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                    <text>£

79th Year, No. 261

Sanford, Florida — Wednesday, June 24, 1997

Price

25 Cents

County Favors Fees For Fire-Rescue, Not Libraries
A proposal to levy fire-rescue Impact fees on
new development In unincorporated areas of
Seminole County Is to get public hearings Aug. 5
and 25. county commissioners agreed Tuesday.
But commissioners declined to schedule hearings
on Impact fees to help boost the number of library
books In the countywide system.
The levy for flre/rescue service is proposed to
re-establish and maintain a fire response time of
five minutes, a standard that county ofTIcials say
has not been met In the last couple years of rapid
growth.
Commissioners agreed to advertise the pro­
posed fees at a rate of $110 per dwelling unit or

1.000 square feet of commerlcal space, but
expressed a willingess to provide discounts
recommended by the Impact fee committee. As
suggested by the committee, developers would
pay $75 for each residential unit and $50 for each
1.000 square feet of a commerlcal building.
The Impact committee recommmended phas­
ing out the discounts over three years, thus
putting the fees back to the $110 level.
Commissioners, however, supported a staff pro­
posal to keep the fees at $75 and $50 and
reconsider the amounts In two years.
County staff said the lower charge for commer­
cial and Industrial buildings Is based on an

Bank Robber
H e ld In
S e m in o le

See FEES, page 12A

Florist W orker Killed
In Apparent Robbery
By Satan Loden
Herald Staff Writer
An autopsy was scheduled
early today for an Seminole
County florist shop worker who
was killed by a robber before
4:40 p.m. Tuesday. Seminole
County sheriffs deputies were
back at the scene early today,
searching for clues.
Dead Is Diane Lynn McGinnis.
3 9 . of 113 D u n c a n T r a i l
Longwood. whose body was
found about 150 yards north of
her workplace. Floral Creations.
484 Hunt Club Road. Hunt Club
Comers. Apopka.
M cG innis' husband of 22
years. Donald, said today they
celebrated their
anniversary
Friday and he last saw hts wife
when he left for work at about 6
a.m. Tuesday.
"I gan't believe It. There wat
nothing there.' There was no
money there," Donald McGinnis
said.

Florence Starllngale
Perching upon the shoulder of his nurse Is a fledgling
starling who was coaxed to adulthood by Rachel Payne.
Longwood's Florence Nightingale of the feathered ilk.
Rachel, 8-year-old daughter of Darryl and Sally Payne,
raised the tweeter after It fell out of Its nest soon after
hatching. Since then it has dined on grasshoppers and
other assorted ornithological gourmand delights. It will
soon take wing and leave Its second nest.

See ROBBER, page 13A

Seminole Recruitment *Active '

R ep o rt C ite s 'Drastic* S h o rta g e
O f B lack G r a d e School T e a c h e rs
The Seminole County School
Board is actively seeking the
best qualified black grade-school
teachers from a d e c lin in g
number tf\at, according to u
state advisory panel, will prove
to be the most serious part of
Florida's worsening teacher
shortage.
Karen Colernun. spokesman
for the Seminole County School
Board, said six ads have been
run this month in black publica­
tions such as the Richmond
Afro-American, the Washington
Afro-American, the Baltimore
Afro-American and the New
Jersey Afro-American aimed at
recruiting qualified black teach­
ers.
A 43 pagc report released by
the Education Standards Com­
mission late last week estimated
that only 90 blacks were avail­

to Roger Nelswender. committee chairman.
"We thought wc could go through this very
quickly, but wc didn't." said Nelswender. "The
validity of the five-minute fire response time
became the critical Issue. The vote came down to
a difference of opinion on how strong our data
was."
Available data were mostly transportationrelated and derived from the years 1982 to 1985.
In a note of advise to the commission.
Nelswender said. "We emphasize the need for
direct data on fire response times." He said the
data should Include the number of responses.

B o d y F o u n d In W o o d s

A convicted bank robber
wanted on murder, robbery and
escape charges was arrested In
Daytona Beach Tuesday and was
being held In the Seminole
County Jail pending a court
appearance today In Orlando
federal court.
Michael Thomas Savlch. 53.
was arrested at gunpoint at
about 6:30 p.m. by U.S Marshals
and Daytona Beach police. He
did not resist when confronted
by the law m en inside the
Voyager Motel lobby on Atlantic
Avenue, said U.S. Marshal Peter
Nagurny. supervisor of the Or­
lando Marshal's office.
The federal agents received a
cull from a m old employee via
911 that Savlch wus at the
motel. The day before, agents
left photographs of Savlch at the
motel after learning that he
might be In the Daytona Beuch
area.
Savlch escaped from the Dade
County Jail on Feb. 5 while
uwaltlng trail on a charge of
murdering a People's National
Bank security guard during a
robbery In Miami In 1985. Frank
Zoufla. 74. was shot to dcuth In
the $45,000 robbery.
Savlch escaped from the Jail
by scaling a 12 -foot wall of un
exercise yard. Guards did not
notice Savlch missing until four
hours later.
Besides the murder and escape
charge, Savlch will be charged
with the Feb. 19 robbery of
$175,000 from an armored cur

From S taff and W ire Reports

occupancy of fewer than 24 hours a day.
Assistant County Manager Montye Beamer
explained unoccupied buildings are less likely to
be the source of a fire or destination of a rescue
call.
Committee members. In discussions with
commissioners, conceded a lack of firm data
made their study of county fire and rescue needs
difficult and contributed to the narrow vote. 5-4.
to recommend the fees. All the committee
members believed fire and rescue services were a
legitimate use of Impact fees but whether the
county was facing a deficit In Its standard of
service remained a matter of opinion, according

able last year for 6.000 teaching
vacancies In Florida.
But In Seminole. "We're not In
a real critical situation." Col­
eman said. "As a general rule,
school systems seek to employ
approximately the same per­
centage of black teachers as they
have black students enrolled.
While there is no great disparity
In the percentage of black teuchers and students In Seminole
County, we are aware that the
trend is for fewer outstanding
black students to enter educa­
tion. We are. therefore, involved
in an active recruitment pro­
gram to secure the very best
black teachers available."
M anagem ent In fo rm a tio n
Services for the district shows
that 109 black elem entary
teachers were employed by
Seminole County ut the end of
lust year out of a total elementa­

ry teaching force of 957, Col­
eman said, which represents
11.4 percent black teachers
compared with 13.25 percent of
the black student population.
The state report blamed the
shortage on declining black col­
lege enrollment and a high black
failure rate on teacher certifica­
tion exams.
Noting that over one-third of
Florida grude-school students
are from minority groups, the
commission said the lack of
minority teachers Is a "drastic"
shortage.
"O f all of the Issues surroun­
ding teacher supply and de­
mand. (we believe) that the
shortage of qualified minority
teachers Is the most crucial, and
will ultimately prove to be the
most difficult to ameliorate."
wrote commission chairwoman
See TEACHERS, page 12A

11-Y e a r-O ld Trying For Flight Record
BURBANK. Caltf. (UPI) - Flying
across the country, even In a
private plane, is not exactly an
unusual feat these days — unless
the pilot needs three cushions to
reach the controls und is still In
elementary school. -I
John Kevin Hill Insists he Is Just
like any other 11-year-old. but
admitted Tuesday that his goal to
become the youngest pilot to fly
across the United States sets him
apart somewhat.
The flight wus scheduled to begin
today, a day after John flew In from
hts hometown of Arlington. Texas,
with his flight instructor. Mike
Fields. In a four-scat, twin-engine
Cessna.
The youngster, who has to sit on
three cushions so he can reach the

airplane's controls, has logged 150
hours of flight time since he began
flying at age 9. Because he cannot
legally fly solo until he is 17. Fields
is on board us backup.
John, a student at Arlington's
Dunn Elementary School, said
Tuesday he wus neryous but anx­
ious to begin the flight.
'
" It's easy to fly ... (but) It
sometimes feels scary up there." he
said.
His mother. Patsy, was not quite
so calm, telling reporters in Texas.
"I am about ready to fall apart."
The plun for the record-setting
3.500-mitc flight calls for stops in
Loveland. Colo., and St. Louts
before w inding up J u ly 1 in
Washington. D.C. The Hill family
See RECORD, page 12A

Sem inole C o u n ty sheriff's
Capt. Roy Hughey said that
Investigators called to the scene
after McGinnis' body was found
In woods about 100 feet from a
lake, reported seeing an appar­
ent bullet exit wound In her
head. But an entry wound was
not found In a preliminary exam.
McGinnis' body was found
after 'off duty Seminole County
reserve deputy Pete Kcltlng en­
tered the unattended florist shop
on personal business at about
4:40 p.m. Kcltlng saw that the
cash register was open and
empty and from the back door.
Hughey said, Kcltlng saw a car.
Kcltlng went to a neighboring
shop and called the Seminole
County Sheriff's Department
and the owner of the florist shop.
Jackie Gordon. Hughey said

been working alone.
D o n a ld G o r d o n , w h o m
H u g h e y Id e n tifie d as the
husband of the shop owner,
found McGinnis.
Rescue workers were called to
the scene, but she was dead.
Deputies arc estimating that she
was killed after 4 p.m. Kcltlng
did not hear a gunshot. Hughey
said.
Hughey said It Is believed
Kcltlng arrived ut the shop Just
shortly after the robbery In
which less than $100 is believed
to have been stolen.
Donald McGinnis said his wife
wus bom In Chicago. 111., and
they moved to Florida about
nine years ago with their two
children, Donald Jr.. 20 . and
D o nn a. 17. M rs. M cG inn is
worked at the florist shop five

patrol deputlea and Oordon and

M G M M f tlii

her husband arrived at about the
same time and a search was
mounted for McGinnis, who had

like this might huppen In such a
setting.

W om an Escap es
A b d u c t o r - R a p is t
A 25-year-old Seminole County woman escaped
from a ktdnappcr-raplst who abducted her from
her lied early today.
The woman was bound, gagged and had a
pillowcase put over her head by an Intruder who
took her from her home at knifepoint ut about
4:30 u.m.. Seminole County shcrIITs Capt. Roy
Hughey said.
The woman told sheriffs Investigators she was
forced Into a car. which was driven a short
distunce by the abductor. When the car slopped
the woman was forced out and raped. She
remained bound, gagged and with the pillowcase
over her head. Hughey said.
After the attack the woman was put buck Into
the car and us the rapist drove she managed to
free her hands, remove the pillowcase and Jump
from the car on State Road 436 at Howell Branch
Road, near Casselberry. The man stopped and got
out of the car. but gut back In and drove away as
the woman fled and htd outside a nearby
apartment complex, which Is also where she
lives. Hughey said.
The woman went home and reported the
Incident to sheriffs deputies at about 6:20 a.m.
Her roommate. Hughey said, told Investigators
she heard noise In the apartment ut about 4:30
a.m. Investigators believe the assailant entered
the apartment through a sliding glass door.
—Susan Loden

Htrtld Photo by Tommy Vlnctnf

Croom s Discipline Board Topic

Digging In

Award of a construction contract for Wilson
Elementary School additions and a new Crooms
School of Choice discipline program will be Items
for discussion and possible approvul when the
Seminole County Schol board meets today.
The meeting is to begin ut 7:30 p.m. In board
chambcrsat 1211 Mellonvllle Ave.. Sanford.

W orkers from DeWitf Excavating use a
drag line to set sewer pipe in ground at
Second Street and M aple Ave. Tuesday as
part of the city of Sanford's project to
upgrade its sewer system. DeWitt excavat­
ing is a Winter Garden based firm .

C i t y A d o p t s P o o l R e s o lu t io n
S a n fo rd c ity c o m m issio n e rs
adopted a resolution offering support
to the Seminole County School
Board in seeking a PECO (public
education capital outlay) grant to
help pay the cost of constructing a
pool at Seminole High school.
Sanford Recreation Director Jim
Jcm lgan said that with the accep­
tance of the resolution the school
Ixtard and city can now begin plans
for a pool
"Th e PECO grant." Jcrnigan said,
"requires a cooperative effort be­
tween school boards and m uni­
cipalities. The resolution means that
the city will cooperate in the plann­
ing and funding of a Joint project. In
this case a swimming pool."
Requirements for the stale grant
are that:
• The pool has to be huill on or

udjaccnt to school property.
• Educational purposes for the
facility come first: recreation second.
• The city must split the cost of
the project with the stale.
Jernlgan said the next step is for
the resolution to officially go to the
school hoard. Then the two bodies
must get together and determine
how much the city is willing to
spend on the project before con­
tracting out for an architect to draw
up the plans.
When the plans are completed
they will be sent along with the
grant application to Tallahassee
where the project will I k *evaluated.
"It will probably take 1H mouths
lor the funding to come through."
Jcrnigan said.
— Brian S u llivan

TODAY
Bridge.............. .....8B
Classifieds ..... 6B.7B
Comics............. .....8B
Coming Events .....3A
Crossword.......
Dear Abby....... .....2R
Deaths.............. ... t2A
Dr. Gott............
8B
4A
Editorial...........
Financial.......... ... I2A

....... 12A
Florida
Horoscope...
Hospital...... ........ 12A
Nation
......... 5A
People......... .....IB 3B
Police......... ......... 2A
Sports......... ...9A-11A
Television... ......... 4B
Weather...... ......... 2A
World........... ......... 6A

Senator says Florida law m akers m ay
be forced to hike sales tax if services
tax stalled by court, 5B

�r

r
1A— Santord HaraM, Santord, FI.

Wadnatday, June 24, in?

P O L IC E
IN BRIEF
Police Search O f Homo Reveals
Cache O f Cocaine, Marijuana
Sanford police, with a warrant, searched a home at 1811
W. 15th St.. Sanford at about 5 p.m. Monday, and reported
finding cocaine, marijuana and drug paraphernalia.
Major Wheeler, 25, of that address was charged with
possession of those Items of contraband. He has been
released on $2,000 bond to appear In court Ju ly 13.

Women Report Sexual Assaults
In separate cases two women who accepted rides from
men Sunday reported they were raped.
In one case, a 22-year-old woman told Seminole County
sheriff's deputies she was raped by a man who picked her
up on Interstate 4 In Orange County after her car broke
down at about 6 a.m. The man drove to an unknown
location and the woman said she was raped. She didn't
report the rape until she and her boyfriend were arguing
about It at a Casselberry bar later Sunday and sheriff's
deputies were called. Th e case was referred to Orange
County.
In the other case, a 24-year-old Sanford woman told
sheriff's deputies she fled partially clothed from a man who
had picked her up at her home and then drove to a wooded
area off Bungalow Boulevard, Sanford, where he assaulted
her. The woman was picked up by a passer-by on Airport
Boulevard and taken to the Sanford police station, a
sheriff's report said. Deputies have the name of a suspect In
that case.

Club Prompts Man's Arrest
Walking along Interstate 4 with a club In hts hand
prompted the arrest of a Casselberry man on a marijuana
charge.
Police received a report around 2 a.m. Saturday that a
man was southbound on 1-4 near State Road 434 and
carrying a club. On the approach of the officer the man
reportedly dropped the club and raised his hands.
The officer, thinking the man may of had other weapons,
frisked him and felt what he first thought was a knife. It
was, however, a set of keys Intertwined with a baggie of
what is believed to be marijuana, said police.
Charged with possession of marijuana was Mark
Franklin Selthcr. 27. of 804 Cypress Way. Bond was set at
$500.

3 Jailed On Drug Charges
A Sanford couple and a person living in their home were
arrested on drug possession charges after undercover
agents searched their home Friday.
The agents served a search warrant around 6:30 a.m. at
1713 Southwest Road In Sanford. Why the agents served
the warrant and where they reportedly found the drugs at
that address was not Included In the arrest reports. The
agents did report finding crack cocaine, marijuana and
drug paraphernalia.
Arrested and charged with possession of cocaine,
marijuana and drug paraphernalia were Salntaler and
Brendp Ex^ntus., 40 and 28, of the above address as well as
gCiOgfo Philemon j 29. Bond at the. Seminole County Jail was
set at $2,000 each.

Repo Men Threatened With Gun
A Midway woman was charged with aggravated assault
after reportedly aim ing a rifle at men who were
repossessing her car.
The men attached the vehicle to a tow truck while the
woman argued with them, according to a deputy's report.
Th e woman then went Into a house and returned with a
rifle, the report said. She then aimed the rifle at one of the
men at a distance of three to five feet and ordered him to
detach the car and tow truck. He did.
When the deputy arrived at whom the gun was aimed
Identified the woman and she was placed under arrest. The
deputy reported finding a rifle under a bed In the residence.
That rifle resembled the one she aimed at the man. he said.
Charged with aggravated assault was Barbara Jean
Watkins, of 2514 Frog Alley. Her bond was set at $1,000.

Burglaries And Thefts Reported
A $300 television, a $330 diamond ring and $200 cash
belonging to Ernest A. Stickle. 21. of 7437 Fleldcrest St.,
Winter Park, were stolen Wednesday from 217 Stcfanlk
Ave.. Winter Park, a sheriffs report said.

C L A R IF IC A T IO N
Sanford Mayor Bcltye Smith
was Incorrectly quoted in a story
In Tuesday's Sanford Herald
regarding the city's decision to
request assistance from the gov­
ernor's office in the Yankee Lake
Investigation.
Smith voted against the city

contacting the governor's office,
saying since the slate attorney's
office already had done so.
Sanford would huve nothing to
gain from the city doing like­
wise. She did not say there was
nothing to gain from the In­
vestigation Itself. The Herald
regrets the error.

FIRE CALLS
TU ESD A Y
— 2:1 8 p.m ., 950 Mcllonville
Ave. A 20-ycar-old woman had a
seizure. Rescue workers treated
and transported to Central
Florida Regional Hospital.
— 2:22 p.m ., 210S. French Ave.
A n 8 -ye ar-o ld boy suffered

(USPS 4ii no)
W ednesday, Jun e 24, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 261
Published Daily and Sunday, except
Saturday by Tha Sanford Herald.
Inc. 700 N. French Ave., Sanlord,
Fla. 33771.
Second Clast Postage Paid at Sanlord,
Florida 11771
P O S T M A S T E R : Send address changes
to T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D , P.O.
Box 1*57, Santord, F L 11771.
Home Delivery: Month, H 75; 1 Months.
SI4.15; * Months. *17.00; Year,
151.00 By M ail: Month. *4.75; 1
Months tlO .lS; t Months. 537.00;
Year, 5*9.00.
Phone (305) 111-1*11.

• *i

abrasions on both knees. Rescue
workers left him in the care of
his mother.
— 3:44 p.m ., 1703B Ridgewood
Lane. A child was reported to be
choking. Sanford Police De­
partment cancelled enroute.
— 6:07 p.m ., 319 E. Second St.
A fire alarm went off. but
firefighters found no fire.
— 7:52 p.m ., 4290 Orlando Dr.
A 95-year-old woman had chest
pains. Seminole County Fire
Department was on the scene.
No action needed to be taken by
Sanford.
W EDNESDAY
— 12:02 a.m ., 23th St. and
Mulberry Ave. A 26-year-old
man was hit In the Jaw during a
robbery. The man required no
transportation and had no ap­
parent Injuries.
— 12:18 a.m., 819 S. French
Ave. A 26-year-old man was
down with stomach pains. No
transportion to hospital was
necessary.
— 5:11 a.m., 1714 Ridgewood
Lane. A 96-ycar-oUl man suf­
fered a possible heart attack.
Rescue workers treated him and
transported him to the hospital.

Health Officials Prepare For Crisis
F O R T LAU D ER D A LE (UPI) counties for neurosurgeons Is
South Florida health officials $ 1 4 3 , 8 3 2 , T h e r a t e fo r
said today they are preparing for neurosurgeons In Palm Beach
the worst as doctors decide County and the rest of the state
w h e th e r to p a y increase d Is $95,996. Those rates do not
malpractice premiums or curtail Include the proposed Increases.
their services.
Many south Florida doctors
"W e are preparing ourselves have already curtailed practices
as If we would be preparing for . to protest malpractice insurance
any other type of disaster, such costs. Th e y arc divided over
as a hurricane." said Ralph whether to accept the rates the
Marrinson. chairman of Broward state approved.
"I think you're going to see a
County's Emergency Medical
Services Council.
lot of physicians curtail their
Palm Beach County officials practice as of Ju ly 1." said
are planning to hire trauma Robert Newman, associate ad­
specialists to work In a hospital ministrator of Florida Medical
emergency room under limited Center Hospital In Lauderdale
protection from malpractice Lakes.
s u its . B ro w a rd C o u n ty
"I think the physicians are just
emergency medical services of­ to the point where how much Is
ficials have organized a task too much? I think we've passed
force to monitor the availability that point already. When do you
of surgeons and other trauma say enough?"
specialists at hospitals.
Many neurosurgeons and or­
St. Paul Fire and Marine In­ thopedic surgeons already have
surance Co. of Minnesota, which resigned from Palm Beach
insures about 5,000 of the County hospitals. Some preg­
s ta te ’ s 2 0 ,0 0 0 d o c to rs. Is nant woman have been forced to
expected to decide In the next seek care In Broward County
few days whether to accept a because most Palm Beach
rate Increase proposed Monday obstetricians arc refusing to ac­
by state Insurance Commission­ cept new patients.
er Bill Gunter.
T h e P alm Beach C o u n ty
Gunter said St. Paul's could Commission could vote next
raise Its basic rates 30.9 percent w e e k o n a p la n to h ir e
in Broward and Dade counties emergency room doctors, proba­
and should drop Its rates by 1.6 bly at St. Mary's Hospital In
percent In Palm Beach County West Palm Beach, who would
and the rest of the state. He receive the county’s limited Im­
allowed an U .8 percent hike for munity from liability awards of
incrcased-covcragc policies.
more than $ 200,000 .
Broward County officials are
St. Paul threatened to pul! out
of Florida on Ju ly I unless preparing for Ju ly 1 by setting
Gunter granted Its rate hike up an Em ergency Resource
request of 63 percent in Broward M anagem ent C o m m itte e to
monitor emergency services that
and Dade counties.
St. Paul's typical annual pre­ h o sp ita ls p ro vid e and tell
mium in Dade and Broward paramedics and other rescue

workers where to take parents.
Dr. Joseph Phillips, secretary
of the Palm Beach County Medi­
cal Society, said he expected
most doctors would reluctantly
accept the newest rate Increase.
"The simplest thing, unfortu­
nately, is to accept a short-term
Band-Aid solution." Phillips
said.

Phillips said many doctors are
waiting to find out whether the
Leglslaiurc soon will make
changes in malpractice law bci
fore they decide to change their
practices.
Gov. Bob Martinez has said he
wants the Legislature to meet In
special session this summer oti
the Issue, but has not set a date.

Court: Churches Con Discriminate
W A S H IN G TO N (U P I) A
un anim o us Suprem e C ourt
handed religious groups a major
victory today, ruling Congress
can exempt churches from laws
prohibiting discrimination on
the basis of religion.
Justice Bryon White, writing
for the Supreme Court, said. "A
law is not unconstitutional sim­
ply because it allows churches to
advance religion, which Is their
very purpose."
The court’s ruling came In two
cases brought by the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

and the government, seeking
review of a decision of a federal
court In Utah that found pop
tlons of the Civil Rights Acts
unconstitutional.
The case was closely followed
by a variety of churches, which
operate schools, hospitals,
nursing homes and childcare
facilities and feared widespread
government Involvement.
T o d a y 's ru lin g gives the
groups wide immunity from a
variety of government antidiscrimination laws that deal
with religious discrimination.

2 En ter Pleas In D ru g C a se
Tw o women arrested on co;
caine charges have pleaded no
contest to attempted possession
of a controlled substance.
Lynette Jackson, 24, and
Angela Sue Little. 22. of 201
Monroe Ave.. Winter Park, en­
tered their pleas before Circuit
JuJge O.H. Eaton Jr. Eaton set
Aug. 13forsentencings.
Tw o other people arrested at
the same lim e on cocaine
possession charges await final
disposition of their cases.

Jackson and Little were ar­
rested In November along with
Patrick Robin Boone, 25. of
Orlando, and Gene Charles Love­
ly, 40. of 5125 Richland Road.
Sanford. They were arrested In
the parking lot of the Hotline
B o ttle C lu b in A lta m o n te
Springs.
The men were also charged
with tampering with evidence
after they allegedly tried to
throw away cocaine when con­
fronted.

W E A TH E R
Notion T em p e ra tu re s
City A Forecast
Albuquerque pc
Anchorage cy
Asheville pc
Atlanta pc
Billing* ty
Birmingham It
Bo* Ion ly
Browntvlll* Tax.pc
Buffalo »y
Burlington VI. *y
Charleston S.C. pc
Charlott* N.C. pc
Chicago ty
, Cincinnati sy 1
Cleveland ty.
Columbus ty
Dal la* ty
Dnwpc
Da* Molnatpc
Detroit ly
Duluth pc
El Paso sy
Evansville pc
Hartford *y
Honolulu pc
Houston pc
Indianapolis ty
Jackson Mist. 1*
Jacksonville pc
Kansas City pc
Las Vegas ty
Little Rock pc
Los Angeles pc
Louisville pc
Memphis pc
Miami Beach pc

.

mnwauin pc

Mlnnoapolltpc
Nathvlllapc
NtwOrltxnspc
Naw York *y
Oklahoma City t*
Omaha pc
Philadelphia *y
Phoenix sy
Pittsburgh ty
Portland M t. »y
Portland Ora. *y
Provldanca »y
Richmond pc
St. Loultpc
San Franc I*co pc
Washington pc

Hi Lo Pep
*4 *7
54 47 .«
17 *7
M 70 J7
71 51
92 *7
*1 51
91 77
It *1
It *0
*5 74
90 72
17 *0
*5 '44 ;.l.
71 59 ....
■1 43 ....
94 70 ....
•3 54 .0*
•9 47 ....
14 44 ....
M 52 ....
102 49 ....
92 72 ....
72 50 .02
90 72 ....
94 7* ....
(4 44 ....
94 70 .44
91 73 .54
14 47 .03
103 75 ....
92 49 .33
I I 45 ....
90 71 ....
94 71 .02
U 12 .03
*7 *3
U *0
90 *9
93 74

M 5*

95 73
M *4
19 *1
105*1
12 *3
*5 53
7* 54
4* 51
92 *7
•9 73
*4 51
19 47

.09
.
.
.

pc partly cloudy
r rain
th showers
*m smoke
tn snow
sy sunny
Is thunderstorms
at iMindy

CODES
c clear
ctrlaaring
cy cloudy
I fair
ty foggy
hi ha;o
m mtt-ing

F lo rid a T e m p e ra tu re s
M IAM I (U P I) — Florida 24 hour temperaturas and rainfall at • a.m. E DT today:
City:
HI 1JB R4 ln
Apalachicola
15 72 0.70
Cretlvlew
92 70 1.01
Daytona Baach
93 72 O.tr
Fort Lauderdale
*4 10 0.01
Fort Myers
92 75 0.00
Gainesville
91 71 005
Jacksonville
91 73 0.54
Key West
93 ■1 0.00
Lakeland
93 49 0.00
Miami
93 79 O.tr
Orlando
94 77 000
Pensacola
90 74 000
Sarasota Bradenton
90 77 000
Tallahassee
U 70 1.97
Tampa
92 77 000
Vero Beach
91 74 O.tr
West Palm Beach
91 77 o n

Moon Phases

Naw
Jun.34

First
July 4

Full
Juiyi*

Last
July 17

Boach C o n d itio n s
D ayto na Beach:Waves are
about 1 foot and glassy. Current
Is to the north with a water
temperature of 75 degrees. New
S m y r n a B e a c h :W a v e s arc
about a foot •maybe 2 feet at the
inlet- and glassy. Current Is
flowing to the north. Water
temperature is 75 degrees. Sun
screen factor: 21 ,

F iv e -D a y F o re c a s t
For Control Florida
PJUTTVTCVQWV

Ptly Cldy

Ptty Cldy

fS B

te B

K B

FMTlf CLOOOr

0 -

High*

91
Low*

Frl.

Sat.

Sun.

Mon.

Source: National Weather Service

T h u n d e rs to rm s
D o t

The high temperature Friday
In Sanford was 96 degrees and
the overnight low was 72 de­
grees as reported by the Univer­
sity of Florida Agricultural Re­
search and Education Center.
Celery Avenue. There was no
rainfall recorded. Partly cloudy
today with expected high In the
low to middle 90s and a 50
percent chance of afternoon
showers.

A re a Forecast

72
Thurs.

Local R eport

S o u th e a s t

B y United Press
International
Ruin, hall and gusty winds
lashed Nebraska today as
storms rolled through the na­
tion's midsection, and thun­
derstorms dotted parts of the
Southeast.
Storms pushing across the
central Plains brought rain to
Nebraska and Kansas after
leaving eastern Colorado, the
National Weather Service said.
Thunderstorms hit parts of
Texas. Oklahoma. Arkansas.
Louisiana and Mississippi.
Rains were scattered, and
there was no threat of flooding.
Three-quarter-Inch hall fell
near Mitchell, Neb.. Tuesday
night, and thunderstorm s
brought heavy rain, gusty
winds and small-sized hall to
the central Nebraska Panhan­
dle.
Tornadoes were spotted
Tuesday near Honey Grove,
Texas. Ardmore. Okla., Em ­
poria. Va.. Weld County. Tex­
as. and Banner County. Neb.
No Injuries or damage was
reported.
Showers subsided over most
of New York state Tuesday,
but not before us much as 3
inches had fallen over Its
w e s te rn , c e n tra l and
northeastern sections. More
Ilian 3 Vi Inches of rain was
measured at Glens Falls. N.Y.,
during a 24-hour period end­
ing Tuesday morning.
Winds up to 75 mph Tues­
day were blamed for damaging
airplanes and a hangar In
Craighead County. Ark., and
for pushing a semi-truck onto
a pickup near Searcy. Ark.
About 2 Inches of rain fell
Tuesday evening at Little
Rock. Ark., and at Myrtle
Beach. S.C.
Elsewhere, the West Coast
enjoyed mostly fair skies,
clo ud s covered the m idAtlantic states and skies were
fair over New England. Tem ­

peratures soared into the 90s
Tuesday In Virginia and North
Carolina.
Toxic chemicals flowing Into
the Atlantic are poisoning fish
and shellfish off the New
E n g la n d coast, posing a
growing threat lo consumers,
a coalition of scientists, law­
yers and environmentalists
says.
The Coast Alliance, in a
report released Tuesday, said a
major study of the chemical
c o n t a m i n a t i o n of N ew
England's fishery resources
show ed e a tin g fish and
shellfish "may be dangerous
to your health."
Thai conclusion is based on
the findings of marine scien­
tists at (he Woods Hole Scien­
tific Institution and the Uni­
versity of Massachusetts.
Sarah Chasls of the Natural
Resources Defense Council
said the threat Is "very real
Indeed" but the trend can still
be reversed.
Our intention Is to sound
the alarm." she said.
Paul Hauge. a mcrnsl.xer of
the Conservation Law Foun­
dation of New England and
one of the authors of the
report, said most seafood In
New England Is not dangerous
local ycl.
"But there are pockets of
contamination that can make
a trip to the fish store a game
of Russian roulette." he said.
The report said the most
dangerous chemicals being
dumped Into the sea through
sewage. Industrial wastewater
and storm runoff Include lead,
c a d m iu m , m e r c u r y , and
hydrocarbons.
"They almost never disin­
tegrate In the water but move
through (he ocean food web.
accumulated by marine life
which Is eventually eaten by
people." the report said.

To d a y partly cloudy with
sca tte re d afterno o n th u n ­
derstorms. High In the low to
mid 90s. Wind southwest 10
mph. Rain chance 50 percent.
Tonight and Thursday partly
cloudy with a chance of after­
n o o n a n d e v e n in g t h u n derstorms. Low In the mid 70s.
High In the low to mid 90s. Light
wind tonight then southwest 10
mph Thursday. Rain chance 20
percent tonight and 50 percent
Thursday.

Extend ed Forecast
The extended forecast. Friday
through Sunday, for Florida
except northw est — Partly
cloudy with a chance of mainly
afternoon and evening thun­
derstorms. Highs near 90 to mid
90s. Lows lower 70s north to
around 80 extreme south.

A re a R eadings
The temperature at 9 a.m.: 84:
overnight low: 77; Tuesday's
high: 96; barometric pressure:
29.98: relative hum idity: 82
percent: winds: North at 6 mph:
rain: None; Today’s sunset: 8:26
p.m., Thursday's sunrise: 6:29
a.m.

A r e a Tides

TH U R SD AY:
S O L U N A R T A B L E : Min. 5:05
a.m., 5:25 p.m.: Maj. 11:15 a.m.,
11:40 p.m. T ID E S : Daytona
Beach: highs. 8:23 a.m., 8:48
p.m.; lows. 2:15 a.m.. 2:02 p.m.:
New S m y rn a Beach: highs.
8:28 a.m., 8:53 p.m.: lows. 2:20
a.m.. 2.07 p.m.: B ayport: highs.
2:16 a.m., 12:54 p.m ; lows, 7:07
a.m.. 8:39 p.m.

B o a tin g '

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
— Today wind southwest near
10 kts. Seas 2 ft or less ft. Bay
and Inland waters a light chop. A
few thunderstorms. Tonight and
Thursday wind southwest 10 to
15 kts. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Bay and
inland waters a light to moderate
chop. A few thunderstorms.

�IN TH E SERVICE
Area A A Groups Schedule
Meetings For Wednesday
Area Alcoholics groups meet Wednesday as follows:
• Sanford AA, noon and 5:30 p.m. open discussion,
1201 W. First St.
^
• REBOS AA. noon and 5:30 and 8 p.m. (closed), Rebos
Club. 130 Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
• Sanford Born to Win AA. 8 p.m., open discussion,
1201 W. First St.
• Sanford Grace AA 11th Step (closed). 8 p.m.. 122 N.
Fifth St., Lake Mary.
• Altamonte Springs AA. 8 p.m. (closed). Altamonte
Community Chapel. 825 State Road 436.
• Casselberry AA. 8 p.m., (closed). Ascension Lutheran
Church. Ascension Drive, Casselberry.
• Alanon, 8 p.m.. Fourth Street and Oak Avenue.
Sanford.

Take Off Pounds Meets
TOPS ( Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Chapter FL-491 meets
every Wednesday from 6:30 to 8 p.m., at the Salvation
Arm y, 700 W. 24th St., Sanford. Open to the public.

Back Care Basics Class
Free class on “The Basics of Back Care" will be
presented on Wednesday. June 24 from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
at the Center for Orthopedic Physical Therapy and
Rehabilitation. 1922 Mizell Ave.. Winter Park. Call
629-9211 for reservations.

Support For Mental Patients
COPE support group for families of mental health
patients meets Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.. Crane's Roost
Office Park. S-377. Altamonte Springs.

Films For Preschoolers

LAftftYB.GACK
Navy Ensign Larry S. Gage, son of June
D. Gage of So” Logan Drive, Longwood, was
designated a Naval Aviator. Presentation of
the "Wings of Gold" marked culmination of
18 months of flight training.
Gage's curriculum included basic studies
In engineering and navigation, training
flights In sim ulators, aircraft fa m il­
iarizations. basic and advanced Instrument
training, extended navigation flights and
landings aboard an aircraft carrier.
A 1960 graduate of Lyman High School
and a 1985 gaduate of the U.S. Naval
Academy. Annapolis, with a Bachelor of
Science degree, he Joined the Navy In May
1985.
WILLIAM J.ilBYBR
Marine Cpl. William J . Meyer, son of
William V. and Allegrette M. Meyer of 614
David St.. Winter Springs, recently received
a Letter of Appreciation.
He received the citation In recognltlun of
his outstanding performance while sta­
tioned with 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing,
Marine Corps Air Station: Cherry Point,’N.C.
A 1984 graduate of Oviedo High School,
he Joined the Marine Corps In Ju ly 1984.
EUGENE J. BOYLE
Navy Ensign Eugene J . Boyle, a 1083
graduate of Lake Howell High School, was
commissioned in his present rank upon
graduation from NROTC Tulane University.
New Orleans.
The commission was received after Boyle
completed the school's Naval Reserve Of­
ficer Training Corps (NROTC) Program.
During each undergraduate semester, he
completed naval science courses in addition
to the full academic schedule that lead to his
degree.

A ll Aboard, Shipmates
John Fehr "signs on" for another tour
of duty at the 19th NAS Sanford
Reunion fo be held Friday through
Sunday for former personnel at the
Naval Air Station, Fleet Reservists and
guests. Activities begin with the Second
Annual Golf Classic to begin at 8 a.m.

Friday at Mt. Plymouth Golf Coursa
followed by lunch. The Fleet Reserve
Club will host a dinner dance Friday
night and brunch on Sunday. A picnic
will be held beginning at 10:30 a.m.
Saturday at
Lake
Golden. For
Information call 322-9606.

Seminole County Public Library's Summer Reading
Program will present three preschool films. 10 a.m..
Casselberry Branch Library. Seminole Plaza. Highway
17-92 at State Road 436.

East-West Sanford Club Meets
East-West Sanford Klwanis Club meets Thursday at 6
p.m. at Friendship Lodge. Seventh and Locust.

Sweet Adelines Meet
Sweet Adelines, women’s barbershop singing group,
rehearses every Thursday at 7:30 p.m., at the Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.

Parent Support Group To Meet
Families Together Parent Support Group meets every
Thursday at 7:30 p.m.. 900 Fox Valley Drive. Sweetwater
Square. Suite 206 for open discussion. For lnformaton call
774-3844.

Narcotics Anonymous Meets
Narcotics Anonymous meets at 8 p.m. every Thursday at
317 Oak Ave.. Sanford.

Bible Study Held
A noil-denominational Bible study and prayer Is held at
noon every Thursday at the Cavalier Inn Restaurant.
Highway 17-92, Sanford.

League Sets River Outing
League of Women Voters of Seminole County will hold a
luncheon at the Wekiwa Marina Restaurant at noon,
Thursday. June 25. At 1 p.m.. there will be a float boat ride
to commemorate American Rivers Month.

Quitters Guild To M eet
Central Florida Qullters Guild will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday. June 25 at the First Baptist Church. 519 S. Park
Ave., Sanford. Barbara Logullo will lecture and demon­
strate padded boxes.

Free Car Clinic Set
Free 5-minute car emission clinic. Friday. June 26. near
front entrance of Winter Park Mall. Highway 17-92. Winter
Park, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Co-sponsored by the
AAA and American Lung Association of Central Florida. No
appointment necessary.

Cardiovascular Screening
Cardiovascular screening is available from 8 a.m. to 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, at the County Health
Department, 240 W. Airport Blvd.. Sanfora. Call 322-2724.
Ex. 370 for appointment.

Blood Bank Announces Hours
Central Florida Blood Bank Seminole County Branch.
1302 E. Second St,. Sanford, Is open Monday and
Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.: and Tuesday and
Thursday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Central Florida Blood Bank Florida Hospttal-Altamontc
Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave.. Is open Monday and
Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.: and on Tuesday. Wednesday
and Thursday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Central Florida Blood Bank South Seminole Branch. 521
W. State Road 434. Suite 103A, Is open Tuesday and
Wednesday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Lawyer: Bakker's Want Peace
T E G A CAY, S.C. (UPII - Jim
and Tam m y Faye Bakker. seek­
ing a iruce in their “ holy war”
with the Rev. Jerry Falwell over
the PTL. agreed to vacate — but
not surrender — their S I .3
million lakeside mansion and
move to a Tennessee mountain
chalet.
Tile Bakkers planned to leave
Tega Cay today for a brief
v a c a tio n at the ch a le t in
Gatllnburg. Te n n .. returning
later to remove their belongings
from the disputed lakefront
"parsonage.” Jim Toms, an at­
torney for the P TL founders, said
Tuesday.
To m s extended the olive
branch to new P TL leaders,
saying the Bakkers want to
avoid a legal fight to regain
control of the P TL evangelical
em pire a (id hope "tru s te d
friends" can mediate a settle­
ment with Falwell and the
ministry's new directors. He
would not Identify the trusted
friends.
"It is the conviction of the
Bakkers and the opinion of their
counsel that the continued de­
structive. divisive presentation

of differences can only harm the
cause of many other Christian
organizations apart from the Old
Tim e Gospel Hour" — Falwell’s
own television program — "and
the P TL organization." Toms
said.
"It Is time for peace to be
made and scriptures to be
followed."
"Th e Bakkers have asked me
also to tell you that within the
next few weeks they will be
moving from this house." Toms
said, adding. "Th e y are not
m oving In an indication of
abandonment of entitlement to
the home.”
The Bakkers contend the PTL
gave them the house in Tega
Cay. but Falwell says it is P TL
property and wants to sell it to
help pay a S70 million debt that
forced the m inistry to seek
Chapter 11 protection from cred­
itors.
Falwell took charge of the
ministry at Jim Bakker’s behest
tit March when Bakker’s sexual
tryst with a church secretary
became widely publicized.

E V E R Y T H IN G
WE'VE CONSOLIDATED HUGE ASSORTMENTS OF BED AND BATH
ITEMS FROM ALL OF OUR STORES, TO THIS O N E LOCATION!
EVERY BATHTOWEL a ENSEMBLE • EVERY SHEET SET • EVERY PLACEMAT a NAPKIN •
EVERY COMFORTER • EVERY PILLOW • EVERY SHOWER CURIAM • EVERY RUG •
EVERY KITCHEN ACCESSORY

THE SAVINGS ARE SPECTACULAR
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND, SO HURRY INI

0 WET ROSS STORES

S A N F O R D OBLANDO DR US 17 a 92 SEMtNOLE CENtER NEXUO WAl MAD I
StOBE HOURS Moo-Sol 9X1 AM-9 PM. Sun 12 PM-d PM
For a Boss Store near you coll toll tree 800-345-ROSS ROSS welcome* your portonal checK. VUa MoilerCord. Choice or American Eipres* Cord*

�r

; c r

'JNl f'TJ

S a n f o rd H e ra ld
(USFS 411-2M)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. F L A . 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Wednesday, June 24, 19$7— 4A
Wayne 0. Deylt, Publisher
Tbemas Oierdane. Managing Edltar
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Month. $4.75; 3 Months. SI4.25:6 Months.
$27.00: Year. $51.00. By Mall: Month. $6.75: 3 Months.
$20.25: 6 Months. $37.00: Year. $69.00.

In to Th e W ild ,
B lu e Y o n d e r
W e do n 't e n vy T . A lla n M cA rto r w ho was
nominated recently b y President Reagan to
assume com m and or the Federal A viation
Adm inistration after Donald Engen retires (n
J u ly . T h e beleaguered governm ent agency
responsible for ensuring air safety appears
increasingly unable to fulfill Its mandate In
such a m anner that Inspires public con­
fidence.
No sooner docs the outgoing F A A ad­
m inistrator assure us that the skies are safer
than ever, than there is another disturbing
disclosure to frighten the m ost seasoned
'alr-travclers. F o r example, recently there was
a near collision between a Jetliner and. a
m ilitary aircraft over Rapid C ity , S .D ., due to
a controller error. T h e n we learn that on May
29. two Boeing 727s came w ith in 500 feet of
each o th e r o ve r C h ic a g o because of a
breakdown In air-traffic control procedures.
These near misses lend chilling credence to
charges b y the N atio n al T ra n s p o rta tio n
Safety Board of a significant "erosion of
safety" (n the skies d u rin g the last several
years. Reports of near m ld-alr collisions are
30 percent above last year's levels, w hich, in
turn, were 42 percent higher than in 1985.
E q u a lly a la rm in g is th a t " r u n w a y in ­
cursions," In w hich one aircraft taxis into the
path of another, have Increased b y 50 percent
d u rin g the last two years.
T h e s e o m in o u s s ta tis tic s are fle ct the
m is m a tc h betw een an understaffed, illequipped alr-trafllc-control system and the
relentless grow th of com m ercial flights since
the airlines were deregulated In 1978. Last
year. 9.555 fully certified controllers were
available to handle 9 m illion flights out of the
nation's 22 busiest airports. Contrast that
w ith 21 percent fewer flights in 1981, w hen
there were 38 percent more veteran con­
trollers on duty.
Despite longstanding assurances that the
current controller corps is adequate, T ra n s ­
portation Secretary Elizabeth Dole has asked
Congress for more m oney to hire an addi­
tional 955 controllers b y October. Even so, It
w ill be another 12 m onths or so before they
jare trained and able to m onitor traffic In the
dncreaslagjy crowded skies.
«*
v
A no the r serious problem is the snail's pace
at w hich the F A A 's outdated equipm ent Is
being upgraded to handle the heavy volum e
of a ir trafllc. In 1985, the agency added a
com puter program that autom atically reports
Incidents In w hich hig h -flyin g planes come
w ith in five miles of each other. A n d the F A A
Is c u rre n tly Installing sophisticated c o m ­
puters to cope w ith the predicted gro w th In
air travel. B ut a m ultlbllllon-dollar overhaul of
the system and a planned nationwide recon­
figuration of air routes have been bogged
do w n between Congress and the Reagan
adm inistration over budget priorities.
T h e n there is a General A cco unting Office
report that scolds the F A A for Its inadequate
safety Inspections. T h e review, based upon
Investigations between A u g u st 1985 and
{J a n u a r y 1 9 8 6 , fo u n d th a t so m e F A A
'employees are being pressured b y the airline
{industry to spend less time m aking Inspec­
tions and m ore time certifying new airlines
and operating changes for existing carriers.
Indeed, the report disclosed that at five
district F A A offices in 1985, inspectors spent
80 percent of their tim e conducting certifica­
tion and other Jobs unrelated to safety
Inspections.
T h is brings us back to M cA rto r and the
;dauntlng task before him if he is confirm ed by
;the Senate. A t first blush, he appears highly
.capable. A n aviator w ho received the Silver
iStar and the Distinguished F ly in g Cross for
;his service In Vietnam , M cA rto r Is a senior
|vice president of Federal Express, the nation's
(largest air-freight com pany. He w ill need all of
1his adm inistrative skills to restore confidence
2In the safety and reliability of the nation's
com m ercial airline system.

BERRYS WORLD

* ~t'-'Tf v

*

W A S H IN G TO N WORLD

W h y W o u ld n 't P o litic s B e P a rtis a n ?
By S t e n Q t n t i l
W A S H IN G TO N (UPI) The raising and
spending of money purely for the purpose of
winning election being undeniably a political
endeavor, why is anyone surprised that reform
of campaign financing laws Is a partisan Issue?
"Whenever you consider the issue of money In
politics, the partisan Juices begin to flow."
Common Cause President Fred Wertheimer
points out. "There has never been a fight
Involving campaign finance reform that hasn't
had partisan overtones."
For three weeks, the Senate has been
paralyzed In a classic spilt down party lines
without even the hint of movement that would
Indicate a rendezvous on common ground.
In fact, the only point of agreement among
Democrats and Republicans Is that something Is
amiss and that It Is time for Congress to remodel
the law that was spawned by the excesses and
failures of a lawless system.
Past that Initial agreement, important In Itself.
Republicans and Democrats are on the road to
different destinations, their routes dictated by

the needs of and weaknesses In their own
parties.
Citing the Increase In the cost of a winning a
S:i:ste election from $600,000 in 1976 to $3
mlhi an last year and no end in sight, Democrats
offer a bill that would set spending limits
ranging from $950,000 In the smallest states to
$5.5 million In the largest.
By contrast. Sen. Alan Cranston and his
Republican opponent. Rep. Ed Szchau, R-Calif..
spent more than $20 million last year In the
California Senate race, and big state contests
threaten to go beyond that In the future.
A Supreme Court ruling, however, prohibits
Imposing campaign spending ceilings that put
Democrats In the position of providing can­
didates with some "carrot" to make voluntary
participation attractive. The answer: taxpayer
financing up to 40 percent of the limit.
Although the skyrocketing cost of winning a
Senate seat Is outlandish and does force
Incumbents to spend an Inordinate time hustl­
ing money, putting limits on spending would
profit Democrats. Th e reason Is simple: Re­

publicans raise more money and, therefore, can
spend more.
Republicans are not willing to cede this
money edge, which they see balancing heavier
Democratic registration In many states and
countering registration and get-out-the-vote
drives by such heavyweights as organized labor.
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole says
that limitations on spending would end any
GOP hopes of the long-awaited "breakthrough"
In the South and other parts of the country
where the Democrats are heavily entrenched.
His counterpart. Senate Democratic leader
Robert Byrd, insists that the legislation "Is not
Intended to destroy the Republican Party.
That's pap."
*
In one area, the role of political action
committees, both sides are willing to move. but.
again, in different directions. The Democrats
want to limit the amount a candidate can accept
from PACs; the Republican suggest cutting the
maximum a PAC can give to a candidate.

SCIENCE WORLD

ROBERT W A G M A N

P ro te in
Cancer
T r e a tm e n t

K r e m lin
S tr u g g le
Rages
W ASHINGTON (NEA) - A major
power struggle Is taking place
within the Soviet hierarchy over the
pace of M ik h a il G o rb a ch e v's
domestic reforms, according to U.S.
experts.
In his two years. Gorbachev has
moved to consolidate his power
both on the 11-member Politburo,
which runs the country on a
day-to-day basis, and the 307member Central Committee. His
aim has been to replace old-liners
who think his economic reforms too
radical with supporters committed
to his policies.
ROBERT WALTERS
Some believe one of the biggest
breaks for Gorbachev In recent
months happened when a young
West German flew his small plane
in to Red S q u a re . T h i s gave
Gorbachev and his supporters the
INDIANAPOLIS (NEA) - For the
excuse they needed to oust Sergei
first time since the Memorial Day
Sokolov as Defense Minister and as
uuto race was Inaugurated in 1911.
a voting member of the Politburo.
the grueling Indianapolis 500 will
Sokolov, a hard-liner originally
not be the major sporting event here
appointed to the Politburo by
this year.
Leonid Brezhnev, was a leader of
That development is noteworthy
the faction that believes Gorbachev
.because for decades Indianapolis
is moving loo fast!
iV
has had a well-deserved reputation
Some bel levc th e outcome of*the
as a Midwest backwater where
current debate will come down to a
nothing of note ever occurred
test between two. Kremlin leaders
except for the auto race. Even the
whose names arc generally un­
natives referred disparagingly to
known in the West.
their home town as "Indla-noYegor Llgachev Is the No. 2 man
place."
on the Politburo. Llgachev Is the
But the Pan American Games, to
party's chief ideologue: his Job Is to
be held here Aug. 7 to 23, not only
see that all party Ideas remain pure.
will overshadow the Memorial Day
This Is an extremely powerful role
500 but also will mark Indianapolis'
within the Soviet structure, and the
success In achieving the urban
holder of this position maintains an
renaissance that has eluded many
Independent power base second
other cities.
only to that of party secretary.
The largest sports event held
Western analysts are split over
anywhere In the world this year, the
whether Llgachev supports or op­
Pan American games will attract
poses Gorbachev's reforms. At
6,500 athletes, coaches and officials
times he seems to support them,
from 38 nations In the Western
but at other times he seems to be be
Hemisphere. Being designated as
saying Gorbachev Is moving too far.
host Is a coup for Indianapolis,
too fast.
which has repeatedly turned to
It Is said that Llgachev Is being
sports to define itself.
challenged by Alexander Yakovlev,
The Market Square Arena, u
a close Gorbachev ally, who holds
17.000-seat facility completed In
the key role of Central Committee
1974 at a cost of $16.4 million. Is
secretary and sits as a non-voting
the home of the Indiana Pacers of
member of the Politburo.
the National Basketball Association.
Yakovlev has apparently laun­
The Hoosler Dome, a 60,500-scat
ched a bid to take over the
covered stadium completed in 1984
Ideological position now occupied
at a cost of $77.5 million, is the
by Llgachev. In the last six weeks,
home of the Indianapolis Colts of
he has published several major
the National Football League.
articles and made key speeches
The metropolitan area's more
about Ideology.
'
than $136 million worth of worldWestern experts point to certain
class sports facilities also Includes a
recent developments as showing
natatorlum for swimming and a
how bitter this contest Is becoming.
velodrome for cycling. In addition,
But If the Politburo changes are
Indianapolis Is the headquarters of a
not made, the message will be
half-dozen amateur sports federa­
equally clear. The Central Commit­
tions. Including those governing
tee will have told Gorbachev he Is
gymnastics, diving and rowing.
moving too quickly.

C ity In T h e F a s t L a n e
Indianapolis' success in capturing
two professional sports franchises
when many other communities
would gladly settle for one masks
the fact that Indiana’s capital Is
hardly a "big city." Its population
barely exceeds 700,000. and its
nascent skyline poses no threat to
New York or Chicago. ‘ ’
For the past two decades, howev­
er. Indianapolis had made up In
spirit what It lacked In size. The
city's astounding growth began In
the mid-1960s under a Democratic
mayor, John Barton.
The commitment to aggressive
but Judicious development was
enhanced In the 1970s and 1980s
under two Republican mayors —
Richard Lugar. now a U.S. senator,
and William Hudnut. now serving
his third term.
Municipal officials estimate that
more than $2 billion has been
Invested since the early 1970s to
construct dozens of hotels, office
buildings and retail complexes —
but the city's revitalization extends
beyond sports facilities and com­
mercial buildings.
Union Station, a railroad depot
built In the late 1800s, has been
transformed Into a superb "festive
m a rk e tp la c e ," a Romanesque
showplacc of more than 100 shops
and restaurants. A hotel Incorpo­
rated Into the complex includes
suites fashioned from refurbished
Pullman cars.
Other old but sturdy downtown
office buildings have been carefully
restored. St. Elmo's Restaurant, for
example, still serves superb steaks
In the same building where It was
founded In 1902.
The resurgence here has pro­
duced a booming economy. Local
officials claim net gains of almost
6.100 businesses and 89.400 Jobs
during the past decade.

By Rob Btoln
UPI Science Writer
B O STO N (UPI) Genetically
engineered proteins based on a
toxin produced by the bacteria that
cause diphtheria may offer a new
approach for treating certain types’
of cancer, organ rejection and]
autoimmune diseases.
Because the proteins are tailored;
to kill specific cells, researchers sayj
they may offer an effective treat-,
ment without the adverse side
effects of chemotherapy.
"This is a whole new ball game,’"
said J o h n M u r p h y , chief of
blomolecutar medicine at the Uni-!
verslty Hospital In Boston, who:
developed the new approach. "It's:
exciting."
Because the new approach has;
shown promise In experiments with;
cells and mice. Murphy and his:
colleagues plan to ask the Food and!
Drug Administration for approval (o'
begin the first tests on humans this
fall.
Diphtheria is an Infection that
usually begins In the throat and Is
m ost c o m m o n in developing
countries. - The Infection W'cdused
by a bacterium that produces a
toxin that can kill cells throughout
the body.
For the new therapy, researchers:
take the gene from the bacterium
that produces the toxin and remove
the coding that allows It to bind to
all cells and replace It with coding
that allows It to be taken up by
specific cells.
In one case, the researchers used
the binding coding for lnterleukln-2.
which Is taken up by Immune
system cells known as T-celis.
T-cells become cancerous In adult
T-cell leukemia — a deadly and
curre ntly u n b e a ta b le form of
cancer.
The altered gene Is then placed
Into another type of bacteria, which
produce the hybrid proteins In large
amounts.
"We set out to design molecules
to learn something about basic
science as well as to develop
prototypes of a whole new class of
biologlcals that could be potentially
used for the treatment of specific
human disease for which at the
present time there are no effective
therapies," said Murphy. "Th at’s
exciting."
The same molecules may also be
effective for treating episodes of
organ rejection and automlmmune
diseases, both of which Involve
T-cells. Murphy said.
Seragen Inc., a biotechnology
company In Hopkinton, Mass., has
’’-ecn granted the right to develop
and market the technology.

JA C K ANDERSON

Carter Planned October '80 Surprise
By Jack Anderson
And Dale Van Atta

C iMfHNC* *w
“Why are the guys in the big leagues hitting
so many more home runs this year?"

W ASHINGTON - A missing key
has been found to a story that won't
go away — a story that we wrote
during the 1980 presidential cam­
paign but that then-Prcsident
Jim m y Carter swore never hap­
pened, a story nevertheless that
Won't give up the ghost. We re­
ported. and Carter angrily denied,
that he was planning a military
attack on Iran as an "October
surprise" on the eve of the election.
The missing evidence has been
uncovered by* the distinguished
Journalist John Barron, a former
intelligence officer specializing In
Soviet affairs, who Is now a senior
editor for Reader's Digest. He re­
vealed the evidence as part of his
Investigation of the John Walker
spy case After digging through
exhaustive files and Interviewing
Walker at length. Barron wrote a
book about the Walker espionage
Hug.
From Barron's book. "Breaking
the Ring," and other sources now

available, here are the bare bones of
the Carter caper:
The story began in April 1980.
with the bollixed attempt to rescue
Am erican hostages from Iran.
"Humiliated and seemingly impo­
tent. the Carter administration laid
plans to redeem Itself In the eyes of
the electorate by mounting a much
larger attack upon Iran." relates
Barron.
This has been confirmed by no
less than Carter's national security
udviser, Zbigniew Brzezinskl. The
day after the disaster In the desert,
Brzezinskl states. "I convened a
meeting in my office, on the In­
struction of the president, to plan
another rescue mission."
Brzezinskl argued not only for a
rescue raid but for a larger, punitive
military assault. "Th e actions that
made the most sense to m e." he
recalls, "involved seizing Kharg
Island. Iran’s muln oil-export facili­
ty. und imposing a naval blockade,
possibly combined with air strikes."
Barron reports that "preparations
proceeded In u n p re c e d e n te d

secrecy." Yet the Soviets were fully
aware of Carter's moves. Our Na­
tional Security Agency Intercepted
some secret Soviet Intelligence
cables: It was clear from these
Intercepted messages that the
Kremlin knew what was happening.
They even had knowledge of the
timing; some cables referred to the
impending U.S. action In Iran as an
"October coup."
How In the world did the Kremlin
know about Carter's super-secret
preparations? Barron has learned
the answer: he reports that the
Walker spy ring delivered the Pen­
tagon's secret codes to the Soviet
Union. So in 1980. the Soviets were
able to decipher the Pentagon's
most secret messages. This pro­
vided them, in advance, with the
details of Carter's October surprise.
The National Security Agency had
the ability. In turn, to Intercept
Soviet messages. With Its high­
speed computers. NSA could also
crack most of their codes. So we
reported on Sept. 22, 1980:
" H e a v ily coded cables from

Russia to its Warsaw Pact all
have warned them to be prepar
for a military confrontation In Ir
In October. T h e K G B 's 'be
estimate.' according to the cabl
was that the United States w
getting ready for military actit
and the Soviets would have to m«
force with force."
Barron reports that the Sov
Union rushed 22 full divisions to t
Iranian border. He conclud
tersely: "American reconnalssar
delected the poised Soviet font
tlons. With their discovery, a h
rendous specter Im m ediate
became apparent:
"The moment the U.S. raid*
land ... Soviet airborne troc
quickly surround the America
while Soviet armored divisions h
tie across the border. Presld&lt;
Carter now must choose. He can
the vastly outnumbered Amerk
mrce surrender or be annihilate
Or he can resort to nuclear weapt
an.^Lr,3k P alpitating World War 1
Prudently. Carter canceled I
raid.

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.zs^shuw.kt .'

Msm

2 T a x R ulings C o u ld
C o s t States B illions

NATION
IN BRIEF
Children's AIDS Contact Prompts
N o w Blood Disposal Rules
INDIANAPOLIS (UP 1) — County health officials say they
w ill consider new rules for the disposal of AID Scontaminated blood after several children came In contact
with tainted vials while rummaging through a dumpster.
Dr. Frank Johnson, director of the the Marion County
Health Department, said Tuesday new rules are being
proposed to prevent contact with contaminatedblood.
About a dozen children were exposed to vials of blood
contaminated with AIDS and hepatitis viruses when they
went foraging through a dumpster outside an Indianapolis
health clinic last weekend, officials said.
Th e children were looking through the trash for a box to
house a baby bird, said Martha Bennington, coordinator for
communicable disease control for the county Health
Department.

Senate Set To Debate Budget
W ASHIN GTO N (DPI) — The Democratlc-led Congress,
awaiting the final Senate vote on a 91 trillion budget
compromise. Is ready to confront President Reagan over
provisions he says overburden taxpayers and shortchange
the Pentagon.
"Th e confrontation is going to take place," Rep. William
Gray. D-Pa., chairman of the House Budget Committee,
said Tuesday, minutes after the House voted 215-201 in
favor of the fiscal 1988 spending plan. "Th e bottom line is
that If we're going to have a solution, he (Reagan) has got
to participate."
Debate was scheduled for today in the Senate. Where
final approval is likely.
Reagan has no authority to sign or veto the budget
resolution, which will serve as a blueprint for government
spending for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. But he does
have veto rights on subsequent legislation that will be
needed to write many budget provisions into law.

A M A Warns On Health Care
CH ICAG O (UPI) — The American Medical Association's
new president is warning that If the public falls to Join his
group's fight for substantial changes in Medicare and
Medicaid the programs "may not be there" when they are
needed.
"Sooner or later, the public Is going to be deprived of
services, and maybe then they will see something needs to
be done,” said Dr. William Hotchkiss, a thoracic surgeon
from Chesapeake, Va., who was to be installed today as the
AMA's president.
Hotchkiss said he favors reforms proposed in Report MM.
a restructuring of health financing proposed by the AM A
last year. The AMA then warned that If Medicare was not
replaced, It would be $1 trillion in debt by the year 2010.
Report MM recommends raising the Medicare eligibility
age to 67 from 65, increasing the federal social security tax
and converting Medicare to a private Insurance system In
which patients would receive vouchers to purchase health
coverage.

Panel Probes N ew M oney Trail
W A SH IN G TO N (UPI) — Congressional investigators arc
studying a new money trail to learn how a mysterious
$500,000 from the Swiss bank that held deposits In the
Iran-Contra operations wound up in the legal defense fund
for Richard Secord. one of the scandal's major figures.
The money, transferred by a Swiss investment company
from the Credit Suisse bank, came into Sccord's legal
defense fund in three deposits In the last six weeks. Noel
Koch, a former Pentagon official, testified Tuesday.
Koch said the deposits led him to resign as a trustee for
the fund.
He appeared before the House and Senate committees
probing the affair as they resumed their public hearings for
a seventh week following a brief recess this month. Today
the committees called forth Stanley Sporkin. a federal
court Judge and former general counsel for the CIA.

Murderer Executed In Texas
H U N TS V ILLE. Texas (UPI) - Elliot Rod Johnson was
executed by injection early Wednesday for the murder of a
Jeweler during a 1982 holdup, a shooting he contended was
carried out by an accomplice.
Johnson. 28. who won stays of three previous execution
dates, was pronounced dead at 12:55 a.m. C D T. He had
been sentenced to death for the killing of Jeweler Joe Angel
Granado. 67. during an April 1982 robbery.
The Supreme Court denied Johnson's handwritten
appeal at 8:30 p.m. E D T Tuesday. The 5th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals. U.S. District Judge Howell Cobb and the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals refused earlier Tuesday to
stay the execution.
The execution was the fourth this year in Texas, which
leads the nation in executions. It was the 80th in the nation
and the 24th in Texas since the Supreme Court reinstated
capital punishment In 1976.

W A SH IN G TO N (UPI) - Legal
experts say two Supreme Court
rulings striking down state tax
laws favoring in-state companies
wilt limit legislatures' ability to
tax ' Interstate businesses and
may cost states billions of dollars
In refunds.
In one decision Tuesday, the
c o u r t I n v a l i d a t e d 6 -2 a
Washington state manufactur­
ing tax assessed only on pro­
ducts made in Washington for
sale to out-of-state purchasers.
The court was more closely
divided In the other case, ruling
5-4 that two Pennsylvania truck
taxes, which bring the state $68
million a year, put a heavier
burden on out-of-state trucks
and are unconstitutional.
T h e r.u lin g s c o u ld cost
Washington state up to , $800
m i l l i o n in r e f u n d s a n d
Pennsylvania $500 million in
refunds.
The Pennsylvania ruling could
also affect Arkansas. Maryland,
Indiana. Kentucky. Vermont and
New Jersey, which have similar
laws.
University of Virginia law
professor. Paul Stephan, said the
decisions together may lead to
major changes in the way states
tax interstate businesses.
"Were I a state legislator and I
wanted to know what kind of
taxes I could levy on businesses.
I would be comfortable with an
Income tax and I would be
comfortable with a sales tax."
Stephan said.
He said any other type of
m anufacturing tax. to meet
constitutional muster, probably
would have to be levied against
both out-of-state and in-state
companies, and most states arc
unwilling to subject their own
businesses to multiple taxation.
Writing for the majority In the
Washington case. Justice John
Paul Stevens said by exempting
in-state businesses from certain
taxes, legislatures thwart the
Constitution's promise of free
trade between the states.
An e xem p tio n "d o e s not
merely erase a tax Incentive to
engage In Interstate commerce;
it affirmatively places interstate
commerce at a disadvantage."

Stevens said.
Dissenting In the Washington
case. Justice Antonin Scalla said
the court's decision "drastically
limits the states' discretion to
structure thetr tax systems, has
no basis In the Constitution and
is not required by our past
decisions."
Chief Justice William Rehnqulst joined Scalla In dissent,
and Justice Lewis Powell did not
take part in the case.
Stevens also wrote the opinion
striking down the Pennsylvania
truck tax scheme, which he said
"has a forbidden impact on
Interstate commerce because it
exerts an Inexorable hydraulic
pressure on Interstate busi­
nesses to ply their trade within
the state that enacted the
measure rather than ‘among
several states.'"
The case Involved an annual
$25-per-truck Identification fee.
In effect from 1980 to 1983. and
a $36 axle tax in effect today,
which brings the state about $68
million a year. Both In-state and
out-of-state trucks are subject to
the axle fee, but In-state trucks
get a reduction In their registra­
tion fee to offset the tax.
Dissenting in the Pennsylvania,
case were Rehnqulst. Scalla and
Justices Sandra Day O'Connor
and Lewis Powell.

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P an d a Cub
Doing W ell
ffG* ’

W A S H IN G T O N (U P I) Excited National Zoo officials
said today there were indications
Ling-Ling, the giant panda that
gave birth to a 4-ounce cub,
actually gave birth to twins.
“ There Is some evidence (of a
twin),” zoo spokesman Robert
Hoagc said. “ I can’t say anymore
than that. Twinning in panda
births happens over 50 percent
of the time."
Hoagc said "more information
of Interest" would be released at
u news conference today.
"When you've got a big 245pound panda you can't always
sec cverylhlng that's going on."
said an excited but tight-lipped
Margie Gibson, another zoo
spokeswoman, who stopped
short of saying Ling-Ling was
the mother of twins.
"W e’re observing her under
less than Ideal conditions." she
said. "W e don't have a real clear
view. We're seeing her on closed
circuit T V ."
Ling-Ling and Hsing-Hslng's
first cub was born Tuesday at
3:33 a.m. and has lived longer
than any other panda born in
the United States, said zoo
spokesman Mike Morgan.

“ F e e l G o o d A g a in ”
L A K E M ARY BLVD.

Governor Denies Money Link

CH IR O P R ACTIC

AU STIN . Texas (UPI) — Gov. Bill Clements, the target of
an attorney general's investigation and possible im­
peachment proceedings, denies he covered up his
Involvement in Illicit payments toSMU football players.
Attorney General Jim Mattox announced Tuesday he
would investigate whether Clements or other former
Southern Methodist University officials used school money
to conceal the pay-for-play scheme that destroyed the
school's football program.
The attorney general said his office will look at possible
violations of a state law covering misapplication of
fiduciary property or property of financial institutions.
Mattox said his office will also look Into the more than
$863,000 SMU is continuing to pay former Athletic
Director Bob Hitch. Coach Bobby Collins and Assistant
Athletic Director Henry Lee Parker..

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Wednesday, Juno 34, IW7

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Renegade Sheikh Gives Up
Palace Coup Against Brother
SH ARJAH. United Arab Emirates iUPI) — Renegade
Sheikh Abdel-Aziz, bowing to demands from the ruling
Supreme Council of the United Arab Emirates, agreed to
ive up a weeklong coup against his brother. Sheikh Sultan
In Mohammed a! Qasslml.
An accord reached Tuesday in a meeting at the A1 Ain
oasis 60 miles south of Sharjah, a tiny emirate in the
southern Persian Gulf, ended the worst crisis In the history
of the U A E. a federation formed by seven former
sheikhdoms after they gafned Independence from Britain
In 1971.
"Th e Supreme Council (of the United Arab Emirates)
today witnessed the full and complete brotherly, warm
reconciliation of the two." the official Emirates News
Agency reported In a brief dispatch.

E

Jews Plan Waldheim Protest
ROME (UPI) — Jewish activists converged on Rome,
vowing to stage demonstrations In St. Peter's Square to
protest a two-day state visit by Austrian President Kurt
Waldheim, accused by Jewish groups of complicity In Nazi
atrocities.
Waldheim was to arrive in Rome late today for the
two-day visit to the Vatican, which Includes an audience
with Pope John Paul II. The trip marks the former United
Nations secretary-generals first state visit since he was
elected president of Austria on June 8 . 1986.
The Vatican Tuesday confirmed Waldheim will have an
audience with John Paul in the Vatican at. 11 a.m.
Thursday and will be welcomed with the full honors of a
visiting head of state.

Germany To Try TWA Hijacker
BONN, West Germany (UPI) — West German security
sources said today the government decided to try
Mohammed All Hamadel on air piracy and murder charges
for the 1985 Middle East hijacking of a T W A Jetliner and
the murder of an American passenger.
As expected, the Cabinet of Chancellor Helmut Kohl
denied a U.S. request that the Lebanese hijacking suspect
be sent to the United States for trial on the charges, the
sources said.
A government source said the cabinet decided In a
meeting today that Hamadel would be tried by a West
German court on charges of air piracy and murder, as well
as a charge of Illegal possession of explosives. Hamadel was
arrested on the explosives charge In Frankfurt last
January.
West German security sources said the government
decided against extradition because of fears two West
German businessmen held hostage in Lebanon would be
killed in retaliation.

Shultz, Shevardnadze To M eet
GENEVA (UPI) — Secretary of State George Shultz and
Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze will meet
nett montltUiv&gt; bid to clear the way for signing of an
ln%rme(l)atVnuidcar missile.treaty by the end of the year.
Presidential arms control adviser Edward Rowny said
Tuesday that Shultz and Shevardnadze will try to remove
obstacle^ to an intermediate arms treaty during a m id-July
meeting In Washington. The meeting, he said, will largely
determine whether an agreement can be completed by late
fall.
Both the United States and the Soviet Union have
expressed hopes that President Reagan and Soviet leader
-Mikhail Gorbachev can sign a treaty at a new summit
before year’s end.
A Soviet government spokesman said Wednesday a
meeting between Shevardnadze and Shultz would be
"most welcomed," but he denied a specific date had been
set.

Kidnappers Free 2; G lass Fate U nknow n
■ ■
B EIR U T. Lebanon (UPI) - The
son of L e b a n o n 's defense
minister was freed unharmed
today after a week of captivity,
but the fan of kidnapped U.S.'
journalist Chnrles Glass re­
mained unknow n. Lebanese

police sources said.
All Osselran. 40. was released
with Suleiman Suleiman. 26. the
bodyguard who was driving
Clast, and Osselran when the
thne were abducted last Wed­
nesday at the entrance to the

C o n s t it u t io n a l D e b a t e
R e o p e n s In K o r e a
SEOUL. South Korea (UPI) President Chun Doo Hwan held
a historic meeting today with
opposition leader Kim Youngsam and agreed to reopen debate
Immediately on constitutional
reform in a bid to end two weeks
of anil-government protests.
The three-hour session at the
Blue House, the presidential
office and residence, was the
first between the president and
the leader of the nation's biggest
opposition party since Chun
came to power seven years ago.
"Th e president told Mr. Kim
that it is desirable that debate on
consltutlona! change Is immedi­
ately resumed and constitutional
amendment based on consensus
Is achieved through the National
A s s e m b ly ," a pre sid e n tia l
spokesman said.
Previous debate to determine a
new system of selecting Korea's
chief executive was cut off un­
ilaterally by Chun on April 13
after almost a year of fruitless
squabbling.
Kim told reporters: "President
Chun promised to immcdlalcly
rcopen constitutional debate.
There was no clear-cut agree­
ment on o th e r dem ands 1
raised."
"I told the president what the
true reality of the nation is."
Kim said. "Now everything Is up
to him ."
Kim. head of the Reunification
Democratic Party, said that. In
addition to resumption of con­
stitutional debate. h£ demanded
direct presidential elections, a
national referendum to let the
vo te rs p ick a g o ve rn m e n t
system, and the release of some
3,000 students arrested in the
past two weeks.
Kim said he further asked that
house arrest imposed on leading
dissident Kim Dae Jun g be lifted
and that some 500 political
convicts be fully pardoned and
their civic rights be reinstated.
He said Chun gave no clear
answer to the demand about
Kim Dae Jung's house arrest,
"but I came to have a feeling
that it will be removed sometime
today."
Kim said Chun told him he
would instruct the Cabinet to
study the request for the release
of arrested protesters.
Asked if he thought the
agreement formed the basis for a
plan to settle the current crisis.
Kim said. "Now everything de­
pends on the president's deter­
mination."
Th e opposition leader told
reporters Chun agreed to meet
with him again if necessary. He

said Chun also suggested that he
hold detailed discussions with
Roh Tae-woo. chairman and
presidential nominee of the rul­
ing Dempcratlc Justice Party.
Kim said.* however, that he told
Chun he did not think such a
meeting would be useful.
The Chun-Klm meeting was
the first in a scries of meetings
Chun planned with a wide range
of leaders in search of a com­
prehensive plan to settle the
current political turmoil.
Chun met the heads of two
splinter opposition groups today
after his meeting with Kim.
The meetings came during a
visit by the Reagan administra
tlon's top Aslan troubleshooter.
Gaston Slgur. who was sent to
Seoul to assess the political
situation and to urge the Chun
government to exercise restraint
in dealing with two weeks of
anti-government protests.
Slgur was scheduled to meet
Chun. Kim Young-sam and Kim
Dae Jung.
Political sources said Chun, a
former four-star general backed
by military allies In key govern­
ment positions, appears to have
heeded the moderate wing of his
ruling Democratic Justice Party
to seek a negotiated end to
violent anti-government pro
tests.
But diplom ats and o th e r
seasoned observers said hard­
liners calling for military re­
pression of the protests could
still win out If a compromise is
not reached soon.
Tens of thousands of students
demonstrated across the country
Tuesday to demand revision of
ihe IMHO martial law constitu­
tion and direct presidential elec­
tions.
In Seoul, where persistent
rloling and ubiquitous clouds of
tear gas have repeatedly para­
lyzed the city's center, de­
monstrations Tuesday were
g e n e ra lly pe ace ful. A b o u t
2 0 ,0 0 0 people a s s e m b le d
without major Incident at Yonsei
University, a hotbed of violent
protest.
The broad-based National Co­
alition for a Democratic Con­
stitution scheduled a "march for
peace" In Seoul and other cities.
A similar rally June 10 began
two weeks of the worst political
violence seen In South Korea
since Chun took power In 1980.
The protests were sparked by
the nomination of Roh — a
fo rm e r g e n e ra l and clo se
associate of Chun — as the
Democratic Justice Party presi­
dential candidate.

southern suburbs of Beirut.
News of the release of the two
men came less than a da&gt;’
Syrian military *ollrc” . “ l r “
Tuesday sundown deadline
the release ot Glass. Osst’ir.
and Suleiman.
The police sources said Ossclran and Suleiman arrived at
the Beirut home of Lebanese
Defense Minister Abel Osselran
in the same while Volvo in
which they were kidnapped by
unidentified gunnun a week
before.
The younger Osselran refused
to talk to reporters early today
and immediately headed for his
father's summer home In the
southern port city ofSIdon.
IRNA. the official Iranian news
agency, reported the release of
Osselran and Suleiman In a
dispatch from Beirut, saying,
"Informed sources told IRNA
that ... the American reporter is
still kept by the kidnappers."
Though no group has claimed
reponslbllity for the kidnapping.
Syrian sources have blamed It
on Hezbollah, a pro-Iranian
group in Lebanon. Hezbollah has
denied the accusations.
Meanwhile, security sources
said, troops from Syria s elite
forces arrived in the eastern
Bekaa valley, where Hezbollah
has its main bases, to boost the
Syrian military presence there.
Witnesses said the Syrians,
who have deployed 7.000 troops
In Lebanon since February In an
effort to end m ilitia rule,
tightened their searches of cars
e n te r in g and le a v in g the
southern suburbs, where it Is
believed Glass was being held by
Hezbollah, or Party of God.

"So far there hasn't been any
direct negotiations between the
Syrians and the kidnappers. The
negotiations are taking p)ace'
with the side close to ihc
kidnappers," he said.
The Lebanese defense minister
had said he received promises
from senior Iranian diplomats
and Sheikh Mohammed Hussein
Fadlallah. Ihe spiritual guide for
Hezbollah, that they would try to
speed the release of the hostagcs.
Earlier Tuesd ay, a senior
Syrian military source warned,
" T h e kidnappers have until
sundown to release their hostag­
es: otherwise we will change our
methods."
Before the deadline expired,
the source said, "W c hope not to
reach a dead end because then
we w ill be forced to take
whatever measures other than
peaceful negotiations to secure
the release of the three cap­
tives."
Glass, a former ABC corre­
spondent and longtime friend of
the Osselran family, was the first
Westerner abducted in Beirut
since the Syrians took control of
Its security Feb. 22. He Is one of
nine Americans, and 24 foreign­
ers overall, who are missing and
b e lie ve d h e ld hostage in
Lebanon.
*

c LIQUOR 6

DAY
SALE

T H E R E ’S O N E N E A R Y O U ! H A P P Y H O U R 4 - 6
E

P R IC E S G O O D J U N E 24 - 30

J A B SCOTCH

BACARDI RUM

1.75 LTR.

Silver or Amber

20.99

8.29

SALE

SALE

POPOV VODKA
1.75 LTR.

9.99

Liter

SALE

S E A G R A M 'S V . 0 .

F I E I S C H M A N N 'S

B L A C K A W H IT !

C A N A D IA N

G IN

SC O TCH

1 7 .9 9

1.75 LTR.

-4 .0 0

MFG. RBT.

1.75
LTR.

11.49

AFTER
REBATE

7 .9 9

750Ml

-5 .0 0

MFG BBT.

SALE

AFTER
REBATE

S M IR N O F F
CLUB

EARLY TIMES

V O D K A 80°

1 1 .4 9

LTR.

1 2 .9 9

1.75 LTR.

7 .9 9

LTR.

-1 .5 0

MFG. RBT.

-2 .0 0

MFG. RBT..

-1 .5 0

MFG. RBT.

T99

AFTER
R EBATE

AFTER
REBATE

AFTER
REBATE

639

W IN E
Riuntte

All Types

5.89

1.5 LTR.

Andre Champagne 4
750 ML

7A

A m iZ

”

Grolsch

3.99

0/12 oz. botls.

Old Style

10$ •
24 12 oz. cans

6.99

Suitcase

RiuniteSpumante* AA Florida wl----- A
w in. cooler

750 ML

-

Inglenook

NOTICE OF CHANGE OF LAND USE

O e 7 7

3.59

t.SLTR.

VODKA

The City ol Longwood Land Planning agency will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, July 8,1987, at 7:00 P.M.. or as soon thereafter
as possible In the Longwood City Commission Chambers, 175 W. Warren Avenue, Longwood, Florida, to consider a requested
amendment to the City of Longwood Comprehensive Plan and Official Land Use Map. The purpose ol this Hearing is to provide
recommendations to the Longwood City Commission regarding the requested amendment and proposed land use designation
within certain portions of the map printed in this advertisement. All interested persons may appear and be heard with respect
to the requested amendment and land use change.
For additional Information, contact the City of Longwood Planning Department, Longwood City Hall, 175 W. Warren Avenue.
Longwood, FL 32750. 260-3440, Ext. 462.

6.29

“

Absolut 80°
750 ML

Wolfsdimidt
1.75 Ltr.

ia

Z .4 i

- 3.99

4-12oz. bolls
All Flavors

10.49

Seagram's Oln

5.99

750 ML

Calvert cm

11.99

1.75 LTR.

Beefeater Gin

10.99
11.69
Don Q Rum
5.99
12.99
RBT.
Uter

Schenley
Liter

“

KEY

t.75 LTR.
S2.Q0MF0

SCOTCH

LDR - LO W D E N S ITY R E S ID E N TIA L
M OR - M ED IUM D E N S ITY R E S ID E N T IA L
0 -C - O F F IC E C O M M E R C IA L
G C - G E N E R A L C O M M E R C IA L
LI - L IG H T IN D U S TR IA L
HI - H E A V Y IN D U S TR IA L
H - H IS TO R IC A L
P SP - P U B LIC -S EM I P U B LIC
PAR - P AR K S A N O R E C R E A TIO N
SC-P - S EM IN O LE C O U N TY -P R E S E R V A TIO
S C -C O M M - S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y C O M M E R C IA L
S C -LD R - S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y LO W
D E N S ITY R E S ID E N TIA L

—

GIN • RUM

Relsko
Liter

4/12oz. bolts.

Seagram's “ ” 2“, .

Blush,

Burgundy. Chabli*. Rhlnt

P U B L IC H E A R IN G TO B E H E L D J U L Y 8 , 1 9 8 7

LONGWOOD , FLO R ID A

Kl*i*
thuthe
Qvrlan
mlrlti
But
Syrian
soldiers so far
have stayed out of the southern
suburbs, a hotbed for pro.
Iranian Moslem fundamentalists
Col. All Hammoud. head of the
Syrian observers In Lebanon,
said contacts on a governmental
level were taking place between
Syria and Iran, which has influcure over Hezbollah.

la llo n tin e

CANADIAN

7.79

750 ML

Chivas Regal

13.99

750 ML

(IanM acGregor , ,
I751TR

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- 1 1 .4 9

Johnnie W a lk e r

_

750 ML. RED

9*99

BOURBOHS

,

BLENDS

ReM l

Canadian LTD.

11.49

1.75 LTR.

W alker's
Uter

“

6.99

”

8.29

Canadian M ist
Uter

Canadian Premium
750 ML
C O R D IA L S

.

6.49

L IQ U E U R S

8.99 - iBrandy
8.39
Seagram's 7
Leroux Schnapps
6.39 750MLALLTYPES — 5.49
Old Thompson
Bailey's Irish (ream
10.99
11.49
F le isd im a n n 's
Southern Com fort
1039
^ 8,99
Items boiow are limit 2 per cult

R E Q U E S TE D S ITE

Uter

Uter

750 ML

1.75 LTR.

750 ML

1.75 LTR.

Uter

with coupon on dates
&gt;8 Indicated.
| G 0 ° D WED., JUNE 24 j u u u o THURS., JUNE 25 I GOOD FRI., JUNE 26

W SR 434

E -SR 434

6 79
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A L L P E R S O N S A RE ADVISED THAT IF T H EY D EC ID E TO
A P P E A L ANY DECISION MADE AT TH IS H EARIN G T H EY
W ILL N EED A R EC O R D O F TH E P R O C E ED IN G S AND FO R
SU C H P U R P O S ES TH EY MAY N EED TO E N S U R E THAT A
VERBATIM R EC O R D O F TH E P R O C E ED IN G S IS MADE,
W H ICH R EC O R D IN C LU D ES T H E TESTIM O N Y AND
E V ID E N C E UPON WHICH TH E A P P EA L IS TO B E BASED .
S E C 286.0105 F.S.

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G O O D W ED., JU N E

ABC

24

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♦-------------—------------ —

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LITER

�'On A Day To Day Basis...Nobody's In Charge '

Santori HeraM, Santonl, FI.

L a k e M a ry M a n a g e r S a y s C ity 's Form O f G o v e rn m e n t M ust C h a n g e
By Ocala Ltadbcrf
Herald Staff Writer
Lake Mary C ily Manager Bob
Norris told residents Monday
night that the city's "hybrid"
form of government, with some
departments answering to the
mayor and some answering to
the city manager, (s not working
and must be changed.
Norris spoke to about 15
citizens at the Community Im ­
provement Association's regular
meeting. His talk was part of
scheduled visits to community
organizations to educate them
about proposed charter revisions
due to come up for a vote at the
city’s next election. The pro­
posed revisions are to give voters
the opportunity to change the
city’s election date to coincide

with the state election date, to
change to a true city manager
form of government with ail
departments under the umbrella
of the city manager or to reduce
the number of commissioners lo
four from five with the mayor
voting other than when there Is
a tic.

Norris said the city manager
form of government has become
very popular throughout Florida
a n d has been p o p u la r tn
California for many years. It is
typically popular In the more
progressive states, he said.
Governments invariably have
to change to suit varying condi­
tions and that change needs to
occur in Lake Mary. Norris said.
Building permits In the city have
doubled since September from
50 a day to 100 a day und single
family lots are available every­
where In the city with 1.100 at
the Tlmacuan subdivision alone,
he said.
"W e. have no Idea what the
population is in the city," he
said. "Between 4.000 and 5.000.
but we have no Idea."

Norris said he has never seen
the type of "hybrid form of
government" that exists in Lake
Mary with some employees an­
swering to the mayor and some
answering to the city manager.
"On a day to day basis In this
city, nobody's In charge." Norrts
said. "Ladles and gentlemen,
you've got to change this form of
government" to a true city
munager form of government.

preparing the city's budget. The
city manager then presents It to
the commission and the mayor
and commissioners go through It
"line Item by line Item” making
any changes they see fit. Once
that budget Is approved. Norris
said. It Is up to the city manager
to keep It In line. He said the city
manager's prim ary function
concerning preparation or the
budget is to present “a picture"
for them to work within and
then to "insure" ihal the budget
stays In line.
Th e C IA President. Police
Chief Charles Lauderdale, said
he agrees with Norris. A city like
Lake Mary, opening Its door to
future development and growth,
has to have a professional with
authority working on a day-to-

He predicts, once the Seminole
County Expressway Authority
selects a beltway route, which he
thinks will miss a lot of the
subdivision areas in Lake Mary
that have been waiting to see
where the beltway would run.
the city Is going to have a
tremendous amount of permit
activity.
"We are going to be Impacted
like never before." he said.
With a true city manager form
of government. Norris said, the
powers and duties of the city
manager will not change except
that all departments In the city
wllPanswer to the city manager
and the city manager will an­
swer to the city commission.
Norris said, in his opinion, a
city manager makes his living

day basis In the city, Lauderdale
said. That person should be able
to present lawmakers with pre­
pared. well researched recent*
mendatlons: otherwise, the city
is going to be sorry, he said.
C o m m is s io n e r C h a r lie
Webster said he agrees the city
should not function with a
"hybrid" form of government.
Previously he said he wanted
take Mary's city government to
stay the same.

Resident Margaret Wesley said
she has been In and out of city
halt for business purposes for
many years.
"There are a lot of fine people
there and I like them.” she said.
"But city hall (s like a ship
without a captain — we need a
captain for the ship.”

R E A L TY TRAN SFERS
Garard J. Sfumm &amp; WF Larraina to
Mlchaal E. Shack &amp; WF Abba J „ Lt 4 Blk C
Swe* (water Oaki, 1183,000
Heathrow to Gerald E. Ray l WF Helen. Lt
39 Regency Green, 143.000
Norma J . Erny &amp; Florence H. Harris* to
William S. Kennedy l WF Melody. L U 71-75
Town Of Sylvan Lake. 134,too
Candace C. Hickman to Jon J. Lehew. LI If
Lake Markham Estates, 1111,000
Greater Conilr. Corp. to Walter R. Paul &amp;
WF Brenda W„ Lt 217 Mandarin Sec 7,

11M.000

Kensington Park Lid to Earnestlne W.
Terboeg. Un 40? Kentlnglon Park Ph III,
174.000
Del Taco Corp to Creative Food ’N Fun Co.,,
L it M0 11 Altamonte Land Hotel A Nav C o A
1121.300
Calfon Homes to Robert W. Sanford Jr., Lt
10 The Trails At Country Creek. Ml,too
Eaitmont Corp to Rote Marie Harl, Lt 17 J
L H llll Little Bear Lake. 1I0M00
CBS Partnership to CNL Income Fund II
Lid, portion of Blk C Weather Held, 1424.400
Thom at E. Hlnet III &amp; WF Bonnie to
Burma J . Knowles. Lt 16 Blk 27 Suburban
Homes. 173,700
Unde Roth Snow to Raymond D. Mlttan
Jr.. Lt 113 River Run Sec 4.174.300
Repr. Estate Olive Rltkalla lo Jerry E.
Hagood &amp; WF Peggy, part ot L it 13-14 Lake
Emma Cove, 171,000
Woodstream Acquisitions Inc to Baqer
Ahmed Bukhamseen, from NE cor Winter
Springs Un 3.11.030.000
Centex Homes to Larry M. Leeper &amp; WF
Theresa G ., Lt 104 Alalaya Woods Ph III,
!73,600
Owlght R. Dooley &amp; Linda to John A.
Sunner &amp; WF Lana N., Lt 1 Blk C Sweetwater
Club Un 1,1340.000
John A. Sunner A WF Lana to Barnett Bk,
Lt 18 Blk C Sweetwater Oaks Sec 2.1138.000
Barnett Bank lo David J . Schmlt A WF
Rena. Lt 18 Blk C Sweetwater Oaks Sec 2.
1130.000
Pioneer Savings Bank to Gary G. Headley
A W F Corliss E.. U 3 Howell Harbor Estates,
1128.000
American Financial Savings Inc lo Paul L.
N uno A WF Anita G „ Un 104 Lakevlew
Gardens At Wek Iva Cove. 14?.300
Clinton Kirkland A Lavert H. to RSC Corp,
LI 1A E tf'ot 3 Blk B. Keeial. 1120,000
Richmond American Homes lo Daniel M.
Seraflne A WF Donna, Lt 37 Blk I -The
Reserve At The Crossings. Ph II, 191.000

“ F R E E

E.R.M. Entr. Inc. to George V. Muglla A
WF Eva. Lt 11 Whispering Winds, 140,000
John H. Sims A WF Jesslne to John C.
Cetlller A WF Donne M „ Lt* 1* A 17 Blk 4
Wynnewood. 154.000
William j . Williams A WF Shell to Glen E.
Winter A WF Margaret T „ Lt 4 Sabal Ridge
At Sabal Point, 1223.000
Donald E. Sledd A WF Teresa to Uriel
Warlock A WF Lynneth, Lt 43 Spring Oaks,
183.000
Centex Homes to Leuri J. Dude. LI *3
Alafeya Woods Ph 111. *83.300
John C. Ridgeway A WF Merlem to Robert
T. Hoover A WF Barbara F „ Lt I Ibis Woods.

•n o Se r v ic e c h a r g e
• NO PER CH ECK CHARGE
• NO MINIMUM BALANCE

OUR

pay t o th e

100

C H E C K I N G ”

•81787

T o d a y ia 87

c u s t o m e r

$ FR H

ORDER O F _________________________________________________

110.000

BR IN G TH IS A D IN A N D R E C E IV E Y O U R FIRST O R D E R O F C H E C K S F R E E DOLLARS

Calton Home* to Sybil G. Norman, Lt 3?
Southrldge At Country Creek, IM.000
Monroe Venture II Inc etc. to John R. Alt
Jr., Lt f Greenbrier Ph l,!?2.500
Kaiuyo T . Plsantl to Clinton C. Kirkland A
WF Lavert G., LI 13 Blk C Oakland Shores,
*77,300
Donald L. Balt* A WF Carol to Syed H.
Hussain A WF Shamlm B., Lt 33 Tibcron
Cove, 180.000

&amp;
PHONE:

FOR

Contractors Supply Orl. to Harvey Kobrin,
land In Sec 2* 30 30.8130.000
Emenual Schattan el al. to Mitchell
Shapiro. E 83' ol Lt 423 Altamonte Land Hotel
A Nev Co, 1123,000

Uom3 m tdif Sta^

3 2 2 -1 2 4 2

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SWIVEL ROCKER
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TABLE &amp;
4 CHAIRS

II You Don't Need 2 O t These
Comfortable Recliners...Bilpn
A Ftiend And Share T h »
Savina*'
NOW ONLY
2 FOR

$189
Buy Thu Style And
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Reclmar FREE)

TM ONLY'

U P TOOAVJ

Choice Of Color
Rich Velvet Fabric
Reversible Seat
Reg. *249

I
M ON. - WED. - FRI.

BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

Reg. '199

36"x60" rectangular with
insert glass. Brass base
on labia and 6 Chairs

SELECT QUEEN ANNE cockl.il lable.

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As Low As $8.34
Per Day

ft — -.*■ .—A

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Around

I IN S IS T O N
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Choice Of
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Compare At *399

NOW

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*159

T A B L E &amp; 4 C H A IR S

DOOR BU STER

BOB DAEHN

4 DRAWER

CHEST

I
WE PAY CASH FOR
Glass
Newspaper
Copper
Aluminum
Brass
Laad
Gold
Silver

Maple

5 Pc. Colonial Style
Duble Dresser,

Or

Mirror, Chest

Dark Pine

Full/Queen Headboard

Finish

5 PIECE BEDROOM
Re|. $699 All S Pcs.
Early American Colonial
Style. Include* triple
dtnut, hutrh minor, lull
queen headboard, 5 dnwtr
chest, night stand.

$

399

And 1 Night Stand

*279

Iwowt;

^ wowSr
/ V '/ t -f -

I
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

TROPIC’S
TAXI
24 H R . S E R V IC E
A IR P O R T S E R V IC E
R E A S O N A B L E R A TES
CALL

I

QUEEN SLEEPER

*599

BEDD IN G S P E C IA L S

PH. 323-1100
918 W. 1st St. Sanford

or

With Purchase of Matching
Traditional styling with • natural Olefin
striped fabric Designed lor eomlort. styling
and ulue Features liar* Arm. Iinad skirt and
boislar.

K O KO M O
T O O L CO.

3 2 1 -1 1 5 0

L0VESEAT

ueu

TRESTLE TABLE

10 P C . PIT G R O U P

4 MATCHING CHAIRS

Reg. S1479_____________

n \ m

HEAVY DUTY

*99 * *149

CHAIRS

r , I

CAPTAIN'S QUARTERS
Complete W/Beds • Chest

- 6-PIECE PINE GROUP
Includ** Sola Chair. Rocker. 2 Solid
End Tablet 1 Cocktail Table

3 2 1 -T A X I
D E S K ...* 1 0 9

15 Yr.
Warranty
Twin Set $ 1 3 9
Full Set
$189
Queen Set $ 2 1 9
King Set $ 2 9 9

LARRY SAMPSON'S
DISCOUNT FURNITURE WAREHOUSE

A 2 Innerspring Bunkies

M A T C H IN G

DOOR
BUSTER
Twin Set
$70
Full Set
$99
Queen Set $ 1 3 9
King Set $ 1 8 9

C H A I R . ..* 2 9

Reg 139?

$269

1401 S. French Ave. (Hwy. 17-92)
Sanford
MasterCard
Phone
(305) 322-4652
Mon.-Sat. 10 AM • 6 PM, Sunday Noon - 6 PM

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.

liar Coaches
Rescue Nationals
Florida Uttio Ma|or SoD-Wstrktl
•1 Leesburg

TaaifM'i santoo
4 p.m. — Sanford Nationals vs. Ltosburg
I pm. — Orlando SAY vs. Orlando Bruton
Tltondav's tamos
4pm — Tuesday's losers
&gt; p.m. — Sanlord Amorlcans vs.
Leesburg Nationals winner

By Chris Plater
Herald Sports Writer
When Joe Litton, manager of
league champion Sanford Police
Benevolent Association, could
not coach the Sanford Little
National All-Star team, some
familiar names came to the
rescue.
Rick Taylor, a veteran and
successful coach in the Sanford
youth leagues, has taken over as
manager and Sylvester ••Slick"
Franklin. J r. and Skip Mitchell
arc the coaches who hope to take
a winner to Leesburg this week
for the Florida Little Major
League Sub-District 2 Tourna­
ment.
T h e N a tio n a ls open the
tourney tonight at 6 against host
Leesburg. SAY of Orlando and
I Orlando Bruton will square off in
the second game Wednesday.
The winner of the Sanford Natlonal-Lecsburg game advances
to an 8 p.m. game Thursday
against defending champion
Sanford American.
While Mitchell has had the
team the past tw o years.
Franklin and Taylor arc return­
ing to the team they took to the

Baseball
state tournament In 1982 and
'83. Mitchell was manager of the
second-place Sunniland team
this season white Taylor was his
assistant and Franklin did not
coach In the Little Major League.
"After the first coach (Litton)
couldn't take the team we fig­
ured we couldn't let the kids
do w n ." Mitchell said. "A n d
we’ve all been there before so we
know what to expect."
As In the past, the Nationals
arc depending heavily on a
* strong pitching^ staff. Demy
Beamon, who pitched SPBA to
the league title, will be the ace of
the staff with Sunnlland's Rich­
ard Peterson and Disabled Amer­
ican Veteran's Bernard Sparrow
also lending mound support.
W h e n he d o e s n 't p itc h .
Eleamon plays shortstop while
Peterson also plays first base
and S p a rro w is a second
baseman. Other Inflelders in­
clude returning all-star Lome
Jones of Sunniland at short or
third base and SPBA’s George
Martin also plays third and Is a
relief pitcher.
The outfielders Include Sun­
nlland's Tyrone Chibbcrton In
right, SPBA’s Keith Roberts in
center and either First Federal’s
Angelo Cashe or SPBA's Tony
Taylor in left.

E. Robtrti

T a y lo r

R aw lings

WIMBLEDON. England (UPI)
— Sweden's Stefan Ed berg con­
sidered throwing a game in
u iu c i

S p a rro w
Mitchell said the Nationals
have three capable catchers in­
cluding Kent Pritchard of First
Federal. Matthew Harris of DAV
and Andre Rawlings of SPBA.
Harris also plays outfield and
Rawlings can also play the
Infield.
Others who will contribute for
the Nationals Include SPBA's
Eric Roberts. Sunnlland's Don
Hunt and Railroaders* Ta m s
Davis.
"W e’ve always had some pre­
tty strong pitching and this
year’s team Is no different.”
Mitchell said. "Th is team could
be a little stronger than the one
last year. This year’s team Is real
fundamental and knowledgeable
about the game. I’m not sure

how much support we'll have in
Leesburg but we hope to have
some people following us."
Taylor, who said Beamon will
start on the mound Wednesday
night, said this year’s Sanford
National team Is dliTcrcnt than
those In the past in one Impor­
tant aspect — discipline.
"This is probably the most
disciplined team wt-'ve had."
Taylor said. “ We have not had to
deal with any attitudes und-the
kids arc quick to learn and
listen."
And. Just like last year, the
coaches expect the Nationals
and Sanford Americans will
most likely fight It out for the
ehamptnshlp.
"It depends on who goes to

D avis

losers’ bracket first.” Mitchell
said. "We lost our first game the
last two years and came back,
but we prefer to stay in the
winners’ bracket. And we know
we'll probably see the Americans
more than once in the tourna­
ment."
Taylor believes the Nationals
have the Ingredients necessary
to win the toumey.
"W e stress hitting first and I
think we’ll be able to hit any­
body we face." Taylor added.
"A n d It will be Important for the
defense to do well and help
spark the offense. If we shake
the first round Jitters early, we
are capable of winning it and
that's what we have in mind
going up there."

4 Opinions: Murphy
Bad Attitude Untrue
By Bam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Ronnie M urphy's com peti­
tiveness has never been ques­
tioned. Yet. some NBA officials
b e lie v e . It w as an o v e r competitiveness which kept him
from going even higher than the
17th pick In Monday's NBA
Draft.
Four gentlemen who have
spent many hours scrutinizing
Murphy, however, feel that the
former Oviedo High all-stater has
been given a "bad rap" con­
cerning an attitude problem.
Two of the four — Portland
Trail Blazers excutivc Bucky
Buckwaltcr and coach Mike
Schuler — put their futures on
the line Monday when they
made Murphy Portland’s No. I
selection in the draft.
Neither has a second thought.
The Trail Blazers also indirect­
ly found the center they wanted
in the first round of Monday’s
NBA draft, selecting guardforward Murphy and trading for
Cleveland pivot Keith Lee.
The acquisition of Murphy led
the Trail Blazers to trade guard
Jim Paxson to Cleveland for Lee.
"Ronnie Murphy Is one of the

Basketball
top six or seven athletes in the
draft." Buckwaltcr, vice presi­
dent of player relations for the
Trail Blazers,~saT&lt;!T* "W e’re ven?'
excited to have been able to
select him. We sec no problem."
With only six centers listed in
the Blazers' draft pick guide as
first-round material. Buckwaltcr
and Schuler didn't expect a tall
man to be available by their
pick, the 17th of the first round.
Murphy Is scheduled to begin
his career with the Blazers in the
off-guard position, eventually
moving into point guard.
"We like Murphy because of
his toughness." Schuler said.
"He’s very competitive and he
can play a couple of positions In
the backcourt. Some people are
afraid of Murphy, but that's
what saved him for us."
Schuler conceded Murphy hud
been Involved in some incidents
such us spitting on the floor that
led to technical fouls. Schuler
said he feels they resulted from
immaturity and a will to win. He
believes things will be different

in Portland.
"Th e difference is. Here it costs
you money. And guys don't like
to lose money. Much of what Is
said (about Murphy) Is not true.
W c arc not taking a risk,"

Ptwto by John Moor*

Deadeye Darryl
D a rryl Payne draws a bead on the target. Payne, a 1971
Lym an High graduate, has won the Bow Hunter Archery
Division of the Sunshine State Gam es four of the past five
years. He goes for his fifth title Ju ly 11-12.

S o ft b a ll
the bottom of the first on Lynn
Anderson's single but Sullivan's
scored three times in the second
with Woodall's two-run sacrifice
fly leading the way.
Stromberg-Carlson tied the
game In the bottom of the
second but Sullivan's broke the
game open with two runs in the

Wenzel, who coached Murphy
for four years, agreed. "People
mistake his competitiveness for
a bad attitude." he said. "Th a t’s
unfair. Some writers
assassinated his character for a
couple of immature acts. People
w ith great talent arc tem ­
peramental. They do things they
are sorry for later.
"Ronnie wants to win very
badly. That intensity will make
him a great pro."
Dale Phillips. Murphy’s coach
at Oviedo, also worked with the
22 -year-old swingtnan for four
years.
"Basically, Ronnie Is a good
kid." Phillips said. "He is a
tremendous competitor which
causes him to lose control some­
times. He is a maturing, though,
and I don't think that he has a
bud attitude. He Just wants to
win very badly."
(U l&gt;l contributed to his articleI

third and five in the fourth. In
the third, Ritchey had an RBI
single and she drilled a lwo-run
single In the fourth. Also in the
fourth. Moreland unloaded a
two-run triple and Lori Corcoran
added a run scoring single.
Sullivan's sealed the victory
with four runs in the sixth
Inning. Ritchey's two-run single
was the big hit In the inning.
In Friday’s first game. Classy
Clerks won by forfeit over The
Barn.

Feeling H eot? Listen To Body's 'Air Conditioning'
I was going to write last week's
column on playing tennis In the heat
but it was too hot. So I put It off until
this week.
Seriously folks, it's hot enough out
there to melt your strings.
Indeed, a lot of the old-timers around
the courts are saying that this is the
hottest summer they can remember. It's
not only hot. It's ulso humid. That Is a
tough and potentially dangerous com­
bination for the avid tennis player.
It makes playing difficult but it also
sets up the possibility lor the player to
come down with a very serious ailment
known as heal exhaustion or even
worse — heal stroke. These heat-related
illnesses are not just something you
read about but never sec. They are for
real. I have seen tennis players suffer
from them many, many times and in
some cases have seen players hospi­
talized because of them.
Actually, a person does not even have

Larry
Castle
HERALD
T E N N IS
W R IT E R
lo be in the sun or even In extreme heat
to suffer front heat exhaustion. Of
course, it's more likely lo happen in
extremely high temperatures and while
engaging in some strenuous activity,
but the fact of the matter is that it's tiltloss of body fluid and the nutrients that
arc lost with this Hold that cause tinproblcm.
When we work hard or play hard and
our bodies become overheated we start
to perspire. This is the body's way of

trying lo keep us cool, nature's "air
conditioning." so to speak. As long as
our bodies have lots of liquid everything
is fine. You can play as hard as you
want with no problem. When our bodies
start lo run low on fluid though, heat
exhaustion might begin.
If you start feeling sick to your
stomach, dizzy, see stars, feel cool and
clammy, in general you feel way off
center out there. It’s your body telling
you that you should get off the court. If
you listen to your body signals and
come off the court, sit down in a cool
place and start replacing the liquids,
then you should have nQ problem.
If you do not listen to your body and
continue to play, then your condition
will get worse and worse. You may not
then be able lo get off the courts — you
might get a free ride on a stretcher.
Heat exhaustion, if not treated, can
lead to heat stroke. Heat stroke can be
fatal. Whereas in heal exhaustion one

w

c m u c u ia s o a i u i u w

f

1and 2 2 minutes to best

S u lliv a n 's P u b C a p tu re s W o m e n 's C r o w n
Sullivan's Pub claimed the
S a n fo rd W o m e n 's S o ftb a ll
League championship Tuesday
night with a 14-6 victory over
S tro m b e rg -C a rls o n at Fort
Mellon Park.
Paula Ritchey led the Sul­
livan's Pub offensive attack with
three singles and five runs
batted in while Chris Woodall
and Tumara Moreland drove in
two runs each to back the
pitching of Bear Foster.
Stromberg took a 1-0 lead in

iiv i

countryman, but a chance to
make Wimbledon tennis history
was more enticing.
Edberg whitewashed Stefan
Eriksson 6-0 .6 -0 .6 -0 Tuesday to
become the first men’s winner in
this year's tournament, which
was delayed nearly two days
because of rain.
Men's top seed and two-time
de fen ding ch a m p io n B o ris
Becker eliminated Karel Novacek in straight sets, while No. 2
seed Ivan Lendl struggled before
s u b d u in g an 1 8 -y e a r -o ld
qualifier he knew nothing about
and who has yet to win a Grand
Prlx match this year.
"I have never won a three-set
match without dropping a game,
but I beat Andreas Maurer (West
Germany) 6-0. 64) earlier this
year." Edberg, seeded fourth,
said.
Edberg became only the third
man during the Open era to
sweep a Grand Slam match
w ith o u t d ro p p in g a gam e.
Eriksson won merely 35 points
in the 60-minute match and had
only three game points.
"I tried to keep the ball in
play," Edberg said. "1 thought
about giving him a game In the
end. but I may never get a
chance to win like this In a
frand slam tournament again. I
elt sorry for him, but he only
laughed afterwards.”
Becker, with his flashy style,
entertained a Center C ourt
crowd which had waited until
late afternoon of the second day
before rain permitted play. He
delivered 10 aces and even won
a point with his left hand — for
which he apologized — in beat­
ing Novacck, 6-4. 6-2. 6-4.
Becker closed out both the first
and second sets with aces.
Lendl, the losing finalist to
Ecker fast year, worked for 2

feels cool and clammy, in heat stroke
the skin feels hot and dry. In heat stroke
the skin is red, with white around the
nose, mouth and eyes. There Is no
perspiration — the body has used all of
it trying to keep you cool.
There is certainly no need to stop
playing tennis in the hot summer
months. But. there are some things you
should do to protect yourself from a
heat-related Illness. You should try lo
avoid playing in the middle of the day.
Early morning or late evening is better.
Wear a hut and keep it cool and wet by
putting water on it between games.
Take lots and lots of water to the
courts with you Take time out anytime
you want to for some water (the more
you drink the belter). Above all. listen to
your body, and if you start feeling weak,
light-headed, etc. — G E T O FF T H E
COURT!
Tomorrow is another day and it might
even be cooler.

Christian Saceanu. a Romanian
who now lives In West Germany,
6-2, 3*6. 6-3. 7-5. Lendl, ranked
No. 1 In the world, came within
two points of dropping the fourth
set before making the decisive
break in the 11th game.
Saceanu won only one set in
tw o p re v io u s G ra n d P rlx
tournaments this year and is
ranked No. 175 in the world.
Other seeds to win during a
program abbreviated by rain
were No. 11 Pat Cash, No. 12
Brad Gilbert of Piedmont. Calif.,
and No. 13 Joaklm Nystrom.
Cash, a quarterfinallst qt
Wimbledon last year, defeated
American Mlbert ousted Stuart
Bale of Britain. 7-6 (7-4). 6-4. 6-3;
and Nystrom beat Henrik Sundstrom, 6-2. 6-7 (5-7). 6-4, 6-3. In
another all-Swedish confronta­
tion.
Gabricla Sabutlnl, at No. 7 the
highest women's seed to play,
defeated Am erican Barbara
Gerken. 6-3. 6-3; No. 8 Manuela
Maleeva of Bulguria defeated
Canada's Helen Kclesl. 6-3. 6-2;
and No. 11 Lori McNeil of
Houston won her opening round
match from M arie-Christlnc
CalleJu of France, 6-2,6-3.
flecker, utilizing his awesome
serve and a powerful return,
never was In trouble against
N o v a c c k . a F re n c h O p e n
quarterfinallst. A service break
in the third game got Becker
started, and the 19-year-old
West German never lost his
service In the 1 hour and 38
minute match.
It was during the second set
that he won a point left-handed.
"It was the only chance I had
to m a k e t h a t s h o t . ” he
explained. " I ’ve never done that
before In my life. I don't know
what came over me there. After
the shot I said to Novacek. T in
sorry. 1 didn't mean It to look
like I was trying to play with
you."'
On today’s schedule. Martina
Navratilova begins defense of her
women's title and the start of her
bid for a sixth straight singles
crown. Navratilova will meet
1 8 -y e a r-o ld West G e rm a n
Claudia Porwlk. Second-seeded
Steffi Graf, also from West
Germany, meets Argentina's
Adriana Villagran.

NO TEBO O K
W I M B L E D O N , E n g la n d ( U P I ) —
Spectator vi*ltmg Ihe Wimbledon tennis
championship* during ralnoul day* may gel
their money bock in tutur* tournament*, but
not this year
The All England Club, which stage* the
Wimbledon tourndment, I* considering In
troduclng s version ol the rdincheck system
used dt the Queen s Club tourndment There,
money is returned II less then two hours ol
pldy Is possible on the center court

-4 l

�JTL

r--1

IDA— Sanford HsraM, Sanford, PI.

BASEBALL
STANDINGS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L
41 26
44 37
37 10
33 12
X 37
17 43
S3 43

Toronto
New York
Detroit
Milwaukee
Boston
Baltimore
Cleveland

Pet. O l
.423 —
630 —
.333 3
.333 7
.471 tow
. m IS
.366 17W

West

Minnesota
40 37 .5*0 —
Kanta* City
16 33 J27 JW
36 » -523 4
Oakland
36 34 .514 4W
Seattle
California
33 3B .463 •
30 32 .446 7
Taxat
23 43 .373 14
Chicago
TeeaSay't Rewritt
Toronto A Detroit 7
Now York 2, Baltimore t
Bolton 9, Milwaukee 5
Chicago 13, Seattle 1
Minnesota f, Clavaland 4
California ATaxat 4
Kama* City A Oakland 0
Wednesday'* Gamoi
Kama* City (Jackten 3-f) at Oakland
(H a i t i 3&gt;.J: I I p.m.
Toronto (Caruttl 4-1) at Dotrolt (Morris
101). 7:33 p.m.
Now York (Guidry 0-1) at Baltimore
(Schmidt 71), 7:13 p.m.
Milwaukee (Hlgutra 5*1 at Bolton
(Hunt 7 3). 7:13p.m.
Saattla (Langifon 14) at Chicago
(Ootion 4-4), lp .m .
Clavaland (Swlndall 1-4) at Mlnnaiota
(Nlafcro 3-4), 4:03 p.m.
California (Sutton 14) at T a ia t (Witt
1 1 ) , 1:13p.m.
Thunday'i Gama
Clavaland at Mlnnaiota
N ATIONAL LE A O U E

Eat*

W
41
37
37
36
30
X

St. Loul!
Chicago
Montreal
New York
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh

Pci. OX
412 —
.357 3W
444 4W
.327 JW
.435 tow
X .441 »w
L
76
31
31
X
34

Watt
Cincinnati
X 31 .337 —
37 X .334 1W
Houston
13 34 ■X7 3W
San Francisco
Atlanta
34 35 .473 4W
Lot Angola*
31 X .447 7W
San Diego
33 41 •X4 I4W
Tuaiday'i Ratultt
Chicago A Now York 1
Montreal I. Pittsburgh 1
Phlladtlphla A St. Louis I
San Diego 4, Houston I
Los Angelas 1, Atlanta 1
Cincinnati A San Francisco I
Wednesday's Gamas
Cincinnati (Hoffman 4-1) at San
Francisco (Grant M ), 4:03 p.m.
Chicago (Sanderson 3-4) at New York
(Mitchell M ).7:35p.m .
Montreal (Fischer oo) at Pittsburgh
(Fisher 1-4), 7:13 p.m.
Philadelphia (Carman 4-4) at St. Louis
(Cox 71), 1:13p.m.
Houston (Darwin 4-4) at San Diego
(Davis 1-7), 10:03p.m.
Atlanta (Smith 7-4) at Los Angelas
(Welch I D , 10:33 p.m .,
Thursday's Games
Chicago at New York
Houston at San Diego
Montreal at Pittsburgh, night
Philadelphia at St. Louis, night
Atlanta at Los Angelas, night
Cincinnati at San Francisco, night

LEADERS
Batting
National League

%
Jttsa » SI *$4

Gwynn. SD
Daniels. Cln
34 1S1 4* 64 .333
Maldonado. SF
47 144 44 II .xn
Murphy, AM
47150 34 41 .333
Galarraga. Mtl
41 211 34 74 .337
Clark, SF
*4 Ilf 13 71 .334
Guerrero, LA
47 244 41 77 .324
Wallach, MM
45 231 41 41 .320
Leonard. SF
44 244 41 43 .320
Clark, StL
*4 210 33 71 .117
American League
g ab
r h pet.
Boggs. Bos
47 234
33 74 .340
Trammell, Dot
34 214
44 43 .353
Puckett. Min
44 271
43 71 .313
Tartabull. KC
44 237
13 74 .334
Fletcher, Tex
44 243
14 44 .331
Hokes, Det
57 177
14 43 .330
Tabler, Cle
44 240
34 13 .117
Randolph, NY
70 2*1
37 13 .314
Farnandai. Tor
*7 273
41 43 .311
Mattingly, NY
33 204
11 44 .311
Ham* Runs
National Laague — Davis, Cln and
Murphy, Atl 22; Clark, StL. Dawson, Chi,
Strewbarry. NY and Virgil, Atl 20.
A mar lean League — Bell, Tor 24;
McGwire, Oek 23; Barfield, Tor )«; Davis.
Oak, O' Brlen and Parrish, Tax 17.
Runs Battad In
National Laagut — Clark, SIL *4;
Dawson, Chi 43; Davis, Cln and Wallach, Mtl
41; McG*e. SIL 53.
Am«rlc4n Laague — Bell. Tor 64;
Joyner, Cel S3; Ward. NY 33; Parrish. Tax
33; Winfield. NY SI.
Stolen Bases
National League — Coleman, StL 44;
Devls. Cln 27; H4tcher, Hou 23; Gwynn. SD
24; R4lnes. Mil ind Thompson. Phil 30.
American League — Reynolds. Sea 24;
Henderson, NY 21; P. Bradley. See 21;
Redut. Chi and Wilson, KC 21.
Bitching
Victories
Notional League — Heaton. Mil and
Sutclllfe. Chi 103; Fcrnandei. NY and
Scott, Hou 71; Welch. LA 41; Moyer, Chi and
Rawley, Phil 4-4; Garber. Atl 4- 5; Whitson.
SD4-4.
American League - Saberhagen. KC
122; Morris, Det 102; Rhoden, NY 04;
Elchhorn. Tor 4-],- Lelbrandt. KC and
Young, Oak 4 4; Key. Tor end Witt. Cal 03;
Langston. Saa 04; Stewart. Oak 07.
Earned Run Average
(Based on I Inning x number of games
each team has played)
Netlonel League - Scott, Hou 3.10;
Reuschel, Pitt 3.33; Hershlser, LA, 2.74;
Ftrnande), NY 3.41; Darwin, Hou 1.71.
American Laague Lelbrandt, KC
2.334; Saberhagen, KC 2.334; Clancy. Tor
1.43; Boddlcker, Ball, 3.70; Kay. Tor 2.70.
Strikeouts
National Laague — Scott, Hou 133;
Ryan, Hou 111; Fernanda!, NY 71;
Horihlser, LA 44; Valensuela. LA 43.
American League — Langston. Sea 123;
Clamant. Bos 101; Hlguera. Mil 100;
Swlndall, ClevTl; Witt, Cal 73.

Saves
National Laague — Smith, Chi 30;
Bedroslan. Phil 17; Worrell, SIL 14;
Franco, Clr. 13; Smith, Hou 11.
American Laague — Plesae, Mil 14,Rlghettl, NY
13; Howell, Oek end
Reardon. Min 14; Henke, Tor 13.

RAINES GAUGE
RAINESOAUOE
Comparison

1764

1767

Gamtt/Playad
6664 4*44
At bat*
241
in
Runt
44
41
Hilt
to
47
Runt Ballad In
26
27
GW RBI
1
4
11
Doublet
16
4
Triplet
1
Home run*
6
6
X X 20- n
Stolen Base*
1
Error*
2
.120
36#
Average
Tim Raines singled and doubled In five
at ball. A year ago. Raines was 2 lor 4.
Raines still needs to make up 37 at bats to
quality for the league leaders. He needs to
average 4.1 at bats over the next I f games to
meet the standard ol 3.1 at bats lor each
game his team has played

•»

7

Wadnoiday, Juno 24, IM7

R a w le y Stops C a rd s
A s Elia F in a lly W in s

UpshaW S/O/ )
Cages Tigers
United Press International
For the past two seasons,
inside pitches have meant trou­
ble for Willie Upshaw. Tuesday
night, he opened up and re­
claimed part of the Inside comer.
Upshaw hit a grand slam In
the fourth inning and Fred
McGrlfT added a two-run shot,
powering the Toronto Blue Jays
to an 8-7 victory over the Detroit
Tigers.
With no score In the fourth.
Jesse Barfield walked. George
Bell singled to center and Ernie
Whitt walked before Upshaw
lined an 0-2 pitch Into the upper
deck In right for his ninth home
run, equaling his home run total
for last season. Kelly Gruber
singled to third and McGrlfT
pulled the first pitch to him Into
the upper deck in right for his
sixth home run.
"I wasn't about to give In.
Regardless of what happened. I
was going to have a good
swing," Upshaw, who hit his
second career grand slam. said.
"1 caught up with a fastball.
That was It.
*Tve been able to open up on
Inside pitches again, and not
stay so closed."
Dave Stleb. 6-4. allowed six
hits In 6 2-3 innings. He has won
three of his last four starts. Tom
Henke, the fifth Toronto pitcher,
earned his 13th save despite
allowing a two-run homer to
Alan Trammell In the ninth. Jeff
Robinson, 4-4, took the loss.
Elsewhere. New York edged
Baltimore 2-1, Boston slugged
M ilw a u k e e 9 -5 , C h ic a g o
pounded Seattle 13-3. Minnesota
clouted Cleveland 9-4, California
shaded Texas 8 -6 . and Kansas
City blanked Oakland 4-0.
In the National League. It was:
Chicago 4. New York 1: Montreal
8 . Pittsburgh 2: Philadelphia 4,
St. Louis I: Los Angeles 3.
Atlanta 2; Cincinnati 4. San
Francisco l.
TO R O N TO

D E T R O IT
a b rk b l
a b rh b l
Fernand) u 3 0 10 Whitaker 2b 3 1 I t
Mow by cl
/ O O O Madlock dh 4 0 0 0
Barfield rf 3 2 0 0 Glbton
II
4 12 2
Balt If
3 2 3 1 Tram m tll
»i 5 1 2 2
Whlll c
3 1 1 1 Noket c
2 0 10
Upthaw lb
4 1 1 4 Haath c
2000
Grubar 3b
4 1 1 0 Shtrldan rl 4 1 1 0
McGritt dh 4 1 1 2 Evan*
1b
3 112
La* 2b
4 0 2 0 Lemon
cl
4 10 0
, .
. Brooken* 3b 1 1,2 0
Grubb ph
0000
Herndon ph 10 0 0
Walawndr 3b 0 0 0 0
Total)
33 4 l« 4 Total)
37 7 10 7
Toronto
ooo 410 loo— I
Dotrolt
040010 222- 7
Gama winning RBI — Upshaw (4).
E — Trammell, Grubar I. DP— Toronto
3. Dotrolt 3. LOB— Toronto 4, Dotrolt 4.
2B— Whltakar. H R -U p ih a w (7), McGritt (4),
Ball (34). Evans (12), Trammell (13)
SB— Trammall (4).
IP H R ER BB SO
Taranto
Stlab (W 4 4)
42 3 4 3 2 3 4
Lavallt
0 1 0 0 0 0
Elchhorn
23 2 2 2 0 1
MutMlman
1 0 I t I |
Hank* (S 13)
2-3 I I I 0 I

Datroit
Robinson (L 4-4)
42 3 5 7 7 4 2
Htnnaman
2 13 3 1 1 0
0
Htrnandaj
2 2 0 0 0 1
Lavall* pitched to 2 batters In 7th.
H B P -b y Stleb (Madlock), T -2 :J 5 . A 27,273.

A ngels....................................8
Rangers................................. 6

ARLIN GTO N. Texas. (UPII —
Devon White belted two home
runs and Wally Joyner went 2
for 3 with three RBI Tuesday
night, lifting the California
Angels to an 8-6 victory over the
Texas Rangers.
Joyner belted a solo home run
in the sixth and a iwo-run
double In the seventh. Willie
Fraser. 4-5, went six Innings for
the victory. Greg Minton pitched
l 2-3 innings for his second
save. Charlie Hough. 7-3. look
the loss despite taking a no­
hitter Into the sixth Inning for
the second consecutive start.
With the 9core tied 4-4 in the
seventh. California scored three
unearned runs with two out.
Downing walked and White
reached on an error by shortstop
Scott Fletcher. Joyner doubled
both of them home. Doug DcClnces followed with a single to
score Joyner and make the score
7-4.
Oddlbe McDowell's seventh
homer of the year, a solo shot In
the second, gave Texas a 1-0
lead. Th e Rangers added an
unearned run In the third to go
ahead 2-0. Jerry Browne walked,
went to third on Fletcher’s single
and scored when catcher Bob
Boone threw wildly attempting
to pick him off third.
White broke Hough's no-hit
bid with a two-out solo homer In
the sixth and Joyner followed
with a homer to tic the score 2 -2 .
The Angels added two more
runs, one unearned, lor a 4*2
lead. DeCinces and Jack Howell
walked, advanced on ft passed
ball, and scored on Boone's
single.
The Rangers tied it 4-4 In the
s ix th . Pete In c a v lg lia and
McDowell doubled for one run.
Mike Stanley's fly ball moved
McDowell to third, from where
he scored on Steve Bucchele's
sacrifice fly to center.

A.L. Baseball
CALIFORNIA

TEXAS

ab r h St
Downing dh 1 1 0 0
Whit# rf
4 3 12
Joynar lb
3 2 21
DaClnca* lb 4 f 2 I
Hawaii If
*10 0
Boone c
4 0 12
Schoflald u 4 0 0 0
Patti* cf
4000
McLamor 2b 4 0 0 0

a b rk b l
Brown* 2b J I 0 1
Flatchar u
S0 30
Sltrr# rf
4 110
O'Brian lb 3 0 10
Parrlah dh 5 1 1 1
Incavlglia If 3 1 1 0
Me Dewall cf 4 2 4 2
Stanley c
2 0 10
Brewer pr
0000
Slaughl c
0000
Buechel* lb 2 0 11
Petralll ph
10 0 0
Ttfala
24 0 7 1 Tatali
17 « 12 I
C l 11farnla
100 004 M l - 1
Texas
Mi "7 O i l - 1
Gama winning RBI — Joynar (J ).
E — Schofield.
Boone.Flatchar.
OP—
California 2. LOB-Callfornl* *. Taxat 7.
7B— Fletcher
2,
Butehele,
Incavlglia,
McDowall, Joynar. HR— McDowell (7).
White 2 (13). Joynar (t l). SB-Downlng (1),
DaClnca* (3). SF-Buechele.
IP H R ER BB SO
Callfernle
Freier (W 43)
* 7 4
3 1 3
Luca*
1 1 - 3 2 1 1 0 1
Minton (S 2)
1 23 2 1
12
1

Tout
Hough (L 7 3)
4 21 3 7
3 * 5
William*
2 1 - 3 2 1 0 1 4
HBP— by Fra»er (Sierra). W P— Fra*er 3.
PB— Stanley 2.7-3:12. A-32.77*.

White Sox.....................
13
M ariners............................... 3

At Chicago. Harold Baines
collected three hits. Including a
t w o -r u n h o m e r , to p a ce
Chicago’s season-high 18-hlt
attack. Bill Long. 4-3. scattered
nine hits over six Innings for the
victory. Scott Bankhead. 8-5,
gave up six runs In four innings,
ending his string of 20 scoreless
innings againsl the White Sox.
CHICAGO
ab r h b l
a b r h bl
Brantley rl
S 1 7 0 Guillen **
4 22 1
PBradlay If S 0 2 0 Hill 2b
4 11 t
S Bradley c
1 0 2 0 Balnat dh
S 13 2
Valla c
2 0 0 1Walker 1b
4 00 1
Phalpt dh
7 0 10 Calderon rf 3 72 0
Chrlitm n ph 0 0 0 0 Fl*k c
4 31 2
Klngary dh 2 0 0 0 Botton If
3 33 1
Pra*l*y 3b
7 10 0 Roy*t*r 3b 4 011
Davit lb
4 1 1 0 William* cl 4 1 1 2
Mote* ct
4 0 17
Qulnontt *» 4 0 10
Rtynoldl 7b 4 0 2 0
Tatali
17 3 12 1 Tatal*
37 13 II It
Staltla
070 000 !0ft- 3
Chicago
131 110 33x-l3
Gam* winning RBI — William* (2).
E — S.Bradley, Mo$«*. DP— S«at1l* I.
LOB— Stalll* 10. Chicago 7. 2B— Royitar,
C*ld*ron, P Bradlay. 3B-M otes, Hill. HR
- F l t k (7). Balne* (7). SB-W llllam * (3),
Guillen (4). S— Guillen. SF-W alker.
IP H R ER BB SO
Seattle
Bankhead(L 7-5)
4
0 6 4 2 3
Reed
2 3 1 1 0
1
Shield*
1
3 3 2 1 0
Tru|1lto
1
4 3 3 0 0
Chicago
Long (W 4 3)
4
7 3 3 7 3
Searagc
13 0 0 0 0 0
Winn
221 3 0 0 0 1
Long pitched to 2 batters In 7th.
HBP— by Long (Presley). T — 3:07. A—
13,400.

Willie Upshaw, left, and Fred
M c G r i f f each slugged
homers to power the Blue
Jays past Detroit.
Twins...................................9
Indians................................ 4
At Minnesota. Gary Gncttl
drove In four runs, helping the
Tw ins overcome two homers by
To n y Bernazard. Mike Smithson,
4-3. allowed six hits and four
runs over 6 1-3 Innings to gain
the victory. George Frazier not­
ched his second save. To m
Candlottl. 2-8. took the loss.
CLEVELAND

MINNESOTA

a b rk b l
a b rk b l
Butler cf
1 0 10 Gladden If
4 110
Franca »*
s o i l Newman lb 5 1 1 1
Tabler dh
4 0 10 Puckett cf
4 111
Carter 1b
1 1 0 0 Hrbek 1b
3 13 0
Demptey c 1 0 0 0 Gaettl lb
4 12 4
Hall If
4 0 0 0 Smalley dh 4 0 10
Snyder rf
3 0 0 1 Brunniky rf 3 7 2 2
Jacoby lb
3 0 0 0 Laudnar c
40 0 0
Barnaird 2b 4 3 12 Gagne *»
4 0 11
Bando c
2 0 10
Parton* 1b 2 0 0 0
Total*
12 4 7 4 Total)
33 7 11 7
Clavtland
M l MS 100- 4
Mlnnaiota
944 no M x - 7
Gam* winning RBI — Puckett (I).
E — Franco. O P — Cleveland I, Mlnnaiota
1. LOB— Cleveland 9, Minnesota 3. 2 B Gladden, Puckett, Gaettl, Gagne. 3B—
Newman, Franco. HR— Bernaiard 2 (10),
Gaettl (13), Brunantky (16). SB— Carter 2
(14). SF— Snyder.
IP H R ER BB SO
Cleveland
Candlottl (L 21)
3 1-3 6 3 1 2 2
Armstrong
23 0 0 0 1 1
Yell
4 5 4 4 0 2
Minnesota
Smithson (W 4 3)
6 1-1 4 4 4 2 3
Atherton
1-3 1 0 0 0 0
Frailer (S 2)
2 1-3 0 0 0 1 1
HBP— by Smllhion (Carter), by Alhtrton (Carter). W P— Smllhion. P B — Bando
T — 1:21. A — 17,393.

SEA TTLE

Red SOX................................. 9
B rew ers................................. 5

At Boston. Ellis Burks hit a
three-run homer and Jim Rice
added a two-run single in the
sixth Inning to lead the Red Sox.
Boston's Wade Boggs singled in
the fifth inning to extend Ills
hitting streak to a major-league
season-high 24 games. Reliever
Steve Crawford. 3-2. pitched 1
2-3 Innings for the victory.
M ILW A U K EE
ab r tl bi
Mol Itor 3b
4 0 10
2200
Yount cl
Coop«r dh
4 2 11
D*«r rt
5 12 3
4 0 11
Surhoff c
Robldoux lb t 0 0 0
Paciorak lb 2 0 10
Faldar It
300 1
Gantner 2b 4 0 10
3000
Sveum ) )

BOSTON

ab r h bi
Burk) cl
3 12 3
Barrett 2b
3 110
Bogg) 3b
3 111
Rica It
5032
4 111
Baylor dh
Evan) lb
3 12 0
Beminger rl 3 I 10
Owen ) t
4 200
Sullivan c
2 000
Greenwll ph1 1 1 0
Gadman c
10 12
Tafal)
32 5 7 5 Total)
34 7 13 7
Milwaukee
002 030 000- 5
Boaton
000 014 20x— 7
Gama winning RBI — Rice (3).
E — Dear. DP— Milwaukee x, BoUon 1.
LOB— Milwaukee 1, Botton
11. 7B
Cooper. Deer. Greenwell, Barrett. Event,
Gedman. HR— Baylor (14), Bu rn (12).
SB— Bek* (11) SF— Felder
IP H R ER BB SO
Milwaukee
Nieves
3 6 3 1 4 4
Wegman |L 47)
23 3 4 2 1 1
Botlo
21 3 2 2 2 0
Clear
17 3 1 0 0 1 1
Bolton
Sellers
4 3 5 4 6 4
Bolton
1 0 0 0 0 1
Crawford (W 11)
12 1 1 0 0 1 2
Schlratdl (S 3)
2 1-1 t 0 0 0 0
Sellar) pitched to 3 batter) In 5ih;
N lava) pitched to 2 batter) in 4th
Balk— Bo)io. PB— Sullivan. T-3 :3 4 . A 31.104

Y an k ees................................ 2
O rioles...................................1

At B altim ore. G a ry W ard
homered off ncwly-signcd re­
liever Doug Corbett in the eighth
inning to lead New York. Rick
Rhoden. 9-4. pitched seven In­
nings for the victory. Dave
Rlghcttl picked up his 15th save.
Longwood'sCorbett fell toO -l.

NEW

(Jailed Press laternxtionxl
Lee Ella found out how easy
managing can be when your
starting pitcher turns In a
dominating performance.
Shane Rawley allowed four
hits over eight Innings Tuesday
night to help the Philadelphia
Phillies to a 4-1 victory over the
St. Louis Cardinals and their
first trium ph In five games
under Ella, who replaced the
fired John Felske last Thursday.
"W e needed a well-pitched
game uud we got It." said Ella,
who received n bottle of champ n lg n a f te r th e g a m e .
"Whenever Shane smelled that
hr wan getting Into trouble, he
found a way to get out of the

inning.
"(The victory) was inevitable
because we were breaking our
tails the last four days. We had
the right ingredients to win. It
was nice getting over that
hump."
Rawley. 8-4. Improved his
career record to 5-1 against Si.
Louis und lowered his career
ERA to 1.59 against the Cardi­
nals.
"I knew today that I had a
great opportunity to give our
ballclub a big
lift." Rawley
said. "Th e first couple of days
you could tell Lee was Just
trying to gel back In the swing of
managing."
Rawley walked three and
struck out four. Steve Bedroslan
pitched the ninth for his 17th
save. Lee Tunncll. 3-2. took the
loss.
Von Hayes, who had three hits
for Philadelphia, said the Phillies
can still salvage the season.
“ This win was twice as good."
Hayes said. "He's (Ella) doing a
good Job. Now that the streak Is
over, we can get on and play the
kind of ball we are capable of
playing.”
In other games. Chicago de­
feated New York 4-1. Montreal
routed Pittsburgh 8 -2 . San Diego
beat Houston 4-1, Los Angeles
nipped Atlanta 3-2 and Cincin­
nati dumped San Francisco 4-1.
In the American League. It
was: Toronto 8 . Detroit 7: New
York 2, Baltimore 1; Boston 9.
Milwaukee 3: Chicago 13. Seattle
3: Minnesota 9. Cleveland 4:
California 8 . Texas 6 ; and
2
0 0 04. Oakland 0.
Kansas
City

YOR K
B A LTIM O R E
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Randolph 2b 3 1 1 0Wiggins 2b 4 0 10
Waihngln dh 3 0 2 1
Dwyer rf
Ward lb
4 1 1 ) Lacy ph
10 0 0
Wlnflald rf
1 0 10 Ripken **
4000
Pagllarul 3b 4 0 0 0
Murray lb
3 ILA D ELP0H0IA
0
ST. LOUIS
PH
Paiqua If
4 0 10
Sheet* If 4
000
ab r h bl
a b rh b l
Salat c
4 000
Knlghl 3b
Samuel
4
2b 0 10
4 1 1 0 Coleman II 4 0 0 0
Thom
*14 2 10 Smith tt
3000
Cotlo cl
4 0 20
Kennedy c
l i l pun
t
Haye*
1b 0 10
4 13 1 Harr 2b
3 10 0
Tolleson ** 3 0 0 0
Gerhart cf
3
4000
Schmidt '3b 4 0 10 Clark 1b
Young dh
3 000
Wilton rf
3 0 10 McGee cf
4070
Total*
12 2 I 2 Total*
11 1 4 1
New York
ool ooo 010— 2
Jama* If
3 0 10 Pendleton 3b 3 0 7 I
Batllmor*
ooo 001 000- 1
GGros* If
10 17 Oquendo rl 3 0 0 0
Game-wlrnlng RBI — Ward (7).
Parrlth c
4 0 0 0 Pena c
4 0 10
D P — Baltimore 2. L O B -N e w York 4,
Aguayo **
40 10 Tunnell p
10 0 0
Baltimore 5. HR — Kennedy (13), Ward
Rawley p
3 0 10 Lake ph
10 0 0
Hughe* ph 1 0 0 0 Dayley
p
000 0
(10).
SB— Randolph
(I ),
Cotto
(2),
Pagllarulo (7).
Bedrotlan p 0 0 0 0 Dawley p
000 0
Total*
33 4 II 3 Tofal*
30 I 3 1
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Philadelphia
101 0M 020- 4
Rhoden (W 9 4)
7
1 1 1 1 3
Sf. Louit
000 100 000- 1
Gam* winning RBI — Hay** (5).
Rlghettl (S 131
2
1 0
01 3
Baltimore
E -C la rk . D P -S I. Loul* 4. L O B Williamson
7
7 1 1 2 1 Phlladelphla 4. S). Loul* 7. 2 8 -S a m utl,
Corbett (L 0 1)
2
1 1 1 1 1
McGee SB— Thompton (20). S— Tunnell.
IP H R ER BB SO
Balk— Rhoden. T-2 :4 9 . A -2 7 .U 7 .
Philadelphia
Rawley (W 14)
s 4 1 1 1 4
1 1 0 0 1 0
(S 17)
R oyals....................................4 Bedrotlan
St. Loul*
A ’ s ................................................................. O
7 9 2 2 0 6
Tunnell (L 12)
13 1 2 2 1 0
At Oakland, Mark Gublcza Dayley
12 3 1 0 0 1 2
fired u three-hit shutout and Dawley
W P— Tunnell. T--2:39. A--X.4S5.

George Brett knocked In three
runs to lift Kansas City. Gublcza.
5-8. recorded his second straight
complete-game triumph, strik­
ing out 10 to tic his career high.
Jose RIJo. 0-3. went the distance,
walking two and striking out
seven.

KANSAS C IT Y OAKLAN D
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Wllion cl
4 t l 0 Polonla cf
4 0 10
Saltier 3b
4 1 1 0 Devi* rt
4 0 10
Brett dh
2 2 2 3 Lantford 3b 4 0 10
Tartabull rt
40 11 McGwire lb 1 0 0 0
White 2b
40 10 Canieco II
4000
Benlquei 11
40 0 0 RJackion dh 1 0 0 0
Ba’bonl lb
40 10 Sleinbach c 1 0 0 0
Salaiar t*
40 10 Phillip* 2b
10 0 0
Quirk c
3 0 0 0 Griffin **
3000
Total*
13 4 I 4 Total*
27 0 1 0
Kanta* City
200 ooo 002- 4
Oakland
ooo 000 000— 0
Gama winning RBI— Brott (4). DP—
Kanta* City 1. Oakland 2. L O B -K a n ia * City
4. Oakland 4. 2 B -B ro tt H R -B r t lt (4).
IP H R ER BB SO
Kanta* City
9 3 0 0 4 10
Gublcia (W 5 S3
Oakland
Rl(o (L O i l
9 1 4 4 2 7
WP— Gubicia. PB-Steinbach. T -2 :2 ».
A— 13,121.

Martin: Jackson Out Of Line
BALTIM ORE (UPI) — Four-time Yankees manager Billy Martin
said Tuesday civil rights' leader Jesse Jackson should not
comment on baseball Issues and added. "W e don't need him."
Jackson has met with Commissioner Peter Ueberroth and
urged club owners to develop an affirmative-action policy since
former Los Angeles Dodgers Vice President At Campanls said
blacks lacked some of the necessities to manage. There are no
black managers or general managers In the major leagues.
"I think Jesse Jackson should stick to religion and politics,"
Martin said at a book-signing session for his latest work.
"Blllyball." "He should stay out of baseball. We don’t need
him."
Martin said race in baseball hiring shouldn't be "an Issue at
all. We've had black managers that haven't been successful and
a lot of while managers who haven't been successful either."
Martin. 59. who also managed the Oakland Athletics. Texas
Rangers. Minnesota Twins and Detroit Tigers, said he will not
manage this season.
"Unless Jesse Jackson pushes me." Martin said, laughing. "I
don't think so."
Martin, now a special advisor to the New York Yankees, said
he hasn't heard anyone speaking about the fact there are no
women. American Indian or Chinese managers in the majors.

Expos...........
Pirates.........

*«*&lt;

... ....8
....2

At Pittsburgh, Reid Nichols
and Mike Fitzgerald hit sec­
ond-inning home runs and Neal
Heaton scatlcrcd five hits over
five Innings lo lead Montreal.
Heaton. 10-3. earned his seventh
victory In his Iasi eight games.
Bob Kipper. 4-6, gave up four
runs on five hits.
T i m Raines s in g le d and
doubled In five at-bals.
M O N TR E A L

P ITTSBU R G H
a b rh b l
Cangelotl II 5 13 0
Van Slyk* cl 4 0 I 0
D la) rf
3 0 11
Morrlton 2b 4 1 1 0
Bream lb
4000
Bonilla 3b
40 t I
O rtl)
200 0
LaValllere c 10 0 0
Pedrlque is 7 0 10
Ray 7b
10 0 0
Kipper p
20 00
Walk p
00 00
Bond) ph
10 0 0
Jones p
000 0
Smiley p
0 00 0
Reynolds ph 10 0 0
Total)
33 I 10 7 Totals
34 2 I 2
Montreal
030 00) 021- I
Pittsburgh
004 100 010- 2
Game-winning RBI — Nichols (1).
LOB— Montrsal 0. Pittsburgh I. 2B—
Wellach. Raines, Galarraga. Law. Bond- la.
H R — Nichols (3). Fitzgerald (1 ). S B Pedrlque (I),, Van Slyk* (17), Galarraga (3).
SF— Wlnnlngham.
IP H R ER BB SO
Montreal
Heaton (W 10-1)
3 3 1 1 1 1
McGalflgan
2 1 1 1 | 1
Parrett (S 1)
2 0 0 0 1 2
Pittsburgh
Kipper (L 4 4)
5 13 3 4 4 1 4
Walk
12 3 1 0 0 3 2
Jones
1 1 2 2 0 3
Smiley
1 1 2 2 1 1
McGalflgan pitched to 3 batters In Oth.
WP— Smiley 2. Balk— Heaton T — 3:02
A — 9,276.
a b rh b l
Candaele ** 3 1 1 0
Web)ter rf 3 10 0
Rain*) It
5 12 0
Wallach 3b 3 1 1 0
Galarrag lb 4 17 1
Nichols cf
2 112
Wnnnghm cl 1 0 0 1
Law 2b
3 111
Flligerald c 3 I 2 2
Heaton p
79
000
McGaltlgn p 2 0 0 0
Parrett p
0000

P a d re *...................................4
A stro s...........................................1

At San Diego. Ed Whitson
hurled a iwo-hlttcr. enabling the
Padres to snap the Astros'
three-gam e w in n in g streak.
Whitson, 8 -6. hurled the first
iwo-hltler of his career, striking
out six and walking five. Nolan
Ryan. 4-7. allowed lour hits In
six innings.

N.L. Baseball
HOUSTON

SAN DIEGO
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Hatcher cf
4 0 0 0Jaffarion cf 4 0 0 0
Chlldratt p 0 0 0 0Flannery 2b 3 I 0 0
Doran 7b
3 0 0 0 Gwynn rf
41 1 1
Walling 3b 3 0 0 0 Martin*) If
31 1 0
GDevIt lb
3 0 0 0Mack ct
0000
Beta rf
3 10 0Kruk 1b
3 111
Crux It
3 0 0 0Santiago c
3000
CRaynld* u 4 0 10 Mllchall 3b 3 0 0 0
R Reynold! c 2 0 0 0 Tamplatn n 3 0 11
Aihby c
1 0 0 0 Whilion p
30 0 0
Ryan p
2000
Puhl cf
10 11
Tatali
27 l 2 i Tatali
n 44l
Hou*fen
000 000 too- i
San Dl*«e
022 0 M M X -4
Game-winning RBI — None.
E — Hatcher.
LOB— Hou* ton *. San
Diego 2.2B— C. Reynold*. 3B— Gwynn
IP H R ER BB SO
Newton
Ryan (L 4-7)
* 4
4 13 4
Children
3 0 0 0 0 2

WhltMnDfw*M)

7 3 113

4

W P -R y a n . T - 2 : to. A-12,722.

Cabs.....................................4
Mets...............................

1

At New York. Mike Brumley
capped a four-run fifth Inning
w ith his first m ajor-league
homer and Rick Sutcliffe won
his 10th game of the season in
leading the Cubs. Sutcliffe. 10-3,
posted his seventh victory In his
last eight decisions. Ron Darling.
2-5. suffered the loss.
David Martinez doubled In four
at-bats.
CHICAGO

NEW YORK
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Martin*) cf 4 0 10 Dykitra cf 4 0 0 0
Mumphrey If 4 0 0 0 Orosco p
0000
Dayalt If
0 0 0 0 Millar 7b
3 110
Dawton rf
4 0 0 0 M * ))llll ph 10 10
Durham 1b 3 1 1 0 Hernandi lb 7 0 0 0
Moreland 3b 3 0 1 0 Carter c
4 000
Devil c
3 10 0 Slrawbrry rl 4 0 7 0
Noc* 2b
4 1 1 7 McRynld* tt 4 0 0 0
Smith p
0 0 0 0 Johnion 3b 3 0 0 0
Brumley n 3 1 1 2 Santana ts 2 0 0 0
Sutcliffe p
3 0 0 0 Magadan 3b I 0 0 0
Trlllo 7b
0 0 0 0 Darling p
2 000
Wilton cf
10 0 0
Total*
31 4 3 4 Total*
31 1 4 0
Chicago
000 040 000- 4
New York
001 000 000- 1
Gam* winning RBI — Noc* (1). LOB—
Chicago 3. New York 5. 2B— Strawberry,
Noc*. Martin*). H R -B ru m le y (I). SB—
Miller 2 (4). S— Moreland.
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicifs
Sutcliffe (W 10-3) 8 2 3
4
1I
3 5
Smith (S 20)
13 0 0 0 0 1
New York
Darling (L 2 5)
I 4 4 4 7 11
Orosco
t
I o0 0 l
Balk— Sutclllfe. P B -C a rte r. T -2 :3 5 A
-37,717.

Dodgers................................ 3
B raves.................................. 2

At Los Angeles. Fernando
Valenzuela. 6-5. went the dis­
tance for his first victory in June
and Franklin Stubbs belted his
11th home run. a three-run shot
to lead Los Angeles. Valenzuela,
who had not won in four starts
since May 27, Improved to 6-5.
The loser was Charlie Puleo, 1-2.
A TLA N TA

LOS AN G ELES
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Jam** cf
3 10 0
Anderton **
Virgil ph
I0 00
Sax 7b 3 0 10
Ram iro 3b
4 0 11
Shelby cf3 0 0 0
Grllfey If
4 0 10
Guerrero II
Murphy rf
3 0 11
Manhall rf
Simmon* lb
30 00
Slubb* lb
Thomai tt
40 0 0
Scloicla c
Acker p
0 0 0 0 Hamilton 3b 3 0 0 0
Benedict c
3 0 0 0 Valeniuela p 1 0 0 0
Davl* pr
0000
Hubbard 2b 3 12 0
Puleo p
10 0 0
Dedmon p
10 0 0
Roenlck* oh 10 0 0
Atienmchr p 0 0 0 0
Nellie* 3b
10 0 0
Total*
32 I 3 2 Total*
14 J 4 1
Atlanta
001 ooo 100— 1
Lot Angelas
010 000 M X - 3
Game winning RBI — Slubb* (4).
E — Slubb*. Thomai. Benedict. DP—
Atlanta 3. LOB— Atlanta I, Lot Angelet 4.
7B— Hubbard. H R -5 lu b b » (I I ). S B - Sax
2 (15). Guerrero (4), Slubbi (4), Jame*
(4). S— Hubbard.
IP H R ER BB SO
Atlanta
Puleo (L t-t)
4 1
Oedmon
1 I
Attenmacher
Acker
Lo* Angelet
Valeniuela (W 651
9 5 2 1
WP— Valeniuela. T — 2:31 A — 31.019.

Reds..................................... 4
G lsnts.................................. i

At San Francisco. Tracy Jones
drove in two runs and Ron
Robinson allowed four hits over
6 1-3 Innings to spark the Reds.
Robinson. 3-2. struck out three
In only his second start of the
season. John Franco worked two
innings for his 15th save. Alice
Ham maker worked seven In­
nings and fell to 3-5.
CIN CIN N A TI
SAN FRANCISCO
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Daniel) If
1 0 10 Thomp)n 2b 4 0 0 0
Jon*) rf
3 0 12 Leonard If
400 0
ED avl)
cf 4 1 1 0 Clark 1b
40 2 0
Parker
lb 3 12 0 Maldonad
rt 4 0 0 0
Bell 3b
4 0 11 CDavl) cf
3110
Diet c
10 11 J Robinson
p 00 0 0
Stillwell u
40 0 0 Brown 3b
4 0 10
Concepcln 2b 3 I 7 0 Brenly c
7 0 10
RRobMton p I 0 0 0 Spllman ph 10 0 0
FWllllamt p 00 0 0 Garrelt) p
00 0 0
Murphy p
00 0 0 Youngblod cl 10 0 0
Larkin ph
11 0 0 MWIIIIm) js i o o 0
Franco p
10 0 0 Milner ph *0 0 0 0
Speler ts
70 11
Hemmakr p 20 0 0
Melvin c
20 0 0
Tofal*
30 4 9 4 Total*
34 I 6 1
Cincinnati
000 001 111-4
San Francisco
ooo ooo loo— 1
Game-winning RBI — Jon*) (3).
E — Stillwell 1 DP— Cincinnati I, San
Francisco 2, LOB-Clnclnnatl 5, San
Francisco
9 2B— Brenly,
Concepcion
Dlat, Clark, Bell. S— R Roblnwn. SF—
Jones.
IP H R ER BB SO
Cincinnati
R. Robinson (W3 2) 4 I 3 4 1
F. Williams
o o
Murphy
j 3 |
Franco (S 13)
2 I
San Francisco
Hammaker (L 15)
? 5
Garrellt
| 3
J. Robinson
| j
,
WP— R Robinson. Balk— J. Rob
-2:33. A -I 3 .906.

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K M IIO U O : U M / M L U O U m e t!

TV/RADIO

M BRIEF

TV/UIM-. T « d * n U dt*

Brantley's 5 Errors Pave Way
For Apopka's Regional Crown
Lake Brantley's American Legion committed five costly
errors Tuesday night, handing Apopka a 7-4 victory In
regional championship Sunshine State Games baseball at
Boardwalk and Baseball near Haines City.
"We simple gave It to them," Lake Brantley manager
Jerrey Thurston said. “ We haven't a lot of problems with
errors lately, but we sure did tonight."
Lake Brantley pitcher Shane Stufflet went five and
one-third innings for Brantley. Stufflet gave up seven hits
as he fanned two and walked one. Mark Gabrovlc and
Randy Green each came on in relief of Stufflet.
The big blow of the game came in the bottom of the sixth
inning. With the score deadlocked at 4 . Green was brought
in with the bases full. Green then gave up a three-run
double.
Brantley could manage only four hits. Jerrey Thurston
went 2 Tor 4 with an RBI triple and a single. Jim "Mongo"
Morse chipped in with an RBI single. Green had a single.
Lake Brantley. 8-4. hosts U k e Howell Thursday at 5:30
P'm'
— Scott Bander

Johnstown Buries Sobik's Subs
Johnstown Properties used a nine-hit attack en route to a
14-2 four-inning victory over Sobik's Subs in the first game
of the best-of-three series In the Seminole Pony Mustang
Division Playoff at Five Points near Winter Springs
Tuesday.
The two teams will square off again tonight at 6 at Five
Points. A victory by Johnstown, the National League
champ, would give It the Mustang championship. But if
Sobik’s, the Amerlcun Leauge champions, regroups, a
deciding third game will be played on Thursday night.
Johnstown pitcher Klley Kapala went three Innings as he
gave up two runs on three hits. Kapala fanned four. Aaron
Church pitched the final inning for Johnstown.
Shawn Burger led Johnstown with a pair of RBI singles.
Church chipped in with a pair of singles and an RBI while
Shawn Ernest and Scott Neufeld each had RBI doubles.
Kyle Gaines and Kapala also had hits.
— Scott Bander

Radcliff Slams Lyman To 11-0
Chris RadcllfTs grand slam lifted Lyman to a 12-8 victory
over Orlando Colonial and an 11-0 record in American
Legion baseball Tuesday night at Lyman High.
Chris Brock relieved starter Jim Lucas In the third
Inning and picked up the victory.
Johnny Luce and Brock each went 4 for 4. Brock had a
two-run homer and a three-run double In the game, giving
him five runs batted In as Lyman walloped 16 hits.
Kenny Jackson. Marty Martin, and Noah Talesnlck each
had two hits apiece.
— Bcott Sander

• ( t - M t * P tH IW Jfc TIVMI H I

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P " - *T»S Haiovii iMfM
abwim irmn « l« An*en M p n &lt;u

Seminole East, composed sole­
ly of Sanford players, took third
place in both the 15 and under
and

13

and

u n d e r

s ta te

tournaments ut Coral Springs
this past weekend.
Seminole High Coach Charles
Steele's 15 and under team
opened the tourney with a 72-22
trouncing of the Palm Beuch
All-Stars. Shawna Cohen’s 12
points led the way with Sherri
Reddicks and Trud! Roundtree
tossing in 11 each. Chineta
Gilchrist pumped in 10. Liz
Long added eight and Connie
Williams. Tam m y Lawrence and
Leticia Strickland contributed
seven points each.
Seminole East then dropped a
60-40 decision to the Bay Area
team out of Tampa. Bay Area
held a 24-19 halftime lead and
pulled away in the second half.
S tric k la n d 's 17 points led
Seminole East and Long hil 10.
After being eliminated from a
shot at the title. Seminole East
faced Vcro Beach St. Helens for
third place and came away with

Basketball
a 54-52 victory. Long and Red­
dicks pumped In 13 points each
while Strickland hit for 10 and
Cohen and Roundtree added six
each. Cohen also made the
defensive play of I he game
when. In the waning seconds,
she stepped in front of a St.
Helens player and took a charge
to stop a scoring opportunity
that could have lied the game.
Others who played for the
Seminole East squad included
Yolanda Baker. Trlna Williams.
C in d y Lyo ns and Mcchclle
Toombs.
"1 can't say enough about the
way the girls played." Steele
said. "We were playing with
almost al) players from one
school while the others were
all-star teams. It's hard to play
hand-picked teams, but the ob­
ject Is to get my kids io play
against that kind of caliber
teams, it will make them bet­
ter."
The Seminole East 13 and

U rn - ( I P N PIAUrum frAOpwlll

Team Central, propelled by a
tenacious press defense, stormed
to the 15 and under AAU State
C ha m p lo n s li ip t ills p a st
weekend at Ta ra vclla High
School in Coral Springs.
Tiie 15 and under all-siars.
including a number of Seminole
County standouts, earns a berth
in the National AAU Tourna­
ment Ju ly 23-31 al Oxford. Miss.
Team Central qualified will) a
66-47 victory over Gold Coast
Coral Springs on Sunday. West
Orange High's Jennifer Clark,
the tournament most valuable
player, led the way with 21
points and eight rebounds while
DeLand’s Renee Bellamy con­
tributed 10 points and Lake
Brantley's Tracy Brandenburg
dished out seven assists.
Team Central used the pre­
ssure defense lo build a 44-13
halftime lead and never looked
back.
After receiving a first-round
bye, Team Central opened the
tourney with a 71-54 victory
over Vero Beach St. Helens.
Clark's 20 points led the way
with Vicky Smith pumping In 15
and Brandenburg adding nine
(Joints, seven assists and three
steals. Sercssa Setzcr ruled the
boards with 12 rebounds.
The Central Florida stars then
went up agalnsi Bay Area and

B a s k e t b a ll

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Springs
Big League at Oviedo: Tp.m. — Clermont n Oviedo
American Legion el Lyman High: 7 p.m. — Lyman v*.
Lake Howell

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SaiM lf. Canada. A A P i PA; KumlU
Okamolo. Japan, drt. Fatrka TaraWni,
ArpantiM. P I, A A, Dianna lalaitrat.
AullratlA drt. Jinny lyma. Aurtralii AA PI.

BOWLING
M W lUM ;Crtw N M M ChM
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maAtkpiay recardi and manry a w hr P i
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t.lfl. L lobby JbdU. Hayaord. CaM. U A L
t.IN L Scan Devon. Canhrvilh Ind., U l i
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t.HA L Mark k«IK Sprh| Lata Haiphtl M J ,
IS IL M il. A Rkk Miniar, Vancouver. Wain.
1SM.lrN.lAMA

Th e two teams swapped runs
in the second inning before the
Nationals erupted for four runs
in the bottom of the third,
sparked by Miller’s first homer, a
three-run shot over the centerfield fence which drove in Kenny
Kramer and Chris Lousman,
w ho had sin g le d . M atthew
Wright singled ln Mike Grandilla
for the other run in the Inning.
Th e score remained 5-1 ln
favor of the BUI Correntc'a Na­
tional team for the next two
innings, due to excellent de­
fensive from both sides. Ameri­
can's Jason Bernosky made the
most spectacular defensive play
In the game — a sliding catch of
a fly ball ln center field.
“ Crunch time" began In the
top of the sixth for the Ameri­
cans as they found themselves
behind. 5-1. Shaun St. Dennis
led ofT the Inning with a single,
followed by singles from Danny
Pursell and Aaron Black, with
Black picking up an RBI. After a
flyout by the next batter, Jason
Klrst sent a three-run homer
sailing over the right field wall to
tie the game. 5-5. Bernosky then
singled before being forced out
at second on a fielder's choice for
the second out. Jason Gaines
then came up and drilled a home
run to give Americans the leud.
6-5.
"W e had a tough time (at the
plate) in the first four or live
Innings.” King said. "We're not
good losers. We're gonna win
tomorrow, no doubi."
Miller's two homers In his two
at-bats led the National squad,
and Christian Sanders also
belted a solo hoiner for Na­
tional’s only run ln the second.

•41

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Facility.

Kennon exploded for 32 points
as Seminole East won the third
place game. 55-44, over Vero
Beach St. Helen's. Francis added
eight points and Regina Alex­
ander tossed in six.

_____Sat.

in

ia

Florida's Newest
Greyhound

Seminole East then routed the
Brevard County Stingers. 77-33.
behind the 30-polnt performance
of Kennon. Regina Alexander
tossed in 14 points. Dnvina
McNicl hit nin. Kayla Alexander
contributed seven. Michelle
Wright and Teresa Matthews
had six each and Julie Francis
added five.

X

i

T lh liU : WlmAlidaa OwpAa*
Al Wlmaadmt. Eaplaad

1*11 1*11 Moor Lm o m latrth

under team of coach Ju liu s
Francis lost Its first game In the
tournament but rebounded to
win Its next two for third place.
Lakoseia Kennon. who will be a
freshman at Seminole High this
school year, was the tourna­
ment’s Most Valuable Player.
In the opener. Seminole East
dropped a 46-26 decision lo the
Team Central Florida Oskles.
Kennon's 15 points led Seminole
East and Regina Alexander
tossed In six.

E

RWMifirtwni

TENNIS

PAfCIAU : leahrd Yart* lu p u n
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1 9
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WINTER SPRINGS Brian
Miller's two home run blasts.
Including a solo shot In the
bottom of the sixth, powered the
National League to a come-from-behind 7*6 victory over
the American League In the first
game of the Seminole Pony
League Pinto Division all-star
series at Five Points Complex.

- Nelientl Lttgge (!•«} vi. Amerlctn U t s w tA t)
Stmlnolt Pony M utltnf L t Pfut Pltyoft t t P lv t PxMntp: P
p.m. — JePmttoam Propertipp ( I N ) « . SoMk'p Subt (0-1)

II 4 I N
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BASISAiL
Sanford Junior LMfuo at Cham Port: S:IS p.m — Boil
Motor Lint up. KlwtnlP
SamlraAt Pony Pinto Laagua PltyoO tt Flva Potnti p u rn.

0 1M l « . * P IM] N JIj T (API) 0 t« ;

-ElPN.iKAOwn*«mJh»

Mon.-Fn.
used the press to build up a
42-19 halftime lead en route to a
66-45 victory. Setzer’s 14 points
ted three players in double
figures while Clark pumped In
11. Brandenburg lilt 10 and
Oviedo's Suzanne Hughes con­
tributed eight (joinIs and six
rebounds.
"Coach (Mac) Blythe's press
tore them (Bay Area) up." head
coach Mike Avcrlll said. "And
Bay Area is a pretty darn good
team."
Willie Clark was the tourney's
MVI\ Brandenburg and Smith
were also All-Tournament.
"Clark Is a very good oftenslve
player.” Avcrill said. "And she
does pretty well on defense. She
was a first team Metro Confer­
ence (ilek. Brandenburg handled
I lie point and siiol extremely
well from up to 20 feet. The best
part about Tracy is her com­
mand of tlie game and protect­
ing the basketball."
Also this past weekend, the 1l
and under team of coach Nancy
Coaltcr. nicknamed the Blue
Streak, defeated Coral Springs
for tiie state title while the 13
and under team of Tom Bleri
was beaten by Coral Springs for
the title.

is

in

Team Central Presses
Way T o AAU 15 Title
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Active Market, Stocks Down
NEW YORK (UPI) — Prices opened lower
Wednesday In active trading of New York Stock
Exchange Issues.

profit-taking and futures-related sell programs
triggered by weakness In the dollar and bond
markets.

The Dow Jones Industrial average, which fell
5.78 Tuesday, was ofT 3.98 to 2435.75 shortly
after the market opened.

But most traders and analysts agreed that the
market Is likely to continue Its advance, with
Investors viewing any pullback as an opportunity
to return idle cash to equities before the end of
the second quarter.

Declines led advances 530-387 among the
1.377 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 14.400.000
shares.
The stock market posted Its first loss In more
than two weeks Tuesday, brought low by

Locol Interest
These quotations provided by
m e m b e rs o f th e N a tio n a l
Association of Securities Dealers
are representative Interdealer
prices as of mid-morning today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.
.
Bid Ask
American Pioneer
6%
7%
Barnett Bank
37% 37%
First Union
25% 25%
Florida Power
&amp; Light
31% 31%
Fla. Progress
35 %
30
HCA
45
45 %
Hughes Supply
26% 26%
Morrison's
3 0 % 30%
NCR Corp
76% 76%
Plessey
3574
37
Scotty's
13%
14
Southeast Bank
27% 28%
SunTrust
24%
25
Walt Disney World 71% 71%
Westinghouse
65%
66

Gold And Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; sliver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
Wednesday:
Gold
London
Previous close 440.25 up 2.25
Morning fixing
443.00
up
2
7
5
Hong Kong
442.25 up 3.50
New York
Comex spot
gold open
443.20 up 2.80
Comex spot
silver open
6.962 up 0.075
(L o n d o n m o rn in g fix in g
change Is based on the previous
day's closing price.)

Dow Jones
,;D o w Jones Averages —
ia.m.
30 Indus 2438.78 off
•20 T ra n s 1026.17 off
•15 Utils 208.72 up
‘65 Stock
913.77

10:00
.
0.95

3.10
0.58
off

Many big investors had sold stocks and raised
cash In the weeks leading up to the Venice
economic summit and last Friday's "triple­
witching .’ tour.” and many are now feeling
pressure to reinvest those assets.

D o lla r D ow n A g a in s t
K e y W o rld C u rre n c ie s
By United Press International
T h e dollar opened low er
against all key foreign currencies
In moderately active trading In
New York Wednesday following
reports that a senior Bank of
Japan official said he saw no
further room for the dollar to
rise.
The dollar was also lower In
Japan and Europe where traders
said the dollar was weakened by
reports of U.S. and West German
bank Intervention. The price of
gold and silver moved higher.
Traders In New York said the
dollar fell on reports that a
senior Bank of Japan official
reportedly said that Instability In
the yen-dollar rale had declined
In recent days and that the
central bank has shifted Its
worries to signs of renewed
Inflation.
The official indicated the Bank
of Japan now considers It vital to
hold down Inflation, but he
added that Jupan would con­
tinue Its easy credit policy to
stimulate demand, boost Im­

ports and cut Its trade surplus.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, the d o lla r weakened
marginally against the Japanese
yen. closing at 145.95 yen. down
0.65 from Tuesday's close of
146.60 yen.
Traders In Japan said the
dollar weakened following re­
ports that the United States and
West Germany intervened to sell
the dollar.
On major European markets,
the dollar began the day In
Frankfurt at 1.833 German
marks, down from Tuesday's
close of 1.8455.
The dollar opened In Zurich at
1.52 Swiss francs, down from
1.526 and In Paris at 6.1165
F re n c h francs, dow n from
6.1345.
The dollar also opened lower
In Brussels at 37.95 Belgian
francs. d(^wn from Tuesday's
close of 38.15, In Amsterdam at
2.057 Dutch guilders, down
from 2.069 and In Milan at
1 .3 2 4 .5 0 lir e , do w n from
1.332.95.

FDIC Bails Out 2 Banks
ANCHORAGE. Alaska (UPI) Tw o Alaska banks on the brink
of failure will be kept alive with
Infusion of u $295 million grant
from the Federal Deposit Insur­
ance Corp. because that Is
cheaper than paying off deposi­
tors If the banks fall, the agency
said Tuesday.
Private investors must put up
$65 million as part of the plan to
keep the banks afloat.
Alaska Mu I uh I Bank and Unit­
ed Bank Alaskg become the fifth
und sixth banks to be rescued
this year as part of the FDIC’s
financial
assistance program.
0.68

FLORDA
IN BRIEF
Ex-DNR Director Surrenders
A m id Probation, Bribery Scandal
FO R T LAUD ER DALE (UPI) — Elton J . Glsscndanner.
former heud of the Florida Department of Natural
Resources, will surrender today on charges he accepted
$80,000 to help a drug smuggler avoid a prison sentence.
Glsscndanner. 59. was scheduled to turn himself in to
U.S. Magistrate Lurana Snow In Fort Lauderdale at 10 a.m.
His attorney, Patricia Kyle, said Glssendanner would
"enter an emphatic plea of Innocent."
Glsscndanner was indicted Monday on four counts of
violating the Hobbs Act. for extortion, lying to a federal
grand Jury and failure to disclose the $80,000 on his 1983
federal Income tax return. If convicted, he faces a
maximum penalty of 48 years In prison and $130,000 In
fines.
Glssendanner. a veterinarian and a polltlcial protege of
Florida Sen. Bob Graham, became DNR chief In 1979. He
had long been at odds with his new bosses — Gov. Bob
Martinez and the Florida Cabinet — and was scheduled to
be replaced Ju ly 1. He resigned when the indictment was
announced.

Coronas Guilty O f Racketeering
MIAMI (UPI) — Father and son bankers Rafael and Ray
Corona were convicted of buying Sunshine State Bank with
money from a marijuana smuggler who wanted the
Institution to launder his profits, officials said Tuesday
Following Monday's verdict. U.S. District Judge James
W. Kehoe allowed Rafael Corona. 67. to remain out on
bond until he and his son are sentenced Sept. 2. The Judge
ordered Ruy Corona. 39. Jailed pending a bond hearing.
Ray Corona was convicted of conspiracy, racketeering
and using the mall and traveling In furtherance of a
conspiracy. He faces a maximum of 65 years In prison.
His father was acquitted of a racketeering conspiracy
charge, but convicted of racketeering and using the mall
and traveling in furtherance of a conspiracy. He faces uu to
45 years In Jail.
r

said Bill Olcheski. u spokesman
for the agency.
" I’m sure tills Is the largest" of
•he bank rescues this year.
Olcheski said. The program
came to the aid of seven banks
last year, he said.
" T h e financial assistance
progrum has been agreed to In
principle by FDIC. which de­
termined that it will be less
costly to FDIC than the cost
which would be Incurred by the
failure of Alaska Mutual Bank
and United Bank A la s k a ."
Olcheski said.

Continued from page 1A

plans to meet John *at his
scheduled stops.
John said he got the flying bug
ufter taking an Introductory
flight back home.
"M y dud and I scheduled
another (light and I've never
stopped." he said.
Jo h n and Fields made a
7,000-m lle flight across the
northwestern United Slates and
Canada last year. John said he
hopes to set a record for Hying
around the world in 1989.

l

Right T o C h e e r A s s a s s in a tio n U p h e ld
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Supreme Court ruled 5-4 today
the Constitution protects a clerk
typist In Texas from being fired
for cheering the attempted
assassination of President
Reagan In 1981.
The Justices, rejecting argu­
ments from Harris County. Te x ­
as. officials, affirmed a lower
court ruling that said the dis­
m is s a l of d e p u t y A r d l t h
McPherson violated her First
Amendment right of free speech.
The case stemmed from the
March 30. 1981. assaslnatlon
attempt of Reagan by John
Hinckley In Washington.
McPherson, then 19. was
listening to radio coverage of the
Incident at her Job at the county
constable's office and turned to a
fellow worker und said. "I hope If
they go for him again, they gel
him."
W h e n C o n s ta b le W a lte r
Rankin learned of McPherson's
remark, he fired her. She then
filed u lawsuit claiming violation
of her First Amendment rights.

At Issue In the case. Justice
Scalla. In a written dissent,
Thurgood Marshall wrote for the said the constable's Interest In
m a j o r i t y , w a s w h e t h e r maintaining a respectable public
McPherson's statement was a Image "outweighs any Interest
matter of "public concern" and his employees may have In
thus protected by the First expressing on the Job a desire
Amendment.
that the president be killed."
"Considering the statement In
context ... It plainly dealt with a
matter of public concern," he
said. "Th e statement was made
In the course of a conversation
addressing the policies of the
president's administration. It
Continued from page 1A
came on the heels of a news
bulletin regarding what Is cer­ In Great North. N.Y. $68,900 of
tainly u matter of public atten­ that money was recovered at the
tion: an attempt on ihc life of the Daytona Beach motel, Nagurny
said.
president."
The court concluded that a
Savich has been convicted six
threat on the life of the president times of bank robbery and was
would not be protected by the serving a 50-year sentence in u
F i r s t
A m e n d m e n t ,
b u t
federal prison In Pennsylvania
McPherson's comment did not when he was transferred to
amount to such a threat.
M iam i to face the m urd er
Chief Justice William Rchn- charge.
qulst and Justices Byron White.
Savich was to nppear before a
Sandra Day O'Connor und An­ federal magistrate today to be
tonin Scalla disagreed with the told of the charges against him.
majority ruling.
—Deane Jordan

...R o b b e r

...T e a c h e rs
Continued from page 1A

lawmakers to establish special
scholarships and target pro­
grams to boost the number of
minority students going Into the
teacher training curriculum. The
Cabinet Is slated to discuss the
recommendations at Its Aug. 4
meeting.
.
Th e commission Is a 24member panel responsible for
a d v is in g the C a b in e t and
Legislature on how Florida
should screen and maintain a
pool of qualllied teachers large
enough to fill grade-school
vacancies.

Lynn Guetllcr.
The percentage of black high
school graduates going on to
college has dropped steadily In
the past decade, the commission
reported.
in 1983. Florida's black stu­
dents represented 19 percent of
all high school graduates, but
only 9 percent of university and
community college enrollment.
T he c o m m i s s i o n s a i d
certification exams, which were
inslitulcd in 1980. have become
a barrier for aspiring black
teachers.
In 1986. only 30 percent of the
blacks taking the tests for the
first time passed, compared with
Bald w in -F a irch ild Funeral an 88 -percent success rate for
C*ntr*l Florida Regional Hoipital
Tuetday
Home. Goldcnrod. In charge of whites.
ADMISSIONS
arrangements.
San lord
"(Boosting the number of mi­
Donna M. Carrlgan
J O S E A . P A D IL L A
nority teachers) is essential to
J c .j * Justice
Mr. Jose A. Padilla. 85. of 81G Inspiring and motivating minori­
Thelma N Palter son
Turnbull. Altamonte Springs, ty Students to achieve and.
Mary S Randles
died Sunday at Florida Hospl- perhaps more importantly, as
Elizabeth C. Ryan
John L. Bailey, Deltona
tal-Altamonte. Born Aug. 22, e v id e n c e that e d u ca tio n a l
AgostlnoG Fontana. Deltona
1901 in Puerto Rico, he moved achievement leads to a better
Walter E. Nadeau. Deltona
to Altamonte Springs from New quality of life," the commission
DISCHARGES
Sanlord.
York In 1975. He was a retired wrote.
Ann D. Murphy
electrician and a member of St.
Th e commission called on
Emily S Chestnut and baby girl
Mary Magdalen Catholic Church.
Survivors Include his wife.
Carm en: two sons. Joseph.
Casselberry. Hector. New York:
Brinson G U A R D IA N Funeral H om e
seven g ra n d c h ild re n : four
great-grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a lrch lld Funeral
re -'
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

H O S P ITA L
N O TES

A R E A D E A TH S
J A C K V A N D E C A R SR.
Dr. Jack H. Van De Car. Sr..
82. 350 W. Artesla St.. Oviedo,
died Monday at Winter Park
Memorial Hospital. Born Ju ly
17. 1904 In New York, he moved
to Oviedo from Mobile, Ala.. In
1980. He was a chiropractor. He
was a member of Winter Purk
Masonic Lodge 239. Order of the
Eastern Star Rachel Chapter.
Casselberry. Scottish Rite Bodies
and Bahia Tem ple, both of
Orlando, and Grotto. Cocoa
Beach.
Survivors Include his wife,
Frances; son. Dr. Jack H. Jr..
O rla n d o : da u g h te r. M ickey
Mullen. Oviedo: five grand­
c h ild re n : four greatgrandehiidren.

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PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER

I 322-4203

|

AIDS Teen Testifies In Porn Case
PENSACOLA (UPI) - A teenager with the AIDS virus
was allowed to testify at a pornography trial without
spectators present after his uttorncy convinced a Judge it
might be traumatic for the boy. who twice tried to commit
suicide.
The teenager, who described the defendant as a
father-figure, was among six youths to testify, but the only
one who did so In private. Spectators and the media viewed
the testimony from a monitor In another courtroom.
I estlmony was scheduled to resume at 9 a.m. C D T today
In the trial of Michael Patrick Haggerty. 34. of Warrington.
He Is accused of taking photographs of young boys and
selling them nationwide through ads in magazines catering
to homosexuals.

how much time consumed and the amount of
equipment deployed.
Nonetheless, consultant Ken Young, of Hen
derson and Young. Palm Harbor, theorized that
the county had maintained a flve-mlnute fire
response time until growth ofTset It. adding about
one and onc-half minutes to the average time It
takes firefighters to get to a fire. He predicted,
though, that upon completion of Fire Station 27
on Red Bug Road the county would regain the
flve-mlnute standard until growth once again
offsets It. "T h c flve-mlnute response time was achieved
for four years In a row until last year because the
county couldn't keep up with growth." said
Young. "But wc are confident that the new
station being built this year will bring you back to
that standard and level of service."
Concerning the library fees, commissioners
agreed having 1.5 library books per county
resident Is a noble goal, but It must be
accomplished through traditional taxing methods
— not by Impact fees.
Commissioners agreed with their Impact Tee
committee that forcing developers to provide
money for new library books strays from the
Intended use of the fees as an Instrument to fund
Infrastructure needs created by growth. In
recommending against the library levy, the
committee had defined the book holdings goal as
a "lifestyle'-’ enhancement rather than a
growth-related need.
The panel voted 5-4 In late May not to
recommend the fees, which were proposed at $50
u dwelling unit or for each 1.000 square feet of a
commercial building.
Florida Library Association guidelines suggest
that u county of 300.000 people have 390.000
library "Items." The level for all libraries
statewide Is 1.23 books per capita, according to
Young.
Indications arc the commission eventually will
take n look at the number of volumes available for

Sometime In the future, he
wants to become a space shuttle
astronaut.
The Guinness Hook of World
Records credits a 9-year-old boy
as being the youngest pilot for a
solo trip over Mcxlcb In 1983.
But there is no entry for the
youngest pilot to fly across the
United States, the record John Is
seeking.
President Reagan. Vice Presi­
dent George Bush. Transporta­
tion Secretary Elizabeth Dole
and Rep. Dick Armey. R-Texas.
have been Invited to attend a
ceremony In the Capitol when lie
completes the transcontinental
Journey.

...R e c o rd

Hwy. 17-92 -

C M t in d fr o a p a g i 1A

the newly constructed libraries funded by a $7
million bond Issue approved by voters.
"We need to examine the libraries we Just
built." sold Commissioner Bill KlrchhofT. "And
come back and see what we need to put them In
service."
Other commissioners agreed they should set
thcii sights on piovirtlng at least one llhmry book
per resident. "Th e one book per capita standard
is something wc have a commitment to do
through taxes." said Commissioner Sandra
Glenn.
Young had advised the impact fee panel during
Its meetings that the county would need an
Infusion of 81 million for book purchases Just to
come up to standard for the population and of
$1.9 million for the population expected In five
years. He estimated that by Sept. 30 of this year,
there will be 0.78 books per capita.
During the committee meetings. Library
Services Director Jean Rhein said one of the first
things a newcomer does upon arriving In the
county Is secure a library card. But at Tuesday's
w o rk s e ssio n , a re p re s e n ta tiv e of the
Homebuilders Association of Mid-Florida argued
growth-related fees for libraries would not meet
legal requirements for Impact fees.
John Tracy, a member of the fin pact fee
committee, countered that "the development
community is getting ofT light" by not not having
to pay Impact fees to fund the construction of
libraries. He also expressed dissatisfaction that
cost overruns In building the libraries have
greatly diminished the $1 million set aside from
the bond money to buy books.
Without the fees, he said, the county will be
using general fund tax dollars as part of its
strategy to accommodate growth.
The commission also decided to put on hold the
pursuit of Impact fees for services, such as law
enforcement, and facilities, such as parks. County
Administrator Ken Hooper said the time could
come when fees may have to be assessed In
response to growth-created pressure for Increased
law enforcement spending. Likewise for parks,
added Hooper. "There may be a need In future
years for Impact fees for law enforcement and
parks."
—Ted Carter

___
..
1st.. .1904

tU mt, fadtui Mm m .C— «Va &gt; y /Y W d i Cm*)

□

M EE T IN G THE N E E D O F E V E R Y FA M ILY

Frederic F Oalne* Jr.
Funeral Director
Owner

,

Gl G
cTu
"

I " J

• Pre-Need Planning
• Out Of State Transfer
• Local Burial
• Cremation
• Burial In All Military Cemeteries

PROUDLY SERVING OUR COMMUNITY FOR OVER to o YEARS.

90S LAUREL AVEN UE
SANFORD

322-2131

PH. 8 3 4 - 8 5 5 0

G r a m k o w - G a in e s
F u n e ra l H om e
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Prearranged Funeral Program

�S tu d e n t, C a rry in g O n F a m ily T ra d itio n
In E d u c a tio n , S p e cia lize s In G o o d ie s

C h eryl Ray,
H. L . C a rte r J r .
R e p e a t Vow s
-

Cheryl Ann Hay and Hugh
Robert Ruchl. Pine Hills,
Lee Carter J r. were married served the bridegroom as
May 2. at 4 p.m.. at the First best man. Ushers were Bruce
Presbyterian Church. San­ Ward, cousin of the bride­
ford. The Rev. Richard G. groom. Pine Hills: T e rry
Dunlcluk was the officiating Grant, nephew of the bride­
clergyman for the traditional groom. Orlando: and Brian
double ring ceremony.
Dwyer, nephew of the bride.
pm fla m ! r j l b i j r t . . W JkjUt.-.^aa ...Suafurd, The bridegroom and
a c c o m p a n ie d b y T u r e
groomsmen wore black tux­
Larson, organist, who also edos with white boutonnieres
played nuptial selections.
In the Jacket lapels.
The bride Is the daughter
The mother of the bride
of Mrs. Florence A. Ray.
ware a pink long-sleeved,
Sanford, and Norman S. Ray.
w altz-len g th gown, with
Sarasota. Th e bridegroom Is white accessories. The bride­
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh groom 's mother chose a
Lee Carter of Pine Hills.
two-piece long-sleeved beige
Given In marriage by her and w h ite w a ltz -le n g th
futhcr. the bride chose for her ensem ble com plem ented
vows a white satin gown
with matching accents. Both
, fashioned with an olT-the- mothers wore bridal white
shouldcr neckline and full rose corsages.
poutled sleeves. The gown
During the wedding cerewas embellished with beaded m o n y , N o e l G r a n t ,
silk Vanlsc lace motifs. The brother-in-law of the bride­
controlled skirt gracefully fell groom . officiated at the
Into a sweeping chapel train reading of the Scriptures,
and she carried a cascading
followed by the bride and
bouquet of bridal white roses,
bridegroom lighting a unity
stephanntisand trailing Ivy.
candle.
Joanne Dwyer attended
The reception was held at
her sister as matron of honor.
the
Sanora clubhouse. Music
She wore a satin radiant
gown styled with a basque was provided by Sugar and
bodice, o ff-th e -s h o u ld e r S p i c e . R a l p h C o w a n
neckline and full pouffed videotaped the wedding and
sleeves accented with a bow reception. Mary Rufas. San­
and back brush train. She ford. served as hostess and
carried a presentation bou­ Millie Peters. Sanford. Peters
registered the buests In the
quet of bridal white roses,
bride's book.
baby's breath and fern.
Bridesmaids were Connie
Following the reception,
Overall. Sanford: and Nancy
the newlyweds departed on a
Gilbert. Casselberry.Their
w edding trip to Sanlhcl
gowns and flowers were
Island. They are making
Identical to the honor atten­ their home in Orlando where
dant's. Ju n io r bridesmaid
the bridegroom Is emplocyd
Beth Dwyer, niece of the as an electrician by D.H.
bride, wore a white satin Contractors and the bride Is
gown accented with a radiant
employed by J.C.Penney.
bow and cummerbund.
Florida Mall.

By Carol Gentry
Special to the Herald
Christy Reynolds. 20. has
spent half of her life In
kitchen creating delightful de­
sserts. Her first solo cooking
experience at age eight was a
unique looking batch of choco­
late chip cookies. "Th ey tasted
good.” she recalled, "but looked
funny."
She learned to cook from her
mother and older sister. Vicky,
by following them around the
kitchen asking questions about
everything they did. While some
culinary connoisseurs give you
lofty conceptualizations for their
expertise. Christy Is down-toearth when she says. "I Just like
local!"
Her cooking has been enjoyed
by ull. In Christy’s senior year at
Lake Mary High School, she
raised over 8200 for publication
of the Senior Calendar by selling
her baked goods to the faculty,
stafrand students.
Christy, who attended Univer­
sity of Central Florida the past
yeur. will enter the University of
Florida in the fall. She does not
have as much time now In the
kitchen us she w ould like.
Besides playing the (lute and her
love of reading, she Is part-time
operations and editorial assis­
tant for Strang Communications
Company In Altamonte Springs.
T h is C h ris tia n p u b lic a tio n
company publishes four maga­
zines. one. Charisma. Is the
largest Florida-bused magazine
lo be Internationally distributed.
Following In her fam ily's
footsteps, she Is majoring In
Language Arts Education in
college. Christy's mother. Ann.
and sister, Tracy, teach English
at Lake Brantley High School.
Her father. Don. Is the principal
at Lake Mary High School.
When asked If cooking was
also u fam ily tradition she
laughed and stated that her
youngest sister. Mickey, could
burn water.
Ju s t re c e n tly the fa m ily
moved to their new home In
Osteen. Christy undertook the
kitchen supervision of preparing
for a combination housewarm­
ing and wedding anniversary
party for her parents who have
been married 30 years. "We
spent two days cooking." she
said.
Here arc some of Christy's
favorite recipes thut she would
like to share with you:
OATM EAL COOKIES

(make 5 dozen)
I 'A cups unsifted all-purpose
Hour
I teaspoon baking soda

1 cup sugar
Mi cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon water
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 cups (lour
1 teaspoon soda
^ teaspoon salt
1 package chocolate mint
afers
Walnut or pecan halves
Cream butter and sugars, add
[gs. water and vanilla. Beat
ell. Sift dry Ingredients and
Id to creamed mixture, mix
lo ro u g h ly . C o ve r und regcrate at least 2 hours.
Enclose each chocolate wafer
about I tablespoon of chilled
tugh. Place on greased cookie
leet 2 inches apart. Top each
Ith a walnut or pecan half,
ike at 375° for 10-12 minutes.
LA T E R PUDDING DESSERT
2 cups finely chopped pecans

I cup flour (may lake an extra
cup)
1 stick margarine, melted
all in 9x 13-Inch pan. Press
n pan. Bake 20 minutes
und let It cool completere a m t o g e t h e r : I c u p
'dered sugar, one 8 -ounce
kage and one cup of Cool
Ip and spread over the first
the third layer, mix l
package of instant chocolate and
one package of Instant vanilla
Christy Reynolds prepares for party.
pudding with 4 cups of milk.
I cup butter or margarine late chips. Put in a floured tube Beal with a mixer until thick.
softened
pan.Bake 1 hour at 325°.
, Spread it over the second layer.
'4 cup granulated sugar
STARLIGHT MINT COOKIES
Frost with Cool Whip (op­
•% cup firmly packed light
(makes 4'.ti dozen)
tional). Shave Hcrshey bar on
brown sugar
I cup butter
lop.
1 package (4-scrvlng size) va­
nilla flavor instant pudding and
pie filling
Z / C A wxvVXjl-N v » "z /CVS.
2 eggs

3'/j cups quick cooking rolled
oats
Mix (lour with baking soda.
Combine butter, both sugars and
pudding mix In large mixing
bowl, beat until smooth and
creamy. Beat in eggs and gradu­
ally add the Hour mixture, then
stir In oats. The batter will be
stiff. Drop by rounded measur­
ing teaspoons onto uugreased
baking sheets, about 2 Inches
apart. Bake at 375° for 10-12
minutes.

Junior W om an's Club of Sanford Inc. was informed on all
aspects of public relations and how to promote club projects
at a recent meeting. Speakers were: from left, Cindi
Goembel, D istrict VII, publicity chairm an; G ail H ill Smith,
Florid a Federation of Women's Clubs publicity chairm an;
and Grace Gottfried, P R representative from Eustis Junior
Woman's Club.

June 19. 1961 — June 24. 1986
You were my life for twenty five years and I know
you are in a better place, but I miss you so much
because you were the light of my life.
Love, Mom

The outdoor chef likes to show
off by using special sauces. Here
Is one Inspired by zesty Chinese
plum sauce to use as a baste for
grilled pork, chicken, beef, hotdogs. hamburgers or any meat
that's good cooked on the grill.
Make an extra batch to offer
for dipping. You'll have a blend
of East and West with every bite.
To marinate a steak quickly,
use a marinade with kiwis.

V\ cup finely chopped onion
1V4 tablespoons grated fresh
ginger or 2 teaspoons ground
ginger
1 clove garlic, minced
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
•A cup prune Juice
V*cup cider vinegar
6 tablespoons sweet orange
marmalade
1 teaspoon crushed red pepper
W teaspoon eacl\ salt and
pepper
1 tablespoon cornstarch
2 tablespoons water
In saucepan, saute onions,
ginger and garlic In oil until
lightly browned. Stir in prune
Juice, vin e g a r, m arm a la d e ,
crushed red pepper, salt and
pepper. Stirring constantly, br­
ing to a boil for 1 minute.
Dissolve cornstarch In water: stir
Into mixture In saucepan. Cook
and stir until thickened and
clear. Store In covered container
In refrigerator. Use as a basting
sauce and glaze for barbecued or
broiled meats. Serve additional

I

_______
vi

CHOCOLATE CHIP CAKE

I yellow cake mix
1carton sour cream (Bounces)
■\*cup oil
4 eggs
1 package Instant chocolate
pudding
12-ounce package chocolate
chips
Mix all ingredients but choco­
late chips together. Add choco­

Dr. R.S. Cunningham

Dr.

MOST INJURIES T R E A T E D WITH
L IT T L E OR NO C O S T T O YOU!
OPEN
6 DAYS

M.-F. 9-6
SAT. 9-12

322-4762

W O O D A L L

sauce on the side for dipping.
This kitchen-tested recipe makes
about 1V4 cups.

C H IR O P R A C T IC

1400 S . P A R K

A V I., S A N F O R D

C EN TER
FL.

»•«

P L L M BLOSSOM
BARBECUE SAUCE
A N D GLAZE

S p re a d in g P u b lic R e la tio n s

IN L O V I N G M E M O R Y O F
M Y SON J E F F H O M E R

Z e sty Sauce M a k e s
T h e M o st O f M e a t
By Aileen Claire
N EA Food Editor

;

JULY4th
Special Sale'
••

T H O R S .
J U N E

*/» •V*
•

- F R I.

- S A T .

2 5 - 2 6 -

2 7

33 % O F F
.

BATHING S U IT S - S P O R T S W E A R
y
SU M M ER SA N D A LS - L IN G E R IE - H A TS *
S P E C IA L RACK
LaBlanca Bathing Suits
Current Styles • I And 2 Piece

$

1

0

oo

3 2 3 -4 1 3 2

All Sales
Final
Cash
Check
M C -V IS A
AM
Express

116 W. First St.
Historic Downtown Sanford

i

�(
3 5 — S a n to rd H t r a M , S a n fo rd , p i.

W M h t t id a y , Ju n o 14, IW 7

M ic ro w o v e M a g ic

Basic Recipe For Meatballs
Served In Variety Of Dishes
Meatballs can lx- the entree for
many meals and can b»- so
varied by the Ingredients ami
sauces that you need not repeat
the recipe.
For two servings of a meatball
recipe Vt pound ground beef Is
needed. This first recipe Is lor a
good basic recipe that will make
two servings.

HtraM Ptitta by Tommy Vincent

Sp«nc«r Schmitt lovos to rood.

Boy, 7, Reads 377
Books In 8 Weeks
To Win Contest
Between March 9 and April
30. F rie n d ly Restaurant
sponsored a Reading Incen­
tive Program with seven
scmlnolc County schools,
gradesK-5. participating
Top reader in the conipclllion was Spencer Schmitt, a
Hamilton Elementary School
student In the first grade
class taught by Sarah Mnglis.
D u rin g the eight-week
program, Spencer read 377
books and finished the school
year with a straight A grade
point average and awards In
math nnd art.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Schmitt of Sanford.
Spencer likes reading more
than a n yth in g else. E n ­
couraged by his teacher, he
nnd several classmates read
to the Tralnubly Mentally

Handicapped to help them
receive their bonk credits and
several days were devoted to
reading nnd reporting on
their iKKiks.
Spencer found most ol the
377 books he read ul the
Sem inole C o unty Public
Library. His mother said he
has loved books since he
could sit up and hns had Ids
own library card since he was
5. He has checked out as
many as 10 easy reader
hooksal a time.
"I read a neat book uhout
spiders and learned that
some can even change col­
ors." Spencer said, but when
asked about his favorite
book, he answers." The Pa/ri
mid llie Great One because lr
sounds like me and Stepha­
nie lids -I year-old sister)."

MICROWAVE MEATBALLS
Vi pound ground beef
2 tablespoons d ry bread
crumbs
2 tablespoons finely chopped
onion
3 tablespoons milk
teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
U teaspoon salt
dash of pepper
dash of garlic powder
Mix Ingredients and shu|H- Into
small balls of uniform size. Place
hulls in an 8 -inch round glass
talking dish. Cover with wax
paper. Microwave on 100%
power 1-2 minutes. Rearrange
meal tad Is. Cover and microwave
until the inside is no longer pink.
This usually takes 1*2 minutes
l o n g e r w i t h a (30 0 - w a 11
microwave oven. Let stand 3-5
minutes, then drain. Serve with
a prepared sauce on spaghetti or
/III.
To serve these meatballs with
a wine sauce on rice follow these
directions. Prepare meatballs
and keep warm.
W in e Sauce Ingredients:

cup water
2 teaspoons cornstarch
2 tablespoons dry red wine
I teaspoon soy sauce
Mi teaspoon instant beef
bouillon
!i teaspoon salt
dash pepper
l Mi cups hot cooked rice
Mix water and cornstarch In
2-cup measure, gradually sllr In
wine, soy sauce, bouillon, sail
and pepper. Microwave on 100%
power 12 minutes or until
1idling, stirring frequently to

ytAqn*s F a m ily Shuts H im O u t
A f t e r C lo s in g D o o r O n W ife
DEAR ABBT: I recently mar­
ried a lovely woman I'll call
Carole. My mother did not
Dear
approve of her because she was
a divorcee with two children.
(Wc are both In our late 20s.| My
Abby
brother was iny lx*st man. My
family came to the church hut
[did not go to the reception. In
Tact, they walked out the side Sign me
door immediately following thc
YUM
ecrcmony.
I’.S. On what did you base
My brother is getting married
vniir conclusion?
soon and I hud already agreed to
DEAR YUM: Just common
|be his best man. When tinsense and good manners. A
wedding invitation arrived. I was
gentleman never keeps a ladv
shocked to sec that it wus walling.
addressed to me only! I asked
my brother If It was some kind of
DEAR ABBY: How right you
oversight und he said no. Carulc
are to (Milnt out that constant
Jwas not Invited because Mother
tickling of a person Is cruelty
(didn't want her there.
ami should not lx- tolerated. My
' I sat down and wrote my
Irish mother told me ut least 5&lt;)
bro th e r a letter because I
years ago of a situation that took
couldn't tell him face to face how- place near her hometown In
hurt I wus. I also told him that Ireland.
unless, my. wife was Invited, 1
A neighbor had at least two
•could not be Ills beat man. I
•asked him to please come to see
im e so we could talk things over,
it heard nothing from him. so I
'called und asked If lie wanted to
{talk, und he hung up on me. I
{haven't heard from him since.
i The lust line of my letter was:
y'W h en Carole and I took our
murriage vows, wc two were
made one. and I cannot send half
of m r to your wedding."
S Was 1 wrong? Should I have
Jgone and left my wife at home?
' (She told me it was my decision.)

&amp;

I pound lean ground beef
1 «gg
2 slices fresh bread crumbled

wives pass away belore anyone
paid much attention to it. then
an o th e r n e ig h b o r reported
hearing hysterical laughter
coming from that house. Well. It
was later learned that the man
had been lying his wives to the
bedpost, and tickling the soles ol
their bare feet with a leather! He
continued until the hysteria did
them In. In truth, they were
tickled to death.

.

M E A T B A L L 8TE W WITH
IT A LIA N GREEN BEANS
Meatballs:

S te w :

In a 3 quart casserole combine
1 (1 6 o u n c e ) can whole
tomatoes
Vt cup water
8 o u n c e s l i c e d f r es h
mushrooms
I medium onion, quartered
I teaspoon In sta n t beef
bouillon
C over and m icrow ave on
100% power for 5 minutes,
reduce pow er to 50 % and
microwave for 20 minutes. Add
meatballs and I ( 10-ounce)
package of frozen Italian beaus
Recover and microwave on 50%
power for 10 minutes. This
makes four servings. Have one
and divide the remainder Into 3
equal portions and freeze.

ORIENTAL BEEP
1 tablespoon cornstarch

V* cup light or dark corn syrup
2 tablespoons corn oil
2 tablespoons soy sauce
1 tablespoon dry sherry

Vi teaspoon ground ginger
V5 pound flank steak, cut In
thin strips
1 cup sliced carrots
Vs cup sliced water chestnuts
1 clove garlic, minced or
pressed
2 green onions, cul In 1-Inch
pieces
Stir together cornstarch, corn
syrup, corn oil. soy sauce, sherry
and ginger until smooth tii
2Mi-quart micro-proof bowl. Add
beef, carrots, water chestnuts
and garlic: loss to coat well.
C o v e r w i l h pl asti c wrap.
M i c r o w a v e at Hi gh for 6
mi n u t e s , st i r r i ng every 2
minutes. Add green onions.
Microwave^l minute.longer o r
until mixture is heated through.
If desired, serve over rice. This
kitchcn-tcsted recipe makes 2
servings.

Sale Starts

M A IS

fo r

Thought
by

Bill
Painter

DEAR READERS: I need your
Tiny l« it l« t i— your own or bought
— a n a i ii par da*tart. Stull with
eraam and alrawbarrlaa now. In
wlntar, uaa ralalna and llga plumpad
In manata wlna and toatad with
choppad walnuta and gratad
chocolita
Researchers have found that monounsaturated fats may be better
than polyunsaturates to lower
cholesterol Look lor more products
to promote the monounsatutates
* •*
When tomatoes are ripe and tlavorlul,
top thick slices with e mixture ot 1
cup tour ctsam and 2 tip each brown
sugar and dljon mustard. Broil until
topping starts to brown.

t *•

What the labels mean lean" beef
has less than 10 percent fat. tike most
choice cuts Extra lean" has less
than 5 percent fat. which would cover
much ot the good" or "selecl" beef
sold
« •*
Top oft your barbecue with "roasted"
fruit. Scatter unpeeled bananas and
loll wrapped nectarines over the
embers. Spoon the tolltned trull over
Ice cream.
* •a
And how do you top dinner al
COLONIAL ROOM RESTAURANT
With our famous desserts, ol course.

DEAR HURT: You were not
wrong. I appluud your loyalty.
Pleuse greet your lucky wife for
me.

V

Food

PAT HOLLINGSWORTH.
BRITISH COLUMBIA

cooperation for an Important
survey.
Q ue stio n : Have you ever
cheated on your mate? How long
have you been together?
You need not sign your name,
but please stale your age. and
indicate whether you arc male or
lemale. Send letter or postcard
to: Abby's Survey, I'.O Box
694-10. Los Angeles, Calif.
90069.

1 pound lean ground beef
I small onion, finely chopped'
Va teaspoon parsley
Mi teaspoon salt
H leaspoon pepper
I egg
M&gt;cup grated carrot
Mix ail Ingredients well and
sh ap e In to s m al l balls.
Microwave on 100% power 3-5
minutes, or until no longer pink.
Drain.

Midge
Myeoff

MEATBALLS HAW AIIAN
1 can pineapple chunks

HURT IN LYNN. MASS.

DEAR ABBYi A while back
you answered u woman's query
about the comparison of u man's
eating habits to ids lovemaking.
She was in love with a man who
j.ale fast and she was concerned
jjthal his quick satisfaction of his
!Jphysical need for food might
Ijprophesy a similar quick satis
ij fact ion of Ids phyical need for
ijsex.
3 You advised her not to be
^concerned — if she loved him.
!jshe should marry him.
!{ Al the time. I wasn't sure ol
tfyour advice. Now I am. Abby.
•Syou were right on the nose. I
•Jnow know what great sex Is. and
ijlt's with this man who eats like
■'{tie hasn't eaten In six weeks.
i'Pleuse prltd this as validation of
your advice to others, who. likeme. put your advice on hold.

I tablespoon Instant minced
onion
I teaspoon sail
1a teaspoon allspice
■nteaspoon cloves
Home Economist
2 tablespoons reserved pine­
apple Juice
Seminole
Vs cup reserved pineapple
Community College
Juice
•a cup catsup
Mi cup brown sugar
p reven t lu m p s . Pour o ver
Drain pineapple, reserve Juice.
meatballs und stir gently- Serve
Mix beef. egg. bread crumbs,
nver hot rice.
seasonings, and 2 tablespoons
Add a German flavor to your Juice. Mold small amount of
next meatball economy meat meat mixture around each pine­
apple chunk. Place In a single
with this special recipe.
layer In a 12xH-lm-h baking dish.
SAUERBRATEN MEATBALLS Cover w ith wax paper and
microwave on l--% power 4-6
1 pound ground beef
3« cup soft bread crumbs minutes. Pour off meat Juices.
Combine Mi cup Juice, catsup
lahout I slice)
and brown sugar, pour over
1 small onion, finely chopped
meatballs. Cook 3-5 minutes on
2 tablespoons water
100% power.
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
Serve over rice or Chinese
Vi teaspoon salt
noodles. Can also be an ap­
•s leaspoon
petizer.
Sauce:
C hildren usually like this
2 ‘ t cups water
version of a meutball. This recipe
3 teaspoons nr cubes Instant is so easy it ts a good one for the
beginning cook to use.
bouillon
■i cup packed brown sugar
11cup raisins
•4 cup lemon Juice
PORCUPINE BALLS
1a-44 cup crushed gingersnaps
1 pound ground beef
110-14 cookies)
I cup instant rice
&lt;'(x&gt;ked noodles
I can (16 ounce) tomato sauce
I leaspoon poppy seed
I egg
Combine ground beef, bread
I teaspoon onion powder
crumbs, onion, water, lemon
Mi teaspoon salt
Juice, salt and pepper: mix well.
■4 teaspoon pepper
Form into I-Inch meatballs.
Mi teaspoon dry mustard
Place In shallow 2-quart glass
Mix ground beef. rice. 15 cup
casserole. Cover with paper tom ato sauce, egg. o n io n ,
towel. Microwave (high) 5-6 p o w d e r , s a lt a n d p e p p e r
minutes 110- 11) or until no together. Shape Into 12 meat­
longer pink. Drain if desired. Stir balls. Place In a round 8-9-Inch
in remaining Ingredients except baking dish.
noodles and poppy seed. Cover
Combine remaining tomato
witli casserole lid. Microwave sauce, parsley flakes, and dry
Ihtgh) 8-9 minutes (17-16) or mustard. Pour over meatballs.
until mixture bolls and thickens, C o v e r w i t h w a x p a p e r .
stirring once or twice. Sprlnkle Microwave on 100% |xjwer 4
uoodles with |xipppy seed and minutes. Rearrange meatballs.,
serve meatballs over noodles.
Cover. Microwave on 100%
jxiwcr 4-6 minifies, or until meal
S o m llm e s th is a p p e tize r Is firm.
meatball recipe can be dinner
w hen served w ith rice o r
A s l e w is e c o n o m l e a l ,
( hiuesc noodles.
nutritious and can be low In
calories too.

Featuring...

TH U R S D A Y

Prices Good
Thru Sat.

EVERYTHING

M U ST
10% 2 0 % 3 0 % 4 0 % 5 0 % OFF
A L L D R E S S F A B R IC S
• TERRY CLOTH •
D EN IM S • TSH IRT KNIT Prints &amp; Solids •
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MONDAYS SPECIAL
U H 1 D A T IU 4 PM

9

T E R IY A K I
STEAK

•

S*tv*d with choke
ol two vegetable!
roll or cotnbreed
Reg t l tS

F A B R IC S • C R A F T S • R IB B O N S • TR IM M IN G S

*3.75

5th ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION
Colonial Room
115 East First St.
Downtown Sanlord, Florida

F r id a y

G a r a g e

S a le s

6 30 AM TOC PM Closed Sun
Enter Thiu Toucnton t Drug Stare

FRI/SAT/SUN 8-5 PM

Who ttys the food’s good at

C O L O N IA L R O O M
lutl M i /our tutn it erAo're dined eith us.

L

Complete Stock of Christmas Items

All On One Huge Table
E N T IR E
S TO C K

Spin-To-Win - $5000 In Prizes
$ 3

CHRISTMAS

,

IN
SUMMER

50%0FF

Discounted
Prices
Marked

SAN FORD

FERN PA RK

APOPKA

3832-34 Orlando Or.
Hwy. 17-92 take Marj Bind.

131 S.R. 436
Fern Park

2303 E. Semoran
(Piedmont Plaza At Wekira;

ORLANDO
West|ati Square
2657 Hiawassee Rd.

ORLANDO
949 N. Semoran
Bl*d.

�Pickings A re
Garden baskets and roadside
stands are spilling over with
gorgeous vegetables that tan­
talize with color. When abun­
dance makes prices low and
flavor high. It Is wise to take
advantage of summer's harvest.
Even the most creative of
culinarians. however, search
anxiously through cookbook
after cookbook for the perfect
side dish when confronted with a
lonely zucchini isolated like a
lonely sentry on the countertop.
Converting such raw material
into tasty foods requires a recipe
repertoire. Summer House Vege­
table Pudding would be a wel­
comed addition on any veranda,
especially wit a grilled salmon or
swordfish. Ruby red native
tomatoes, bascll. and zucchini
are sliced, chopped, and added
to sauteed onions and garlic.
Eggs, cheese and breadcrumbs
provide the framework for this
savory pudding, and tabasco
pepper sauce adds life to the
concoction.
Cob-fresh corn figure won­
derfully Into Farm Fresh Corn
Pudding. Soothing milk, butter
and eggs are blended, smartly
flavored with red bell pepper and
red pepper sauce and baked to

custard-like perfection.

lto-quart shallow baking dish:
nrrangc reserved tomato and
SM O O CH HO USE
zucchini slices on top. Bake in a
‘ VEGETABLE PUDDING
preheated 375®F. oven 25
lA cup butter or margarine
minutes. Sprinkle with remain­
1 large onion, chopped (1 cup)
ing V* cup cheese. Bake 3
2 m e d iu m cloves g a rlic , minutes longer, until cheese Is
minced
melted. Yield: 4 servings.
4 medium tomatoes, divided
FARM FRESH CORN PUDDING
3 medium zucchini, divided
2 cups milk 1
1
tablespoon fresh basil,
1 tablespoon butter or marga­
chopped or 1 teaspoon dried leaf rine
basil, crumbled
3 large eggs
lVi cups shredded Cheddar
V•cup all-purpose flour
cheese, divided
Vi teaspoon salt
1 cup fresh whole wheat bread
Vi teaspoon red pepper sauce
cubes
2 cups fresh kernel com, cut
2 large eggs. lightly beaten
from the cob (approximately 2
Vi teaspoon red pepper sauce
large ears)
In large skillet melt butter;
44 cup coarsely chopped red
saute onion and garlic about 2 bell pepper
minutes. Chop 3 tomatoes (you
In small saucepan scald milk;
should have about 2 cups). Slice add butter. In small mixing bowl
remaining tomato, set aside. Cut beat eggs with a whisk until
8 thin slices of zucchini, set foamy: beat In flour, salt and red
aside for garnish. Coursely chop pepper sauce; gradually beat in
remaining zucchini (you should milk mixture. Add corn and red
hav e about 2 c ups) . A d d pepper: mix well. Pour mixture
chopped tomatoes, zucchini, Into a buttered lVi-quart baking
basil and onions to skillet. Cover. dish. Set dish In larger pan; add
Simmer 8-10 minutes, stirring 3 Inches hot water to larger pan.
occasionally, until zucchini Is Bake In a preheated 325°F. oven
crisp-tender. Stir in 1 cup cheese 55-60 minutes, or until a knife
and bread crumbs. Cool slightly; Inserted In center comes out
stir In eggs and red pepper clean. Let stand 10 minutes
sauce. T u rn mixture Into a before serving. Yield: 4 servings.

Vagatabla Pudding combines a medley ol summer's garden harvest

BARBECUE
SAUCE

$159
TO W ELS

FR YER LEG
Q U A R TE R S

EXTRA LEAN BEEF

PREMIUM

CUBE STEA K

FRYER B R E A S T

N a u t ic a l S a la d r e f r e s h in g in s u m m e r
U.S. CHOICE BEEF

Ta n g y Dressing
Is Secret O f
Salad Success
By tradition, as well as the
current focus on seasonal eating,
sum m er signals salad days.
During the warmer months' cel­
ebration, refreshing salads arc a
tasty and often quick solution to
what to have for dinner.
Good cooks know' that the
secret to a good salad Is a special
dressing that complements and
brings out the flavors of Ingre­
dients In the salad bowl. The
following two entree salads,
perfect for light summer meals,
have noteworthy dressings made
with tangy Miracle Whip salad
dressing.
N a u tica l Salad, featuring
chunks of tuna on a bed of
mixed greens, has a cool and
creamy dressing that combines
mayonnaise-type salad dressing
with sour cream, chopped cu­
cumber. onion and hard-cooked
egg whites. Mix the dressing
several hours in advance of
serving so the multiple flavors

have a chance to blend.
Then at meal time, arrange the
tuna and salad greens onto a
chilled plate. Spoon on the
dressing and add sieved egg
yolks and ripe tomato wedges for
color. The dressing can also be
served over chilled canned
salm on c h u n k s , t ur key or
chicken to create other entree
salad. To complete the menu,
serve rolls. Iced tea and a simple
fruit dessert.
Everybody's favorite potato
salad can be transformed Into a
party main dish with the addi­
tion of a tangy homemade celery
seed dressing, broccoli flowerets,
hum strips and cubed Cheddar
cheese.
Be sure to prepare the salad
several hours In advance so it Is
well-chilled and the medley of
ingredients take on the special
flavor of the salad dressing. Just
before serving, add a little extra
salad dressing. Delicious)

SH O R T
RIBS

* 6 9f
CORN FED, ASSORTED LOIN END

EXTRA WAN SLICED

PO RK C H O P S . . .

SM O K ED B A C O N iainooaiD

JELLY

JIFF SMOOTH CRUNCHY

P EA N U T B U TTER
Q u a n t ity
R ig h ts
R eserved

P r ic e s G o o d
6 / 2 4 t h r u 7 /1

W h o’s C ooking?
The Sanford Herald welcomes suggestions for cooks ol
the week. Do you know someone you would like to see
featured In this spot? The Cook of the Week column Is
published every Wednesday.

f

329 Sanford Ave
Sanford
323-1580

SU P E R M A R K E TS

$ 0 4 5

i k

O

�T

4ft— Sanford HaraM, Sanford. FI.

Wodnoodar. Juno 24, 1947

M

r &gt;

9

9

1 *9 ' 0

Straight From
PARAMOUNT'S PICTURM
H O LLYW O O D IUPII - Movlr
buffs will be treated to a Para­
mount Studios photographic ex­
hibit at the Academy of Motion
P ictu re A r t s and Sciences
Foundation this summer.
The academy's 145-tmage ex­
hibition. "Paramount Pictures.
1912-1987: A 75th Anniversary
Celebration.” will be open to the
public free of charge from June
25 to Sept. 18.
The collection will Include
pho t og r aphs from "Q u e e n
Elizabeth." the 1912 drama
starring Surah Bernhardt, up to
the recent "Crocodile Dundee."
starring Paul Hogan.
Other photos depict the works
of filmmakers Cecil B. DcMillc.
D . W . G r i f f i t h . J o s e f von
Stern be rg. Ernst Lubltsch.
George Stevens. Alfred HHchock
and mnny more.

M ooting
Blgfoot
" H a r r y a n d the H e n ­
dersons," an off-kilter, ag­
gressively cornball " E . T . , "
Is a movie about a suburban
family that discovers Blgfoot
while on vacation. The Hen­
dersons, from left, George
(Jo hn L l t h g o w ) , Nancy
(M e lin d a D i l l o n ) , Sarah
(M a rg a re t La n g rlck ) and
Ernie (Joshua Rudoy) meet
H arry, the legendary Blgfoot
who becomes one of the
family.

lO F f c w d T h — i r » » l

BELIEVERS

iili

By then. Ness had retired from
low enforcement and was In
private business.
"He came to New York with a
friend of mine. They wanted to
sell a waterproofing mark for
bond paper that they had come
up with somewhere." Fraley
said.
Fraley assembled a group of
New York City reporters to
examine the invention and meet
Ness. They threw a party for him
at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, at
which Ness regaled the guests
with his tales of closing down
speakeasies and p u r s u i n g
gangsters.
"We stayed up 'till 4 in the
morning sipping on the bottle."
said Fraley. "H e’s telling me all
these wild stories. I said 'Why
don't you wrlle a book?* He said.
'You’re u writer. Why don’t you
write It?'So I did."
Fraley wrote the first two
chapters using stories Ness re­
layed at the party, then showed
It to his agent. The agent was
Impressed.
"I took It to my agent at 10 in
the morning. At 12 they called
me and wanted to have lunch.
At 2 o'clock 1signed a contract."
Fraley stuffed the book con-Intel*ln*hts desk and proceeded
to liquidate the money he re­
ceived as an advance.
" I s p e n t It o n s lo w h o rs e s a n d
fast w o m e n . " h e s a id .

He did not look at the contract
again until shortly before he was
due to go to M e l b o u r n e .
Australia, to cover the 1956
Summer Olympics for the news

jlBEVERLY HILLS^
'

2

co p

.s

2W AYS
lO n ly U f t 's g h r « s y w

tw « M k k v s

w ays

»• ftn|fty *r«4rt eftunfry chkkfttil

F a m o u s K ftc lp ft,
This is the country chicken that's Qiven
us our good name We honey dip our
chicken, then add special seasonings
tor extra flavor Golden Drown, tender
and mouth-watering country chicken
al its best!

Crispy Plus*
Enioy more crispy crunch with Crispy
Plus Marinated, lightly spiced, then
double breaded and open tried to
golden brown It's a delicious
change ot pace1

&amp;

a/nSSs]
COUNTRY CHICKEN
Jerry C Margurette Sullivan O w ners Since 1972

We Cater Any Site Group
SAN FORD
CASSELBERRY

1905 F R E N C H AV E.
H W Y . 17-92

THREE PIECE
CHICKEN DINNER
$

2

6 9

3 pieces at golden brown Lee S Caunlry
CTucsen, (mu«d. while i dark). your choice or
leo individual servings of our delicious coontry vegetables or U s t i and biscuit (com 15*
eitre)
Limn 4 pet coupon
Not .end witft an, other otter or dtecouni

Coupon

41 N. HWY. 17-92

FIFTEEN PIECE PACK
OR BOX OR
•
TWENTY PIECE BOX
|
$ 2 o o
5J

®
ft
ft
ft
ft

keck Includes: 1J pieces ot golden brown
lee s Country Chicken. {Mi ted while /dark),
your chorea ot 3 pint* ot our del&gt;ctout coun­
try .agatacies ot salads and &gt;? biscuits
•os Includes Chicken Only
NoI tthd mitt) any other otter ot discount

Coupon

HOLLYWOOD (UPI) _ ^
Gazzara and Connie Sellecca
have been signed to star in
"Downpayment on Murder." a
two-hour movie or the week from
20th Century Fox Television fmNBC-TV.
T h e m elodram a w ill a)i0
feature David Morse from "Si
Elsewhere" and Joseph BarV&lt;
from the "W ls e g u y" serle*
which makes Its debut this fall
The story Involves a husband
who hires a hit man to kill his
wife.
Gazzara is a veteran TV t*r.
former best known for his serw
"Run For Your Life." Sellecca
co-stars In the highly ra,cd
prime-time soap opera "Hotel."

G e ttin g M a rrie d

T O N IG H T 'S T V

As in the movie. Ness was in
reality, "a very nice guy nnd a
good lawman." Fraley said. He
was not a heavy drinker.
"He had a couple of scotches
now and then, lie didn’t drink
very much."
Fraley. 72. has retired from UP
(now UPI) and lives In Fort
Lauderdale, where he publishes
"The Senior Golfer." a bimon­
thly magazine backed by Sam
Snead and an assortment of
other golf pros.
F r a l e y has w r i t t e n and
ghostwritten dozens of bio­
graphies. ‘ncluding that of vet­
eran sportscaster Bill Stern and
boxing manager Mickeng on a
book about lounge singer and
pianist Woody Woodbury.

Off

j

HOLLYWOOD (UPII - NBC
announced this
8 *j l .
America Pageant will be brt«dcast Sept. 19 with Gary Collins
returning for his sixth year a*
host of the nation's oldest beauty
contest.
Ceremonies will originate from
the stage in Convention Hall on
Atlantic City's boardwalk. The
34th live broacast of the annual
beauty pageant will feature
contestants from all 50 states
and the District of Columbia.
The pageant wilt offer approx­
imately 95 million In scholar­
ships at the national, state nnd
local levels to assist competitors
with their educations. Winner of
this year’s Miss America crown
will receive a 930.000 scholar­
ship.

location and on three Paramount
sound atages. The show win
make ita national debut Oct. 3.
The all-new cast include.
Patrick S tew art. Jonath«n
Frakea. LeVar Burton. Oeordj L,
Forge and Denise Crosby

CASTING FOR GLORY
H O LLYW O O D (UPI) - Abe
Vlgoda and Harry Shearer will
co-star In the hew movie "Glory
KBIfTUCET ftBAEEftPBAlX
Days." to be filmed on location
LO U ISVILLE. Ky. (UPIj - t JL
In and around Seattle by director
city will spend 9150.000 as pan
Martha Coolldge.
of a matching grant program to
Vlgoda Is best known for hts
renovate Central Park, home of
role of Detective Fish In the old
the K e n tu c k y Shakespeare
"Barney Miller" television series.
Festival.
p re
Shearer co-wrote und starred in
The city money will match a
"Th is Is Spinal Tap.” the cult
grant from Mary and Barry
agency.
movie directed by Rob Reiner.
Bingham Sr., millionaire an
"It was due In two weeks. I
Vlgoda will play a teacher in a
NEW SERIES
patrons and former owners of
was two weeks away from going high school where a student has
HOLLYW OOD lUPll Pro­ the Courier-Journal and defunct
to Australia. I took the two been arrested for the murder of a
duction
has
started
on
“Star
Louisville Times newspapers
weeks off and did It." Fraley faculty member. Shearer plays a
Th e grants will allow the
Trek:
The
Next
Generation."
said.
mystery man who may be the
He took a tape recorder and next victim. Other cast members Paramount Network Television's expansion of seating from 700 to
w e n t to N e s s ' s h o m e In arc Arllss Howard. Siizv Amis. first-run syndicated series based 1.500 and Improve drainage,
on the old "Star Trek" T V series lighting and sound equipment
Coudersport. Pa., where he re­ George Wendt and Diane Ladd.
a c c o r d i n g to Mayor Jerry
that ran from 1966-69
corded the exploits of Ness and
The
two-hour
ptku
film.
"E
n
­
Abramson, who announced the
his hand-picked band of nine
DISNEY'S 13 7-TEAR-OLD
counter at Farpoint." ts the first grants recently befcee a perfor­
young incorruptible treasury
MAN
agents.
H O LLYW O O D fUPI) The of 26 hours to be shot on mance of "King Lear *
He then transcribed the notes Disney Channel will present
and wrote the book, meeting the "Charlie Smith and the Fritter
deadline and leaving on time for Tree." the true story of a former
Australia.
slave who lived to be 137.
After a brief argument over the
B a s e d on w r i t t e n a n d
title — the publisher Initially videotaped Interview s with
Engagement and wedding forms are available at The
balked because the name Fraley Smith, who was brought to the
SanfonJ HcraDd. 300 N. French Ave. The cumpkned lurms
chose Is the same given to the United States from Liberia in
may be *cwropxrued by a professional black and vine
members of India's lowest social 1858. the drama begins in a
pbotcgrapih 3f a jwrturr ts desired with the announcement.
For iricrm stjcc cjlJ 322-2611.
caste — "Th e Untouchables" Florida nursing home where
w as p u b l i s h e d by J u l i e n
Messner In New York and sold
1.5 million copies.
Fraley also wrote a sequel.
"Th e Last of the Untouchables."
w i t h t r e a s u r y agent Paul
5:45
10:00
I a Y0UNC ANZ T he RESTRobskv. the last survivor among
HOURS
1
■ 4 NBC NEWS SPfCAu Sn
the 10 "Untouchables." Both
D»is Pus ? : -n-rr. a D -h i- ts
* * LDVWt
LOO
books are still available from
D m g A i » r r e -rp*r» a1 me
Si 111 EV5R_7 HL-BtU.4S
EVENING
s - e r - E jy d r * » - « . »a- a x r e asRiver City Press, usually by
O SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
tens a.aiaoe e buei j t **: r r *
ftOATHKM
too
special order.
© 4 DAY* V OJA UYES
jat-rsuCiers V4ca-e L a c . A - c - o - r z
0 1 ) GOOD DAY' a a ll my children
Fraley sold the rights to De- f t i I O * O K T W S
r . "a- 3-3»aA O
CNN NEWS
D U © h o k u m d tu .
31 ( i n GJWME A
'
O
ARTHUR
HAILEYS
HOTEL
stlu. which made the T V series © (10) MUkCNCn.
ttl HONE SHOPPING
© 'ID WTRt COOKITIG NOR
l £ m»E*
lAepa- -anes a srr-oa seevtr r«■13 NBA DRAFT (MOM)
In the 1950s. The rights were HEWSHOua
630
paror.; rutoand s mu; ?•»•*CD (I) GREATEST AHE&amp;CAN
later sold to Paramount, which
135
»)0
O CBS HORNING NEWS
•t: »O V5 FR i t j E*th u )
» (11) INN NEWS
made the Brian DePalma movie, HERO
( 11 ) CENTURONS
© (!) AU. M THE FAM IY
6.-05
130
the No. 4 top-grossing movie in
TON A JERRY ANO FRIENDS
’ ! GILUGA.N S tSUNO
10:30
r © BD-D A«C T h E BEAUTIFUL
the nation a couple of weeks *
L45
31 (11) BOB NEWHART
fti, t.-R0CP
6:30
after Its release.
ISO) A H WEATHER
0 '10, P-DRDt HOMEGROWN
’ t MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
O « NBC NEWS
» ’ a—a 3 - 3.es a; lps A-tp»-»s
(PR),
Fraley was not involved in the
s o c a s NEWS
730
a n (L-&gt;ei
© -to NTV BD.Tf«AN COOK­
T O ABC NEWS Q
1 TQCAV
movie, but the closing titles note
© (I) ONE BX3 FANCY
ING (MON
31 (11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
O CBS NORMNG NEWS
that the film is based on charac­ FORT
a ’ to =reicn
(t u e )
0 9 0 0 0 HORNING AMERICA
11-00
a 'to JUETIfc WLSONS LOUIS­
ters suggested by the television
(I t ) 6 X J0C
0 4 1 0 7 o x e rs
6:35
IANA TOOK IN - OUTDOORS
(SO) READING RAINBOW
31 (11) U T E SHOW iu tv -car
series and the books written by
D LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(WED i
V a c o - . a - a /.*—*, r 5 v .
730
Fraley v. ilh Ness and P.ov iky.
a no W DXN ffliXT S SHOP
7:00
© 1 10) MONTY PVTh OW S FL TING
Q NORMNG PROGRAM
rierut
(THU)
"I thought it was a great O * NEWLYWED GAME
( 11) TRANSFORMERS
5 O PM MAGAZINE
© (I) HOME SHOPWING NET­
movie, not very close to the
2M
(SO) SESAME STREET
t O JEOPAROY! □
WORK
a « AtCTeC* WORLD
book, but whatever. Literary
11 (11) BARNEY MILLER
•30
11:30
I O At "H I WDRuS TURNS
© (10) WONDERWORKS Rescued
license." Fraley said.
(t l ) DENNIS THE MENACE
O
4 TONIGHT SHOW ~oe
7 O ONE -P t TD - ’Vi
a-c
aooa'd
Tom
G
oings
Frank Nl l tl . the gloating
Jom r, Carscn r S v r ,
835
31 (11) ANDY DRFPT h
'
barge 3a'*a:e B'C a - wca~it 1 DREAM OF JCANNIE
I O M -A -S 'H
mobster who Ness pushes over
© (10i NASC DF PAINTING
n . r«*&lt;oura *- e'ds by M con7 O NIGHTL.NE O
KEEPSAKES (PR!
•30
the side of the courthouse roof in t -ued oosseis-on of the oe*et *to© (1 0 ) STAR HUSTLER
O (10) AFT S FJW (MON)
en from Loro HOba't * tO*r&gt; rvQuS*
» (11) FUNTST0NES
the film, actually committed
a (18) JOY
PAINTING (TUE)
O
12:00
© (10) N IS T U ROGERS
suicide years after Capone's © (I) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
a (10) MAGC OF O t PANTING
1 O ADOERl y 3'eenscar s-e~935
DISNEY Da&gt;y Cro&lt;»en j*a re
conviction, Fraley said.
(WED)
oora-.y assgred to
cr a* v
*1 BEWITCHED
a .e&gt; p rates W tn :r « r » o of h$
a (10) MAGC &gt; FLORAL PAINT­
a*d A»e-e . vm qc s yartcec 3
Ness, who had a wife and ice*'e«
Georg* (Buddy £osen) a-d
ING (THU)
7 O NIGHTLIFE —os* DtidS-er
9.00
adopted son In real life, is given boatman v «e Fe* uen vo*«| Da.,
'•f Guests
-as ypuc Rjn.
O 4 DIVORCE COURT
239
(Few Pa-*#fi v-.estga’ei roan
a young daughter in the movie.
D U C (R un Sie'eo)
f O OONAH’JE
s* (11) MY U T U E PONT N
-a « along tre r .er
7
O
OPRAH
WtNFREf
IS
(11)
ASK
OR.
RUTH
“ There Is one true part, when
FRIENDS
3* (11) GREEN ACRES
© (I) HOME SHOPPING
7:05
a (10) SECRET O TT
he takes that baseball bat and
©
(10)
SESAME
STREET
1) 5ANF0RD ANO SON
1230
kills the g u y ," Fraley said,
235
9:05
O 4 U T E NIGHT WITH DAVI0
7:30
U WOMAN* ATCH &lt;F*D
referring to the brutal scene O 4 ENTERTAINMENT
tl
DOWN
TO
EARTH
TONIGHT
LETTERMAN Scnedu-ed a r y
where a tuxedoed Capone beats
I O DATING GAME
330
Judge Remold, sx^er Pady Sm.,?
930
(in Stereot
I O WHEEL OF FORTUNE □
O 4 SANTA BARBARA
one of his henchmen to death at
O 4 LOVE CONNECTION
} ! (11) BENSON
7 O MOVIE Da.o wo G c-a * O GUIDING UGHT
3t (11) PETTICOAT JUNCTION
an elegant banquet.
(1960) Orson V(t *s 1,0 Pa,*r
CL o GENERAL HOSPITAL
7:35
935
"Only in real life, it was two
3S (11) HAWAII FIVE-0
j * (11) SCOOBY 000
II HONEYMOONEHS
tl MOVIE (FRI)
guys." Fraley added.
a (10) MISTER ROGERS
1:10
tl HAZEL (MON-THU)
8:00
S o MOVIE Mss A Are-can
3:05
The two. John Scaltse und O 4 HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN A
1030
Beauty" (19821 bare Lane Cions
It TOM A JERRY ANO FRIENDS
Albert AnselmI. were trusted petty crook t-nttt a w e'ease eonianO 4 SALE Of THE CENTURY
leachman
Si rn.Mion |R) (in Stereol Q
killers who were planning to ng
3:30
t O HOUR MAGAZINE
it MOVIE The Burning h iis
5 O NEW MIKE HAMMER ram­
7 O TRUE CONFESSIONS
i f ( H ) SMURFS
leave Capone's gang to Join up mer he'ps a a dor. secure *2 200
(1957) Tab Hunjer Uara'e Wood
3S (11) f a l l g u y
a (10) SESAME STREET
due h«- from a unryi person fund
with gangster Hop Toad Glunta.
1:30
© (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO
(R
)
4:00
39 (11) BIZARRE
"They were double dealing. He
1035
7 O PERFECT STRANGERS La'O 4 MAGNUM. P.L
1:45
threw a big party for them and ry t emoarrassed Dy Ba».s Outra­
U MOVIE (MON-THU)
S O STAR TREK
7 O MOVIE Joshua at jenervo
came up behind him with a geous approach lo dal rg g rs |R)Q
7 O JEOPARDY!
10:30
City
)» (11) MOVIE The Biac* Marti e
J* (11) THUNDERCATS
O 4 CU SSIC CONCENTRATION
baseball hat and killed them.”
119801 Robert Fo«north. Pauia Pren2:00
7 O SUPERIOR COURT
4:05
Fraley said.

H it M o v ie T h e U nto uchables'
Fu e le d By G lasses O f Scotch
By Jane Sutton
UPI Venture Writer
F O R T L A U D E R D A L E . Fla.
(UPI) — The book that Inspired
the vintage T V series and the
current hit movie "T h e Un­
touchables*' was born over sev­
eral glasses of scotch at a
late-night bull session with
treasury agent Eliot Ness.
Ness dropped dead of a heart
. attack when he read the proofs.
“ I wanted the man to read It."
said Oscar Fraley, author of the
hook "T h e Untouchables."
"I gave him the proofs. He
read them all. Then he went out
to the kitchen to get a drink of
water and fell over dead."
Ness died of a heart attack In
1957. but lives in legend as the
unrelenting lawman who put Al
I Capone behind bars.
Fraley, a United Press reporter
tor 25 years and author of the
"Today’s Sports Parade” col­
umn that appeared in 450 news­
papers. was Introduced to Ness
in 1956 by an old college buddy.

Smith - played bY Rlch8rd
W ard-re la tes his storyScheduled for broadcast June
26. the 90-minute drama
how Smith, who died In
was tricked Into c o m i n g aboard
a slave ship with the promise
that com fritter* grew on trees in
America.
., _
During hla long life 9™ ul? * .
a cowboy, outlaw, bounty hunt­
er. saloon keeper, ffambier «n d
eventually a side show attrac
tion.

/

€

t

\

N\
mMMTUJ
CALL TO LL FR EE
14M -M Z-I1II

t SS After working on an emotonaNy
eihausting chwid-rhurder case a
nea. y-drmii.ng po ce delect .e l
teamed »&lt;th a poi-ceworran to *nd a
dsturped dognapper
© (10) TO BE ANNOUNCED
© (!) MOVIE A'ice Doesn &lt; L„e
Here Anymore' (19/5) Ellen ButSfyrt Kns Kr.stolterson When an at­
tempt to return to her former s-rgirg
career pro.es unsuccessful a a do a
becomes a eatress to Support ter­
se t and her 12-year-okt son

8:05
11

MOVIE
DarpyS Rangers
(19581 James Garner Etch «a Choreau The hero-c Amercan Rangers
go into combat under the leadersho
of Colonel Darby nt thee m.ason ot
Italy and North Aft ca

3S (11) 0UKES OF HAZZAR0

2:30
S a NEWS

3:00
S ONIGHTW ATCH
7 O MOVIE The Long Wad"
( 1954) Anthony Quinn. Charles Cob­
urn
3S (11) BJ / LO0O

3:10
it MOVIE Ten Seconds to Heir
(1959) Jett Chandler Jack Paiance

4.-00

8:30

MORNING

1 O h e a d OF THE C U S S Chartie s students dscuss irea io.e : «es
on Valentme S Day |R) Q

5:00

9:00
O * FACTS OF LIFE Tool* s
fr end Cninaman linger Stacey Q)
•its the gru n Pee»s» n ,uit be'o’e
the start of net concert tour &lt;R| in
Sie'eo i a
1 O CBS NEWS SPECIAL The
So.et Unon Se.en Oa.s m May
Oan Ram*' Ed Bradey and Wyatt
Andre a are among the fo'resory
dents Aho report on peop e places
and (rend* n tre So, et Uwcm
7 O MACGYVER A renegade .
oe-co.er agent
ei-A'-fe and ne&gt; teenage son iR| Q
© (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES

9:30
O 4 NIGHT COURT Oa’ r-as m
counters A'th Harry s raoul dog a- d
tao S*esi-.- t'eAardesses (R)

^ V

it FUNTST0NES

(? u ij0) **°r i u * 0F NATURE

1 O CARD SHARKS (MON. WED-

S

e d ,0'

^ n o m i n a l WORLD

© (10) NEWTON S APPLE (THU)

-

O
*
7
»
©

11:00

4 SCRABBLE
PRICE IS RIGHT
O WHO S THE BOSS?
(11) CHIPS
( 10) SURVIVAL SPECIAL IFRl)

a

S i W S S f * " ™ 1®

3S (M )O A L U S
n r r e w

© (10) INNOVATION (FRI)
© H O ) WHO AMERICA (MON)

© (10) LIVING WILD (TUE)
,i

7 O GUNS OF WILL SONNEn
(THU)
3f (11) CNN NEWS
tl MARY TYLER MOORE (FRIWE0)

5:10
t) WORLD AT U R 0 E (THU)

5:15
O 4 z s COUNTRY (FRI. TUETHU)
O 4 THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
MUSIC (U0N)

™ U)

31 (11) SILVERMAWKS
(10) REAL ADVENTURtS
SHERLOCK J0NE5 AND PROC­
TOR WATSON (FRI)
a (10) REAL ^VENTURES OF
SHERLOCK JONES AND PROC­
TOR WATSON (“ o n -TDE« « UL
a (10) REAL ADVENTURES OF
SHERLOCK HOLMES AND PROC­
TOR WATSON (WED)

a

4:35

! w e o )°* MATU,,t 0F THINGS
© (10) NOVA (THU)

It FLINTSTONES

«

. 12:00

a 4 JUDGE
I O U aA ‘ S*H
7 a CARD SHARKS (FW; TUE)
7 O HOLLYWOOD SQUARE*
(MON. WED-THU)
3* (11) FACTS OF LIFE
a (10) READING RAINBOW
© (•) SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF
POWER

0 * * 0 7 ONEW S
H (11) BEWITCHED
(FRI)0’ U8,TAmSr DOWNSTAIRS

It ROCKY ROAD (FRI)
TU11|
tt AOOAMS FAMILY (MON-THU)

11:30

O 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
7 Q WEBSTER

afternoon

_

© ( 10) BERGERAC (MON)
(TUE)1” MA*T | W ,IC * THEATRE
©&lt;10) MTSTIRYI (WE0)

5:30
! O LOVE YOUR SKIN (FRI)
S O CAN YOU BE THINNER?
(TUE)
7 O LOVE TOUR SKIN (FRI. THU)
7 O LEARN TO READ (TUE)
) ( (It ) CNN NEWS
&lt;7 BOB NEWHART

4:30

11 PERRY MASON (MON)

12:05
it PERRY MASON (FRI. TUC'THU)

12:30
n

4 W ORDPLAY

5:00

5:05
5:30
O « PEOPLE S COURT
* ONEW S
.» O HOLLYWOOD SQUARE*
(FRI. TUE)
» O NEWS (MON. WED-THU)
3* (I t ) JEFFERSONS
© (10) 3-2-1 CONTACT
© (I) HE-MAN A MASTERS 07
THE UNIVERSE

5.35
It SAFE AT HOME (FRI)
't MUNSTERS (MON-THU)

�1

1

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t 1 1 1 '.

^ &lt; t

r

Sales Tax Hike Option
If Services Tax Delayed
TA LL A H A S S E E (UPII — Florida lawmakers
may be forced to hike the sales tax from 5 to 0
percent or cut hundreds or millions of dollars
from agency budgets If the new consumer
services tax runs Into legal problems, state
ofllclals say.
About 40 businesses, trade groups and individ­
uals have asked state and federal courts to

Farm ers M a y P articipa te
In F m H A Panel Election
Election of a Farmers' Home Administration
County Committee member is to lake place June
30. County Supervisor James E. Merrick an­
nounced.
The Fm HA County Committee assists the
county ofTIce In determining the eligibility of
applicants for certain types of Fm H A farm loans.
Farmers who live In Seminole/Brevard counties
have their principal farming operation within the
county or area for which the election is being
held, and derive the principal part of their Income
from farming are eligible to vote.
“ We will elect one committee member who will
serve a three-year term.” Merrick said.
Ballots are available from the FmHA county
office. Marked ballots must be received at the
FmHA office by June 30.
Further Information may be obtained by calling
James E. Merrick at 322-4251.

Execution Preparations Begin
STA R K E IUPI) — Officials at Florida State
Prison were to begin preparations today for the
execution of James Agan. a convicted double
murderer scheduled to go to Florida’s electric
chair 7 a.m. Thursday.
A last-minute appeal to halt the execution
remains in the hands of U.S. District Judge John
Moore Jr. in Jacksonville.
Agan lawyers's say he did not kill Dana DcWitt.
a fellow Florida State Prison inmate, although
Agan confessed to the killing In 1980.
His lawyers twice failed to win a stay of
execution earlier this month, losing In the Florida
Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court.
The lawyers have said they will go to the 11th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals In Atlanta. If Judge
Moore rejects their motion.
Gov. Hob Martinez has signed 10 death
warrants since he took office In January, but
Agan would be the first Florida inmate to be
executed during the Martinez administration.
Agan. 59. is under his second warrant.

Legal Notice
N O TIC E OF E L E C TIO N
The Farmers Horn* Administration (F m H A ) County Commlttaa elec
lion this yaar will ba hald on Juna 30. IN 7. Tha ballot balow must ba
llllad out, datachad and mallad and racalvad or raturnad In parson to
JAM ES E. M ERRICK not latar than Juna 30, 19*7. It you do not vota
In parson, you should mall your ballot Inslda a blank anvalopa marked
ballot to ensure a secret ballot. This blank anvalopa should ba placed
lm Ida tWa 4hkMeps'y*u uaa NVpoll yeur a x liil. »
must ba leglbla on tha outer anvalopa. Failure to provide thla Informa­
tion will render your ballot Invalid. Ballots and anvalopas may also ba
obtained from your local Fm HA office.
Tha slate of nominee* from SEM IN OLE/BREVARD county(les) are
listed In tha ballot balow. Tha qualifications of parsons voting are
described In tha "Voter Certification Statement". For further Informa­
tion ragardlng voting and votar eligibility, contact the county oftlca
listed above. FmHA elections are open to all allglbla voters without
regard to race, color, religion, national origin, aga. political affiliation,
marital status, sax. and/or handicap.
U S D E P A R TM E N T OF A G R IC U LTU R E
FARM ERS HOME A D M IN ISTR A TIO N
B A LLO T FOR C O U N TY C O M M ITTE E M E M B ER IS )
Stata: Florida
County (las) Brevard and Samlnola
'Candldata(s)

E Z E K IE L D IXON

J ___ /

•ONLY V O TE FOR I C A N D ID A T E S )

invalidate the extension of the 5 percent stale
sales tax to advertising, lawyers fees and other
services.
The Florida Supreme Court heard arguments
for and against the tax Monday. The court is
expected to issue a special advisory opinion on
ihe constitutionality of the lax by mid-July.
Sen. Jim Scott, who chairs the Senate
Appropriations Committee, said Tuesday that
lawmakers are concerned a court might forbid
state officials from collecting the tax until (he
legal challenges are settled.
Scott. R-Fort Lauderdale, said that might force
the Legislature to hold a special session to
consider a one-year. 1 percent Increase In the
sales tax rate to make up the $750 million dollars
In lost revenue.
Without the tax hike. Scott said, the Cabinet or
Legislature would be required to rut funds slated
for state agencies, school districts and local
governments.
"It would not be a very good option," said
Scott.
Jim Zingaie. House Appropriations Committee
stafT director, said lawmakers might have to cut
at least $200 million to make up the difference.
Th e Cabinet, sitting as the state’s Administra­
tion Com m ission, is empowered to make
emergency budget cuts', or the Legislature could
make the cuts itself In a special session.
Gov. Bob Martinez has said he will call a special
session to focus on the medical malpractice issue
later this summer or In the fall.
Martinez budget aides agreed at a Tuesday
meeting to start developing contingency plans In
case any court problems arise.
"There’s no game plan or strategy." said
Martinez spokesman Jon Peek. "But you have to
coverall the possibilities."

Ltgal Notice

legol Notice

IN T H K C IR C U IT COURT
IR M IN O LE CO UN TY,
FLORIDA
C A S I NO. 44-444I-CA-49-E
A TL A N TIC FE D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION O F
F O R T LA U D ER D A LE.
Plaintiff,
w
R O B E R T K. CO YN E and
ROSEMARIE M. CO YN E,
hit wife; L IB E R T Y
N A TIO N AL BANK; and
W ILLIA M J.C U T H E L .
Defendant*.
NOTICE O F SUIT
T O : W ILLIAM J .C U T H E L
YOU ARE H E R EB Y
N O TIF IE D that a Crottclalm to
foreclose a mortgage upon those
lands described as.
Building "C ", Lot A. Block F.
and that part of Lot 20. Lot F,
lying West of Interstate No. 4
IS.R. 400); AND ALSO Lots 4, 7
and I, Block G, and that part ol
Lot S, Block G. lying West of
Interstate No. 4 (S.R. 400) and
East of the West line of Lot I.
Block G, extended Northerly;
all In Sanlando Springs Tract
No. 47, according to the plat
thehaot as recorded in Plat Book
4, Page as, ol the Public Records
of Seminole County, Florida.
has been Hied against you and
you are required to serve a copy
of your written defenses, to the
Crossclaim. If any, on John V.
Baum. 7100 South U.S. Highway
1792, Fern Park, Florida 32730,
and Ilia the original with the
Clerk of the above styled court
at the Seminole County Court
house. Sanford, Florida, on or
before July 10. 1947, otherwise a
ludgm ent m ay be entered
against you lor the relief de
mended In the Crossclalm.
T H I S N O T I C E sh a ll be
published once each week for
four (4) consecutive weeks In
Ihe SANFORD HERALD . San
lord, Florida.
D A VID N . BER R IEN
CLERKOF
C IR C U IT CO UR T
B Y : Jean Brlllant
ASD EP U TYC LER K
June 5, ISO7
Publish: June 10. 17. 24, July I.
1947
D E P 73

U N IT E D S TA TE S O IS TR IC T
C O U R T M IO D L E D IS TR IC T
OF F L O R ID A O R L A N D O
D IV IS IO N C A S E N O .
I7 -3 2 4 -C IV -O R L -I4 U N I T E D
S TA TES OF AM ERICA. Plain
lilt. vs. M A N U EL A CABAN, at
ux.. Defendants. ORDER FOR
SER VICE BY PUBLICATION .
On motion of plaintiff In the
above-entitled cause by Lynn*
L. England, Its Assistant United
States A ttorn e y, In action
against th* defendants. Manual
A . Caban and M llagrot O.
Caban, and to enforce 4 lien
upon real property situate In
Ihls Olttrlcl and described a*
follows: Lot I I . Less tha South 5
feet thereof, W A S H IN G TO N
H E IG H TS, according to th* Plat
thereof at recorded In Plat Book
3, Page 37 ol tha Public Records
ol Seminole County, Florida,
and It appearing to th* Court
that the defendants, are not
Inhabitants ol nor found wllhln
tha State ot Florida and have not
voluntarily appeared herein,
and that personal service upon
them It not practical becauie
Ihelr residence and whereabouts
are unknown. It Is O R D ER ED
that Manual A . Caban and
Mllagrot O. Caban, appear or
plead to tha complaint herein
within 20 days of th* last date ol
publication and In dafault
thereof the Court will proceed to
Ih hearing and adjudication of
this sull as it Manuel A Caban
and Milagros O Caban had been
served with process in th* State
of Florida, but only to Ihe extent
provided lor by Title 24. United
State* Code. Section 1455; It Is
further O R D ER ED lhat notice
ot Ihls order be published by Ihe
United States Marshal in a
newspaper ol general clrcula
lio n In S em inole C o u n ty.
Florida, once a week for six (4)
consecutive weeks, commencing
within 20 days from the date of
this order DONE AND OR
D E R E D at Orlando. Florida,
this 21 day of May. 1947 /s' G
K e n d a ll S h a rp U N I T E O
S TA TES D ISTR IC T JUDGE
Publish June 10. 17. 24. July I.
1 . 15. 1947
O EP 9

Pleas# detach Ihls notlca before voting ballot
V OTER C E R T IF IC A TIO N S T A T E M E N T
Subpart W ol Part 2054 ol Tltla 7, Coda of Fadaral Regulation* requires
that all voters for Fm HA county or area commlttaa alactlons meet the
following eligibility requirements: (a) ba farmers; (b) derive the prln
clpal part ol Ihelr Income from terming (that It. more than 50 percent
ot Ihelr gross Income mutt com* from agricultural production); (c)
have their principal farming oparallon within Ihe county or area for
which Ihe election It being held.
By submitting this ballot. I attest that I meet the criteria to vote.
Publish: J u n e lf 1947 D E P 174
IN T H E C IR C U ITC O U R T
FOR T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIR CU IT OF
FLOR ID A, IN AND FOR
SEM INOLE CO U N TY
CASE NO. 45 344ACA 09-0
G E N E R A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
J. I KISLAK M ORTGAGE
SERVICE CORPORATION,
P L A IN TIF F .
v*
ALLAN L. FRASURE.
D IA N A M FRASURE,
D EFEN D A N TS.
N O TICE OF SALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
pursuant to an Order or Final
Judgment ot Foreclosure deled
June 4, 1947. entered In Civil
Case No 45 34M CA09G ot the
Circuit Court ol the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit In and lor
Samlnola County. Flo rid a ,
w h e re in J I K IS L A K
M O RTGAG E SERVICE COR
PO R ATIO N, plaintiff (si. and
ALLAN L .' FRASURE. DIANA
M FRASURE. . are defend
antslsl, I will sell to the highest
and best bidder lor cash, at th*
West front door ol the Samlnola
County Courthouse. Sanford In
Sanford, a) 11:00 o'clock to 2:00
o'clock, on Ihe 22nd day of July.
1947. tha following described
property as sat forth In said
Final Judgment, to wit:
Th# East 10 feel ol Lot 7 and
th* West 60 leal of Lot I. Block
Q, LON G W OO D P A R K , ac
cording to th# Plat thereof a*
recorded In Plat Book 11. Pages
4 through 10. ot the Public
Records ol Seminole County.
Florida.
D A TE D at San’lord. Florida,
this 12th day olJune. 1987(C IR C U IT COURT SEA L)
DavidN. Berrien
C L E R K O F THE
C IR C U ITC O U R T
Seminole County, Florida
BY Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish' June 17. 24. 1947
D FP 124

IN T H E CIR CU IT
COURT IN A N O FO R
SEM INOLE CO UN TY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO: I7-27S-CA-09-G
JOSEPH GERARDend
LO R E N E G E R A R O .
his wit*.
Plaintiffs,
v.
D A N IE L A MARION.
A N G ELIC M. MARION,
hit wife. DAVID
SCHWIDERSON. SEM INOLE
CO U N TY . FLORIDA, a
political subdivision
of th* Stale of
Florida. DOU ON EY
SURVEYORS. INC..
J N EA L WISE. ANO
CHARLES BRANNON.
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
N O TICE Is hereby given that,
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgment ot Foreclosure an
lered herein. I will tell the
property situated In Seminole
County. Florida.descrlbadat:
Th* West 423.31 feet of the
East 440 feet ol th* North 15
chains ot Southwest 14 ot
Southwest U ot Section 9.
Township 20 South, Range 32
East, lying South of the Old
S t n l o r f G e n t v i Road
right ol way. Seminole County.
Florida.
T O G E T H E R W I T H : 1972
M a n h a M o b il* H o m e , ID
(724501050. F lo r id a T U I*
•5351049
at public tale, to the highest
and best bidder tor cash, at tha
west entrance ol th* Seminole
County Courthouse in Santord.
Florida, at II 00 a m on th* 13th
day of July. A.D 1947.
WITNESS my hand and at
liclal seal ol said court this 11th
day of June. A D 1947
(Seal)
D A V ID N B E R R IEN
CLER K. CIR CU IT CO UR T
By: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish June 17. 24. 1947
O E P 127

IN T H E CIR CU IT
COURT FOR TH E
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR CU IT
OF FLO R ID A ,
IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE CO UN TY
CASE NO. 44-1592 CA Of-L
G EN ER A L JU R ISD ICTIO N
DIVISION
C E N TR U ST SAVINGS BANK
F/K/A OAOE SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION.
P L A IN TIF F ,
v
s
PAU L L. HORN.
V ISITIN G NURSE
ASSOCIATION.
D EFE N D A N TS
NOTICE OF SALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
pursuant to an Order or Final
Judgment of Foreclosure dated
JU N E 17th. 1947. entered In Civil
Case No 14 2S97 CA 0* L of the
Circuit Court of the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit In and for
Seminole County. F lo rid a ,
wherein C E N TR U S T SAVINGS
BANK F/K/A DADE SAVINGS
A N D LOAN A S S O C IA TIO N .
p la ln lltt(s ). and P A U L L.
H O R N . V IS IT IN G N U R SE
ASSOCIATION. , are defend
ant(s). I will sell to the highest
and best bidder tor cash, at Ihe
west front door of the Seminole
County Courthouse in Sanford,
at 11:00 o'clock to 2.00 o'clock,
on the 4th day of August. 1947.
the following described property
as set forth In said Final
Judgment, to wit:
Lot 32. W IN O TR EE W EST,
according to the plal thereof as
recorded In Plal Book 20. at
pages 97 and 9*. of the Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida
D A TE D at Santord. Florida,
this 22nd day of JU N E . I9«7
(Seal!
David N Berrien
C LER K O FTH E
CIR CUIT COURT
Seminole County. Florida
B Y : Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publish June24,
July 1,1947
D EP 174

IN T H E C IR C U ITC O U R T
OF TH E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N D F O R
SEM INOLE COUNTY.
FLOR ID A
CASE NO. 47 2222 CA «9 L
SOUTHERN G R E E N TR E E
M O RTGAG E CORPORATION.
INC .acorporation
which Isorganlied and
existing under the
taw* of the Stateol
Florida.
Plaintiff.
vs.
WARWICK L JONESand
JA N IC E D JONES,
his wife.
Defendants
N O TICE OF ACTION
TO WARWICK L JONES
and JA N ICE D JONES,
his wife
LKA 15 Yiagally Drive
Arana Hills
BRIZBAN. Q UEEN SLAN D.
A USTRALIA
You are hereby notified that a
sull has been Hied agalnsl you In
the Circuit Court lor Orange
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , e n title d
SO UTH ER N G R E E N TR E E
M O R TG A G E CORPORATION
INC., a corporation which Is
organised and existing under Ihe
laws of Ihe Stale ol Florida.
Plaintiff, vs W ARW ICK L
JONES and JA N ICE D JONES,
hi* Wile, Defendants, Case
Number 47 2722 CA 09 L
The nature ol Ihls suit is an
action to foreclose a mortgage
on Ihe tallowing described pro
p e rty located in 5eminole
County. Florida
L O T J7. T IF F A N Y WOOOS.
according to Ihe plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 29. Pages
24 and 29. ol Ihe Public Records
ol Seminole County. Florida and
having an address ol 4424 Tit
lany Woods Circle. Oviedo,
Seminole County. Florida
You are hereby requested to
tile your written delenses with
the Clerk of said Court and
serve a copy thereof upon Ihe
Pla intiff * attorney whose
address is 214 Annie Street.
Orlando. Florida 32404 and
whose name Is M IK E L W
CA R P EN TER on or before July
31, 1947, or a default will be Hied
against you
WITNESS my hand and seal
as Clerk ol the Circuit Court In
and lor Orange County, Florida.
Ihls 12th day ol June. 1987
D A V IO N bER R IEN
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
By Jane E Jasewic
Deputy Clerk
Publish June 17. 24.
July 1,4. 1987
D EP 129

'We Don't Even Know The Questions.

Sprint To Mars
Arouses Medics
W ASHINGTON |UPI) - Even
if NASA had the money and
spaceships, scientists say they
would not recommend sending
people to Mars now because of
questions about their ability to
withstand such a long voyage
in weightless apace.

ference.
"Any kind of a successful
mission to Mars must require a
tremendously expanded re­
search effort in the field of life
science activities." said Dr.
Dennis Smith, chairman of the
National Academy of Sciences’
Committee on Space Biology
and Medicine.

of NASA’s life sciences .
In g c o m m i t t e e , s a i d
spaceflights that have, been
carried out so far have revealed
no major medical problems.

"B u t. when we’re talking
about a mission of a year or
more, then we’re getting into
quite a different situation, and
we really don’t know very
"I don’t think personally, ■ m u c h a b o u t p r e v e n t iv e
measures. We don’t know very
and the committee would tend
much about the real degree of
to agree, that the data base at
this point would allow such an
Impairment that astronauts or
cosmonauts might experi­
endeavor. But there is no
ence." Robbins said.
reason why the data base can’t
be obtained."
"Many of us feel that our
Doctors are worried about a
knowledge is limited to the
wide variety of problems,
point that we don’t even know
ranging from the effect of
the questions to ask." agreed
prolonged weightlessness on
Dr. Robert Moser, chairman of
bones and blood cells to radia­
NASA's Life Sciences Advisory
tion dangers and psycho-social
Committee.
Interactions.
Robbins spld. however, that
Americans have spent no
scientists will have to accept
more than 84 days in space,
that not all the questions can
but three Soviet cosmonauts
be answered.
have logged a record 237 days
“This is a pretty risky busi­
in orbit.
ness any way you slice it." he
Dr. Frederick Robbins, a
said. "W e’ll never know every­
Nobel laureate and chairman
thing we'd like to know."

But the life science experts
said Tuesday most of the
potential medical problems
should be able to be resolved if
the space agency provides the
necessary resources aboard its
planned Earth orbiting space
station In the mid-1990s.
The question of a manned
flight to Mars was raised
Monday at the opening session
of a NASA-sponsored confer­
ence on life sciences in space.
Astronaut Salty Ride said a
plan has been developed for a
quick ’’sp rint" mission to
Mars. The plan would send six
people to Mars and back over a
’period of a year or so as early
as 2000 .
The medical aspects of such
an adventure were addressed
Tuesday at the weeklong con­

The Sanford Herald is being read by more and more
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Comprehensive News Coverage

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F D L E P ro b es A lle g a tio n s A g a in st P o lice

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41— Sanford Harold, Sanford, FI.

Wodaesday, Juno 24. Iff/

legal Notice

logoi Notice

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FIN Number i7-4M-CP
IN R E : ESTATE OF

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
RONIIMINOilCOUNTY.
FLORIDA
F R O R A T I DIVISION
FftoWemb*r*7-Q4-CP

IN R I: ESTATE OF
RESSIE PITTMAN
STEPHENS

NOAHNEWTON.
Deceased
N O TIC E OF

ADMINISTRATION

NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION

T O A LL PERSONS H A V IN G
C L A IM S O R D E M A N D S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
E S TA TE AND A LL O TH E R
PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D IN
TH E ES TA TE :
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E O th a t th e a d ­
ministration of the estate of
N O A H N E W T O N , deceased.
F IN Number t7-«13 CP. Is pend­
ing In the Circuit Court for
Seminole C ou nty, F lo rid a .
Probate Division, the address of
w h ich It Sem inole County
Courthouse. North Park A v e .
Sanford. Florida, 13771. The
personal representative of the
etteM Is THOM AS C. G R E E N E ,
whose address Is 313 North Park
Avenue. P.O. Box **J, Sanford.
Florida 13771. The name and
address of the personal repre
tentative's attorney are set
forth below.
All persons having claims or
demands against the estaN are
required. W IT H IN T H R E E
M ONTHS FR O M TH E D A TE
O F T H E F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N
O F TH IS N O TIC E , to flN with
the clerk of the above court a
written statement of any claim
or demand they may have. Each
claim must be In writing and
must indicate the basis for the
claim, the name apd address ol
the creditor or his agent or
a tto rn e y, and the am ount
claimed It the claim Is not yet
due, the date when It will
become due shall be stated If
the claim Is contingent or unli­
quidated, the nature of the
uncertainty shall be stated. If
the claim Is secured, the securl
ty shall be described. The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies ol the claim to the clerk
to enable the clerk to mall one
copy to each personal repre­
sentative.
All persons Interested In the
estate to whom a copy of this
Notice of Administration has
been m ailed ere required,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FROM TH E D A TE OF T H E
F I R S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
THIS N O TICE, to file any ob
lections they may have that
challenge the validity of the
decedent's will, the qualifies
lions of the personal repre
sentatlve. or the venue or
jurisdiction of the court.
A L L CLA IM S. D EM A N D S,
A N D O B JE C TIO N S N O T SO
F IL E D W ILL BE FO R E V E R
BARRED
Date of the first publication ot
this Notice of Administration:
June 17, Ift7.
IM Thomas C. Greene.
As Personal Representative
of the Estate of
NOAH N EW TO N .
Oeceesed
A TT O R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E :
THOM AS C. G R E E N E
311 North Park Avenue
P.O. Box at)
Sentord. Florida 13771
Telephone IMS) 131 0751
Publish June 17.14.1W7 P E P IM
IN T H E CIR CU IT
CO UR T. IN AMD FOR
SEM IN OLE CO UN TY,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO. (7-IMf-CA-Of-O
F L E E T F IN A N C E A
M O R TG A G E. INC.
Plaintiff.
vs.
D A N IE L G A TL IN and
R U TH IE M AE G A TLIN ,
a/k/a R U TH IE M AE
ANDREWS. JU N E ID ELL
OPPER.and JA N O.
L ITTM A N .
Oelendants.
N O TIC E O F SALE
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that, pursuant to a Summary
Final Judgment of foreclosure
entered In the causa ol F L E E T
FIN A N CE A M O R TG A G E. INC
vs. D A N I E L G A T L I N and
R U TH Y M AE G A TLIN , a/k/a
R U T H IE M A E A N D R E W S .
JU N E ID E L L O PPER.and JA N
D. L ITTM A N . In the Circuit
Court ol Seminole County,
F l o r i d a , Case No.
17 IOtSCA 09 G. the undersigned
Clerk will sell at public sale to
the highest and best bidder for
cash at the west front door of the
Seminole County Courthouse. In
Sanford. Seminole County,
Florida, at the hour ol 11:00
a.m. to 1:00 p.m.. on the 11th
day of July. A.D.. 1*07, that
certain real property situate and
being In Seminole County.
Florida, described as follows:
Lot 10. BO YKIN PLACE, ac
cording to the Plat thereof, as
recorded In Plat Book 7. Page
10. Public Records ot Seminole
County, Florida
D A TE D this llth day ol June.
A.O l**7
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IEN
Clerk of the Circuit Court
BY: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish; June 17.14. I*t7UEP 115

T O A L L PERSONS HAVING
C L A IM S OR D E M A N O S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
E S T A T E AND A L L O T H E R
PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D IN
T H E E S T A TE :
YOU ARE H E R EB Y
N O T I F I E D th a t lh a a dmlnlsfrefton of It* estate of
B E S S I E P I T T M A N
S T E P H E N S . N ( H M d , F lit
Number *7 43* CP. Is pending In
th&lt;» Clr. uil Court lor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo rid a . P ro b a te
Division, the address el which Is
Seminole Courtly Courthouse.
North Part Avenue, Sanford.
Florida, 13771. The personal
representative of the estate Is
N ED STEPHENS. SR., whose
address Is 3431 Water Street.
Sanford. Florida 13771. The
name and addrass ol the
personal representative's at­
torney are set forth betow,
All persons having claims or
demands against the estate are
required. W IT H IN T H R E E
M ONTHS FROM T H E D A TE
OF T H E FIRST PU BLICATIO N
OF TH IS NOTICE, to Ilia with
the clerfc of the above court a
written statement of any claim
or demand they may have. Each
claim must be In writing and
must Indicate the basis for the
claim, the name and address ol
the creditor or his agent or
a tto rn e y, and the amount
claimed. If the claim Is not yet
due. the date when It will
became due shall be stated. If
the claim Is contingent or unli­
quidated. the nature of the
uncertainty shall be stated. If
the claim Is secured, the securl
ty shall be described. The
claimant shall deliver sufficient
copies of the claim to the clerk
to enable the clerk to mall one
copy to each personal repre­
sentative.
All persons Interested In the
estate to whom a copy of this
Notice of Administration has
been mailed are required.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S
FROM T H E D A TE OF TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
TH IS NOTICE, to file any ob­
jections they may have that
challenge the validity of the
decedent's will, the qualifica­
tions ol the personal repre­
sentative. or the venue or
jurisdiction of the court.
A L L CLAIM S. DEM AN DS.
AN D O BJECTIO N S N O T SO
F IL E D W ILL BE FO REVER
BARRED
Date ol the first publication of
this Notice of Administration:
June 17,1*07
/s/ Ned Stephens. Sr..
As Personal Representative
of the Estate of
BESSIE PITTM AN
STEPHENS.
Deceased
A TT O R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E :
THOMAS C. G R EEN E
313 North Park Avenue
P.O Bo* *ti
Sentord. Florida 13771
Telephone IttS) M107H
Publish June II.S 4.1*e7
D I P -1)1

IN THE CIRCUIT
COURT. IN AND FOR
SIMINOLICOUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASK NO.i l7-ef7*-CA-0t-O
SUN BANK. NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.
vs.
DONALD E .L E IN IN G E R
and JA N E E. LEIN IN G ER ,
Defendants
N O TIC E O F S A L C
N o tic e Is h e re b y g iv e n
pursuant to a Final Judgment
dated June 10. 1f«7. entered In
Case No. 17 0479-CA 0*-G of the
Circuit Court of the Itth Judicial
Circuit In and lor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo rid a , w h erein
DONALD E. LEIN IN G ER and
JA N E E. LEIN IN G ER are the
Defendants, that I will sell to the
highest and best bidder for cash,
at the West Front Door, of the
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida, at 11:00 a m .
on the 11th day ol July. 1**7, the
following described real pro­
perty as set forth In the Final
Judgment:
Lot 5. Block B. ID Y LLW ILD E
OF LOCH ARBOR. SECTION 1.
according to the Plat Ihereof as
recorded In Plat Book U . Pag* 1
,of the P u blic Records of
Seminole County. Florida.
Dated this IMh day ol June.
1*07.
(S E A L)
D A V ID N . BERRIEN
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By: Phyllis Forsythe
As Deputy Clerk
PublHh: June 17.34. If*7
DEP-IJB

CELEBRITY CIPHER

C Webrtty Crpftw cryptograms are craaied from quotations by famous
people, past and present
Cacti M lar m tba cipher stand* tor
another Today's eAm. N squab O

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O H B Z O S .

PREVIOUS SO LU TIO N : "Darting, the only way to make
the body more beautiful la to get a good man." — Zsa
ZaaQabor.

BLO O M

Legal Notice

legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT
COURT. IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
ORNRRAL CIVIL
DIVISION
CIVIL ACTION NO.
M-1990-CA-ft-L
JV B JD E V E L O P M E N T
COM PANY. INC.
Plaintiff,
vsRICHARD V. CROMLISH and
LIN D A J . CROMLISH. his wife.
Defendants

NOTICE OF MLR
Notice Is given that pursuant
to a final ludgment dated this
IJth day of June, 19(7. In Cate
No. IS 010* CA 0 f-L of the
Circuit Court of the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit In and for
Seminole County. Florida, In
which TN P D E V E L O P M E N T
COM PANY. INC.. I« the Plaint lf f and R IC H A R D V .
C R O M L IS H end L IN D A J .
C R O M LIS H . ere the Defen­
dants. I will sell to the highest
end best bidder tor cash at the
West Front Door of the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sentord.
Seminole County, Florida at
11:00 o'clock a.m.. July 31.1*47,
the following described property
set forth In the ordar ol final
judgment:
From the NW corner of the
NW'k ot S 31. T 3t S. R 33 E.
Seminole County, Florida, run N
19*5*'40" E 443 47 tool along the
N boundary of said NW to to a
point on a line parallel with end
443 44 feet E of. when measured
at right angles to. the West
boundary of sold NW to; thence
run S 00*39 54" E 1111.05 feet
along said per aIlaI line tor the
Point of Baginning, said point ol
beginning being e point on a line
parallel with and 1111.00 feet S
ol, when measured at right
angles to. the said N boundary
of the NW ■*&gt; thence continue S
00* 39- 54'' E 331.01 teat to a point
on a line parallel with end
1141.00 feet S of. when measured
at right angles to. the said North
boundary ot the NW to; thence
run N t r i r s O " E 11*3 feet,
more or less, along said parallel
line to the Westerly bank of the
apparent navigable portion of
tho Econlockhatchee R iver;
thence run Northerly along tho
sinuosities of sold Westerly bank
lo e point on tho aforesaid
parallel line being 1111.00 feet S
ot the N boundary ot the NW to;
thence run S »9*S«'40" W 1310
teat, more or less, along said
parallel line to the point ol
beginning.
Dated this 77nd day of June,
I9f7.
(Seal)
D A V ID N . B E R R IEN
Clerk of Circuit Court
By: Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June34.
July 1 .19*7
DEP175
S T A T E OF WISCONSIN
C IR C U IT COURT
POLK CO U N TY
Norman Vogt, and
Virginia M. Vogf
Taylors Falls. MN 550(4
Plaintiff,
— vs—
William mcMahon
P O. Bo* MSS
Altam onte Springs. F L 13701

NOTICROF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business el 7(5
Scooter Point, Box 404. Geneve.
F L 11713. Seminole County,
Florida under the Fictitious
Name Ot J.H. THOMAS P A IN T­
ING CO., and that I Intend to
register said name with the
Clerk of tho Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida in
accordance with the Provisions
of the Fictitious Name Statutes.
To-Wit: Section (SS.0* Florida
Statutes 1*57.
/s/John H. Thome*
Publish Juno 10. 17. 24 A July

why me 6iun FAces *
u rs ee happy in our
WORK ' COUNTCUR

BUS3N69 /..

Seminole

IN THR CIRCUIT COURT
OFTNRKTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLR COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. (*-477*-CA-*9-P(L)
A M ER IFIR S T FE D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.
W ILLIAM W. ROUSE. E T A L ..

A D S

Orlando - Winter Park

322*2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 tin * ................ 72C c Pat
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7 consecutive tiasas 50C a Hot
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1.1*07.

N O T E In (he event o«
p b ii.r.n q ot errors 11 advertisement!, the
Sentord Herald shell publish the advertisement, alter It has been coo &lt;&lt;!ed
at no colt to tho advertiser but such Insertions shall number no more than
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SOCIAL S E C U R ITY Disability
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Wo W lnl W ard W hile A
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lor Full/Par! tlm* position* *
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Defendant!

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO : W ILLIA M W. ROUSE
and FR AN K R. SHEA
R ESID EN C E: UNKNOWN
A N D T O : all persons claiming
an Interest by. through, under or
against the aforesaid Oaten
dents
YOU ARE H E R E B Y N O TI­
F I E D T H A T an action to
foreclose a mortgage on tho
following described property
located In Seminole County,
Florida:
Lot 74, R E P LA T OF WYN
OHAM WOODS. PHASE ONE.
according to tho plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Booh 23. Pages
74 and 77. Public Records ol
Seminole County. Florida.
Together with oil structures
and Improvements now and
hereafter on said land, and
futures attached thereto, and
all rents. Issues, proceeds, end
profits accruing and to accrue
from said premises, all ot which
are Included within the forego­
ing d e s c r ip t io n e n d tho
habendum thereof; also all gas.
steam, electric, water and other
heating, cooking, refrigerating,
lighting, plumbing, ventilating.
Irrigating, and power systems
machines, appliances, fixtures
and appurtenances, which ere
now or may hereafter pertain to.
or bo used with. In. or on said
premises, even though they may
be detached or detachable.
IN C L U D IN G S P E C IFIC A L
LY, B U T NOT BY WAY OF
LIM ITA TIO N , TH E FOLLOW
ING E Q U IP M E N T
RANGE
DISPOSAL
DISHWASHER
C E N T R A L H E A T A N D A IR
has been filed against you.
end you are required to serve e
copy ol your written detenses. It
any, to this action on ROGER D.
BEAR ot ANDERSON A RUSH .
Attorneys lor Plaintiff, whole
address It 133 East Central
Boulevard. Orlando. Florida
37101. end III# the original with
the Clerk of the above styled
Court on or belora the 3rd day ol
JU L Y , Iff7; otherwise a |udg
ment may be entered against
you for the relief demanded In
the Complaint.
W ITNESS M Y HANO AND
SEAL OF SAID COURT on this
Tfth day ot M AY, 19*7
(SE A L)
D A V IO N . BER R IEN
as Clerk of said Court
By: Ruth King
as Deputy Clerk
Publish: June 1.10. t7, 74. IM7
PEP 19______________________

end
Lempert Yards. Inc.
1150 Como Avenue
St. Paul. MN 55100
and
Dennis Schultek
■Ota Robert Street South
West St. Paul. MN 551II
and
Commercial State Bank
15 West 5th Street
St Paul. MN 55101
end
Seliler Excavating. Inc.
Osceola. Wl 54070
and
Minnesota Toro. Inc.
14900 — I I st A venue North
Minneapolis. MN 55119
Defendants.
SUMMONS
A U T H E N T IC A T E D
NO. 17 CV 105
BY M E L MADSEN
CLER K OF COURTS
TH E S TA TE OF WISCONSIN
To each person named above
as a defendant:
You ere hereby notified that
the plaintiff named above has
filed a lawsuit or other legal
action against you. The Com
plaint, which Is attached, steles
the nature and basis ot the legal
action.
Within twenty (30) days ol
receiving this Summons, you
must respond with e written
answer, as that term Is used In
Chapter 101 ol the Wisconsin
Statutes, to the Complaint. The
Court may reject or disregard

IN T H E CIR CU IT COURT
OF T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR CU IT
O F T H E S TA TE OF
FLOR IDA, IN AND FOR
SEM IN OLE COUNTY.
O E N E R A L C IV IL DIVISION.
Case Ne.(7-2395-CA*9-L
CITICO RP SAVINGS
OF FLO R ID A ,a
Federal Savings
and Loan Association,
Plaintiff
vs
W ILLIAM R E E D CLIN E and
PATSY ANN C LIN E, his
wife; JOHN A LVAREZ and
C A TH E R IN E ALVAREZ, hit
wife; P H ILIP N O G U E IR A
end LOUISA NOGUEIRA.
his wife end JOHN DOE.
If he be married and
M ARY DOE. his wile
Defendants.
N O TICE OF SUIT
-P R O P E R T Y
TO: W ILLIA M R E E D C L IN E
and PATSY ANN CLIN E,
hlswlte
Route 1. Box 42

•n answ er that does not follow

K i n k y . Kentucky

the requirements of the statutes.
The answer must be sent or
delivered to the Court, whose
address Is: Mel Madsen. Clerk
ol Circuit Court. Polk County
Courthouse. Balsam lake. Wl
54( 10. end to Kathleen M .
Llndgren. plaintiff's attorney,
whose address Is Llndgren Law
Office. lOt Washington Ncrtii,
St. Croix Falls. Wl 54024. You
may have an attorney help or
represent you.
If you do not provide e proper
answer within twenty ( 10) days,
the Court may grant ludgment
against you lor the award ot
money or other legal action
requested In the Complaint, and
you may lose your right to
object to anything that Is or may
be Incorrect In the Complaint. A
ludgment may be enforced as
provided by lew. A judgment
awarding money may become a
lien against any real estate you
own now or In the future, and
m ay also be enforced by
garnishment or seliuro ol pro
party.
Dated this 19th day ol April,
19t7
By KathleenM. Llndgren
Attorney tor Plaintiffs
109 Washington North
St. Croix Fells. Wl 54014
715 4(3 9tl(
Publish June 13. 14.15.19(7
O EP 171

YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D that an action lo
foreclose a mortgage on the
following property In Seminole
County, Florida:
Lot It. Block E. COUNTRY
CLU B MANOR U N IT ). ac
cording to the plat thereof as
recorded In Piet Book 12. Pages
75 end 74. ol the Public Records
ol Seminole County, Florida
has been filed against you
W ILLIAM R E ED CLIN E end
PATSY ANN CLIN E, hit wile
end you ere required to serve a
copy ot your written defenses. If
any to It. on the plaintiff's
atlorney. whosa name end
address Is ROBERT L. KING.
E S Q U IR E . 401 E. Kennedy
Boulevard. Tam pa. Florida
13403 52(1 and file the original
with the clerk ol the above
styled court on or before July 27.
19(7. otherwise e ludgment may
be entered against you tor the
relief demanded In the com
plaint or petition.
W ITNESS my hand end the
seel ol said Court on June I.
19(7.
(Court Seel)
D A V ID N BER R IEN
Clerk Circuit Court
By Jane E Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June 10. 17. 24. July 1,
19(7
DEP 72

WHYJUSTKeep tN MINTHOW
memmavKiNO seem
Of M/WtPlOW eCONOMY is
staunatwu m u we in me
seiwce wvsm es im ve
ANP

C L A S S I F I E D

DEP-70

b y B e rk e B re a th e d

COUNTY

- f T

THANK

OOP
for me
x e v tc e
SeCTOR'f

seKvice
THIS.
enve

21— Personals
A L L A L O N E T Call Bringing
Poopla Together. Sanford's
most respected deling service
since 1977. Men over 50 (45%
discount)............. 1100 977 4477
CRISIS P N IO N A N C Y C TR .
Free Pregnancy Tes). conflden
llal. Call for appf....... .371 7495
FANS If you onjoy this soap
sond a L.S.A.S.E to "bring
Capital beck" Box 4112 March
A FB .C A 97504______________
I, LEIO H DO CKERY, will not
be responsible lor debts In
curred by anyone other than
myself as 014/14/(7__________
I. R O BERT H. STRINE. W ILL
not be responsible lor any
debts Incurred by anyone
other than myself ai of 4/17/17

25— Special Notices
BECOME A NOTARY
For Detolls: I (00417 4754
Florida Noiary Association
C E R A M IC T IL E
CLEA R AN CEl
See under »311, Miscellaneous
HAVINO A F A M IL Y REUNION
TH IS M ONTH? Call Melinda
at The Cavalier........... 171 0490

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care
C H IL D C A R E , fenced yard,
m e a ls p ro v id e d Please
call.............................. 414 9444
C H ILD CARE. Intents up. clean
hot food. Individual alt T.L.C .
Ret., Idyllwllde area 177 4447
C H ILD CARE IN MY Home.
D a y s . e v e s , o v e rn lte s .
weekends TLC . Ret 377 177«
GOOD REF. 1 yrs 4. up Start 6
am, hot lunch, oil Lk Mary
Blvd 540 Call............. 177 0645
I W ILL B A B Y SIT your child In
my home 1 yr. A up Pleas*
call 111 4179 anytime
_____
I W ILL B A B Y S IT In my home
Exp . fenced yd . reas rates.
lunch A snack. Cell 171 7574

45— Arts &amp; Crafts
F R E E LAN CE A R TIST- De
signing logos, slogans, sign
p a inting, w a ll m urals A
crafts, at affordable prices.
Give me a call. pref. eves
373 7414.. &gt;49 9594 . . 44? 4449

55— Business
Opportunities
O P P O R T U N IT Y KNOCKSM o d u ia r H om e B u ild e r/
Dealership now available In
the Sanlord area Call now lor
more Information WAUSAU
HOMES INC..........&gt;11 474-9190
PHILLIPS 44 Service Station for
lease. 7543 $ French Ave
Call:........................... I l l 4449

63— Mortgages
Bought &amp; Sold
WE BUY M ORTGAGES
also
1st A Ind Mortgages
A Commercial Loans
(11 1400

71—Help Wanted
A D D T O INCOM EItl
SELL AVON NOWIII
1110459........... or............M l

N1U
€

'T
I

n

;q

m unoTifi - v
CALL TO LL FREE
I4M -34M I1I

HELP!

AIR COND. IN STAL. A Service
man, experienced, perms
rvent. good pay. benefits, call
904 775-7191 or 305*1* M13
A P P O IN TM E N T SETTER S - 54
hr. Must be experienced tor
home Improvements...140-1713
A P P O IN T M E N T S E T T E R S .
Earn big ttS's working In
Sanlord lor the Rich Plan
Food Co. High hourly rate -f
wkly. bonus. Cell Charles
Bordet, or Jeanette Braswell
177 1*41 ext. 315......or........ M4
ASSEMBLY WORK at home. +
many others Earn good wages
In spare time. Info 504 441 0091
ext 1449............. Open 7days
BAKER- Homestyle dessarts.
Apply: Holiday Housa Reslau
rant. Hwy 17 91 naar Lk. Mary
IT 'S T O Y P A R T Y A O A IN I
Housa ot Lloyd now hiring
ladies lo show toy gilts. Earn
51.000 by Dec. 1. F R E E kit A
supplies Call between 11:10
and 1:00 pm................. 311 4471
LPN OR M E D IC A L RECORD
TE C H N IC IA N : Looking lor an
Individual to take complete
control ot our Medical records
section with other related
duties In a 93 bed skilled
Nursing facility. Must possess
excellent organliatlonal A
people skills. Previous expert
ence highly desirable. Call
DeBary Manor between I am
A 4pm, Mon Frl lor ap
pomtment 444 4474
EOE
L P N 'S - 7 3 A 3 II shltts,
NURSES A ID ES All shills
Need conscientious employees
to provide good care Excel
pay scale, tuition relm
burvtmenl program available
Longwood Health Caro339-9700
M A IN TE N A N C E
SUPERVISOR
Hands on type Individual
needed to supervise personnel
In a well esl. aluminum A
copper fabrication operation
Must be p ro ficie n t with
electrical A electro hydraulic
control circuits with some
knowledge ot electronics Abll
Ity to read hydraulic diagrams
a must Supervisory back
ground desirable Send Re
sume. wage requirements,
and phone number to P O. Box
7137. Sanlord, FI. 117771137
M A N A G E M E N T TR A IN E E S I
Good opportunity lor salt
motivated individuals. Apply
Tenneco. 1400 S. French Ave
MFO. P L A N T SUPERVISOR
Must be ambitious, mature
person, w/prevlous manage
ment exp A supervisory skills
in high production assembly
operations for growing sheet
metal factory. Good benefits.
Call tor appt................M l t i l l
M O R TG A G E BROKER/Loan
Rep FHA/VA A Conventional
loan exp Would prefer indi
vldual to be licensed but will
sponsor A train motivated
person Contact Steve Lee at
904 549 4199 EOE/M/F/H/V
NO P R O S P IC TIN O
If you want to make 5500 to 51000
a week selling Lite A AH. Call
305 441 7741 for a 40 second
recorded message___________
, NURSE A ID ES needed lull time
for 3pm to It pm A 11pm to
7am shift Must be certified or
experienced and be willing to
take certification test Contact
DeBary Manor between 4 A
4pm, Mon Frl. lor appoint
ment. 44* 4414 .............. EOE
N UR SES A I D E : All shills,
exp'd or certified only Apply
Lekeview Nursing Center
919 E. 2nd St............... Sanlord
O FFIC E C LE R K TR A IN E E To
15.15 hr Top co needs a
detail minded person lo pro
cess their paperwork! Learn
computer, tool Hurryl AAA
Employment. 700 W. 15th
■ Street Call_________ 313 5174
ONE OF FL O R ID A ’S O LD EST
Pest Control Companies
Looking lor carter minded In
dividual*, who want to learn
and be the success they know
they con bo I Company vehicle
A company benefits A moral
Apply with rtsumo' Spencer
Pest Control 1541 Park Dr
No phono calls, plaasa

HELP!

'l —f* r

71— Help Wanted

71— H B lpW anttf

ORDER ENTRY Frlondly bon

R EN TA L R E C E P T IO N )* * 14
hr. Will tralnl Dlver»lfl*d
dull** answering customer
question* A processing con­
tra cts ! D a n d y cot A A A
Employment. 700 W. llth
Street. Call:................. 1X3-5174

will train Immediately I 1130
wk.-t- bonoflt* Norn com puter
A more. AAA Employmanf.
700 W 35th St.............. MTS)?*
P A R T TIM E JA N ITO R - Main
tonanco/Hondyntan noodod
for now shopping confor.
Writ* P. O. Bo* 140 Longwood
237*1 5)40 with -**ume' or
tottor of background Inform.
flan or call.........l (004214*30
N UR SER Y W ORKER Wanfod.
Exp. doslrablo but not notes
sary. CollMIko at........*2»2*30
O E N E R A L S H O P
A P P R E N TIC E - IS top supply
co noodt you to learn a trad*
todayt Steady raises. A AA
Em ployment, 700 W. 25th
Stroof. Call:................. 33*5174
GOOD WORKERS! If you nead
dally pay A steady work call
BobxHorlpm .......... 377 7550
HAIRSTYLIST-tlexibl# hours!
Apply ot M AIRBII
7440 H low* tho Dr
Sanford........................... 132 2352
H IR IN G ! Government jobs your
ore* S15.00aS44.000 Call (4031
434 4445....................... E x t 1241
PLUM SERS. Experienced, all
phase*, apply in person Sun
Lake Apts...... 474 Sun LokoClr
Q U A L IF IE D D R V W A LL
HANGERS wontodl Top payl
Unexperienced ntod not
apply.Call 444 4537004*4 404*
REHAB. A ID E : Looking tor an
Individual highly motivated,
enthusiastic A croatlva with
the ability to work well under
m inimal supervision H.S.
groduoto or tho 4qulvolont
with ot toast 1 yr. t ip In a
geriatric or rehab, salting
required. Contact DeBary
Manor between ( A 4pm.
Mon. Frl. lor appointment.
*44 4414............................ EO E
R E L IE F VAN DRIVERS/
H O M EM A K E R S Sonlor Citi­
zens Agency In Semlnolo.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Coll............................. M i 1431
SO M ETHIN G NEW
UN D ER TH ESU N I
Reps needed for Business A c­
counts. Part Tim e Sto.ooo
Potential. Full-Time 540.000 &gt;
Potential. Work own Hours •
T r a in in g p ro v id e d . C a ll
1412 *1* 001* M F. (.00 am 5:00 pm...................... 1C,S T .)
R E S ID E N T M ANAOER- Couple
to manogo the F la g sh ip
Apartm ent Com munity In
Sentord under tho direction of
one of (he notions largest
developers Previous man­
agement exp A supervisory
skills are required. Duties
Include renting, bookkeeping.
A Inside, outside maintenance.
Compensation Includes salary,
opt., utilities A bonus. To
apply send letter or resume'
with phone number to P.O.
Box 147, Casselberry M707
R E V IEW CLER K- 15 hr. Greet
start with local co l Train to
review mortgage appraisals!
Help greet clients, too! Needs
now! AAA Employment. 700
W 15th St .................M l 5174
APT'S. OT'S A ST'S
Highest per visit rat**
For large etfablitlted nat'l
home health agency serving
Seminole A Volusia Co For
Immedlat* opportunity con
tact Barbara Davis Personnel
Manager. Norell Carp, at
105 M l 0400........... *04-714 *114
SER V ICE TEC H N IC IA N ItTOO
mo Top service co. needs you
to Item e trade today 1Growth
position. AAA Employment.
700 W ?S!h St...............M l 5174

NURSING ASSISTANTS
Needed for Orange Co. posi­
tions. Must have good trans­
portation end be abto to work
In the Orlando area. No expe­
rience necessary, will train.
Low Income eligibility re­
quirements. To tee If you
qualify call:

PRO SYNC
3 2 3 -7 0 4 4
■OE

FREE TUITION
TONEAL ESTATE
UCENSE SCHOOL
a A New Career
a A New Beginning
Call Franar Stu

323-3200

f e

im

nom oA »wc.nf acroas
K E Y E I H IN T H E SOUTH
CNA'S. HHA'S.
PSYCH. NURSES
Needed Immediately
New pay rates A benefits.
Vacations dally pay. flexible
hours. Call:................. 74b 57*4
M EDICAL PERSO N N EL POOL
EXCHANO E BUILD IN O
HWY 17*1. M A ITL A N D
A

Medical

R m onnel
iF o o lt

&amp;

CLER ICA L position In smsll
Sanlord office. Requires good
phone technique for customer
cells, light typing and general
clerical skills. Call: 123 1440
Mondav Friday, 7am-4pm

America's oldest licensor
o( ice cream shops
needs qualified families
to operate their own

C a /u td .
Ice C re a m F a c to iy
Carvel representatives
will be in
ORLANDO. FL

at the
Th# Holday Inn
7900 3. Orange
Blossom Trail
Ju n e 27 A 38

To make an appointment
- 9 CALL COLLECT.....

914-969-7200
CARVtL CORPORA non
Tonlwrs t i n York 10701

s s s m a a s c i r a w B ______

FREE T R A IN IN G
H You Qualify

WORD PROCESSOR-SECRETARIAL
M orning ★

A fternoon ★

Evening.

J o b P la c e m e n t A s s is t a n c e

C e n tra l F lo rid a Coaipuler Institute
APPLY IM PERSON
MON. &amp; WED. 9 AM-2 PM

ON CALL
194-4515
OB TOLL FREE
1-400-330-2327

P riv a te In d u s t r y C o u n c il
o f S e m in o le C o u n t y In c .
212 8. Sanford Av*.
Sanford. Fla. 3 2 7 7 1
Fadaralfy Insured itudenl loan* i
without regard lo p*«t credit or i

i lo q u a lifie d a p p lic a n ts
I h is to r y .

CSSSS532S55SSS335333SSSS2

P h a rm a c is t
Now Accepting Applications
For A Pharmacist In The
Sem inole County Area.
Starting Salary $39*000 +
Daily Hours 9*6 PM
42 hr. Work Week
Good Benefits
Send Resume To

Winn Dixin Stores Inc.
______

HELP!

K.W. CLACK
P.O. BOX 15200
ORLANDO, FLA. 32858

FU LL OR P A R T -T IM E ^
NEEDED

T ire d of w a tc h in g re ru n s!
T u rn y o u r h o b b y in to c a s h !
Florida Polymers, Lake Mary, is
growing so fast that we need to
expand our sewing operation into
a second shift.

TAK IN O A P P L IC A T IO N ! tor
Manager A A**t. Manager
Trainee. Also. Ceshler posi­
tions opened for all shift*. Full
A part tlm* available. Good
. benefit package. Apply al
ECO L,I 4ASR4*.Sanford

FAST FOOD COOKS
CASHIERS
GAS ATTENDANTS

ONE STOP CENTERS
Gas

-

Convenience Store • Fast Food

TRA N SPO R TA TIO N can be provided!

• Top Hourly Wagas

Fu ll or part tim e available. W ill Train.

• Frgg Medical 8 Ufa Insurance

G ood Pay
Health Plan
Modern air-conditioned operation
Call or come see us at 1000 Sand
Pond Road, Lake Mary. 321-5500.
E EO
MHV

• Paid Vacations-2 Waeks Per Year
• Profit Sharing 8 Othar Banefits
MAKE APPLICATION IN PERSON AT

202 N. Laurel Ave.,

Sanford
Monday Thru Friday (:3 0 A M - 4:30 FM

�&gt; &lt;

V

1

«

«

«

1

1

KIT W CARLY U

71— Help Wanted

93— Rooms for Refit

C A R P I N T I R i 4 HELPER S.
own tool* A transportation,
good pay. b a n a llti,
vacation....................... 3113553

CASSELBERRY- 17 *2. Mature
prefers seme. Private
4 entrance, microwave,
refrtg.,»70wh........... *457131

1

V

i

l

l

i

1

i

Urn

CNA’s. 11 to T thlft. Full 4
part time. Apply to TOO W
Airport Blvd.
COLL 1 0 « S T U O IN T S
Summer |abe aval table. No tee

TEMP HIM--------- 740-5100
COMSISSIOM/ASS’T MANAOIR S 4 helper* to y ri 4
older. IS hour* week excellent
benefit* 4 advancemenlt.
A p p l y at F I a a w e r I d .
Thurs.-Sun, M P " t .
C O O L E R IN S T A L L E R - (230
wk.-t- bonusei. Excellent co
with unmatched benefit*, look
Ing tor clean cut Individual for
great lu tu re ll AAA
Em ploym ent, 700 W. 15th
Street, Call:.................. 323-317*
C O O L E R IN S T A L L E R - (ISO
wfc.-t- bonu*e*. Excellent co.
with unmatched benefit*, look
Ing tor dean cut Individual for
great future I I AAA
Em ploym ent. 700 W. JSth
Street. Call:.................. CT3I7*
D ATA EN TR Y BILLING
CLER K - Accuracy, (peed 4
exp’d. for an Electrical Supply
Co. Call Sally at..........3110831
D E L IV E R Y DRIVERS 4
Mature Weltretae*. Full 4
p a r t t i me . C a l l tor detall*............................3317(3*
D E L IV E R Y / R O U TE 16.50 hr.
Enter eupply Induttry Imme­
diately. Will train) excellent
local ipot. AAA Employment,
700 W. ISth St.............323 3176
D E N T A L H T O IE N IS T - Full or
Part time. Seeking highly
motivated Individual tor a
prevention oriented practice.
Top telary 4 benefit* Includ
Ing pention plan. Send re­
lume to 2433 S. Volutla Ave.
«D 1. Orange City, FI 12743
OSNTAL RECEPTIONIST
Here'* the chance you've been
waiting tori Will tralnl Hurry
Ini A AA Employment, 700 W.
13th Street. Call:........323 Site
D I E S E L M E C H A N I C S for
expanding Mac fleet at I.W.S.
US Hope St. Long wood (31133f. Top pay. excellent
ben* I It*. Immediate openings
D I E T A R Y R E L I E F COOK.
al*o. AIDE- 11am 7 pm. Food
prep. 4 cleaning. Full time.
Apply: Laktvlew Hurting Ctr
*1* E. 2nd St............... Sanford

FLORIDA HOTIL
Raaaonabla weekly rata*
300 Oak A v*— ............. 323-♦***
lQ*M W OOD room for mature
person l akafront home. *7J a
weak. Call:................332-400*
N ICE CLEA N ROOM. M0 weak,
deposit required, downtown
Sanford. Call..............322 30*4

☆

☆

☆

☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
THE VILUKE

U — Retirement

Homes
I N JO Y A PA M ILY SOTTING
tor your golden yeartl We
havo rooms for both men and
woman. Willow Wood Re­
tirement Center. Call .323 3130

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Am TOCOME HOME10
Quiet, single story living with
energy l a v i n g feature*.
E F F IC IE N C Y apis with attic
storage 4 private patio*.
ASK A B O U T F N IE R E N T 4
Senior CHI ten* Discount
SANFORD CO UR T APTS.
33*1 S. 1ANFORD A V I
_______ 123-33*1 OXt. li t _______
A TT R A C T IV E t br. Downtown
area ttOO wk. Incl. util. Sac.
dep. (300. Call:........... .321*447
O N E ID R M . A P T. 12*3 mo. f
1200 sac. dap. Reftrenca* re
gulred. C a ll-...... 322 3342aft.*
O STEEN - Lrg. downtown 1 br. 2
entrances, parking, quiet
neighborhood. *230.... .372 *27*
SANFORD- Etfkltncy apart
mant, near town. 143 wk.
Call:............................32134*0
SANFORD- I bdrm. efficiency,
complete privacy. *40 weak +
*200 sac., includes utilities
323 22*4--------- or......... 321 *447
SAN FOR D Studio 4 I br, adults
no pats or children, modern.
*220/up mot- dep..... ..323101*

DRIVERS- Part time. Wed.-Frl
only. A valid Fla. driver* lie.
required. Applicant* mutt be
II yr*. or older and mutt know
how to drive standard thlft.
Apply In person at Sanford
Auto Auction. 2213 W. 1st St..
Sanford......................See John
O R IV ER - Good driving record,
chauffeur'* lie. Apply Tropic
Taxi, 1*17 French Ave._______

___________ 323-4742___________

EXCELLENT INCOME

A m TO COME HOME TO

99— Apartments
Unfurnished/ Rent
LAK E JE N N IE APT*.
Peel, lake. Adults wily

RENTING NOWI

For part time horn* assembly
work For Information call
1504) 441 *003 ext TWO_______
EXP'D. INSTRUCTOR needed
lor Energy Source Athletic
Club Call Julie...........321 4722
W K N S IM Lx e e « , 'W O R K E R * *
needed. Good pay, no feel
A B L E S T T E M P .........3213*40
GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
SOLDERERS 4 L IN E POSI­
TIO N S OPEN. Will Tralnl
Full time, permanent poll
Hons. Benaflttl Apply In
person Matthew* Associate*
1-4 Industrial Pk.
*43 Hickman Clr., Sanford

Quiet, single story living with
energy saving taature*. 2
bedroom apartments with at­
tic storage 4 private patios.
ASK A BO UT F R E E R E N T
Sl*t M OVES YOU IN
SANFORD COURT AFT*.
)M lf . SANFORD AVE
_______ 323-3301 ext. 211________
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
1215 Moves In
Qualified Applicants
ONE Y E A R LEASE
300 E. Airport Bl........... 333 *401
Tues. Frl. Oam *pm
Mon 0 30am 3 30pm
________ Soma Sat. 10 4
___

EM PLOYM ENT
O P P O R TU N ITIE S
Full 4 part lime w/local chair
manufacturer. Woodworking,
upholstery, tawing, assembly
To apply pleas* call 321 9990
for direction* to our location

Atlractlva 2 bdrm., 1 bath,
single story duplex on bus
line, large pool, walor, sewer
4 trash pick up Included.
Separate adult section, re
lire** welcome. Ask about our
move In SPECIAL.
SHENANDOAH VILLAG E
A P A R TM E N TS .............223-2*20

GREAT LOCATION

C A F E T E R IA W O RKER- Full
time. Monday Friday day*
Prep or short order exp
helpful Excellent co. benefits.
Call between la m 2pm. 323
*230 ext. 143_________________

143—Out of State
Property /Salt

TR A IN IN G IN STRUCTO R lull
time or on call, to work In
ICF/MR with the mentally
re ta rd e d , f rie n d ly a t ­
mosphere. good benefits
Call............................... 331 7231
U T I L I T Y M A N /Y A R D MANA p p ly In p e rs o n . G a lo r
Culvert. Senford Airport
W A IT R E S S . F / T . Apply In
person to G aynelles Country

Kitchen........... 110 S Palmetto
W AREHOUSEM AN- IS . M, F
Non-sm oker, self starter.
Must be dependable... 321 4*33
W AREHOUSE/O RIVER Poly
graph required, valid chauf
four's Ik., knowledge ot Cen
Fla............ 322 0*31 ask tor Joe
★

★

★

★

★

★

W W W *

WORK IMMEDIATELY
N E E D M EN 4 W O M EN NOW)

LAMM
0H1IMI

* _

FOmCM

^

0*111 NT

DAILY PAY
Work Assignments
• Daily # Weekly a Monthly

321-1590
NOFEE
★ ★ ★ ★

I

★

★

★

N O FEE
WWW

W ALK ANO G E T PAID
H e l p u p d e t e th e De
Ilona- Orange City. City Dlrtc
lo r y
No s e llin g
No
experience we train Apply *
to noon; R L Polk 4 Co . 3000
S Orlando Or , Sanford. Sun
Bank Bldg ( 2nd lloor) START
NOW I......................... E.O.E.
U N W E E K L Y , mailing circular
In your spar* lime Send SASE
lor deiells lo P O Box itfl,
Apopka. FL 32704 Itfl

73— Employment
Wanted
W IL L C A R E F O R a ldarly
person In my Deltona home,
reasonable Cell.......... 374 3729
IS Y E A R S E X P E R I E N C E
malntence. electrical, plumb
Ing. cirptnlry and painting
Call..............................321 4210

91— Apartments/
House to Share
FU R N ISH ED RM. FOR RENT
with kitchen/laundry prlvl
leges, private home In nice
neighborhood.reference* re
gulred 321041* . or. *4* 4243
Professional naeds same 1250
Call aarly AM late PM. leave
message It no answer. 321 2311

• t BDRM.. I BATH......*300 M O
• Pool 4 Laundry Facilities
• Just off 17-42
Near Zayre Plata
FR A N K LIN ARMS
11M FlerMa Ave.
1D U H

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
M T E M M I REALTY

r

r*

R E N T W IT H OPTION- J/2. 1
car garaga. convenient toe*
lion *475 month

2*4* Santord Av*.

3X1-0759______ 3211257

1.1 acres short distance from

D ELTO N A , 3/1. Country Club
area, *300 per. mo. dl*
counted. * sec. Call ...321-4743
DELTOMA/OSTEEN- Low rent
tor Handyman. 3 br, 2 ba. big
fancad yard. 1*7 Hadgewood
Ave, (* ml. E. ot 14.1 ml. W.
ot Ostoon. Taka Doyle Rd. to
Citation). Available now. *430
mo. Call:...........|103) 334-4003
FR ESH LY R E N O V A TE D 2 br..
Ilrepfaca, large fenced yard,
quiet street, *3*0 mo. Days
323 *74*............. Eve*. 322 3033
e e * IN DELTONA * e e
e e HOMES FOR R E N T e e
a » 374-1*34 e e_______
S A N F O R D ! bdrm., 2 be . nice
yard. Clot* to rout* 17-42
shopping. C a ll.............2440003
SA N FO R D I br. possible 3rd.. 1
bath, rtoeo to Hamilton Sch.
*425 mo. &gt;100 sec.........323-3130
SANFORD. 3 b/l'y b. garage,
appls., mlcrowav*. *430 mo.
2030 Gala Place........... *4*4300
S U N L A N D E S T A T E S , 712
Baywood Clr.. 3 bdrm.. IV*
bath, appliance*, a/c. *440.00
3*35740.................
ares.
TW O BD R M .. I balh, large
yard, aat-ln kitchen. *323 Mo ,
Call.............................. 321 3440
2 BEDROOMS, 2 FU LL BATHScar 4 vs garage. *&lt;25 month.
Call.............................. 321 4443
2*4 S. S U N LA N D 3/1. fenced,
new carpeting 4 paint, no
pat*. Lease. *400 mo dli. counted. Call:............. 471-334*
1 B E D R O O M H O M E S IH
SANFORD, *400 4 *350 mo. +
lecurlty. Call...............321-3*30
4 BR., 2 BA., garaga, prlv.
fence, large yard, dep/1st mo.
*330. C a ll - 332 3375.434433a

Murphy good garden spot
ready to build on owner said
tall ( 12.100 pay ( 2.000 down
payment assume loan

CUSTOM B U IL T 2 story horn*
almost rsewl British Columbia
Rad Cedar exterior 1 22 ft.
slots* 11rep lac* I *0 ft. porch!
Hot t u b / s p a l Ca t h e d r a l
celling*! Cent, heat 4 air
w/haaf pumpl Flowing foun
tain In rear yard...........(44,500
SANORA TOWN HOME I Hug*
master bdrm.! 1700 sq.H. of
living areal C/H/AI 4 peddle
(ansi Almost new carpet! Obi.
garage 4 24x11 privacy patlol
Prestigious I................. (43,300

105— Duplex*
Triplex / Ren!

STENSTR0M

C A S S E L B E R R Y - Townhouse
duplex, *425 mo. Will accept
kids. 2*0 1723.... or.....334 44*4
TW O LA R O E BORM, 3 celling
tans, mini blinds, city utilities
Inc. upstair* duplex *343.00
^ e rm o ^M S O O O s e C j^^llO TI^

107— Mobile
Homes / Rent
ONE * TW O BDRMS, Furn .
mature adult* only, no pets.
Park Ave. Mobile Pk, 322 2*41

109— Mobile Home
Lots/Rent
R.V. LOTS Now avail Mature
adults only. No Pets, Park
Ave&lt;Mobll*Park&lt;&lt;&lt;_^2 2 2 a 4 l

121— Condominium
Rentals
PIN ER ID G E CLUB! Luxurious
2/2, condo Pool, tennis,
washer and dryer,

STARTING AT $400
Landarama Fla., Inc...322 173*

141— Homes for Sale

(w e x iM

141— Norms for Sal«

ii \11 Ki \ m
HI

\I I O H

323-5774
34*4 HWY. 17-93
SANFORD Beautiful Idyllwlld*.
1/2. large family room with
fireplace. A home for gracious
l i v i ng. SS4.300. J O A N N
TO M P K IN S P R O P E R T I E S .
IN C R E A L TO R ...........240-3*21

in

»
V

H A

7

you

'll I o

If)
H «IAl IMAM

REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford's Salts Laadtr
W E LIS T ANO S E L L
M O R E P R O P E R TY T H A N
A N YO N E IN N O R T H
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY
INVESTORS LOOKI 2 br., I ba.,
on lrg. lot, joned GC 2, owner
may hold mtg. with substan
Hal down payment........ SI 1,400

O n h J iK

L A K EFR O N T. All brick 3 bdrm.
3 balh home overlooking Lake
Dupont. Reduced lor quick
sale. Call
C H A R L O TTE .............574 *555
D ELTO N A ESTA TE A R E A Low down lo assume mlg on
this executive home Only
S129.900. Call
C H A R L O TTE .............374 9555

322-8678

NEW LEASE ON LIFESTYLE

RI

|JAMES LEE

M S

■:a i .

to r

321-7823......... Eves. 323-0809
LAR O E 2 story colonial on
wooded 1 acre Family room,
game rm . 2 tpl . many axlras.
* 137,000. W. M allctowski
Realtor....................... 322-79*3
LARGE 1/1. country kitchen, on
2 'i or $ acres, near all Lake
M a ry schools. SI49.000.
Call............................ 323 3073
L O V E L Y H O M E . Beautiful
Streat. Assume 9% , Low
down, only serious Inquiries
please..........................313 333*
FOR SALE BY OWNER- Must
see to appreciate. 2 br., 1 ba
Drive by 1*3 Bieder ull $
Sanford Av. In 530's 311 0772
G O V ER N M EN T HOMES trom
51 oo (U Repair) Also tax de
llnquent 4 foreclosure pro
parties Avail. Now. For list
Ing Call 1 113 733 *0*2 ext G27*
IO Y L L W IL D E POOL HOM E.
3/2, great room, fireplace,
paddle fans, must see Mid
190 s. C a ll:...,............. 322 7163

THE VILLAGE
C L E A N 4 A TTR A C TIV E
REASONABLE BY TH E W EEK
E F F IC 142 BORM APTS
FU R N IS H 4 UNFURNISHED
Call:.............................323-4307
D EV O TE D TO E X C E LLE N C E
TW O BDRM.. large kitchen,
fenced yard No pets *05
wkly *200 s e c ___________ 1214143 LK. JESSUPI Mobile home on
TW O LAROE BORM. 1 ceilings
I S acres Bring your horse but
Ians, mini blinds, city utilities
not much hay Very low cash
Inc, upstairs duplex *343 00
needed Owner will hold 2nd
per mo *230 00 sec
322 3717
I OR 2 BOROM. APTS. First
month ♦ security Call
321 14*9 alter 4 p m__________
International Business Ctr
1100 D. SA N FO R D AVE* I
230 International Pkwy
bdrm . alr/heaf. carport, no
Heathrow. FI. 3274*
pets. Call................
530 2133

322-9031

v 'V t t W iM x l

^ 7 ( i roup,

767-0606
B Y OW NER- Spacious 2/1, LR.
D R, kit., large front porch 4
carport on large shady lot.
SBS.000. Call:..3211031 anytime
B Y O W N IR I Immaculate. 3/2.
Santord Home, garage, fenced
yard. I ll Reel Ct. ISanora S.)
*34.000....................904 9(549*4
B Y O WN E R- Attention: In­
vestors. Sharp 3 bdrm., 1300
sq.ft., nice neighborhood, new
root, air, appliances, big lot,
fenced. Assume 1.73% FHA
with S15.000 down. Owner hold
2nd. Reedy to rent, positive
cash IlOw......................(33,300.
3230104......... or......... (31-1342
B Y OWNER- 2411 Adams Ct
Mint cond.. 3/1, Fla. rm., air,
Ians, appls.. new roof 4 paint,
big lot. fenced, tree*. (33,300.
Only 5% down 4 sailer pays
loan 4 closing cost or assume
existing 1.75% FHA. For de
tells call 373 010*...or...131 2543
SO UTH PIN ECR EST- 3 br., 2
ba., all new kitchen w/pantry,
family room w/tlreplece, heal
pump w/alr, scr. porch, pretty
1*9,900. Call:
TaMn Remax Unlimited
140-2400........... or............321-7(14

K

E X C E P T I O N A L L Y N IC R I 3
br., 2 ba. mobile home, double
roof 4 floor In '14. paddle fens,
lots of storage, dining room,
eel-ln kitchen.................*40,230
EN JO Y L IF E In this 3 bdrm.,
IVv balh home, central h/a.
dining area, garage, located In
Winter Sprlngsl............. *49,900
P IN E C R ES T A R E A I 3 bdrm , 1
bath home, screened porch,
well, central H/A, dining area,
large bedrooms, equipped
kitchen........................... *33,300
CHARMING V ILLA ! 2 bdrm . 2
balh, living 4 dining area,
backs up to green belt area,
private yard, central H/A,
garage............................ *34.300
FA N TA S TIC PRICE! 3 bdrm , I
balh home wllh lot* ol nice
features, as well as a 1 bdrm..
1ba-guesthouse.......... *34,950
SOUTHERN COMFORTI S
bdrm., 2 VY balh. 2 story home,
den. formal living 4 dining
rooms, tpl., central H/A,
screened porch..............S92.500
ST. JOHNS R IV E R FR O N TI 2
bdrm . I bath home on 1.71
acres. Great room, vaulted
ceilings, dining room w/ston*
tpl.. barn, shed, dock 4 much
morel...........................SI2S.900
VALU E IN T H E P R O P E R TY I 2
bdrm., I bath home near
hospital, excellent potential
lor olflct complex, approx. I
acre!.......................... 5250.000

S Tem

T H R E E BDRM., 2 balh. new
home, concrete block, price
only (53,730
T H R E E BORM., I h balh. con
crele block home, new paint,
only (34.900

W E H A V E OTHERS
C A L L A N Y TIM E
R E A L T O R .................. 322 4991

$1 0,0 00 DOWN
Take over payments 4 move
right In. Beautiful 3 br., 2 ba..
2 car garage on quarter acre
In lovely, convenient new area

869-9100
NEW L IFE R E A L T Y INC.
4 BDRM., 1 B A TH , family room
w/fpl., formal dining room,
enclosed porch 4 work shed,
fenced back yard, treed tot.
*64,300 Callafl 6pm 322 8577
M O D U L A R 'S / M O B iT e S on
acreage. 3 acres, fenced, 3/7,
plus 2 stall barn, lowS/O s
3 ACRES oft Lockwood. 3/1.
owner financing, low S60‘i
V i+ ACRE T R E E D LOT, 3/1.
reduced, make otter, low 130's
Oviedo Realty. Inc.Call 3*3.6403
ONLY *99,500
For a home In Maylalr. 4 br., 2
story on large lot, family
room, formal living 4 dining
rooms, eat in kitchen, c/h/a
House has been recently re
lurblshed 720 N Scott Ave

CALL BART
REAL E S TA TE
R E A LTO R
372 7491

W EK IVA RIVER E S TA TE S I 5
arras partially cleared, great
location *35.500. Call: Rhonda
Gortney Reallor/Assoclal*
RARE O P P O R TU N ITY ! 12 ♦
acres for possible comm,
devmnf. in Lk Mary. *600.000
Call Beth Hathaway. Real
tor/Assoc late
a G E N E V A OSCEOLA RD. *
ZO N ED FO R M OBILESI
5 Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
20% Down. I&gt; Yr*.*l 11%t
From SI*.5001

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720
Call toll free 1 800 323-3720
2545 PARK A V E .............Sanford
901 Lk. Mary Blvd........ Lk. Mary

^^jWCajJJjrgjjNXjjjJI***
149— C o m m trd R l
P ro p trty / S a le

APPRAISALS ANO ( A L E S
BOB M. BALL. JR. P.A..C.S.M.
R EA LTO R etc•••eeeeee***#*223-4111
Florid*.-Virginia...Mary land
SA N FO R D 1.(00 sq.ft, malal
building, cornar location.
1170.000 with terms.
BORM. B A L L JR . P.A.
R E A LTO R ..................... 313-4111

153— Acreage*
Lott/Sale
OCALA NATIONAL FOREST
High and dry wooded lots.
Mobile home, cabin, camping
O.K.-Hunting and fishing.
(3,450 w/SISO dn., (41.71
monthly..... (904) 23* 4379 days
or...............(904) *22 24311
1 ACRE Mobile Home fat. 5 ml E
Sanford 14500Owner financing
Wallace Crest Realty, Inc.
321-4377

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
USED HOMES
Fram *1,204
Orogary Mabfle Hemes-311 5240
IliM IN PARK
*5,995 Easy Term*
Gregory Mobile Hemes..333-5200
U X I , w ith2* X 9 Manufactured
rm. add. Ideal tor hunting
camp or storage. *450 321 24*1

111— Appliances

Flnancin^^^^U^CRCOOOOT^

Carpentry
A L L T Y P E S O l Carpentry
Remodeling 4 home repairs.
Call Richard Gross 321 5972
R E M O D E L IN G PRO'S. Add:
lions, remodeling, decks,
docks, boathouses, pole barns,
new homes. We do It all, St
Lie. CBC2B190
37) 7461
RICHARDS CAR P EN TR Y
ISyrs In Central Florida
Call.................................. 323 5717

Cleaning Service
HOUSE CLEAN IN G by week
month,offices also
Call .___________
_33l 34*/
NEW BUSINESS seeking clients
Offices 4 Retail businesses
preferred Call A lo l Clean
^ n ^ S e ^ lc e ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 2 ^ 7 ^

Concrete
C O N CR ETE slabs.drlves.patlos
walks, 23 yr. exp Lllelong res
Lie &amp; Ins
349 9754 alter 5

Electrical
0 4 S E L E C TR IC ............323 *050
New &amp; Remodeling additions.
Ians, security, lights, timers.
&amp; all eleclrle service Quality
Service......Licensed &amp; Bonded

V M f R IP t
Kept in a/c hAuaa. 3 lb* tor a
St. 1311 Randeiph St—i

Iff-P o ts * Supplies
CO CK ER SP AN IELS 4 males. 1
tomato, AKC registered pup
ptoe. Call......................3314494
F E R R E TS , 1 month OM, 430 00
each. Healthy, playful pat*.
Call after 5:30.............. M l Ball
F R E E T O OOOO HOM E Twin
Persian Cats, gaad w/kids.
litter box trained......... 33)4074
K I T T E N S Part Persian. 3
taboy, 1 calico. Adorable, tov
able. (H e # ...................321-T ill
M I X I D BU LLO O O PUPPIES
FO R SALE. Please phone
attorapm— ..... ........... 3217*30
W A N T E D AKC Chihuahua tor
stud sarvlce. Short hair. 122
14) 7 attar 4:30 pm

A IR LIN R T IC R E T - On* way tor
June 30th. o n end* Cleveland
OH or to Rechettor. N Y . M t.
Call:...................... ..... -M M M I
BROWN R IV E R ROCN. Patio
Stones. Great* Trap*. Sand
Dry Welle. R— dy Mix Can-

m in i.
B U Y -.........S I L L .......... T R A O I
MOBY A N Y T H IN *
to ll ( . P R IN C H A V I .
H U R T ’S CROWN P A W N W 7 4 *
C L IA R A N C R S A L I, Ceramic
tile, ever ASM ft. ef tile at (to
ft., many colors, many pet
torn*. Limited amounts. Call

Nobleat AMTILR.... JDMM
•OLFCARTS

(to to (39* utad riding carte
Celt:.......................3*9333( 7*1
P I A V I Y COMBO. 300 bast. 3M
watt, l/ts In BW
patch A crossover
(ISO or oftor.........331 0417 ovee

201— Horsts
RAY O E L D IN O , 13*0
Big and Beautiful
Call.323 0447 or -123 7241.

231-Cars

209— Wttrlng Apptrtl
N A M I BRAND SHOES. 40% oft
B 4 G SHOES. 1*13 S. French
Av*. ( Stamper Bldg. J..J22 707*

Bad Credit?
No Credit 7
W l FIN A N CE
WALK IN ............... DRIVE O U T
N A T IONA L A U T O SALES
Santord Ave. 4 12th St— M l-402S

213— Auctions

O ATSUN m SX- *11, Like new.
3 spd.. air. every extra. *4230
Ca ll:............................. MI-1470

BOWDEN 4 ASSOC.

TR IU M P H S P ITF IR E ‘7t, fair
condition (730 00 Call Dean
322 2*11.............................Days

In need ot cash? We liquidate
Inventory 4 estate* 74p706r

BRIDGES ANO SON

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories

Auction every Thursday 7 PM.

WE BUY ESTATES!
Hwy 4*......................... 123 2*01

OOOO USED MOTORS
and transmissions
Call:.........................— .3212234

215— Boots and
Accessories

235— Trucks/
B u sts/ V a n s

BASS B O A T, '70'. 35 hors*
Evlnrud*. trailer, (1300. Call
133 0417.....or..... 123 7311, eves
C ITA TIO N 45', cuddy cabin. 140
hp Marc. Cruiser (7300. Call
323 0407.... or..... 323 72(1. ave*
O H E E N O E , ll"&gt; It . Galvanized
trailer, all new. *900 00 OBO.
Call............................. 121 0464
OHEN O O '44', with trailer 4
swivel seat*. Uk* tiyw. (300
Call 323 0417 o r,,321 72&gt;l, eves
13 F T . M FO, excellent condition
with 30 Johnson, loaded, (1700
Phone 113 *147_______________
14 F T SKIP JA C K 90 HP
mere., power trim, hoi lool.
*1*00. Call:..................121 3174

to

C H IV Y R E A U V IL L I VANton ’79. dual air. remarkable
condition..........................(1,430
Ktn Ruminal Chevrolet. 34*3
Orlande Or................ SIMMS
C H IV Y PICKUP (W B , ’I T . *
cyl, 1 spd , good dependable
truck or trade for good
van............................... 321-6310
I N T E R N A T I O N A L 19*4, rad
P/U. Ideal for mechanic or
farmer *900 Call......... 3314*34

237— Tractors and
Trailers

217— Garage Sales
C L E AN . SM ALL T R A I L E R ,
wllh 13x14 room, lor rent In
Laka Mary . Call..........323 0424

BIO OARAOE SALE- T h u n .
Frl., Sat- IIS Bradshaw Dr.
Furniture, clothes, etc._______
FO UR F A M IL Y . China close!,
table chairs, lols ol mlsc. 117
Vlnowood Sal, only........ H o 4
HOUSEWARES. F U R N IT U R E .
Antique*, Sal.,27th 4 Sun.
ltth ; 10*Orange Or.

23S— Vehicles
Wanted
WE PAY TO P M tor wrecked
cars/truck*. W* Sail guar an-

219— Wanted to Buy

239—M otorcycles
and Bikes

**1 Aluminum Cans..N*w*p*per
Non-Ferrous Metals.......... Glass
KOKOM O....................... 113-1100
J U N K A W R E C K E D CARS
Running or not, lop prices
paid Free pick up 331 2354

HONDA 74*. Nlghthawk S. '14'.
4.000 m i . garaga kapl. axe
cond . 3 halmals. *1.300 or best
oiler Call
......... 333 *444

AIRLINE/TRAVEL SCHOOL

BUY H ER E
PAY H ER E
LOW
DOWN PAYMEN1

Train to bt a

TRAVEL AGENT
TOUR GUIDE
AIR R E S E R V A T I O N S

GOOD CREOIT BAD CRLDH

NO CREDIT
NO INTEREST

Start locally, lull Ume/part lime.
Train on live airline computers.
Home study end reeldeni train­
ing. Financial aid available. Job
plecomont aeelelenco. Nat'l
Hdqta. llghlhoue* F T - FL

A.C.T. Traval School

USED CARS

1-800-432-3004

3? 19 S HWY 1/ 9?

Accredited member N.H.S.C.

SANFORD

c
y
p
c
o
T
V f l r
V i a
I

i/J/m

DO IT

TO P U T TH IS D IR E C TO R Y TO W O R K FO R Y O U C A LL 322 2611

L____________________ _

B E. LIN K CONST.
Remodeling............. 305 372 7029

N EW - Excerclse bike.
Pack M M 4 Del* gym.
S3M tor a lll piece*.
Call aft. «pm ............... 3221577

SALVAGE &gt;-i D*B*ry..*64«*ei

B U N K B E D S W I T H
M A TR ESSE S- good cond .
S100 Phone................... 323*147
E X E C U TIV E TE A K DESK wllh
matching labia and Ilia cabl
net Immaculate condition!!
*300 oiler Call
321 1430
Good Utad T. V S25 and up
MILLERS
2*19 Orlando Dr
322 0352
K E N M O R E O R Y E R ,
nfghtitand. beige sofa 4 chair.
Call.............................. 373 2346
LADY KENMORE Gas Dryer
Excellent condition Asking
S100 Call:....................331 *944
LARRY'S MART. 215 Sanford
Av* New/Used turn 4 appl
Buy/Sell/Trad* 321 4133
NICE KINGSIZE Waterbed with
wooden headboard 4 mirror
&lt;41501 2 Peacock chairs (430)
Maple 4 draw dresser 4 mlr
ror (IMS) with matching desk
4 chair (S7S). Matching coffee
4 end tables (430). 2 wicker
TV tables (SlOea.) Call
131 1747 or...323 421* anytime
STRAUSS4 SONS
Spinel piano. Ilka new. *1000
Call............................. 323 1465
T W IN B E D S - Saparata or
together. Imitation rattan 4
wicker. Call:............. 113 0534
W HITE lull sire canopy bed w/S
drewer chest. 4190 Wood lable
*30 Bunkbeds. good condition.
4139 Call 322 5140 alter 6pm

C

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

L IK I

/ F u rn itu re

LET AN

NON-RESIDENTIAL

BU ILD YOUR NEW HOM E I S
* acres w/w*ll. septic 4
electric. *14,000. Call John
Butner, Broker/Salesman

Those are a few ot over 2000
listing*- W* havo all types of
property from (TOO par acre
and up. W* have small tracts,
large tracts, cabins, house, old
farms, lake front loft. Etc.
Writ* or call today for a fra*
listing brochure. You can call
free by dialing I 000-430 7411.
Wrlle or call today. Charektt

per

LIVE IN LU X U R Y I 4 bdrm. 3to
bath, executive home on II
acres wllh lake. pool, rec 4
family room, 1 llreplaces 4
many extras I.......
*29 5.000

NICE B U ILD IN G LOTSI Each
lot is 94 X 140. localed In quiet
area. Ideal lor single family
residence............. *9,000 each I
Call: Nancy Buller.
Reallor/Assoclal*

Laka front lots deep water level
and ready to build on paved
road county water under­
ground utilities very desirable
lots. (44.000 pay (1,000 down
payment assume loan

wi * i » n r s

Wehav# rentals

II
JU N E PORZIO R E A LTY , INC

141— Homes for Sale

221— O t e d T M t if i

I* (a t

2 bdrm., 1 bath, S miles
trom teem lovely totting largo
deck ove r l o oki ng m t m .
excellent location built In cab­
inets vary private oil tor
(31,900 pay 17,000 down
assume loan

Lie. Real Estate Broker

1000 Laka Mary Blvd.

Near 1-4
Located In country selling yet
near conveniences
3 Bdrm , I bath 2 Bdrm , 2 bath
Carport ,
Garages
ASX A BO UT OUR FR EE R EN T
S1M M OVESYOUIN
C A N TER B UR Y at LK. MARY
311-19)1........................ Ext, 103
O N E BDRM., lrg rooms, screen
porch, carport No pets. (73
wkly S200 sec............ 323 4343
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
Ask about our
MOVE IN SPECIAL
ONE Y E A R LEASE
1300 Ridgewood Ave.......311 *420
Tues Frl. Sam *pm
Mon 0 30am 3:30pm
________ Some Sat 10 4________
SAN FOR D 4 br apt Upstairs,
newly renovated Downtown
erea *450 mo *300 sec Call:
321 0334 leave message
SAN FOR D 1 br I b. 111! A Pine
Av. Adults, no pels. *00 wk.
*325 mo t sec Day* . 629 0005.
Eves *44 1017 , or
149 5*7*
SPECIALI
1175 move in through end ol
month to the llrsl 10 new
residence who quality
Call today I
Geneva Gardens Apts.
___________ 122 2090___________

117—Sporting Goods

NORTH CAROLINA, **ll/tr*d*
tor FL property, new, 2 BBrm.,
1 ba . on U 3 acre*. MO deg
view, Maggl* Valley, U t .m .
____.
WS-WMtW '
;
N O R TH CA R O LIN A
MOUNTAINS
2 J acre* located In the moun­
tain* dandy stream good ac­
cess ready to build on good
garden spot owner needs to
sail S9J06 pay (t.BOO down

GR0VEVIEW VILLAS
• •**
D O N 'T
**•*
• **
RENT
*•*
•*
until you've seen
•a
• TH E MOST SPACIOUS a
• a 2 bdrm . 2 bath apt* a a
•a#
In Sanford
a**
•*a*
32) 0504
aaaa
H ID D E N V IL L A O E , New 2
bdrm . many up gradts. leas*
1325 00 Mo Avll. Now Ralston
4 Assoc........................7*7 &gt;733
ID E A L FOR R E TIR EE S I San
lord 1 br., I ba . liv. rm „ kit.
appls- a/c. new paint S373 mo
1st. Iasi, sec. Ret
1210724
M ARINERS V ILLA G E. LAKE
ADA, I bdrm *300 a Mo 4 2
bdrm *340 a Mo Call 323 0*70

. r T * r r &lt; * f

SBitfortf HbtsM/ Sanford, PI.

☆

CLEA N 4 A TTR A C TIV E
REASONABLE RATES
W E E K L Y M AtO SERVICE
C*lll............................m-4147
111 S. PARK A V I.
MS wkly. 4 up. common kitch­
ens. T.V. room*, walk to town,
park. lake. 121 *941 or 6*94010

1

99— Apartments
U n fu rn is h e d / (fo n t

C A S H I E R S - Shift work.
Advancement opportunities.
Apply: I&lt;08 S. French Ave.
CHAIR R E N TA L available or
S T Y L I S T with fallowing.
C a ll:......... 3 » M l eefc lor Bob

n

________ ._________________________________

Landclearing

Fence
F E N C E I N S T A L L E D A ll
types no |ob too small or
large Call:
30* 133 4798

Handy ^ton
ODD JOBS. Fix up 4 repairs,
carpentry 4 other tasks
around the home Don 312 5004

House Plans
B ^
&gt;1 K
/ I | V
DBMQMt

Custom blueprints
OllOrlenta Ave.
All Spgs. 33701
311914*

BACK
hog.
Call
BUSH
clng
Tall

HOE. Oump truck, Bush
Box blading, and Discing
332 1806
or
322 9113
HOG. Box Blading. Dis
4 Tractor Roto Tilling
123 359/

Landscaping
BOGUESI Exp! Protessional!
Lawn 4 Garden Maint 4 chain
saw work Trees and shrubs
planted! Free Estl . 323 8347

SEMINOLE LANDSCAPING
Call............................... 323 * m

Home Improvement

Lawn Service

CARPEN TRY BY ED D A V IS
REM ODELING/RE PAIRS
4 INSTALLATION SERVICE
Lie Santord res
.... 121 0463
COLLIERS
HOME IM PRO VEM EN T
No job loo small.... Call 321 *422
COMPLET E REPAIR
SERVICE bath repair, ceram
fc tile. Mobile home repairs
also. No Job too small.
Call 4 am to 9 pm....... 323 5457
CO M PLETE HOME REPAIRS.
plumbing, electrical, painting,
la n d s ca p in g , c a rp e n try ,
anylime/anyplace!. 321 4210

BARRIER'S Landscaping!
Irrlg . Lawn Care. Res 4
Comm. 331 7846. F R E E ESTt
C E N TR A L FL LAW N M AIN
TE N A N C E , salislacllon guar
anleed. F R E E E S TIM A TE S
Call chuckor Rick
131 3006
G EO R G E'S LAWN CARE
Fast reliable service Res 4
Comm Freeest
333 0901

Home Repairs
HOME REPAIR S4 Remodeling
No |ob too small!
28yrt exp
321 9645

LAWN SERVICE
111 1011

"S U N N Y S ". Mow. edge, trim,
planting, mulching SPRING
Spec. Freeest............. 333 7839

Nursing Care
Hlllhaven Healthcare Center
950 Mellonville Ave.
Santord.........................131(5*6

Nursing Care
OUR R A TE* ARE LOWER
Lakovlaw Nursing Center
919 E. Second St., Santord
111 *707

Painting
FRANK BARNHART Painting
Contractor Interior 4 Exterl
or painting, pressure cleaning
Free esl All work Guaran
toed He! upon request Paint
Ing since 1970.............. 333 11*3
MARSH PAIN TIN G
Inter lor/Exterior
Call
......... 133 4400

Paper Hanging
PAPER HANGING
ING (Interior
Ret 4 comm 35
Free Estimates
Taylor al

4 P A IN T
Exterior)
year* exp,
Call Roy
131 4033

Tree Service
ECHOLS TR E E SERVICE
Free estimates! Low Prices!
Lie Ins Stump Grinding. Too!
331 3339 day or nlte
"Let The Professionals do It"

W indows
GLASSOME TR Y! Comprehen
slve window cleaning service
I Comm 4 Res
333 6718

�£ f "-t r v r

BLONDIE

88— Sanford Htrt Id, Aanford, FI.

Wodnoiday, Juno 24, 1W7

BEETLE BAILEY

TH E BORN LOSER
p
6 ee, I'M fcaMfcTOIM&amp; N Y l ALWAYS LOCK w m * D

MAMA WHEN$HE*$AWY
Vj$lTIN6AUNT RAHC^...

TDOUfc‘lAUl£TlM CS'.

ARCHIE

EEK A MEEK_________________

I I WEWTCOT WITH MV
COJ6RESSMAU LAST WIGHT

t r r r t t r *

- r s s ~ 's ' /

■i i - r r - r T ' A T F T »

WHAT
HAPPENED?,

OH,SOU
W O O U ...

by Chic Young

y7 7 7 f7 ^ rt

A C o m m o n P ro b le m
Th a t M a y B e S e rio u s

DEAR DR. G O T T - I am 61
and still work six days a week,
walking on a cement floor. I
missed two weeks of work
because of phlebitis. What is
this? Could It have come from
the Estratest pills m y family
doctor has me on?
D EA R R EA D ER Strictly
speaking, phlebitis means In*
by Mort Walker flammatlon of the lining of a
vein. Th is Inflam m ation Is
almost always associated with
thrombosis, formation of a blood
clot at the site of Irritation.
Therefore, doctors usually refer
to thrombophlebitis, a term that
Includes both the clot and the
vein inflammation.
Thrombophlebitis commonly
affects the leg veins, which are
di vi ded Into two syst ems:
superficial and deep.
Superficial veins are the ones
we can see: they frequently
by Art Sansom become inflamed and throm*
bosed. causing a situation that Is
u n c o m f o r t a b l e b u t not
dangerous. People get red.
painful bumps that disappear
with application of heat, eleva­
tion of the legs and the use of
anti-inflammatory medicines,
such as Indocln and Butazolldln.
Deep venous thrombophlebitis
is quite another matter. The
deep leg veins are large and not
visible. When they become In­
flamed and thrombosed, serious
medical complications can de­
velop. Unlike blood clots In the
by Bob Montana superficial veins, the clots in the
deep veins have a dangerous
tendency to break ofT and be
carried to the lungs, causing
pulmonary embolism. If the
blood clot Is big enough, large
portions of lung tissue can be
injured and the condition may
be fatal.
Pulm onary embolism is a
dreaded affliction because It may
be difficult to diagnose without
the use of sophisticated and
dangerous testing, such as
pulmonary angiography. In ad­
dition, It can occur suddenly and
by Howia Schneider without warning. Similarly, deep
venous thrombosis can be tricky
to diagnose. Patients usually
COMTICTS OF (WTLREST,
huv
e swo l l en , t end er cal f
ERRORS IW OUDGMEMT,
muscles. However, the typical
AKJD A TDIALLV UNREAL­
signs m ay not be present.
ISTIC IfJTERPRETATQU OF
T r e a t m e n t inclu des antlcoagulatlon with heparin.
cofJsrnuEKJT suprort
Thrombophlebitis can have a
variety of causes. In particular,
women who smoke cigarettes

Dr.
G o tt

and take birth-control pills are at
higher risk. Some people who
spend long hours standing on
hard surfaces can develop the
condition.
In short, thrombophlebitis Is a
common disease that is often
unsuspected In people with leg
(and chest) pain, and requires
careful attention and manage­
ment. if the deep veins are
affected.
In m y opinion. Estratest. a
combination of estrogen (female
hormone) and testosterone (male
hormone), could have triggered

your phlebitis. Ask your doctor
about this; perhaps he or she
will want to change your medi­
cine.
&gt;
If you have questions about
H IA TA L HERNIA, you can get
answers In Dr. Gott’s new Health
Report on the subject. Send $1
and your name and address to
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-C428. Be sure to ask for
the Health Report on Hiatal
Hernia.
Answer to Previous Punie

ACROSS

6 Close relative
7 Eastern
8 Football league
1 W hil
(abbr.)
4 College group
8 One-billionth
9 Disembarked
(pref.)
10 Short for
12 Baking pit
Nathan
13 Adjective luffii 11 Semiprecious
14 Cuatard
atone
18 Short aleep
1 7 _____ 'a Irish
16 Friendlineaa
Rose
18 Idol
19 Mouth port
20 A c to r_____
23 Knots in cotton
Hunter
fiber
21 Cowboy" 1
25 Pounds (abbr.)
nickname
26 Actress Anna
22 Ornamental
M a y _____
27 Slangy
24 Zero
affirmative
26 More worm28
File
infeated
29 Carried away
30 Rolled out
31 Supervisor
34 Wood aorrel
32 Songstress Ad­
38 Three-banded
ams
armadillo
33 Moms’ mates
37 Beverage
36 Unusual
,38 Space agency
39 Tree
(abbr.)
41 Downfalls
40 Duration
42 Comedian
1 2
Caeaar
43 Vagabond
ft
48 Hair
47 Marchers'
IB

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nnnn nnnnn
□ □

S G C in D ii]

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DOWN
Puablo Indian
Moslem priest
Pre-adult insect
African land
Runner
Sebastian

SO

82
54
86
87
58

44

0270

Apparel
Grimace
Cooled
Indian
“Auld Lang

I4
11

4.

11

1M

so

111

14

IS

ML
PP
24

10

It

14

31

1 17
40

42

41

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| 40

4?

4*

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40

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□ □ □ □

60 Recant (pref.)
61 Yorkshire river

IS

11

n n n

n n n n

44 Cosmonaut
_____ Gagarin
46 Have a meal
48 Water-raising
machines
80 South African
tribe
51 E pluribus

is

17

□

□□□ nnnn □□□□

word

M

□

nnn n o n n e m n n o

*1

49 Flightleaa bird
80 Swiaa lake
83 Fermented
cane
85 Claaaie stories
24
59 Without dissent
62 Call out
14
63 Invito
04 Unadulterated
14
65 Even (poet.) •
68 Center of shield 4 ]
67 Watches
68 Actress Ruby

□

•1
Its

44

J

»■

as
(c) 19S7 by N fA . Inc

W IN A T B R ID G E
MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

/W?.GREEPr, T A S T E
T H &amp; FPU IT PUNCH
A N P TELL- M E IF
THERE'? A N Y T H IN G
&amp; &amp; IN G

BUGS BUNNY
IT

by Warner Brothers

J E A N SFLICINGHN T

SPACEi r T ^ /

By James Jacoby

So often the right play requires
the suppression of natural bridge
Instincts. Here's a good example.
Many times with 18 high-card
points the opener will Jump to
only three hearts, but here North
t h o u g h t t ha t hi s k i n g of
diamonds was as good as an ace
after West's overcall, so he
Jumped right to game.
Declarer won the diamond
opening lead with his ace to lead
a trump right away — normally
good procedure. West grabbed
the ace and continued with the
diamond 10. king from dummy,
ruff. East returned a club to
West's ace and West took the
setting trick with the diamond
Jack. Despite the need to draw
trumps, that vulnerable overcall

by West should have alerted
South to the likelihood that West
held both aces as well as a
six-card diamond suit. So he
should look for a counter to the
predictable defense.
The right tactic.Is to capture
the diamond opening lead with
the king In dummy. Then play a
low club back to the Jack. West
will win with his ace and play
another diam ond, but now
South can play low when East
ruffs. If East then returns u
spade or a club, declarer can
throw his other diamond on
dum m y’s club king before re­
turning to his hand to finally
lead a trump. And If East plays
back a heart after ruffing, he will
not have another heart left with
which to ruff.

NORTH
«A K
▼ k 10 e 3
♦ K 53
♦ K Q65
WEST
♦ J2
*AQ
♦ Q J 10 8 7 6
♦ A 43

EAST
♦ Q 109 8 7
♦ 64
♦ 9

♦ 10 9 17 3

SOUTH
♦ 8343
♦J9752
♦ A 42
♦ J

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
West
2♦
Pass

North
! ♦
4*

East
Pass
Pass

South
1V
Pass

Opening lead: ♦ Q

HOROSCOPE
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thaves

UH„ LET'S TPAPE
PLACES IN
L lN f t o f c A Y ?

£

by Jim Davis

What The Day
Will Bring...

VIR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
There arc strong Indications that
an Important change will take
place today. It will usher In new
conditions for which you've been
YOUR BIRTHDAY
hoping.
JUNE 25. 1987
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
In the year ahead, you are
destined to play a leadership role D o n ’ t be i n t i m i d a t e d by
In an Important venture Instead challenges today, because the
of being numbered In the ranks. aspects indicate that success can
be achieved through boldness
You’ll be up to what Is required.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) and tenacity. Aim high.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Projects or ventures that you
initiate have good chances for Your ideas and suggestions
success, provided you can get carry more weight today than
something moving today. Be a you may realize. People you
doer, not a dreamer. Trying to think arc Indifferent will be
patch up a broken romance? absorbing every word.
SA GITTARIU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
The Matchmaker set can help
you understand what It might 21) Joint ventures hold more
take to restore the relationship. promise for you today than your
Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o this Independent efforts. Don't fight
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, the world alone If you can team
up with an able ally.
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
CAPRIC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
LEO (J u ly 23-Aug. 22) A
career goal can be accomplished 19) Someone with whom you arc
today, but you will have to put closely affiliated will make an
the needs of another above your Important decision today that
will also affect you. Fortunately.
own.

ANNIE

this person's judgment Is good.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Pace yourself wisely today so
that you're In command of your
work and It's not in command of
you. Proper procedures enhance
productivity.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your organizational abilities will
be very pronounced today. If
there Is a situation you’d like to
reconstruct, do it now.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Your demeanor will cast a shad­
ow over eveiyone in your house­
hold today if you are long-faced
and grumpy. T r y smiling In­
stead.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Schedule your day wisely so that
you don't do a lot of unnecessary
running around. If you fall to
make appointments, the people
you want to see may not be in.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be
especially alert today for an
unusual development that has
profitable potential. You’re very
close to something good.

by Leonard Starr

�►

1 '» &gt; ^ '

&lt;. t t — &gt;-» « l

..
I *7 *

Birthday With A

T V

WW

R t r r -l
r iv.

Lay«r«d dasiart •y«*app«oling.

Potpourri
Elegant Rice Royale
Is Simple To Prepare
By Aileen Claire
NEA Pood Editor
A layered dessert of rice,
butterscotch pudding and choco­
late syrup, enriched with a
whipped cream topping, makes
a fantastic dessert. It is simple to
put together, but looks as
though you’ve spent hours pre­
paring It.
Serve Rice Royale In clear
glass — In elegant goblets, wine
glasses or a simple kitchen glass
— so family or guests get the full
Impact of the layered design as
they savor the dessert’s rich
flavor.
RICE ROYALE
1 package (3% ounces) butter­
scotch pudding and plc-fllllng
mix
2 teaspoons Instant cofTcc
2 cups milk
2 cups cooked rice
1 envel ope (1 Mi ounces)
whipped topping mix. prepared,
divided
Chocolate syrup, homemade
or bottled
Chopped nuts (optional)
Combine pudding mix. Instant
coffee, and milk. Cook and stir
over medium heat until mixture
comes to a full boll. Add cooked
rice; cool. Fold In 1 cup whipped
topping: chill. Then, in clear
glasses, alternate layers of rice
pudding and chocolate syrup.
Top each serving with remaining
whipped topping. Chill at least
one hour before serving. Garnish
with chopped nuts. If desired.
This kitchen-tested recipe makes
6 servings.
V A N ILLA ICE CREAM

V* cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
*/*» teaspoon salt
3 cups milk
1/3 cup light corn syrup
2 egg yolks, slightly beaten
2 teaspoons pure vanilla
1 cup heavy cream
In 2-quart saucepan combine
sugar, cornstarch and salt.
Gradually stir In milk until
smooth. Stir In corn syrup and
egg yolks. *Stirring constantly,
bring to boll over medium heal
and boil 1 minute. Remove from
heat; stir in vanilla. Pour Into
large bowl.
Covet suirtce w ill) plastic
wrap. Refrigerate at least 2
hours or until chilled. Stir in
cream. Freeze In 2-quart electric
or hand freezer following manu­
facturer’s directions. Spoon Into
freezer containers: cover and
freeze several hours or until
firm. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes about 2 quarts.
Blueberry Ice Cream: Follow
recipe for vanilla Ice cream.
Reduce vanilla to 1 teaspoon.
Stir 1 cup pureed blueberries
Into cream. Freeze as directed.
Chocolate Ice Cream: Follow
recipe for vanilla Ice cream. Add
2/3 cup unsweetened cocoa to
dry Ingredients. Reduce vanilla
to lMi teaspoons. Freeze as
directed.
Peach Ice Cream : Follow
recipe for vanilla Ice cream.
Reduce vanilla to 1 teaspoon. In
blender or food processor, finely
chop 2 cups peeled, sliced
peaches with 1/3 cup light corn
syrup and 1 tablespoon lemon
Juice. Add to chilled mixture
with cream. #Sl i r until well
blended. Freeze as directed.

Pastry for a double-crust, fl­
inch pic
Peel peaches, slice thinly and
place In large bowl. Sprinkle
with lemon Juice, add brown
sugar, (lour, salt and pecans:
Mix gently.
Roll out half of pastry and line
a 9-Inch pie plate: trim overhang
to 1 Inch. Tu rn fruit Into pie.
Roll out remaining half of pastry
and place It over fruit: seal and
flute edge. Make 3 or 4 small
slits In top crust. Bake In
425-degree oven for 40 minutes,
until pastry Is browned and
peaches are tender. Serve warm
or cool. This kitchen-tested reci­
pe makes 6 to 8 servings.
PEPPERONI CHEESE LOAF

By Aileen Claire
NEA Food Editor
Every summer, the Fourth of
Ju ly Is a favorite party day, an
all-out national festival. This
year. Independence Day marks
the 211th birthday of the United
States, and festivities will be
more patriotic because 1987 Is
also the bicentennial celebration
of our Constitution.
The Constitution was actually
signed on Sept. 17. 1787. but
the birthday of the nation is a
great day to toast that historic
document.
What better way to say happy
anniversary than to gather with
family and friends for an outdoor
barbecue with such traditional
fare as colorful drinks, burgers,
bean salad, potato salad, pecan
pie and homemade Ice cream?
All foods may be readied In
advance so everyone will have
time to enjoy the day’s events.

MENU
SPARKLING
BLUEBERRY-LEM ON
PUNCH
FR U IT
BLENDER DRINK
SPICED PITA CRISPS
COOL-AS-A-CUCUM BER
DIP
SEASONED
HAMBURGER ROLLS
S TU FFE D
BARBECUED BURGERS
O R IEN TA L
V EA LB U R G ER S
MAGIC V A L L E Y
P O TA TO S A L A D
PICKLED PEPPER
AND KIDNEY BEAN
SALAD *
6
2
1
SPARKLING

BLUEBERRY-LEMON
Mi cup chopped mushrooms
PUNCH
1 large clove garlic
3 cups (24 ounces) blueber­
Mi cup Italian olive oil
ry-cranberry drink, chilled
Mi cup diced pepperoni
Vi cup (2 ounces) frozen
14 c u p gr at ed Par mesan
rh eeau- — ---------- — ■----------------— Lemonade concentrate, u n ­
V* cup chopped parsley
diluted
1 large loaf seeded Italian
cup (6 ounces) club soda,
bread
chilled
Lemon slices, for garnish (op­
Microwave method: In 1 quart
bowl, com bine m ushroom s, tional)
Pour b l u e b e r r y - c r a n b e r r y
garlic and Mi cup of olive oil.
Cook, covered, on High for 2 drink and lemonade concentrate
minutes, stirring once during Into a 1'.4-quart pitcher. Stir
cooking. Add pepperoni, cheese until lemonade melts. Add club
and parsley.
soda. If desired, garnish with
Slit bread horizontally In 3 lemon slices. Add Ice as needed.
slices. Spread mixture on bot­ This kitchen-tested recipe makes
tom and second slice. Cover with 6 servings, about 5 ounces each.
top. Wrap in paper towels. Cook
FRUIT
on High for 3 minutes, turning
once during cooking. Wrap In
BLENDER DRINK
foil and set aside for 5 minutes
1 bottle (32 ounces) cranberry
before slicing to serve. This Juice cocktail, chilled
kitchen-tested recipe make 1
2 small ripe bananas, peeled
and cut Into chunks, chilled
loaf.
1 cup fresh or drained canned
VEGETABLE-STUFFED
peaches,
sliced, peeled, chilled
PICNIC LOAVES
2
cups
watermelon, seeds
2 tablespoons olive oil
removed,
dlctu.
chilled
1 large onion, thinly sliced
6
Ice
cubes,
crushed
2 cloves garlic, minced
Fresh peach slices or mint
1 medium (1 pound) eggplant,
sprigs for garnish
thinly sliced
Place half of all Ingredients —
1 zucchini, sliced thinly on the
except
garnish - - In container of
diagonal
electric
blender: w hirl until
1 yellow squash, sliced thinly
smooth.
Pour
Into 3 tall glasses.
on the diagonal
Repeat
with
remaining Ingre­
1 tomato, thinly sliced
dients.
Garnish
each drink with
1 red pepper, thinly sliced
a
fres).
peach
slice
or mint sprig.
1 cup fresh mushrooms, sliced
This kitchen-tested recipe makes
6 tall drinks.
'3 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1 teaspoon dried leaf oregano,

crumbled
Mi teaspoon dried leaf basil,
crumbled
% teaspoon salt
Vli teaspoon pepper
2 loaves (about 15 Inches each)
Italian or French bread
Va pound salami, thinly sliced
pound provolone cheese,
thinly sliced
Va p o u n d f r eshl y grated
Parmesan cheese
In a large saucepan, heat oil:
cook onion and garlic until
softened, about 5 minutes. Add
r (Hipla n t- z u c c h i n i , yel l ow
squash, tomato, red pepper,
mushrooms, vinegar, oregano,
basil, salt and pepper. Stir oc­
casionally while simmering until
vegetables are softened, about
10 to 15 minutes. Remove from
heat: cool. Cover. Refrigerate
overnight. Drain vegetables In a
colander to remove most of the
moisture. Slice loaves in half
lengthwise, and scoop out on­
e-half of the soft bread bn both
sides. Spread small amount of
vegetable mixture in one half
PEACH PRALINE PIE
6 cups (about 12) peaches, and line loaves with a layer of
salami and a layer of cheese. Top
sliced, peeled
with remaining vegetables mix­
2 teaspoons fresh lemon Juice
% cup packed light brown ture and Parmesan cheese. Place
halves together and wrap In foil
sugar
or plastic wrap. Slice into por­
3 tablespoons (lour
tions. This kitchen-tested recipe
Vk teaspoon salt
makes 8 servings.
Vi cup chopped pecans

SPICED
PITA CRISPS
1 package (8 ) whole wheat pita

bread (4-Inch diameter)
6 tablespoons safflower oil
Select as desired: chill powder,
dill weed. Italian seasoning,
garlic powder, sesame and/or
poppy seed
Preheat oven to 300 degrees.
Using a paring knife to cut
around the edges, separate each
pita bread Into 2 layers. Brush
the rough sides of each pita
round well with safflower oil.
about 1 teaspoon. Sprinkle with
desired spice. Cut each round
Into 6 triangles. Place In a single
layer on 2 baking sheets. Bake
until crisp, about 10 minutes.
Cool. Refrigerate In a tightly
covered container until ready to
serve with cheese or dips. Tills
kitchen-tested recipe makes 96
triangles.
COOL-AS-A-CUCUMBER
DIP
1cup cottage cheese

Mi medium cucumber, u n ­
peeled. cut In pieces
4 radishes, chopped
2 scallions, including green
tops, sliced thinly
1 tablespoon freshly squeezed
lemon juice
1 teaspoon chopped fresh dill,
or Vi teaspoon dried dill
1 teaspoon seasoned salt

Serve a variety of grilled favorites on the Fourth.
Dash hot pepper sauce
Assorted fresh vegetables: car­
rot strips, celery strips, zucchini
rounds, broccoli flowerets,
cherry tomatoes, etc.
In c o n t a i n e r of el ec t r i c
b l e n d e r , c o m b i n e cot tage
cheese, cucum ber, radishes,
scallions, lemon Juice, dill,
seasoned salt and hot pepper
sauce. Process until smooth.
Cover. Chill. Serve with fresh
cut-up vegetables. Double or
triple recipe as desired. This
kitchen-tested recipe makes
about 1Mi cups dip.
SEASONED
HAMBURGER ROLLS

3 cups biscuit baking mix
Seasoning, as indicated below
1cup milk
1 egg. lightly beaten
Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
Mix baking mix and seasonings:
stir in milk. Mix until a soft
dough forms: beat vigorously for
about 30 seconds. If dough Is too
sticky, gradually add enough
baking inlx to make dough easy
to handle. Form dough into ball.
Dust large board with flour.
Knead dough about 12 times on
board. Roll to Mi Inch thickness.
Cut with 3V4- or 4-Inch cookie
cutter dipped In flour. Brush
tops of rolls with beaten egg;
sprinkle with desired toppings.
Bake rolls on ungreased bak­
ing sheet, until golden brown. 10
to 12 minutes. Cool at least 5
minutes on wire racks before
serving. This kitchen-tested rec­
ipe makes 6 rolls.
SEASONINGS/TOPPINGS:

For Turkey Burger Rolls: Use
Vi teaspoon poultry seasoning.
Top with 2 tablespoons sesame
seeds.
For Veal Burger Rolls: Use Mi
teaspoon ground mustard and Vfc
teaspoon garlic powder.
For Beef Burger Rolls: Use Mi
teaspoon mixed herb leaves and
Vb teaspoon onion powder. Top
with 2 tablespoons poppy seeds.
STUFFED
BARBECUED BURGERS
2 pounds ground chuck
2 eggs

Mi cup packaged, seasoned
bread crumbs
1Mi teaspoons salt
Va teaspoon pepper
Mi pound fresh mushrooms,
chopped
1 large onion, chopped

1 tablespoon butter
Mi cup cranberry-orange sauce
Mi cup shredded C heddar
cheese
1/3 cup chopped parsley
2 navel oranges, cut into 4
thick slices
Mi cup cranberry Juice cocktail
In a large bowl, combine beef,
eggs, bread crumbs, salt and
pepper: blend well. Divide into 8
thin patties. In a pan. saute
mushrooms and onions in butter
until golden brown. S tir In
cranberry-orange sauce until
well blended. Spoon mixture on
center of patties; top each with 2
tablespoons shredded cheese.
Top patties with remaining 4
patties and press edges together
to seal.
Grill 5 Inches from source of
heat for about 15 minutes for
medium burgers, turning once
or twice.
Place orange slices on gr'll.
about 5 Inches from source of
heat: brush with cranberry Juice
cocktail. Grill on both sides,
about 5 to 8 minutes, turning
and basting with cranberry Julre
cocktail. Sprinkle with chopped
parsley and top with grilled
burgers. This kitchen-tested rec­
ipe makes 4 burgers. Double or
triple recipe as needed.
ORIENTAL
VEAL BURGERS
Basting Sauce:

1 Jar (14 ounces) cranberryorange sauce
Vi cup dry white wine or apple
Juice
Mi cup soy sauce
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 cup (1 large) onion, chopped
1 clove garlic, crushed
2 teaspoons ground ginger
2 teaspoons dry mustard
Veal Burgers:
2 pounds ground veal
1Mi teaspoons salt
Va teaspoon pepper
Garnish:
1 fresh pineapple, pared and
cut Into Mi-inch slices
Lettuce
Onion slices
To make cranberry basting
sauce: In large bowl, combine
cranberry-orange sauce, white
wine, soy sauce, oil. onion,
garlic, ginger and dry mustard.
Blend well.
Place veal in large bowl:
sprinkle with salt and pepper
and work in lightly. Shape
mixture into 6 equal burgers.

Grill over charcoal, until deli­
cately brown on both sides. 10 to
15 minutes. Brush with cranbcrry b a s t i n g s a u c e .
Grill pineapple slices Just until
tender. Place burgers on grilled
pineapple slices with lettuce and
onion slices. Heat remaining
cranberry basting sauce and
spoon over burger. This kitch­
en- t es t ed r eci pe ma k e s 6
burgers.
MAGIC V A LLE Y
POTATO SA LA D

1 package (5.5 ounces) de­
hydrated au gratin potatoes with
sauce mix
3
2/3 cups water, divided
3 tablespoons cider vinegar
1 teaspoon chill powder
Mi teaspoon ground cumin
1 medium tomato, coarsely
chopped
1 a v o c a d o , seeded and
coarsely chopped
In medium saucepan, combine
potatoes and 3 cups water: heat
to boiling. Reduce heat and
cover. Simmer 15 minutes until
tender. Drain. Cool.
Meanwhile. In small saucepan,
combine sauce mix. remaining
2/3 cup water, vinegar, chill
powder and cumin. Cook, stir­
ring constantly, until mixture
bolls and thickens. Cool to room
temperature.
In l a r g e b o w l c o m b i n e
potatoes, tomato, avocado and
sauce m ixture; toss lightly.
Cover. Chill. This kitchen-tested
recipe makes 4 servings. Double
or triple as needed.
PICKLED PEPPER
AND KIDNEY BEAN
SA LA D
1 can ( 1 pound) kidney beans,

drained
1 cup diced celery
Mi cup sweet fresh cucumber
pickles, drained, chopped
1a cup diced pickled peppers
2 tablespoons chopped
scallions
2 tablespoons ketchup
1 cup diced Monterey Jack
cheese
1/3 cup mayonnaise
1 cup crushed tortilla chips
Toss together bean, celery,
pickles, peppers and scallions.
Gently fold In ketchup, cheese
and mayonnaise until Ingre­
dients arc blended. Chill several
hours. Sprinkle with chips be­
fore serving. This kitchen-tested
recipe makes 6 servings.

�r

r
JC— Sanford Herald — Wtdntday, June 34, IH7

I” * f - •

Herald Advtrfitor — Thureday, June 2J, tW7

» '

T

r r

Sanford, FI.

Orange, Lake, Saminola,
Oacaola, Polk, Highlands Co.
Tab or Reg. or Diet: Sprite, Minute
Maid Orange or Lemon-Lime, A&amp;W
Root Beer or Assorted Flavors of

FO R A

Fabulous

French Colombard, Chenin Blanc,
Grenache Rose, Blush Chablis n

CO M E TO PUBUX FIRST.
6.5 to 7-oz. Sizes,
Assorted To m 's Country Style

Potato Chips....... “«h 99*
4.25-oz. Tablewater or 5.29-oz. Croissants

Carr’s Crackers... S *1”

Keebler Reg. or Low Salt

Publix

Reg. or Low Salt Cheez-lts
Hi-Ho, or Wheat Wafers

7 to 10-oz. Sizes, Assorted Wheat Thins,
Better Cheese, or Great Crisps or
Chicken In A Biskit, Sociables, Twigs,
Bacon or Vegetable Thins, or
Reg. or Low Salt Triscuits

Sunshine
Crackers...........

Nabisco
Snack Crackers... X h »1«»

Town House
Crackers...........

JULY 1 , 1 9 0 7 . . .

Publix Beef, Gov't.-lnspected

------------------------- \ New York
Boneless Bottom *?r'P steak
Round Roast V\;L * j n A m

t

Publix Beef, Gov’t.-lnspected

1

_

_

u

Reg. or Light Beer

t

Budw eiser
12-pk.
12-oz. cans

$4.85

(Limit 2 Please, With Cither Purchases of
$7.50 or More, Excluding all Tobacco Items)

r A Case of Old Style Beer for $1.661! A
(with $ 5 .0 0 mail-in rebate offer)
Regular or Light

Our Steaks and Roasts,
Pork and Lamb aro
Trimmed to not over:

1/4-lnch
Average!

ll-oz. cans * 3 '

Look for “NUTRh
FACTS” brochures and

(Limit 2 Please. W ilh O ther
Purchases ol $7.50 or M ore,
Excluding all T o b a c c o Items)

displays in your Publix
Meat Department.

T w o 12-pks.
In 12-oz. cans
Less $5 mail
in rebate
Publix Beef, Gov't.-lnspected

C o st of case of
O ld Style
Beer after
mail-in rebate

Eye Round Roast..
Publix Beef, Gov't.-lnspected

Short Ribs...........

$1000
Winners!

PLAY MERV GRIFFIN'S

The Deli Lets You Eat
Out At Home.......
Premium Stick Pepperoni
or Sandwich Style

Slicing
Pepperoni........... S'

only at Publix
Pick up your g a m e c a rd s and d e ta ils at any
p a rticip a tin g P ublix to d a y . No p u rc h a s e n e ce s s a ry.

Hebrew National Deli
Marge Johnson
Naples

HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY
Pump Dispenser, Assorted

Bologna or
Salami.................. t

Melanie Leimer
Tampa

Hot From Th e Delil

Macaroni
&amp; Cheese............. r

FROZEN FOOD

Hot From Th e Deli!

Crest
Toothpaste.......... » t *1M

Frozen Concentrate, Reg. Snow Crop

Original, Fresh Scent, or Musk Deodorant

Dinner Classics... °
Pkcoh *240

Old Spice Stick.... 2jJ,M*1“
Tablets, Nasal
Decongestant/ Antihistamine

Five Alive........... *£?■ 89*
10.75 to 12-oz. Sizes, Assorted Armour
La Choy Lobster, Shrimp, or Chicken
—

—

—

7 .2 5 -o z.

Egg Rolls
Pak, Aunt Jemima Reg.
Actifed......................... %5'-*2"Family
or Blueberry
30mg Nasal Depongestant Tablets
Waffles...............
Sudafed.................*£? »2«»

AA/&gt;

SEAFOOD

1

Fresh

Mahi Mahi Fillet
Fresh Frozen

Turbot Fillet....
Gulf Maid Frozen

Flounder Fillet.
Virginia C apes Frozen

Red Snapper
Fillet.................
Breakfast Club
\S,
Florida Grade A White

dozen

bow l

99*
79*

Frozen, Publix All Natural,
No Preservatives Dutch Apple Crumb or

Apple Pie............. X

»1««

Birds Eye Broccoli, Mushrooms, Bamboo
Shoots &amp; Red Peppers; Broccoli, Carrots,
&amp; Water Chestnuts; or Broccoli,
Cauliflower, &amp; Carrots

Farm Fresh
Vegetables......... ’bag1 $129
Gorton’s Fillets or Sticks

Crunchy Fish...... %

Sunnyland Meat or Beef

Jumbo Franks....

*179

Swift Premium, Gov’t.-lnspected, Shipped
Quick Frozen, Evisc., U .S.D .A ., Grade A

Duckling..............

99*

Dinner Bell

Birds Eye Reg. or Extra Creamy

Cool Whip......... ..

Cream of
Broccoli Soup..... T

*3”

Boneless Ham..... r $249
Butterball Deep Basted, Gov't.lnspected, Shipped Quick Frozen,
Evisc., U .S .D .A . Grade A

Turkey Breast
with Ribs............ Z *1«»

Great Tasting

Cole Slaw ............ T
(Includes 4 Breasts,
4 Legs, 4 Thighs, &amp; 4 W ings),

16-Piece Fried
Chicken &amp; 2-Lbs.
Potato Salad........ ,6i8,“
Hot From The Deli! Fully-Cooked

O scar Mayer Reg. or Thick

Sliced Bacon.......

*2°»

ICE CREAM
Assorted

Jell-O
Pudding Pops

Frozen Crispy Mini Drums,
Nuggets, or Breast Tenders

Assorted Dairi-Fresh

Weaver’s
Chicken

T asty-Lite
Ice Milkvu

Deli-Baked New Orleans

French Bread.... •

1

Deli-Baked

Cherry Pie........... 7„c,h*
Delicious Natural

Potato &amp;
Herb Salad.......... T *
Great-Tasting Cheese, Cuts of Swis

Baby Sw iss......... t

’

* r y

�» t M

*1'» i “ '

"« t ^

•••

. » t * 1 1

^

1 « » * ’

&lt; f "&lt; ■&lt; ■♦

.r

&lt;

Sanford Horald — Wednesday, June 34,1*47

HardId Advrtt—r — TtwrsSsy, Jvna 33,1*S7

PRODUCE (Mg*.
«&lt;
HDL „ »
r|«H

The Natural Snack, Crunchy

Red
Seedless Grape*

From Concentrate, Publlx Brand
All Florida Chilled

•1*9

half

Orange Ju ic e ....

gal

WHh Tills Coupon

Any Gallon Size
of Publix Milk

California Ripe Ta s ty 80 Size

Fresh
Nectarines..... 10 •«

i

Fresh Peaches..

per
lb.

Enlarge your favorite prints.
5x7
8x10

California Juicy Delicious,

Northwestern, Sweet Tasty

Black Beaut or
Santa Rosa
Plums................

~ 5 ^ »i1

Bing Cherries-

99‘ *189

per

lb
large
bunch

ADC or Reg. Perk,
Special Roast Flaked Coffee

Ragu Traditional Plain,
Meat or Mushroom Twin-Pk.

Folger

Spaghetti
Sauce

11.5-oz. bag

ij| With This Coupon
I Publix Mild or Hot

TH IS AD E F FE C TIV E :
TH UR ., JU N E 25 TH R U
W ED .f JU L Y 1, 1987 . . .

Fresh Cut Flowers

Mixed Bouquet.

50* O FF

F r o m )O u » c o lo r n e g a tiv e

FLORAL
lb.

1

8*10not avaWDiehofnOsc

Fresh Tender

Broccoli............

jPork Sausage

to u m t

ou/urrmcs s o lo

Reg. Liquid

Clorox
Bleach

|70* O FF

J With This Coupon
Publix Assorted Reg. or Diet

I Soft Drinks

gal. bot.

i

: l (Effective June 25-Jufy I. 1067)

White House Reg. or Natural Plus

Van Cam p’s

Folgers Coffee....

*2®»

Roddenbery Fresh Pack Bread &amp; Butter
Chips or Kosher Dill Spears

Pork &amp; Beans....

2 t-o z .
can

59*

(Reg. Price $1.09 Each 6-oz. Pkg.),
Seasoned, Onion/Garlic, or Caesar

Squeeze
Mustard......................... 'bo°z79°Brownberry
Croutons.......... 5°.?! r n w i
In Water or Oil, Star-Kist Light
Chunk Tuna......... 2 S *1 Dixie Superware 8.75”
Reg., Thin, or Vermicelli. Publix
Disposable.
40-Ct 0 4 0 0
Spaghetti........ -JiSir 89* Plates...............
pkg..
Vanity Fair All O ccasion

|90* O FF

Apple Juice......... 6^ ' *1M

j;j With This Coupon
Royal Oak

Jif Extra Crunchy or Creamy

$199
Peanut Butter.....
Pickles.......................... '1.V99*Publix
Cairo Beauty Hamburger Slices
Nature’s
$1$9
Pickles................... A%V
Grain Bread......... I T 69*

Plochman’s

Dixie Superware 10.25”

Napkins........................ *&amp;?■89*Disposable
Assorted or Decorated, Soft &amp; Pretty
Plates...............
Bathroom
Dixie Superware 12-oz.
Tissue.......................... K?99*Plastic Cups.....

DAIRY

| Charcoal
;i| 10-lb. bag

Mazola Reg. or Sweet
Unsalted 100% Corn Oil
1-lb.
ctn.

Margarine.......

x| (Limit 1 Please. With Other Purchases of $7 50
or More. Excluding All Tobacco Items)
i : j | (Effective June 25 July I. 1987)

85*

Light Corn Oil

■

Mazola Spread

t j j n

pkg
3 6 -c t

pkg

mm mm°mm

Midget Bundle, Merio’s

Cheese Pizza..

$119

pkg

30* OFF-**

Dairi-Fresh
half
pint

Light Cream....
Plain, Non-Fat Plain, oc^anllla

49*

With This Coupon
Assorted Paper

,

Gala Tow els

Quarters, Swift Brookfield Reg. or Unsalted
1l b.
$1$9

Butter
$149

mm mm mm mm mm

O k * 1 69

Dannon Yogurt ... c“ *139
15 Cl

2-liter bottle

x 'l (Limit t Please. With Other Purcheaee of $7.50
::2 or More. Excluding All Tobacco ftema)

32-oz.
jars

Instant

j;;

:•« (Limit 1 PleaM. With Other Purchases of $7.50 g-i
or More. Excluding All Tobacco ttema)
I*
1 (Effective June 25-Jufy t. 1087)

PUBUX MSCRVCS THE ISOHT

medium e a g g a
size

j

!;i M b . pkg.

2 $099

(Limit I Please. With Other Purchases of
$7.50 or More. Excluding All Tobacco Items)

(limit t PIm m . With Offer Pwcftaees of $7.50
or M ot#, Excluding AH Tobacco Hums)
(Effective June 2S-Ju*y 1 .1907)
Q jocsry *:•

J

Ripe Juicy Flavorful

- .....

lantard, FI.-JC

large roll

flat c tn .

Borden IndividuallyWrapped Cheese Food

(Limit I Please. With Other Purchases of $7 50
or More. Excluding All Tobacco Items)
»x
(Effective June 25-July 1, 1087)
lx

Grocery::

t2-oz. $ 1 9 3
pkg.

Sliced America

Wisconsin Cheese Bar Cheese:
Colby Jack, Monterey Jack,
Mild or Medium Cheddar, or

Mozzarella..........
Polly-0 Skim or Whole Milk

Ricotta Cheese

I5 °z $ ^
SPSS

50* O FF

8 oz. $ 1 0 9
pkg

With This Coupon
White House Reg.
or Natural Plus

73

Cup

Sealtest Small Curd or Light n' Lively Lowfat

Apple Sauce

Cottage Cheese... 2Ac°p 9169

50-oz. jar

Assorted Kraft

Quality Dips........

8-oz.
cup

P ublix

-g

(Limit I Please. With Other Purchases of $7 50
or More. Excluding All Tobscco Items)
^(Effective June 25 July I. 1987)
G rocery gi-

65*

Weight Watchers Cold Pack
Sharp Cheddar or Onion

Fuji T-1 2 0 Standard Grade

Video Tape........

Use the convenient
automated teller at Publix, it’s
each $ 4 9 9

Cheese Spread....

8oz
$443
cups
I

50* O FF

This ad effective at these locations only:

for

With This Coupon
Tetley

18” x 24 ” , Monsanto Astro Turf
each 3 ^ 9 9

Door Mat.............. eL

•AT MOST PUBUX LOCATIONS

S E M IN O L E

DANISH BAKERY

Serve with
Coffee for
a Delicious
Different
Breakfast

Orange Juice A
D onuts............0

Baked Fresh
Each Day

Hamburger &amp;
Hot Dog Rolls

8120

Set .
... . pkg

Danish Pecan
S trip ...............

Serve with
Your Meal or
as a Snack

Zucchini
Muffins...

pkg

D R IV E
SANFORD

fo r

7 9 0
-| 9 9

I lb
size

6 cl

100-ct. box
(Limit I Please. With Other Purchases ol $7 50
or More. Excluding All Tobacco Items)
(Effective June 25-July I. 1987)

19

items above available at Publix stores with in-store bakeries only.
Items below available at all Publix stores &amp; Danish Bakeries.
Topped with
Crunchy
Pecans

Tea Bags

3609 O R LAN D O

*&lt;|39

10*02

■**

L a o v n w im a n v M m n iB ,

(Effective thru August 1987.)

Great Topped
With Fruit

r*

C EN TR E

“F re e W e d d in g O rn a m e n t ($ 1 5 .0 0 value) with the
p u rch a se of a 3-tier o r larger w edding c a k e ."

Angel Food
C a k e ..........

'S y .

$

1 69

LO NGW OOD
V IL L A G E
C EN TER ,
LO NGW OOD

where shopping is a pleasure.

■ Publix

£loc*'r J

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4C-San»ord HeraId — Wadneiday, Junt 24,1M7

Sanford, FI.

Harald Advertiser - Thursday, June 25, 1f«7

DOUBLE MANUFACTURER’S

COUPONS

WE WILL DOUBLE THE FACE VALUE OF MANUFACTURERS COUPONS
INCLUDING 50c. COUPONS FROM 51c
S1.00 WILL BE REDEEMED
EXAMPLE O F
REDEM PTION VALUES
25c Coupon - 50c Value
50c Coupon — $1.00 Value

i Ih « PouOt* »« u » oT ttu ccuppn. I

ratiut.v.iMtiU

DON’T MISS THE 79th \

.*/ • U I ' , | U v i

MU

Hl(, Mt

TO ||M 11
&lt;J U A N *1 T If *,

EVERYDAY

PRICES GOOD
JUNE 25*27, 1987

W

7o

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

FRIDAY JULY 3.7 JO PJli SATURDAY JULY 4,
4:00 Pi!^ SUNDAY JULY 5,2:30 P.M.
Sponsored b v the Beef People...WINN-DIXIE

Am erica’s Superm arket

IOCAT1D ON U.S. MW Y. 192*441 KAST
OF KISSIMMIE
FOIT1CKI1S AND INHUMATION, CAU (305) M7-S11I

• BAREBACK RIDING
- SADDIEBRONC RIDING
• BULL RIDING
•CALF ROPING

CARNATION FRUIT SCOOPS or RON RON
VANILLA, CHOCOLATI, BAVARIAN MINT
•r VANIUA CRISFY

• STEER WRESTLING
■ BAREBACK RIDING
■ SQUARE DANCING
ON HORSEBACK

IICE CREAM
NUGGETS!

AU FI0C1IDS DONATIO TO LOCAL CHARITIES:
4-M CLUE •F.F.A. •OSCIOU OFFORTUNITT CENTER

2a C l

SIZE

CALIFORNIA

SANTA ROSA PLUMS

y t T -—
^:c

ENTREES .

StPIKBOMS

&lt;a wp piAn\ Swp«* Bonu« Cd'l *C4»#T

I our cnec»owt coo**'* ..
x V '. V .

A ST0 R R EG U LAR &amp; LITE

LARGE
EGGS

GAIN
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                    <text>Com m issioner Soys M anning Scared Her

Police Chief's Outbursts Spur Probe
By J i m C uM lbtrry
Herald Staff Writer
Long wood City Administrator Ron Waller
refused comment today on his investigation of
so-called “ unprofessional behavior*' by City
Police Chief Greg Manning. The Investigation was
requested by Commissioner Lynette Dennis, who
said Manning's behavior frightened her.
She asked Waller to investigate and report back
“ as soon as possible," but today he said he would
not say when the report might be completed.
City Attorney Ann Colby said the city charter
gives the city administrator the power to hire and
Are city department heads, including the police
chief. He can. when deemed necessary for the
good of the city, suspend or dismiss a department

head who has the right to a review by the city
commission if he desires.
Wednesday Manning labeled the incident that
spurred the request a “ dead issue" and said he
has "more serious problems to deal with."
He said calling his behavior unprofessional
during outbursts at a city commission work
session lsa*‘matter of opinion."He said a heated
discussion he was Involved In at the time with
Commissioner Dave Gunter related to old in­
formation and rumors, but would not reveal the
topic. Neither would Gunter.
Mrs. Dennis, who is in her first month o f office,
as is Gunter, said at Monday night's regular
commission meeting that the incident occurred
during a break In a work session Jan. 15. The

work session was unrelated to the police
department.
She said Manning, who had returned from the
back office where he had been talking with
Gunter, was completely "out of control." which
frightened her.
“ It was alm ost to thp point that as a
commissioner I would be afraid to talk for what
he might do." she added.
Mrs. Dennis said Waller went outside with
Manning talking to him for about 15 minutes to
calm him down.
Gunter said. Wednesday Manning wanted to
talk to him In Waller's office during the recess
and there was some discussion about the police
department. Gunter declined to elaborate on the

? P « in c . o f the discussion and Is awaiting
Waller s report.
"W e hashed out some things." Gunter said,
but when we went back Into the commission
chamber Greg began hollering at me and carrying
olL’ .
uP**8ht and created a disturbance,
which apparently frightened Mrs. Dennis because
she knows he carries a gun.
"tt was uncalled for so I excused him and told
him I dldn t want to talk to him anymore. He is
supposed to be an officer o f the law and couldn't
keep himself under control."
Gunter said. "It should have stayed in the
backroom and he and Mr. Waller could have
handled it. but Greg brought It out in the open.

B «« PROBE, page 10A

Sanford Population To Double
In Less Than 20 Years: Study
City Planners Begin Efforts To Cope With Influx
By Karen Talley
Herald StafT W riter
A new study finds Sanford's population
almost doubling by the year 2005 and the
anticipated influx — bringing the city to
more than 54.000 residents — has staff
planners working up guidelines to consider
public needs.
The city's planners are working with
private consultants who came In with the
population projection. The consultants are
with the Orlando firm o f Ivey. Bennett.
Harris and Walls.
A recommendation from staff planners led
Sanford commissioners to hire the firm last
fall for $20,000 to assist preparation o f the
city’s new comprehensive land use plan.
T h e state required p lan m u at be com plete
b y A p ril 1990. b u t the city e x p e c ts to com e

Gov. Bob M artinez speaks to about 550 members of the
Greater Orlando Chamber of Commerce Wednesday.

Martinez: Educators
Must Teach To Get
State Salary Hikes
By Tom Giordano
Herald Managing Editor
Teachers who don't teach
children can expect to be
passed up for any pay raises
coming out of Tallahassee.
That was the message imrted by Gov. Bob Martinez
f t ednesday night during a
speech b efore about 550
members of the Greater Or­
lando Chamber of Commerce
at the Sheraton-Maltland.
Gov. Martinez, who was
Introduced as "Gov. Bobby
Martinez" by Chamber Presi­
dent Frank Kruppenbacher,
said he favors pay raises for
teachers to "recruit and hold'*
better-qualified educators, but
warned: "Those who teach
kids ... I repeat, those who
teach kids get the salary
Increases, not those who are
Just In education.”
Martinez' appearance at the
Orlando cham ber's annual
business meeting was his first
in this area since his inaugu­
ration. The main thrust of his

talk was to reaffirm his cam­
paign promises of bolstering
the state’s economy, using a
business approach to running
state government in terms of
sp en d in g, p r o te c tin g the
e n v r lo n m e n t an d c o n ­
c e n tra tin g on Im p ro v in g
water quality and sewage
disposal.
Gov. Martinez said he in­
tends to look at how previous
a d m in is tr a tio n s h a ve
operated the state's affairs,
but "...w e Intend to look at
them and say. 'How can we
do it better?*"
"W e don't want to have
local government get that
Tallahassee mindset where
they're expecting everything
to come out o f the capital.
That's why I’m glad we’re
here tonight..." Martinez said
he plans to encourage local
governments and business
organizations to work on
solving local problems with as
little outside help as possible.
See MARTINEZ, page 10A

TODAY
Bridge........................4B Horoscope................ 4B
Classifieds...........2B.3B Hospital.................. 10A
Comics.......................4B Nation.......................5A
Coming Events....... 5A Pe0p|e .......................IB
Crossword................. 4B p0||ce........................2A
° “ L ? bbV............ ill Sports.................. 7A 9A
8“ ' ^

h : : :: : : : : : : : : : : : ° 5 t . ' . v is 1oo .............. *

Editorial....................4A Weather.................... 2A
Financial................. 10A W orld........................ 5A

School M ono
F r id a y : A ll-A m e r ic a n h a m b u rg e r,
c ris p y ta te r-to ts, vegetable blend,
m inl-m llkshakeand lowfat milk.

In with it this summer.
The earlier completion date will enable a
Jump on the planning process to address
anticipated needs, according to City Manag­
er Frank Faison.
In terms of population, the consultants'
see post-Dlsncy World growth extending
through Orange and southern Seminole
counties and Into Sanford during the next
20 years.
The state's overall growth pattern as well
as its east central region's employment and

tourist opportunities will also supplement
Sanford's population, according to the
consultants' study.
The firm's overall effort. Including data
collection and countless studies, will take up

Sanford must be prepared to expand its
services to meet Increased demands or to
lower the level and/or diversity of its
services."
According to Marder. "Y o u can say this
about any city USA: Sanford Is growing.
And based on the city's actions during the
last year, you could add w e've been
expanding our services, not low ering
them."
Sanford's efforts to expand services dur­
ing the last year have Included the laun­
ching a multi-million , dollar wastewater
project to address growth as well as comply
with a state edict, purchasing of well and
fire station sites west of the city, plans to fay
a water- Mne- alon g - Sta te Road •dOr* and

•e v a ra l vo lu m e s w h e n c o m p le te later this
year, said City P lan n er d a y M arder.
T h e p o p u la tio n r e p o r t *‘le ju s t rirat

developm ent o r p la n n in g o f n e w p a rk a In
residential areas.
" C i t y c o m m l u l o m n . &gt; ■ p a r t u f ih tt

chapter." in this effort, he said.
Subsequent reports will address housing,
land use. transportation, public services and
facilities, conservarlon. recreation and open
space. Intergovernmental coordination and
capital Improvements. Marder said.
The studies In their entirety will consider
“ where we were, where we are. and where
we want to go now." Marder said.
According to the population report, the
anticipated Influx "Implies. In general, that

planning process, will have to continue to
d e te rm in e w h eth er s e r v ic e s w ill be
expan ded or lo w e r e d ." M arder said.
"T h ey'll be setting the levels for public
service needs and facilities."
Commissioners' will be provided with
planning study Information to assist their
decisions. Marder said. "R igh t now we're
rapidly compiling background Information
that will lead to a proper data base for future
planning."

The studies In their entirety
will consider ’where we were,
where we are, end where we
want to go n o w /
Jay Marder
City Planner

Openings In August

Library Evening Hours
For Sanford, Oviedo
By Kathy T yrity
Herald Staff W riter
Libraries In Seminole County will be
open evenings in a few months, said Jean
Rhein, director of libraries.
Starting In late August, she said, the
new Sanford and Oviedo libraries will be
open from 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday
through Thursday, and 9:30 a.m. to 5
p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. The
Sanford library has been operating from
10 a.m. * 6 p.m.. Monday through
Saturday.
"W e hope these two new libraries will
be open around Aug. 31 with these
(extended) hours." Ms. Rhein said.
The county has two libraries, the main
branch in Casselberry and the downtown
Sanford one. They will be replaced and
three more branches constructed.
The Casselberry branch has already
been operating In the evenings, but will
conform to new hours when Its replace­
ment library Is finished, hopefully In
February or March of 1988. Ms. Rhein
said.
Sanford's library will be In a new
building behind the old one at First Street

and Palmetto in downtown Sanford. The
old building will be used as a library
system processing center and head­
quarters for the libraries' com puter
system.
There Is no library In Oviedo yet. But
the new one will be a 12.000 square-foot
facility at the corner of State Road 426
and Division Street In downtown Oviedo.
Construction on Sanford’s and Oviedo's
new libraries began in November.
A total of five new libraries will be built
In the county by March of 1988, if all goes
according to plan. Ms. Rhein said. Lake
Mary and Forest city will get branches,
too.
Ms. Rhein said as the new libraries are
open, the new hours will be followed.
They will be (except for Casselberry):
9:30 a.m.- 9 p.m. Monday through
Thursday, and 9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. Fridays
and Saturdays. Casselberry's will be a
little longer. 9:30 a.m.- 9 p.m. Monday
through Friday, and 9:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. on
Saturdays.
See LIBRARY, page 10A

To rn a d o , Cold Threaten A re a
Morning sun through lucent
rain clouds bathed Sanford in an
orange glow early today before a
deluge drenched the area as
w eath er forecasts predicted
thunderstorm s, a 20-degree
temperature drop by midday,
and a chance of a tornado.
Sh ow ers w ere an ticipated
thoughout the day and tempera­
tures are expected to continue
d r o p p in g to th e m id -3 0 s
overnight. The tornado watcli
was to end at 1 p.m.
Sanford Airport reported a half
an Inch of rain overnight.
Hazel Johnson, traffic con­
troller at the airport and a

certified weather observer, said
the tower reports hourly weather
conditions for pilots and updates
reports more often If needed. She
said an 8:45 u.m. shower that
blew through Sanford registered
a 40-knot gust at the airport.
That's about a 46-mph wind.
It also dropped more than a
half-a-lnch of rain. Doug Vickers,
air traffic manager, said the
to w e r Is a s u p p le m e n ta r y
weather station for the weather
bureau so that a pilot anywhere
In the country can find out
anytime what the weather Is like
In Sanford.
At the Central Florida Zoo.

west of Sanford, usual coolerweather precaution were being
taken In anticipation of the
pending lower temperatures.
Curator Ed Posey said keepers
make sure that the heating
systems for the animals that
need It are In working condition.
He said spider monkeys and
squirrel monkeys like the heat
so they are "denned up" for the
duration.
The lower temps also makes
some of the zoo’s animals frisky
and they appear to like the
change, he said.
T h u n d erstorm s w ere also
See COLD, page I 0 A

Herald Photo by Ta m m y Vincent

H ooped
scending for a two-point shot to add to
»minole Com m unity College's 103 67 route
ser Daytona Beach C o m m u n ity College is
alH oi-'c r ia n r lA Ixrlrcn n

7A

t
jO$

�r

r

Couple Receives Jail
Terms In Cocaine Case
IN BRIEF
Allsgad
K n H a -A m a d Pinchmr
Charged With Assault, Jallad
A 20-year-old man w ho allegedly grabbed a woman’s
buttocks and tried to grab her purse as she walked to her
car from Publlx. State Road 436, Altamonte Springs, at
about 8 p.m. Tuesday, allegedly threatened to pinch her
again.
The man also allegedly armed himself with a hunting
knife, that was handed to him from a car by a woman who
apparently knows him. The man allegedly threatened
another man with that knife, before Altamonte Springs
5police arrived and arrested the suspect.
f 'Mark Anthony Kendall, or 1159 High Meadow Road.
Apopka, has been charged In the case and was being held
In lieu of $1,000 bond.

Caught With Pants Dow n
Longwood police were called to Albertson's, State Road
434, at U.S. Highway 17-92. after two women reported that
a man In the parking lot was exposing himself. The ofTlcers
reportedly confronted the man. who as he sat In his car,
had his shorts pulled down around his knees.
Police said the man tried to cover his sexual organs with
his pants, which he was not wearing.
Thom as Kelly Merritt. 23. or Maitland, was charged with
exposure o f sexual organs and driving with a suspended
license at 6:16 p.m. Tuesday. He was being held In lieu o f
$1,000 bond.

Brandished Knife Leads To Ja il
Altamonte Springs police received a report from a
woman that she had seen a man waving a "su rvival" knife
at about 4:37 a.m. Tuesday at the Day's Inn on Wymore
Road.
She desclbed the suspect and police, at about 5 a.m..
found a man matching that description at a Chevron
gasoline station at 107 G. Altamonte Drive. The man had a
knife such as the one described by the witness and
although he first said he had only change in his pockets,
police reported finding more than $300 In his possession.
T h ey also found a gold pen and pencil set qnd a leather
Jacket in the man's possession, a police report said.
After his arrest on a charge o f carrying a concealed
weapon. Patrick M. Crowley, 20, of Chicago. 111., was
reporteldy linked to a late Monday or early Tuesday
burglary at the Stillwell Inn. 1073 Orienta Ave., Altamonte
Springs, from which two knives like the one found on the
suspect had been stolen, police said. He was charged with
armed burglary In connection with that case and was being
held In lieu o f $ 15,500 bond.

Deputies Nab Burglar
Jane Green, of 102 Sunset Drive, Sanford, called
Seminole County sheriff's deputies at about 2:22 p.m. to
report that she had spotted a man on her enclosed back
porch and heard glass breaking as she was reporting the
Intruder.
The man had fled by the time deputies arrived and
witnesses said they had seen him In nearby woods.
Deputies found a window of Ms. Green's home had been
broken and partially opened.
was mounted.for the .suspect .and a man

S S iV ?

it f c r

David Christopher Huff. 19, o f 2432 S. Chase Ave..
Sanford, was charged with burglary to an occupied
dwelling at 3:15 p.m. Tuesday. He was being held In lieu of
$2,000 bond.

Freedom Cashed With Checks
A Sanford woman, who allegdly forged and cashed two of
four checks of Mildred R. EUzy that were stolen In a Dec. 19
burglary to Ms. EUzy's home at 1111 W. Second St..
Sanford, has been charged with burglary and two counts o f
uttering a forgery.
The woman allegedly used a key to enter the home and
steal four checks on a First Federal of Seminole bank
account. Tw o o f the checks were cashed, one on Dec. 19 for
$150 and the other Jan. 7 for $100 at First Federal of
Seminole, according to a Sanford police report.
Janice Lavada Moore, 18, ol 601 Magnolia Ave.. Sanford,
was arrested following questioning by police at about 8:50
p.m. Tuesday. She was being held In lieu of $ 1.000 bond.

Pipe Spotted, Causes Arrest
A Seminole County sheriffs deputy who thought he saw
a woman in a pickup truck parked near the Seminole Pony
Baseball Complex on State Road 419. Winter Springs,
smoking from a pipe that Is typically used for smoking
marijuana, stopped and confronted the woman.
The deputy reported the woman had such a pipe In her
lap and also allegedly had possession of cigarette rolling
papers and marijuana.
Theresa Ann Hardy. 20. of DcBary, was charged with
possession of less than 20 grams o f marijuana at 3:34 p.m.
Tuesday. She was being held In lieu of $500 bond.

Battery-Spouse Abuse Charged
Joanna Sapp, o f 216 Ridgewood Arms. Sanford, reported
to Sanford police that her husband allegedly hit her In the
face at about 1:30 a.m. Tuesday.
At about 9 p.m. Ms. Sapp called police again to report
that her husband had tried to return home. Police reported
finding Barry B. Sapp. 27. o f the above address and
arresting him on a charge of battery-spouse abuse at about
9:30 p.m. In front of the Franklin Arms Apartments In
Sanford. He has been released on $500 bond.

Cops Case Mistrial Declared
MIAMI (UPI) — Government
prosecutors, dismayed that the 3
16-month Miami River Cops trial
ended In chaos and a mistrial

tU S P S 411 i M )

T h u rs d a y , J a n u a ry 22. 1987
Vol. 79. No. 130
P u blU tw d D ally and Sunday, tx c e p l
Saturday by Tha Sanford H arold,
Inc. JM N. F re n ch A v * „ Sanford,
F la . W i l l .
Second Class Pottage P aid at Sanford,
F lo rid a W i l t
Home D elivery: Month. 14.71; IM o n lh i,
114.l i t t M onth*. 117 04] Y e a r,
ISI.OO. By M a ll: M onth, 14.71; 1
M onth*. 110.11; t Month*. 117.04;
Y e a r, M1.04.
Phone (101) 111 1411.

b

i

order, say they will try again to
convict the seven former officers
for running a m ulti-m illiondollar racket selling drugs they
strong-armed from smugglers
and dealers.
" W e ’ re e x t r e m e ly d is a p ­
pointed." said Assistant U.S.
Attorney Pat Sullivan. "It was a
tremendous waste of time. We
definitely will retry the case."
U.S. District Judge Kenneth
Ryskamp announced at 4:20
p.m. Wednesday — after a day of
confusion — that he had no
other recourse than to declare a
mistrial for all defendants on all
charges.
Ryskamp scheduled a bond
hearing today for defendants
A r m a n d o E s tra d a , R om an
Rodriguez and Armando Garcia,
who have been held without bail
since their arrest.

A Winter Springs couple re­
ceived prison terms, plus a fine
when sentenced on cocain e
charges by Circuit Judge S.
Joseph Davis. Jr recently. It was
one of four cases heard.
Adlson and Jeanette Cezalien.
31 and 29. both o f 126 Lori Ann
Lane, were sentenced by Davis.
Cezalien received three years In
prison with credit for 57 days
already served. He also has to
serve 18 months probation and
pay a $ 5 0 ,0 0 0 fin e . M rs.
Cezalien was placed on 5 years
probation and a year In a county
jail with credit for one day
served.
The couple was arrested on
trafficking cocaine charges after
a C ity-C oun ty In v e stig a tio n
Bureau agent and a confidential
Informant reportedly bought an
ounce of cocaine from Cezalien
for $1,250.
The Investigators first went to
the couple's home at about 7:55
p.m. April 30 and Mrs. Cezalien
reportedly told them she didn't
know where the cocaine was
stored, but if they returned at
about 8:15 p.m. her husband
would be there, an arrest report
said.
The Investigators returned at
8:20 p.m. and reportedly bought
the cocaine from Cezalien. The
couple was then arrested and
about three ounces of cocaine
were reportedly found in their
possession.
In a second case, an Altamonte
Springs woman pleaded guilty to
sale and delivery o f cocaine.
Davis set a March 12 sentenc-

tag date for Char Costello, 46, of
725 N. Orlando Blvd.
She was arrested after agent*
o f the City-County Investigation..
Bureau served a search warrant
at her home in August. A gen t*,
reported finding cocaine in the 5
woman's bedroom and packaged
cocaine was reportedly found In
her purse.
In a third case, a Sanford man
charged with 12 counts o f forg­
ery has pleaded guilty to utter­
ing a forgery.
Larry Devon Miller. 22. o f
1822 Harding Ave.. Is scheduled
to be sentenced by Circuit Judge
O.H. Eaton Jr., on Feb. 23. He
was accused of writing about
$1,000 worth of checks an the
account of Carletha Merkerson
between July 29 and Aug. 3.
Miller, one of several suspects
In the case, reportedly received
only about $80 from the checks.
In a fourth case, a 21-year-old
Casselberry man charged with
selling marijuana to an infor­
m ant was sentenced to 26
weekends In the county |ail.
Judge Davis also ord ered
David Andrew Hanson, o f 1449
Tyrone Court, to serve three
years probation and complete
300 hours o f community service.
Hanson was arrested In June
after selling $30 worth o f marinuana to an Informant and $10
worth of hashish oil to CityCounty Investigation Bureau
agents, according to an arrest
report.
Both sales were reportedly
made at Hanson's home.
—Deane Jordan

HaraM F to ts by Luufe R aim a**

Pageant Personalities
Preparing for the sixth annual Miss Lake M a ry High School
Pageant to be held Jan. 24 at 7:30 p.m . are clockwise from
left: Jennifer Lofland, 17; K im Stephenson, 17, Kristi
Stephenson, 14, and Lisa Schlrer. Th e 32 contestants were
nominated by various school organizations and will be
judged on poise, personality and beauty, but grades and
school Involvement are equally im portant, said organizer
Sharon Singleton of the sponsoring Boosters Club.

WEATHER
N a tio n

Te m p era tu re s

City 4 F o rtc iit
Albuquarquasy
Anchorage cy
Ashavlllasn
Atlanta in
Billing* »y
Birmingham *n
Bolton in
B ro w n iv llla Tix .ty
Buffalo tn
Burlington Vt. in
Charlotte N.C. in
Chicago w
Cincinnati in
Cleveland in
Cotumbui in
Oallat ty

Denver,y

HI
30
31
31
42
31
40
33
14
31
44
21
31
30

IP

Five-Day Forecast

Pep

21 11
14
32
27
24
31

W ednesday’s high tempera­
ture In Sanford was 71 degrees
and low during the past 24
hours was 54 as reported by the
University o f Florida Agricultur­
al R esearch and Education
Center on Celery Avenue. Rain­
fall recorded was .45 Inch.

For Central Florida

.10
.47

Pity w dy

!ii
.30

Pity Cldy

Ptty Cldy

Plly Ctdy

EE E E EE
[ 44]

[48]

A r o a Forecast

[5 1

34 24
11 13
37 01

&gt;F*

Evansville w
Hertford in
Honolulu *y
Houston sy
Indianapolis w
Jackson M in . pc
Jacksonvllla ti
Kansas City cy
Las Vegas sy
Llltla Rock pc
Loi Angola tsy
Louisville in
Memphis pc
Miami Beach pc
Milwaukee cy
Minneapolis cy
Nashvlllasn
New York in
Oklahoma City sy
Omaha pc
Philadelphia in
Phoenix sy
Pittsburgh in
Portland Me. in
Portland Ore. r
Providence in
Richmond in
St. Louis cy
Sen Francisco r
Washington in

Lo
10
33
21
33
II
32
22
37

Local Report

at
44
30
34
•0
43

10

«
17
27
13
70
34

31 21
40
11
37
54
47
47
34
42
74
32
34
31
34
34
40
40
11
32
29
40
31
41
40
10
42

21
44
tl
30
31
43
2*
30
74
24
It
24
30
23
14
30
30
21
01
21
20
31
22
47
X

Frl.

.02
.41

.03

Winter Storm
Hits Southeast

By United Press
International
.0!
A winter storm moved up the
G ulf Coast Into the South
today, dumping snow at the
rate of up to an Inch an hour,
snarling traffic, closing schools
.31
an d s e n d in g " p a n i c k e d "
shoppers streaming to stores
.01
for supplies.
The Southern storm was
CO DES
pc pertly cloudy
e c la ir
r-raln
expected to combine with a
cl clearing
ih ihoweri
storm system moving across
cy cloudy
trrvtmoke
the northern Plains to spread
H a ir
sn-snow
ty foggy
sy- tunny
snow Into New England later
hi h e »
ti-thunderitorme
today. Warnings and advisories
m m lu ln g
w-wlndy
for snow spanned the East
Coast from Georgia to Maine.
Florida T e mp e r a t u r e s
A cold Canadian air mass
dubbed the "Alberta Clipper"
M IA M I (U P I) — Florida 24 hour tempera­ numbed the northern Plains
ture* and rainfall at 0 a .m .----------today:
Wednesday with single-digit
City:
HI 1
Lo R«ln
temperatures and threatened to
Apalachicola
10 42 0.31
Crestvlaw
40 34 2.37 drop wind chills as low as
Daytona Beach
17 11 0.37 minus 50 degrees In the Great
Fort Laudardale
&lt;2 74 0.00 Lakes tonight.
Fort M yers
«
49 0.00
Snow fell early today In
Gainesville
u SO 000
Jacksonville
and
43 44 0.00 M ississip p i, A lab am a
Key West
I I 75 0.00 North Carolina, and northern
Lakeland
41 S3 000
Miami
•4 73 000 Georgia was glazed with rain,
Orlando
42 17 0.01 slett and snow. Centrevtlle.
Pensacola
41 37 1.12 Ala., and Asheville, N.C.. were
Sarasota Bradenton
77 70 0.00
hit with 2 inches of snow.
Tallahassee
SO 40 0.41
Tampa
In Mississippi, state police
41 M 0.43
Vtro Baach
77 41 0.00 said the snow tripled traffic
West Palm Beach
•1 U 000
accidents in Simpson. Cov­
Moon Phases
ington, Copiah and Lincoln
counties as cars slid into dit­
ches. The snow also closed
schools In Simpson County
today.
"Up North, they get 2 to 3
inches and It's not a big
First
F u ll
Last
Fab. 13
Fab. 21
Feb.S
problem." said Hugh Atkins.
Jan. 24
Floyd County civil defense
director In Rome. Ga. "Down
here, we can have an inch and
Beach. Conditions
It Just about paralyzes us. It
comes
down as snow and then
Dsytons Besch: Waves are
turns
to
Ice on the roads."
about 1 feet and calm but
expected to pick during the day
Dianna Vickers, manager at
during expcctced storms. Cur­
Kroger grocery in Atlanta said
rent is slightly to the north with the slore was crowded with
a temperature of 60 degrees.
sh o p p e rs s to c k in g up on
New Smyrna Beach: Waves arc supplies Wednesday.
1 lo 2 feet and very choppy with
"It was extremely husy.” she
wind from all directions gusttng said. “ People were saying they
up to 40 mph. Current is slightly had to s to c k up. P e o p le
to the north: Water temperature.
68 degrees. Sun screen factor: 9.

o o c

Tuei.

panicked."
In North Carolina, snow fell
at the rate of an Inch per hour
early today at the Triad Re­
gional Airport, and several
areas reported 3 or more Inches
of snow. Up to 8 inches was
forecast for the North Carolina
mountains, and up to 10 inches
was predicted for parts of West
Virginia.
The snow was expected to
spread north along the East
Coast as the Midwestern cold
air combines with the Southern
storm.
Up to a foot of snow was
predicted for eastern New York,
where Joe Delefano. manager
o f th e P r ic e C h o p p e r
supermarket outside Albany,
said his supply of rock salt was
cleaned out.
"W e had to call people In
because we got rushed." Dclefano said. "You can plan on
the crowds. They more or less
com e In to get the staple
Items."
The storm spread rain from
the central Gulf Coast to the
south Atlantic Coast. Flooding
was reported Wednesday in
Waynesboro. Miss.
Snow also stretched today
from the Great Lakes to the
low er Missouri Valley, and
snow squalls were predicted in
W is c o n s in and M ich igan .
Grand Island. Neb., had an
Inch of snow.
In Chicago. 28-degree tem­
peratures prompted the city to
open nine additional shelters
for the homeless Wednesday
night.
The storm In the South today
dumped heavy snow in the
S o u th w est this week and
prompted Navajo tribal officials
to declare a state of emergency
for some portions of the Indian
reservation In northeastern
Arizona.
An estimated 500 families
were snowbound on the Navajo
reservation about 150 miles
northwest of Albuquerque.
N.M.

Today..^considerable clouds.
Showers likely with a chance of
thunderstorms. Becoming windy
with decreasing showers during
the afternoon. Temperatures
mainly in the 60s but dropping
Into the 50s by late afternoon.
Wind south 15 mph shifting to
northwest 20 mph and gusty
d u rin g the aftern oon . Rain
chance 70 percent.
Tonight...clearing breezy and
colder. Low In the* mid 30s to
near 40. Wind northwest 15 lo
20 mph.
Area

Readings

T h e temperature at 8 a.m.:
overnight low: 58: Wednesda
high: 62; barometric pressi
29.57; relative humidity:
percent: winds: South at 22 it
with gusts up to 30 mph: n
.01 Inch: Today's sunset: 5
p.m.. Friday’s sunrise: 7:17 a.i

Extended

Forecast

The extended forecast, Satur­
day through Monday, for Florida
except northwest — Fair and
cold Saturday and Sunday then
warmer Monday with a chance
rain or showers. Lows averaging
In 20s north to low and mid 40s
south Saturday and Sunday
then 30s north to 50s south
Monday. Highs in 40s north to
50s south Saturday and Sunday
then 50s north to low 70s south
Monday.

A r e a Tides

F R ID A Y : Daytona Beach;
highs, 1:20 a.m.. 1:42 *p.m.:
lows. 7:39 a.m.. 7:49 p.m.; New
S m yrn a Beach: highs. 1:25
a.m.. 1:47 p.m.; lows. 7:44 a.m..
7:54 p.m.: Bayport: highs, 7:37
a.m.. 6:12 p.m.: lows. 1:12 a.m..
12:29 p.m.

Boating

St Augustine to Jupiter Inlel..small craft advisory Is In e
feet...
Today...wind south 15 to 2'
kts with seas 4 to 6 ft shifting t
northwest 20 to 25 kts with sea
building to 6 to 8 ft during th
late afternoon.

�4 To Be Honored By State

H srald g ta ff W riter
w ith four state aw ards to com m unity
benefactors of education. Seminole County has
earned 20 percent of Florida's recognition for
such achievement this year.
Florida Community Education benefactor
awards will be presented to three Seminole
County Individuals and to one Seminole County
business at a black-tie dinner Friday at the Palace
Hotel. Lake Buena Vista. Twenty-one awards will
be presented statewide.
Seminole's three individuals to be honored are
Shirley Schilke, W .E." Duke" Adamson and
Ernest Cavallaro. Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal Is the business.
The Florida Chamber of Commerce and the
Florida Education Foundation, which basically
acta as a money-generating and support program,
recognizes outstanding business and Individual
benefactors o f education In Florida, said Karen
Coleman, school board spokesman.
She said that the School Board, working with
the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce, sent
the four nomination packets to Tallahassee for
review. More than 50 nominations from all over
Florida were made and 21 selected to receive the
Foundation's benefactor award.
"S o. Seminole County has captured approxi­
mately 20 percent of the awards for the entire
state." Mrs. Coleman said.
Each nominee will receive a certificate and
Individual recognition at the award dinner
Friday. In addition, the Foundation will choose Its

“top ten." Mr*. Coleman Mid. “I will predict that
one or more of Seminole County'* nominees
should be represented in those top ten."
According to the Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce nomination letter. Mrs. Schilke is an
outstanding community leader in the fields of
business and education. Through Harcar Alumi­
num Products, a company owned and operated
by Mrs. Schilke and her husband, she has made
considerable financial contributions to Individu­
als that enabled them to achieve educational
excellence.
W.E. “ Duke" Adamson has made substantial
contributions to the field of education In the State
of Florida, according to the nomination report
filed on his behalf with the Foundation. “ These
contributions have been in the form o f financial,
personal Involvement and business commitments
through his company, the Rich Plan of Florida."
Ernest Cnvalla ro, chief financial officer and
treasurer o f CODISCO, has also made many
valuable contributions to education in Seminole
County. Robert W. Hughes, school superin­
tendent. said in his nomination letter about
Cavallaro. “ He develops and participates In
programs which encourage young people to
continue their education and learn much about
the business community.
Because o f his
involvement, scholarships are provided to stu­
dents by businesses and
civic groups from throughout our com m unity."
Central Florida Regional Hospital has made
Sanford, Seminole County and all o f Central
Florida a better place to live, learn, work and

Many state ‘‘notables" will bt
Friday evening award dinner. Mrs.
Florida's Lt. Governor Bobby
present the awards. Also attradUn
Castor. Commissioner o f CdiM
Turlington, former Commlsalontr
w w k flopping. iTMiacTiL, rio n a
Commerce and other state officials.

play, according to the nomination report filed on
Its behalf by the School Board and Sanford
Chamber of Commerce. "The hospital has done
this by working cooperatively with Individual
schools, entire school systems, the local garden
club, other civic and professional ■
businesses, churches, the Chamber
Commerce,
and other Interested cltlsena."

D O T Hearings Set I
DELAND - The Florida Department of Transportation will
h e a r p u b lic c o m m e n t p n
Seminole County road projects
beginning at 6:45 p.m. Jan. 27
at th e O range C ou n ty A d ­
ministration Center. 201 South
Rosalind Avenue. Orlando.

i
;
j

The hearing concerns Die Fifth
District's Five Year Transportstion Plan.

;

FREE S P IN A L E V A L U A T I O N
1.
2.
3.
4.

Fraquant Haadachos
Low Back or Hip Pain
Dizzlnasa or Loas of 8laap
Numbness of Hands or Fat

5. N ervousness

6. Neck Pain or Stiffness
7. Arm and Shoulder Pain
s

“ The purpose of this hearing is
to discuss the departm ent's
planned activities in this district )
for the next five years," said
S te p h a n F r e g g e r , d is t r ic t
director for planning. "T h is 1^
hearing gives public officials and
other Interested persons the op- m
portunlty t o . comment on the
p la n and re c o m m e n d a n y ^
changes."
j

LAKE

M A R Y

CHIROPRACTIC

BLVD

CLINIC

3 2 2 - 9 3 0jq0t&gt;

THOMAS r YAMOIII

Longwood Bows To Court

City Won't Appeal Funeral Home Decision
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
Now that the Longwood City
Commission has bowed to a Jan.
5 court order to grant a pre­
viously denied conditional use
for a funeral home to be built on
State Road 434, Garden Chapel
Funeral Homes President Cy J.
Case said Tuesday he hopes the
matter is pretty well settled.
Pleadings o f a patient of the
doctor whose office Is opposite
the proposed funeral home site
that the city appeal the court
order went unheeded by com­
missioners Monday.
Case, who sued the city after
the commission turned down his
request for the third time citing
traffic and safety problems,
said."I thought It would be built
by now and operating, but now If
we are lucky we may be open by
the end of the year. My attorney
fees were heavy and If we had
been turned down by the court,
our engineering fees would have
been wasted."
The commission unanimously
voted approval Monday night
rather than risk a loss In the
Fifth District Court of Appeal.
S e m in o le C o u n ty C irc u it
Judge Dominick Salfi said his
decision (one of his last before
retiring from the bench) was
based on the city’s failure to
present evidence to support the
argument that the funeral home
located there would Increase
traffic or harm the business of
Dr. James Hynlck. whose office
Is located adjacent to the pro­
posed funeral home site. 100 feet
east of Oleander Street. The city
had 30 days in which to file an
appeal.
Case said he plans to construct
a 6.000 square foot Colonial
style building on slightly over an
acre o f property. He said the
state Department of Transporta­
tion has approved the entrance
and exit onto State Road 434
and has already gotten 90 per­
cent of the necessary approval
for the project Including septic
tank permits. "One or two things
were put on the back burner
when the commission turned us
dow n." he said.
Case said he has no plans for
embalming or cremation at the
Longwood location. He said he
has a crematory In Orlando and
that Is sufficient and at any rate
additional permits would be
required to operate such a facili­
ty. He said even though he has
no Intention of doing this type of
preparation there, in order to get
a perm it from the state to
operate a funeral home a holding
tank for hazardous waste and
other equipment Is required.
The Land Planning Agency,
City Planner Chris Nagle and
other staff members had re­
commended granting the origi­
nal request, but the commis­
sioners had rejected tt after
hearing objections from Hynlck.
his patients and residents in the
area. They said a funeral home
next door would depress his
patients and be bad for the
doctor's business as well as
causing additional traffic con­
gestion.
A final emotional appeal was
made Monday night by Sandra
Westfall of 203 E. Hornbeam, a
patient of Dr. Hynlck. who said
she lives and votes In Longwood.
but actually lives outside the city
In Sabal Point with a Longwood
mailing address. Pleading with
the commission to appeal the
Judge's decision, she said she
was representing the other op­
ponents of the funeral home.
She asked. “ Is It over? Is it
done? We would like you to
appeal this, lt isn't that we are

1

opposed to having a business
there, but we don't want a
funeral home next to a doctor's
office and at the end o f a
residential street. How would
you like to live on that block and
be having a barbecue while a
cremation was going on? Doesn't
anybody want to appeal this?"
Deputy Mayor June Lormann
responded, " I agree with you,
but once before when residents
asked us to fight a convenience
Btore b e in g b u ilt on E.E.
Williamson Road. It cost the city
B5.000 and we lost and the
convenience store went up."

City Attorney Ann Colby, who
presented the commission with
Its two op tion s at M onday
night's meeting, said there was
no guarantee the city would win
an appeal and It might lose the
right to impose conditions as
well as the possibility o f having
to pay court costs.
Gary Shader of Maitland, at­
torney for Case, said he has
forwarded a list of the conditions
approved by the commission to
his client to see If they are
acceptable.
Case said, "W e want to be &amp;
good neighbor and hopefully

with the doctor as well. I hope he
will learn to live with It. I would
like to meet with the doctor and
clear the air. W e’re here to stay
and provide a service.”
In his suit. Case claimed the
city acted Improperly denying
the conditional use request by
basing Its decision on the emo­
tional effect the funeral home
would have on patients of the
doctor rather than on zoning
guidelines.

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Credit George and G r a d e , the w h ale stars o f
"Star Trek IV ." for a strong rem inder that the
half-century-old struggle to save the w hales is
far from over. In the movie, Kirk, Spock and
crew return to the late 2 0 th century In search
of humpback whales, hunted to extinction in
the 21st century. They rescue George and
Grade from a w h a le r * harpoon and brin g
them back to the future.
The entertainment, however. Is based on a
faulty premise. H u m p back w hales nearly
hunted to extinction by 1916. have been
protected from hunters for som e 50 years.
That protection extended to all w hale species
last year when a n International W haling
C om m ission m o rato riu m on com m ercial
whaling took effect.
Unfortunately, the m oratorium has more
holes than a S ta r T re k plot. By filing
objections to the moratorium, the Soviet
Union. N orw ay and J apan have continued to
hunt whales for com m ercial purposes. Under
the guise of research. Iceland and South
Korea also hunt w hales — and sell the meat.
T h e threat o f U .S . econom ic san ction s
brought agreement from commercial whalers
to stop In the next two years, but Japan
already has Indicated It then will take up
research whaling.
Such practices violate the Intent, i f not the
letter, o f the IW C m oratorium , fu rth er
depleting w hale populations to keep an
antiquated industry in business a few more
years. T h e research loophole should be closed
w hen the whaling commission meets again In
June. The commission should adopt a U.S.
proposal to ban all commercial trade in whale
meat, thereby ending the profit incentive to
kill whales. And the Reagan administration
should use the economic sanctions provided
by Congress to punish countries that violate
the moratorium.
"S tar Trek IV " may be wrong about the
status of the singing whales, but Its w arn in g
Is sound. Many species o f whales have been
protected from harpoons, but not before their
populations were reduced to levels that leave
them vulnerable to extinction by pollution or
disease. The world should not count on future
time travelers to bring them back.

Left
/

This is the 200th year o f the Constitution o f
the United States, and the first year of the
constitution In Nicaragua. T h e two events are
hardly com parable. N icaragu a's President
Daniel Ortega signed his constitution and
Immediately extended em ergency powers
that annul much of It.
The new Nicaraguan constitution Is unusu*
al In Latin America because It Is a blend of
W est and East. It offers strong civil guaran­
tees and ensures the coexistence of state and
private property. It also guarantees rights to
h o u s in g , e d u c a t io n , h e a lt h c a r e a n d
employment. It Is not unusual in another
sense, because constitutions on paper are not
necessarily constitutions In practice. A
num ber of Latin republics have constitutions
modeled on that o f the United States. The
form has had more respect than the princi­
ples, especially when military dictatorships
ruled.
In Nicaragua, the overriding of constitu­
tional guarantees comes from the left, not the
right, as has been customary elsewhere.
Ortega’s state of emergency, In effect most of
the time since 1982, suspends civil liberties,
broadens arrest powers, allow s the tapping o f
phones and opening of mail, restricts freedom
o f exp ressio n an d p ro h ibits p u b lic d e ­
monstrations and strikes. His explanation Is
that the country Is at w a r against Am erican
aggression conducted through the Contra
rebels.

BERRY'S WORLD

Fight Illiteracy: Pun Is Mightier Than Sword
WASHINGTON (UPI) - For only 819 * year,
you. too. can help "fight functional Illiteracy."
At least that la the advertised price of a year's
membership In the International Save the Pun
Foundation. Judging from the Foundation’s
selection of the "Best-Stressed Puna of 1986,"
It's no wonder this form of play on words Is on
the endangered list.
According to John Crooble. the organization's
"Chairman of the Bored." the membership last
year reached an all-time high,
"From Alaska to Zimbabwe, more and more
people are helping us as we fight functional
illiteracy by arousing an interest In words by
having fun with them." he sold.
Funny he should mention Alaska. The
organization's monthly newsletter, where the
awards were ann ounced, apparently Is
published In Canada, where cold weather may
Influencejudgment.
If It Is true, as Crosbie asserts, that "the pun is
mightier than the sword.”all I can say Is that
this Is no time for the United States to be
Investing huge sums In President Reagan’s
Strategic Defense Initiative.

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

0 V* A

Soviet
Spetnaz
Threat

—A college football coach Is asked about his
In any event, this is what passes in Canada for
star
quarterback's scholastic achievements.
"having fun with words:"
"He
makes straight A ’*." the coach replies.
—A string goes into a bar and, having been
"Wonderful!" says the interviewer.
told that strings aren’t served there, ties Itself
"But some of his B’s are sort of crooked.” the
into a knot.
coach admits.
Then, when the bartender oaks whether it la a
string, replies: "No. I’m a frayed knot."
—An Easter Bunny demonstrates he Is old
—At a Chinatown bar, a customer who has
enough to shave but la challenged by the
endured five dreary tunes asks If the pianist
children to whom he offers colored eggs because
knows "something a little less mournful.”
he has no whiskers.
He Is told: "With six. you get allegro."
"All of which goes to prove." Crosbie adds.
—A lad takes some tadpoles to school and . “that a bunny shaved is a bunny spumed."
hides them for two days before the teacher finds
—A newlywed couple tell a hotel clerk they
them.
would like a suite.
"What are these?" the teacher demands.
"Certainly." says the clerk. "Would you like
Whereupon the student explains that "they
the bridal?"
were going to be frogs but they have already
"No. thanks," the husband replies. "Now that
croaked."
we're married, we're going to stop horsing
—A young woman tells her parents she Is
around."
quitting college to marry a newscaster.
—A bee that continues to gather pollen after
"Good Heavens, girl!” her mother exclaims.
becoming 111Infects all the flowers. This episode
"After all that we have done for you. how could
becomes known. Crosbie tell us, as “the blight
you marry a common taler?"
of the fumble bee.
—A railroad engineer notices the train Is
Had enough? OK. But don't ask me for your
running short of fuel and at the next station tells
619 back.
a colleague: “Buy coal, porter."

'

tove MB AM ( x!~ ffIVE rn A * c l W l Mf A'z,W|

¥

Sugar:
How Sweet
It Isn't

,

# 1

W A SH IN G TO N W h ile the
Western nations worry about the
Soviet nuclear threat, a very dif­
ferent Soviet m enace rec e iv e s
hardly any attention. This Is the
Spetnaz threat.
"S p e tn a z" stands for special
operations brigades, whose mission
It Is to conduct raids, sabotage and
clandestine attacks In the enemy
rear. The Soviet naval Spetnaz
b r ig a d e s I n c lu d e f r o g m e n ,
parachutists, and midget subma­
rines.
Since the late 1970s. S oviet
Spetnaz forces have been active In
the territorial waters o f Norway and
Sweden. In Sweden, Soviet minisubmarines have penetrated sup­
posedly closed naval security zones,
and even operated In the Stockholm
channel. The situation was brought
to light when a Soviet "W h isk ey"
class submarine ran aground In
restricted waters near a Swedish
naval base.

a V E M E A N 'O -R -Y .'.. WHATS IT W * U ?

h
f t -

ROBERT

k
■"

WA

SEC, Boesky Antics
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Why did
the Securities and Exchange Com ­
mission stand Idly by while Ivan
Boesky — the stock speculator
accused in the Wall Street Insidertrading scandal — sold or trans­
ferred millions In securities?
There arc two explanations being
. on a Strictly not-for._ ______ basto; about why Boesky
ay have been allowed to maneu­
ver In this way:
• First, Boesky was a fount of
v a lu a b le In form a tion that In ­
vestigators were desperate for. and
they may have made a deal with
him to get It.
• Second, and perhaps more
Important, Is the belief within the
SEC that the case against Boesky
was actually very weak.
Had Boesky chosen to contest the
action, the matter would have been
lied up In court for years. Even­
tually he might have won. and In
doing so, he would have made
future prosecution of Insider-trading
cases very difficult.
In the end, the Boesky case might
have come down to an argument
over whether he was actually an
"Insider" within the meaning of the
laws and the SEC regulations he is
accused of violating.
What Boesky did. In brief, was to
buy shares o f companies after
receiving advance notice of pending
takeovers from Investment banker
Dennis Levine, to whom he Is said
to have paid some $2.4 million for
the Information.
The SEC says. In doing this,
Boesky violated Its Rule 14e-3.
which states that If someone has
taken "substantial steps" to com­

It has taken som e tim e for
Western defense authorities to real­
ize Soviet Intentions with respect to

the event o f aT nuclear war in
Europe. Immobilizing Swedish de­
fenses and pushing Into Norway to
Isolate, then destroy N ATO forces
operating on the USSR's northern
(lank. The Soviets have no hesita­
tion In conducting these menacing
Spetnaz operations at a time when
they are proclaiming a policy of
peace.
Soviet Spetnaz forces also repre­
sent a threat to British and Am eri­
can submarine bases which almost
certainly are targets of Soviet war
planning Involving special opera­
tions. Coastal defense o f Britain and
the United States Is alm ost a
forgotten subject, as Is defense of
Canada's Far North.
Logical Atlantic targets of Soviet
Spetnaz operations are Holy Loch In
Scotland and the naval base at
Charleston. S.C.. Including Its vita!
m is s ile - lo a d in g f a c i l i t y .
Americans don’t regard Soviet
w ar p la n n in g w ith s u ffic ie n t
seriousness. They don’ t appreciate
the comprehensiveness of Soviet
preparations for armed conflict. The
NATO nations could pay dearly If
they continue to neglect the Soviet
Spetnaz threat.

DON GRAFF

mence a tender oiler, it Is a violation
for a n yon e w ho has acquired
non-public information about the
offer to trade In that company’s
stock.
However, no one has yet tested
Rule 14e-3 In the courts.
Some securities lawyers believe
recent Supreme Court rullngs'about
Insider trading raise doubts that the
SEC has authority to make such a
sweeping rule. Insiders believe the
SEC did not want to see Boesky
challenge this rule In court.
Boesky. among others recently
accused of Insider dealing, was also
cited under the SECs Rule 10b-5.
That rule was designed to prevent a
company officer or director from
taking advantage of his company's
stockholders, to whom he has a
fiduciary responsibility, by buying
or selling company shares based on
Information he has about the com­
p a n y b e fo r e th a t k n o w le d g e
becomes public.
But how can Ivan Boesky be
called an Insider? He was not an
officer, director or relative of one In
any of the companies whose stocks
he traded In. Thus It appears he had
no special fiduciary duty to the
shareholders of any of the compa­
nies in which he was trading.
Had Boesky decided to challenge
the SEC on Rule 10b-5. he very well
might have won.
It appears the SEC was not willing
to take that chance.
Boesky. also, wanted to avoid the
court battle that would ensue.
So It looks like a deal was made,
allowing Boesky leeway to redis­
tribute his holdings and make
himself judgment proof.

" T h e U.S. government struck
another blow the other day for
unrest in our Central American and
Caribbean back yard."
That is a recycled lead sentence,
but It is as accurate today as It was
when I wrote It three years ago.
Washington has again cut the
quota for sugar Imports. This year,
foreign suppliers to the American
market will be limited to some 1
million tons, down from 1.7 million
In 1986.
T o be fair, the Department of
Agriculture had no choice In de­
creeing the cut. It Is mandated
under a support program adopted
by Congress in 1981 that sets limits
on su gar im ports based upon
domestic production — the more
sugar American producers send to
market, the less from foreign grow­
ers is allowed into the country.
T h e o r ig in a l in te n t was to
stabilize a highly volatile commodi­
ty market. By controlling supply, a
boom-and-bust cycle has been elim­
inated.
But the e ffe q t has been an
.artificially high price — about 21
cents a pound compared to 5 cents
on the world market — that Ameri­
can consumers must pay for pure
sugar. This also affects the cost the
many products that contain sugar.
T h e p ro gra m has p roved a
windfall for the very few at the
expense of the many.
In addition to harming American
consumers, the support program
could have a devastating effect on
the sugar-growing nations to our
south, which should be our primary
suppliers — but which too often find
themselves virtually shut out of
their most Important market.
T h ese are m e very countries
which the Reagan administration’s
Caribbean Basin Initiative, pushed
through Congress In 1983, is sup­
posed to assist via "m ore liberal
access to the U.S. market to spur
their economic development."
Those words are recycled, from a
recent release by the Heritage
Foundation on the sugar quota.
Once again I find myself In essential
agreement with unflinchingly con­
servative Heritage. The foundation
makes the further point that the
shrunken sugar quotas “ have cer­
tainly not helped but have added to
the problems of their (Caribbean
basin countries'! fragile economic
and social systems."

JACKANDERSON

Fake Bolts Found At Nuclear Plants

C»6€f6»M*
"SO, SWEEPING THINGS UNDER THE RUG
AGAIN, EH?”

By Jack Anderaon
And Joseph Spear
WASHINGTON Substandard
bolts have been found at one U.S.
nuclear power plant and may well
be In place at others, ready to give
way at the first serious vibration or
ultra-high temperature. And the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission Is
a la rm in g ly re la x e d abou t the
danger that the faulty fastener could
cause a Chemobyl-Ilke disaster.
The bolts are counterfeits, mostly
from Taiwan. Korea and Japan.
They look like high-grade bolts and
bear false Industry markings de­
signating top-quality manufacture.
But they are made o f substandard
metals or are inadequately tem­
pered to withstand the stress that
they may be subjected to in an
emergency.
A quality-control official at the
com m ission told our associate
Stewart Harris he was reasonably
certain that there were no coun­
terfeits In nuclear power plants,
because a recent random test had
turned up none. Asked how many
bolts were actually tested, the
official replied: "1 3 ."

Further tests will be made on
perhaps 30 more bolts taken from
three to five power plants, the
official said. This will complete the
testing, he said, unless some coun­
terfeits are discovered.
W e have news for the com ­
mission: Counterfeit bolts have al­
ready been found at a nuclear power
plant. Bill Windt of Texas Bolt
conducted laboratory tests on bolts
taken from a plant that he said had
bought "tons" of substandard steel
fasteners. He was told he'd be sued
If he revealed the name o f the plant,
but he was able to tell us .the nuts
and bolts he tested at his Houston
lab did not meet specifications and
could fail under such conditions as
the extreme temperatures that are
c o m m o n in n u c le a r c o o l i n g
systems.
The substandard fasteners dis­
covered in Texas aren’ t the only
ones that have been palmed off on
the nuclear industry. We have also
learned that bogus bolts were
purchased by PosiSeal Interna­
tional. a Connecticut firm that
makes butterfly valves for nuclear
plants. Many supposedly high-grade

Ik s?

bolts sold to PoslSeal twisted off
during Installation. The company
ran chemical tests to find out why.
and discovered that some of the
bolts were made of low-carbon steel
that turns to putty at high tempera­
tures. Another sample tested was
susceptible to shattering because It
hadn't been properly heat-treated.
W e spent weeks poring over
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
documents for any mention of
counterfeit bolts, and found abso­
lutely nothing. But we were told
that commission inspectors might
not recognize a spurious bolt if they
tripped over one. An industry
source had this biting comment on
the commission’s approach to the
problem: "It's like asking your
friendly neighborhood home builder
to put together a Boeing 747."
We presented our evidence to a
number of experts In the industry.
T h e ir responses were chilling.
Tom my Grant of Grant Fasteners in
H o u s to n , m ade a o n e -w o rd
assessment: "Frightening."
Frank Akstens. an engineer and
editor o f Fastener Technology In­

ternational magazine, said: "The
documented evidence you send Is
appalling testimony on the behavior
and s h o rtc o m in g s w ith in the
nuclear power Industry."
John Cole of Product Risk Reduc­
tion Inc. of Westlake. Ohio, said, "I
see many of the assumptions and
decisions Indicated in the (com­
mission’s) reports as basic Igno­
rance o f the products and the world
fastener base."
Charles Wilson of the Industrial
Fastener Institute In Cleveland
agreed. Some of the engineers who
wrote the reports appeared un­
aware. for example, that bolts that
are too hard can be as dangerous as
ones that are too soft. If they’re too
hard. Wilson explained, they won't
break loose under extremely high
pressure as they're Intended to:
lacking this safety feature, the
entire cooling system could explode.
W ilson also faulted the com­
mission for allowing unmarked
bolts to be installed In nuclear
plants. "W hy doesn't the manufac­
turer put his mark on? Because he
doesn't want you to know that he
made the bolt." Wilson said.

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*

&gt;C-

REALTY
TRANSFERS

IM BRIEF
U.S. M ilitary Installations
Roadled For Terrorist Strikes
WASHINGTON (UPI) — U.S. military installations
worldwide are on heightened alert today against possible
terrorist attacks in retaliation for the capture of a suspected
hijacker of a TW A Jetliner, the Pentagon says.
Notice o f the Intensified security precautions Wednesday
came a day after the United States formally asked West
Germany to extradite Mohammed All Hamadel, 22, a
Palestinian Shiite Moslem, to stand trial on charges o f air
piracy and murder In connection with the June 1985
hijacking o f a plane to Beirut.
A Navy diver Robert Stethem, o f Waldorf. Md.. was killed
by one o f the hijackers.
In Bonn, West Germany, government sources told United
Press International there would be no quick extradition.
And German newspapers reported that Chancellor Helmut
Kohl’s government — which faces a general election
Sunday — was wavering even on the question of
extradition.

Black Leaders Plan Workshops
CUM M ING. Ga. (U P I) — Black lead ers planned
workshops In non-violence to prepare for Saturday's civil
rights march and the sheriff of all-white Forsyth County
asked residents to stay home this weekend and "cook
hamburgers" In their backyards.
Gov. Joe Frank Harris put the National Guard on alert
and said Wednesday he will use the troops " I f they’re
needed" to protect the freedom march on the north
Georgia county to be led by Coretta Scott King, the Rev.
Jesse Jackson, comedian Dick Gregory and other promi­
nent civil rights and political figures.
Sheriff Wesley Walraven. whose officers were overrun
last Saturday by white supremacists who threw rocks and
bottles and disrupted a march honoring Martin Luther
King Jr., has promised to protect this Saturday's march.

Reagan Urged To Sign Water Bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan is being
advised by top aides to veto a 820 billion clean-water bill
passed by crushing majorities on Capitol Hill — and
Identical to one he vetoed last year while Congress was
adjourned.
The bill, the first major legislation introduced In the
100th Congress, passed the Senate 93-6 Wednesday
minutes after the 82-17 defeat o f a 812 billion Reaganbacked plan offered by Republican leader Robert Dole of
Kansas.
The overwhelming Senate vote followed 406-8 approval
by the House Jan. 8 and forewarned another presidential
veto would be easily overridden.
But Reagan aides remained adamant.
"T h e president’s senior advisers have recommended a
veto," said White House spokesman Albert Brashear. "W e
will await word from the president."

W O R LD
IN BRIEF

Omm Mont** to Mott A Fowtor A W F
M ary A Frank A G e n e A W F M argaret, I t 41
•to A U t o W K A t Th# Creating* O n j.
HIM*
M orrill ly n c h Rotoc M gm to W Scott
m dtortoon A W F Dianne M . L t f t Door Run
U M M .S D M M
F A C Inc to John F Schvltz* A Robert
Qrlffln, Lt iM Sw nm erfiill, Ph ll,*73,M0
Porkvtow Corp to Mavol T o ro A W F Dora
C , L H Alamo Park MUM
Colton Homo* to Jonlco M Motion, L t 17
SovthrMgoAt Country Crook. MOW
Arthur M Bromor to Bruca A Rhoo A W F
Rulh.lt to ShoBwr Lofco Weed*. 1177.7W
Scott C Forbar A W F Morion* to Ranald E
Jlrlk A W F Juno A . Lt W R lvor Run Soc ] .
A lt o n Croup to Mlchool W Bow lor A W F
Margaret, 1 1 » Sunrise E*t* U n % N M O O
Aitoon Group to Lynn A M acGregor A W F
Helen, Lt 43 Sunrise Eat* Un 1. M 3 W
A lt o n Croup to Thomos J Jullon Sr A W F
M a ry, Lt 1J* Orango Grov* Pork Un A U 4 .X 0
A lto n Croup to Shun Chon A W F Anno A
Jl«nn-Long Wu A W F Ming-Huol, L t IP*
Orang* Grovo Park Un A *43,700
FI Land Co to C ity of Wtntor Spgt, lond In
No Orlando Ranchos, Soc A t t M O O
Hocfctr Homo* to David P Harfaon A W F
Nancy E , Lt X T h # Estate* At Springs
Landing. MA700
Rylond Croup to W David M illar A W F
Da*. Lt 43 Bear Crack, *11X300
William Wotoch A W F Jacqualln* to Craig
Bush A W F Sharon, Lt It Blk F , Columbus
Harbour. I13SJ00
Matchlo E Broughton A W F Jocquollrw to
Rofaort Cochran A W F Pamela G , Lt 70 A N it
ot 27 Blk 70 Sandlando Th o Sub Beaut,
Sanford Sac, *73,700
Jama* Lewis A Roger A Pitre* A W F
Nancy to W llm ar J Knighton A W F Barbara
J , Lt 33 Highland* Clan. 145.100
Kensington Pork Ltd to Dorthoe S Rogalikl
or Harold F Rossow, Un 313 Kensington Park
Ph lll.S111.100
A lt o n Group to Jam as M Flckart A W F
Blanche, L I 117 Orang* Grov* Park U n A
*07,300
Arlan* Handler A H B M arvin to Robert W
Smith A Elizabeth Bolt, Lt 13 Th* Springs
Whlsparing Pinas, Sac 2, *171.*00
John O'Hal 11 Grlarton to Bambl L Brown,
Lt IM A WW ol I N Amended Plat Magnolia
H tf, 155,200
La* R Malattl to M ary L Norman, L t t U
Dear Run Un 11, WA300
Bal-AIra Homes to Lawrence E Goals A W F
M ary. Lt 337Oak Forest U n 3 ,$09,900
Hum* Prop to Lola Mae Powell, U s * A 10
Shannon Downs, 300,000
Heathrow to W J Williams Bldrs, L I 3
Regency G r a n , 177,100
Heathrow to W J Williams Bldrs, L t *
Regency G r a n , 171,700
Barn)* Slayton A W F La th lo Tana M
Harris. U 31 Southrldg* A t Country Creak,
*04,000
Pina Grov* Holding Corp to Kathleen A
Gucehla, Lt *7 G ranspolnla, *90.000
Danbury Ltd to Wilma Olson, Lt 3 Danbury
M ill U n TA , 104,300
Pina Grove Holding Corp to Jam as H
Charles J r A W F Eleanor, Lt 35 Greenspoint*, 1111,700
Barry Parker to Denial E Durochar A W F
Gay la, Lt I X Stockbrldg* Un 7,373,000
Sanford Place Inc to Charles W G ragg A
W F E J a n . Lt 13 Sanford Place, *47,MO
Jack E Knight A W F Evelyn to F ra n k C
Oropasa A W F Anna, Lt* 1* A 17 Holliday
Boar L k i. *93,000
Angelo A Lavlano A W F R im e to Stephan B
McGaa A W F Ella, U 4 Blk M Th# Woodlands
Sac 2,1*3,900
Dennis Mundy to Philip C Spanct A W F
Ella. Lt 279 Bal Aire Hills Un 3. *47.900
Calton Homes to John G Garner A W F
Bobarm, Lt 99 Southrldg* At Country Creak.
1*3.300
Hooker Barnes Homes to Albert J La*son A
W F Rena, LI t A lifa y a Woods Ph IV, *77,000
■Joyce W Woodhurst lo Chart** J BotaMe A
W F Janat, Lt * B lk B, Lk K ath ryn Woods,

THURSDAY, JAJT. 81
Seminole County League of Women Voters
dinner meeting, 6 p.m.. Capri Restaurant
(formerly Major’s). Springs Plaza. County Com­
missioner Bill Klrchhoff wUl speak at 7:30 p.m. on
charter government.
Central Florida Quitters’ Guild. 7:30 p.m.. First
Baptist Church, 519 S. Park Ave„ Sanford.
Speaker — Amy Glnson. Open to new members.
STANDING MEETINGS
Families Together Teen Support Group. 6:30
p.m., at its headquarters at 900 Fox Valley Drive.
Sweetwater Square. Suite 206. To Join rap group
or for further Information call 774-3844 or come
to meeting.
International Training In Com m unication
G r e a t e r S e m in o le C lu b ( p r e v i o u s l y
Toast mistress). 7:30 p.m.. Altamonte Chapel
EducaUon Building on State Road 436, second
and fourth Thursdays.
Central Florida Clvltan Club for single men and
women, dinner at 6:30 p.m., meeting at 7:30
p.m., Quincy’s Restaurant. 4000 E. Colonial
Drive (tt mile east of Fashion Square). Meets
second and fourth Thursdays.
Maitland Bridge Club. 7:30 p.m.. Maitland Civic
Center.
B-SIim Diet Club for behavior modification and
improved self-image, 7 p.m.. Howell Place.
Airport Blvd., Sanford. Phone or 668-6783.
Freedom House AA (women dnly), 8 p.m.
(closed). Lake Minnie Road. Sanford.
Sweet Adelines. 7:30 p.m.. Casselberry Senior
Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Narcotics Anonymous, 8 p.m.. 317 Oak Ave..
Sanford.
Freedom Outreach. 8 p.m. closed discussion for
women only, 591 Lake Minnie Drive, Sanford.
Covered dish supper on the first Thursday at 6:30
p.m. followed by speaker.

Sanford. Call 322-2724 Ex. 370 tori
STANDING L________ I ’ ; •./'
Central Florida Kiwanla Club. 7:30 at.m.
Florida Federal Saving* and Loan. Stkte Road
436at 434, Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Klwants Club. 7 aon.. Airport
Restaurant, Sanford.
Optimist Club of South Seminole. 7.30 a.m..
Holiday Inn, Wymore Road. Altamonte Spring*.
Reboa AA. noon. Rebos Club. 130 Normandy
Road. Casselberry (closed). Clean Air A A for
non-smokers, first floor, same room, aame place
and time.
Wekiva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m. WekJva
Presbyterian Church, SR 434. at Wekiva Springs
Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian
Church. SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. aame time
and place.
Tanglewood AA. 8 p.m.. St. Richard’s Episcopal
Church, Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same time
and place.
Sanford AA Step. 5:30 p.m., closed discussion,
and 8 p.m. step study, 1201W. First St.. Sanford.
24-Hour AA. 8 p.m. (open discussion). 317 S.
Oak Ave.. Sanford.

SATURDAY. JAN. 24

FRIDAY, JAN. 23

STANDING MEETINGS
Sanford Women's AA. 1201 W. First St.. 2
p.m.. closed.
Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m. The G rove
Counseling Center. 580 Old Sanford/Ovledo Road
(off SR 419). Winter Springs.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St., noon and 8 p.m.,
open discussion.
Casselberry AA Step. 8 p.m.. A scension
L u th e r a n C h u rch . A s c e n s io n D r iv e ( o f f
Overbrook). Casselberry.
Sanford Grace AA 11th Step (closed). 8 p.m.,
Wekiva Assembly of God. Longwood.

Manna Haven serves free lunch for the hungry.
11 a.m. to 1 p.m.. Monday through Friday:
Sunday, 1-3. at 519 Palmetto Ave., Sanford.
Cardiovascular screening, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m..
County Health Department, 240 W. Airport Blvd.,

STANDING MEETINGS
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p.m.. open discussion.
Florida Power and Light building. N. Myrtle
Avenue, Sanford.

^

SUNDAY, JAN. 25

M ONEY SOURCE

Fast Professional
and Confidential Service.

1st and 2nd Mortgage
Loans

Purchase of Existing
Mortgages.

Residential and
Commercial

GIB EDMONDS
President

!*« momcaS

LET US HELF SOLVE YOUR MOREY PROBLEMS.
BARRY BARKS
Exacuthr# Vic# Pr#sid#nt

323-8990

5&gt;XJUl#rvt

Waite Continues Secret Talks
With Kidnappers On Hostages
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) - Hostage negotiator Terry
Waite met secretly with Moslem extremists holding
Westerners In Lebanon but the Church of England said
speculation about the Imminent release of some of the
captives was "sim ply rumors."
Waite, who came to Beirut last week on his first mission
since the secret U.S. arms sales to Iran surfaced in
November, left his hotel Tuesday night and had not
returned by noon today.
"W aite is holding talks with the hostages' kidnappers."
Jihad A1 Zuhalri. spokesman for the Druze Progressive
Socialist Party, told reporters Wednesday at the seaside
Riviera Hotel, where Waite is staying.
Speculation grew in Washington and elsewhere that
Waite, the special envoy of the archbishop of Canterbury,
was preparing to leave Lebanon with at least two hostages,
but the Church of England said it had not been informed of
such plans.

12 Blacks Massacred In Homes
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (UPI) — Authorities
mounted a manhunt for the gunmen who burst Into a
house in a black township near Durban and killed 12
people. Including seven children.
"It was a massacre," police MaJ. Chari du Tolt said of the
attack Wednesday In the black township or Kwamakhuta
near the south coast city of Durban. "Som e were shot in
their beds and some as they were trying to get away."
Officials called the Incident the worst terror attack in
South Africa since 19 people were killed by a car bomb
outside air force headquarters In Pretoria In May 1983.
Authorities blamed that explosion on the African
National Congress, the guerrilla group fighting to topple
South Africa’s white-minority government, and some
officials said they suspect the outlawed group in
Wednesday's slayings.

Police Kill 9 Protesters
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) - Marines and police opened
fire today on thousands of angry farmers who marched on
the presidential palace demanding land reform, killing at
least nine and injuring dozens of others, ofilcials said.
Independent radio reports said at least 36 demonstrators
were wounded. Including a Japanese student from Tokyo
who Joined the protest. The reports could not be
immediately confirmed.
Authorities at six nearby hospitals reported nine
demonstrators. Including at least one woman, were killed.
At least six of the casualties were shot in the head and two
others in the back, a witness said.
Marchers said they were demanding land reform and the
distribution of land taken over by the government of
Corazon Aquino after the overthrow of Ferdinand Marcos
last February.
Military authorities denounced the incident as a
"provocation."

Iraq Makes Peace Offer
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein offered Iran a peace plan
to end the bloody Persian Gulf War as the Iranian news
agency announced the capture of a military township a few
miles east of Basra. Iraq's second largest city.
But the state-owned Iraqi News Agency said Iraqi forces
contained an 11-day-old Iranian offensive Wednesday.

! There’s Someone Special
Waiting To Hear From You.
There’s som eone who would love to
hear the sound of your voice. Give
them a call. It m eans so very much.
And costs so little. C om pared to the
cost of postage, tim e or travel, long
distance is a very inexpensive way to
keep in touch. Call today. There’s some
one special waiting to hear from you.

Southern Bell
A BELLSOL'TH Company
A L R E A D Y IN T O U C H W I T H T H E F U T U R E ?

:

-

�:'t r r x r &amp; r

■ • 'K

Ft.

T im r g iB y , J b b .

a , 1W

legal Notice

Logqf Notice"

legal Hettce

legol Notice

t, t4 &gt; 4.
IN T H E CIRCUIT
COURT, EIGH TEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE N O .N setf CA-0f-I
STOCKTON. W HATLEY,
DAVIN
A COMPANY, a Florida cor­
poration.
Plaintiff,

IW T W « C l i O W T c o y
IN T N IIM N T m T N
j u d ic ia l c w o ir T
S E M IN O L I C O U N TY .
CASE N U M i « e * M * M C A - l * L

LE O N A R D K. W A 6 N IR and
* ^ y K o n c r . h l»
w IN . and L U T H I N J . P IP P IN
and B O N N IE •• P IP P IN . his
- I N , end R O B E R T P A U L
PIP P tN and IA N O N A L.
P IP P IN . UN WIN. et. us.,
#t. aH..
a n n a iil l e

ROBERT LEE HILL;
M ARILYN HILL;
U N I T E D COMPANIES F I ­
N A N C IA L

CORPORATION, e Louisiana
corporation;
F I R S T UNION NATIONAL
B AN K OF
FLO R ID A, the successor by
trgorwllh
A T L A N T I C BANK OF OR­
LANDO, a banking
corporation; C E N T R A L
FLORIDA REGIONAL
H O S P I T A L . I N C . , f/k/a
SEMINOLE MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL, a Florida corpora­

N O n iC I O f A C T IO N
T O : LE O N A R D E . W A G N E R
and A N N A B E L IE
M .
W A G N E R , h i* w l f a , a n d
L U TH E R J. P IP P IN and
BONNIE B. P IP P IN , h it w IN .
and R O B E R T P A U L P IP P IN
and SANDRA L . P IP P IN , hi*
wlN. raUdMKt* unknown and
all Parties claim ing Interest*
by. dtraugk. under or against
ttw etam ald namad PartNa and
all Parties having or claim ing to
M M any right, till* or Interest
In th t p ro p e rty h e re in d e ­
ferred.

YOU ARE N O TIF IE D that
action tar declaratory relief
to the following property
Seminole County, Florida,
wit:

tion;

PEACOCK AND JOHNSON, a

Florid*
p a rtn e rs h ip : W I N G F I E L D
D E V E L O P M E N T CO.,
a/k/a H A L L M A R K C O N ­
S T R U C T IO N O F F L O R ID A ;
C H R V S L E R C R E D I T COR
P O R A T IO N . a Delaware
corporation; any unknown hairs,
devlsaes.
creditors, grantees and othar
unknown
parsons or unknown spouses
claim ing by,
through, and under R O B E R T
L E E H IL L end/or
M A R IL Y N H IL L .
Defendants.

an
at
In
to

Lot I t , Block B , IO W A N A
S U B D I V I S I O N ao por P la l
thereof recorded In Plat Book f,
at Page 3a, Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida.
A lio known as:
Lot I t , Block B . IO W A N A
S U B D IV IS IO N A M E N D E D
P L A T , according to the plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
10. Page It . Public Records ot
Seminole County, Florida,
has been filed against you and
you are required lo serve a copy
ol your written defenses. If arty,
to It on Hope Strong III, E s ­
q u ire , P la i n t i f f ’ s a tto rn e y ,
whose address Is P .O . Boa *07.
Winter Park. Florida 12710 On
or before the 24th day of F ebru ­
ary. 1907, and tile the original
with the Clerk of this Court
either before service on Plain­
tiff's attorney, or Immediately
thereafter; otherwise a default
will be entered against you tor
the re lie f dem anded In the
Complaint.
D A T E D on the fth day of
January. 1*17.
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
As Clerk of the Court
By Jane E . Jasewlc
As Deputy Clerk
Publish January IS, 32, 2V A
February S. Iff7
DEK-41

NOTICE OF ACTION

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 40» S.
Alderwood St., Winter Springs.
Seminole County, Florida 33701
under the Fictitious Name ot
ROBCO Industrial Supplies, and
that I Intend to register said
name with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
Provisions ot the Fictitiou s
Heme stall

T O : R O B E R T L E E H IL L ;
M A R IL Y N H IL L
Residence: Unknown
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action to foreclose the mortgage
e n c u m b e rin g the tallow ing
property In Seminole County.
Florida:
_ ,
L o t * . B lo c k ” C ” .
W A S H IN G TO N O AK S S EC TIO N
T W O . according to tha plat
thereof as recorttod In Piet Book
to. Pages U t 17. Public Re­
cords o l Sem inole C ounty.
Florida.
Together with: One Orbon
R ange-M odel lE J O A V ; One
M e rc u ry Hood-Model f M I T ;
One Com fort Pee FurnaceModel IC P FIO D ; One Coldspot
Refrigerator Model *4*41215.
has bten Iliad by tha Plaintiff
against you and othars In tha
above antltlad causa and you
ara raqulrad to serve a copy of
your written defenses. It any, to
It on D O N A L D L . S M IT H ,
Plaintiff’s attorney, t i l l Barnett
Bank Building, Jacksonville.
Florida 37207, on or batora Fab.
23. if f 7. and Ilia the original
with tha Clark ol this Court
•ither batora service on Plain­
tiff's attorney or immediately
thereafter; otherwise, a default
will be entered against you for
the relief demanded In the
complaint or petition.
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal
ot this Court on this ttlh day of
January, IN7.
O A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clark ol the Circuit Court
By: JeanBrlllant
Deputy Clark
(S E A L )
Publish: January 12. W A Feb

S 5 T ::

- ** * - * *

NOTICE OP FORECLOSURE
SALE BY CLERK
OP CIRCUIT COURT
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned D A V ID N. BER­
RIEN Clerk of C ircu it Codrt of
Somlnoto County, F lor Ido. will,
on the 2nd day of February,
)W 7, ot 11:00 o'clock A .M ., el
the wesl fro n t door of the
Somlnoto C ounty Courthouse.
Seminole County, In tho City of
Sanford Florida, after tor solo
and soil ot public outcry to the
highest end best bidder for cosh,
tho tot leaving described property
situated In Seminole County,
F tor Ido. to-wit:
Lot 547, W IN T E R SP R IN G S
U N I T 4, according to tho Piet
thereof, os recorded in Piet
Book if. Pages *, 7 end I , of the
Public Records of Somlnoto
County, Florida.
pursuant to tho final decree of
foreclosure entered In a cost
pending In sold Court, the style
of which ts
U N IT E D V IR G IN IA
M O R T G A G E C O R P O R A T IO N .
Plaintiff
P E T E R W A G N E R end
V A L E R IE W A G N E R ,
his wife, el el.,
Defendant
and the docket number of which

Is
number •*-! to-CA-O t-L
W IT N E S S m y hand and tho
official seel ot said Court, this
fth day of January, lff7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N ,
Clerk of the
Circuit Court of Somlnoto
County, Florida
B y: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clark
D a v id M . Krause,'Esq.
Attorney for Plaintiff
Publish January 15. 22, ltt7.
D E K -U

NOTICE UNDER FICTITIOUS
NAME S TA TU TE
T O W HOM IT M A Y C O N CER N :
Notice Is hereby given that the
undersigned pursuant to tho
" F ic t it io u s nam e S ta tu te '',
Chapter fU .O t, Florida Statutes,
will register with the Clerk ol
the Circuit Court, In ond for
Somlnoto County. Florida upon
receipt ol proof ol tho publica­
tion of this notice, the fictitious
- name, to-wit:
Chuck's Bakery, under which
we are engaged In business at
151 State R o a d 414 E a s t,
Longwood, Florida J2750.
That the parties interested In
said business enterprise ere as
follows:
P H O E N IX D R A G O N , INC.
D oled et Sanford, Somlnoto
County, Florida, December 12,

jfl4

Publish January IS. 22, J t A
February 5, 1907
D E K -U
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notica Is hareby given that I
am engaged In business et 4000
S. H w y. 17-92. C asse lberry.
Seminole County, Florida 32707
undtr the Fictitious Name ol
B E T T Y 'S Y A R N S E T C ., end
that t Intend to register said
name with the Clerk ol the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
Pro visions ot the Fictitious

IN TH E CIRCUIT
COURT OB THE
EIBHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOE SEMINOLE
COUNTY: STATE
OF FLORIDA
CASE NO.: MtoS2S-CA49-l(0)
SOVRAN MORTGAGE •
CORPORATION,
Plaintiff,

vs.
L IN D A H O L L A N D , et at..

NOTICE OF ACTION
S T A T E O F F L O R ID A
T O : J . R A N D O LP H SANDERS
and C L A U D IA W . SANDERS,
hlswlto.
Whose residence Is 13539
S h roth lre Lena, Sen Diego.
California W ill.
You ere hereby required to
tile your answer or written
defenses. If any, In the above
proceeding with the Clerk of this
Court, end to serve e copy
thereof upon the Plaintiff's at­
to r n e y s . w hose na m e end
address appears hereon, on or
before the 23rd day of February,
1917, tha nature of this proceed­
ing being o suit lor foreclosure
ol mortgage against tha tallow­
ing described property, to-wit:
Lot 20, O A K L A N D V IL L A G E
S E C TIO N O N E , according to
the plat thereof as recorded In
Plat Book 25, Pages 51 end 52. of
tho Public Records of Seminole
County. Florida.
It you fell to file your answer
or written defenses In the above
proceeding, on Plaintiff's at­
torney, a default will be entered
against you tor the relief de­
manded In the Complaint or
Petition.
DONE AND ORDERED A T
Sanford. County ol Seminole.
State ol Florida, this 19th day of
January, 1917.
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
B Y : JaanBrlllant
Deputy Clark
Publish: January 23, 29 A Feb­
ruary 5,13, tN7
OEK-12S

IIWMlIiHfcK

to-0747-CA-oe-P el the Circuit
Court oI the Eighteenth Judicial
C irc u it In end for Seminole
County, flerMe, wherein C I T I ­
Z E N S F E D E R A L S A V IN G S
A N D L O A N A S S O C IA TIO N Is
th e P la in t if f o n d J O A N
G R U B E R a/fc/o J O A N M .
G R U B E R , o tingle w om an;
S P R IN G W O O D V IL L A G E
C O N D O M IN IU M A S S O C IA ­
T I O N , IN C ., o Florida non-profit
c o rp o ra tio n ; S P R IN G W O O D
V IL L A G E C O N D O M IN IU M
A S S O C I A T I O N
O F
L O N G W O O O . IN C ., o Florida
non-profit corporation, ara tho
Defendants. I will tell to the
highest end best bidder tor cosh,
ot tho West front door ot the
Somlnoto County Courthouse.
Sanford. Florida, ol 11:00 a.m.,
on the 29th day of January, 1917,
tho following described property
as set lo rth In to ld F in a l
Judgm ent, to w i t :.
T h a t cortoln condom inium
parcel known as Unit No. I05C
and on undivided t/39e Interest
In the lend, common elements
a n d c o m m o n expanses a p ­
purtenant to sold unit, a'l In
accordance with end subject to
tho covenants, conditions, re ­
strictions, terms ond other pro
visions of that Declaration of
Condominium ol S P R IN G W O O D
V I L L A G E , o Condominium, as
recorded In Official Records
Book 1331, Pago 1049, Public
Records ol Somlnoto County,
Florida.
D A T E D th is 9th d a y o l
January. 1917.
(C I R C U IT C O U R T S E A L )
O A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk ol Circuit Court
B y : Phyllis Forsytho
Deputy Clerk
Attorney for Plaintiff:
U n d o L. Batch, Attorney
S T U Z IN A N D C A M N E R , P.A.
9455 Koger Boulevard
Suite tOO, Hendry Building
SI. Petersburg, Florida 13702
Publish January 15,32. 1907
D EK -41

the tow firm of C L O N IN G E R
A N O F IL E S . P .O . Box 337,
Oviedo, Florida 13745. on or
before February 2*. 19*7, and
ftto the original with tho Clerk of
the Circuit Court either batora
service on Plaintiff's attorney or
I m m e d ia t e ly t h e r e a f t e r ;
otherwise o Default will be
entered against you tor tho
relief demanded in the Com ­
plaint.
W ITN E S S m y hand end of­
ficia l seel et the Court ot
O r la n d o , O r a n g e C o u n t y ,
Florida, this 9th day ot January,
19*7.

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E N IN T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D F O R
O R A N G E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
CASK NO. 17-eOM-CA-IJ-L
L IN D A J .C H A T T I N ,
Plaintiff,
v.
R O L A N D E . H O O D . J R . and
E L I Z A B E T H E . HO O D , his
wlto. It allvt. and It dead, thalr
unknown chlldran, legatees,
grantees, heirs, devisees, or
claimants claiming otherwlia
by, under, or against them,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : R O L A N D E .H O O O . JR .
and E L I Z A B E T H E . H O O D , his
wlto, It alive, and It daad, tha
hairs, devisees, grantees, credi­
tors or other parties claiming
by. through, under or against
said R O L A N D E. H O O D . JR .
and E L IZ A B E T H E . H O O D , his
wlto. and to all
P A R T IE S OR P ER S O N S
having or claiming any right,
tltla or intorast In and to tha
tallow ing described proparty
situate and being In Orange
County, Florida, to-wit:
Lot 14. P IN E S H O R ES SU B ­
D IV IS IO N , according to tha plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
‘‘V ’’, Pag# 94. Public Racords of
Orange County. Florida.
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that an action to
quiet title to the above described

_ IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T
O F T H E tlT H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A
G E N E R A L JU R IS D IC TIO N
D IVISIO N
CASE NO. M-07I7-CA-09-P
C IT IZ E N S F E D E R A L
SAVIN GS A N D LO AN
A S S O C IA TIO N , a corporation
orgonlied and existing under the
lews ol the United States of
America.
Plaintiff,

vs.
JO A N G R U B E R a/k/a JO AN
M . G R U B E R ,e single women;
SPR IN GW O O D V IL L A G E
C O N D O M IN IU M ASSOCIA
T ION. I N C . a Florida non prof It
corporation; SPRINGW OOD
V IL L A G E C O N D O M IN IU M
A S S O C IA TIO N O F
LO N G W O O D . INC . a Florida
non profit corporation.
Defendants.
S P R IN G W O O D V IL L A G E
C O N D O M IN IU M ASSOCIA­
T IO N , IN C., a Florida corpora­
tion, SPR IN GW O O D V IL L A G E
C O N D O M IN IU M ASSOCIA
T I O N O F LONGW OOD, IN C .,a
Florida non profit corporation.
Cross Claimant,
vs.
JO A N G R U B E R a/k/a JO AN
M . G R U B E R , a single woman.

--------------#SJ

d M f------

~

qulred to serve e copy ot your
written defenses, It any, to It on
E V E L Y N W. C L O N IN G E R . ol

Foreclosure dated December to,
19W. entered In Civil Case No.

U—I Noth*

Legal Notice

(SEAL)
Jana E . Jasewlc
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
Publish January 15, 23, 39 A
February 5.19*7
DEK-41
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,.
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO. 15-27*4-CA-2e- P
IN T H E A D O P T IO N O F
J.M .O .
A M E N D E D N O T IC E
O F A C T IO N
T O : VO R IS P A T R IC K CO N N O R
Route I, Box t i l
New Market. Virginia
22144
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that an amandad
Petition for Adoption has been
Iliad In tha above referenced
matter and that you ara re ­
quired to serve a copy ot your
Response or Answer to tho
Petition upon tho Petltlonor's
a tto rn e y , K E N N E T H W .
M c lN T O S H . E S Q U IR E . Post
O lf lc o Box 1330, S a n fo rd ,
Florida 13772-1310. end file the
original Response or Answer In
tho office ol tho Clerk of tho
C irc u it C ourt for Sem inole
County, Florida el Sanford,
Florida an or before the 3rd day
ol February, 1907. If you toll to
do so, e Dflault Judgment will
be taken against adoption and a
Final Judgment entered grant­
ing unto tha Patltlonar. R IC H ­
A R D O IB A R T O L O M E O , his
dtm and for tho adoption ol
J.M .D .
D A T E D at Sanlord. Saminola
County, Florida, this lis t day ol
Otcemhar, A.D . 19*4.
(S E A L )
C LER K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
By: Ruth King
Dtputy Clark
Publish: January 15, 22. 29 A
February 5.1917.
DEK-71
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T,
IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO.M-I33S-CA-99-E
M c L E A N S A V IN G S A LO AN
A S SO C IATIO N .
Plaintiff.
vs.
D A V ID H. D O N O V A N .-------------D O N O VAN , unknown spousa ol
D A V ID H .D O N O V A N .lt
married. E L IZ A B E T H K IN G
D O N O V A N , and tha U N IT E D
5 T A T E S O F A M E R IC A ,a n d
any unknown hairs, devlsaes.
grantees and othar unknown
persons or unknown spouses
claiming by, through and under
any of the above named

Defendants.
Defendants.

legol Notte*

devlsaos. grantees and other
unknown persons or unknown
spouses claiming by. through
and undir any of ttw foregoing
Defendants. I(deceased
Residence unknown
YOU ARE HEREBY
N O TIFIED that an action to
toroctoeo mortgage covering ttw
following reel ond personal
property In Seminole County,
Florida, to-wit:
Lot 9. F A IR W A Y O A K S A T
DEER R U N , according to ttw
plat ttwraof as recorded In Plat
Book 34. Pages 41. 42 and 41.
P u b lic Records ot Seminole
County, Florida.
has boon filed against you and
you ore raqulrad to serve a copy
ol your written defenses. If any,
to It on C . V IC T O R B U T L E R .
J R ., E S Q ., Ill* East Robinson
Street, Orlando. Florida 22001,
and Ilia tha original with ttw
Clerk of ttw ebevo-styled Court
on or before the 14th day ol
F e bru a ry, 19*7, otherwise, a
Ju d g m e n t m a y be e ntered
against you tor the rellel de­
manded In the Complaint.
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal
of said Court on ttw 12th day ol
January, 19*7.
(S E A L )
□ A V I O N . B E R R IE N
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y : Cacalla V. Ekarn
Deputy Clerk
Publish January 15. 22. 29 A
F e b ru a ry ). 19*7
DEK-43

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E EIG H TEEN TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA.

CASE NO.: 14-42*9-CA*9-P

CHASE HOM E M O R TG A G E
C O R P O R A T IO N
Plaintiff,
vs.
JO H N W . C O L L IN S , etux.,

etal.,

Defendant (s).
N O T IC E OF A C T IO N
S T A T E O F F L O R ID A
T O : J O H N W . C O L L IN S . It
living, and O IA N N E J . C O L­
L IN S . If living. Including any
unknown spousa ol said Defen­
dants. if either has ramarrled.
and If either or both ot said
Defendants ara deceased, their
respective unknown heirs, de­
visees, grantees, esslgness,
creditors, lienors and trustees,
and all othar persons claiming
by, through, under or against
tha named Defendants,
W H O SE R E S ID E N C E IS UN
KNOW N
You ara hereby required to
tile your answer or written
defenses. It any, In tha above
proceeding with the Clerk ol this
Court, end to serve a copy
thereof upon the Plaintiff's at­
torney, whose name and address
appears heraon, on or bafore the
t3th day ol F tb ru a ry 1997, tha
nature ot this proceeding being
a s u it to r f o r e c lo s u r e of
mortgage against tha following
described property, to wit:
L o t 20. H I D D E N L A K E
P H A S E III. U N I T IV . according
to the plat thereof as recorded in
Plat Book 28. Pages 1 and 2,
Public Records ot Seminole
County, Florida
It you tall to file your answer
or written defenses In Ihe above
proceeding, on Plaintiffs at­
torney. a default will be entered
against you tor Ihe relief de­
manded In the Complaint ol

. Petition. •

D O N O V A N , -l “■
------D O N O V A N , unknown spouse ot
D A V ID H. D O N O V A N , It m a r­
ried, and any unknown heirs.

CARPET

DONE AND ORD ER ED AT
Sanford, County ol Seminole,
Stale ol Florida, this 9th day ol
January. 1917.

(S E A L )

OevldN. Berrien
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
By: CecattoV. Ekerit
Deputy Clerk

Publish: January 1), 12. 29 B
February 5* 19*7,

OEK-70

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
FROBATK DIVISION
File Number S7-31CP
IN REt E S T A T E O F
B Y R O N L . V A N C E,
Deceased

NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
T O A L L PERSONS H A V IN G
C L A IM S O R D E M A N D S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E
E S TA TE AND A L L O TH E R
P E R S O N S I N T E R E S T E D IN
T H E E S TA TE :
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D t h a t Ih e a d ­
ministration ol ttw estate ol
B Y R O N L . V A N C E , deceased..
File Number (7 -lt-C P , Is pend­
ing In the Circuit Court lor
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a ,
Probate Division, the address ot
which Is P.O. Drower C. Senl o r d , F lo r id a . 32771. T h e
personal representative ol tho
ostoto Is T R O Y V A N C E , whose
odd ross Is 540 3 rd S tro ot,
Chuluote, Florida 3274*. The
n a m e end a d d re s s o l tho
personal representative's at­
torney a rt sot forth below.
All persons having claims or
demands against tho estate ore
re q u ire d , W I T H I N T H R E E
M O N TH S FR O M T H E D A T E
O F T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N
O F T H IS N O T IC E , to file with
the clerk of tho above court a
written statement ot any claim
or demand they may hove. Each
claim must be In writing end
must Indicate the basis lor tho
claim, the nemo and address ol
tho creditor or his agent or
a tto r n e y , ond tho a m o u n t
claimed. It the claim Is not yet
duo, tho dote when It w ill
become due shell be stated. If
the claim Is contingent or uni!
quldoted, Ihe nature ol the
uncertainty shall be stated. It
the claim Is secured, the securl
ty shell be described. Th e
claimant shall daliver sufficient
copies of tho claim to the clerk
to enable the clerk to mall one
copy to tech personal repre
sontatlvo.
All persons Interostod In tho
ostoto to whom a copy ot this
Notice ol Administration has
baon m aile d a re re q u ire d ,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S
FROM TH E D A TE OF TH E
F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
T H IS N O T IC E , to Ilia any ob
lections they may have that
challenge Ihe validity of the
decedent's will, the qualifies
lions ol tha personal repre
sentatlve. or Ihe venue or
jurisdiction of the court.
A L L C L A IM S , D E M A N D S ,
A N D O B JE C T IO N S N O T SO
F IL E D W IL L BE F O R E V E R
BARRED
Dale of Ihe first publication ol
this Notica ot Administration:
January 22, 19(7.
T R O Y V A N C E,
As Personal Represantatlve
ot tha Estate of
B Y R O N L. V A N C E ,
Deceased
A T T O R N E Y FOR P E R S O N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
R O B E R T L. P O O R E, Esquire
1271 E . Robinson Street
Orlando. Florida 32801
Telephone 305422 2977
Publish January 22,29, 19*7
O E K 129

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�Raiders Rip
No. 1 Scots

Polite Won't
Limp
m
Vs. Seminolo

A , .. •\ .

Hi '
Daytona Beach Mainland all*
atater Mike Polite twtoted hia
ankle Tuesday night against city
rival Father Lopez but you can
bet he will be sufficiently healed
when the Bucs invade Sanford
tonight to play the Seminoles.
TipofT is 8 p.m. Sanford’s
WUEZ-AM (1400) will begin its
pregamc at 7:50 p.m.
Polite. Seminole's chief dis­
trict-championship roadblock,
went down with 3:17 left In the
third quarter. Mainland coach
Dick Toth kept him down the
test of the game as the Bucs
pulled out a 63-53 victory.
"There was no reason to take a
chance on playing him." Toth
said Wednesday via telephone
from Mainland High. "Not with
the week we have coming up.
W e’ve got Sanford Thursday.
Spruce Creek next Tuesday and
New Smyrna Beach next Fri­
day."
Toth said his Florida Statebound center's ankle did swell
up and Polite was limping, but
he was In the clinic and was
expected to be close to 100
percent. That translates into
25.6 points and 13.3 rebounds.
Polite is Joined by guards
Derrick Henry (16.1 ppg). Brian
Morris (7.8 assists) and Vern
McIntyre (7.1 ppg) nlong with
forward Barry Powers who Is
quickly replaced by aupersub
Kenny Mackeroy (12.3 ppg).
"W e are going to try and keep
those other guys down, hold
down the turnovers and play
Polite as tough as we can,"
Seminole coach Bill Klein said.
S even th -ra n k ed M ainland.
13-1. has handed ninth-ranked
Seminole, 13-4, two of its four
blemishes. Once by 11 points
and again by 12 points. Toth
said he knows Seminole has
been playing belter (seven con­
secutive victories), but his Bucs
have only been playing well
enough to beat the competition
lately.
H«raM Photo by Sonnt* Wkboldt
ill 111
"W e're a good basketball team
defends. Th e Raiders walloped Daytona, but we have weaknessea." he
said;""W hen they start to do a
103-67, Wednesday at the SCC Health Center.

Ridenour:
I ' v Never
Seen Team Play Better'
'

By 8am Cook
Herald Sports Editor

Basketball

Daytona Beach Community
College came Into town Wed­
nesday night with an 18-game box-and-1. We knew everything
winning streak, a No. 5 national they were going to do."
ranking and a No. 1 state*
S a n fo r d 's D a rry l M erth le
ranking.
turned In the best effort for the
The Scurryin' Scots left with Scots. The former Lake Mary
their kilts dragging.
High standout had a team-high
Seminole Community College,
16 points, three assists and two
rising to the occasion for its steals.
best-ever showing under coach
"W e couldn't handle Darris
Bill Payne, dominated Daytona. (Gallagher)." Merthle said. "That
103-67, before 1,702 delighted was the key. W e didn't shoot
fans Wednesday night In Mid- very well either and they beat us
Florida Conference basketball at p re tty bad on the boards.
the SCC Health Center.
Another thing, they had good
The Raiders played so well bench strength. I guess we were
that DBCC coach Ray Ridenour too excited."
waved olT any embarrassment
Morris, a powerful 6-3 forward,
from th e 36-polnt setback. said the Raiders concentrated on
"They did everything possible rebounding. "W e hammered and
right and we did everything pounded on the rebounds,” he
possible wrong.” he said. *Tve said abou t th e 48-34 SCC
never seen a team play better.
advantage. "W e knew we had to
"(SC C point guard Darrls) control the glass.”
Gallagher put on the damdest
The Raiders shot 53 percent
show I've ever seen. He did while taking a 47-34 first-half
everything tonight."
lead. The Scots could manage
Payne couldn't explain the Just 40 percent. Gallagher and
wide margin cither. "1 feel bad Houston each had 12 at In­
for Ray. We arc not 36 points termission while Dunning had
better than the No. 5 team In the
10. Cedric McCoy had nine for
nation," he said. "N o way did I the Scots.
think it would end up this way. I
Dunning. In particular, played
didn't think anybody from the a big role. Hall, who blocked four
Celtics on down could beat shots in the first six minutes,
Daytona by 36 points.”
picked up his second foul with
14:15 left In the half. "Vance
SCC. 22-2 and ranked No. 4 In
the state, won for the eighth was throwing their shots all over
consecutive time and Improved the place. He had them Intimi­
to 6-1 in the conference. Daytona dated." Payne said. " I didn't
Beach, 22-2, fell to 6-1 in the know what would happen when
MFC. J a c k s o n v ille 's Florida he went out."
Hall, though, said he wasn't
Community College completes
the three-way 6-1 MFC deadlock. concerned. "W hen I went out. I
Seminole hosts St. Johns River knew Jackson or Dunning would
Saturday while Daytona and carry the load inside. I wasn't
worried."
F C C - J g e t t o g e t h e r In
SCC's Vance Hall battles Daytona's M ickey
SCC led, 13-7, when Dunning C o llier, righ t, fo r possession as T on y Bates
Jacksonville. SCC and DBCC go
entered. Seven minutes and
at it again Feb. 14 at Daytona.
Everybody had a field day for eight Dunning points later, the
Ihe Raiders. Point guard Darrls Raiders blew the bulge to 29-17.
Gallagher tossed In 18 points "After I made my first couple of
By Chris Flster
and handed out 12 assists. Barry shots. I felt good." Dunning said.
Herald Sports W riter
"They
were
sagging
off
me
and
Dunning was perfect from the
Depleted yet still dynamic.
[loor, hitting all nine floor shots giving me the open shot."
Two minutes later. Merthic's Florida Com m unity Collcgefor 18 points. Malcolm Houston
18-footer pulled DBCC within 10 Jacksonvlllc’s Lady Stars roll four players."
connected on six 3-polntcrs.
Seminole Community College
but
Gallagher scored seven of into Sanford tonight for a key
finishing with 20 points.
Mid-Florida Conference clash comes in with a record of 12-6
the
Raiders'
next
23
points
as
"W e played good basketball
SCC took a 13-polnt lead Into against Seminole Community overall and a five-game winning
from th e Jum p b a ll o n , "
College's Lady Raiders.
streak. The game will tlpoff at
Houston, who almost attended intermission.
The Lady Stars, the fifth- 7:30 tonight at tile SCC Health
The
Raiders
exploded
in
a
DBCC before deciding on SCC.
ranked JUCO team In the na­ Center.
said. "T h ey weren't sorry. We hurry after halftime. They outTonight's game ulso marks the
scored the Scots. 16-4. In Just tion. come In with a 19-1 overall
were just that good."
record,
averaging
91
points
per
re
tu rn o f S a n fo r d ’ s M ona
Vance Hall, despite sitting out four minutes to take a 63-38
game while holding opponents Benton, a 1985 Seminole High
lead.
Houston
had
eight
of
the
14 minutes of the first half, had
points, the last one a 3-point to 58.8. Because of Injuries and graduate and twice the Sanford
14 poin ts. C laude Jackson
academic ineligibilities. FCC-J is Herald prep Player of the Year.
tossed in 12 points and plucked bomb which forced Ridenour to
down to seven players, but Benton Is averaging 8.2 points
call
a
time
out.
10 rebounds. James Morris had
coach Lyndal Worth says those per game for the Lady Stars tills
Midway
through
the
second
10 points. Rob Williams came off
seven can still play with anyone season, is shooting 51 percent
the bench for 10 rebounds. Holly half, two Jackson free throws
in the nation.
from the field. 70 percent from
Keller turned in a solid iloor and a slam by the 6-7 sopho­
"W e lost two starters and one the free throw line and adds 2.4
more
pushed
the
lead
to
70-42.
game.
of our top reserves lo academ­ assists per outing.
"There wasn't anybody who Four Gallagher free throws and ics." Worth said. "But these
"She (Benton) Is getting as
came off that bench that didn’ t Dunning's seventh consecutive seven kids have Just responded
much game time as anyone
bucket
blew
It
up
lo
76-47.
Two
do w e ll.” Payne said. " W e
buckets by Hall preceded con- beautifully. We defeated Santa else." Worth said. "And site has
p r a c t i c e d for thei r
Fe, 102-80. and finished with
been playing really well for us.”
See RAIDERS, Page 0A
trtangle-and-2. 1-3-1 chaser and

B enton Returns With D ynam ic Stars
B a s k e t b a ll

The Lady Stars start point
guard Val Avant. an all-amcrlca
candidate who averages 15.6
points and 8.4 assists per game,
two guard Lisa Jones (1 5 .1 ppg).
forwards Angle Scott (11.2) and
Violet Dummett (10.2) and 6-3
center Jan A rrin gton (10.6
points. 10.2 rebounds).
Benton and Antllea Mobley
(6.5 points. 6.8 rebounds) are the
two reserves for the Lady Stars.
Worth said she hopes lo have
forward-center Betty Flshmon. a
Titusville Astronaut graduate,
back by state tournament time.
"W e were fourth In the nation
last year and I think we're a
better basketball team this
year." Worth said.
Tile Lady Raiders, who lost a
50-point game to llie Lady Stars
at Jacksonville early this month,
will look to control the tempo
and not let the fast-breaking
Lady Stars get a big lead early.

Simms Receives Broncos' Defensive Message
PASADENA. Calif. (UP!) - The Denver
roneos made It clear what they thought
the New York Giants offense before the
art of their Nov. 23 game.
The Broncos won the loss and elected
• klek off. Denver then Held the Giants
i 262 yards and no touchdowns,
though New York won 19-16 at Giants
ladium.
When the two teams meet Sunday at
ie Rose Bowl In Super Bowl XXL the
lants will try lo gain respect from the
roneos defense.
"T h e last time we played them, to
low what they thought of our offense,
ley won the opening toss and elected lo
lek o f f . " Giants quarterback Phil
Imms said Wednesday. "They made a
atement and we heard It.”
The Giants also elected to klek oil to
art the NFC Championship Game
(alnst Washington. But the wind was
Jsting to 25 mph In that game, and the
lants wisely decided to gel the wind
irly and capitalized on the advantage
ra 10-0 opening-period lead.
When the Broncos played at Giants
iadlum, the wind blew at a mere 8
ph.
"W e feel sometimes we want to send a
lessage right away that says we re not
awe of your offense and we came to
ay,” Broncos comerback Mike Harden
ild. "W e ’re telling you we re coming at
j u defensively and it's going to be a
ngday.”
Although Joe Morris gained 106 yards
1 20 carries against Denver, the Giants
lied to make the big plays against the
roneos until their final drive.
"W e were abb to gel i lot of people

F o o t b a ll
tackling Joe Morris." Denver linebacker
Jim Ryan said. "H e broke a couple of
runs but we were happy with the way we
handled them.
"Sometimes when we play a team with
a great defense. (Coach) Dan Reeves
decides to start off the game with our
defense and try to get good field
position."
The Giants hit big plays when they

had to In the final minutes against
Denver. Simms took them 55 yards in
1:49 to set up Raul Allegro's game­
winning 34-yard field goal with six
seconds left. Simms threw for 24 yards
to Bobby Johnson on a thlrd-and-21.
then found Phil MeConkey for 46 yards
to the 15.
Simms completed 11 of 20 passes for
148 yards and was sacked three times by
the Broncos.
"When we walked off the field after the
game, particularly the defense, we were
disappointed we didn't have the victo­

ry." Harden said. "W e said 'Man. we
wish we could play them again.’ What
better time to play them again than the
Super Bowl.”
The Giants maintain their offense has
Improved since Nov. 23. but are wary of
the Broncos defense.
" I feel like we’re the underdogs." said
Simms, whose team is favored by 10
points. "W e didn’t do what we wanted
against them the first time. The thing
about their defense Is they have speed. If
there's a weakness on our offense. It’s we
don't have great speed.”

Sizzling Lady Seminoles Blitz DeLand
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports W riter
Seminole High's Lady Seminoles
have had hot streaks before In the
1986-87 season, but never one that
lasted an entire ballgamc.
Wednesday night, the Lady 'Nolcs
hit a sizzling 67 percent from the field
(30 o f 45) and the free throw line (12 of
18) as they barbecued tile Lady
Bulldogs from DeLand. 72-42. at Bill
Fleming Memorial Gymnasium.
"That's without a doubt the best
we've shot and the most points we've
scored all y ea r." Seminole coach
Charles Steele said. "T h e kids are
really improving and playing with
more intensity every game.”
Seminole, which started the season
with an 0-5 record, including an

B a s k e t b a ll
loss lo DeLand. has won
seven of its last nine ballgatues to draw
even at 7-7 overall. The Lady Tribe
returns to Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence action (2-1) Friday at home
against Oviedo.
A pair of sophomores, point guard
Adrian Hlllsman and forward Liz
Long, were the hottest of the hot for
the Lady 'Noles Wednesday night.
Hlllsman connected on 12 of 14 shots
from the Iloor and 7 of 10 from the foul
line for a game-high 31 points. Long
fired In 10 of 12 from the Iloor and
finished with 20 points. Hlllsman also
had nine steals and three assists while
Long added six steals and five re­
o v e r tim e

bounds.
Junior guard LaShon Cash also hud
a good night as she hit 4 of 6 from the
field and 2 of 2 free throws for 10
points. Chlneta Gilchrist contributed
six points.
DeLand was playing without one of
its top players In Shawn Lane, but the
Lady Bulldogs, behind the play of C.C.
Hayden and Wendy Eaby. stayed
within two points. 14-12. at the end of
the first quarter. Hayden had 14 points
for the game while Eaby tossed In 12.
OELANO ( « ) - Hayden 14, Lovett* a. Eaby 1?
Porcelll 2, Sireetman 4. Fennell a. Curry 4 Totals: tv
4 12 42
SEMINOLE (H i - Scott 0. Cash 10. Hlllsman 21.
Toombs 2. Long 20. Reddick 3. Gilchrist 6 Totals 30

12 1822

Halttlme - Seminote 32. DeLand 24 Fouls
DeLand IS. Seminole 12 Fouled out
none
Technical — non*

little lo o m u ch Individualism ,
w r 'r e v e ry beatable.
" W e h a v e o n e m uperntar bu t

the other four guys are usually
out-heighted al every position.
That is the way it will be again
tonight."
Either 6-8 Craig Walker (9.7
rebounds. 3.3 blocks) or 6-10
Brad Baird will be In the pivot
for coach Bill Klein. Roderick
Henderson (16.1 ppg) and Jerry
"S tick" Parker (15.2 ppg) arc the
forwards. Andre Whitney (10.1
ppg. 6.2 assists. 3.2 steals) and
Michael "Spu d" Edwards (4.9
assists) are the guards.
Whitney, who leads the county
In assists and steals, has played
well of late, teaming wilh rella b 1c H e n d e r s o n , s p e e d y
Edwards and torrid-shooting
Parker to give Seminole a potent
n ffe n s iv e a tta c k . W h itn e y .
Parker and Henderson also go to
the boards very well.
Walker leads in rebounds and
blocks. Baird turned In his best
outing — 10 points and seven
boards — last week against
L y in u n . R e g g ie " S p o o k "
B e lla m y , S te v e H a th a w a y .
W alter Hopson and Freddie
Gadson have been bonuses from
the bench.
Toth said Seminole's progress
has evolved because of more
familiarity with Klein. "A n y time
you have a new coach, it takes a
while to dwell into his philoso­
phy." he said. "They never got
unwound last year. They went
2-1 at the Rotary (Tlpoff Classic)
this year. They lost to us again
and then Spruce Creek. Then.
Miami Senior.
"Sanford lias not losl lo a
rinky dink. They have lost to
th ree very good basketball
teams."
Toth said he knows it will be
tougher to beat Seminole at
home but he relishes coining to
Sanford. "I think it definitely
creates a problem playing at
Sanford." he said. "But. to be
honest, it seems like people
enjoy good basketball there and
it Is never a problem with
attitude. Both teams will play
hard. A good rivalry has devel­
oped over the years."
Klein said the homecourt edge
will only prevail if the fans come
out. "W e don't seem to have
much of an advantage." he said.
"W e're playing better. That's the
advantage. It is important Tor us
to beat them this time and
everything time from now on."

a tt tt

S T IFF TE ST —• Seminole's
unbeaten freshman team should
receive a stiff test tonight when
It plays Lyman at Lyman. The
Greyhounds. 9-1, have lost Just
once — to Seminole.

I

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Holes

Lake Monroe's Attractors Provide Plentiful Fi:
How would you like to have a local
fishing spot that always produces
fish? Moot fishermen would raise
their eyebrows a little skeptically at
such a question.
There is such a spot. In fact, there
are two spots — ■ right In Lake
Monroe. They are the two Hsh
attractors that the Florida Game and
Fresh Water Fish Commission placed
In the lake near Enterprise.
Fish attractors are placed In bodies
of water to attract fish. In saltwater
they are called artificial reefs, but the
purpose Is the same. Fish attractors
provide cover for fish as well as
protection for food organisms that
fish like to eat.
Terry Cheek, fisheries biologist for
the Florida Game and Fresh Water
Fish Commission, said each attractor
is about an acre In size and consists
of 420 bundles of brush weighted
down with concrete blocks. Each
attractor Is marked with an orange
and white buoy.
"One attractor Is located near the
entrance to the Enterprise power

plant where the river channel splits."
Cheek said. "The other Is approxi­
mately one mile south of the En­
terprise boat ramp in the middle of
the lake."
Cheek went on to say that the two
fish attractors were placed In Lake
Monroe because "there Is little
structure in the lake outside of the
shoreline vegetation."
Largemouth bass, speckled perch,
and bream have already been ob­
served around the structures, and
sunshine and striped bass should
also gather there.
The best method to fish the at­
tractors is to drift them with a cork
rig at a depth of 3V4 to 4 feet. This
depth will keep the hook free of the
many tangles found below that de­
pth.
Missouri minnows are a good
choice for bait because they will
catch speckled perch, sunshine bass,
and largemouth bass. Worms are the
best bait for bream.
Bass anglers using artificials will
find the fish attractors challenging.

light weight and work the worm
slowly through the brush. You will be
certain to get some strikes, but
getting the bass out of the brush may
be another matter.
The fish attractors in Lake Monroe
would be an excellent place for a
family fishing trip. They are conve­
niently located and teeming with fish.
What more could you ask for?

SANFORD
HERALD
PlSftofO
WRITER

000
BRUTE'S SCOOP — Why not try
The bass are there, but they are
tough to pull out of the heavy cover.
One strategy is to fish topwater plugs
over the submerged brush in order to
bring the bass up and out or the
cover.
Another good tactic la to run
splnnerbalts over the brush to bring
the bass out of hiding. If you feel
brave, let the sptnnerbalt fall briefly
and then resume your retrieve. This
will trigger strikes from bass that are
reluctant to leave their lair.
If you are particularly adven­
turesome. fish the attractors with a
Texas rigged plastic worm. Use a

shad fishing for a change of pace? It
is very relaxing and shad are great
gameflsh on light tackle. You simply
troll several shad rigs (a length of
monofilament with a keel sinker on
one end and a small spoon and Jig
combination on the other end) barely
off the bottom and hang on for the
strikes and hard fighting action that
is sure to follow. Call Dell Abcmethy
(322-3825) at the Osteen Bridge Fish
Camp for the best spots.
M l
Ron Rawlins at Highland Park Fists Camp said
that the spacks ara still biting In Labs Woodruff.
Tro ll Hal Fllos for ttw bast rosults. but soma spacks
ara Doing caught by jigging ttw illly pads. Wild

Sophomore Bernard Mitchell
(14) and junior Mike Mandeville
(12) turned In career-best scor­
ing elTorts while Oscar Merthle
tossed In 19 points as Lake Mary
knocked off Fort Pierce Central.
72*67 In overtim e, in prep
b ask etball Lake Mary High
Wednesday night.
Lake Mary improved to 4-9
with the victory while Central
dropped to 9-5. The Rams host
Lake Howell Friday in Seminole
Athletic Conference play.
"M ik e (M andeville) started
shooting the ball a little better
and he's starting to gain con­
fidence,” Lake Mary coach Willie
Richardson said. "Bernard re­
bounded real well and made up
for his mistakes with his quick­
ness."
Both teams had numerous
chances to win In regulation.
Central had the ball out under
Its basket with eight seconds left
and couldn't convert. It also

HOWELL RALLY FAILS

a m o u n t

of

th i!

Nereid Photo by Bonnl* Wleboltft

Mikler Joins 'Hall'
Oviedo's Paul M ik le r, left, receives a plaque from J im
Je rn lg a n . M ik le r, who coached Oviedo to a 1957 Class A State

f im i

11* d # S «2 ^ | lflh L * S t

ketbaUgame.
MTicneTi nit
two big buckets — one of a good
fed from Mandeville — and 9 of
12 free-throw accuracy eased the
R a m s a w a y from a 5 9 -5 9
deadlock.
Terry "T h e Cat" Miller, who
finished with 11 points, con­
verted 5 of 6 from the foul line In
overtime. Merthle, a 6-1 center,
pulled down 11 boards to go
with his 19 points. Matt Napoli
and Mitchell each yanked down
10 rebounds while Miller handed
out seven assists. Mandeville
had five assists and Cory Prom
doled out six.
C h a r le s B ru n son to p p e d
Central with 33 points and
Auburn-bound John "Don’ t Call
Me Johnny" Walker added 20.
FORT PIERCE CENTRAL (47) - Farrell
1. Terger 1, Oavlion 4. 4 7 Walkar JO.
Robinson 3.4 3 Brunson 33. Total*: X 7-14 47.
LAKE MARY (71) - Prom 3. Ciernle
|aw*M 4, Millar II. Mandeville 13, Mikhail 14.
Napoli I, Marlhla If, Slawart 3, Totali: IS
14-33 73.
Halftlma — Laka Mary 3t, Fort Plarca
Canlral 37. Ragulatlon — Laka Mary it, Fori
Plarca Cantral J*. Foul* — Fort Plarca
Canlral II. Laka Mary II. Foulad out —
Ci*rn;#(e**kl, Napoli. Tachnlcal — non*. A
— 230. Racord* — Laka Mary 4 9, Fort Plarca
Canlral f-S.

'HOUNDS FINISH 8TRONO
Lyman used a strong fourth
quarter to break open a 33-33 tic
to upend Orlando Bishop Moore.
57-49, for Its first road victory
W ednesday night at Bishop
Moore.
The Greyhounds upped their
record to 6-5 and will host Lake
B r a n tle y th is F rid a y In a
Seminole Athletic Conference
matchup. The Hornets fell to
4-11 on the season.
Lym an was led by C raig
Radzak and Vince Florence with
12 points each. Darryl Starkcs
played a good Inside game with
11 points and seven rebounds
and point guard Robert Thomas
chipped In nine markers.
"It was a close game all the
w a y ." Lym an coach Tom
Lawrence said. "W e played well
in the fourth quarter to win the
gam e."
Lyman used its balanced play
to take a 24-19 halftime lead.
Bishop Moore, though, came out
with a strong third-quarter effort
to pull even.
The final period belonged to
the Greyhounds as they outscored the Hornets. 24-16.
LYMAN (S7&gt; - Moulton 7. Florence 13.
Stork** It, Thom** 9, Radrek 12, H*lt*r 4,
Kendrick 0. B'ttwnO. Total*: 24 J 7 37
BISHOP MOORE (47) - O'Malley I.
R*tnhl**r 4. Cuff 12. Rim 13. Tocco 4. Total*;
33 7-1149.
Halftime — Lyman 34, Blihop Moor* If.
Foul* — Lyman 14, Bishop Moore 14. Fouled
out — Hotter. Technical* — non#. Record* —
Lyman 4 3. Blihop Moore 4 )1.

la .

R od n ey C h atm an o f New
Smyrna led all scorers with 23
points. Herman Douglas added
12 and Tony Thompson chipped
In nine.
" I ’ m proud of the way we
came back." Robinson said. "W e
played hard but killed ourselves
with turnovers.”
Robinson came back to score
14 second-half points leading the
wuy for the Silver Hawks Ith 16.
Steve Johnson added 14 to go
along with Clark's 12.
N E W S M Y R N A (43) Chatman 23.
Thornpton ?, Oavldton 4, Douglas 12. Spice 4,
Welch 4, Woodard 3, M cCray 4. Total*: J4
10-1443
L A K E H O W E L L ( i t ) — Gibson J. Johnson
14. Robinson 14. Clark 12. Yapo 2. Keller *,
Gammons 2. Bulflngton2. Totals: 231 IS i t
Halltlma — New Smyrna J i. Laka Howell
II. Foul* — Lake Howell 14, New Smyrna T4.
Fouled out — none Technical — McCray
(Hanging on tho rim ). Record* — Lake
Howell J 7, New Smyrna 11-3.

BRANTLEY FALLS IN OT
Jerry Magee scored a gamehigh 22 points as Winter Park
sent the game Into overtime on a
last-second shot en route to a
66-63 victory aver Lake Brantley
In prep basketball at Lake
Brantley High School.
The Patriots now stand at 4-7
and will have battle Lyman
Friday. Both teams are 1-1 In the
SAC. The Wildcats improved to
5-8.
"T h ey hit a shot with a couple
seconds left and had momentum
going Into the overtime." Lake
Brantley coach Steve Jucker
said. "W e were concentrating on
stopping Magee and some other
players hurt us."
Lake Brantley held a 59-57
lead with seconds remalng be­
fore Willie Daunic hit a short
Jumper to send the game Into
the extra period.
The Patriots saw limited play
from senior leader Brent Bell In
the second half. Bell was In foul
trouble und eventually fouled
out after scoring 16 points.
Darren Leva led the way with 17
paints as Joe Nolff added 12 and
Doug Lawson 10.
"W e kept switching defenses
to try and contain M agee."
Jucker said. "H e Just kept hit­
ting some long range bombs that
opened up the middle."
W IN T E R PAR K (44) - Mage* 22. Daunic
14. Suedmeyer I. Wilkin* 4, Munsey 4.
Hodgson 3. Harden 11. Total* 24 I 1 1344
L A K E B R A N T L E Y (43) Lawson 10.
Nolfl 12. Shirley 4, Bell 14. Leva 17. Morris 4.
Total*: 2i 13 X43.
Halftime — Lake Brantley 29. Winter Park
26 Foul* — Lake Brantley 17, Winter Park
14 Foulad out — Bell. Technical — Lake
Brantley Cojcn Jucker Records — Lake
Brantley 4-7, Winter Park 51.

theright time.

cawp

__ .

....

Sebastian Inlet Is fairly Slow, and ttw wafer Is
dirty. Soma large llounder ara
working finger mullet slowly across » t " bottom.
Snook have lock|aw duo to the cold w a ta r
‘’ c S S T E t f at Part C e M W i l reports that
offshore fishing Is still at o standstill due to high
teas. A law boats made It out Saturday
tom# satirist, and dolphin In 140 teat ol watar. The
watar It dirty In ttw buoy line and action Inside ttw
Part Is still limited to blueflsh and floundsr. Trout
h a w bean slow In ttw banana and&gt;Indian f J f
has not baa cold enough to concentrate them In ttw
holes, and consequently they have bean scattered.
The warm watar discharge at the power plant on
the Indian River will be a good bat It ttw woather
turns cold by this weekend.
Fishing at ttw Haw Sm yrna latttas has been
limited due to high winds and dangerous seas.
Blueflsh ara the main attraction, and they love ttw
rough water m at Is frequently found on ttw north
aidt of the north |ottlas m is time of yoar. Soma
largo shoapstwad will be caught on live shrim p
when the seas subside.

By Chria Titter
Herald Sports Writer

Basketball
Down by 23 points with 4:48
to play, Lake Howell put on a
furious comeback led by Phil
Clark's 12 fourth-quarter points
but fell short, absorbing a 62-59
setback lo New Smyrna Beach at
Lake Howell Wednesday.
The Silver Hawks fell to 3-7
und will travel to Lake Mary
Friday for a SAC battle. The
'Cudas Improved to 11-3 for the
year.
"T h e y 're (New Smyrna) so
quick and they're press really
hurt us In the first half," Lake
Howell coach Greg Robinson
said. "W e turned the ball over
seven times to their press In the
first half and only once In the
second."
T h e S i l v e r H a w k s w e re
without the services of center
Alonzo Robinson for a large

Dali Abamathy at W eea irldga F W

reports that ttw shad ara g o b y &lt;=” * * '* " &gt; * * ?
E tc h in g thum by ttw bsd ioa d.
w c h ^ j
bass h a w boon spotty, but •ofT&gt;#
good eatehas. J . D . Jonas caught a lim it of Mg
spacks rscantly naar ttw I-a brldga. Eddie hussard
2 d a eliand caught '• bass last S j " * £ j h a f l s h
ara ttwrs, It's a matter of being In ttw right spot ot

Sem inoles Stick
'Hounds, 44-30

Mitchell, Mandeville
Help Rams To Win;
Lyman Tops Hornets
By Mark Blythe
Special to the Herald

ahhwrs ara still
thorn naar (looting w a r ^ t ^ t w f K t t S ^ S t a y
ntar running watar. It you m a * * * Jf e L * * ”
« atari you will ancountar undesirable shlnarsating
apacla«suchasgarandmudtlsh._ _
----------

Mary, Lyman Girls
Slip, Slide To I-I Tie
By Chris Filter
Herald Sports Writer
LONGWOOD — The condi­
tions were not very favorable
Wednesday night as the temper­
atures got chilly, the field got
slippeiy and the fog was as thick
as pea soup. Jack The Ripper
would have had a field day.
It was not, however, the best of
nights for girls soccer.
Both L y m a n ’ s Lady
Greyhounds, ranked second In
the state (Class 4A) and Lake
Mary s Lady Rums, the state's
lOth-ratcd team, had plenty of
opportunities but the only two
goals came on mental mistakes
us the two teams slipped and slid
to a 1-1 Seminole Athletic Con­
ference tie before 117 fans at
Lyman High.
"W e felt It could have been 5-0
In our favor at halftime but we
wasted so many opportunities."
Lyman assistant Kim Wyant
said. "T h e girls have to realize
they have to play hard the entire
80 minutes. If they don’t they’ll
never get out of the district."
Lyman now stands at 12-1-5
overall and 3-0-5 In the SAC.
The Lady Greyhounds host Vero
Beach Saturday. Lake Mary now
stands at 12-3-3 overall and
3-2-3 In the conference. The
Lady Rams travel to Gainesville
F rid a y to c o m p e te In th e
Wendy’s Tournament.
"W e came out a little Oat In
the first half and weren’t going
to the ball.” Lake Mary coach
Bill Elssele said. "T h e girls
picked It up In the second half
and played well. They Just didn't
c a p i t a l i z e on e n o u g h o p ­
portunities."
Lyman took a 1-0 lead early In
the first half when Kim Mitchell
received a pass from Kerry
Musante and got off a shot that
slipped underneath Lake Mary
goalkeeper Tam my Scott.
The Lady Greyhounds had a
golden opportunity with 10
minutes left In the half when
they were awarded an indirect
kick from 10 yards out. Lyman
tried to get the kick off before
Lake Mary set up its defense and
Maye Belle Bryant ripped the
ball Into the net. The goal was
not allowed, however, because
an Indirect kick means another
player has to touch the ball
before It can go In the goal.

Soccer
Lake Mary was the aggressor
In the second half as Donna
Rohr. Kelley Broen and Kristen
Joes got the Lady Rams' offense
c ra n k e d up. B roen had a
breakaway opportunity with 22
m inutes rem aining and un­
loaded a rocket of a shot but
Lyman keeper Sarah Cobb made
a brilliant save as she dove to
her right and slapped the ball
away.
Less than two minutes latet.
however. It was on a ball that
Cobb let get awa1' that Lake
Mary scored the tying goal.
Swccperback Julia Callarman
played the ball back to Cobb but
she couldn't tuck It away and
Rohr intercepted, dribbled into
the clear and (lipped the ball Into
the goal with 20:27 left to play.
Lyman pluyed Wednesday’s
game without senior midfielder
Karen Abcm ethy and senior
defender Laura Russell. Wyant
said all-stater Abernethy and
Russell were suspended for three
days for disciplinary reasons.
The two seniors will be able to
rejoin the team for Saturday's
game against Vero Beach.

HOWELL. MOORE TIE. TOO
L a k e H o w e ll’ s K lr s tln
Reesnmn broke a scoreless tie as
she scored with 18 minutes left
to play but Chris Geltz put in a
goal with six minutes remaining
to give Orlando Bishop Moore's
Lady Hornets at 1-1 tic.
Lake Howell. 7-6-3 overall,
returns to action tonight In a
Seminole Athletic Conference
game at home against thirdranked Lake Brantley.
The Lady Silver Hawks outshot Bishop Moore. 25-12, and
had five comer kicks to the
Hornets' zero but could not
crack the Lady Hornets’ goal
until Reesman scored her sev­
enth goal of the season on an
assist from Tori Campbell.
Geltz. a former Oviedo High
player, tied It up though as she
lo o p e d a lo n g s h o t o v e r
g o a lk eep er Sh erri R a y n o r’ s
head.
"I was pleased with the type of
shots we took." Lake Howell
eoach Art Raynor said.

While its old reliables kept
L y m a n fro m g a in in g a n y
momentum. Seminole High also
got solid performances from Its
youngsters Wednesday night in
a 44-30 victory over Lyman’s
Greyhounds In prep wrestling
action at Lyman High.
Seminole ran Its dual-meet
record to 7-3 for the season and
returns to the mat Saturday In
the Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence Championships at Lake
Mary High.
The three grapplers Seminole
counts on the most, seniors
Sheralton Mays and Troy Turner
and Junior Tracy Turner, all
came through with powerful
efforts Wednesday.
At 130 pounds. Mays blanked
Lyman's Dan Chlodo. 7-0. to
snap a two-match Lyman win
streak. Tracy Turner plied up a
2 2 -1 0 v i c t o r y o v e r J a s o n
McElhlnney at 171 pounds and
Troy Turner sealed Seminole’s
victory as he pinned Doug Terry
, in 1:09 ul 189.
! " M a y s a n d the T u r n e r
brothers are'fhe kids we always
rely on and they came through
for us tonight." Seminole coach
Glenn Malollnl.
Malollnl said two other key
performers for the ’Nolcs were
Troy Rollins at 149 and Randy
"P o rk " Bryant at 224. Rollins, a
sophomore, came through with
a pin of Clay Coopertder in 2:57
while Bryant, also a sophomore,
downed David Callglurl. 9-1.
"Rollins and Bryant have been
the ones we’ve counted on la
follow Mays and the Turners."
Malollnl said. "T h ey both are
coming on strong and wrestled
well tonight."
Seminole Jumped out to a
quick lead beind victories by a
pair of freshmen. Titus Manning
at 101 and Brad Dycss at 109.
Manning pinned Lyman’s David
Mcngel In 3:09 while Dycss look
it toMasahlkoYamamotto. 13-4.
"Dycss has lost some close
ones this year so it was nice lo
see him come through." Malollnl
said.
Lyman stuck close In the early
going behind a pin by Sidney
Bolden at 116, a win by dis­
qualification by Gregg Hunziker
at 136 and Robert Cannaday’s
pin at 142. Seminole then pulled

Wrestling
away by winning the next five
matches.
CORRECTION — In Wednes­
day’s Sanford Herald It was
I n c o r r e c t l y r e p o r t e d th a t
Seminole’s Sheralton Mays lost a
9-4 decision to Lake Howell’s
David Figler. The correct score
In the match was a 4-4 lie.
S E M IN O L E 44, L Y M A N M
10) — Manning (S ) p Mangel. 3:0t; l i t —
Dye** IS) d. Yamamotlo, 13-4; 11*— Bolden
(L I p. Brlndle, 1:SI; 123 — Garrett ( L I won
by forfait; IM - May* (S ) d. Chlodo, 7 0; 13*
— Hunilker ( L ) won by dl*q.. L. Nathan; 14]
— Cannaday ( L ) p. K. Nathan, 1:44; I4t —
Rolllnt (SI p. Cooperlder, 2:57; t i t — Hick*
(S) won by fortall. t7) — Tra c y Tu rn e r (S) d.
McElhlnney. 2210; l i t — Troy Tu rn e r IS) p.
Te rry, 1:09: 224 — Bryant (S ) d. Callglurl,
9 1; H W T - Smith ( L ) won by forfeit; U N L
— Butler (SI won by forleit. J V *cor* —
Lym an 40. Semlnola 3*.

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301 Dog Trick Hoad. Longwood
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MON.-FRI. 8-5:30, SAT. 8-3

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SANFORD

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United Free* International
Almost as soon as Mario Lemleux returned to the
Pittsburgh lineup Wednesday night, he regained the
scoring touch that had produced 27 goals at the point of his
Dec. 20 knee Injury.
^
So the problem for the Penguins Wednesday night was
not Lemteux’s timing, but that of the Los Angeles Kings.
The slumping Kings also rediscovered their scoring
touches, resulting In Los Angeles* 10-5 shellacking of fc
Pittsburgh.
8
Bob Bourne struck for his first two goals since Nov. 18.
and the NHL's leading rookie scorer. Lu&lt;j Robltallle, added
his 29th goal of the season and two assists as the Kings
reached double figures for the first time Blnce a 12 -1 home
victory over Vancouver Nov. 29,1984.
In other games. Toronto topped St. Louis 4*2. Detroit
defeated the New York Islanders 8-5. Hartford downed
Montreal 3-1, Philadelphia and Chicago tied 5-5. Edmonton
stopped Winnipeg 5-3 and Vancouver beat the New York
Rangers 5-3.

G eorg* Doeidog O n Hurrleanot
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Freshman quarterback JelT
George, who set national passing records In high school,
said Wednesday he will transfer to the University of Miami
(Fla.) from Purdue.
George started for the Boilermakers last fall but became
unhappy after Coach Leon Burtnett resigned under
pressure following a 3-8 season. New Purdue coach Fred
Akers sought to keep the 19-year-old quarterback, but
George said Akers' different offensive plans forced him to
seek another program.
"The coaching has nothing to do with It. It all bolls down
to the passing philosophy. That's why I decided to go to
Miami and I'm happy with my choice.” George said at a
news conference In his hlgh-school cafeteria.

Hawks Don't Miss M elbourne
Lake Howell's Silver Hawks weren't too happy with a 2-2
tie at Melbourne Tuesday night but. as coach Glen Griffin
said, the Hawks were definitely happy to get out of
Melbourne.
"It was an Incredible gam e," Griffin said. "There were
eight cards given out and the linesman forgot to run his
clock so the game was 16 minutes too long. We were Just
happy to get It over with and get out of there."
Todd Miller scored a first-half goal on Douglc Lee’s assist
and Jerry Philips scored In the second half for ninthranked (Class 4A) Lake Howell which now stands at 11-2-2.

Rollins Ends Drought Vs. UCF
Rollins College, losers of 10 consecutive games to the
University of Central Florida, turned the tables on the
Knights Wednesday night with an 80-74 victory before
2.456 at the UCF gym.
The Knights fell to 6-10 and Rollins Improved to 13-4.
Dan W olf tossed In 22 points to pace Rollins while Curt
Flster added 21 and Dan Schecl chipped In 16. JefT Wolf
- had 11 points and seven assists. Former Oviedo High
standout Troy Kesslnger added eight.
Faronte Roberson led the Knights with 27 nnd Pat
Crocklln added 20.

M artina Storms Past Lindqvist
MELBOURNE. Australia (UPI) — Top seed Martina
Navratilova advanced to her fourth Australian Open singles
final Thursday when she stormed past Catarina Lindqvist
of Sweden. 6-3, 6-2 with an almost flawless display of
disciplined tennis.
Earlier Thursday, second seed Hana Mandllkova swept
into the final round by defeating Claudia Kohdc-Kilsch 6-1.
0-6.6-3 in a rain-delayed match.
Navratilova and Mandllkova play for the title and the
$ 115.000 winner's check on Saturday.

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Continued from 7A
secutlve dunks by Morris and
Jackson for an 84-50 lead and
another time out with 6:41 to
pJay.
S a n fo r d 's K en n y G o rd o n
tossed In back-to-back buckets
fo push the Raiders over the
100-point mark. Williams, a 6-6
freshman, converted two free
throws for the biggest lead of the
night 103-6-1 — with 42
seconds to play.
"Coach (Payne) told me to go
In and contiol the middle with
my strength." Williams said.
"W e were ready coming in. But
nobody expected the difference
to be so large."
D A Y T O N A B E A C H (47) - Samples 0 3 0 0
0, Collier a3 3 5 3. McCoy H I (1-3) 00 11.

B a s k e t b a ll
guard who finished with 18
points and 12 assists.
"He was incredible." Ridenour
said. "H e did everything tonight,
he shot, played defense and
shot."
SCC shooting guard Malcolm
Houston finished with a gamehigh 20 points, leading a list of
six players who reached double
digits. Gallagher and Dunning
added 18 apeicc. Hall scored 14
more, forwards Claude Jacksoq
and James Morris added 12 and
10 respectively.
The near-perfect game for
Dunning was his best perfor­
mance of the year and the strong
Inside play of the was a big
factor as the tempo was dictated
by the Raiders for the entire
game.
"T h ey gave me the short Jump
shot and 1 look It." Dunning

Williams 1 1» (3-S) (70 I . Dunoar 3 4 OO 4,
Addle 3 9 13 )1 0 0 4. Merthl* 7 10 11-3) H 14,
Bales 04 13 l. While O l 0 0 0. Dumas 1-1 1-4
3. Harris 1 3 003, Jorws4 B J + IJ, Totals3S 73
(4 IS) 11-31 *7.
S E M IN O L E (101) - Gallagher S-9 13-4) 4-7
11. Reilly 0 1 00 0, Houston 7 1) (4 10) 0 0 30,
Hackworth O ) 0 0 0, Keller 1-4 00 3. Morris
4 7 3 7 10. Gordon 3 3 U -1 ) 0 0 ). Jackson 4-9
+4 13. Dunning 9-9 0 1 1». Hall 5-10 4 7 14,
Williams 1-3 7 3 4, Totals: 34 71 (9 14) 1*34
103.

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PREPS
WEIGHTIIFTIHO: Writwidayt 9tty Atuttt
LYMAN 4], SEMINOLE 14
ID - Lang IL). 141. ID - RidiiA (LI. m.
IX - Burn (S). 441. IU - Willil (SI. Sit: III
- Garbo III, 41). It) - Crgtlgn (II. 414. DR
- Hagan III. 431 HW T- Smith (SI. 430

B A S K ETB A LL
AAIKET1AIL: NAA STANDINGS
E lltrri ( i i l i t i K i
AtUtlK OiriUM
W l Pel. GA
Bolton
X II .711 Philadelphia
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USA I T BAIL:
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■naiy* 71 Ottawart It. 44
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Catoyll farted 44
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FrtghOckmnXSl. Francis INYIN
Gamanfl. Ade»»ri7J
ONrpXM 41Cantctkul 41
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Mimardt P VMItyP«P &gt;•

L e g o l N o tlc o
IN TH K CIRCUIT
COURT SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASK NO: 1+144+CA+t-E
L I B E R T,Y F E D E R A L
S A V IN G S A LO A N ASSOCIA­
T IO N ,
Plaintiff,
v i.
W O O O L E Y B U IL D E R S , INC.,

•tal.,
Dtftrvdanf.

AMENDED NOTICE OF SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
tfial, purtusnf to an Am tndtd
final ludgm tnl dattd D tc tm b tr
31, t f l l , In C a t* N u m b t r
M -1 A 4+C A 0+E of tha Circuit
Court of th* E lg M ttn lh Judicial
District In and for Samlnola
County, Florida, In which L IB ­
E R T Y F E D E R A L SAVINGS A
L O A N A S S O C IA TIO N a rt Iha
P la in tif f s , a nd W O O D L E Y
B U IL D E R S . IN C ., *t al. a rt th*
Dtfandanft, I will tall to th*
hlghatf and b a il blddar for cash
at tha Watt Front Door of th*
Samlnola County Courthouw. In
Sanford Florida, at 11:00 a.m „
on January i t , it*7, tha tallow­
ing date r Ibad proparty tat forth
In tha final ludgmant:

Th* South • faat ol Lot JOan
Lot 31 last tha Souttwrly • faat,
PALM PARK, according to Iho
plat tharaof as racordtJ In Plat
Book 1), Pag* 4, Public Records
ol Samlnola County, Florida.
Lot I I . P A L M P A R K , ac­
cording to th* plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book II, Page
4, Public Records ol Samlnola
County, Florida.
D A T E D this 3tsl day ol Dacemher, 19M
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clark
Publish: January U .2 ! 1987
DEK-72

D a y t o n a used the
trlangle-and-2 defense In at­
tempt to stop the strong guard
play of the Raiders but the Scots
le f t th e m id d le o p e n fo r
Gallagher to penetrate and shoot
short Jumpers or dish off to the
big men. The constant changing
d e fe n s e had no e f fe c t on
Gallagher who handled every­
thing thrown at him with ease.
"H e was the key for them ."
Lake Mary High graduate and
Daytona star Darryl Merthlc
said. “ He makes them go."

Halttim* — Seminole 47. Daytona Beach 34.
Fouls — Daytona Beach 31. Seminole 30.
Fouled out — McCoy. Technical — Daytona
Beach Coach Roger Dario (verb al), Williams
(hanging on rim ). Rebounds — Seminole 44
(Williams 10, Jackson 101, Daytona 34 (Jones
a, Dunbar ) ) . Assists — Daytona Beach 9
(McCoy 3. M erlhl* 3. Dunbar 3). Seminole 3)
(Gallagher 17). Steals — Daytona Beach 7
(Merthle 7. M cCoy 7, Jonas 3). Samlnola II
(Houston 3).

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Montraal at Barth l:»p * .
Canary at Naa Janay- f.B F *

IMkCnRwSLRUMaM

caxniitiPAixoman

said. "T h e y sagged off me on
defense and left me all alone."
Gallagher was given test after
test and came through with
flying colors, he worked pa­
tiently through the press leaving
the Scots behind him after
faking and forcing them to
commit.
"W e thought they would come
out and play the trlangle-and-2
defense," Gallagher said. "W e
designed some plays for I t ."

N»togIt Southam77
ladapMaon 71 VaMndxfi X
Rolan XCantrUFIaraX 74
T i m m 74 M W M pI U. II
Ylrpiatl ALLNpaNAI
ViryiMi Military 111 UwtlaMD
W.Va SlaX N7. IluatiaMn

Lagol Notka

W alii CaslirtatA

IN TH K CIRCUIT
COURT IN ANDFOR
SEMINOLK COUNTY.
FLORIDA

la g o l N o tk a
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
OF TH E EIG H TEE N TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
FLORIDA
CASE NO. M-MIl-CA-Df-P
T H E H O W A R D S A V IN G S
B AN K ,
Plaintiff.
vs.
C H A R L E S D. N O L A N and
D E B O R A H J. N O L A N , his wit*
and F IN A N C E A M E R IC A
IN D U S T R IA L P L A N , IN C .,
a corporation,
Oalandants.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
SALE BY CLERK
OF CIRCUIT COURT
Nolle* Is haraby given that tha
undersigned D A V ID N. B E R ­
R IE N Clark ol tha Circuit Court
of S E M IN O L E County, Florida,
will, on tha Ind day of February,
1917. at 11:00 A .M ., at th* watt
front door ol tha S E M IN O L E
County Courthouse, In tha City
ol S A N F O R D , Florida, otter tar
tala and tall al public outcry to
th* highest and b a il blddar for
cash, tha tallowing described
property situated In S E M IN O L E
County, Florida, to-wlt:
Lot t and tha Watt » faat ol
Lot 1. Block " F " ; Ridge High
First Addition, according to th*
plat tharaof as recorded In Plat
Book H , Pag* al, in th* Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
pursuant to th* final dtcrea of
loreclosur* entered In a case
pending in said Court, th* style
of which Is: T H E H O W A R D
S AV IN G S B A N K vs. C H A R L E S
D. N O L A N , e tu x .e ta l
W IT N E S S m y hand and oltidal seal of said Court this 9th
day ol January, 1917.

(SEAL)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N ,
Clerk
B y: Phyllis Forsyth*
Deputy Clerk
Publish January IS, 13.1987
D E K 47

land guard John Bagley Wed­
nesday night to record a l l 1-107
triumph over the Cavaliers. The
v ic to ry en d ed the B u ck s*
three-game losing streak on the
road.

"It'a a reflex for us now to
overcome trouble," Pierce said.
"W ith three guys out hurt, we
don't talk or think about any­
body else getting banged up.
W hen C levelan d lost John
Bagley tonight, we understood
what went through their minds.
Because we've had the same
problems, we managed to exploit
theirs."
The Bucks increased the
game's tempo In the second half
en route to defeating Cleveland
for the seventh straight time.
Craig Hodges added 19 points
for Milwaukee. Rookie Ron
Harper led Cleveland with 24
points and reserve Craig Ehlo
notched a career-high 18.

HOCKEY
HOCKEY: RHLfTAMOliOt

---------------- ---------------for the
Milwaukee Bucks, Ricky Pierce
stya. to m easy m countlnf the
team’s injured guards.
Pierce and Terry Cummings
each scored 2 1 paints, and the
Bucks — playing without Injured
guards Sidney Moncrtef. Paul
Pressey and Scott Sklles —
capitalized on an Injury to Cleve­

C O M M E R C IA L C R E D IT
LO AN S. IN C.,
Plaintiff,
D O M IN IC K B E L L O N C I.
M A R IL Y N B E L L O N C I, his
wile, O R A N G E P A V IN G A N D
C O N S T R U C T IO N CO ., and
B A N K E R S IN S U R A N C E
COM PANY,
Defendants.

NOTICE OF SUIT
T O : D O M IN IC K B E L L O N C I
A N D M A R IL Y N B E L L O N C I,
his wile
449 Dunn D rive
Altamonte Springs, Florida
33714
YO U A R E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that an action to
foreclose mortgage covering th*
following* real and personal
property In Seminole County,
Florida, to-wlt:
L o t * .
B l o c k 34,
W E A T H E R S F IE L O SECOND
A D D IT IO N , according to th*
Plat tharaof as recorded In Plat
Book 13. pages ioa and 10).
P u blic Records of Samlnola
County, Florida also known as
449 Ounn D riv e , Allam onta
Springs, Florida
has been Iliad against you and
you are required to serve a copy
of your written defames. II any.
to I t o n W A R R E N H .
P E T E R S E N , E S O U IR E . 417
East Washington St.. St*. 3,
Orlendo. Florida 33101. end rile
the original with in* Clerk of th*
above-styled Court on or before
th* 34th day ol February, 1N7,
otherwise, a Judgement may be
entered against you lor th*
ralial demanded In the Com­
plaint.
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal
at said Court on th* 30th day ol
January, Iff7.
D A V I D ;1 V ’ R R IE N
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
B Y : Ja n a E Jasawlc
Deputy Clark
Publish: January 33, 39 A Feb­
ru a r y !. 13.I f f 7
DEK-174

Elsewhere, Boston thumped
Indiana 130-100. New Jersey
s la p p e d Phoenix 120-114,
P h ila d e lp h ia edged Seattle
129-123 In overtime, the Los
Angeles Lakers nipped Atlanta
112-109, Dallas trounced New
York 113-93, Houston routed
San Antonio 111-91, Denver
flipped Golden State 129-112
an d U tah defeated Detroit
112-108.

Celtics 130, Pacers LOO
At Boston. Larry Bird scored
26 points, Kevin McHale added
24 and Robert Parish had 22 to
steer the Celtics to their 21st
straight victory over the Pacers
at Boston Garden. Herb Williams
had a team-high 17 points for
Indiana, which last won at
Boston Garden April 2, 1978.

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LA Lahen X M a x I o x

G alla g h er, Dunning Handle P ressu re

... Raiders

iff

mmjM

Lem leux Regains Scoring Touch
But Kings Rout Penguins, 70-5

By Mark Blythe
Herald Sports W riter
Poise, perfection and the abili­
ty to handle pressure.
That was the key for Seminole
Community College point guard
Darris Gallagher and power
forward Barry Dunning, each of
whom played major roles in the
Raiders' upset rout of Daytona
Beach C om m u n ity C ollege.
103-67. Wednesday night at the
SCC Health Center.
Gallagher zipped through the
Scots press all night, putting on
a clinic of how to dribble, pass
and shoot aiding the Raiders
Their eighth consecutive victory.
’ Dunning shot an Incredible 9
'of 9 from the field, giving SCC a
-much-needed boost when allconference center Vance Hall
went to the bench with two fouls
-with 14:15 left In the first half.
Daytona Beach coach Ray
Ridenour was frustrated by the
play of Gallagher and was forced
’to switch defenses In order to
find a way to stop the 5-8 point

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NEW YORK (UPD — Price* opened higher today
In active trading of New York Stock Exchange

•The market Is acting toppy. but that doesn’t
mean it’s topped out yet." said Jon Groveman.
head of equity trading at Ladenburg. Thalmann

‘*The Dow Jone* Industrial average, which fell
10 40 Wednesday after advancing 208 points In
13 sessions from the start of 1987. was up 12.38
to 2106.45 shortly after the market opened.
Advances led declines 665-378 among the
1,449 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 17,587.000
shares.
The stock market closed lower for the first time
In 1987 Wednesday, as widespread profit taking
ended a record winning streak for the Dow Jones
Industrial average.

ft Co.

Gold And Sllvor
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold ft silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold
London
Previous close 407.25 ofT 7.00
Morning fixing 410.60 up 3.60
Hong Kong
410.70 off .50
Nsw York
Comex spot
gold open
409.80 up 1.70
Comex spot
silver open
5.553 up 0.03
(L o n d o n m o rn in g fix in g
change Is based on the previous
day's closing price.)

Locol Interest
These quotations provided by
m e m b e r s o f t he N a t i o n a l
Association o f Securities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
prices as o f mld-momlng today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
murkdown.
•
American Pioneer
Barnett Bank
First Union
Florida Power
&amp; Light
Fla. Progress
HCA
Hughes Supply
Morrison's
NCR Corp
Plcssey
Scotty's
Southeast Bunk
SunTrust
Walt Disney World
Westlnghouse

Bid Ask
714 7%
34% 35
25% 25%
33% 33%
42% 42%
32% 32%
24 24%
24% 24%
57 57%
29% 13
12%
41% 41%
22% 22%
55 55%
64% 64%

"Traders are physically tired from the relent­
less activity on Wall Street since the beginning of
the year." Groveman said. "W all Street's mood Is
conflicted." he added. "It Is too soon to sell, but
on a trading basis It may be a little bit late to
buy."
For most of Wednesday's session the market
was mixed. Blue chip Issues erased sharp
morning losses and advanced while the broad
market lagged. In the last hour and a half of
trading, blue chips Joined the broad market in
negative territory.

D ollar W eakens A s
G o ld M oves H igher
By United Press International
The U.S. dollar weakened
against the Japanese yen In
Tokyo today In the absence of a
clear-cut U.S. pledge to bolster
the greenback. The price of gold
was up.
The Bank of Japan said the
dollar closed at 152.40 yen.
down 1.20 from Wednesday's
close of 153.60.
Dealers said the dollar fluctu­
ated but remained weak as
market participants were dis­
appointed by the outcome of a
meeting between Japanese Fi­
nance Minister Kilchl Mlyazawa
and U.S. Treasury Secretary
Jam es Baker, who met In
Washington Wednesday to dis­
cuss ways to stabilize exchange
rates.

A statement Issued after the
meeting said both sides agreed
to monitor developments in
exchange markets. It left open
whether the United States would
take action to prop up the dollar.
In early European trading, the
dollar weakened In what dealers
said was the absence of a
clear-cut American pledge to
back the currency.
T h e W est G e rm a n B u n ­
desbank late Thursday cut the
country’s discount rates by a
half percentage point to 3 per­
cent from 3.5 percent. The dollar
had dropped In Frankfurt to
open at 1.8255 marks, against
Wednesday's closing 1.8506, but
had recovered slightly to 1.8230
at the midday fixing.

GNP Grew 2.5 Percent In *86
W A S H IN G T O N (U P I) America's real gross national
product grew an anemic 2.5
percent In 1986, the Commerce
Department said today, for the
worst performance since 1982
and fa r b elow R eagan a d ­
ministration predictions.

Dow Jones

The department also said the
real GNP. which measures the
nation's output of goods and
services and adjusts the total for
inflation, rose by 916 billion, or
1.7 p e rc e n t. In the fourth
quarter, com pared with 2.8
percent growth for the third
quarter.

Dow Jones Averages— 10 a.m.
30 Indus
2108.27 up 14.20

The 2.5 percent annual growth
to an estimated 94.21 trillion

would Jump 4 percent In 1986.
The administration steadily
revised Its prediction downward
to 2.7 percent by earlier this
month and still ended up getting
less than expected out of the
nation's broadest measure of its
economic health.
It was the worst GNP perfor­
mance since the recession of
1982 when the gross national
product decreased 2.4 percent.
Another im portant govern­
ment Index, the GNP Implicit
•price deflator. Increased 2.7
percent in 1986 — the lowest
since 1967 when It rose Just 2.6
percent.
The usual GNP Is based on the
niukcup of the economy In J982

...Library

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Activists Ready To G et
O ut O f Jail, Leader Says
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — Of the 186 anti nuclear
protestors arrested last week at the Kennedy Space Center.
95 remain In Jail, and one of the group's leaders says they
are ready to get out o f Jail — on their own terms.
"W e want them released without ball, fines, probation, or
trials." said Bruce Gagnon, head of the coalition for Central
Florida Peace and Justice, which was part of the protest.
"T h ey would Identify themselves under these conditions.
After all. trespassing Is Just a misdemeanor and wc think
the time spent In Jail Is enough.
Those remaining Wednesday at the Brevard County Jail
in Titusville will remain Incarcerated until their trial dates,
most of which are set for February. March or April In
Titusville. Rockledge or Melbourne, said Joan Haller, a
spokeswoman for the Brevard County Sheriff’s Depart­
ment.

Producer Demands Tape's Return
MIAMI (UPI) — Customs agents had no right to seize
videotapes of a satellite Industry meeting on unscrambling
cable television transmissions, and an Industry news
producer says he will file suit for return o f the tapes.
Agents at Miami International Airport Wednesday seized
videotapes taken of p meeting billed as a "Descrambling
Summit." a week-long session held on Provldenclales In
the Turks and Caicos Islands chain. The meeting ends
today.
Shaun Kenny, a producer with Boreslght News, in
Plscataway. N.J.. said a reporter and editor. Bill Miller, was
delayed Wednesday at the airport and his videotapes
seized.
Kenny said about 62 videotapes were seized, each about
20 minutes long. The tapes Included footage of meetings.

Eastern Seeks Wage Cuts
MIAMI (UPI) — Eastern Airlines announced Wednesday it
will try to rid Itself of "labor cost cancer" by negotiating
9490 million In wage reductions, most of them to be born
by union-covered employees.
"T h e vast majority o f our people at Eastern obviously are
very hard working, honest, concientious men and women
who see our labor cost structure as a cancer that could
consume us over tim e." Eastern President Phil Bakes told a
news conference. "T h e y don't like the medicine, but they
know It has to be taken."
Bakes outlined a savings program that envisions S450
million In pay cuts and
940 million In voluntary
retirements. Eastern owes about 92.5 billion and was
reported to be losing 95 million a month in 1986.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Rational Hospital
•
Wednesday
ADM ISSIONS

Sanlord.

Linda J K irby
Warren R .M cClung
Lawrence W. Turner
Sean R. M u rra y, Deltona

Continued from page 1A
The county provides funds for
all of Its library operations, and
K en H o o p e r, c o u n ty a d ­
ministrator, said the new library
hours and additional libraries
staff will impact the *86/’87
general revenue budget by about
9141,821 a year, pending final
approvals by the Personnel
Board and county commission
The county commission gave its
tentative approval last week.
T h e p l a n w i l l a d d 75
employees, or 60.6 full-time
equ ivalents, to the present
system with 46 employees or
40.5 full-time equivalents. There
will be a total o f 121 positions, or
101 full-time equivalents.

He was wrong and In doing so left himself open to
criticism, th e deportment and tfie dty do not
need any more criticism. We need to get down the
road to proper business and proper conduct and
meaningful relationship* with everyone.".
Manning said he talked to Waller twice about
what happened and told the administrator how
he felt.
.
"I told Ron Tuesday about the discussion Dave
and I had. Ron understands where I stand, but
didn’t say If he agrees or disagrees," Manning
said. ’“Unprofessional behavior’ Is In the eye of
the beholder, but I like to make sure people
understand me. I'm trying to change my style."
Manning added. “The less said, the better off I

am. because it may mean the possibility of
Commissioner Gunter and I working together."
’T o me It’s a dead Issue. I have more serious
problems to deal with.” Manning added.

Casey Accused Of Lying
Bv B. Michael Myers
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Private
tesUmony by Secretary of State
George Shultz has led at least
one legislator probing arms sales
to Iran to the blunt conclusion
that CIA Director William Casey
lied about his role In the oncesecret policy.
Rep. Lawrence Smith. D-Fla..
a member of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, accused the
ailing spy chief Wednesday or
offering dishonest testimony to
the panel before Casey's hospi­
talization for brain-cancer sur­
gery last month.
“Casey lied, and now Snultz’s
testimony Indicates to us that
other people have said things
which conflict significantly with
Shultz.” Smith told reporters
after a three-hour private com­
mittee meeting with the secre­
tary of state.
Sh ultz also reported his
anguish that the CIA arranged a
secret meeting to discuss arms

U.S. arm s to Iran and the
subsequent diversion of profits
for Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
That task now belongs to the
special select committees formed
this month In both chambers.
President Reagan’s special
adviser on the Iran-Contra
scandal, form er N A T O Am ­
bassador David Abahlre. was
expected to turn over a new
batch of documents today to the
Senate's select committee.
Committee Chairman Daniel
Inouye, D -H aw all. said late
Wednesday he had met with
Abahlre and expected the docu­
ments "w ithin the next 24
h o u rs." He said they were
gathered from several executive
branch agencies and differ from
those sent to the Senate In­
telligence Committee for Its In­
quiry last month.
Inouye also said his committee
was ready to announce Its top
staff members today, though Its
public hearings on the crisis are
still a month away.
Casey, in his closed session
with the House Foreign Affairs
C o m m itte e last m on th , re­
focusing national attention on portedly asserted his agency had
race relations In the nation's a minimal role In the arms sales,
which Reagan has defended as a
largest city.
T h e d e m o n s tra to rs fille d bid to forge new ties with Iranian
Broadway at 32nd Street, the "m oderates" and win freedom
site of a city welfare hotel, and for U.S. hostages In Lebanon as
m arch ed to M ayor Edward a byproduct.
Koch's Greenwich Village home.
S h u ltz . In h is te s tim o n y
Leaflets proclaiming the “ day Wednesday, reportedly said the
of mourning and outrage" and C IA pressured hlin to allow
continued meetings with Iranian
u r g in g b la c k s to b o y c o tt
white-owned stores, stay away contacts even after the arms
from w ork and school and deals were exposed in November
participate in the afternoon and Reagan pledged publicly to
demonstration were distributed end such weapons sales.
Shultz, who has made clear he
throughout the city.
opposed
the policy from Its
"T h is Is an Idea whose time
outset,
agreed
on the condition
has come.” said the Rev. Herbert
Daughtry of Brooklyn, looking at of State Department presence at
the Une of demonstrators that such meetings. According to
stretched'' fbr more than five several accounts of his testimo­
ny. Shultz said he was Infuriated
blocks.
to learn'that a* a subsequent
meeting in Europe Dec. 6. the
trial base, advising against re­ Iranians presented a nine-point
lying exclusively on services* arms-for-hostages plan and said
oriented Industry to provide It had been worked out with U.S.
intelligence.
Jobs.
Asked what he thought about
b ein g In trod u ced as "G o v .
Bobby Martinez" — Martinez's
lleutentant governor is Bobby
Brantely of Longwood — the
governor shrugged It off with a
Continued from page 1A
laugh.
Kruppenbacher said his In­ expected today with southerly
15 mph winds shifting to the
troduction referring to Martinez
as ’ ’ B o b b y" was deliberate. northwest at 20 mphs. Sailors
"Someone even asked me before will find the seas rough w'th
I introduced him whether I'd use waves peaking from 6 to 8 feet
that name. I've known Martinez when the wind quarters direc­
a long time. It wasn't Inadver­ tion. Tonight on land, breezy
tent. I knew I was going to and colder, and Friday sunny,
Introduce him that way." The breezy and cold. The high may
chamber president said the term stretch to the upper 40s. but 15
to 20 mph winds will chill the
w as used " a ffe c t io n a t e ly '*
b eca u se o f th e ir lon g-tim e
bones.
friendship.
— Deane Jordan

with Iranian representatives In
December, three weeks after
President Reagan announced
publicly there would be no more
deliveries of weapons.
Shultz was on Capitol Hill to
keep a promise to the House
panel that he would return after
an open hearing in November to
expand upon his testimony
behind closed doors. While he
was speaking Wednesday, acting
CIA Director Robert Gates was
answering questions from the
Senate Foreign Relations Com­
mittee.
Gates told reporters that Casey
Is Improving from the Dec. 18
surgery that removed a cancer­
ous brain tumor, but ABC News
reported Wednesday night the
director Is suffering from lifethreatening prostate cancer as
well.
Neither foreign Issues panel Is
responsible for continuing the
congressional probes they began
last month Into the secret sale of

Thousands Protest Racism
NEW YORK (UPI) — A "day o f
mourning and outrage’ ’ sparked
by the fatal racial attack on a
black man In Queens brought
thousands of marchers to the
s tr e e ts but an a n n o u n c e d
boycott of white stores had an
uncertain Impact.
Police esttmated that more
than 3.000 blacks Joined the
Wednesday afternoon march
through Manhattan as part of a
daylong protest against racism.
The protestors shouted slogans
and some held banners that
read: “ Say no to racism from
H o w a r d B e a c h to J o h a n ­
nesburg!"
Howard Beach Is the Queens
When three black
I by a gong of
suftti
whites Dec. 20. resulting
In the
death of one o f the blacks and

...Martinez
Continued from page 1A
Martinez, a former teacher
himself, said he's Intent on
upgrading education in the
state, but cautioned It should be
done cost-effectively. As an
exam ple, he urged e xistin g
school buildings be utilized to
their fullest, rather than being
abandoned.
Martinez also strongly urged
bringing about an Increase In
amateur and professional sports
In Florida: "...w e need a healthy
climate for sports, professional
and amateur, as the best way to
market an area."
He noted he was pleased with
the Increase In the state's Indus­

...Cold

AREA DEATHS
HUBERT G. BARR
Mr. Hubert Gentry Barr. 60. of
Chocowinlly. N.C.. died Jan. 12
at his home. Born Jan. 24. 1926
In North Carolina, he moved to
Sanford In 1959 where he retired
from the Navy. He moved back
to North Carolina In 1966.
Survivors include his wife,
Margaret: two sons. William G.
Barr,and Michael T. Barr, both of
C h o c o w in it y ; a d a u g h te r .
Venlsha E. Lynon o f Sanford and
five grandchildren.
Funeral services and burial
w e r e h e l d J a n . 15 I n
Washington. N.C.. with Paul
Funeral Home In charge.

Longwood from there In 1969.
She was a homemaker and a
m em b er o f First M ethodist
Church. Sanford. She was a
member of RSVP.
Survivors Include a daughter.
M a rilyn S m ith . L o n g w o o d :
brother. Edward Schroeder.
C h icago: tw o sisters, Erna
Rleker, Evelyn Stevens, both of
Chicago: four grandchildren:
four great-grandchildren.
B aldw in-F airch ild Funeral
Home, Forest City, in charge of
arrangements.

MILTON O. JONES

Lt. Col. Mortimer W. Donovan.
84. o f 350 R e id e r A v e .,
Longwood. died Tuesday at
F lorid a H o sp ita l-A lta m o n te.
Bom May 28. 1902 In Vicksburg.
Miss., he moved to Longwood
from Aiken. S.C.. In 1965. He
was retired from the Army and a
member of St. Mary Magdalen
C atholic Church. Altam onte
Springs. He was a member of the
Retired Officers Association.
He is survived by a niece.
Rosalie Szllagyl. Louisville. Ky.
B ald w in -F airch ild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

Mr. Milton O. Jones. 75. of 200
Shady Hollow. Casselberry, died
Tuesday at Winter Park Memo­
rial Hospital. Bom June 9, 1911
In Richmond. Va.. he moved to
Casselberry from Arlington. Va..
In 1975. He was a retired bank
vice president and a member of
St. Augustine Catholic Church.
He was a member of the Lions
Club. Washington. D.C.
Survivors Include his wife.
Agnes H.; two sons. Thomas O..
Richmond. John W. , North
Carolina: two sisters, Burnelle
Rhodes. Gladys Bartz. both of St.
P e t e r s b u r g Beach: two
grandsons.
.
B aldw in-F airch ild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs.

MARGUERITE H. GLAWE

MARIANNE KEITER

Mrs. Margueriete H. Glawe. 78.
of 1400 W. Lake Brantley Road.
Longwood. died Tuesday at
Apopka. Born Dec. 22. 1908 in
C h i c a g o , she m o v e d to

Mrs. Marianne E. Keiter. 68. of
470 Fifth St.. Chuluota. died
Tuesday at her residence. Born
Oct. 12. 1918 In Vienna. Austria,
she moved to Chuluota from

MORTIMER W. DONOVAN

Kentucky In 1964. She was a
homemaker and a member of
Chuluota Community Church.
• Survivors Include her husband
. Harold Ross McBride: brother.
Victor Sturm, Bogata. Colombia.
B a ld w in -F a irch ild Funeral
Home. Goldenrod. In charge of
arrangements.

JOSE D. ORLANDI
Mr. Jose D. Orlandi, 76, 510
Cranes Way. Altamonte Springs,
died Tuesday at Flordla Hospi­
tal-Altamonte. Bom March 3. 31.
1910 In Arroyo, Puerto Rico, he
moved to Altamonte Springs
from Puerto Rico In 1977. He
w as a r e t ir e d m e c h a n ic a l
engineer and a Catholic. He was
a member of the Engineering
Association. Puerto Rico.
Survivors Include his wife,
Marla: two daughters. Gloria.
Sonia, both of Miami; two sons,
Jose D.. San Juan. Puerto Rico.
Carlos J.. Bayamon. Puerto Rico:
sister. Provldcncla Avila. Alta­
monte Springs: three brothers.
Augusto. San Juan, Rafael.
Lares. Puerto Rico, and Gusto.
Bayamon: four grandchildren.
B a ld w in -F a irch ild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangements.

SUZAN A. SIVILS
Mrs. Suzan Angela Sivlls, 31,
of 1750 Fifth Street Drive. Hick­
ory. N.C.. died Monday at Baptist
Hospital. Winston Salem. N.C.
Born Nov. 8. 1955 In Jonesboro.
Ark., she moved to Hickory from

Altamonte Springs In 1982. She
was a homemaker and a Baptist.
She was secretary of the Junior
Woman's Club. Hickory.
S u r v i v o r s i n c l u d e her
husband. Bobby Joe: daughter.
Brittany Paige, Hickory; parents.
Dr. and Mrs. Ron Stephenson.
Altamonte Springs: three sisters.
Cynthia Faring. Virginia Beach.
Va.. Katrina Bellamy. Apopka,
and Ronda Kerley. Bryan. Texas:
p atern al g ra n d fa th e r. W.M.
Wertz. Salem. Va.
B a ld w in -F a irc h ild Funeral
Home. Forest City. In charge of
arrangements.

EMILY WITT
Emily Witt. 92. of Forest City,
died Saturday at Florida Living
Nursing Center. Forest City.
Born March 30. 1894 In Austria,
she moved to Forest City from
Illinois In 1971. She was a
Seventh-day Adventist and a
homemaker.
Survivors Include two nieces.
Emily Mezera. Evergreen. 111.
and Emy Mllllk. Austria: a neph­
ew. Otto Antrich, Illinois.
Fairchild Funeral Home. Or­
lando. In charge o f arrange­
ments.

I DIRECT CREMATION 53951

OAKLAW N
FU N ER A L HOME
M r«r hm Intw,
322-4203

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Man Wonders W here He Went
W rong Looking For Miss Right

Double Ring
Church Rites
Unite Couple

DBAR ABBTt I am a nicelooking. clean, personal be. In­
telligent. sensitive fellow. I'm 23.
masculine (but thin), have a
good sense of humor and I'm
Cynthia Rusho-Green and Jon Andrew
friendly. However. I’m shy. In­
secure and very, very lonely. 1
Hagetnann were married Dec. 27.1986. at 7 p.m..
at Ypsala Presbyterian Church. Sanford. The Rev.
am currently attending a univer­
Darwin Shea performed the traditional double
sity for graduate study. I have
only two friends here. (They're
ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
both from home.) I was never
Manley L. Rusho. Sanford. The bridegroom is the
with the "In " crowd.
son of Mr. and Mrs. William Hagemann. Wichita
I'm polite, have social skills
and I'm always first to offer my
Falls. Texas.
congratulations for an achieve­
Given in marriage by her parents, the bride
ment. I offer compliments to
chose for her vows a formal gown with a molded
bodice or candlelight schlfTlI embroidered organza
others on their appearance
accented with a tie belted basque waist and
(especially girls), but no one has
renaissance sleeves. The full satin skirt featured
ever congratulated me on any of
an overlay of shirred schlfTlI embroidered or­
my numerous achievements. (I
ganza. Her headpiece was a wide-brimmed
do not brag about them.) Actual­
ly. 1 was complimented once. A
picture hat caught in the back with organza
homosexual said I was "cute."
flowers. She carried three long-stemmed Ivory
and he was sorry I was straight.
roses and baby's breath showered with ivory
I'm adored by my female
streamers.
Cathy Rusho of Sanford, attended her sister as
relatives, but treated with con­
home of Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Greenberg, sister
maid of honor. She wore a royal blue taffeta
tempt by most girls In my age
and brother-in-law o f the bride.
floor-length gown with a fitted bodice and pufTed
group. Younger girls mainly
Following a wedding trip to Panama City Beach
sleeves. She carried a single long-stemmed ivory
Ignore me.
and Tampa, the newlyweds are making their
rose with baby's breath in a shower of royal blue
Don't tell me to Just be myself.
home in Groton. Conn, where the bridegroom, an
I've been myself forever, and the
streamers.
ensign In the U. S. Navy, is attending submarine
David Whitehead of Wichita Falls. Texas,
only women who express any
school for 12 weeks before assignment at
served the bridegroom as best man. Ushers were
Interest In me are either going
Charleston. S.C.
Brian Allen, nephew of the bridegroom. Iowa
steady, engaged, married or over
. Out-of-town guests came from Miami. Panama
Park. Texas, and Brian Higgins. Orlando.
60. Where did I go wrong?
City. Ft. Lauderdale. Tampa. Daytona Beach.
David Green, son of the bride, was the ring
Don't suggest Joining a group.
Charleston. S.C.. Washington D.C.. Wichita Falls
I've Joined groups all my life and
bearer.
and Clayton. N.Y.
The reception was held at the Casselberry
always felt like an uninvited
guest. Please don't suggest
counseling. I saw two licensed
psychologists in college, and all
they did was make me poor. I’m
dent. Last year's winner was
The Seminole County Branch applications may be obtained by
out of ideas. Can you help me?
Linda
Ann
Mammon,
a
chemical
of American Association of Uni­ s e n d in g a s e lf- a d d r e s s e d ,
ON THE OUTSIDE
engineering student.
versity Women announces it will stamped envelope to P.0. Box
LOOKING IN
According to Bunnyc Bomar.
award a $500 scholarship to a 1648 Altamonte Springs 32771.
education chair. AAUW is a
fem ale resident o f Sem inole Deadline for filing is April 9.
DEAR OUTSIDE: You write a
wom en's organization which
This
is
the
fifth
year
u
local
County. Need and a 3.0 GPA are
charming
letter, and I'll bet
promotes education nnd leader­
the the primary criteria for scholarship has been awarded to
you’d
be
great
company, but I
a Seminole County female resi­ ship among professional women.
a p p l i c a t i o n . S c h o la r s h ip
don’t qualify because I'm over
60 and married.
If you described yourself accu­
rately. something is wrong here.
It's either your perception of
yourself, or the world's percep­
tion of you. Ask a friend for an
honest evaluation. Ask two
friends. If they can't ofTer any
constructive criticism, maybe
you're trying too hard. For a shy

became very angry. He con­
fronted Joan, they talked It out
and she promised to end alt
contact with Jim. He forgave
her. but he refuses to speak to
me or have me In his house. He
hangs up on me when I call, and
I am never Included In anything
they do together.

Dear
A bby
marriage, but she has tried hard
to make It work. Joan asked me
to receive mall for her at my
address, and I agreed. She's
corresponding with "Jim ," a
former boyfriend. He Is also
married, and they see each other
occasionally and maintain con­
tact by mall. When I see how
happy Joan Is when she gets a
letter from Jim. It does my heart
good because she gets so little
happiness from her husband.
Well, the Inevitable happened.
Her husband found one of those
letters Joan had carelessly left In
the bathroom. Although It was
addressed to me. he read It and

Joan tried to reason with him.
but he Is very stubborn. She Is
forgiven. Meanwhile I am being
punished.
What advice have you for me?

OUT IN THE COLD
IN WISCONSIN

DEAR OUT: Try to put it out
of your mind. You can't change
anyone but yourself. Unfair?
Ym . But you are paying dearly
for having been a party to a
sneaky business In the first
place. I hope your sad story will
prevent someone else from
making that mistake.

K 3TC 5ER
OPEN 3 A.M. - 7 DAYS A WEEK

AAUW Offers Scholarship To Woman

99c
S p e c ia ls ----- *3.25

B re a k fa st S p e c ia ls ..........
Luncheon

SOUP A SANDWICHES
SERVED AFTER 3 P.M.

Ph. 321-2729
110 Palmetto Ave. - Downtown Sanford

TONIGHT'S TV

. *IjI
NtVYSHOUR

6:30

■ Cc TH * T0KT1L1JG
Ccnwty In IN* "Ch**»»" ipkvoft.
Carta* womanizing ai-ttusband.
Mch (Dan HadayaL and Ma new
«Ma, Loralta (Jean Kaaam) move to
Laa Vagaa. Tonight. Nick hop** to
mat* moony aa a TV repairman
whita loralta work* aa a ahowgirt

)N S C NEWS
I CSSNKW S

lflki (11)
!IASCNCWSQ
LOSS FOB COM­
TO O CLOSE
FORT Muriel'* former boyfriend
atop* by lor dinner and diract* hi*
aitanuon 10 Jackla.

6:35
02 ANOY GRIFFITH

0®

7:00

NEWLYWED QAMC
® O PM MAGAZINE Th* Supar
Bowl championahlp ring; th*
Point** Statart.
CD O JEOPARDY
(11) BARNEY MULES
( K » NATURE A look at how Afri­
ca*

1

naad tor prior* food hav* adversely
altactad th* African aiaphant'a nat­
ural habitat. In atarao. g
0 (8) MOVIE "Th* Young Runa­
way*" (1078) (Pari 2 of 2) Gary Colkna. Arm* Franci*. Out lo raunlt*
har brothar* and alatara, a Maty
12-yaar-oid mu*t outwit har paranti, th* pone*, a TV now* craw
and th* bank-robbing ownara of har
trader hldaout. A "Wondartul World
of Dtanay" praaarrtatkxv

10:00
■ ® LA . LAW McKenzie and hi*
partnara accept a luaattvo buyout
by a humortaa* tagat ttrm; Markowtti and* hi* raiatlonaNp with
Kataay in atarao
® 0 20 / 20 Schadulad: protUa ol
cartoonist Gary Laraon, whoaa
atrip. "Th* Far Slda." raacha* 80
m fo n reader* g
« (11)INN NEWS
(10) AXIS SHOW; ARTISTS IN­

VOLVED With d e a th and s u r ­
vival Baaad on a San Frandaco

theatrical production. Fkmmakar*
Robert Epatam and Peter Adair •&gt;amtna AIDS' Impact on th* gay
community through theatrical per­
formance aicarpt*. paraonal narra­
tion and Inlarvtaw* with th* play'*
actor*, wrttara and diractors
0 (8
) MARY TYLER MOORE

10:20
02 MOVIE "Yank** Doodle Dandy"
11042) Jama* Cagney. Joan Laaka
Coioruad edition ot th* Oacar-wlnning biography of Oaorga M.
Cohan, whoaa patriotic Ideal* ear­
ned into hi* acting, producing and
writing and mad* him a show bual-

( Q SANFORD ANO SON

7:30

0 GD ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Inlarvtaw with actor Pat Morlta
("Th* Karat* Kid").
CD O SETTER SHOPPING WITH
PAT BOONE
O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(ll)B E N S O N

7:35
(O HO N SYM O O NERS

800

0 3 ) COSBY SHOW m atarao g
CD 0 SHELL GAME JannI# and
John go undercover with th* bunko
to aipoa* a con artiat on
CD O

OUR WORLD Stortas from
th* aummer of 1830 Indud* Hlttar'a
mvaaion ol Poland, th* premier* ol
th* Mm* "Gone With th* Wind" and
"Th* Wizard ol Oz." and th* publi­
cation of John Stamback * "Th*
Grapaa of Wrath." g
(11) HART TO HART
(10) WILD AMERICA a portrait
of th* combat, mating, agg hatch­
ing and loading behavior of king
scrAm . g
©
( 8) MOVIE "The Shoolist"
(1076) John Wayne, Lauren Baca*
A dying gunman aaaka lo Iv* out
hM final day* In paaca. daaptta partratanl chailanga* by would-b* aucca**or* to hi* tarn* and raapact

8

8:05
32 NBA BASKETBALL LosAngaias
Laker* at Indiana Pacer* (Uva)
(Subject lo blackout)

8:30

O GD FAMILY TIES Mallory devel­
op* a crush on a gkb graduate stu­
dent in atarao. g
© (10) THIS OLD HOUSE Installa­
tion ot th* kitchen's custom-meda
cabmat*. installing bathroom til**.
Norm work* on th* Cap*'* Interior
trim, g

too

O GD CHEERS

Carla madiataa
whan har ei-huaband. Nick, and hi*
new wit*. Lcratta. ara having man­
ta! problems In atarao. g

® Q SIMONS SIMON
(D O THE COLSYS A bullet Inlended for Jaaon wound* Cash
Cassidy. Jail contronts the mother
of mysterious Hoyt Parker, g

© 111) TRAPPER JOHN. M.D.

3:00
(X ) o

NtQHTWATCH

10:30
(11) BOB NEWMAtrr
(8) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRKN06

8

11:00

SCRABBLE
WEBSTER (R)
© (1 1 ) MAUDE

8

(11) BIG VALLEY
(S)NtO HTO W LFUN

AFTERNOON

4:00

12:00

O (1 1 )0 A L L A 8

4:10
3 ) Q MOVIE "A NIC* Llttla Bank
That Should B* Robbed" (1856)
Tom Ewall, Mickey Rooney

4:50

32 WORLD AT LARGE

FRIDAY 1
MORNING

O

5:00

® 2*8 COUNTRY
© (It)CNN NEWS
32) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

5:30
O ® T 0 0 A r 8 BUSINESS
© ( 11) CNN NEWS
(12 ANOY GRIFFITH

O®

7:05

11:30

Bobo" (1067) Pa-

6:00

NBC NEWS
CD O SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
3 ) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
© (1 1 )0 0 0 0 DAY)
32 CNN NEWS
© (8) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
SAVINGS

O ® ® O (Z) O NEWS
© (1 1 ) b e w it c h e d
0 ( 1 0 ) ISIS
0 (8) MID-DAY BARGAINS

12:05
32 PERRY MASON

12:30
O ® WORDPLAY
CD O YOUNG AND

Pomtar Slater*, lor mar pro football
player Art Donovan. In atarao.
(t0) DAVE ALLEN A T LARCE
(8) SARGAWS TONIGHT

S

0 ®

11:30

TO M G H T SHOW Hoat:
Johnny Carson. Schadulad;
ocaanographar-axptorar Bob Bal­
lard. comic actor Richard Pryor
(''Critical Condition"), country mu­
sic duo the Judd*. In atarao.
© M*A*8'H
G 1.TQHTUNE g

8

O

6:45
0 ( 1 0 ) AM. WEATHER

O

0®

12:30

LATE M QHT WITH 0AV1D
LETTERMAH From March 1846. ac­
tor Tony Randall, radio partonality
Ktm wwtama, comedian Rtchcrd
Better and "let* Night *" Bift Han­
derton make appearences In ster­
eo. &lt;R)
3 ) O MOVIE "Mr Batvadar*
Ring* Th* Ball" (1851) Clifton
Wabb. Joann* Oru.
© (1 1 ) HAWAII FIVE-0

7:15
0 ( 1 0 ) AM. WEATHER

7:30
(X) © MORNING PR00RAM
© (11) TRANSFORMERS
0 ( 1 0 ) SESAME STREET (R) g

8:00
0 ( 1 1 ) DENNO THE MENACE

8:05
32 IDREAMOf JEANNIE

8:30
©(11)FLJNT3TONES
0 (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8:35
32 BEWITCHED

9:00
O ® THE JUOOE
0 ) 0 DONAHUE
3 ) O OrRAH WINFREY
© ( 1 DOREEN ACRES
0 (10) SESAME STREET (R) g
0 (8) SHOP-AT-HOME AND SAVE

12:50
Q ) ACE AWARDS Th* eighth annu­
al ceremony honoring aicakanc* m
cable from th* Witarn Theatre m
Lo* Angela* Among thoa* nomlnatad m th* 60 catagoria* are Bitty
Crystal. Peter O'Toole. Robert Carradma. Susan Sarandon. Barbara
Straiaand and Robin WUllam* Co­
hosts Garry Shandkng and Bernedelta Paler*. (R)

1:10
(X) © MOVIE Once Upon A Spy"
(I860) Eleanor Parker, Tad Denson

1:30
©

(11) BIZARAE Sketch**: mlar-

7:00

® TODAY
3 ) O 00 00 MORNINQ AMERICA
© (ll)G L J O E
0 ( 1 0 ) FARM DAY

12:00

(X) O NIGHT HEAT
3 ) O NIQHTLJFE Host: David
Brenner Schadulad actor Daitar
Gordon ("Round Midnight"), come­
dian Robert Wuhl. In atarao
0 (11) ASK O R RUTH Topic: co­
cam* addiction. Guest: country
singer Larry Oatkn
0 (8) M QH T OWL FUN

8:30

® NEWS
&lt; T )Q CBS MORNING NEW8
© (1 1 ) CENTURIONS
32 TOM 8 JERRY AND FRIENDS

1:00

O

® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
( 7 3 0 ALL MY CHILDREN
© (1 1 ) DICK VAN DYKE
0 (10) w r RE COOKING NOW

1:05
32 MOVIE

9:30
C l ® LOVE CONNECTION
© (11) PETTICOAT JUNCTION

9:35
3 1 1LOVE LUCY*

10:00
© ® SALE OF THE CENTURY
® Q HOUR MAGAZINE
3 ) O TRUE CONFESSIONS
© (1 1 ) FALL GUY
0 110) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (R)

32 MOVIE

10:05

am a widow,
lot to me. My
call Joan. Is
not a happy

204 East First Street,
Downtown Sanford
3 2 1 -3 2 1 1

HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. &amp; Sat. 9-5:30, Frl. 9-7

1:30

...All Fall &amp;
Winter Dresses
Now...

® © AS THE WORLO TURNS
© H U G O M E R PYLE
0 ( 1 0 ) FLORIDA HOMEGROWN

2:00

O®

ANOTHER WORLD
(73 O O N E LIFE TO UVE
© (1 1 ) ANOY GRIFFITH
0 (10) PAINTING CERAMICS

2:30
® O c a p it o l
©
(11) MY LITTLE PONY 'N*
FRIENDS
0 ( 1 0 ) SECRET CITY

2:35
32 WOMANWATCH

3:00

O®

SANTA BARBARA
® © GUIDING LIGHT
33 O GENERAL HOSPITAL
0 ( 1 1 ) 8C006Y DOO
0 ( 1 0 ) MISTER ROGERS (R)
0 (8) M10-DAY BARGAINS

3:05
32 TO M i JERRY AND FRIENDS

3:30
© (11) SMURFS' ADVENTURES
0 (10) SESAME STREET (R) g

4.00
O ® MAGNUM. P.L
J O OIFF'RENT STROKES
(73 © JEO P A R D Y
© (It)T H U N D E R C A T S g
0 (8) AMERICA'S BIGGEST BAR­
GAINS

4:05
32 3COOSY DOO

4:30
® Q THREES COMPANY
® Q CARD SHARKS
ffl (11*811VERHAWKSg
0 (1 0 )8 -2 -1 CONTACT g

price

Final
Clearance
Take advantage of 50%
Savings on this year’s
fall and winter dresses
★ ALL SALES FINAL
★ NO REFUNDS
NO EXCHANGES

4:35
32 FUNT3T0NES

9:05
32 DOWN TO EARTH

DEAR ABBY: I
so family means a
sister, whom I'll
married. Hers Is

first Street
Clothier

LESS
3 )O L 0 V tN Q
© (11) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

® (I) © 3 ) ©NEWS

(11) LATE SHOW Host: Joan
8
Rivers. Schadulad Dick Clark, th*

THE REST­

group? Even though you've al­
ready rejected Joining a group,
try again.
If none of the above relieves
you of your loneliness, perhaps
the counselor at the university
can help you. Whatever you do.
d o n ’ t g iv e up. S o m e w h e re
there's a nice-looking, clean,
personable. Intelligent, insecure,
conservative, lonely female In
your age group who's Just dying
to be discovered.

5:00
0 ®

DIVORCE COURT

(S a ic m

(73 a HOLLYWOOO SQUARES
© (1 1 ) FACTS OF LIFE
0 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
0 (8) RAM BO

5:05
32 OILLIQAN'S ISLAND

5:30
0 ® PEOPLE'S COURT
&amp;) © ® Q N E W S
©(M)JEfFERSONS
0 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
0 ( 8 ) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

THE OLDEST C FINEST"
FOR 34 YEARS
218 E . 1st ST.
H ISTO RIC DOWNTOWN SANFORD
MON.-SAT. 9:30-3:30

1

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n ”' 1

H w M . « — M i, M . n &gt; n &lt; iif, i m

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I M T H I C IR C U IT C O U R T

IN T N I C IR C U IT C O U R T ,
IN A N D FO R

FLORIDA
C IV IL

. C A S E 9IO. 99-317* C A M -F
C , V IC T O R B U T L E R , J R *
F R A N C I S B U T L E R F L IP P E N
• M F IR S T F L O R ID A B A N K ,
N A .,M T r M 9 9 9 , '
Plaintiff,
v*. C . R IC H A R D BR OW N and
P R A N K T U T I N , and any un­
known hairs, devisees, grantees
•tW other unknown persons ar
imfcnown spouses claiming by.
through and under any of tha
above named Defendants,

m vm m m

G O V ER N M EN T I* R 1 0 V * «*
C O R P O R A TIO N ,
^ |rrt|W

^

ti^ ano- u c ivd yl .

tim p a n o , a * su"****'
H A,
■
, ,
°

*

N O TIC E O F SALE

J S S S S S Z S M
Faractoaaf* K H r td In the
• bOV* l l f W

N O T IC E O F
F O R IC L O S U R IS A L I
N O T IC E Is hereby given that
tho undersigned D A V I D N .
B E R R IE N , Clark of the Circuit
C o u r t of Sam lnola C o u n ty ,
Florida, will on tha W h day of
January, 1997, at it a.m . at tho
West Front door ol tho Seminole
C ounty CourfhouM , Sanford,
Florida, otter tor sate and sail at
public outcry to tha highest and
best bidder tor cash, the followIng-doscrlbod property situate In
Samlnola County. Florida.
Lot 7, Block F , D IX IE T E R ­
R A C E , 1st Addition, according
to tho plat thereof, as recar dsd
in Piet Book 10. Page 39, Public
Records of Samlnola County,
Florida.
pursuant to the Final Judgment
entered In a case pending In said
Court, the style of which It
Indicated above.
W IT N E S S m y hand and of­
ficial teal of said Court this 7th
dteg ot January, 1997.

«•»»«'•

CirCHlt C u r t •* tcmlnot*
Cwnfv. flvM A I will Mil the
4ltueto In laminate
La* * IYLV A GLADE, acm M h Ml DM
thereat m
iiite W B f~"“ * ®m H a . Paget
a « H I I , Public Records ol
Um M to County. FlarMa.
at m M c aate, to the highest and
aaatiWMr. far cash, at tha west
frant Mar of lha Seminal*
County CaurthouM, at Sanford,
FlerlMu at 11:00 O'clock A M.,
on February 2, 1107.
D AVID N . B E R R IE N
C L E R K C I R C U IT C O U R T
B ytFh y llla Foray tha
Deputy Clerk
Publish January 1 ! M , 1997
D E K -M
N O T IC E
Tha SI. Johns River W alar
Management District has recelvod an application tor M anOgomant and Storage ol Surface
Waters from :
H .D . H O L S O M B A C H , 7S4 B IG
T R E E DR flOO, LO N G W O O O ,
F L 3 1 7 J0 . A p p lic a t io n
I43-I17-0097AN, on 11/1V U . The
pro|act Is located In Samlnola
County, Section 9, Township 1*
South, R ange M E a tt. T h a
a p p l i c a t i o n Is l o r a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
servo 1.73 acres to be known as
C A N TE R B U R Y W AREHOUSE.
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A Y M C A ,
433 N M IL L S A V E , O R L A N D O ,
F L 32103, A p p lic a tio n
141117-OOffAN, on 12/11/M.
protect Is located In Samlnola
County, Section 30, Township X
South, Range 30 E ast. Th a
a p p l i c a t i o n Is f o r a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
serve 7.70 acres to be known as
Y M C A S E M IN O L E BR A N C H .
Th a receiving water body Is
S O L D IE R C R E E K .
C H A T L O S F O U N D A T IO N ,
P .O . B O X l3Sf, LONGW OOO,
F L 33730, A p p lic a tio n
142- 117-0100AN, on 12/14/94. Tha
protect Is located In Seminole
County, Section 31, Township 30
South, Range 39 East. Th a
a p p l i c a t i o n Is l o r a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
serve U 5 acres to be known as
C H A T L O S F O U N D A T IO N O F ­
F I C E S I T E . T h e re c e iv in g
water body Is W E K IV A R 1V E R.
C O M M U N A L L IA N C E CH O F
S E M IN O L E , 4015 E L A K E O R ,
W IN T E R SPR INGS. F L 3370S,
Application I43-I17-OI01AN, on
11/11/M. The protect Is located
In Seminole County, Section 13,
Township 31 South, Range 30
East. The application Is lor a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
serve 3.11 acres to be known as
C O M M U N IT Y A L L IA N C E
CHURCH.
Action will be taken an the
above listed application within
30 d a y s of re c e ip t of the
application. Should you be Inter­
e sted In a n y of the liste d
applications, you should contact
the St. Johns R iver Water M an­
agement District al P.O. Box
1439, Polatke. Florida 330711419, or In person at Its office on
S ta te H i g h w a y 100 W e s t,
Palatka, Florida. 904/3X9M1.
W r i t t e n o b je c t io n to th e
application may be made, but
should be received no later than
14 d a y s fro m th s d a le of
publication. Written objections
should Identify the ob|aclor by
name and address, and fully
describe the ob|ec1lon to the
application. Filing a written
ob| action does not entitle you lo
a Chapter 110. Florida Slatutes,
Adm inistrative Hearing. Only
those persons whose substantial
Interests are affected by the
application and who tile a peti­
tion meeting the requirements
ol Section 39-3.301. F.A .C ., may
obtain an Administrative Hear­
ing. A ll llm ely tiled written
objections will be presented to
the Board for Its consideration
In Its d e lib e ra tio n on the
application prior to the Board
taking action on the application.
D annlseT. Kemp, Director
Division of Records
SI. Johns River Water
Management District
Publish January 23.1997
D E K 123
N O T IC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged in business al 2333
P a rk O r.. Sanford, Seminole
C o u n ty , F lo rid a under the
Fictitious Name of M A S T E R 'S
T O U C H A U T O S U P P L Y , and
that 1 Intend to register laid
nam e with the Clark of the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
P ro visio n s of tho Fictitious
Nem o Statutes. T o W It: Section
•43.09 Florida Statutes 1937.
/%/ Robert C. Freeman
Publish January 23,19 I, Febru­
a r y ! 11,1997.
D E K -123

O A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y : Phyllis Forsyth#
Deputy Clark
Publish January IS. 33.1*97
D E K -4 J

N O T IC E
Tho St. Johns River Water
Management District has recelvsd an application for M an­
agement and Storage ot Surface
Tha
Waters from:
S C O T T L. B A R N ES, 709 IN ­
D U S T R Y R O , LO N G W O O O , F L
33 7S0, A p p l ic a t io n
I43-U7-9I03AN, on 11/12/14. The
project It located In Seminole
County, Section 31, Township n
South, Range 30 East. Th a
a p p lic a tio n It for a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
serve .44 acres to be known as
AERO.
H E L M U T H L. A P A U L A N.
E IO E L , 430 W D R IV E . A L T A ­
M O N T E S P R G S , F L 33701,
Application I43-I17-OI09AN, on
1/S/I7. The project It located In
Seminole County, Section 13,
Township 21 South, Range 19
East. Tha application It tor a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M lo
serve io acres to be known as
P A R K IN G L O T I M P R O V E ­
M EN T.
SEM IN O LE COUNTY
S C H O O L B O A R D . 1311
M E L L O N V I L L E A V E . SAN
F O R D , F L 33771, Application
143 117-0I10AN, on 17/39/14. Tho
protect Is located In Seminole
County, Section 33, Township 71
South, Range 30 E a tt. Th e
a p p l i c a t i o n It lor a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M lo
serve 14.3 acres lo be known as
R ED BUO E LE M E N TA R Y
SCHO O L. The receiving water
b o d y Is R E D B U G R O A O
SYSTEM .
R I C H A R D T I C K A L , 397
M A IT L A N D A V E , A L T A ­
M O N T E S P R G S . F L 33701,
Application 141-117-01H A N , on
1/3/97. The pro|eel It located In
Seminole County, Section 7,
Township 31 South. Range 30
East. The application It for a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
servo 14.33 acres to bo known as
C A S S E L B E R R Y L A K E S IN ­
D U S T R IA L PAR K. Tha receiv­
in g w a te r b o d y Is L A K E
M O B IL E .
Action will be taken on the
above listed application within
30 d a y s of re c o lp l of the
application. Should you be Inter­
ested In any of the listed
applications, you should contact
the St. Johns River Water M an­
agement District at P.O. Box
U39. Peletke. Florida 320791439, or in person at Its office on
S la ta H ig h w a y 100 W e s t,
Palatka, Florida. 904/319 1311.
W r i t t e n o b je c t io n to the
application may be made, but
should be received no later than
14 da ys Iro m lh a d a le ol
publication. Written objections
should Identity the ob|ector by
name and address, end fully
da scribe lha objecllon lo lha
application. Filing a written
objecllon does not entitle you to
a Chapter 120. Florida Statutes.
Administrative Hearing. Only
those parsons whose substantial
Interests ere affected by the
application and who (He a peti­
tion meeting the requirements
Of Section 29-3.201, F .A .C ., may
obtain an Administrative H ear­
ing. A ll llmely filed written
objections will be presented lo
the Board for Its consideration
In l i t d e lib e ra tio n on the
application prior to the Board
taking action on the eppl leaf Ion.
Dannlte T . Kemp, Director
Division of Records
St. Johns River Water
Management District
Publish January 21,1997
D E K 111

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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paopta. pax and praaant
taefr taller m Ihe ctpner standi lor
another Today t cktt C tquala U
by CONNIE WIENER

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “Golf Is not a funeral, though
both can bo very ta d affairs " — Bernard Darwin.

BLOOM COUNTY
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Legol Notice

Legal Notka

CLASSIFIED ADS

N O T IC E
I99T99B C IR C U IT
CO U R T OF T H I1 9 T H
Th a St. Johns R iver Water
Management District hat re­
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT 111
i n app! k itte n tor Man
A N D FO R S E M IN O L E
it and Storage ol Surface
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
tH
alO
M
g
_
—___
CASE NO. 94-MM99P
W w m t I ITOITii
D U V A L F E D E R A L SAVINGS
D A V I D D A W S O N t 173
A N D LO A N A S S O C IA TIO N ,
CR AN ES ROOST BLVD.
Plaintiff,
A L TA M O N TE SPRGS, FL
vs.
12701, A p p l i c a t i o n
J A Y T . G ILS O N , S R .ia fa l.
M - 117-9991A N . on 11/1/94. Tho
project Is located In Seminole
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L I
County, Section 1. Township 21
P U R S U A N T T O C M A P T IR 45
South, Range 19 Bast. T h e
N O T IC E IS H R R IB Y G IV E N
a p p l i c a t i o n l» for a
pursuant to an Order or Final
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
Judgment ol foreclosure dated
serve .91 acres to be known as
January 9, 1997, and entered In
L E T T 'S R A C E A M E R IC A Case No. M - x x 09 P of I
P H A S E II. th e receiving water
Circuit Court ot the Eighteenth
body It IS LA N D L A K E .
Ju d ic ia l C irc u it In and I or
J . G A R Y S H A R P . 1109
S a m ln o la C o u n ty , F lo r id a
B R O W N S H IR E C O U R T .
w haraln D U V A L F E D E R A L
L O N G W O O D , F L 33779.
SAV IN G S AND LOAN
Application 942-117-0093AN, on
A S S O C IA T IO N plaintiff, and
12/11/99. Tho prefect Is located
J A Y T . G ILS O N . SR.: at al. are
In Seminole County, Section It,
N O T E : In the event ol the publishing el errers In adverttiemtnts, the Sendefendants. I will tell to the
Township 99 South, Ranpa X
ford Herew shell publish the advertisement, otter It hat been car reefed at
highest and best bidder tor cash
East. Tho application It tor o
no tost to the advertiser but such Insertions shell number no mere then me
at tha west front door of I
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
111.
Samlnola County Courthouse In
serve t.41 acres to bo known at
S a n fo rd , S om lnolo C ou nty,
S H O N E Y 'S R E S T A U R A N T .
Florida at 11:00 o'clock A .M . on
Th e receiving water body Is
L A K E ADA.
tho 11th day of February. 1997,
tha following described prop*:
T H E H U S K E Y C O ., 1000
12—L*gal Servlets
27—N ursary*
as sat forth In said Order or
W E K I V A S P R IN G S R D ,
L O N G W O O D , F L 1 2 7 7 0 , t Final Judgment, te-wlt:
Child Car*
Lot 4 and the East U of Lot 3.
Application I43-117-0094AN, on
S O C IA L S E C U R IT Y MaaMIHy
B lock B , L A K E W A Y M A N
11/1 I/OS. Tha project Is located
Free Advice. No Charge U n le u
C N I L D C A R I . M y hom e,”
H E IG H T S . L A K E A D D IT IO N ,
In Seminole County, Section 31A
W a W in I W a r d W h it* A
a g e * . C P R c e r t llle d .
according to tho Piet thereof as
33, Township 10 South, Range 19
■■..X9 -M H H 9
References................. 321-4447
East, The application It tor a
recorded In Ptat Book 4, Pago
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
23. Public Records ol Seminole
21—Personals
serve 13.343 acres to be known
County, Flo/lde.
55—Buslnasi
os S W E E T W A T E R O F F I C E
Together will all structures
Opportunity*
and Improvements now and
P A R K . Th o receiving water
A L L A L O N I T Call Bringing
hereafter on sold land, and
bodies are W E K IV A R IV E R A
People Together. Sanford's
fixtures
attached
thereto,
and
S W E ETW A TE R LA KE.
mast respected deling service
A F T E R N O O N P A P IR R O U T !
all rents, Issues, proceeds, and
P A T R IC IA B A R N W E L L , 1049
since 1977. Men over X (43%
for u to . Longwood area.
profits
accruing
and
to
accrue
E A LTA M O N TE DR. A LTA ­
discount)..............1-900-911-4477
C all................................... 9P-0X1
from said p rim lies, all of which
M O N T E S P R O S , F L 33701,
IN T E R N A T IO N A L Metal Build­
CRISIS PREfiNANCY CENTER
•re Included within the forego­
Application I43-1I7-0093AN, on
ing Manufacturer Mlactlng
A B O R T IO N C O U N S E L IN G
in g d e s c r i p t i o n e n d th e
13/13/04. Tha prelect Is located
builder/dealer In some open
F
R
I
I
Pregnancy
Tests.
Con­
habendum thereof: alio all gas.
In Seminole County, Section 10,
area*. High potential prof 11 In
t i d a n 11 a I , I n d i v i d u a l
steam, electric, wafer, end
Township 31 South, Range 39
our growth Industry. (303)
a u ltla n ce . Call lor appt. Eve.
other heating, cooking, re ­
E a tt. Tho application Is for a
_ 7591200 Ext.1403_____________
Hrs Available..............121 7493.
frigerating. lighting, plumbing,
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M lo
ve n tila tin g , irrig a tin g , and
serve 1.09 acres to be known as
power systems machines, appli­
6 3 -M o rtg a g e s
B A R N E Y ’ S B A R B E Q U . The
a n c e s , f i x t u r e s , e nd a p ­
r e c e i v i n g w a t e r b o d y Is
25—Special Notices
B ought A Sold
purtenances. which now ara or
P R A IR IE L A K E .
may hereafter pertain to, or be
F L O R ID A C O N F E R E N C E
A T T I M T I O N f IN O C R S I
used with. In. or on told pre­
A S S O C IA TIO N , O F 7TH D A Y
W l B U Y 1s t a n d 2n d
W rite for tree catalog. O ver 700
mises, even though they be
A D V E N T IS T . P.O. B O X 1313.
M O R T O A O E S Nation wide.
songs.
Sing
with
your
very
detached or detachable.
O R L A N D O . F L 33903, Applica­
C e ll: Ray Lagg Lie. M tg
own bend.
Deled at Sanford, Florida, this
tion 943-117 0094AN, on I3/I3/M.
B roker, 940 Douglas Ave.,
Nashville Sound Plus You
13th day ot January, 1997.
T h e p re le c t Is lo c a te d In
Altamonte.....................774-7732
1X1
Division
(S E A L )
Seminole County, Section 13,
Nashville. T N 37X3
David N . Berrien
Township 10 South, Range 30
71— H e lp W anted
C L E R K , C IR C U IT C O U R T
East. Tha application Is tor a
BECOM
E AROTARY
B Y Cecelia V Ekern
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
For Details: 1-900-432-4254
D E P U TY CLER K
serve 3.7 acres to bo known as
Florida Notary Association
Publish: January 13.33,1997
S A N F O R D 7TH D A Y A D V E N ­
D E K -M
T I S T C H U R C H . The receiving
w a t e r b o d y Is S I X M I L E
CREEK.
J W W .t t f t lt .
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y D E ­
N O T IC E O F
P A R T M E N T , O F E N V IR ,
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T,
F U L L -T IM E / P A R T -T IM E , Ca­
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
S E R V IC E S . P .O . B O X 1449,
E IG H T E E N T H
shier, for efternoons/mldnlght
Nolle* Is hereby glvan that I
S A N F O R D . F L 33771. Applies
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
shifts A weekends. Apply In
am engaged In business at 1141
lion f43-117-010IAN, on 13/17/14.
IN A N D F O R
person lo E C O L, 1-4 A W. 44
M a g n o li a D r . , A lt a m o n t e
T h e p ro te c t Is lo c a te d in
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
H A IR S T Y L IS T , Experienced,
S p r in g s , S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Seminole County, Section 20,
F L O R ID A
F lo rid a under the Fictitious
In Sanford area, work your
Township X South, Range X
C ASE N O . 94-4705-C A-09-G
own hours. Call 3219711
Name ol M A T H IS A P P L IA N C E
East. The application It tor a
L I D E R T Y N A T IO N A L BANK,
S E R V IC E , and that I Intend to
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M lo
L I O H T D E L I V E R Y - Neat A
a national banking corporation.
register said name with tha
serve • acres to be known as
dependable, economy car a
Plaintiff,
C
le
rk
ol
the
C
irc
u
it
C
ou
rt,
G R EEN W O O D LA K E S W PCF.
must.............................. 311-4947
vs.
Seminole
County,
Florida
In
Th e receiving water body Is
S A M U E L A . W ILLIA M S O N
accordance with the Provisions
S O L D IE R C R E E K ,
A C C O U N TS R E C E IV A IL E
atal.,
ot the Fictitious Name Statutes,
Action will be token on the
BOOKKEEPER
Defendants.
To -W it: Section 143.09 Florida
above Hated application within
T H E S A N FO R O H E R A L D Is
N O T IC E O F A C TIO N
Statutes 1937.
30 d a y s ot ra c s lp t of tha
currently accepting resume’s
T O : P E T E R D W A G N ER
/»/ Holley H. Mathis
application. Should you be Inter­
lor an experienced A/C Book­
714 Florida Boulevard
Publish January 9, IS, 33, I f ,
ested In an y ol th e listed
keeper. Duties Include pric­
Altamonte Springs. Florida
1997.
applications, you thould contact
ing, posting A billing on a
C O -E Q U IT Y G R O U P , INC.
DEK-33
the SI. Johns River Water Man­
manual system.
by notifying III
agement District el P.O. Box
registered agent
1439, Palatka, Florida 32079Requlremants Include:
P E T E R D. W A G N E R
1439, or In person at Its office on
714 Florida Boulevard
• Typing Skills
S ta te H ig h w a y lo o W e s t,
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
•Calculator by Touch
Altamonta Springs, Florida
FO R T H E E IG H T E E N T H
Peletke, Florida, 904/339 (331.
• Pleasant Personality
The other defendants not be­
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
W r i t t e n o b je c t io n to tho
eComputer Exp. a Plus
ing served under Nils notice of
O F F L O R ID A . IN A N D FO R
application may be made, but
We Otter:
s ui t e r e : S A M U E L A.
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
thould be received no later then
W IL L IA M S O N . B R E N D A J.
a Insurance Plan
C AS E NO. 94-4194
14 d a y s fro m the d e le ot
a Paid Vacation
S IE N IA , JA M E S Z. C R A F T ,
publication. Written objections
G E N E R A L JU R IS D IC T IO N
• Friendly Atmosphere
CHARLOTTE HARVEY,
D IV IS IO N
thould Identity the objector by
• Job Security
C H A R L E S A. C R A M P TO N ,
U N IT E D V IR G IN IA
name and address, end fully
B R IA N D A V ID R IS T , K IM
M O R T G A G E C O R P O R A T IO N ,
describe the objection to the
It you meet the above require­
M A R IE JA C O B S R IS T , and
application. Filing a written
P L A IN T IF F ,
A P R Y L L . W ILLIA M S O N .
ments and would like to be e
objection does not entitle you to
— vs—
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
part ol the Sanlord Herald,
P E T E R D. W A G N E R ,
a Chapter 110, Florida Statutes.
action to foreclose e mortgage
send resume' to:
Administrative Hearing. Only
" -------------- " A N U N K N O W N
on the following property In
T E N A N T S t S ), L A K E O F T H E
those persons whose substantial
Seminole County, Florida:
SANFO RDH ER LAD
W OODS H O M EO W N E R S
Interests ere affected by the
The East I X teet ot Lots 4 and
P.O. BOX 1437
A S S O C IA TIO N . IN C., L E I L A R.
application end who tile a peti­
7, B R A D L E Y 'S A D D IT IO N T O
S A N FO R D . F L . 12771-1457
W O O D A R D F/K/A L E IL A R
tion mealing the requirements
LO N G W O OO . less the South 240
Attn: Ofllce Manager
B A R R O N . A G G R E S S IV E
of Section 2S 3.N1, F .A .C ., may
leal ol Lot 7 and lest the North
A D D T O Y O U R IN C O M E
A P P L IA N C E S A N D F IN E
obtain an Administrative Hear­
314.77 leal ol Lot 4. according lo
Sell Avon Nowl
F U R N IT U R E . L IN D A R .
ing. A ll llm ely Hied written
the plat thereof as recorded In
1110439..........o r...........M3 41
W IL L IA M S O N , JIM M Y R.
objections will be presented lo
Plal Book I, page 17, ol the
T A Y L O R . D. JA D E T A Y L O R ,
the Board for Its consideration
B O A T B U I L D E R S - C oble /
Public Records ot Seminole
In Its d e lib e ra tio n on the
A N G E L O H A LK IS 4 n d .
R o b a lo h a s I m m e d ia t e
County, Florida
application prior to tha Board
B A R B A R A H A LK IS , His Wile,
openings for boot riggers,
has been tiled against you end
D E N N IS L .S A L V A G IO .
taking action on the application.
cabinet makers A assemblers.
you ere required to serve e copy
E L L E N S. K R IE G E R , L A R R Y
Dannlse T . Kemp, Director
Exp. helpful but not neces
of your written defenses. It any,
Division ol Records
E .K R I E G E R . LE O N A R D O
w r y . Competitive wages A
to II on J . Robert Hunkaplller,
5t. JohnsRIver Water
R I V E R A ,J R .,J A S M IN A M .
benelils. See Wall Hamilton.
p la in tif f 's a tto rn e y , whose
R IV E R A ,
Management District
Cobla Boat Co., 300 Silver
address Is B ALW IN A BAUM ,
Publish January 21.1997
D EFEN D A N TS.
Lake Rd., Sanlord Mon. Frl.
7100
South
U
S.
Highway
17
91,
D E K 121
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
« :X e m -4 :X p m . 313-3340
Fern Park, Florida 337X, on or
C O N S T R U C T IV E S E R V IC E
C A R P EN TER H ELP ER
before Feburary 12, 1997, and
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
- P R O P E R TY
T R A IN E E
III#
the
original
with
tha
clerk
ol
O F T H E I9 TH
T O : L A R R Y E. K R IE G E R A N D
Entry level, permanent posi­
fhlt Court either before service
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT IN
E L L E N S . K R IE G E R
tion. Experience with power
on plaintiffs attorney or ImA N D FO R S E M IN O L E
Residence Unknown, II living.
tools helpful. San lord/Del and
medietelu thereafter: olharwita
C O U N T Y ,F L O R ID A
Including any unknown spouse
area. Never a lee I
a default will be entered against
C A S E NO. S4-134I-CA-99-L
ot the u l d Defendants, it either
you for the reliet demanded In
B A R N E TT BANK OF
has rem arried end If either or
the complaint or patlllon.
TEMP PERM
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A . N .A ..
,260-5100
both ol M id Defendants ere
D A T E D on January 9, 1997.
Plelnlltf.
dead, their respective unknown
CHUR CH Y O U TH W ORKER(S
E
A
L
)
vs.
h e ir s , d e v is e e s , g ra n te e s ,
Part time from Sept.-May.
O A V ID N . D E R R IE N
D O R O T H Y T . S C H M ID T , etc.,
assignees, creditors, lienors,
Full lime during summer.
Clark
of
the
Circuit
Court
■I at.,
end trustees, and ell other
Exp. In working with youths
By: SusanE. Tabor
Defendants.
persons claiming by, through,
required. Apply by celling
Deputy Clerk
C L E R K 'S N O T IC C O F SALE
under or against the named
333 4 3 7 IM on.-Frl.9 to4 :X p m
Publish January IS. 12, 19 &amp;
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
D e l e n d a n t ( s ) : a n d t he
C N A : Immediate full time posi­
February J, 1917
that pursuant to a Summary
a lore mentioned named Defend
tions. 7-3 or 3-11 shifts. Gocd
OEK40
Final Judgment ot Foreclosure
a n t ( s ) a n d s u c h of th e
benelils A atmosphere. Apply
entered In the above-entitled
a foremen Honed unknown De­
Dabary Manor. 40 N. Hwy.
cause In the Circuit Court of the
fe n d a n ts e nd such o l the
17-92. D e B try 449 4434.....EOE
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit, In
aforementioned unknown De­
N O T IC E U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
C
O
M PANY N EEDS YOUNO
e n d fo r S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
fendants as m ay be Intents,
NAM E S TA TU TE
Inexperienced A willing to
Florida, I will sell al public
Incompetents or otherwlM not
T O W H O M I T M A Y C O N C ER N :
travel Individual tor rewardauction to lha highest bidder lor
sul juris.
Nolice Is hereby given that the
Ing Mies career. Call 747-9393
cash at the West front door ol
YO U A R E H E R E B Y
undersigned puriuenl to lha
the Courthouse In the C ity of
N O T I F I E D that en action has
CONTRACT LABORERS
" F ic titio u s name S ta tu te ",
S a n lo rd , S em ino le C o u n ty ,
been commenced to torecloM e
E a rn 19 to 111 per hr. Must
Chapter 943.09. Florida Slatutes.
Florida, at tha hour ol 11:00
mortgage on the following real
en|oy working outdoors. No
will register with the Clerk of
a.m . on January X . 1997, that
property, lying end being end
exp. nec. For lull or pert time
lha Circuit Court, In end lor
certain parcel ol real property
situated In Seminole County.
positions In Seminole Co. cell
Seminole County, Florida upon
described at follows;
Florida, more particularly de­
9amto9pm.. ........ 113-114 7131
receipt ol proof ol the publica­
Th e South t/1 ol Lots 14. 13
scribed as follows:
tion ol this notice, the fictitious
end 14, Block C. S A N O LA N D O
L O T 19, L A K E O F T H E
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
name, to-wlt:
S P R IN G S . L A K E O A K S E C ­
W O OD S TO W N H O U SES S E C ­
ROM
A
IT
A
L
IA
N
B
A
K
E
R
Y
.
DAILY WORK/DAIIY PAY
T IO N . according to the Plat
T IO N O N E . A C C O R D IN G T O
INC.. t31 State Road 434 East,
N E E O M E N A W O M EN NOWI
thereof a« recorded In Piet Book
T H E P L A T T H E R E O F , AS
Lon j wood. Florida J77JO.
9, Page 21, Public Records ot
R E C O R O E D IN P L A T BO OK
That the parties Interested In
Seminole County. Florida.
I t . P A G E X . P U B L IC R E
said
buslnats
enterprlsa
are
as
Dated this 7th day of January,
CORDS OF SEMINOLE
m u &gt; eon
- ^ r
suit Mi
follows:
1997.
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A ,
P H O E N IX D R A G O N . INC
(S E A L )
m a rt commonly known es 101
I
NO
V
FEE!
Dated at Sanlord, Samlnola
D A V ID N. B E R R IE N
E A S T W IN D L A N E . F E R N
Report ready for work at 4 AM
County. Florida. December 73.
P A R K , F L O R ID A 337X.
C L E R K O F C IR C U IT C O U R T
407 W. 1st. SI................. Sanlord
1994.
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Th is action has been tiled
321-1590
Publish
January
IS,
21.
19
A
Deputy Clerk
against you end you ere re­
February 5, 1997
Publish: January IS. 21.1997
quired to M rve e copy of your
D E J -IM
OEK-44
written delenM, If any, to it on
D I R E C T O R OF Nursing
S H A P IR O . R OSE A F IS H M A N .
Sarvlca, 120 bed, skilled. Su­
Attorneys, whoM address Is 5 X
perior rated Nursing Home,
North Reo Strait. Suite 303.
located In Longwood. Florida.
Tam pa. Florida 33409 1013. on or
Must have supervisory exp. A
before February 14. 1997. 4nd
g e n e r a l k n o w l e d g e ot
Ilia the original with the Clerk at
Geriatric nursing. Cell the
this Court either before M rvlce
* A -A C A tm
Administrator at 303-139-9100
on Plaintiffs attorney or Imme­
Of CAMS
D R A F T S M A N : Alum inum A
diately thereafter; otherwise a
AY NOONOR
Copper Redraw Mill requires
default will be entered against
F s m m fr
Draftsman abla to read A
you tor tha rollel demanded In
n m tN
Interpret drawings relating to
the Complaint.
fa b ric a tio n A fabrica tion
. M ro r
W IT N E S S m y hand and Mai
looting. Minimum 2 yrs expo
of this Court on the 13th day ot
r lance In tha Hold.........313 3300
January, 1997.
D R IV E R S W A N T E D . Domino s
(C O U R T S E A L )
P itta . Inc. Wages, tips, A
□avid N. Berrien. C L E R K
commission. 95 hr. guaran­
Clrcul t and County Courts
teed. Must have own car with
B Y : SuMn E. Tabor
liability Insurance.
Deputy Clerk
Apply: 1910 French Ave. or
Florida Bar #331132
call M l 3000 alter llam
*4-1949
Publish January IS. 13, 19 A
E X P . PIZZA M A K E R S A P R EP
February 3, 1917
COOKS. Apply In person al
D E K 59
2400 S. French Ave

Seminole
322-2611

HZ'SfJVTHM a r m
opt
O M p y rn n e c K /

ITHNKHeSSTfM
SCMtVM..

O rlando • W inter Pork
831-9993

DEADLINES
Noon Tho Day Boforo Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
Monday - 9:00 A .M . Saturday

Employment

legal Notice"

by Berke Breathed

m m f f -m

71—HalpWantad

323-5176

M A I N T I N A N C I M A N : Motel
experience pre*erredl apply In

♦ 7 -A p a r t m a n t s

-

i/r *

Short term

toaaea. furnished

, efficiencies, tlngte itery.
Exper lanced Sewing Machine
O p e ra to r* w a n te d en a ll
operations. Wa after p*M Iwllday*. paid vacation. health
care plan, and m adam air
condttlanad plan*. Piece work
rate*. W ill tra in quatlflad
applicant!. San-Dal
Manufacturing. H49 Otd Lake
M a ry R d.. Santerd..... -X1-X1P
N U R S I A I D E : A ll Mitt*,
rfenced o r c e rtllle d o n ly.
A p p ly L e k e v le w N u rs in g
Center. 919 «■ 2nd St., Santerd_

NURSES, AIDES,
COMPANIONS
H A P P Y N E W T E A R . Wa m od
yeu now. New benefits In­
cluding group Inw ronco and
vacation. Free C E U 'S . Dally
pay. Staff A private duty.
M E D IC A L P C R S O N N IL F O O L
Call 1740-1X4

• a ^ N B d lc a l
M

B B e w o M itt
* "^a B D O l a

F A R T T I M B . a f te r school
teachers. Chauffeur's license
required. Call E l ton.... .323-&gt;414
P A R T -T I M E S IW IN G
MACHINE MECHANIC
W A N T E D , must t » exportmeed, on all types of Industri­
al sowing machines. Apply In
p e rso n o n ly t o : S a n -D a l
Manufacturing, 2140 Old Lake
M a ry R d.. Santerd..... .321X10
FA R T T IM E H E L P N E E D E D .
Gregory Lum ber/True Value
hardware Is new accepting
applications lo r part lim a
stocking and cleaning parson.
390 Maple A ve.. Santerd.
F A R T T IM E R ESEA R C H ER
needed lo r S e m ino le C o .
Knowledge of reel estate doc­
uments helpful. Earning up to
HO hr. C e lt:.................1-171-1739
P H O N E P E R S O N - Needed far
Demina's P lu a , Inc. Apply:
1910 French Ave. or phone
MI-3000 after Mam___________
P H O N E S O L IC ITO R S - Positive
attitude A pleasant phone
voice Is ell you nesdl Exp.
helpful but not necessary.
M i-M il between l : X A I X
P R O G R A M A S S I S T A N T to
work In direct care/trelnlng
position with m enially relarded. C a ll: 331-7231._________
R .N .- Full time. 11-7. Med Surg.
Apply: West Volusia M em ori­
al Hospital, 70t W . Plymouth
Ave.. Deland. FI._____________
S E A M S TR E S S . E xp . preferred.,
canvas product. Spenco. Inc.
C A L L .............................. 327-1123
T E L E M A R K E T E R S - Calling to
co. only. No residential calls.
Advance sales lor local beneflt
concert. No weekends or night
work. * : X am to 5 pm , M -F .
MI-4147
T E L E P H O N E S A L E S - SS per
hr. + bonus. Full or pert time.
A LS O L I O H T D E L I V E R Y ! 9
am to 1 pm or S pm to 9 pm .
No exp, necessary........491-4394
T E X A S O I L C O M P A N Y needs
mature perion lor short trips
surrounding Sanford. Contact
customers. We train. Write
H .T . Dickerson, Pres., South­
w e s te rn P e t r o le u m , Box
94100S, F t. Worth, T x . T4I0I
W O R K E R S N E I O E O I If you
need steady work-paid dally,
Cell Sam after 3 p m ..... 3M-7334

73— Employment
Wanted
B A B Y S IT T IN O In m y Sanlord
home. D ay or night, part or

^Jt^MIma^aMeje*^^

♦1— Apartments/
House to Share
B E A U T I F U L - 3 bdrm . turn
home to share with another
working A mature lady. 9300
to move In. Inct. util. W . 25th
SI., Loch A rb o r............311-7179
ROOM IN P R IV A T E H O M E .
Weekly rent, house privileges.
Cell - 740-4790..... or......313 4193
S A N F O R D : Will share 3 bdrm .,
3 b a th lo w n h o u s e . R e n t
negotiable, + utilities A 9100
dep.
e rte n (t)
ep. Responsible p
pertot
niy............M l-O tX , ask lor Bill
W IL L S H A R E 2 bdrm . houso.
Short expenses. Quiet
neighborhood.................313-1414
1 B O R M ., 1 bath In very nice
n e ig h b o rh o o d , k itc h e n A
laun dry p riv ile g e s. P re fe r

_Jemele;Jll&gt;04l*;;;or;;;J7^4lf

93— Rooms for Rent
L A R G E R OO M . F u rn., laundry
A kit. p r l v ., to r w o rkin g
person. 943 w k............... 322 4293
O R EASO N A BLE R A TES
e M A ID S E R V IC E
e P R IV A T E E N T R A N C E
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

&lt;Tlic Hillugr
323-4507
ROOM F O R R E N T I
140.00 weekly
X I BrlarclU tS t.________
ROOM T O R E N T : Private home
across from Heathrow, work­
ing tomato preferred. Cell:
331-4991, Aft. 4: lM-4a.Ti
S A N F O R D - Clean room with
private bath. Heat, air, use ol
kllchen. Large pasture for
horses a v a il, on pro perly.
C*1*:................................323-9430
S A N F O R O , Furnished, walk lo
to w n , p a r k , la k e , SSS.43
weekly, 443-40X or 331-3000
S A N F O R D : I I g. b d r m .
w /prlvale bath, kit. p rlv .,
non smoker, nondrinker. 943
wkly + Iw k d e p .......... m a m

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

SANFORD CO U R T A F T.
12*2X1 ax. N t

99—ApartfMfrti

UitfumislMd/ Rant
G IF F IC .IA IR O R M .A F T S .
a F U R N . A UNFUR99.

G FAV WEEKLY
W hy Consider Living Anywhere
Etee When You Can Lire In

u

h r

U11 L i n r

32545B7
H IS T O R IC D IS T R IC T , Santerd:
1 A 2 b d r m . u n its w ith
charm ing tun perch**. Re­
cently redecorated, conve­
nient location..............911*9193
494 «S99.....Attweed Fhllllp* Inc
M A R IN E R S V IL L A G E
1 A lb d r m s ....................from SMS
Cal).................................... -323-9470
N E A T - 2 bdrm . apt., kitchen
•quipped, carpet, c/ti/a. tot
m e. Includes w ater/uw er,
oeraoa toed. C a ll:........93I-40U
S A N F O R D : 2 bdrm ., 2
can. h u t A air, Ig living room,
u t -l n kit. with dishwasher,
wether/dryer. Adults or smell
Child. 44S-X14..... or..... 99*3991
S A N F O R D - Large efficiency.
17$ a week plus security.
Phone:........................... M I 3990
S A N F O R D , T o w n h e u t* . 3
bdrm ., 2 be., central air A
h u t . full kitchen appliances,
w/d hook-ups. well to wall
carpets, storage shed, now
paint, real dean. 1393.24*1131
S H E N A N D O A H V IL L A G E

* * $199 * *
Ask about move In special!
C ell..................................... 313-1918

N ID O E W O O O ARMS A
B A M B O O C O V E S F IC IA L I
Rent any site apartment by
Feb. 1st end receive March
rent F R E E !
ISM Ridgewood Ave......MI-4429
I N E . Airport E l............ 11*4411

1 bdrm ., t bath.................9135 mo
2 bdrm ., U sb e th .............9X0 mo
• Central Heel A A ir
a Pool A Laundry
F R A N K L IN ARMS
I I X Florida Ava,
223-4430

$299
M O V E IN S P E C IA L
• New 2 bdrm. vlllaa a Mini
Blinds a Hookups
F A R K S ID E P LA C E APTS.
Just W . ol 17 92 oil 25th SI. Turn
left on Hartwell. We're on »h#
rlg h tl............................. 322 4474

101— Houses
Furnished/Rent
S U N L A N D - F u lly furnished
home, 1 bdrm ., Fla. rm „ w/w
carpets, appliances A micro.,
storage area. 1st. last, A tec.

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
* * * IN D E L T O N A a * *
• * H O M ES FO R R E N T * *
* # 374-1434 * *
LAKE MARY/HIOOEN
L A K E S , discounted •1 bdrm.,
2 ba.. full aqulppad kltchan,
9473 Mo. a sac, dep.....949 4717

LOG HOME, Hwy. 415,1 bdrm.,
2 be., central H/A, water
cond., 1330 MO., 911213 4411,
131 1411 altar 4. dap-required
S P AC IO U S - 1/2. family room,
fenced, c/h/a, no pelt. 9475 HI
A la s !................. M31791 alter 3
S T . J O H N 'S R IV E R F R O N T Lerga 3 bdrm ., 3 both, can.
h/a plus furn. guest house.
Harold Hell Realty
t-439-1012 or 1-447-73*9 eves.
S U N L A N D - 734 Cherokee Clr., J
bdrm ., I bath, S413 mo. + sec.
No pets. Call................. M3 4441

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
eeeeeeeeeeeeeee*
Da lux 4 Duplex Comm. Screen
poreh, laundry A storage rm „
lawn terv. provided..... MI-9319
D E L U X E D U P L E X : 3/3 cen.
heel A e lr, garage, many
extras. S3X mo Includes yard
cere. 1 y r. lees*..................Cell
Red or Linde Morgan al
322 2420.....or..... M3 51Uavas
D U P L E X : 2 bdrm ., carport,
dean, extras. 9393 me. plus
security. C ell................ M3 3443
N IC E . 3 bdrm .. 1 be., central
heet/alr, no pels. 9343 Mo.,
91X dep. 1101 W. 3rd SI. Call
Sharon el 443-3000, Letter
Kelmenson, Assoc. R tailor
N IC E . 2 bdrm .. 2 both, well to
wall carpel, central haat A
air, dishwasher, w/d hook up.
1st Month -t- security. No
Pets. Alter 3...... ..........M H449
S A N F O R D , Ouplex 2 bdrm..
u t i lit i e s , c a r p o r t , m a ny
extras. S393 mo. Call: M l-1047

117— Commercial
Rentals
O F F IC E S - 700 k 1000 sq.ft. In
growing 4-Towns/Debary area
on Hw y. 17-92.441 4*l5*vet.

121— Condominium
Rentals
S A N D L E W O O O V IL L A S - 2/2.
kit. appl., washer/drytr. pool.
S390 mo. -t- sac. 111-0940,
7214447. . . .or..... 1100 422 5331

S A N F O R D : 2 bdrm.. 1 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
S A N FO R O . Large 2 bdrm .. with
washar/dryer, sec. 1430 Mo.
screened p orch . Com plete
Landarama Fla., Inc. 3M-1734
privacy. S95 wk. + 1230 sec.
Pep. C ell.................................. 3232249
Furns Apts, for Sontor Clttiens
127— Office Rentals
111 Palmetto Avo.
J. Cowan. No Phone Cells
N E A R T O W N - 1 A 7 bdrm ., 975
S A N F O R D . 1st St.: 2 oflicas.
&amp; U S wank. SI30 depn-.lf.
Secretarial sarvlca availabla
C e ll:................................ 313-1X4
SI23 mo. taeh. utilities In­
S A N F O R D , Lo ve ly I b drm .
cluded.................. Call: MI-3197
cottage w llh front porch 190
w k k . + 9200 s e c . d e p .
Call...........................................3232249
141— Homes For Sale
S A N F O R D : Large I br , up­
stairs. very private, tile bath,
•at-ln kitchen. E ve ry th in g
W O U L D Y O U L I K E to
furnished. S IM .............. 313-1917
Y O U R H O M E advertised
at no cost to You? Ask ;
S A N F O R D : 2 b d rm ., adults.
our 4% *0 day listing a l.. ..
Nice, quiet neighborhood, no
pets. C e ll................................. 3237543 F IR S T R E A L T Y IN C ..... M l

�n

s-*~rf r r * rr r ^ ^ 'r r f 't f r ~ * r r r r r r r r r - r

h it

141—Hemes F«r Sale
_

ACOOOTTWYOaOAILRtSOMIl'
S acres high land In
* - M any. e
xtr
extree
includJff,
C .R . fam ily roam,
T .v .d ts h and more II
Now listing, priced M r lm -

r

141-Hemes Far Salt
H A N O Y MAM'S S P E C IA L I
J* m ip area, 3 bdrm..

O'

BB

CAUBART
R IA L E S TA TE

REALTOR__________ 333-7040
i

A ttU C K Ill
v irn u p ,

7

767-0606
P E R F E C T H O M E POR A
V O U N O P A M I L Y l A p p li­
ances for convenience. A a
lovely pool on a com er lot with
privacy fence for relaxing.
This can be yours for only
075.000. C a ll m e, B arbara
M ach nlk , Realfor/Assoclafe
tor details.
OW N Y O U R O W N T A R A I Th is
historic spacious home can be
fumed Into your own palace.
Owner is very motivated and
It even has an Income pro­
ducing apartment. Call: M a ry
Burkhart, Roaltor/Aseoclato.

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Rea! Estate Broker
3440 Sanford Ave.

321-0759_______ 321-2257
A fter hears 333-7443
B Y O W N E R - Spacious 3 bdrm ..
2 bath home on large shaded
lot- C a ll..............323-103137pm
B Y O W N E R , 2 bdrm ., I bath. In
Ideal Sanford location. Newly
remodeled kitchen A bath,
fenced back yard, screened
front porch with swing. Re­
duced W O O . O W N E R M U S T
R E -L O C A T E . 143,400. days
321-0772 o r eves 323-0307

ENERGY REALTY
323-2959
FOR S A L E B Y O W N E R ,
Spacious 3 bdrm ., 2 bath, pool,
R iv e r R u n In A lta m o n te
Springs. Call 774-1531

i i \ u

iti\i

DO YOU PRRF ER Owlet
Country Sotting Yet Cleat In

I M U H l&amp; D o lF ^

pMW

W

family will tovo this beautiful
3 bdrm. brick homo w/sunkan
family
room A vaulted
— »»«----*—■-a--------- a
I A-«—

n

it i : \ i . r o i t
W E N E E D L IS T IN G S
E X T R A N IC E C U S T O M B U I L T
H O M E I Almost new, 1/3 split
plan, fireplace, garage, C H A ,
heat pum p, good terms.15a.400
L O V E L Y V I L L A In Hidden
Lekel E x tra clean end nice. 3
bdrm ., 2 bath! Assuma. no
qualifying I Can. elr. 155.500.
Rant or laasa purchase

323-5774
________ 2404 H W Y . 17-to________
HOM ESEEKERS R EA LTY
" S E R V IN O A R E A B U Y E R S "

322-8825

^

• l{ 1

^

7

.

country kltchon. french door*,
on t acre of tovmrtng oaks.
Asking S14MM. To pTOvtow

.

■* «

. . .

caMi........BRCKY COURSOtf.
■

windows. SMK............ 322 1132
S A N F O R O , 3/1. g r e a t
neighborhood, renovated, ot­
ter. Call 323 3777

Start locally, lull tlme/pert
time. Train onlive airline com­
puters. Home study and realdent training. Financial eld
available. Job placem ent
aselstance. National headquartars. L.H.P..FL.

A.C.T. Travel School

1-600-432-3004

toe.

U -P I C K S T f t A W lI R R I I S
L A R R Y ’ S M A R T . 31S Sanford
A m . N M / U n d turn. A eppl.
Buy/Soll/Trodo 333 4133

W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M O R E H O M ES T H A N
A N T O N I IN N O R TH
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y

CALLMY TIME

322-2420
LO W M O R T O A Q E R A T E S ! 1
b d r m . , t bath condo,
washor/dryer. walk In ctoeat,
all appliances, pool, clubhouse
A m o ra l...........................125.100
S I R I T T O D A Y ! 3 bdrm., IVy
bath home, split plan, cant.
H/A, utility room. A single
B«rage........................
C O U N T R Y C LU R M ANORI 3
bdrm ., Ito bath, 3 story heme,
lots of storago A closets,
fam ily room, control H/A,
living room, dining room A
m orol............................. .144.400
A S S U M A B L E M O R T O A O E I No
qualifying. 3 bdrm., t both
homo on two lots. 4 lots can bo
purchased, cent. H/A. dining
........................... *44,400
O R E A T F A M IL Y H O M E I 3
bdrm ., 3 bath, formal living A
dining rooms, oat-ln kitchen. 2
fireplaces, peddle lens, large
utility room A m orol.....*55.500
P O P U LA R H ID D E N LA KBSl 3
bdrm, 3 bath home, breakfast
b a r , la m lly ro om , patio,
fenced yard, split plan, '14'
roof A m o ra l.................. *44.400
S E R E N E PEACEFU LN ESSI 2
b d rm ., 2 bath home with
screened porch overlooking
lakt, fpl.. eat In kitchen, din­
ing area, central heat end air.
........................................ *73.000.
H O U S E S E N S EI 3 bdrm., 2 bath
home, breakfast bar, lamlly
room, split plan, sunken living
room w ith fp l., screened
porch, peddle lens, vaulted
callings, newly painted Inside
A out.............................. *73.400
N E W LO O H O M E I 3 bdrm. 2
bath home In Osteen, front
porch, rear deck, water con­
ditioner, vaulted ceilings, spilt
plan, aluminum sofflls,.S74.400
S U B M IT A L L O F F E R S I 3
bdrm . 3 both home, cathedral
ceilings, out door breakfast
courtyard, split plan. cent.
H / A I...............................*74,000

UKE MARY OFFICE
Call toll frN 1-800-323-3720
2545 P A R K A V E ............. laniard
401 Lk. M ary B ird .........Lk. Mery
W A T E R F R O N T P R O P E R TY , 3
bdrm , 2 bath, lamlly room, 3
car garage, I fireplace* A
many extras. Ad|olnlng lot
available. Call owner 33M24I

Y O U R HOM E
FOR O N E O F OURS
Y O U R P LA N OR OURS
O U R LA N D OR YOURS
C A L L BOB SAN D ER NOW
T O S E E IF Y O U Q U A L IF Y

149—Commercial
Property / Sale
APPRAISALS AND SALIS
BOR M. BALL. JB. P.A..C.S.M.
BRALTOB.........---------- *334110
CASSILRIRRYi 1 aero tonod
PR i. MS.OOO. W. MoHcwerskl
Realtor....................J 23-74Q3

LIND
S A N F O R O A R IA
1* A C R E S W IT H L A R G E
FAR M HOUSE ZO N ED
IN D U S T R IA L ..............*200.000
10 A C R IS Z O N E O IN D U S T R I­
A L ................................... *500,000
1 A C R K S A T A IR P O R T
E N T R A N C E .................*110.000

2559 Path Drive
(305)321-0140

153—AcreageLots/Sale

M l Call 10-3. M k k o y . J t m t *

B U IL D E R S : High B Dry
duplex lot*. Lk M ary Schools
Wallace Creea Realty, Inc.
____________ 321-0177____________

LAKE MARY I4JACRIS
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Lake Mary school district. Ideal
tor potential development,
partially wooded, owner will
epl l t and hold part ol
mortgago. Coll Narlane
Reichert. 223 3200, eves 1213352

S A C R B S S T A T E H IG H W A Y
FR O N TAG E ZO N ED H E A V Y
C O M M E R C IA L ........... *140.000
I t r X a tr LO T ZONED H EA V Y
C O M M E R C IA L ..............*10.000
Ito* X 130* C O R N E R Z O N E D
IN D U S T R IA L O N E A S T 21th
S T ......................................*10.000
I
O IB A R Y A R EA

K l Y I S f t I N T H E SO U TH

LU N D

C A L L A N Y T IM I
R E A L T O R .......................*22-4041

A L L T H R A B O V E H A V I L IB ­
E R A L T I R M S A V A IL A B L E
B Y M O T I V A T I O S IL L E R S .

STENSTROM

C A N A LFR O N T TO "L A K E
M A R K H A M " *23.000 T E R M S

REALTY*REALTOR

SEITillER

3 A C R E S O N S M A L L L A K E IN
G E N E V A *21.000. TE R M S

LNIND

W O O D E D 71 X 140 N E A R
" R O L L IN G H IL L S G O L F
C O U R S E *22.000 T E R M S
P IN E A V E . 12 X 137 ACCESS
T O " B E A R L A K E " *23,000

321 Qt.40
OLDPAR KESHO PBLDO .
11.000 iq .fi.. also ad|scant bldg.
Needs to soli to settle estate.
100 tt. on Pork Ave. 170 ft. on

K S,
nanclng......................*441.000.

CALL BART
R EA L E S TA TE
R EALTO R
323-744e

153— AcreageLots/Sale

D ELTO N A AR EA
4 A C R E S W O O D E D . (3
H O M E S I T E S ) *1 1 , 0 0 0 .
TER M S

*to A C R E S N E A R E NT IR P R III, H Q A O (ACCESS
T O " L A K E B E T H E L " *11.100.
TER M S
Ito A C R E S N E A R " S T O N E
IS L A N D " *12,100. T E R M S
H I B I S C U S
L A N E
W A T E R F R O N T . *11.900
D E L T O N A
E S T A T E S
L A K E F R O N T . *34,000
NORM ANDY
TER M S

O R O W IN O S A N F O R O A R E A
4 Acres on S. Sanford Ave. with
beautiful trees end flowing
well. Would make greet set­
tin g lo r log h o m e . C e ll
Nerlane Reichert, 331-3200.
eves................................ 121 3212

K eyes
n oni04 fMC.nrxi.rcms

JO H N S A U LS. SR.
Reg. Reel Estate Broker
acre tracts. Osteen/Msytown
R d . paved road, trees. From
*30.000 to *34.100. 20% down.
Flnancingavallablf.
122-7174...... o r....... 322-1101 eves

BLVO.

*27.100.

O R A N G E C IT Y
2 Vs A C R E
T R A C T S
(P A S T U R E ) *2I.100TERMS

5EIGLER
R E A L T Y

SaRtord’i Safes Leader
W l L IS T A N D S E L L
M ORE P R O P E R TY T H A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y

CALL AMY TIME

322-2420
LA K E M A R Y I Excellent lot lor
duplex site, high (rattle area,
close lo schools, shopping,
rssteurants. etc., great In­
vestment property, ad|scant
lot available . 111.000. Call
Both H a t h a w a y , Reel
tor/Aaeaclato
.
P R IC E D T O S E L L F A S T I 1 f
or - acres, toned lor mobile
home, en|oy the peace and
quiet living, build that home
you've been dream ing ol,
121.000. Call Te rry Llvle. Re
allor/Associete
V A C A N T L A N D •G E N E V A , 1 +
acres with lots of Oaks A
Pines, lend Is high end dry,
build your dream home on this
lovsly home site, nice homes
In area. *24.000. Call Te rry
Llvle, Realtor/Assoclate
O G E N E V A O S C E O L A R D .e
Z O N E D FO R M O B IL E S I
1 Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
20% Down. I » Yrs. at 12% I
From sis,sooi

(fell toil free 1-800-323-3720

m . i n , ................... ...
2141 P A R K A V E ..............Sentord
401 Lk. M a ry Blvd.........Lk. M ary

y »

n d

321 [lb4D

STO N E IS LA N D . Lake Monroe
Nice large wooded lot. also lot
on Little Withlacoochee River,
e B A R G A IN e For quick
cash
332 0471.........or............442 3100

7.7% APR
CONSTRUCTION FINANCING
FOR UP TO 2 YEARS

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

SAVE O N H IO H LA B O R COSTS
and build It yourself. No down
payment. Quality pre-cut me
terlals. Step by step Instruc­
tions. Cell for details or attend
a seminar...............301-413-1441

155— Condominiums
Co-Op /Sale
S A N D LEW O O O V IL L A S - Sale
or lease option. 1/1 condo,
near pool, good financing.
131.440. C a ll:.................*441121

157— Mobile
Homes / Sale

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B .E . L IN K CO N ST.
Remodeling............... 301322 7024
Financing........... Llc*CRC00047l

Blinds &amp; Drapes
C U S TO M D R A P E R Y , balloon
c u r t a in s , m ln l-b lin d s A
verticals. Free est. In home
service. Madeline....... 323 *301
O R A P E S / TO P T R E A T M E N T S
D U S T R U F F L E S / P IL L O W
SHAMS B Y D IA N E ..... 333-1244

House Plans
C U S T O M B L U E P R IN T S
FestServIcel Good quality)
KK D E S IG N S ................... 7*7-1434

Carpentry

General Services

Landclearing

Painting

F R E D 'S ERR ANDS
24 hr. sarvlce. Reasonable
C a ll:.................................. 32141741

B A C K H O E , Dum p truck. Bush
hog, Box blading, and Discing.
Call:322-I*04...... or.......322 4313

P A IN T IN O : Complete Interior
*241/Exterlor *310 Satisfaction
guaranteed. C all..........*1*2214

Handy Man

T H O R N E L A N D C L E A R IN G
Loader and truck work/septic

H A U L IN O / C L E A N U P W ORK.
New/Old Const. Clean Inside A

out. Carpentry. *311*41

Home Improvement
C A R P E N T R Y B Y E D DAVIS
R E M O D E L IN O / R E N O V A T IO N
Large And Small Jobs Welcome
Sentord Res. I* yrs. 331-4443
R E M O D E L IN G A A D D ITIO N S .
Masonry A Concrete work.
Locai number. 44* 1341 EVES.

Home Repairs

R IC H A R D S C A R P E N T R Y
I* yrs In Central Florida
Call...................................... 323 17*7

tanksand^^e^srnTl^l^

Landscaping
B A H IA SOD, *14.00 par pallet.
Wax M yrtles all sites, de
livery avail. C ell.......... 144-4231
B O O U E S I E x p l Professional I
Lawn A Garden Main! A chain
saw work! Lake M ary Resldent. F R E E E S T I 323 *347
S E M IN O L E L A N D S C A P IN G

322-8133

Lawn Service

A L L PHASES of household
repair A Improvement.
o F R E E E S T IM A T E S # 323-1*31

B A R R IE R 'S Landscapingl
Irr lg ., Lawn Care. Res A
Comm. 321-7*44. F R E E E S T I

R E M O D E L I N O . C a rp e n try .
P ainting . Sm all electrical
repairs A Installation, plumb
Ing A Installation. Hauling A
lawn service. Call:
E d o r Allan....................... 321 4210

" S U N N Y S ". Mow. edge. trim ,
planting, mulching. S P R IN O
Spec. Free est. 322 7124

A L L T Y P E S O f C a rp tn try .
Remodallng A home repairs.
Cell Richard G ro w 321 1472.

1 0 1

“ "S S

VW R A B B IT D IE S E L L - 02.
Baby blue w/belge cloth Int.
A/C, 5 sp., 53.000 m l.. 40 mpg
city. 55 mpg hwy.. 3 mo.
Pirelli tires. Like new cond.
Must Sell 113.300 nog. 174 3740
p i p , SR Ji. d w i ....................See:
A A U T O IN S U R A N C E W O R LD
2544 S. French A ve ........ 333-7203

Nursing Care
H IL L H A V E N H E A L T H C A R E
C E N T E R , 910 Mellonvllle A v ..
322 4144........................... E .O .E .
O U R R A T E S A R E LO W E R
Lekeview Nursing Canter
f i t E . Second St., Sanford
122-4707

P R O F E S S IO N A L . Q U A L IT Y
Painting by Dave
Interior. Exterior, Residential.
C o m m e r c i a l . Pressure
Washing. Drywall Repair A
Popcorn Callings.
Lie
Bonded....Ins
323 407*

Secretarial Service

A A R O N M O B IL E H O M E . 2
bdrm., sat up In nice lam lly
park, will finance pert, phone
321 &gt;4*4 eves til 4._____________
C A R R IA O E C O V E : Adult Sec .
2 bdrm ., 2 bath. 2 car carport,
screened porch A utility rm .
Exc. cond. &gt;14.100........322 2474
DBL. W ID E (2tx60). 3/2. 4 rms
total A very spacious. Located
Carriage Cove. M oving, must
swill 321 &gt;404......o r...... 341 744*
R EP O S.......R E S A L E S ........N E W
Ceirlege Cove Mobile Home
Perk. Come see us 111
Gregory Mobiles Homes.3231200

Custom Typing- BookkeepingNotary Public. Call: D .J. En
ftrprlsas. ( M l ) 322-7*42.

'73 V IL L A O E R : 12X12. 2 bdrm ..
I bath. A/C. celling fan. new
carpet *4100080....... 322 3121

S e w e r /S e p t ic T a n k

159— Real Estate
Wanted

HO W AR D'S S E P T IC S E R V IC E
Repair Linas A Clean Tanks
Free Estimates............ 122 0214

Tree Service
ALL TREE SERVICE t
Firew ood Woodsplitter lor
hire Call Attar 4 P M 323 4044
EC H O LS T R E E S E R V IC E
Free Estlmatetl Low Prlcetl
Lie...Ins...Stump Grinding,Tool
131-/334 day or nito
“ Let Iho Professionals do it".

P R O F I T A B L E BUSINESS.
Service station, mobile park,
etc In Lo ngw ood/Senlord
area for owner management
by serious buyer. 323 4420 eves

VW BUO: '71,
Pay Here......

■*»i-*tn

Hw y. W , Daytons Beach

904-2554311

uuy ner#....................... fa y Mere
Instant Credit

233—Auto Parts
/ Accossorlos

199—Pets 6 Supplies
USED CARS

OOOD

Sanford............................. 321-112*
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
W E F IN A N C E
W A LK IN .................D R IV E O U T
N A T IO N A L A U T O SALES
Sanford Ave. A 12th 5I....33) *071

D O O O B E D IE N C E CLASSESS ta rt S a t. Ja n . 24. C a ll:
Shirley Rallly...............373*343

201—Horses

A L T A M O N T E S P R IN O S A R E A

CONSULT OUR

H U B E R T PEARCE
Exp. Income Tax Service

H O T W A T I R Solar System,
new. Being transferred, must
sell. 03000.............240-2434

DAYTONA AUTO
AUCTION

SANFORDAREA
1 A CR ES A T "A S TO R FARM S"
W E S T O F 1-4 O N L Y *31.000.
TER M S

C A N A L F R O N T TO "L A K E
J E S S U P " *11.000. T E R M S

4.000 to 14.000 lb*., traffic A
vibrator rollers, huber grater,
farm tractors. 12 ft.. 40 ft., 45
ft. bucket trucks. ) Wayne
Chippers. 0.000 lb. A 14.000 lb.
B oom tru c k s , u n it tru c k
c r a n e . ‘ 7* C a s a M 0 R
excavator, '73 John Oeera
440A . 7 4 John Deere 742A
Scraper, '7* C A T W0 with tree
shear, 440G Graded. 3 diesel
engines. 0 Inch pumps. 121/140
C F M Compressors. Cummins
p o w e r g e n e ra to r. Oskosh
truck mixers. 25 trucks In­
cluding single, double. A frlaxtes. chasey cabs. A dump
trucks. 0 tractor units some
with wet lines, 7 drop deck A
tall-a-long machinery trailers.
2 fire trucks. A dbl. decker bus
More A more equipment A
mlsc. Items arriving dally.
Sale conducted by:

*u &gt;i)i «im

O N 17-41 Z O N E D H E A V Y
C O M M E R C IA L *
A C R E S ............................. *40.000

K E Y E S * ! I N T H E S O U TH

Accredited mambar N.M.S.C.

Accounting &amp;
Ta x Service

POOHBERRY FARM ISOPEN
CALL X B 97V

SaeferfsSafeslute

LETS TRADE!
Train To Be A
Travtl A ftn t • Tour Guid«
Airline Rssenrationist

mm
. realty

,...4 r.........323-4430

REALTY*REJ)LTOR

321-2720
S A N F O R O I Quiet. 3/1. Mod.
klt/bath, New alum, eaves A

RI/MAX

STENSTROM

JAMES LEE
321-7823.........E m . 323 0809

ITSIMTOWLY

M J V C R W T om
i
-n c ^ w n o M .

cvinngi, otilr vccvni w|ii, Dig

CALL NOW11

■
V

■A .

I If

P AI R
. . . .1
.N B B 0
M
Lot? Blit

•w C A m .n i ® ii u n i wrtgM

141-

203—Livestock and
Poultry

F O R D R A N O E R '•5. 4 X 4. 5
spd. overdrive, P .S., P.B.. A
stereo, 27.000 m l., taka over
pymnf. After 12 N oe n ..J1 1 -7 iU
F O R D V A N : '7*. to ton, l speed,
4cyl„ work truck WOO.
__Call.............. ,331-37*0 after 4pm

USED CARS
Sentord............................. **1-*1**
C A M A R O 'W
Buy Here....................... Pay Here

1

A

Installation

C H I V Y L U V - '10. 4x4, rail bar,
w ith w a n c h , a/ c. S t, 100.
C a ll:............. 174-4541 after 4 pm

M *m /
C A T T L E / H O R S E Trailer. 1* ft.,
d iv id e d , good c o n d itio n .
*445.00 Cell.
ill....................33*1)37
O O A T S FO R S A L E
C H E A P II

M O TO R S

2 3 5 -T r u c k s /
Busas/Vans

B U IC K R E O A L : '*0. 2 door. V 4.
air, pow. steering A brakes.
Many other options. X X -N Ice l
**41 down...... Phene: M l ■1470,
BUICK E L E C T R A :'t0
Buy Here....................... Pay Hera
Instant Credit

L A R G E P A S T U R E FO R R E N T Sanford area. *30 month. Call:
323 1410

USED

transmissions.

238— V e h icle s

x/HVvtrx iuEWNJvSf.^Ill

211— Antiques/
Collectibles
B L A N K E T C H E S T , Humpback
trunk, 4 oak kltchan chairs,
oak piano bench, d ryin g rack,
appointment only, 323 1771
D E P R E S S IO N C LA S S
SHOW A S A LE
Sentord Civic Center
Sentord. FI.
Sat. Jan. 24th...............1Oam 4pm
Sun. Jan 25th................ 10am 5pm
Preview
F rl. Jan. 23rd............... 7pm 4pm
Admission: *3.10
(with this ad *2.001
L IQ U IO A T IN O Slock ol uphol
story A decorator furniture.
Peddlers Cart. 133 N. Ad.lie
Ave., Deland................ 734-1144
W O O D B U R N IN O Cook stove
with bun warmers. Iltt top
school desk. Jtoxi tt. solid oak
desk. 1*1 04*4.....o r..... 323 3*43

213— Auctions
BOB'S U S E D F U R N IT U R E
W E T A K E C O N S IG N M E N TS ,
B U Y OR S E L L ................333-3)10

BRIDGES AND SON
Auction every Thursday 7 PM.

WE BUY ESTATES!

USED CARS

W E P A Y T O P W tor wreckad

»* "«ord............................2*1-1111
C H E V E T T E i'7 4 ..........Buy Here
Pay Here...............Instant Credit

cars/trucks. Wa Sail guaran­
teed used parte. AA A U TO
SALVAOR o* P*eecy..4*»Mt»

fantoed............................-* * 1-2132
C H E V Y C H E V E T T E i 'I O
Buy Here.......................Pay Hare
Instant Credit

Y A M A H A H S .'M , D irt Bike:
Like new 2*4 mile*. 1)400
C a ll.............. J44 4011 Evenings

JO H N S O N 40hp electric start
outboard motor. 1974, runs
perfectly *400 ALS O 14* alu­
minum John boat, good cond
*210..See at 2140 Granada Ave.
(ott 21th St. behind Hardy's)

217— Garage Sales
E S T A T E S A L E . E ve ry th in g
Must G ol Free/er *71. 343
Sprlngvlew D r. F rl Sat, 10-3
F R E E Z E R , rototllle r. riding
mower, work bench, furniture.
A mlsc. 24* Maureen Dr. (1
ml. west ol I 4 on SR 44) Sat.
4 1.................................... 321 1241
M O V IN G S A L E : F rl 4am 2pm.
Furniture, housewares, bikes,
clothes, etc. 104 Whispering
Pines C t................Hidden Lake
Y A R D S A L E - Frl.. Sat. A Sun.
112 Crystal Lake Ave. Lake
M ary across from Na/arena
Church.

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

USED CARS
fanferd.............................. *31-31*3
C H R Y S L E R , *77’ : . ......Buy Here
Pay H e r e ^ j j ^ ^ n s t e n l Credit

USED CARS
» «" to r d ............................... 331-3133
F O R SALE O R T R A D E . 1474
Chrysler New Yorker, nice
shape. 49.000 miles, new radial
tires. *1.910 or will trade for
smaller car ol equal value.
C e ll:........................... 321 3140
F O R D O R A N A D A :';* Buy Hero
Pay Here........... Instant Credit

~1SSE

H I-L O Tra ve l T ra ile r: '12. 21 ft.
*7.700 Exc. cond. Bob Owen
T ra v e l Traitors *13 N. Adolto
A ve ., Poland.................734-1010
M A Y F L O W I R : '1 0 . P a r k
M odel. l l ' X t ' T ip outs. Neal A
clean *7.MO Bab Owen T ra v e l
Traitor* 313 N . Adolto A ve .,
p * 1* " * .......................... Tie-Mia
c *r« o .
Ut i l i t y . T ilt in g T r a ile r .
Unique.
Bob Owen T ra v e l
Tra itors 132 N . Adolto A ve .,
Poland......... .................. 730-1010
* E * V 48 N B W H , L 0 T R A V E L T R A I L E R S at Bob O w tn
Tra ve l Trailers 333 N. Adolto
A ve.. Deland................. 73*1010

USED CARS

Sanford..... .........................221-2123
F O R D M U S T A N O :'7 l Buy Here
Fay Here...............Instant Credit

1T

Hw y 44...........................333 2*0)

215— Boats and
Accessories

239—Motorcycles
and Bikos

____________E i 1

USED CARS

USED CARS
Santord.............................. 331-1113
F O R O M U S TA N O '7 1 '
Buy H e re ..................... Pay Here
Instant Credit

S K Y L A R K T ra v e l traitor':
'•2. U til. shed. Insulated alum ,
root, ready to m ove Into.
Com pl. turn. See at !2 Oaks
Campground, slta 331.......*7100

BUY HERE
PAY H ER E

USED CARS
Santord.............................. 331-2123
F O R D P IN TO :'7 9 .........Buy Hera
Pay Here...............Instant Credit

LOW
DOWN PAYMENT

a

USED CARS
Santord..............- .............331-3123
H O N D A C IV IC i'1 0...... Buy Here
Pay Here.............Inslant Credit

GOOD CREDIT BSD CREDIT

NO CREDII
NO INTEREST

USED CARS
Santord..............................331-3123
IM P A LA '4 4 Buy Here....................... Pay Here
Instant Credit

a

USED CARS
1219 S HWY 1/9?
SANFORD i ? l ? l ? l

USED CARS
Santord............................. 131-1123

CO M PLETE D E T A IL SERVICE
$ 7

9

9 5

rtl&lt;«
s »0fie
”*
£/'

ASK FOR LUDY
OIL CHANGES • TUNE-UPS • SAFETY INSPECTION
•- - SPEEDY SERVICE! LOW COST!

163— Waterfront
Property / Sale
S AN FO R D : Lakefront lot In tha
city limits. Sewer A water,
ready to build on Fish. ski.
swim. Call Now 1..........321 3247

3219 S. Hwy. 17-92
Sanford

USED CARS

PH. 3 2 3 -2 1 2 3
* i.; *
y . .. f

fv*
.

�Calcium Count Level
And Gland Problems

V

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coowe

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SUB STITUTE
F O R C IG A R E T T E S

f in p a

THE B O R N LO S ER

W H Y A R E YOU 6 U C K IM E
O N TH A T S A U S A G E*
.

_

^

By Art t u t ofr

Y X * T R O U B L E 16

j &amp; T ' toots. « w z o p n * » ie i

SU P P O SE I REVEAL THE
ID E N TITY O P THE PERSON
WHO S L U e P Y O U R BOOK
^ r il v
TO G E TH E R

O R PLEAD
GUILTY TO
TALKING IN
^ CLASS r

DID MOU EVER BARE. SOUR
SOUL ID A WOMAWUJHOWAS
SO AFFECTED BV IT SHE-

FORGET
&gt; IT, «&lt;
ARCHIE/

AND TAKE V O U R S E A T /

you CAN'T
V?

YOUR VYAY OUT O F DETENTION/' J

n

DOAJT BE
RIDICULOUS

p l e a - b a r g a in

MEAH...ME
N E IT H E R !

F O R G O T MOUR WAME. ?

DEAR DR. GOTT — I’m 67.
and my calcium count stays
between 10.0 and 10.5. My
alkaline phosphate has gone
from 144 to 183 In a year. My
doctor wants to do surgery on
the parathyroid gland, which he
says is small and does not show
up on X-rays. Can you tell me
more about these symptoms?
DEAR READER - A calcium
level of 10.5 to 10.0 la minimally
elevated. However, your alkaline
phosphate Is rising; this in­
dicates the likelihood that the
alkaline-phosphate enzyme is
b e i n g r e l e a s e I nt o the
bloodstream because of rapid
bone turnover.
The parathyroid gland regu­
lates calcium (and bone) metaboItem. Therefore, your doctor Is
correct In wanting to make sure
that the gland Is not overworklng and producing the abnormal
lab tests. A parathormone assay
(a test that measures the amount
of parathyroid hormone) would
be a valuable piece of lnformatlon to have before letting the
surgeon operate. I think that a
more common cause of your
laboratory abnorm alities Is
Paget's disease of bone, a condi­
tion of unknown cause that Is
characterized by simultaneous
bone breakdown and repair. A
bone scan will highlight the
areas of bone change. If you
have Paget's disease, no treat­
ment la necessary. However, If
your parathyroid hormone level
Is high, surgery will be advisable
to remove the diseased part of
the gland.
DEAR DR. GOTT - What Is
the cure for laziness? I'm 64.
single, can't see too well and
have had no ambition lately.
What's happening to me?
DEAR READER — Laziness
has a moral connotation: Some­
how. a lazy person can force
himself (or be more motivated)
to be less lazy. If you are
fatigued and have no ambition,
there could be a physical cause
— such as anemia or a lowthyroid condition. Depression
also can cause lack of energy.
Rather than considering yourself

lazy, see a doctor for a complete
examination. Loss of ambition is
more likely due to a physical or
mental cause than to sheer
cussed lailness.

• Daviata

12 Taka apart
13 Domination
14 Codoetion of

18 ioHov#----------- not
18 Honorable
18 Stupid
20 Ancient Italian
family
21 Bitter vetch
22 Actor Brynner
24 Wins

3 7 ____ Churchil
31 Thii ,nd
32 Mulberry cloth
33 Entertilnor
Sumsc
34 Tie-____ -toe
38 Trivet piece
38 Cord
37 Old Testsment

□nc nnnn nnnn
nnnn oqgg
nnn n n nn n nnn
□nnnn non nnn
□od nnnn
unncm nn n n n n n
nnc n n n n nnnn
nnnn nnnn nnn
□nnnn nonnnnn
nnnn nnn
nnn n n n n n n n n
□nnn n n n n nnn
□ n n n n n n n nnn
□ n n n n n n n one

3M i

7 High not*
8 Vary small

9 SwMt pOtltOM
10 Dill MSd

11 W a S

in watar

17 Iloetrie fish
IB Tax agsnoy

(•bbr.)
22 Cry of pain
23 Faorio Quoono
24 Feminine tuffli
28 BibHcel king
28 Move quickly
27 Greet_____of
Chine
28 Amcteur
29 Prophetic sign
30 Words of denill
32 Knots
38 Pleting motel
1

41 Breedmsking
Ingredient
42 Csmpus eree
43 Hooklike ports
|«

3

a

13

10

11

114

i

13
It

•
31

24

31

33

34

30

47

43

f iiM 13

31

I 34

34
37

42

33

I 34

43

44

44

4*
“
•3

1 Tobacco chew
2 Biblical
proposition
3 Pagan god

“

M

L

WIN A T BRIDGE

A N S .S IL U r H A S B E E N
P R A C T IC IN G T H E V IO L IN
TE N YEARS .

N O , BUTT H E «5
^ H D W N A AAARKED
IM P R O V E M E N T
IN T H E L A S T
TW ELVE M O N TH S

By James Jacoby
On this deal the defenders
realized that their heads were
not Just pegs on which to place
their hats. When West led the
queen o f hearts, declarer won
the ace and played dummy's
A-K o f clubs. Now declarer
played a low diamond to his jack
and West's king. Knowing that
declarer had four club winners
In his hand if he could get the
lead. West wisely abandoned
hearts, playing the spade king
and another spade Instead. East
won the second space with his
Jack, cashed the spade ace and
played back the nine. Declarer
could win the fourth spade In
dummy but now had to play
away from the A -10 o f diamonds
again. When he chose to play the
ace first and then another
dlamong. East took two more

I T W A S N IN E
Y E A P S BEFO R E
HE FO UND O U T
H E W A S N 'T "
S U P P O S E D

T2?

I T / o C\ 0 t o ) .

diamond tricks to set the con­
tract two tricks. Good thinking
on the part of both defenders. So
what's the problem?
...
Just a minor point. It Is'
natural when defending'against
no-trump to continue a suit In
which you are winning tricks.
What then would happen If West
were allowed to win the first
trick with hls heart queen? If he
thought his partner held the
king or ace of hearts, he would
very likely continue with a
second heart. Declarer could
then happily discard the A-K of
clubs from dummy on the A-K of
hearts and cash out hls six good
clubs to make nine tricks and hls
contract. Maybe West would be
clever enough to abandon hearts
at the second trick, especially
with a discouraging signal from
East, but then again, maybe not.

SOUTH
♦ 72
♦ AK3
♦ J3
♦ q j 109 8 3

Vulnerable- East-West
Dealer: North
South

24
2 NT
Pass

Opening lead: V Q

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring.,.

I

F^ALLY

FN VY Y3U

PEOPLE W H ° C A N
(SET A W A Y
5 0 M P

ON&amp;E IN A WYULE:

THEM MAKE SOME GUVS
THINK THEV RE SOMEONE
^
THEY'RE NOT
~

MUSTACHES PO
STRANGE THINGS
TO PEOPLE

FRANKLU.MV PEAR. I P O N T J
GIVE A PARN n -------■--------«■
— . ,

r PONT FEEL
^V SA FE H ERE
' / T Y U l V A N YM O R E f

by T . K. Ryan

TUM BLEW EED S

f LOOK RTALLTHOSE A
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H A Z Y H O L L S K !/ V Z

TOUR BIRTHDAY
J A N U A R Y 23,1987
You have excellent potential
for success In the year, ahead.
However, In order to achieve
everything of which you are
capable, you must continuously
set goals.
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Today you might feel that what
you have to say Is so Interesting
you'll want to dominate the
conversation. Remember that
you can also learn by listening.
Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Matchmaker set
can help you understand what It
might take to make the rela­
tio n s h ip w o rk . M all $2 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Even though It will be difficult,
don't reveal to others today
something that was told to you
in s t r ic t c o n fid e n c e . You
w ouldn't like If If someone

P-DEAf? SANDY-THANH
YOU- PERHAPS yOO L
n COULD- HELP ME - 1
GET PACK-

exposed your secrets.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) An
acquaintance who does a lot of
talking but seldom has anything
to say could confuse your life If
you get too closely Involved with
him or her today.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Others are not apt to find fault
with your general m ode o f
behavior today, but you might
do something trivial that could
tarnish your Image.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Before prematurely revealing
your plans to another today, stop
and think about whether the
person to whom you're talking
should know about those plans
In the first place.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
It's best not to introduce heavy
topics when socializing with
friends today. Your Input could
make others feel uneasy, and
take the edge off their fun.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be sure
to follow through on promises
you’ve made to family members
or relatives. They’re not likely to
continue to believe your excuses
for delays.

WOULD YOU HAVE
IF WE'VE
_ _ DONE AWAY
WITH HIS WlfS,
WHAT WOULD

mm

m att

**?

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Guard against the temptation
today to blame a co-worker for a
mistake which was o f your own
making. Passing the buck will
have repercussions.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) It
behooves you to take a little
extra time to be a "omparlson
shopper today. Money can be
saved If you check all your
sources before buying.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Early In the day you may be
rather temperamental and take
things that others say out of
context. Upon reflection, howev­
er. you'll realize no 111 will was
intended.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Information passed on to you
today by "Insiders" shouldn't be
taken too seriously. There's a
strong possibility their facts are
erroneous.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Any material or financial
losses you suffer today are likely
to be due to your own care­
lessness. S triv e to conduct
yourself in an organized fashion.

WH-WHO
IS THAT?,

WH'WHAT
ISTHATff

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I

ForlResearch Lab Gets

Sanford Management Praised

Auditors Suggest Fee For Late Utility Payments
By Keren Talley
Herald Staff Writer
In on audit almost three times
as expensive as the one done by
a local firm last year, a ‘•na­
tionally recognized" accounting
firm has told Sanford It should
consider imposing late fees on
overdue utility bill payments.
That was one of a number of

suggestions the city got for Its
927.000 audit by Coopers and
Lybrand, Orlando. Last year
Hartsock and Hartsock of San­
ford prepared the city's audit for
99.480. The firm had responsi­
bility for the audit for several
years but was criticized last year
by Commissioner John Mercer
for not offering management

suggestions.
The decision to retain Coopers
nnd Lybrand came after Mercer's
criticisms and state and federal
r e q u i r e m e n t s t h a t a ll
municipalities have more com­
prehensive audits prepared
b e g in n in g the fiscal y ear
1985-86. according to com­
mission discussion last summer.

Coopers and Lybrand gave the
city an extremely clean bill of
fiscal health In the 1985-86 audit
presented In a city work session
Monday.
Efforts to Improve city opera­
tions further have city repre­
sentatives Indicating agreement
with several of the firm's "con­
structive criticisms" and sug­

gestions. Including the possible
start of laic fees for overdue
utility bill payments.
The firm also suggested In­
suring against the potential of
million dollar workers’ com­
pensation claims, and devising
an In-house security system for
city hall's growing computer
system.

Sanford compiles on all counts
with applicable state and federal
financial, operational and man­
agem ent reg u la tio n s, said
Christine Hill, n partner In the
firm.
The Information, not suprislngly. was well received by
See AUDIT, page e A

Residents Study
Possible Routes
For Expressway
By Kathy Tyrity
Herald Staff Writer
Hundreds of Seminole County residents
huddled around maps posted at the Winter
Springs Municipal Building Tuesday where
consultants working on possible routes for
the Seminole County Expressway answered
questions and passed out Information.
It was the first of three Informal public
Information sessions this week showing
several proposed routes for the expressway.
The sessions continue today from 3-9 p.m. at
Sanford City Hall, and Thursday from 3-9
p.m. at SanfordTClvlc Center.
Tuesday, these were some of the most
common questions asked and the answers
given:
.
• How much will bo paid for a y
property?
The Expressway Authority Is required to

Seminole County firefighters rem ove seriously Injured Indiana w om an fro m car.

e p

H urt In
W re ck
Herald Staff Writer
"This Is what happens when
you pull out In front of a sand
truck, or anything else." said
Florida Highway Patrol trooper
Ken Weaver at the scene of a
wreck which seriously Injured
an Indiana couple In a compact
car west of Sanford at about 2
p.m. Tuesday.
"I was In the Inside lane and
he was right there." said Kevin
Rogers. 23. or Apopka who was
See WRECK, page 12A

Bystander Joe

A r»l

com forts

Injured

d riv e r

County rescue w orker applies neck brace.

w hile a Seminole

wmcnTs purchased form e expressway, W value will be determined through appraisals
which will consider the value of the property
needed, as well as Impact of a purchase on
parcels which are split, or reduced In size.
The authority will make every effort to reach
an agreement with each property owner on a
price for a fee simple purchase. If an
agreement cannot be reached, the apthorlty
can acquire property through Its power of
eminent domain, which allows the final
value of the property to be determined
through the Judicial system.
o How m uch p r o p e r ty w ill be
purchased for the expressway?
The Expressway Authority will purchase
all property needed to construct a safe and
efficient highway. This land will generally be
300 feet wide except at Interchanges which
will require additional property for ramps.
Parcels of property which are not needed for
construction or the expressway generally
cannot be purchased by the authority even if
they are adjacent, to the expressway
right-of-way. '
o What information will bo uaod to
evaluate the alternative routee and
reconunend a final location for the
expreeeway?
Possible routes are to be evaluated on how
well each will meet the travel needs of the
area, how they will affect environmental

1
i

Steve P reco urt, expressway consultant,
explains m a p of possible routes to
L o re tta D a s h e r, w h o liv e s In the
H ighlands subdivision between State
Road 434 and State Road 419, near one
of the suggested highw ay paths.

quality, including impacts on the natural
environment as well as the people who live
and work nearby, ond financial feasibility.
Environmental Issues to be evaluated
include wetlands, habitat, neighborhoods,
community services, cultural features, and
Individual homes. Financial discussion will
include a comparison of project costs for
right-of-way and construction and estimated
toll revenues.
• W ill o th er groups a s s is t the
authority la reviewing the possible
routes and In making the environmental
study?
Yes. The Expressway Authority wants to
have as much Information as possible
available. They have appointed a Technical
Review Committee which will be assisted by
two sub-committees: the Citizens Advisory
Committee and the Environmental Advisory
Group. These three committees will review
Information, analysts and recommendations
Bee ROUTES, page 6A

N o Rate H ik e A s Lo n g w o o d O K s S e w e r Pact
two bicycles that
to an anon-attempt that
explosive device near the
a panting lot gas pumps last week.
A hear can and a bottle containing gasoline
tly robed into the lot and were
four feet from the gas pumps.
___ Chief Bteve Harriett said.
The gasoline to the bottle was burning when
officer* arrived and had to be extinguished.
Harriett said that the act must have been done

By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
Ignoring the recommendation of
their city administrator. Longwood
City Commissioners have unani­
mously approved revisions In the
c ity 's sew er ag re em e n t with
Seminole County without increasing
sew er r a te s or d e v e lo p m e n t
assistance fees. The action was
taken subject to the approval of Sun
Bank, which holds the revenue
bonds.
CUy Administrator Ron Waller had
recommended the revised agreement
be approved subject to Increasing

monthly rates and development fees
to levels needed to repay the Sun
Bank loan and In line with the Feb.
16 feasibility report prepared by
Kane and Shuck auditing firm.
The original agreem ent was
approved by the city commission on
Dec. 15. 1986.
Waller had recommended a 50
percent Increase in rates to sewer
customers, which are now at 924 a
month because he said Kane and
Shuck's report clearly shows It Is
needed. Com m issioner Harvey
Smeiilson. who made the motion at
Monday night's meeting with the

stipulation that nothing be done
about the rates at this time, said he
did not see any Justification at the
present time for a 50 percent
Increase.
Sm crllson's the report's con­
clusion that the increases would be
needed was before the commission
came up with viable options at a
Feb. 18 workshop. These Included
renegotiating with the county to
extend the terms of the agreement
from 10 years to Sept. 1, 1998. to
coincide with the deadline for paying
off the loan: revising the payment
schedule to parallrl construction

Ordinance To Get Tough On False Alarms
The Longwood City Commission system has been examined by an quate because the city has no legal
has given preliminary approval to a authorized repair service or certified method of requiring payments for
security alarm violations. The city
proposed ordinance that will permit in good working order.
was informed by Its attorney that the
The
proposed
service
fee
to
be
police and fire departments to stop
responding to alarms that fall to charged for false alarms Is as follows: past procedure of putting a lien on
comply with the ordinance and first reponsc In the last six months . the property of those who had
public hearing on the proposal has with report filed — no fee: first repeated false alarms and failed to
response within six months with no pay the fine Is unconstitutional.
been set for 7:30 p.m. April 6.
Waller said the proposed change is
Under the proposed ordinance report filed, 935: second response
used
effectively by numerous cities
within
six
months,
950:
subsequent
voted on unanimously by the com­
and will accomplish the primary goal
mission Monday night, upon recep­ response within six months. 9150.
Upon failure of the owner to pay of reducing the number of responses
tion of a false alarm, or a system test
the
fee within 10 days, response to to false alarms.
with no notlflcatlon. the police or fire
In other business. Fire Department
department will Issue a warning that alarm system will be discon­
Battalion Chief Alan Brown asked
notice to the owner, lessee or tinued.
City Administrator Ron Waller the commission to approve a re­
manager of the premises. The owner
will have five working days to file a said In a memo to the commission newal of the agreement between the
written report stating the alarm thut present procedures are Inade­ city and Dr. Benjamin G. Newman.

IL .

the Medical S ervices Medical
Director for Seminole County. He
said the city's paramedics practice
under Newman's license and are
certified in the county through him.
He advises them and supervises
their Advanced Life Care Service.
The commission voted 4-1 to
authorize Mayor Ed Myers to sign
the agreement on behalf of the city.
Commission June Lormann made
the motion. Commissioner Harvey
Stnerllson said he voted against it
because of "privileged Information I
won't give out. but I can't In my own
conscience support It."
—Jane Casselberry

activities and actual flow of sewage
through the lines from Longwood:
and the terms for giving notice lo the
mayor.
The county agrees to reserve for
Longwood 325.000 gallons per day
of sewage capacity at the rate of
95.75 per gallon. The agreement
calls for the city to pay the county
91.868.750 In connection fees, origi­
nally required In advance, under the
following revised payment schedule:
• Five percent (993.437.50) Is
due upon execution of the Florida
See PACT, page 12 A

TO D A Y
SB
4B.5B
...... 3A
..6B
....12A
..... 4A

F lo rid a ......... ........... 3A
Horoscope... ...........6B
N ation...................... 5A
People.......... ..... IB-3B
P o lice ........... ...........2A
Sports........... ...9A-11A
Te le v is io n ... ...........3B
* W e a th e r------- ...........2A
W o rld ........................6A

School M o n o
T h u r s d a y : Cheese c ro is s a n t, ta sty
green beans, fresh |ulce, pa rty m ix cup
and lowfat m ilk.

i

�r
2A— Stnford Htraid, Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, March 4 , 1W7

POLICE
IN BRIEF
Burglary Victim Identifies Bag,
Tapes, Suspect Arrested
Gregory Scott Smith, 23. of 1954 Springs St.. Winter
Springs, spotted a man walking along Scmoran Boulevard
In Casselberry at about 4:45 p.m. Monday. The man had a
bookbag that looked like one stolen Monday from Smith in
a burglary.
Smith called Casselberry police who stopped the
bookbag carrier and questioned him. Inside the bag police
found four audio tapes that bore Smith's Initials and which
Smith reportedly Identified as his.
The suspect reportedly said he found the bag. The Items
were valued at $21. Brian David Huddleston. 19, of 11885
Homboldt Drive, Maitland, has been charged with
theft-possession of stolen property. He has been released
without posting bond.

Fast Car, Bad Tag Brings Ja il
Lake Mary police, who clocked a car traveling south on
Rinehart Road at 73 mph, stopped the vehicle and found
that (t also had an unasslgned license tag and the driver
had no valid driver's license. Police reported finding less
than 20 grams of marijuana Inside the vehicle.
Jerome Simmons, 25. of Orlando, was charged with
possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana, having an
unasslgned license tag and no driver's license. He was
arrested at 11:10 p.m. Monday on Rinehart Road and was
being held In lieu of 9500 bond.

Driving Under Influence Arrest
The following person has been arrested In Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
—Gary Arthur Durrance, 36. of 112 Anderson Court,
Sanford, was arrested at 9:49 p.m. Monday after his car
was seen weaving on Snow Hill Road south of State Road
426.

Burglaries A n d Thefts Reported
Susan Fowler Van Aalten, 35, of 2441 Mills Creek Road,
Chuluota, reported to sherlfTs deputies that a 9450
diamond ring was stolen from her home between Feb. 22
and 28.
The 1971 Bulck of Bruce Celia, 66, of 525 S. Scmoran
Blvd„ Fern Park, was stolen between Feb. 22 and Monday.
A sherlfTs report valued the vehicle at 91,000.

jChurch Lurkers Arrested
4

; W h e n tw o L a k e M ary
.'policemen checked with each
;other just after midnight Mon.'day they discovered that within
fmlnutes of each other they had
.‘both questioned two suspects
.'who were lurking around the
^Presbyterian Church on Sun
4.Drive,
; The officers returned together
Ito that *area. They found one
jsuspect In his car at a service
.'station on Lake Mary Boulevard.
'That man allegedly told police
:hc had taken his companion
3home to Sanford. But police
3reported finding the second sus-

pect In a nearby telephone
booth.
The suspects couldn't give
police a reason for being around
the church.
Jeffrey Mark Dunn, 25, of
2018 Palmetto Ave„ Sanford,
and Richard Stephen Sandkulla,
24. of 3807 Cypress Ave„ San­
ford, have been charged with
l o i t e r i n g a n d p r o w lin g .
Sandkulla who alle^dly resisted
police was also charged with
resisting arrest without violence.
They were arrested at 12:34
a.m. Tuesday and have been
released on 9500 bond each.
—Busan Loden

iWoman Jailed For
McDonalds Attack
■ A 24-year-old A ltam onte
^Springs woman who allegedly
^threatened to shoot and shoved
■an employee of McDonalds In the
Sparking lot of that restaurant on
fu.S. Highway 17-92. Longwood,
•has been charged with ag&gt;gravated assault and battery.
1 The suspect reportedly got out
[of the passenger’s seat of a car In
ithe drive-up window lane at the
.restaurant at about 8:30 p.m.
t Monday and began to argue with
!a woman who works at the
restaurant who had walked out­
side. The suspect allegedly
pushed the victim against a wali
as she tried to go back Inside the
restaurant. A witness came to
her aid and the suspect got back
inside the car and asked the
driver to give her "the...gun," a
Longwood police report said.
The suspect allegedly yelled.

"I’m going to blow you all
away." The victim and witness
fled and went Into the kitchen of
the restaurant. Police arrived
and the suspect who had left
came back to complain about
her food. She was arrested.
In a search of the car police did
not find a handgun, but reported
finding a shotgun locked In the
trunk out of reach of the suspect.
A knife was found Inside the
passenger compartment of the
car and five ,25-callber bullets
were found In the suspect's vest
pocket, police reported.
Kelly Ann Ensign, of 203 Pearl
Lake Causeway. Altam onte
Springs, was arrested at the
restaurant at 9:34 p.m. Monday.
She has been released on 91,000
bond to appear In court March
23.

The Friday, Feb. 27, 1987 Services was Incorrectly Iden­
edition of the Sanford Herald tified In the story as a lawyer.
Included a story regarding the
cott Is a public benefits
'Oviedo satellite clinic of the S
paralegal
and not a lawyer. The
Central Florida Community
Clinic of Sanford. Bruce Allen Herald regrets the mlsldentlflca;6cott of the Central Florida Legal tlon.

FIRE CALLS
Sanford firefighters and rescue
•workers have responded to the
I
■ ..
:f

(U S P S 4SI tsoi

Wednesday, March 4, l**7

Vol. 79. NO. IU
F w M ith o d D a ily and S vn S a y. eacaet
Saturday b y Ttie to itfe rd H e ra ld ,
Inc. MO N . F re n c h A y e ., Sanlerd,
F la . n m .
Second C la t t P e lta te P a id at Sa n le rd ,
F lo rid a M m
,
Hom e D e liv e ry : M onth. S4J i i 3 Mentha,
t i t . I S ; t M onths, S 3 7 .X ; Y e a r,
t i t .t o . Ry M a lt: M onth, 54.75; 1
M onths, t ! 0 .IS : t M onths, tir.O O ;
Y e a r, ttt.oo.

(MSI

Research Lab Site Plan Under Review
By Genie Llndberg
Herald Staff Writer
Lake Mary commissioners
Monday questioned toxic waste
amounts that might result from
research being done in a pro­
posed laboratory that Quantum
Technology of Sanford wants to
build in Lake Mary.
The discussion occuircd dur­
ing a work session in which Dr.
Ratan Adhav, the laboratory's
developer, came before commis­
sioners to request a site plan
review for a research laboratory,
rental warehouse and offices.
Quantum Technology has had
its lab In Sanford for eight years
and wants to relocate in Lake
Mary.
Lake Mary's Planning and
Z oning Board last m onth
approved Adhav's request with
the condition that there be an
approval of a conditional use
application that involves formal
application to the city for ap­
proval to use a portion of the
building as a research lab. Final
approval of the proposed site
plan will come before commis­
sioners Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in
their regular session.
Commissioner Buzz Petsos
said he was concerned that there
be sufficient monitoring of the
septic system at the proposed
laboratory. He said he un­
derstood that monitoring by me
E n v iro n m e n ta l P ro te ctio n
Agency (EPA) and some county
health department monitoring
goes on but that he would like to
sec the county provide a daily
monitoring of the lab's toxic
waste.
"If there arc any hazardous
wastes or metal going Into the
sewer system, they would know
it immediately." Petsos said. "I

following calls, details based on
fire department reports:
MONDAY
—• t i l JMB.. 2885 S. Orlando
Drive, rescue. A 30-year-old
' woman suffering from difficulty
breathing was transported to the
hospital.
TUMDAY
—ltS 9 a m . 2545 Park Drive.
Lot *33. rescue. A 33-year-old
woman reported chest pain. She
declined hospital transport after
check by rescue workers.
—10:30 am .. W. First Street,
near Poplar Avenue. Firemen
remained on stand by while
Florida Power and Light workers
repaired a transformer that
exploded when a truck hit the
le to which It was attached.
wer outages reported for sev­
eral minutes in nearby area.

K

have yet to sec any authorities
come out and monitor septic
tanks, and even if the waste
that's going to be put Into the
septic tank at this facility would
be appropriate. I’m concerned
with approving this and then
later seeing the company get
Into bl«;ger disposal methods."
City engineer Tim Weaver said
that he had spoken with the
Seminole County Water De­
partment and apparently the
only toxic waste that would be
produced at the proposed lab site
is sodium arsenic.
Quantum Technology has to
get a Dcpaitmcnt of Environ­
mental Regulations (DER) haz­
ardous waste permit which will
be required of them beforehand.
Weaver said. He added that toxic
waste at the lab would have to
go through a completely sepa­
rate system which would pump
the waste out and there would
be another permit necessary for
that.
At the present time. Weaver
said, the lab would have to have
permits from both EPA and DER
and they would assure that no
toxic waste was entering the
septic tank system by monitor­
ing it periodically.
The only heavy metal, which
is the sodium arsenic, is a solid
material that would be sanded
on sandpaper with lab workero
wearing rubber gloves. Weaver
said, and all solid materials
would then be disposed.
Adhav, responding to Com­
missioner Ken King's question of
how much waste was actually
being talked about said, "We're
talking about one pound a year,
and I am requesting EPA to
exempt our company because
the amount is so small, and I'll

give you a certificate from EPA
In the next couple weeks
exempting us from their rules
and regulations."
King then nsked what would
happen to the sandpaper and
Adhav said that the sandpaper
would be disposed of through a
w aste-m anagem ent agency
approved by the EPA. "So it
doesn't go Into the waste matter
and it doesn't ever go into the
septic tank or the city water.".
Adhav said."The toxic chemical
sticks to the sandpaper and all
the sandpaper Is collected and
disposed of by an approved
agency, and In our basin we
have many approved disposal
sites for these toxic wastes to go
into."
Adhav explained that the
chemical's dust ts sensitive to

moisture and as soon as it li
sanded, because it is watei
s o lu b le . It s tic k s to th&lt;
sandpaper and docs not fall of
so that everything can be col
Iccted and agency approved. Hr
said that the only matter thal
would be entering the proposed
site's septic tank would be sew­
age "and nothing else."
Adhav said that samples he
has sent to the EPA from
Sanford In 1984 and 1985 "were
certainly within the limits" and
"they never found any problem"
and thal is why he is asking for
an exemption from EPA. The
1986 results have not come in
yet. he said, but those results
will be checked out by staff at
the recommendation of the
commission.

Man Drops Gun In Fight
Shot With Own Weapon
Lawrence Crews. 61. of 122
Williams St., Atlamonte Springs,
reportedly drew and fired a
handgun during a fight with
another man on North Street
outside Altamonte Springs at
a b o u t 5:15 p.m . M onday,
dropped the gun and the other
man grabbed It.
The other man allegedly fired
the gun at Crews and wounded
him in the left shoulder and
forearm.
There were several witnesses
to the fight and some said they
saw the alleged shooter flee with
the gun, but none of the wit­
nesses saw the actual shooting,
according to their statements to
sheriffs deputies.

Crews had reportedly fired the
gun once into nearby woods
before he dropped the weapon
and it was then taken by the
man who allegedly wounded
him.
Crews’ wounds were treated at
Florida H ospital-A ltam onte
Springs. He remained hospi­
talized Tuesday In satisfactory
condition.
The suspect, a 41-year-old
Memphis, Tenn. man, was found
and questioned by sheriffs in­
vestigator Greg Barnett at the
Altamonte Springs police sta­
tion, but no arrest was reported.
—Busan Loden

WEATHER
L ocal R e p o r t

N a tio n T e m p o i a t u r e s
CHy S Portcotl
Albuquarquo»y
Am arillo ty
Anchor ago ly
A th o v llltiy
Atlanta ly
Baltimore cy
Billing* pc
Birmingham ly
Bltm arck ty
Bolt* cy
Boatonpc
Browntvllla ty
Buffalo pc
Burlington Vf. ty
Char lot ton S.C. ay
Chortotfp N .C . ty
Chicago pc
Cincinnati ty
—
Cleveland pc
Colombo* »y
Dalle* ay
D e n ve rty
Ce* Mot net pc
Detroit ty
Duluth pc
E lP a t o iy
Evantvllle ty
Hartford pc
Helene w
Honolulu ty
Houston ty
Indlenapolliay
Jeckton M itt, ty
Jacksonville pc
Ken set City ty
Let Vega* 1
Little Rock ty
Lo t Angeles pc
Lo ultvliiety
Memphis ty
M iam i Beech cy
Milwaukee pc
Mlnneepolltpc
Nashville ty
New Orleans ty
New York pc
Oklahoma City ty
Omaha ty
Orlando pc
Philadelphia pc
Phoenix f
Pittsburgh tn
Portland Me. ty
P o rlla n d O re .r
Richmond pc
COOEl
cclear
e f t leering
cy-cloudy
l-falr
fy foggy
h ih a u ,
m m lttln g

Hi La Pep
43 33 ....
44 33 ....
30
I ....
&lt;3 33 ....
M
37 ....
54 31 ....
44 41 ....
71 31 ....
33
I I ....
M
49 .03
33 15 ....
7! 53 ....
31 I* .17
31
* ....
43 47 ....
47 34 ....44 34 ....

F iv e -D a y

F o re c a st

For Central Florida
piiyaay

S B
Night

0

PtlyCMy

35 33 ....
47 X ....
41 - X
X ....

51
X X ....

35
37
71
53
X
47
71
ti
47
tf

70
Sf

TO
44
S3
S3
47
74
43

X

41
70
45
41
55
75
51
M
41
X
54
43

33
35
X
37
35
—
40
X
34
41
44
X
45
41
57

3f
X

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

x ....
M ....
34 ....
54 ....
31 .01
41 ....
41 ....
57 ....
X ....
53 ....
23 .01
17 .05
S3 1.05
2t ....

pc-pertlydoody
r-raln
th showers
tm tm o k a
ty tunny
t v thunderstorm*
w-wlndy

M IA M I (U P I ) - Florida 14hour tempera­
tures and rainfall of I e.m . E D T today:
Cityi
HI U
*•*"
Apalachicola
41 X 0 00
Crestvlew
74 X 0 00
DaytonaBoach
73 S3 0.00
F o rtU u d s rd a le
51 70 0.00
F o rtM y o rt
74 43 0 00
G elnttvlllo
71 X o x
Jacksonville
X X 0.00
Key West
74 40 0.77
Lakeland
71 54 O X
M iam i
X *4 O.tr
Orlando
75 57 O X
Pen taco Is
73 50 o x
Sarasota Bradtn Ion
74 44 O .X
Tallahassee
73 X O .X
Tam pa
74 57 O .X
Vara Beach
75 44 O .X
W ott Palm Beach
7* 47 O .X

.»

5 4 e r.lt

Boot h Condi ti ons
u Waves are
about 1 to 2 feet and choppy.
Current is slightly to the south
with a temperature of 59 de­
grees. N «* Smyrna Beach:
Waves are 2 to 3 feet and very
choppy. Current is slightly to the
south: Water temperature. 59
degrees. Sun screen factor: 12.

0
Thvrt.

aoy

Pity CHy

1B E

1S B

U

10

10

0

| I r|

1f „

10 n ....'

Florida Te m p e ra tu re s

Correction

&lt;1
\

r

, %.

;0

Frt.

10

tot.

s

d u
10

A ro a F o re c a st

‘Today..'.partly cloudy.'A' 20
percent chance of showers. High
In the mid 70s. Wind no-iheaat
10 to 15 mph.
0
10
Tonight...partly cloudy.*A 20
percent chance of showers. Low
toorcot HoHomIWoothor tonic around 50. Northeast wind 5 to
10 mph.
Thursday...partly cloudy and
b re e z y . H igh a ro u n d 70.
Northeast wind 15 to 20 mph.

Balmy Temps
O'er Nation
By United Press
Interne tloasl
Rain in the Northwest today
swelled rivers that already
flooded roads with up to a foot
of water and damaged homes,
while springlike temperatures
prevailed over much of the
nation and light snow lingered
in the Northeast.
"Right now. we have the
usual Hooding In low areas and
t h e r e a r e s o m e m in o r
mudslides, but the tides are in
our favor," Tom Dye, manager
of the Tillamook County, Ore.,
office of emergency manage­
ment, said Tuesday. "High tide
will not be until the middle of
the night."
Rain falling today over
Washington, northwest Mon­
tana, western Oregon and
northern California combined
with warm temperatures that
has melted snow since early
Monday to swell rivers in
Washington and Oregon.
Oregon State Police said
coastal U.S. Highway 101
south of Seaside was limited to
one-way traffic Tuesday as
m otorists sloshed through
about a foot of water.
Some minor flooding oc­
curred In Willamette Valley
and along the coast and soggy
coastal hillsides gave way,
damaging homes.
Flood warnings were Issued
today for the White, Chehalls,
Skookumchuck. Cowlitz and
Kalama rivers In Washington.
In Oregon, flood warnings
were posted for the Nehalem
during the night and for the
Siletz and Wilson rivers and
the Upper T ualatin River
Basin.
Avalanches were feared in
the Cascade and Olympic
mountains of Washington and
Oregon.
Gale warnings were posted
along the northern and central
Pacific Coast, as a gust of 60
mph lashed Astoria. Ore.

Tuesday's high temperature in
Sanford was 74 degrees and the
8 a.m. reading today was 53
degrees as reported by Universi­
ty of Florida Agricultural Re­
search and Education-Center on
Celery Avenue. No rainfall was
recorded. Partly cloudy today
with a high near 76.

Winds reaching 65 mph also
whipped across the eastern
slopes of the northern Rockies.
Across the nation, a National
Weather Service report said,
"Two strong high pressure
areas centered over the Rockies
and the Midwest resulted In
mostly clear skies over the
eastern two-thirds of the na­
tion."
S cattered snow show ers,
however, lingered from the
lower Great Lakes across the
n o rth ern h alf of the Ap­
palachians and up to 3 inches
of snow was expected today in
northeast Ohio.
Temperatures early today
ranged up to the teens In
upstate New York and New
England. In the western half of
the nation, they were in the
30s, 40s and 50s and were
expected to be 10 to 15 degrees
above normal through today.
More seasonable weather was
forecast for New England.
Harry Gordon, a weather
s e rv ic e f o r e c a s te r , sa id
extended forecasts Indicated
the unseasonable w eather
would spread through the na­
tion by week's end and would
"be around for a while."
"There's no reason why we
can't go right Into spring,"
Gordon said.
An inch of snow fell Tuesday
e v e n in g a lo n g th e Ohio
lakeshore and around BufTalo,
N.Y,
At least four record highs
were set in three Western
states Tuesday. Including
readings of 84 degrees at
B akersfield, Calif., 64 at
Billings, Mont., and 63 at Salt
Lake City.
Meanwhile, the winter stoim
blamed for 21 deaths over the
weekend left only snowshowers
from Michigan to northern New
England.

A ii'o

K u o d in g s

The temperature at 9 a.m.: 65;
overnight low: 57; Tuesday's
high: 75; barometric pressure:
30.17; relative humidity: 78
percent; winds: NE at 12 mph;
rain: None: Today’s sunset: 6:27
p.m.. Thursday sunrise: 6:46
a.m.
E x t o n d o d For (•( ost

The extended forecast, Friday
through Sunday, for Florida
except northwest — Mostly
cloudy with a chance of rain and
th u n d e rs to rm s so u th and
central Friday and Saturday
tapering ofT by Sunday with
partial clearing during Sunday.
Otherwise partly cloudy. Lows
from 40s north to 60s extreme
south. Highs mostly near 70
north to mid and upper 70s
south.
A i g o Tidos

THURS DA Y: D a y t o n a
Beach: highs. 11:40 a.m.. 11:59
p.m.; lows, 5:50 a.m., 5:52 p.m.:
New Smyrna Beach: highs,
11:45 a.m., 12:04 p.m.; lows,
5:55 a.m., 5:57 p.m.; Bayport:
highs, 4:44 a.m., 3:22 p.m.: low.
9:39 a.m.
Booting

St. A ugustine to Juplti
Inlet— Today...wind east 10
15 kts becoming northeast ar
increasing to 15 to 20 kts. Sci
Increasing to 4 to 6 ft and high
in the Gulf Stream. Bay ar
inland waters choppy. Wide
scattered showers or thui
derstorms south portion.
Tonight and Thursday...wir
northeast 20 to 25 kts. Seas 6
9 ft with moderate norlhea
swells. Bay and inland wate
rough.

i

�* '*•-

COMING EVENTS
Manna Haven Serves

Food To The Hungry
Manna Haven serves Iree lunch for the hungry. 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m.. Monday through Friday: Sunday, 1-3, at 519
Palmetto Ave.. Sanford.

Semoran Optimists M eet
Optimist Club of Setaoran will meet at 6 p.m..
Wednesday at Quincy’s Steakhouse. Live Oaks Center.
Highway 17-92, Casselberry.

Take O ff Pounds
TOPS Club (weight loss) meets 6:30-8 p.m., Wednesday,
Salvation Army. 700 W. 24th St.. Sanford. Open to the
public.

Support For M ental Patients
COPE support group for families of menial health
patients meets Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.. Crane’s Roost
Office Park. S-377. Altamonte SprlngB.

A A Groups Set Meetings
Area Alcoholics Anonymous groups meet Wednesday as
follows:
• Sanford AA, noon and 5:30 p.m. open discussion,
1201 W. First St.
• REBOS AA, noon and 5:30 and 8 p.m.(closed)! Rebos
Club. 130 Normandy Lane, Casselberry.
• Sanford Born to Win AA, 8 p.m., open discussion.
1201 W. First St.
• Sanford Grace AA 11th Step (closed). 8 p.m., 122 N.
Fifth St., Lake Mary.
• Altamonte Springs AA. 8 p.m., (closed), Altamonte
Community Chapel, 825 State Road 436.
• Casselberry AA. 8 p.m., (closed), Ascension Lutheran
Church. Ascension Drive, Casselberry.

Narcotics Anonym ous Meets
Narcotics Anonymous, 8 p.m. The Graiu^JCnunssJlrjfi
Center. 580 Old Sanford/Ovledo Road (off SR 419). Winter
Springs.

Tax Help For Elderly
Free Income tax help for retirees will be offered on
Thursday through April 15 at the following locations: 9
a.m. to 1 p.m.. Oviedo City Hall. 42 E. Central Ave,: Sun
Bank. 3000 Highway 17-92, Sanford: Hacienda Village.
500 State Road 434, Winter Springs: and 1-3:30 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center, 200 N, ^ k e Triplet Drive.
Casselberry.

Blood Pressure Checked
Free blood pressure checks are offered 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday at the American Red Cross
Seminole Service Center. 705 W. State Road 434,
Longwood.

Bible Study Held
A non-denominatlonal Bible study and prayer is held at
noon Thursdays at the Cavalier Inn Restaurant, Highway
17-92, Sanford.
East-West Sanford Klwanls Club meets Thursday aF
p.m. at Friendship Lodge, Seventh and Locust.

Families Lend Support
Families Together Parent Support Group meets
Thursdays at 7:30 p.m., 900 Fox Valley Drive, Sweetwater
Square, Suite 206 for open discussion. For information call
774-3844.

Communication Group Meets
International Training In Communication Greater
Seminole Club meets 7:30 p.m. at Altamonte Chapel
Education Building on State Road 436, on second and
fourth Thursdays.

FLORDA
IN BRIEF

’ ns

Teacher 'Elated'
Over Court Ruling
FERNANDINA BEACH (UPI) The Supreme Court decision
u p h o ld in g th e r i g h ts of
employees with contagious dis­
eases is a victory over "medieval
ideas." the former teacher whose
firing prompted the ruling said
Tuesday.
Gene Arlinc lost hci Job as a
third-grade teacher in 1978,
when a rem issive case of
tuberculosis cropped up again.
She sued the Nassau County
school board, saying that since
her ailment was a handicap, she
deserved protection under the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
The Supreme Court ruled In
her favor Tuesday, and the
school board must now schedule
a hearing to determine If she
should return to work.
The Justices said people with
contagious diseases may be
handicapped and therefore pro­
tected by anti-discrimination
laws.
Arlinc, 44. who taught for 13
years In the Nassau County
‘school system, said she had not
been able to get a teaching Job
since her firing eight years ago.
"I’m very elated about the
. decision and very grateful it was
in my tavor." Arllne said. "I’m
Just trying to get over the shock
of it. I feel very strongly I was the

Sanford Hsrsld, Sanford, FI.

Wsdnsaday, March 4 , 1W7— IA

I

victim of some medieval Ideas
because of all ... the miracle
drugs and things that they
have" that can treat such dis­
orders.
"It was Just something (they
did) out of fear and Ignorance,
not knowing about the disease."
Arllne said. "They Just shouldn't
deny you a livelihood, because
everybody has to survive."
Craig Morris. Nassau County
Schools su p e rin te n d e n t In
Fcrnandina Beach. 25 miles
northeast of Jacksonville, said
he had not read the full decision
but was "disappointed In losing
the case."

#•

m

The long awaited opening of
Maitland Boulevard from Lake
Destiny Drive to Forest. City
Rosd (State “ ------ occurred
Mom
end of fifteen months of T* *
sl/uctkm but no end to traffic
ti

redude traffic along. SR 436.
b u t r a th e r acco m m o d ate
motorists who have been using
other alternate routes.
"Maitland Boulevarf
vldes an alternative to i

1,75 .m iles of Tour laned
highway and completes the
up from 1*4to SR434.
No traffic count has been
made since the highway open­
ing. and none planned, .ac­
cording to D epartm ent of
Transportation officials, The
roadway la also not expected to

t"V for DOT s Fifth District
Construction on Forest City
Rosd, a 33.383,275 contract byHubbard Construction, from
Maitland Boulevard to SR 436.
is also substantially complete
with only minor work still
being completed, according to
the DOT.

r-!'

O ur
E

REALTY
TRANSFERS

,

- :,4.

,,

^ 'V? ’

&lt;»•

n t i r e

S e l e c t i o n

*t

?

o f F r i e 4 m 2 f0 ®

Vinter Snni
n r.
i
21 fteer Creek kite, M i.f w 1 1
Heinz Krahm er &amp; W F Karin lo Martin R
Kaltor S W F Janat H, Lt 220 Barclay Wood*
3rd Addn, &lt;175.000
Waldo Badglay, truttee, to H tlnz K rah mar.
L I 222 Barclay Woods 3rd Amencted Plat,

1220,000

Kan sing ton Park Ltd to Halan Dlbbla. Un
SOS Kentlngton Park Ph Ilf, 1103,500
E m a il L Ford A W F Floranca to Rlchartd
E Martlndala &amp; W F Carrla, Lt 213 Spring
O a k tU n 2,171,500
Kannath A Murphy A W F Annla to Frank
M cM illan, truttea, Lt 10 Alt A N 10’ of 12
M irro r Laka Manor, 1133,000
Robert L S a crlit J r , tru ita a , ale to
H un tlay't Jiffy Storat Inc. land In Sac
22 21-31, U20.300
Billy D Hanlay A W F M a ry L to Cal E
McHaffla J r A W F Rhonda, Lt 2** Barclay
Wood* 3rd addn, I1 15,500
Andan Group to Tru a -Tta l Shlh A W F Wal A
Rax Y Yaa A W F Anna, Lt 44 Sunrlta Eat* Un
2, &lt;72,000
Darryl DaLoat A W F Sharry to Dan la I L
Shawl A W F Bavary A . LI 5 Ramblawood, Un
2.145,700
Robart M Luka A W F M arla to Paul T
Calllhan A W F Ya*uko, Lt &lt;4 Tutcaw llla Un
4,1105,000
Joaaph A Conttantlna A W F Linda to
Stevan J King A Klm barly Ann Moora, Lt 30
Blk E Oekcrett. *47,000
i F ln tg J E d w e r d FrankllnJ.^W F
Kirk, Ete O F Blk E T r 10 Sanlando Spring*.
&lt;73.000
Richland Prop to Jack H Bray, land In Sac
21 31-30, &lt;14,135,400
Philip L Mouar A W F Janat to Philip L
Mouer A David L Mouar, Lt 3 A Ete ol 4 Blk
50 Sanlando Tha Suburb Baautlful, Palm Spg*
Sac, &lt;22,000
AI bar I P Hodga* J r A W F Jaan to Elalna
Ka*tar A Kally Howard Kattar, Lt 14 Tha
Landing*. &lt;40.000
Magnolia Svc Corp to Victor W Lanford J r
A W F Carol Ann, Un 3W5 Waklva Hunt Club
Cond. *93,700
Andan Group to Nlchola* Klock A W F
Paulina, Lt 295 Sunrlta Village Un 4, &lt;42,400
Magnolia Svc Corp to Dor I* M Engelhard,
Un 3945 Waklva Hunt Club Cond. &lt;137,100
Ryan Home* to Ramon A Gonialai A W F
M uriel M Faria, Lt 40 Garden Grove, *10.400
Canterbury Conttr Corp to Alaqua, Lt 9
Alaqua, &lt;44,000
Ryland Group to Mitchell S Seldmen A W F
M ary, Lt 35 Dear Run Un 12A, &lt;121.400
Fred R Ballanger A W F Margaret to
- Thoma*- C Greene A .WF Linda. A , L I 4)
Cardinal Oakt, &lt;144.900
Babcock Co to Glenn R H a rrlt, Lt 39
Stillwater P h i, &lt;17,500
Edward L Lombardi Co Inc to Floyd D
Warren J r A W F Ellz. Lt S3 Creak’* Bend.
1131.500

B ft G Shoes

Martinez, Cabinet Split O ver
Lottery Proceeds Distribution

1913 8. French Are.
Sanford, Fin.

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) ■
—The six Democrats on Florida’s
Cabinet have overruled Republican Gov. Bob Martinez by
endorsing a non-binding plan to earmark proceeds from a
state lottery solely for education.
Martinez, who has proposed siphoning some of the
lottery money for other state needs, such as Indigent health
care, abstained from the vote during Tuesday's Cabinet
meeting.
The measure was directed at the Florida Legislature,
which has the final word on creating the lottery and
deciding where to spend the proceeds. The public
overwhelmingly approved a state lottery last Nov. 4.
The proposal by Commisloner of Education Betty Castorwould pledge the proceeds for teacher salary increases and
programs for dropouts.

10% Off

I

O FF'
F r i e d m a n ’8
t T ic k e te d
p ric e s !
Classic Designs
At G reat Savings!
r '***
**•?

■ / •t

NO
ADDITIONAL
CHARGE
..For Ring Sizing
With Purchase!
Representative Styles May
Not Be Available At Some Stores!

•C H A IN S !
•C H A R M S !
•E A R R IN G S !
...A N D M O R E !
C h o o se F ro m
A W id e V a r ie t y
o f S ty le s !

Friedman's Regular
Ticketed Retail Prices!

I Mil l&gt;M W S M\kl S II

III

1

II* I N

\ t II

K

i &gt;\\ N

•IN C * 1 9 8 4

I I I \ l&lt;&lt;

.1

\C I I I t S I

S anfo rd Plaza
A lta m o n te Mall
W in te r Park M all

O ur Everyday Low Prices
Sa le Ends
M a rc h 7, 1987
T u e s -S a t. 9 -5 :3 0

I ’ l . U M I S \|

JEWELERS

lllutlr.ilMM
T . kiwi. U.i.11
All [Manwad Wet*.I. An A w n .lm .i.
QuM llU, Umllt44jH.Mll, Higtu. Kfwr.nl

322-7076

O il-Soaked Sand Heads North
NEPTUNE BEACH (UPI) - Up to 1,000 cubic yards of
oil-laden sand is on It way to a hazardous waste dump in
South Carolina and officials have declared the cleanup of a
30-mile-long oil spill a "resounding success."
"All that's left now is to clean up a few tar balls and dig
in the sand to look for hidden pockets of oil," said Chief
Warrant Officer Rick Meldt of the U.S. Coast Guard.
Between 100,000 and 200,000 of heavy black Type 6
Bunker C fuel oil leaked Into the Atlantic Ocean from the
freighter Fernpassat after It ran aground and ruptured two
of Its six fuel tanks last Thursday on a rock and concrete
Jetty at the mouth of the St. Johns River.

M edfly Fight Begins
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Stale officials planned to Import
sterile Mediterranean fruit files from Hawaii to help control
an Infestation by the pest discovered this week In the north
Miami area.
Commissioner of Agriculture Doyle Conner said Tuesday
that the sterile flies proved highly effective In Interfering
with the pests’ reproduction during a 1985 Medfly
Infestation In Miami, when used with pesticides.
Conner confirmed that five male Mediterranean fruit flies
were found Monday during a routine Inspection In the
Hialeah area. Officials had alcady begun collecting and
examining host fruit.

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( U S P S 4*1-310)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Wednesday, March 4, 1987—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Olordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director

ilomr Delivery: Month. *1.75:3 Months. *14.25:0 Months,
$27.00: Year. *51.00. By Mall: Month. *6.75: 3 Months.
$20,25. 6 Mantns. *37.00; Year. *69.00.

No Quick-Fix For
Trade Imbaiances
The word on Capitol Hill Is that the
Democrats have finally sworn ofT the demon
rum of protectionism In order to achieve a
comprehensive trade bill this year that Is
acceptable to President Reagan. This would
be good news were It actually the case.
Inasmuch as the current U.S. trade deficit of
$170 billion shows no sign of receding any
time soon. Unfortunately, a m easure being
considered by the House subcom m ittee on
trade Is Identical to the bill that was vetoed
last year by the president.
The punitive House proposal would target
those nations that have excessive trade
balances with the United States. Unless they
agreed to trim their surpluses by 10 percent
annually for four years, the president would
be compelled to retaliate with higher tariffs
and lower Import quotas. Such simplistic
reasoning assum es that U.S. trading partners
would be pressured into buying American
goods. To the contrary, this heavy-handed
approach would not only reduce the flow of
foreign products to the United States, it would
constrict American exports as well.
T hat disastrous strategy was tried more
than five decades ago when President Herbert
Hoover, ignoring protests from the nation's

HELEN THOM AS

Deaver's Collection Of Reagan Vignettes Due
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Former White House
deputy chief pf staff Michael Dcaver is writing a
book about President and Mrs. Reagan, vi­
gnettes about the first couple that have never
been revealed before.
Denver's publisher, the William Morrow
company, expects to have the opus on the
stands In September.
Dcaver. who Is being Investigated for conflict
of Interest In lobbying activities after he left the
White House, has been the Reagans' closest
confidant. Nancy Reagan is on the telephone
with him dally, and he remains her adviser. He
has been of particular comfort to her as the Iran
arms scandal unfolds.
Dcaver has been through tough times since
the Investigation began, losing clients In the
process. But he Is keeping his chin up and being
consoled by others who have gone through It.
Nancy Reagan has been having regular
seances with conservative columnist George
Will at restaurants around town and at
out-of-way places. At times, there were reports
that he was seeking her advice. Now it appears

the shoe Is on the other foot and she Is sounding
him out on how to handle the repercussions
from the arms scandal.
Her aides say that the first lady Is In touch
with many friends who give her advice and docs
no", limit her contacts to Will alone. She »:eeps In
close telephone touch with friends In
Washington and California.
Many of her friends took up the cudgels for
her In her feud with former White House chief of
staff Donald Regan and Regan did not fare well
in the Monday morning quarterbacking.
Now that members of Congress got their pay
increases through the back door, the men and
women In uniform who put their lives on the
line for the president ore also seeking a salary
hike.
The White House police union has decided to
picket the president's house for a couple of
hours on March 10 to make Us grievances
Known. The police and their families will hit the
pavement on Pennsylvania Avenue.
Their pay runs about $20,000 a year, which
many are finding too little money to support

their families. About ^ p o lic e m e n a month ar&lt;
|CThe* Treasury Department does plan to
nmoose a pay Increase for the policemen to the
P J j K f ?2 percent in the higher brackets and
edging downward, but this has not yet been
doSe and when It is it will not be enough.
The g o v e r n m e n t spends $35,000 on each
recruit and the training Is said to be among the
best In police work. But the police say that they
are losing ground and when once allowed to
retire at half pay after 20 years, they must now
work 25 years and get only 37.5 percent of the
salary.

A smile can make a difference In the White
House and It does. How a president trcatB the
help can mean a lot. From that aspect. President
Reagan is popular with policemen and aides
because he takes time out to say "good
morning" and to smile as he strolls down the
colonnade to the Oval OITlce.
The most unpopular Cabinet official is
Secretary of State George Shultz who, one aide
said, looks down on staffers.

SCIENCE WORLD

A N T H O N Y H A R R IG A N

Artificial
Blood And
Tumors

Enemies
Threaten
Security

WASHINGTON - In the mail the
o th er day cam e a com putergenerated letter signed by Dr. Ben­
jam in Spock on behalf of the
Nicaraguan Network, an organizetlor^hatsejnre^JJjjcm jj^jjJjyjg^
i t o a r i t o a i f l r f l f t r n V r t n M . n i f l n a r V . I n t n I n m i w i h v — il5
_!flTc!TTRsErf?g!meandTt!wiw
"
"
h ) It
KIghest
i r ™ tarifT wall In U.S. history. This, in
The letter asked for a contribution
tu rn , se t off a global tra d e w ar th a t
of $200 or more and declared that
exacerbated the Great Depression.
"the Nicaraguan people are not my
enemy.
And they’re not yours,
Mindful of that haunting precedent, the
cither."
S e n a te is p ro c e e d in g so m e w h a t m o re
Of course now. But Dr. Spock or
cautiously with a m easure designed to reduce
whoever drafted the letter knows
the trade deficit without disrupting Interna­
that the U.S. government doesn't
tional trade. A bill Introduced by Sen.-Lloyd
regard the Nicaraguan people as
Bcntsen, D*Tex„ would pressure the presi­ enemies of the American people.
The U.S. government Is concerned
dent to retaliate against recalcitrant trade
about the communist government
p a rtn e rs. But it does not c o n ta in th e
In Nicaragua and Its masters In
m andatory tarifT provision of the House
Havana and Moscow.
measure. Nor does the Bentsen bill seek
In March 1980. with only ten
protection for specific Industries, which seem
minutes
of debate. Congress passed
likely In the House’s Anal version. Rather the
a measure ’o send $75 million In aid
Senate proposal would require industries
to the Sandtnlstas. as requested by
requesting protection to dem onstrate their
President Jimmy Carter. President
productivity and ability to compete.
C a rte r was. able to tra n s fe r
The Senate bill’s major flaw is its goal of , supplemental funds and Increase
the congressional aid to $15 million.
m icro-m anaging U.S. trad e policy. For
Five years later, when President
exam ple, th e m easu re would lim it the
president's discretion in implementing relief R e a g a n s o u g h t funding for the
anli-communlst freedom fighters In
for American industries by requiring him to
Nicaragua,
the request for money
follow unanim ous recom mendations of the
was denied. Today, there Is again an
U.S. International Trade Commission. It cflort to kill aid to another Cuba in
would also fund a worker retraining program
this hemisphere.
through a custom s duty of up to 1 percent of
The Sandlnlslas have influential
the value of commercial imports.
friends In Congress determined to
deny aid to Nicaraguans flghUng
The president Isn’t about to approve any
their communist government. What
legislation th a t c u rb s his d iscretio n ary
Congress needs to counter this is a
powers on trade. Moreover, he correctly
refresher course on what has hap­
opposes a custom s fee because It would
pened In Nicaragua and Contra aid
prom pt other nations to set sim ilar charges.
Is vital. A good place to begin is with
Mr. Reagan should also guard against any
" L a P re n s a of M a n a g u a —
congressional attem pts to underm ine the
Chronicler of Us Country." a booklet
written by Dr. Marvin Allsky of
successful m aquiladora concept th at has
Arizona State University (Bevln
enabled num erous American m anufacturers
Corp.
Press. Box 26362. Tempe.
to rem ain competitive a t home and abroad by
Atlz, 85282). This Is the story of the
encouraging them to su b c o n trac t som e
Nicaraguan newspaper that opposed
assembly operations to Mexico. Organized
the Somoza regime.
labor contends that this process is depriving
Dr. Alisky has visited and taught
American workers of Jobs. In truth, the
In Nicaragua since 1960. He is
m aquiladora system has prevented m any
Immensely Informed about freedom
U.S. industries from moving their operations of press issues In Latin America. He
to another nation.
describes how the Sandlnlstaa
If U.S. lawm akers are truly serious about "confiscated tons of newsprint, let­
ting them rot In governm ent
reducing the trade deficit, they m ust begin by
warehouses."
He tells how the
conceding that this goal cannot be achieved
Marxist
junta
in
Mnagua "closed
by a congressional qulck-flx. The president i s .
independent radio stations such as
ultim ately responsible for protecting Ameri­ the
Catholic C hurh'a AM and
c a n p ro d u c e rs a g a in s t u n fa ir tra d in g
shortwave and FM outlets." The
practices, As such, he m ust do what Is best booklet gives a factual history of
for this nation's long-term economic Interests. ..Nicaragua!* communist takeover sothat "the early 1980s would find
Mr. Reagan ‘is obligednhereTorcV foveto~any
legislation that does not give him sufficient thousands of Cubans indoctrinating
Nicaraguans In Marxist theory."
latitude to fulfill that responsibility.

JEFFREY H ART

Fading Into Sunset
No doubt there were many
reasons, Including personal ones,
for Mario Cuomo's withdrawal from
the presidential race. Anyone can
understand a man's not wanting to
spend the next 500 nights in
H oliday In n s In Iow a. New
Hampshire and other points dova
the road, all the while dining on
rubber chicken. Cuomo does have a
full-time Job in New York state. His
wife did not want him to run. His
most recent speech, full of gener­
alities. bombed in Los Angeles. Most
presidents get shot at. and some­
times h‘t. Cuomo probably does not
like hom osexuals or m ilitary
women. He has no ideas about
foreign affairs, and when asked In
an interview about Nicaragua pre­
ferred to "pass" on that one. The
Queens County Democratic Parly,
which Is Cuomo's background, has
turned out to be a can of worms,
and who knows what more is buried
out there?
But lb the larger picture. Cuomo
is an unreconstructed liberal New
Dealer, a true believer like Teddy
Kennedy, and time has passed all of
that by.
Cuomo enjoys orating about "the
poor" in the old stem-winding
manner. But we have spent billions
on food stamps, rent supplements,
welfare and all the rest of It. and
what more do you want from us?
T h e s u s p ic io n h a s b eco m e
widespread that If Indeed there are
"poor" among us their problem Is
beyond the reach of federal pro­
grams. No conceivable New Deal
-can-reach them.
•• —
Mario Cuomo's famous speech In
the 1984 San Francisco convention
wowed the Democratic delegates.

But his "talc of two cities" theme,
about a nation divided between the
haves and the have-nots, left all
credibility In the lurch. The speech
would have been appropriate In
1934, not 1984. It was 50 years out
of dale. Franklin Roosevelt and
Huey Lohg could successfully play
the politics of resentment and class
warfare, the poor against the rich,
but that Is not workable today. It’s
as out of date as "Rum. Romanism
and Rebellion,” or "Tippecanoe and
Tyler too."
Of course everyone knows that
catastrophic problems exist in the
black ghettos, but everyone knows
too that they arc beyond any New
Deal sort of solution. They have
been analyzed by Daniel Patrick
Moynlhan. by Charles Murray,
George Gilder and countless others.
They are problem s of family
structure, work ethic. Illegitimacy,
community and maybe religion.
Maybe black Americans will solve
these problems.— and maybe they
will not. But Cuomo-slyle liberalism
offers no answer at all.
And so, along with his Boston
political soul mate Ted Kennedy,
Mario Cuomo fades into the Bunset
as a national figure.
His departure opens up the Liber­
al Possslbillty for someone else,
probably Senator Joseph Blden. to
beat the big drum of liberal oratory
— not really to win the presidency,
let alone address today's Issues, but
to please the San Francisco Demo­
cratic constituency. After all. you
-can g er cheers and headlines by
sounding like Hubert Humphrey,
"we shall overcome," and all the
rest of it.

By Elisabeth Drake
KANSAS CITY. Kan. (UPI) Researchers are testing a Japa­
nese-made blood substitute as a
means to Increase amounts of
oxygen to malignant brain tumors. '
a technique, which If proven, could
add to the benefits of radiation
therapy.
The theory that increasing
oxygen to tumors makes them less
resistant to radiation has been
around for several years, but this
study focuses on the use of Fluosol
for that purpose.
Fluosol Is a mllk-llke emulsion
that was developed during the
1970s by Green Cross of Japan and
Is distributed in the United States
by Alpha Corp. of Los Angeles. It
has been used as a temporary.
emergency substitute when whole
blood was unavailable or for people
whose religious beliefs prohibit ‘
transfusions.
i
The research team Is headed by ■
Dr. Richard G. Evans, chairman o f'
the Department of Radiation On-j
cology at the University of Kansas '*
Medical Center, and Dr. Robert A. I
Morantz, director of the Brain j
Tumor Institute at Research Medl- j
cal Center in Kansas City, Mo.
Hospitals In London. Australia j
and at Yale University have tried to ;
increase oxygen available to the j
body by placing people In chambers j
containing pure oxygen.
"It's a very time-consuming pro-;
cess, getting people Into these \
tanks, Evans said. It's alBo;
expensive and uncomfortable for j
the patient, he said.
1
"But because of the (small) size of j
the Fluosol particles and because;
oxygen Is much more soluablc In j
Fluosol than It Is even In blood or j
plasma, we are hoping that we can J
get a lot more oxygen into the j
tumor than we can normally.";
Evans said.
"The patients on this study arc •
those who have been proven at j
surgery to have the most malignant *
type of brain tumor," said Morantz.
The study focuses on patients
with high-grade tumors, which are
considered the most malignant.
"The theory Is based on the fact
t h a t c e l ls t h a t a re p o o rly
oxygenated are about three times
more resistant to radiation than
cells in tum ors that are well
oxygenated." Evans said.
"So if we could get more oxygen
into these tumors and make them
more radiation-sensitive, then we'd
get a better response rate and a
better cure rate for those tumors.

JA C K A N D E R S O N

BERRYS WORLD

Navy's Deals With Iran Are Thwarted

“We DID learn
WatergateI"

from

the mistakes of

By Jack Anderson
And Dale Van Attn
WASHINGTON - A crucial ques­
tion In the lranfcontra arms scandal
Is whether the two active-duty
military officers running the caper
out of the National Security Council
— Adm. John Poindexter and Lt.
Col. Oliver North — were acting on
their own Initiative, outside any
"chain of command." Skeptics
maintain this was an unlikely way
for career milltary men to b e h a v e .____
As luck would have It. simulta­
neous secret negotiations with Iran
over U.S. military hardware offer a
clear Illustration of the military's
t r a d i t i o n a l b y -th e - n u m b e r s
approach. The Navy's covert con­
tacts with the Ayatollah Khomeini's
representatives were significantly
different In style from the huggermugger NSC operation.
Poindexter and North went to
extravagant lengths to keep Secre­
tary of State George Shultz and
other high officials In the dark about
their effort to swap arms for hostag­
es. The Navy, on the other hand,
informed not only North, but the

.V

State Department and Attorney
General Edwin Mceac, that It was
secretly dickering with Khomeini to
buy back some expensive aircraft
equipment delivered years earlier to
the shah of Iran.
Neither Mccsc. who had some
knowledge of the White House arms
shipments to Iran, nor North, who
knew everything, saw lit to share
confidences with the Navy negotia­
tors.
The most Important difference
between the two parallel negotia­
tions with Iran, as we reported. Is
that the Navy flatly refused to
consider swapping TOW anti-tank
missiles or other weapons for the
Iranians' U.S. equipment, and broke
off the talks when the Iranians
persisted in their demands for arms.
Poindexter and North, of course,
didn’t boggle at the Idea of shipping
U.S. arms to Iran — to President
Reagan's subsequent embarrass­
ment.
Here's the chronology of the
Navy's secret dealings with Iran:
— Summer 1985: As a cost­
cutting possibility, the Navy decided

to try purchasing six mint-condition
F-14 "test benches" — electronic
diagnostic machines that detect
malfunctions In F-14 fighter planes
— from Iran, Instead of paying top
dollar for new ones to equip three
new aircraft carriers.
— Fall 1985: Navy officials con­
tacted a businessman with Iranian
connections In London, where
two-thirds of Iran's arms purchases
were handled by Khomeini’s milltary~ officials: The bUSiHessmah
enlisted the aid of an Iranian
engineer living In London, who had
been friendly with Khomeini during
the ayatollah's years of exile in
Paris.
— November 1985: The first ol
several substantive meetings be­
tween Navy officials and Iranian
Intermediaries was held. The Navy
offered up to $1.5 million apiece for
Iran's F-14 test benches — which
would have saved the taxpayers
about $6.5 million per copy.
It was agreed that the Iranians
would produce an Inventory, and
once a price was agreed on the Navy
would deposit the amount In a

A

Swiss bank account. (Sound faml
iar?) The Iranians would then 11
the test benches to the U.S. A
Force base at Frankfurt, where tli
machines would be checked by U.S
and Iranian inspectors. If th
equipment was satisfactory. tf
Navy would transfer the purchas
price to an Iranian account.
— Early 1986: The Iranians bega
to balk at a straight cash deal. The
suggested cash plus medic:
■equipment, which was fine with ti
Navy. But then the Iranians pushe
for a straight swap: TOW missil:
for the test benches.
The Navy, which had Informt
North about its negotiations an
cleared the legalities with Meese an
State Department legal advlsi
Abraham Sofaer, didn’t know ti
Iranians had already received TOi
missiles under the secret Whl
House deal for hostages.
— March 1986: The Navy bra)
ofT negotiations when the Iraniar
Insisted on trading the F-14 tei
benches for weapons: antl-alrcra
Hawk m issiles and alr-to-a:
Phoenixes as well as the anti-tan
TOW missiles.

�**—

**nfanl Hsrsld, Sanford. FI,

***-»•#

t

Congressmen, Actors
Spend Night 4
WASHINGTON (UPI) - About
a dozen congressmen and sever*
al Hollywood stars bundled up In
heavy clothing and played the
role of America's homeless by
sleeping out till sunrise today on
the cold streets of the nation's
capital.
H uddled around h eatin g
grates near the U.S. Capitol, the
celebrated but rag-tag looking
gathering sought to place a
n a tio n a l sp o tlig h t on the
country's homeless, estimated to
number up to 3 million and
growing each year.
"It will be a long night, It will
be a cold night, but It's going to
be a very meaningful night."
Rep. Mickey Leland, D-Tcxas.
said as he stretched out near the
Library of Congress.
With tem peratures falling
toward 30 degrees, actor Brian
Dennehy looked Into television
lights and said, "We’ve pretty
much accomplished what we
wanted to — get a lot of reporters
here, draw a lot of attention to
this situation."
T h e " G r a t e A m e ric a n
Sleep-Out" was expected to give
i final push to anticipated House
ipproval this week, perhaps
loday, of legislation that would
provide 9500 million In shelter
md medical and mental help for
he homeless. The measure faces
i somewhat uncertain fate In the
senate, but backers are already
(earing up for a lobbying blitz.
"Once they see what the
tousc does, the Senate will
ollow suit, predicted Rep. Mike
-owry. D-Wash., who pulled out
i stocking cap. gloves and a
ilceplng bag for his night on the
-r£’e9, . „
There are no solid figures on
he number of homeless Amerlans. The government. In a
nuch-disputcd 1983 report.
1
JU8t 250.000
,
The U.S. Conference of Mayors
nd other groups estimates the
lumber Is from 1.5 million to 3
nllllon and growing by about 25
ercent a year, the fastest inreasc since the Great Deiresslon
They say there are several
casons for this rapid rise, In-'
ludlng cuts In social programs.
ick of adequate low-incoming
ouslng and a breakdown of the
imlly structure.
Another large factor, they say,
i that the big push several years
go to release the mentally 111
'em hospitals was not accom-

FBI Reformer Chosen For
Encore Heading The CIA
WASHINGTON (UPI)
William Webster, the former
prosecutor and federal Judge named by President Carter to
restore credibility and integrity to the FBI. now faces a
similar Job for President Reagan at the CIA.
Praised by congressional leaders of both parties for his
nine-year record at the FBI. Webster was tapped by Reagan
Tuesday to succeed the ailing William Casey as head of an
Intelligence community reeling In the Iran-Contra crisis.
His selection followed 24 hours of scrambling by the
White House to replace Its first choice of acting CIA
Director Robert Gates, the Casey deputy whose nomination
fell victim to the scandal, and to contribute to the
impression of an embattled administration embarked on a
fresh start.
Because of the haste with which the White House moved,
presidential spokesman Marlin Fltzwater said there had
been no discussion of a successor for Webster, whose
10-ycar FBI term expires next February.

Reagan 9 P.M . Speech Slated
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan believes his
"highly personal" response tonight to the Tower Com­
mission probe of the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal will be
the turning point for his remaining two years In office, an
aide said.
The aide said Reagan also hopes to demonstrate hr Is In
command and running his own White House In die wake of
the presidential panel's report. The Tower board criticized
Reagan for lax management and his national security staff
for not steering him away from a "highly questionable"
operation.
Reagan will deliver the 9 p.m. EST address from the Oval
Office. The thrust of the speech, which aides said would be
without "the usual rhetoric he Is known for." has been a
closely held secret all week.

Poindexter Loses Star
WASHINGTON (UPI) — John Poindexter, who stepped
down as President Reagan’s national security adviser
because of his role In the Iran-Contra scandal, backpedaled
further in his career today with a new Navy Job at reduced
rank.
Rather than retire at age 50 after 29 years In the service.
Poindexter agreed to begin work today In a demoted role
that will keep him on active duty. He no longer Is a
three-star vice admiral but a two-star rear admiral (upper
half).
"It was entirely his decision," Navy Secretary John
Lehman said at a news conference Tuesday.
Poindexter will work on the long-range planning staff of
the chief of naval operations, Adm. Carlisle Trost, "where
his unique experience and expertise can really be of
genuine help in strategic planning of the Navy," Lehman

Killer Welcomed Death
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (UPI) - Ellseo Moreno, who killed
six people and then taught blble classes in prison, was

are mentally 111.
Actor Martin Sheen helped
coordinate the "Bleep-Out" with
the Community for Creative
Non-Violence, a local group
headed by activist Mitch Snyder.
A year ago. Sheen starred In a
television movie based on
Snyder's life,
Snyder said the homeless
"aren't drunken bums. They are
everybody. They are the old.
They are families. They are the
unem ployed. They are the
mentally and physically handicapped. They are people like you
and me."
One of them, Mike Shlko, 40,
has been homeless since shortly
after losing his Job as a constructlon worker in December.
Said Shlko: "I think It's great
that these congressmen and
actors are showing us their
support."
Then he shrugged and said, "I
never expected to end up being
homeless — asking people for
nickels and dimes In the moming for a cup of coffee and being
told,'You’re a bum.’ I applied for
a Job today as a security guard. 1
hope I get it,"
Among the actors who Joined
Sheen and Dennehy, were Dennls Quald, Grant Cramer and
Harley Cross. Snyder said about
two dozen others had planned to
attend but were unable to do so
because a threatened directors'
strike forced them to expedite
Riming schedules,
jn addition to Leland and
Lowry, the congressmen who
slept out were; Reps. Tony
C o e lh o . D - C a l lf .. G a ry
Ackerm an, D-N.Y.. Jo sep h
Kennedy. D-Mass., John Cony cn . D-MIch.. Esteban Torres,
D-Callf.. Steve Neal. D-N.C.,
Stewart McKinney. R-Conn.. Ron
Dellums. D-Callf., George Miller,
D-Callf., and congressional delegate Walter Fauntroy, D-D.C.
„
.
,
K ennedy, snu g g led In a
.wlfe'
Shiela, said, We have to bring
attention to -the plight of the
homele»». His teeth chattering,
he addcd' T°° many people
can't afford housing."
Overall, about 100 people,
Including congressional staff
members and volunteers from
the center huddled together,
Many were dressed In sweaters,
Jeans and coats, ?nd all wrapped
th em selv es In b lan k ets or
sleeping bags.
District of Columbia Mayor

just and he was ready for fits ' rocket tdtakeolTHto heHven. '
Moreno, 27, who refused to ollow his lawyers to seek an
almost certain stay of execution on his first death warrant,
died calmly at 12:19 a.m. CST today, smiling until the
lethal drugs took cfTect.
"I’d like to say I'm here because I’m guilty. I have no
grudges or anything against nobody. The word of God tells
me that the wages of sin Is death," Moreno said In a final
statement. "I'm willing to ay according to the law of
Texas because I know I'm guilty."

t

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Students Rampage O n Grades
HOLLISTER, Calif. (UPI) — What began as a protest
against a tough grading policy by about 800 high school
students turned Into a rampage by youths who ran
through downtown streets, threw rocks and bottles at cars
and "trashed" City Hall.
"They were generally running amok," said Dena
Lengsam. a parking control officer. "It was like the 1960s."
Three students were arrested on charges of disturbing
the peace or resisting arrest during Tuesday's demonstra­
tion. They were released to their parents.
About 800 students streamed out of San Benito High
School at about mld-momlng to protest a new policy that
will subject teachers to review If they give a large number
of high or low grades.

Ph. 322-0285
1

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1 ifr. Hume. C ur. H u Jn ts v One numr **&gt;% il all.

yuppies' Blamed For Deficit

H r / / 1 ) jy /v U Y w
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WASHINGTON (UPI) — Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, blaming
"yuppies who order Becks Instead of Budwelser” for some
of the nation's trade problems, warns a strong bill may not
be enough to curb the $170 billion U.S. trade deficit.
But the trade legislation, expected to be drafted by the
House Ways and Means Committee this year, can help by
calling for more concentrated power for the U.S. Trade
Representative, encouraging other countries to drop
barriers to free trade, and helping make American firms
more competitive on the world market. Bald Rostenkowski.
the committee chairman.
In a speech Tuesday al the National Press Club,
Rostenkowski said legislation alone will not solve the
problem because It cannot change American buying
habits.

Curtain Falls
On Mardi Gras
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - Police
scattered crowds lingering on
French Quarter streets early
today and crews moved In to
clean up tons of glittery trash
strewn by a million revelers at
Mardi Gras, the hedonistic
climax to Carnival.
"The City That Care Forgot"
lived up to its nickname Tues­
day with a bash that drew
cro'.vds to see gaudy parades,
show off bawdy costumes and
drink and dance until they
dropped.
S u n sh in e and 70-degree
weather brought out crowds that
ch o k ed In te rs e c tio n s ,
particularly In the French
Quarter where revelers celebrate
the more ribald aspects of the
pagan ritual with roots In the
Roman Feast of Saturnalia.
"These people are weird."
shouted a young man with a
Michigan State sweatshirt.

2 S 7 5 S . F r e n c h A v e ., S a n fo r d

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�♦A— Sanford Hsrafd, Sanford. FI.

...Audit

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Korean Police H o ld 439For
Questioning O n Demonstrations
SEOUL, South Korea — Police held and questioned 439
people today for Involvement In sporadic demonstrations In
Seoul and other cities that were put down by a massive
deployment of security forces.
Those held included 293 students who scuffled with
police Tuesday while trying to stage "peace marches" In
memory of Park Chong-chul. a Seoul National University
student who died while being interrogated by police.
"A total of 439 were taken Into custody and are under
questonlng for taking part In Illegal street demonstrations
in Seoul and other cities." a police spokesman said. "Most
will be freed soon with admonition. However, those w h o
played leading roles and those who resorted to vehement
violence will face formal charges."

Italian Leaders Start Talks
ROME (UPI) — Political leaders In caretaker Prime
Minister Bettino Craxl's flve*party coalition government
arranged a round of consultations today aimed at settling
the nation's latest political crisis.
Political observers on all sides saw no easy way out of the
crisis and predicted the likelihood of early elections unless
the squabbling coalition members can compromise,

• • •

Routes

Continued from page l A
prior to presentation of this
material to the authority.
• Will tho Semlaota County
Expressway bo similar to the
East-West Expressway?
Yes. The proposed toll road
will be a four lane divided
expressway with Interchanges at
m a jo r c r o s s r o a d s . T h e
right-of-way for the expressway
will be approximately 300 feet
wide, which is similar to In­
terstate 4 and the East-West
Expressway.
• When will right-of-way be
purchased and construction
begin?
As soon as possible. The exact
timing of right-of-way purchases
and construction will depend on
the availability of funds from
tolls and other sources. The
financial feasibility study is to
Identify a time schedule for
right-of-way acquisition and
construction. The authority
hopes to begin purchasing
right-of-way for at least part of
the expressway by 1989.
• How can I express my
c o n c e r n s and o s n n o a t a
about tho propsood
forms
distrib­
uted a t public Information
sessions will be summarized and
forwarded to the authority
members. In addition, you may
w ant to w rite or call the
authority members. The mem­
bers are the five Seminole
County Commissioners, Fred
Streetman, Barbara Christensen.
Bill Klrchhoff, Sandra Olenn and
Robert Sturm , and Sanford
Mayor Bettye Smith and Lake
Mary City Clmmlssioner Paul
Tremel.
The public is encouraged to
attend the authority's monthly
meetings. The dates, times, and
locations of these meetings arc
announced in monthly newslet­
ters and by the general media.
Additional public meetings to
p r e s e n t a n d d is c u s s th e
a lte rn a tiv e ro u te s for the
expressway are scheduled for
May and July.
• What la the Seminole
County Expressway
Authority?
The authority is an agency of
th e s ta te , c re a te d by the
legislature In 1974. It is re­
sponsible for planning, financing
and constructing expressways
within Seminole County.
• la tho a u th o rity re­
sponsible for o il roado to
Sossluolo County?
No. The authority is only
responsible for expressways In
Seminole County. The Florida
Department of Transportation is
responsible for state roads, such
as Aloma Avenue. State Road
434, State Road 419, U.S.
Highway 17-92. State Road 46.
and Interstate 4. Seminole
County is responsible for many
of the heavily- traveled local
roads Including Tuskawllla
Road, Red Bug Lake Road, Lake
Mary Boulevard, and Paola
Road."
To request a comment sheet If
you cannot attend a public
sesalon or authority, meeting,
call the Expressway Authority at
321-1130, Ext. 388. Comment
forms should be returned to:
O erald B rlnton, ex ecutive
d irec to r. 8etnlno|e County

Continued from page 1A
c o m m i s s i o n e r s a n d ad*
mlnistrative staff.
"Seldom have I been hit with
such a comprehensive audit and
enjoyed It so much," said City
Manager Frank Faison, who's
been in the municipal and
county management field for
more than 20 years.
In addition to the audit itself,
which considers state and feder*
al requirements, the firm pres­
ented a "management letter."
which suggests potential ways
for the city to further improve
operations. Many of these pro­
posals arc already in place or on
their way towards implementa­
tion, Faison said. Some of these
proposals had been made to
Faison before Monday's pres­
entation, during the four months
the firm's representatives spent
on the audit this winter. The
audit period covers Sanford’s
fiscal year. Sept. 31, 1985
through Sept. 30. 1986.
Some new measures rcsulti/ig
from the firm's suggestions will
enable closer monitoring of in­
ventories, Invoice? and checks,
avoiding late paym ents on
purchases to eliminate dellquent
fees, and consideration of pool­
ing certain funds to enable larger

investments and commensurate
interest returns, Faison said.
Coopers and Lybrand is re­
cognized as one of the country's
"Big 8" accounting firms. Com­
missioners retained the firm's
Orlando office last August for
three years at $27,000 per year.
Mercer's complaint with the
Sanford firm was Us failure to
Include a management letter in
Its audit. While the audit found
Sanford financially solvent.
Mercer, n banker, said any
operation, whether public or
private, can stand proposals for
Improved fiscal operation.
On Monday Mercer termed the
Coopers and Lybrand audit
"excellent."
"It's what we were looking for.
I'm real pleased." he said.
The management letter from
Coopers and Lybrand runs sev­
eral pages, and Its recommenda­
tions "are Just that." Mrs. Hill
said, and not required by state or
federal statute.
The suggestions should be
Judged by the city in terms of
implementation costs versus
potential financial risks faced by
continuing the cited practices,
she said.
The proposal for Sanford to
look at workman's compensa­
tion insurance was well received
by city representatives. Because
the city doesn't carry such
coverage, it could conceivably

County expressways, eventually
connecting to the Bce-Llnr
Expressway and the Orlando
International Airport. Three of
the proposed routes cross Lake
Jesup and the others go around
It. About 55 neighborhoods or

subdivisions are affected by the
proposed routes. Construction
may begin late this year, with
building of the final stretch
within an o th er. three years.
Completion is expected In 1991
or 1992.

Wodnosday. March 4 . 1M7

Expressway Authority, 1101
East First street. Sanford, Kla.
32771.
The planned 16-mlle toll
expressway will follow one of 68
proposed routes and connect on
the southeast end to Orange

pay out million dollar claims If between timely collections from
found negligent for an on the Job those abusing the system and
accident, said City Attorney avoiding undue hardships on
those who can’t pay on time
William Colbert.
because
of limited resources.
Sanford "has been lucky," in
avoiding such actions so far, Commissioner A.A. McClanahan
"but they are not unique and all said.
It takes is one to throw you
Steps to avoid unauthorized
completely out of whack," Col­ access to the city's computer
bert said. "You’d be responsible system are also being taken in
for medical and living expenses accordance with audit proposals.
for the rest of that person's life."
Sanford is moving toward a
The cost for a policy to limit self-sufflcent computer operation
the city's liability on such claims at city hall, to rid Its rellanr* on
will be included in the 1987-88 the city of Lakeland's system.
budget proposal, Faison said.
Sanford should take steps to
Staff will also be looking this safeguard Its growing operation,
spring into instituting late the auditors say.
charges for delinquent utility
The firm's suggestions In this
bills. The fees would be pres­
ented to commissioners for re­ area range from keeping city
view and approval before im­ h all’B main term inal room
locked to issuing employees
plementation.
The fees should be "reason- . private codes for access to their
able." to attempt a balanoe desktop systems.
because they were behaving
suspiciously, a report shows.
According to a report, officers
Continued from page 1A
had chased somejuveniles out of
by Juveniles because it did not the service area around 1 0 p m
appear to be the work of some­ Thursday and later found the
one who would have been more beer can and bottle in the
famlllllar with that type of de­ parking lot, Harriett said. The
vice. Earlier in the evening, the containers are being held as
bicycles were abandoned by two evidence while the Investigation
Juveniles when an ofllcer at­ continues.
tem pted to question them
—Genie Lindberg

...Probe

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W adwetday, March 4,1*07— 7A

Elementary Pupils Compete
In District Curriculum Fair

D anny Watson, a 5th g ra d e r from Wilson
E le m e n ta ry School In Sanford stands watch
o ver his social studies project titled "W h a t
are the rights and responsibilities of the free
press?" Th e project, a top w inner at his

school, was presented w ith other students'
w inning projects at Seminole C ounty's first
elem entary C u rric u lu m F a ir at Seminole
C o m m u n ity College F rid a y .

Supreme Court Rules

Contagious Disease Victims
Protected By Anti-Bias Laws
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The sides. This gives us a clear legal
Supreme Court ruled today a precedent."
person with a contagious disease
Kellogg added it should be
m ay be h a n d ic a p p e d and easier for AIDS sufferers to prove
therefore protected by anti­ they are able to work than those
discrimination laws In a case with more Infectious diseases
that could extend such protec­ such as tuberculosis.
tion to AIDS sufferers.
"If a person Is In a contagious
The court, on a 7-2 vote, held a state with tuberculosis, they can
Nassau County. Fla., teacher affect people by Just being
who was fired because she around," he said. "That Is cer­
sufTered tuberculosis could be
handicapped under the Re­
habilitation Act of 1973 and
protected from discrimination.
"We conclude that the fact
that a person with a record of
physical Impairment is also
contagious docs not suffice to
remove that person from cover­
age" under the act. Justice
William Brennan said for the
majority.
In a footnote to the decision,
the court said the ruling did not
reach the question of whether
AIDS would be covered by the
Rehabilitation Act. However.

tainly not the case with AIDS.
We have a much stronger case."
In other action, the court:
• Ruled 7-2 police did not
need a search warrant to go over
a fence and peer Inside an open
barn as part of a narcotics
Investigation.
• On a 6-3 vote, ruled an
A rizona police officer InSee COURT, page 12 A

By Genie Lindberg
Herald Staff Writer
Students from Seminole County's 25 elementa­
ry schools who won their school's top awards for
math, science and social studies projects and
competed at the district's first elementary
Curriculum Fair at Seminole Community College.
Kindergarten through 5th grade students
brought their winning projects In to SCC Friday
evening forjudging. Fourth and 5th graders were
asked to stay with their displays as Judges passed
through and asked them questions about their
projects. Professors, business people and district
school administrators were Judges who placed
award ribbons on selected projects Friday after
students went home.
Projects were on display to the public Saturday
morning and students began arriving around
noon to discover If their project had a ribbon on
it. All students received participation ribbons.
Sabal Point Elementary students. Ryan Dulskl,
5th-grade, and Chad Rome, 4th-grade, found they
had first-place blue ribbons on their projects.
Dulskl's science project about lubricants asked
the question "Which lubricant will make wood
blocks go down the slope faster?" and was made
up of wooden slopes lubricated with such things
as wax, graphite, vegetable oil and others but
showed the graphite worked best as a lubricant.
Rome's project had colorful letters printed on Its
background which stated the rights and re­
sponsibilities of eskimos and had a model Igloo In
front. Other projects on display ranged from
topics such as the Cuban missile crisis, tracing
family trees that originated in Europe and what
efitets colored light had on plants.
Also on Saturday, students selected to repre­
sent their schools registered for competitions In
mathematics, science and social studies which
took place between 9 a.m. and noon. Some of the
events included were basic math-solving pro­
blems for different gradc-levelB In the math
competition, student-produced media pres­
entations such as video recordings, slides and
filmstrips in the social studies competition and
building and experimenting In the science
competition.
In science student built milk carton towers,
blew bubbles with a prize for the largest "super
bubble," and made paper airplanes. Award

KE FREE

SWIVEL ROCKER

t
tuberculosis, like AIDS, is in­
fectious. They also said a
Supreme Court victory for the
teacher could eventually extend
the Rehabilitation Act to AIDS
victims.
"The fact that some persons
who have contagious diseases
may pose a serious health threat
to o t h e r s u n d e r c e r t a i n
circumstances docs not Justify
excluding from the coverage of
the Act all persons with actual or
perceived contagious diseases,"
the court said.
"Such exclusion would mean
that those accused of being
contagious would never have the
opportunity to have their condi­
tion evaluated in light of medical
evidence and a determination
made as to whether they were
‘otherwise qualified.' Rather,
they would be vulnerable to
dlscrlminaon on the basis of
mythology — precisely the type
of injury Congress sought to
prevent."
In Florida, Craig Morris, the
superintendent of the Nassau
County schools, said, ‘Tm dis­
appointed In losing the case. I'm
disappointed for the children In
Nassau County."
"It was the board's concern for
the safety of the children which
led to the dismissal," Morris
added.
Brennan, Joined by Justice
B y ro n W h ile , T h u rg o o d
Marshall, Harry Blackmun.
Lewis Powell. John Paul Stevens
and Sandra Day O'Connor,
wrote before a person with a
contagious disease Is dismissed,
a Job hearing must be held to
determine If the person is a
danger, and If so. could another
position be found for that
person.
Such healings would take into
account the nature of the risk,
the severity of the risk, and the
probabilities the disease will be
transm itted and will cause
varying degrees of harm.
But Chief Justice William
Rehnqulst, Joined by Justice
Antonin Scalla, said the court's
ruling goes beyond the Intent of
Congress in passing the Re­
habilitation Act.
James Kellogg, staff attorney
for the Lambda Legal Defense
and Education Fund, a group
fighting for homosexual rights,
said AIDS discrimination cases
have been on hold throughout
the country pending today’s
court ruling and now appear
likely to be resolved in favor of
AIDS victims.
“I think this will clear the
b o ttle n e c k ," Kellogg said.
"Everybody has been more or
less holding their breath on both

ribbons were given out at the end of each event.
First place winners were:
Individual science projects:
Reagan Russell, Forest City Elementary kin­
dergarten: Joshua Botts. Keeth 1st grade; Erin
Gayhart. Red Bug 2nd gmde: Michelle Keefe,
Altamonte Springs 3rd grade; Christy Duval.
Keeth 4th grade; Ryan Dulsky. Sabal Point 5th
grade.
Gronp scteaco project:
Idyll wllde kindergarten.
Science competition:
Stephanie Pavlls and Laync Stein. Eaatbrook
kindergarten tied with Donald McIntosh and
Matthew Davidson. Idyllwllde kindergarten: Car­
rie Benton, Pine Crest 1st grade; Brian Farr,
Eastbrook 2nd grade: Michael Bare. Sterling Park
3rd grade; Marcus Alexander. English Estates 4th
grade: Nat Olsen and Scott Kasey. Sterling Park
5th grade.
Individual math projects:
Christopher Frank. Woodlands kindergarten;
Meghan Dennis, Sterling Park 1st grade; Lucie
Olewlnskt, Wilson 2nd grade; Richie Keesee.
Eastbrook 3rd grade tied with Stefany Groover.
Lake Mary 3rd grade; Chris Juenzll. Casselberry
4th grade; Jim Irwin. Lake Mary 5th grade.
Group math projects:
Altamonte Springs kindergarten; Woodlands
Elementary 1st grade class; Lawton 2nd grade;
Spring Lake 5th grade.
Math competition:
Morgan Lathrop, English Estates kindergarten;
Lisa Bergenske. Lake Orlenta 1st grade: Milton
Reparip, Red Bug 2nd grade; Ken Dunkel, Weklva
3rd grade; Ben Golnlck Spring Lake 4th grade;
Kelly Gajew&amp;kl, Carrie Lacore, Michelle Bishop
and Rebecca Kessley. Casselberry 5th grade.
Individual social studies projects:
Heath Moncrief. Winter Springs kindergarten;
Scott Malhc, Keeth 1st grade: Lucy Couch. Keeth
2nd garde; Jenny McCluan, Red Bug 3rd grade;
Chad Rome, Sabal. Point 4th grade; Amanda
Crocker, Casselberry 5th grade.
Group social studies projects:
Keeth kindergarten; Lawton 1st grade;
Goldsboro Elementary 5th grade.
Social studies competition:
Primary, Casselberry Elementary and Interme­
diate. Pine Crest Elementary.

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SPORTS
Sanford HoraM. Sanford, PI.

Wtdnosday, March 4 , 1M7— f A

Mainland
Marches
By Evans

T e a r s S a id T h e R est
The Turner Entourage num­
bered 20 people as It prepared to
depart for Saturday night's Class
4A State Wrestling Tournament
at Lyman High School.
There was father Carl, mother
Ellene, brothers Tracy and Tony
along with numerous relatives
and friends. There was Just one
problem. The young man most
Important to the entourage on
this particular evening was miss­
ing.
Where Is Troy Turner? Where
Is that young man who pos­
sessed a 31-0 record at 171
pounds and a 114-5 mark for his
career? Where is that Seminole
High senior who on this evening
Is on the verge of Seminole
County wrestling history. Where
is that gladiator who has been to
the final war twice already and
was without a victory?
You can Imagine the thoughts
that went through the minds of
the family.
Here it Is; Troy's last chance
for a state championship, and he
is nowhere to be found. Could
Clearwater Countryside, whose
wrestler (Dennis Nelson) Troy
was opposing, have kidnapped
h im ? C ould th a t d e v ilish
Solomon Fleckm an. T roy's
trimmed-down (159 pounds)
■arch enemy from Merritt Island,
have conked him over the head
with one of his Mustang horse­
shoes? Or could Troy have
gotten cold feet on the night of
his biggest wrestling match?

"Where Is Troy?" the family
wondered aloud.
Ellene went back Into the
house. After checking about, she
found him In his room. Happily,
she reported there were no
Clearwater residents, horseshoes
nor cold feet.
There was, however, a familiar
face, standing Intently In the
middle of the room.
"He was Just standing there,"
Ellene said. "Ju s t standing
there, looking around at all of his
trophies and medals and rib­
bons."
It was as If Ellene had walked
Into her son’s consciousness.
"Honey, what Is It?". Ellene
asked. "Is there something
wrong?"
"No mom," Troy answered. "I
Just have to do It tonight. This Is
my last chance."
A chance he had two times
previously but failed.
The first time, as an unbeaten
sophomore, was easier to except.
The opponent was the better
m an. He proved II on

scoreboard. Painfully, convinc­
ingly, 19-8. Mark Surrette. a
senior from St. Petersburg
Seminole and bound for the
highly regarded University of
Oklahoma, relegated Troy to
second best. The loss was a
tough one. but understandable.
The foe was two years his senior,
two years more experienced.
Last year was not so easy to
accept. Once again, the Junior
Turner was unbeaten. Then,
came the bad break came, in the
form of a broken thumb during
the semflnal round. Somehow,
discarding the pain, he pulled
out the semifinal victory. It
would be no go In the finale,
however.
The a fo re m e n tio n e d
Fleckman. who would pick up
his second state championship
(and third this year) via Injury
default, said he felt "empty"
w ith his 159-pound title .
Fleckman had lost to Turner In a
dual meet earlier In the year. He
wanted so much to avenge the
loss. Maybe as much as Troy
wanted to shut him up once and
for all.
Both were helpless to do any­
thing about It. The dream match
never materialized. Troy Turner
was 0 for 2 under the year's final
spotlight and looking at his last
time at bat Saturday night. One
more time to grasp the thing he
wanted most In life. One more

H e r a ld B p o r te E d i t o r

Herald Ptieto fry Bennie W M e ld t

Seminote's T r o y T u rn e r, rig h t, w aves a trium p hant No. 1
after beating Dennis Nelson for the 171-pound title.

N C A A Slaps
Gamecocks,
Texas Tech
Reverberations from the latest col­
lege sports scandals have stretched
from the statehoune Li Texas to the
b a sk e tb a ll p ro g ram at S o u th
Carolina, and have involved Illegally
b e s to w e d g if ts t h a t In c lu d e
thousands of dollars and ostrich-skin
boots.
The NCAA Tuesday placed the
T ^ iu . Tech footlNUj
frouth
Carolina basketball programs on
probation for recruiting violations.
Meanwhile, Texas Gov. Bill Clements
became linked to the widening pro­
blems at Southern Methodist when
he admitted he was part of a group
aware of illegal payments to players.
Also, former University of Houston
players said they were paid In the
thousands by former coach Bill
Yeoman.
Texas Tech was placed on a year’s
probation and stripped of three
scholarships. South Carolina was
sentenced to two years' probation for
Illegalities committed under the
tenure of former coach Bill Foster.
The Red Raiders' scholarships were
cut from 25 to 22 for the 1988-89
academic year, but there were no
sanctions Involving television ap­
pearances or postseason play.
The NCAA cited 15 Infractions,
including charges that an assistant
football coach provided a recruit's
mother with "at least $200 in cash
and groceries" and gave a recruit
ostrich-skin boots, a trip to I-as
Vegas. Ncv., and a Texas Tech
sweatsuit.
"We apologize for the Infractions,"
said Lauro Cavazos, Texas Tech's
president. "Today is a very black day
In athletics at Texas Tech, and we
will make sure that it will never
happen again."
The Infractions, which included a
scries of "violations of the NCAA
ethical conduct legislation," occurred
while Jerry Moore was coach at
Texas Tech. Moore was fired after the
1985 season.
A report by the NCAA Committee
on Infractions said Its Investigation at
South Carolina found violations were
committed during Foster's tenure.
Those violations included the sale of
players' complimentary tickets, the
loan of automobiles to prospective
and enrolled student athletes, and
the provision of free meals to several
players at area restaurants.

u

Herald Photo by To m m y Vlncont

Seminole's Walter "Jumpman" Hopson leaps 6-6 to tie the school record in high jump Tuesday.

O a k R id g e O u t -'D is t a n c e s ' 'N o le s
Hopson Ties High Jump Record — Martin Burns To 100, 220 Wins
By Chris Pister
Herald Sports Writer
Despite some tremendous perfor­
mances. Seminole High was out-"distanced" by Oak Ridge's Pioneers
Tuesday, 83-76, In a triangular track
meet that also Included Edgewater at
Seminole High.
Oak Ridge won the meet on the
strength of the mile and two mile, where
It swept the first three places In each.
Edgewater finished a distant third with
10 points.
"We had a really good meet with some
outstanding performances,” Seminole
coach Ken Brauman said. "And we
actually could have won It had we split
up Oak Ridge In the distance events.”
Seminole High will host Its own relay
meet Friday night with field events
starting at 4 and running events at 6.
Highlighting the meet for the ‘Notes on
Tuesday was Junior high Jumper Walter
"Jumpman" Hopson who tied the school
record by clearing 6-6. It was Hopson's

Track &amp; Field
first meet for the Tribe since the end of
basketball season. ,
Seminole also got pn outstanding meet
from senior sprinter Earle Martin who
won the 100 meters with a personal
record of 10.9 as he outleaned Oak
Ridge's Richard Glover. Martin also won
the 220 dash at 22.9 with teammate
Steve Warren second at 23.2.
Other personal records for the Tribe
were turned In by Jcrod Jones In the
discus and Arthur Herscy and Alan
Seward In the 120 high hurdles. Jones
unleashed a throw of 139-1 for first place
while Hcrscy won the hurdles In 14.8
and Seward was second at 15.0. Hersey
(41.4) and Seward (41.7) also went 1-2 In
the 330 intermediate hurdles.
In one or the closest Individual events
of the day. Seminole's Rufaro Matipano
outlasted Oak Ridge's Mike Grothe In the

880 run. Matipano finished in 2:06.9
with Grothe coming In at 2:07.
Seminole also took first in both the
440 and mile relays. The 440 relay learn
of Warren, Martin. Dwayne Willis and
Jerry "Stick" Parker smoked the Pio­
neers as the Tribe finished In 43.8
compared to 45.9 for Oak Ridge.
The mile relay went right down to the
wire. Willis led off and gave Seminole the
early lead but Oak Ridge made up the
difference on the second leg while
Seward ran step for step with Oak
Ridge's runner on the third leg. Maurice
Roberts then look over for the anchor leg
and he put on a strong kick In the laBt
110 to give Seminole the victory.
Seminole finished In 3:30 compared to
3:33 for Oak Ridge.
Second place finishers for the Tribe
Included Mike Mingo In the long Jump
(19-714), Lewis Butler In the triple Jump
(40-10) and Sonny Osborn In the pole
vault (12-0).
...Results In SCOREBOARD

Edwards, Maher Sweep Lake Mary Past Lyman
By Mark Blythe
Herald Sports Writer
LONGWOOD — Lake Mary's Erwin
Edwards won four events to lead the
boys and Elisa Maher captured two
events and ran on the winning mile relay
team to lead the girls as the Rams swept
Lyman Tuesday afternoon in a dual
track meet at Lyman High School.
Edwards won the 100-meter dash with
a time of 11.7. the 220 at 23.3, the 440
at 53.5 and the long Jump with a leap of
20-8 to lead Lake Mary to a 75-60 victory
over the Greyhounds.
Maher won the 100 (13.3). setting a
new Junior record. She also won the 220
with a time of 28.0 and ran a leg on the
winning mile relay team that finished cl

1

DAYTONA BEACH —
Mainland's Bucs know they can
go uptown to all-state center
Mike Polite and forward Kenny
Mackeroy when the situation
calls for It. Tuesday night, how­
ever, Junior guard Very! McIn­
tyre showed them they can go
downtown, too.
McIntyre threw In five 20footers In the • first half while
Polite and Mackeroy tormented
Orlando Evans inside for 59
p o in ts a s D ay to n a 7;each
Mainland captured the Region
4A-5 championship with an
87-78 victory over the Trojans
before 1,901 fans at Mainland
High School.
Mainland, which beat Lake
Mary for the District 4A-9 title
Saturday, advances to the Sec­
tion 4A-3 Tournament against
Palm Beach Gardens, an easy
68-49 winner over Merritt Island.
Mainland. 24-5, will play at
Palm Beach Gardens. Evans,
ranked No. 8 In the final Florida
Sports Writers Association Poll,
finished 27-5.
In other sections this Satur­
day, top-ranked Hialeah Miami
Lakes hosts arch-rival Miami
Hlghr Jacksonville Wolfson en­
tertains Pensacola Washington;
and Clearwater Countryside
travels to Lakeland Kathleen.
"Veryl In a great shooter and
we needed him to n ig h t,"
Mainland guard Derrick Henry
said.
McIntyre, a thin sharpshooter,
took advantage of the collapsing
defenses on 6-7 Polite and 6-4
Mackeroy to finish with 15
points. After he loosened up the
Inside with his long-range gun­
nery, Polite and Mackeroy
operated powerfully inside.
Polite finished with a game-high
30 points while Mackeroy added
29.
"They were Just better than

Track &amp; Field
4:30.7. Lake Mary won going away,
75-42.
"We’re doing real well in the running
events hut we arc still a little weak In the
field." Lake Mary coach Mark McGee
said. "We had a few break throughs In
the long Jump and discus today which
should help greatly In the bigger meets."
Larry Stankovlts came through In the
discus, winning the event with a toss of
133-3‘/«. while Edwards won the long
Jump.
"The 440-relay team also did a good
Job." McGee said. "They are only

freshman and sophomores and they did
really well with the exchanges."
Lyman took the lead after the 330
Intermdlatc hurdles as Darren Marshall
won the event and Lake Mary could only
manage a third place finish.
The Greyhounds took a 50-45 edge
after the hurdles but could get no score
from either the 880-yard run or the
220-yard dash as the Rams built a 63-50
lead with two events remaining and the
high Jump still going on.
Leroy Jenkins gave Lake Mary another
edge clearing 6-2 in the high Jump to up
the lead to 68-54.
Brad Smith then won the 2-mile with
Lyman's Teddy Mitchell finishing a close
second after a winning the mile.

In the girls meet, the Lady Rams
dominated both the Held and the runn­
ing events. Maher led the way In the
sprints as Lake Mury swept ull the points
In the high jump and long Jump.
Tabutha Guno had a good day, winn­
ing the the 330 low hurdles (49.9) and
finishing second in the 110 high hurdles
at 17.6..
Lyman's best counter attack wus the
distance running of Julie Greenburg who
won the mile (5:39.2). the 880 (2:31.9)
and the two-mile (12:24.0).
Eileen Costello won two events for the
Lady Greyhounds. The senior transfer
won the shot put with a toss of 38-8 and
the discus with a distance of 121-3%.
...Results in SCOREBOARD

m ra m v i m j i c \ i v ;

combined for 26 points as
Mainland took a 37-31 first-half
lead. Reggie Shields, a 6-0 senior
guard, threw In 11 of his teamhigh 26 points In the first 16
minutes for the Trojans.
"McIntyre didn't miss In the
first half." Mainland coach Dick
Toth said. "He really came
through for us."
Early In the second half, Polite
went down with an Injured ankle
with the Bucs holding a 39-33
lead. While In the lockerroom
being taped up, Maurice Grey
sandwiched two strong Inside
moves around a Jumper by
Henry.
At that Juncture, Toth sent a
player after Polite and he re­
turned one minute later. Shields
pulled Evans w ithin 41*39
midway through the quarter but
Mackeroy hit a dazzling Bcoop
layup to start a 12-6 spurt as
Mainland took a 53-45 lead with
1:43 to play. Polite, usually great
balance to control a lob pass,
converted a three-point play to
push the lead to 61-53 with two
seconds left In the quarter.
Mainland steadily built its lead
to 12 points midway through the
fo u rth q u a rte r an d w hen
Mackeroy converted two free
throws the Bucs lead, 79-66, but
Evans crawled back into the
game behind strong Inside play
from 6-4 Earl Barnett and the
outside shooting of Shields.
Shield dropped two free
throws with 44 seconds left and
added a steal and layup five
s e c o n d s l a t e r to s h a v e
Mainland's lead to 83-78.
When the Trojans tightened
the pressure, however, steady
Brian Morris effectively handled
the heat and found Mackeroy
down low. Mackeroy was fouled
with 24 seconds left and his two
charity tosses put the Bucs out
of reach, 85-78.
Mainland was not the only
Daytona Beach school to find
re g io n s u c c e s s T u e s d a y ..
Seabreeze used three free throws
by Gerald Smith in overtime to
nip Jacksonville Bishop Kcqny,'
56-55, for the Region 3A-2 title.
Seabreeze, 20-9, will play at
Quincy Shanks in Saturday's
section.
Orlando Jones also won Its
Region 3A-3 with a 72-66 victory
over Ocala Forest. Janes, 23-8,
will host Bartow Saturday In the
section.
E V A N S (71) - Shield* 24. H. C ra y II,
Jeflerion I , Bouyer I . M . C ra y 10. Barnett M ,
To ta l!: m i l l 71.
M A IN L A N D (17) - M cIntyre IS. M . Polite
30, Mackeroy If , Henry f. Cooper 4, E. Pollle
0. M orrltO . To ta l!: 3313 3117.
Helltime — Mainland 37, E v a n ! 31. F ou l! —
E v a n ! II, Mainland If. Fouled out — none.
Technical — Shield! (grabbed rim ). A —
1.901.

�CL
10A—Sanford

r—

Hsrsld, Sanford, FI.

uMUrSt* 1,1 -*•-' -~3’ -’ ■’„ - '• ' 1

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■' "C *” -.,.

W sdim dsy, March 4, in ?

L a d y S e m in o le s
By Chris F ilte r
Herald Sports W riter
Seminole High turned a few heads
with a latc-scason charge a year ago. In
1987, however, the Lady Seminoles
have arrived after only two games.
The Lady ‘Noles picked up one of
their biggest victories ever Tuesday as
they blanked the defending district
and regional champion Lady Braves of
Boone High. 2*0. at Rayford Field In
Orlando.
"The girls were fired up all the way
up there and I think they felt they
could hang with Boone and give them
n good game," Seminole coach Lance
Abney said. "When they scored and
held Boone scoreless through their
entire lineup, they knew they had It

won. After beating a powerful team
like Boone, the girls believe they can
play with anyone now."
Seminole, 2-0. has Its home and
Seminole Athletic Conference opener
Thursday afternoon at 4:15 against
Lake Howell at Fort Mellon Field.
Boone now stands at 5-1.
Seminole broke up the scoreless tie
with two runs In the top of the third
inning. With two outs, Kim Walsh
drew a walk and Sheri Peterson
followed with a base hit to right. When
the ball got by the right fielder, both
Walsh and Peterson scored.
For the game, the Lady 'Noles had
12 hits compared to seven for the Lady
Braves. Peterson, Tammy Bailey and
Bobble Osborne had two his each for

Softball
Seminole while every other player who
started had one hit. '
Defensively. Abney said the Lady
Tribe turned in a solid effort In
shutting out a strong offensive team.
"The outfield (Natasha Beasley.
Leticia Strickland, Lori Bird and Amy
Hawkins) did an Incredible Job."
Abney said. "Every one of them made
two or three shoestring catches. And
we got a near (lawless game from
Jackie Suggs on the mound.”
Suggs, a Junior lefthander, faced 29
batters, gave up seven hits, struck out
one and walked only one.

The Central Florida area is
fortunate indeed to be playing
host to a major men’s tennis
tournament. The Paine Webber
Classic, a unique 32-player
event, will be held at the Grand
Cypress Resort. March 16-22.
This event will be sponsored
by Paine Webber and Volvo and
Is part of the Nabisco Grand Prlx
Super Series. This very exciting
and prestigious event will be
coming u&gt; the Central Florida
area for the first lime.
Of course, some of the top
players In the world will be
coming to this $350,(XX) event.
Ivan Lendl, the No. 1 men’s
player In the world, will be the
top seed and will be the odds-on
favorite. Five time U.S. Open
champ, Jimmy Connors, will
also be part of the field. Lendl
defeated Connors In the finals
last year at the event that was
held In Fort Myers, Fla.
Although this event has en­
joyed a lot of success in the past,
the promoters frankly expect
this year’s tournament to be the
best one yet. The Grand Cypress
Resort Is a fantastic site and a
perfect facility "for a world-class
tennis tournament.
Past winners of the Paine
Webber Classic have Included
Andres Gomez, Connors and

Coljeski Propels H o w e ll —

I

Larry
Castle

FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI) Donald Fehr, executive director
of the Players Association,
' warned Tuesday that unless
major-league owners return the
free e n te rp ris e system to
baseball another players’ strike
could resit Iu
Fehr. visiting the New York
Yankees’ spring training camp
on the first stop of his annual
tour through the Florida training
Lendl, the two-time defending
sites, said It was clear to him
champion. Lendl and Gomez
that the owners were acting In
also teamed for the doubles
crown last year.
c o llu sio n by no t m ak in g
whole-hearted efforts to sign free
ABC Sports will telecast the
agents.
semifinal and final matches as
"The owners have decided to
they have done In the past,
reassert control of the Industry,"
proving once again that this
said Fehr, after addressing the
tournament Is a very Important
Yankee players for an hour and
event.
15 minutes. "My prediction Is
The Grand Cypress Resort Is
tnlngs are going to get nastier
located near Walt Disney World
before they get better. The
and EPCOT Center and Is fully
owners’ Intent Is to punish
equipped with 11 tennis courts
players who exercise their
and a 6,CXX)-seat tennis stadium.
right."
Indeed It Is an excellent place to
H*raM M wte fey To m m y Vlneont
Fehr said he had no Immediate
have a major event and If the
solution to the problem, but that
beautiful Central Florida spring
a strike was an alternative that
weather lives up to expectations
league club for the 1987 season. Raines, the
could be Implemented In the T im Raines ranges to h!s rig ht to backhand
It should be a fantastic week of
N .L . batting cham pion, goes to Sarasota
future. The 1985 baseball season a ground ball. Raines, curre ntly a free
tennis.
today to talk w ith agent T o m Reich about a
was tntemupted by a two-day agent, Is w orking out w ith the Seminole H igh
For Information regarding
player walkout, and the 1981 baseball team until he signs w ith a m a|orpossible deal w ith the A tlan ta B raves.
tickets call 239-7115.
season was crippled by a 50-day
work stoppage.
"I tell the players there are no
magic solutions. There are a
number of grievances that have
been filed and will be filed," said
ly C k u U V itU r
Lake Howell opened up a 3-0 In the top Thursday,
Fehr. "If all of that falls and (the
of the first on an RBI single by Chris
Harold Sports Writer
The Raiders erased a 1-0 Santa Fe lead
ownersrstflf'don’t compete, the
Norton and run-scoring groundouts by in the bottom of the first when Chad
Cory Coljeski moved from center field
time will come to strike again. If
Bauss and Eric Martinez. Bishop Moore Sims singled to left and Danny Moore
(the owners) are going to Behave to center stage Tuesday night as he
Itched five innings of shutout relief to
took advantage of starter Mickey Nolan's socked a double to center, sending Sims
Coljeski entered In the third Inning
like monopolists, they leave the
wildness to score one run In the first n:.d to third. Kevin Hill's groundout scored
with the score tied at 3-3. In five Innings,
players, no alternative. Right tlead Lake Howell’s Silver Hawks over
Orlando
Bishop
Moore’s
Hornets,
6-3,
In
he
allowed
no
runs
on
three
hits,
struck
two in the second on only one hit. Nolan Sims and Gage followed with a groun­
now there is no competition tor
prep baseball action at Orlando.
out two and walked only one.
walked six In two Innings.
dout to chase home Moore for a 2-1 lead.
players at any price."
The Hawks Improved to 5-4 overall
RAIDERS TRIM BANTA FE
Lake Howell broke the tie with two
Fehr mentioned Yankee left­
Santa Fe nicked Rood for Its last run In
Chris Gage drove In three runs and
runs In the top of the sixth and added an
hander Ron Guidry as a prime and return to action today at home
the
second for a 2-2 tie but SCC. which
Jeff Rood scattered nine hits as Seminole
insurance run in the seventh. In the
example of the owners' refusal to against West Orange. Lake Howell’s next
rapped
out 14 hits, pushed acorss two In
Seminole
Athletic
Conference
game
Is
Community College tripped Santa Fe,
sixth, David Bauss singled, Eric Martinez
go after prime free agents.
the
fifth
and two more in the eighth to
Friday
at
home
against
Seminole.
6-2,
in
Mid-Florida
Conference
baseball
walked
and
Steve
Sheppard
drew
a
"Not one team has made an
take
control.
"Coljeski came In and did a super Job."
Tuesday at SCC.
one-out walk to load the bases. Vito
offer to Guidry," said Fehr. "We
DeLand’s Rood struck out two and
Scutero followed with a walk to force In
will see if Tim Raines is good Lake Howell coach Birto Benjamin said.
In the fifth, Bill Pellctreau •singled to
"He’s relieved once before but It was
walked one while going the distance. left. Moore beat out a swinging bunt and
Bauss and Brett White also drew a free
enough to play for someone."
Seminole Improved to 5-13 overall and Hill's Infield hit loaded the bases. Gage
pass to force In Martinez. In the seventh.
There are six premier free when we were out of the ballgame bo It
4-5 in the MFC. Santa Fe dropped to 11-7 doubled to center for two runs and a 4-2
agents on the open market and was good that he got the victory after
Coljeski singled and scored on a double
and 6-2. SCC travels to Lake City lead.
none of them appear to be close pitching so well."
off the bat of Ernest Martinez.
to signing with new clubs. They
cannot return to their old clubs
until May 1. The six Include
* Raines, Guidry, Lance Parrish,
Bob Homer, Andre Dawson and
Rich Gedman.
AGENT UPSETS GREEN
Chicago Cubs General Manag­
KEY BISCAYNE (UPI) - Steffi
By Mark Blythe
er Dallas Green accused Andre Graf,
who
recently
climbed
to
Herald
Sports Writer
Dawson's agent of staging "a
2 in the world, has posi­
Lake Mary used the efforts of
dog-and-pony show" in attempts No.
tioned herself to make a large
Its entire team to down Lake
to get the free-agent outfielder stride
toward
No.
1.
Thursday,
when.
Graf
and
Brantley, 5-2, Tuesday afternoon
signed with the National League
Graf needed Just 36 minutes to Navratilova-play. It will be the
In prep tennis action.
team.
Lisa Bonder 6-0, 6-1 first time in five years that the
The Lady Rams improved to
Green met with Dawson In destroy
Tuesday
In
the
$1.8
million
Nos.
1
and
2
players
face
each
71 and will return to action
Mesa. Arlz., for more than an
Thursday away against Lake
hour Tuesday, but did not ac­ Lipton International Player other and Evert Lloyd Is not
The 17-year-old Involved.
Howell.
cept an Invitation from the Championships.
West
German
advanced
to
the
"I
know
how
she
plays
and
I'm
After number one player Susie
former Montreal Expos out­ semifinals In which she will
S te w a r t lo s t to K r is tin e
fielder’s agent, Dick Moss, to fill meet Martina Navratilova. The feeling good." Graf said of
in a salary figure on a one-year world's No. 1 player moved to N avratilova. "M y serve Is C h r lt E v e rt L lo y d hits a backhand. L lo yd w as overtaken by Longmler 8-3 Lake Mary came
stronger now and since the U.S. Steffi G ra f In the com puter rankings last m onth.
alive and did not lose another
contract.
the
semis
by
crushing
Nathalie
Open. I’ve Improved a lot."
single’s match. Erin Higgins
"1 find it rather strange that TauzlantB-1,6-1.
Evert Lloyd, seeded second in
whipped Lisa Llden, 8-3, and
we come to spring training and
Though seeded third In this the tournament, reached the 12th-seeded Bettlna Bunge 6-2, seed, 3-6. 6-3. 7-5. 6-7 (4-7). 6-4 Heather Bennett took care of
then the guy whole in charge of
Graf moved, from quarterfinals by routing Stepha­ 6-4: No. 4 Yannick Noah com­ In a match that lasted 3 hours. Jennifer Josephs.
a free agent wants to put on a tournament.
No.
3
-to
No.
2 In the world nie Rehe 6-3,6-2.
pleted a match that was sus­ 51 minutes: sixth-seeded Jimmy
Kerry Marshall then gave the
dog-«nd-pony show a t my
computer
rankings
after
winning
In other matches, top-seeded pended by rain Monday by Connors breezed to a 6-0, 6-1, Lady Rams a lift with an 8-1
expense In my complex using the Virginia Slims of Florida
Ivan Lendl defeated 16th-seeded defeating Johan Krlek 4-6, 6-2, 6 -0 , triu m p h o v er J o h a n crushing of Michelle Rossmleller.
my press," Green said.
tournament last month while Brad Gilbert 6-2, 6-2, 6-4 to 6-3. 7-6 (7-0); fifth-seeded Mats Carlsaon; and Helena Sukova. Ingrid Degraff then stepped in
former No. 2, Chris Evert Lloyd, advance to the qquarterfinals: No. Wllander outlasted Tim Mayotte, the women’s sixth seed, edged and took care of Maryann An­
In other training-camp news:
At S t, P e te rsb u rg , Meta was upset earlier In that event.
4 Hana Mandllkova topped the 1985 champion and 12th- No. 13 Lori McNeil 5-7, 7-5,7-5.
cona 8-5 to secure the win.
right-hander Dwight Gooden
The Patriots' Longmler and
faced hitters for the first time
Llden then won the first doubles
since 1986, displaying a live
match with a 9-7 win over
fastball during 20 minutes of
Stewart and DeGraff. Higgins
p itc h in g b a ttin g p ractice.
and Bennett came on to win the
Oooden, 22, says he is con­
second doubles match for Lake
centrating on returning to his Cy
In the other semifinal game, Darryl Prue Mary with an 8-5 decision over
Young Award-winning form of
scored 18 points and Tyrone Shaw added 16 Josephs and Rossmleller.
Nate Blackwell regained his shooting
1985. when he went 24-4 with a touch In the Atlantic 10 tournament
as West Virginia, 23-6, dealt Rhode Island.
In boys action Tuesday, the
1.53 BRA. Gooden waa 17-6 with semifinals to help No. 8 Temple set up a
20-9, Its worst defeat of the season. West
Rams
also knocked off Brantley
a 2-84 ERA in I960, but consid­ rematch against West Virginia, the team anyone. They were all in the right place."
Virginia led by as many as 27 points In
by
an
indentical
5-2 margin. The
ered the season disappointing that spoiled the Owls’ perfect league record.
The tournament winner will earn an winning for the 11th time In Its last 12
victory
was
even
more im­
from a personal standpoint.
Temple defeated 8t. Joseph's 84-68 automatic NCAA Tournament berth, al­ games.
pressive
since
Lake
Mary,
7-1,
Tuesday
night
to
advance
to
the
toumaIn
other
tournaments,
Lamar
beat
North
though the loser also will probably receive a
"I got Into some bad habits
did
It
without
No.
1
player
Shea
Texas State 87-82 and Arkansas Slate
and lost movement on my roent final against the Mountaineers, who bid.
stopped Northeast Louisiana 81-60 In the Whigham who was sidelined
3wls
In
their
final
regular-season
"We
know
we're
going
to
be
In
the
fastball." he said. "My main
te.
West
Virginia
beat
Rhode
Island
NCAA,"
Blackwell
said.
"Now
we
want
to
Southland C onference: Siena edged with a sprained ankle.
concern is to regain movement. I
1-58
In
the
other
semifinal.
establish
we're
the
best
team
In
the
Atlantic
Can
talus 67-65. Northeastern downed New
At No. 1 Brantley's Mark Palus
thought my fastball moved very
For
the
10th
time
In
11
games.
Temple
10
so
we
have
to
go
out
and
prove
it."
Hampshire
85-71,
Boston
beat
Maine
76-57
whipped
Eric Weinman. 8-0, but
well today."
failed to make 50 percent of Its shots (47.6).
Blackwell scored 11 straight Temple and Niagara defeated Vermont 109-90 in the Mary’s Mike Renaud came back
At Scottsdale, Arts., Oakland But Blackwell, who has struggled recently, points In the second half as the Owls opened ECAC North Atlantic Conference; and San to derail Chip Devine, 8*3. Ram
right-hander Joaquin Andujar. connected on 11 of 15 shots, Including 3 a 68-50 lead with 7:17 to play.
Diego State edged Hawaii In the Western Tom Boysen followed with an
who angered A's Manager Tony 3-polnters as he hit for 25 points.
Tim Perry struck for a career-high 24 Athletic Conference.
8-4 victory over David Casey. 8-4
LaRuaoa by reporting late to
"We got our chemistry going," Blackwell points, 11 rebounds and 7 blocks ana Mike Southland Conference
before Bret Thorpe topped
camp, complained of soreness in
"In the second half, when we were up Vreeswyk added 15 points for Temple, 30-3.
At Beaumont. Texas, James Gulley col­ Trevor Olson. 8*1. and No. 5
his. throwing arm after his first by 10. the guys Just started to know what St. Joseph's. 16-13, received 19 points from lected 24 points and 21 rebounds to power Dave Sharidan flattened Steve
workout.
they were doing. I didn't have to holler at James Flint.
Polakoff, 8-2.
Lamar's first-round victory.

Raines

I
r

"We played errorless ball and that
kept us In the game." Lake Brantley
assistant Debbie Frank said. "Every­
thing we hit up until the sixth was
right at them."
Brantley scored once In the top of
the second when Kim Robinson
singled, Michelle Weston reached on
an error. Dawn Gebhart walked and
S tacy B ra n d e n b u rg sin g led in
Robinson.
Along with an errorless defense,
Robinson pitched a three-hit shutout
for the Lady Pats, striking out one and
walking one.
WEST ORANGE BOPS LYMAN
In other action Tuesday, Winter
Garden West Orange whipped Lyman.
18-2. No details were reported.

Unique M en’s Tournament
Comes To Grand Cypress

Fehr Warns
Of Possible
Player Strike

il

LAKE BRANTLEY TRIMS EVANS
Lake Brantley pushed across two
runs in the top of the sixth Tuesday as
the Lady Patriots avenged an earlier
loss with a 3-1 victory over Orlando
Evans at Lake Falrvtcw.
The Lady Patriots Improved to 2-2
overall and return to action today at
4:15 at Lake Fairvlew against Winter
Park. Brantley opens Its Seminole
Athletic Conference schedule Thurs­
day at 4:15 against Lake Mary at
Merrill Park in Altamonte Springs.
With the score tied, 1*1, Heather
Meyer led off the sixth for Brantley
with a base hit and Tracy Branden­
burg followed with a triple to center.
Brandenburg then scored on Mandy
Mathleson’s sacrifice fly.

, Rood Lift SCC

Baseball

N o.
2 G ra f Positions
For M ove O n M artina
Tennis

Blackwell Shoots Temple Past West Virginia
Basketball

M a ry Nets
2 Victories

�SBttfAtrd HtraM, Untard, FI,

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

TV/RADIO

Dandrldge Gains \Hall1Entry
TAMPA (UPI) — A generation after he was denied
entrance to the major leagues because of his color, Ray
Dandridge will stride Into baseball's Hall of Fame.
A stylish third baseman dubbed "the Brooks Robinson of
the Negro Leagues." Dandrldge was the sole candidate
elected into baseball's Hall of Fame Tuesday during a
heated Veterans Committee meeting. The 18-member
committee needed an extra hour past a scheduled noon
EST news conference before announcing Dandridge was
the only candidate to receive the minimum requirement of
14 votes.
Dandridge. 73, starred in the Negro League, the Mexican
League and the American Association in a 20-year career
than began in 1933. He was never called up to the majors
despite two decades of slick glove work and steady hitting.

Sanford Cham ber G o lf March 13
The 12th annual Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce
Golf Tournament will be held Friday, March 13 beginning
at 1 p.m. at Mayfair Country Club in Sanford.
Entry fee is $40 per person with net proceeds going to
the Chamber of Commerce Sports Committee. The 18-holc
tournament is open to men and women and entry fee
includes greens and cart fees, prizes for low net scores in
each of five flights, door prizes donated by local businesses,
a putting contest, free refreshments on course and a
hamburger buffet.
Foursomes will be assigned by the golf committee or
entrants may matte up their own foureomc. For moie
information, call the Chamber of Commerce at 322-2212 or
Ernie Horrcll at 322-4507.

Philadelphia Honors Ervlng
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Julius Ervlng knew somethlnf
was going on when he was ushered out of practice
taken to Northeast Philadelphia '' "I wasn’t told anything," he said. "Just don't ask
questions, that's what I was told."
Ervlng did not have to wait long for the answer. The
Philadelphia 76ers and the city of Philadelphia Tuesday
began saying‘goodbye to the basketball legend, who is
retiring after this season.
A giant billboard, depleting two large sneakers and the
words "We’ll never fill your shoes. Thanks for everything.
Doc." was unveiled at a surprise ceremony.

Blue: Positive For Cocaine
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — Former Cy Young Award
winner Vida Blue, who during spring training last year
promised to spurn drugs, tested positive for cocaine three
times last season, court documents revealed Tuesday.
Blue is on probation after spending 81 days in Jail on a
1983 drug-possession conviction. Documents from U.S.
District Court in San Francisco disclosed the left-hander
was charged with violating his parole last year when he
tested positive for traces or cocaine on July 11, Aug. 6 and
Sept. 3.

. . . C

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United Press International
New York Knlcka Coach Bob
Hill, who has exercised positive
reinforcement, sounded very
negative in victory Tuesday
night.
Hill blasted his team after 11
snapped a five-game losing
streak with a 99-86 triumph over
the Utah Jazz.
”1 thought we played better In
our last two games." Hill said.
"It weis very frustrating. I felt
like a dentist pulling teeth. Our
fastbreak was sickening."
As the Interim replacement for
the acerbic Hubic Brown, Hill
has been more supportive of the
players since taking over earlier
this season. Though New York Is
13-29 in his tenure, Hill says he
wants the Job permanently.
Gulf &amp; Western, the pwners of
the Knlcks. says a decision on
next year's coach will be made
after the season. Among the
names reportedly being consid­
ered arc Larry Brown of Kansas
and John MacLeod, formerly of
the Phoenix Suns.
Hill has been unable to get
New York to play consistently.
Utah was treated to 21 turn­
overs.
Elsewhere, Aliuhtu defeated
In d ian a 109-108, C hicago
topped the LA Clippers 114-80,
the LA Lakers dumped Golden
State 114-109 and Portland beat
Cleveland 127-122.

OIRLS: iso Men n, Irene o.

m iv itiM

United Prese International
Two trademarks of the Quebec Nordiques — pride and
offense — have vanished from the provincial team with
showy goal-scorers.
The Nordiques. clinging to a four-point lead over Buffalo
for the Adams Division’s fourth and final playoff spot,
Tuesday night lost 8-1 to the Pittsburgh Penguins to drop
to 1-6-1 In their last eight games.
‘‘This loss is the biggest disappointment I have had since
coaching the Nordiques," said Michel Bergeron, whose
team has never missed the playoffs in his six seasons.
‘‘This game was so Important to us and to play, this
way... We have a serious problem on this team, no pride,
no desire to wear the Nordlque Jersey. I don't want to
blame specific players but I don’t feel the spirit that was
present on other Nordiques teams."
Elsewhere. Washington edged New Jersey 3-2, St. Louis
topped Toronto 4-3. Philadelphia beat Buffalo 4-2. Hartford
downed Detroit 5-3, Montreal defeated Calgary 4-2. the
New York Islanders tied Boston 4-4 and Minnesota tied Los
Angeles 4-4.

TONIGHT'S SCHEDULE

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Nordiques Lose Offense, Pride
A s Penguins Prolong Skid, 8-1

Hill Berates
N Y After Win

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4:30 p.m . — Luka M a ry at Oay Iona Boacti Mainland
4:10p.m. — Lak* B rantlty at Winter Park

TINNIS
1:30p.m. — OeLand at Lake Howell (bo yt)
3:30 p.m . — Lake Brantlty at Oak Ridge (boyt)

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74

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No appolntmont necetsary!

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HOCKEY
MOCXEYi M L STANDINGS

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WadrwRday, March 4, )W -UA

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4

NOW!

1 N IO H TLY 7 t90 p.m.
I Except Sunday, thru May 2nd

ifUnits Monday, W
4 Murtfay 1:00 p'.m

jggjjgl $9,000. AIm Mm

THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission for ladias
Visit our two climate-controlled
clubhouses lor your fine dining
end entertainment pleasure!

CLUBHOUSERE8V.: (SMI

•ANFORO-ORLANDO
KENNEL CLUB
Northof Orlande, Just oil Hwy. 17-92
301 DegTrackBead, Longw *
lorry. NoOea Under 18

Wodltldir’l OlMII

(AKTimnEtT)
NT liUnd*t ol NT R*ng*v 7:D p m
Wnmp*go1CNc*go,l Mpm
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W L Fit. 01
ill -

DX

C ontinued from B A

time to win the thing he and his
family worshiped fervently.
One more time...
One m ust understand the
Turners to realize how much.
How much does baseball mean
to Tim Raines? How much does
H e a th ro w m e a n to J e n o
Pauluccl? How much does the
presidency mean to Ronald
Reagan? How much does re­
ligion mean to Billy Graham?
How much does wrestling
mean to the Turners?
Wrestling to the Turner family
is religion. Each member lives
and dies by the mat. Whether it
is Ellene throwing her hands up
to her face In excitement or Carl
pacing the floor, trying to
squeeze one more win out before
heading for the door for another
Pull Mall.
One time Seminole had taken
a sizab le lead a g ain st an
overmatched foe. a lead large
enough that victories in the
upper weights were not neces­
sary. There was Carl, though,
still matslde, encouraging the
remaining boys.
"Time for a smoke. Isn’t it
Carl?" someone asked.
"Not yet," Carl replied, brow
furrowed. "I still got a couple of
these boys to get through yet."
When it comes to wrestling, all
the boys are Turners. And not
Just the Scmlnolcs either. Rams.
Greyhounds, Lions. Hawks and
Patriots are all Turners. As long
as they are not wrestling the
'Notes. Carl and company are in
their corner, pulling them
through.

B E S T P R IC E S
B E S T S E R V IC E
TR Y US!
40 000 MILE WARRANTY
DOU8U 9TUIHLTID RADIA19

PBIMIUr.: MTMADt
*U M
* NUBS

u*w/uuuumi

H*reM PhoN hy R i a l o W IiM W

C a rl T u rn e r, left, hugs his
171-pound state cham pion.

Saturday night. Troy was the
most important one to pull
through. Junior Tracy, a super
wrestler in his own right, would
have to wait for his champion­
ship. A severely injured wrist
had knocked him for the stale
tournament in the second round.
It was Troy Turner and Dennis
Nelson for the 171-pound cham­
pionship. This is it. The last time
around. Troy picked up two
points, then three more for a 5-0
lead. Nelson came back with one
but Troy added four more. It was
over. Troy Turner was the best
171-pound wrestler In Florida,
As the official raised Troy's
hand. Troy turned toward the
bleachers, looked to the very top
row, found the loved ones and
waved a triumphant No. 1.
Tears said the re si.

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--------- i r --------- coupon----------- 1 ---------COUPON--

GRAND PRIX
RV TRACTION
u*

• ^ 1
1

10x15
11x15

1 12x15

SS9.95
$45.95
S75.95

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT
$ 9 » 9 Cars
i Warraety

|| BRAKE SPECIAL |
Mfasted PaBs
li erlkee
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NAME CHANGE ONLY
(FariMiiy BIG 10 TlftCS)
S E R V IC E ...................................................................................
P R I C E S .....................................................................................
W A R R A N T I E S ........................................................................
P E R S O N N E L ..........................................................................

CARL BERGMAN

SAME,
SAME

v v 3 i' —
J E F F K R U G ER

A

�V

U A — Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

«m *v

■r

Wednesday, March 4, IM7

Stocks Open Higher
NEW YORK (UPI) — Prices opened higher today
In active trading of New York Stock Exchange
Issues.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose
6.05 Tuesday, was up 9.14 to 2235.66 shortly
after the market opened.
Advances led declines 628-367 among the
1.426 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 16,629.000
shares.
The stock market posted modest gains Tuesday
In subdued trading while Investors waited for
President Reagan’s response to the Tower
Commission report on the Iran-Contra affair In a
Wednesday address to the nation.

Local Interest
These quotations provided by
m e m b e r s o f t he N a t i o n a l
Association of Securities Dealers
arc representative Inter-dealer
prices as of mld-momlng today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.

This market Is like a child that's tired but
doesn't want to go to bed.” said Harry Vlllec of
Sutro &amp; Co. He said the Dow could move as high
ac 2400 before It retreats. But he said any
slgnllcant setback will attract renewed buying.
Ernie Rudnet. manager of block trading at
Mabon Nugent A Co. cited "some slight
nervousness about what Reagan will say Wed­
nesday.” But he said overall, the market gave a
"pretty good" performance.
Traders said government reports showing the
Index of leading economic indicators fell 1
percent in January while single-family home
sales dropped 6.8 percent had little Impact.
Traders said Investors are waiting for February
unemployment data, due Friday.

Dollar Off A Bit
As Gold Climbs
1.828 German marks, down
from Tuesday's close of 1.834.
In Zurich, the dollar opened at
1.538 Swiss francs, down from
1.544 and In Paris at 6.0825
French francs, down from 6.105
on Tuesday.

By United Preee International
The U.S. dollar opened slightly
lower In light trading on all
Bid Ask major world money markets
8 %
8 Mi
American Pioneer
today. The price of gold moved
36% 36ft higher.
Barnett Bank
28% 28 Mi
First Union
In earlier trading In the Far
Florida Power
East, the dollar closed slightly
31ft 32V* lower In slow trading against the
&amp; Light
40 4014 Japanese yen.
Fla. Progress
34% 35
HCA
The dollar closed In Japan at
28ft 25% 153.47 yen, down 0.13 from
Hughes Supply
25 25ft Tuesday's close of 153.60. *
Morrison's
65ft 65ft
NCR Corp
Dealers said the dollar's
37% 38ft weakness
Plesscy
an overnight
14ft 15 decline In reflected
Scotty's
New
York,
where the
29ft 30ft dollar closed at 153.60
Southeast Bank
on
25 ft 25%
SunTrust
Tuesday.
59 59ft
Walt Disney World
63% 64 ft
T raders noted that most
Westlnghouse
market participants were reluc­
tant to take large positions and
Dow Jones
waited for some news that may
affect trading. There was only
Dow Jones Averages — 10 a.m.
30 Indus
2233.55 up 7.03 small-lot buying and selling of
20 Trans
942.34 up 1.57 the dollar, they said.
In European trading, the dollar
15 (Jills
217.53 ofT 0.86
slipped
In Frankfurt, opening at
65 Stock 852.27 up 1.49

Continued from p ife 1A
Department of Environmental
Regulation permit application by
the county or within six months
of the execution of the agree­
ment
• An additional five percent
($93,437.50) Is due at the time
the county Issues a notice to

lines are In operation.
The county will also charge
the city an Initial user charge of
$1.50 per thousand gallons of
wastewater. The charge will be
adjusted from time to time based
on its cost for p ro v id in g
wholesale service. Additional
capacity up to 600,000 gallons
per day can be obtained with the
amount of connection fees to be
calculated on a rate of $1 less
per gallon than the county's

p r o c e e d fo r c o n s t r u c t i o n o f th e

c o n n e c tio n fe e In e ffe c t a t th e

transmission facilities;
• An additional five percent
($93,437.50) must be paid for
each month for the three months
after the notice to proceed;
• An additional 60 percent
($1,121,250) Is due at the time
the transmission facilities are
placed Into operation and sew­
age Is flowing from the city to
the county system.
• Another five percent, that Is
$93,437.50. Is due 90 days after
the transmission facilities are in
operation.
• And a final payment of 10
percent ($186,875) Is due 12
months after the transmission

time.
*
Another breakthrough In the
financial log Jam came at the
work session when Ann Sweet­
ing. property manager for St.
Laurent Properties, said If terms
could be worked out with the
city. St. Laurent would pay the
city $500,000 up front to reserve
58.824 gallons per day addi­
tional capacity at the county's
Greenwood Lakes treatment fa­
cility. She said St. Laurent
would prefer to hook up to the
sewer system through the city
rath e r than build Its own
package plant at the Florida

...Pact

Gold And Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold
London
Previous close 404.00 ofT 1.00
Morning fixing 407.65 up 3.65
406.50 up 2.50
Hong Kong
New York
Comex spot
407.10 off 0.10
gold open
Comex spot
silver open
5.479 up 0.015
(London m o rn in g fixing
change lo based on the previous
day's closing price.)

Central Commerce Park.
St. Laurent has made an offer
and the city Is preparing a
counter olTer. Waller said Mon­
day night. Mrs. Sweeting said
the firm could give a letter of
Intent for the city to take to Sun
Bank. Waller said he will be
taking the latest contract with
the county to thr bank this week
along with St. Laurent's pro­
posal.
The

c o m m is s io n

p o s tp o n e d

action on terminating the city's
contract with the engineering
firm of Dyer. Riddle. Mills and
Pr*court until the bank approves
the contract as financially feasi­
ble.
The city originally borrowed
$3 million from Sun Bank with
$2.5 million to be used to build
the proposed 600.000 gallons
per day Grant Street sewage
treatment plant to replace inad­
equate facilities at Skylark and
Columbus Harbour subdivisions,
which have been labeled sub­
standard by Florida Department
of Environmental Regulation.

AREA DEATHS
BUSIE M. HENDERSON
Mrs. Susie Mae Henderson. 64.
02 Academy Ave., Sanford,
led Monday at Central Florida
egional Hospital. Bom March
2. 1922 m Alley. Ga.. she
loved to Sanford from St.
etersburg in 1968. She was a
omcmaker and a member of
loly Trinity Church of God In
:hrlst. Sanford.
S u r v iv o r s Include her
lusband, Charles L.; four sons,
lohnaaron, Sanford, Harold and
Vllliam. both of Tlldenvllle and
hrtia Lee. Orlando; five daughers. Johnnie Mae Dawson.
Vebster. N.Y.. Mary Elizabeth
M e m o n s , D o u g l a s . Ga . .
Aackleatha Mingo. Daytona
leach. Gwendolyn D.. Fern
’ark. and Dorothy. Wilmington.
)el.s two sisters. Ruby Bennett,
iazlehurst. Ga.. Queen Esther
laker. HlnesvUle, Ga.; brother.
2arol Akins. Rochester. N.Y.: 25
g ran d ch ild ren ; five g re a t­
grandchildren.

Wllson-Elchelberger Mortuary. tractor/estlmator.
Survivors include a daughter.
Sanford, in charge of arrange­
Mignon
Ratliff. Huntsville. Ala.:
ments.
four
grandchildren;
six great­
CURTIS ROBINSON
Mr. Curtis Robinson, 73. of grandchildren; three sisters.
485 Maytown Road. Osteen, died Bessie Wright and Sue Scott,
Monday at his residence. Bom both of Cullman. Ala., and Peggy
Jan. 27. 1914 In Ft. Meade, Fla., Driver. Tampa; five brothers.
he moved to Osteen from Lake Ralph Wilkins. Sanford. Heard.
City In 1962. He was a retired Felton, Bert and Jim, all of
heavy equipment operator and a Cullman.
Gramkow Funeral Home.
Protestant.
Survivors include two daugh­ Sanford, in charge of arrangters, Betty Cook. Osteen, and ments.
Geraldine Robinson. Live Oak;
brother. A.B. Robinson. Osteen: Funsral Notlcss
six grandchildren and five
great-grandchildren.
WILKINS. JOHN WAVILAM
— Fun#f*l m t v Ic m lor M r. John W ovoUn
Wllson-Elchelberger Mortuary Wilkins.
SI. of Sonford. who dlod Monday,
In charge of arrangements.

HsraM Ptwtaby T s m O tsrS sm

T r u c k d r iv e r K e v in R o g e rs, left, and
bystander w ait In the shadow of his truck for

...Wreck
Continued from page IA

when glass from the driver's
door window shattered during
the operation. It did not hit him
In his already bleeding face.
Rogers truck blocked both
westbound lanes of State Road
46 and traffic was rerouted west
into the eastbound lanes. TrafTlc
In both directions was directed
by Seminole County sheriff's
deputies.
Cable said he and his wife
began a Florida vacation Feb. 23
lo visit a relative and former
students and friends In Bcvernl
areas of the state. They traveled
to Florida on the Auto Train and
were scheduled to return home
Thursday. They were on their
way from Deltona to Cocoa
Beach when the accident oc­
curred. he said.
Cable Is a retired professor
emeritus from Purdue Univerattty where he taught biolog­
ical science, he said. Mrs. Cable
Is a retired microbiologist. Their
h o m e la a b o u t 60 mi l e s
northwest of Indianapolis.
Rogers said he has been driving
since he was 16 end has never
before had an accident.
T rooper W eaver was in-.
vestigating the accldenj^Rl-the
scene for the-JWwCRfrgea arc
pending against Cable.

trying to hold the steering wheel
of the truck when the right front
of that vehicle crushed the
driver’s side of the car occupied
by the Indiana couple.
First to aid the Cables at the
scene as they lay in the rear
section of their rental car. where
their scats had been forced by
the Impact, was Joe N. Aral, of
Hopewell. Virginia. Aral said he
didn’t sec the accident, but had
pulled Into the Phillip’s 66 sta­
tion where the accident occured
Just before the Cables' car en­
tered the roadway. "I guess it
could have been me." he said.
Both Cables suffered multiple
cuts and rescue workers placed a
brace on Cable's neck. Assistant
Fire Chief J.W. Walters at the
scene said he couldn't say the
extent of the Injuries to the
couple, but rescue woikers
handled them with care, he said.
Mrs. Cable was first to be
removed from the passenger's
side of the car. Cable had to
await the arrival of additional
Seminole County firefighters,
who used the "Jaws of llle" tool
to pry open the driver's side of
the car. so he could be taken out.
R esue w o rk e rs sh ie ld e d
nket while
Cable’s face with a blanket
the Jaws were being used, so that

westbound on State Road 46. at
the intersection of Interstate 4,
when the rented Ford Escort
hatchback pulled onto the
roadway from an Interstate
4 exit.
"I thought he saw me. He cut
right dead In front of me. I was
doing about 45." Rogers said.
Rogers was driving a 3.000pound em pty sand-hauling
semi-truck for the Astro Co., of
Lockhart. He was on his way
home after making a sand de­
livery at Seminole Concrete In
Sanford.
From his Sanford hospital bed
today the driver of the car,
Raymond M. Cable, 77. of West
Lafayette. Ind.. said, he didn't
see the truck.
"I was exiting from Interstate
4. We were on our way lo Cocoa
Beach. I was told I had gone too
far Into the Intersection. I
thought there might be an exit
lane tlicrc."
"I feel much better today."
Cable said. But after the accident
he said his wife of 50 years, Mary
T. Cable. 75. was Incoherent.
Mrs. Cable remained In the
critical care unit of Central
Florida Regional Hospital In
Sanford, where Cable Is recov­
ering from a cervical strain and
cuts and bruises.
Mrs. Cable Is reported to be In
Continued from page 7 A
serious condition and the extent
of her Injuries has not been vestigating a shooting Incident
reported by the hospital, a had no right to move stereo
equipment so he could record
spokesman said.
Rogers suffered only minor serial numbers to check to see If
injury to a finger when he was the equipment was stolen.
The Florida case began In
1978 when the school board
fired a third grade teacher. Gene
Arllne.
Mrs. Ar l l n e c o n t r a c t e d
tuberculosis In 1957 when she
was 14. The disease went into
will be held later this wssk In Cullman , Ala.
Frlandt m ay call at Gram kow Fu n a ril Homa
remission and In 1966 she was
tonight (W adnotday) Irom * 1 p.m . A rhired as an elementary school
rangomonti by Gram kow Funoral Homa.

teacher. However, she suffered
three relapses of tuberculosis
during 1977 and 1978 and
eventually was fired.
She brought suit charging she
was di scrimi nat ed against
be ca us e of her handi cap,
tuberculosis. In violation of the
Rchablliatlon Act. The law
applies to any employer receiv­
ing federal money, which the
schools did.
Mrs. Arllne argued she should
not have been fired because the
risk of Infecting her students
was minimal and even If there
were a risk, Uk school board had
a duty to find her another
position.

...Court

Sanford.

HKMDIRSON. SUSII AAAI
— F unaral larvica t lor M r*. Su»'a AAao
Handarton, *4. of 101 Acodamy Avo.. Sanford,
who died Monday, wtll ba natd 1:19 p.m .
Saturday at Holy Trin ity Church Of God In
C hrltt, 1409 AAangowtlna, Ava., Sanford, with
Pastor Alto Sconlart officiating. Informant to
follow In R a ttliw n Camatary. Calling hours
tor frlnoda will bo hold Irom 2 d p.m . Friday
a l tho chaps I. W ilton Elchalbargar Mortuary
In c h a rg r

■OBI NSOM. CURTIS
- Funoral tarvlcst tor M r. Curtis Robinson,
72. of i U Maytown Rood, Ostoon. who dlod
Monday will ba hold 1 p.m . Saturday al
M acadonla M issio na ry Baptist C h u rch ,
AAaytown Read, with tna Rav. Dlvellla
Grooms officiating. Informant to follow In
Ostoon Camatary. Calling hours lor frlondt
will bo 2-0 p.m . Friday at the chapel.
Wllson-Elchelberger Mortuary In charge.

J ohn w. wilkins

Mr. John Wavelan Wilkins, 81.
of 3301 S. Sanford Ave. Apt. 65,
Sanford, died Monday at his
residence. Bom Sept 17, 1905 In
McDonough. Ga.. he moved to
Sanford from Canton, Ohio, in
1959. He was a paving con-

the accident victim s to be rem oved from
their crushed car.

Briason G U A R D IA N Funeral Home

WHAT ABOUT
PRE-A RRA N G IN G
A FU N ERA L?
T h is Is som etim es* p ru d e n t.
However, if you are thinking about
pre-arranging a specific funeral
you are u r g e d to contact an exper­
ienced Funeral Director. Careful
counseling with him can avoid un­
wise planning with a salesman.
We offer a method of F R E E Z IN G
T O D A Y S F U N E R A L C O S T S through
our new Pre-need Funeral Plan; brief­
ly, here are tom e of the plans major
features:
• You Make The Decisions Today About
Your Funeral Arrangements And Costs
• Convenient Installments If Needed
Without Finance Charges
• The Plan Is Not Insurance

WILLIAM L GRAMKOW
L.F.O.

IF YOU WISH TO CANCEL. 100% OF THE
MONEY PAID WILL BE REFUNDED

C*.

IVVMB

Hwy. 174t - P $ m M

O A K LA W N

GRAM KOW a

F U N E R A L HOME \

FU N E R A L HOME

PRE A R R A N G E M E N T C E N T E R

O antH unt, O m v jr^

130WEST AIRPORT BOULEVARD
SANFORD. FLORIDA
TELEPHO NE (305) 322-3213

JAMES E. 8CHUITEMAN

Un-ally O w im l And Operated Since IJ5b

L.F.D.

MIITINO THI NIID OP IVIRY FAMILY
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905 LAUREL AVENUE

• Out Of Stats Transfsr
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ISO 000 TRACK RD. •LONOWOOD

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I vowM Uk$ lo Itlffi moil About jrot* (wRfll lifin|em«nl pUn. PW lif §«n4 booklet.
I un4*r»tift4 «h«»» It 1*0oNU#itlo«.

N A M E __
ADDRESS
C IT Y _____
ZIP ______

STATE
PHONE

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PEOPLE
C o o k

Microwave Magic

Stir An Elegant Sauce

w e e k )*

Kohlrabi Is often overlooked
because many people are not
familiar with it. It has a bulbous
stem and leaves which resemble
a turnip's. The stock has a crisp
texture and a mild flavor. When
choosing kohlrabi look for firm,
small bulbs.
To prepare: trim root ends and
stems from 6 small kohlrabi.
Scrub and peel. Cut Into V4 inch
slices. Combine in a 2-quart
casserole with V* cup water.
Cover. Microwave on 100%
power 10-15 minutes or until
fork tender, stirring every 4

M ld g t

Myeoff
Home Economist
Seminole

Commsaiiy College
minutes. Let stand 5 minutes.
Drain and serve with a cream
sauce as Is done at the Cloisters,
or with butter and dill, or sour
cream and chives.
A basic white sauce can be
made quickly and easily with the
microwave oven. Vi cup of
shredded cheese can be added
for a cheese sauce.
Measure, mix. and cook In a
4-cup glass measure.

T h e

Vb teaspoon pepper
1 cup milk
Melt butter In a 4 cup glass
measure on 100% power 30-45
seconds.
Stir In flour and seasonings
until smooth. Blend milk into
flour-butter mixture. Microwave
See Magic. 2B

By Dorothy Greene
Herald Correspondent
Mama Mia! Only those two
words can describe what's In
store when our Cook of the Week
stations himself In the kitchen.
John Vanore. a brand new
Sanford resident, but far from a
newcomer to this area, has the
experience that only an Italian
background and a love for good
food can offer.
A product of Jersey City, N.J..
our cook, his brother. Ralph, and
s is te r, F ran ces " C h l c k l e "
Bernard, were raised during the
historical Great Depression era
when families worked together,
played together, and stuck
together. “My mother was out
working all the time." says
Vanore. "She owned a bridal
shop In West New York. N.J.. the
very first one In Hudson County,
so my grandmother actually
took care of me and helped raise
me."
J u s t w a t c h i n g hls
grandmother cook, Vanore re­
calls, gave him hls basic know):
edge of traditional family reci­
pes. "You know the old timers."
he says, "they never told you
anything. Just a handful of this
and a handful of that. My
grandmother, she could cook —
she never wasted food. She could
empty out an Ice box and make
you a gourmet meal that would
be out of this world."
Recounting some of the Old
World fare that "Ninon," which
is the Italian word for Grandma,
used to serve. Vanore em ­
phasizes that pasta was the
mainstay In those Depression
days, but varied greatly with
s a u c e s a n d m e a t s . From
pastafagioll. to macaroni, to
spaghetti, to lentils, peas and
beans, and fish on Fridays, the
week was filled with hearty
stlck-to-the-rlbs type meals.
"Pasta was filling, potatoes were
filling, and that's what I remember."he says. "To get a
steak was a treat. A roast beef? It
mean an occasion —a party or a
birthday or an anniversary!"
Times have changed, and John
Vanore is now a retired police
sergeant who served on rhe
Palisades Park. N.J. force for 25
years, mainly In the traffic
division. He and hls wife, Elaine,
chose to build their beautiful
retirement home right down the
block from hls boyhood friend.

Sal Manfre. in a lovely section of
Sanford outside the city proper,
For many years. Vanore spent
vactlons In Sanford, so it was a
natural choice to make.
Learning to cook, and cook
well, became a necessity when
Vanore became a widower In
1973 and found himself with
three sons to raise. Married to
hls high school sweetheart In
1954, their boys. James, Brian
and Michael were quite young,
"and." he says. "I had to learn
how to cook, clean, and be a
mother and a father. The boys
certainly helped out. They all
took care of their own rooms,
and my little guy. who was only
five at the time, would make hls
own breakfast. They can all
cook. In fact, my oldest boy Is
quite a gourmet cook now."
Vanore continues to tell how
good planning and cooperation
helped a great deal during those
years when a split shift on the
police force left little time for
dally cooking. "I would prepare

W e d d in g
In v i t a t i o n s

Thursday

AvaUeMe A t

2bod Thru S*Wtd*y
E N T IR E S T O C K O F

Special Purchase
From Wes-Tex

S IM P L IC IT Y PA T T ER N S

SEW ING AIDS

Includes All Simplicity
Patterns

2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
2 tablespoons flour
V4teaspoon salt

Limit 3

‘199 each

SPRING MILLS
Famous Maker
Wash N' Wear

D R E S S P R IN T S

Russell Seafood Shoppe
^

food a week ahead of time." he
says. "I'd have all the meals „
precooked, take U out of the $
freezer In the morning or when I
went to work that evening, and
I'd leave notes on what to do and
the boys did It. One boy would
put the oven on at five o'clock,
the other boy would set the
table, and then my other boy
would clean up and do the
dishes. And that’s the way we
learned. We all helped each
other. That was the name of the
game."
Today, the ' boys" are grown
men. still living In New •Jersey,'
and are the results of a proud
father' s careful nurt uring.
James and hls wife, Ann. have a
little girl, Jllllan. 2 years old.
Brian and his wife, Wendy, are
the parents of Elaine, almost 2,
and baby Jacqueline bom last
November. "Michael Is 20 now.
and Is on hls own," Vanore adds.
Sharing hls life now Is John's
lovely wife. Elaine, whom he met
Bee COOK, 2B

Sals Starts

WHITB SAUCE

SPECIALS of the
WEEK
/

W e e k

Retired Police Sergeant Spices His
New World With Old World Tradition

ttsna

The fanners market and pro­
duce stands locally have a good
supply of fresh greens and some
other winter vegetables
especially those of the cabbage
family. This past weekend I
stocked my refrigerator with
cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower,
and kohlrabi. (We'll certainly get
our Vitamin C and fiber this

O f

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• Delivered this week tor this special sale!
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�r

r
I B — Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

...Cook
Continned Prom IB
In 1976 when she was a bank
teller In Palisades Park. During
tlielr dating days. Elaine grew to
know John's sons well, and by
the time they were married In
1978, the family ties were
strong. Mrs. Vanorc is also a
grandmother thanks to her son,
John, who has a little girl,
Jamie, 7.
For the past ten years or so,
the Vanores have been spending
many pleasant vacations in
Sanford at the home of their
friends, Sal and Teny Manfre,
while planning their own little
piece of heaven complete with
pool, garden and patio. “It was
five years In the planning," says
Vanorc, “and we are still work*
lng on little details."
Our cook Is a handy fellow to
have around when things need
fixing or rejuvenating. "That's
my hobby." he says. "I can
handle all kinds of tools — I can
do everything except plumbing
and electrical. I love building
th in g s," Stripping and refinishing furniture Is an art in
Itself, "if the wood Is good," and
Vanore's home Is dotted with
fine examples of his handiwork.
"I did house painting. Inside and
out, for 32 years." he comments,
"as a second Job for pin money."
Noting that a policeman's salary
la often Insufficient when raising
a family. Vanore found a way to
Increase his Income, "and I
enjoy It," he says. "I enjoy
handling tools and working
around the house." A home
workshop Is being set up for all
this handyman's specialties.
One of Vanore’s talents Is the
ability to make attractive con­
versation pieces from what most
people would consider "trash."
Together, the Vanores like to
browse the garage sales and flea
markets. "I'm a scavenger," he
laughs, "an If there’s anything
worthwhile, I’ll buy it." A perfect
example of decorative scaveng­
ing Is hanging on the wall of his
comfortable living room — a
glass encloed case of keys, The
keys, of all shapes and sizes,
were rusted and destined for the
trash can when Vanore retrieved
them, removed and the rust and
gave each one a shiny new look.
They are now an attractive
addition to the decor.
As an amusing anecdote to the
key saga, Vanore relates that he
and his wife had purchased a
beautiful curio cabinet In Sanford, back In 19BJ. but It was
wotiM h a l f t o n e o f the keys In
his collection opened the cabi­
net! So now the two are mated
and waiting for Vanore's tal­
ented hands to reflnlsh the
woodwork. The Vanore's home
Is very tastefully furnished with
a hint of the Oriental.
Entertaining Is almost second
nature to the Vanores and an
Impromptu gathering of friends
Is not unusual at all. "I love
company," says Vanore. "We
Just had a birthday party for a
friend last Saturday night and
we had chicken, rice, sparer!bs.
sausages and peppers, cheese,
wines, liqueurs — everything."
Depending on the occasion, the
Vanores often work together In
th e k i t c h e n . E l a i n e ' s
Czechoslovakian background
adds Interest to the menu when

Wednesday, March 4, IH 7

she makes some of her own
specialties.
There Is still much to be done
while the Vanores continue to
settle Into their new community,
but their plans for the future
Include traveling and Just en­
joying retirement with their
precious pup, a Shepherd-Collie
mix. named Keo. "I love this
area," says Vanore, "because all
my life I've been confined to a
house with neighbors close by.
congestion —and we agreed that
whenever we built a home we
would have space. That’s what I
like, space. I'm dying to start my
vegetable garden. The weather Is
Ideal. I had over 55 years of
snow and I don't want any more.
Just to enjoy what we worked all
our lives for, that's what I want."
And while Sanford shares all
Us many attributes with new
neighbors, Vanore also shares a
little bit of his kitchen magic
with us:
'
BAKED CLAMS OK DIP
Mix Together:
2 cans minced clams
1Vi sticks of butter
3 tablespoons lemon Juice
Simmer for 5 minutes. Then
add: 2 tablespoons minced on­
ions, 2Vx tablespoons minced
garlic, 1 tablespoon Oregano. 1
cup bread c r u m b s a nd 2
tablespoons parsley. Mixture
should be m oist, not dry.
Sprinkle Italian grated cheese
and paprika on top. Bake In
400° oven for 20 minutes.
FOR BAKED CLAMS. Vanorc
saves small to medium sized
clam shells which can be reused.
StufT clam shells with Ingre­
dients and place under broiler
for 5-10 minutes. Squeeze lemon
wedges over tops and serve.
Makes 20 to 30 baked clam
servings.
VEAL PIZZIOLA
1 pound veal cutlets, cut Into 3
Inch strips
Vi cup olive oil
Vi clove pure garlic, chopped
Vi cup parsley
2 pound can chunky tomatoes
Fry veal cutlets until tender.
Brown the garlic In olive oil, add
tomatoes and parsley. Add to
veal until heated through. Serve
with cooked pasta. Serves 4.
CHINESE RICE
Early In the day, cook 2 cups
rice with 4 cups water. Vi
teaspoon salt and 1 stick of
butter. Let rice get cold so that it
separates and Is not sticky.
Cube one large pork chop. Cut
1 bunch of scallions (green
onions) into V4 Inch pieces. Fry
together in huge skillet.
Scramble 4 eggs. Let cool,
then break Into small pieces
wlthfuik. *
Combine all Ingredients and
toss lightly while heating In
skillet. Add soy sauce according
to taste. Rice should be a light
brown color. Serves 6 to 8.
CLAM SAUCE
Vi cup olive oil
1 clove pure garlic, chopped
2 bottles clam Juice
1 teaspoon salt,
1Vi teaspoons pepper
2 pound can of crushed
tomatoes
parsley
Brown garlic In oil. Add
tomatoes, clam Juice, salt and
pepper and Vi cup parsley.
Si mme r lightly for a few
minutes. Serve over very thin
spaghetti. To this basic clam
sauce, your choice of clams,
mussels, scallops, etc. may be
added.

Teen-Ager's Original Poem
Has A Much- Recorded Past
DEAR ABBTi In reference to
t h a t c h a r m i n g poem you
published titled "A Kiss Good­
night": As a dedicated record
collector from way back, may I
set the record straight? That
poem supposedly authored by a
16-year-old girl Is not original.
It's an obvious steal from the
song titled, "I Said My Pajamas
and Put on My Pray'rs." written
by Eddie Pola and George Wyle.
It was popular in the late '40s
and early '50s, and was recorded
by Margaret Whiting and Frank
De Vol. I have It on a 78 rpm
Capitol record.
Si nce record c o mp a n i e s
stopped making 78s long before
that 16-year-old girl was bom.
It's safe to assume that this ditty
predates the young poet by
several years.
I trust that this will be the
vinyl word on the subject.
QLEN BANKS, LONG BEACH
DEAR GLENi Not quite. Other
old-timers wrote to tell me that
the hit song "I Said My Pray'rs
was recorded 40 years ago by
the following vocalists: Tony
Martin, Fran Warren, Ethel
Merman, Ray Bolger, Doris Day
and Buddy Clark. And the mail
Is still coming In.

Dear

Abby

h ea v yh ear ted

DEAR ABBY: My husband
DEAR HEAVYHEARTED:
and I received a Christmas card
on which the sender wrote a full Since George refuses to discuss
page of past Incidents, as we had this problem with you, discuss It
not heard from her for more than with your clergyperson. If you
20 years. "George" and I have have one, or talk it over with a
been married for 37 years, and marriage counselor. (It would be
he was engaged to this party better If George and you had
before he met me.
counseling together, but a
Well, George wrote about the person who denies there's a
same amount on our Christmas problem Is not about to spend
card and sent It to her. I didn't time and money to solve a
see what he wrote because he problem that doesn't exist.)
I seriously doubt that your
didn't Invite me to, which woutd
have been OK had It ended right marriage Is threatened, but your
there. It didn't. The next week a husband's unkind and uncaring
letter from this woman came behavior Is less than loving. You
addressed to both of us, but It need someone who will listen to
was never shown to me. so I you unload your anger and
didn't know what was In It. As a reassure you. Hie thee to a
rule, George and I share all the therapist.
mall, and when one of us writes,
DEAR ABBY: The problem of
the other adds a few lines, so all
of this sudden secrecy on grandparents who allow their
grandchildren to do whatever
George’s part is very disturbing.

&amp;REDKEN

*30
The C ut/hop

H

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ACCIDENT?

9

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A V I

SANtOHO

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fewlittlereasons
to choose

F lo r id a H o s p it a l/ A lt a m o n t e
Tiny hands and wrinkled feet. That chubby little face.
W e're making baby’s homecoming as warm and as
soft as we can. And through our prepared childbirth
classes and other special programs, everyone In the
family can be Involved In helping baby feel at home.
New this Spring, our community birthing unit con­
tinues the tradition established at Florida Hospital/
Orlando, one of the most progressive family-centered
maternity programs In the state.
Those tiny hands and wrinkled feet. There may be
bigger reasons to choose Florida Hospltal/Altamonte.
But probably no better reasons.

Florida H o sp ita l/A lta m o n te

tomfciolo C o n tra
(Noxt To PubMx)
3407 Orlando Dr.
Mwy. 17*42
Sanford, A 32771

HEPS TAKE THE SITE OUT OF DENTAL COSTS!

lagg fw Mmi InghadB M4Skml addiliami Kmummmi

CHAMPION
1« If

Introductory cgQO
Grooming. . .

Sanford
Dental Centre
“General Dentistry"

1

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Dr. AW.

DENA'S PETS
Sanford
ffDental
Centre

DEAR GRANDMA: I caught a
lot of dak on my "only one set of
rules" reply. I assumed (er­
roneously) that all grandparents
allowed their grandchildren to
get away with behavior that
would not be tolerated In their
parents' home. 1 was wrong.
Thank heavens Tor grandparents
like you. Unfortunately, I fear
you'rc In the silent minority.

...Magic

Pr. it*.

The Sanford Herald welcomes organization and personal
nears. The following suggestions arc recommended to expedite
publication:
1. Releases should be typed (upper and lower case), double
spaced and written narrative style (third person).
2. Do not abbreviate.
3. A contact person's name and phone number Is necessary.
4. Keep releases simple.
5. Organization releases (the program should lead the meeting
account) must be submitted no later than two days after the
event
6. Advance notices should be submitted one week prior to
desired publication date.

they please at Grandma's house,
and your saying there should be
only one set of rules — the ones
made by the parents — caught
my eye. It's true, kids enjoy
b e in g s p o i l e d by t h e i r
grandparents who allow them to
eat sweets all day long and do
things at Grandma's that they
are not permitted to do at home,
but we have a reverse problem.
When our 3-year-old grandson
visits us, we do not allow him to
eat and drink anywhere he
wants to in our house. Neither
do we allow him to Jump on beds
or walk on the furniture. When
we are at his house we keep our
mouths shut. However, when he
comes here, we set the rules.
This seems to satisfy him, and
our daughter (hls mother) re­
spects our feelings.
BAN DIEGO GRANDMA

1 pound fresh greens, washed, v e g e t a b l e s . C o v e r a n d Pour over vegetables, microwave
microwave 5-6 minutes. Stir on 100% power 3 minutes,
drained and cut into inch strips
In a 3 quart casserole combine alter 3 minutes. Stir together u n c o v e r e d . St i r after 1V4
bacon ' and oni on. Cover cornstarch, bouillon, water, minutes. Allow to stand 3
Continued Prom IB
Microwave on 100% power 4-6 ginger, soy sauce and garlic. minutes before serving.
6-8 minutes, until thickened, minutes, or until bacon is crisp,
stirring after half the time. Mix
stirring every minute.
The cheese sauce Is a color In lemon Juice and seasonings,
WE’VE GOT
compliment for cauliflower. A add greens and toss to coat.
whole 1 pound cauliflower will Cover. Microwave on 100%
BEAUTIFUL HAIR
microwave In 5-7 minutes If power 4-6 minutes or until
DOWN TO A SCIENCE
these directions are followed. tender-crisp, stirring once.
All of the aforementioned veg­
Trim leaves from head, wash
We think you deserve hair care that works for you.
and shake off excess water. etables can be eaten raw, as
That's why we use and recommend scientifically for­
Wrap In plastic wrap and place finger food or In a salad and can
mulated Redken* hair care, to keep your hair u beau­
on a paper plate. Microwave on also be part of a stir-fry. If you
tiful
as can be.
100% power 3 minutes. Invert haven't tried stir-frying In the
Call
soon. And get your hair c a n down to a science.
microwave
oven
you
will
be
head and micro-cook the re­
pleased
with
this
easy
recipe
maining time. Let stand 3-5
minutes, Remove wrap and the that includes a small amount of
Salon Prescription Center______________
cuallflower Is ready to serve with several winter vegetables.
a cheese sauce or lightly
DEBBIE’S s p e c ia l
STIR-FRIED VEGETABLES
00
seasoned with butter, salt and
2 tablespoons peanut oil
PERMS - R » r $40
pepper. For cauliflower flow­
1 clove garlic
erets: place 2 cups of flowerets In
*4 cup soy sauce
a 114 quart casserole. Add 2
V4cup water
tab lesp o o n s water. Cover.
L. t i a i p o o n i l n t l k n t b e e f
Microwave on 100% p o w e r 3
. H im
minutes, Let stand, covered, 2 bouillon
Vi teaspoon ginger
minutes to complete the cook­
3 tablespoons cornstarch,
ing. The stems will be fork
tender. Serve as Is or mix with dissolved In Vi cup water
Vt cup celery, sliced diagonally
carrots and peas for a colorful
Vb cup green onions, sliced
vegetable melange.
Greens can be cooked in the diagonally
Vt cup broccoli flowerets
microwave oven. 1 have found
Vi cup mushrooms, sliced di­
that the mustard and turnip
agonally
greens do better than collards.
Vi cup carrots, sliced diagon­
GREENS WITH BACON
ally
4 slices bacon, cut Into 1 Inch Vt cup cauliflower flowerets
pieces
2 teaspoons sugar
1 small onion chopped
Heat the oil In a 2 or 3 quart
V4teaspoon lemon Juice
casserole 2 minutes on 100%
V4teaspoon salt, pepper
power — quickly stir In the

•AUTO* WORK COMP.
•SUP A PALL

Publicity Procedures

Every time I bring It up. he
becomes hostile and defensive
and says he doesn’t want to
discuss It, then a heated argu­
ment follows. Am I being stupid
to let this bother me? He Insists
that he loves me. and says I'm
overreacting and paranoid. How
shall I handle this? We arc about
to separate over this.

A full-service, comprehensive hospital serving Seminole,
South Volusia and North Orange counties, Florida Hospital/
Altamonte continues to grow with the community. Services
now available Include:
• Center for Women's Medicine, offering breast and osteo­
porosis screening and education services
• Pediatric Medicine
• Level III Trauma and Emergency Department
• The Cancer Treatment Center, offering Central Florida's
most powerful cancer-fighting radiation equipment
• Eating Disorders Unit
• Microsurgery for limb replantation
• Orthopedic Surgery
• Cardiac Diagnostic Services. Including nuclear "first-pass"
studies
• Pulmonary Rehabilitation Program
• Outpatient Surgery and Testing
• Neurosurgery
• Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
• Physical Therapy
• Home Health Services
• Ophthalmology Services

FLORIDA HOSTTIAL

Altamonte

Nrtor D. WoMxuch, D.D.S., P.A.
Jomos D. WNNormon, D.M.D

3214957

9

601 E. Altamonte Drive • (305) 830-4321
(E. of Altamonte Mall on Hwy. 436)

�4

Legal N otice
IN T H E C IR C U IT
COURT OF TH E
E IO H T E E N T H
J U O IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C ASE N O : I t - U t l C A -M O
C A R T E R E T SAVIN GS AN D
LO A N A S S O C IA TIO N , F .A .,
Plaintiff,
v*.
T R A D IT IO N A L C O N ­
TR A C T O R S
C O M P A N Y , et el..
.
Defendant!.
C L E R K 'S
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that puriuant to a Summary
Final Judgment of Foreclosure
entered In the above-entitled
cause In the Circuit Court ot the
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. In
and lo r S e m ino le C o u n ty .
Florida, I will sell at public
auction to the highest bidder for
cash on M arch 14, 1X7 at 11:00
am at the West Iron! door of the
Courthouse In the City of San­
ford, Seminole County, Florida,
certain parcel ol real property
described as follows:
Lot 31, N O R TH R ID G E , ac­
cording to the Plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 31, Pages
1, 3, A 3, Public Records ol
Seminole County, Florida
Dated this 30 day of February,
1X7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: F e b ru a ry !},
M arch 4,1X7
D E L -IN
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that we
are engaged In business at 1712
Heathwood St., Winter Park,
Seminole County, Florida under
the Fictitious Name of J ,E .T .
Enterprises, and that we Intend
to register said name with the
Clark ol the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes,
To Wit: Section S45.07 Florida
Statutes 1757.
/!/ Evelyn S. Tumelson
/*/ Jeanne E . Tumelson
Publish February U A March
4,11,11,1N7.
D E L -IN

le g a l Notice"

le g a l N otice

F L O R ID A .
N .A .; L A K E H O W E L L AR M S
C O N D O M I N I U M A S S O C IA
T IO N ,
IN C .; A N D D E P A R T M E N T
OF R EV EN U E, S TATE OF
F L O R IO A ,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E Is hereby given that
pursuant to the Final judgm ent
of Foreclosure and Sale entered
In the cause pending In the
Circuit Court ol the E IG H ­
T E E N T H Judicial Circuit, In
and for S E M IN O L E County,
Florida, Civil Action Number
*44543 CA-07 G , the undersigned
Clerk will sell the property
situated In said County de­
scribed as:
Unit MS D. L A K E H O W E L L
A R M S C O N D O M IN IU M , a
Condominium according to the
Declaration of Condominium
and Exhibits annexed thereto,
recorded In Official Records
Book 1377, Page 1144, of the
Public Records of Seminole
County, Florida; together with
an undivided Interest in the
common elements and limited
common elements declared In
s a id D e c la r a t io n of C o n ­
d o m i n i u m to bo a n a p ­
purtenance to the above Con­
dominium Unit.
at public sale, to the highest
and best bidder for cash at 11:00
o'clock A .M ., on the 30th day of
M A R C H , 1N7. at the West Front
Door of the S E M IN O L E County
Courthouse, Sanford. Florida.
D A T E D T H IS I7th D A Y O F
F E B R U A R Y , 17*7.
(C O U R T S E A L )
D A V IO B E R R IE N
CLER KO F TH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y : Phyllis Forsythe
Publish: M arch 4,11, lfS7
OEM-41

Plaintiff,
vs.
D A N IE L F . B U R T O N and
D EB O R A H J . B U R TO N ,
formerly D E B O R A H J .
S E E V E R S , his wife,
etal..
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
Notice Is hereby given that
pursuant to the Sum m ary Final
Judgment Of Foreclosure And
Sale entered In the above
c a p tio n e d a c tio n , the un
derslgned Clerk will sell the
property situated In said County
described as:
Lot 30, W I N G F I E L D R E
S E R V E , P H A S E I, according to
the plat thereof as recorded In
Plat Book 34. Pages 7* and M ,
Public Records of Seminole
County, Florida.
at public sale, to the highest
and best bidder, for cash, at
11:00 o’clock A M . on the 3Sth
day of M A R C H , 1X7, at the
West Front Door of the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford,
Florida..
D A T E D : M A R C H la 19*7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk of the Circuit Court
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: M arch 4, II, 17*7
DEM-30

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 10IS
East Sem oran B lvd .,
Casselberry, Seminole County,
F l o r i d a 33707 u n d e r th e
Fictitious Name of 1st Run
Video or First Run Video, and
that I Intend to register said
name with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
Provisions of the Fictitious
Name Statutes, To-W it: Section
*45.07 Florida Statutes lfS7.
M R C O IN C .
/*/ Ray Swler
Publish February 11. IS, 3S A
M arch 4,1X7.
DEL-74

IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R TO FTH E
E IO H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R IO A '
C IV IL A C T IO N N O .:
S4-1S41-CA-S7-0
C IT IZ E N S M O R T G A G E
C O R P O R A T IO N , a Florida
corporation.
Plaintiff,

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
F O R T H E E IO H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U rT
OF TH E STA TE OF
F L O R ID A IN A N D
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
C A S E NO . *4-X77-CA-at-G
W IN G F IE L D D E V E L O P M E N T
C O M P A N Y , a Florida
corporation.

P A U L A . JO H N S O N , a
single man, B A R N E T T
B A N K OF C E N T R A L

* «6 w w

le g a l N otice
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that wo
era engaged In business at Sth
E x t e n s io n , L a k e M o r y ,
Seminole County, Florida under
the Fictitious Name of Best
Garbage Service, and that we
intend to register said name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with the Pro­
visions of the Fictitious Name
Statutes, T o W It: Section M SOt
Florida Statutes 1757.
1*1 Richard L . McCabe
/*/ Aundra F . Kauffman
Publish Februety 3S A M arch
4,11, 11,1X7.
DEL-177

N O T IC E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
EXPR ESSW AY
A U T H O R IT Y
M E E T IN O
T h e S o m ln o la C o u n t y
E x p re s s w a y A u th o r ity a n ­
nounces a public meeting to
which all persons are Invited:
D A T E : Wednesday, M arch IS,
1717
T IM E :4:90 P.M .
L O C A T IO N : Seminole County
Services Building, Room W-130
IWest E n tra n ce ), 1101 East
First Street, Sanford, Florida
33771
G E N E R A L S U B JE C T
M A T T E R T O B E D IS C U S S E D :
Progress on the alignment a - J
environmental studies for an
expressway In Seminole County
will be presented and discussed.
Additional Information m ay
be obtained by contacting:
Gerald N. Brlnton, Executive
Director of the Seminole County
Expressway Authority; phone:
331-1I X , extension 3M.
P E R S O N S A R E A D V IS E D
T H A T . IF T H E Y D E C ID E T O
A P P E A L A N Y D E C IS IO N S
M ADE A T TH ESE M E E TIN G S / H E A R IN G S , T H E Y
W IL L N E E D A R E C O R D O F
T H E P R O C E E D IN G S A N O
F O R SUCH P U R P O S E , T H E Y
M AY N E E D TO ENSURE
T H A T A V E R B A T IM R E C O R D
O F T H E P R O C E E D IN G S IS
M A D E , W H IC H IN C L U D E S
T H E T E S T IM O N Y A N D E V I ­
D E N C E U P O N W H IC H T H E
A P P E A L IS T O B E B A S E D .
P E R S E C T I O N 3 1 * .010S,
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S .
Publish: M arch 4,1X7
OEM-33

IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R T O F T H E IIT H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C T IO N NO.
S4-4444-CA-07L
L IN C O L N S E R V IC E
C O R P O R A T IO N ,
Plaintiff,
vs.
C L IF F O R D O . H A L L E Y ,
E T A L .,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that on the )Sth day ol Ap ril,
1H7, at 11:00 a.m . at the West
Front Door ot the Courthouse of
S E M IN O L E County. Florida, at
S a n fo rd , F lo r id a , the u n ­
dersigned Clerk will offer for
sale to the highest bidder for
cash the following described
real property:
Lot 40, G O V E R N O R ’S P O IN T .
P H A S E O N E , according to the
plat thereof as recorded In Plat
Book 14, Pages 34,15 and X . ot
the P iA llc Records of Seminole
County, Florida.
Together with all structures
and Improvements now and
hereafter on said land, end the
rents, Issues, and profits of the
above described property, and
all fixtures now or hereafter
attached to ur used In connec­
tion with the premises herein
d e s crib e d and In a d d itio n
thereto the following described
household appliances which are
and shall be deemed to ba,
fixtures end a part of the realty.
Range, O ven, Dishwasher,
Garbage Disposal, W /W Carpet
Th is sale Is madb pursuant to
a Sum m ary Final Judgment In
Foreclosure entered In Civil
Action No. M 4 4I4C A 0 S -L now
ponding In the Circuit Court In
and for S E M IN O L E C ounty,!
Florida.
D A T E D this 37th day of F a b
ru ery, 1X7.
(seal)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y : Cecelia V .E k e m
Deputy Clerk
Publish: M arch 4,11,1X7
OEM-45

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Danny De Vito; an unusual chim­
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Princess" When Sara's new circum­
stances relegate her to the attic,
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maid; Mr. Carrtsford begins n erchIng tor tha daughter ol his old triend
and business partner. (Part 3 ol 3)

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Genevieve Bujoid
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HARRY (Premiers) Comedy.
Alan Arfcln stars as Harry Portchak.
the scheming head ol Ihe purchas­
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hospital. Tonight: Hlbor (Thom
Bray) goo* lo Nurse Duckett (HolIwxf Taylor) with evidence that Har­
ry’s bean setting hospital luppSu.

LO O K ATM EN O W fW BD I
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•••

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If your’ra going to u ta Inftover
marinade a* a sauce, ba sure lo
bring it lo ■ boll before carving.
T h a i ’s n e c e s sa ry lo kill any
salmonella germs from the meat.

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W EDNESDAY SPECIAL

------ Ycealabla - pale Breen
cauliflower — la a cross '

---------- --------------- II
created In the Netherlands.
•••

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H )0 tC K V A N D Y K E
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1*5

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parmasan cheese makes a tasty
topping for French bread. Spill m #
loaf the long way; toast lightly, then
spread on lopping; toaal again.

3 Piece Dinner!

(ll)T H U H O E R CAA T tt q

PXNCESS

$279

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Creampuffs-especially ihe BW&gt;
bite-sited ones — ere
dinary. But they're extra extreordinary w han________
n IWed * _

® f t THRVE COMPANY (U0N-

SB

3 pieces of golden brown Fam ous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and tw o fresh, hot biscuits.

£ f t l CARD SHARKS

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cream Bier* bean spiked wHh your
favorite liqueur. Figure about 1H
ounoec per cup of whipping cream.
6 0 6

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f t (W) MONEYPUZZLE(THU)
f t (Kt ART OF BEING HUMAN
(PRO

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I
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FEED 4 FOR
■ H H h sG
Look at what you get: 6 pcs. of golden brown
Fam ous Recipe Fried Chicken, 1 pint mashed
potatoes, Vi pint gravy and 4 biscuits. A n entire
family dinner for only $7.99.
G o o d T h u r s ., F r i., S a t., S u n .

COUPON

5*6
O OfUJGAM’t ISIANO

" I
I
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Nothing ordinary about tha food at

COLONIAL ROOM RESTAURANT

A n n o u n c i n g ...

6:30 AM7:00 PM

8 :8 0
f t ® F E O P L T E CO URT

® f t CD f t HEWS
f t (11) JEFFERSON!

B

f t i to) o c c A N u g (m o m )

Colonial Room

Is a a s F * - " " " - "
to) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
HO) A R T O F BE1NQ HUMAN

A Taste of the Country

I S

1*0

6 :4 5
(M ) A i l . WEATHER

S
3 OOOOJOME OAMNQ AMERICA
f t (11)0.1.
(H j

Hare’* a quickie hors d’oawrre
whan company cornea — wrapper
Hally cooked bacon stripe wound
bread*lick a. Put them in • rack in
a roasting pan and brown In a ISO*
ovan. If* even easier In a

f ttD R A M S O

CS8 MORNIHQ NEWS
11) CENTURIONS
FARM M Y
1 JERRY ANO FIBENOB

N O T IC E O F M L S
N O T I C E IS G I V E N that
pursuant to Final Judgment of
Foreclosure dated February A
1X7, In C a u No. 04-3170-CA-Ot-Q
In the Circuit Court of tha
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit, In
a n d fo r S e m in a l* C o u n ty .
F lo rid a , In w hich C A W
T R U C K IN G , IN C ., I* fh* Plain­
tiff, end R .A .K . D E V E L O P ­
M E N T C O M P A N Y . IN C ., and
P E T R O S Y S TE M S , IN C ., and
all part to* claiming by, through,
under and against them, are
Defendants; f W IL L S I L L to
the highest and beat i
cash, at the W E S T F R O N T
DOOR O F T H E CO U R TH O U SE
IN S A N F O R D , S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A : at ! t : «
o’clock A .M . on the 33rd day of
M arch, 1X7, the following de­
scribed property sal forth In tha
order ot tha Final Judgment.
Lots 7 and 10. Block *, A .B .
R U S S E L L ’S A D D IT IO N T O F T .
R E E D , according to tha plat
thereof, as recorded In Plat
Book ” 1," Pag* *7. Public Re­
cords of Sem inole C o u n ty,
Florida, LES S and except part
deeded to State of Florida as
recorded In Official Records
Book 240. Page* 51 and 51 of u l d
Public Records.
D A T E D : February 23,1X7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R I E N 1 *
C LER K O F TH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y: Phytlla Forsythe
Publish: Fatoruery 35.
M arch 4,1X7
OEL-200

Thought

3*0

430

I t ’S COUNTRY (TUE-PRQ
B R AN D S) (TUB)
GUNS OP WWX BONNETT

bait to trip an International kHar.

a

FAME FORTUNE * RO-

( 2 « W f « K Pi OOUNTRY

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO U R T
O F T H E E IO H T E E N T H
J U O IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C AS S N O . *4-1170-C A -e ^ G
C A W T R U C K I N G , IN C .,
Plaintiff,
vs.
R .A .K . D E V E L O P M E N T
C O M P A N Y , IN C -a n d
P E T R O S Y S T E M S , INC.,

for

I ® SANTABARBARA
)ftOUKNNG LIGHT
) f t GENERAL HOSPITAL
(ttlBCOOEYOOO
{10) MWTIR ROGERS (R)
^ M lfrO A Y BARGAINS (MON-

11*0

FLOASM ’S
(MON)
iTtONALi

N O T IC E O P M L R
Nolle* Is hereby given fhet,
pursuant to an O rder of Sum m a­
ry Judgm ent of Foreclosure
entered In the above-cap ttoned
action, I will u l l the property
situated In Samlnol* County,
Florida, described as:
L e t 10, W I L O W O O O . s
planned unit dsvetoprrwnt ac­
cording to Ih* plat thereof a*
recorded In Plat Book It , Pages
7-10, Public Records of Seminole
County, Florida.
at public sato, to the highest
and b u t bidder tor cash, at the
west front door of tha Saminoto
County Courthouse in Senior d.
Florida at 11:00 A M . on the 30th
day of M arch, 1X7.
O A T E O this 37th day Of Feb­
ruary, 1X7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N .
CLERK
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Pub!
ubtlsh: M arch A I I , 1117
OEM -41

(11) MY LITTLE PONY ’N1
FRWNOE
• (10) SECRET CITY

1(10) NEWTON’S APPLE (THU)

6*0

C f V I L A C r iO N
C A S E N O .to -IIM -C A -M
D IV IS IO N G
E M P IR E O P A M E R IC A
F E D E R A L M V IN O S B AN K ,
a Corporation,
Plaintiff,
vs.
N E I L J . M IL L E R , efux.,

Pood

(TO) PHENOMENAL WORLD

MOANMQ

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,
EIGHTEENTH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN ANO PON
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA

2 :3 0

10*0

_ IT H U R S D W

« » ®

Th a County reserves tha right
to reject any or all otters, with
or without causa, to walva
technicalities, or to accept tha
otter which In Its bast judgment
b u t serves tha In tart t of the
County. Cost of submittal of this
offer Is considered an opera
ttonal cost of tha offeror and
shall not be passed on to or
bom* by tha County.
JoAnn C. Blackmon, C P M
Purchasing Director
County Services Building
I I 0 I E . First Streot
Second Floor, West Wing
Sanford, F L 33771
Publish: M a rch 4,1X7
OEM *

IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R TO FTH E
E IG H T E E N T H
J U O IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
F L O R IO A
C a u N*. S4-1747-CA-47-0
F E D E R A L N A T IO N A L
M O R T G A G E A S S O C IA TIO N ,
Plaintiff,
vs.
P A M E L A A. H A G O O O , also
k n o w n aa P A M E L A A .
HAGOOO
R Y A N , and If married
------------------ R Y A N , her husband.
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F
FORECLOSURE
M L B B Y CLER K
O P C IR C U IT C O U R T
Notice Is hereby given that tha
undersigned D A V ID N. B E R ­
R IE N Clark of the Circuit Court
of S E M IN O L E County, Florida,
will on the 13rd day of M A R C H ,
17S7, at I1 :M A .M ., at the W E S T
F R O N T door of the S E M IN O L E
County Courthouse, In tha City
ot S A N F O R D , Florida, offer for
M l* and u l l af public outcry to
fh* highest and best bidder for
cash, tha following described
property situated In S E M IN O L E
County, Florida, to-wlt:
U n it 5, T o w n h o u u B of
C A S S E L C R E E K P H A S E I,
together w ith an exclusive
easement for u u and *n|oym*nt
of the Courtyard ad|ac*nt to and
appurtenant to said Tow nhouu,
according to the Plat thereof
recorded In Plat Book 15, Pages
I and 3 of fh* Public Records of
Samlnol* County, Florida.
pursuant to the final decree of
foreclosure entered In a c a u
pending In u l d Court, the style
ol which It;
F E D E R A L N ATIO N AL
M O R T O A O E A S S O C IA TIO N vs.
P A M E L A A . H A G O O O , at ux
W IT N E S S m y hand and of­
ficial seel of u l d Court this 30th
day of M A R C H , 1N7
(S E A L )
D A V IO N . B E R R IE N
B y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clark
Publish: February 35,
M arch 4, IN 7
•DELSl
U N I T E D S T A T E S D IS T R IC T
C O U R T M I D D L E D I S T R IC T
O P F L O R ID A O R L A N D O
DIVISIO N C O U R T NOi
14 1 4 1 - C l v - O r M t U N I T E D
S T A T E S O F A M E R IC A , Plain­
tiff, w R O S E T T A O . C O O P E R
f/k/a R O S E T T A D A V IS , Oafand a nt(i). N O T IC E O P M L B
Notice Is hereby given that
pursuant to a Final Decree of
Foreclosure entered on January
1*, 1X7 by tha above entitled
Court In the above causa, tha
u n d e rsig n e d U n ite d S ta le s
Marshal, or ana of his duty
authorized deputies, will u l l the
property situate In Seminole
County, Florida, described as:
Tha North X teat ot tha South
I K toot ot tha West i n toot ot
tha North M4 toot of the East I X
t u t of fh* NW14 of tha NW14 of
S E C T IO N 4. T O W N S H IP K
S O U T H , R A N G E 31 E A S T .
Somlnola County, Florida at
public outcry to the highest and
b u t bidder for cash at 11:00
noon on April t, 1*67 at tha West
door of the Seminole County
Courthouse, Sanford, Florida.
Dated: Ja n u a ry X , IW7 —
R IC H A R D L. C O X , J R . U N IT E O S TA TE S M AR SH A L M ID ­
D L E D IS T R IC T O F F L O R IO A .
R O B E R T W. M E R K L E U N I T ­
ED STATES A TTO R N E Y
M ID D LE D IS TR IC T OF
F L O R ID A .
Publish: February 15, A March
4,11,11, IN 7
D E L -X

3 :3 0
l O BMURPB’ A D V P m jR E B
SCBA44I STREET (R )q

I ® B L O O K B U B Tn S
f t SUPERIOR OOURT
I(50) WILD AMERICA (MON. FRD
(10) PROFILES O F NATURE

3 ) f t MOVW "Beyond E X " (1M0)
Lynda Day Georga, John Saxon.

i

R F P in L E O A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T
TH E BOARD OF
C O U N T Y C O M M IS S IO N ER S
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
Separata sealed propouts for
the following requests for Pro­
posed will ba received in the
Office of Purchasing, Seminole
County, until l i M PM , local
time, Wednesday . M arch is,
1X7. P ro p o u ls w ill b* publicly
opened and ra id aloud In tha
Office of Purchasing, Room
W333. 1101 E . First Street, San­
ford, Florida at fh* above ap­
pointed date and lim a. The
Officer whoa* duty If Is to open
pro p ou ls will decide when Ih*
specified time has arrived and
no pro p ou ls recalved thereafter
will b* considered. P ropouls
received after the 2:00’ P M
deadline w ill ba returned to
sender unopened.
IF M A IL IN O PR O PO SAL.
m a i l T O ; Office of Purchasing.
P.O. Box 211f, Sanford, F L
33773-111*.
IF D E L IV E R IN G P R O ­
P O S A L IN P E R S O N , D E L IV E R
T O ; C O U N T Y S E R V IC E S
B U I L D I N G , 1101 E . F IR S T
S T R E E T , R O O M W114, S A N ­
F O R D , F L . 13771
RFP-77 — Request for Prop o u l for Providing Snack Bar
Concession or Vending Machine
Service at tha Samlnol* County
Services Building.
P ro p ou ls must be submitted
In t original and 3 copies to
Include firm name, address,
telephone, principal contact,
and ba signed by an authorized
representative of tha firm .
P ro p o u ls shall address each
area as Indicated In R F P
p a ck nga , to enable pro p e r
ovnlue'lon.
The R F P package Is available
In tha Office of Purchasing at no
charge.
Upon award, the successful
bidder w ill b t required to
furnish Payment and Perfor­
m ance Bonds, each In an
amount to ba determined by
Samlnol* Cowity. Bond forms
w ill ba furnished by fh* County
and only th o u forms will bo
used. Proof ot Insurance In
amounts equal to or exceeding
amounts as specified will also be
required.
FOR
F U R T H E R
IN ­
F O R M A T IO N C O N T A C T : B IL L
D O L A M O R E , P U R C H A S IN G
A G E N T , (X S ) 331-1I X , E X T .
111.
N O T E : A L L P R O S P E C T IV E
O F F E R O R ! A R E H IR C B V
C A U T IO N E D N O T T O CO N ­
T A C T A N Y M E M B E R OP T H E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y B O A R D
O P C O U N T Y C O M M IS S IO N ­
E R S R E G A R D IN G T H I
ABO VE PROPOSAL. A LL
C O N T A C T ! M U IT BE
C H A N N E LE D TH R O UO H T H E
O F F I C E O P P U R C H A S IN G .
Any actual or prospective
bidder who disputes the reason­
ableness. necessity or competi­
tiveness ot the terms and/or
conditions of fh* Invitation to
|&gt;id; selection or award recom ­
mendation shall file such protest
In writing to tha Purchasing
Director In compliance with the
Seminole County Purchasing
O r d in a n c e 113-1 a n d a n y
amendments. Procedures for
such flllng/settlement of claims
are out lined In Article X —
Appeals and Remedies, of u l d
ordinance; which Is posted In
fh* Office of Purchasing for

legal Notice

le g a l N otice

S ftCAPfTOL

(BMOVW

1:10

&lt;BI
(11) HART T O HART
HO) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Holbrook narrates the story of
four Americans now bring In China:
a student, a JoumaHat. a buNnaaa
man and a teacher, q
a
(*) MOWS "Espoaod" (1M3)
Nastassja Kinski. Harvey Keitel A

® LOVE CONNECTION
(ll)F S T T IC O A T JUNCTION

0*6

I B MOVW "A Stolen Ufa" (1*46)
Balt* Davis. Glenn Ford.

3 ) HIGHWAY T O HEAVEN

J (10) MAGIC OF FLORAL PABfTMOfTHU)
f t (10) FABfTMOCERAMICS (FRI)

of the u l d S .A .L . Railroad, run
thane* along southerly right of
w ay line 473.03 feet to the point
of beginning.
at pvAtllc u l t . to the highest
and b u t bidder for cash at 11:00
o’clock A M on the 14th day of
M A R C H , 1167. at tha West front
door of the Samlnol* County
Courthouse, Sanford, Florida.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
CLERK OF TH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
B Y Phyllis Forsyth*
Deputy Clark
Publish: F e bru a ry25,
M arch 4, IH7
D E L-)* *

Legal N otice

2 :3 5

(B IL O V E LUCY

12*6

6*0

2 *0

ANOTHERWORLD
ONEUFETOUVE
(ll)ANDYORIFFTTH
(10) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
ACRYLICS(MOM)
| (tO) JOY OF PAINTING(TUB)
1(10) MAGIC OF OL PAINTING

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O P T H E E IO H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N O FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO. S4-S417-CA-S7-0
M .E . P O L I and
W IL L IE M . P O L l.h ls w Ila .
and P O LI BROS.. IN C ., a
Florida Corporation.
Plaintiffs,
vs.
O V E ID A IN D U S T R IA L
C O M M E R C IA L P A R K . IN C ., a
Florida C o r p , and
F L O R IO A C E N T E R BAN K,
a Florida Banking Association,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
Notice Is hereby given that
pursuant to tha Final Judgment
of Foreclosure and Sal* entered
In the causa ponding In the
Circuit Court of the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit, In and for
Somlnola County, Florida. Civil
Action No. CI-S4-0437-CA-07-G,
the undersigned Clerk will sail
the property situated In said
County, described as:
Tha North * ot the N W U ot
th a S E t* of S e ctio n 14,
Township 11 South, Rang* 31
East, Somlnola County, Florida,
L E S S the West 150.00 ft* !
thereof} and,
The SW U of the N E to of
Section 14, Township I t South,
R a n g e 31 E a s t , S a m ln o l*
County, Florida, lying South ot
S .A .L . Railroad right-of-way,
LE S S T H E West 150.0 feet
t hereof; and.
The East 471.0 feat of the West
431.0 feat of the SW 14 ot tha N E
U of Section 14, Township 31
South, Rang* i t East, Samlnol*
County, Florida, lying North of
Th e S .A .L . Railroad right-ofw ay and South ot Stefa Road 103
(S.R.434).
LES S A N D E X C E P T :
Being a portion of Section 14,
Township 31 South, Range 31
East, Samlnol* County, Florida,
described as follows: Beginning
at the Intersection of the South
lino of tha S .A .L . Railroad and a
line parallel and 150 00 feat East
ot tha East line of the SW 14 ot
tha N E 14 of said Section 14,
thane* S 00 11 West 57.30 feat,
thane* South 00 23 East tlt.10
feat, thence South M U 00 East
ST3.53 feet, thane* North X 33 00
West 331.10 foot, thence North 47
41 X West 3*5.40 feat to Ih*
Southerly lino ot said S .A .L.
Railroad, thane* along said
Southerly R/W lino 473.0! foot to
tha point of beginning.
L o u tha East 471.00 ft. of tha
West 436.00 ft. of said SW 14 of
fh* N E U of Section 14, tying
South of SR 424 and North of the
S .A .L . Railroad, sub|set to a
40.00 ft. easement for Ingress
and egress lying M.00 feet either
tide of the following described
centerline beginning at tha N W
com ar ol u l d parcel thence
along the South R/W line of SR
434 Northeast 171.lt foal to the
true point of beginning, thence
southeasterly at right angles to
u l d South R/W line 440.51 ft.
L E S S : Begin af the Intersec­
tion of the south line of Ih*
S .A .L . Railroad and a line
parallel and I X feet east of the
west lin t of fh* southwest
quarter of the northeast quarter
of u l d Section 14, run thence
South 00*33’ West 57.30 feet, run
thence South 00*13’ East 121.10
laat, run thence South ei*S5’00”
Eest sej.53 fset, run thence
North 00*11‘00” West 336.40 feet,

W s W u s d E y , M a r c h 6 ,1 6 0 7 — 3 »

(BWOMANWATCH(FRO

0*0

12*0

("The Cosby Show"). In stereo

a

6*0

3 ) O AOOERLY Adderty rtiuclanlly agree* to haip a retired agent td |ut1 to dvMlan Me. (R)
(D O
M O H TU FE Host: David
Brenner. Scheduled: actor John
Maftovich ("Making Mr. Right"). In
slarao.
• (11) ASK OR. RUTH Guest: au­
thor Sidney Sheldon, q
■ {•) M O O T OWL PUN

o -* * * * * ..,

(10) FLORRM HOME GROWN

6*6

(BH DREAMOF JEAHHSt

ft® ® ft® ftN E W S
■ (11) J t E SHOW Host. Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: Michael J. Fos.
Whoopi Goldberg, David Copperttaid. in ttaren
1 1 :3 0
■ 3 ) BEET O F CARBON From
January 10M: comedian Don Ric­
kies. clarinetist Pale Fountain.
Owen Paterson (race* pigs) and
cowboy pool Waddle Mltehe* loin
host Johnny Carson. In Herso. (R)
B M ' A ’ E 'H
■ M Q H TU N S Q

8 :3 5
(B A N O V GRIFFITH

w

• (11) DENNWTHE MENACE

11*0

I ABC HEWED
(11) TO O CLOBC FOR DOM -

i *

6*0

10*6

10*0

) NBC NEWS

FRENCH CHEF (TUB)
W ) MAOELEVW COOKE (WBM
w o o o w R K M fre s h o p

f t (W) SESAME (TROT |R)q

(•) MARY TYLER MOORE

ftH R IO G M M H A R T
■
(6) CAROL BURNETT ANO
PRSMOt

6:30

NEW BOUTH0 N COOK-

^ B M O M N G program

o
MOVW “The Bkw Of Rachel
Cade" (1061) Angle Dickinson. Pe­
ter Finch

6.-06
Q BEVERLY HRXBILURS

ffl| WORLDTURNS

s x r a r * -'*

£ (11)
« EM M

6:00

1*0

i(«)C Z S H O W (

i a n f t f d H e r a ld , S a n fs rd , F I.

le g a l N otice

ft

(I ) KNIGHT M U R (THU. FRO

6:36
O ROCKY ROAD (M ON-THU)
9 SAFE A T HOME (FRI)

SANFORD

C A SSELBER RY

1905 FRENCH AVE.
HWY. 17-92

41 N. HWY. 17 92

115 East First 8L
Downtown Sanford Florida
700 AM •7 00 PM ClMed Sun.
Entet Thru Togctilon'* Drug 8lor*

Who M/i (he food’t good af

COLONIAL ROOM

Mmkjmu Waedi eto'w tm4 mitt a*.

�r.

F a r * *

71— H t lp W an ted

1
!

le g a l N otice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF TH E tIO H T IE N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,

Legal N otice
IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R T FOR T H E
E IO H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
O F F L O R ID A ,

N O T IC E O F F O R F E IT U R E
P R O C E R D IN O
C A S E NO. IT TTS-CA IS-O
JU D O E i
C. V E R N O N M U r . JR ,

INRHlKONFLOOfiB
OFtMyilUhiri'i

Notice Is tWreby given that the
undersigned D A V ID N. B E R ­
R IE N Clerk of the Circuit Court
of S E M IN O L E County, Florida,
will, on lha 23rd day of M A R C H ,
1M7, at 11:00 A M ., at the W E S T
F R O N T door of the S E M IN O L E
County Courthouse, In the City
el S A N F O R D , Florida, offer for
sale and salt al public outcry to
the highest end best bidder for
cash, tha following described
property situated In S E M IN O L E
County, Florida, to-wlt:
Lots 23 and 24, Block C. W E S T
A L T A M O N T E H E IG H T S , ac­
cording to tha plat thereof as
recordsd In Plat Book 10, Pago
at, ot tha Public Records of
Semlnola County, Florida.
pursuant to the final decree ot
foreclosure entered In a case
pending In said Court, tha style
ot which Is:
F E D E R A L N ATIO N AL
M O R T G A G E A S S O C IA TIO N vs.
JO H N C . M O O R E , at ux, at al
W IT N E S S m y hand and of­
ficial saal ot said Court this 20th
day ot F E B R U A R Y , 1**7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
B Y : Phyl.ls Forsythe
D E P U TY C LER K
Publish: February 23,
M arch 4, tM7
D E L 201
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that l
am engaged In business at 433
Snowhlll Read, G eneva,
Seminole County, Florida 32731
under the Fictitious Name of
C M T , and that I Inland to
register said name with th*
C lark el tha C ircu it Court,
Semlnola County, Florida In
accordance with th* Provisions
•f the Fictitious Nemo Statutes.
To-W it: Section *33.0* Florida
Statute* 1*57.
/•/ P .A . Molony
Publish February I I , II, 23 B
M arch 4,1*17.
D E L I*

S TA TESC U R R EN C Y
T O : Victor Broward Johnson
010 Plum Lane
Altamonte Springs, F L 32701
and all others who claim an
Interest In the following pro­
perty:
a .) S3e3.lt United States CurJO H N E . P O LK , Sheriff ol
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
through his duly sworn Deputy
Sheriffs, salted the described
property on the 11th day of Ju ly ,
1M4, at or near tha com er of
North Street and M arker Street.
Altamonte Springs. Seminole
County, Florida.
On IN h day of February, 1W7,
the Seminole County Sheriff's
Department filed a Petition for
Rulo to Show Cause and for
Final O rder of Forfeiture with
the Clerk el the Circuit Court,
Seminole County Courthouse,
J0P North Perk Avenue, San­
ford, Florida.
A f/ve IS) m ln v tt hearing has
been scheduled before H O N O R ­
A B L E C. V E R N O N M IZ E , J R .,
a Judge Of the Circuit Court,
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit, on
the 30th day ot April, )M 7. at
■:30 A .M ., In room 334N, for tha
purpose of filing a Rule to Show
Cause why tha described pro­
perty should not bo forfeited to
the use of or sold try the Sheriff
of Sem'nute Co«-r,ty. Florida,
upon producing due proof that
the same was used In violation
ot Florida lews dealing with
contraband and other criminal
offense’, all pursuant to Sec­
tions *33.701-704. Florida Stat­
utes 11**3&gt;.
A copy of said Petition Is on
file In tha Clark's office and Is
available for examination dur­
ing regular bus!ness hours.
D A T E D this 13th day ot Feb­
ruary, IW7.
N O R M A N R. W O L F IN G E R
S TA TE A TTO R N E Y
B Y : A N N E E.
R IC H A R D S -R U T B E R G
A S S IS T A N T
STA TE A TTO R N E Y
Off let ot the State Attorney
100 East First Street
Sanford, Florida 32771
(203)322-7334.
Publish: M a rch 4, It, )W7
DEM-43

L IN D A R. W IL L IA M S O N , his
wife,
F L O R ID A N A T IO N A L B A N K .
C A R LO S A . G A R C IA . A N A
M A R IA G A R C IA , C O -E Q U IT Y
G R O U P . IN C ., H A R C A R
A L U M IN U M P R O O U C TS C O .,
------------------- U N K N O W N T E N A N T IS ).
D EFEN D AN TS.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
C O N S T R U C T IV E S E R V IC E P R O P E R TY
T O : C O -E Q U IT Y , INC.
A D IS S O L V E D F L O R IO A
C O R P O R A TIO N
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that an action has
been commenced to foreclose a
mortgage on the following real
situated In Semlnola County,
Florida, more particularly de­
scribed as follows:
L O T 3, B L O C K
F,
SW E ETW A TE R
OAKS.
S E C TIO N 7, A C C O R D IN G T O
T H E P L A T T H E R E O F AS R E ­
C O R D E D IN P U T BOOK 1*.
A T P A G E S » T H R O U G H 2f,
IN C L U S IV E . O F T H E P U B L IC
R E C O R D S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A .
more commonly known as 103
Brandywine Lana, Long wood.
Florida 3377*.
This action has bean filed
against you and you are re­
quired to k ' W a copy of your
written defenses, If any, to It on
S H A P IR O , ROSE B F IS H M A N ,
North Rao Strcaf, Suit* 302,
Tam pa, Florida 313** 1013, on or
before A P R IL 3, IW7, and Ilia
th# original with th* Clark of
this Court either before service
dlatoly thereafter; otherwise a
default will be entered against
you for tha relief demanded In
th* Complaint.
W IT N E S S m y hand and anal
of this Court on tha 17th doy ol
F E B R U A R Y , IW7.
(C O U R T S E A L )
David N. Berrien,
CLER K
Circuit and County Courts
B Y : Phyllis Forsyth*
Deputy Clark
Publish: M arch 4, II,
13,23, lf*7
DEM-43

to register sold name with the
C lerk ot th* C ircu it Court.
Seminole County, Florida in
accordance with the Provisions
of the Fictitious Nam* Statutes,
To-W it: Section H I P Florida
Statute* 1*32.
/s/K .E . Rush
Publish February tt, IB &gt;3 B
M arch 4.13*7.
D EL-**

L IN D A R . W IL L IA M S O N , his

wlte

F L O R ID A N A T IO N A L B A N K ,
C A R LO S A . G A R C IA , A N A
M A R IA G A R C IA , C O -E Q U IT Y
G R O U P . IN C ., H A R C A R
A L U M IN U M P R O O U C TS CO..
------------------- U N K N O W N T E N A N T IS ),
D EFEN D A N TS.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
C O N S T R U C T IV E S E R V IC E P R O P E R TY
T O : C A R LOS A . G A R C IA A N D
AN A M A R IA G A R C IA
APARPADO
31373 CARUCAS1030A
VENEZUELLA
II living, Including any known
spouse of said Defendant(s) If
any have remarried and If any
or all of said Detendant(s) are
dead, their respective unknown
h e ir s , d e v is e e s , g ra n te e s ,
assignees, creditors, lienors,
and trustees, and all other
persons claiming by, through,
under or against the named
D o f a n d a n t ( s ) ; a n d the
aforementioned named Defenda n t ( s ) a n d s u c h o f th e
aforementioned unknown De­
fenda nts and such of the
aforementioned unknown De­
fendants as m ay be Infants,

YO U A R E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that at. action has
been commenced to toractoa* a
mortgage on th* following real
property, lying and being and
situated In Semi nl* County,
Florida, mere perticuLvty de­
scribed a t follows:
L O T 3, B L O C K
F,
S W E ETW A TE R
OAKS,
S E C TIO N -7 , A C C O R D IN G T O
1 H E P U T T H E R E O F AS R E ­
C O R D E D IN P U T BOOK If,
A T P A G E S 33 T H R O U G H 3f,
IN C L U S IV E , O F T H E P U B L IC
R E C O R D S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R IO A .
more commonly known a t 103
Brandywine Lana, Longwood,
Florida 3277*.
This action hat baen filed
against you and you are re­
quired to serve a copy of your
written defenses. It any, to It on
S H A P IR O , ROSE B F IS H M A N ,
North Roo Street, Suite 301,
Tam pa, Florida 224OM01J, on or
before A P R IL 3, tf*7, and fll*
the original with lha Clerk of
to ll Court either baton service
on Plaintiff's attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter) otherwise a
default will be entered against
you tor tha relief demanded In
the Complaint.
W ITN E S S m y hand and seal
of Mill Court on lha 27th day of
F E B R U A R Y , t**7.
(C O U R T B E A U
David N. Berrien.
clerk

Circuit and County Courts
• V i Phytlta F orsyth*
Deputy Clerk
Pubtfih: M arche, It,

tt*7, of 11:00 a.m . at th* West
Front Door of the Courthouse of

I.

I N T H K C IR C U IT
COURT F O R T H I
IIQ H T IE N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
O F F L O R IO A ,
IN A M O F O R
!
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
C A S E N O .M -t U l CA-t*
O E N K R A L JU R IS D IC T IO N
D IV IS IO N
A L L IA N C E M O R T G A Q E
COM PANY,
P L A IN T IF F ,

t l . 2 3 , 13*7

N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
Th e a d m ln litra llo n of th*
at la la ol H A R R Y K. WOOD,
dacaaiad, File Num ber
17-130-CP, It pending In ths
C irc u it C ourt for Semlnola
C o u n t y , F l o r i d a , P ro b a ta
Division, the address of which It
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanford, Florida 33771. The
names and addresses of the
personal representative and the
personal representative's at­
torney are set forth below.
A ll Interested parsons are
required to file with this court,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S OF
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E : 111 all C le lm i
against the estate and (1) any
obje ction by an Interested
person to whom this notice w ai
mailed that challenges the valid
Ity of the w ill, the qualifications
at the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of the
court*
A L L C L A IM S A N D O B J E C ­
T IO N S N O T SO F IL E D W IL L
BE FO R EV ER BARRED
Publication of this Notice hai
begun on February 23, IN7.
Personal Rapresantatlve:
BA R N ETTB A N K STR U ST
C O M P A N Y , N .A .
B Y : G E O R G E B.
H A M R IC K , JR .
Assistant Trust Officer
250 Park Avenue South
P.O . Box 1000
Winter Park, Florida
Attorney for
Personal Representative:
L.W . C A R R O L L , JR .,
S Q U IR E
LA W R E N C E W. CAR R O LL,
J R .. P .A.
3200 S U . S . Highway 17-02
P .O . Box 30
Catselberry, Florida 32707
Telephone. (303) 200-S3M
Publish: February 23 A M arch

4, HOT
D E L -t H

N O T IC E
Th* St. Johns River Water
Management District has re­
ceived an application tor Man
agamant and Storage of Surface
W atersfrom :
R.S. F U T C H , T . H A G E N , H.
E A R L E Y , 733 SW 14TH A V E -,
O C A U , F L 33734, Application
140-117-0077A , on 2/V/I7. The
prelect Is located In Seminole
County, Section 22, Township 20
South, Rengo 30 East. Th#
application Is tor 31.334 acre
S IN G L E F A M IL Y R E S ID E N ­
T I A L to b* known as U K E
M A R Y W O OD S P H A S E II, III B
IV . Tha receiving water body Is
S O L D IE R S C R E E K .
Action will bo taken on th*
above listed a p p lic a tio n !* )
within 30 days of receipt of th*
application. Should you bo Inter­
ested In any . ot th* listed
applications, you should contact
the St. Johns River Water M an­
agement District at P .O . Box
141*, Palatka, Florida 1207*141*, o r In person at It* office on
S ta te H ig h w a y too W a i t ,
PalatL
- i.rld a , *04/220031.
W r i t t e n o b j e c t i o n te th a
kaftan m ay be made, but
Id b* received no later than

«

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

should Identify the oh lector by
name and address, and fully
describe th* objection to the
application. Filing a written
objection doe* not entitle you to
a Chapter 130, Florida Statutes,
Administrative Hearing. Only

derslgnad Clerk will offer tor
sal* to the highest bidder tor
cash th* following described

D EFEN D A N TS.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
C O N S T R U C T IV E S E R V IC E P R O P E R TY
T O : C O -E Q U IT Y , INC.
P E TE R O. W AGNER, RA .
A D IS S O L V E D F L O R ID A
C O R P O R A TIO N
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that an action ha*
been commenced to toracloaa a
m arfgaga on the following real
property, lying and being and
situated in Seminal# County,
Florida, mar* particularly de­
scribed as to!tows:
Lot I, T H E SPR IN G S, SHADto Ih* plat thereof aa recorded In
Plat Book 13. at Page* 44 and 43.
a t tha P u b lic R e co rd * ef
S em lno la C o u n ty , F lo rid a j
together w ith an undivided

qulrad to torvo a copy of your
written 0oknees, If any, t* ft an
S H A P IR O . R O SS B F IS H M A N .
Attorney*, whose addraa* to M i
North Roe » treat. SuH* JOB
Tam p*. Florida 3M00-WIS, an or
before A P R IL 3, 1*07, and file
Hr# original with Ih* Ctarfc of

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS
i*
1:30 A.M. •5:30 M l.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY9 ■Ntofl

\' J

RATES

7 .

.

D E A D L IN E S
N o o n T h e D a y B e fo re P u b lica tio n
S u n d a y - N o o n F rid a y
M o n d a y - 9 :0 0 A . M . S a tu rd a y
N O T E : In the event ol the publishing ot errors In advertisements, the San
lord Herald shall publish the advertisement, alter It has baen corrected al
ho cost to the advertiser but such Insertions shall number no more than one

12— L e g a l S e rv ic e s

SAM U E L A . W IL L I AM SON and
L IN D A R . W IL L IA M S O N , his
wife, B R E N D A J . SI B N IA ,
J A M E S Z. C R A F T and
C H A R L O T T IM . H A R V EY ,
hlswtto, C H A R L E S A .
C R A M P T O N , P E T E R D.
W AQNFB

• R IA N D A V ID R IS T . K IM
M A R IE JA C O B S R IS T.
C O -E Q U IT Y G R O U P , IN C ..
A N D A P R Y L L. W IL L IA M S O N ,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that, pursuant to a final judg­
ment dated F E B R U A R Y . &gt;7,
i * * 7 . In C a t # N u m b e r
•3-4703-CA-Ot-G of the Circuit
Court at the E ighteenth Judicial
District In and tor Samlnoto
County, Florid*. In w htdi L I B ­
E R T Y N A T IO N A L R A N K Is lha
P la in tif f a n d S A M U E L A .
W IL L IA M S O N and L IN D A R,
W I L L I A M S O N , h ie w i f e ,
B R E N D A J . S IB N IA , J A M E S Z.
C R A F T and C H A R L O T T E M
H A R V E Y . M* wife, C H A R L E S
A. C R A M P TO N , P E T E R D .
W A O N B R . B R IA N D A V ID
R IS T , K IM M A R IE JA C O B S
N I S T , C O -E Q U I T Y O R O U P .
IN C ., and A P R Y L L.
W IL L IA M S O N are Hie Deton

application and who file a peti­
tion mooting th* requirements
ot Section 3 M .M 1 , F .A .C ., m ay
obtain an Administrative Hear­
ing. A ll timely filed written
w|VCTlOrtt Will O T pflM filW l' fO1
the board tor It* consideration
In Its d e lib e ra tio n on the
application prior to th* Board
taking action on th* application.
D a m lte T . Kemp, Director
Division of Recards
SI. Johns River Water
Management District
Publish March 4. I**7
OEM -37

D O UG LAS A V E N U E R E T A IL
C E N T E R . The receiving water
bod y I* L I T T L E W E K I V A
R IV E R .
D E N N IS R A N Z A U , 530 S,
P O S T O A K R D S U 100,
H O U S TO N , T X 77027, Applica­
tion 143-117-013IA N , on 1/13/07.
T h e p re le c t la located In
Sam took County, Section IB
Township s i South, Rang* I f
Eaet. The application Is tor a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
serve 33-2 acres to be known a*
BEAR U K E V IL U O E .
Action will be taken on the
above Hated a p p lic a tio n !* }
within 30 day* el receipt at the
application. Should yew b* inter­
ested In any at tha lilte d
application*, you should contact
the St. John* R iver Water M an­
agement District at P .O . Bax

Hi* Board tor It* consideration
In Its d e lib e ra tio n on tha
application prior to to# Beard
taking action on to* application.
O a m lm T . Komp, Director
Division of Record*
SI. Johns River Water

LEO AI. R E C E P T IO N IS T
T R A I N E E - SIM wk. Excep
flonal opportunity! WUI train)
Light typing! Needs today I
A A A Employment, 700 W . 23th
Street.............................. 323-5)73
M A C H IN E SHOP O E N E R A L .
E xp Individual capable of the
following: Light sheet metal,
lathe, m ill, hell-arc, torch
w elding, other related
m echanical apparatus. A ll
manual operations, no CNC,
Florida electronics. 32 ) 3000
M A IN T E N A N C E M A N - 34 hour.
Nice complex. Urgently needs
today! Live on or off property
and en|oy y o u r freedom I
D on't w a lll A A A E m p lo yment, 700 W . 23th St..... 323-3173

N E W C O N S T R U C T IO N

Notary Public
C R IS IS P R E G N A N C Y C T R .
Free Pregnancy Test, eon 11denllal. Call lor appt..........331-73*3
A L L A L O N E ? Call Bringing
People Together. Sanford’s
rr jst respected dating service
rl.ice 1*77. V * n over 30 M X
O.eCQunt)..............I 300 *22-4477

NEW CREDIT CAIDI
N o ono re fu te d . V it a or
M atlercuru. Call l-3)f-333-lf23
o a t.C IO lF L ...................34 hours
THANK YOU SACRED
H E A R T and S T. J U D E for
favors granted. M M ."

25— Sp e c ia l N o tice s

JOHN ROBERT POWERS
Will hold an open house and
offer fro* personal evaluations
ixi Sunday, M arch 22 from 2 to
4 pm tor males, tamales, and
children 3 years and over.
Pleas* call tor an appt.
John Robert Powers la voted
"Bast School In tha W o rld " by
Th a M odi ling Association Of
Am erican In r l., Inc. F o r your

A S S IS T A N T R E C E P T IO N IS T T o S3 hr. Combine your people
personality A life bookkeeping
skills B land this enjoyable
chalrl Terrific boss! In San­
ford I A A A Employment, 700
W . 23th St.......................3213)73
B IN D E R Y H E L P : part tlm t.
Sanford Printing, *03 W. 3rd
Stroot............................. -323-4*11
CAM VASSER # earn S3 fa 17 hr.
plus bonuses going door to
door m aking appointments
Will train.............. CaH:330S*4i
F U L L T I M E B a n a llls. W ill
train. U p to 34 hour. Stari

C A S H IE R : F u ll time. Equal
Opportunity Em ployer. Apply
at: Little Food Tow n, 710 Lake
M a ry B lvd................... 331-00**
C A S H IE R T R A I N E E - *4.10 hr.
No nights I National co.l Quick
advancement! Build your ca­
reer herel A A A Employment,
700 W . 23th St............... 323-3174
C A S H IE R S B C L E R K S - Full B
perl lim e. W ill train. *373 B
C A S H IE R - Full B Part tlm*.
Afternoon B midnight shifts.
Weekends. Wilt train. Apply in
personal E C O L 1-4 B SR 43.
C L E R IC A L O A L . Happy spell
E n try level office opening
gives you th* training you
nood. Established firm with
r o o m to g r o w l A A A
E m p lo y m e n t, 700 W . 23th
Street.............................. 323-317*

NOW HIRING
Experienced Sawing Machine
O p e ra to rs w o nte d on a ll
operations. Wa otter paid holi­
days, paid vacation, health
c a rt plan, and modern air
conditioned plant. Piece work "r
rates. W ill tra in qualified
a p p lic a n t* . S an-D al
Manufacturing, 2240 Old Lak*
M a ry R d„ Sanford...... 321-3310
SAINT LEO C O LLEG ER S V
seeking additional ad|unct
faculty tor teaching assign
men Is Ih th* Leerburg/Deland
/ S a n f o r d / O a y t o n a Beac h
a r e a . P h . D . p r e f e r r e d , ;•
Matter's acceptable. Pleat*
sand latter of Inquiry to:
Philip M cClung, ESO, P.O.
Box 2241. Saint Lao, FI. 33374

NURSES, JUDES,
COMPANIONS
H A P P Y N E W Y E A R . W* need
you now. New benefits In­
cluding group Insurance and
vacation. Frao C E U 'S . Dally
pay. Staff B private duty.
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L P O O L
Call: 740-32*4

O R D E R L Y - Completion of acute
care nurse'* aid* training
course or equivalent hospital
axp. 7-3 B 3 It shift. Must be
cerltlfed. Apply: W . Volusia
M em orial Hospital, 701 W . ^
Plymouth Ave., Poland, Fla.

(305) 774-7616
For Details: 1 *00-433 4234
F lorld* Notary Association
H E A D A C H E B M U S C L E P A IN
R E L I E F through massage
therapy, by appt......... .333 *34*

C O O K *- Tw o full tlm# positions
open. Apply In person. Hungry
Howto’s. 2400 French Av..
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE

27— N u r s t r y A
C h ild C a re

FON Q U A L IT Y CARR B
N U R T U R IN O of your child's
development call E lle n at
(303) 323-1424

55— B u sin e ss
O p p o rtu n itie s

D R IV E R •Top pay and benefits,
local and overnight Florida
delivery. Chauffeurs license
n e c e s s a ry . M V R W ill be
chocked. Apply 401W . n th SI.
Sontord or call 322-3333

CXCEUIKT INCOME
O SJ D E V E L O P M E N T S IN C ,
100 S O U T H O R A N G E
A V EN U E, ORLANDO, FL
32002, A p p l i c a t i o n
I*1-1!7-0I30AN&gt; on 2/11/07. Tha
project la located in Seminole
County, Section 14. Township 21
South, Rang* 2* East. Th e
a p p l i c a t i o n la f a r a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to

H IR IN O I Federal Gov. |obi. In
your i r t &lt; A o v t f t » « l Many
Immediate openings, wlfhout
w a l l i n g H a l t o r t a &gt; l&gt; .
II3 S3* ooo Phone call refun­
dable........301*3**0*3 a* t. U P
LA N D S C A P E R S A Lawn Main
lananca paraonnal naadad.
Exp. A drlvar'a llcania es­
quired. Pay equal to ’ proven
experience....................I21-M13

M E D IC A L O F F IC E T R A IN E E .
S IM wk-t- Local flrm l E xcit­
ing office I Learn all phases of
medical ftaldl Really neat!
A A A Employment, 700 W . 23th
Street.............................. 323-3173

S O C IA L S E C U R IT Y Disability
Free Advlce.No Charge Unless
W a W l n l W a rd W h ite B
Associates.............JM -3 3 M 3 I*

IN S U R A N C E C U I M I
A D J U S T E R / 1 N V E IT IO A T O R
S E M IN A R
S em inar prepares you lor
slate license exam ination.
Class Is 3 days, l weekend.
S a la ry potential *33,000-1-.
Orlando area, M arch 27th,
2*thB2*th t**7. (Em ploym ent
opportunities possible upon
satisfactory com pletion ol
S o m ln a r). State approved
class. Registration and depos­
it of *33 required. Master
Charge/Visa accepted. F or
details call M r. Raaca, A B R
Insurance Sar., #04-13*1707

F o r part tlm * horn* assembly
work. F o r Information phone:
304-341-0QC3..................a x t.T N O
E X P . O N L Y with furniture refinishing B repair. Spolnlng B
coloring v a ry helpful. Resposlble parson naadad tor
expanding business. Sanford
are*.....332-74S3 between I 2 B «

PU N TW O R K ER S
Plant workers for entry laval
positions required for Sanford
manufacturing facility. Good
work record required. Call -/
122-3300....................... Personnel ■[
P O R T R A I T S T U D I O
T R A I N E E , Lots of F U N I No
e x p e r i e n c e n e e d e d ! Self
starter wanted! Challenging
ca ra e rl A A A Em ploym ent, .
700 W . 23th St.................323-3173 .
P R E -S C H O O L teacher needed. ‘
Special parson lor a special *
opportunity. If you are career ’ '.
oriented, have a chauffeurs *
license, over 13 yrs. old, have
classroom axp., abl* to com- A
muni cat# easily B function as 52
n a rf nf m Ifoam
■— — - •-* - * 11L,»
*.
pert of a team, we
would
Ilka 7*
to hear from you. A ll reply#
confidential. Th is Is a growth J
position for th* right person. •.
Sand resume'to: Bex 24* c/o
Sanford H e ra ld, P .O . Bex
1337, Sanford, F L . 33772-1337
•_
P U B L IC R E U T I O N S R E P . for *&lt;
Club Sunshine Lino Inc. Boat
rental B memberships located
at Monro# Harbour B Marina
In Sanford. F o r appointment
call............................#04 773 2027
R E N T A L O A L T R A IN E E -Id e a l spot It you Ilk* people and are V
looking lor a job with a luturel
Vary little typing! Move up
qulckl A A A Employment, 7 0 0 .,
W . 13th St...................... 223 3173

NE S PONS I E L E ORI VEN
llcania raqulr*d...Call 222-3008
R N N E E D E D . Full time. E x p o -n rlenca aa Charge Nursa a n d '/
latrlcs helpful. Apply Oa- '
Y M anor, 30 N . H w y 17 *2.
*33 4423.................... ...........E O E

K

W E B U Y le t a n d In d
M O R T G A G E S Nation wide.
C a ll: R a y Lagg L ie . M lg
B roker, *40 Douglas A ve .,
Altamonte..................... 774-7733

143*. or in person at It* office on
St at e H ig h w a y t r s W a i l .
Palatka, Florida, *04/230-0211.
W r i t t e n o b j e c t i o n to th *
application m ay bo made, but
should be received no later than
14 daya from th* data ef
publication. Written object lens
should identify the oblector by
name and address, and fully
describe the objection |* the
application. Filing a written
objection dee* net entitle you to
a Chapter lie . Florida Statutes,
Administrative Hearing. Only
fhaoa parsons whom substantial

I

831-9993

i U &amp; t a i'W i r i iN M M

a w wtM f f g t f
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
Th e adm inistration of th*
aafato at R E R T H A L . V A L E N ­
T I N E , dow n ed. File Num ber
•7 122 C F . la pending In the
C irc u it C ourt for Sem inal*
C o u n t y , F l o r i d a , P ro b a ta
Division, lha addraw df which It

I N T N I C IR C U IT C O U R T
FO R S IM IN O L R C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
F R O e A T I D IV IS IO N
Fll# Number 17-130-CP
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
H A R R Y K . W OOD .

P h a r m a c is t
Box M S, Ganava. Seminole
County, Florid* 11711 under the
Fictitious N am * of Captain
Louis E . Pohlman, and that w*
Intend to register said name
with th* Clark of tha Circuit
Court, Samlnoto County. Florida
In accordance with tha Pro­
vision* ot the Fictitious Nam*
Statutes. T o W it: Section MSA*
Florida Statutes l»S7.
/*/ Louis E . Pohlman
/*/ Tin a F . Pohlman
Publish M arch 4. I I , IB 15,
1**7.
D E M 35

Now Accepting Applications
For A Pharmacist In The
Seminole County Area.
Starting 8alary $39*000 +
Dally Hours 9*6 PM
42 hr. Work Week
Good Benefits
Send Resume To

�1 1 1 1

71— Help Wanted
N UR SES- C N A , Physical Th e r­
apists, A Live-In's urgently
needed. C e ll: Cere-At-Home
774-1153........................... E .O .E .
f tiilN
P R I N T E R . e k p e rT
eneed. Cell for appointment to
apply In pereon.............M t M ie

N E A R D O W N TO W N - 1 bdrm"
apt. Nicely furnished. Complate. *15 week..............311-3110

S E C R E T A R Y : Typing and all
general office duties. Sanford
office. Call *04-775-73*2 for
•appointment__________ _____

F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T Nlce tor single working men.
Cell u t e r i pm ..............i l l 3*30

S E C R E T A R Y T R A I N E E , MOO
w k + bonueoi. Buty phone*
need your pteatnat touch I Lite
dutlea put you at eate here!
Nice b o u need* to hire now I
A A A Employment, 700 W . 25th
Street.............................. 323-5174
S E C U R IT Y T R A I N E E - E x d tIngl F u lly tralnl Flea. hr*, to
suit your need* I Professional
career I A A A Em ploym ent,
700 W . M th St................ m i l 7*

S T U D IO A 1 BR ., Adults, no
pets, quiet res. no down. 1335
end upper mo. -t-dep. 313-0011
S A N F O R D - Lovely 1 bdrm .,
efficiency. Complete privacy,
WO week + 1100 sec. Include*
utilities.................Cell:333 1341
1 B D R M . apartment. 1100 wk.
utilities Included, plus sec.

SE M I D R IV E R , 14 hr. Stable
perton wanted I Ta k e thl*
driver'* le a ll No ovem ighti
F u l l ben ef i t p k g e t A A A
E m p lo y m e n t, 700 W . M th
Street.............................. m i i u
S O L D E R E R S - Eap. In wiring
hametee* A J-hook connection
a m utt. Apply In perton be­
tween 4:30 A J: jo at Mathew*
Ataoc. 44S Hickman C lr., 1-4
Induttrlal Park, Sanford
A P P O IN T M E N T S E T T E R S
Pleasant working condition*
with 40 y r. old local company.
New department seek* expe­
rienced appointment setter*
only. IS hour + tremendous
bonus structure. Call: 7773443
eat. 334..............Chariot Bordet
T R U S S A S S E M B L E R S , eaperlenced preferred. A p p ly In
perton to Lowe's T rv * » Plant,
IVOt Aileron C lr. (Sanford
Airport lndu»trlal Park)
V A N O E L I V E R Y - 1235 week.
Simple I No chauffeur* Keen**
needed I Will train you 'odayl
A A A E m p l/ y m o t, 700 W . lit l
Street.............................J33-5174
W E L D E R S N E E D E D : Apply In
person at K A D Tra ile r, 1101 E .
Celery Aye. S a n fo rd ....3 n -lt»
W O R K E R S N E E D R D I If you
need steady work-paid dally,
Call Sam a fte rJp m ,....333-7554

73— Em ploym ent
Wanted
E X P . C N A - Mature lady to sit
w/elderly A do errands. Flea.
hr*. O w n car. Wot. 331-3713
HOUSEW ORK W A N TE D
Dependable homemaker will
do your house cleaning. Rea­
sonable rates, reliable, trust­
worthy. Call 313-1041 anytime,
leave message._______________

91— Apartments/
House to Share
I L E Reemmate to share
n house. C a ll:.............313-4145
■:’J \ r 313-4440 ask for Renee
T E N E E D E D or take
lease at Sanford Villas.
Includes water A elec.
ill:333-0441 0:30 to 1:00 A M or

7yfttotOOPM_

I B D R M ., 3 bath In very nice
Ih b o rh o o d , ki t chen A
rlvlleges. Prefer
*
jj^ jJ T + W ll

•Rooms for Rent
SOB R OO M - Near town. SSO
week. Private entrance.
.........................311 -m o
l O N O W O O D , Room with
private bath. Lakefront home.
M ature 141 wfc.............. 747-3141
• R EASONABLE R A TES
• M A ID IE R V IC S
[• P R IV A T E E N TR A N C E
W hy Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

u lir U i l l i u u '
373-4507
R O O M wttk private bath, air
condlllonlng, privileges. 145
wk. tst A last. Mature nonsmoker, non-dr Inker ...M l-0415
R O O M M A T E , Fe m a le , nonsmokar. 3 bdrm ., 1 bath villa.
SISO-t- Vk Util. 041-1773 after 4
S A N F O R D : Furnished rooms A
kitchenette S55, S45 weekly A
up. Walk to town, park and
take. Call 445-4030..or..311-4*43
U N F U R N IS H E D ROO M , House
privileges. 1375. M o Includes
utilities. Must have refer-

^enceSjMtdlllafteraPjMj^
97— A p a rtm e n ts
F u rn is h e d / R a n t

L A B O R I bdrm .. too w k., effi­
ciency 145 wfc., plus S IM dap.,
near town C a ll -.......... 3 IJ-tl»4
C L E A N 1 bdrm ., 1 bath, living
room, oat-ln kitchen, carpet,
a/c. turn. St IS weak. 321-31*0
S A N F O R D - Huge 1 bdrm . com­
p l e t e p r i v a c y , c l o s e to
doomtown. Looking for family
With t children. 1100 vmek +
c. Calls..............333-3341

^JMdlU^jjrjjj-mjtlOev#*^

d E F F I C . 1 A 1 B D R M . A P TS ,
a FURN. A UNFURN.
a FAY W EEKLY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

&lt;i hr U ilk in r

C B D A R A V E : l bdrm ., 1 bath,
carport. Inside utility, 1400
mo. -t- sec..............Cell 13* 7444
L A K E M A R Y : 135 E . Lake
M ary Ave., Deluxe, brand new
2 bdrm ., 2 bath duplex. All
appliances, wash/dry hook-up,
vaulted callings, celling fans,
weeded lot. Really nlcel 1450
mo, 321-04— ...... or.......747-WIO
RI D C E W O O D A C R E ! - Deluxe
Duplexes. 2 bdrm . Families
welcome. Cell T a m l....3 2 H 2 U

H IM

GR0VEVIEW VILLAS
M M Lake M ery Blvd.
D O N 'T R E N T ...U n til you «ee
Sanford’s most space*.
2
bdrm .,1 bath apt*.......321-0544
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G - M ain­
tenance helper. M inim um 1
,r . exp. In apt. m»l&lt; ■jnence
1500 Rldgev rod Ave........ 1M-44M
L A R G E i bdrm ., 1 full baths, all
appl., washer/dryer, cent.
M/A, w/w carpet, Ige pool,
1345. no pets, lease, 3731040

LUSH LANDSCAPING
Surrounds these single story,
enefgy efficient, 1A 2 br. apt*.
SA N FO R D C O U R T A P TS.
I N I S. SAN F O R D A V E
*33-1301 e x t .lt l
M A R IN E R S V IL L A G E
Special 1 bdrm .......... .............1315
2 bdrm* iiiMIMHfliilMtitif from 1335
C all
i............................. 313-0470
R ID O E W O O D AR M S A P TS .
Ask about our move-ln special I
ISM Rtdaevged Ave____ M j B I
S A N F O R D : 1 bdrm ., 1 bath,
carpal, central a ir ; appli­
ances. 1150 mo. Discounted
British American
Beatty.......................... — .411-1175
S H E N A N D O A H V IL L A O E

★

* S IN * ★

Ask about move In special I
C e ll.............................. ....... 323-2170
T I R E D O F B O R IN O , Cramped
Apt*? See our Irg. 1 A 2 bdrm .
apt*. In ch arm ing 4-plex.
Form al dining A living rm „
sun rm ., 1 ft. callings, C/H/A,
fully aqulpptd eat-ln kitchen A
..441 5471...... 1345-1400
I bdrm ., 1bath................ 1335 mo
7 b d rm ., IV* bath.............. Siaom u

• Central H a a tA A Ir
• Pool A Laundry
F R A N K L IN A R M S
I t t t Florida Ave.
1011 P A R K A V I : L a r g e
downstairs apt. 2 bdrm ., 1450
mo. plus sac. dap. Call 411-0005
days.317-1047 or 337-1*2* nights
SIM M O V E IN S P E C IA L
A D U LTS , POOL, LA K E
L A K E J E N N I E A P T S — 3134741

103— H o u s e s

Unfum ishtd / R tn t
D O W N TO W N S A N F O R D : 2
bdrm ., 1375 mo. 1st, last A sac.
........ *04-775-4512
H A N D Y M A N - 1003 Grove. 1
bdrm ., 1345 rent or option.
C e ll:......................... 113-1733 IIP
* * * IN D E L T O N A * * *
* * H O M E !F O R R E N T * *
________ « « 574-1434 * « ________
M O V E R IO H T IN - 3 bedroom
home*I Cleanl New carpet.
Only 1450 m o................ .321 3454
S A N F O R D - 3 br, dining rm , a/c,
appls, screened porch. 1315
m o + 1st A last. Special price
tor senior cltUons.........331-0415
S A N F O R D - 3 bedroom, 1 bath
Aval labia on March 7.

Call:........................ 0304123
S A N F O R D - 3 br., 1 be, larga
yard with fruit free*, carport.
1400 par me- + sec.32l-5*W
S A N F O R D - Rant or Rant to
own. Lika naw, J br, 2 be. dbl.
garaga. 313 M cVay, Sanora
subdivision, 1510 mo....43f-4*70
S A N F O R D - 1/1 homo to rant.
N lc t area. 1445 mo. with
discount -f deo .C ell:..373 4540
S A N F O R O , 2 bdrm ., I bath, 1315
mo. 4- 1300 dap. Includes
wafer A W g e i. Call.... M I M l
IU N L A N D Estate* tor qualified
tenant. 3/1, children ok, no
petS. 1435. 4- Sec. 373 4441

Desired.. •

Come home to a v»cstlo n ... Sallpointe, the
newMt adult community in old historic
'Sanford, offers a lifestyle you've been dreaming
about... tt'a designed for people who love
selling, skiing end swimming. Who prefer to
spend their free time laughing with friends at a
poolside barbeque or strolling along a moonlit
dock. If you're this person, Sallpointe at Lake
Monroe was made for you.

exppefand deserve.
why Sallpointe is the desired place to
Come
live. Located on Seminole Boulevard at Lake
Monroe In Sanford._______

SAILPCMNTE
1 3 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
401 West Banknote Boulevard
Sanford. Florida *1771 # 322-1051

\ m

k i

I OK

F H A B U Y E R S S IN V E S T O R S
C H E C K T H IS H O M E I 11350
down A only ties per mo.
P .l.T .I. plus minimal closing
costsl 1 b d rm ., IV* bathl
F e n c 'd Y .ird l C orner loll
Many trees!.................... 141,500
E X T R A N IC E C U S TO M B U IL T
H O M E I Almost new, 3/2 spill
ian, fireplace, garage, C H A .
tel pump,.good Mrrns.14i.NV

R

*3^$° 5 7 7 4
24M H W Y . 17-tl
A C C E P T O U R F IV E % listing
contract A tee your home
advertised el no coat lo You.
F IR S T R E A L T Y IN C ..... 334-44M

141— Homes Fo r Sale

L A R O E 2 story colonial on
wooded 1 acre. Fam ily room,
game rm , 2 fpi., many extras.
S137.000. W . M a l l c i e w t k !
..172-m i
Realter...

O W N E R D E S P E R A T E ! Re
located lest week. Wants sold.
E x t r a nice 3 b d rm ., new
carpet A paint, central heat A
air. Less then S2.000 down.
Seller pay* closing costs.
S4f.*00. Don’t mis* outl Call
now )......... B E C K Y CO URSO N .
R E / M A X 200 n. realty Inc.
410-4310.......... or.......... 311-0420

L A K E M A R Y /LO N O W O O D , 3
bdrm ., 2 bath, pool, has every.
thing. S.~t,*00/oUor...... 221-0731
LO NO W OOO/Lake M ary area.
By owner. 1 br, 3 be. quiet
neighborhood, fenced yard,
cathedral callings, Lake M e ry
school*. *41,*00............323 )310
M A Y F A IR , 210 N . S C O T T A V E
SIM ,*00. 4 bdrm ., U * bath.
Large home. Beautiful Inside
A out. Nice lot. Enjoy this
specious home with family
rm , dining rm , eat-ln kitchen

CALL BART
R IA L ES TA TE
R E A L T O R _____________323-74*1

ENERGY REALTY
111 N . C O U N T R Y C L U B R O.
____________ 1132*5*____________

JAMES LEE
Ml

VI I •»M

3217523..... Em. 323-0609
L O O -A -F ra m e ,
complete on 2
acres 2.500 sq.ft.+ , 145.004.
Term s. Owner/Brker. 223 2440

117 E . T H I R D S T R E E T

C O U N T Y - 2 houses on 2 taperate lots, 3/1V* A 1/1. Needs
T L C . Owner financing. Asking
...........................................144,100
C O M P L E T E L Y Refurbi shed
with new carpet. 4/2. Blk., 2
ca r garaga, consider leaM
option............................... 14*. 500

BATEMAN REALTY
U c , Reel Estate Broker
2440 Sanford Ave.

321-0759----------- 321-2257
Attar heart 321-74*1

Ontuifc.
J U N E P O R Z IO R E A L T Y , IN C
Do You Love Lake M ir y ?
Do You Love the Country?
Do You Love Horses?
Do You Love Trees?
Do You Love A Nice Home?
Do You Love 2 Acres?
Then you’ll love this all In one.
O nly................................1112.000
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ....323-4742
S A N F O R D - Historical area. 1
story. Rtducad.............141,100
R E A W IL L IA M S O N ....231-4741
W H Y P A Y R E N T When you can
own e 2 bdrm . cottage near
Lake Monroe. Under..... *30,000
• B A W IL L I AMSON....32J-4741

Visit u t l Chase Ave.
Tune your A M radio to 1050
and hear the details ol this 1
br, ll* b a . home. Price 144.100
S A N F O R D - *2 bdrm ., 2 bath CB
home, central heat A air.
O n ly.................................144,000
P O O L H O M E - 3 bdrm ., 1 bath,
tlreplaca, screen patio A pool,
central heat A a ir, large
corner lot......................... U5.000
1 B D R M ., 1 B A T H F R A M E .
Owner financing •eeeeeteee.121.100
Z O N E D M R-2- Extra large 3
bdrm ., V.* bath. Adult-cere,
daycare or duplex use...145,000
L A R O E 3 bdrm ., 3 bath CB.
Good area, large Fla. room.
...........................................152.500
P A O LA - Lake Markham Rd. 1
bdrm ., 2 balh. Owner will help
with new financing.......154,900
H ID D E N L A K E - Old section.
Large 3 bdrm ., 2bath double
garage............................ 14*, *00

mmwm

REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford's Salts Lsadoi
W E L IS T A N D S E L L
M ORE P R O P E R TY TH A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R T H
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y

L E N D SO M E TLC...10 this 4
bdrm ., 1 bath home. Corner
lot, fenced yard, enclosed
p o rch , flro p la ce and
m oral......... ..................... 122,000
O R E A T F O R B E O IN N E R S I 2
br., 1 bath home, could be 3
b r’s, neatly landscaped, eat In
kitchen, heat A elr, nice areal
............... :..........................144,500
I E E I T T O D A Y I 3 bdrm ., IV*
bath home, app lian ces ,
assumable mtg., eat-ln kitch­
en, heat A air, and Much
Morel.1.................
144,100

\*

O S T R E N A R E A - Handymen’s
Special. 14,000 down and no
qualifying. Mobile home on 7
acres. 133.000. Cstl: E O O A R ’I
A R E Y N O L D S R E A L T Y INC.
tor details........... *12-4441..........

149— Commercial
Property/Sale
A P P R A IS A L S A N D S A LES
BOB M . B A L L , JR . P .A ..C .I.M .
R E A L T O R ........................323-4111

Florlda-Vlrglnli...M aryland

153— AcreageLots/Sale
O C A L A N A T IO N A L F O R E S T High and dry wooded lots.
Mobile home, cabin, camping
O . K . - H u n t i n g and fishing.
15,450 w/ 1150 dn., 143.71
monthly...... (*04) 234 457* days
or................ (*04)422 2431 eves.

G E N E V A , 10 acres, can be sold
as 2 live acre parcels, near
Lake Harney, 142,000, Cell
Linde M o rg e n , Realtor/
Associate
W A T E R F R O N T I 1 + - acres, on
Lake Little, owner financing,
535 000. Cell T e rry Llvle. Realtor/Assoclate
OREAT INVESTMENT OP­
P O R T U N IT Y ! 4.4 acres toned
tor 15 units per acre. *3*5,000,
Call T e r r y U v le . Realtor/
Associate

A M E R IC A N Te rrie r Pit Bull
puppies. 130*50 ■ week* old.
C e ll:.............331407* tile r 4pm
LH A S A A P SO P U R I, A K C . *
wk*. 1300 female*, M7S males.
Ctll.27S-77l4tve*. A weekends
P E T S I T T E R A B IR D T A M E R 3 y r. exp. handling exotic pets.
Taking a trip? Cell me. I’ll
baby your pel. Impossible
bird? I’ll tame It. Rees, feet,
loving care. Aft. 7.........774 0450

U T I L I T Y T R A I L E R - tx4 heavy
d u ly , d o lly , mag s , ra m p .
C a ll:...............................371 1542

23 1 -C a rs
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
W E F IN A N C E
W A L K IN ................. D R IV E O U T
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L E S
U rtford A v e .4 ITfh S t . 311-4075
C O L T : '41, 4 cyl., auto, a ir.
Extra Clean! Can arrange
llnanclnq........... Call:331-II7D.
D A T S U N 1 I 4 S W - 1*41
Good condition
C a ll:............................... 3720343
F O R D L T D - ' 40, 4 d o o r ,
•xcellonl condition. S3,400.
C a ll:..............311 IS** attar 4:30
P L Y M O U T H A R R O W . '44, 5 tp .,
air, am/fm stereo, S1400 or
best otter. Cal 1311 2*34 attar S

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories
O O O D U S E D M O TO R S
and transmissions
C e ll:...................................321-3254

201— Horses

211— Antiques/
Collectibles

235— Trucks /
Buses /V ans
C H E V Y Custem van,'41, auto,
.-.r , cruise, stereo, murals.
etc. Very clean........... 422-141*
J E E P P IC K U P - '72, 4x4. Runt
good, naodt body wor k.
C a ll:............................... 123 *347

238— Vehicles
Wanted

D E A L E R ! S C O N S tO N M E N TS
fo r a n tiq u e A collecti ble
m lnl-m ell. Special rates lor
first 10 dealer*. Clean store,

322-2420
321-2720

Jjngvw od----^^

213— Auctions

Call toil ftNl-500-323-3720
2545 P A R K A V E ............ U nford
*01 Lk. M e ry B lvd.........Lk, M ery
1 V* A C R E H O M E S IT E , high
end dry, paved road, S2000
down, 1140 month, good water,
O S T E E N ......................323*040

B O B 'S A U C T IO N
E V E R Y M O N D A Y N IG H T
TP M . R E A R O F BOBS U S B D
F U R N IT U R E IMIlliliMI*.341*17-43
W E B U Y H O U S E H O LD S
121-1154.............or............ .131-74*7

BRIDGES AND SON
Auction every Thursday 7 P M .

WE BUY ESTATES!

157-M obile
Homes /Sale

Hw y 44........................... 321 7401

F A M IL Y S PAC E S A V A I L A B L E
Carriage Cove Mobile Home
Perk. Come see utl 11_________
F L E E T W O O D : 1*44, Must be
moved. 14 X 40, 3 bd., central
air, take over pymts. 11*5.11
mo. Call :321-1145.W. .322.3433
L A T E M O D E L - A ir, lurnlshad,
super clean and ready. *500
down, low monthly. Owner
financing to adults. No pets..
240-1723.......... or.......... 14541515

1*3— Waterfront
Property / Sale

215— Boats and
Accessories
B O A T R E P A IR 4 Retlnlshlng,
A ll types of fiberglass repair
A custom painting JOyr exp.
Free est. 371-5444 or 373 4t34
14 F T . R U N A B O U T - ’*4 40 H P
m otor, galv. tra iler, spare
wheel A prop. Vinyl top A side
curtains. 4*75................ 313 5443
14 F T . H O B I C A T .- w/traller.
Excel, cond. *2,500. 321 3110
ex. 227..... or..... 131-0743 after 5
' l l B O W R IO E R IU C C E S S . Incl.
'45 trailer. Its M ar. cruiser.
Exc. cond.............111-15*3 alt. 4

S A N F O R O : Lakefront lot In the
city limits. Sewer a water,
build to suit. Fish, ski, swim.
Call N o w l...................... 321-32*7

i l l — Appliances
/ Furniture
SOX SFRINOS A N D M A T­
T R E S S . Queen ilia .
Phone:........................... 37I-7447
L A R R Y ' S M A R T . 215 Sanford
Ave. New/Used turn. &amp; appl.
Buy/Sell/Trede. 377-4132.
Q U E E N Waterbed w/heeter A
choice ol waveless or reg.
mattress, sheets A comforter,
MOO. Wood Desk. S50....32I-4042

217— Garage Sales
M O V IN O S A L E - Appliance*
Washer/dryer, T .V ., stereo,
end small appls. Furnituredining, living, bdrm . Ceram ­
ics, glassware, tricycle, bicy­
cle A other. 3004 Grandview
Ave. N . I l l 1454 attar 5pm.
A L L P A Y S A T . A SUN .

W E P A Y T O P M tor wrecked
cars/trucks. We U l l guaran­
teed used peris. A A A U T O
S A L V A O E ef DeBery..**M**1

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
K A W A S A K I 154 O F Z : '11,
m ills , excellent condition,
helmets, SHOO/offer... .122-4477

241— Recreational
Vehidos / Campers
K R O W N H A R D T O P Pep Up
cam per;'??, sleeps 7. 1'xlO’
add a room, 2 awnings, level
leeks, many m ore extras.
Absolutely like new . Call
221-0131, seeet 111 Bedford Ct.
P A R K M O D E L T R A I L E R with
Florida room. 14,400. Located

BUY HERE
PAY HERE
low
DOWN I’/IYMI Nil
(,HUD 1 wi j) 1 (•;,)

1 hi 'i

l

N O I l(| |)| I
NO I N I ! 10 M

219— Wanted to Buy
SIS Alum inum Cant..Newspaper
N en-Ferrevt Metals eatssate**(Mat*
K O K O M O ....................... ..331-11*4
J U N K A W R E C K E D CARSRunning or no), top prices
paid. Free pick up. 121-2254

IISI [) I AH'

t. 'I'l S MW 1
SANf (IRI)

I / &lt;l.'

l.’ 1 ’ I *|

T o List Y o u r B usiness...
D ia l 3 2 2 -2 6 1 1 o l 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3
Accounting &amp;
Te x Service
H U BER T PEARCE
Exp. I neeme Te x U rv lc e

l2M04ttoregjd^_

Additions A
Remodeling
R .E . L IN K C O N S T.
Remodeling...............305-332-701*
Financing........... Llc.fCRC00047l

Blinds A Drapes
D R AFES/TO P T R E A TM E N TS
DUST RUFFLES/PILLOW
SHAM S B Y D IA N E ..... 373 11*4

Bookkeeping

Cleaning Service

Landscaping

Paper Hanging

A F F O R D A B L E A th oro ug h
home cleaning lor S40.00. Reteronco* available. 4*4-4720
H O U S E C L E A N 1 N O - Fait,
thoro ug h, and re lia b le .
C e ll:............................... 333-7542

B O O U E S I E xp l Professional I
Lawn A Garden Maint A chain
saw w o rk , m u lc h , Spring
cl em up! Free B ill 133 *317
K I N O A E B B S Landscaping A
Lawn care. Clean up *34 A up.
Hauling, cutting, trim m ing.
C e ll:............................... 3*5 4443
S E M IN O L E LA N D S C A P IN G

P A P E R H A N O IN O A F A I N T ­
IN G (In te rio r ■ Exterior).
Res. A com m . 35 years exp.
Free Estimates. Cell: Roy
To y lor at....................... J2I -4W3

322-1133

R E -R O O F your home now In
time lor spring rains. 34%
discount lor a limited time
State Lie. fCOCC 0JJ710CC
C a ll..................................331 3555

S P R IN O C L E A N IN O
Res - Com m . •New Const.
For that special touch.
&lt;_ F R E £ E S T ;i;i;;i;is ^ ^

Handy Man
H A N D Y M A N Repairs
Nothing too smell.
C e M R e lg lw ™ ™ ^ ^

Health A Beauty
M E R E A ^ IJ ^ n d e p r id J n r D ir
trlbutor. Call me tor products.

B O O K K E E P IN O A Secretarial
Services el reasonable rates.
Devs. 321-3405. Eves.. *44 471*

Call tail fr« 1-500-323-3720

A L L T Y P E S O l Car pent r y .
Remodeling A home repairs.
Cell Richard Gross 111-5*73.

C O M P LETE HOM E REPAIR
Door........window........ cabinets
Cell Russell at 774 *54*__________
SUN D E C K S A porches. All
phase* ol building, rooting A
remodel Ing.........321-0245 eves

R IC H A R D S C A R P E N T R Y
14 yrs In Central Florida
C e ll..................................... 3215717

Landclearing

W A T E R F R O N T . Executive
home on lake with dock. Lake
M ary, 1 bedrooms, 2V* baths,
w/tunken tub In master, pool,
hoi tub, a/c, fpl., cathedral
callings, 2 car garage, lull
porch, kitchen with all appli­
ances, rec. room, living room,
dining room, utility room,
possible 4th bdrm .. Specially
priced C a ll................. 112 1234

199— Pets A Supplies

M E L R O S E Diamond
ring sat, Ilka naw. Paid t il* ,
will tall M00 or best offer.
Ca 1....... .377 7064 i» K fer C ’ndv
P O O L ? lilt, A B O V E O R O U N O
In good condition. *500
C a ll............. &gt;31-0771 alter 5PM

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720
1545 P A R K A V E .............. U n fo rd
*01 Lfc. M ery Blvd.........Lk. M ery

M A S O N R Y Cut-Off U w
for sale..................................... *300
C a ll.................................... 331-4742

Q I.A R T E R H O R S E S AQ HA .
Bey M ere, Pe lam Ino Mara.
Both beauttes/pieesure
horses. Also, 1 Bay Colt. All
prlcad to sell................371 4416

• O E N E V A O S C E O L A RD.e
Z O N E D F O E M O B IL E S !
I Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
24% Down. 11 Yr*, at 12%!
From *11,5441

R A V E N N A P A R K I 4 bdrm ., 2
bath home In Idyllwllde school
district, fenced yard, central
H/A, spilt br plan, greet for
kl«f*................................... *5*,*00

CALL ANY TIME

195— Machinery/Tools

Brown R iver Reck Patio Stones
Grease Traps Sand Dry Wall*
Ready M ix Concrete
M ire d * Cewccote Ce.
313-5751.....,-........ JO* E lm Ave.

AN D L E T AN EX P ER T D O T H E JO B

S U N L A N O E S T A T R S I 3 bdrm , 1
bath home, den, Florida room,
new kitchen, wor kshop ,
sprin kler system , satellite
dish optional, more right In.
.......................................... 153,*00

I D E A L F A M IL Y L IV IN O I 1
bdrm , 2 bath home, central
H/A, pool, fam ily room, lots ol
closet space, I year home
w arranty and much morel
...........................................141,100

CU STO M O A R D E N T IL L IN O
Th e Troy-Blit* way. F re t ast.
Satlfaction guaranteed.
Gardens, (lower beds, lawns.
122-1337 aft, 4....or.... weekends

223— Miscellaneous

C O N S U LT OUR

S T. JO H N S V IL L A O E I 4 bdrm ,
I both home, freshly painted
Inside and out, new carpet A
ro ot, lanced y a rd , utility
room, central H /A ......... S4f,000

L A K E M A R Y - 4 bdrm . Fam ily
F u n t O n q u ltt residential
street A shady larga lot. Ing rou nd pool wi th p riv a c y
fenc#................................ t i l . 500

113— Television /
Radio/Stereo

193— Lawn A Garden

144 A C R E S • O S T E E N , 5 acre
parcels, agriculture, owner fi­
nancing . *77,500 ■S3*.500, Call
Red Morgen,
Broker/Selesman

4 Y E A R S N E W I 4 bdrm .. 2 bath
energy efficient home, solar
water heeler A panels on root,
central H/A, near schools A
Shopping!........................ S4f,000

L O T S O F C H A R M I 3 bdrm , 1
bath home, central H/A, eat-ln
kitchen, I year home w ar­
r a n t y . In gr aat location!
........................................... 143.500

3224671

(TALKING HOUSE)

R E A L T O R ♦44IMIHM4SSHHH 321-4*11

I D Y L L W I L D E - 4/2, f a m i l y
home on e x tra la rga lot.
Mature traes and landscaping.
Executive area, good schools.
Prlcad at appraisal........110,000

O L D S A N F O R O - Charming and
H isto ric 2 story home.
Hardwood floors, stein glass
windows. Architect’s home.
Quality and space..........*17,000

STEMPER

.W E HA'

A S S U M E A N D M O V E IN I Very
new 3 br., 2 be. home, llvI n g / d l n l n g ro o m c o m b o ,
central H/A, equipped kit.,
poss. lease purchase..... 140,000

S A N F O R O - 3/2 With Hot Tub!
Large eat-ln kitchen and fam i­
ly room with french doors to
screened porch, 2 car garage.
Excellent location on large lot.
Priced at.........................tat,000

Ml A 1 l OWS

1.1 A C R E IN G E N E V A ....*72,000

D E L T O N A - Lovely home priced
right. 2 bdrm ., 2 bath. You
don’t even need a car hare.
Walk to bank. Poet Office,
r e s t au ra nt , and g r o c a r y
Store.................................SSI,500
E E A W IL L IA M S O N ....113-4742

IA N O R A S O U T H - 3/2, Im m acu­
late. Tastefully decorated.
High balance F H A mortgage.
Owners motivated........445,100

L O N O W O O D i Lako M a ry
schools. 3 bdrm ., IV* bath plus
mora. Assumable F H A
S5*,T00/otfer..................774-1015

fcU ILD IN G LO TS ...F ro m *4,000

OW N Y O U R O W N T A R A I
This historic specious home can
be turned Into your own pal­
ace. Owner It verjnmotlvated
H/eee
producing apartm e nt. Call
M a r y B u rk h a rt, Raal
tor/Assoclata

O R O V E V IE W - Lovely 4/2 with
great aat-ln kltchan, family
room . Low down paym ent
putt you In this homo. Priced
at.......................................171,500

Professionally Managad By U.S. Shelter Corp-

141— Homes Fo r Sale

767-0606

B Y O W N E R , spacious home,
2/2, living room, dining room,
kitchen, porch A carport on
large shady lot. 123-1031,3-7.
C O U N T Y 3 rental units ell lor
...........................................1J3,*00

Villi H\ I 0
rn in n #
bui 1 Min

REALTORS
Sanford's Sato ludfr

D E L T O N A - Closo to Osteen
school A 1-4. 1 bdrm ., 2 both,
screen porch. Assumable m tg,
Owner/Reeltor.............1131072

LO T TO B E TH A N K F U L
F O R I You can build to suit
your fam ily, life style and
fulfill your dre a m t, A
lakefront lot In prestigious
La k e M a rk h a m Estates.
Country charm with city con­
venience on this .37 acre lot.
Cell to tee your dream comn
true at 12*.*00. Sandy Mandla,
Broker/Selesman

J

t*S* Hw y. 17-*]
in s e e e

A L L -IN -O N E Stereo 1100. ALSO,
E le c tric Bass G u ita r with
am p. S50. C e ll:..............34*5144

REALTY, INC.

, .Attwood
( ^ 7 lim u p .

A

ALTERNATIVE T.V. A APPL.

STENSTR0M

H ID D E N L A K E I 3 bd., 1 bath
split plan, larga private lawn,
g a ra g e . P riced to te ll at
li e ,*00................ Call Anytim e I
Alan B. Johnson, Re/Max
Unlimited, 323-41*3 or 240-2000

«2M V IA B E L L A

B Y O W N I R - Osteen. ■ + /•
acres. M aytow n Rd. area.
127.500. C e ll:..................323*147

f

4

Wednesday, March 4 , 1H7— SB

i l l — Appliances
/ Furniture

.

S A N F O R D : 2 bdrm ., 2 bath,
luxury condo*. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer, tec. *425 Mo.
Landereme Fla., Inc. 122-1714

I

i

153— Acreage*
Lots/Sale

411

121— Condominium
Rentals

ii \ i i

&lt;~4

Sanford HeraM, Batrterd, Ft,

i-; a

1 A N F O R D , 2 bdrm ., I be.,
Adults only, no pets, Cell
322 *21*.......... or...........574-4*27

141— Homes Fo r Sale

i

OWNRR F IN A N C IN G U .» !
w ooded acr es, 174 It. on
highway 44.
Wallace Cress Realty, Inc.
_____
311-4577

107-M obile
Homes / Rent

373-4507
E FF IC IE N C IE S - I A 3
bedroom s. C e ll: Southern
Rental* after 4 p m ...... 377 1441

(

105— Duplex*
Triplex / Rent

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
B A M B O O C O V E A P TS .
Move In before M arch 15th A
receive 1100 off M ay's rent. 1
bdrm . or efficiency available
tor Immediate occupancy.
NO E . Alrpert B l.............. 313-4411

1 1 t

by Larry Wright

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Furn* Apts, ter Senior Clllien*
311 Palmetto Ave.
J . Cowan. No Phono Calls

1 1 1

Carpentry

Carpet/Floor
Coverings
F L O O R IN O - All types. Wood
install, sand, raflnlth, stain,
wax. Tlla, terracotta, te rro r
10, llnollum, etc. Clean, polish,
seal. wax. Llc/Bond 7*7 130*

Home Improvement

B A C K H O E , Dum p truck. Bush
hog, Box blading, and Discing
Cal 1:3771*0*
o r...... 322*111
BUSH HOO, Box Blading. Ol*
clng A Tractor Roto-TIIIIng
C all..................................322 15*7
THORNE LANDCLEARINO
Loader and truck work/septlc
tank sand Free est 223 1*13

Lawn Service

Roofing

^TARaiEr^SndscepJng^
trrlg., Lawn Cere, Re* A
C o m m ,371-7444, F R E E E S T I
O E O R O E 'I LA W N C A R E
Reasonable prices
Call new to reserve service
Free est........................... 373 7541
" S U N N Y S ". Mow. edge, trim ,
planting, mulching. S P R IN G
Spec. Fraaast..............322 712*

Masonry
Concrete Slabs, drives, patios A
walks, 25 y r. exp. Lifelong
res.. Lie. A Ins. 34**754all. 5

Nursing Care

^HUheveMfeelMsear^enter™
*50Mellonville Ave.
U n lo r d ..............................333 45*4
O U R R A T E S A R E LO W E R
Lakevlew Nursing Center
f I* E. Second SI., U n fo rd
113*7*7

Secretarial Service
Custom Typ in g- BeekfceeplngNofery Public. Call: D .J. E n­
ter pri*at. (141) }31-7t*2.

Sewer/Septic Tank
H O W A R D 'S S E P T IC S E R V IC E
Repair Lines A Clean Tanks
Free Estimates............ 313 035*

Tre e Service
A LL T R E E S ER V IC E +
Fi r ewood W oodsplltler lor
hire Cell Aflor 4 P .M 323 *0*4
ECHOLSTREESERVICE
Free Estimate*! Lew Prices I
U c...Ins...Stum p G rindln«,Tael
311 222* day er nlle
" L e i the Pretasstonats d r rt",
STUMP GRINDING
Insured
..Free Estimates
Call ....................... ............774 7500

4

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BLONDIE

4B— Sanford Horald, Sanford, FI.

WWAT*» THH
CATCH O P &lt;
TMBOAV? J

by Chle Young

Wodnoadsy, March 4, m y

I

by Mori Walter

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THE BORN LOSER

by Art

T W 4 J U E A L W A 6 A D 1 0 6 T E * :!

THAT WONT (55 FD56IBLS.

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I D E M A N D T D 3 E E •»—

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(

W M A N A ^L/

by Bob Montana
' a r c h ie ... I j u s t
NOTICED you DIDN'T
, SHAVE TO D A Y/

SO MUCH FOR THREE 3
WEEKS' WORTH OF
TOMORROW

EEK A MEEK

by Howto SehnoMor

«eyMtac...«jHAr5

TfW(u&amp;ioa?AM5anux,
(SOATOJJVJ6AJATOJ,
iaxuwe$s aud prwhcv
imto aoe pasmswt CASV

H A r t U X IO S ?

Stroke Patients
Can Be Helped
DEAR DR. QOTT —Two years
ago my husband had a stroke
during carotid artery surgery. He
was left without the use of his
right arm and has damage to his
right leg and ability to speak.
We’ve heard of a spray that is
applied to the affected limb,
which is then manipulated to
improve the range of motion. My
husband’s doctor and physical
therapist have never heard of It.
Have you?
DEAR READER — No. I
haven’t. Once a stroke has
occurred, parts of the brain die
and cannot be revived. Treat­
ment is directed toward two
goals: (1) training other nerves
and muscles to take over the
work of the damaged tissue, and
(2) r eha bi l i t at i on t hr ough
range-of-motlon exercises and
physical therapy.
Unfortunately, strokes can
occur during (and after) surgery
on either carotid artery, each of
which supplies a primary source
of circulation to the brain. Al­
though strokes are a catastrophe
for people who have them,
patlenta can be helped by a
well-planned program of physl*
cal/speech/occupatlonal therapy.
DEAR DR. QOTT - Three
years ago (I’m 30) my doctor told
me I had a heart murmur and
m itral valve prolapse. Why
would these show up all of a
sudden? Are they progressive?
DEAR READER — Mitral pro­
lapse is common In p o st­
adolescence, particularly among
women. When prolapse occurs,
one of the two portions of the
mitral valve becomes loose and
allows a Jet of blood to be
squirted backwards through the
valve. Ordinarily, this la not
dangerous. It can occur sud­
denly and cause a heart murmur
or click (an extra sound between
the two heart tones).
People with mitral valve pro­
lapse can lead ordinary lives; the
condition docs not lead to heart
disease. Nevertheless, such pa­
tients should be checked period­
ically by a doctor and should be
given antibiotic coverage for
dental work or other teats, like
colonoscopy, that can release
bacteria into the bloodstream.
DEAR DR. QOTT — Three
times in the last eight months,

G off

when I’ve sneezed, I’ve leaked a
little urine. I’m a young woman
and this condition is very em­
barrassing. Is there anything I
can do?
.
DEAR READER — Sneezing
raises the pressure in the ab­
domen. As a result of this
sudden increase in pressure, gas
can be expelled from the rectum
or urine from the bladder. This
reaction Is common In healthy
ACR088
1 A gushing out
• Tobacco chsw
13 Truths
14 tkstoton part
16 Small intot
16 Author Philip

women.
In women who have had
babies, occasional urine leakage
Is more pronounced because!
pregnancy and age tend to
weaken bladder control. Check
with a gynecologist. He or she!
will be able to instruct you in
exercises that will improve your
control over urine flow.

7 Baaaball avsnta
8
________degros
S Wharf
10 Funs ganua
11 Cross
inscription
12 Time periods
20 Common level
21 First Hebrew

17 Ethofoal
11 Scrap
Tu ba
IS Ensign (abbr.)
20 Andont vasa
21 Juioo drink
22 Old Dominion
(•bbr.)
23 Throws
26 Sound barrier
31 Phraoo of under,
standing (2
wda.)
32 Nsgathrs word
33 Idol
Gne-billlonth
34 Untidy pile
(pref.)
38 Yeers (Fr.)
38 Bring out Into
36 Tennis piayar
the open
•___ Lendl
37 Waifs
3 9 _____ Ssiasai#
40 Jovian satailtta
41 Zara
42 Much largsr
46 Nagativas
47 Ship-shaped
clock
50 Egyptian daity
51 Towel word
62 Silkworm
63 Foroe

Answer to Previous Punt#

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39 Shows
disapproval
41 Scandinavian
42 Skin
43 Information
agency (abbr.)
44 8nares for
gams

□□□
46 This (8p.)
46 Coma close
47 Necessity

6 4 Lags! right

86 Bsing
87 Chairs mestirv

DOW N
1 Architect

2 Impartial
3 College group
4 Note of Guido's
seals
6 Fragment*

6 ________
01*4

WIN A T BRIDGE
by Hugroavot A Bailors

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
WHY
NOT?

m

m

O P P O R T U N IT Y

K N O O W 5 OfslUY

fa

by Wamar Brothara
THE MENU

By JamOs Jacoby
What do you do when you
have 10 cards in the trump suit
between your hand and the
dummy, and you are missing
the king? The answer depends
upon where you are playing — if
you are in a vacuum, the right
percentage play ia to take the
finesse; if you are at the bridge
table, you may have very good
reasons for knowing the finesse
is not going to work.
West takes the king and ace of
spades and switches to the king
of diamonds. After you win the
ace, what next? West likely has
either the heart king or the club
king. If he has both, you can win
the heart finesse. If East has
both kings, .you can win the club
finesse. But there is an obvious
danger when these kings are

divided — "West may have the
club and East the heart. In any
event, you are going to have to
take the club finesse, so do It
right away. West wins the club
king and. tries to cash the
diamond queen, but you trump. WEST
EAST
♦ A K 8 8 S
Now where is the king of hearts?
♦ J1042
YK
When you bid three hearts, was
Q 10
♦ 984J
would West have bid only three ♦♦ K
K 10 3
♦ •878
spades holding A-K of spades,
K-Q of diamonds, the club king
SOUTH
♦Q8
and also the heart king? Not
Y Q J 10854 2
likely. Turn to the other oppo­
♦J
nent. After his partner’s opening
♦ AQJ
bid. did East raise to two spades
Vulnerable: North-South
with the spade Jack and nothing
Dealer We«t
more? Once again, not likely.
Maybe both adversaries violated Wnt
North Eoit
Sooth
sound bidding principles, but 1 ♦
Post
24
IY
4V
Pus
Pom
probably not. At this bridge table 1 4
you Bhould drop the singleton Pan
Opening lead: ♦ K
king of hearts In East's hand.

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

FRANKANDERNEST
GENETICS

by Bob Thavaa

YOU* BIRTHDAY
MARCHS. 1987
In the year ahead you will find
it s
A
cp ass g e v nseveral
e e n new waya to generate
RESEARCH LAB
additional Income. You'll be
VA A g LQ o P H O U N P A N P
lucky In areas where fortune
hasn't smiled upon you before.
A P IP A N H A . T H t
MBCBB (Feb. 20-March 20)
Conditions
will start taking a
ftESEAflCH m s FUHPEP favorable turn
pertaining to a
financial matter aobut which
B Y I T H E I .R .A
you've been susceptible. In fact,
your worries might even end
••
T h a v b 5 P*Atoday. Know where to look for
romance and you'll And It. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker set
Instantly reveals which signs are
tv a j n t n u K ti w o w i u u a
romantically perfect for you.
Mall $2 to Matchmaker, do this
newspaper. P.O. Box 01428,
^
_
ANV CHARM
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
AMUR (March 21-April 10)
Good news is on its way per­
taining to something which is of
tremendous importance to you.
Check the mall and leave word
where you can be reached.
JfaflWffr

. TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Those who love you will treat
you In a generous fashion today.
In fact, you might even be
pleasantly surprised by a person
you thought didn’t give a hoot.
OBMUVI (May 21-June 20)
Nice things could happen for you
t oday If you get out and
circulate. The chances for a
positive outcome will be In­
creased with each Involvement.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The harder you try today, the
luckier you will get. Don’t be
afraid to strive for objectives that
tax all of your capabilities.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
will have a broad grasp of
situations today both socially
and commercially. Put into
practice your concepts for han­
dling matters.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Something profitable can be
developed today for generating
Income outside of your usual
channels. You may be able to tap
Into a lucrative vein.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
You'll be in your element today

where partnership arrangements
are concerned. No one knows
how to make them work as
effectively as you do.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
An old project will soon be
re s u rre c te d and made
meaningful. You'll work on it
with a dab of ingenuity here; a
touch of elbowjgrease there.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Social acceptance Is not
likely to be a problem for you
today. Wherever you go your
personality will be like an ap­
pealing m agnet th at draws
others to you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
10) Conditions which have an
effect upon your occupation are
lucky for you today. You're apt
to reap benefits from situations
where others come up emptyhanded.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
This Is a good day to plan
something fun to square ofTyour
social obligations. After you
have your concept, start calling
and invite those who are avail­
able.

I

/WJM0KBSJSB FROMam

eMotismALnMf

vKTwWur

3

* + * -*■

i

�FOOD
Sanford Horald — Wednesdoy, March 4 , 1M7

HaraM Atfvortlaar — Thursday, March 5 , 1N7

Sanford,

FI.—1C

Tropical Temptress
Coconut Flavors Variety Of Enticing Dishes

Potpourri

Reel In Low-Cost
Taste And Nutrition
MUd-flavorcd fish fillets lend
themselves to a variety of dishes
featuring such vegetables as
spinach, tom atoes or corn.
Spinach-stuffed fish rolls help
stretch a pound of fillets to serve
four. The fish dish Is also low In
cholesterol. A con queso casse­
role is a quick one-dish meal,
again with an eye to lower
cholesterol, and it may be lower
In sodium if no-salt added
canned foods are used. Also
select a lower salt, lower
cholesterol Cheddar cheese for
those on special diets. It's still a
tasty fish meal.
SPINACH-STUFFED
FISH ROLLS
1 package (10 ounces) frozen
chopped spi nach, thawed,
squeezed dry
14 cup grat ed Pa r mes an
cheese
4 tablespoons grated onion
14 teaspoon Tabasco pepper
sauce
4 fish fillets, tt pound each
2 tablespoons butter or marga­
rine
1 clove garlic, minced
Paprika
In s ma l l bowl, c ombi ne
spinach/ Parmesan cheese, on­
ion and pepper saucei mix well.
Wash fillets: pat dry. Divide
spinach mixture Into four por­
tions; place one portion across
each fish fillet. Starting with
short end. roll fillet around
filling.
In small saucepan, melt but­
ter; remove from heat, stir In
garlic. Brush each fish roll with
garlic butter: place in ungreased
shallow baking pan; sprinkle
liberally with paprika. Bake In a
350-degree oven for 20 minutes,
or until fish flakes easily when
tested with a fork. Serve over
brown rice. If desired. This
kitchen-tested recipe makes 4
servings.
FISH CON QUESO
1 can (1 pound) stewed
tomatoes, undrained
1 can (1 pound) kernel com.
drained
2 cups shredded Cheddar
cheese, divided
2/3 cup packaged, pre-cooked
rice
1 pound fish, cut in chunks *
Vi teaspoon Tabasco pepper
sauce
In a 2-quart casserole dish,
combine stewed tomatoes, com,
1V4 cups cheese, rice, fish and
pepper sauce; mix well. Bake In
a 3 50-degree oven for 20

minutes. Stir; sprinkle with
remaining V» cup cheese. Bake
10 minutes longer. This kitch­
e n - t e s t e d reci pe ma k e s 6
servings.
Note: Use fresh or frozen cod,
flounder, sole or blueflsh.
FORK ROAST GUMBO
1 3-pound pork shoulder picnic
or Boston butt roast
3 Vi quarts water
1 Tbsp dried onion flakes
2 tap Cajun seasoning mix (or
salt and black pepper)
3 Tbsp bacon drippings
4 Tbsp flour
1 Vi cups chopped onion
Vt stick butter or margarine
3 cups cut okra
1 tsp minced garlic
1 tsp Tabasco pepper sauce
1 tsp brown sugar
,
2 bay leaves
14 pound diced ham, optional
File (ground sassafras leaves) for
serving
Boll the Inexpensive cut of
pork roast In the water seasoned
with onion flakes and either 1
teaspoon of Cajun seasoning or
salt and black pepper until
tender, about 114 hours.
Remove the meat to a chop­
ping board and when cool
enough to handle, cut meat from
the bone In very small pieces.
Put the m eat back in the
seasoned stock.
Make a roux in a separate Iron
pot with bacon drippings and
flour, stirring over medium heat
until cocoa brown. Stir In the
chopped onions and cook for 3
minutes. Add to the stock.
In the same roux skillet, cook
the okra In melted butter about
10 minutes. Add the okra along
with all remaining Ingredients to
the stock and cook for another
hour. Remove the bay leaves
and serve over rice. Sprinkle
with file if desired. Serves 12-15.
STRAWBERRY NOG
1 cup skim milk
V4cup sliced strawberries
1 egg
1 tablespoon sugar
V4 teaspoon pure vanilla
extract
In the container of an electric
blender place milk, strawberries,
egg. sugar and vanilla extract.
Cover and whirl until strawber­
ries are pureed. Pour into a tall
glass. Sprinkle with nutmeg, If
desired. This kitchen-tested rec­
ipe makes 1 portion, about 1V4
pups: 340 mg calcium per por­
tion.

From the myriad lands of the
Indian and South Pacific Oceans
clear across the world to the
Atlantic and the Caribbean, the
noble coconut palm is the uni­
versal and graceful symbol of the
beauty of the tropics.
But the coconut palm is more
than Just another pretty tree. It
not only provides shelter and
shade, it's a bountiful source of
food and drink everywhere In
the tropics. Especially in Its
fresh state.
When the coconut Is very
young, its flesh is very tender,
like Jelly, and its taste has an
unusual fruitiness. You can eat it
with a spoon. As it matures the
flesh becomes firm but still
moist. In addition to cutting it
Into chunks for eating out-of­
hand. it’s shredded for use In an
endless variety of cniiclng dis­
hes.
In the tropics, every part of the
coconut Is used: tree trunk,
bark, fronds, leaves, husks,
meat, liquid. If you travel
through these countries,
armchair or otherwise, you’ll
discover a whole new world of*
culinary delights based on the
coconut.
Dishes range across the
stretch of the imagination, from
hors d'oeurve through dessert:
from the Pacific, pates and
salads, dressed with coconut
milk ... also fritter-like shrimp
and coconut delectables ... from
Col ombi a , c o c o n u t s o u p ,
flavored with fresh red chill and
chicken broth ... from ^he
Bahamas, creamed coconut and
vegetable soups ... from India,
curries, thalis (platter meals of
several vegetable preparations),
and chutneys ... from Thailand,
chicken and coconut milk soup
flavored with lemon grass ...
and, from every spot around the
world, an unbelievable cor­
nucopia of desserts: soothing
custards and ices ... toothsome
coconut and fruit (or yam) pud­
dings and pies. All this — and a
kaleidoscope of Irresistible coco­
nut-accented thirst quenchers,
too. •
—
Now. tf there** one place where
coconut reigns supreme in cook­
ery. it’s the island country of
Indonesia.
One of Indonesia’s classic reci­
pes to be served by Itself or part
of a special Rijst tafel. Is chicken
perfumed with tropical spices
and generously napped with
seasoned coconut milk. It's a
very special introduction to the
captivating taste of the islands,
as is the luscious Fresh Coconut
Ice Milk, which follows.
INDONESIAN CHICKEN
1 medium-size fresh coconut
3 cloves garlic, finely minced
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon ground cumin
teaspoon ground pepper
2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon
vegetable oil, divided
2 whole chicken breasts,
boned, skinned, split in half
(about 114 pounds)
.
2 teaspoons soy sauce
2 teaspoons freshly squeezed
lemon Juice
2 teaspoons brown sugar
1V4teaspoons cornstarch
1 tablespoon water
2 tablespoons chopped fresh
parsley
To prepare coconut, pierce the
three dark round spots with an

&amp;

m
•V; m
-r

'• i

•z

J •'

Fr#«h Coconut Ico Milk It a rofroshlng, dolldous moal final#.
ice pick; drain liquid into bowl;
reserve. Heat the coocnut In a
preheated 350°F. oven 15
minutes. Remove from oven; tap
all over with a hammer, and pull
away shell as it cracks. Peel
away brown skin. Shred or grate
coconut In a blender or food
processor. If using food pro­
cessor. shred first then use
chopping blade for finer texture.
Set aside 14 cup chopped coco­
nut. To make coconut milk,
strain reserved liquid from coco­
nut through a very fine sieve, tea
towel or cheesecloth into a 2-cup
measure. Add enough warm
water to make 2 cups. Return
half the remaining shredded
coconut and 1 cup coconut
liquid to processor. Process 30
seconds. Pour mixture through a
sieve or cloth squeezing out as
much liquid as possible. Repeat
with remaining coconut and
liquid. (You should have 1Vi
cups of coconut milk.) Discard
coconut. Combine garlic, cor­
iander. cumin, pepper and 1
teaspoon oil; rub on chicken.

Refrigerate 1 hour. In large
skillet heat remaining 2 tables­
poons oil; saute chicken 3
minutes per side. Remove, set
aside. Drain off oil. In same
skillet combine coconut milk,
soy sauce, lemon Juice and
br own s u g a r . S i m m e r 10
minutes, stirring up bits from
bottom of pan. Stir In-reserved 14
cup chopped coconut; bring to
boiling. Combine cornstarch and
water; stir into sklllewt. Cook,
stirring constantly until mixture
bolls and thickens. Return
chicken to skillet: heat through.
Sprinkle with parsley. Serve
over rice, if desired. Makes: 4
servings.
FRESH COCONUT ICE MILK
1 medium-size fresh coconut
2 cups milk
14 cup sugar, divided
2 large egg yolks
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed
llmejulce
To prepare coconut, pierce the
three dark round spots with an
ice pick: drain liquid Into bowl;
reserve. Heat the coconut in a

preheated 350°F. oven 15
minutes. Remove from oven; tap
all over with a hammer, and pull
away shell as it cracks. Peel
away brown skin. Shred or grate
coconut in a blender or food
processor. If using food pro­
cessor, shred first then use
chopping blade for finer texture.
In medium saucepan combine
milk, Vt cup coconut liquid, 114
cups shredded coconut and 14
cup sugar. Stir over medium
heat until sugar dissolves and
bubbles form around edges of
pan. In small mixer bowl, beat
yolks with remaining 14 cup
sugar and lime Juice until thick,
about 5 minutes. Beat half the
hot liquid Into the egg yolks;
return mixture to saucepan.
Cook over low heat, stirring
c o n s t a n t l y , u n t i l mi x t u r e
thickens slightly. Do not boil.
Pour into metal pan; freeze until
slushy (about 1 hour). Pour
mixture Into bowl; beat until
smooth. Cover, return to freezer
until firm (about 3 hours).
Makes: About 1 qiiart

In Good Taste

Freshness Secret
By John DeMsrs
* UPI Food Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) — Everywhere Guido
Bellanca goes, people ask him to taste their
Fettucine Alfredo, perhaps even mixing In
extra-generous portions of enriching cream and
egg»The only trouble, according to Bellanca, is that
neither ingredient is supposed to be there at all.
And he can back up his argument with all the
authority of Alfredo himself — three generations
of Alfredo#, In fact.
As founding president of a U.S. company called
"Alfredo the Original of Rome," Bellanca spends
much of his travel time dodging bad versions of
the dish that made its creator famous beginning
in 1014.
And while he Is the first to admit that any
restaurant — and Indeed any fettucine — can
legally call itself Alfredo, he hopes that diners will
know enough about the real thing to know when
It's set before them.
"Alfredo, after all. is Just a name —Just like Joe
or Sam In America." said Bellanca. who continu­
ally commutes between his pair of official
Alfredo's, one In the Citicorp complex In New
York and the other at EPCOT Center In Orlando,
Fla.
"But there can be only one original, and people
will believe that when they taste our fettucine."
Part of the difference, Bellanca says, is none too

mysterious. The original Alfredo's (including the
one still operated by the De Lello family in Rome)
uses the freshest and most expensive versions of
each essential Ingredient.
This applies to the wonderful homemade
fettucine, cooked In the traditional (firm, not
mushy) manner known as "al dente." It also
applies to the Parmesan cheese, of which only the
finest from Reggio Emilio will do.
Beyond fine Ingredients and careful prepara­
tion, the rest is simplicity Itself, though Bellanca
does work a bit of magic with the pasta water that
supplies the creaminess most often gotten from
heavy cream and eggs.
As for those two ingredients, which seem
mandatory In Fettucine Alfredo's around the
world, Bellanca Insists the -additional fat Is
unnecessary —and they, simply but finally, were
not part of Alfredo's recipe.
Accepting only authenticity is part of what
Bellanca does as an enthusiastic diner — and a
large part of what he does as a restaurant
executive.
"Once in while, one of my sous chefs will say,
'Come on. this is America. What do Americans
know about Italian rood?,'" said Bellanca. "But
you have to Insist on the real thing, not Just some
combination of garlic and oregano."
With executive chef Angelo Ceranlnl (whose
career included stints aboard the transatlantic
liners Leonardo da Vinci and Michaelangelo).

O f Original Fettuci
Bellanca has built his two Alfredo's into a 912
mllllon-pcr-year-enterprlse.
The Citicorp restaurant opened its doors in May
1978, with the Orlando outlet following In 1982.
According to Walt Disney executives, Alfredo's is
by far the most popular restaurant In EPCOT’s
World Showcase.
FETTUCINE ALFREDO
1 pound homemade fettucine (see recipe below)
Boiling salted water
1 cup butter or margarine, softened
1/3 to 4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
Freshly cracked black pepper
Additional grated Parmesan cheese
Drop the fettucine In boiling salted water and
cook until it rises to the surface, about 2 minutes.
Quickly drain, place In a warm bowl in which half
the softened butter has already been placed. Top
with remaining butter and the measured
Parmesan cheese.
,
Toss lightly using a fork and a spoon, about 2
minutes, until the fettucine is well coated and a
creamy sauce has formed. A small amount of the
hot salted water from the pasta can be added to
the mixture to help achieve the desired con­
sistency.,
Serve on a warm plate and sprinkle with freshly
cracked black pepper and additional grated
cheese. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
HOMEMADE FETTUCINE
1 cup semolina flour

1 cup all-purpose unbleached flour
2 eggs
1 Tbsp olive oil
Pinch of salt .
Combine the flours in a large ceramic bowl and
mix well. Make a well in the center of the flour
and put In the eggs, oil and salt. Using a fork,
beat the whites of the eggs, then the yolks and
other ingredients, into the flour. Work up to the
rim and thoroughly Incorporate the wet ingre­
dients with the dry.
If the mixture Is too dry, add a few drops of
water. When combined, moisten hands with
additional olive oil and work the dough, kneading
and folding about 10 minutes, until almost
smooth and pliable.
Keep on kneading 5 minutes longer, until
dough Is as smooth as you can make it. Because
of the toughness of the semolina, kneading will be
difficult, but keep going.
Keep hands moistened with oil during the
kneading process to help stretch the dough and
make it pliable. Form into a ball, cover and let
stand for 10 minutes to rest.
Process through a pasta machine according to
the manufacturer's directions, using the widest
setting for the first rolling, the middle setting for
the second rolling and the next-to-smallcst setting
for the final rolling.
Process through a fettucine cutter. Cover with a
cloth away from any draft until ready to use.

�r
3C— laniard Herald — Wednesday. March 4 , 1W7

Herald Advertiser — Thursday, March » . 1W7

Publix Special Recipe
Buttercruet White or

Wheat Bread .... 2 ioavtB9!*®
8.8-oz. Boxes, Aseptic Pack,
Assorted Flavors

Hi-C Drinks........... p*i.‘ 79®
Assorted Varieties, Traditional
or Gardenstyle, Ragu

Spaghetti Sauce... ;.° »179
Publix Reg. or Thin

Spaghetti........
100% Pure Corn Oil

M azola.............

48-oz,
hot.

Del Monte

Catsup.............

Assorted Varieties of Sealtest

Ice Cream ............. S3! *2*°

(Lim it 1 Please, w ith O th e r P u rch a se s of
$ 7 .5 0 o r M ore, E x c lu d in g All T o b a c c o Item s)

Sealtest Black Cherry,
Red Raspberry, or Strawberry

Cranberry Blueberry, Cranapple,
or Low Calorie Cranapple

Frozen Y o g u rt

Bonus[Pjrinte

et. #1*9

Ocean
Spray
■__a___

M

48-oz. | j g

Excellent Baked,
Fried or Mashed

Idaho Potatoes
PRODUCE
Limit 1 Psr Coupon

Serve With Cheese Sauce, Sno White Fresh

■"

Cauliflow er ............................... ............

Dixie Crystals Sugar

head

09

Great For Snackt}, Thompson White
or Red Flame

Wb. bag

(Effgcthro March 5- 11, 1087) (C)
(Umlt 1 Par Family Please, With
Othar Purchases of $7.50 or Mora,
Excluding All Tobacco Itama)

Seedless G rapes............ K! 89
For Salads or Sandwiches, Fresh Crisp

Iceberg Lettuce

al a i t i a n eaaaa h#Sd

Made From Concentrate, Publix Brand
“All Florida” , Chilled

Orange J u ic e .................. 5?,!
Florida Sweat, Juicy Soedlesa

White G rapefruit.........5 &amp;

Limit 1 Par Coupon
100% Colombian Automatic
Drip or Rag* Park
*
-

Florida Flavorful, Freeh

M ushroom s...................

16-oz
pkg.

Florida Swaat, Juicy Saodlaaa

s

z

U b . bag
a s

&amp;

Red Grapefruit............. 9 &amp;

i

■

a ! U “-

; Excluding AN Tobacco Items)

Salad Perfect, Florida Medium Size

Tasty Tom atoes ............ s;

®

(EffocSvo March 5*11, ig87)

Assorted Colors, FfS M n co *'' •- • .

c

Tulip Bouquets ititiiiiniitai for

AN Purpose, Unbleached
Self-Rising, or Bread

Seltzer Water, Tonic
Water, Club Soda, or
Assorted Reg. or
Diet Flavors, Publix

Pillsbury
Flour
5-lb. bag

Soft Drinks

THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
THUR., MAR. 5

■
HB

l x K M ? « i i r 7 i 'i

16 to 16.5-oz. Cans,
Whole Kernel or Cream
Style Corn,' Cut or
French Style Green
Beans, or Garden Sweet
Peas, Grade A Fancy

2-liter bot.

Except Slim Line,
Assorted Varieties

Budget
Gourmet
Entrees
10-oz. pkg.

(Umlt 1 Ridas*, With Othor
Rurohasds of $ 7.8 0 or More,
■xoludlng All Tobaooo Itama)
Hungry Jack Rag. or
Buttarmilk Complete

(Bonus Pack), Purina

Dog C h o w ............
Liquid Hsavy Duty Datargant

Wisk...................... *£8?-$3*8
1 Ptoata, with Othar Purchase* of
I7.S0 or Mora. Excluding All Tobacco Itama)
!Limit

Pancake M ix ....

In Watar or Oil,
Star-Kief Chunk Light

Aaaortod Charmln

T u n a ......................2

Bathroom
Tissu e ...............

Frosting................ ^

DANISH BAKERY
Topped with
Freeh Straw­
berries, Heavy
(6-inch slza)

M

Aaaortod Flavors of
Batty Crocksr Raady To Sarva
6.5 to 8.75-oz. Slzet,
Batty Crocksr

Hamburger or
Tuna H elper......... V!i
Gallon Slzo, Dow Zip-Loc

Food
Storage B a g s ...... ISf «2“

Bakad Froth
DaNy, Sliced
orUneUced

FROZEN FO OD
10.75 to 12-oz. Slzaa, Salisbury
Steak, Veal Parmlgiana, Chicken
Fricaasoa, Chickan Milan,
Spaghetti W/Baaf, Chicken
W/Wine, or Turkey A Dressing

Arm our
Dinner Classics... Sff *2*®
Gorton’s Fillets or Sticks.

Crunchy Fish ....... VkSz ®2"

Assorted Varieties, Kraft

Greeting

Mailer
plua 8 Color RtprinU
Deep South

Casino
Brand
Cheese
8-oz. pkg.

�Sanford

Herald — Wednesday, March 4 , 1M7

Our Steaks and Roasts.
Pork and Lamb are
Trimmed to not over:

Publix Beef, Gov’t.*
Inspected Boneless

1/4-lnch
Average!

p o to jji

Chuck
Roast

Look for “N llTR h
P A C TS ” brochures and
displays in your Publix
Meat Department.

■ "B e e t

per lb.

M EAT
Fresh
per

Pork Steak.........

lb. $ 1 » 9

Herald Advertiser — Thursday, March 1,1W7

teM erd, FI.— 1C

Publix Beef,
Gov’t.-lnspected Boneless

Shouldsr Steak.... K ®187
Publix Beef,
Gov’t.-lnspected Bonoless

Beef For S t e w ....

Fresh Homogenized

?b#r ® 1 ”

Publix Beef,
Gov’t.-lnspected (Bone-In)

Now York
Strip Steak

Publix Milk
B«Ho n $ 2 0 9

per
lb.

$2«7

(2 % Low Fat, 1% Low Fat or Skim, Gallon
8lza Avallabls with On# 8AH Stamp Pries
kSaver Certificate)

TH IS AD I F F I C T I V I t
THUR., MAR. 5
THRU W ID .,
MAR. 1 1 , 1 9 8 7 . . .

Fresh
per

Pork Spareribs..

lb .

$189

&lt;«

All Varieties of
Swift Premium Brown ’N Serve

DEL

Sausage................ JS *11®

Butterball
Oven-Roasted or Smoked

Eckrich Reg. or
Lean Supreme, Jumbo

Turkey B re a s t.... t

Si\ «18®

Beef Fra n k s.........

Swift Premium Breakfast Strips,
Brown Sugar Cured, Beef, or Reg.
Sizzlean............... V2» T » 1 88
(1.5 to 2-lb. Avg.),
Butterball Honey Cured
par

Turkey H a m ........

lb. $ 2 &gt; »

Bryan Meat or Beef
1 -lb .
pkS.

Jum bo F ra n k s ....

$179

Sliced B o lo gn a ...

Turkey Pastrami... t

69*

Shoulder
Roast

Franklin Hard or Genoa

Salami................... t: 89*
Swift Premium Honey Cured

Ham........................ «• 89*

per lb.

Reg. or Spicy Hot

Fried C h icke n..... ttS* ®4»®

$157

Natural Casing Wieners or

(Pre-Cooked) Bratwurst or

Dinner Bell Dinner Style
Semi-Boneless

Knockw urst........
par

Ham.......................

lb .

$169

(Lower Salt, No Sugar Added),
Olde Smithfield
................. »•

Butterball Turkey Ham or

Smoked
Bratw urst............. ft' ®3°®

Bryan Meat or Beef

S liced B aco n

Publix Beef, G ov’t.*
Inspected Boneless

®1°®

Ksg.

r Young ’n Tender G o v’t.-"
Inspected, Shipped D&amp;D,
Fresh not Frozen,
Premium Grade

Cornish
Hens

C h e e se ....

Large Eggs

828®

Delicious Cheese N Taco or
Pepperonl or Pizza, Salami,
Onion, p.p p jr, or

Swiss ft Caraway
m

Breakfast Club
Florida Grade A White

Regular or Light
V

99°

Coors B e e r
$JL85

12-pk.

oz. Sizes,
Potato Crunchias, Cheaz Curia1,
Cheaz Balls, King Size
Corn Chips, Pretzel Twists,
or Sour Cream/Onion Puffs

12-oz. cans
^
(Limit 2 Please)

Fresh Pork

Boston
Butt
Roast
per lb.

$149

Regular or Light Blue Ribbon

Pabst Beer

P la n t e r

12-oz. cans
(Limit 2, Please)
Orange, Lake, Seminole, Osceola,
Polk, Highlands Co.

Tab, Lipton Tea or Reg. or Diet:
Sprite, Minute Maid Orange or
Lemon Lime, A&amp;W Root Beer
or Assorted Varieties of

Shaasm
'a s *

(Buy t wit. each fWe4 U H
^ F s u m e Prte. Specie Cerunceti

Coke

((C BSBB))

Any Kind of

Chilled Vegetable Juice

HOUSEHOLD

V-8 Ju ic e ............................... 6c4« r ® 1 ® ®

Colgate
Shave C re a m ......." » 70s

10.5 to 11-oz. Sizes,
Assorted Varieties

General Electric Soft White
40, 60, 75, or 100W

For Normal or Oily Hair,
Shampoo With Conditioner

Fresh Chef Soup... ’J? *1“

Light Bulbs...........K M "

Kraft Chunk Style Mild or Medium

General Electric 170W

Cheddar
C heese................... 1P2kS*'®21®

Reading
Light B ulb.............

Kraft Mozzarella or
Mild or Sharp Cheddar

2-Pk. General Purpose D or C
or AAA or Single 9-Volt, Alkaline

Shredded
C heese................ . 5'S 89*

Duracell
Batteries

Pert P lu s .............. 1£S?*®24®
(Special 18-oz. Bonua Pack),
For NormaFOHy or Normal-Cry Hair

Head &amp;
Shoulders.............

T H IS A O G O O D A T T H E S E L O C A T IO N S O N L Y

*17B

each

pkg. $ 1 8 9

T»
, It's

Original Mint
or New Peppermint

Scope
Mouthwash
24-oz. bot.

S E M IN O L E C E N T R E
3609 O R L A N D O DR IVE
SANFORD
LONGW OOD
V IL L A G E C TR .,
LONG W OOD
where shopping is a pleasure.

Decorator or Earthtone

H i-D ri T o w e l s

sr9*

'Pfalo/
e I u. u t a

lu ■■■rv . 1

Real

H e llm a n n ’s
M a y o n n a is e
32-0*. 0 9

9

(Lim it 1 Please, W ith O th e r P u rcha se s of
$ 7 .5 0 or More, Excluding all T o b a c c o Itam

�r
4C— Sanford Herakl - Wednatday, March 4, IftT

Harald Advertleer -

Thursday, March S, 1WT

Sanlord, FI.

DOUBLE M A N U FA C T U R E R ’ S

COUPONS
EVERYDAY

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PRICES GOOD
MARCH S - 7, 1987

USDA GRADE A
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Um H 4 wtth I S M of mo«o purchaee m l . dg*.

£ T? _7'* 1- ■■OUIAA, SW-ei. I M ,
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B A N Q U ET A LL VARII

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12-PK.
12-oz.

CANS
or more purchase axel. clgs.

PIZZAS
FLAVOR OF THI MONTH
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AVAILABLE ONLY IN
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                    <text>Sanford, Florida — M onday, M arch 30, 1987

Price

25 Cents

Raines Looking A t A Return To Montreal Expos
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Will Tim Raines return to Montreal?
That prospect looks to be more and
more of a reality today.
Free agent Raines, who has been
shopping himself around the majorleague camps this spring, took an
unexpected excursion to West Palm
Beach Saturday to visit some familiar

surroundings.
Raines, a six-time all-star outfielder
for Montreal before declaring his freeagency In January, has repeatedly
denied he would return to his former
club.
Those denials, however, sound a bit
hollow today after the Saturday meet­
ing with his forrr\cr club. Raines was a
guest Saturday afternoon of Montreal

owner Charles Bronfman. Bronfman
had visited with Raines and agent Tom
Reich In Sarasota Thursday where he
Issued the Invitation to visit the Expos*
spring training base, which Raines
accepted.
Raines apparently has shifted direc­
tion and said It Is possible he will be
Joining the Expos after May 1. Because
he did not sign with his former club by

W eather
Focus Of
A tlas Probe

Jan. 8 — one of a series of deadlines
governing free-agent negotiations —
Raines cannot bargain with the Expos
..—
.A il f t l . . . I
C n i n m i ' s
m a a i.
until
May 1. although Saturday's
meet­
ing is a prelude to that bargaining.
Raines, 27. has turned down offers
from San Diego and Houston. He was
the 1986 National League batting
champion with a .334 average.
"This is not a press conference to say

%

Road, Bridge Washouts;
Fire, Power Outages
Brought On By Rainstorm

j 'i )j * &gt;
i'fa
h\ T / &gt; .

CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - A
team o f NASA Investigators
geared up today for the start of a
grim probe into the loss of an
Atlas-Centaur rocket launched
In a t h u n d e r s t o r m t h a t
highlights ongoing problems
forecasting unpredictable space
coast weather.
Jon Bussc, on engineer at
NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center In Grcenbclt, Md.. arrived
at the Kennedy Space Center
late Saturday to take, over the
agency's Investigation Into the
nation's latest space disaster.
He planned a news conference
today before meeting with his
nine-member panel lor the first
time Tuesday.
T h e $78 m illio n A tla s Centaur. carrying an $83 million
military communications satel­
lite. Hew ofT course Thursday 52
seconds after blastofT in a steady
downpour. A lightning bolt near
the launch pad an Instant before
the rocket nosed out of control
may have triggered the disaster,
but engineers have not made a
final determination.
source said, "but they don't
know why It happened."
S a lv a g e crew s spent the
weekend recovering debris from
area beaches and mapping the
seabed with sonar to locate
significant parts o f the destroyed
rocket.
Whether lightning caused the

I'm coming back to the Expos," Raines
told United Press International Satur­
day in the team's dugout before an
exhibition game against the New York
Mets.
H ow ever, his appearance with
Bronfman gave credence to the belief
that he will be back with the Expos
after May 1.
See RAINES, page 8A

By Kathy Tyrity
Herald Staff Writer
The worst rainstorm in two
years in S em in o le C ounty
dropped 9.15 Inches of rain in
fo u r d a y s and cau sed an
apartment house fire due to
lightning, a road wash-out on
Interstate-4, a bridge closing,
many lightning-related power
outages, and an undetermined
number of stalled cars.
According to the National
W e a th e r S e r v ic e , sh ow ers
should end by midnight tonight.
Forecast for Tuesday is partly
cloudy in the morning, sunny in
the afternoon. The temperature
low is expected to be around 50
tonight. A cold front coming
through tonight is expected to
push the nightly Iowa into the
40s for most of Florida and highs
will reach mld-60e for three or
four days.
County road workers tolled
through the night but gave up

bitSge'Teing*undermined by
M isty Glenn, 6, lends a comforting arm to
her friend Krystal Bryant, 3, Frid a y at
about 2 p.m. after they were involved In
an accident while riding In a car driven by
K rystal's mother, seated In car. Katherine
Bryant, 24, 1001B E lm Ave., Sanford was
charged with careless driving after her

1980 Chevrolet struck the rear end of a
1986 Toyota driven by M a ry Beatty, 62, of
W inter P a rk . M s. B e a tty's c a r was
stopped for traffic within the southbound
right lane of U.S. Highway 17-92 near
Santa Barbara Drive.
■
•

See PROBE, page SA

Stolen Infant Found, 2 In Custody
Cagnassola, Jr., head of the
Jacksonville FBI. She came out
of the bathroom with a gun In
her right hand and a knife in her
left, and demanded that the
Witt’s newborn baby. Heather
Marie Witt, be given to her.
The woman stabbed and shot
Barrett and Witt, then took the
baby out of her crib and fled,
police said.
Police said the victims appar­
ently did not know the attacker.
The.child was the first for Mrs.
Witt, an accountant for WinnDixie Stores Inc., and her
husband. Mark. Police said Mark
Witt was at work at the time of
the abduction.

Burglars Take
Sculptor's
Prized W orks

The baby was bom March 22
at Baptist Medical Center and
had been taken home Wednes­
day afternoon. Mrs. Barrett was
at the home to help Mrs. Witt
care for the Infant.
George Wlsnovsky. FBI special
agent, said the break in the case
came Saturday, when a weapon
was found about two miles from
scene following a search by
authorities.
The gun led agents to a gun
distributor in California, a
wholesaler In Minnesota, to
Wisconsin, where the gun was
sold, and back to Jacksonville
Beach.
The apartment in Jacksonville
was under surveillance since
e a r ly S u n d a y m o r n in g .

Jimmy Brown said today.
The road was closed after
water eroded dirt around the

aa-f

3 8 -f o o t

h*t» m nwu ty Tammy vn*em*

p umDina rainwater from an

r u 7ipmfl r a ‘nwaTor Tro,m ai?

tw
olanea&amp;xr'.rwrws

Brown said about eight county
employees worked through the
night dumping 18 or 19 truck
loads of sand around the bridge
trying to stop the erosion but the
rushing waters swept the fill
away. Brown said the bridge will
need repairs once the flood
waters have receeded.
Brown said he believes Smith
Canal is connected to the St.
Johns.
Maurice Sterling, of the St.
Johns River Management Dis­
trict in Palatka. said the river his
agency is opening all possible
flood gates it can to keep the
river from rising. He said the
area around A popka Lake
seemed to have received the
most rainfall.
In M e lb o u rn e , n ea r the
headwaters of the St. Johns, the
water flowing over a 13Wfoot
weir has risen four inches to 14

Street In Sanford today Is
F l o r id a P u b lic U t ilit ie s
worker Ron Stafford. Water
In the gas main can Interrupt
service, he said,

feet four inchs over the weekend,
according to the city's water
department.
Sanford Sewage Treatment
Plant in downtown Sanford re­
ported 8.05 inches of rain fell
since midnight Friday morning,
but the Sanford Regional Airport
tower controller reported only
3V4 Inches, and a. total of almost
8 Inches for the month. Orlando
National Weather Service re­
ported a 7,15 total between
Thursday morning and Monday
morning. Normal for the entire
month of March Is 3.20 inches.
The total for March is 9.24. A
Sae RAIN, page SA

Homlcld• $u$pmetmd

Body Found By Firefighters
Herald Staff W riter
The body o f a man. in his
forties, was found early today by
firefighters in the bedroom of an
apartment where they were investigatlng a fire in Southeast

Police Investigators were at the
scene today in an effort to
identify the man and determine
the cause of death. Foul play is
s u s p e c t e d , a c c o r d in g to
Seminole County sheriffs de-

tectlves.
Sem inole County s h e riffs
Capt. Roy Hughey said the body
was found by firefighters inside
apartm ent 902 at Semoran
North Apartments, 2575 N.
Sat BODY, page SA

TODAY

Daniel DeMendoza works on one of his
wildlife sculptures, surrounded by some
completed ones.

Tenasha Petresa Rickard. 1010 Orange Ave..
died Sunday at Orlando Regional Medical Center
about 12 hours after the 8:20 p.m. accident at
Celery and Orange avenues.
The girl was first treated for head injuries at
Central Flolrda Regional Hospital in Sanford
before being transferred to Orlando.
Audrey Bender of the same address was towing
Tenasha and her infant son. Keith Gordon, in a
wagon as they left a store and were crossing
Celery at Orange. As they crossed, the girl fell out
and onto the westbound lane. While she was
trying to stand up. she was struck by a
westbound vehicle driven by Eugene Butler. 27.
See BABY, page 8A

Crossword........ ...4B
D e e rA b b y ...............IB
Deaths.....................8A
Dr. Gott................... 4B
E d ito ria l................. 4A

Hosplta
People,
P o lic e ......................2A
Sports................5A-7A
Television............... IB
Weather.................. 2A
W orld...................... 3A

School Mono
Tuesday: Charbrolled burger, ovenbaked potato, tender broccoli cuts,
strawberry fruit mix, baked dessert and
lowfatm ilk.

�* • • » » v"f “ r re r

r
JA— Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Monday, March 30,1W7

Falwell Criticized For
Fund-Raising Project

POLICE
IN BRIEF
A Sanford man was arrested Friday arfcr a bank parking
lot robbery In Sanford Jan. 16.
Arcsted and charged was Johnny P. Hall. 34. of 2480
Church St. Bond was set at $8,000.
Around 11:05 a.m. Jan. 16, a man with an unknown
type o f weapon in a canvas bag struck another man In the
head as he was walking in Ihe parking lot of Sun Bank, 200
W. First St, The victim, unldcntlfcd in the police report,
received a deep cut on his forehead and after a struggle
with the assailant lost control of a pouch containing
$8,600.
The robber ran north to the rear of the Florida Power and
Light Building on Fulton St. and got Into a car that then
proceeded west on Seminole Boulevard. Witnesses said the
car stopped and the robber got out at his home. He then
reportedly threatened the witnesses with harm if they told
anyone what they had seen, according to the police report.
Hall was arrested around 10:46 a.m. Friday on Bcardall
Avenue.

lCH

(UPI) - J
dedicated a van
_______
Impassioned ceremony
monument
t
that if ... nearly 300 people. Including aq
man beaten three days before the

cut short by about nine years because of
political turmoil."
According to State Department cables and
key Falwell aides, the magazine said, the
operation never directly distributed any food
In Sudan because of obstruction against
such aid by the Sudanese government.
Falwell's project was "unable to perform
any services in Sudan," the magazine
quoted an Oct. 3. 1985, internal State
Department cable as saying.
At his Thomas Road Baptist Church In
Lynchburg, Va., Sunday, Falwell referred
repeatedly to the $172 million PTL empire
he took over March 19 when founder Bakker
resigned In a sex scandal that shook some of
the giants of television evangelism and the
Assemblies of God church.
"There are people today Just rejoicing in
this scandal," Falwell said. "But sin is not
something new that was Invented with Jim
Bakker."

B y United Preen International
Evangelist Jerry '■‘^uwell, who newly
agreed to head the PTL ministry shaken by
Jim Bakker's sex scandal, has been accused
of raising $3.2 million for famine relief In
Africa while actually spending only a
fraction o f it on the program.
Falwell came under lire In a U.S. News &amp;
World Report story Sunday saying he raised
$3.2 million in 1985*86 for famine relief in
Sudan, but spent only $300,000 — mostly
to send 15 college students there to
refurbish a camp and to buy trucks for the
project.
Th e m agazin e said F a lw ell raised
$740,000 from four Moral Majority appeals
and $2.5 million from other Falwell groups.
Falwell told the magazine the $2.5 million
figure was "absolutely ridiculous." His
spokesman, Mark Demoss, added the orga­
nization had been "committed to a 10-year
famine relief project in the Sudan that was

Man Arrested After Robbery
In Bank Parking Lot

Rededicate
M onum ent

' :me dozen uniformed ofiiccrs
of the Jewish defense
c Sunday ceremony at
He plainclothes office™
with the veterans, civic activists
sh groups.
ty increased fo llo w in g the
/ attack on Murray Hymowitz,
ings Point near-Delray Beach in
t believed to be related to the
________ J h gray marble monument.
w j£ *
m“p i * * “
bpaw j
Three thugs called Hymowitz. former
commander of the Jewish War Veterans
Post 296, a derogatory name, pummelled
him and bashed his head against
concrete wall, authorities said.
"Today Is the fulfillment of something
we wanted for a long tim e," Hymowitz
said during the ceremony.
Hymowitz wore a bandage over his left
eye ag.several local dignitaries, including
three county commissioners, delivered
speeches near the monument, which
bearsaStar o f David at the top.
."Even though they knocked it down,
we . made (the monument) stand tall
-^aln;" said Hymowitz, whose name Is on
e slab erected by Post 266 and
ihed at a cost of $1,600.
Anti-Defamation League, Whose
s Attended the ceremony. Is
ting the attack on Hymowitz.
ihur Teitelbaum. the group’s
i regional director.
Is said they have no evidence of a
anti-Semitic network In southern
Beach County. Teitelbaum said his
organization will be checking its flies to
find extrem ist groups that may be
Involved.

Idyllwilde Residents To
Get Expressway Briefing

Shooting Suspect Jailed
An Altamonte Springs man was charged with aggravated
assault after reportedly shooting into a dining room celling
during an argument.
Marlnellc Bailey, of 907 Pennsylvania Ave., told police
that she asked a seemingly drunk man who had verbally
threatened her to leave her home. She said he then went to
the front door and got a gun that was leaning against the
wall, according to a police report. The gun was a
combination 20-gaugc shotgun and .22-callber rifle. The
incident occurred Friday at 11:47 p.m.
She said the man aimed the gun at her and she thought
she was going to be shot. When he pulled the trigger,
however, the shot gun blast went Into the celling o f the
dining room, she Bald.
The man told the arresting officer that she wanted him to
go so she grabbed the gun and it went ofT.
Arrested and charged with aggravated assault was Jose
Luis Estrada, 51, of the same address. Bond was set at

available at the early March public meet­
ings.
Idyllwilde residents said they were sur­
prised early this, month when they learned
that one o f the alternatives for the
expressway divides their school district and
neighborhood.
Since they did not have a homeowners'
association, the information was not passed
on to them as It was in the south county and
Lake Mary area months ago. resident said.
For more Information call Brlnton at
321-1130.
Kathy T y r lty

Idyllwilde area residents are invited to a
briefing and question-answer session about
the proposed routes for the Seminole
County Expressway that may be coming
through their neighborhood.
The meeting will be at 7 p.m. Tuesday
(Mar. 31) at Idyllwilde Elementary School.
On hand will be Gerald Brlnton. executive
director of the Expressway Authority.
There will be a presentation about the
proposed routes with time afterwards for
questions. The routes will be accurately
shown on large scale maps, which weren't

$ 1,000.

Woman Attacked, Man Charged

| WEATHER

Robbery and possession o f stolen property charges were
logged against a Winter Park man after he reportedly
assaulted a woman in a restaurant parking lot.
A woman called police several times Friday about an
ongoing disturbance, battery and theft that happened at
her home. The man In question returned the property and
he agreed to leave, said the report.
Later Friday, after 10 p.m., a man assaulted the woman
as she was getting out or of her car in the parking lot o f the
restaurant where she works. The man punched and
choked her and ripped a gold necklace off her before
leaving.
When police stopped the man at Oxford Square Shopping
Center he had a gold braclet and chain with him but not
the one taken from the woman. The woman said the
bracelet and chain were hers, however.
Charged wtth robbery end possession of stolen property
.was Ricardo Salamanga. 23. Bond was set at $5,000.
...

A west Seminole County man's Corevette disappeared
from his yard only to be found the next day stripped.
Frankie Incenogle. of west Seminole County, reported
Thursday that the 1975 car was missing. Incenogle lives at
3550 Cleaves Road.
The $6,500 vehicle was found by a building inspector
Friday near McNeil Road in the Bear Lake area of the
county.
According to the sheriffs report, the car had been
stripped by vandals who left only the frame, body, engine
block and battery.

Car Left Behind Vandalised
A car left in a Sanford city park because it would not
start was vandalized by the time the owner returned the
next day to get it.
Felix D. Vazquez, 20. of 111 Geneva Gardens, Sanford,
told police that he left his car. valued at $2,000. in the
parking lot at Academy Manor Park Monday at 4 p.m.
because It would not start. By Tuesday at 4:15 p.m. when
Vazquez returned to get the car. all of the windows In the
car had been broken out, the roof and hood were caved in,
parts were broken off the engine, the headlights and tall
lights were broken and papers that were kept in the car
had been scattered around the parking lot. a police report

BurglariesA n d

T
h
e
* Reported

A $200 circular saw, a $150 saw all and a $450 tripod
were stolen from a tool box on the bed o f the pickup truck
of Robert A. DeLorenzo, 24. of 3060 Fox Hill Circle &lt;&gt;102.
Apopka, Tuesday or Wednesday, a sheriffs report said.
Andrew Thomas Smith. 39. or Oviedo, reported to
sheriffs deputies that $60 worth o f copper pipe and a $130
tool box were stolen from a Blue Ribbon Plumbing truck at
that business at 200 Pine St.. Altamonte Springs. Tuesday
or Wednesday, a sheriffs report said.

Cabbie Robbed By
-Be Dealer
side Altamonte Springs at about
3:30 a.m. Saturday.
Hedges Ronald Ross, 27, of
W in ter Park, said he w as
enroute to pick up a fare on
Baling Street when the suspect
got into his cab and refused to
get out. The suspect tried to sell
Ross crack cocaine and when he
refused the offer the suspect
tUSFS SSI MS)
said. "You know what I want.
Give
me the money. I'm crazy."
Monday.
March
30,1W
May. m
s
The robber put his right hand
Voi.Tf. No. »»7
under a Jacket and said " I ’ll kill
y. oacapt
you," a sheriffs report said.
Fswnssd OsHy
•aterdsy Sy TSs Ssstord MsrsM,
Ross handed over the cash and
lac. MS N. French Are., Sanford.
the suspect got out o f the cab.
fis . smt.
stood at the door and said, "I'll
Claw Frets* Paid at Ssntard.
blow you away."
am
Ross saw him Join other men
, ____ ni i Minttii
on *Ae street as he drove toward
flO fi o &amp; S ? . W M I Vssr. County Road 427, to call and
UISS.
Mailt Masts, m . » i z rep o rt the th e ft. D ep u ties
MmMs. MMSt « Msstsi,
searched the area, but didn’t
“ •re,~
the siisnect
(MS) find
nnuncsiwpera.

An Orlando Yellow Cab driver
reported to sheriffs deputies
that he waa robbed of $140 by a
man who got into his cab on
North and Marker streets, out-

W -*

v*

N ation T c m p e ia lu fe s
Ctty* Forecast
Albuquerque!
Anchorage sn
Asheville tt
Atlanta th
Billing* w
Birmingham r
Bolton cy
Brownivllta Tax.pc
Buffalo r
Burlington Vt.r
Chartatlon S.C. t*
CharlottiNC.il
Chicago pc
Cincinnati tn
Clavotandr
Columbot r
Dallai pc
Dtnvarsy
DM Moines ay
Detroit m
Duluth »y
El Rato»y
E van*villain
Hartford cy
Honolulu pc
Hootton pc
Indianapolis in
Jackson Miss, r
Jacksonville ts
Kama* City pc
LasVagassy
Uttla Rock sn
to* Angola* f
Louisville in
Memphis r
Miami Saach pc
Milwaukee pc
Minneapolis »y
Nashville r
New Orleans cy
Naw Yorfccy
Oklahoma City f
Omaha sy
Philadelphia sh
Phoenix sy
Pittsburgh r
Portland Me. pc
Portland Ora. sy
Providence cy
Richmond r
St. Louis wy
San Francisco sy
Washington r
CODES
c-ctaar
c tr tearing
cy-cloudy
Hair
fy taggy *
ht-hare
m-ml-tlng

HI La
35 17
40 31
54 51
re SO
34 11
•0 51
54 43
71 40
77 5*
43 47
44 43
44 51
50 33
77 41
74 44
n *r
43 30
33 10
33 13
70 33
It 11
41 31
4* 33
44 45
77 45
5* 35
70 33
75 40
74 44
40 tO
41 35
54 31
M 57
77 40
41 37
7* 74
40 33
35 14
re 43
70 4*
45 4*
34 n
37 11
70 50
70 55
71 50
41 J7
43 34
44 30
70 53
54 31
7f 50
70 53

Five-Day Forecast

Ftp
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.44
1.74
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till
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re
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1.14
.74
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1.07
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pc-partly cloody
rraln
•hthowirt
•nvwnoka
•fi'inaw
sy-tunny
tsthunderstorms
w windy

Florida T e m p e ra tu re s
M IA M I (U P I) — P lor M s 34-howr tampers-

turnandralnfelIat Ss.i . eot today:
CHyi
/ HIn La«0 ire
Apalachicola
74 to ire
Crottvtaw
Daytona Baach
re 47 0.«4
si 75 O.tr
Fort Lauderdale
•1 70 0.01
Fort Myers
74 re I.7S
Gainesville
74 *4 1.07
Jacksonville
SI 74 ore
KoyWret
74 40 i re
Lakolond
•4 74 O.tr
Miami
71 441 1.IS
Orlando
74 44 0.74
Ponrecola
74 45 I SO
Sarasota Bradsntan
74 40 i r e
Tallahanao
74 41 1.41
Tampa
75 70 ore
Vara Baach
M 73 or e
West PalmBaach

44ar.lt

B ooth Conditions
Waves are
About 2Vt feet and semi-glassy.
Current Is slightly to the north
With a temperature of 60 de­
grees. N e w S m yrna Beach:
Waves ate 1 to 2 feet and glassy.
Current Is slightly to the north:
Water temperature. 60 degrees.
Sun screen factor: 12.

For Central Florida
PtlyCldy

Ody

FtlyCWy

S B E E EX
_

_____ __

0

0

0

-- gman mmemR^eaed^ernlmseemkeBsieemseaeses

0 @ 0 0 0

Local Report
Sunday's high temperature in
Sanford was 70 degrees and the
low during the past twenty-four
hours was 62 degrees as rc
ported by the University of
Florida Agricultural and Educa­
tion Center. Total rainfall over
the week-end, ending Monday
morning was 5.36 inches.

Area Forecast

Todhy,.‘.breezy with shoWers
and thunderstorms producing
heavy rain and possible flooding.
High in the mid 70s to near 80.
Wind south to southwest 15 to
Tu«
Ufa*
Thurs,
Fri.
ret.
20 mph and gusty. Rain chance
Srercti MsHssai Wrettre tarries 90 percent.
Tonight...breezy with rain or
thunderstorms likely. Turning
cooler near daybreak. Low In the
mid 50s to near 60. Wind
southwest 15 to 20 mph shifting
to northwest shortly before
daybreak. Rain chance 60 per­
cent.
Tuesday...partly cloudy dur­
in g the m orn in g becom ing
mostly sunny by afternoon. Cool
wtth high in the lower to mid
United Press
calving season for Nebraska's
60s. Wind northwest near 15
International
blUlon-dollar livestock In­
mph.
A spring storm that grew into dustry, and Custer County
a blizzard in the Plains pushed Extension Agent BUI Pedersen
Into Canada today but left estim ated livestock-related
Ar«*o R u o d i n y s
behind towering snow drifts losses in Just that county could
that closed 450 miles or In­ exceed $500,000.
The temperature at 8 a.m.: 63;
terstate 70. stranded travelers
in western Kansas, Army
overnight low: 63: Sunday's
and kept cattle from being fed National Guard helicopters
high: 71; barometric pressure:
during calving season.
were poised to begin airlifting
29.92; relative humidity: 90
Before moving north, the
1,500-pound bales of hay to
percent; winds: North at 13
storm pounded the Plains starving cattle In 16 counties
mph; rain: 3.15 Inch; Today’s
during the weekend wtth its today.
sunset: 6:42 p.m., Tuesday's
second blizzard tn a week,
"T h e y 'll die without any
sunrise: 6:17 a.m.
dumping 16 inches of snow In food," said Major Joy Cole, a
Superior. Neb., and creating National Guard spokeswoman
£ x t «*ndi - d I ' Oh' i o s I
18-foot d r ifts In w estern
in Topeka. She said the hayllft
Kansas, National Guard of­ could take four days.
The extended forecast. Wed­
ficials said.
N a tio n a l G u ard tro o p s
nesday through Friday, for
Record cold invaded the s e a rc h e d s o u th w e s t and
Florida except northwest —
Plains today on the heels of the n o rth -c e n tra l K ansas fo r
Partly cloudy and cool extreme
storm, but the winds weakened s tra n d e d m o to ris ts . F iv e
south wtth a chance of showers
and no snow fell, allowing armories were open Sunday
Thursday and Friday. Mostly fair
crews to clear snow from closed
night to provide shelter.
elsew h ere. Cold north and
highways such as Interstate 70.
In eastern Nebraska, hit with
central and quite cool remainder
which was shut down for 250 50-mph winds and the heaviest
south. Lows averaging mid to
miles In Kansas and 200 In snow In 22 years so late In the
upper 30s north to near 50
Colorado, highway patrol of­ s e a s o n . O m a h a 's E p p le y
Bouth. Highs averaging low 60s
ficials In the two states said Airfield was reopened late
north to lower 70s south.
early today.
S u n d ay, but the L in co ln
"Crews are out there now
Municipal Airport remained
working, trying to get the drifts closed.
A r u a T tdos
cleared away. We got pretty big
Some 600 people waited out
drifts, some around 12-feet the storm Sunday at a Red
high," said Gerald Weyand. a Cross shelter In North Platte.
dispatcher in Norton, Kan.
Neb., and another 200 were
"Everybody has been taken ofT housed In a city facility. Na­
TUESDAY: Daytons Beach
(he highway but vehicles are
tional Guard troops Sunday
highs. 9:12 a.m.. 9:30 p.m.
stranded."
rescued 12 people who had
lows. 2:52 a.m.. 2:56 p.m.: N si
Susan Emurin, a dispatcher
been trapped on a TraUways
Smyrna Beacht highs. 9:1’
In Denver said, "Troopers are
bus near Holdrege, Neb., for 23
a.m.. 9:35 p.m.: lows. 2:57 a.m.
out assisting several motorists
h o u r s . C iv il D e fe n s e
3:01 p.m.; Bayportt highs, 2:11
lined up on the Interstate.
spokesman Rick Scmm said.
a.m., 1:42 p.m.; lows, 8:01 a.m.
Some motorists are waiting it
8:51 p.m.
“ The engine was running.
out at rest areas along the
The bus was warm. We talked
Interstate."
a lot, laughed a lot and got to
B o o t i rig
Record low temperatures
know each other," said Ruth
were reported today In at least
Sima, a passenger from Des
12 cities In the central and
M oines, Iow a. " W c knew
southern Plains. Goodland,
sooner or later someone would
Kan., reported 2 degrees,
come."
snapping a 61-year-old record,
In Lincoln, the Nebraska
and Grand Island. Neb., also
Legislature, which was sched­
St. Augustine to Jupiter Ii
had a record 2-degree reading.
uled to convene for the 52nd
— Small craft advisory Is
Victoria. Texas, tied its record
day of lls 90-day session today,
effect.
o f 37 degrees.
decided to resume Tuesday,
Tonight...wind southwest it
The storm hit at the height of
Speaker William Barrett said.
20 kts. Seas 5 to 7 ft. Bay i
• Inland waters choppy. Show
and thunderstorms.

Storm Moves
West To East

�Monday, March » , 1M7-2A

Sanford HorakI, Sanford, FI.

COM ING EVENTS
Alcoholics Anonymous
Schodulos Monday Mootings
The following area Alcoholics Anonymous and Alanon
groups meet on Monday:
•* Sanford AA. noon and 5:30 p.m., open discussion; 8
p.m.. closed dlsrusston, 1201 W. First St.
• Narcotics Anonymous, 8 p.m.. 317 Oak Ave., Sanford.
• Apopka Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m., closed. Apopka
Episcopal Church. 615 Highland.
• AI-Anon Step and Study, 8 p.m., Casselberry Senior
Center, 200 N. Triplet Drive.
• Young and Free AA, St. Richard's Episcopal Church,
Lake Howell Road, Winter Park, 8 p.m. closed, open
discussion. Last Monday of the month, open.
• 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.

Ovoreators Anonymous
Overeaters Anonymous meets Monday at 7:30 p.m.,
West Lake Hospital. State Road 434. Longwood. *

Child Abuse Seminar
A free community seminar on child abuse will be
presented by Orlando General Hospital, 7 p.m., April 1 at
7727 Lake Underhill Drive, Orlando. To register call
281-8605. Speakers will be Eve Krupinskl, Dana Weikel
and Lucy Braun, authors of Death from Child Abuse and
No One Heard, and staff pediatrician Dr. E.J. Marsh.

Aviation Safety Seminar
The South Seminole Flying Club will sponsor a FAA
* Aviation Safety-Education Seminar and Pilot Proficiency
Award Program meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 2, In
the Airport Restaurant Banquet Room at Sanford Airport
Terminal Building. Audio visual presentation on coping
with air traffic control systems.

Mayor Smith Is ABW A Speaker
American Business Women's Association Adventure
Charter Chapter will hold a Boss Appreciation Night at the
April 2 meeting at 7 p.m. in the House of Beef, John Young
Parkway. Orlando. Sanford Mayor Bcttye Smith will speak.
For reservations call Nancy Plank at 831*4122 or
657*5795.

Deborah Chapter To Meet
Deborah Foundation Seminole Sanford Chapter will meet
April 2 at 8 p.m. at Howell Place. 200 W. Airport Blvd.,
Sanford. For Information call 323-5152.

Food For The Hungry
Manna Haven serves free lunch for the hungry. 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m., Monday through Friday: Sunday. 1*3, at 519
Palmetto Ave.. Sanford.

Free Tax Help For Elderly
Free Income tax help for retirees Is available on Tuesday
through April 15.9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Florida National Bank,
West SR 434 at Markham Road: VFW Club, 420 N.
Edgcmon Ave., Winter Springs; Longwood Recreation
Center, W. Warren Avenue.

Cardiovascular Screening
Cardiovascular screening Is available from 8 a.m. to 5
ipartment
Ex. 370 for appointment.'

Fraud Against The Elderly
A free all-day "Fraud Against The Elderly" Workshop
will be held Wednesday April 1. 8 a.m. at the Harley Hotel.
151 E. Washington St.. Orlando. For further Information
call (904) 487-3712.

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Demonstrators Ring Courtroom
As Food Poisoning Trial Begins
MADRID, Spain (UPI)— Hundreds of demonstrators
chanted "murderers, murderers," outside a Madrid
courtroom today at the start of the trial of 38 people
charged with causing history's biggest mass food poison­
ing.The accused filed Into a bulletproof dock through a
special side entrance as riot squads and mounted police
held back about 1,000 victims at the main door. About 300
people were allowed to enter.
Nearly 600 people died, and almost 25,000 were affected
by what has become known as the "toxic oil syndrome," a
malady traced to the sale of adulterated cooking oil In the
spring of 1981.
Thousands of survivors, known as "los afectados" or the
affected ones, continue to suffer Ills ranging from paralysis
and crippled muscles to wasting diseases and psychiatric
disorders.

Israelis Buzz Palestinian Camp
TRIPOLI. Lebanon (UPI) — Israeli warplanes buzzed a
Palestinian camp outside the northern Syrian-controlled
city of Tripoli today, hours after Israeli troops reportedly
killed three guerrillas in a gunbattle in southern Lebanon.
A spokesman at police headquarters in Beirut said Israeli
warplanes staged seven minutes of maneuvers over the
Palestinian camp of El Beddawi. Just north of the Tripoli,
42 miles from Beirut, prompting guerillas to respond with
anti-aircraft fire.
"A group of Israeli warplanes flew over the camp at a
medium altitude but did not fire any rocket or drop any
bomb," he said, disputing earlier reports that bombs and
rockets had been fired on the camp.
There was no Immediate confirmation from Israel.

Dllley Replaces Wiley
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (UPI) - The suicide of a
Cabinet member and the withdrawal of a candidate for
Parliament left President Pieter Botha's ruling National
Party scurrying today to find replacements for May's
whltes-only election.
The party today nominated Slmonstown Mayor Harry
Dllley as Its candidate for Parliament In Slmonstown,
replacing Cabinet Minister John Wiley, who committed
Bulclde.
But there was no word on tyho would take up the party
banner in Pretoria's central district, where former
Information Minister Louis Nel dropped out of a race In
which ultra-rightists provided the toughest opposition.
The National Party must name a replacement for Nel by
11 a.m. Tuesday, the nominations deadline for the May 6
election for the House of Assembly, the all-white chamber
of the nation’s tri-racial parliament.

White House Panels Omitted In Arms Sales
WASHINGTON (UPI) - To
keep the Iran arms sales secret.
CIA Director William Casey and
national security adviser John
Poindexter went so far as to
bypass two White House panels
that review covert activity, In­
telligence sources say.
Had the two panels been
Informed o f the clandestine
operations, they might have
weighed In with serious ques­
tions on the policy, the sources
said Sunday.
The White House Intelligence
Oversight Board and the Na­
tional Security Council's plann­
ing coordination group were
form ed to im prove the e f­
fectiveness and ensure the legal­
ity of covert operations approved
by President Reagan.
Yet, they were not notified of
the weapons sales or Reagan’s
Jan. 17, 1986, order authorizing
CIA participation In the deals
until the policy was exposed In
November, the sources said.
Administration officials chose to
skirt a review by both groups
even though their members
were appointed by Reagan.
The Tower Commission report
on the scandal criticized the
administration for not subjecting
the Iran policy to rlgorouo
evaluation, but It did not Identify
who was responsible for the lack
of review or how It occurred.
However, sources said Poin­
dexter, who resigned when the
scandal erupted, told two NSC
officials In 1985 and 1986 to
steer clear of the activities of
their fellow NSC aide Lt. Col.
Oliver North.
North, fired the same day
Poindexter resigned, has been
Identified as the key operator in
the Iran arms sales and the
scheme .to divert profits to
Nicaraguan Contra rebels at a
time when U.S. aid to the
guerrillas was Illegal.

In a related development, The them from a certain sensitive to the Contras and determined
Boston Globe reported Sunday matter at Casey's request, a the NSC could provide military'
assistance to them without vio­
that North helped set up a source said.
D e G ra ffe n re ld and Can- lating the ban in place from
tax-exempt corporation to allow
wealthy conservatives to get nlstraro, who coordinated the October 1984 to October 1986.
huge tax breaks for contribu­ NSC Interagency review group,
th e NSC-run group, composed
tions to the Contras.
later realized the matter related
of senior officials from the CIA,'
Under the plan, a contributor to the Iran deals, said the source,
State Department. Defense De­
giving $1 million to a group speaking to UPI. like the others,
partment, Joint Chiefs of Staff
supporting the rebels could get on the condition of anonymity.
and Office of Management and
The Intelligence oversight
back $500,000 from the federal
Budget, regularly conducts poli­
government In the form of a tax board, led by Glenn Campbell of
write-ofT, the newspaper said.
the conservative Hpover Institu­ cy reviews of covert operations..
Its findings are forwarded to
Taxpayers thus unwittingly tion at Stanford University,
Cabinet-level secretaries.
would have underwritten a ma­ evaluated the legality of U.S. aid
jor part of North’s secret Contra
aid plan, the Globe said. Sen.
i;
a a ?
__
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio,
has already noted one proContra tax-exempt group lob­
bied Congress In violation of
laws forbidding such groups
from lobbying in a "substantial"
STOWE, Vt. (UP!)
Maria Lodge in the ski resort town of
manner.
von Trapp.* the inspiration Tor Stowe In 1962.
A chart found In North's safe
the popular musical "Sound of
T h e lod ge, an A u strian
Indicated another group, the
Music,' will be buried In the chalet-style Inn set on an
National Endowment for the
picturesque mountain town 800-acre hilltop estate, i
Preservation of Liberty, led by
where she settled with her rebuilt after a fire
fund-raiser Carl Channell. also
singing family after fleeing in I960 and Is run by the
played an Important role In the
Nad-controlled Austria.
youngest of the von Trapp
scheme. United Press Interna­
Von Trapp died Saturday children and their nephew.
tional reported last week that
night surrounded by family
Von Trapp was 20 when she
Channell Instructed hla staff on
members in Copley Hospital in left a Salzburg convent to
how to skirt restrictions on
nearby MorrlsviUe, three '
the seven motherless
political activity by non-profit
after undergoing surgery
o f Baron Georg von Trapp, a
organizations.
gangrene of the sn
Intestine. stem
n naval officer 2ft years her
According to the Senate In­
She was 82.
senior,
or. They married a year
telligence Committee's early
A funeral was planned for later,
r. In 1927, and she bom
report on the scandal, Poindex­
early this week at the Blessed him three more children.
ter and Casey misled even
Sacrament Church In Stowe for
" I was frightened when the
high-level officials such as Secre­
family members only, a family mother abbess sent me to the
tary of State George Shultz
spokeswoman said,
baron," she said In a 1970s
about aspects of the Iian opera­
Anticipating a deluge o f flow­ interview. "H e was a World
tion.
ers, the family asked Instead War I submarine
It lc not known whether Casey
for donations to CcrUnum, or I'm a girl from
the
and Poindexter were instructed
"O ne Heart,” a worldwide mountains."
to withhold Information about
missionary fund founded by
The family fortune gone, the
the arms sales from Shultz or
the baroness, who once lived in von Trapps landed In New York
the White House panels.
a convent.
with only $4 to their name and
In early 1986, however. Poin­
Von Trapp, who led her started the Trap p Fam ily
dexter apologetically told NSC
family o f 10 children from Singers, making a living for the
Intelligence aides Kenneth deN ad -con trolled Austria in next IS years by giving con­
1938, opened the Trapp Family certs across the United States.
Graflenreld and Vincent Cannlstraro that he had excluded

Maria

Reagan Starts Week With Pep
Talk To Political Appointees
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi­
dent Reagan, determined to
show he has not abandoned his
political agenda, faces combat
with Congress and pressure
from Western allies this week as
part of his effort to push his
administration forward.
Reagan planned a pep talk
Jectives. though his appearance
before the Executive Forum car­
ried symbolic Importance as well
— coming on the sixth anniver­
sary o f the s h o o tin g that
wounded him, press secretary
James Brady and two law of­
ficers,
T h e su ccess w ith w hich
Reagan bounced back from that
personal crisiB has not been lost
on those responsible for advising
him about how to rebound from
the political damage o f the
Iran-Contra scandal.
In the last few weeks, White
House officials have gone to
great lengths to counter that
furor with stepped-up activity by
the president on such Issues as
arms control, trade and domestic
policy — plus a much higher
public profile.
In the case of arms control, the
While House strategy has been
to emphasize the prospects for
c o n c ilia tio n in o p tim is tic
assessments of the outlook for a
U.S.-Soviet agreement to elimi­
nate medium-range nuclear

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missiles from Europe.
tariffs on as much as $300
In his dealings with Congress, million In Japanese electronics
” l- 1*1*1 ( (O llll .\ I* ,I I 11
Reagan has chosen the opposite exports to the Unied States.
L A K E MARY ULVD
tack, electing to pick a light with
TW
BIW
BBrW
At
Ntw
Republicans as well as Demo­
CHIROPRACTIC
MOMMY THRU FUMY 1:3041$
crats by vetoing a popular $88
OOKO MTUKMY ft SUNDAY
billion highway bill despite
CLINIC
warnings he can ill afford a veto
7$
tfiMf SuZdMM
| l| l
I III I M A
I
i A N I H ii
override.,
Reagan could receive an earful
, ■* HONA
I. „ | l i t *
*
, Ikivll
"TJnSBWptin concern about his
eagerness for an arms pact with
Slit! » 1&lt;1/ H.t »li&lt; III ( •nl* •
DR. JOHN J. H A MME R L I
the Soviets when he meets
S,infill if f I i j t t l
Tuesday with French Prime
OPTOMETRIST
• ACUPUNCTURE
Minister Jacques Chirac and two
VISION I H A M' ,
IIIN IA ltllN S lS
days later with NATO Secretary
• PEHSONAl INJURY
1)1 S K . N I H I K A M I S
General Lord Carrington.
• PAIN CON f HOI
PH. (3051 321 7497
The West Europeans want
•&gt;!•&gt; VS I A h l M A H V III VII
guarantees that Reagan. In his
• WO R KE R' S COMP
S i l l II i l l I O K I ! I VSOIID VII I A l . l
eagerness for an arms control
I A M M A H V II
i . ' l It,
breakthrou gh to help him
overcome his problems at home
SI NIOH DISC (MINI
and enhance his legacy, will not
erode the U.S. commitment to
their own security, which rests
In large part on a nuclear
counterweight to Warsaw Pact
conventional forces.
LICEN8E0 - FULLY INSUREO - SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Between his meetings with
Chirac and Carrington, Reagan
w ill m ake a b r ie f trip to
Philadelphia — the second step
in a public-image polishing that
began last week with a visit to
2406 Qrsndvlsw Avsnus
Columbia, Mo. — and will lobby
Sanford, FL 32771
P h O lT P
Congress to uphold his veto of
Contact Pats or Tarry Echola ' ' , V / I ^ flfH W U I 321 7694
the highway bill.
The course he chose In con­
fr o n tin g C o n g re s s on the
highway bill was mirrored last
week in the tack he took toward
Japap by ordering 100 percent

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Sanford Herald
(USPS 4U-280)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305 322-2611 or 831-9993
Monday. March 30, 1987—4A
Wayns D. Doylt, Publlihsr
Thom*i Giordano, Managing Editor
Motvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Month. 84.75:3 Months. 814.25:6 Months.
827.00; Year. 851.00. By Moll: Month. 86.75: 3 Months.
820.25: 6 Months. $37.00: Year. 869.00.

Small Businesses:
An Export Asset
In the current debate over Im proving the
nation's Internationa! competitiveness, one o f
ou r most overlooked resources is sm all
business. Th e econom y's most innovative
sector, providing the majority o f its new Jobs,
sm all business is a potentially valuable player
In the trade game.
Yet It rarely plays. Only 10 percent o f some
30.000 small companies that have goods
readily exportable actually sell overseas.
(Often they can’t find banks willing to lend
small amounts to facilitate previously untried
export venturers, and many o f their execu­
tives know little o f the world abroad and fear
•both the risk and red tape associated with
exporting.
R ecen tly the National Com m ission On
•Small Business and Jobs submitted a report
to Congress containing several suggestions to
rem edy the situation.
( (1 ) Im p ro ve the use o f fo re ig n sales
corporations — shell com panies located
offshore that get tax breaks on export incom e
by allowing the shell companies to be shared
•by several small companies. This allows them
to share start-up and maintenance costs but
&lt;kccp tax benefits separate.
(2) Create incentives for large companies to
su bcontract foreign w ork to sm all U.S.
companies, and pass on m arketing tips the
. larger corporations can’ t use.
i (3) Ask the Export-Import Bank, which
provides credit to overseas buyers o f U.S.
products, to make more credit available for
'small business transactions.
, If Congress and the president are serious
/lbout fostering com petitiveness to ’ avoid
^protectionism, they must utilize every avail­
kvuiiuiiiiu resource. on.m.
..oone
ne
able economic
Small business is
o f our most promising, and It should receive
•the help it needs to get onto the international
'playing field.
r

.

Keep Pumping
• Since oil is relatively cheap and plentiful,
\Why be sorry *about filling-the U.S. Strategic
rPetroleum.'Reserve?.,iBecause today's glut
could become tomorrow’s shbrtage.
i Ignoriiigjhfstory, the Reagan administration
fwould add to the nation’s emergency oil
'supply — stored in huge salt domes along the
coasts o f Louisiana and Texas — at the rate o f
.only 35.000 barrels a day, less than half the
;level Congress demanded last year. The
administration also wants to stop filling the
reserve when it reaches 580 million barrels,
■as opposed to the 750 million that lawmakers
•had envisioned.
• T h e d e c is io n , w h ic h w o u ld Bave an
e s tim a te d $ 2 2 5 m illio n n e x t y e a r, is
shortsighted from the standpoint o f both
econom ics and national security.
At $18 a barrel, oil Is a bargain too good to
pass up. W hy risk paying the higher prices
that w ill result if, as experts predict, OPEC
nations eventu ally regain control o f the
m arket? Moreover, the United States spends
m any times the projected savings to protect
its foreign oil supplies, which nonetheless
rem ain vulnerable to disruption. W here is the
sense in shortchanging a m ore reliable source
o f oil?
V '
•
, T h ere's another good reason for filling the
reserve at the faster pace: Virtually all o f the
oil being pumped into storage com es from
Mexico, whose foreign debt now exceeds $100
billion: about one-quarter o f the total is owed
to American banks. E very dollar the United
States spends on M exican oil Is an Investm ent
In that nation's econom ic stability — and our
own.

BERRY'S WORLD

george

M cG o v e r n

Secrecy A n d United States Presidents
v

Notwithstanding the poet William Blake’s
assurance that secrecy Is “ the human dress."
the two most serious presidential crises in
American history have occurred in the ad­
ministrations of the two most secretive and
manipulative presidents — Richard Nixon and
Ronald Hcagun.
In a perceptive piece. David Broder of The
Washington Post concludes that "A White
House cult of secrecy — linked to a manipulative
view of press relations and rooted in distrust of
Journalists — winds up victimizing the very
politician who creates It."
P r e s id e n t N ix o n c a r r ie d the a rt o f
manipulative public relations to a new Intensity.
More than any previous president, he relied on
public relations experts like Bob Haldeman and
John Ehrllchman.
In contrast to his predecessors, from Roosevelt
to Johnson. Nixon held comparatively few press
. conferences, but extensively used his aides to
manipulate, Intimidate and sometimes discredit
the press. Nixon did not Invent these
manipulative arts, but he carried them to

. . . » .vrruted
cover-up
executedbv
by Nixon
with the n M M j*.1* the Watergate break-in. h
and his men fo lio ™ * #ccrt;t, illegal bombing
also followed the
denied even as it
of Cambodia, which nw
proceeded In 1970«nd
• |g ^
rather ^
In the end. Nix jr chnient proceeding that
submit to «
ujd^iave forced him to leave
almost surely
the White House-jfin Bome respects different -

unprecedented levels. Prior to Ronald Reagan,
no president In modem times held as few press
conferences as Nixon.
As an aspirant for the presidency against John
Kennedy in 1960. and again In 1968 against
Incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey,
Nixon agreed to campaign debates with his
opponent. But once In the White House he
refused all debates with me as the Democratic
nominee. All during the summer and fall of
F M * "1 h“ bMn rol,owln8
1972. Nixon refused even to appear on the same
Nixon script.
Jouily a much better-lnformed
stage with me or to visit the same city where I
was campaigning.
^^!SJK e president than Reagan. He did not
In these same crucial campaign months, he
a!!liC?£^eonstant "nursemaldlng" by aides that
refused to meet with the press. For the most
CoTheen&lt;reQUk^d for Rea« an- Nor dld he h®ve
part, he declined to campaign personally except
{jfbewnected for errors after press conferences
for carefully orchestrated television appearances
and negative TV commercials designed to depict
^ he*»ecrecy manla that led to the Watergate
me as an unstable radical.
rfiLsterhan clearly marked the fiasco over Iran
These tactics "worked" admirably for the
'rajma. The unanswered question Is
Incumbent president. He was carried to victory w ith e r politicians, press and public will learn
In 49 of 50 states. Just as Ronald Reagan was In m w rnore lasting lessons from the current crisis
1984. The trouble with all of this unavailability,
secrecy and manipulation is that It coincided fhan we did from Richard Nixon.

ROBERT WALTERS

DICK WEST

Gazebos,
Kazoos,
Gazoo!
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Language
purists Insist there Is no such word
as "gazoo" and even a slanguage
expert was baffled by Its use.
When Sen. Alan Simpson said
White House reporters sometimes
shouted questions at President
Reagan because they’d "like to stick
It In his gazoo." there was a
tendency to believe the Wyoming
Republican had been misquoted.
One d ictio n a ry I consu lted
equates gazoo with kazoo. And we
all know what a kazoo is.
As to why newsmen would want
to stick their questions in a musical
toy played by humming, I leave to
your Imagination
, ' ' “ d by a roll.ague who like
*
J was a common
West
that ™
gazoo
slang term in the wide open spaces.
Well, I grew up In the wide open
spaces myself and I never heard
that term except as a synomyn for
gazebo, which my dictionary de­
fines as a structure build on a site to
command a view.
Assuming you admire the view
commanded by 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue, the question remains as to
whether there are any gazebos on
the White House grounds.
Clearly, It would make more sense
to try to stick questions In a cupola
than In a musical toy.
You can be pretty sure Simpson
did not accuse reporters of wanting
to stick questions In the president's
bazoo.
By one detlnltlon, a bazoo Is a
"raspberry" or "sound of disap­
proval." and executive mansion
correspondents hear plenty of those
without shouting questions at photo
opportunltes or otherwise raising
their voices.
I prefer to think of my brethren as
trying to put words in the presi­
dent's mouth, or nose, which may
have been done by another defini­
tion pf bazoo.
O ne p la s t ic s u r g e o n w h o
specializes in "nose Jobs" — is there
any other kind? — sized up
Reagan's possible replacements by
appraising their schnozzolas. *
I was pleased to note that insofar
as his view of noses Is concerned,
the country is going to be in good of
hands regardless of who Is elected
as the next president.
I mean, this doctor had nothing
bad to say about possible aspirants.
He opined that Gov. Mario Cuomo of
New York has a nose that is "bold,
masculine and decisive."
That may be one o f the reasons
Cuomo has taken himself out of the
race. You can't get much bolder and
more decisive.

BEN WATTENBERG

W hat Children Think
We have heard the bad news
get Into more trouble If the mother
works. They also think the children
about children. There have been a
series or well-publicized suicides
of working mothers are more in­
and suicide pacts. Television has
dependent than other kids. On
locured in on child abuse. Social
balance, however, by 59 percent to
scientists tell us that high divorce
34 percent, children prefer that
rates yield a very high rise in
their mother have a Job out of home.
female-headed households which, in
W h at a b ou t th ose te r r ib le
turn, yield a very high rate of
schools? This may sound surpris­
children in poverty. Beyond that, we
ing, but most American children
.rilko school" — 77 percent. When
have heard aU^hfluLrotten schools,
drug abuse, children bearing
asked to grade their schools in the
children (teenage pregnancy). Inter­
same way most schools grade them,
esting: All the news comes to us
by letters from A to D, 29 percent
courtesy of adults.
gave their school an A and 49
Comes now another view: what
percent gave them a B. The aspect
the kids think about It. Rather
of school that children liked the
surprisingly, over the years there
least should not come as a surprise:
has been very little public opinion
"cafeteria food."
polling of children. What there was
Now, don't get them wrong:
dealt mostly with what cereals and
American youngsters do feel that
candy children ate. and what televi­
there are big problems among our
sion shows the children watched.
youngsters. The Roper pollsters
This kid gap has been remedied
asked the teenage part of the
by a major new poll, the first
sample about what's going on. More
com prehensive survey to ask
than half the teenagers observed "a
youngsters how they see the world
lo t" of smoking (52 percent),
around them. The poll was taken by
drinking (37 percent), sexual activi­
the Roper Organization, com ­
ty (30 percent), crime (19 percent),
missioned by the American Chicle
drug abuse (19 percent), marijuana
Group and asked questions of 1.000
(23 percent), teenage pregnancy (13
youngsters aged 8 to 17.
percent).
The results are full-bodied and
What to do about It? It turns out,
complex — and quite different from
according to the survey, that less
the view of crisis often presented.
than half of our schools offer sex
Consider a child’s-eye view of his
education or classes on drug and
or her "family and home life."
alcohol abuse. But an overwhelming
Given a choice between "happy"
m ajority o f students in those
and "not too happy." 90 percent
schools (almost 4-to-l) think such
reported they are happy. Asked If
classes are good.
they are happy or not loo happy
It’s a time when we adults are
about "the amount of love your
once again embarked on a small
parSnt(s) show you,” 93 percent say
orgy o f self-flagellation, partly
happy. Nojv, these are discriminat­
because we think our kids are In
ing children; do not think they are
trouble, what with suicides, abuse,
not wildly happy about everything.
dope, poverty, latchkey kids and
Only 62 percent say they are happy
bad schools. But our kids appar­
about "how well you get along with
ently think differently. When asked
your brotherta) or sisters)."
what makes them "feel good" — 95
There Is complexity, too. about
percent responded "being an Amer­
family life, particularly about how
ican." Here’s a question some
children view working mothers.
pollster should ask: "W ho knows
Kids say they think kids are likely to
best about kids?"

BALTIMORE (NEA) — Although
Bethlehem Steel recently agreed to
pay a $1.5 million penalty for
befouling public waterways here in
violation of a major federal antipollution law. the government had
nothing to do with the action.
In stead, two environmental
groups filed a civil suit against the
firm under a special provision of the
Clean Water Act authorizing citizen
enforcement of the statute.
The Environmental Protection
Agency is supposed to assure com­
pliance with the law. but the
Natural Resources Defense Council
notes that "six years of massive
budget cuts and sweeping personnel
cuts at EPA have taken their toll."
The New York-based NRDC is
sh a rp ly c ritic a l o f President
Reagan's lack of leadership on
conservation issues. "Enforcement
of our nation's landmark environ­
m e n t a l la w s r e m a in s at a
standstill." it says.
Phillip Reed shares that con­
clusion. He Is a lawyer with the
Environmental Law Institute In
Washington who headed an in­
dependent commission ctlmbilahed
by EPA to study the trend toward
citizens' suits against polluters.
"W e reported a definite surge In
such suits in the last two or three
years, and they definitely were
triggered by a perception that EPA
was not doing Its Job," says Reed.
"Starting in 1981 and 1982. EPA's
enforcement actions dropped pre­
cipitously."
NRDC says it would "prefer not to
be In the business of enforcement"
but has been forced to do so because
the Reagan administration pro­
motes the myth that "corporate
Goliaths do a good Job of policing
themselves and safeguarding the
quality of our environment."
Often working with national or
local environmental organizations,
NRDC Investigated the pollution of
rivers, lakes and other waterways
by more than 1,000 companies.
L egal cases were developed
against 88 major violators. Includ­
in g th e P f i z e r and U pjohn
pharm aceutical firms, General
Electric and Texas Instruments.
Concentrating Initially on the
Northeast and to a lesser extent the
South and Midwest (future activity
is planned in the West) NRDC has
filed law su its In Maine, New
Hampshire. Massachusetts, Con­
necticut. Rhode Island, New York,
Maryland, Virginia, Louisiana. Ohio
and Michigan.
Of those cases, 44 were settled out
of court by defendants anxious to
avoid embarrassing trials. Another
30 were won by NRDC following
trials, and 14 remain unresolved.

JACKANDERSON

Brazil's Debt M a y Cause W orldw ide Panic

• HHhkU m

"...then at 10:15, you're scheduled to have
your picture taken with a homeless person..."

A s4 Dale V u Atta
W ASH IN G TO N - The *Latin
American debt crisis la deepening,
and federal o fficia ls are con­
templating once again the dread
p o s s ib ilit y p f a fin a n c ia l
Armageddon that could leave the
world banking system a smoldering
ruin.
The effect on millions o f Ameri­
cans, already bent bowlegged under
their consumer debts, would be
catastrophic.
Brazil, the biggest single debtor in
Latin America, recently announced
that It can't even meet Interest
payments on Its $100 billion debt.
Other countries In the region are
making It clear that they must find
some relief from the burden of their
collective $400 billion debt. These
ominous developments are a re­
minder to Treasury and Federal
Reserve Board officials that a full­
blown International panic has been
averted so far with only temporary.
Band-Aid expedients.

What will happen If. the debt
bomb goes off? This Is no academic
question for Treasury officials, who
have been trying to forecast the
consequences and draw up contin­
gency plans to soften the Impact.
But one Treasury economist glumly
predicted that a default by one or
more Latin debtor nations would
create a "credit implosion” In the
United States. Here's why:
Default by Brazil or another big
debtor could cause the collapse of at
least one "megabank" stuck with
th e d e fa u ltin g g o v e r n m e n t's
now-worthless bonds. And such is
the delicate interrelationship among
the major banks that the (allure of
one would almost certainly topple
others like so many dominoes.
The banka that managed to sur­
vive the Initial debacle would lack
the resources to finance the major
c o rp o ra tio n s ' o p era tio n s and
expansion, which depend on bor­
rowed money. Not only would the
supply o f credit dry up, but desper­
ate bankers would call In loans

already made in hopes of staving off
collapse. Calling In loans would
create a wave or corporate defaults
and bankruptcies; refinancing
would be Impossible.
That’s what the Treasury official
meant by credit implosion.
The casualties would not be
restricted to bankers. Corporations
driven over the edge would take
their workers with them. Suddenly
stripped of their Jobs, they would be
unable to make their loan pay­
ments. This would bring even more
banks to ruination, and a full-scale
depression could result.
"The problem with the major
banks is that they are the system,"
a former Treasury official explained
to our associate Michael Blnstein.
The 15,000 banking Institutions
in the United States are ostensibly
Independent. But they are locked
together like Siamese twins in
everything from check clearing,
wire transfers and data processing
to loan sharing and Investment
advice.

More than $1 trilii&lt;
transactions per day de
Interlocking network. 1
and stability of the cred
essential not only for.
Tor the nation's econom
"A sudden failure ol
lion, particularly of sub
can interrupt a Ion
payments and drami
unexpectedly affect oth
Institutions, some of wl
even have a business
with the institution In &lt;
have themselves been v
and sound." Fed chi
Volcker has warned Cor
In other words, the l
su ffer alon g w ith
Perversely. American
businesses are alreai
from Latin America's el
Its debt problems throi
and retren ch m en t,
brought a drastic dec
exports to the debtor n
loss of at least a mil
manufacturing and agri

�Klein Resigns

Chases
Legends

'Job Wasn't Fun Anymore'
By 8am Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Coach Bill Klein, whose varslly
basketball teams won 41 of 56
games the past two years at
Seminole High School, said
Sunday he has resigned that
position because "It Is not fun
anymore and he Is not satisfied
with the job he was doing."
S e m in o le High P rin cip a l
Wayne Epps said he gave Klein
the weekend to reconsider his
decision, but Klein sald hls mind
was made up. Epps said this
morning he will accept applica­
tions for the Job and hopes to
name a successor In two to three
weeks.
"I didn’t like the way things
were going and It has concerned
m e fo r s o m e t i m e , ” th e
47-year-old Klein said. "It wasn't
fun anymore and I was not
satisfied with the Job I was
doing. And you sure don’t want
to do a Job like this If It isn’t fun.
"It will be better for everybody
involved to step down, but
mostly It will be better for me.”
Epps said the announcement
came as a complete surprise.
"Bill came In and told me over
the break," Epps said. "I was
totally surprised."
Klein took over a strong pro­
gram two years ago when he
replaced Chris Marlette who had
been coach the previous three
years. At the time. Klein took the
Job with mixed emotions due to
the fact he and Marlette were
close friends.
Klein had served two years as
freshman coach where his teams
were unbeaten (32-0) during that
span. Epps said the choice of
Klein for the varsity Job was a

Basketball
natural since he had coached the
same kids as freshmen.
The Semlnoles were 17-9 with
predominately underclassmen
two years ago and won the
Seminole Athletic Conference.
Klein was voted SAC Coach of
the Year.
With Roderick Henderson, a
three-year varsity starter, and
senior Jerry "S tick ’ ’ Parker
a lo n g w ith Juniors A n d re
Whitney and Craig Walker re­
turning, the Semlnoles planned
on a banner season this past
year.
It was an excellent year as the
Tribe posted a 25-6 record and
was ranked as high as No. 8 in
the Florida Sports W riters
Association Prep Poll. Included
were 10- and 9&gt;game winning
streaks and a victory over
D ayton a B each M ain lan d .
Mainland, which also whipped
Seminole twice, made It to the
Final Four before losing to
eventual champion Miami Se­
nior. Seminole posted a perfect
(10-0) record while winning the
SAC again and Klein was again
SAC Coach of the Year.
The season, however, came to
an premature halt when .a
flrcd-up Lake Mary team upset
the Semlnoles in the district
semifinals, denying them what
was expected to be a classic
showdown with Mainland for the
title. The Tribe had beaten Lake
Mary hahdlly two other times.
Klein said, however, that the
setback to Lake Mary did not
affect this decision. ” 1 was think-

N CAA T s w u a m M t Fbw l
at N s w O rtM M
•:11p.m. — SyraciM avt. Indiana
TatovWon : • p.m. Orlando'* WCPX-d
Radio: 7:*Sp.m.Orlando’ *W M M A -A M (VW)

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - The
Indiana Hooslers can elevate
Bobby Knight to the company of
collegiate basketball’s all-time
coaching elite tonight with a
victory over Syracuse In the
NCAA Tournament final.
Knight can become the third
coach in NCAA history to win
more than two national titles
with a victory over Syracuse
before an expected crowd of
more than 64,000 In the cav­
ernous Superdome. Legendary
flgures John Wooden or UCLA
and Adolph Rupp o f Kentucky
are the only others to achieve
thatdlstlctlon.
Indiana has won two titles In
the past 10 years under Knight,
who also won a title as a player
with Ohio State In 1960.
The showcase game o f college
basketball, set for a 8:12 p.m.
EST tlpoff, culminates a season
that began In mid-November
with 290 Division I teams gun­
ning for the national title.
Lasts I

Bill Klein makes an emphatic point with his
starters. The Seminole High coached retng about It (resign in g) in
J a n u a ry." he said. " I had
tremendous support from the
administration — and that's no
bull. I also had fantastic support

signed Sunday after two successful seasons.
The Semlnoles were 25-6 this past year.

from (wife) Cheryl Klein. It Just
wasn’t fun anymore."
Epps said he was satisfied with
Klein’s performance. "I thought
he did a fine Job," he said. "The

kids played hard, played with
enthusiasm and enjoyed the
game. I thought they were pro­
gressing well and showed a lot of
Improvement."

Splash Helps Lyle Past Sluman
PONTE VEDRA (UPI) - Sandy Lyle
owes at least a small part of his victory in
the Tournament Players Championship
to an unidentified man who decided to
yie a
holes tied at 14-under par 274 Sunday
and had both paired the first playoff
hole, the par-5 16th. On the famous
par-3 17th. Sluman put his shot on the
island green six feet from the hole, while
Lyle’s landed about 50 feet away.
Lyle ran his first putt about three feet
past the hole, and Sluman stepped up
with a chance to win the tournament
and the $180,000 first prize. Just when
he was about to putt, the man Jumped In.
the water, forcing Sluman to back away
from his putt.
When order was restored, Sluman
missed the putt and Lyle went on to win
the tournament by sinking a seven-foot
par putt on the 18th hole after Sluman
missed from 10 feet. Along with the
first-place check, Lyle won a 10-ycar
qualifying exemption.
"I'd already putted, so it wasn't so bad
for me," said Scotland's Lyle, the 1985
British Open champion. "He (Sluman)
was ready to hit the ball and we heard a

Golf
Vff'k W IT Be WftllH'BBVg"
made the p u tt said Sluman. 29. bidding
for his second PGA Tour win. "I was
ready to putt the thing. I’m not saying I
would have made the putt, but it
certainly didn't help me. I can't believe
the guy would Jump in the water like
that."
It was a strange end to a strange day In
what had become a somewhat bizarre 72
holes. Rain hampered play Thursday
and Friday, and Raymond Floyd was
assessed a total of four penalty strokes
during the opening round. Unknown
Steve Jones shot out of nowhere to lead
after 36 holes with Mark O'Meara, then
faded Just as rapidly to finish tied for
ninth place at 7-under 281.
Sunday. It seemed no one wanted to
take the lead and before both Sluman
and Lyle blrdied 18 within a minute of
each other, there were four players tied
at 13-undcr par. with third-round co­
leaders Scott Simpson and O'Meara the
others. Simpson bogied No. 18 to tie for

fourth place with Greg Norman at
12-under 278, while O'Meara finished
alone In third place at 13-under 275.
Until Lyle and Sluman blrdied 18,
there had been only two other birdies on
OiatwilBsn .....................

Lyle, who shot a final-round 70,
2-under par on the par-72, 6.857-yard
Tournament Players Course, gained
momentum when he sank a chip from
15 feet away on the 15th hole for a birdie
3. The 14-under 274 tied the course
72-hole record, set by Calvin Pcetc In
1985.
“ What happened at 15 with thechip-ln
was great for m e," said Lyle, holding a
miniature Union Jack given to him by a
fan in the gallery. "I needed something
to happen. Those are the breaks you’ve
got to have."
Sluman. who shot a 3-under 69
Sunday, collected $108,000, his biggest
puyday ever. The former Florida State
golfer said the big check was no
consolation for coming in second.
"it was one o f those days when I
looked at the leader board and saw my
name on top and I Just kept trying to
make pars and sneak in a few birdies."
he said. "All In all, 1 should be happy
with the week, but It’s really would be

Track &amp; Field
Friday night. Friday’s meet will be the
first time since early In the season
defending state champion Seminole and
runnerup Oak Ridge will go head to
head.
Lake Mary’s top finish In Saturday's
meet was a sixth in the mile relay with a
time of 4:16. Christine Adamson. KwaJa
Floyd. Tcri Whyte and Allison Snell
made up the relay.
Junior hurdler Onyekc Berry returned
to the track after being out 111 since
March 10 and ran a 16.8 for seventh In
the 100 meter hurdles and 49.0 for
eighth in the 300 hurdles. Berry also
teamed with Elisa Maher, Tabitha
Newsome and Tonya McCrae to run a
season's best 50.9 in the 400 meter relay
which was good for eighth place.
The Lady Rams took seventh In the
two mile relay as the team of Adamson.
Tabatha Gano, Whyte and Snell com­
bined for a 10:29.6. Truman High of
Brooklyn was first at 9:26.5. Snell also
finished seventh in the 400 meters
(60.9).
Lake Howell's Lady Silver Hawks had
only two athletes compete in Saturday's
meet and both placed In the top six.
Senior Lisa Samocki finished fourth in
the championship 1.600 meter run
which included the top nine runners
from around the state in all classifica­
tions. Samocki, still gaining her strength
back after a lengthy illness, ran u 5:09.9.
Melanie Bloch of Pensacola Catholic look
first place at 4:54.9
Senior Klin Hanunontrec finished six­
th In (he high Jump us she cleared 5-2

Lyle sank the winning putt in a steady
rain with darkness rapidly falling, eras­
ing fears that the tournament would
have to be concluded today.
"It's never easy to win something," he
said. "Jeff and I had a battle today. I held
It together realistically well and made a
few birdies. All In all. I’m happy with the
day. I'm glad It ended on that hole (18).
Otherwise, there would have been no
light left."

Prep Rogers Thrives
With College Crowd

Tilden O u tle an s 'N o le s
In M ile -R e lay M atch u p
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer
Seminole High almost took a bile out
of the "Big Apple" Saturday but had to
settle for second place in one of the most
hotly contested races at the Florida
Relays in Gainesville.
The Lady Tribe’s mile relay team of
Dorchelle Webster, Yolanda Baker,
Adrian Hlllsman and Shownda Martin
went up against a powerful team from
Tilden High in Brooklyn, N.Y. and it was
Tllden’s runner who Just outlcaned
Martin at the tape for first place. Tilden
finished with a time of 3:48.1 compared
to a season's best 3:48.2 for Seminole.
"U came right down to the end and
both girls leaned at the same time."
Seminole coach Emory Blake said. "The
Tilden girl Just barely outleaned
Shownda (Martin)."
Along with the mile relay, the Lady
‘Noles also finished second In the 440
relay as thr team of Baker, Tasha Wynn,
LaShon Cash and Hlllsman ran a
season's best time of 48.3. Orlando Oak
Ridge was first at 47.6.
Seminole took third In the 800 meter
relay with the team of Cash. Hlllsman,
Wynn and Webster running a 1:43. Oak
Ridge was first at 1:41.2.
In open events for Seminole. Webster
was third In the 300 meter hurdles at
46.6 while Miramar's Tonya Parker won
with a time or 44.9. Baker also came
away with a fifth place finish In the 100
meters with a time of 12.5.
"1 was pleased that both of our relays
dropped their times." Blake sald.J'Now
we're looking forward to this week.
On Tuesday. Seminole will travel to
Palatka for a dual meet while the
Seminole High Invitational Is on tap

nice to be going to Augusta (In two
weeks for the Masters)."
Tournam ent winners receive an
automatic invitation to the Masters.
Lyle, who has 16 international wins
and a victory •in last year's Oreater
Greensboro Open to go with Sunday's
win, said he hoped he proved the British
Open win was not a fluke. He also gladly
accepted the qualifying exemption, and
said he plans to play at least the
minimum 15 events each year necessary
to keep his PGA card.
“ In my situation, It (the exemption) is,
very Important," he said. "Because if I
don’t play well the next few years. I’m
going to be struggling to get my card
(without the exemption). This helps an
awful lot."

HaraM PS•*• toy T M im y Vincent

E ile e n C o stello cranks up. The
Lym an junior tossed the discus 129-0
for a socond-place finish at the
Florid* Relays Saturday.
State record holder Holly Kelly of Miami
Palmetto was first at 5-9V&amp;.
Lyman High had a pair of excellent
performances at Saturday's meet as
Julie Greenberg took a first place and
Eileen Costello a pair of seconds.
Greenberg soared to a time of 11:27.4
to win the 3,200 meters while Costello
was seco nd In the discus at 129-0 and
second in the shot pul at 39-3. Tampa
Galthcr'ft Cynthia Sumes. one of the lop
shot putters In state history, won both
events as she heaved the shot 43-11'.6
and hurled the disc 133-10.

To collegiate runners. Lyman High
Junior Robin Rogers may not look too
Intimidating, but, at Saturday’s Florida
Relays In Gainesville, he entered their
domain and ran right with some of the
best the southeast has to offer.
Rogers received special permission to
compete In the college division In the
10,000 meter run at Saturday's meet
and came away with a time of 31:3S.5,
the best high school time In the nation
for that distance for the last two years.
Rogers, who finished sixth In the pack of
college runners, also qualified for the
TAC Junior National meet in June In
Tucson. Ariz.
"H e (Rogers) has been training for this
for four monthB," Lyman coach Fred
Flnke said. “ And he came out and ran an
Incredible race. He finished Just ahead of
Florida's Oscar Sosa who was AllSoutheastern Conference in cross
country."
Rogers, the only high school runner In
the race, came through the two mile
mark with a 9:52 split. He was at 14:58
after three miles, 20:07 after four and
25:15 after five.
While Rogers' feat In the 10,000
meters was the highlight of the meet for
Lyman, the Greyhounds had a number
of solid performances. The distance
medley relay team took fourth In the
high school division with a new school
record time of 10:46.9. The team
Included Octavius Holiday on the 880
leg. Darren Marshall on the 440, Mike
Mohlcr (1.320) and Teddy Mitchell
(mile).
Ricky Sheets tied for third in the pole
vault at 11-6.
Lake Brantley High senior Bucky
Chambers continued his excellent
season In the shot put as 'ic unloaded a
put of 54-5 for second place.
-C h ris Fitter

Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim,
who played with former NBA
great Dave Bing in the Or­
angem en backcourt In the
mid-1960s. Is making his first
championship game appearance.
Before this season, Syracuse had
failed to win consecutive NCAA
Tournament games in 11 years
under Boeheim.
The game will be televised on
CBS and the network Is hopeful
the matchup will attract an
audience that approaches the
top-rated final ever, the 1979
championship game featuring
Magic Johnson of Michigan State
against Larry Bird of Indiana
State.
Indiana, winner of the Midwest
Regional, reached the final by
.dawning top-ranked Nevada-Las
Vegas 97-73 In a semifinal game
Saturday. Syracuse, the East
Regional champion, advanced
by whipping Big East rival
Providence 77-63.
A ll-A m e ric a guard S te v e
Alford. Indiana's all-time leading
scorer, struck for a team-high 33
points In the victory over UNLV.
The 6-foot-2 senior presents the
most difficult defensive problem
for Syracuse. The Hooslers use
screens to get Alford open for his
Jump shot.
"1 didn't sleep much after
watching the Indiana game
(against UNLV)," Boeheim said.
"When Alford plays the way he
did, I don’t know if they're
beatable."
If Syracuse uses a man-to man
defense, as they have much of
th e t o u r n a m e n t , g u a r d s
Sherm an D ou glas or G reg
Monroe or small forward Howard
Triche will cover Alford.
"Alford is going to get his
points," Boeheim said, "but any
one of their starters is capable of
a 20-plus point night so you
can't be concerned with Alford
alone."
Syracuse’s star during the
tournament has been Rony
Selkaly. a 6-foot-10 Junior center
who did not begin playing
basketball until he was in the
ninth grade In Athens. Greece.
He is scoring 24 points a game In
five NCAA gam es and has
teamed with freshman forward
Derrick Coleman to give the
Orangemen formidable Inside
punch.
" I think Syracuse has an
ou tstan d in g Inside g a m e ."
Knight said. "Selkaly and Col­
eman are very, very good Inside.
There are three or four things
that you have to be able to do to
play Inside and they do all of
them well."
Indiana will play Its traditional
man-to-man defense and Dean
Garrett will try to stop Selkaly.
S a tu rd a y , U N L V 's A rm on
Gilliam scored 32 points against
Garrett.
Indiana was rated among the
top teams In the country begin­
ning the season after returning
its three top scorers from a team
that went 21-8 and made the
NCAAs last year. Alford. Rick
Calloway and Daryl Thomas
were Joined by Junior-college
transfers Garrett and Keith
Smart.
Syracuse lost Its three leading
scorers — Dwayne " P e a r l"
Washington. Rafael Addison and
Wendell Alexis — from last
year's 26-6 club. Sophomore
Sherman Douglas has been u
surprise, replacing Washington
at point guard and becoming the
team's lop scorer.

�r *■ » » &gt; • P • ►r i*'# w i+ &lt;r *■ r

fl

SA— Sanford Herald, Sanford. FI.

Monday, March 30, HIT

Bloomington Police, Tavern Owners A d d Security
BLOOMINGTON. Ind. (UPl) - Law
enforcement officials and local taverns
arc adding security In anticipation of
Indiana beating Syracuse In the NCAA
basketball championship game Mon­
day night, officials said.
Both the Indiana University and
Bloomington Police Departments say
they will have extra officers on duty to
help keep students and local revelers
under control. Taverns near the
campus plan to have extra workers on
duty to handle the expected crowds.
"W e’re not going to turn our heads
on those who arc breaking the law, but
we want everyone to have a good
time," said Ll. Jack Frltch. a shift
commander at the IUPD. " If wc see
something, we'll take action.
The IUPD will close a section of road
around Showalter Fountain, the site of
student celebrations after NCAA
basketball championship victories In
1976 and 1981. Flitch said Sunday.
More than 3.000 people showed up at
the fountain after the Hooslers* semifi­

nal triumph over Ncvada-Las Vegas
Saturday.
Five arrests were made Saturday,
Flitch said, adding most were for
driving under the influence of alcohol.
•One student tried to lake off with one
of the dolphin replicas at the fountain,
but abandoned the effort when con­
fronted by !U police. Frltch said.
Bloomington police will try to be
highly visible downtown, where many
taverns frequented by students are
located, said Capt. Steve Sharp, a BPD
shift commander.
A block or Kirkwood Avenue, where ,
2,500 people celebrated in the street
after Indiana's triumph Saturday, will
be closed to traffic. Sharp said. Two
arrests were made on the street
Saturday, one for indecent exposure
and one for reckless driving. Sharp
said.
Nick's English Hut and Hooligan's
Drinkery. two taverns located on the
block closed to trafllc. will try to keep

Basketball
damage to a minimum by serving
drinks only In plastic containers, with
takeout orders only In cans.
"Nothing will be sold In glass," said
Jim Mathias, manager or Nick's.
"W e’ll be taking a few chandeliers
down, too."
Hooligan's will remove exposed neon
lights and any plants that could be
grabbed In order to minimize damage,
said Gerald Borman, co-manager.
"Hopefully, we'll have nothing out
that anybody can get their hands on."
he said.
Only 200 people will be allowed into
the 300-person-capaclty bar and only
beer and soft drinks will be sold In
order to keep the crowd under control.
Borman said.

Shakar's 2-Hitter, MVP Letterio
Master Lyman In Tourney Final
Bjr Scott S u d o r
Harold Sports Writer
LONGWOOD - Lake Mary
left-hander Steve Shakar Is de­
velopin g a reputation as a
greyhound tamer. Shakar. who
subdued Lyman March 13 tn a
Seminole Athletic Conference
battle, mastered the ‘Hounds
again Saturday with a nifty
two-hltter.
Shakar’s strong outing lifted
Lake Mary to a 4-3 victory and
the the championship of the
Lyman Greater Greyhound In­
vitational baseball tournament
before 255 fans at Lyman High
School.
"I really felt comfortable out
there tonight," Shakar, who
Improved his record to 5-1, said.
"This was probably the best
game that I have pitched so far
this season."
Shakar. who came Into the
contest with a county leading 52
strikeouts, lenghtened his lead
as he fanned nine, while walking
only three. Shakar mixed his
fastball with a strong curve to
keep the 'Hounds guessing.
The triumph Improves the
seventh-ranked (4A) Rams to
14-2. T h e loss d rop s the
Greyhounds to 9-8.
Lyman coach Bob McCullough
had simple, but accurate view of

Baseball
the game. "W e didn't hit the
baseball," McCullough sold.
"You aren't going to win a heck
of a lot of games with only two
hits. We have to learn that
hitting Is just as much a mental
art as a physical one."
Lyman pitcher Ross Urshan.
who registered a pair of victories
In relief appearences earlier In
the tournament, only gave up
five hits. Urshan (4*3) struck out
seven, while walking four.
"I thought that Ross pitched a
good game." McCullough said.
"They Just had one big inning
they hurt us. Other that that, he
played well."
The big Inning that Mc­
Cullough referred to came In the
bottom of the third with the
game scoreless.
Ram shortstop Shane Letterio.
who has committed to the Uni­
versity of Miami, led off the
Inning with a long Komer to left.
The round-tripper was the tal­
ented senior's first of the season.
"It feels good to finally hit
one," Letterio, who was voted
most valuable player of the
tournament, said. "W e are hit­

ting the ball better. I feel as
though we are starting to peak."
Ram second baseman Wes
Weger was then walked. Catcher
Ryan Lisle followed with a single
to left, advandlng Weger to
second. Third baseman Anthony
Laszaic was then walked.
Designated hitter Eric Blrle
came to the plate and drilled a
single to left, scoring Weger. and
keeping the bags full. Lisle
scored when Urshan unleashed
a wild pitch. Laszaic went to
third, and Blrle went to second
on the play. Laszaic Bcored what
amounted to be the winning run
a on groundout by Jeff "L efty "
Hagen.
Lyman scored three runs In
the top of the sixth to make the
contest Interesting. Second
b a sem a n D a rre n B o y c s e n
reached on an infield single. Left
fielder John Luce followed with
a walk. Boyesen and Luce
advanced to second and third on
a passed ball. Sophomore Chris
Radcliff then walked to load the
bases. Boyesen scored when
Shakar uncorked a wild pitch
Luce and Radcliff took second
and third on the play. Kenny
Jackson then hit a high pop up
to Letterio, who allowed the bail
to drop for an error, scoring two
runs to cut the deficit to 4-3.

Brantley Rebound
Has Smith Smiling

i!

By Scott Sander
Herald Sports Writer
LONGWOOD — Prior to the start of the Lyman
Greater Greyhound Spring Invitational baseball
toumamnet. the season had been extremely
frustrating for Lake Brantley coach Mike Smith
and his Patriots.
Smith's youthful Patriots, comprised mostly of
freshmen and sophomores, had played well, but
came up on the short end of the stick in almost
every game. The Pats had lost six games by one
run and several other by two tallies.
Smith was hoping that his team would turn
things around In the tournament. As It turned
out. Smith got exactly what he was asking for,
and then some.
On Saturday afternoon the Patriots knocked off
two county rivals. Oviedo (5-4) and Lake Howell
(12-11), capturing third place In the tourney.
The victories up Brantley's record to 6-12.
Oviedo fell to 10*5 and Lake Howell to 11-7.
"I really think that we can turn things around,"
Smith said. "Our kids really showed what they
■are made or In these games."
• After defeating Lake Howell earlier In the day,
:Brantley met Oviedo, an 11-1 winner over
.Orlando Lake Highland Prep, in the consolation
[game.
*. Brantley pitcher Ed Dickmycr rebounded from
'.control problems against Lake Howell earlier in
■the day to toss a three-hitter against the
:seventh-ranked (3A) Lions to raise his record to
:2-5.
| *‘This win really gives me some confidence."
:Dickmycr, one of three Brantley seniors, said.
|"Now I know that I can pitch against anybody."
j Dickmycr, who came into the game with 41
[strikeouts, whiffed nine Lions, while walking six.
' Jon Cox relelved starter Chris Crockett In the
fourth, and took the loss for Oviedo.
Brantley broke on top with a run In the top of
.
Rendy Green singled to center, scaring
Jeirey Thurston, who had also singled.
***** **“ * ame 1,1 the bottom of the first.
After Mark Merchant walked. Glenn Reichle
reached on an error. Merchant and Reichle then
stole second and third. Catcher Tony Belllower
followed with a sacrifice fly to center, plating
Iterchant for a 11 deadlock.
The Patriots pulled out in front with two runs tn
the top of the third. Freshman Thurston reached
on one of three Oviedo errors. He went to second
on a throwing error. Thurston look third on a
sacrifice fly by freshman Greg Thomas, and
.scored when Jim Morse grounded out.
; Green then took a fastball and put It over the
;left-field fence, giving Brantley a 3-1 buldge. The
tround-tripper was Green's first of the season.
{ These wins really will help us." Qreen. a stocky
junior, said. "W e needed some confidence, and
;theae aril] give It to us."
‘ Oviedo came back with a run in the bottom of
;the frame. A pair of walks put Reichle and Cox on
first and second. The duo then stole second and
third. Reichle scored on a passed ball to make the
score 3-2.
Both clubs scored runs in the fifth Inning to
make the score 4-3.
; Brantley scored the winning run in the top of
the seventh. Morse’s single, a walk to Green, and

I
*r

* r ,v ■ * r
Herald Phat# by Tam m y Vincent

Lake Brantley's Jim “ M ongo" M orse, left,
finds himself In “ No M an's La n d " while
being tagged out by Lake Howell third
baseman Ernest M artinez. M orse, though,
atoned a few innings later with a grand slam
to cap Brantley's 12-11 comeback victory.
an error which allowed Ebbert to reach loaded the
bases. Ted Schlefllln singled, scoring pinchrunner Greg Markham.
Oviedo had a chance to tie the game In the
bottom of the frame. Two walks to Scott Bowers
and Merchant and a single by Jody Spelman
loaded the bases. Spelman scored on a passed
ball, advancing Bowers and Merchant to second
and third.
A t this point. Smith put releiver Jamie Mouw
on the mound. Mouw struck out both batters he
faced to earn the save.
M O S I I S LA M S L A K R H O W IL L IN 7TM, 11-11
In Lake Brant lay'• opening gam* on Saturday attar noon, Jim
“ Mongo" M o n o cracked a grand tla m in tha bottom of th* wvantti
inning, lifted tha Patriot* to a thrilling 11-11 v k fo ry ovar Lake
Hawaii tn lo aa n ' brack*! action In tha Lym an Ibaseball tournamnat.
*1 can't tall you how good It foal* to finally win ona of that* ona run
gam es," a happy Brant lay coach M ika Smith to id. "W a never gave
up today, wa kept packing away and II paid off lor us."
W ith Brantley down, 11-g, tha Patriot* loadad tha batat to tat tha
atago lo r Moraa. Laka Hawaii pitcher David S a u tt (I t) throw a
fat (ball down tha cantor of tha plat* and Moraa hit a lowering homar
wall ovar tha cantar-tioM tanca.
"T hat ta il groat," MPrao, who load* tha county M R SI with It.
told. "W * have lott to m any clot* gam** thit taaton It w at fin ally
n lca to w in o n a ."
Brantlay pitcher Grog M arkham relieved ttarter E d D lckm yer
and Soon Caalorlin* In tha fourth with 6 ran Iley trailing l-t.
M arkham 1)4) told that the win w at extremely tatlttylng. "I
haven’ t pitched much at a ll this y e ar," M arkham , a ten lor, tald. "I
|u*t wanted to get out thar# and do m y b e tl."
Smith ta ld that M arkham w at tha dltloronca In tha gam*. “ Greg
■In and look ch a rg e /' Smith tald. "H a pllchad ona hack o l a
Hawaii took advantage ot D lck m y ar't w ild pitching In tho li n t
Inning a t Otckmyor gave up only on* hit, but walked tin , giving tho
Silver Hawk* a * 4 buldge attar a halt an inning. A t th lt point, Smith
Inaortad Caalorlin*.
Brantley came back with a run In tha bottom ot tha aocond whan
frethman lott flaM ar M ark G a b ro v k clubbed the fIrti ot h it tacrlflea
fllo t: a repo to cantor that plated Grog Ebbert.
Howell longthonod Its toad w ith a p a ir o l ru n t In tho third and
tourth Inning*. In tha third,daaignatadhHtar Vito Scwtoro doubled to
ioff. tearing C h rit Norton, who had tingled. Scularo tcored whan
C h rlt T rie r ting lad la cantor.
In tha tourth, Emoat M o rtln o i raped a two-run homar to loft,
giving tho Hawk* o taamlngly Inturmounlabl* cvthion. Smith put
tarn in
M arkham
I tha gam* attar tho H R . The homar w at the hot-hitting
M artinez's second ot the taaton. “ That M l fait awatom a," M artin*!,
who It hitting .2*1, tald. "II waa a hack ot gamo today/

SYRACUSE FANS GO BERSERK
SYRACUSE. N.Y. (UPI) - Even the
National Guard could not have stopped
a car-stomping, window-breaking,
becr-fllnglng rampage that followed
S yracu se v ic to ry In the N C AA
Tournam ent semifinals, a police
spokesman said.
An estim ated 6,000 exuberant
basketball fans filled the streets In
Syracuse's university section late Sat­
urday and early Sunday, walking over
police patrol and television news cars
and damaging several businesses.
Property damage was In the thousands
of dollars, officials said.
Police reported no arrests or serious
Injuries In the rowdy celebration,
which followed the Syracuse Or­
angemen's 77-63 NCAA semifinal vic­
tory over Providence In the Louisiana
Superdome.
To mark the occasion, the Syracuse
Herald-Journal published Its first extra
edition In some 25 years Saturday
night. The newspaper was hawked

legol Notice
N O TICE O P
FICTITIO US N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In bu tln att at 321*
S. Hw y 1/-«, Sanford, Samlnol*
County, Florid a 32771 under tha
F lc tltlo u i Nam e o l Courtesy
P on tia c Inc. d/b/a Courtesy
Utad C a rt, and that I Intend to
ra g ltta r ta ld name with tha
C la rk ot tha C irc u it Court.
Sam lnol* County, Flo rid a In
accordance with the P ro vltlo n t
ot the Fictitious Nam* Statutes.
T o W lt: Section 1*5.0* Florida
Statutes 1*57.
/»/ Douglas B .T y lt r
Publish M arch It, 23, 30 A
A p ril* , I*f7.
OEM-15*
N O T ICE O F
P U B L IC H E A R IN G
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y . F L O R ID A
P L A N N IN O A N D Z O N IN O
BO AR D /
L O C A L P L A N N IN O A O E N C Y
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that tha Planning and Zoning
Board of tha City of Laka M ary,
Florid a , acting a t the Local
Planning Agency, w ill hold a
P u b lic Hearing to consider the
feasibility of amending tha Land
U se E le m e n t o l tha C it y 's
Comprehensive Plan to Include
provision lor Vested Rights.
The P ublic Hearing w ill b*
held on A p ril 1*. |*«7, at 7:00
P.M ., In the Lake M e ry City
H all, 151 N. Country Club Road,
Lake M ary, Florida, or a t toon
thereafter a t possible. At the
hearing, Interested parties m ay
b* heard with respect to tha
proposed amendment. Copy ol
the amendment It available at
C ity H a ll and tha tam e may b*
inspected by the public during
norm al b u tln att hours.
Carol Edwards,
C ity Clark
Dated th lt 17th day of M arch,
t**7.
A D V IC E T O T H E V U S L I C i It*
a parson decides to eppeel a
decision mad* w llh respect to
any m atter considered at tha
above hearing, he w ill need a
verbatim record of a ll proceed­
ings, Including tha testimony
and evidence, which record Is
not provided by the City ot Lake
M a r y . ( C h a p t e r 21*.0105
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S )
Publish: M arch 20. A p ril 1,1N7
□EM-25*
N O TICE O F
P U B L IC H E A R IN G
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
P L A N N IN G A N D
ZO NING B O AR D /
L O C A L P L A N N IN O A O E N C Y
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
Ihat the Planning and Zoning
Board of the City o l Lake M ary,
Florid a , acting as the Local
Planning Agency, w ill hold a
P ublic Hearing to consider a
request to annex the below
described property and the fea­
sib ility ol granting a specific
amendment to tha adopted City
o l Lake M a ry Comprehensive
P la n , L a n d U s* M a p . E d
Vergara, Trust**, applicant. Is
requesting to edd to the Lend
Use M ap Ihe property described
below and to assign to It tha
Land Usa classification ol Low
Density Residential.
A l the same P ublic Hearing
tha City o l Laka M a ry Planning
and Zoning Board/Local P la n ­
ning Agency w ill consider Ihe
request ol the same Applicant
that tha City ol Lake M a ry zona
th* property R-1AA Single Fa m ­
ily Residential.
Tha proparty lo r which thasa
changes are requested Is legally
described at:
The North as o l fh* Northeast
la ol th* Southwest
of Section
15, Township 20 South, Rang* 30
Hast, Seminole County, Florida.
Containing therein 30.0*0 acres
m ore or loss.
The P u b lic Hearing w ill b t
h old on A p ril 14, IN7, at 7:00
P .M ., In the Laka M a ry C ity
H a ll, 151 N. Country Club Road,
L o k a M ary, Florida, or as soon
thereafter a* possible. A t the
hearing. Interested parties may
be heard with respect to th*
proposed Comprehensive Plan;
L e n d Usa M a p changa and
ra^onlng. Copies o l these re­
quests are available at City H all
and th* same may be inspected
by the public during normal
business hours.
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : If
a person decides to appeal a
decision mada w ith respect to
any m atter considered ot the
above hearing, he w ill need a
vorbistlm record o l a ll proceed
Ings, Including the testimony
and evidence, which record Is
not p iw ld a d by the City ol Lake
M a r y - ( C h a p t e r s 214.0105
F L O R ID A STAT U T ES).
Dati&lt;d this 17th day ot M arch.
tt&gt;7.
C A R O L ED W ARD S,
City Clark
P ub lish : M arch 30. A p ril I, l**7
OEM-2**

UnUbadWtau

Legal Notice
N O TICE OF
F R O C E E D IN O F O R
C L O U NO, V AC AT IN G
A N D A BAN D O N IN G
AN ALLEY
TO W HOM I T M A Y CO N CERN :
You w ill lake notice that the
City Commission ol the City ot
Sanford, Florida, at 7:00 o'clock
P.M . on A p ril 13, IM7, In tha
City Commission Room at the
City H all In the City ot Sentord,
Florida, w ill consider and de­
termine whether or not the City
w ill close, vacate end abandon
any right o l tha City and tha
public In and to a portion of
East/W est alley lying between
E a s t 25th S tre e t (G e n e v a
Avenue) and East 2ith Place
and tying between Palm etto
Avenue and Magnolia Avenue,
further described as follows:
That certain 17' Easl/W esl
alley tying between Lot 13 and
L o t 14, F R A N K
L.
W O O D R U F F S SUBDIVISION,
P la t Book 3. Page 4*. Public
Records o l Seminole County,
Florida.
Persons Interested may op
paar and be heard at tha time
and place specified.
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : It
a person decides to appeal a
decision made with respect to
any m atter considered at the
above meeting o r hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record ol
th* proceedings. Including the
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by the
City of Sanford. (FS 214.0105)
City Commission of ths
City o l Sanford, Florida
By: H .N .T am m , Jr.
City Clark
Publish: M arch 30,1**7
D EM-243

N O TICE O F
P U I L I C H E A R IN 0

downtown, In the university area, the
airport and at newstands around New
York's fifth largest city.
On University Hill, about two dozen
police officers, some on horseback,
patroled the neighborhood, trying to
stop fights and keep fans off of trees
and buildings.
Witnesses said rowdy fans damaged
a police patrol car by stomping on the
hood and trunk, and at least two
television news crews fled from the
area when fans began climbing on the
station's cars. Staffers from Rochester
station WHEC-TV drove back to their
hometown with dents, dirty footprints,
spilled beer and bent antennas.
A bus shelter also was destroyed and
several store windows broken when
too many fans leaned on them. There
were unconfirmed reports at least one
store was looted.
Ted Dellas, who manages the Varsity
pizza parlor, said fans were wellbehaved until the basketball game
ended.

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT
COURTOFTHE
1ITM JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE CO U N TY.
FLO R ID A
C A S E N O .*7-471 l-CA-Ot-Q
C O L L E C T IV E F E D E R A L
SAVIN G S A LOAN
ASSOCIATION,
Plaintiff,
vs.
C A R O L F. B A K E R ,*
single woman.
Defendant (s).
N O TICE OF ACTION
117710
TO: C A R O L F . B A K E R ,
a single woman, It
alive, and/or dead his
(their) unknown heirs,
devisees, legatees or
grantees end a ll
parsons or parties
claim ing by through,
under or against
him (them).
YO U A R E N O T IFIE O that an
A ction tor foreclosu re o l a
mortgage on th* following pro­
p e rty In S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Florlda:
L O T 4 ,' B L O C K C ,
SW EETW ATER OAKS, S E C ­
TION 14, ACCO R D IN G TO T H E
PLA T T H E R E O F AS R E ­
C O R D E D IN P L A T BOOK 10.
P A G E S 12 A N D 13, O F T H E
P U B L IC R EC O R D S OF
SEM I H O LE C O U N TY,
FLO R ID A .
has been filed egalnit you and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written detenus, 11 any,
to It on S P E A R A N D H O F­
F M A N , A t t o r n e y s , w h o sa
address Is Coral G ablet Federal
B u ilding, 1541 S u n u t D rive,
Suite 202, Coral Gables, Florida
33143, on or about tho 23rd day of
A p ril, 1*17, and to III* the
original with the Clerk o l this
Court either before service on
S P E A R A N D H O F F M A N , a t­
torneys or Immediately thereat
f o r i o t h b m l a w , «* O w fa u i t w i l l tz *

L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
P L A N N IN G A N D
ZO NINO B O AR D /
L O C A L P L A N N IN O A O E N C Y
NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that th* Planning and Zoning
Board o l th* City o l Lake M ary,
Florida, acting as the Local
Planning Agency, w ill hold a
Public Hearing to consider th*
feasibility o l granting a specific
amendment to th* adopted City
ol Lake M a ry Comprehensive
Plan, Land Usa M ap. Hubert R.
Earley, applicant Is requesting
to add to the Land Usa M ap th*
property described below, which
was recently annexed Into th*
City ot Lake M ary, and to assign
to II tha Land Usa classification
ot low donslty residential and to
zone the property R-1A Single
F a m ily Residential. Th* pro­
p e rty lo r w h ich th is C o m ­
prehensive P lan Land Uss Akop
chang* and zoning changa Is
requested is located north ol
Stato Road 427 and east of
Wsbster Street end Is legally
described as:
Tha West 1*1.0* feet ol th*
Northwest V4 ot tha Southwest I*
lying North of Slat* Road No.
427 (a 100' R/W ) In Section 22,
Township 20 South, Rang* 30
East. Semlnola County, Florida.
LESS th* Southerly 170.00 feet
thereof.
Containing 4.4*4 acras more or
lass and being sub|*ct lo any
rights-ol-way and aaeemants ol
record.
AND
Th* East *S.$4 teat of th* West
313.)* feet ot the Northwest U ot
tho Southwest U lying North ot
Stale Road No. 437 (a 100' R/W)
in Section 32. Township 20 South,
R a n g * 30 E a s t , S a m ln o l*
County, Florida.
LE S S Ihe Southerly 170.00 feet
Containing 2-0*7 acres more or
le u and being subject to any
rlghts-of-way and casements ol
record.
AND
Tho East *5.54 foot o l th* West
2*4.43 feet o l tho Northwest 14 of
the Southwest U lying North ol
Stato Rood No. 427 (a 100' R/W)
In Section 22, Township &gt;0 South,
R a n g e 30 E a s t , S a m ln o l*
County, Florida
LE S S the Southerly 170.00 feet
Containing 2.1S11
le u and being subject lo any
rlghts-of-way end easements of
The P u b lic Hearing w ill be
hold on A p ril 14, 1M7, at 7:00
P.M ., In tha Laka M a ry City
H all, IS* N. Country Club Road,
Laka M ary, Florida, or os soon
thereafter as possible. At the
hearing, Interested parties may
bo hoard with respect to tho
DfOQOiad C o m p r a h f u lv Plan,
Lend Us* M ap changa and
re zoning Copies ot th o u re­
quests ore available at City Hall
and tha soma may be Inspected
by th* public during normal
business hours.
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : If
a parson decides to appeal a
decision mad* with respect to
any matter considered at the
above hearing, he w ill need a
verbatim record ot a ll proceed
Ings, Including tha testimony
and evidence, which record Is
not provided by th* City ol Lake
M a r y . ( C h a p t e r s &gt;**.010*
F L O R ID A STATU TES)
Dated this 17th day ot M arch,
1X7.
C A R O L ED W ARD S,
City Clark
Publish: M arch 30, A p ril 0, 1f*7
D E M 244

- r

entered egelnst you for th*
r*|l*l demanded In the Com ­
plaint or Petition.
W ITN ESS m y hand and soal
of this Court on this 1*th day ot
M arch, lft7 .
(seal)
D A V I D N .B E R R I E N
A s Clerk of th* Court
Cecelia V. Ekern
Publish: M arch 23, X .A p ril 4,
13.1*17
OEM-212

NO TICE O F
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
P L A N N IN O A N D
ZONINO B O AR D /
L O C A L P LA N N IN G A O E N C Y
NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that th* Planning and Zoning
Board of th* City of Lake M ary,
Florida, acting as tha Local
Planning Agency, w ill hold a
Public Hearing to consider th*
feasibility ol granting a specific
amendment to th* adopted City
of Lake M a ry Comprehensive
Plan, Land U u Map. Jam es B.
Thom pson, a p p lic a n t Is r e ­
questing a change from th*
p re u n t Low Density Residential
to Com m erclal/O lllc* lo r this
certain parcel of land described
below.
A t th* same Public Hearing
th* City o l Lake M a ry Planning
and Zoning Board/Local Plannlng Agency w ill consider the
request of the seme Applicant
that tha City e l Lake M e ry grant
th* re zoning of th* seme parcel
ot land from It presort zoning
classification of A-1 Agriculture
to PO Professional Office.
Th* property for which this
Comprehensive Plan Land U u
M ap change and re zoning are
requested Is located at 415 E.
L a k e M a r y B e u la v a rd . Tha
p r e p a r t y f o r w h ic h th a sa
changes are requested is legally
described as:
Com m encing at th* N. U
corner of Section 11-20-30, run
South IS ft. to a p o in t o l
beginning. Thence run South a
distance of 2U.1S ft., thence run
South 72 degrees 07"I0 sec. East
a distance of 2514 ft, thane* run
South 71 degrees 34" South 141
ft., thence South 7* degrees S3"
East 12*.2 ft., thence run North
SI degrees East 170.21 t l„ thane*
run North 3IS ft., thence West
*40 ft. to th* point ot baginning.
Th* P ublic Hearing w ill ba
held on A p ril 14, 1t*7, at 7:00
P .M .. In th* Lake M a ry City
Halt, 1M N, Country Club Road,
Laka M ary, Florida, or a* soon
thereafter as possible At the
hearing. Interested parties may
ba hoard with respect to tha
proposed Comprehensive Flan,
L an d U u M ap changa and
re zoning. Copies ot th o u re­
quests era available at C ity H all
and the same may be inspected
by th* public during normal
bu slneu hours.
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : II
a person d o c ld n to appeal a
decision mode with respect to
any m atter considered at the
above hearing, he w ill need a
verbatim record e l a ll proceed­
ings, Including th* testimony
end evidence, which record Is
not provided by the City e l Lake
M e r y . ( C h a p t e r s 2*4.0101
F L O R ID A STATUTES).
Dated this 17th day ot M arch.
1**7.
C A R O L ED W ARD S,
C ity Clerk
Publish: M arch 30, A p ril *. IM7
D E M 245

Legal Notice
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y . F L O R ID A
NO TICE OF
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by the Planning and Zoning
Board ol fh* City ot Laka M ary,
Florida, that said Board w ill
hold a Public Hearing to consid­
er a request from Hubert R.
Earley that th* City of Lake
M ary, Florida, vacate and annul
tha plat o l th* following de­
scribed property and rapist:
Lots 1-7, Block E. and Lots
I-to. Block F, of Lake M e ry
Woods ( P h a u III), according lo
tha plat thereof as recorded In
Plat Book 24, Pag* 35, ot the
P u b lic Records o l Sem inole
County, Florida.
Th* P ublic Hearing w ilt be
held In th* C ity H ell at 151 North
Country Club Road In Lake
M ary, Florida, on A p ril 14, 1X7,
at 7:00 P.M ., or as soon thereatter as possible. A l that time all
I n le r ts la d p e rso n s to r and
a g ainst tha request w ill be
heard. Said hasrlng may be
continued from tim e to time
until a (Inal recommend* IIon Is
m ad* by th* P la n n in g and
Zoning Board.
This notice shall be posted In
three (3) public places within
th* City ol Lake M ary, at th*
City H ell within said City, and
published In a newspaper of
general circulation In th* City of
Lake M ary, prior to the date of
the Public Hearing. In addition,
notice shall be posted In the area
to be considered at laast fifteen
115) days prior lo tha data ot
P ublic Haaring.
A taped record of this meeting
Is mad* by th* City for Its
convenience. This record may
not constitute en adequate re ­
cord for th* purposes ol appeal
from a decision mad* with
respect to th* foregoing matter.
Any person wishing to ensure
that an adequate record of the
p n c M S I m la m alnteliw *
appellate purposes Is advised to
make th* necessary arrange­
ments at his or her own expert*.
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
/%/Jean M . Stacy
Planning A Zoning Secretary
D A T E D : M arch 34,1X7
Publish: M arch 30, A p ril* , 1X7
OEM-251
NO TICE O F
F U B L IC H E A R IN O
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
P L A N N IN O A N D
ZONINO BO AR D /
L O C A L P L A N N IN O A O E N C Y
NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that th* Planning and Zoning
Board of tha City of Lake M ary,
Florida, acting as tha Local
Planning Agency, w ill hold a
Public Haaring lo consider the
feasibility ol granting a specific
amendment to fh* adopted City
ot Lake M ary Comprehensive
Plan, Land U u M ap Hagen
Homes. Inc., eppl leant. Is re ­
questing to odd to th* Land U u
M ap the property described
below, which w at recently an ­
nexed Into th* City ot Lake
M ary, and to assign to It th*
Lend U u classification o l low
density residential. The p ro­
p e rty fo r w h ich th is C o m ­
prehensive Land Plan U u M ap
change It requested It located
north of State Rood 427 and east
ol Webstar Street and It legally
deter Ibad at:
Th* South 170.00 feet ol th*
following described parcel ol
land:
Th* East *5.54 feet ot th* West
202.42 feet ol the Northwest U of
th* Southwest i* lying North of
State Road No. 427 (a 100 foot
righ t-of-w ay) In Section 22,
Township 20 South, Ranga 30
E a it.
Containing 0.3*0 acres more or
la u and being subject to any
rights-ol-way and easements of
record.
AN D
Th* South 170.00 teet of the
following described parcel of
land:
Tha East *5.54 teat of tha West
3*1.14 feat ot th* Northwest (a ol
th* Southwest \a lying North ol
Slat* Road 427 (a 100 foot
right-of-w ay) In Section 23.
Township 30 South, Rang* X
East, Semlnola County, Florida.
Containing 0.310 acres more or
la u and being subject to any
rlghtsof-w ay and a*s*marts of
The P ublic Haaring w ill ba
held on A p ril 14, 1M7, at 7:00
P .M .. In tha Lake M e ry City
Half, I X N, Country Club Road.
Lake M ery, Florida, or as toon
thereafter a t p o u lb lt. At th*
hearing. Interested parties may
ba heard with respect to th*
proposed Comprehensive plan.
Land U u M ap chang*. Copies ot
th lt requests It available at City
H a ll and tha tarn* may ba
Inspected by th* public during
normal buslneu hours.
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : If
a parson decides to appeal a
decision made with respect to
any m atter considered a l th*
above hearing, he w ill need a
verbatim record o l a ll proceed
Ings, Including th* testimony
and evidence, which record It
not provided by tha City of Laka
M a r y . ( C h a p t e r s 214.0105
F L O R ID A STATUTES).
Dated this 17th day ot M arch,
1X7.
C A R O L EDW ARDS.
City Clark
P o lis h : M arch X . A p ril B, 1X7
O E M 247

l

�\
t

i %* n *

►a*

#-

%

I
tsnfsrd HsrakL Sanford, FI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

Jordan Shakos Off Injury,
Loads Bulls Past 'CBA Knleks'
United Press International
The Chicago Bulls almost lost as much ofTense with one
Injury Sunday night as the Knicks have with six.
Michael Jordan, who injured his left wrist while
scrambling for the ball against three of the "C B A " Knicks,
suffered a bruise but Is expected to play Tuesday night
against Washington.
"Although my left wrist hurts and I'll be wearing a
protective bandage an a splint for a couple of days, there’s
no way I’m going to miss the Washington game Tuesday."
Jordan said after the Bulls’ 115-96 victory over the Injury
depleted Knicks. "Especially with Moses Malone back.
"1 know it may have been tough getting up for the
Knicks, CBA or NBA, I was ready to go and so were my
teammates, especially Charles Oakley."
The Knicks played without their three 7-footers — Bill
Cartwright, Patrick Ewing and Jawann Oldham, and three
other regulars. New York used five players signed out of the
Continental Basketball Association.
Jordan who helped snap the Bulls’ two-game losing
streak by getting 33 points before hurting his wrist with
2:42 left to play. Despite suffering their fifth straight toss
and ninth in their last 10 contests to the Bulls, Knicks
coach Bob Hill wasn't discouraged with the efforts of the
nine players he was able to use.
Elsewhere, Dallas defeated Cleveland 101-98, Boston
beat Philadelphia 118-100, Detroit edged Seattle 108-107,
and Portland pounded San Antonio 135-113.

Red Wings Clinch Playoff Berth
United Frees International
The Detroit Red Wings turned the Norris Division upside
down this season, and the rest of the division Is still In a
shambles from the shock waves.
The Red Wings, the worst team in the NHL last year,
clinched a playoff berth last week while five points separate
St. Louis, Minnesota, Chicago and Toronto in the race for
the final three spots.
The Maple Leafs were mired in last place a week ago. but
a 6-2 victory over the Winnipeg Jets Sunday night pulled
Toronto within a point of Minnesota, which lost to
Washington 4-2 and Chicago, an 8-6 loser to Boston.
"Our season will come down to our two games with
Chicago," Maple Leafs coach John Brophy said. " I f we
want to pay the price, the final spot is ours. We hold the
key to our own destiny."
Elsewhere, Hartford ripped Vancouver 7-4. Edmonton
shaded Buffalo 3-2 and Montreal topped Pittsburgh 4-1.

Lucky Earnhardt Wins TranSouth
DARLINGTON. S.C. (UPI) — You could hardly blame
Dale Earnhardt if he was an emotional wreck following his
TranSouth 500 victory.
"There were a lot of wrecks," Earnhardt said. " We
dodged wrecks, and I wrecked, and we still won the race.
That's tough to do. It was Just a lucky, fortunate day for
On the last lap of Sunday's 367-lap race, leader Bill
Elliott's Ford ran out of gas and Earnhardt blew by him in
turn four to take a 1.23-second win and a 852,985
paycheck.
With 10 laps remaining, Earnhardt a half-lap lead over
Elliott and Ken Schrader, but had to pit for fuel. When he
returned to the track, he was in third place and six seconds
behind Elliott, who had moved into the lead.

3 O f Top Seeds Play Today
CHICAGO (UPI) — Three of the eight (op-Bceded players
— Johan Krlek, Scott Davis and Christo van Rensbcrg —
will see first-round action today in the 8315,000
Volvo-Chlcago tennis tournament.
The fifth-seeded Krlek of South Africa will meet Marcel
Freeman from Los Angeles; sixth-seeded Scott Davis from
Bardmoor. battles Christo Steyn from South Africa, and
seventh-seeded Christo van Rensbcrg of South Africa,
meets Kelly Jones of San Diego.
France's Yannick Noah was awarded the top seed in the
32-man draw Sunday when he disclosed from his Paris
home he would participate in the tournament.
Noah had been summoned late Saturday by toumapient
director Henry Brehm following the sudden wlthdrawl
Friday of John McEnroe. Kevin Curren, and Robert Scguso.

Skip Trial Upsets Snow Chief
HALLANDALE (UPI) — Warm and muggy weather took
its toll on favored Snow Chief, bogging him down in the
Gulfstream Park handicap and allowing Skip Trial to
overtake him and pound down the stretch to a 4 Wlength
victory.
Snow Chief, the sport's leading money winner. Jumped to
an early lead Sunday and held It until the final turn, but
faded to third behind Skip Trial and second place Creme
Fraiche. Wise Times finished fourth as the appearance of
Snow Chief from California had scared off most of a field
which had been expected to be 12 strong.
Skip Trial, trained by Sonny Hlne and ridden by Randy
Romero, covered the 1 14-mile oval in 2:02 4-5, nearly three
seconds off the Gulfstream Park record over a heavy track
that was rated as fast.

Boardwalk To Open Saturday
Boardwalk and Baseball, "An American Classic" theme
park combining 30 thrill rides with live entertainment and
traditional baseball Is scheduled to open Saturday.
Boardwalk and Baseball is located at the site of the old
Circus World attraction Just off Interstate 4. 25 minutes
southwest of Orlando.
The park, which also includes daily baseball games,
memoribllia from the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown and
baseball batting cages, will be open from 9 a.m. until 10
p.m. Admission is 816.95 for adults, 812.95 for children 48
Inches and. children under three free and seniors 55 or
older 812.95. For more information, call 648-5151.

Sanford To Register Pee Wees
The Sanford Recreation Department is holding registra­
tion and tryouts for its youth baseball Pee Wee League on
Tuesday. April 14 at Chase Park on Celery Ave.
The league is for youngsters who will be seven before
Aug. 1. 1987 and will not turn 10 by Aug. 1. Participation
fee is 85 and youngsters’ birth certificate should be
presented at the time of registration.
Youngsters may register the day of tryouts or prior to
tryouts at the Sanford Recreation offices located at the
Sanford Civic Center Youth Wing. Westside Center or
Sanford City Hall. For more information, contact the
Recreation Department at 322-3161.

Monday, March &gt;0, 1997-7A

SCOREBOARD
SCORIBOAID; U N /H IU U ) U R V K t t

TV/RADIO

Aril.
San Dtogo «t.
Sprit*. Calif.

CaMaral* *t

Palm

B A IIB A L L
* p.m. — 0* Land at Leke M ary

Scoffldad. Aril
lotion n Nowton II Kdtlmmoa, Fit. (n|

TV/RADN&gt;;T«M0nU*rcp
TIKVISXM
1 pm. -- ESPN, Cfftogt

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ArimlU

SO FTBALL
4:15 p.m. — Orlande Jorwt at Lyman

BASKETBALL

TK N N II

BASKETBALL: NIACTANOIMI

I pm. - WCP7U Caffagt: NCAA Chtmpl
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I pm. - KPN. Baton Brv'm tt Chicago
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1 am - IPSN. NCAA DMiton I Won't t
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7 pm - WWBF AM (MO). H&gt;gn School
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M l p m - WMMA AM (M l. NCAA:
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Ctlltomia X Milwauka 4
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Montreal vt Baltimore at Miami
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Ctovtland vt Saotttoal Tamp*. Fla
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Tout vt. Baltimaro at Miami
Atlanta re. Minncwi* at Orlando. Fla.
Taranto re. Cincinnati al Tampa. F X
Pittiburgh vt. Philadelphia at Clear
motor, F X
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Pttonburg.FX
L a Angttoi re. Montreal at Wnl Palm
l. Fla.
Sattto re. Oakland at Phaonia. Aria.
Milwaukee re. Ctowlond al Tucton.

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Gears Up
For Invite

MONDAY'S SCHEDULE

CMctpi (Nil vt. tin FrancHe* 0

Tw aOodtiin H. Manhaii IB

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Florida R. North Carolina HatoS
PurdutW Normoattomn
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San Antonio *1Oanvor.»:J0pm,
PhoonlialUtaMXpm.
,
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DatraitalPortland, 10 Xpm
SoCTamonto *1 Sattto. N X pm

BASKITBALL: CBA Playaffi
FlrtUtaoad
loclal (Moo
PmacttovtbpUCPr
(BapMCtrodaortMOll
March il - Rapid City NL Pomaaia It
March Tl — RapidCity tot Ponatocoia to*
March a - PoMooia ill. RtpidCity no
March 14-RapidCity XL PomacaUP
March IS - Rapid City tl. Pontacoto It
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March M-Albany lAMruIttppi HI
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March n-Atoany IX MHWttlppUII
March 74- Atony III. Mdtiuepi W
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March it — Ctockmail 111 Tapaka 114
March II-Cincinnati tX To W u Ik)
March 71- Cincinnati X T*p« «
March D -T tp o U 101,Clnclnnotl M*
Marchta- Ta**katotClncinnttl WIOT)
March 77—OnckmaH lit, TapakaIS
la C n a a v t Rochtord
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March to - Rockhr* tt, la Crow to
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March 11 - tt Rapid City, * It p m.
A tvill-a t Rapid City,*.Hpm.
Aprlll-atAlkany.l 03pm
April 4- tl Atoany. 11 IS, m.
a Apr* 1—alAeainy.l t)pm
i April 7- at Rapid City, t a p m.
k April*-at Rapid City.* )) pm
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Alarchll - *1Clncmnall. I;to p m.
April 1— alCinclnnttl. 7 N ,m
Apr II7- at Raklerd. 1;a p m
April*— at Rocklord. 1 Mpm
. April 7 - 11Rocktori * U ,m
lAprill-alCIncImitl,; Upm
a April P— at Cincinnati. 1 Upm
i-Unocouary
BASKET BALL: NCAATooretOMl Bareffl
EAIT
FlntRound
Al Ourtotto, N C
Marc* 11
North Caralln* 111 Porvnylranit 0
Michigan tt, Navy 0
Notre Dama X Middlt Tomrewt itato 71

Alltow Ortam
Syrocutovk IndtorxUlpm.EST

Al tyrecoa, X T .

W RESTLING

Ftortdall. Punka M
iirrttt* M . WMtom Kantockr M

WRISTUNOi

Al tad Rrtorhrt. XJ.
March It
SyracvaV. Ftortda II
North Carotin* 74 Notre Dam* M

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Al FOoNot. Mkh.

Floit

AIEtdRMhtrtorlNJ.
March71
Syracu* Tt. North Conilno 7)
SOUTHBAIT
FlnlHoood
At LrmlwfAgin, All
Alobom* X North CoroUn*ALT 71
Autlln Ptoy X I lltokot*47
Htw0rto4ntH Brigham Yeung 70
P rtv ttn a X Alobano Bkmlnghom 40
Af I**is|h8ai, Alt.
Morchlt
Profldaa X Aatln Pay 17(OT)
Alobtmotol.NlwOrttMN
FkttBaod
Mo
March))
Ooorgttown TL Buduioll D
n o n tax Momtonu
Ohio Sltto 11. Kentucky 77
Southwnt Mittourl S'eto X Ctomun 40

hulk Hogan * Andre M Giant; Rowdy
Roddy Pipor d Adorabto A*ton AdoW; lh*
Honky Tank Mon d. Jak* "Th* Sake
Robert). Ricky "Th* Draga’ Stoon*o*t I
Rondy Mocho Mon" Sovogt. Butch Rood d.
Kokt B Wore; Mortoy Boa d Juno Yard
Dog; Billy Jock Hoynat and Htrtutot « *
quaiitiutura. Hlltoilty Jtm. Thi Haiti Kid and
unit Barer d King Kang Bundy. IHtto
Tokyo and lord lllttobrook: Grog “Th*
Hammtf" V a X Jrt and Brvdut Bre«c**t d
Jtcrwi and Raymond Rougoau; Rick Martol
m i Tam tank 1 “Th* Magniftcwr Muract
and Cowboy Bob Orton: lh* Ira Shoik and
Nikolai Voikott d Rd Klltor Bare by dii
quoMicatum. Ih* Hart Faimdatton and Darny
Da, 11 d. Th* trttlkh BoiWegi and Ttto

HOCKEY
NOCXIViNNl STANDINGS
D a la i C aalariat*

Brauman brought only four
athletes to Saturday’s Florida
Relays at the University of
u » It
Florida In Gainesville and al|
uu i
tl
four came away with at least a
I
fifth-place finish. The meet was
4} II 7 IN 1)0 not scored so there were no team
» It II
Ml IM
t Montreal
m X4 standings.
t Baton
X » I
14* Ml
Outbtc
nx »
Senior sprinter Earle Martin
X ) It7
17 41 I
Bultato
CtmpfetN CMdffBtt
took second place In the 400
W m l DITTUM
w i T Ph. OF OA meters with a time of 49.10.
t Detroit
Wa I* 71 7)4 X)
"Earle (Martin) could hav&lt;?
St. louH
Tt a 1) 77 xa it)
finished
with a really good time
Mlnotol*
to to I H i n m
but he went out a little too fast,"
It a t &gt;i
Chicago
H M D
Toronto
II 4* 0 M n t a t
Brauman said. "He was under
Smytho Orrtttoa
y Edmonton
41 11 S 1
11 ut in 22 seconds for the first 220 and
t Calgary
aa It I ft a t v i
that's too fast for him."
i Winnipeg
to to I U i u a t
i l a Ant
to to I U a s i n
In the pole vault, senior Sonny
Voncourer
M 0) I at M
) X) Osborn was third as he cleared
■rtadtod playoff barlh
y clincheddivlkiuntitle
11-6. In (he 120 hurdles. Arthur
Satvrtay‘ 1 Rewlti
Herscy took third at 15.01 and
Baton I. Voncourer 1
Detroit l PtotodetpM* I
teammate Alan Seward was fifth
HarttordlPittoburgh*
at
15.44. Seward also ran In the
Quebocl Chicago l
330 hurdles but. In the pre­
Montreal I. Buttetol
TarmtoiEDontonl
liminaries. tripped over the last
Calgary a. L a Angola 1
hurdle and felt and did not
WoddogtoniMimoootal
qualify for the (Inals.
WIT

March 11
Kanta W, SWMliaourl Itato U
GrargtiownX Ohio SUto Tt

a) 14
y Phil*
• Waikinglan
it a
t MY liland
&gt;NY Bangart
Plttkburgh
71 17
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II 4)
AdntiDtvMa

At Lbotovdto, Ky.
March It

ProvtdwK*MLAlabamaO
GoorgttownXKantaP

AUo*tovRto.Ky.
March It
ProvIdeiaXGoargitownT]
MIDWEST

Ikitori Dtvtotoo

Syracrea 77, PreviOne* II
Indiana V. Ntvada la v o g a n

MarchU

Miridi!1

Dolla 114. Wothlngton Ml
Indent IX Atlanta 114
LA Lakart t a Mowtton WO
OotraitULDvnmrWt
SocramantoiaiACUppanll
Geidon Slato I X Utah II*

If

ti

ln«*nin.F*irltotdll
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14
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March I)
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St.lautoANMionoyl
Harttordl. Voncourer I
Edmonton). BuffotoI
Toronto LWmnioog |
Baton l Chicago 4
Montreal 4, Pllliburgh

March tl
Leuiklwi* Itato41 DtPaut )t
IndiauHDukaa

March a
Indian* 77. lautUan* Itato 74

"I think Alan (Seward) could
have came In high In the finals if
he had finished In the prelims."
Brauman said. ‘ ‘ All In all,
though, it was a good meet for
the people wc took."

SOCCER

WtIT
Fin! Rood
Al Salt Lakt City
Marc* ll
Kama tltto ll Goorgit XI0T)
Ntvtdt L a Yoga X Idaho Slato X
UCLA ILCtntral Michigan 7)
Wyoming th Virginia to
Ii c m I R m i
At Salt Lakt CHy
Attn* I)
Novkdk L a V ig a X Kamaiikto4i
Wyoming TL UCLA M
F n lt o a d
AITocmArtt
March 1)
Iona N. SantaClara 74
Oklahoma 74. TuHa 44
Plttlturgh n Mar ill 44
TikM El Pt»o X Arlonall 101)
m
,
-- a». - j
iicaaa rrrv
AIT*con.Arti.
March II
Oklahoma XPltMiurinn
lo a tU T to a E LP a w C
RagtoultooMaato
AllaaWa
MarckX
Im * X Oklahoma (1 (OT)
Ntvada L a V o g aX Wyoming X

Tennessee, Summitt
Grab Championship

U C C IIi M ill ITANOINSI
[atom Dnnuon
W L Pet.
X 14 4*
X 14 AH
14 II 471
» X 414
11 X 47J
&gt; n IU

Baitimori
Ctovtland
Daltot
Mmnttslt
,
CMcaga
ttoau York
Wootora Otvlito*
oTacona
x IS ax
&gt;Kanut City
n it x i
San Dtogo
11 II DO
Wichita
n t* 4i7
Si Laud
m x at
L a Angola
B i n
i ctadad pdytff lp*4
i toomdotuncl
Satarday'i Raaltl
CtontondLMInnnstotlOTI
Chicago kOaltotl
Kama City L St. Laud )
Sonday'tRtoattt
W&lt;hito L Son Dngo 1
TKomi IB. Lot AMtfct 1
MoaOtyt Gaoa
No gomot tchidultd
Toatdty'iOaan
No gomot tchodultd

J.

Basketball
as coach In the Olympics In
1984 was important, but this is
special because Tennessee has
been so good to me."
T e n n e s s e e took a 33-24
halftime lead by virtue of Tech’s
9-of-27 field goal shooting In the
first half. The Lady Tcchsters
only got a point closer, 39-31.
with 16:19 left to go In the game.
Edwards, a 5-foot-10 guard,
scored 8 of her 13 points In the
first half. She was named the
Tournament’s MoBt Valuable
Player.

No appolntmont nocottaryl

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REMODELING

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APRIL 1ST
BOB'S TIRE A
AUTOMOTIVECENTER

—
14
)
14
114
1)

The Scminolcs did not run any
relays and they would have had
their hands full ir they did as. In
the mile relay, Mobile (Ala.)
Davidson ran a time of 3:11.0
which is faster than any mile
relay lime in Florida State Meet
history.

iiiSSqfiSnL*

FREDERICK •ROCKWELL - OUON

••You Nam* X W* Do to"
FR EE ESTIMATES
(Fred)
Iflonq)
DtOff)
0 q t - 4 lll
2*0X111
BDATSS44M
•TATE CERTIFIED I CSC-024U

GB
—
—
)
1
14
—

PARTS 8 SERVICE
OPEN 7:30-5, M-F

AUSTIN. Texas (UPI) - Ten­
nessee had lost to Louisiana
Tech 11 times in their last 12
meetings, and it was not until an
all-night film session at the Final
Four that Volunteer coach Pat
Summitt found the way to win.
Behind the play of freshman
guard Tonya Edwards. Ten­
nessee defeated Louisiana Tech
67-44 Sunday for the NCAA
women's championship. The ti­
tle Is Tennessee’s first in eight
Final-Four appearances.
"After they beat Texas Friday
night, my assistants and I wat­
ched films until 3 a.m.." Sum­
mitt said. "It was not until then
that I felt like we knew their
offensive system and made a
plan to stop the kindB of things
they wanted to do."
Edwards. DcLand's Bridgette
Gordon and Sheila Frost scored
13 points apiece to lead a
tenacious Tennescc defense that
held Louisiana Tech to 20 seco n d - h a l f p o i nt s and a
tournament-record low of 44
total points. The Volunteers.
28-6. so dominated the game
that Tech hit only 16 of 48 field
goals (33 percent), was outrebounded 47-36 and turned the
ball over 20 times.
Tech, which finished 30-3 and
had its 19-game winning streak
snapped, had beaten Tennessee
72-60 earlier in the year.
"The monkey’s off my back."
Summitt said. "It's a great win
today because it was a team
effort. Winning the gold medal

By Chris Ftstar
Herald Sports W riter
Competition-wise, Seminole
High took it pretty easy over
Spring Break and geared up for a
big week of action this week. On
Tuesday, the 'Notes will travel to
Palatka for a dual meet with
coach. Ken Brauman's former
team and, on Friday night, the
Tribe will host its own Seminole
High Invitational.
Tuesday’s meet will be the
fourth su ccessive betw een
Seminole and Palatka. where
Brauman won two Class 3A slate
titles. The Seminole High girls
will also compete in Tuesday’s
dual which starts at 6 p.m.
"Palatka Is a strong 3A team
and we will have our hands
full.” Brauman said. "T h ey’re
strong where we're strong. They
have a couple good hurdlers,
decent sprinters and good long
Jumpers and triple Jumpers."
Friday night’s Seminole In­
vitational, for boys and girls, will
begin with field events at 4 with
running finals scheduled to start
at 7:30. All six Seminole County
teams will be on hand while
Orange County power Orlando
Oak Ridge will also compete.

IN C O M E T A X E S
FIG U R ED FR EE
B rin
ing
g U
us Y
1 our In com a Tax R atum a
W a ’ll F lg u r a T h a m F R U I I
Use Your Refund Aa Your
Down Paymant — Drive Horns Today
Why Waltl Wa'va Qot Your Daall
L im ite d o fl* r • E x p ir e s A p r il I t , 1 M 7

“ Complete Car C a n
A t The Low est P rice"
2Ca l M m*. Vr. Im M

323-9583

U S E D CARS
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S A N F OH U

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l riJJ
SANFORD
O R L A N D O 4 *!b bUBH

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M onday, M arch 3 0 ,1W7

...Probe

Stocks Open Off Sharply
NEW YORK (UPl) - Prices opened sharply
lower Monday In active trading o f New York Stock
Exchange Issues.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose
2.28 last week, was ofT 19.74 to 2316.05 shortly
after the market opened.
Declines outpaced advances 996-97 among the
1,299 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 19,968,000
shares.
Stock prices Tell Friday In active trading as
Investors took some of the profits they have
earned In the blue chips that buttressed two
weeks of record-breaking advances by an

Local Interest
These quota tIons provided by
m e m b e rs o f th e N a tio n a l
Association o f Securities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
prices as o f mid-morning today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.
Bid Ask
American Pioneer
8 814
Barnett Bank
36Vi 36*4
First Union
28V4 28*4
Florida Power
&amp; Light
31*4 32
Fla. Progress
39 39V4
HCA
35*4 3614
Hughes Supply
25*4 26
Morrison's
2714 2814
NCRCorp
6314 6414
Plcsscy
38*4 39*4
Scotty's
14*4 15
Southeast Bank
2914 30
SunTrust
23y* 2414
Walt Disney World 6114 6114
Westlnghouse
5714 6314

Gold And1Silver
NEW YORK (UPl) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
Monday:
Gold
London
Previous close 416.75 up 5.00
Morning fixing 421.80 up 5.05
Hong Kong
424.15 up 9.60
New York
•
Comcx spot
gold open 423.00 up 0.30
Comex spot
sliver open 6.274 up 0.075

Dow Jonoi
Dow Jones Averages — 10:00
30 Indus 2272.59 ofT 63.21
20 Trans
908.91 ofT 26.53
15 Utils
211.88 ofT 5.19
65 Stock 849.26 ofT 23.55

otherwise hesitant market.
“ We finally saw some consolidation of the gains
generated over the last week or so,“ said Richard
McCabe, manager of the market analysis de­
partment at Merrill Lynch A Co.
"A s has been the case since early February,
we've seen the market spurt and then hesitate for
a week ot two before spurting again,” McCabe
said. “ We're now due for some kind of consolida­
tion or retrenchment."
Analysts said the market was unlikely to fall far
before the end of the quarter because of expected
continued buying by Institutions reducing cash
reserves before the end of the first quarter
Tuesday.

Dollar Plunges But
Gold Sharply Higher ...Raines
By United Frees International
Th e U.S. d o lla r plunged
against the yen and opened
lower against major foreign
currencies Monday. Gold was
sharply higher.
The dollar hit yet another
postwar low against the yen on
the Tokyo foreign exchange
m a r k e t d e s p i t e m a s s iv e
dollar-buylng intervention by
the Bank of Japan.
The dollar closed at 146.20
yen. down 2.80 from last Fri­
d a y 's close. T h e p revio u s
postwar low for the dollar was
148.80 last Tuesday.
Bank o f Japan G overn or
Satoshl Sumlta again called for
concerted market Intervention
by the Industrial nations to halt

the yen's climb, but said market
caution made a free-fall of the
dollar unlikely.
Exchange market sources said
the Bank of Japan again in­
tervened on a massive scale as
virtually the only dollar buyer.
They said the central bank
bought between 81.5 and $1.7
billion.
In early European trading, the
dollar dropped again at the
opening of foreign exchanges
despite massive central bank
support.
The dollar opened in Frankfurt
at 1.80 marks, against Friday's
close of 1.8231: in Zurich at
1.5035 Swiss francs, against
1.5195 and In Paris at 6.0090
francs, against 6.0720.

Dollar H,t* N« w Low Against Yen
TOKYO (UPl) - Japanese In­
stitutional Investors turned
away from U.S. government
bonds because of the dollar’s
c o n tin u in g plu n ge to new
postwar lows, securities analysts
said Monday.
The dollar fell to close at
146.20 yen despite massive In­
tervention by the Bank of Japan.
Exchange market traders said
the central bank bought at least
$1.5 billion.
A n a ly s ts fo r J a p a n e s e
securities firms said the dollar's
steep fall appears likely to
further encourage Japanese In­
v e s to rs to d iv e r s ify th e ir
portfolios.
“ Japanese Investors have been
favoring U.S. Treasury securities
because they are safe,” said
Michael Korver, an Investment
analyst at Nomura Research
Institute, but the yen's rise Is

"encouraging them to seek other
markets."
Japanese Investors have been
taking advantage of the high yen
to Invest overseas, but some
economists have warned they
might turn away from U.S.
government seiuritles If their
return falls too low.
A shortfall In demand for U.S.
government securities — which
help finance the massive federal
budget deficit — could force
higher Interest rates In the
United States and restrain
growth.
Of Japan’s $95 billion net
capital outflow last year, much
w e n t to U .S . s e c u r it ie s ,
particularly U.S. government
bonds considered reliable by the
nation's conservative Investors.'
At one point last year, Japanese
Investors held some 60 percent
of newly Issued Treasury bonds.

REALTY TRANSFERS
M artin M lndlch 1 W F Ann to W illiam B
Towles &amp; W F Carolyn. Lt It Woodbrldge At
Tha Sprlrvgi, UnJ.S1tS.M0
Babcock Co to A lla S M a rk i, L t 71 M ayfair
Meadows, ttt.SOO
Jacques A G trm a ln A W F Carolyn to
Franca* J M cW llllam *. Lt 24* Windward
Squara,Sacl.»S*.*00
A lv in L Savoy A W F M argarat to Sandra J
D urr A HB Brian M . Lt 1 Blk N T ht
Woodland* Sac 2. tlO f.000
Pulta Noma Corp to Harold N Spaulding, Lt
IS Alafaya Wood*. Ph XII A. 170,400
Pulta Homa Corp to Roy H Halo A WF
Baryl. L t l Alafaya Wood*. Ph XI 1.170.400
C ra c a Sullivan to Board Of Truttaa*
International Imp Trust Fund. Lt* 40-42
Spring Hammock, *200.000
Dorothy W ilton A HB Donald to P a trick J
Thomas A W F M a ry A. E fO' of LI S B lk A
BavarlyTarr.U 2.S00
Jonathan Andarson A W F Valarle to Joa W
Andarson. Lt I Blk A Starling P ark Un I,
**4,000
Jaspar D Barefoot J r A W F Joann* to
Richard N Vest, LI • Underoak*, WS.000
Fred E Brook* A W F Loretta to Lea B
Haw* A W F Polly, land In Sac 15-If-10. *52.000
Calllm ora Homes Inc to Frank W Fu lm a r A
WF E llt. Un 17 A II Douglas Cantor Cond.
g fjftjQQQ

Woodstream Dav Co to Woodstroam P tr
Ltd. Portion of Lt* 2 A 1. Sec 10, P h illip &gt; R
Yonge Grant, *2.500.000
Ralnarlo M Serrano A Irma to M arlin
Detweller, trustee, land In Sac 21-21-90.

fno.ooo
Ruby E Johnson to Sara C Tolar, L t *1
Tuscawllla U n A 1110.000
Branlm lr Botlc to M arc Zipper, Un 0 . One
Douglas Place n, tat,too
Anden Croup to Andrew Rodrlguei A WF
Dobra. L t 17t Orange grave P a rk U n A
STUN
Ryland Croup lo Pedro A Vatallo J r A WF
Yolanda. Lt f t Stillwater Ph I, tM.SOO
W ilbur P Dorthlmer A W F Katharine to
W illiam D Cline A W F Anna. L t II The Forest
P h 2 S a c l.lt7 .M I
Jam es P Rhoads A W F Susan to Pedro A
Porta* A W F Ana E. L t II B lk A North
Orlande Terrace Sec f Un t S IM M
John Ingoglla A W F Linda to Jeee L Zabala
A W F M a rita l. L t 17 Sunrise Village U n 1.

H

M |HHugh Chappell J r. trustee A W F Linda lo
Continental Circuit* Inc. NW of L t I Blk A,
Johnsons Poultry Farm s. S2^3MM
Danbury L id le Candace E Reed. L t lot
Danbury M ill U n 2 B .t7 7 ,fN
Cel ton Homes to Ranald D Collin* A W F
Judith L. Lt 20 Woodland T err A t Country
Creek. S IIA M i

HOSPITAL
NOTES
C— r l F l t r t i t
Hm
ADMISSIONS
■ 11,1 ew rw v a p

p Wi

I

Dale Sanchet. Oviedo
E lija h Damps

DISCHARGES
Key* L. Renton
Coerg* Frenceour. DeSery
Paulo D. Porter. M l. Dora
BrenSa A. K ram er an* baby girl
Sheri L. Gregory ant baby boy. Deltona
Saaiay
Teresa L. Russell

li

Continued from page 1A
disaster or not. the AtlasCentaur failure raised new con­
cerns about NASA's "launch
commit criteria" and Ihc de­
cision-making process used to
clear rockets for blastofT in a
climate that historically has
been difficult to predict.
Lightning Is a threat to rockets
because a discharge, produced
either by surrounding clouds or
the vehicle Itself, can damage
sensitive electronic gear on
b o a rd , su ch as g u id a n c e
systems. The current guideline
requires a launch to be delayed If
lightning Is within 5 miles of the
launch pad.
The rule was established after
a bolt hit the Apollo 12 Saturn 5
rocket 43 seconds after the giant
booster blasted off In 1969 for

Danbury Ltd to Jam as V Saary A W F Treva
G A P atricia M Goodman. L t 110 Danbury
M IIIUn2B.M d.f00
M / l Schottanstaln Homes to M ichael A Lue
A W F Jana E. Lt 10 A lafaya Woods. Ph VIII,
MO,700
Jam as T W hitm an A W F Nan to Frank A
Barblsrl A W F Annette C. Lt 2t Waklva Club
E stsS acS.lllS.00 0
Allan L Krachenko A W F Megan to Leon C
Hardy A Deborah Edward*. Lt 44 Cardan
Laka E st* Un 1.MI.000
John J Newby A W F M arilyn to Fred W

...Body
Continued from page IA
Semoran Blvd. near Winter
Park.
Hughey said Information on
the fire and death was sketchy.
He said he did not have specific
information on the dead person,
but said sheriffs deputies are
“ 80 to 90 percent sure” the
death Is a homicide. Hughey said
a sheriffs homicide Investigator
as well as an arson investigator
were on the scene.
Hughey said the body was
found In a bedroom, but the fire
was confined to the livlngroom.
A carpet in the livlngroom was
"scorched." but the fire burned
Itself out. he said. The body was
not burned and its location in
the bedroom was "unusual."
according to Investigators, but

Smith A W F Shirley A. L t 11 M andarin Sac I.
Sft.000
Ronald R Pilch er A W F Llnnea to Robert M
Longfellow A WF Janice. L t to Country
Downs Ph 11,1141.000
M / l Schottanstaln Homa* to Robert E
Nicola A W F Christina L, Lt 11 Alafaya
W oodtPhVII,Sf2,700
M ark A Heutel A W F Janice lo Nicholas F
DIGIoglo A W F Dorothy. Lt 117 Tuscawllla
.UnfB.S1M.000

Hughey declined to specify
where the body was found.
Investigators said there was no
apparent signs of a struggle,
although that could become an
element when the Investigation
is concluded. A cause of death
had not been determined.
He said sh eriffs technical
services in vestigators w ere
searching the scene for evidence
and trying to determine the
cause ofdeath.
Investigators were also trying
to determine today who occupies
the apartment where the body
was found. At this point. It's
possible the dead man was the
tenant, investigators said.
The Seminole County Fire
Department was called to the fire
at 9:27 a.m. today.
Hughey said firefighters re­
ported to sheriffs deputies that
they had found the body inside
the burned home.

Soft Loads To Gun Charga
Seminole County sheriffs deputy Brent Davison who
spotted a large safe on a trailer parked on Weklva Springs
Road at about 2:48 a.m. Thursday, notified via radio a
Sweetwater Oaks security guard assigned to the area. The
security agent told Davison he had given a ride to a gas
station on Weklva Springs Road at Hunt Club Boulevard, to
the man who had the safe and was with him at the station.
When Davison arrived at the station and approached the
security guard's truck he told the guard to step aside. He
confronted the suspect and frisked him.
On the frontaeat o f the truck Davison found a .45-caliber
handgun, which the guard said the suspect had put under
the seat when he got into his truck. The suspect, according
to the guard, moved the gun onto the seat when Davison
approached.
Davison ran a police computer check on the gun and
determined it had been reported stolen In Palmetto. Fla.
Ricky Edward Stephenson. 35. of Orlando, was charged
with grand theft at 4:27 a.m. Thursday. He has been
released on $1,000 bond to appear in court April 13. The
suspect, according to sheriffs Capt. Roy Hughey, was
moving the safe for his boss and had permission to have
possession o f the safe. He was charged In connection with
having possession of the stolen gun.

Continued from page IA
But Raines is hedging: " I ’m
not sure you can safely say that.
But It certainly is possible."
Bronfman said he was en­
couraged by the discussions.
"W e had a meeting a couple of
days ago," Bronfman said. "The
rule says we can cannot negoti­
ate. We did not negotiate. There
is no rule against talking. Then I
Invited him to the game."
Asked what had been dis­
cussed at the meeting. Bronfman
said, " I told him he's loved,
n e e d e d and w a n t e d in
Montreal."
Murray Cook, Montreal vice
president and general manager.

...Rain
Continued from page IA
total of 9.91 inches was reported
In Seminole County In June
1985, the most recent month
with higher totals than this
month.
Seminole County Fire Lt. Bill
Bethke said emergency crews all
over the county were busy and
co n tin u e to be busy w ith
emergency calls. He said lighnIng struck the Semoran -North
Apartments at State Road 436
and Howell Branch Road. The
most damage was done to Apt.
2211 where lightning came In
through the wiring and blew out
oulets. Many appliances Includ­
ing the . cable TV were blown.
The fire caught only momen­
tarily when the wiring was
blown and did not spread or
cause any further damage. No
Injuries were reported.
Bethke said lightning can
come In a home or building
through the television cable, so
lt Is best to unplug the cable and
televisio n during electrical
storms.
Lightning can also
come In through an antenna, he
said, or It can bounce off a tree
and come in through anything
metal that provides a ground. "It
follows the path of least re­
sistance. such as a tree or a
metal pole," he said. "It happens
quite a bit In Florida."
In Altamonte Spring*, the
Police Department reported that
the on-ramp toward Orlando on

r* r

r

r r » yt^r-r

s ' as

T*- r

r

the second manned lunar land­
ing flight. Circuit breakers
snapped open and only quick
action by the crew prevented
more serious problems.
The Incident, the only con­
firmed case ofllghtnlng hitting a
rocket after launch, prompted
NASA to establish new launch
commit criteria, such as the
5-mlle lightning limit.
For Thursday’s Atlas-Centaur
launch, lightning was observed
Just outside the restricted zone
around the rocket's launch pad.
But the launch decision has been
sh a rp ly c r itic iz e d because
Florida's coastal weather Is
extremely volatile and subject to
rapid change.
Regardless of the outcome of
Busse's accident Investigation,
w eather restrictions at the
spaceport probably w ill be
reassessed.
In the shuttle program, pro­

blems with forecasting were a
major factor in leading the
Rogers Commission that In­
vestigated the Challenger dis­
aster to urge that shuttles land
in California Instead of at the
Kennedy Space Center until
prediction techniques Improve.

said today he was also en­
couraged by Saturday's visit.
"W e cannot talk contract until
after May 1." Cook said. "But we
feel good that Tim has affirmed
he has no problem coming back
to the Expos.
"T im has tested the free-agent
market and Tound out that It Is
not as favorable as It was in
Montreal. It's unfortunate he has
to wait until after May 1, but we
would be very happy to have
him back Just the same." he
added.
In November. Raines turned
down Bronfman's offer of $4.8
million guaranteed over three
years. Bronfman says Raines
and Reich did not have to ask If
the offer stands.
"They know I am a man of my
word," Bronfman said.
Raines said: "W e talked about

our relationship, our friendship.
I feel a lot better about It. We got
a lot of things off our chest. Me
and Charles worked out our
differences."
Raines never gave the Expos a
contract demand after becoming
a free agent following the 1986
season. He rejected the Padres'
March 1 offer for $2.2 million
over two years. Two weeks later
Reich made a counteroffer of
$1.2 million plus incentives for
one year. The Padres declined
the offer and broke off negotia­
tions.

Interstate-4 gave way as State
Road 436 comes onto 1-4. Bar­
ricades arc up but traffic Is still
passing. Also, roads were re­
ported washed out or almost
washed out In Geneva, and In
Oviedo one road was blocked
with rocks, callers said.
Lots of power transformers
blew throughout the county, and
A lta m o n te S p rin g s had a
particular problem with that.
Cable TVs were also blown and
power was out here and there.
Forlda Power &amp; Light Co.
D is t r ic t M a n a g e r M a rv in
Whiteside reported only scat­
tered outages this weekend due
to the weather all over the
Sanford District, but none af­
fecting a large number of cus­
tomers at one time.
Stalled cars were also part of
the dreary landscape.
"When you dump this much
water on the streets we have
some stalled motorists. You can
see the water standing all over
the city." said Sanford Police
Chief Steve Harriett.
Harriett said there was a
report Sunday of a tree limb
falling on a van at 1606 Palmetto
Ave.
The 1986 van, owned by
Thomas Walker. 38. of 407 S.
Sunland Drive, received $500
worth of damage to Its hood, roof
and windshield.
Sanford Fire Department re­
ported an Increase In false
alarms because of wet alarm
lines.
In the school district. Richard
Wells, director of transportation.

guessed that about every high
school had a late bus this
morning, which would then de­
lay the buses' arrivals at the
middle schools.
He said that because school
was not In session lust week due
to spring break, the buses had
not been started for a while, and
about 10 buses would not start:
several buses due to road condi­
tions were flooded out.
"Every time It rains, this kind
of thing happens." he said. If a
bus driver needs help, lie or she
rad ios to an oth er bus for
assistance, he said.

"Th e most serious concern Is
not that the weather In Florida Is
bad. but that the atmospheric
conditions nrc frequently un­
predictable." the commission
said. "In the spring and sum­
mer. thunderstorms build and
d is s ip a te q u ic k ly and un­
predictably.
"Although NASA has a con­
s e r v a tiv e p h ilo s o p h y , and
applies conservative (light rules
In evaluating cnd-of-mlssion
weather, the decision always
comes down to evaluating a
weather forecast. There Is risk
associated with that."

In eight major-league seasons,
Raines has a career .305 average
— fourth In Ihe NL among active
players.
(Some o f the Information In this
story was furnished by United
Press International)

...Baby
Continued from page 1A.
of 121 Anderson Ave., Sanford,
according to a police report.
No charges arc expected. The
girl is the sixth traffic fatality In
Seminole County this year.
—Deane Jordan

...Sculptor
Continued from page 1A
art gallery displays. In 1979, he
placed third In the miniature
c la s s c o m p e t it io n at the
Wildfowl Championship.
DeMcndoza's signature was
not yet on the stolen carvings,
he sa id , " s o w ith o u t the
signature, It's worth nothing to
anyone: they won’t get the $900.
but It’s a great loss to me."

AREA DEATHS
MICHAEL J.LEPANE
BASIL B. CRADDOCK
Mr. Michael J. Lepane, 77. of
Major Basil E. Craddock. 64. of
106 Sheridan Ave.. Longwood. 713 Lin d en D riv e . W in te r
died Friday at Winter Park Springs, died Saturday at his
Memorial Hospital. Bom Jan. 31. residence. Bom Sept. 3. 1909 In
1923 in Cub Run. Ky.. he moved New York City, he moved to
to Longwood from Dayton. Ohio, Winter Springs from there In
in 1977. He was retired from the 1981. He was a retired salesman
Air Force and was a member of and a Catholic.
Survivors Include his wife,
the A n n u n cia tion C ath olic
C h u r c h . He r e p r e s e n t e d Grace: two sons. Allan. Orlando,
Longwood on the county trans­ Mlahael. New York City: four
portation committee and volun­ daughters. Arllne Korsak. New
teered his expertise to the city York City, Janice Scalice Winter
and the county as a researcher Springs. Linda Hemadez and
Janls DITore. both of Orlando:
and advisor on many occasions.
"H e helped the city in any way sister, Marion Barbero, Deerfield
he could and we certainly will Beach: 10 grandchildren: one
miss him." City Clerk Don Terry great-grandchild.
Cox-Parker Guardian Funeral
said.
' Major Craddock also served on Home, Winter Park. In charge of
the county math textook selec­ arrangements.
FREDDIE L. DENNIS
tion co m m itte e . H is m ath
Mr.
Freddie L. "Uncle Dan"
expertise came from teaching at
Dennis,
36. of 226 Hawley St..
the college level during his Air
F o r c e c a r e e r . He t a u g h t Rochester, N.Y., died Wednes­
mathematics for three years at day at St. Mary's Hospital.
Duquesne University In Pit­ Rochester. Bom Feb. 17. 1951 In
tsburgh. Pa., and taught night Brinson. G a.t he moved to
courses at a local college In San Rochester In 1969 from Sanford.
Antonio. Texas. In 1982. he He was a nightclub owner and
contracted to teach math to Baptist.
S u rv iv o rs in clu d e
w ife.
sailors and Marines aboard ship
Martha
Dennis,
Rochester:
his
in the Mediterranean.
He was also an Army veteran. mother. Mrs. Eva Dennis. San­
He was a member of the VFW ford; son, Kevin, Rochester: one
Post 8207. Longwood. the Of­ d a u g h ter. Y vo n n e D ennis,
ficers' Club and the National Rochester: two sisters, Katherine
Pearson. Rochester, and Bertha
Rifle Association.
Dennis,
Sanford: two brothers.
Survivors Include his wife.
D orothy J.: brother. Dane. Clayton Dennis. Rochester and
Canmer. Ky.; four sisters. Oris Leroy Jackson. Sanford: one
Reynolds. B on n levllle. Ky.. grandchild.
WUson-Elchelberger Mortuary
Mavis Lester. Valley Station.
Ky.. Edwlna Orden. Cave City. in charge of arrangements.
EDELL O'NEAL TURNER
Ky.. and Hazel Bolton. MunMrs. Edell O'Neal Turner. 56.
fordville. Ky.
B aldw ln-Fairchild Funeral of 2201 Alexander Ave., San­
Home. Altamonte Springs, in ford. died Thursday at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. Bom
charge of arrangements.

March 11. 1931 In Sanford, she
was a lifelong resident. She was
a homemaker and a member of
Second Shiloh Missionary Bap­
tist Church.
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e her
husband. Frank Sr.. Atlanta,
Ga.: five sons. Tommy. Sammy,
Frank Jr.. Anthony, and Marvin,
all of Sanford; three daughters,
V i v i a n B e n tle y ., F r a n k i e
Robinson. Sandra Turner, all of
Sanford: Mother. Julia O'Neal,
Sanford: three sisters. Barbara
Williams. Dcloris Grant and
Annie Muc Lockett, all of San­
ford: three brothers, Wesley
O'Neal. Leon O'Neal and Lcvem
O'Neal, all of Sanford: 21 grand­
children.
Wllson-EIchelbergcr Mortuary,
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

FunTol N o»Icr_________
D ENNIS. F R E D D IE L.
— Funeral services lo r Freddie L. Dennis,
Rochester. N.Y., who died Wednesday, w ill
be held II a.m. Wednesday at F irst Shiloh
M issionary Baptist Church. 700 S. E lm Ave.,
with Pastor H.O. Rucker officiating. Inter*
ment to follow In Restlawn Cememtery.
Calling hours lor friends w ill be held Tuesday
4 7 p.m. at the chapel Wilson Elchelberger
M ortuary In charge.
TURNER. ED ELLO .
— Funeral services for M rs. Edell O. Turner,
St. of 2201 Alexander Ave., Sanford, who died
Thursday, w ill be held I p.m. Saturday at
Second Shiloh M issionary Baptist Church,
IWS A irport Blvd.. with Pastor W illie J. Pope
officiating. Interment to follow In Restlawn
Cemetery. Calling hours for friend* w ill be
held )*l p.m. Frida y at the chapel. Wilson*
Elchelberger M ortuary In charge.
•

O A K L A W N
F U N E R A L HOME A
PRE A R R A N G E M E N T C E N T E R
$ ta-4 t$ a
■ a t.

�\

Readers Stand By Grandma For
Cutting Ungrateful Grandson Off
DEAR ABBTi I am constantly
amazed at some of the nitwits
who w rite to you. I re.fer
particularly to "Burned Up In
Butte" whose son received a
card for his 16th birthday with
this h an dw ritten m essage:
"Sorry; Billy, no money this
time because we received no
thank-you for the money we sent
last year. Lots of love, Grandma
and Grandpa Jones."
"Burned" complained: " A l­
though these grandparents are
retired and living on a fixed
Income, they are far from poor,
and It wouldn't have hurt them
to have enclosed a • 10 bill."
Abby, instead of taking of­
fense, "Burned” should have
boxed Billy’s ears all the way to
the desk and forced him to write
his grandparents a long letter of
apology.
You asked your readers how
they felt about G randm a's
message to Billy. How did they
reel?
M M . GLENN R.
DEAR MRS. R.t "Burned"
lost to Grandma in a landslide.
Some typical letters:
D E A R A B B T i I'd like to
nominate Grandma Jones for
Grandmother ol the Year. I wish
I had the guts years ago to do
what she did. I have seven
grandchildren whom I’ve out-

grandma?
D E A R A B B Y t W hen my
children were little, I sat them
down with crayons and paper
before they even knew how to
write and said. "Copy this!”
Then they would "d ra w " a
picture of the gift they had
fitted lavishly every Easter and received and copy their names.
Christmas. On their birthdays I aAer which they placed X's for
have sent them all sizable kisses. People shouldn't be so
checks and becam e so ac­ hard on kids. They learn what
customed to not receiving any they are taught.
MINNESOTA MOM
kind of thank-you. I would have
fainted had one arrived. From
DEAR ABBTi You are mistak­
now on, I'm going to follow
en. A gift Is something that is
Grandma Jones' lead.
ANOTHER GRANDMA, given without expectation of
MOLINE, ILL. anything in return. If one
expects anything in return — it
DEAR ABBTi About gifts and is not a gift.
no thank-yous: For years I have
I am sure Grandma Jones
sent generous birthday checks to went down a few pegs In love
my granddaughter — increasing and respect In the eyes of her
the1 amount every year, even 16-year-old grandson and his
though I had to wait until I mother.
receive the canceled check to be
NAMELESS IN
sure she received it.
MANVEL, TEXAS
On her 21st birthday. I figured
she was old enough to acknowl­
DEAR N A M E LE SS! Aw.
edge my gifts, so I enclosed a c'monl A simple "thank you" Is
little note with my check saying. not too much to expect in return
"How about a simple thank-you for a gift. Show me a person
so I'll know this arrived?"
who. for the sheer Joy of giving,
Do you know what she did? continues to give to someone
She sent back the check — tom who shows no sign of apprecia­
In half. I wonder If this has ever tion. and I'll show you a sap —
h a p p e n e d to any o t h e r
or a saint.

TONIGHT'S TV
( D © CAGNEY 4 LACEY An etlor.
nay, Who had baan bonding a caaa
against a pornogrspher lor yaars, la
brutaty murdered. 1R) Q
(11) INN NEWS
(tO) AL JAM M AU: UVK M LON­
DON Tapad m 1984 at London'a
Wembley Arana. |au vocalist Al
Jarraau parlorms many ol hie hits
including "W ere in This Love To­
gether." •'lat a Pretend." "Trouble
m Paradtaa" and "Boogie Down "
a (•) LEPROSY FOUNDATION

S

10:20

© MOVIE Forty-Second Street"
(1933) Ruby Kaatar. Dick Powell
Colour ad vaision ol tha classic
backstaga musical about tha
mounting ol an akmg producar's
naw Broadway show.

10:30

a GD YOU AQAINt Matt auditions
to ba a raplseaman) drummar lor
tha Baach Boys In stereo (ft)
■ (1DBOBNEWHAAT

240

0 (I) ANOTHER WORLD
(D • AS THE WORLD TURN*
® 0 ONE UFE TO LIVE
• (11) ANOY GRIFFITH
• (10) WONOEAFUL WORLD OF
ACRYLICS (MON)
■ (10) JOY OF FAINT*** (TUB)
■ 00) MAGIC OF OIL FAINTING

11:00

S CDQDaNEWt

(11) LATE SHOW Host: Joan

■ (W) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYS40
CMCUS
. ■ (S) BARGAINS TONIGHT

11:30

(Part t ol 2) Tab Huntar. Sutan
Brack an In tha Canadian Rock la#,
a modern-day cowboy capture# a
wad ttalkon. I■achat him to pul in
harneti and anl#r« him m tha Cal­
gary Stampede chuck wagon race
A -Wonderful World ol Disney"
presentation

7.-05

© SANFO RO AN O BO N

7:30
■ GDENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with actor Alan Thicka
("Growing Pama") In stereo.
CE • DATING GAME
® B WHEEL OF FORTUNE

• ( £ BEST OF CARSON From
February 1988: Atlanta Hawki
guard Spud Wtbb and acton Alan
Thick# and Jamw Rota Join boat
Johnny Canon. In atorao. (R)
( S B M 'A T H

■ (10) MAGIC OF FLORAL FAMTIMG (THU)
■ ( 10) FASITWO CERAMICS (FAI)

2:30

■
(11) MY LITTLE FONT t f
FACN 06
■ (10) SECRET COY

12.-00
(D • SIMON 4 SIMON Rick and
A.J. ara hwad by a |awalar to locata
a valuabia gam that may hava baan
ttoian by a compactor. |R)
2 ) B NEWS
■ (11) ASM DR. RUTH Topic: aai
education Oueatt: Lucie A mar.
Faya Wattle!on ol Planned Parent­
hood (R ig
■ (S) NIGHT OWL FUN

12:15
© NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
PLORER British ckmbera tackle tha
24.770-loot Kengkar Punaum
mountain m Bhutan; a look at the
tukpa ol Hotand, a proMe ol tha
guardian ol Florida's Evargladoa
anvaonmantakat Marjory Slonaman
Douglas, a Roman coastal resort
that was entombed lor 2,000 yean.

1240

■ GD LATE M BHT WITH 0AVK)
LETTEAMAN Scheduled actor
Tony Curtis. Physics O c u a In alar-

2:35

© WOMANWATCH (FAI)

3.-00

I

(1t)FUNTSTONES
(10) MUTER ROGERS (R)

1:35

©BEWITCHED

$40
■ (S T H S JU 0 Q S
XaO O NAHUS
( T ) B OPRAH WMFRBY
■ (11) GREEN A C R U
■ ( 10) SESAME STREET (R) Q
■ (S) 4HOP-AT-HOME AMD SA'

$4$

■ ( £ SANTA SAHtARA
(T) O O U O N Q UQHT
(7) 0 GENERAL M0SFITAL
■ (11) SCOOS Y 0 0 0
• (10) MMTER ROGERS (R)
■ (8) MKLOAY BARGAINS (MON.
TUB. THU, FRO *
■
(t) NO FOOUN- SFECIALS
(WED)

can't believe she placed first In the Greater
Seminole International Training In Com ­
munication Club's annual speech contest.

Congratulating the winner are, from left,
Ingrid M cCollum , club president, Altamonte
Springs; Sharon Buck, second place winner,
Altamonte Springs; and Edith Valentine,
Sanford, president of Council IV ITC,

Workshop Offers Help In
Climbing The Family Tree
The Genealogical Group of
Seminole County is sponsoring
th e E v e r t o n P u b l i s h e r s
Genealogical Workshop Satur­
day. April 4. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. at
Seminole Community College,
Vocational Building J-100.
G e o r g e B. E v e r t o n Jr .
publisher of The Genealogical
Helper, an unusual magazine
subscribed to by over 48.000
family history bufTs. will conduct
the w orkshop. He w ill be
assisted by Joseph Hall, a
m e m b e r of t he E v e r t o n
Publishers professional staff
since 1978.
They will present a lecture
that will inspire and assist those
attending In their genealogical
activities. Lectures will include
subjects such as: Notekeeping;
Family Histories; Beginning Ge-

nealogy; Where to Search Before
Vital Records; and, Computers
and Genealogy.
Workshop participants will
have the privilege of searching
for ancestral data from the
complete printouts of Everton's
two computerized data banks
"Computerized Roots Cellar”
and the "Computerized Family
File." These data banks hold
over 600.000 ancestor names
plus references to the names and
current addresses of the persons
who submitted the data. Also,
they will be able to take advan­
ta g e o f g re a t s a v in g s on
Everton's genealogical supplies
and services. Participants re­
ceive. free, six Issues of the
Helper.
Pre-registration is $20. Door

registration is $25. if available.
Ma k e c h e c k s p a y a b le to
Genealogical Group of Seminole
County and mall to P.O. Box
2148, C asselb erry. 32707.
Phone (305) 298-8576 for addi­
tional Information.

Wedding
Invitations
Available At

u

Cheerleading Tryouts Set
Seminole High School will
hold cheerleading tryouts for the
1987-88 school year beginning
Tuesday. March 31 through
Wednesday. April 8. Freshman.
J.V. and varsity squads will be
selected on Wednesday. April 8.
Applications can be picked up in
the SHS or middle school offices.

Cheerleaders are required to
have a 2.0 grade point average
with no F’s. All applications
must be In by March 31 at 5

available at

FASHION
CLEANERS

p.m. For further information call
SHS 322-4352 and ask for Gayle

Sem inole Centre
( N e il to Leundrom et)

Tipton, varsity sponsor, or Tami
Gaudreau, J.V. sponsor.

D E L T O N A
C IIN IE IV IA

345
© TOM 4 JERRY AN0 FRIENOS

Wall Disney's Classic

3:30

“SONG OF

0 ( 1 1 ) SMURFS'ADVENTURES

r

O D 0 W N TO BARTH

Elaine's
Hallmark £
Shop
i

•40

■ GDLOVEOONNBCDON
■ (11) PETT10OAT JUNCTION

ISWDCW

"We are H ill eaa #4
(be largest and Sett Hal
M sgs la Me leeWaail
SANFORD PLAZA Serf

RUSSELL SEAFOOD
SHOPPE
COME CELEBRATE WITH US
$40

maMBHTWATCH

■
(11) WHAT'S HAPPBMNG
NOWS Ra(s hopes ol gotng on a
halting tnp are put on hold amen hw
mother In tew arrtvee lor a Had (R)
• m M G H T O W LPU N

$40

■ |11)OBOOM S

3:40
CD •
MOWS ‘ The World. The
Flesh And The Dev*1 (t9S9) Harry
l i l l l o f i i i , Ingot GIifo o i

440
■ (11) DALLAS

OPEN DAILY
8 u S (2 &amp; Wlet * ° ° yMT" V

10:00 A.M.-7 P.M

HwaMAYBAI

s s ’jrn f f s &amp; n aw*.22

THU)
© S A F E AT HOME (FRI)

(Closed Sun. G Mon.)

CALL: 321-8112
321-2603

(Retail)
(Wholesale)

3801 East State Rd. 46
Sanford, Fla.

£

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Legal Notice

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Legal Notice

Legal Notice'
NOTICE O F
P U B L IC H EA R IN O
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R Y , F LO R ID A

Legal Notice

71-H elp Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS

71-Help Wanted

71— HcIpWanttd

4 4 4

f

f i t

f

K I T *W* C A R L Y L 1 i b y L a r r y W r i g h t

S e w le r a H t f M , U n H r l , F I ,
M e o d e y , M i r t h so.
CITY O F
L A K E M A R Y . F LO R ID A
P R O D U C T IO N S C H E D U L E R
M AILRO O M C L E R K - To S200
NOTICE O F
For growing manufacturing
141—Homes For Sale
f la n n in o a n d
1 5 7 -M o b ile
wk.l T e rrlllc l Train fully, sort
231-Cars
.
P U B L IC H E A R IN G
plant. Experienced only. Good
.
"card/
A llla l Fu ll benefllsl A A A
Homes
/Sale
4144
M
O
V
B
IN
S
P
E
C
IA
L
. NOTICE is h e r e b y g i v e n
benellls. Call 322-4140 for
LO CAL P U N N I N O A O E N C Y
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1
'
8 3 1 -9 9 9 3
Employment..............323-517*
A D U L T S 'P O O L . L A K E
L A R O E 2 story colonial pn
by the Planning end Zoning
Interview
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
C H B V CITATION. '40 Co*2*A
L A K E J E N N IE APTS....223-4742
Board ol the City ol Leke M ary.
wooded t ecre Fa m ily room,
that the Planning end Zoning
D RIVERS- Part lima
1443. Seminole ?ord. 3744 Hwy
M
A
IN
T
E
N
A
N
C
E
™ U IS a s s e m b l e r s a
H Wether Rack*
Florida, that said Board w ill
game
rm,
S
fpl..
many
extra*.
NO
M
O
N
E
Y
DOWN.
Assume
17 42 Santord.............322-10*1
enca 1 valid F la Drivers?!,"
SU P ER V IS O R
L#k» M ary
C
L
A
S
S
IF
IE
D
D
E
P
T
.
R
A
T
E
S
E
X
P
.
F
O
R
K
L
IF
T
O
P
ER
A
T
O
R
1 Mop Bucket
hold a Public Hearing to ransld
mortgage.
Beautiful
24x40.
.
4137^000.
W:
M
a
l
l
c
z
t
w
s
k
l
Florida, acting as the (.oral
Cell Tommy git, 3.... *.«
Hands on type Individual needed
Apply In person. Lowe's Truss
C H B V M O N T E C A R L O , '77
bdrm.,
2
bath,
living
A
fam
ily
p
r
o
c
e
e
d
i
n
g
103—
Houses
er
a
petition
to
close,
vacate,
Planning Agency, w ill hold a
1 t i n * ......................7 2 C a ling
! J ’ *', P l4 d d e r— aluminum
to supervise personnel in a
Plant. TSOt Aileron Clr. (Sen7C004B 41*43. Seminole Ford.
E X P . A P P O IN T M E N T S e tte rh
room, tam lly sectlon...31l x9S0
IN R E : F O R F E IT U R E
abandon, discontinue, disclaim
Public Hearing to consider the
LOG-A-Fram e, »• complete on 2
3 c o n s tc u tiv * t i n t s M C a lin t
well established aluminum A
_ lord Airport Industrial Park
Unfurnished / Rent
3/4* H w y 17 92 S« nford327-1441
work
In
Sanford
with
the
RiJ?
O
F
A
1442
HONDA
end to renounce any right of the
feasibility of granting a specific
• : 3 0 A . M . . 5 :3 0 P .M .
•cre s 2,300 sq.ft.-e, 313,000
O
S
T
B
B
N
/F
A
R
M
T
O
N
Area,
old
copper
fabrlratlon
operation
7 c a n s a c iftiv t t i n t s 5 6 C a lin t
Fo od C o m p a n y . E v t n l„ .
C H E V Y M O N T E CARLO - 75.
W A R E H O U S E - Com* to O r­
City ot Lake M ary. Florida, a
FO U R^ D CO RAUTO M O BILE,
amendment to the adopted City
Terms. Owner/Brker.SM.sajn
trlr A lot, fenced yard, owner
M u s t be p r o f ic ie n t w ith
M O N D A Y H im F R ID A Y
hour* necessary. U hr J
Runs good New Irens., new
lando lor a one timo Interview
V E H IG L E ID EN TIFICATIO N
political subdivision, and the
A T T R A C T IV E 3 bdrm., large
1 0 c a n s t c u t iv t t i n t s 5 0 C a lin t
finance.
&gt;i
down
373CP
For
e
l
e
c
t
r
i
c
a
l
a
n
d
e
l
a
c
t
r
o
O
S
T
EE
N
,
3
bdrm.,
1
ba..
cha.
P an*|k« 5 ? i fK Comprehensive
liberal bonus package r.i,
S A T U R D A Y 9 - N eo n
radial*. 4375/ottor...... H t w t
•"d go to work In the Sanlord
U S S S l 4X
^
MOd*' 0 R A M 7 7 ’ * " W « Ji4 i 410.
N U M B E R MSZ5425CCI343.7
public In and to the following
fenced yard, carport, laundry
Plan. Land Use Map. Robert M .
Into, come by 1301 M allenvllla.
C o n tra c t R a t t s A v a ila b le
garage.
hydraulic
conlrollad
circuits
fenced
back
yard.
T od a y! 222-3043 ext.
Lak# Mery area. Call Ablost
described right of way:
room. 3100 week. sec. deposit
Dance, applicant, Is requesting
r n S| , C 0 N D P U BLICAT IO N
C H R Y S L E R L e B A R O N , '74
Santord after 4 P M
w ith som e k n o w le d g e of
S4000
Charles Berdet
*'
M O V E INI 322
' Ah
£ i^
0,^Delo
/^ A/D
hln*
' B " " 5j*o
» « C a m '* s p a ,
3 L in e s M in im im
TO: RIchardM . M alls
T » m p . G r e e t p a y . No
That part of Second Road
- MM- C«ll =................... 321-4447
7T064A 317*5, Samlnol* Ford.
• change from the present
Model
1*03,^Semi
, teriel
electronics.
A
b
ility
to
raod
*294
l
443
South
North
Lake
Drive
(W ebster Street! (40' R/W )
321-3400
E X P E R IE N C E D person~t&lt;rrun
C ^ ^ c la l/ O f f ic e to Light In­
3744Hwy 17-42 5antord372 1*41
D E B A R Y - V e r y n i c e 2/ 1,
hydrallc diagram s a must
I Bcvereoe Air* ? ! £ ? ? ' ‘7’d*f C0'X' ,#r Coolor
S
A
N
FO
R
D
t
New
FH
A
homes.
]
Altamonte
Springs.
F
L
327U
extending 400 00 leet south (as
Independent
automobll*
dustrial for this certain parcel ol
W AREH O USE- S200 w kl Stable
C/H /A, washer, dryer, refrlg.,
COLT: '41, 4 cyl., auto. air.
Rasuma' and wage require­
DEADLINES
1
bdrm., 2 bath, concrete block.
Howard Reiss, Esquire
159-Real Estata
land described below.
m e a s u r e d a lo n g Its e a s t
surance agency |„ Sanlord
company) Any forklift exp.
new carpet, verticals. 322-1421
Ex t r a Clean! Can arrange
ments to Box 250, c/o Sanlord
l Micro* Register System 4
Post
Office
B
o
i
2304
Low
down.
4%
m
tg.....
*31.900
right-of-way line) of the south
office. Llcansa preferred but
lands III Fast ralsasl AA A
A* the same Public Hearing
N oon The Day Before Publication
or 443 4441. Adults S43Q
Wanted
financing...........C a ll: 33)-IS70.
Harold, PO Box 1457, Sanford,
4 High beck Circular Booths
Orlando.
F
L
32402
2304
C
e
ll................................499-1)00
not
necessary.....
C
a
lh
atzoS?
right of way line of Lake Road
_ Employment............. 3M 3I74
c ‘ f'K Pf Lake M ary Planning
F L 22772 1457________
• • • IN D ELTO N A e • •
FO R D ESCORT WON 42. C047I
5 Low beck Circular Booths
and all others who claim an
Sunday - Noon Friday
(40* R/W) as shown on L A K E
and Zoning Board/Local Plan
LA K EFR O N T LO C N ARBO R
FA C T O R Y T R A IN E E - 47 U h T i
* e HOM ES FOR R E N T * *
11745. Samlnol* Ford. 374*
30 High beck Chelrt
A N IN V IS T O R Wants to buy
M A R Y WOODS. Plat Book 24,
nlng Agency w ill consider the
212
C
ry
ite
t
Or.
S.
Beautiful
M
A
IN
T
E
N
A
N
C
E
,
housekeeping
Look
at
thlsl
Train
with
stable
pirtyT*
*
n
,ol,owlnfl
Prt&gt;
___
** 374004*.
Hwy 17-42 Sanlord...... 322 144)
M o n d a y • 9:00 A .M . Saturday
24 X " x 4« " Tebles
Income property. W ill look at
Pages 35 through 40 of the
1&lt;y acre lot. 224 ft. on lake,
A grounds personnel needed
f
h
r
t
^
i
r
/
.
Applicant
background!
Large
company"
WORK
IMMEDIATELY
10 T rey Stands
NOTE In the event of the publishing ot errors in advertisements the Sen
a I One 1942 Honda Four Door
R E S P O N S IB L E m arried cou­
, f l l iie n ico n d 1CaM lH4*44
P u b lic Records o l Seminole
F O R D F A IR M O N T WON. '74
that the City of Lake M a ry grant
nice
shrubs,
targe
oak
trees,
A A A Employment.
sssTJZ*
lor
•
104
bed
healthcare
fa
c
ili­
N E E D M EN AW OM ENNOW t
lord Hereld shall publish the advertisement, alter It has been corrected at
* Chempegne Buckets. SS
ple, 33 y rs. o r o ld s r, no
Automobile. Vehicle Identlfica
C4033B 41X5. Samlnol* Ford.
County. Florida, the south line
the rezoning 0f the same parcel
variety ot fruit trees, older
ty In Lake M ary. Send name,
M .-T ’F O O O M M j K i g
no cost to the advertiser but such Insertions Shall number no more than one
1 i* ft. beck Booth
children, no pets. *223 mo +
3744 Hwy 17W Senior d 3 7 ? l4 ll
ot this description being perpen­
lion Number MSZJ425CCI39SI7
bom* w/plenty of room. 1 br.,
“ I ' * " ? ' " ’" i '» Present zoning
address
A
phone
number
to
S.
181—
Appliances
Top salary, hospltallzalion, |
12 Retlen Chelrt
_ *100 «*c. references 322-MI?
THE l o n g w o o d p o l ic e
dicular to the right-of-way line
Classification of C-l Com mercial
2 be., fam ily room, hardwood
F
O
R D O R A N A D A , 7* 4TI004B
M
urrey.
1047
Sand
Pond
Rd.,
week vacation each a months,
40 Oek Chelrt
/ Furniture
ol Second Road (401R/W ).
D E P A R T M E N T seized the de
•**' »«*
M IN I
!? M -,A Heavy Com m ercial.
SAN FO RD , Rent or Sale, J/P y,
lloors. flrtpiaca. eat-ln kitch ­
4743. Samlnol* Ford. 374* Hwy
Lake M ary. F L 3274a________
other benefits. A p p iu ^ " ^
4 Horse Mannequins
scribed
property
on
the
14th
day
More commonly known as a
Office, and Light Industrial.
central H/A, garage, 3443 +
en, new roof, c/h/a. With llttl*
17-42 Sanlord....... ......322 1411
Laurel Ave. 4 : 3 0 a m ^
N E E D E D IM M E D IA T E L Y . 25
10 J Top Tablet
o l November. 1944. at or near
portion ol Webster Street North
- d*P (344,400).. .......... *43 200*
The property for which this
work could be a dream horn* I
A L T E R N A T IV E T .V .B A F P L .
F O R D LTO. 73. 4 dr. 7TI44A
DAILY PAT
AMnday through Friday
paopla. Roofers A laborers.
2
443
South
N
Lake
Drive,
Alta
o l Sprucewood Road and South
Owner financing....... *119.300
Comprehensive Plan Land Use
1434 Hwy. 17-41
SANFO RD : 3 bdrm., I bath,
4*43 Seminole Ford. 374* Hwy
Work Assignments
d
"Penter
Laborers-no experience nec
FIN A N C E TRAINEE* To i m
2 Par!!r* « , B^ w" h
63— Mortgages
12— Legal Services
L a k e Avenu e. In L A K E
Map change and rezonlng are
^
Ct 5? J compartment«' Bar Sinks
discount (or carpentar willing
112-3444
17-41 Sanlord..............327 ta ll
• Daily • Weekly • Monthly
•ssary. Roofers need 5 yrs
s a f c i&amp; s v I
wk-l
T
e
rrlllc
l
Train
to
p
£
m a r y w o o d s . PH ASE II.
to help renovatg..........323 7321
Bought &amp; Sold
l0C* ,,d 00 Highway
experience
A
tools..........
Call:
B
E
D
,
D
A
V
E
N
P
O
R
T
.
Dresser.
t o #fi £? 5* ®*- M ^hlltor. Model 0000 U L
FO
R D LT D Crown Vlc.'43 auto,
The
Public
Hearing
w
ill
be
17-42
at
Weldon
Boulevard
,
°
°
*7nd
ol
December.
32M590
c , **Alf * n* A computer | A^jy,
Weldon Boulevard. The
,r
24.! 0r#ln dryin g Sink
141— Homes For Sale
SO CIAL S E C U R IT Y Disability
222-7473 between tarn A tom
other Items. 414 W. 1st St.
SANFORD- 2 bdrm. on 2 acres,
a/c. a ll powar. t ill whael,
I o
1444, the Longwood Police O*
held at the Lake M ary City H all
upl A A A employment.3M sii^
Perllck 24“ Ice Bln
p r o p e r t y lo r w h ic h th e s e
141—
Homes
For
Sale
N
0
F
«
N
O
F
E
E
Free Advlce.No Charge Unless
173 X43____________________
p riv a te . 5775 mo. + dtp.
cruise. 4 dr. loaded, 23000 ml,
t
parlm enl filed a Petition for
'•NEW C O M P A N Y IN TOW N"
at 134 North Country Club Road
W E B U Y l i t an d 2nd
V ^ S e ia r e requested is legally
F R A M IN G C A R P E N T E R S '
R E A L ES T A T E
Call:________
We W ln l W a rd W h lta a
P m fe V t j i 2 e ,0P B#v,r*®* Coo,#r*Model 7247CUC
I owner like new 47300 327 6340
...... 322 0354
Rule to Show Cause and for
O fK rlD W || :
W ill train In new telemarket­
D I N I N O R O O M S E T , Exc .
In Lake M ary, Florida, at 7-00
M O RTO AO ES Nation wlda.
Experienced In elevaiion.'
REALTO R
F
O
R
E
C
LO
S
U
R
E
P
R
O
P
E
R
T
Y
,
Associate*............x
i
z
iiu
i
e
121-7494
W O R K ER S N E E O E D I 11 you
Final Order ol Forfeiture with
S A N F O R D OH Laka M i ^
in g v e n t u r e . A d v e r a g e
cond.. table, a chairs A china
Large Oek Buflet
P M. on A p ril 14, 1447. or as soon
C a ll: Ray Lagg Lie. M lg
FO R D F IN T O 74, 7T040C. 3445
P A R C E L NO. 1:
Call 322-4144 evenlnoi
’
1
bd.,
tty
bath,
block
const.,
need steady work paid dally.
•he C le rk of C irc u it Court,
Blvd.. Clean, 3/t, with appli­
cabinet. 4300 F IR M . 371 0*71
Broker, 9z0 Douglas A ve „
earnings attar training S4.7S
S*mlnoto Ford. 3744 Hwy 17 42
thereafter as possible, at which
a ll that pa r t of the
clean. 343.000..............321 717*
Call Sam attar 3 pm .... i s r m i
ances. screened porch, lg«.
hr. + bonus. C all Faye lor
S e m ln d e County Courthouse.
Allam onta................. 774 7737
.S a n lo rd ......................322 IM 1
FREE TUITION
lim e Interested parties lo r and
^ S r B e H &amp; V "0* ' 5,°7’ Mr‘*1K:* * U 1
21— Personals
L A R R Y ' S M A R T . 215 Santord
0 F THE NE U L Y IN G
153— AcreageS4I A « IHNS
details Monday: A M 322 5204
300 North Park Avenue. San
(•need yard, 3430 discounted,
against the recommended re ­
X -R A Y F IL E C L E R K - S3 NOWI
Ave. New/Used turn. A appl.
n o r t h w e s t e r l y O F SR
FO R O T BIR D , 7* C 4*44 A
TO REAL ESTATE
i
Jord. Florida. A copy of ftald
sac. Call 321-4743 alter J
or Att. 4 pm .... ........... 322 3440
quest w ill be heard. Said hear­
iT b S K S tf*"'“ “ •"SPIt
it t : \ 1 . r 0 K
Train guys or gals fullyl Sty
Lots/Sale *
Buy/Sell/Trede. 322 4132.
414*5. Samlnol* Ford. 3744
&lt;
L
E
”
W
EST
M3
71-Help
Wanted
100 Patio Chelrt
A
L
O
V
E
R
'S
KNOT
Petition
is
on
tile
In
the
Clerk’s
ing may be continued from time
LICENSE
SCHOOL
days a wkl A A A Employment
F E E T ) O F S E C T I O N 22
Hwy 17 42 Sanlord......322 laat
NOW
HIRING
W
EDDINOS
BY
DOT
10 » " * a - Tablet
office
and
Is
available
lor
exam
to limb until * IInal recommen­
•
A
N
tw
Career
TOW NSHIP to SOUTH. R A N G E
105— DuplexHW Y. 44 F R O N T A O E t 2 bdrm.
FO R D T BIRO, 7* Ca*0* 31495
-Notary Public
m s .s u s
Experienced
Sewing
Machine
I P erllck SS Ice Bln with Sink
inat.on
during
regular
business
dation Is made by the Planning
•
A
New
Beginning
209— Wearing Apparel
30 E A S T , S E M I N O L E
AD D TO YOUR INCOME
home with fam ily room. Close
nourft.
Seminole Ford. 37*4 Hwy 17 92 '
O p e ra to rs w an ted on a ll
1 Per ek Glass Chiller, Model 1000 UL
Triplex/ Rent
X L L A L O N E ? C a ll Bringing
Call Fran or Slu
and Zoning Board ot the City ot
CO U NTY. FLO R ID A.
Sell Avon Now(,
to 1-4! Great starter hem* or
Sanford..................... 322-1441
91—
Apartments/
operations.
Wa
offer
paid
holl
1 i krlIck SS 2 compartment Bar Sink
Lake M ary, Florida.
People
Together.
Sanford's
W
H
E
R
E
A
S
a
p
rlm
a
facie
P A R C E L NO. 2
222 0639........ o r .........323 4334
Investment
Income
I
323-3200
days,
paid
vacation,
health
P
R
O
M
D
R
E
S
S
.
M
ik
a
Banal
L
I
N C O L N M A R K IV - '? * ..
showing
has
been
made
by
the
most
respected
dating
service
Publish M arch 23,30, ttet
This notice shall be posted In
T H E EA S T 110 F E E T OF
House to Share
A L L T H E Conveniences you
° n 'Y ............................. *14,900
AD M INISTRATIVE
care plan, and modern air
t ic lu s iv a , F ille d whlta s*
O E M 203
7C02IA, *993. Samlnol* Ford.
Petitioner that there Is a probe
*lnce 1477. Men over 30 (03%
three (3) public places within
TH E W EST 143 F E E T OF THE
n
e
e
d
l
Q
u
ie
t
C
o
m
m
u
n
ity
.
ASSISTANT
conditioned plant. Piece work
quenad strepltss bodice, very
374* Hwy 17 X ............322 l i t 1
1317O SCEO LA OR
ble cause tor the Issuance of a
- ditcount)............1 400 922 0*77
the City of Lake M ary, Florida,
PO O L H O M EI 7 bdrm.. tty
Spacious 2 br. duplex, c/h/a,
JOBSI JdBSI JOBSI
NOTICE O F
tp r r T n ? F ™ E NE
OF
rata*. W ill tra in qualified
lu ll layered skirt, sz. 12. Paid
SANFO RD - Woman to share
O R B A T S A N FO R D LOCATION
Tune your A M radio to 1030
Rul* to Show Cause.
NOTICE OF
at the City H all within said City,
M E R C CO M ET, 74 7CI1SB 3*95
CRISIS P R E O N A N C Y C T R .
f E f . V ° N ” ■ TO W NSHIP 20 ,
screen
porch.............
l
i
m
n
bath,
Fla.
room
I
Cantral
H/AI
' ' c t 't jo u s n a m e
International company expan­
a p p lic a n t s . San Dal
44X. M atching whlta satin/
horn# and expenses. Terms
ON EAST 23th ST. 100‘x l X '
and hear th* datalls of this 3
and published In Ihe Sanlord
FICTITIO US N A M E
Seminole Ford, ]?ia Hwy 17-97
S O U T H . R A N G E 30 E A S T 1 n n u n iV 'i
4bove-Indicated
frr , P r4«n4ncy Test, conllden
P riv a c y fancal Lrg. eat-ln
N otice It hereby given that I
ding to this area. 31200/mo
pearl shoos A clutch, paid 443.
br, 2 ba. horn*. P rice 343.000
C A S S E L B E R R Y - Townhouse/
ZO N ED LIG H T IN D USTRI­
Manufacturing, 2240 Old Laka
potential claimant. Richard M
Notice It hereby given that I
Herald, a newspaper ot grneral
_ J la L C a lH o r oppt........ 321-7493
....................322 1441
L Y IN G N O R T H W E S T E R L Y OF
rio a to a f * c * r a t r o * t
kltchanl
Screen
porchl
In­
beginning
pay.
Various
post
am engaged In business at 5113
A L. 330.000 WITH T ER M S ,
Sacrifice a l l - t i x ....... 322 4417
Duplex. 2 bdrm.. IVy bath,
Mary Rd., Sanlord..... 321-3410
M ells. A R E H E R E B Y COM
am engaged In business at tw
circulation In the City of Lake
M US T A N O 1*7*.
S EM IN O LE
ground pool I................ *47,300
flon*. Rapid advancement,
" " T - » M t . Casselberry,
B U I L D TO S U I T . OR
kids
okay.
3425
mo.
Call:
SANFORD2
bdrm.,
2
bath
CB
M oyses Road. W inter P ark,
M ary, In two weekly Issues at
P
R
O
M
DRESSESLike
new.
N
U
R
S
E
S
A
l
O
E
t
A
ll
s
h
ills
,
CO U N TY, FLO R ID A.
93— Rooms for Rent
M n U S I?
i ppear b*,ore 'he
......................... .
K E Y E S * ! IN T H F SOUTH
company training, no expert
Semlnole Coun'y, Florida under
_ 240 1723........ or.........339 9404
23— Lost A Found
home, central heat A air.
PO SSIBLE T RA DE .
Seminole County, Florida under
£ ° ? ° R A B L E C. V E R N O N
Tea langth. size 7/4, lavender.
LESS:
least 15 da ys p rio r to the
axp'd. or card (led only. Apply
C a " .............................377 1394
•nee necessary, a x c e lltn !
Fictitious Name of Allied
O
nly............................
*44,900
the Fictitiou s Name ot Star
H
IR
IN
G
T
O
D
A
y
P
t
S
T
T
^
M
I
Z
E
.
J
R
.
in
C
h
a
m
b
e
rs
,
Long
length,
size
4,
red.
Rea
aforeald hearing. In addition,
Lokavlaw
Nursing
Cantar
D
U
P
L
E
X
Large
2
br..
I
be.
THAT P A R T O F T H E SW la
benefit*. Call today for In
Printing Co. d/b/e Alan Trimble
O L D S O M E O A , '41 C4437A
L A R O E C O R N E R LOT A T t*TH
Work at homa. No . . ^ r l . ^
1404 HW Y. 17 91
FLO R ID A H O T EL
Business Services, and (hat I
Seminole County Courthouse,
_*gnabla. C a ll:............ 323 4304
c/h/a, washar/drytr hook up.
notice shall be posted In the area
OF T H E N E '« L Y I N G
‘ •G*T- J'» y«ar old Golden
lerviaw. 7*7 4393.
Communications Co., end that I
41X5. Samlnol* Ford. 37M
A N D P A R K A V E . Z O N ED
2 B E D R O O M , 1W bath, cb
needed. Writ# Collage |^.
Reasonable weekly rales
Intend to register said name
S e m in o le C o u n ty , S a n lo rd .
•240 mo, + dep...........3114990
to be considered at least 15 days
H ID D EN L A K E : 3 bdrm.. 2
R
e
triever.
3/70/47.
1400
S
NURSES:
CNA,
Physical
Ther­
N
O
R
T
H
W
E
S
T
E
R
L
Y
O
F
SR
__Hwy 17 X Sanlord...... 372 1411
College Students Accepted
^
* register said name
FOR U P TO* UNITS. 343.000
horn#, D raam w old section,
300 Oak Ave..................313-440*
d u s t r le s . 140?&gt;, j.n k ln s ,
with the Clerk ot the Circuit
Florida, on the 1st day of May.
p rio r to the date ot P u b lic
bath.
J
yrs.
old,
corner
lot,
2
Perk
Ave....................
1
3
4
0
0
.
S
E
C
T
I
O
N
2
2
,
321
4779
apists,
A
Live-Ins
urgently
L
A
K
E
M
A
R
Y
D
U
P
L
E
X
.
2
211—
Antiques/
with the Clerk of the Circuit
F H A or VA. O nly......... 334.900
Norman, Oklahoma 730*4
Hearing.
Court, Seminole County, Florida
t»47, at 4:30 A M., for Pre-Trial
A S S E M B L Y WORK at home,
car garaga, cathedral
F U R N IS H E D - Large kitchen
bdrm., 1 be., large yard, child
TOW NSHIP 20 SOUTH. R AN G E
"••bed. Call: Care At Horn*
Court, Seminole County, Florida
R E G A R D - 330 for return ot
274' FRO N TIN O ON 2nd ST. AT
plus many other*. Earn good
to show cause why the above
In accordance with the Pro
Collectibles
A taped record ol this meeting
callings, 3*4,400.......... M2 0333
233— Auto Parts
• It*. S45 w e e k ly . Ro oms
774 1153....................... f o p
A sm all pal O K . 3173. +
Federal flovernmenl
ST' SEM IN O LE
In accordance with the Pro
black
A
ten
7'»
wk.
female
2
BD
RM
.,
1
BATH
F
R
A
M
E
.
RAI LROAD/OVERPASS O F F
described
property
should
not
be
visions ot the Fictitious Name'
wages
In
spare
time.
Into
Is made by the City for Its
lobs In your area A oversee*
S40S70 weekly. A ll util. paid.
CO U N TY. FLO R ID A
m
cu
rlty.....................444
1*91
S A N F O R D /L A K E M A R Y - Must
D o b e rm a n P ln c h e r pup.
/ Accessories
O F F I C E A D M IN IS T R A T O R A
I
RP
O
R
T
B
LV
D
.
SAN
FO
R
D
324.900
Owner
financing..........
forfeited
by
this
Court
as
Con
c .“ I* 0fr ,h# Flc,m °u* Name
304
442
0091
ext.
1449.
7days
Statute. To-WIt: Section 443 Ot
convenience. This record may
Many Imm. openings without
40*030........ or.........311*943
L Y IN G S O U T H E R L Y O F A
A R T - P r l v a l * c o l l e c t o r 11q
sail I 3/2. must sae to apprecl1 BD R M , 2 be. w/w, cant. H/A,
S a n f o r d a ra a In s u ra n c e
,r°m Y«rd 3/22/47 on W.
A R E A Z O N E D C - 1 ....... 373,000
Florida Statutes 1437.
i rabJ " d ’ Pursuant to Sections
Wl,:1957.
Sw ,,° " “ *■o*
walling list or test. s i j m S
not constitute an adequate re­
BABYSITTER NEEDED
L
A
R
O
E
ROOM
In
privet*
horn*.
Florida Statutes
ata.
331,900.
Evas.......
373
3943
w/d hook-up, all kitchen appl.
uidatlng original lithographs.
. ,Lh E’ -Sanlord. No questions
agency seeks Intelligent Indi­
Z O N ED MR-1- Extra larg* 3
! M Star Mahaftey
cord tor the purposes ot appeal
f o l l o w s E S C R 10 E 0 A s
Afternoon and some eves.
F ,o rld * Statute*
OOOD U S E D MOTORS
Bath, meals, laundry, cablt,
asked. Or 3104 R E W A R D for
/s/A la n Trimble
O lder pieces Including
vidual for data entry, filing,
•Iter qpm .no pet*. 171 14*9
bdrm.. Uy bath. Adult care,
*• A C R E S F R O N T I N G ON
Publish M arch 14, 23, so A
f *4431, *0 the Longwood Police
trom a decision made with
and transmissions
Longwood/Lake M ary area.
is : 1
telephone,
shopping,
taken
to
Information
leading
to
the
Chagall.
M lro. Agem, Caldar,
m
a
ll,
c
o
m
p
u
t
e
r
p
r
i
n
t
e
r
D
O
Y
L
E
ROAD
IN
O
S
T
E
E
N
A p ril 4, 1447,
daycare
or
duplex
us*.
.
343.000
1
BD
RM
.,
2ty
be.,
3475
-f
dap.
A
D
epartm
ent,
as
the
agency
™*P*cl lo the foregoing matter.
3210003 alter*
u S K W S S W ffiS
.................. 321 2234
Doctor II needed. Senior c iti­
•rrast and conviction of the
P a ll A more. C a ll....... 443-4030
operations
and
other
ofllce
41*0.000
O
R
W
I
L
L
S
U
B
­
D E M 134
2
bdrm.,
tty
be
,
3173
-tdep.
Any person wishing to ensure
N E U O F S E C T I O N 22
! 2 K L “ !,#d M ,d Pr°P*r ty on
D E M 137
zen preferred. Lovely home
CANVASSERS 3*34 hour. Go
P*rson or persons respon. for
duties.
Cash
handllng/tallar
No
Pels..
D
I
V
I
D
E
10
A
C
R
E
S
O
R
L
A
R
O
E
1
bdrm..
2
bath
CB.
K
E
N
A
R
U
T
H
’
S
A
N
T
I
Q
U
E
the
19th
day
of
November.
1944,
..449
4547
that an adequate record ol the
TOW NSHfP 20 SOUTH. R AN G E
_ fo r right person..........313 7947
Ing door to door. W ill train
experience A general o fllc t
Good area, large Fla. room.
M O R E ........ G R E A T T E R M S .
ri °* our P«L Call:
M IN I M A L L opens A p ril 4th.
Seminole County, Florida, based
231— Vehicles
IN T H E CIRCU IT COURT
proceedings Is maintained for
M EAST, A T A POINT 344 24
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
c *ll : ..........................2*0 2723
e x p e rie n c e h e lp fu l. Good
LO N O W O O D : Room with
.................................... *52,500
Come In to see us A register
upon
alleged
felony
violations
o f t h k k «o h t e b n t m
appellate
purposes
is
advised
to
F E E T NORTH 00»S7'02 ' S s T
H
I
M
li(|&lt;
° ^ A K I0 M T ' e n t h
Wanted
company benellts....... 323 4292
private bath, lakefront home.
115— Industrial
J (W ) A C R E T R A C T S
lo r Free Dinner lor 2. 1*40 N.
CASHIER: Convenience Store,
which occurred In Seminole
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
make the necessary arrange
° F T H E SOUTHW EST CORJU D IC IA L CIRCU IT
Mature, M3 wk. Call....332 zaoz
County,
Florida.
lop
salary,
hospltallzalion.
I
PAO
LAL#k#
M
arkham
Rd.
3
**
.
477,
Lent
wood....132-133*
P
A
S
T
U
R
E
L
A
N
D
O
R
IN A N D F O R
O
PP
O
R
T
U
N
IT
IES
open
lor
full
25—
Special
Notices
Rentals
321-7823........E m . 323-0109
^ ER. 0 F _SA ID SW U O F N E 1*,
IN A N D FO R .
New b e n e fils , tree C E U ’S.
bdrm.. 2 bath. Owner w ill help
week vocation each 4 months,
W OODED TRACTS IN O R ­
," c j T V OF* ° f h*r °Wn *&gt;p*n M '
S E M IN O LE COUNTY,
A part tlm* teachers In a
W E F A Y T O P 33 for wrecked
W H E R E A S a prime lacie case
• REASO N ABLE RATES
S E M IN O LE COUNTY,
T H EN C E RUN SOUTH
Vacation, dally pay. flexible
olher
benefits
Apply
202
N
A N G E CI TY A R E A FR O M
with
new
financing......
334.900
•
M
A
ID
S
E
RV
I
C
E
FLO R ID A
has
been
shown.
It
I*
therefore
trend
setting.
PreschoolChild
cars/trucks. We Sell gueron
L
A
K
E
M
A
R
Y
.
FLO
R
ID
A
_
F L O R ID A
e a s t . A d is t a n c e
hours.
213—
Auctions
SANFO RD - Lease. 3000 sq. It. on
*'••*00............ WITH T E R M S
149— Commercial
Laurel Ava. 4:30am 4:30pm
the Order ol this Court that a ll
CASE NO. B7-I22I*CA'I4*L
• P R IV A T E E N T R A N C E
7*/ Je a n M . Stacy
Care Corp. Love of children a
•red used parts. A A AUTO
BECOME A NOTARY
C A S E NO. 47-I224-CA-I4-L
° F M F E E T f o r t h e p o in t
Monday through Friday
busy hwy. I n d u s tria l,
H ID D EN L A K E - Old section.
JU D O E i
Why Consider Living Anywhere
p o te n tia l Respon dent ft who
must. Exp. A education a plus,
Planning A Zoning Secretary
^ J ^ V A O E ^ O s ia r ^ M A a O M
For Details: 1400 432 4254
Property
/
Sale
JU D O E t
O F B E G IN N IN G . SAID POINT
C
a
ll:
740-5144
warehouse, com m ercial, or
O N E A C R E WITH POND ON
Large 3 bdrm.. 2 bath double
‘
BO B'S AUCTION
but we w ill provide training
Else When You Can Live In
claim an interest In the above
KENNETHM . LEFFLER
D A T E D : M arch 74, 1947
CASHIERS- A ll ohllfs. Full A
__ Flofl&lt;*a Notary Association
®EING TH E BE G IN N IN G OF
« N N E T H M . LEFFLER
ofc. W ill remodel lo suit te­
L A K E AAARY B LV D . IX.000
garage..........................449.900
M E D IC A L PE R S O N N E L POOL
E V E R Y M O N D A Y NIONT
andaducatlon.............323 4435
described property shall within
P o li s h : M arch 30. A p ril 4,1947
NOTICE O F F O R F E IT U R E
P e rl Urn*. Above minimum
N O TICE O F F O R F E IT U R E
A C U R V E CO N CAV E TO TH E
241— Recreational
nant. From *937.30 par mo.
M U 5 C L E PAIN
S E L L E R WILL HOLD
TPM. R E A R O F BOBS U SED
twenty (20) days from service
D E M 230
PR O C EEO IN O
A P P R A IS A L S A N D S A LE S
wage s ta rtin g pay. Good
O R D E R L IE S . F u ll time 3-11.
P R O C EEO IN O
^ ° r t h e a s t e r l y AND
R E L I E F through m assaga
M O R T G AG E .
_^
on
lkctM
[ke
at
904-714-1494
BU
ILD
IN
G
LOTS....From
14.000
but
no
later
than
seven
(7)
days
F
U
R
N
IT
U
R
E
..............141*17
92
Vehicles
/ Campers
IN R E : F O R F E IT U R E OF
u
l
.
r
H
i
I
l
n
u
r
BOB
M.
B
A
L
L
,
JR
.
P.A..C.S.AA.
IN R E : F O R F E IT U R E O F
H A V I N G A R A D IU S O l 72
b« ! ! l»Ffc®4’ Apply in parson
P a r ! tim e l l - ; . M u s t b»
-Jh g rap /. by gppt........ 3a3 tU e
NOTICE o f
A 1447 J E E P P IC K U P
before the dale set above, show
W E B U Y HOUSEHOLDS
ECOL. SR 44 A t-4, Sanford
R E A L T O R .................... 121-4111
M W .00 U N IT E D STATES
F E E T , TH EN CE FRO M A
ce rtifie d . Good benefits A
^ / ' C T 'T ' D U S N I kM E
S A C R E S ON P A V E D ROAD
TRUCK, V E H IC L E
1.4 A C R E IN G E N E V A ....332.000
333-SIS4...........or........... 321-70*7
cause by tiling In this Court,
CURRENCY
Florida...Virginia,..M aryland
t a n g e n t
B E A R IN G OF
atmosphere. A pply Debary
117— Commercial
CASH IER with exp., good refer
323-4507
K O M F O R T 17' Travel Traitor
* •» hereby given that I
W I T H S M A L L L A K E IN
27— Nursery A
responsive pleadings as lo why
TO: Augustus Malone
SOUTH 00*37'02‘ ‘ W EST R U N
M anor, *0 N. Hwy. 17-97.
•nets, 32.95 start. Call 33:1442
‘42 C4413Z 33X3. Samlnol*
fl
"
BRIDGES AND SON
Rentals
ROOM FO R R E N T 440 wk
G E N E V A .................... *25,000
W
E
H
A
V
E
R
E
N
T
A
L
NOUSINO
this
Court
should
not
enter
Its
2144 Sipes Avenue
DeBary 404 4426..............EO E
5 p U T H E A S T E R L Y ALO NG
batween 10 A 12...........any day
ChildCare
Ford. 3244 Hwy 17 42....322 1441
Auction every Thursday 7 PM .
791 B rla rclltf St.
55*
Geneva. Seminole
TO: Steven E.M ascho
Order
forfeiting
the
said
pro
C
A
L
L
A
N
Y
T
IM
E
l
F
YOU
T
Y
P
E
35
WPM
A
have
Sanlord, F L 32771
*A , 0 c u r v e t h r o u g h a
&lt;11 Hilt S lid
PA IN T S E A L A N T
__________ Sen lo r d _________
Florida 32732 under the
• ACRES. G E N E V A A R E A OFF
CNA: Immediate full time poll
•24 Cherokee Circle
R
E
A
L
T
O
R
.....................Mi-4991
good
clerical
skills
come
to
t°
the
use
of,
or
tale
by,
Brenda Hopkins
WE
BUY
ESTATES!
C E N T R A L A N G L E OF
O F F IC E S i 700 A 1000 sq.ft. In
• s 'lt A
10 sxnw
Fictitious Name o l Tomorrow’s
TEC H N IC IA N
(Ions. 7 3 or 3 II shills. Good
O S C E O L A R O A D 325,000
Sanlord. FL3277I
C H ILD C A R S m y home. Exp. In
the Chief ot Police of Longwood
O rla n d o lo r one lime in
Roommate. Rm., private en­
2221 Broadway Street
_H » y4 * ...................... 323 2401
growing 4-Towns/Debary area
A D IS T A N C E O F
E A R N U P TO 111.34 HR. No
bynelit*
A
atmosphere.
Apply
T E R M S A V A IL A B L E .
\
7
~
7
tk
•!»!
• stan
Seminole
County,
Florida.
and att others who claim an
c
h
ild
ca
re
.
R
eferences
tra
n
c
e
,
kit.
facilities.
3200
tervlew
and
go
lo
work
In
the
Sanford, F L 32771
rhJt 1 with
ln,tndthe
*0
If
113.33 F E E T TO THE EXIST_ o n Hwy. 17 92 ...... 66A49tSaves
•xperltnce
nacessary.
For
lull
register said name
'N
o
w e s t E R L Y R fCHE ™ ;
.
Call:....,.
mo
.
share
util,
exp.
122
3044
G
^
f
y
M«nor.
40
N.
Hwy
y
o
u
a
r
e
f
u
r
t
h
e
r
Sanlord
Lake
M
ary
area.
Top
322 4149
and a ll others who claim an
viH1 aii t n
party*** " ,h* ,0" ° wlnfl pro
C le rk o l the C irc u it Court.
or part positio ns c a ll
17 42. OeBery 444 4426.... EOE
219— WftntBd to Buy
pay. No Fee. Call Ablest
C O M M A N D E D to serve a true
Interest In the following p ro­
W A Y L IN E O F STATE ROAD
LO VIN G M O T H E R w ill babysit
to xxon
Seminole County. Florid a In
.............I 412 444 7131.............
a.) One 1447 Jeep Pick-Up
121—
Condominium
and
correct
copy
of
such
plead
perty;
COOKSome
experience
helpful.
T&gt;mP........................ 221 3440
'
J
M
*
FlOR
T
H
E
E
N
D
O
F
THIS
W
D*y
or
night,
97—
Apartments
ia
m»i
t
Msi
i
accordance with the Provisions
P A R T T I M E E d u c a t io n a l
Truck, Vehicle Identification
Ings within such time period
Apply at DeBary Manor, 00 N.
_ p a rt/tu ll time, a llaoes321-0474
D E S C R IB E D L IN E .
f •-) 4424.00 United Slates Cur
Rentals
IN S T A L LE R TRAINEE- S3 No
•44 Aluminum Can*..Newspaper
Director lor Child Care Cntrs.
Number 240SWI01I44
- H w y 17 42...................... E O F
Furnished / Rent
To w !.FICcJii'.0Os Nam# S»*'utes,
S U B J E C T TO E A S E M E N T
#*p. needed I Learn all phases
r « r ADNrNE. E ’ S H A R D S
Nen-Fecreu* M etals..........oiass
H°
M
E
I
M
eals
A
snacks,
Exp.
A
BS
Degree
in
early
- J Q * N e - P O LK , Sheriff of
R
U
T
B
E
R
G
,
Assistant
State
At
JOHN E. P O LK , Sherlfl of
R E C O R D E D IN O F F I C I A L
alarm Installing! Good trodel
Statutes 1457,*00 •‘ 5 °9 F,0fW*
CUSTOM ER SERVICE- To 3223
fenced yard, 330 a wk., 1307
KOKOMO......................ill-tie*
childhood*m
ust........
373
9x1*
F
IN
E
RID
O
E
C
LU
B
.
I
bdrm..
lorney.
Office
of
the
State
At
RECO R D S BOOK 122. P A G E
lV2H0
L lria,un,r' Florida S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
A A A Em ploym ent.....323 317*
wk.l Top notch I Light typing,
Furns Apts. Ier Senior Citizens
/»/ Judith Kem plln
M o n te z u m a A v a . o f t of
mrwAjh tils duly sworn Deputy
• I B U Y OLD •
appliances, pool, tennis, seculorney. loo East First Street.
P A R T T I M E T E L L E R - St
through his duly sworn Deputy
ordering and computer! AA A
M a llo n v lllt Ave.. l blk before
313 Palmetto Ave.
IN S U R A N C E TRAINEE- SI
rlty. 3330 mo............ ,.3H.|?qq
REALTORS
. Q u ilts........Crocks........ Linens
Sfwrllfs, seized the deicribed
Sanford,
Florida
32771.
Failure
Super!
Train
with
cash
han­
•fctflW** M l lt d th# d ttc rlb td
Employment............. j m t m
13PlH 7*h M#rCh ” *301 A(yrl^*■
_ C e le ry Ave.................32! 3471
J. Cowan. No Phone Calls
T
o
p
s
i
T
r
a
in
completalyl
* ......TedUy Bears...... 3774101
Property on the 30th day ot
dling experience I Nowl A A A
SANFO RO t J bdrm., 2 bath,
property on the 14th day ol
4nd *erv* ,uch Pleading*
SinTord’i Sales Loader
D E M 2i l
.
Laern computer I Benatitsl
D ATA E N T R Y C L E R K - B u ^
P A R T IA L L Y FU R N IS H E D . 1
October. 144*. at or near Captain
within said time period shall
EA B V *,T I" nsy hom T
JUNK A WRECKED CARS*
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
- Em ploym ent..............373 317*
fo, «N/ T ,o ‘N. F L O R I D *
September. 1444, at o r near
o
fllc
e
,
grow
in
g
com
pany.
A
A
A
Employment....323
317*
bdrm . apt. near lakalront.
Another ot 2. Prim e location.
result In the entry o l a Default
Running cr not, lop prices
Wal-Mart Plaza.
washer/dryer, sec. 3425 Mo.
The Public Hearing w ill be
C ra b m a n 's R e sta u ran t. 2104
P A Y R O L L C L E R K - To S723
REALTORS
Call:
~
‘
N
T
H
E
C
I
R
C
U
I
T
C
O
U
R
r
*273 mo. * sac............121-1)90
In person.
LLS. Highway 17 42. Sanlord.
IRRIGATIO N INSTALLER or
anda FlnafO rderot Forfeiture.
paid. Free pick up. HI-7134
______ ^ ^ ^ ^ 3 2 3 7 4 4 3
(.000 CHI DU BAD 1 RiDiT
Landarama F lq „ Inc. 322 173*
held on A p ril M. 1947. at 7:00
!* P 4 » A v e n y e . S a n l o r d ,
w
k.l
Locall
Any
experience­
O
E
N
E
R
A
L
C
O
M
M
E
R
C
I
A
L
O
F
T
H
E
E
IG
H
T
E
E
N
T
H
Metal Manufacturing, Upsala
Seminole County, Florida.
Sanford’s Salts Loader
Helper. Eup. required. Full
D A T E D th is 13th d a y o l
SAN FO R D I bdrm., apt., with
Seminole County, Florida.
P M ., In the Lake M a ry City
ZONINOI
3.440
sq.
ft.,
]
office
H
iring
nowl
A
A
A
Em
ploy
NO CHI DIF
M arch, 1447.
time. C a ll: . ............... 377 m j
lanced yard, complat* privacy
th9 rV * * d
Pf M arch. 1447.
Hall, 134 N. Country Club Road.
0 " » d day ol M arch, 1447,
33-Real Estate
suites, 2 apartments, owner
m ," l ......................... 323 317*
, « K * o l. C ' " c “ ' T222 4190 HWy 4*' S‘ n,0rd
231-Cars
ttw Seminole County Sheriff's
141— Homes For Sale
W E LIST A N D S E L L
^ " m a n r -w o l e in g e r
*43 week 4 3100 sec.... 123 77*9
Lake M ary, Florida, or as soon
me Seminole County S h e riffs
financing.
344.000.
Call:
John
JA N IT O R /LO A O E R - Perl time,
NO
IN 11 HI SI
S
E
M
IN
O
LE
CO
U
NTY.
P B X /A C C O U N T IN O C L E R K ,
Courses
de
Department filed a Petition for
STATE A T T O R N E Y
M O R E P R O P E R T Y THAN
„ n t a l H V O IE N IS T . P a r i
Department tiled a Petition for
4 ? pm. Apply in person 401 W.
thereat ter as possible. At the
Butfter, Broker/Salesman
SANFORD- Large 2 bdrm. with
FLO R ID A
P re fe r title exp. Apply in
B
Y
:
A
N
N
E
E.
Nule to Show Causa and tor
lime
position,
lop
salary.
Send
A
N
Y
O
N
E
IN
NORTH
Rule to Show Cause and for
hearing, Interested parties may
- »3m St.* Sanford. 9 4 pm
Bod Credit?
No Credit?
fireplace A front porch, newly
C A S * NO: 43 44I-CA-43 L
A C C E P T OUR F IV E % listing
person only. Courtesy Used
SS*
ol Forfeiture with
resume' to 2433 S. Volusia
S E M IN O LE COUNTY
O C A L A N A T IO N A L FO RESTRICH ARD S R U T B E R G
be heard with respect to the
Flna! Order o l Forfeiture with
painted. *40 wk+ 3230 securlB U S IN E S S R K L O C A T IN O ,
W E F IN A N C E
C A R O IN A L INDUSTRIES,
contract A see your horn*
LAW N M AIN TEN A N C E- Expe
C e rt. 2219 S. Hw y. 17-92,
★
*
REAL
ESTATE
★
w
ASSISTANT
Mlgh
and
dry
wooded
lots.
INC.*
•Ne C le rk o l C irc u it Court.
proposed Comprehensive Plan.
Com m ercial bldg.. In high
W A L K IN ...............D R I VE OUT
*Y- £•"=..................... 123 22*9
.c ,re u " Cour»*
advertised at no cost to You.
rlence required. Full lime.
Sanford. M rs. Hammers
f u m Sb !* 0 *' Orano# Cl,ySTATEATTORNEY
M obile home, cabin, camping
County Courthouse,
★ * CAREER NIGHT ★ *
Land Use M ap change and
tra lflc area, 3104,000.
N A T IO N A L AU T O S A LES
FIRST R E A L T Y INC.... sie-goa*
C®un,'r Courthouse,
V|
P la ln tlll,
1 BD R M ., fenced yard, carport,
- C*ll: .......................... .
Of
lice
o
l
the
State
Attorney
D
E
LT
O
N
A
L
A
K
E
S
I
3
bdrm.
I
PH
O
N
E
SOLICITORS
O
.K
.-H
u
n
tin
g
end
fish
in
g
.
rezonlng. Copies o l these re
” , North P ark Avenue. San
Wed. A pril 1st, 7 pm
Call: John Butner
O E N T A L ASSISTANT, experi
______
IlSf D CARS
Sanlord Ave. A 12th SI... . lit 4073
no pets, 373 wk. + 3200 sec.
”
. Ft^ |d a
k
^
L
IFE
O
U
A
R
O
S
:
Sanore
Swim
&amp;
bath
homa,
sunkan
liv
in
g
M
o
n
d
a
y
th
ro
u
g
h
F
r
i
d
a
y
,
100
East
F
irst
Street
*5.430
w
/
S
IM
dn..
M
l
.
71
wrd. Florida.
quests are available at City H all
ENERGY REALTY
Call: 323 3344
•nee required lo r quality or
Brokar/Salasman
LA N D S C A P E AN D DESIGN
B U IC K C E N T U R Y , 74 C4570B
Call323
4343
eves
A
weekends
T
e
n
n
is
C
lu
b
.
P
a
r
i
flm
t:
room,
fam
ily
room
A
dining
5:20pm
to
4:30pm.
Positive
Sanford,
Florida
32771
monthly.....
(404)
114
437*
days
l.’ l ' l ‘ MAT I I
and the same may be inspected
For details
'
A five (I) minute hearing has
221N. CO U N TR Y C L U B RD.
lonlwf practice. Top salary a
B Y C A P R I, INC., at el.,
SX3. Seminole Ford. 1744 Hwy
A pril June, full flme: June
(303)322 7334
1 BD R M ., Adults, no pets, quiet
attitude A pleasant phon*
room combo, aal-ln kllchan.
^ ..............1404) 411 lax eves.
by the public during normal
boon scheduled before HONOR
__________ 212-2939
D A N C E STUDIOI Newly r t
Ask for Fran or Stu
»*fltn»ft. S«nd re»umt* fo 2435
17-42 Sanlord.............. 1221441
’.A h lllH U
!.' t ,’ | .’ 4
residential,
modern,
all
elec.
September.
For
Interview
call
A B LE KENN ETH M. LEFvoice
Is
a
ll
you
need
I
Expertdo
y
ou
r
own
d
t
c
o
r
a
lln
g
l
Publish:
M
arch
14.
23.
30.
A
pril
business
hours.
S- Volusia Ave. Suite D 2,
K E N N E T H M. L E F
modeled, office, kitchen, rest
I.S A C R E S , 200 tt. frontage X
t
N O T .C O F .c fro r" " ’
—J23
2100........o
r..........373
7M
7
•nee
helpful,
but
not
neces­
F L E R . 4 Judge of the Circuit
....................................444,000
_O
range
City,
F
L
32741
D E M 134
F L E R , a Judge ol the Circuit
A D V IC E T O THE P U B L IC : It
rooms. 3IX.000. Cell Linda
TO: A L L T H E KNOW N AN D
327, cash or terms, by owner,
sary. Call 222 2*11 between
C o u rt. E ig h te e n th J u d ic ia l
LO CAL D E L IV E R Y - S4 73 hr.l
a person decides lo appeal a
S47.000. Located on Old Lake
Morgan. Realtor/Assoclat*
D E N T A L RECEPTIO "N IST- SS
U N K N O W N C R E D IT O R S O F
5,o u rf: E , B h teen th J u d ic ia l
O W N ER F IN A N C IN O I1 bdrm.,
ClrcutL on the 22nd day ot May,
•
:20am
A
5:30pm
NOTICE
O
F
Wow
I
No
weekends!
Super
Circuit, on the 22nd day ot M ay.
decision made with respect to
M ary Rd. oft 23th. 323 0110
Sm ile!
I 's b a t h h o m e , f r e s h l y
99— Apartments
r t2 2 ? CAPB AND D E SICN B Y
chanc*
'
Nice
bos*
slablo
companyl
AAA
P U B LIC H EA R IN O
any matter considered at the
C A P R I, INC., a Florida corrt oatas Mrc.a4a iro a s
PROD UCTION P E R S O N N E L
FISH C A M P E M A R IN A I Newly
painted, cen. h/a, new woer
h
iii , ' ,’J 0 A M ‘
Room
o tnllst needs you now I AA A
1* J i? 0
ln Room
Unfurnished
/
Rent
-217, for the purpose of tiling a
CIT
Y
OF
-E
m
p
lo
y
m
e
n
t.............
333
si;*
above
hearing,
he
w
ill
need
a
Auto parts rebuilding. Located
N2 7. lor the purpose ol tiling a
renovated restaurant, bar.
healer, some new capret, I yr.
- Em ployment............ m i «itx
K n ^ a J ^ a LANDSCAPE
Rule fo Show Cause why the
157-Mobile
L A K E AAARY, F L O R ID A
verbatim record ol a ll proceed
on Sanlord A irpo rt..... i l l 492*
Pule to Show Cause why the
established clientele. ttX.000.
A N D D E S I G N . IN C .. A N D
L P N Needed lor busy Dr's oil.
home warranty.............344,900
_KE Y E S « n tTT(ie_SOUTH
D
i
e
t
a
r
y
a
i
d
P
a
n
time,
n
?
F
L
A
N
N
IN
O
A
N
D
Ings, including the testimony
^ P ro p e r» y should not be
Call Frank or Lisa Wlckars.
C A P R I CONSTRUCTION. INC
Homes/Sale
P T, Thurs 4 3. A Frl. 4 I
Q
U
A
L
I
T
Y
C
O
N
T
R
O
L
ARTS TO COME HOME TO
jortailed to the use ot or sold by
! ! ^ l n nc* nacessary Apply
,
Z ° N I N O B OARD/
forfeited tc the uta of or sold by
and evidence, which record Is
a Florida corporation, DelonRaaltor/Assoclatas
Must be able fo draw blood,
CH ARM IN O I 1 bdrn , 2 bath
INSPECTO R- M inim um 2 yrs.
the Sheriff ot Seminole County
* ' G*B «ry Manor, to N Hwy
Quiet, single story living with
43-Medical &amp;
0401ft
lo c a l p l a n n in o a o e n c y
not provided by the City o l Lake
the Sheriff ol Seminole County,
Bring Us Your Income Tax Return*
home, fam ily room, Inslda
start
|.V.
A
type.
Starling
sal
•xp.
with
circuit
board,
must
upon producing due proof that
C A R R I A O E CO VE, 1/1, 12X33,
•nergy
saving
feature*.
I
A
2
—
n
............................
F
rtc
M a r y . ( C h a p t e r s 244.0105
Florida, upon producing due
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
thx.
L !s h e r e b y g i v e n
Dental
*4.30 hr. Call M rs Thomas
u tility, aal-ln kllchan sp ill
know color cod*. Permanent
We'll Figure Them P R I I I I
good
cond.,
part,
turn..
Adult
“ me1 was used In violation of
bedroom
apartments
with
at­
that
th#
Planning
and
Zoning
B
Y
OW
NERIdyllwlld*.
3
br..
2
proof that M in e was usad In
FLO R ID A STATUTES).
N O T IFIE D that an action lor
» . P 'S Jw re u T O R S N E E O E O *
Tuts or Wad 323 2230
plap, do** to (own....... 345.too
position. N ever* fool
CALL
ANY
TIME
tic
storage
A
private
patios.
section.
S7300neq,
321-3*10
Florida laws dealing with con­
Use Your Refund As Your
Board
of
the
City
ol
Lake
M
ery!
b#.,
g
reat
rm
..
fire
p
la
ce
,
v *o}ellon of Florida laws dealing
Dated this 17th day ol M arch,
Declaratory Judgment has been
A f t M * "A A A ILM A LL 4M".
traband and other crim inal ofIrl* .
Florida, acting as th* Local
F R C E M E D IC A R E
'
SA N FO R D COURT A FT S.
peddle Ians, lrg. fenced yard,
—322 4075 for recorded nwxxxy.
F A M IL Y S PA C E S A V A IL A B L E
wdh contraband and other c rim ­
Down
Payment — Drive Home Today
F
O
R
T
H
E
H
A
N
O
Y
M
A
N
I
1
, , l, d h « re ln by
TEMP PERM..
3M1 S. S AN FO R D A V E
Planning Agoncy, w ill hold a
l o t * of t r * * s , e x c e l l e n t
-260-5100
C arriage Cove M obile Home
C A R O L EOW ARDS,
inal offenses. a ll pursuant to
P l a i n t i f f , C A R D I N A L IN .
bdrm ., I bath homa (not
pu2 u* ? l 10
D R IVER S
T—
Why Waill We've Got Your Deal!
_______
1
1
1
3
M
te
x
t.n
l
n r7 0 t-7 B 4 , F lo rid a Statutes
City
Clark
neighborhood,
assumable
1st.
Park.
Come
see
usl
1
1
Hiring now! Exp over the roed.
* « » £ » • M2.70I 704. F lo rid a
D U STRIES. INC., In the Circuit
completed). Larga foyer and
ld ,» M r.lng ,0 COfUld*r the
FO R A LL YO UR
____
L i ml led o llo r - Expires A pril IS, f BAT
feasibility of granting a specific
341.500. I l l 4174 aft. a
Gregory Meblto Hemes.. 3713XS
Statutes (1443).
• E F F IC . I A 1 BD RM . AFTS.
S f f i &amp; A M r d l 30. A p ril 4. 1417
~
H O SPITAL B E D
G«od driver rec. single to
rooms, needs cabinet* and
r l U' ! ‘ Ln
,o r Sem inole
D
E
M
749
amendment
to
the
adopted
City
si«
way
electric.............
ivv.
Petition Ison
a F U R N .A U N F U R N .
County, Florida, and accordingTAX N E E D S . . .
For Business accounts. Full
* .“ W i ' i a M Petition Is on
B Y OW N ER. Spacious home,
M A N A T E E : '41. 14x3*. 3 bdrm.,
healing syslam ............. 349.300
r
a
il.
.....
.
Cell:
Clerk's office and Is
a FAY W EEKLY
llh since there are known arid
Ilia In the C lerk's office and Is
1/2, living room, dining room,
tim e, 360,000-340.000. P a rt
D i»L a l‘# W
Comprehensive
322 0437
tt* bath. Sat up In traitor
4(vail«E»3« for esemination duravailable *—
Why Consider Living Anywhere
unknown creditors o l said Deavonooie
for eiom lnetlon durtime. 417.000 414.000. No salt­
kllchan, porch A carport on
TA X S M IT H
park. Ready to mov* In. Call;
i
E m a a tM
COMFORTABLE FAM ILY
X, F ,C T ,T |O U S H A M E
* ? i * y ' e , a c - -S o uth w a rd,
ing, repeal business. Set your
'"•T tu la rb u H rw s ^ h o u n .
Else When You Can Live In
large shady lot..... 313 1031, 3 7
321 43X between 4am A 3pm
H O M E I- 1 b d rm ., 2 bath
- ^ ° P * r"«»........ 301 sa x-w^
Ul^Wjnf* ,hT * !*•»•"»» com ­
applicants, are requesting a
^ Notice Is given that the unOt
mand you to appear and tile
own hours. Training provided.
p a d d l * I ans , c o m p l e t e l y
C A R E F R E E L I V I N O WI T H
Cali
toll
frta
1-800-323-3720
M A N A T E E - 74, 1 bdrm. In
US E D CAHS
P
dft
,,m*Wed
-FrlT
,r0Z
1
*he
present
M
edi­
J W g ’ g " . " W f In business
1-412-434-4470. M /F , tarn to
ta n ca d , h aa t A a i r , and
°[ ^
P'eettings
S T Y L E A S E C U R IT Y . (The
tam lly park with pool. No
®nlY- A valid Fla. drivers lie
um Low Residential to Comat 1750 Watt Broadway, Oviedo.
L*
h
r
l
l
11
L
i
n
r
.
Spm
(Central
Standard
Tlmat
I.
iw
S
M
A
T
t
/
'
I
J
S
A
N
FORD
more
...........................
349,300
Oaks).
Beautllul
3
bdrm..
2
required. Applicants must
money down. Assum e
^ Ct*f ^ ° ' ,h» C ircuit
1341 P A R K A V E ............Santord
NOTICE U N D E R
m arclal for this certain pa rctl ol
C ° u rf. In and lo r Sem inole
RN's, Needed for j- tt A H 7
F
h !rid
r t da iMunder
;*2:S*rT
’ |r’0,#
c °unly.s
story home. 1* It. screen
X I Lk. M ary B lvd ....... Lk. M ary
m *0.............................121 3443
S
A
N
I
O
H
D
l
.
'
l
.
’
l
.
M
O
H
l
A
N
D
O 4 Z S *&gt;08h
land
described
below.
FICTITIOUS
N
A
M
E
STATt/TS
F
lo
the
Fictitiou
BY: A N N E E.
h
ow Tto
o°dfi&lt;
1*f standard
•,nd m u l' bnow
County, Florida, and sary* a
O E S IR A E L E A R E A I 3 bdrm, 2
shifts. N E W P A Y R A T E S with
porch. Premium location next
323-4507
n°w
drive
shill
S S S S S f t k v r t is o
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
NaT ? d' CO N T O U R ED BO D Y
thA ' V “
Public Hearing
"IC H A R D S -R U T B E R G
copy thereon on P la in tiff's atbath
homa.
new
carpet,
pad
to
pool
A
Iannis,
amanltlas.
salary
commensuratlng
with
^ Pf'Y In person a l Sanford
Notice Is hereby given that the
th# City of Lake M ary Planning
- T A N N IN G A TONING, and
ASSISTANT
tornoy. J A C K T. B R ID G E S .
GREAT LOCATION
dl# fans, work shop, breakfast
For appointment call Becky
Auto Auction. 221* W 1st St
experience. Geriatrics and/or
underxlgned, pursuant to the
and Zoning Board/Local P la n ­
stateatto rney
undersigned Intends to register
STATEATTORNEY
A ttra ctiv e 2 bdrm ., I bath,
£LCLEVELAND t
bar, dining room, screened
Caursan. Re/AAax X I n. realty
c h a rg e n u rs e e x p e rie n c e
.Santord.
See D om lnlcorM lke*
''F
ic
t
it
io
u
s
N
am
s
S
tatu
te
".
ning
Agency
w
ill
consider
ttw
that
name
with
the
Clerk
of
the
BR ID G ES, Post Office Drawer
single story duplex on bus
O ^ P t t h e S le le A t t o m e y
helplul but not required.
Inc. *14-4114
* r ..... 111-4419
porch, central H /A A moral
Chapter MS 09, Florida Statutas.
C ircu it Court o l that county In
ol th* same Applicant
ISO East F irst Street
line, large pool, water, sewer
Contact D eBary Manor, I to
.................................... 343.000
w ill register with ttw Clerk of
accordance with the provisions
JJ*** Nw City ol Lake AAary grant
Sanford. Florida *2771
A trash pick up Included.
. ,7,t’ ^ 7 Of A pril,
4pm, M on.-Frl. lor appoint
of Florida Statutes.
the Circuit Court, In end tor
♦he rezonlng of the same parcel
(3431322 7334
1447. Otherwise
a
Default
Separate adult sac Hon. re ­
NO TE FIN AN CIN O I 10% down
* *“ '
tw ill bo I
ment. 064-441*................. EO E
A&gt;
Seminole County, Florida, upon
^ ^ M - r r h J O . A pril*. 1X7
NAN/CON, INC.
'* Frttonf zoning
tiree* welcome. Ask about our
and owner w ill wrap, 1 bdrm.,
#f',!*!*d •B 4 ,n»* You lo r the
O E M 3 4 JM *fC h 3 °'APr " * ' I W
receipt ol proof 0| ttw public*
RO D M AN T R A IN E E - SS Great
By:
Nancy
Posey
classification
ol
A
-l
Agriculture
move In S PE C IA L.
Br*n,#d •* demanded In
2
bath
homa,
breakfast
bar
President
chence tor a super cereerl
lion ol this Notice, ttw fictitious
to C-l General Commercial.
said Complaint.
tbuckdm veb
SH EN AN D O AH V IL L A O E
open lo patio, formal living
name, to wit:
T ra in com pletely! Securel
'h e property for which this
• J R } } * M *r r t « • 20 A A p ril 4.
A P A R T M E N T S .............1U-14M
room, split plan, cantral H/AI
N O T ? * ip n R E , F U R T H E R
W ird
_
A
A
A
Em
ploym
ent.....
323
3I7S
Comprehensive
Plan
Land
Usa
R
IL
E
Y
'S
N O T IFIE D that 4 hearing has
11
heavteqoip
.................................... 349.900
JU N E PO RZIO R E A L T Y . INC
D E M 204
under which we are engaged In
M ap change and rezonlng are
GR0VEVIEW
VILLAS
SALESMAN
WANTED
h2T
!
h
a
s
business
at
917
W.
H
ig
h
w
a
y
s*
.
requested
Is
located
at
451
Peoia
O
PERATO
R
2
N
I
Lake
AAary
Blvd.
“ 1 ^“ r . A p r l1 24, 1447, at
R E A O Y FOR S U M M E R I 2
(or fast growing carpal store.
E N T E R T A IN M E N T . NO M ELongwood. Seminole County.
•CO M BFO N O EN CI/
P u f f The property for which
DON'T R EN T...U ntil you see
bdrm., 1 bath pool horn*, spa.
i'* F B
,,h# Nooorabla
Salas exp. htlpful. Must b*
Beautiful oversize pool with
Florida.
■W
JENTTlAINtNG
♦hese
changes
are
requested
it
_
N
O
T
IC
E
O
F
Sanford's
most
spacious
2
Kannalh M . L e ff lt r , C irc u it
great room, breakfast bar,
from Sanford area. Apply In
privacy lence. Large 1 bdrm.,
• ( £ C A L 6 NATIONAL TOO
'•golly
d
e
K
rlb
e
d
a
t:
Tb**
»he
party
Interested
in
bdrm.,
1
bath
apt*......M
l
0344
FICTITIO
US
N
A
M
E
Judge presiding lor the purpose
dining room. cen. h/a. and
parsen, F lo rid a C a rp s l A
2 bath home In quiet residen­
"A C EM EffT ASSBTANCI
said business enterprise Is as
Notice Is hereby given that I
chaln* West ol
more extra*................. 379,900
AAARINERS V IL L A O E
• ,,M | determlna
Vinyl. 3497 S Orlando Dr.,
tial area. Home has lots ol
•nNANOALAJOAVAIL
follows:
sngaged
|n
business
a
t
4
U
the
Northeast
corner
of
Section
Special 1bdrm ....................3795
L fT l
disbursement of funds
Wal M art Plaza. Sanford
extras, solar haat. naw roof,
it
* A C C K O fm ) M CM IPI
S. Township 20 South, Range 30
_
a y c o a p p a r e l . INC.
iJ R j f h j R " W alntltl on behall of
S ^ r t n a . ^ * A,V#’* A IU m on l.
2 M rm * ...................... from 3315
OTMTM
M il 1 C
ID Y L LW ILD E I 3 bdrm . 2 bath
sprinkler system lor lovely
I lF R A
LM
D A T E D a t C a s s e lb e r r y ,
East, run West a# 4.00f!et.
SECRETABY/Racaptlonlstthe Defendants herein.
'
C o u n ty,
home, great room
C a ll...............................Ml-BA 70
landscaped lot. M usi see I
Seminole
County,
Florida
on
Lek#
AAary.
Mortgage
exp.
is
tjwnce
run
South
440
00
feet,
“
nd*r
the
Fictitio
u
s
W ITNESS my hand and seal
w / f l r a p l a c t , c a n tra l H/ A ,
AA A R N IT A C A R LI.....1212447
N IC E S T I A 2
bdrm*. In
AAarch
II.
IN?.
thence
run
East
44400
leet
helpful.
20
X
hr.
per
wei
IW CTYOLOa.
^
Painting,
and
Of the Clark of the Circuit Court
breakfast bar. sunkan shower
M A T
c o o f m t
o
Sanford. A ll appls., can. h/a,
that I Intend to register said
_l«*dlnq to lull lima. 373 0990
/ s / Gregg K .R ila y
^ . J J t h d e y o l M a r c h , tig?.
In AAester, Inside utility A
IhTft!: r,Un, 2 0r,h 44000
&gt;d
N EW HO M E, Quiet residential
naw c a r p a l A p a in t, b ig
President
name w ith-th e c E k of ? h .
th« Point ol Beginning. Seminole
SEW
INO
AAACNINE
O
P
E
R
A
­
"»°*'4l...........................342.300
VW.
MATH
are* ol Loch Arbor. 1 bdrm., 2
rooms. 3135 to 34M Open Sat.
Publish
AAarch
23.
30
A
A
p
ril
4.
2
2
2
L
e
r
»
t
‘
•nilnote
County.
TORS
Wonted,
w
ill
train
quel
O A V ID N . B E R R IE N
*W M
CW N T
bath sp ill plan. Now is the
A Sun.. 2pm apm, X IS Sanlord
13.1947
*cc.ordance with the
L,u
IHod applicants, paid voce
C L E R K O F THE
■RIO H T A C H E E R Y I Spacious
Accounting A
time lo pick your III* and
A va.................... Call:aa4Sa7i
DEM-207
Cleaning Service
Lawn Service
‘
he
F
ic
titio
u
s
CW O TJt."
Hons A Holidays. Clark Ap
C IR C U IT CO U RT
Nursing Care
3 bdrm., 2 bath homa, ceram ic
carpet. Over 1100 sq It. under
O
N
E
BORAA.,
newly
decorated.
Tax Service
parel.
247
Power
Cl.,
14
In■ Y tC o to U o V .E k a rn
III*
toyar,
b
rick
fireplace,
h
A
a.
Come
s
e
e
.n
a
Vine
wood
r n t v io u a
T * V*
P
o
o
l
,
a
l
l
a
p
p
l
.
I
n
c
.
Statutes 1417.
B
A
R
R
I
E
R
'
S
Landscaping!
dustrlel
Park,
121-1199_______
Deputy Clerk
OUR R A T E S A R E LOW ER
N O TICE U N D E R
„
* F R IN O C L E A N IN O
I M ^ iu x T 5 U h*
City
built In mlcrowava, breakfast
A A A RNI T ACARLI ..... 12114*7
/s /Ja m e s A . Bartz
H U 0 E R T PEARCE
Hall, ISO N. Country Club Rood.
Irrig., Lawn Care, Res a
washar/.drytr, 1 calling Ians.
Rt* •Comm. • N tw Const.
Lekevtow Nursing Center
FICTITIOUS N A M E S T A T U T I
Publish: AAarch 14. 23. 30. A p ril
b a r lo nam * a le w lin e
S T A R T NOW
Exp.
Incom*
Tax
Sarvlc*
Comm,
321
7444,
F
R
E
E
ESTI
Publlsli AAarch It. 23. 30 A
I
yr.
leas*
SH5.
1st,
la
s
t.
3100
6#Iff/
For
that
special
touch.
*1* E. Second St., Santord
TO WHOM IT AAAY CO N CERN :
t t i i*
Ftef,d*’ or as soon
features........................ttx.soo
Walk
and
gat
paldl
Help
updat*
R
E
D
U
C
E
O
I
Country
living
with
A p ril* . 1447.
‘
J2 M 0 4 t t o r o g p t ^ ^ ^
ttwrsatter * , po»»ibie. At the
sec, dep , no pels. 3110*11
172 *707
O E M 140
F R E E ES T ................. 321 7217
Notlca Is hareby given that the
O E O R O E 'S LAW N C A R E
• h r Sanford Lak* AAary City
access to Lake Monroe. Con­
D E M -143
♦paring. Interested parties may
Reasonable prices
S A N FO R D : I bdrm . garage
!jnd, , *l9r'*d- Pursuant lo the
D
ire
cto
ry
.
No
se
llin
g
.
No
temporary
3
bdrm..
2
bath
Additions A
bo heard with respect t0 the
F ic titio u s Nam e S ta tu te ".
Call now to resarve service
opt., quiet neighborhood. *323
•xperlence we train. Apply
• G E N E V A O SCEO LA R 0 . 9
pool homa Metier suit* ha*
Home Improvement
{"'&lt;****d Comprehensive Plan,
Chapter 443 09, Florida Statutas.
month. C a ll................ 3221411
F re e e st........................ 3220X1
Remodeling
Z O N ED FOR MOBI L ESI
4 noon; R.L. Polk A Co. 2410 S.
balcony
that
overlooks
pool.
Paper Hanging
Land Usa AAap change and
w ill register with the Clerk of
S Acre Country tracts.
Orlando D r., Sanford. Sun
U N F U R N IS H E D On* bedroom
Q U A L I T Y L A WN S E R V I C E I
Also has lo ll tor private ofC O M P L E T E NO M E R E P A IR
rezonlng. Copies ot these re­
the Circuit Court. In and for
B.E.
L
I
NK
CONST.
apt., water Included. No pet*,
_Bank Bldg. (2nd floor).... EO E
W all tread an paved Rd.
Tim e lo Thatch, F a rllllz a A
r A F E 7 T T A N 0 I N 0 A P A IN T ­
He# ate....................... 3)17,400
Door...... window..... cabinets
quests are available al City H all
Remodeling.............305 372 7074
Seminole County. Florida, upon
X % dawn. 14 Vr*. at t&gt;%l
Call alter 4 pm ............322 14*4
Clean up Free E H
371 0716
IN G (Interior
Extorlor).
AAA R N IT A C A R LI..... 111-19*7
M JP P L V S E C R E T A R Y To SIM
C
a
ll
Russell
at
774
63*4
•«d
fhe
same
may
be
Inspected
F
in
a
n
c
in
g
..„....LIC.»CRC000*7I
receipt
o
l
proof
of
the
publica­
V K XHOLL‘5
“ tft 4 comm. 35 yttrft t ip .
From 314,3X1
"S U N N V S". Mow. edge. trim .
wk.l Excel lent I Casual olfic*.
tion
ol
this
Notice,
the
fictitious
P
L
U
M
B
I
N
O
,
E
l
e
c
t
r
i
c
a
l
.
otxx-em xs:
K * L CONSTRUCTION CO.
Free Estim ates. Call: Roy
dor,nfl W m a l
planting, mulching. S F RI NO
Train with basic skills! A A A
322-8678
name, to wll:
ca rp a n lry. Fra* a stlm a la t
3210101. Quality/Raas. 75 yrs
t « v '‘&gt;'4»................... 121 4071
BHMtoument.............,111317*
RiD
O
EW
O
O
O
A
R
M
S
APTS
^
S
p
j
c
^
r
e
e
a
s
^
^
^
T
T
T
t
T
t
I
A
D
V
IC
E
TO
THB
P
U
B
L
IC
:
If
_
C
*
h
B
o
.......................
321
1342
T H E CO NNECTIO N
experience In araa. Llcansad
flo w •/
SANFORD- 2 bdrm.. I bath,
BAM BO O CO VE AFTS.
• Ptreon decides *0 appeal a
GAU ANY TIME
T B i t (M ARKETING: Are You:
wider which wo are engaged in
can t, h/a, n ear Sam lnol*
AAOVE IN S P E C IA L
Masonry
boelslon mod* with respect to
C L E A R . CONCISE. CO N­
business a l VIS W. Highway 434.
Landclearing
C o u n ty la k a lr o n t o f l l c a t ,
On I year lease, you get I
Carpentry
oov miner c o n s I d e r ^ V the
V E R S A T IO N A L A CO N VIN ­
L^ Sw ood, Seminole County.
Hamilton
School
321
1317
Sewer/Septic Tank
month o l your choice tree I
Cencrtto Slabs, drives, polios A
•bove hearing, he w ill need a
B A C K HOE, Dump truck. Bush
CING. Then | want to talk to
A L L T Y P E S O l C a rp a n lry .
S A N F O R D , 3/2, (am. room,
ISM Ridgewood Ave..... 123-442* walk*. 23 yr. exp. Lifelong
verbatim record of a ll proceed
hog. Box blading, and Discing.
Y*u about part tlm# work at
That fhe party Interested in
HO
W ARD'S SEPTI C S E R V I C E
Remodeling A homa repairs
screened porch, pool, fenced
2M E. Airport B!...........1214441
re*..LIc. A Ins.... 344 4731 alt. 3
'"®»' '"eluding the testimony
Call:322 1404..... o r......322 4313
M l tlm# wages. NO S E L L
M id boftintftft tnttrpflft# it a t
Repair Linas A Clean Tanks
Call
Richard
Gross
321
3472.
yard.
37,000
cash
to
mlg.
no
and evidence, which record Is
ING. Hourly wage plus bonus.
follows:
Free Estim ates
372 0259
BUSH HOO. Box Blading. Ols_ goal. 113-4X7.... o r.... m u n
Moving A Hauling
RI CHARDS C A R P E N T R Y
W ill T rain ....................... Call:
clng A Tractor Roto Tilling
ACTION SPO RTSW EAR. INC.
II yrs In Cantral Florida
L A K E AAARY: Hugo corner,
M * r y - ( C h a p t e r s 20*.OIOS
t bdrm., t bath..............3113 mo
_ Mr*. AAcP e r molt at 374 43M
D A T E D a t C a s s e lb e r r y ,
C* " ........................... -322-2S47
C#M_B i i ; i _ i_ _ _ _ 3 l 3 57|7
MAN WITH TRUCK w ill haul,
shaded lot. 1 bdrm., 2 bath,
F L O R ID A STATUTES).
2 bdrm.. It*bath...........siaomo
Seminole County, Florida on
T I T U S E A R C H E R / Examiner.
T H O R N E L A N D C LE A R IN O
dellvar. clean garaga. cut A
|fC2#*#d this l?th day of M arch.
screened
porch,
many
oxtras
&gt;
Cantral
H*at
A
A
ir
Tree Service
AAarch i4. IN7.
F irst Am erican Title Co. has
Loader
and
truck
work/sepllc
care lor lawn W* trim trees
C
eII toll frM 1-800-323-3720
Cleaning
Service
•
Pool
A
Laundry
Wallace
Cress
Rsalty,
Inc.
/»/ Gregg K. Riley
Immediate opening lor exp.
_j*gk*and. F f — t t |, jgg 3453
Low
rates.
24hr
ser.
774
4114
C A R O L EDW ARDS.
ECH O LS T R E E S E RV I C E
__________ 111-0377
F R A N K L IN AR M S
President
saarcher/exam lner Orlando
K.W .CUCK
Free Estimates I Lew Prlcasl
City Clerk
*3*3 P A R K A V E ............Santord
A F F O R D A B L E A thorough
111! Florida Ava.
Publish AAarch 23. X A A p ril 4.
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F O. SOX 15200
Uc...Ins...Stump Crinding.Toel
_________1114034__________
13. 1447
From 31 (U repair) Oelin
program, salary Wommensu
O EM 344M *rCh * • A p f" •' " * ;
■rentes avallabla a x 1770
121 2129 day or nit*
D E M 20*
3 BD RM ., I*i ba . new carpet,
1 B D R M . I u p stairs, 1
0R1AN00. FLA. 3285ft
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B
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"L at the Prelasstonals do It".
JJ QUALITY CLEANINO.
kitchen appliance* Included.
downstairs, a il P ark Ave. No
1 *14 3*3 1*37 a il. HI02FL lor
Interview call Keith Handrix
Lawn
A
Garden
M
ain!
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chain
M a ln l., Ja n ito ria l A M a id
*4.000 down, assume mtg ol
ST U M P ORI NDI NG
current repo list
« t W 3 W *94t
E O F 'M / F 1 pet* 321 4416'- -or 244 4731
saw work, m u lch , S pring
Service. *71 5303 A 260 6453
Insured ......... Fr«e Estim ates
*34.600. no qualifying 371 4317
dean upl Free Estl 373 4147
Ca"
774 730*

st&amp; t s ^ s s s S ^ S ^ S T S S 111911

IN T H E CIRCUIT COURT
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O LE COUNTY.
FLO R ID A
C A IE NO. 44-47J4-CA-14-0
JU D G E :
V E R N O N M IZ E . JR .
NOTICE OF F O R F E IT U R E

Seminole

Orlando * Winter Park

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

C L E R K TYPIST- Excel" typing
skills required. Busy
office!
Orowlng company.
A p p ly In p e rs o n

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JAME S LEE

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STENSTROM

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PAY HERE

STENSTROM S E I G L E R
REALTY, INC.

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767-0606

322-2420
321-2720

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To List Your Business...

Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

SS, 645-3001

K I t SS f if l S“»:5

Pharmacist

•M OM C O U N TY

N° w Accepting Applications
For A Pharmacist In The
Seminole County Area.
Starting Salary $39,000 +
Dally Hours 9-6 PM
42 hr. Work Week
•
Good Benefits
Send Resume To
Mxlm S f f r M lac.

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322-2420
321-2720

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�You Must Take Charge
O f Your O w n Health

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THROUGH
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ISN’T IT*

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'M A N TLE e 5 2 6 1,

R E G G IE S T R O U B L E
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A N Y T H I N G S E R IO U S /

R E P O R T IN G F O B
. D E T E N T IO N /

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OVERT HAW K...
COVERT IW tEUmXE

I WENT OUT WITH A
CIA ASEWT LAST WIGHT.

DEAR DR. GOTT - My blood
pressure was high and the
doctor put me on medicine.
When It gets to 107/70. he takes
me off the medicine. What wor­
ries me Is I get short of breath
when I go upstairs. My heart
checks out OK. I weigh 200
pounds and am 5 feet 3.
DEAR READER - You raise
two Interesting questions.
To begin with, your doctor is
not doing you any favors by
using blood-pressure medicine
In an o n - o ff c y c le . M ost
hypertensives need some type of
medicine for years. The fact that
your blood pressure becomes
low with treatment Indicates
that the drug Is too strong or you
d o n ’ t h a v e t he t y p e of
hypertension that requires drug
therapy.
Second, you are overweight.
Your obesity Is a probable cause
of your elevated blood pressure
and Is almost surely the reason
you have trouble climbing stairs.
Your primary goal should be to
lose weight. Ask your doctor to
put you on a diet, or go to
Weight Watchers. Once you trim
down, you may be surprised at
the change In your ability to
exercise. Your blood pressure
may drop and you'll feel better,
too.
To get you started on a
weight-loss program. I'm send­
ing you a free copy of my Health
Report WINNING THE BATTLE
OF THE BULGE. Other readers
who are interested should send
their name, address and $1 to
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to mention
the title.
DEAR DR. GOTT - I'm 75
and suddenly have developed
numbness In my left ear and
neck. My doctor diagnosed It as
n e u r a lg ia and p re s c rib e d
nothing for It. I’ve had a hearing
aid in that ear for 40 years. Do
you agree with the diagnosis?
DEAR READER - I f the
nerves that supply the skin of
your ear and neck are not
functioning normally, numbness
or tingling can result. The
diagnosis of neuralgia does not
shed much light on the reason

Tor your problem. I doubt that
the hearing aid is the cause of
the numbness. Ask for a referral
to a neurologist who can Identify
which nerves are Involved and
why: then you can be given
appropriate treatment.
For Dr. Gott’s complete dlscusslon of problems and treat-

ments ot the prostate gland,
write for your copy of Dr. Gott’s
new Health Report on THE
PROSTATE GLAND. Send SI to
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to mention
the title.

Release In Papers of Monday, March 30. 1987
ACR0 8 8

8 Short 1or
Nathan
6 Kimono aaah
7 Approximately
8 End a call (2

_______ Aniwor to Prevlou

□□□
□EE

1 Dacambar
holiday (abbr.)
8 Ark bulldar
9 Claap
12 Hawkeya State
13 Eaatem priest
14 Individual
18 Rspetitlon
17 Hurry
11 Clan
18 Three (pref.)
16 Mountain crest
19 Entertainer Lea20 Actress Lillian

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I 11 1 1 B B 1 11M l 1

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it
angle
46 Slavic language
47 Like duck's feet
80 Type of tuber
B1 Actor March
82 Living on other
creatures
87 Ear (comb,
form)
88 Opera prince
89 Knob
60 Time lone
(abbr.)
61 TV program
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62 Health centers

■1
1
2
3
4

12. Roman
Clever phrase
Reverence
Author Jean-

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21 Ration
24 Needle ease
28 Well vlsuallied
27 Religious poem
31 Place for
unclaimed mall
(abbr.)
32 Songstress Ad-

21 Flower
22 Mountainous
23 Tannla tarm (2
. wda.)
24 Qenus of ants
26 Chemical suffix
28 Sound track
29 Andes animal
34 Hawaiian dance 30 French painter
38 Hawaiian food 33 Long time
fish
36 8eeker of Moby
3 7 _____ Jacket
Dick
39 Actor Dailey
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40 Stories
.
42 Former (comp.
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WIN A T BRIDGE
REALLY?

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by Wam«r Brothers

BUQ8 BUNNY

THE ffifA L SEC R ET TO SUCCESSFUL FLY
CASTIN0 IS POING IT WHILE GRANNY IS
A T THE SHOPPING MALL
-------- --------- H

THE SECRET TO SUCCESS
-FUL FLY CASTING IS ALL
IN TH E WRIST/
S U F F E R IN '

Now there was a problem. He
cashed the diamond A-K and
trumped a diamond as East
discarded (he club five. If he now
led a heart and East was kind
enough to cash both heart tricks
before playing cither clubs or a
spade back, everything would be
Just fine. That was not going to
happen. Since he needed to get
rid of his club loser, declarer led
to the king of spades and played
a good diamond. East trumped
In Immediately as South shed
his club. Now, because the
spades were 3-3. declarer made
his game contract.
Is there a lesson here? Only
one. Instead of leading a low
spade from a three-card holding.
West would do better tabling u
club at trick one. "Leading from
longest and strongest" may be
an old wives' saying, but usually
It's the best approach.

NORTH
♦

J - IM 7

K 7 5

V 5 4
♦ A K 10 7 8 5
♦

10 2

W EST

EAST

♦ J 96

♦ Q 8 3
Y Q J 7 2

Y 9
♦ Q 32
♦ K J9 8 6 4

.

♦ J 4
♦ A Q 5 3

SO U TH
♦ A 10 4 2
Y A K 10 8 6 3
♦ 98
♦

7

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East
W est
I ’ a ss
Pass
Pass

N o rth

South

E ast
Pass

I Y

2 ♦
3 Y

Pass
Pass

2Y

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

♦

4 Y

6

HOROSCOPE

SUCCOTASH

you MEAN £ HAVE
ID MAKE THE DECISION
WHICH 15 TH P
h&lt;S POTATO
WHICH IS TH E
=

l it t l e p o t a t o

Ij

Th Av i } 1-la

&gt;T KNOW VOU TWO ARE
^ 5 L &amp; .S K

B y J u n e s Jacob y
Now why should South, with a
minimum opening of 11 highcard points, accept a game
Invitation? For starters. South's
hand has an attractive 4-6-2-1
shape. Furthermore, his 11
points are two aces and a king —
the highest quality points. The
final plus is that North’s twodiam ond response matched
South's two little diamonds. If
o p e n e r had h eld a s in g le
diamond and two small clubs, he
would have passed the threeheart Invitation like a shot.
With a spade lead, how should
you play? Declarer saw that the
game would be easy If both red
suits split 3-2. and did not see
any simple way to guard against
any other distribution, so after
playing low from dummy and
winning East’s spade queen with
his acc^hc played A-K of hearts

h t

^ 8a

r f ie l p

?

?

RIGHT. SURE. UH. WOULD VQU
TO HAVE A LIGHT FOR
MM CUTTING T O R C H ?

h appen

by T. K. Ryan
P E W t f r iT j lW E * n t * L Y \

o o te m o e *

m lln svsk
it io r r * L Y

A
. y

YOUR BIRTHDAY
MARCH 31.1987
A secret career desire that you
have only discussed with a few
Intimates has excellent chances
of being realized in the year
ahead. Soon it'll be safe to talk
about It openly with others.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Before proceeding with a com­
mercial Involvement, be certain
It doesn't have greater costs
attached than you had consid­
ered. Double check your figures.
Know where to look for romance
and you'll find it. The AstroGraph Matchmaker set Instantly
reveals which signs are roman­
tically perfect for you. Mall 82 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­
per. P.O. 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
you are too concerned with your
self-interests today. It might
cause an associate to behave
likewise. This could create a
stalemate where neither will
benefit

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) day. both you and your mule will
When dealing with loved ones have to make some concessions.
today, you'll feel better If you let Don’t wait for your spouse to
your compassion govern your make the first move.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
actions, even if It calls for some
21) If your Instincts warn you
type of sacrifice on your behalf.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) It against doing business today
could spoil the day for you. as with a certain firm or Individual,
well as for your friends. If you acknowledge your hunches.
take s o c ia l s itu a tio n s too Your perceptions are pretty
seriously* Keep everything In sharp In these areas.
perspective, and Just relax and
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
enjoy life.
19) Being around groups today
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Gratifi­ may not provide you with the
cation and recognition should fulfillment It usually generates.
not be more important to you Y o u ’ ll be happier In quiet
today than playing the game In pursuits with a close friend or
accordance with your usual high two.
standards. Keep your Ideals In
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
mind.
VIRGO (Aug.. 23-Sept. 22) It’s best not to Invite people
Bolster your beliefs in things whose com pany your mate
spiritual today by seeking inspi­ doesn't enjoy Into your home
ration from the proper sources. today. Before you spring any­
thing on him or her. check It out
Don’t be Influenced by doubters.
•
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You first.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
will have to be on constant
guard If you hope to do well In Today, associate with friends
commercial Involvements today. whose topics of conversation are
light and Inspirational. Avoid a
Take nothing for granted.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In pal who likes to argue about
order to maintain harmony to- heavy Issues.

I TAKE rrvcu
ARE VCOGWING
THE YOUNG SHOULD MEAN SO-CALLED
•ADULT* REAWS
BE ALLOWEDY)
READ A W m W M L MATTER, AAR.
WARWICKS.1
A*66 SLATE 9 rrr=

..THINK PACK. TMSURE
T H E R E W E R E FD R W P P E N

MATERIALS WHEN MEM/
WERE YOUNG. P1DTHAT
PREVENT YOU FROM r :
EXPLORfka THEM I f

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Sanford Herald
79th Year, No. 260

Sanford, Florida — Tuesday, June 23, 1987

Price

25 Cents

Sanford To Ask Governor For Yankee Lake Probe
By Brian Sullivan
Herald Staff Writer
Suiilbrd Commissioners voted 4-1 Monday to
ii-quest Governor Bob Martinez appoint an
Independent special prosecutor to Investigate
alleged Improprieties In methods Seminole
County used to obtain the 2.867-acrc Yankee
Lake property for u sewage treatment plant.
The resolution, suggested by Commissioner
Whltcy Eckstein, was opposed by Mayor Bettye

Smith, but she is to send a letter to the governor
making the official request.
“ I don't think there's anything to be gained by
such an investigation." she said.
Two weeks ugo Eckstein made a similar
request, saying public response to media attenlion over the Issue warranted a look at the
transaction to vindicate local government officials
In the eyes of their constituents.
City Attorney William Colbert said that the

governor had received a similar request for a
special prosecutor from Semlnole-Brevard State
Attorney Norm Wolflnger.
The governor hasn't made a decision yet."
Colbert said.
" I f there was some hanky panky then 1 want to
sec If the city can get some of the money back
that we lost In negotiations." Eckstein said. " If
there was a violation of law then maybe we can
recover same of our costs." he said, referring to

Reagan Praises
Am erican Workers
M E L B O U R N E (U P I) A
Dictaphone Corp. picnic to cele­
brate recent company gains
drew 2.000 workers and their
families Monday to hear Presi­
dent Reagan praise them as he
promoted his economic and fed­
eral budget policies.

Two-year-old Akeem Brinson
of Cocoa, waits for a glimpse
of Reagan just before his
arrival at Dictaphone Corp.

Fathers held children on their
shoulders to see the president,
who made the Dictuphonc facto­
ry first stop on his nationwide
campaign to sell his version of
the federal budget.
Dictaphone executives said
r e c e n t p r o g r e s s by th e
dictaphone-machine company
had produced a 100 percent gain
In e m p lo y m e n t — to 700
workers — and a 70 percent
Improvement in production per
worker.
"Doubling employment, sur­
ging productivity, increasing
competitiveness, a team spirit
and shared goals — you've got a
miracle of you own going right
here." Keagun said. "Something
you cun all be proud of."
Nearly 2.000 people packed
the grounds o f Dictaphone's
Melbourne factory, waiting for
president under a hot sun that
pushed late-morning tempera­
tures to near 85. Each worker
got two tickets for guests und
family.
The president's remarks drew
almost uniform uccolades from
several workers who showed up
toscoReagun.
' • ‘
" I ’ m for h im ." said Dtck
Wclsnbarger. an engineer. "T h e
ones up In Washington who
spend and spend, tax and tux. I
don’t go for that."
Dick Elken. a contract manag­
er at the plant, agreed. "I think
he was right on the money,
everything he said.
"W e work as a group here."
Elken said. "There's an oppor­
tunity with the company to
grow. I think we have to get
more companies to stand on
their own feet."
Melbourne, a rapidly growing
seaeoast community of about
50.000 residents 35 miles south

A d v is o r s
R o u te

Engineering consultants told
th e S e m in o le C o u n ty
Expressway Authority Monday
the route they recom m end
would cost less, force fewer
people from their homes and
save more community facilities
from destruction, compared to
alternate routes.
The seven authority members
heard why the consultants and
two oT three study committees
prefer "Route 53" for the eastern
beltway link to Interstate 4. but
did not Indicate their preference
at Monday's meeting. The route
Is a 16-mlle stretch over the
western end o f Luke Jcsup und
t h r o u g h s e v c r u l S a n fo r d
neighborhoods to a link-up with
1-4 south of State Road 46. The
authority Is expected to make Its
choice by July 22.
R esidents o f the affected
neighborhoods have Iqdlcted
their displeasure with the plan.

HtraM Photo* by Louis Rolmondo

Reagan addresses audience of about 2,000 outside
Dictaphone's Melbourne factory.
of the Kennedy Space Center,
turned on Its charms for the brief
presidential visit.
"W e ’re very thrilled about It.”
said Marian Sharp of Melbourne.
" I t ’ s a very b ig even t for
Melbourne, but this Isa beautiful
city."

D ictaphone em p lo yees re­
ceived two tickets each for
guests and family members for
the picnic, which swelled the
crowd to nearly 2.000. The
fa c to r y has ab ou t 700
employees. Giant grills prepared

See REAGAN, page 10A

After seven months of study,
the route selection was based on
cost and degree of social and
commercial displacement. Al­
though the alignment is consid­
ered best in those regards. It
would require filling of more
high and low value wetlands and
would save the fewest number of
tra v e l hours a n n u a lly , the
studies indicated.
The authority is scheduled lo
meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday to
discuss elim ination of other
routes still under consideration.
Chairman Fred Streetman said
M onday the public w ill be
allowed lo comment at the
meeting In the county com­
mission chambers. Public meet­
ings are scheduled for early
July.
The eastern Seminole County
route, at a cost estimated at
$245 million, represented the
least expensive of the three
routes remaining under consid­
eration. An estimated $47.8 mil­
lion of the total cost would go
toward purchasing rights of way.
Also, an additional $2.5 million
is proposed for buying rights ol
way on which noise buffers
would be constructed.
The two others, alignments 56
and 68. would cost an estimated
$275.4 million and $280.2 mil­
lion resp ectively . A ll three
alignments would leave Orange

Plan for western beltway
suggested, 10A
County along the County Road
•120 corridor until they neared
Lake Jcsup. Alignments 53 and
50 would cross the lake at the
same point, traversing a cause­
way of more than 3.000 led.
Alignment 68. however, would
cross more to the center ol the
lake and require a causeway ol
more than 7.000 feet.
From Lake .Jcsup. alignment
56 would turn northeast and
cross County Road -127. Align­
ment 68 would stay on a north,
northwest route alter crossing
the lake, and also would cross
CR 427. Both 56 and 68 would
continue In a northwest direc­
tion. east of laike Ada. All three
proposed routes cross County
Road 46A and turn west toward
1-4 about one. mile souj.lu»LSU|l£
Road -10.
A comparison of residential
displacmcnt shows route 53
taking out 57 single-fam ily
dwellings compared to routes 56
and 68 claiming 53 and 50
dwellings. Bui the prefered runic
would claim only 12 m ulti­
family dwellings compared lo
158 lor each ol the others. Five
community facilities would he
lost to route 53 while eight
would he losi to eai li ol the
others.
Far more houses and apart­
ments would fall within 500 led
of route 53 than with the other
tw o . T h e rep o rt said 299
s i n g l e - f a m i l y h o m e s . 102
multi-family dwellings would he
within 500 feet ol the highway, a
c irc u m s ta n c e that has led
engineers lo propose spending
the $2.5 million on noise hollers.
The noise reduction plans call
for elevating the highway about
eight led In areas neat dwellings
and establishing butlers ol about
50 led on each side ol the
highway. I lie hulli i s would I n ­
clude natural berms vegetation
and walls ol several fed
E ngineers said the hulh-i
costs, excluding the expense ol
buying the properly, would Imabout $I0&lt;) per linear loot. I bis
trealmenl." said engineer Tim
Jackson, "would u u d ledcral
noise standards, and go beyond
the standards."

Astaire - 1899-1987

Bridge..................... ..............6B
Classifieds........................ 4B.5B
Comics.................... .............. 6B
Coming Events....... ...............3A
Crossword............... .............. &amp;B
Dear Abby............... ..............IB
Deaths.................... .............I0A
Dr. Gott................... ...............6B
Editorial................. ..............4A

Dance Legend Succum bs To Pneum onia

Financial................ ............. 10A
Florida................... ............... 4B
Horoscope...............
Hospital.................. .............I0A
People....................
P olice..................... .............. 2A
Sports..................... ......... 7A-9A
Television............... ..............IB
Weather................. ............... 2A
W orld..................... .............10A

LOS A N G E LE S (U P I) - V irtu a lly
everyone used the same words to describe
Fred Astaire on learning the movies'
quintessential dancer was dead at 88 —
gentleman, perfectionist, graceful, unique,
professional — a class act.

sweatshirt. He did for white tie and tails
W’hat a young Marlon Brando did for torn
T-shirts, but off screen he hated formal
wear and more than once was asked to
leave a restaurant for not having a proper
Jacket.

Astaire died Monday in the arms o f his
wife. 10 days after being hospitalized for a
cold (hat turned Into pneumonia.

Despite the legendary assessment by a
Hollywood producer who showed him the
door when he came West from a successful
Broadway and vaudeville career — “ Can't
act. can't sing, balding. Can dance a little"
— Astaire could act and sing and dance
more than a little.

"He knew I was with him." said a tearful
Robyn Smith Astaire, a former jockey and
his wife of six years, " lie was happy. He
was ready to go."

------------------ Inside
Supreme Court upholds fed­
eral law requiring withhold­
ing of federal highway funds
from states that do not raise
their drinking age to 21, 2A

Commissioners were united In this de­
cision to. as Mercer put it. "avoid another
Yankee Lake." by making sure thut the
public Is aware ol the land purchase and
that none of the alleged Improprieties
surrounding the Yankee Lake land sale,
which the city lost to Seminole County,
become afflictions of Sanford elected of­
ficials.
In so doing commissioners made a step
towards solving what Mayor Bettye Smith
said was the greatest, "overriding problem
the city has faced since I've been mayor.”
The $3.5 million purchase would be
Integrated into an effluent disposal program
See LAND, page 10A

B a c k

C h o ic e

By Ted Carter
Herald Staff Writer

"gouged" out of $1 million and that In Ills
estimation the property Is only worth $2.5
million.
" If we waited 60. 90 or 120 days it
wouldn't make much difference.” Mercer
said. " I beg you (fellow commissioners) not
to act hastily. I'm convinced that there are
other properties suitable for this kind of
treatment."
But the measure passed. The stipulation
pul back In the agreement on the advice of
City Attorney William Colbert will require a
public hearing on the proposed purchase of
the property. After 30 days of advertising
the commission will hold a public hearing
on the purchase at city hall.

TO D A Y

See PROBE, page 10A

E x p r e s s w a y

City To Hold Public Hearing On Land Buy
To re-enter a clause* stipulating the
contingency of a public hearing, the Sanford
City commission voted 3-2 to resubmit a
purchase contract to pay $3.5 mlllln for a
2.200-acre tract of land lo Ik- for used in
Sanford's treated wastewater disposal pro­
gram. Commissioners Whitey Eckstein and
John Mercer opposed the measure.
The land owners had returned the offer
with the hearing clause deleted.
Eckstein and Mercer don't object to the
public hearing, hut said they feel the city Is
rushing Into the land buy without looking
fully at other options. In the past Mercer has
expressed displeasure with the asking price
of the land saying that the city Is being

the city’s legal and engineering expenses. Ecks­
tein was not on the commission at the time
Sanford attempted to obtain the Yankee Lake
proerty by condemnation after It was purchased
by the county.
In 1985 Seminole County Commissioners voted
to buy the property for 87.5 million from
developer Jcno Pauluccl. Sanford had eyed the
property us a site for their treated wastewater

F r e d A s t a ir e

'...there will
another.'

never be

News of Astaire's death brought tributes
from the leading ladles with whom he
seemingly defied gravity in a movie career
that spanned more than 40 years. The
world's great danccis called him the
greatest of them all.
He was a man who wore a tuxedo with
th e sam e e a s e must m en w e a r a

After he had made some of Holly wood's
most enduring musicals — almost defining
the genre — he won an Oscar nomination
for a dramatic role in "Towering Inferno."
Irving Berlin said he wrote many ol what
became some of the world's great songs
with Astaire in mind.
See A S T A IR E , page 5A

Astaire made top hat and tails his
trademark.

�I* * * » » ^ •

0' • *

0 **

• r

f
3A—Sanford MtriW, Sanford, FI.

Tutsday, Juno 33,1H7

Supreme Court Upholds
Highway Funds Law

POLICE
INBRIEF
Hosts Report House Guest
For Alleged Burglary
An 18-year-old Casselberry man. who allegedly went out
at about 1 a.m. Monday to burglarize a neighboring home
while visiting at 951 N. Lake Triplet Drive, was arrested
there after he allegedly returned with a bottle of
champagne, a knife and Jewelry from a home at 935 N.
Lake Triplett Drive. The Items were valued at $500.
The neighbors were away at the time o f the burglary, a
Casselberry police report said, but residents of 951 N. Lake
Triplet Drive, reported the apparent break-ln.
Held Owen Riblett. no other address listed, was arrested
at 951 N. Lake Triplet Drive at 1:12 a.m. He has been
charged with burglary, theft and possession of drug
paraphernalia. He was being held In lieu of $8,000 bond.

Police Pushed, Man Jailed
Sanford police who responded to a disturbance at 1310
S. Sipes Ave., Sanford, at about 6:47 p.m. Saturday,
reported charging a man with battery on a policeman and
resisting arrest. The man allegedly pushed a policeman
and struggled when arrested.
Ottls Holloway. 22. o f 1505 W. 25th St.. *205-A. Sanford,
was arrested In the case and released on $1,000 bond to
appear In court July 7.

WASHINGTON (U?I) - The Supreme
Court upheld a federal law today requiring
the withholding of federal highway funds
from states that do not raise their drinking
age to 21.

• Overturned a 126-year-old precedent,
ruling federal courts have the power to force
governors to comply with extradition re­
quests. The case Involved an Iowa man
wanted In Puerto Rico on murder charges.

The court, on a 7-2 vote, affirmed the 8th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals In holding that
the law does not violate the 21st Amend­
ment.

• Struck down 5-4 two Pennsylvania laws
that Impose lump-sum annual taxes on the
operation of trucks on Pennsylvania's
highways. The opinion by Justice John Paul
Stevens said the taxes discriminate against
Interstate commerce.

The state of South Dakota argued the
legislation violated a state's right to decide
for Itself how best to regulate the sale of
alcoholic beverages.
While Congress may lack the power to
directly Impose a national drinking age.
Chief Justice William Rehnqulst wrote for
the m ajority, " w e conclude that en ­
couragement to state action ... is a valid use
of the spending power."
"Congress found that the differing drink­
ing ages In the states created particular
Incentives for young persons to combine
their desire to drink with their ability to
drive, and that this interstate problem
required a national solution." he said.

Revolver Found In Car Search

Justices William Brennan and Sandra Day
O'Connor dissented.

Altamonte Springs police who stopped a car on State
Road 427 at State Road 436 at about 5:40 p.m. Saturday,
and asked permission to search the vehicle, reported
finding a .22-cal!ber revolver and the driver was charged
with carrying a concealed firearm. Junior Roy. 28, of 4 D-B
N. Orlando Ave., Fern Park, was arrested and released on
$ 1.000 bond to appear in court July 6.

The case Involved legislation passed by
Congress In 1984 that directed the secretary
of transportation to withhold a portion of
federal highway construction funds unless
states raised their drinking age to 21 by
October of 1986.

Employee Arrested For Burglary

The law authorizes the withholding of 5
percent of the funds In 1987 and 10 percent
in 1988.

A foreman for Bob Dance Dodge, U.S. Highway 17-92.
Longwood. reported spotting an employee at that business
at about 5:30 a.m. Saturday. The foreman also had heard
noise In an office and found that a cigarette machine had
been burglarized.
Seminole County sheriffs deputies were called and
reported stopping the suspect's car on U.S. Highway 17-92
at Lake Mary Boulevard. Roger James Busche. 28. o f
Deltona has been charged with burglary and theft and was
being held without bond.

Drug Drop Goes A w ry
A man who allegedly put Illegal drugs Into the wrong car
In the Altamonte Mall parking Tot. Altamonte Springs, was
arrested after police watched him return to pickup the
drugs.
The mistaken drop at about 2:30 p.m. Saturday had been
reported to police who were watching the car when the
suspect returned.
Johnnie Calvin Simmons, 32. o f 106 Oak Ave.,
Altamonte Springs, was arrested on charges o f possession
of cocaine and marijuana at 3:23 p.m. Saturday. He has
been released on $2,000 bond to appear in court July 6.

Driver Nabbed For Pot Possession
When a Seminole County sheriffs deputy stopped a
weaving car on Jackson Street. Altamonte Springs, the
passenger ran and the driver was arrested on a charge of
possession of marijuana. Marijuana residue was reportedly
found on the ground beside the car and a sheriffs dog
reportedly sniffed out additional marijuana spilled inside
the car.
Norman David Allen. 26. of 147 Jackson St., Altamonte
Springs, was arrested at 2:53 a.m. Monday and was being
held in lieu of $500 bond.

Driving Under Influence Arrests
The following persons have been arrested in Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the influence:
— Mark Edward Goldman. 33. of 5950 Hester Ave.,
Sanford, was arrested at. 11:38 p.m. Sunday after his car
failed to maintain a single lane on Interstate 4. Lake Mary.
— John Lowell Knabenshug. 33, of 114 Wax Myrtle
Drive, Sanford, at 3:15 a.m. Sunday after he almost hit a
Lake Mary policeman at at traffic stop.
— David B. Walker. 22. of Jacksonville, at 2:50 a.m.
Sunday after his car was seen weaving on Interstate 4 near
Lake Mary. He was also charged with having an
unasslgned license tag.
— Karen Evelyn Day, 29. o f 561 Jasmine Drive,
Casselberry, at 3:02 a.m. Monday on Red Bug Lake Road.
Casselberry, after her car was seen weaving.

Burglaries A n d Thefts Reported
Arthur L. Milks, 55. of 1469Vti Lake Drive. Casselberry,
reported to sheriff s deputies he was hit from behind as he
was leaving the Deluxe Bar. Southwest Road. Sanford, and
was robbed of $230.
Sandy Lee Marlany. 7449 Betty St., Winter Park,
reported to sheriffs deputies $240 was stolen from her
home between June 15 and Sunday.
A cash register valued at $525 and containing about
$200 was stolen from Tony the Baker's Restaurant. 588
Red Bug Lake Road, Winter Springs, Sunday, a sheriffs
report said.

FIRE CALLS
M ONDAY
; — 1:12 p.m.. 1011 Olive Ave. A
; 54-ycar-old woman cut her ear.
■ Rescue workers treated and

Sanford Herald
tU SP S 411 210)

Tuesday, June 23, 1987
Vol- 79, No. 260
Published Daily and Sunday, esrapt
Saturday by The Sanford Herald,
Inc. J00 N French Ave., Sanford.
Fla. 21771.
Second Clast Postage Paid at Sanford,
Florida 12771
P O S T M A S T E R - Send address changes
to T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D . P.O
Bo« 1*57, Sanford, F L 12771.
Home Delivery: Month, M .71; ] Months,
514.25; * Months. 527.09; Year.
551.00 By M ail: Month, 5* 75; 2
Months 520.25; * Months. 517.00;
Year, 547 00
Phone (105) 122 2*11.

14.

Tlod To Drinking A g o

bandaged the patient and trans­
ported her to Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford.
— 1:59 p.m., 108 W. 27th St. A
23-year-old woman was hit by a
car while riding her bike. She
complained of back pain but
refused transportation to hospi­
tal.
—2:27 p.m. 1011 S. Olive Ave.
A 54-year-old woman was in­
volved In a fight. She received
unspecified injuries and was
transported to the hosptlal.
—4:54 p.m.. 128 Mayfair Circle.
A 2-ycar-old girl fell off a couch
and hurt her head. The child’s
mother said that she would take
the girl to the doctor.

TUESDAY
— 12:01 a.m., 2016 Clalrmont
Ave. Firefighters received a cull
that a power line was down In a
tree. Firefighters couldn't find
the line, but notified Florida
Power and Light that the power
was out In the area.

In other action today, the Supreme Court:

• H e ld 6 -2 W a s h in g t o n s t a t e 's
manufacturing tax discriminates against
Interstate commerce in a ruling that state
officials said could cost the state nearly
$800 million.
The drinking law was enacted after a
presidential commission concluded teenage
drinking was a major cause of highway
deaths, exacerbated by a variety of drinking
ages that send many youths across state
borders In search of booze.
In 1984. South Dakota — which permits
19 and 20 year olds to drink low alcohol
beer — charged the law was an unconstitu­
tional violation of the state's right to set a
drinking age.
Federal courts disagreed.
South Dakota was s u p p o r t e d in its
arguments by Colorado. Hawaii. Louisiana.
Montana. Ohio, South Carolina. Vermont
and Wyoming.
Forty-six states and the District of Col­
umbia have a drinking age of 21. South
Dakota passed a law raising the drinking
age to 21 as of April 1988 In the event Its
court case was unsuccessful.

Woman Sought
In Alleaed Arson
Seminole County sheriff's deputies arc
searching for a 19-year-old Maitland
woman who allegedly set her apartment
afire during a dispute with her husband.
SherlfTs investigator Barry Brady re­
ported that Jackson Alexander Jr., 18, of
2105 Howell Branch Road. »47-E. had
locked himself in a closet of his home at
about 8 p.m. Friday. He reportedly put a
cardboard box against the Inside of the
closet door to keep his wife out.
She allegedly removed a small vent
from the base of the door and reached
Inside to set afire the cardboard box.
which Ignited the closet.
When Alexander pushed aside the
burning box and fled from the burning
closet his wife allegedly hit him in the
head with a hammer.
She then left, taking their 10-day-old
baby with her. Alexander tried to put out
the fire, but couldn’t. Brady said. The
Seminole County Fire Department ar­
rived at the scene and extinguished the
blaze.
Although Alexander reportedly told
Brady he didn't want to file charges
against his wife, Brady said the alleged
arson was a threat to others.

—Susan Loden

Man Beaten, Robbed
A 67-year-old Sanford man who told
Seminole County sheriffs deputies he was
attacked from behind, beaten and robbed as
he walked along 18th Street at Airport
Boulevard. Sanford, was hospitalized, but
has been released from Central Florida
Regional Hospital In Sanford.
James F. Kirkland Jr., told deputies he he
was attacked at about 1:30 a.m. Friday. He
said he didn't get a good look at the
assailant and he doesn't know how much
money was taken from him. Deputies
reported Kirkland's face and ribs were
injured.
—Susan Loden

WEATHER
Nation To mperatures
City A Fareeait
Albuquerquety
Anchoragety
Asheville pc
Atlanta pc
Billing* pc
Birmingham pc
Boston »h
Brownsville Tex.sy
Buffalo ty
Burlington Vt. cy
Charleston 5.C. cy
Charlotta N C. pc
Chicago ty
Cincinnati pc
Cleveland cy
Columbui pc
Dallas pc
Denver pc
Oat Moines pc
Detroit pc
Duluth ts
El Paso ty
Evansville cy
Hartford th
Honolulu pc
Houston pc
Indianapolis pc
Jackson Mist, pc
Jacksonville ft
Kansas City ti
Las Vegas sy
Little Rock pc
Los Angelas 1
Loultvlllacy
Memphis pc
Miami Beach pc
Milwaukee ty
Minneapolis It
Nashville Is
New Orleans pc
New York ts
Oklahoma City pc
Omaha pc
Philadelphia ts
Phoenix sy
Pittsburgh pc
Portland Me. r
Portland Ora. sy
Providence th
Richmond pc
St. Louis pc
San Francisco sy
Washington pc
COOES
c dear
ct-c leering
cy cloudy
1 lair
ty foggy
Ii; h.ue
m missing

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Five-Day Forecast

Pep
....
.01
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....
.20
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.52
....
4.91
.13
.01
....
....
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.37
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....

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3 7^7
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t j 70
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....
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....
.11
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.19

pc pdrlly cloudy
r rain
sh showers
sm smoke
sn snow
Sy sunny
Is thunderstorms
w windy

Florida T e m p e ra tu re s
M IAM I IU P I) — Florid! 24 hour temper#luroi and rolnfoll ol I a.m. E DT today:
City;
Hi 1JO Rain
Apalachicola
1* 73 O.tr
Crestvlew
71 73 0*0
Daytona Beach
90 75 031
Fort Laudardala
17 71 0.70
Fort Myers
94 75 000
Gainesville
93 73 0.31
Jacksonville
93 74 0*4
Kay Wast
91 13 000
Lakeland
94 71 000
Miami
91 79 004
Orlando
91 7* 0.07
Pensacola
«* 74 1.74
Sarasota-Bradenton
93 7* 000
Tallahassee
17 73 0 05
Tampa
91 75 O.tr
Vero Beach
90 77 0.19
West Palm Beach
91 75 o.t*

Moon Phases

Last
July 17

Beach Conditions
Dsytons Besch:Waves are l/i
to l foot with a slight chop.
Current is to the north with a
water temperature of 75 degrees.
New Smyrna Beach:Wavcs are
1 to 2 feet and glassy - great for
wading. Current Is flowing to the
north. Water temperature Is 76
degrees. Sun screen factor: 21.

Local Report

For Central Florida
Ft!9 Cldy

EC

m N
Wed.

M M

Ptly cidy

cl

m ty t

cio uot

E*

74

73

72

F rl.

Sat.

Sun.

Thurs.

Source: Notion!I Weather Sorvlco

Thunderstorms
Put East Aw ash
By United Press
International
Thunderstorms were scat­
tered today from the Midwest
to the East, but It was Buffalo.
N.Y.. that apparently "got It all
al o n c e " as n e a r ly tw o
months' worth of rain came
down In a matter of hours.
Breaking the old record of
3.28 Inches for a single day set
In 1985. Buffalo picked up a
record 5.01 Inches of rain
Monday, officials said.
"W e got It all at once." said
meteorologist Tom Dunham In
Buffalo. "W e got more than a
month's equivalent of rain In a
matter of six hours."
The average rainfall for the
month Is 2.72 Inches, he said.
Thunderstorms hit western
Pennsylvania and southern
New York today, with driving
rain also fa llin g In Iowa.
Missouri. Nebraska and the
Dakotas, the National Weather
Service said.
Heavy rains Monday covered
Kansas, southern Illin ois,
southern Indiana, parts of
K e n t u c k y a n d O h io . In
Kansas, the storm produced 5
Inches of rain and a tornado In
Morris County, but there were
no reports of damage or InjuryA flash flood warning was
p o s t e d e a r l y to d a y fo r
W a s h i n g t o n C o u n t y in
southeastern Ohio. Up to 3 feet
of water covered some of the
county's roads.
Flash flood watches were In
effect for parts of western
P en n sylvan ia and for the
Florida Panhandle.
A tornado Monday afternoon
near Onconta. N.Y. ripped up
dozens o f trees. A twister
touched down at Farmington
Lake, Kan., Monday night,
damaging trees, cabins, boats
and docks. A tornado also hit
an ora n ge g ro v e M onday
evening north of Haines City.
Fla.
The deluge appeared to be
over fur Buffalo as the city had

only a 20 percent chance of
rain for today. Residents were
balling out basements and
high water under viaducts had
forced police to close roads In
the suburbs of Depew and
West Seneca after cars became
stranded in water up to their
roofs.
Erie County sheriffs officials
said a section of Route 78 In
the county was closed because
of high water.
O th er r a in fa ll a m ou n ts
Monday Included 2.74 lnehes
at Syracuse. N.Y.. 2.27 Inches
at Rome. N.Y.. uiul 2.07 inches
al Wilkes B rre-Scranton. Pa.
In Bath. Pa., residents were
soaked with 1.03 Inches of
rain In Just 20 minutes.
T h e s to r m fr o n t o v e r
western Pennsylvania and
southern New York kept tem­
peratures cool In much of the
Northeast, and highs were
mostly In the 70s.
In New Jersey, log and poor
visibility was blamed for the
collision of two passenger fer­
ries Monday night In tile
Raritan Bay between New
York and the New Jersey
Shore, the Coast Guard said.
At least 14 people were treated
and released from hospitals.
Floods up to 8 feet deep in
the Detroit area Monday closed
roads. Including sections of
Interstates 96, 75 and 94 and
forced some 1Q0 motorists to
abandon their cars, police
said.
Heavy rains and a tornado
hit lower Michigan Sunday.
The twister that struck the
Chateau Estates trailer park in
the Detroit suburb of Novi
killed one man and Injured
four other people.
Shrimpers in the western
Gulf of Mexico will be exempt
for the next nine months from
new federal regulations that
would require the use of con­
troversial turtle excluder de­
vices during shrimp harvests.

The high temperature Monday
In Sanford was 95 degrees and
the overnight low was 75 de­
grees as reported by the Univer­
sity o f Florida Agricultural Re­
search and Education Center.
Celery Avenue. There was .17
inch es o f rainfall recorded.
P a r t ly c lo u d y to d a y w ith
expected high in the low to
middle 90s and the probability of
afternoon showers.

T o d a y p artly clou dy with
thunderstorms liklcy this after­
noon. High In the mid 90s.
Southwest wind 10 mph. Rain
chance 60 percent. Tonight
partly cloudy with scattered
thunderstorms ending. The lows
In the mid 70s. Light wind. Rain
chance 30 percent. Wednesday
partly cloudy with scattered af­
ternoon thunderstorms.

Extended Forecast
T h e e x te n d e d fo r e c a s t,
Thursday through Saturday, for
Florida — except northwest —
Continued warm and humid
with scattered mainly afternoon
and even in g thunderstorms.
Thunderstorms most numerous
on frlday. Lows near 70. Highs
in the upper 80s and lower 90s.

A r e a Readings
The temperature at 8 a.m.: 77;
overnight low: 76; Monday's
high: 98 (new record for this
d a te); b arom etric pressure:
29.98: relative humidity: 97
percent: winds: SW at 9 mph:
rain: .07 Inch: Today’s sunset:
8:26 p.m.. Wednesday's sunrise:
6:29 a.m.

A r e a Tides

WEDNESDAY:
SOLUNAR TABLE: Min. 4:20
a.m.. 4:35 p.m.: MaJ. 10:25 a.m.,
10:50 p.m. TIDES: Daytona
Beach: highs. 7:40 a.m.. 8:08
p.m.; lows. 1:32 a.m.. 1:19 p.m.;
New. Smyrna Beach: highs.
7:45 a.m., 8:13 p.m.: lows. 1:37
a.m.. 1:24 p.m.; Bayport: highs.
1:38 a.m.. 12:16 p.m.; lows. 6:25
a.m.. 8:03 p.m.

Boating

St. Augustine to Jupiter Ini
— T o d a y w in d s o u t h t
southwest 10 kts. Seas 1 to 3 1
Bay and Inland waters a llg!
chop. Scattered mainly aftt
noon thunderstorms. Tonlgl
wind southwest 5 kts. Seas 2
or less. Bay and inland wate
smooth to a light chop. A fe
th u n d e rs to rm s . W ednesds
wind southwest 5 to 10 kts.

�Tt— 4ty, Jem It, H W -IA

Board
COMING EVENTS
Honors
Alcoholics Anonymous Groups
Schedule Tuosday Mootings
Retiring
Staff
Area Alcoholics Anonymous groups meeting on Tuesday
Include:
• Rebos Club AA, noon and 5:30 p.m., closed to the
public. 8 p.m., step, 130 Normandy Road, Casselberry,
Clean Air Rebos Club, noon, closed to the public.
• Sanford A A , noon. 5:30 p.m., 8 p.m., open discussion,
8 p.m., Living Sober (closed to the public). 1201 W. First
St., Sanford.
• 24-Hour A A group beginners open discussion, 8 p.m..
317 S. Oak Ave., Sanford.
• 17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m., (closed to the public).
Messiah Lutheran Church. 17-92 and Oogtrack Road.
• Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m. (closed to the public).
West Lake Hospital, State Road 434, Longwood.

Rotary Club Holds Bonquot
Sanford Breakfast Rotary Club will hold Its annual
Installation o f officers and awards banquet at 6:30 p.m.
today at Frontier Cattle Company, Sanford.

Ovoroators Support Group
Overeaters Anonymous, open to the public, meets every
Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m., at the Florida Power &amp; Light. 301
S. Myrtle Ave., Sanford.

Weight Loss Group Moots
TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Chapter 79 meets from
6:15 p.m. to 8 p.m. every Tuesday at Howell Place, 200 W.
Airport Boulevard, Sanford.

Rotarlans To M oot
Sanford Breakfast Rotary Club meets at 7 a.m. each
Wednesday at the Sanford Civic Center.

Constitution Is Topic
Sanford Optimist Club will hear a program on The U.S,
Constitution In observance of the Bicentennial o f Its
signing presented by speakers Herb Salyer and Bud Tobin
Wednesday at noon at the SLzzlln Steak. Highway 17-92.
Artifacts of the period will be on display.

Toko O ff Pounds Moots
TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Chapter FL-491 meets
every Wednesday from 6:30 to 8 p.m.. at the Salvation
Army, 700 W. 24th St., Sanford. Open to the public.

Sanford Serenaders Dance for seniors Is held every
2:30-4:30 p.m., Wednesday, at the Sanford Civic Center.
Free admission with live band.

Back Caro Basics Class
Free class on "T h e Basics of Back Care" will be
presented on Wednesday. June 24 from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
at the Center for Orthopedic Physical Therapy and
Rehabilitation. 1922 Mlzell Ave., Winter Park. Call
629-9211 for reservations.

Support For Montal Pationts
COPE support group for families o f mental health
patients meets Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., Crane’s Roost
Office Park.S-377, Altamonte Springs.

Parent Support Group To Moot
Families Together Patent Support Group meets every
Thursday at 7:30 p.m., 900 Fox Valley Drive, Sweetwater
Square. Suite 206 for open discussion. For lnformaton call
774-3844.

Narcotics Anonymous Meets
Narcotics Anonymous meets at 8 p.m. every Thursday at
317 Oak Ave., Sanford.

Bible Study Held
A non-denomlnatlonal Bible study and prayer is held at
noon every Thursday at the Cavalier Inn Restaurant.
Highway 17-92. Sanford.

Back To Basics
Free class on "T h e Basics of Back Care" will be
presented on Wednesday. June 24 from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
at the Center for Orthopedic Physical Therapy and
Rehabilitation. 1922 Mlzell Ave.. W inter Park. Call
629-9211 for reservations.

Voters League Plans Outing
League of Women Voters of Seminole County will hold a
luncheon at the Weklwa Marina Restaurant at noon.
Thursday, June 25. At 1 p.m., there will be a float boat ride
to commemorate American Rivers Month. Reservations by
June 22 to Marcella Hansen. 339-5359.

Quilters Guild To Meet
Central Florida Quilters Guild will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday. June 25 at the First Baptist Church, 519 S. Park
Ave., Sanford. Barbara Logullo will lecture and demon­
strate on padded boxes.

Michael Dean Bedenbaugh. 28.
of 108 S. Holly Ave., Sanford,
the victim of a 4:30 p.m. Sunday
swimming accident after a dive
from the Weklva River Bridge
west of Sanford on State Road
46, drowned by drowning ac­
cording to an autopsy relascd
Monday morning.
The autopsy was performed
Monday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital, Sanford, and
Sheriffs Chief Deputy Duane
Harrell released the results o f the
autopsy Monday morning.
Seminole County sheriffs In­
vestigators initially thought that
Bedenbaugh. who was pulled
from the water by a fellow
swimmer after being found float­
ing face down, might have suf­
fered a broken neck In the dive.

Dem it Barborka 4 Linda 4 Margarot E. to
Ruban Rodrlguei 4 W F Mlcaela. Lt 90
Crovevlew Village, *59,000
Louisa Tetlo a.k.a. Tesla to Stanley H.
Sandefur, land In Sec 17 20 30.11.200.000
Mlndleh Constr. to James H. Bransford Jr.
4 WF Gloria. Lt 4 Sliver Lakes West At The
Crossings U n i, *107,100
Harris American Homes to James T .
Vickers 4 W F Donne. L t 27 Hyda Park.
*99.300
George P. Guttery 4 W F Rebecca to Terry
B. Uhran 4 W F Julia A., Lt 4 Tlmbartand Un
2. *149,000
Joseph C. Closek 4 W F Susan to Falldlo C.
Martinez, Lt 11 Blk lt Weatherstleld 2nd
addn, 135,700
Group 3 Design 4 Constr. to Bernard R.
Cote 4 W F Barbara A ., Lt 12 Citrus Point,
S7I.N0
J . Kelly Caldwell 4 W F Rhonda to Gregory
O. Crowell 4 W F Ann M.. LtS 33 34 4WV* of 33
Blk E. Robert L. Betts Addn, UJ, 300
Sanlord Place Inc. to Terry A . Cartwright
4 WF Constance. Lt 102 Sanford Place.
104,100
Carrie Rebun to James M. Burkshlre 4 WF
Rebecca, W 100' ol E 200’ of Blk 3 amended
Diet South Wlldmere, S1W.OOO
Sanfcrd Place Inc. to Stephen G. Robinson
4 WF Cynthia. Lt 44 Sanford Place. 344.300
Eddie Johnson et al. to James W. Cornell 4
WF Melanie. Lts 7 12 Blk A Midway Heights.
1170.000
Hardy Sharpe Jr. 4 WF Elm a lo Lynn H
Smith 4 WF Joan. Lt 142 Wsklva Hunt Club
Fox Hunt Sec 1, $71,400
Lloyd Bogglo lo Kenneth A Woolley 4
Jacqueline. Un 440 Summit Village Un 1.
152,900

MARRIAGE
LICENSES
Douglas Warrsn O'Dell and Sandra C
Arias
Michael M. Gurln and Ellen T . Berendien
Alvaro Romero Jr. and Deborah C. Linton
David A. Locke and Karen Y. Baker
James S. McCleery and Lisa A. Blanton
Charles R. Oglesby and Penny Sue Robles
Michael S. Palmer and Karyn D. Jones
R a n dy L . M a s s tr and A n n e tte S.
Blackiedge
James B. Bernosky and Naomi R. Slncler
David E. Moss and AngalaM. Harrelson
Bobby J. Couch and Batty J. Rowe
Anthony M. Nicholas and Dianne J . Webber
E rlc J Welshapl and Nancy F . Panter
Daryl J. Collins and Sharon D. Bush
Bruno J Malagno and Judith A Belbeck
Fred A. KlrchnerandMyrlan I. King
AceC. Zryd and Gayle D. Cates
Allred E Lawson and Audrey A. Moody
Michael E. Holoway and Dorothy M. Lowle
Matthew D. Greene and Ginger K. Ferrell
Joseph Vecchlo and Evelyn DelRosarlo
Noluente
•

Dorothy Cartw right, right, a Seminole
school bus driver for 21 years, accepts a
certificate recognizing her years of service
from Superintendent of Schools Bob Hughes

while, from left, Seminole County School
Board member La rry Betslnger and board
chairman Joe Williams, J r . en|oy the happy
moment

— Lyman; E. Roland Hill, J r„
Geneva: Vada Levesque. Asst.
Teacher — Teagu e; R oger
Principal — Altamonte; Ruth
H ob b s. T e a c h e r. S em in o le;
Lltten, Bus Driver — Transporta­
Virginia Holland. Lunchroom
tion.
Manager — Rosenwald.
Alberta Jones. Custodian —
John MacKenzle, Teacher —
Lakeview; Henry Jones. Custo­ Lyman; Marie Martin. Custodian
dian — Sabal Poin t; M arja — Hamilton; Etolse Matheny.
K a l a s h i a n . T e a c h e r — T e a c h e r — V e lm a M itc h e ll
Casselberry; Bertha Keller. Food Annex; Marietta Meuse. Custo­
S e r v ic e — S e m in o le ; A lic e . d ia n — A l t a m o n t e : J a n e
Kimber, Food Services — Keeth; Michael. Secretary — Oviedo;
Mary King, Teacher — Midway; Florence Mooney, Teacher —
Eleanor Krol. Bus Driver — Sabal Point; Jean Neel, Food
Transportation; Lelra Lambert. Service — Bear Lake; Betty
T ea ch er — T eagu e: C onnie Overman, Secretary — Jackson
Lane, Aide — Co. Office (ESE): H e ig h ts M a rga ret P ack ard .
Thomas Leonard. Jr.. Teacher — T e a c h e r — G e n e v a ; L au ra

Parker. Teacher — Lake Mary:
A n n ie P r ic e , C u s to d ia n —
S e m i n o l e : C a r r ie R a b u n .
Psychological Specialist — Co.
Office.
Junette Rastom. Teacher —
Greenwood Lakes; James Red­
dick, Teacher — Sanford Middle;
Josephine Rosa, Teacher — Bear
L a k e ; L a u ffe r R u m b a u g h .
T each er — Teagu e; Clifford
Sampson. Plant Maintenance —
So. Seminole; Virginia Staley.
Teacher — Oviedo: Merrill War­
ren. Custodian — Woodlands;
M a rjorie W illia m s , A id e
Wilson.

—Genie Llndbcrg

Jon P. Graham 4 Laslye to Dennis Menard
4 W F Gretchen, Lt IS Blk C Sweetwater Oaks
Sec1l.llS3.500
Harris American Homes to Charles H.
Smith Sr. 4 WF Dorothy. Lt 109 Hyde Park.

1I9.N0

Parkview Corp to Gwen L. Spoon, Lt 4
Aloma Park, ISO,000
Texstyrerw Corp to Carol Lea Prelslnger,
Un 3993 Weklva Hunt Club Cond . 1*2,300
Huskey Co. to S.W.C. Corp, Lt 4 Sweetwater
Club Estates. (330.000
Regency Constr. to Ylberto Ruts 4 WF
Cerlded, Lt 149 Pickett Downs Un 2, *139,900
First Orlando Dev. to Ryland Group Inc.
Lts 4.7, If 4 23 B4§r Creek, *107.200
llaana Larruble to Joseph H. Oonagan Jr.

4 WF Dorothy R., Lt 4* Deer Run Un II.
144, IN
Thomas L. Karpenske 4 WF Lise to Harold
E. Shlgley Jr. 4 WF Marcia, LI 37 Greenwood
Lakes Un 3, *94.000
Ronald W. Blackwell 4 W F Janice to David
I. Richard 4 WF Susan K.. Lt 7 Blk I
amended plat Blk t Rest Haven On Lake
Harney. *132,500
Trond Kaalstad 4 W F Aud to Debra 0.
Krol, Lt 79 Willow Run, *141.000
Scott Ryland 4 W F Karon to Barbara A.
Todd. LI * Blk K Foxmoor Un 3, *73,000
Varna Davis 4 W F Batty to Joseph E.
Boatwright 4 W F Dabl, Lt 7 Blk F Glen
Arden Hts 1st addn, *93.000
Sara J. Buckley to Cheryl A. Home. Lt •

Blk E Lynwood Rev., 141,900
Margaret L. Simmons to James R. Reed
Jr. 4 WF Brenda J., L I4 4 E 10.30- ol 5 Blk B
English Estates Un 7, *93.300
LeCesse Corp. to Joan C. Walker. LI 47
Greenwood Lakes Un I, « 0 . 900
Daniel K. Mllanak lo William J. Williams
Jr. 4 WF Margaret A.. Lt 33 Orient*
Gardens. *43,000
Deutschmark Go 11 Prop, lo Winter Springs
Partner* Lid., Winter Springs Goll Course W.
ot Sheoah Blvd. In The Highlands Sac X
ll.2M .N0
Big Cypress Assoc, to Deutschmark Got)
Prop., Comm. SW cor T r 1 The Highland* Sa«
3, *101.400
*

9"
wl-Mctl

SEMINOLE C O U N TY
W ATER AND SEWER
CAPACITY SALE
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA,
PURSUANT TO RESOLUTION NUMBER B7-R-135 IS OFFERING WATER SERVICE
CAPACITY AND 1.4 MILLION GALLONS PER DAY SEWER SERVICE CAPACITY TO
PERSONS WHO OWN LAND IN TH E NORTHW EST SERVICE AREA (AS OEUNEATED
ON TH E MAP). EXCEPTION: APPLICANTS WITHIN LAK E M ONROE UTILITIES SER­
VICE AREA MAY PARTICIPATE, HOWEVER, COUNTY C A N N O T GUARANTEE CAPACI­
TY RESERVATION A T THIS TIME. CAPACITY OFFERING PERIOD COMMENCED 8:00
A.M. ON TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1907 AND SHALL END FRIDAY JULY 10, 1987 AT
5:00 P.M. APPLICATIONS MAY BE OBTAINED FROM TH E SEMINOLE COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES LOCATED AT 3000 SOUTHGATE
DRIVE, SANFORD, FLORIDA 32771.

S anford
D en ta l
C entre
Peter D. Weisbruch DDS, PA
J. Dwight Williamson DMD
G en era l D e n tis try

S E R V IC E A R E A A S D E P I C T E D E N C O M P A S S IN G U N IN C O R P O R A T E D S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y E X C L U D IN G
IN C O R P O R A T E D C I T Y L IM IT S A N D P R IV A T E U T I L I T I E S A N D T H E IR E X I S T I N G S E R V IC E A R E A S

(E X C E P T IO N :

• EXAMINATIONS
• CROWNS
• CLEANINGS
• BRIDGES
• FILLINGS
• DENTURES
• COMPLETE HN-HOUSE LABORATORY

CALL 321-3820
E m e r g e n c ie s &amp; N e w P a t ie n t s W e lc o m e

According to the autopsy,
Bedenbaugh’ s blood alcohol
level at the time of his death was
0.2. twice Florida’s legal level for
being under the Influence.

MaraW Pfwto by Santa Uttobw g

REALTY TRANSFERS

Danco For Sonlor Citizens

A u to p s y : D e a th
By D ro w n in g

The Seminole County School
Board recently honored the fol­
lowing employees retiring from
the school system:
R ic h a r d A lb e r t , C h ie f
Mechanic — Transportation:
Katheryn Alexander, Teacher —
Seminole: Mary Barnes, Teacher
— Tuskawltla: Charles Brabban,
Teacher — Oviedo; Paul Bran*
dorff, Teacher — Lyman; Jean
B ry a n t, B oard M em b er;
W oodrow Burnsed, Assistant
Director of Transportation; Betty
Campbell. Teacher — Seminole:
Ramona Campbell, Teacher —
Tuskawllla.
Archie Cannon. Teacher —
Seminole; Dorothy Cartwright.
Bus Driver — Transportation:
M ary J a n e C au lk , A id e —
E n g lis h E s t a t e s ; J o A n n
C opeland. T e a c h e r — A lta ­
monte; Margaret Cox. Principal
— Bear Lake; Cynthia Crain,
Assistant Prin cipal — Lake
Brantley; Harriet Deas, Building
and Department Acct. — School
Board (Insurance Dept.); Beverly
Douthltt, Bus Driver — Trans­
portation.
Kenneth Echols, Principal —
Student Museum; Agnes Egener.
Food S e rv ice — E astbrook;
Frank E llio t, O c c u p a tio n a l
Specialist — Seminole; Bertha
Gregory, Lunchroom Manager —
Lake Mary Elementary; William
Hammond. Teacher — Milwee;
Rawlins Harrell, Graphic Artist

Seminole Centre (Next To Publix)
3607 Orlando Drive (Hwy. 17-92), Sanford

A P P L IC A N T S WITHIN L A K E MONROE UTILITIES S ER VICE AREA MAY P A R T IC IP A T E )

During the forty-five (45) day o fferin g period, a p p lic a n ts sh a ll file the ir ap p licatio n ,
select a co nn ectio n fee payment option; pay the application fee and pay the appropriate
c o n n e ctio n fee. A p p lic a tio n s , acco m p a n ie d by the appropriate co n n e ctio n fee, m ust
be com pleted and returned to the D epartm ent of Environm ental S e rv ice s at the above
ad d ress no later than 5:00 P.M. on Ju ly 10, 1987.
For further information regarding application procedures, please contact Cindy
Wright, Deputy Director, Department of Environmental Services at 323-9615. All ap­
plicants are obligated to be familiar with the provisions of the applicable resolution
lor the service area.

�•/ / * (»V

I

jtA—leiHerd Hw«M, U M fd , PI.

Tuesday, June 33,1917

'Sprint' To
Proposed Fo r 2000

Dressed To Tho Co-Nines

Couturiers Put On The Dog
■ BAL HARBOUR IUPI) - The
Haut D og can in e cou tu rier
Company has declared it no
longer fashionable for dogs to
gad about naked. let alone in
something off the rack.
, The Key Blscayne company
will custom-fit Fldo or Fill In a
gold lame bathing suit, satin
lingerie or a striped dinner
Jacket, with tails,
i Jane Robles, one o f the com­
pany founders, adm its that
spending $250 for a dog ensem­
ble Is "very, very frivolous."
i "These are gifts for the dog
and his owner who have every­
th in g . O u r m a rk e t Is Bal
Harbour people. Fifth Avenue
people. Rodeo Drive people."
Robles said. "M any o f them are
real dog lovers."
Haut Dog recently unleashed
Its line of pricey dog duds In a
fashion show at Coco's Sidewalk
Cafe In Bal Harbour. The restau­
rant was chosen because It offers
a special menu for dogs to
a c c o m m o d a te Its w e a lth y ,
pooch-loving clientele. Leftovers
are sent home in people bags.
Eight models on leashes dis­
played the 27-item line.
Tiffany, a white schnauzer.
sported a rose silk bra with eight
cups, a matching garter belt and
ruffled lace cape with a 9250
p ric e ta g , E lish a, a black
^chnauzcr. modeled a green
velvet smoking jacket desglned
"for the bone vlvant."
j There is a "London Dog”
khaki trenchcoat. a silver lame
graduation gown and cap “ for
flea scholars" and even some fur
coats. Including a rabbit fur cape
w orn o v e r a pink je w e le d
sweater that went for 9160.
"Haut pants." basically lame
diaper covers, fashionably ac­
commodate the bitch In heat and
sell for $75.
T h e m u tty m o d e ls w e re
well-bred. The only gaffe was
committed by a little dog In a
ruffled maid's costume with a
(ray of plastic sushi attached to
her back. Blue plastic pooper
scoopcrs took care o f the faux
paws.
Haut Dog was founded by
Hobles, an Interior designer, and

real estate agent Jane UUoa of for Rover." to $300 for an Ivory
Key Blscayne. who have two silk wedding dress with beading
dogs each and hope to turn the and antique lace and a 4-foot
company Into a thriving cottage train. The gown Is from the "T ill
industry.
Death Do Us Bark" line.
Most of the sewing Is done by
The clothing comes In four
Ulloa's mother. Jane Platt, In a stan d a rd s ize s — c o c k ta il,
spare bedroom In her Fort ballpark, foot-long and Jumbo —
Lauderdale home.
but custom orders are w el­
"It started as a fluke." said comed. The outfits are made
Robles. "Jane's mom had made with imported fabrics and come
a sweater for the dog, and we with full accessories: a white top
were saying how cute It was. 1 hat and rhinestone cuffs with the
said, ‘The next thing you know black striped wedding tuxedo: a
we'll be designing dog clothes.' jeweled turban with the Arabian
An hour later we had the whole Nights "h airem " pants.
line designed."
The clothes fasten with hooks
Prices range from 915 for a or velcro and are open In the
cotton Jersey maternity T-shirt back.
"T h e y do not have to be
with the slogan " I Rolled Over

W A S H IN O T b N (U P I) Astronaut Sally Ride unveiled
a novel plan Monday for six
astronauts to make a quick
one-year round-trip "sprint
mission" to Mars starting as
early as the year 2000.
The proposal would shave a
year or tw o o ff previous
estimates for the duration of a
manned flight to the red
planet and back, thus making
it more feasible from a medi­
cal standpoint. Three Soviets
already have spent eight
months In space.
The Mars "initiative" is one
of four advanced programs
devised by Ride and her staff
as possible goals for the Na­
tional Aeronautics and Space
Administration In (he next

removed for their duties," UUoa
said.
The reaction from the 50 or so
guests at the fashion show was
enthusiastic.
"It's fantastic." said DeeDe
Stroud o f Miami Beach, who
considered buying a Jeweled
sweater knit ensemble trimmed
in boa feathers for her Yorkle.
"Blue Is her favorite color,", she
said.
T o o ts ie M ig lc o v s k y o f
Hollywood. Fla., also admired
the line, but questioned the
practicality uf the fur coats.
" I t ’s kind o f warm here for
those." she said.
Robte said her own pets enjoy
putting on the dog.

s g

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*

two decades. The others are
an Intensive study of Earth
from orbit, stepped up robotic
e x p lo r a tio n o f th e s o la r
system and a return to the
moon in 2000.
Ride's formal report is to go
to N A S A A d m in is t r a t o r
James Fletcher Aug. 1. He
and the White House could
then endorse one or more o f
the four Initiatives, combine
parts of several or take no
action on the plans for the
future.
Speaking at an Interna­
tional c o n fe re n c e on life
sciences In space, the first
American woman to fly In
apace said the moon plan
would build on the legacy of
Project Apollo 20 years ago.

i

"

SPECIAL BUY
Hunt Club® shirt
ssrsassa?SPECIAL BUY

Deadline Nears
To Save Club

treat and

At Crossings
. A group wanting to save "The
Club at the Crossings" near
Lake Mary has until the end of
the week to sign up a couple
hundred people for
year-long
m em b ersh ip s to the clu b 's
s w im m in g p ool and tennis
courts.
If the membership drives fall
short, said Lynne Kendlg, "at
that point 1 think we have to give
up." Kendlg. an organizer of the
effort to keep the facilities open,
said 120 memberships were
gathered over the weekend. But
she n o te d , " W e need 350
members to get the lease."
The pool and the attractive
greenery surrounding It were a
favorite of people living In The
Crossings' half dozen residential
communities, said Kendlg. Then
the p ro p erty Just o ff Lake
Boulevard was sold and the club
and pool were closed In Febru­
ary.
Kendlg said the new owner 1s
willing to lpase the club to the
members only If the 350 mem­
bers are signed up by the end of
the week.
If the membership drive suc­
ceeds. the members will form a
non-profit corporation and hire a
manager to run the facilities,
which Include the clubhouse,
showers, changing rooms and
lockers, according to Kendlg.
She said there has even been
talk of adding a playground to
th e r e c r e a t io n a l c o m p le x ,
though she added there have
been no assurances from the
owner that he would permit
playground construction.
' " I f we go successfully with this
and he sees we're managing the
property well, perhaps he will let
4S." she said.
Yearly nembershlps arc being
offerd at $350 for a family. 9200
for a single person and $150 for
an Individual to use the tennis
courts only, said Kendlg.
The YMCA recently opened a
recreational complex that In­
cludes a swimming pool — a
circumstance that Kendlg con­
ceded w ill m ake the m em ­
bership drive more difficult. She
nfted. however, she expects a
"lo i of people who Joined the *Y‘
would Join our club If they knew
wnat was happening.
Kendlg said her family Joined
the YMCA but at the time "w e
didn't know how successful the
pool effort would be."
She said the pool at The
Crossings Is situated In a t­
tractive and natural surroun­
dings and would have longer
hours for members than the
YMCA pool.
—T e d C a rter

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bikinis and bnefs
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Winter Park Mall - Florida Mall - Sanford Plaza
Mon.-Sat. 9:30-9 Sunday 12-5:30

s m a rte r
Lake Square Mall
Mon.-Sat. 10-9 Sunday 12-5:30

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...Astoire
1A

Astaire danced with many beautiful
female partners, but he didn't need one.
He could even make a hat rack look
good.

"H e's not Just a great dancer, he's a
great singer o f songs,'* Berlin once
said. "H e's as good as any o f them —
as good as Jolson or Crosby or
Sinatra."
When he danced up the waits and
across the ceiling in "Royal Wed­
ding." moviegoers nearly forgot it was
special effects. Astaire could do that to
an audience.
Slim, urbane, sophisticated. Astaire
shared the stage with som e o f
Hollywood's most glamorous women
— Ginger Rogers. Rita Hayworth,
Betty Hutton, Audrey Hepburn and
Cyd Charisse.
But his most famous romance was
his real life one — and his last. He met
Jockey Robyn Smith at Santa Anita
racetrack. He was 81. She was 35.
They were crazy about each other.
" I don't think there Is another
individual that had the wonderful,
creative talents (he) expressed and his
marvelous class." Rogers said Mon­
day of the man with whom she stole

the 1939 musical "F lyin g Down to
R io" even though they had only
supporting roles.
President and Mrs. Reagan called
Astaire. “ An American legend."
“ Fred was. in every sense of the
word, a superstar." the Reagans said
In a statement. “ He adapted a witty,
sophisticated, casual air which belled
the enormity of his talent."
Some of the greatest compliments
came from fellow dancers, including
the next generation of legends.
Gene Kelly, who once said that he
and Astaire formed a "fraternity of
tw o " when It cam e to dancing,
learned of his old friend's death
during an appearance at the Universi­
ty o f Pittsburgh.
"Although we have lost one of the
greatest dancers who ever lived, Fred
Astaire will always be Immortal and
an inspiration to all dancers who
come after us." Kelly said.
"H e was one o f America's great
Intellecutal ic o n s ." said M ikhail
Baryshnikov in New York. "N o dancer
can watch Fred Astaire and not know
that we all should have been In some
other business."
Rudolf Nureyev. whose sold-out

Ssatsri HsrsM, Sssfsrd, FI.
production o f "Cinderella" at New
York's Metropolitan Opera House In*
eluded an homage to Astaire, said "...
he will live forever. His dancing will
inspire dancers and choreographers
for eternity.**
Astaire’s perfectionism was legend­
ary. Unsure o f himself In spite o f his
enormous talent, he worked like a dog
to achieve the lUusion of sublime ease.
“ Dancing Is a sweat Job." he once
told L if t magazine. "It takes time to
get a dance right, to create something
memorable. There must be a certain
amount o f polish to it. I don't want It
to look anything but accomplished,
and if I can't make It look that way.
then l*m not ready yet.”
Gregory Peck recalled how hard
A s ta ire reh earsed fo r "O n T h e
Beach." working endless hours to get
his dramatic part down.
"H e was the ultimate professional."
Peck said.
With his urbane manner. Astaire
w a s o f t e n m is t a k e n fo r an
Englishman. But he was bom in
Omaha. Neb., on May 10. 1899 to a
haberdashery salesman and a woman

10°/oto50°/oan
T W IN

Percale sheets

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*

A Sanford police officer was
admitted to Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital Monday night
after being Injured In a fight with
u prisoner at the Sanford police
station.
W hen Sanford officers re v
sponded to a call about a fight at
409 W. First St., they found:
Scott Richard Popour. 27. In a
hallway of the apartment and
saw him strike a woman. Th®,
officer® arrested Popour lor bawl
tery.
i- s
While ut the poller station.
Popour Jumped up and attarkrt)
officer A.G. Fontana. -12. who.
struggled with him and in the
process fell on u table injuring
Ids hock.
Rescue workers had to be
called In lo treat Fontana and
transport him to the hospital at
I I pin.
Sanford Police Captain Charles
Fagan said Popour was also
charged with aggravated bat­
tery.
"There may be other charges
pending." Fagan said.

B e d p iU o w s

v x x s z i* * -* *

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S S P S ' io c.o "- a - * * " " 101

on sale.

SALE

•A lt'1

9.99
*| 4.99 w ,N'

W IC KER-LO O ^

AsirolilP P°jVes'®f'

REALTY
TRANSFERS

pitted

20%a*

polyester fit&gt;e

Other sizes also on sale.

illS2££r~
Charleston pnscillas o
rayon/polyester.

Sale $36 Reg. S45.132

valance.
r2"x45“ tiaf.
Sale $28 Reg $35.62
40% to 50% Off Oh^our

2„ WQOd

S d t S K S . And shades
pleated or plain.

^JS S S S S S T

SALE

37.99
Westwood"*

5 0 " x 84"

Reg. $45 pr-Leno weave
S T s r / 5 &gt;ayon/acr,llc « . " « * « ’h

polyester/colton.
Sale 13.W Re9 $2° 85”*15
pole valance.

■ vM W #

Winter Park Mall - Florida Mall - Sanford Plaza
Mon.-Sat. 9 30-9 Sunday 12-5:30

; f,v

Lake Square Mall
Mon.-Sat. 10-9 Sunday 12-5:30

jm

who would become a classic stage
m o th er. T h e fa m ily nam e w a i
Austertltz.
Their mother took Fred and his
sister. Adele, to New York to nurture
their talent. By the time he was seven
and she was nine, they were dancing
In vaudeville
They became popular on Broadway
In the 1920s In such hits as "L ad y Be
G o o d " a n d G e o r g e G e r s h w in ’ S
"Funny Face." When "T h e Band
W agon" closed In 1932, the act broke
up when Adele married Lord Charlea
Cavendish and retired to Ireland.
A solo appearance In "T h e Gay
D ivorcee" brought Astaire to the
attention of Hollywood.
"In such classic musicals as "R ob ­
erta." ’T o p Hat.*’ "Easter Parade"
and others A staire w h irled and
swirled with a half-dozen fem ale
partners. But he did not need another
dancer, even a beautiful one. He did
amazingly Inventive routines v/lth
nothing but a single prop — a hat rack
or a (light o f stairs. Astaire could
make stairs look good.
He Anally stopped dancing about
1970.
"I don't want to be the oldest
performer in captivity." he said
nearly a decade later. "I don't
know w h y a n yb od y should
expect o dancer to go on forever.
I don't want to be a professional
octogenarian."
Astaire was married In the
1940s to the former Phllis Pot­
ter. who died in 1954. They had
two children, Fred Jr., and Ava.
His wife said at his wish there
would be a private burial, but a
memorial service was pending.
Lucille Ball, a budding starlet
when Astaire was becoming a
sensation in the 1930s. said "H e
had great style on screen and in
his personal life.
"W e 'v e lost another great.
There will never be another Fred
Astaire."

Policeman
Hospitalized
After Attack

Other sizes, patching

|

Tuesday, Jen* SS, 1M7-SA

vrsr

Ardeshar 0 Dutla A WF Cool to Jerome R
Solar; &amp; WF Karen L . LI 541 Spring Oaks Un
5. IS/,500
John T . Cullom Jr. A WF Laura to Water L
Caines III &amp; WF Joy L . Lts 24 A, 25 Blk I
Highland Park. 185.000
David J. Jasmund &amp; David K Krauser &amp;
WF Susan to James E. Jordan &amp; Robert
Buturla. Un 13 Harbour Bend Ph It. 573.300
Res Fin. Corp lo Charles T Cato &amp; WF
Judith. Lt 3 Blk B The Meadows Un 1.184,000
Hein; Krahmer to Karina Amer. Prop . Lt
222 Barclay Woods 3rd addn. 1230.700
Kenneth B Ingram A WF Beatrice lo
Thorne Michael Price. Lt 29 Weklva Hills Sec
2.198.000
Robert B Anderson &amp; WF Emily to David
O Latter A WF Mary I., part ol Lot B Blk 5
Amended Plat 1st addn Mineral Springs
Park, tai.000
Ronald Sims etc . repr estate Walter 8 . to
Gerald F. Schiedel &amp; WF Arlys A . Lt t Lake
Brantley Shores. 1220,000
Ryland Group Inc lo Thomas M. Bagby &amp;
WF Suianne. Lt 65 Deer Run Un 15.183.100
Ryland Group to Cedi DI&gt;on &amp; WF
Shliuko. LI 45 Deer Run Un I3A. 198.500
Lawrence F. Fleming A WF JoAnne lo
Clyde B. Spivey Jr. &amp; WF Nancy. Lt 5 Deer
Run Un2IA. 177.200
Lawyers Title Ins. to Thomas L White A
WF Mary. Lt 158 Winter Springs Un 4.
1105.500
Winifred Hart to D C. Patel A W C Nash,
Lt 11Arle Corner. 190.000
Charles M, Turner to Rick C. Vincent A WF
Judith A . LI 20 Springs Landing Un 2.
1153.000
Hedor C Blackwood A WF Marla to
Norman M Nichols A WF Judith, Lt 208 Un 2
Spring Oaks, 179.900
James R Shaw A WF Helen to Gilbert Trad
A Mitchell Trad. Lt 527 Spring Oaks Un 3.
173.100
Callori Homes to Robert A Blankenbltler A
WF Nancy B . Lt 23 Woodland Terrace At
Country Creek. 1121.900
Gaynor P Markham A WF Jessie to David
K Martin A WF Terrll. land In Sec 10 21 32.
153.000
Mary Clarke lo J Richard Hampton A WF
Kimberly. Beg NE cor Lt 7 Blk C. Lake
Kathryn Park 5th addn. 154.000
Hugh A Combs A WF Nanette lo Oavld A
Williams, Lt 15 A E 'v of 14 Blk N Longwood
Park. U7 ,000
Stephen M Sensakovic A WF Malha to
Qulggle A Son Inc . Lts 13 A 14 Blk 9 2nd Sec
Marvanla. 1125 000
Joseph E Badger A WF Norma to Thomas
E. Shlmick A WF Sharon L , Lt 4 Blk G
Sweetwater Oaks Sec 2, 1148.000
Greater Constr. to Andrew A McDonald A
WF Audrey. Lt 248 Mandarin Sec 7.1135.000
Phillip J Schart to Glenn R. Young A WF
Donna K . E S3’ ol Lt 24 A W 24’ ql 71 Blk M
Longwood Park. 181.500
James M Lull to Christopher A Roberts A
Anna K Okratkl. Lt 10 Blk D Eastbrook Un 8.
158.500
Michael T Nevln A WF Anne to Patricia L
Nevm. Lt 40 Hidden Lake P h il Un 1.587.000

�*- *_f ff" T *r &gt;- - 1—,n*-.

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W f-

Sanford Herald
(USPS W -W )
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

Tuesday, June 23, 1987 — 6A
Wayne D. Deyle, Publisher
Themes Oierisne, Msne«ln« Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery; Month. $4.75: 3 Months. SI4.25; 6 Months,
$27.00; Year. $51.00. By Mall; Month. $6.75: 3 Months.
$20.25; 6 Months. $37.00; Year. $69.00.

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Court Strikes
Proper Balance
R easonable. T h a t's th e best w a y to describe
the U.S. S u p rem e C ou rt's ru lin g that property
ow n ers are en titled to com pen sation w h en
g o vern m en t regu lation s d ep rive them o f the
use o f th eir property.
In w h a t m a y b e th e S u prem e C ou rt's m ost
im p o rta n t lan d-u se ru lin g sin ce a 1926
decision that upheld the con cep t o f zoning,
the high cou rt struck the p rop er balance
b etw een con stitu tion al righ ts o f property
o w n ers and th e necessary land-use regu la­
tions o f local govern m en ts.
T h e cou rt m a jo rity 's carefu lly crafted ruling
does not d irectly lim it local govern m en ts'
a u th o rity to regu la te land use. It does,
how ever, g iv e p rop erty ow n ers the right to
com pen sation if those regulations d eprive
them o f th eir property, e v en tem porarily.
T h a t’s on ly fair.
T h e Fifth A m en d m en t prohibits govern ­
m ent from tak in g p rivate p rop erty for public
use "w ith o u t Just com p en sa tion ." T h at is
w h y g ov e rn m e n ts at all levels rou tin ely
com pensate ow n ers for land con dem ned for
such public projects as h igh w ays and parks.
But som etim es zo n in g regulations can result
in a "ta k in g " o f p rivate property, if they
prohibit an ow n er's use o f that property.
In the 6-3 ru lin g, the cou rt m a jo rity
concluded that Los A n geles C ou n ty had
"ta k e n " p rop erty from the First English
E vangelical Lutheran 'Church o f Glendale.
Calif., w hen the cou n ty adopted an interim
flood control ordinance that prevented the
c h u rc h fro m r e b u lld lln g flo o d -d a m a g e d
structures on a 21-acre cam p and recreational
area In the A n geles N ational Forest.
T h e church sued the cou n ty, but a Superior
Court Judge in Los A n geles dism issed the suit
w ith out a hearing. T h a t decision w as upheld
by the state Court o f Ap p eal and. after the
state S u prem e Court denied the church's
request for a hearing, the Luth eran s appealed
to the U.S. S u prem e Court.
T h e state C ou rt o f A ppeal w as
1979 C aliforn ia S u prem e Court
said an o w n e r’s on ly rem ed y In
undue regu lation Is to seek a
Invalidatin g th e regulation.

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" W e d is a g r e e ," w ro te C h ie f Ju stice W illiam
R eh n q u is t In th e U.S. S u p re m e C o u rt’s
m a jority opin ion , "a n d con clu de that In these
circu m stan ces the F ifth and 14th A m e n d ­
m ents to the U.S. C onstitution w ould require
c o m p en s a tio n ."
R ehnquist, h o w ever, w en t to great lengths
to exp lain that ow n ers are not entitled to
com pen sation an y tim e a land-use decision
tem porarily d ep rives them o f the use o f their
property.
" W e lim it o u r h o ld in g s to th e fa c ts
presented, and o f course do not deal with the
ilte d ifferen t questions that w ou ld arise in
e case o f n orm al d e la ys In ob ta in in g
building perm its, chan ges in zo n in g o rd i­
nances. varian ces and the like, w h ich are not
before u s ," he wrote.

S

M oreover. R ehn qu ist added, after a court
determ ines that a zo n in g regulation resulted
in the ta k in g o f p riv a te p ro p erty , " t h e
g o v e rn m e n t reta in s the w h o le ran ge o f
options alread y available — am en d m en t o f
the regulation, w ith draw al o f the Invalidated
regulation o r exercise o f em in en t d om a in ."
But those rem ed ies d o not relieve govern m en t
o f its obligation " t o provide com pensation for
the period during w hich the taking was
e ffe c tiv e ."
L ocal g overn m en ts should have nothing to
fear from this ruling, provided they are not in
the practice o f using land-use regulation as a
low -cost altern ative to con dem nation.

lf ■•r--

DICK WEST

M aking The World Safe For Congressmen
WASHINGTON (UPI) - If. as one senator
pointed out recently, the U.S. Capitol is a
security disaster "waiting to happen." I re­
commend action to make the East Plaza
landing-proof.
Otherwise, some wise guy pilot Is sure to take
off from North Podunk. or some such place, and
land there, as a West German pilot did in
Moscow's Red Square after a flight from
Helsinki.
There is. of course, no way to make members
of Congress perfectly safe any more than we can
afford to pay them what they might list as
income In private life.
The fact that a lawsuit was filed last week
charging their 812.000 salary Increase this year
was unconstitutional only underscores that
point.
If our lawgivers really arc all that securityconscious. not to say money-mad. probably they
made a mistake In running for Congress in the
first place.
They might make a Capitol plaza landing
unlawful hut. as sccrulty experts agree, legisla­

JEFFREY HART

Funeral
Homily
Improper
In a mini-scandal, Bishop John
McGann of Rockville Center. L.I..
chose the occasion of former C.I.A.
Director William Casey’s funeral to
deliver a political sermon. John
Ahlgren. a close friend o f this
columnist, who is also a close friend
of the Casey family, did not Just
fume and bite his lip. He wrote to
Bishop McGann respectfully, but
also devastatingly. I excerpt from
his letter to the bishop, the cuts
dictated only by space require­
ments.
Most Reverend John R. McGann.
D.D.:
I have read very carefully your
letter and the full text of the homily
you p reach ed at B ill C a s e y 's
funeral, for which I thank you.
I believe the following comments
will explain why I, and all of the
many Catholic friends I have spoken
w ith in the past three weeks
(re g a rd le s s o f th eir v ie w s on
Nicaragua), took umbrage at your
remarks...
The explanations in your letter —
(1) the Catholic Bishops' disagree­
ment with Bill Casey, (2) "local
publicity prior to the funeral" o f Bill
Casey's position. (3) the strength of
Bill Casey's convictions, and (4) the
importance of the Issue — simply do
not wash.
First, no Catholic clergyman has
an obligation to cite, at a funeral,
the views of the deceased which
m ay d iffe r from those o f the
Catholic bishops.
Second, the publicity did not Just
develop "locally." There was long­
standing. continuing world-wide
publicity about Bill's accomplish­
ments and opinions. There was also
long-standing, continuing, world­
wide publicity about the Catholic
Bishops' views, and will continue
long after Bill's passing.
Third, you say Bill had strong
convictions about his views. But
what comes very clearly through
th e fo g is th at it w a s y o u r
overweening desire to set forth your
views that drove you to Interpose
them at Bill's funeral.
Finally, you say that the issue at
hand was so Important, of such
towering slglnlflcance — "matters
of life and death" — and that your
solution to it was so right and
correct that you had to over-ride the
fact that the Issue was "out of
bounds" because It was the subject
of Bill's last request — and present
your solution to the notables
assembled so that they would see
the light as you see It.
John R. Ahlgren

BERRY'S WORLD

i
ta

K 3 5 S 5 F

tion provides scant protection from flyibg circus
stunts.
If they are serious about preventing light
ulrplaucs from landing on their doorstep, so to
speak, they might consider more Judicious
placement of the hydraulic poles now used on
some driveways to block vehicular traffic.
Either that, or permit cars to park on the Plaza
as they did before all this security business
start rd.
I'm told that few things arc more frustrating to
a flier than trying to land on cartops. And most
parking would be banned from the Plaza under
u plan now under consideration.
But even it no landing Is possible for airborne
terrorists, there apparently is nothing to prevent
them from disguising themselves as tourists and
smuggling weapons into the Capitol.
(As to how terrorists might go about disguis­
ing themselves as tourists Is something for them
to figure out.)
The latest buzz word In the onward and
upward march of firearm development Is the
"stealth" pistol, which may be any plastic or

other non-metallic sldearm weapon that goes
undetected by metal detectors. Just as the
so-called stealth bomber supposedly eludes
enemy radar.
.
, ,
At this point, stealth pistols may be mainly a
device to push security legislation, but they
could nevertheless be outlawed. They are said to
exist only In the minds o f lawgivers who would
control them.
A House member said stdearms that get by
metal detectors, positioned at Capitol entruncewuys. are "pocket-sized versions 6f the stealth
bomber."
It might be pointed out here that any
legislation enacted by Congress would only
cover weapons manufactured or Imported Into
the United States for sale to the public.
Rumors o f "throw aw ay" pistols Include an
American model, said to be made of polymers
and ceramics and used by CIA agents to fire
glass poison-filled bullets, and two made In the
Soviet Union, mainly for Its secret police, the
KGB.
Let s hope that if stealth pistols fall Into the
hands of terrorists they also arc biodegradable.

SCIENCE WORLD

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By William Harwood
UPI Science Writer

VINCENT CARROLL

Aid For Land Owners
Thank the Supreme Court lor
small favors. They're very likely to
be the only ones you'll get.
That's because the court seems to
content Itself with pecking at llie
edge of Issues. Its recent decision
protecting property owners from
unjust regulation is simply one
more proof of the pattern — al­
though tt was greeted, depending on
the source, with lavish praise or
regret.
Actually, the case, involved such
an extreme instance of govern­
mental "taking" of property that it
is a wonder even three justices
would dissent.
Judge for yourself: A church In
Glendale. Calif., tried to reopen a
recreational complex after a flood,
but was p reven ted by a new
drainage ordinance. So. the church
sued for compensation, pointing out
It hud lost all use of Its property.
If the county had simply seized
the entire 21 acres, the effect on the
church could hardly have been
worse.
Not exactly a subtle case, right?
In fact, the shower of publicity it
received only underlines the more
typical impotence of citizens these
clays before official edicts reducing
the value of their property.
Still, perhaps we should be grate­
ful whenever the court does manage
to notice the Fifth Amendment’s
requirement of "Just compensation"
for government seizures. This de­
cision may not have been bold, but
at least it reminds us that constitutional protections extend beyond
personal liberties such as freedom of
religion and of speech.
Most people forget the extent to
which the Constitution emphasizes
economic rights, (no. Yet this am­
nesia is probably natural, since
courts have often shared it during
the past few decades.
Consider the fate of the Four­
teenth Amendment, which says "N o
state shall ” ... deprive any person of

life, liberty or property without due
process of law." As Harvard pro­
fessor Stephen Maccdo has written,
this amendment clearly means to
limit "the ways in which the state
can interfere with privutc rela­
tions."
Yet. Macedo notes: "T h e court has
simply shifted its Inquiries away
from the economic sphere. When it
comes to state economic regulation,
the court requires nothing more
thun -tile merest ‘rationality* to
Justify restrictions or. Individual
liberty."
The fault doesn't lie with "liberal"
Jurisprudence, either. Conservative
Judges defer regularly to laws erod­
ing property rights, too. That's one
reason Richard Epstein's book.
"Takings: Private Property and the
Power of Eminent Domain." created
a stir when it was published a
couple of years ago. With forbidding
logic, this University of Chicago law
professor flattened the legal con­
sensus.
E pstein fa v o rs a p rin c ip le d
a ctivism for courts, one that
entrenches individual rights against
government In all spheres — in­
cluding the economic.
T h e sad a ltern a tive subm its
personal treasure to lawmaker
whim, a lesson bitterly learned by
the people of a Detroit neighborhood
a few years ago. They resisted a
plan to condemn and raze their
homes so that General Motors could
build a new plant, yet the Michigan
Supreme Court refused to Intervene
on their behalf.
Never mind that both state and
federal constitutions restrict seizure
by eminent domain to a "public
use." and that GM Is hardly a unit
of government.
By that standard, of course, the
local city council could declare your
downstairs bathroom u public
latrine and invite in the Fourth of
July parade.

CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - The
space agency Is mounting an am­
bitious series of experiments In the
Kansas prairie to study the subtle
interaction between vegetation and
climate in research that could pay
off in Improved weather forecasting.
More than 100 scientists are
participating In the International
Satellite Land Surface Climatology
Project, under NASA management,
utilizing 25 ground stations, a fleet
of six Instrumented aircraft and live
satellites.
Project chief Forrest Hall, a physi­
cist at the Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt. Md.. said the
research is aim ed at learning
whether it Is possible to infer from
satellite data the telltale signs of
how living things Influence climate.
"W e hope to pull all this together
into not only a series o f individual
research efforts, but some kind of
integrated picture that basically
tells us how the energy balance
depends on vegetation and how we
can sort that out from looking at
satellite d a ta ." Hall said In a
telephone interview.
" I f we can prove out that concept
In this local area then we would
hope what we learn could be
g e n e ra liz e d to a glob al scale
th rou gh a series o f follow-on
experiments." he said. "We'd be
able to link satellite data Into the
weather models, for example, lo
result In much better weather
forecasting."
The research is the first field
experiment In the International
Global Change Program, designed
to study worldwide changes thal
affect the planet’s habitability.
An area measuring 9.3 miles on a
side has been staked out In the
Konza Prairie of Kansas, one of the
last great tail-grass prairie preserves
In the United States.
In stru m en ts w ere placed at
ground stations to measure a host of
meteorological variables such as
wind speed, humidity, preclpitallon
and temperature. The scientists also
are characterizing the vegetation In
the area in great detail.
"W e ’re also measuring the energy
balance at the surface," Hall said.
"That heat, that radiation, some of
it Is boiled off in the form of
evaporation and transpiration by
the plants. Some of the heat Is
radiated aw ay in the form of
thermal energy, some Is convected
away by the wind."

JA C K ANDERSON

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Jesse Jackson's O dd Claim To Fame

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WASHINGTON - The Rev. Jesse
Jackson's emergence In front of the
pack In the Democratic presidential
race is widely attributed to Ills
greater name recognition. How he
a c h ie v e d c e le b r it y s ta tu s is.
therefore, a matter of legitimate
public concern.
Jackson became a media star
literally overnight, within hours of
tiie assassination of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., on April 4. 1968.
Jackson was only 26. a Junior
member of the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference. He was part
o f King's party In Memphis. Tenn..
on the fatal day.
Jackson's actions — and iiie
media's Instant lionizing of him —
still mystify some of King's old
associates after 19 years. He flew
home to Chicago within hours after
tlie assassination.
"W e saw him on TV at the
Midway Airport in Chicago doing a
press conference on the tarmac."
recalled tlie Rev. Bernard Lee, then

a special assistant to King, now’ an
aide to Washington Mayor Marion
Barry. "A ll of us were surprised to
see him doing a press conference.
He iiad some blood on his shirt,
saying 'This is Dr. King's blood.' i
personally did not see him touch Dr.
King."
Another SCLC leader Interviewed
by our reporter Lisa Sylvester was
tlie Rev. Hosea Williams, now a
member of lhe Atlanta City Council.
"Jesse was talking to the press
out in tlie yard after we were sure
I)r. King was absolutely dead." he
recalled. "Jesse was talking to the
press and showed them tlie blood
on his shirt, and I know the blood
didn't come from Dr King. I reacted
very violently."
Williams said lie and other King
associates watched Jackson on TV
the next morning. "Jesse said lie
was feeling bad and sick Before we
knew it. he was on the ‘Today
Show.' I thought it was horrible."
Williams said. "Jesse flew out that
night to Chicago. Why would lie
keep a bloody shirt on all night?

The blood did not come from the
body of Dr. King."
Williams attributes Jackson's ac­
tions at tiie time lo his youth. "1 feel
very bad about it." Williams said.
"He was Just a young man and
made a mistake. It could hurt him."
Tiie Rev. Ralph David Abernathy,
who succeeded King as head of the
SCLC. expressed a similar view.
Abernathy, who was the first to
reach King’s side when he fell to the
floor of tiie motel balcony, said he
has heard of press accounts saying
Jackson was the first to reach the
fallen leader and the last person to
t
a
I
k t
o li
t m
"I am sure the press has been 'old
that." Abernathy said. "But that
was not Important to me. because
we iiad lost our leader. I can only
say Jesse has grown. He has
matured greatly."
Abernathy and Williams both
recalled Jackson being In the motel
courtyard near the balcony when
tiie fatal shot was fired, but they
have no recollection that he reached

King's side Yet the news act
the Chicago Defender of /
1968. said: "(Jackson ) s
rushed to Dr. King’s side I
ately. but got no response w
asked. 'Doc. can you hear me
We called Jackson's ea
oiflee for comment. His pre:
Frank Walkins. said Jacksoi
no claim that tie spoke wll
after the shooting. He said l
before the murder. Jackson
the motel courtyard talklti
King as he stood on the i:
Watkins suggested (fiat coul&lt;
basis for the claim that Jack:
the last person to talk to King
As for the blood on Ja
shirt. Watkins said: "W e r
other people shot? I'm just
about the logic of R. When
come irom if no one else w a s:
llrt' ss a id e note:
william s is tin* only on
uiiectly charges Jackson wl
loti exploited King's marl
and said: "Everyone else su\
s sut'h a media hound
wouldn’t put it past hint."

�M u rp h y
T r a il

T o

By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
After carving his way Into
O v ie d o H ig h S c h o o l a n d
Jacksonville University basket­
ball record books the past eight
years. Ronnie Murphy will now
blaze a trail to Portland.
Murphy, considered the finest
b a s k e tb a ll p la y e r e v e r in
Seminole County, was selected
by the Portland Trail Blazers as
the No. 17 pick in the first round
o f the National Association
Basketball Player Draft Monday
at New York City’s Felt Forum.
" I was surprised and excited."
Murphy said via telephone from
his girlfriend's house In Suffcrn.
N.Y. Monday night where he
watched the draft. "I thought I
would go to cither the (New
York) Knlcks or Portland, but I
was still surprised."
Murphy, a 1983 Oviedo gradu­
ate. is the first Seminole County
graduate to be selected In the
NBA Draft.
The 6-foot-5 (correct style)
Murphy averaged 22 points. 6
assists and 5.6 rebounds per
game for the Dolphins during his
senior year. A sturter since his
freshman season, Murphy Is
second to Artis G ilm ore in
Jacksonville career scoring and
four-time All-Sun Belt Confer­
ence selection. He was selected
to several All-America teams
following his senior year.
The 22-ycar-old Murphy has a
chance to move Immediately
Into the starting lineup for the
Trail Blazers. Portland traded
all-star guard Jim Paxson to
Cleveland for forward-center
Keith Lee after drafting the
versatile Murphy.
"Is that a signal or what? They
must think a lot of Ronnie to
trade their best guard," Wenzel
said ubout the Paxson-Lce deal.
"This is an Ideal situation for
Ronnie. The Trail Blazers did an
awful lot of homework oh him.

T o

Robinson: No. 1,
But Dunbar High ,
Dominates D ra ft !

B la z e

NEW YORK (UP!) - T h e valu e'
a high school basketball
e d u c a tio n w as a lt e r n a t e ly
diminished and enhanced in the
first round o f the NBA draft.
David Robinson and Armon
G illiam , both o f whom hadi
lim ite d prep careers, w ere
selected nos. 1 and 2 respective­
ly In the draft Monday. However,
an unprecedented trend devel­
oped later In the round when
three players from Dunbar High
S c h o o l In B a ltim o r e w e re
selected.
Robinson, the 7-fooM Navy
center, went to the San Antonio
Spurs. Gilliam, a 6-9 forward
from Nevada-Las Vegas, was.
then selected by the Phoenix,
Suns.
Robinson, who grew six Inches
between his freshmen and soph­
omore years In college, played'
Just one season at Osbourn High
S ch ool In W o od b rld g e. Va.
Gilliam went out for his high1
school team. Bethel Park In
Pittsburgh, his Junior year to
stay in shape for football.
R e g g ie W i l l i a m s of
Georgetown. Tyrone Bogues o f
Wake Forest and Reggie Lewis of,
Northeastern, who helped lead
Dunbar to a 59-0 mark their'
Junior and senior years, were:
first-round picks. Williams went*
fourth to the Los Angeles Clip-'
p ers. th e 5-3 B o g u e s was;
selected by Washington 12th,
and Lewis 22nd by Boston.
,
"T ryin g to figure out the draftgive someone a lot o f
" Golden State Coach|
said. "Bogues is a(

P o r t la n d

Basketball
and we knew If he was still
available on the 17th round,
they would take him ."
Murphy said he believes if he
works hard, he could move Into
the starting lineup at Portland
his rookie season. "T h e Paxson
trade opens the door for me and
I ’ m h app y to be g o in g to
P o r tla n d ." he said. " T h e y
showed a lot of interest in me
before the draft and they sell out
every game at home. It will be a
lot or fun."
While playing for coach Dale
Phillips at Oviedo, Murphy set
career school records In scoring,
rebounding and assists along
with being named to the Florida
Sports Writers Association AllState First Team. .
T h e s e n io r s w ln g m a n is
expected to play point or shoot­
ing guard In the pros. "Portland
thinks he can play both (guard)
positions." Wenzel said. "But I
think, eventually, he will be
better at point guard. He Is a
tremendous passer.
"H e is Just so. so talented and'
so smart. The pro game Is made
for him. He is going to be a
trem en d o u s p ro b a sk etb a ll
player." Wenzel added.
Wenzel said Murphy will be
represented by Herb Rudoy. an
a g e n t fr o m C h ic a g o w h o
specializes In NBA players. An
NBA rule forbids the players to
sign until October.
" I ’m going to play In a sum­
mer league in New York or-Los
Angeles until August." Murphy
said. " I ’ll be back In Florida to
work coach Wenzel's camp in
August."
Murphy gave credit to his
m oth er. B essie, alon g with

W enzel. Phillips and Oviedo
guidance counselor Larry Tyson
fo r h is d e v e lo p m e n t as
basketball player.
"M y mom always thought that
I could make the pros someday."
Murphy said. "She pushed me
and kept me going. She always
had confidence In m e."
"C oach Wenzel and coach
Phillips and Mr. Tyson
v e r y lm p o r t a n t
Everybody In the Oviedo com­
munity has always been
portive."
Bessie Murphy said It w
dream come true. " I ’m
happy, real happy." she
Monday night. "Ronnie loves
basketball. He always liked to
p la y . He g re w up p la y in g
basketball and that’s why he has
been successful.
"I'm proud of him. I’m telling
you. I'm real proud of him."
P h i l l i p s s h u r e d B e s s ie
Murphy’s enthusiasm. "Go get
them Portland." Phillips said
Monday night. "I was happy for
him. I’ve talked with (Portland
coach) Mike Schuler several
times. 1 think It is a good
organization ull the way down
the line. Schuler is a straight­
forward guy."
Murphy is the third Oviedo
graduate, and the second firstround selection, to be drafted
professionally In the past three
weeks. In the major league
baseball amateur draft June 2.
Oviedo senior Mark Merchant
was signed by the Pittsburgh
Pirates after he was taken as the
No. 2 pick In the first round.
Darrin Reichle. an Oviedo grad­
uate who Just completed his
Junior season at Saint Leo Col­
lege. signed after he was taken
in the fifth round by the San
D iego Padres. Both live In
Chuluota. ,

H trtld Photo by Brian La P«l«r

Ronnie Murphy muscles Inside against New Smyrna Beach
during his prep days at Oviedo High. The 22-year-old
Jacksonville University senior was taken by Portland as the
17th pick in the first round of the N B A Draft Monday j
lif&lt;/

in m i

Martin, Webster To Represent USA Juniors
Sh ow n da M artin and D o rch cllc
Webster have been champions ever
since they pulled on their track un­
iforms Tor Seminole High School. The
talented twosome has given the school
and the city a lot of thrills the last three
years.
Martin and Webster will get one of
their biggest thrills yet the next time
they put on a uniform as they will not
only be representing Sanford, but the
entire nation as members of the USA
Junior National team.
Martin, who will be a senior at
Seminole High this coming school year,
qualified in the 800 meters by finishing
second at this past weekend's qualifying
meet In Tucson. Az. The top two in each
event qualify for the national team.
"I Just wanted to go out and do the
best 1 could." Martin, a Junlur Olympic
champion in the 800 meters last year,
said. "1 kind of expected to make the

Chris
Fister
HERALD
SPORTS
W R ITE R

team, but it was still kind of surpris­
ing."
Martin finished with a time of 2:11 In
the grueling Tuscon heat while the
winner. Jasmine Johnson, came in at
2:08. Martin Just nipped out Simla
Lynch for second place. Lynch finished
at 2:12.
"I was in good position the whole
way." Martin said. "I didn't let the lead
girl take it out too far. I was in third
place going into tin- last 300 meters and

W im b le d o n Rain W ipes
O u t Round, 24,000 Fans
WIMBLEDON. England (UPI|
— The skies cleared, the sun
came out ... and the fans went
home. The Wimbledon Jinx had
struck again.
A dismal afternoon of rain
wiped out all play on the open­
ing day of the Championships.
More than 24.000 stoic fans
took no notice of the weather,
thronging the All-England club
(capacity 28.000) and sitting
patiently under umbrellas for
hours until tournament referee
Alan Mills was forced to send
them aw ay without anyone
having seen a hull hit.
Less than a half-hour after all
hope of play was abandoned, out
came the sun for a cheeky — if
brief — summer evening ap­
pearance.
Even without any play, the
Championships lost their first
seed as Mills announced the
withdrawal from the women s
singles of fourth seed Hana
Mandllkova.
The last player to heal Martina
Navratilova at Wimbledon — in
the 1981 sem ifinals — and
lo s in g f l n h l i s l la s t y e a r .
Mandllkova pulled out with a
foot in ju ry that has been
troubling her for a month and
not responded to treatment.
M a n d llk o v a 's w ith d ra w a l
forced a realignment of the
women's singles draw, anti took
one worry from ihc mind of

T ennis
Navratilova as she chases a sixth
successive, and eighth overall,
singles title.
Fifth seed Helena Sukova was
moved from the lop half ot the
d ra w l o f i l l c o m p a tr io t
Mandlikova's place in the lower
section.
Until the change. Sukova
could have met Navratilova in
the semifinals, repeating their
encounter of last Saturday when
Sukova defeated Navratilova in
the final at Eastbourne. Now
Sukova will face second seed
Steffi Graf of West Germany if
they both advance to the last
four.
In the meantime, defending
men's champion Boris Becker is
still scheduled to get the S3.5
million Championships properly
underway when he plays his
fir s t-r o u n d m a tc h a g a in s t
Czechoslovakia’s Karel Novacek.
Monday’s entire program was
rescheduled for Tuesday, when,
despite appearances, history is
on the side of at least some
tennis being played.
Since the first Championships
in 1877, two successive days
have been lost to rain on only
one occasion — in 1909. al­
though the opening two days of
the 1888 Wimbledon, a Satur-

started to make up ground and passed
Simla (Lynch) In the last 110."
Webster, who will also be a senior at
Seminole In 1987*88. was running I lie
•100 meter hurdles for only the fourth
time but turned in another spectacular
performance us she finished second
with a time o f 59.2.
"For Dorchelle (Webster) to break 60
in only her fourth time running the -100
hurdles is really something." Seminole
High boys coach Ken Brauman. wlm
made the trip to Tuscon as an assistant
coach, said. "She lost to the girl who
was second In the World Junior Games
last year so she was in pretty good
company.
"It was a real good experience for the
girls." Brauman added. "T h e y run
competitively against some really good
people and now have a chance to pul on
the USA uniform."
As members of the USA Junior
National team, Martin and Webster will

next compete against (he Canadian
Junior National team In Vancouver.
British Columbia. They will leave for the
meet on July 8 and will follow that meet
with a competition in Pullman. Wash.
"I'm going to have to practice hard
because I want lo be able to compete
when 1 get up there." Martin said,
"There will be a lot o f good competition
so I know what I have to do.”
Former Seminole High great Alvin
Jones also competed in the meet In
Tucson and be took tilth in the triple
Jump. J o n e s |usl c o m p le te d his
freshman year at Princeton University.
L ym an High senior-to-be Robin
Rogers also made the trip to Tucson and
lie came in sixth in the 10,000 meter
run.
Another Central Florida utheltc. Or­
lando Oak Ridge's Jovenle McDuffie,
finished second in the heptathlon
competition and qualified for the Junior
National Team.

O vied o Crushes
A lta m o n te , Wins
Top Team Crow n
Undaunted by a 6-0 deficit In
the top o f the first inning.
Oviedo’s Cardinals erupted for
eight runs in the bottom half en
route to an 18-7 victory over
Altamonte's Mets to claim the
Little League Baseball District 2.
Area I Top Team Tournament
title before 133 fans at the Eustls
Little League Complex.
Oviedo, managed by Tank
Boston, won its fourth consecu­
tive game to qualify for Thurs­
day's Top Team final.
Mark Bellhorn. who no-hit the
Mets last Wednesday, carried the
big stick (his time around with a
homer, double and five runs
hatted in.
Todd Bellhorn. Anthony King,
Klay Aspfnwall and winning
pitcher Brian Hendrix supplied
two hits each. Todd Bellhorn,
Aspinwall and Hendrix each had
doubles. Jesse King added a
triple and two RBI.
Hendrix twirled u four-hitter to
pick up the victory.
After Altamonte boiled to a
six-run lead in the top of the
first. Mark Bellhorn followed a
B o r is B e ck e r, No. 1 seed at W im b le d o n , re a c h e s for a retu rn .
single
by Todd Bellhorn and
•
day and u Monday, were also
they had a good time despite several walks with a two-run
homer for a 6-4 game.
rained out.
seeing no tennis.
Todd Bellhorn. batting for the
T h e had w e a l tier caused
In the past. Wimbledon orga­
second
time, drilled a two-run
s m i l e s a in o n g m a n v o I nizers have taken advantage ol
Wimbledon's regulars: the food,
the long-suffering British tenuis double to tie the game before
drink and souvenir tradesmen
fans' attitudes to justify iltcir K ing cam e through with a
who did a roaring business
policy o f no rain checks anti no two-run triple to snap the 6-6
deadlock.
— Sam Cook
among spectators who insisted
refunds.

Bogues, who would replace*
Spudd Webb of Atlanta as the!
smallest player In the league.*
would team with 7-6 Manute
Bol, the league’s tallest player,
j
T h e s e le c tio n o f B o g u e s
created another draft-day first.)
NBA Commissioner David Stem,,
used to g re e tin g 7 -footers,'
dwarfed the dlmnutive guard.
|
"T h e people will always say
something about m y height."
said Bogues. "1 have never really
thought about my size. Others,
highlighted by 'd ’ tnScie of top
.selections between Chicago and
Seattle. Scottie Plppen barely*’
had tim e to learn he was&lt;
selected fifth by Seattle before he,
was traded lo Chicago for Olden,
Polynlcc. the eighth pick, and a,
future draft choice.
After Gilliam, teams turned to
guards and swlngman. Newj
Jersey selected Ohio State guard,
Dennis Hopson third followed by,
s w l n g m a n W i l l i a m s of,
Georgetown to the Clippers,1
swlngman Plppen o f Central
A rkansas to S eattle, North,
Carolina guard Kenny Smith to
S a cra m en to and C a lifo rn ia
guard Kevin Johnson to Cleve-,
land.
Plppen. 6-7, wus not recruited
out of high school and ended up
at Central Arkansas of the NAIA.
He averaged 24 points u game
last year.
" I was surprised to go as high1
as I did." Plppen said. " I ’m'
looking forward to going to'
C h ic a g o and p la y in g w ith ’
Michael Jordan."
i
A lab am a forw ard Derrick;
McKcy was chosen with the,
ninth pick by Seattle. The 6-9,
stringbean was declared incligl-,
hie for his senior year after
signing with an agent.
"1 was surprised a little but)
that I didn't go higher but Fnii
satisfied." he said.
Forw ard Horace G rant o f
Clcmson was chosen No. 10 by
Chicago and UCLA swlngmanReggie Miller went next to Indi­
ana. Washington then named
the diminutive Bogues from
Wake Forest.
Eight guards and three centers
were selected In the first round.
The Atlantic Coast Conference
was the big w inner in the
opening round with five selec­
tions.-including two from North
Carolina. Alabama also had two
draftees.
T h e A t la n t a H a w k s s e t
another trend in the draft, using
its last five selections to take
foreign players.
With their third-round choice,
the 67th selection, the Hawks
selected 6-10 Song Tuo of the
Chinese national team . One
round later, the Hawks took 6-8
center Theofanis Christodoulou
of the Greek national team. In
the next two rounds, they
selected Jose Antonio Montero, a
65 guard from B arcelon a.
Spain, and Riccardo Moramloti,
a forward from Turin, Italy. Fori
their final pick, the Hawks took;
Franjo Arapovlc of Yugoslavia, a1
71center.
One other foreign player,;
Charunas Marchulenis of the;
Soviet Union, a 6-3 guard, was
selected as the 127th pick In the'
sixth round by Golden State.

�*-«:■

■*. - - « - w r-*.rVM~

lA-Ssntord Htrald, Sanford, FI.

BASEBALL

"T * rc f |.
■"•■ ■*' ^ —»

v-t^vn* •**

Tu*»4Uy, June JJ,1«7

S e a v e r

R e tire s

W

it h

N o

C o m p l a i n t s

S T A N D IN G S
A M ER ICA N L E A G U E
East
W L Pet. O t
Toronto
43 74 .411 —
New York
43 17 .414 —
Detroit
37 19 .541 4
Milwaukee
35 31 SX 4
Boiton
12 37 .444 I0W
Baltimore
29 41 •4t4 14
Cleveland
25 43 .173 14W
West
Minneiota
39 19 .174 —
Oakland
34 11 .539 3
Seattle
34 31 572 3W
Kanta* City
35 31 .512 1W
California
33 X .457 ■
Texa*
X X .455 1
Chicago
14 41 .144 14
Monday’s Results
Boston 5. Milwaukee 1 .7 1nn., rein
New York 7. Baltimore 3
Detroit I, Toronto 0
Seattle 3, Chicago 0
Oakland 4, Kansas City 1 California 7,
Texas!
Tuesday's Games
Toronto IStleb 5 4) at Datrolt (Robinson
+1). 7:35pm.
New York (Rhoden 1-4) at Baltlmora
(Williamson 3 5). 7:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Nieves 5-4) at Boston
(Stanley 3 I). 7:15p.m.
Seettle (Bankhead 7-4) at Chicago
(Long 1-3),Ip.m .
Cleveland ICandlottl 3-7) at Minnesota
(Smithson 1-1), 1:05 p.m.
Californio (Fraser 15) at Texas
(Hough 7-1), 1:15 p.m.
Kansas City (Gublcza a •) at Oakland
(R llo H l. 10:35p.m.
Wednesday's Gamas
Kansas City at Oakland
Toronto at Detroit, night
New York at Baltimore, night
Milwaukee at Boston, night
Seattle at Chicago, night
Cleveland at Mlnnasota, night
California at Taxai. night

NEW YORK (UPI) - Tom Seaver
decided 60 feet. 6 inches had become
too great a distance for his right arm.
Seaver retired from baseball Monday
only 16 days after rejoining the New
York Mcts. leaving the team he carried
to Its first championship 17 years ago.
Seaver. with a 311-205 record and
2.B6 ERA' in a magnificent 20-year
career, was attempting a comeback at
age 42. He said he was unhappy with
his progress after being sidelined nine
months. T h e right-hander pitched
poorly in an exhibition game against
minor-league hitters and in two simu­
lated games against the Mets.
" I can't complain about anything."
Seaver said. " I have had more than my
share of accomplishments, champion­
ships and good times. You have to know
when it Is time to go. Now this Is the
time for me lo g o ."

Seaver entered the majors in 1967
and pitched more than 10 seasons for
the Mets. He captured the National
League Cy Young Award three times
(1969, 1973. 1975) and won 20 games
five times. Including a 25-7 mark when
the Mets won their first World Series
title in 1969.
"1 wanted to be fair to the Mets
management and the players in the
clubhouse who are trying to win a
championship." he said. " I f I felt I
would be able to contribute, and that
things would have gotten better. I would
have kept going. But I honestly didn't
think things would get any better."
A knee injury prevented Seaver from
pitching in last year's playoffs and
World Series with Boston. He became a
free agent after the season, and June 6
rejoined a Mets team beset by pitching
Injuries.

Moreland,
Martinez
Save Cubs

'Oil Can' Tops
Milwaukee, 5-2
United Press Internstlonsl

A.L. Baseball

A couple o f "c h a ra c te r s "
teamed up to beat the Milwaukee
Brewers Monday night.
N A TIO N A L L E A O U E
"I watched my cartoons today Tigers................................. 2
East
to keep my mind off the game." Blue Jays............................O
W L Pci. OE
St. Louis
41 75 .421 —
[Tennis “ Oil Can"Boyd said after
At Detroit, Alan Tram m ell
Chicago
X 31 .551 4W
pitching
the Boston Red Sox to a slammed a home run to open a
Montreal
X 11 .537 sw
5-2 rain-shortened victory. "I two-run fourth Inning and Frank
'New York
34 11 .517 5W
Pittsburgh
X 37 .440 ttw
saw Top Cat. Anything to get my Tunana scattered live hits for his
Philadelphia
29 34 .444 i m
m in d o f f to n ig h t. W hen I first shutout of the season to
West
overthlnk, I ovcrpltch. I'm the pace Detroit. Jim Clancy, 7-5,
Cincinnati
X 11 .551 —
'Houston
Vi
37 31 .544
type of guy who responds to the suffered the loss. Tanana. 7-3,
San Francisco
15 X .515 3W
sltuutlon."
walked two and struck out five.
Atlanta
34 34 .500 1W
Boyd, who suffered from a sore
Los Angeles
X X .441 7W
TO
R O N TO
D E T R O IT
San Diego
» 44 .314 I4W
right shoulder, made his first
4 b rh b l
a b rh b l
Monday's Results
start with the Red Sox since Fernandz u 4 9 1 0 Whllakar 2b 2 0 10
Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 3
sp rin g train in g. T h e righ t­ Motaby cf 3 0 3 0 Mad lock dh 4 0 0 0
Montreal at St. Louis, ppd. rain
Barfield rl 3 0 1 0 Gibson It
4030
Tutf'MfAw'i Oamtft
hander did not walk u butter and Balt It
4 0 0 0 Trammall ss 4 ) 1 1
Chicago (Sufclltfa *1) at Naw York
struck out two In a game called Fielder dh 4 0 0 0 Nokas c
3 13 0
(Darling 2 4), 7:15 p.m.
in the lop of the eighth Inning Grubar 3b 4 0 0 0 Sheridan rf 3 0 0 I
Montreal (Haaton 93} al Pittsburgh
lorg 2b
4 0 1 0 Evans lb
3 0 10
(Kipper 45), 7:15 p.m.
because of rain.
Upshaw lb 3 0 0 0 Lamon cl
40 30
Philadelphia (Rawlay 7-4) at SI. Louis
R e lie v e r C a lvin S ch lrald ! Moora C
3 0 0 0 Brooktns 3b 3 0 0 0
(Tunned 11), I.IS p.m.
37 « 5 t Totals
30 2 14 1
threw three pitches in the eighth Totals
Houston (Ryan 4-4) at San Diego
Toronto
000 000 M 0 - I
I Whitson 7 4), I0;03p.m.
when the game was called, and Datrolt
000100 M x - 1
Atlanta (Puleo 10) al Los Angeles
Boyd did not receive credit for a
Game winning RBI — Trammall (5).
(Velenzuela 5 5), 10:15 p.m.
E — Trammall. DP— Toronto I. LOB—
complete game. Boyd had made
Cincinnati (Robinson 2 2) al San
Toronto 7, Datrolt 9. 2B— Gibson, Lamon.
Francisco (Hammaker 3-4), 10:15p.m.
three starts during a 20-day 3B— Nokas. H R -T ra m m a ll (13). S F Wednesday's Games
rehabilitation assignment with Sharldan.
Cincinnati at San Francisco
IP H R ER ES S O
Pawtucket of the International
Montreal at Pittsburgh, night
Toronto
Chicago at New York, night
League (AAA).
Clancy (L 7 3)
7 23 10 3 3 4 4
Philadelphia at St. Louis, night
"Tonight. I was determined lo Elchhorn
1-3 0 0 0 0 1
Houston at San Diego, night
Detroit
go out and throw like I can,"
Atlanta at Los Angeles, night
Tonana &lt;W 7 3)
0
5 0 0 3 5
Boyd said, "Y o u can make
Balk— Clancy. T — 2:34. A — 21,971.
excuses and say the weather was
LEADERS
bud. but that s not the kind of
Angels.................................. 7
MAJOR L E A O U E L E A D E R S
guy I mil. I'm confident, slightly
Rangers ................................................. . . 3
flamboyant. I have to go out like
I) a t t I n g
Al Arlington. Texas. Wally
a competitor, can’ t be beat."
National League
Joyner
drove in Iwo runs and
r K pet.
g ab
With the score (led 1-1 In the
Devon White collected three hits
Gwynn, SD
47 244 49 90 .344
third, tile Red Sox chased John
Maldonado. SF
44 240 44 14 .314
and an RBI to carry California.
Henry Johnson. 0-1. Marty Bar­
Daniels, Cln
57 119 44 43 .333
DcWuyne Bulec. 3-3. worked 4
Murphy, All
44 347 54 11 .111
rett singled to center. Wade
1-3 innings In relief to earn the
Galarraga. Mil
41217 17 74 .114
Boggs and Jim Rice walked to
Leonard. SF
45141 41 15 .314
victory. Greg Minton pitched 2
load the bases.
Guerrero. LA
44141 41 74 .324
1-3 Innings for his first save.
Clark. SIL
45 114 53 73 .123
Jay Aldrich replaced .Johnson
Greg Harris. 2-7. went six In­
Clark, SF
43 115 14 49 .311
and lilt Baylor will) his second
Wallach, Mil
44 ISO 41 40 .IX
nings. striking out seven.
pitch, forcing in Barrett. It was
American League
g ab
r h IKl.
the 242nd time Bayor lias been
CA LIFO R N IA
TE X A S
Boggs. Bos
64155 51 97 140
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
hit by a pitch, moving him
Trammell, Del
57 111 45 11 .151
Downing
dh 3 2 2 1Browns 2b
4 12 0
within one of the major-league Whlta
Puckett, Min
47149 44 90 .135
rt
5 2 3 1Flatcher ss 3 12 3
Tartabull. KC
43 135 15 77 111
record held by Ron Hunt.
Joynar lb
502 2 Slarra rl
4000
Tabler, Cle
47 154 34 (2 3X
4011 O'Brian lb
3 0 10
Dwight Evans followed with a Howell tt
Noket, Del
54 195 34 41 .314
single n(T Aldrich's leg. scoring OaCIncas 3b 400 0 Parrish dh 4 0 3 0
Flelcher, Tex
45 257 34 •1 .115
Boona c
4 0 0 0 Incavlglla If 3 10 0
Randolph. NY
69 254 54 ■I .114
Boggs. Todd Benzlnger then
Schofield
ss 3 1 0 0 McDowell cl 4 0 3 0
Fernanda!. Tor
44 244 41 44 .313
bounced Into a double play,
Pattis cf
3 10 0 Stanley c
400 1
Franco. Cle
47 259 41 41 .113
McLemor 2b 3I I 1 Buachale 3b 4 0 0 0
scoring Rice to make It 4-1.
Home Runs
National League — Davis. Cln and
Murphy. All 23: Clark. S«L, Dawson. Chi.
Strawberry. NY and Virgil, At! 20
American League — Bell. Tor 21;
McGwire. Oek 22: Barfield. Tor II; Davis.
Oak. O'Brien and Parrish, Tax 17.
Runs Batted In
National League — Clark, StL 44,
Dawson. Chi 43: Davis. Cln and Wallach. Mil
41; McGee. StL 52.
American League — Bell. Tor 41;
Joyner. Cel. Parrish, Tax and Ward. NY 52;
Wlnlleld. NY 51.
Stolen Bases
National League — Coleman. StL 44;
Davis, Cln 29; Hatcher, Hou 25; Gwynn, SO
24; Raines. Mil 20
American League — Reynolds. Sea 24;
Henderson, NY 23; P. Bradlay. Saa 23;
Redos. Chi and Wilson. KC 21.
Pitching
Victor las
National League — Fernindei. NY,
Heelon. Mil. Scott. Hou and Sutcliffe. Chi 9-3;
Welch. LA 41; Moyer. Chi 14; Gerber,
AtISS
American Leagua — Saberhagan. KC
123; Morris, Oet 101; Elchhorn, Tor 4-1;
Lelbrandt, KC. Rhoden, N Y and Young. Oak
1-4; Key. To r and W ilt, Cel. I S ;
Langston. Saa § 4; Stewart. Oak 17.
Earnad Run Average
(Based on I Inning x number of games
each Item has played)
National League — Scott, Hou 2.10;
Reuschel, Pitt 1.51; Hershlser. LA, 1.74;
Fernanda!. NY 2.42; Ryan. Hou 2.t4.
American Laague — Lalbrandt. KC
2.324; Saberhagan. KC 2.114; Clancy, Tor
2 45; Boddlcker. Belt, 1.90; Key. Tor 1.90.
Strikeouts
National Laague — Scott. Hou 125;
Ryan, Hou 10*;
Fernanda!, N Y 91;
Hershlser, L A I I ; Valen!uela, L A I I.
American Leagua — Langston, Sea 123;
Clemens, Bos 103; Higuera. Mil 100;
.Swindell, Clev *1; Wit), Cal 92
Saves
National Liague — Smith. Chi 19;
Bedroslan. Phil and Worrell. StL 14;
.Franco, Cln 14; Smith, Hou II.
American League — Plesac. Mil 14;
Howell, Oak, Rtardon. Min and Rlgheltl. NY
14; Hank*. Tor I2.

RAINES GAUGE
Companion

1944

19*7

Gam**'Played
47 43 47 45
Al bJt»
744
177
Run*
44
47
Hit*
71
45
Run* Baited In
24
29
GW RBI
1
4
Double*
IS
11
Triple*
1
4
Heme run*
4
4
Stolen Bate*
20 33 20 22
Error*
1
2
Average
320 .347
- Tim Raines, Expos were rained out Monday night

a Met and because he did this himself,
reaching a conclusion he felt he had to
make.
A contract dispute in 1977 resulted In
Seaver going to Cincinnati. He pitched
for the Reds through the 1982 season
and returned to the Mets In December
1982. Seaver was 9-14 for the Mets In
1983 but was left unprotected in the
free-agent compensation pool and was
claimed by the Chicago White Sox.
He won 31 games in his first two
American League seasons. By 1986 he
expressed an interest in returning to the
East Coast and finishing his career close
to his Connecticut home. He was traded
to Boston last June 29 and was 5-7 with
a 3.80 ERA for the A L champions.
Seaver had 61 career shutouts and
once shared the majors’ single-game
strikeout record of 19. broken last
season by Boston's Roger Clemens.

Seaver underwent arthroscopic sur­
gery during the offseason and was
unable to throw with the velocity that
helped him strike out 3.640 batters
during his career. He arrived at his final
decision after throwing Saturday in a
simulated game at Shea Stadium.
"I went home that night and dis­
cussed everything with (wife) Nancy and
the fam ily." he said. " I was unhappy
with what took place on the field and we
took stock of the future. I know myself
better than an&gt;ouc and I came to the
conclusion that the 4.000-plus innings,
the knee injury and the long layoff had
finally taken its toll."
Seaver Informed Mets General Manag­
er Frank Cashen Sunday.
"This is a happy-sad day." Cashen
said. "Tom Seaver Is the best ballplayer
who has ever played for this franchise. It
Is a happy day because he Is retiring as

M IL W A U K E E
BOSTON
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Molitor 3b 3 0 10 Burks cl
3 0 10
Yount cl
3 0 10 Barra!) 2b
3 110
Coopar dh
3 0 0 0 Boggs 3b2 12 0
D a«r rt
3 0 0 0 Rica It
3 10 0
Surhotl c
3 2 2 0 Baylor dh
3)12
Robldoux lb 3 0 10 Evans lb
3 12 1
Faldar II
2 0 0 1 Bcmlngar
rf 3 0 I 0
Gantnar 2b 3 0 0 0 Owan ss
200 1
Svaum ss
2 0 0 0 Sullivan c
3 0 10
Totals
25 2 5 I Totals 25 5 f 4
(Gama called by rain altar 7 Innings)
Milwaukee
110 100 0— 1
Boston
0)2 001 0 - I
Gama winning RBI — Baylor (1).
E — Barratt. DP— Mllwaukaa 3. Boston
I LOB— Mllwaukaa 3. Boston 4. 28—
Surhotl, Evans. H R — Baylor (13). SB—
Burks (10). S— Faldar. Barratt. SF—
Owan.
IP H R ER BB SO
Milwaukee
Johnson (L 0-1)
1 4 4 4 2 0
4 3 1 1 0 1
Aldrich
Clear
1 0 0 0 2 2
Boston
Boyd (W 10)
7 5 1 2 0 2
Schlrald!
0 0 0 0 0 0
Johnson pltchad to 3 batters In 3rd.
H B P -b y Aldrich (Baylor). T-2 :0 7 . A 29,544.

Ta llis
34 7 9 4 Totals
33 3 9 3
California
101 200 210- 7
Texas
oil 000000- 3
Gama-winning RBI — Downing (5).
E — Harris 2. Slarra. DP-Callfornla 2.
LOB— California
0.
Texas
4.
2B—
Downing, Joynar. 3B~McLemore. HR —
Fletcher (4). SB-W hite (IS). Pattis (12).
S— Me L# more.
IP H R ER BB SO
California
Wilt
2 13 4 3 1 1 1
Bulce (W 13)
4 13 4 0 0 0 4
Minton (S 1)
2 1-3 i 0 0 0 0
Toxa*
Harris (L 17)
1 7 4 5 4 7
Williams
2 2 1 1 3 1
Mohorclc
1 0 0 0 0 0
Harr.i pitched lo 2 batters In 7th.
T — 1:52. A— 15.119,

Mariner*.......
White Sox....

3
.0

At Chicago. Mike Moore and
Bill Wilkinson combined on a
seven-hitter to lift Seattle. Moore.
3-8. allowed seven hits, struck
out six and walked none over 8
1-3 innings. Wilkinson earned
his third save.

UPt Photo

Wally Joyner gets a high five after singling to score Devon
White In a victory over Texas Monday.
S EA TTLE

CHICAGO
ab r h bt
a b r h bl
Branllay rt 4 1 1 1 Gulllan is
4030
PBradlay It
20 0 0
Radus ct4
SBradlay c
40 0 0
Caldaron rf4
Phalps dh
4 0 11
Balnas dh4
Praslay 3b
x0 0 0
Walkar 1b3
Oavls 1b
40 0 0
Hill 2b 3 0 10
Mosas cl
4110
Boston If3
Quinonas ss
3 12 0
Fisk c 3 0 0 0
Raynolds 2b 4 0 11
Hulatt 3b2
Hairston ph 10 0 C
Manrlque 2b 0 0 0 0
Totals
13 1 4 3
Totals
31
Saattlo
t io ooo l o o - i
Chicago
ooo ooo OOO- 0
Gama winning RBI — Phalps (4).
E — Hulatt. Nlalsen, Caldaron. DP—
Saattla 1, Chicago I. LOB— Saattla 7,
Chicago 4. 2B— Hill. SB— Raynolds 2 (24).
S— Quinonas.
IP H R ER BB SO
Ssatlli
Moore (W 3 4)
4 13 7 0 0 0 6
Wilkinson (S 3)
21 0 0 0 0 0
Chicago
Nielson (L 0 2)
4 23 6 1 1 1 1
Soarago
1 13 0 0 0 0 1
James
1 0 0 0 0 0
T — 2:11. A— 11.473.

Athletic*..............................4
Royals.................................. 1
At Oakland. Steve Ontiveros
and Jay Howell combined on a
four-hitter and Reggie Jackson
hit his 556th career home run,
h elp in g O akland snap Bret
Saberhagen s six-game winning
streak.
KANSAS C IT Y
O AKLAN D
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Wilson ct
4 0 0 0 Polonla ct
4 0 11
Sallitr lb
1 0 0 0 Javlar cf
0000
Pacota 3b
0 0 0 0 Davis rt
4020
Bratt dh
4 0 0 0 Lanstord 3b 4 0 10
Tartabull rl 2 1 1 0 McGwIra lb 1 0 2 0
Whlta 2b
4 0 0 0 Cansaco It 4 0 0 0
BJackton It 3 0 0 0 RJackson dh 4 I 1 t
Boslay ph
0 0 0 0 Stalnbach c 4 1 1 0
Balbonl lb
4 0 10 Phillips 2b 2 12 2
Salazar ss
1 0 10 Grlflln ss
4 10 0
Elsanrach ph 1 0 0 0
Quirk c
1 0 10
Totals
31 I 4 • Totals
34 4 10 4
Kansas City
t it too to o - 1
Oakland
0 » too 01x - 4

Game-winning RBI — Polonla (21.
E — Lanstord. Stalnbach. Whlta. D P Oak land 1. LOB— Kansas City 7, Oakland I.
2B—
M c G w Ira .
T a r ta b u ll.
Polonla.
0 10
Lanslord.
HR—
R. Jackson (I ) , Phillips
02
0
(t).0 SB—
TartaLuli
,1).
0
0
IP H R ER BB SO
00
0
Kansas City
Saberhagn
00
0(L 122) 72-1 9 3 3 2 5

Qulsenberry

0 Oakland
0
0

Ontiveros (W 4-1)
Howell IS 14)
A— 14,144.
0 T—
7 2:43. 0

11 i

t | 0 0

7 4 t 0 2 4
2 0 0 0 2 2

Y a n k e e s ................
7
O rio le s ...................
.3
At B al M in o r c . C 1a u d c 11
Washington ripped u two-run
hom er and W illie Randolph
keyed a five-run seventh inning
with a two-run double lo spark
New York.
NEW

YORK
BA LTIM O R E
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Randolph
2b 5 2
2
2
Washlngln
It 3 1
I
3
Ward lb
100 0 Rlpkan
ss 4 0 10
Easlar dh
3 0
0
0
Kiltla dh
2 0 0 0 Knight lb
4000
Wlnlltld rl 4 0 12 Young If
1110
Pjgllarul 3b 4 0 0 0 Kannady c
4 12 2
Pasqua lb 1 ) 0 0 Lacy rf
400 0
Salts c
1 1 2 0 Burleson dh 2 0 10
Cotto ct
1 1 1 0 Dwyar ph
0000
Tollason ss 4 I I I
Totals
15 7 I 7 Totals
12 1 t 1
Naw York
000 002 500— 7
Baltlmora
020 ooi to o - 3
Gama winning RBI — Randolph It).
E — Knight. D P — Baltlmora I. LOB—
Naw York 5. Baltlmora 7. 2B— Burleson,
Randolph. HR— Kennedy (13), Washington
(4). Murray 111). S— Gerharl.
IP H R ER BB SO
New York

Rasmussen (W 6 4) 4 1-3 5 1 3 2
Guanle
223 1 0 0 t
Baltimore
Boddlcker
4 1-1 1 3 3 1
DeLeon (L 0 1)
0 2 4 4 2
Bell
23 1 n 0 0
Arnold
3 2 0 0 0

2
4
7
0
1
0

DeLeon pltchad to 5 baiters In 7th.
HBP— by Rasmussen (Young); DeLeon
(Cotto). PB— Salas. T — 2:54. A— 24.331.

CHICAGO (UPI) — With the
tying run on first base In the
ninth inning Monday. Keith
Moreland missed the bunt sign
from Chicago Cubs third base
coach John Vukovlch. then hit a
Rick Reuschel fastball Into the
left-field stands.
Moreland's 12th home run of
the season lifted the Cubs to a
3-2 victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
"I'v e been swinging the bat
g o o d t h i s m o n t h , " s a id
Moreland, who hit a gamewinning home run in the final
Inning for the first time In his
eight-year career. "T h e first two
months. I stunk."
Cubs starter Jamie Moyer, 8-4,
had a 1-0 lead In the eighth
Inning, but gave up a two-out
walk lo Mike Diaz. Andy Van
Slyke followed with his ninth
homer Inio the center field
bleachers, and things looked
bleak for the Cubs.
"I didn't want to walk him
(Van Slyke)." said Moyer, who
hurled his first complete game in
14 starts. "I missed with a good
fastball earlier to him. I came
back with It, but made a mistake
by putting It Into his power.”
Moyer scattered eight hits,
struck out three and walked
four.
The Cubs took a 1-0 lead In the
third inning when Dave Martinez
tripled to the center field wall
and scored on Rafael Palmiero’s
single to left. Martinez also
turned In a spectacular running
in right center which robbed
Mike Diaz of n double and two
runs batted in.
Pirates manager Jim Leyland
put the defeat in perspective.
"T h e guy hit the ball out o f the
park." he said. "Y ou lose legiti­
m a tely. T h a t's b etter than
walking people or kicking the
ball around."
Leyland left In Reuschel. 5-4.
to p itch a g a in s t M orelan d
because of Rcuschel's sinker.
Garhartct 400 0
PITTSBURG
CHICAGO
Wiggins3b4H00 0
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Bondi
II lb 1 41 1
0 10 0 Martinez cl
4 110
Murray
Bonilla rl
4 0 1 0 Palmalro If
4 0 11
Ray lb
1 0 10 Dawuri rl
40 2 0
Dial lb
1 0 0 0 Durham lb
4110
W Davli pr 0 10 0
Moreland lb 3 1 1 2
Bream lb
0 00 0
Hoc* 2b10 10
Van Slyke cl 4 I 12
Sundberg c10 10
Morrison lb 4 0 10
Brumley si10 0 0
O rtli c
4 020
Moyer p10 0 0
Belllard is 4 0 10
Reuschel p 10 0 0
Totals
12 1 I 2 Totals
11 ) 10 1
None out when winning run scored.
Pittsburgh
000 000 020— 2
Chicago
001 000 001-1
Game winning RBI — Moreland (0).
DP— Pittsburgh 1, Chicago 2. LOB—
Pittsburgh 1. Chicago 5. 3B— Bonilla,
Ortlle Palmeiro. 3B — Martinet. HR — Van
Slyke (9), Moreland (17). SB— Bond*
(19). S-Reuschel.
IP H R ER BB SO
Pittsburgh
Reuschel IL 5 4)
a 10 3 3 1 4
Chicago
Moyer (W 4 4)
9 1 2 2 4 1
Reuschel pitched to 2 baiters In 0th.
T — 2:27. A — 21.064.

Morning Excurions May Avoid Thunderstorms
In Florida we are subjected to a very
large number of thundcrslorms during
the months of June. July and August. In
fact, these months each average aboul
20 thunderstorms per month.
These storms usually occur in the
afternoons and if your nautical itch
cannot lie cased by scratching, and you
want to venture forth and brave the
elements, the best time of day to avoid
the storms is to do so in the morning.
Try to gel back before 3 p.m. as that is
(lie itmc (lie sky starts lo darken and the
clouds begin to darken up. A good place
to be when these storms hit is at home
with a good hook on sailing and
seamanship.
Not all storms are thunderstorms, but
all thunderstorms do contain a danger to
(lie sailer in the form of lightning. As
itullculcd above, these storms are most
common during the summer months
and are usually formed by air currents
rising over locally warmed areas or by
the p a s s a g e of a cold Ironl which forces
moist air aloft.
Before a storm flits, the* winds are

A

Carl
Carlson
HERALD
BOATING
WRITER
the south and west and
warm and humid. These
conditions are typical of the conditions
which create cumulonimbus clouds and
then thunderstorms. Although this cloud
may be obscured by other cloud layers,
they cun. If visible, be easily recognized
by i heir characteristic shape.
Starting al the top. often over 40.000
feet high, there is a layer of cirrus clouds
that are shaped like an anvil. The top
leans in (he direction the wind is blowing
and tile storm Is moving. Below the
"anvil head" Is the main body o f the
storm. It is of great height and lias
"cauliflower sides."

At the front bottom is a roll cloud
formed by the turbulent winds at the
leading edge of the storm. Behind the roll
cloud is a dark area which extends from
the base to the earth where hail. rain, or
both, are falling. Being able to recognize
this type of cloud formation can serve as
a warning that thunderstorm s are
approaching and you can prepare ac­
cordingly.
Whenever thunderstorms are in tfie
area, the prudent boalcr will head for
shore lo a safe, protected mooring. You
can pick up weather reports on your
marine radio VHF channels WX2 or
WX3. If you do noi have a VHF marine
radio available, there are Inexpensive
radios being sold by radio stores and
discount houses liuu broadcast continu­
ous weather reports. Som e of the
marinas and marine equipment outlets
iiave marine weather service charts
giving the locutions and frequencies of
weather broadcasts.
Thunderstorms are very dangerous
because o f the lightning and even more
so because of the high winds and strong

seas that go along with them. It should
lie recognized that there arc no safe­
guards dial can be guaranteed against
lightning. Ii is very unpredictable and
lias Immense power. A bolt of lightning
iiitting as much as 1.000 feel away can
blow the socks ofl all your electronic
gear.
Recently, I saw a boat with a tuna
lower and scads o f electronics that
suffered a loss that would make a grown
man cry. It was the tallest of all the boats
around it; none of the other boats had
any damage. Grounding systems can
help under certain conditions.
II you have an AM frequency radio,
usually the static on it can alert you to
the fact that a storm Is close at hand.
» U tt

B O A T E R 'S T IP There is an
ancient storm formula that you might
want lo remember. You may need it this
summer, fa ce the wind ... the storm will
be on your right, (wind circles counter­
c lo ck w ise). Storm in the west or
northwest will reach you. Storm In the
south or east will pass you by.

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Knights O f Columbus, Lightning
Finally Knock O u t Moose, 16*9
Lightning struck three times Tor the Knights of
Columbus against Moose Monday night. Twice. KOC used
five-run Innings before real lightning finally halted the
contest In the bottom o f the fifth Inning with Moose at bat.
Knights o f Columbus, which clinched the Sanford Junior
League championship last week, add Its 19th consecutive
victory Monday night, subduing Moose. 16-9, In baseball
action at Chase Park.
KOC Improved to 9-0 In the second half and 19-0 overall.
Moose fell to 2-8 and 8-11. Woodmen o f the World (3-7.
4-16) won by forfeit over Rotary (1-9. 3-17) In Monday's
first game.
The Knights used five-run first and fifth Innings to
engineer the victory. In the first. Mike Maples and
Demetrius Presley each doubled In runs while winning
pitcher Mike Taylor added an RBI single. In the fifth.
Maples had another double while Anthony "Redm an"
Roberts, Floyd Henderson. Presley and Maurice Fisher
each chipped In singles.
Maples and Presley each collected three hits to lead KOC
while Taylor and Henderson had two apiece. Presley scored
three times while Erskine Howard. Taylor. Roberts.
Henderson and Fisher scored twice each.
Moose pulled within 11-9 with a seven-run fourth Inning
but could not get any closer as the game was called In the
fifth Inning. Darrell Canada. Johnell Brewlngton, Arthur
Polk and Ell Blanton each had singles while Donavan
Tucker doubled to highlight Moose's fourth.
Tucker. Brewlngton and Polk each led Moose with two
hits.
— 8am C o o k

Brantley Legion Needs 2 Wins
Lake Brantley's American Legion team, needing a sweep
of Apopka tonight to advance to the State Sunshine Games
State Tournament, will resume play with a 2-1 lead In the
top of the third Inning at Boardwalk and Baseball near
Haines City. Game time Is 5 p.m.
Brantley had Just taken a 2-1 lead when rain showers
interrupted play. After Greg Thomas walked. Jerrey
Thurston drilled a triple to right center to tie the game.
Dalton Reed then struck out. but when the catcher missed
the pitch. Thurston scored and Reed raced to first. Then,
the rains came, suspending play.
"W e ’ve got to beat them twice, but I think we can do It,"
Manager Jerrey Thurston said about his team's chances.
Brantley advanced to the winners’ bracket final with an
8-3 victory over Eau Gallic Monday. Pitcher Thurston
altowed Just four hits while striking out four and walking
two. He shut out Eau Gallic until the sixth.
Jimmy "M ongo" Morse led the offense with two doubles
and a single, good for three runs batted in. Thurston added
two singles and two RBI while Jason Varitck had two hits
and an RBI. Shane Stuftlet and Reed each had singles.

Tullius Group Goes O ut Winner
WEST PALM BEACH (UPI) - Bob Tullius' Group 44 has
left Its relationship with Jaguar as a winner on the
International Motor Sports Association circuit.
The Jaguar won Sunday's Grand Prix of Palm Beach, the
second consecutive year a Porsche has failed to win on the
tight, twisting 1.6-mtlc. I O-turn layout through the streets
ordowntown West Palm Beach.
Jaguar has broken its long relationship with Tullius,
owner of the car driven by Hurley Haywood and John
Morton Sunday, and will concentrate for the rest of the
year on the European sports car circuit before coming back
to 1MSA next year with a new team. With a triumph
Sunday, Jaguar became the only automaker other than
Porsche to win more than one race In 1987. and Haywood
Joined A1 Holbert, Bobby Rahal and Jochcn Mass as the
only drivers with more than one victory.

Vancouver Names McCammon
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (UPI) — A few years
back, Pat Quinn and Bob McCammon passed each other
twice in the revolving door leading to the head coach's
office of the Philadelphia Flyers. Monday, the two NHL
coaching veterans were reunited In Vancouver in a bid to
lift the Canucks out of the Smythc Division basement.
Quinn, lured from the Los Angeles Kings to Vancouver as
Canucks' president and general manager earlier this year,
announced McCammon as the team's head coach.
McCammon and Quinn worked together In various
coaching positions with the Philadelphia organization for
several years during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Quinn
replaced McCammon In 1979 as head coach of the Flyers.
McCammon. in turn, replaced Quinn as coach in 1982
before let go by the Flyers at the end of the 1983-84 season.

Bohn III Takes O ver P G A Lead
SEATTLE. Wash. (UPI) — Parker Bohn III of Freehold.
N.J.. moved from fifth place to the lead Monday night after
four rounds In the S I 25,000 Columbia 300 Professional
Bowlers Association Open.
Bohn, who suffered only one open frame In his eight
match games, leads a pair of Californians by 39 pins with
his 5.901 plnfall. Mark Baker of Garden Grove. Calif., and
Bobby Jacks of Hayward. Calif., are tied for second with a
pin total of 5.862.

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New managers, new players,
internal strife. The Seminole
Savages have seen II all the past
two years but they have always
been able to roll w ilti the
changes.
This past weekend. Joe Davis'
first as manager of the Seminole
Softball Club 15 and under
all-star team, the Savages played
their usual strong defense and
got their bats cranked up en
route to a 5-0 record and the
Tampa Mustangs Tournament
title.
"T lie girls deserve a loi of
credit for the way they played."
Davis, who look over as manager
for Roger Richardson two weeks
ago. said. "W e only brought 13
players to Tampa and two of
those were injured so we were
down to 11. Hui the girls
reached down and showed a lot
of intestinal fortitude."
T h e S a va g e s op en ed ihe
tourney on Saturday with a 9-3
thumping of Manatee County
Gray. Marie Peters was 3 for 5 to
lead tlie offense while Michelle

I

S o ft b a ll
Davis. Lisa Boatwright and
Heather Golden contributed two
lilts each. Michelle Panion was
tlie winning pitcher.
In game two. Seminole rode
tlie lilt ling of Golden to a 10-0
slaughter of Manatee County
Blue. Golden went 3»for 3 with
two home runs and drove in half
of the 10 runs. Christy Dees and
Boatwright added two hits each
to hack (lie combined two-hil
pitching of Mishcll Karr and
Leeann Trimble.
In Sunday's single elimination
round, the Savages opened with
a 7-1 victory over Manatee Blue.
Peters was 2 for -l with a homer
and Davis 2 for 3 while Karr and
Trimble combined on a onehitter.
T h e S a v a g e s th en faced
Tampa Magic tn the semifinals
and exploded offensively in a
1-1-1 rout. Peters. Karr. Dees and
Jennifer Daniels rapped out
three lilts each while Boatu right
and Trimble had two tills apiece,

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Third Placa Playoff: Th# Bam (4*) v*. Claity Clark* (A*):
7:30 p m . — F ln t Placa Playoff: Sullivan'* Pub (P i) v*.
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N EW SM Y R N A B E A C H D avid R ogers held ofT L e e F a u lk
to w in the 25-lap Late-Modei
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New S m y rn a Speedw ay.
J o e M id d le to n w a a t h ir d ,
closely followed by C h ris Roberts
and National R a c e T ra c k C le a r­
inghouse President B ill Posey.

Semlnol* Pony Pinto League Playoff* of Five Point*: *
p.m. — National* n American*
Sunthin* Stata Gama* Rational at Boardwalk and
Bataball: 5 p.m. — Laka Brantlay v* Apopka (continuation
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NBA DRAFT
Toam by Team Salacliant In NBA Dr*lt
United P r in International
( Listed by round with overall pick In parenthei**)
Atlanta
I (21). Dalla* Comegyj. f, DoPaul. 2 (42), Terrance Balloy, g.
Wagner. 2 (44), Tarry Conor, g. Alabama. 3 (47). Song Tao. c.
Chine*a national taam. 4 (90), Thaofanl* Chrlstodouiou. c, Crook
national toam. 5 (113), Jo*a Antonio Montero, g, Barcelona (Spain). 4
(130), Rlccardo Morandoti, f, Turin (D aly). 7 (IS9), Fran|o Arapovlc.
c. Yugoslavia.
Boston
1 (23), R*ggle Lawls, f, Northaaslorn. 2 (AS). Brad Lohau*. f, Iowa,
a (70). Tom Shaahoy. f. Virginia. 4 411). Darryl Kannady. I.
Oklahoma. 5 (114), Dave Boiler, I, California 4 (137) Tom Naegell, f.
WlKOmln Stovont Point. 7 (140), Jorry Corcoran, c, Northeastern
Chicago
I (I), Olden Poiynice. f, Virginia (Iraded to Seattle), t (10). Horace
Grant, I, Clemson. 2 (21). Ricky Winslow, f. Houston. 2 (33), Tony
Whit*, g. Teniwsse*. 3 (SN). John Foa. f. Mlllersvlll* State (Pa.). 4
(79), Jack Haley, c. UCLA. S (102), Anthony Wilson, g. Louisiana
Stale. 4 02S), Doug Altenberger, g, Illinois. 7 (141), Earvin Ltavy. g.
Central Michigan.
Cleveland
I (7), Kevin Johnson, g, California. 2 (41), Kannerd Johnson, I,
Western Kentucky. 3 (S3). Donald Royal, f, Notre Dame 4 (751. Chris
Dudley, c, Yale. 4 (401. Carven Holcombe, g, Texas Christian. 3 (94),
Carl Lott, g, Texas Christian. A (12)), Harold Jensen, g. Vlllanova 7
(144), Michael Foster, g. South Carolina.
Dallas
1 (20). Jim Farmer, g, Alabama. 2 (24). Steve Alford, g. Indiana 3
(46), Mike Richmond, f. Texas El Paso. 4 (49), David Johnson, I,
Oklahoma. S (113). Sam Hill. I. Iowa Slate. 6 (IJS).o 7 ( ISN). Gerald
White, g, Auburn.
Denver
2 (31). Andre Moore, f. Loyola (III.). 3 (54). Tom Schafer, f. Iowa
Stale 4 177), David Boone, f, Marquette. S (100), Ronnie Grandison,
f. New Orleans. 6 (1331. Kelvin Scarborough, g, New Mexico 7 (146).
Rowan Gomes, c, Hampton Institute. 7 (IS6). Curtis Hunter, g. North
Carolina.
Detroit
2 (34). Freddie Banks, g. Nevada Las Vegas 3 (NS). Eric While, g.
Pepperdlne. 4 (41). David Popson. I, North Carolina. S ( li t ). Gerry
Wright, t. Iowa, d (134), Antoine Joubert. g. Michigan. 7 (IS7). Mark
Gottlried. g. Alabama.
Golden Stale
1 (14), Tellls Frank, f. Western Kentucky. 3 154). Darryl Johnson.
g, Michigan State. 4 (43), Bennie Bolton. I, North Carolina Slate. S
(10S) Terry Williams, f. Southern Methodist. 4 (137). Charunas
Marchulenis, g, Soviet Union. 7 (IS2). Ronnie Leggelte, g. West
Virginia State.
Houston
2 (35) Doug Lee, g. Purdue. 4 (42), Joe Niego, I. Lewis (III.). S
(104), Andre LaFleur, g. Northeastern 6 (129). Fred Jenkins, g.
Tennessee 7 (ISO, Clarence Grier, t, Campbell
Indiana
1 (I I ). Reggie Miller, I g, UCLA. 2 (34). Brian Rowsom. I. North
Larollna-Wilmlngton 3 (40). Sean r mjeh. g, Columbia. 5 (103), Mike
Milling, f. North Carolina Charlotte. 4 (126). Gary Graham, g,
Nevada La» Vegas. 7 (l49),Mont*l Hatcher.g, UCLA
L.A. Clippers
I 14). Reggie Williams, g f. Georgetown. I ( ) ] ) , Joe Woll, t. North
Carolina. I (19), Ken Norman, I, Illinois. 2 (34), Norris Coleman. I,
Kansas State 3 (47), Tim McCalister, g. Oklahoma. S (93). Chad
Kessler, f, Georgia. 6 (116). Marlin Nessley. c. Ouke. 7 (139), Henry
Carr. I, Wichita Stale.

Savages Roll To Tampa Title
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer

l»

001) M* POD IflNi T O+11MAN N

MooOimiri Wort Svp (U
P pm - USA. IAAUSII

liwl'thtnolWm

n* I* IIM

O ff Faulk,
Wins Feature

----- T O N I G H T 'S S C H E D U L E -------

Trimble also tossed a four-hitter.
Seminole then went up against
Manatee Gray in the champion­
ship game and made it five in a
row with a 6-3 victory. Davis,
who was 3 for -I in the game, put
i lie Savages ahead for good with
a two-run homer in the third
inning. Boatwright. Trimble and
Dees contributed two lilts each.
Dees was called up from the
S e m in o le E a g le s fo r th e
tournament along with Sherry
Adams and Tara Caiviii and
those three players will remain
with the team.
"T h e girls have always played
real good defense and did the
same tills weekend." manager
Davis said. "And we worked on
lilt ling last two weeks and the
girls really came through. They
scored -16 runs and had a team
halting average of .430 for the
tournament. It was very gratify­
ing because they had been
holding the opponents but not
scoring runs."
The Savages return to action
Hits weekend at the Conway
T ou rn a m en t.

L.A. Lakers
3 (69), Willi* Glass, f. St. John's. 4 (92), Ralph Talley, g. Norfolk
Stall, i (IIS ), Kenny Travis, g. New Mexico Slat*. 4 ( l i t ) , Frank
Ford, g. Auburn. 7 (141). Ron Vartderschaaf. I. Central Washington.
fWMlw8 uktt
3 (40), Wlnslon Garland, g. Southwest Missouri Stale. 3 (44), J.J.
Weber, f. Wisconsin. 4 (47), Darryl Bedford, f, Austin Peay. S (110),
Brian Vaughns, f, Cal Santa Barbara. 6 (133), Gay Elmore, f,
Virginia Military.
New Jersey
l 13), Dennis Hopson, g. Ohio State. 3 (44). Jamie Waller, g.
Virginia Union. 4 (72), Andrew Motan. g. Florida. S (94), James
Bltckmon. g, Kentucky. 4 (111). Perry Bromwell, g, Penn. 7 (140).
Frank Booker, g. Bowling Green
’ "L* ■
'*'* 1
New York
1 ( I I ) , Mark Jackson, g, SI John’s. 7 (35), Ron Moore. I. West
Virginia State. 3 (49), Jerome Batiste. 1, McNeese State 4 (71). Mike
Morgan, t. Drake 5 (95), Glenn Clem, g, Vanderbilt. 6 (117), Howard
Triche, t. Syracuse. 7 (H I ), Wayne Williams, g. St. Joseph's (Pa I.
Philadelphia
I (16), Christian Welp. c, Washington. 2 (39), Vincent Askew, g.
Memphis Stale 2 (43). Andrew Kennedy, f. Virginia. 3 142). Eric
Riggins. I. Rutgers. 4 (15), Brian Rahllly, t, Tulsa 5 (104), Frank
Ross, g, American 6 (131), Tracy Foster, g. Alabama Birmingham.
7 (154). Eric Semlsch, f. West Virginia.
Phoenix
1 (2), Armon Gilliam, f. Nevada Las Vegas 2 (441, Oruce
Dalrymple. g, Georgia Tech. 3 (53), Winston Crlte. f, Texas AAM 4
(76), Steve Beck, g. Arizona State 5 (99). Brent Counts, t. Pacific. 6
(122), Marcel Boyce, f, Akron 7 (145), Ron Singleton, g, Grand
Canyon
Portland
1 (17), Ronnie Murphy, g, Jacksonville 2 (29). Lester Fonvllle. c.
Jackson Slate. 3 (631, Kevin Gamble, g. Iowa 4 (441. Pee Wee
Barber, f, Florida Slate 5 1109), David Moss. I. Tulsa 4 (133),
Bernard Jackson, g, Loyola (III.). 7 (155), Kenny Stone, I, George
Fox.
Sacramento
I (6). Kenny Smith, g. North Carolina 3 (51) Sven Meyer, f,
Oregon. 4 (74), Joe Arlauckas, I. Niagara. 5 (97), Vernon Carr, g.
Michigan State. 6 (1201. Darryl Thomas, t. Indiana 7 (143), Scott
Adubato, g. Upsala
San Antonio
I (I ) . David Robinson, c, Navy. I (23), Greg Anderson, I, Houston
2 (77), Nate Blackwell, g, Temple. 1 (50). Phil Zevenbergen, f.
Washington. 4 (73), Todd May, t. Plkevllle (K y.) 5 (94), Dennis
William*, g. Georgia 6 (119). Ricky Brown, t. South Alabama 7
(147). Raynard Davis, I, Texas.
SeaDI*
1 (5). Scottle Pippen. g f, Central Arkansas (traded to Chlcaqo) 1
(9), Derrick MeKey, f, Alabama 3 155). Tommy Amaker, g. Ouke 4
(74), Todd Linder, I, Tampa 5 (101), Michael Tall, g. Clemson 6
(124), Tom Gneltlng, t-c, Brigham Young 7 (147), Mike Gloml. t.
North Carolina State
Utah
I (15) Jose Ortli, f. Oregon State. 3 (61), Clarence Martin. I,
Western Kentucky 3 (44), Billy Donovan, g. Providence 4 144),
Reuben Holmes, c, Alabama Stale 5 (107). Bart Koloed. g. Kearney
Stale (Neb ). 6 (130). Art Sabb. g, Bloomfield Stale (N .J.). 7 (153),
Keith Webster, g. Harvard
Washington
1 (12), Tyrone Bogues, g. Wake Forest. 2 (34), Duane Washington,
g. Middle Tennessee. 2 (37), Derrick Dowell, f, Southern Cal 3 (59),
Danny Pearson, g. Jacksonville. 4 (41), Scott Thompson, c, San
Diego 5 (1041, Patrick Fairs, g. Texas 6 (124), Dwayne Scholten. t,’
Washington Slate. 7 (1501, Jamie Dixon, g, Texas Christian

Florida's Newest
Greyhound
Facility.

“ L e t

T h e

W it h J u n i o r S i m m o n s '
Thunderhtrd right nn his back
bumper. Jerry Fitch led every
lap to win the Thunder car
fin a le . F in is h in g th ird was
division's point chase leader
Pete Starr.
Back after a severe crash
nearly destroyed his open wheel
Florida Modified. Ted Hodgdon
won the feature. Tom m y Pat­
terson. a low budget Indepen­
dent. badly in need of a sponsor,
led until half-way and was close
second at the finish. Third was
JciTBlchr.
"T h e largest crowd of the
season p ro m p te d the fourcylinders to put on a whale of a
s h o w ," NSS pu blicist John
Darveau said. "T h ere were sev­
eral lead changes and sparks
(lying on many occasions."
When the smoke cleared. Gene
Van Alstlnc had won another
one. besting Bobby Sears. Bill
Rose and Tom m y Symons.
After a race long battle against
Randy Smathers* Monte Carlo.
Joey Warmack won the street
stock main.
The top Roadrunner finishers
were Wayne Marshall. Tom my
Elliss and Mike Kubanek who
went on to guide Randy Grief to
victory in the Great American
Sack Race.
Detroit Demolition winner was
Peanut Northup.
***
L A T E MODELS
w ilder: David Rogers. Orlando.

Fastest
11.749 sec.
Heat (tolaps) — I Roger*.
Feature (25 laps) — 1. David Roger*.
Orlando: 2. Lee Faulk, Orlando; 3. Joe
Middleton. 5o Daytona. 4. Chris Roberts.
Ormond Beach; 5 Bill Posey, Rockledge; 6.
Hal Parry, Mim s; 7. Don Hassall, So
Daylona; 4. Don Fann. Frullland Park: 9
Buddy Teed. Orlando.
Lap Leader: David Rogen: MS.
THUN D ER CARS
Fastest Q ualifier; Je rry Filch, New
Smyrna Beach, 19.94 sac.
Heat ( I laps) - 1 Fitch.
Feature (20 laps) — I. Jerry Fitch. New
Smyrna Btach; 3. Junior Simmons, Santord;
3. Pete Starr. Rockladge; 4. Gary Adkins.
Orlando; 5. Tim Fuller, Orlando; 4. Granny
Tatroe. Ormond Beech; 7. Darrell Cole,
Daytona Beech; •. Rand Rhodas, Longwood.
9. Eddie Vunk. Apopka; )*, James Carte*.
Lap Leader: Jerry Fitch. I 10
FOUR C YLIN D ER S
Heat (6 laps) — ). Gen* Van Alstine,
Rockledge
Feature (25 laps) — I. Gene Van Alitlne.
Rockledge; 7 Bobby Sears, Osteen. 3 Bill
Rose. Orlando; 4 Tommy Symons. New
Smyrna Beach; 5 Chuck Baker. Orlando; 6
Mike Fitch. Samsula; 7. Billy Hooven,
Orlando. 4. Matt Hrube. Orlando. 9. Jerry
Symons. New Smyrna Beach
lap Leaders: Fitch: 14. G. Symons 5 7.
Fitch: I 17. Van Alstine: 14 25
FLO R ID A M O D IFIED S
Heat (4 laps) — 1. Wray Shafer, Lake
Helen.
..
Feature (17 laps) — 1, Ted Hodgdon,
Oaylona Beach; 2. Tommy Patterson, Scot
tsmoor; 3. Jeff Blehr, Deltona; 4. Jon
Compagnone. Orange City; 5. Steve Prater,
Edgewaler; 6 Wray Shater, Laka Helen; 7
Gary Salvatore. Daytona Beach
S T R E E T STOCKS
Heat 14 laps) — 1 Joey Warmack, Santord.
Feature (12 laps) -— ). Joey Warmack.
Santord; 7. Randy Smathers. Lake Mary; 3
Marc Klnley, Osteen; 4. Johnny Walker.
Orlando, 5. Robert Hopping, Lake Mary; 4
Guy McRoberts. Cocoa. 7, Chuck Green.
Orlando, a. Carl Oillon. Samsula. 9 Kerry
BellFlower, Melbourne.
R O A D R U N N ER !
Heat (6 laps) — ). Mike Kubanek,
Longwood
Feature (10 laps) — 1 Wayne Marshall.
Malabar; 7 Tommy Ellis. Edgewaler; 3.
Mike Kubanek. Longwood; 4 Ricky
Marshall, Malabar; 5. Terry McDade. Lake
Mary. 6 Wayne Parrish, Port Orange; 7
Don Cwen Jr.. DeBary. 4 Chuck Rush, Port
Oranqe; 9 Rosemary Plstor, Deltona
T H E G R E A T AM ER ICAN SACK RACE
I Randy Grief, Driver, Mike Kubanek.
Co pilot. Longwood
D E T R O IT D E M O LITIO N
I. Peanut Northup. Orlando: 2. Brian
Kasky, Daytona Beach.

P r o fe s s io n a ls

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Orlando Jai-Alai Now Open
!^ j\ E N T

(3 0 5 ) 6 9 9 -4 5 1 0

P la y th e S u p e rfe c ta

323-2229

P h O f lS

C o n ta ct Pete or Terry Echols

Table or Dining Reservation*

It”

E C H O L S T R E E S E R V IC E

2405 Grandview Avenue
Sanford, FL 32771

M.itmees: 1:00 Mon . Itiurs, &amp; Sat.
Nithlly: 7:45 P M. (Except Sun )

D o

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10A-S*itf«rd HtraM, Sanford, FI.

Twoodsy, Juno 23, 1M7

Trading Active, Stocks Higher
NEW YORK (UPI) — Prices opened higher
Tuesday In active trading of New York Stock
Exchange issues.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose
24.66 to a third-consecutive new high of 2445.51
Monday, was up 5.70 to 2451.21 shortly after the
market opened.
Advances led declines 536-419 among the
1,398 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
.
Early turnover amounted to about 19.180.000
shares.
Stock prices continued their advance Monday
as buyers returned to equities after two weeks of
hesitation, sending the blue-chip Dow Jones
Industrial average deeper Into record territory.

Locol Interest
These quotations provided by

m e m b e rs o f th e N a tio n a l
Association of Securities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
prices as of mid-morning today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.
Bid Ask
American Pioneer
6%
7*4
Barnett Bank
37*4 38
26&gt;/4 26*1
First Union
Florida Power
3 l'/ 4
&amp; Light
31%
Fla. Progress
35 V* 31*i
45V*
MCA
44 hi
267k 27
Hughes Supply
30V* 30*4
Morrison’s
78'/* 78*i
NCR Corp
35*4 36'/*
Plcssey
13*4
14
Scotty's
28 V* 287*
Southeast Bank
24*4 25
SunTrust
Walt Disney World 72V* 72%
6 6 '/4
66*.
Westlnghousc

NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
Tuesday:
Gold

London
Previous close 438.00 off 11.50
Morning fixing
438.10
up
0

1

Hong Kong

438.75 off 5.75

New York
Comex spot
gold open
Comex spot
sliver open

438.30
6.72

up 0.90
up

0.01

(L o n d o n m o r n in g f ix in g
change Is based on the previous
day's closing price.)

D o w Jones

Dow Jones Averages — 10:00

30
20
15
65

Indus 2450.41
Trans 1030.44
U tila
206.47
Stock
916.05

Dollar Opens Higher;
Gold, Silver Mixed
By United Press International
The dollar opened higher on
all major world money markets
Tuesday, climbing to its highest
level In Japun In more than 11
weeks. The price of gold was
mixed.
Traders in New York cited the
continuing turnaround In the
U.S. trade deficit, dampening of
in fla tio n e x p e c ta tio n s and
possible foreign demand for
dollars ahead of the Treasury's
mini-refunding as reasons for
the dollar's strength.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, the dollar strengthened
against the Japanese yen In
active trading on the Tokyo
foreign exchange market, clos­

up
4.90
up
3.24
. o f f 0.29
up
1.45

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
United States' foreign debt more
than doubled In 1986 to reuch
$263.6 billion, more than the
next three mast debt-ridden na­
tions combined, the Commerce
Department said today.
The United States showed a
surplus In its Net International
Investment Position until 1985.
when It slipped $111.9 billion
Into the red. That marked the
first time since 1919 that foreign
Interests owned more In the
United States than Americans
owned abroad, the Commerce
Department said.
With today's report, the U.S.
debt dwarfs even Its closest
rivals.
The developing world's biggest
debtor. Brazil, stands far behind
at $108.8 billion. Add No. 3
Mexico at $101.6 billion and
Argentina's $51 billion debt to
Brazil's and the total still Is

W ORLD
INBRIEF
Syrians Set Sundown Deadline
For Release O f Three Hostages
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — The Syrian command
demanded the release of American Journalist Charles Glass
and the son of Lebanon's defense minister by sundown
today and warned measures "o th e r than peaceful
negotiations" would be adopted If the hostages were not
freed.
The ultimatum coincided with reports Syria had
mobilized Its troops In the Syrian-controlled Bckaa Valley
In eastern Lebanon, In apparent preparation for a possible
military confrontation, a security source said.
"T h e kidnappers have until sundown to release their
hostages, otherwise we will change our methods." said a
senior Syrian military source who requested anonymity.

Korean Peace Meetings Set
SEOUL, South Korea (UPI) — The Reagan administra­
tion's top Aslan trouble-shooter arrived today to assess
Korea's political crisis and President Chun Doo Hwan
offered to meet a key opposition leader Wednesday to
discuss ending two weeks of anti-government riots.
Yonhap.News Agency reported.
Yonhap said Chun Invited Kim Young-sain to meet him
Wednesday morning and planned to see Lee Mln-woo and
Lee Man-sup, heads of two splinter groups. In the
afternoon.
Kim has demanded as a precondition to a meeting with
Chun that the government lift the tight house arrest
Imposed April 8 on top dissident Kim Dae Jung and free all
those arrested In two weeks of anti-government protests.

2 Injured, 6 Missing In Collision
ROUEN. France (UPI) — Two tunkers collided today on
the Seine River near Rouen, setting ofT an explosion and
fire and Injuring two crew members. Police said six other
people were missing.
Police said the 14.000-ton Japanese ship Fuyoh Maru
had delivered a load of kerosene and was heading for
Rouen. 70 miles northeast of Paris, when It struck the
16.000-ton Panamanian ship Vittoria. The Vlttoria had
unloaded Its cargo of kerosene In Rouen.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Rational Hospital
Monday
ADMISSIONS
Sanford:
Valeria T. Bockus
Hot* rt R. Don lay
Wan Ila Robinson
Soian A. Combi. Do IIona

ing at 146.60 yen. up 1.30 trom
Monday's close.
It was the first time since April
6 the dollar broke the 146-yen
barrier.
Traders In Japun said dollar
purchases by life Insurance
com p an ies and other large
market players set the pace early
In the day. but profit-tuklng and
buyer cautiousness slowed the
dollar's climb In late trading.
In European trading, the dollar
opened In Frankfurt at 1.844
German marks, up from Mon­
day's close of 1.8353.
The dollar opened In Zurich at
1.533 Swiss francs. up from
1.5275 and In Paris at 6.151
French francs, up from 6.1305.

Foreign Debt, Inflation Rise

Gold And Silver

0

Most analysts and traders said they expect the
market to move high'” at least through the next
two weeks as investors that hung back during the
Venice economic summit earlier this month and
the week leading up to last Friday's "triple­
witching hour" return to the market.
Monte Gordon, research director of Dreyfus
Corp.. said Monday's strong showing w'as a
continuation of the trend over the last ten days.
"T h e interesting thing now is the awareness of
the strength that Is In there." Gordon said.
"T h e hey Is a sense of stability." he said.
"T h ere’s a sense that the dollar Is stable: there's
no Indication that interest rates are going to Jump
or that there's going to be any change In
monetary policy.

Clarlnda V. Koach. Deltona
Joseph R. Paine. Deltona
Jakob Rosenrwelg. Deltona
Andrew Siopo. Deltona
DISCHARGES
Sanlord:
Helen F Crawford
Chariot G. Stone. Laughman

smaller than the United States'
debt.
The average American's life Is
not felt by foreign debt but were
affected by prices ut the retail
level which rose 0.3 percent in
May. However, the pace of Infla­
tion slowed slightly from the
three previous months, the gov­
ernment said Tuesday.
The Labor Department said a
0.9 percent increase (n grocery
prices was the biggest onemonth hike since last August,
with beef and pork prices rising
by 3.1 percent and 2.0 percent,
and fruit and vegetable prices
rising 1.4 percent for tbe month.
The May increases for apparel,
transportation and bousing, a
big reason for higher inflation In
the past few months, were the
smallest so far this year, with
clothing prices rising only 0.2
percent after Increases of 1.5
percent and 1.7 percent.

IN THE
SERVICE
TIMOTHY J. RICHARDSON
Marine Lance CpI. Timothy J.
Richardson, son of Dale F. Rich­
ardson of Sanford, recently re­
ported for duty with 2nd Marine
Aircraft Wing. Marine Corps Air
Station New River, Jacksonville,
N.C.
A 1982 graduate of Seminole
High School, he Joined the
Marine Corps in December 1985.

»- =0*»«

SR 46 Avoided In Consultant's
Suggestion For Western Beltway
T h e c o n s u ltin g e n g in e e r
charged with studying align­
ments for a western expressway
from O rlan d o to S e m in o le
County via Luke County Monday
recommended avoiding the State
Road 46 corridor In favor of an
abandoned railroad right-of-way.
Three other proposed western
routes remain.'though only one
of the three is conslderd an
adequate choice by the consul­
tants. tbe committees studying
them and the Florida Depart­
ment of Transportation. The
consultant, committee members
and the DOT are "very much"
against a SR 46 route, said
G e r a ld B r ln to n . S e m in o le
County Expressway Authority
technical committee director.
Tbe Orlando-Orange County
Expressway Authority Is the
lead agency for the western
beltway, envisioned as a limited
access hi ghway running
northward from State Road 50
through the cities of Ocoee and
Apopka In northwest Orange
County, to Mount Plymouth in
east Lake County. From Mount
Plymouth, the beltway extends
eastward to 1-4.
The route receiving the top
recommendations starts In Lake
County and ties In with the east

Lake County corridor Just west
of County Road 433. From this
point, the route turns southeast
and fo llo w s an ab an d on ed
railroad rlght-oPway. South of
Wrklva Falls resort, the route
turns east Into Seminole County
and extends south of Markham
Road o v erp a ssin g Markham
Woods Road and County Road
431. From there, the route turns
n o rth e a s t and fo llo w s the
abandoned railroad right of way
to an Interchange with 1-4.
By this route no more than
four homes would have to be
removed and a total of 24 ucres
of wetlands near the Weklva
River affected, according to Mark
Callahan, o f Greiner Engineer­
ing. Callahan Is the western
beltway coordinator.
The construction cost of the
7.32 miles through Seminole
County Is estimated at 845
million, the least expensive of
the eight routes Initially under
c o n sid era tio n , a c c o rd in g to
Callahan's report to authority
mem tiers.
The other western beltway
alignment considered a good
c h o ice by con su lta n ts and
committee members also ties In
with the cast Lake County corri­
dor west of CR 433 and turns

Tax Arguments
Uncover Issue
T A L L A H A S S E E ( UP I ) Whether constitutional problems
w ith In d ividu al tax breaks
should invalidate all of Florida's
new consumer services tax law
has emerged as a major new
legal Issue In the debate over the
tax.
.
Lawyers on both sides of the
bix debate clashed on the point
during six hours of oral argu­
m e n ts b e fo r e th e F lo r id a
Supreme Court Monday.
At Issue were certain exemp­
tions In the law extending tbe 5
percent stale sales lax to law­
yers' fees, newspaper sales,
advertising and other services.
Lawyers opposing the lax lawsaid that If state courts find any
individual tax break unconstitu­
tional. I be entire lax law- should
be declared Invalid and tbe $750
m illio n in e x t r a r e v e n u e
expected from the tax during the
1987-88 budget year should go
Lawyers for state oITIrlals de­
fending the tax said slate courts
should only strike the un­
constitutional exemption, not
tbe entire tax. That approach
would mean additional lax reve­
nues for the slate.
The seven Justices sharply
questioned lawyers on both sides
of the debate during the argu­
ments. but they gave no clear
Indication where they stood on
the Issue.
The high court agreed In May
to Issue a special advisory opi­
nion on the law-'s constitutionali­
ty. after Gov. Hob Martinez said
be needed to know how likely
the tax law was to withstand
court challenges.
Alan Su ndbcrg. a form er
Supreme Court chief Justice rep­
r e s e n t i n g M a r t i n e z , s a id
lawmakers specifically stipu­

...Land
Continued from page 1A
that the city has been forced Into by the
Federal Department of Environmental Regu­
lation The city Is using Lake Monroe for the
dumping of 5 million gallons a day of
treated effluent and the DER has given until
1989 for the city to have another system on
line to handle that capacity. If the city
doesn't stop dumping into Lake Monroe bv
that time than it may face up to $I0.(XX) a
day In fines and a moratorium forbidding
construction that would tap into the city's
sewer system.
The Sanford Airport Is part of tentative

—Ted Carter

...Reagan
Continued from page 1A

lated that If the courts found any
exem ptions unconstitutional,
the services they cover should
simply be dropped from the sales
tax list.
"T h e tux remains and the
exemption falls." Sundberg said.
But Parker Thomson, a Miami
lawyer representing The Miami
Hcruld Publishing Co., said that
sort of stipulation Is unconstitu­
tional. .
Lawyers representing news­
papers and iidvertislng trade
groups criticized the law for
exempting groups that advertise
In periodicals published by re­
ligious. charitable and non-profit
organizations.
Thomson said those exemp­
tions are unconstitutional and
that ought to void tbe entire
services tax. " I f the exemption is
unconstitutional, the tax falls,
not the •exemption.” Thomson
said.
•
J u stice R osem ary Burkett
questioned lawyers defending
the lax the most severely.
Burkett asked about tbe legit­
im acy o f the tax break lor
religious publications and the
propriety of the court trying to
Include federal constitutional
questions In the advisory opi­
nion.
"Perhaps we ought to give
(Martinez) advice about a lot of
other other things as w ell."
Barked said.
hut Justices Raymond Ehrlich.
S t e p h e n G r im e s an d Ben
Overton bad pointed questions
for tax opponents.
Tbe three at times appeared
skeptical about tbe lawyers'
claims that the tax would un­
c o n stitu tio n a lly In frin ge on
Floridians' right to free speech
and access to courts.

plans to handle 3 million treated gallons
which would be sprayed via a sprinkler
system on airport grounds. Other properties
in tbe scheme to handle (lie rest ol the
capacity Include eily ball and the Mayfair
Country Club. The Federal Aviation Ad­
ministration is investigating the city's
purposed system for llie airport and they
have expressed concern about Interference
the ellluent might pose in aviation activity.
Sanford Engineer Bill Simmons bus said
that the main reason for wanting (he
additional 2.2(H) acres was for contingencies
in case the airport is deemed unsuitable by
tlie FAA: and also as a plan for future
growth.
Tbe properly is located east of Lake Jesup
and south of Slate Road 46 and Is owned bv

southeast to follow the aban­
doned railroad right-of-way.
South o f Weklva Falls resort, the
route turns to the east and
crosses the Weklva River. ,It
continues east Into Seminole
C ou n ty and runs south to
M arkham Road. Near Lake
M a r k h a m R o a d . It t u r n s
northeast to overpass Markham
Road In the vicinity of the
Seminole Soccer Club. Then it
f o l l o w s the a b a n d o n e d
right-of-way to the cast. From
there, it continues east, crosses
County Road 431 and follows
the abandoned railroad right o f
way loun Interchange with 1-4.
This route would cover 7.3
miles through Seminole County,
displace 17 single-family dwell­
ings and cost an estimated $48
million to build, according to
Callahan's report.
The environmental committee
for the western beltway Is still
stu d yin g the environm ental
Impacts of all eight proposed
routes.
The first leg of the western
beltway from SR 50 to the
Apopku area is planned as a toll
facility. Whether tolls would be
charged for the remainder of the
beltway has yet to be decided.

hot dogs, and soft drinks were In
abundance.
"T h is Is the most excitement
Melbourne has had for some
time." said Marieda MacKenzIe.
Rita Woodard of Palm Bay
brought her I I- and 9-year-old
boys to the event, hoping to
expose* them to the excitement
of a presidential visit.
"T h is Is a chance to see a little
history." she said. "It boosts the
local moral a lot."
Robert Cox Sr. said. "It's not
every day a president comes to a
small town. There’s only 40 of
them, and we got one."
J a c k i e Dunl ap Joined.
Dictaphone Corp. a week ago
from a Chicago steel company,
and today admitted the change
in Jobs was probably for the best.
"It's exlcillng. I came from a
steel company to come down
here with all this high-tech, and
then to have something like this
hapipen. It makes me feel it was
a good move' "

...Probe
Continued from page 1A
effluent program, hut was offer­
ing a lower price.
Besides the profit Pauluccl
made on the transaction, he
received a county guarantee that
he would receive sewage treat­
ment capacity he needs as he
develops the area.
Wolflngcr said earlier that he
asked Martinez to have someone
look into the issue to once and
for all end the controversy. He
said the questions raised by
critics of tbe purchase should be
resolved. But. because of ac­
cusations. counter accusations
and suspicions, it should be
investigated and resolved by the
governor's office.

.i consortium of owners called the Lake
Jesup Joint Venture.
Mercer raised further objection because,
lie said, the DER hasn't yet stipulated how
many gallons of ellluent would be permitted
on the 2.2(H) acres.
Commissioner A.A. McClanahan said that
the city has to have a site for the effluent.
"Tim e Is of the essence." he said. "T ills is
a bigger problem then a lot of people realize.
W e’ve already spent 850.000 on studies and
I think It is time to get off the dime and
move on It."
Mayor Bcitye Smith said the commission
lias been looking for solutions to the
problem for two years and none have yet
been found.
—Brian Sullivan

AREA DEATHS
MICHAEL BEDENBAUGH
Mr. M ichael Dean Bedcnbaugh. 28. of 108 S. Holly Ave..
Sanford, died Sunday as the
result o f a drow ning while
swimming In the Weklva River.
He was u lifelong resident of
Sanford. He was a carpenter and
a member of Sanford Congrega­
tional Church. He was a Marine
veteran and a member of the
Demolay, Sanford.
Survivors Include ills parents.
Jam es and Judith, Sanford:
daughter. Melody. Casselberry:
three brothers. Larry Gene. De­
ltona. Danny Gene. Phoenix.
Arlz.. and James Earl. Appleton.
Wls.
G ra m k o w F u n eral H om e.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

GUY H. DUFFEY
Mr. Guy H. Duffcy. 54. 761
Crestvlew Drive. Casselberry.

died Sunday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Born Sept.
20. 1932 In LaGrange. Ga.. he
m oved to C asselberry from
Atlanta in 1945. He was a retired
mobile home salesman. He was a
member of Veterans of Foreign
Wars. Casselberry.
S u rv iv e s include his wife.
Bc i t y e ; son . R ex P ie r c e .
Longwood: daughter. Shawn
Swenson. North Carolina: father.
Leon P „ Casselberry: brother.
Rudolph . Sanford: two grand­
children.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary. In charge of arrange­
ments.
IRENE GOLDBERG
Mrs. Irene Goldberg. 85. of 316
Heather Ave.. Longwood. died
Saturday at Florida HospitalAltamonte. Born Dec. 23. 1901
in R u s s ia , s h e m o v e d to
Longwood from Miami In 1982.
She was a homemaker and was

Jewish. She was a member of
the Democratic Committee.
Survivors Include two daugh­
ters. Lillian Adclson. Longwood.
S ylvia Stone. Surfslde: four
g r a n d c h ild r e n ; on e g re a tgrandson.
Beth Shalom Memorial Cha­
pel Orlando. In charge of ar­
rangements.

Funeral Notices
MARION. NORINE C.
— Funeral services for M ri Norlne C.
Morion. 86. of M1I Dixie Way. Sanford, who
died Thursday, will be held 12.30 p m
Saturday at St. Paul Missionary Baptist
Church with the Rev Amos C. Jones
officiating Viewing will bo 4 f p m . Friday.
Burial will be In Resllawn Cemetery Sunrise
Funeral Homo in chargeol arrangements
B E D EN BA UG H , M IC H A E L 0.
— Funeral services for Michael Dean
Bedenbaugh. 28. of Sanford, who died Sun
day. will be II a m Wednesday at Gramkow
Funeral Home chapel with the Rev. Fred L.
Neal of lie la ting. Friends may call at
Gramkow Funeral Home tonight (Tuesday)

68 p m For those who wish, friends are
asked to consider memorial contributions to
the Special Olympics. Arrangomenls by
Gramkow Funeral Homo, Sanford
M ARLIN E. CARROLL
— Memorial services for Mr. Marlin E.
Carroll. 73. of IIS Zenith Point, Geneva, who
died Friday, will be held 4 pm . Thursday at
Wilson Eichelberger chapel. HIO Pino Ave ,
Sanford, with the Rev James H. Browdy
officiating Interment to follow In Genova
Cemetery. Wilson Eichelberger Mortuary In
charge.
REDDICK. REBECCA F.
— Funeral services for Mrs. Rebecca F.
Reddick. 82. of 603 Avocado Ave.. Cocoa, who
died Wednesday, will be held l l a m . Sunday
at the Church of God. 708 Magnolia St.,
Cocoa, with the Rev. Tomas Eaton, pastor in
charge Interment to follow In Restlawn
Cemetery, Sanford Calling hours for friends
will be held 47 p m Saturday at the chapel
and Irom 9 a m until service time Sunday at
the church.

I C R E M A T IO N SPECIALISTS I

O A K L A W N
FUNERAL HOME &amp;
PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER
322-4203

Bat. 1054

The wUy r»&lt;M,j&lt; Mm h CwWey Umimtit

I

�^ ^ T v * *

« * - •* i r r r t r * * ^ |

PEOPLE
S a n fo rd H o ra M , Sa n fo rd , F I.

T u t s d o y , Ju no 2), 1 9 9 7 -1 B

Sleeping Quarters Are Too
Close For Mom's Comfort
DEAR ABBT: My ex-husband
Is planning a weekend at his
cabin with his fiancee, and he's
taking our 16-year-old son along
to meet this woman for the first
time. I brought up the subject of
their sleeping arrangements,
suggesting to my " e x " that he
and his lady-friend sleep apart at
the cabin.
1 told him that I had raised our
son to respect women and have
high moral standards, and for
him to be sleeping with this
women to whom he Is not yet
married would be setting a very
poor example for our son.
He was not very receptive to
my suggestions and told me 1
should not try to Inflict my
"old-fashioned" moral values on
our son. How about It? Am I
being old-fashioned?
A MOTHER FIRST
DEAR MOTHER: Not In my
book. If your " e x ” chooses to
Ignore the fact that he Is giving
his 16-year-old son the message
that sex before marriage Is OK.
unfortunately, there Is nothing
you can do about It. Since your
son Is living with you. let's hope
your values and the example
you have set for him over the
years will have a greater Influ­
ence on his character than his
father's.
DEAR ABBY: I Just read your
le t t e r fro m " H e a r t b r o k e n
Grandpa In Kansas" and am
moved to write to you. You sec. I
also have a 4-month-old baby
whom I frequently lay on my
waterbed for naps. Although my
husband has questioned the

Dear
Abby
wisdom o f this practice. I saw no
harm.
I consider myself a conscien­
tious mother who would never
put her child In danger. I read
every article on child rearing,
and diligently follow all saety
precautions. Never have I heard
a warning to waterbed owners.
In fact, 1 have seen cribs on the
m arket with waterbed m at­
tresses.
"Grandpa." I grieve for your
loss as If it were my own. It very
well could have been. Please
know that I am sending copies of
that Dear Abby column to my
friends who own waterbeds and
to parenting magazines I read
frequently. Be assured there will
be one hanging In my pediatri­
cian's office. I pray that you and
your faintly will learn to live
with your loss. Thank you for
preventing mine.

SAFER HI BAN DIEGO
DEAR SAFER: Yours was one
o f m an y letters I received
thanking "G ran d p a" for hts
valuable letter. Please let me
repeat that the 4-month-old
grandchild was found face down,
asphyxiated on a waterbed. was
dressed In a bunting suit and
was unable to free his arms or
legs to lift himself to breathe.

DEAR ABBY: As the wife of a
compulsive gambler. I read with
great Interest your reply to the
women who corriplalned about
her hu sband s p e n d in g th e
welfare check on lottery tickets.
You were right! The man Is a
com pulsive gam bler. Recom ­
mending Gamblers Anonmyous
could save their marriage.
H o w e v e r , w h e t h e r the
husband attends G.A. or not. the
wife should attend Gam-Anon to
learn the following:
1. How to protect herself and
her children financially, for If
she doesn't, the results can be
devastating.
•
2. W hy she remains In a
relationship with a compulsive
gambling man. which Is clearly
self-destructive behavior.
3. How she can help her
husband stop gambling.
4. How to find the serenity,
courage and w isdom to do
whatever Is necessary to "swim
alongside him " If he sincerely
tries to stop gambling, but refuse
to "d ro w n ” with him If he
doesn't.
A GAM-ANON MEMBER.
N.JIELLMORE. N.Y.
DEAR READERS: I need your
cooperation for an Important
survey.
Q u estion : H ave you e v e r
cheated on your mate? How long
have you been together?
You need not sign your name,
but please state your age. and
Indicate whether you arc male or
female. Send letter or postcard
to: Abby's Survey. P.O. Box
69440, L o s A n g e le s , C alif.
90069.

TO N IG H T'S TV
7 O SPENSER: FOR HIRE Former
clems accuse Spenser ol blackmail

5:45
O J ' BEFORE HOURS

(R) Q
l i (11) INN NEWS
ED (10) BIRTH OF THE BOMB
(D (I) DISCOVER PANTRON I

EVENING

6:00

10.30

0 4 S O 7 O NEWS
I I (11) GIMME A BREAK
ED (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
(D (!) GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO

J! (11) BOB NEWHART
IT MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Atlanta Braves at Los Angeles Dodg­
e's (Live)
(D (I) TONY RANDALL

6:05

O 4 S O 7 ONEW S
JS (11) LATE SHOW Guest host
Maicoim-Jamai Warner (In Stereo)
ED (10) MONTY PYTHON S FLYING
CIRCUS
CD (I) HOME SHOPPING NET­
WORK

It GILLIOAN S ISLAND

6:30
0 4 NBC NEWS
1 O CBS NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS Q
M (11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT

6*35
It LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

7:00
0 4 NEWLYWED GAME
1 O PM MAGAZINE
7 O JE0PAR0YI Q
I I (11) BARNEY MILLER
ED (10) NATURE OF THINGS
CD (I) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
0ISNEY Davy Crockett * Keeiooat
Race WJy n.erman V »e Fna (j«t»
York) coo* Da.y (Fe*s Parker) and
0i* vdekick Georgia (Buddy Ebsen)
•nto faeng him ooah ths M ss&lt;svdp«
to Ne* Orleans

7:05
it SANFORD AND SON

7:30
0
1
7
IS

4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
O DATING GAME
O WHEEL OF FORTUNE Q
(11) BENSON

7:35
it HONEVMOONERS

6:00
O 4 MATLOCK A pooular actor .*
accused of mun^nng hi* therapist
|R) (In Stereoi
} O WIZARD Secret agents p&lt;ot to
undermine an intemat.ooai peace
conference (R)
7 O WHO S THE BOSS? Tony dis­
covers a pre*iOoSiy onhno*n facet of
hi$ late Aifes persona ty (R) (in
Stereo) Q
1! (11) MOVIE Bniy Jack (1971)
TomLaughlin. Delores Ta.ior AnetGreen Be&gt;et cnampons me cause of
a freedom school for runaways on an
Arizona Indian reservation
CD (10) NOVA An eiamnation ol the
reasons for leprosy * continued c«
'stereo despite the fac* mat a cure
for the disease has been known for
Over 40 years (R) Q
CD (I) MOVIE indiscreet' (1950)
Cary Grant. Ingrid Bergman A rich
American and a European actress
fait m love although he claims to be
married

11:00

11:30
O
4 TONIGHT SHOW Host
Johnny Carson Scheduled musical
grouo Crosby. Stills 0 Nash, comic
actor-filmmaker Mel Brooks (In
Stereo)
S O M ' A ’ S’ H
7 O NIGHTLINE □
ED (10) STAR HUSTLER

a

6:00

4 NBC NEWS
,r
SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
7 o DAYBREAK
31(1*) GOOD DAY!
II CNN NEWS
CD (■&gt; HOME SHOPPING

a

6:30

a

4 NEWS
S O CBS MORNING NEWS
Jf (11) CENTURIONS
)7 TOM A JERRY AND FRIENDS

6:45
O) (10) A.M. WEATHER

7:00
0 4 TODAY
S O CBS MORNING NEWS
.7 O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
3S (11) a.l. JOE
CD (10) READING RAINBOW

7:30
1 O MORNING PROGRAM
3S (11) TRANSFORMERS
CD (10) SESAME STREET

8:00
)S (11) OENNIS THE MENACE

12:00
5 O T.J. HOOKER Stacy goes un­
dercover as a masseuse to infiltrate
a prostitution rng IR)
7 O NIGHTLIFE Host David Bren­
ner Guests recording artist Joe
Jackson, author Kaiky Friedman
( Greenwich Kilting Time") (R) (in
Stereo)
IS (11) ASK DR. RUTH
CD (0) HOME SHOPPING

12:30
O 4 LATE NIOHT WITH OAVIO
LETTERMAN Scheduled former
NY Yankees outfielder Mickey Mantie. storyteller Jackie Torrence (in
Stereo)
7 O MOVIE Moses (1970) Bud
Lancaster, ingnd Thukn
IS (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

o

1:10

S
MOVIE Enchanted" (1903)
Julius Hams Will Sennet!
17 MOVIE Genghis Khan' (1965)
Omar Shanf. Stephen Boyd

1:30
JS (11) BIZARRE

1:45
7 O MOVIE Judgement ol Solo­
mon"

2:00
IS (11) DUKES OF HAZZARO

2:30
S a NEWS |R)

3:00
J 1O NIGHTWATCH
CD a MOVIE "On the Riviera"
(1951) Danny Kaye. Gene Tierney
IS (11) BJ / LOBO

8:05
,17 I OREAM OF JEANNIE

8:30
3S (It) FUNTSTONES
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS

8:35
tl BEWITCHED

9:00

O 4 DIVORCE COURT
S O DONAHUE
7 O OPRAH WINFREY
JS (11) GREEN ACRES
CD (10) SESAME STREET

9:05
17 DOWN TO EARTH

9:30

a

4 LOVE CONNECTION
IS (11) PETTICOAT JUNCTION
9:35
17 MOVIE (FRI) '
t7 HAZEL (MON-THU)

10:00

a

4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
S O HOUR MAGAZINE
7 O TRUE CONFESSIONS
IS (I I ) FALL GUY
CD (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO

10:05
17 MOVIE (MON-THU)

10:30
a 4 CLASSIC CONCENTRATION
7 O SUPERIOR COURT
CD (10) INNOVATION (FRI)
CD (10) WILD AMERICA (MON)
CD (10) PROFILES OF NATURE
(TUI)
CD (10) PHENOMENAL WORLD
(WED)
CD (10) NEWTON’S APPLE (THU)

3:40
MAX-Craay About The
* Movies: Grace
Kelly on CINEMAX
_________________ CINEMAX

U WORLD AT LAROE

4:00
Aa,

3$ (11) DALLAS
U GUNSMOKE

8:05

4:40

it MOVIE Flying Leathernecks
(1951) John Wayne Rooert Ryan A
tougn Marine commander Ires to
show hs men that tWc-piine i* the
key to survival on me oamefe'd

J . O MOVIE ' intermezzo ’ (1939)
ingnd Bergman Leslie Howard

WEDNESDAY

11:00
O 4 SCRABBLE
S O PRICE IS RIGHT
7 O WHO S THE BOSS?
IS (11) CHIPS
CD (10) SURVIVAL SPECIAL (FRI)
CD (10) IN SEARCH OF THE TRO­
JAN WAR (MON)
CD (10) LIVING WILD (TUE)
CD (10) NATURE OF THINOS
(WED)
CD (10) NOVA (THU)

8:30

7 O GROWING PAINS M »e pe
evea mat zr crorury store has
magical powers |R) Q

9:00
O 4 MOVIE City Killer ' (1964)
Gerald McRaney Heather L xkiear
A dstur&amp;ed Army demo! tons eipert
terrorizes the woman who rejects
han, and a whole oty when he tries
to wo her respect by blowing up off­
ice Duiuings |R) (in Stereo) Q
5 O MOVIE \ Summer to Re­
member'' (19051 James Farentino
Tess Harper Us-ng s-gn language, a
deaf boy communicates w.tn a
traned orangutan and establishes a
unique and loving teutonsrvo with
the arunai ,Rj Q
7
MOONLIGHTING A con art St
(Whoopi Goldberg) trying to evade a
Dunco investigator nadvertent'y
sa.es me i&gt;fe of a po-t-oan (R) Q
ED (10) COMMANOERS

a

10:00

P

MORNING

.7

a

5:00
GUNS OF WILL SONNETT

(THU)
3$ (11) CNN NEWS
t; MARY TYLER MOORE (FRIWED)

5:10
tl WORLD AT LARGE (THU)

5:15
O 4 2 S COUNTRY (FRI. TUETHU)
0 4 THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
MUSIC (MON)

a

11:30

O 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
) O WEBSTER

5:30

S
LOVE YOUR SKIN (FRI)
1 O CAN YOU BE THINNER?
(TUE)
7 O LOVE YOUR SKIN (FRL THU)
7 O LEARN TO REAO (TUE)
IS (t l) CNN NEWS
1? BOB NEWHART

AFTERNOON

0

o

12:00

O

4 s
?
NEWS
) ! (11) BEWITCHED
CD (10) UPSTAIRS. OOWNSTAiRS
(FRI)
CD (10) BERGERAC (MON)
CD (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
CD (10) MVSTERTI (WEO)
CD (10) ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL II (THU)
17 PERRY MASON (MON)

12:05
17 PERRY MASON (FRI, TUE-THU)

a

12:30
4 WORDPLAY

S O YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS
7 O LOVING
IS ( I t ) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

1:00
O 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
? O ALL MY CHILDREN
IS (11) DICK VAN DYKE
CD(10) WE RE COOKINQ NOW
17 NBA DRAFT (MON)

Mimosa Circle of the Garden Club of
Sanford Inc. selected the home and grounds
of M r. and M rs. W .T . Stapleton, 202
Bradshaw Drive, Sanford, for the Garden of
the Month award for June. M rs. J .R .
Hoolehan and Mrs. W .L. Swain made the
selection based on the unique yard. The

Stapletons have grown podacarpus in un­
usual shapes since 1959. Stapleton waters a
clipped podacarpus and privet hedge en­
circling a rain tree in the front yard. In
addition to the well-trimmed shrubs, blood
lilies, day lilies, hydrangeas and roses are in
full bloom.

Coretta King G uest Speaker
A t 1987 Volunteer Conference
"Foundations for the Future"
Is the theme of the 1987 Na­
tional Volunteer Conference be­
ing sponsored by Volunteer —
The Natlonul Center. The con­
ference Is scheduled for June
21-24 al the StoufTer Orlando
Resort in Orlando. Major plenary
speakers Include Coretta Scott
King; Richard Schubert, presi­
dent of the American Red Cross;
Arthur White, president of the
n lfc r J a m e s , c u ltu r a l a n ­
thropologist.
The conference will focus on

I I MOVIE (FRI. TUE-THU)

1:30
S O BOLD AND THE BEAUTIFUL
IS (11) F-TROOP
CD (10) FLORIDA HOMEGROWN
(FRI)
CD (10) NEW SOUTHERN COOK­
ING (MON)
CD (10) FRENCH CHEF (TUE)
CD(10) JUSTIN WILSON S LOUIS­
IANA COOKIN’ • OUTDOORS
(WEO)
CD (10) WOODWRIGHT'S SHOP
(THU)

2:00
O 4 ANOTHER WORLD
S. O AS THE WORLD TURNS
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
« (11) ANDY GRIFFITH
CD (10) MAGIC OF PAINTING
KEEPSAKES (FRI)
CD (10) ART IS FUN (MON)
CD (10) JOY OF PAINTING (TUE)
CD (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(WED)
CD(10) MAGIC OF FLORAL PAINT­
ING (THU)

2:30
N

2:35
J t WOMANWATCH (FRI)

3:00

O 4 SANTA BARBARA
if ) O GUIDING UGHT
CD O GENERAL HOSPITAL
j f ( I I ) SCOOBY OOO
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS

3:05
.17 TOM t JERRY ANO FRIENOS

3:30
jS (11) SMURFS
CD (10) SESAME STREET

4:00

a 4 MAGNUM. P.l.
,J O STAR TREK
,T O JEOPARDY!
j f (11) THUNDERCATS

4:05
.tl FUNTSTONES

4:30
,7 0 CARO SHARKS (MON. WEOTHU)
j f (11) SILVERHAWKS
CD (10) REAL A0VENTURES
SHERLOCK JONES ANO PROC­
TOR WATSON (FRI)
CD (10) REAL AOVENTURES OF
SHERLOCK JONES ANO PROC­
TOR WATSON (MON-TUE. THU)
CD (10) REAL AOVENTURES OF
SHERLOCK HOLMES ANO PROC­
TOR WATSON (WEO)

4:35
.17 FUNTSTONES

a

Garden O f The Month

Issues facing communities today
Including aging. AIDS, children
and youth, employment, home­
lessness and hunger, substance
abuse, new Immigrant groups,
p h y s i c a l l y and me n t a l l y
challenged, literacy and racial
and ethnic relations. Specially
designed Issues sessions on
Monday will feature both experts
In each o f the fields as well as
panel discussions combined w|th

5:00

4 JUOGE
S' O M*A*S*H
'%r O CARO SHARKS (FRI. TUE)
.7 u H J l LYWOOO SC.UARE3
(MON. WED-THU)
j f (11) FACTS OF LIFE
CD (10) READINQ RAINBOW
(D (•) SHE RA PRINCESS OF
POWER

5:05
17 ROCKY ROAO (FRI)
17 AOOAMS FAMILT (MON-THU)

5:30
O 4 PEOPLE S COURT
1 ONEW S
7 O HOLLYWOOD SOUARES
(FRI. TUE)
7 O NEWS (MON. WED-THU)
JS ( I I ) JEFFERSONS
CD (10) 3-2-1 CONTACT
OD (I) HE-MAN A MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE

Price
Honored
By GED
John Price, 21. of Altamonte
Springs, was recently recognized
by the General Educational Dev­
elopment Testing Service as a
national award winner. Over
40.000 adults took the GED high
school equivalency tests last
year In Florida. A passing score
Is 225 of the 400 points. Price
received an almost perfect score
of 387.
A ceremony was held at the
Olive Garden restaurant where
Price Is employed. Dr. Keith
Samuels Jr., vice president for
Instruction for Seminole Com­
munity College, presented Price
with a plaque honoring the
event.
Price said he regrets not com­
pleting high school. No\y that he
has his diploma, his future plans
are to attend the University of
Central Florida and major In
computer engineering.

leaders orln n ovatfve volunteer
programs.
The conference also Includes
o v e r 100 s k l l l - b u i l d l n g
workshops featuring top trainers
from around the country. More
lhan 1.000 Volunteer Center
directors, corporate volunteer

The StoufTer Orlando Rraort Is

ENJOY

GRAPEFRUIT
FR O M FTORIDA

2WAYS
&amp;

Only Ln ' s givos you two doHdows ways
to o«(oy groat country chickon!

Famous Roclpo*
This is the country chicken that's given
us our good name We honey dip our
chicken, then add special seasonings
lor extra flavor Golden brown, lender
and mouth-watering country chicken
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Crispy Plus*
En|oy more crispy crunch wilh Crispy
Plus Marinated lightly spiced, then
double-breaded and open tried lo
golden brown It's a delicious
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1
7
5
*

The GED tests leading to a
Florida High School Diploma will
be offered at Seminole Commu­
nity College on July 27-29.
Eligibility for taking the tests
must be completed by July 16.

'amous

GED Test Orientation will be
held on July 23 at 4 p.m. and 5
p.m. Students qualified to take
the tests are encouraged to
attend this class on "H ow to
Take and Pass the GED Exams."
For m ore in form ation on
GED’s free study program, call
Seminole Community College
a;td ask fot i*.e GED Office.

® *

COUNTRY CHICKEN
Jerry C Margurette Sullivan Owners Since 1972

Wb Cater Any Six# Croup
SANFORD
C A SSE LB E R R Y

1905 F R E N C H A V E .
H W Y . 17-92

41 N. HWY. 17-82

■ o o o o o o C o m 1—

Ifj Floyd Theatres I

THREE PIECE
CHICKEN DINNER
$

2

6

9

3 piece* ol golden brown Lao s Country
Chicken, (mued, white /deni), your choice ol
two individual serving* of our deficiou* coun­
try vegetable* or talad* and biacuil (com IS'
aitra)
Limn 4 par coupon
Not vjhd wirn any o/her ott»r or discount.

Coupon

—

FIFTEEN PIECE PACK
OR BOX OR
TWENTY PIECE BOX

$ooo O ff

Feck Include* IS piece* of golden brown
Lee * Country Chicken. (MUed. whit* /dark),
your chore# ol 3 pint* of our deliciout coun
try vegetable* or talad* and 12 biscuit*
Boa Includaa. Chlckan Only
Not mid with any orner oltsi or discount

It* S s x S £ .

5:35
.17 SAFE AT HOME (FRI)
17 MUNSTERS (MON-THU)

program admlnstrators. g o v­
ernment volunteer program slnlf
and g e n e r a l v o l u n t e e r
coordinators arc expected to
attend the conference.
To arrange an interview with
plenary speakers, trainers or
Volunteer staff contact Cynthia
Vlzza. Media representatives arc
Invited to cover portions of the
National Volunteer Conference.

q u e stio n ; a n d « n » w c r a fe a tu rin g

1:05

U (11) MY LITTLE PONY
FRIENDS
CD (10) SECRET CITY

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HWT. 17-92

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4 cyl. $20 • 6 cyl. $24 • 8 cyl.$28
(Most American Cars)
Consists of Spark Plugs &amp; Sat Timing A Csrb.

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SENNOLE TRINITY
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
S p o n s o re d

Smooth As Silk Electrolysis
Gets Rid Of Unwanted Hair

Shampoo &amp; Set *0.00

By:

SANFORD CHURCH OF GOD
801 W. 22nd Street, Senford FL

Coupon Expire* 6/27/87

2729 Hwy. 17-92 (Center Mall)
SANFORD
M u ll Present Coupon

323-5227

BLAIR AGENCY
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m BATTERY SHOP
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AND UP

By Tim Johnson
LIMA. Peru (UP1| — A fledgling company In
Peru is finding that nation's foreign debt a potent
asset when it comes to selling microcomputers to
the Soviet bloc.
Novotec. which rolled out Its first IBM X T clone
only 15 months ago. Is already manufacturing
m ic r o c o m p u te r s fo r East G e rm a n y and
Czechoslovakia.
Now. the pint-sized Lima-based company has
signed a letter of Intent to export a glam order of
103.500 Novotec CP 1000 microcomputers to the
Soviet Union.
Difficulties are anticipated because Novotec Is
new, but the company has a simple advantage

Batter In the Long Run!

A H O Y

The clientele o f Smooth As Silk is pre­
dominantly women and the most common hair
problems ate on the face. Up, chin and neck. The
only parts o f the body where hairs can't he
removed hair by electrolysis arc the nose and
ears.
The amount of discomfort felt during the
process depends on the tolerance of the individu­
al. hui Carmen and Nancy, who are expremely
sympathetic to the clients and the way they feel,
can adjust the equipment accordingly.
"It is s a f e ." they said, " w e use individual
needle bulbous probes and clients don’t have to
worry about spreading diseases or infections.
Each individual's needle is sterilized before and
alter using and is wrapped in cotton before
attaching it to their chart. It is never used on any
other person."
"ll is more expensive, but we feel ll Is worth ii
because the client lias piece o f mind that he or
she is not being exposed to the possibility of
contracting a contagious disease.
They have hours from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday
through Saturday. They have always kept their
hours flexible to accommodate the working
woman, who doesn't have enough time at
lunchtime. For an appointment or further
information, call .'162-1266.

Computer Maker Finds Peru's Debt
An Asset In Selling To East Bloc

^ ™ ^ ™ S T E V ^ M E A D O R s " ™ ,‘ ,™ "

H a ir F o r m u l a I
DU

*4395

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SOLUTION c m i to HAIR FORMULA I WHERE EVERYDAY
ECONOMICAL PRICES ARE A WAY OF LIFE f DAYS EACH WEEK UUH
REGULAR PRICES ARE NORMALLY LOWER THAN THE SPECIALS ANO
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y o u r a d S SALES GIM
MICKS COUPONS ETC FROM ANY OTHER SALON TO THE
PROFESSIONALS

%

• BIDDISO N D E S IG N S

SOLUTION • come to HAIR FORMULA I WHERE ONLY
QUALITY PERMS ARE USED AND AT BUDOET PRICES NO BUDGET
PERMS IN OUR INVENTORY)

ALTERNATE SOLUTION iwing

0

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AT A

D IS C O U N T
WHEN YOU AHHIVE FOH SERVICE YOU ARE INFORMED THE PERM
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BETTER PERM AT A MUCH HIGHER PRICE
SOME SALONS SAY*
NOTHING AND GIVE A BUDGET PERM THAT WILL DRY YOUR HAIR
OUT

PROBLEM -SOME SALONS ADVERTISE 1 FOR I SUMMER
SPECIAL •1/2 PRICE CERTAIN CAYS COUPONS IN OlRECT MAIL
COUPONS IN PAPE ns ETC , WHEN IN FACT. THESE SPECIALS A GIM
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REGULAR PRICES ARE)

2

"I'm a perfect example of before and after."
Nancy said. " I had excessive body hair and there
is such it difference in how I am now and was six
months ago. I responded extra well to the
treatments. The time arid results vary with the
Individual, hut when you have eventually de­
stroyed the hair rools. it won't come back. The
end result Is I'm extremely thrilled wllh the
results 1 have. Other methods are only tempo­
rary."
"It does take time and you need to be
consistent, hut It's the only permanent way." she
said.

STEVE BLAIR

IAHOY MARINE
O ff

Btcoil.

Christy

Is unwanted body or facial hair making you
srll-consclous or embarassed? When you're
Invited out for a romantic dinner for two. are you
afraid Ihe close encounter by candlelight will
emphasize the hair shadow on your upper lip?
There is no reason anybody should have to
walk around with any unwanted body or facial
hair when II can be rem oved safely and
permanently with the use of electrolysis, say
Nancy Holtz and Carmen R. McBalh. co-owners ot
Snmoih As Silk Electrolysis.
Nancy and Carmen opened their sendee in
Suite 21 In Regency Square at 500 E. Sonoran
Hlvd. (Stale Road 456). Casselberry, in February
after being trained as technicians at PlainAcademy, Casselberry. They have Ihe latest stale
ol (heart equipment.
They are not only trained electrulogists. but
they know where you're coming from and can
empathize because they've been there! Both
aitractive women bad problems with unwanted
hair and that Is how they first became Interested
In electrolysis.
Carmen, who has had hair removed from all
areas of her body, said "I had my eyebrows done
15 y e a r s ago so I knew it worked, hut I was
unhappy with the service I was receiving and was
looking lor a good technician after moving here. I
couldn't find one so decided to go Into business
for myself."
She said she had always bleached the hairs on
her legs because she just didn't want to invest the
money to go to an electrologisl. "Then the skin on
my hands and legs started to turn white."
Carmen said.
Nancy said. "I had hair problems myself, that's
why I got Interested. I tried every other form ol
hair removal without success. A large percentage
of women walking around feel Intensely selfconscious and I wanted others to feel freed ol
razors or dlpilatories and relate to others In a
•oore relaxed fashion.

n il

Lrli.

C O E

C C Q Q

0 3 3 *0 0 3 3

|
J

937 * M" 1’ 17 92 I

L&gt;ni»&lt;.od ■

over foreign competitors: Peru is exporting
Novotcc microcomputers to Soviet bloc nations as
partial payment for overdue debt, and the
creditors arc jumping at the chance to collect.
Peru, one ol Latin America's most recalcitrant
debtors, owes about $965 million pf Its S14.H
billion foreign debt to Warsaw Pact nations,
principally to the Soviet Union.
Allrcdo Novoa. a mechanical engineer, founded
Novotec In 1983. hut It was not until late 1985
that a Iriend of Novoa's stumbled on the equation
for rapid growth.
The friend. Ramiro Priale Zcvallos. read that
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev wanted 10
m illion m icrocom p u ters to put In Soviet
classrooms and usher his nation Into the
Information age.
"I made some calculations and I said to Alfredo
Novoa. "Look, you go to the Soviet Union and
they might offer (to buy from) you 500 of the 10
m illion." said Priale. head of the National
Informatics Secretariat.
The brainstorming led Peru’s Foreign Ministry
to Include the Novotec microcomputers among
goods offered to llie Soviet Union In lieu o f debt
payments In scarce hard cash.
Since early 1984. Peru has shipped blue leans.
Iruit Juices, zinc and other goods to Moscow to
service Its debt. Its Central Reserve Bank ha?
pays manufacturers in local currency, the Inti,
rather than In dollars

�T"Y

T * * * -9

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TlSlAlf. JsRSB,W»-&lt;e

Business Review

A

Prspsrsd by Ihe Advertising Dapi. of ttw

S a n fo r d H e r a l d
"Let Oar Reputetian 6a Tartar lkaf.

322-2611 %m!

frU

PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE
ADVERTISING

47SW

ADVERTISING

’TkruUimvu

CAU T H AV Feel
■ b c m m iiH
e -u r n a T iO

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m ta e lh M
P t v K H J im t

tm M

SMOOTH AS S ILK
ELECTROLYSIS
H M M K N T NAM MB9VM.

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IN S U L A T E D B U L B O U S M O R E

*

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(4 3 6 ) 5 0 0 E . S o no ra n B ird.
(Regency t'-quarc • Sulla 2 1 )
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VALID THRU

For more Intormstion, cal

3 2 1 -5 8 5 1

2303 French Ave. (Hwy. 17-92) • Sanford

HUM! AUTO KUSINI SS
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Katherine with
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Products
W 1 South Highway 17*2

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PHONE

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the original Madame Katherine." she said. She
has been voted Central Florida’s best psychic by
the readers of Central Florida Scene Magazine.
She gives psychic readings, palm readings, card
readings, and crystal ball readings by appoint­
ment only. She also makes out horoscopes.
She has In the Orlando area for'more than -15
years and In the same location on Highway 17-92
two blocks south of State Hoad 434. Longwood.
since 1969.
Call |305) 695-7005 for an appointment. Her
hours are 9 a.in. to 9 p.m., Monday through
Saturday.

Global Stock M arket Gets Singapore Link
B y R uth Youngblood
S IN G A P O R E (UIM) — A new s ecu rities
exchange nurturing young and technology­
intensive companies Is to provide a crucial link to
the global stock market and boost Singapore Into
the world o f International equity trading.
The tie-up betw een the fled glin g Stock
Exchange of Singapore Dealing and Automated
Quotation system and Its big brothers in New
York and London is scheduled to start In the last
quarter of the year, with backers maintaining
burgeoning economic demand mandates the
move.
America’s National Association of Securities
Dealers Automated Quotation system "has been
exchanging quotations with the London Stock
Exchange since April 1986." said Gordon S.
Macklln. president of the U.S. National Associa­
tion of Securities Dealers.
"Our link with Singapore Is a major step toward
an Integrated three-way trading linkage among
markets In Europe, the United States and the
Pacific basin."
The offspring of months of negotiations be­
tween market officials. Sesdaq is modeled after
Nasdaq, the world’s thlrd-largrst equity market
behind the New York and Tokyo exchanges, and
geared to eventually fill out the time zone gap for
24-hour trading now exposed In the current
London-New York tlc-up.
The arrangement gives Singapore a head start
over the other Aslan financial centers tn Hong
Kong. Tokyo and Sydney, backers noted, and
adds substantial credibility to Sesdaq. which only
began local trading Feb. 18.
"Our system Is a fully automated, screen-bused
market system , which is com patible with
NASD AQ ." said Tan Chok Klan. executive
chairman of the Stock Exchange of Singapore.
"W e now want to use the capabilities of

SESDAQ In the global marketplace, for the
trading of securities of international Interest."
The first phase of the link will Involve two dally
transmissions of closing quotes and volume
Information on 50 NASDAQ stocks traded In both
markets. Nasdaq’s transmission at 6 p.m. New
York time will reach Singapore at 7 a.m. local
lime and help Singapore market makers establish
their opening quotes.
The Singapore transmission, to be made at 6
p.m. local time, would arrive at 4 a.m. In New
York, well before the market opens.
The arrangement will eventually provide for
direct trading among market-making dealers on
other exchanges, automated execution of small
orders and other clearance and settlement
facilities. It will also provide for Joint regulation
and automatic surveillance of Intersystem trans­
actions.
There currently are only three companies listed
on the new system: Singapore National Printing.
Trans-Island Hus Services PTE Ltd. and WaltChang Electroplating.
Those promoting SESDAQ. the Monetary
Authority of Singapore and the Economic Devel­
opment Board, acknowledged the Immediate lask
Is to beef up the portfolio of companies lo reach
10 to 15 by the end of the year.
The requirements for a listing “ effectively
exclude start-up companies of the true venturecapital genre." said monetary authority Execu­
tive Director J.Y. f’llluy. SESDAQ was designed
for young and hungry Innovative firms, not yet
mature enough to qualify for the main ttoard of
the Stock Exchange of Singapore. Pillay said.

Between SR 434 G Dog Track Rd. on Hwy. 17-92
lall for appt.
6 0 5 -7 0 0 5
8 am •9 pm

8 5 .0 0 O ff Palmist Reading n«t uoi w/nmu

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Billy B o y s

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a

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Eraluition Includes: Pwtur# Aiwlfw, Fitation Tnt, Short Leg Twt. Short Armlest
And Talk With Doctor.

• Aik about out "Making Chiropractic Allotdabla' Program
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L A K E M A R Y B LV D .
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC, INC.
902 E. Lake
M ary Blvd.

3 2 2 -9 3 0 0

D A V I 'S U P M O L S IID Y
I

CELEBRATING OUR NEW LOCATION

|

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UPHOLSTERY - INTERIORS
CONSIGNM ENT

8
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O F F T; ^ bw,;h
§15%
I 3238 So. Hwy 17-92
910 Mil* S. ol Dog Track Rd., Canal
Eiptraa A 3017

Say "I Love You
With Flowers

ARNOLD’S
STAINED GLASS
Cuatom Windows 3 Panala
Tiffany Stylm Lamps
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Inalructlon A Supplies
— Builders Inquiries invited —
Drill wood Village
Sulla #203
549 W. Lake Mary Blvd. ,0.9 p m m f
Lake Mary • 322-0197 tot pm s a t .

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§18 S. SANFORD AVE.
SANFORD

Phone 322-5066

iJUULflJu.ajuuuL(ij a.a aaa aj
SPECIAL

POLLY’S PET
SALON
2040 H IA W ATH A AVE.

RELAXER
TOUCH-UP
CAREFREE CURL | 9 C
TOUCH-UP....... O D

SANFORD

FOR SALE

LYNN PURNELL ■Owner Stylist

With m Welcome

AKC TO Y A MINI
POODLES • SHIH-POO A
YORKIE POO PUPPIES

G ALE. 3 2 2 -2 1 1O

Mon Thurs 96
Ffl Sat 98

WE CARRY A PULL LINE
OF CAT t DOG SUPPLIES

WITH COUPON

Hours

OPEN MON THRU SAT

SOUTHWEST ROAD

TIC GROOMING

322-8372

C u rls - P e rm s - C u t s - C o lo r
2410 SOUTHWEST RD.

SANFORD

a r r ir n r m T r ir r in r in r r ^ ^

~R00
RENTALS"

f/’nfre* Cjirfucfr Sjjo uity
Wlfi4l%liirl«J Si Ftfie SfHjO (rUte.i

★ ICE * BEER * TACKLE
w MINNOWS ★ SHINERS ★ WORMS
★ WILD SHINERS * BULLHEADS ★
★ GUIDE SERVICE

I-4 Exll 52
Lake Monroe, Fla.

rrs ri

AUTO GLASS TINTING
MOST CARS ONLY*6S

TAMMY’S
BAIT &amp; TACKLE
I AM TO DARK
“ 7 DAYS A WEEK"

ALL BREEOS
REASONABLE PRICES

P ro f e s s io n a l
6 Years Experience
Conwr ot 0th A 17-92

Sanford, Fit.

Telephone
(305) 322 0340

3 2 3 -7 2 7 2

"17im car fur wr Pntt i Qkr*r, r « (at t H

fear

NAME BRAND FURNITURE FOR LESS

LARRY SAMPSON’S
DISCOUNT FURNITURE WAREHOUSE

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-toes c--Jc

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aat CANCELPAffelNf 0*&gt;t
0 PaewiNl *or* any efwii*tinvm'f i &lt;awhaI’iqn
omr*Ea mi sf w*mcmis hahwaiDas a MttuiT op and *1ft*.** r/mod*** O* «**pohc-ho to
IM A C *»"f I'M MINI

F U R N IT U R E • R O A T.Q • P A D Q

Quality Malarial* * Worfcmanahlp • Frss Eatlmalsa

•-COUPON-

1 0 % O FF ON LIVE B A IT

Frequent H e a da che s
Low Back or H ip Pain
D izzin e ss o r L oss o l Sleep
N u m b n e s s o l Han&lt;Js or Feet
N e rvo u sn e ss
N eck Pain or S tilln e s s
Arm and S h ou lde r Pain

WE CAN MAKE IT NEW AGAIN!

831-8818

321-0833

'■ua.’-AS USUAL tIHIS IS FREE ...

VOTED BEST PSYCHIC
In Central Florida 1984

LONGW OOD

•- ti NfcKft
otioieii •uat.rc/

WIN A 14 FT. FRONTIER CANOE
L IV E B L U E C R A B S

MADAM KATHERINE

HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL PROBLEM S

W l CARRY TH t RIAL TMMG MPOftTID PARTS M AM OVIRSIA*
WHillS THS CAMS AMI MAPI.
TNCMOHT QUALITY ANOTHBMOHT
m TO KEIP VQUH CAA PCRf ORMIMa
AT ITS U S T . AT TH t RIGHTPRICE
J1M ORLANDO DR — (1 7 -tJ)

FREE SPINAL EVALUATION*
WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES

^ Tells you the past, present,
and future, reunites the
separated, asks no questions,
helps you find the right
employment.

3 2 3 -7 2 0 0

—

*

Suite 107,
Bayhead Confer

|--------- tr C o u p o N

Madame Katherine, psychic reader and advisor,
has more than 50 years experience In her field.
"People these days need help, especially In
marriage and In love." Madame Katherine said. "I
reunite separated couples and help find absent
friends. Why be sick and worried? One visit will
convince you I give the bc 9t of advice without
asking questions."
No problem Is too big or too small thul Madame
Katherine can't advise you on. She can help
overcome your children overcome problems, help
to find the right employment and best Invest­
ments.
"Others claim to be me. but make sure you see

_

a M

M a d a m e Katherine, Psychic
G ive s A d vice O n Problem s

c a l l u s

1401 S. H W Y . 1 7-92
(3 0 5 ) 3 2 2 -4 6 5 2 • S A N F O R D

F R E E L A Y -A -W A Y
UP TO 36 MOS. FINANCING
MON.-SAT. 10 a.m. •6 p.m.
SUN. N O O N • 6 p.m .

CHAIR RENTAL OR
STYLIST WITH FOLLOWING
APPLY NOW!
I 13 W. 27th St., Sanford

3 2 2 -8 9 9 1

�r

i r rr r ' r r r - r r~ r-r

r-t-

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4ft—Sanford Horald, Sanford, FI.

Toooday, Juno as, 1H 7

CLASSIFIED ADS

legal Notict"

FLORDA
INBRIEF
DNR Chief Indicted, Quits;
Feces 4 Bribery Charges
MIAMI (UPI) — Elton J. Glssendanner, state
director o f natural resources since 1979. resigned
after he was charged with taking ft80,000 In
exchange for helping to arrange lenient treatment
for a convicted drug smuggler.
Glssendanner. 59. a veterinarian, had sub­
mitted his resignation In February as chief of the
Department of Natural Resources effective July 1.
bowing to Cabinet criticism of his handling of
state programs to buy environmentally en­
dangered land.
The four-count Indictment Monday alleged
Glssendanner. once the chief Cabinet aide to
former Gov. Bob Graham, tried to arrange
favorable treatment for Patrick Bllton. arrested
Dec. 12. 1982. for attempting to smuggle 400
pounds o f marijuana into south Florida.

Cruse Must Hire Lawyer
T IT U S V IL L E (U P I) — Accused m urderer
William Bryan Cruse Jr. told a Brevard County
Judge Monday he has no intention of hiring a
lawyer to represent him on charges of gunning
down six people In a supermarket massacre.
Cruse. 59, a retired librarian originally from
Kentucky, made the statement after Circuit Court
Judge Gil Goshorn agreed with the public
defender's office that Cruse can afTord to hire his
own counsel.
At a hearing Monday, Russo’s office presented
witnesses from Boston and Valley Forge, Pa., who
testified that Cruse and his wife own 9118.000
from a Joint mutual fund.

Legal Notice

legal Notice

N O TIC E O F
P IC TITIO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 7f*
Glennwood Dr.. Lake Mary, FL
3274*. Seminole County, Florida
under th* Fictitious Nama of
T H E SEARCH, and that I Intend
to register said nama with the
Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with th* Provisions
oi th* Fictitious Nam* Statutes,
To-Wit: Section MS Of Florida
Statutes t*57.
/*/ John Mlch**l Mahoney
Publish Jun* 1*. 23. X A July
7, l*«7.
DEP-121

N O TIC E o r
F IC TITIO U S N A M E
Nolle* It htreby glv*n lh*t I
*m engaged In business *1 i n
D re s d e n C o u r t . S a n fo rd ,
Seminole County, Florida und*r
th * F i c t i t i o u s N a m * of
CR AYTO N M A N A G EM E N T
COMPANY, and that I Inland lo
register said nama with th#
Clark of Iha Circuit Court,
S*mlnol# County, Florida In
accordant* with th# Provisions
of th# Fictitious Nam* Statutas,
To-Wit: Section 1*5.09 Florida
5tatut*s 1*57.
1*1 R.S. Schwarts
Publish Jun* 21, 30 A July 7.
14.1*17.
DEP-170

N O TIC E OF A
PUBLIC H E A R IN G
O F PROPOSEDCHANOES
AND A M EN D M EN TS IN
C E R TA IN DISTRICTS AND
BOUNDARIES O F T H E
ZONINO O RDINANCE OF
T H E C IT Y OF
SANFORD. FLOR ID A
te hereby atven iha* a
ill be have Vn
th* Commission Room at th*
City Hall In th* City of Sanlord.
Florida, at 7:00 o'clock P.M. on
J u ly 13, 1*17, to consider
changes and amendments lo th*
Zoning Ordinance of th* City of
Sanford, Florida, a*follows:
A portion of that certain
property lying at th* Northeast
corner of th* intersection ol
West First Str*«t (State Road
44) and Mulberry Avenue Is
proposed to be rezoned Iron
RMOI (Multiple-Family Resi­
dential, Office and Industrial)
District to GC-2 (General Com­
mercial) District. Said property
being more particularly de­
scribed as follows:
The Southwest % ol block 2.
Tier t», ot FLO R ID A LAND
AN O C O L O N IZ A TIO N COM
PANY L IM IT E D . M AP OF T H E
ST. G E R TR U O E 'S A D DITIO N
T O SANFORD, FLORIDA. *c
cording to the Plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 1, Pages
115 through 117, of th* Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
All parties In Interest and
citizens shall have an opportuni­
ty to be heard at said hearing.
By order ot th# City Com­
mission of th* City of Sanford,
Florida.
A D VIC E TO T H E PU BLIC: If
a person decides to appeal a
decision mad* with respect to
any matter considered at th*
above meeting or hearing, he
may need a verbatim record of
th* proceeding*. Including the
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by the
City of Sanlord. IFS2M.0105)
H .N .Ta m m , Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: Jun* 23 A July 3.1957
DEP-4

N O TIC E O F A P P LIC ATIO N
F O E TA X D E E D
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
G IV EN , that John T . Barnard
th* haldor *1 th* Mtowtng certif­
icates has tttoSl
' h » .s « ■ *m
*a Wan
ttwraon. Th# carllllcat* num­
bers and yaars ol Issuanca, th*
description of th* property, and
th* names In which It was
*ss«st#d#r* at follows:
C E R T IF IC A TE NO. *53.
Y E A R OF ISSUANCE: 19*4.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O ­
P E R T Y : LEG SEC 0* TW P 20S
RGE 32E BEG INO F T ] * 130
F T W of NE COR RUN S 4*0 F T
*W 330 F T N 440 F T E 330 F T TO
’BEG (SA C).
Nam* In which assessed
^William D. Harrison
»* All ol said property being In
Vtw County of Samlnolo, State of
Florida.
' Unless such cartlflcat* or ear.Silicates shall b* r*d**m*d ac­
cording to law th* property
described In such certificate or
^certificates will b* sold to th#
highest bidder at th* court house
door on the 27th day of July, 1*17
At ll:00a m.
t Approximately tt35.00 cosh
'. -tor l#e* Is required to b* paid by
'Successful bidder at th* sal*,
t f u ll payment of an amount
equal to th* highest bid plus
applicable documentary stamp
- taxes and recording fees is due
w ith in 74 hours a lte r th*
advertised time of th* sal*. All
. payments shall be cash or guar
•an teed Instrument, mad* pay­
able to th* Clerk of Circuit
; Court.
Dated this 3rd day ol Jun*,
1917.

(SEAL)
DavIdN. Berrien
Clerk ot Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By Michelle L. Silva
Deputy Clerk
Publ
ubllsh: Jun* *, I*. 23, A X .
1*57.
DEP 39

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Cswomy Cipher cryptogram* ere creeled from quotation* by

fam ou s

people, past and present
Each letter In Ot* cipher stands tar
another. Tad*/ * ctae M equate 0.
’ M

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It has boon said that arl Is a
tryst, lor In the Joy of It maker and beholder meat." —
Ko|iro Tomita.

S TA TE O F WISCONSIN
C IR C U IT COURT
POLK COUNTY
Norman Vogt, and
Virginia M. Vogt
Taylors Falls. MN 55014
Plaintiff,
William mcMahon
P.O.Box 3451
Altamonte Springs, F L 32701
and
Lamport Yards. Inc.
1150Como Avsnue
St. Paul. M N SHOD
and
Dennis Schu Ileft
1011 Robert Street South
West St. Paul. MN SSI II
and
Commercial State Bank
15 West Sth Street
St. Paul. MN 55102
and
Seliler Excavating, Inc.
Osceola. W! 54020
and
Minnesota Toro, Inc.
I4f00— 21st Avenue North
Mitvwapol Is, MN S51If
Defendants
SUMMONS
A U T H E N T IC A TE D
NO. 17 CV 1*5
■Y M I L MADSEN
C L E R K O F COURTS
T H E S TA TE OF WISCOHSIN
To each parson named above
as a defendant:
You are hereby notified that
the plaintiff named above has
tiled a lawsuit or other legal
action against you. Th* Com­
plaint, which Is attached, states
th* nature and basis ef the legal
action.
Within twenty (20) day* ol
receiving this Summons, you
must respond with a written
answer, as that term Is used In
Chapter *02 of th# Wisconsin
Statute*, to the Complaint. Th#
Court may r*|*ct or disregard
an answer that does net Wllow
th* requirements of the statutes.
Th# answer must be sent or
delivered to th* Court, who**
address Is: AMI Madsen, Clerk
ol Circuit Court, Polk County
Courthouse, Balsam lake, Wl
54110, and to Kathleen M.
Llndgren, plaintiff's attorney,
who** address Is Llndgren Law
Office, idf Washington North,
St. Croix Falls. Wl 54024. You
may have an attorney help or
represent you.
If you do not provide a proper
answer within twenty (20) days,
th* Court may grant lodgment
against you for th* award of
money or other legal action
requested In th* Complaint, and
you may lose your right to
object to anything that Is or may
be Incorrect In th* Complaint. A
lodgment may be enforced t*
provided by lew. A lodgment
awarding money may become e
lien against any reef estate you
own now or In th* lufur*, end
m ay a lio be enforced by
garnishment or seizure ot pro­
perty.
Dated this 2fth day of April,
19*7.
By Kathleen M. Llndgren
Attorney lor Plaintiffs
1Of Washington North
St. Croix Fells. Wl 54034
715-4*3 9411
Publish June 23,24,25, 1947
DEP-172
,
N O TICE OF APPLICATION

FORTAXORAD
SSOTICI tt MISSSV

GIVEN, that County of Seminole
Ih* holder ol th* following certif­
icates has filed laid certificate*
lor a tax deed to be Issued
thereon. Th# certificate num­
bers and yaars ol Issuance, the
description of the property, and
Ih* nama* In which It was
assessed are as follows:
C E R T IF IC A TE NO. 1031.
Y EA R OF ISSUANCE: IW3.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O ­
P E R T Y : LEG PT L O T 7 BLK E
DESC AS BEG SWLY COR
RUN N 45 D EG 37 M IN 54 SEC
W 244.24 F T E 4.25 F T S 45 DEG
If M IN 37 SEC E 241.30 F T
SWLY 1.49 F T TO BEG LAKE
O R IE N TA HILLS U N IT 2 PB 14
PG77.
Nama In which assessed
Greater Construction Corp.
All of said property being In
(he County ol Seminole, State of
Florida.
Units* such certificate or cer­
tificates shall be redeemed ac­
cording to law lha property
described In such carllllcat* or
certificate* will b* sold to the
highest bidder at th* court house
door on Ih* 27th day ot July, lfR7
at 11:00 a.m.
Approximately SI25.00 cash
for lees Is required to be paid by
successful bidder at th* sale.
Full payment ol an amount
equal to the highest bid plus
applicable documentary stamp
taxes end recording lees Is due
w ithin 24 hours after th*
advertised ;im# ol th* sal*. All
payment* shell be cash or guar­
anteed Instrument, made pay­
able to the Clerk of Circuit
Courl.
Dated this 3rd day ol Jun*.
19*7.
(SE A L)
David N. Berrien
Clerk ot Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
By Michelle L. Silva
Deputy Clark
Publish: June f, 14, 23, A X ,
tf57.
DEP-40
NOTICE OF
FIC TITIO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at P.O.
Box f 150*4. Long wood. Florida
327ft-5044, Seminole County,
Florida under th* Fictitious
Nam* of SYLVIA'S STOCKING
STOPS, and that I intend to
register said name with th*
Clerk ot th* Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with th* Provisions
ol Ih* Fictitious Nam* Statutes,
To-Wit: Section 445 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
1*1 Sylvia H. Brown
Publish Jun* f. 14,23, X . 19*7.
DEP 44

BLOOM COUNTY
vwxe

A
TRASH
man*
i

‘ WASHMANAoewnr
artisan.'
i

S e m in o le

O r l a n d o - W in t e r P a rk

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

C L A S S IF IE D D E P T .
R ATES
UOIIDQ
1 tfcBB............... 72C i Brb
n v ju n o

1:30 AJL •S:Jft P.M.
MONDAY Mm FRIDAY
SATURDAY •

cRRMcvtiv* toM 9 9 C • Hr*
7 CMMceUn Urm MC r I m

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ARTISAN

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KLttCSMR
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inhat rm
EMPTY, Ktupwr
TRASHf CAlUP HIS
,
1WHANRANSOM
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shipments or
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WEAPONS*
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DEADLINES
Noon Th* Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
Monday • 9:00 A.M . Saturday
NOTE In th* event ot th* publishing of error* In advertisements, the
Sanford Herald shell publish the advertisement, alter It ha* been corrected
at no coat to th# advertiser but such Insertions shell number no more then
on* (II.

1J— L o g s I Se rvle ts
SOCIAL S E C U R ITY OtsaMttty
Free Advice. No Charge Unles*
We W in l W a rd W hit* A
Associate*............. 3tt-321-1Jlf

21— Personals
A L L A LO N K T Call Bringing
People Together. Sanford’s
most respected dating service
since If77. Men over X 145%
discount)............ t 40D922 4477
CRISIS PREOHANCV CTR.
Fre t Pregnancy Test, conllden
Hal Call tor appt......... 321 74f5
FANS It you enjoy this soap
send a L.S.A.S.E. lo "bring
Capital heck" Box 4)12 March
A F B .C A 92501_______________
I, R O BERT H. STR IN E. W ILL
not b# responsible for any
debts Incurred by anyone
other than myself as of 4/17/S7

25— Special Notices
BECOME A ROTARY
For Details: 1X0-432 4254
F lor Ida Notary Association
CERAMIC T IL E
CLEAR AN CEI
See under 4223. Miscellaneous
HAVINO A F A M IL Y REUNION
TH IS MONTH? Call Melinda
at Th# Cavalier............32104*0

43— M e d ical ft
Dental
E L E C TR IC HOSPITAL B I D Excellent condition.
Call:............... ............. 1215494

55— Business
Opportunities
O P P O R T U N IT Y K N O CK SM o d u la r Horn* B u ild e r/
Dealership now available In
th* Sanford area. Call now tor
more Information. WAUSAU
HOMES INC........ 4)3-474-919*
PHILLIPS 44 Service Station for
leas*. 2543 S. French Av*.
Call:............................321-4*49

43— Mortgages
Bought ft Sold
WE BUY M O RTGAG ES
also
1*1 A 2nd Mortgages
A Commercial Loans
431-MOO

27— N u rse ry ft
Child Care
C H IL D CA R E, fenced yard,
m e a ls p ro v id e d . Pleas*
call...............................114 9444
CH ILD CARE. Intents up. clean
hoi lood. Individual att. T.L.C.
Ret., Idyllwlld* area.. 322 4447
CHILD CARE IN MY Home.
D a y s , e v e s , o v e r n lt e s ,
weekends. TLC , Ret .322-1724
GOOD REF. 3 yrs A up Start 4
am. hot lunch, alt Lk. Mery
Blvd. 540 Call...............122 0445
I W IL L BA BYSIT your child In
my home. I yr. A up. Pleas*
celt 311*11* anytime

Legal Notice
PUBLIC N O TICE
FLOR ID A D E P A R TM E N T
OP EN V IR O N M EN TA L
R EG U LATIO N
TW IN TOW ERS
O F F IC E BU ILOINO
U »» Blair Stone Reed
Tallahassee. PL33351-424!
Public Notice No. 72
Jun* 14.1fB7
N O TICE OF ISSUANCE OF
AN E M E R G E N C Y P E R M IT
UNDER TH E RESOURCE
C O N S E R V A T IO N A N O R E ­
C O V ER Y A C T ANO TH E
F L O R ID A R E S O U R C E R E ­
CO VER Y AND M A N AG E­
M E N T A CT
T h * D e p a r t m e n t of
E n v iro n m e n ta l Regulation
( D E R ) h a s Is s u e d an
Emergency Permit to Seminole
County Sheriff'* Department.
Sanford. Florida, and Orange
County Public School, Orlando,
Florida. Th* treal menI sit* was
located at Seminole County
Landfill. Osceola Road, Geneva.
Florida. Th# permit authorized
detonation of unstable, reactive,
shock sensitive, or explosive
materials.
A n e m e rg e n c y p e rm it
pursuant to Sections 403.724(5)
and 1 2 0 .5 9 (3 ), F .S ., and
17-X.3X. F.A.C., wa* warranted
because there was an Imminent
and substantial endengerment
to hum an h e a lth and th*
environment. This Issuance ol
t h is p e r m i t r e s u lt e d In
e nviro n m e n ta l bensflts as
compared with th* previous
storage conditions of the west*.
Th* permit was dratted In
accordance with th* provisions
ol th* Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act and tha
Florida Resource Recovery and
Management Act and were de­
signed to protect human health
end th* environment.
Persons wishing to comment
upon the permit Issuance or to
th* permit conditions are Invited
to submit seme In writing within
forty-live (45) days of the date
of this nolle* to th* Florida
Department ol Environmental
Regulation, Twin Tower* Office
Building. 2400 Blair Stone Road.
Tallahassee, Florid* 22101,
A T T E N T IO N : Raoul Clark. Tha
public notice number should be
Included In the Itrst page of
comments.
All comments received within
tha 45-day period will be consld
•red In the formulation of future
emergency permits.
Publish June 23, 19*7
DIP-171

'OCOCWIL
NfTS ‘

ZW A
■'MtsreMANAGOWT
ARTISAN'

1

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

NURSE AIDES needed full time
lor 1pm to H pm A 11pm to
7am shift. Must be certified or
experienced end be willing to
take certification tesl. Contact
DeBary Manor between ■ A
4pm, Mon.-Frl. lor appoint
men! 44* 4434.................. EO E

C A F E T E R IA W O R K IR - Full
time. Monday-Frlday days.
Prep, or short order exp.
helpful. Excellent eo benellts
Call between lam 7pm. 323
9750 ext. 145_________________
CAR O f T A IL IR S . Experienced
A inexperienced Mr. Hand
Inc........................ XS13I 7404
C A R P E N T E R S , Experienced
with wood siding, Longwood
area. Call..............904 734 2X7
C A S H I E R S - S h if t w o r k .
Advancement opportunities.
Apply: 1*005. French Ave.
CHAIR R E N TA L available or
S T Y L I S T with following
Ca ll-------- 322 9991 ask tor Bob
C L E R IC A L position in small
Sanlord oltlc*. Requires good
phone technique lor customer
calls, light typing and general
clerical skills Call: X I 1440
Monday Friday. 7am 4pm
CNA't, II to 7 thllt. Full A
part time, Apply to 200 W.
A irp o rt Blvd________________
CNA’ S, HHA'S,
PSYCH. NURSES
Needed Immediately
New pay rate* A benellts
Vacaiion* dally pay. Ilexibi*
hours. Call ...............740 5744
M E O IC A L PER SO N N EL POOL
EX CH AN O E BU ILO IN O
HWV 17*1, M A ITL A N D

A CCO UN TIN G C LER K 5340 wk
Wonderful spot 4 you don't
need fo be full charge book
keeper, lust know baslctl Will
hire today! A A A Employ
men). TCP W. 25th S!.... 323 517*
A C R Y L I C S E A L A N T
TE C H N IC IA N ’S. Earn 49 lo
413. per hr., no experience
required Training evaiiebl*
for Full'Part time position* 9
A M . 9 P M ..........5131*4 7151

M O R TO A O E BR O K IR /Loan
Rep FHA/VA A Conventional
loan exp. Would prefer Indi
vldual to be licensed but will
sponsor A train motivated
person. Contact Steve Lea at
904 549-4199. EOE/M/F/H/V
D IE T A R Y R E L I E F COOK,
also, A ID E 11am 7 pm. Food
prep A cleaning Full lime
Apply t Lakevlew Nursing Ctr
919 E. 2nd St................ teeter*
ERR'D. ORSDOE O PERATOR
to run a mudd cat dredge.
Cell ............................345 4732
DRIVERS- Part time. Wed Frl
only. A valid Fla. drivers lie.
required Applicants mutt be
14 yrs or older and mutt know
how to drive standard thllt.
Apply in person at Sanford
Auto Auction. 2215 W. 1st St..
Sanford..................... See John
D R IV lR - Good driving record,
chauffeur's lie. Apply Tropic
Taxi, 1917 French Ave._______
DRIVER TR A IN E E - 14 hr. No
kidding! This boss needs lo
hire you today I Full Kale
career with lest growing llrml
AAA Employment, 700 W 35lh
Street Call.................. 223 5174
EXP'D. INSTRUCTOR needed
tor Energy Source Athletic
Club. Call Julie........... 12U722
FABRICATOR- 55 hr. Train**
position! Learn all phases ol
air conditioning A sheet malal
work I AAA Employment. 700
W 25th St...............
323 5)74
O E N C R A L OFC. W ORKERS
needed. Good pay. no fee I
A BLEST T E M P .......... 331 3940
O EN ER AL ASSEM BLY,
SOLOERERS A LIN E POSI­
TION S O PEN . Will Train!
Full time, permanent posi
lions. B e ne llltl Apply In
person Matthews Associates
M Industrial Pk.
S45 Hickman Clr., Sanlord
GOOD WORKERSI It you need
dally pay A Steady work call
Bob alter 3 pm........... 322 7554

TW

Medical
I IP e rs o n n e l

r*1
*Pool*

C O LLEO ESTU D EN TS
Summer jobs available. No tee

TEMP PERM_____260-5100
D A TA E N T R Y B IL L IN G
CLER K Accuracy, speed A
exp'd. for an Electrical Supply
Co Call Sally at.......... 322 0431
D A TA E N T R Y C L E R K - 4250
wk. Guaranteed satisfaction!
Input reports for this classy
co l Terrific benellts! AAA
Em ployment, 700 W. 25th
Street. Celt.................. 323 5174
D E L IV E R Y O R IV E R S A
Mature Waitresses. Full A
p a rt tim e . C a ll lo r d*
tell*.............................. 322 7451
HAIRSTYLtST-llexibl* hours!
Apply et HAIRBIZ
7440 Hiawatha Dr.
Sanlord............................ 321-2152

O F F IC E / R E N TA L T R A IN E E 54 hour. Fantastic office
training spoil Enjoy people
confect! Give Information on
equipment rentals 4 write up
orders) Really funi AAA
Em oloyment, 7C: W 23th
Street. Cell:................. 323 517*
ON E O F F LOR I D A 't OL DE I T
Pest Central Companies
Looking for career minded in
dividual*, who want to learn
end be th* success they know
they can be! Company vehicle
4 company benellts 4 more!
Apply with resume' Spencer
Past Control 3543 Park Dr
N* phene calls, please
A P P O IN T M E N T S E T T E R S .
Earn big SSI's working In
Sanlord lor the Rich Plan
Food Co High hourly rat* ♦
wkly bonus. Call Charlas
Berdal, or Jeanalta Braswell
332 1*43 ext 325...... Or....... 324
ASSEM BLY WORK et home. *
many others Earn good wages
in spare lime. Info 504 441 0091
ext 1449...........
Open 7days
B A K E R - Homestyl* desserts.
Apply: Holiday Housa Rtstau
ran), Hwy 17 92 near Lk. Mary
B A N K T E L L E R T R A IN E E Looking lor a career? 55 hr t .
Cash handling Exp Is all It
ta k a tl Plush spoil A A A
Em ploym ent. 700 W. 75th
Street, Call..................323 5174

NOTICE
KNIGHTS
OF

FREE TRAINING
M You Qualify

WORD PROCESSOR-SECRETARIAL

H IR IN G ) Government lobs your
area. SI5.000 544.000. Call (4031
4341445.......................Ext 1243
IN S U R A N C E O F F IC E G A L SIX. Full training! National
company you can count on I
Learn all phases ot office A
computer! AAA Employment,
700 W. 25th St............... 3215174
IT 'S T O Y P A R T Y A O A IN I
House ot Lloyd now hiring
ladies to show toy gilts Earn
52.000 by Dec. 1. F R E E kit A
supplies. Cell between 12:X
end 3:00pm..................3215411

Morning ★ Afternoon ★ Evening.
Job Placement Assistance
Central Florida Computer Inatltute
APPLY IN PERSON
MON. &amp; WED. 9 AM-2 PM
P r lv a t u In d u s t r y C o u n c i l
o f S e m in o le C o u n t y In c .
212 5. Sanford Ave.
Sanford. Fla. 32771

M A IN TE N A N C E
SUPERVISOR
Hands on type Individual
needed to supervise personnel
in a well est. aluminum A
copper fabrication operation.
M ust be p ro ficie n t w ith
electrical A electro/hydraullc
control circuit* with some
knowledge ol electronics. Abll
Ity lo read hydraulic diagrams
a must. Supervisory beck
ground desirable Send Re
sum*, wag* requirements,
and phone number to P O Box
3137. Sanford. FI 32772 2137
M FO . PLAN T SUPERVISORMust be ambitious, mature
person, w/prevlous manage
men) exp. A supervisory skills
in high production assembly
operalions lor growing lheet
metal factory Good benellts.
Call for eppt................322 *211
D E N TA L H Y G IE N IS T- Full or
Part time. Seeking highly
motivated Individual for a
prevention oriented practice.
Top salary A benellts Includ
Ing pension plan Send re
sum* to 2415 S. Volusia Ave.
»D 2. Orange City, FI 32743
D I E S E L M E C H A N IC S lo r
expanding Mac tleet at I.W.S
555 Hop* St Long wood 43t
1519 Top pay. excellent
benellts. Immediateopeninj-,
NO PROSPECTING
If you went lo mek* 5500 to 51000
a week selling Lit* A AH. Call
X5 *42 7741 lor a 40 second
recorded menage
N URSERY W ORKER Wanted.
Exp. desirable but not neces
sary Call Mike at.
421 29X
N U R S E S A ID E : All shills,
exp’d or certllledonly. Apply
Lakevlew Nursing Centsr
919 E. 2nd SI................ Sanlord

OR YOU. Fin
1 -4 0 0 -3 3 0 -2 3 2 7

Now Accepting Applications
For A Pharmacist In The
Seminole County Area.
Starting Salary $39,000 +
Daily Hours 9 -6 PM

42 hr. Work Week
Good Benefits
Send Resume To
W i n n D i x l a S t o r e s In c .
K.W. CLACK
P.O. BOX 15200
ORLANDO, FLA. 32858

HELP!

HELP!

JACKPOT *250
B I G N &gt;250
BIG X *250
GSMES
Thurs. ft Sun. 7 p.m.
2504 OAK AVE.,
SANFORD

TEMPLE SHALOM
OF DELTONA
ELKCAM BLVD.
NEAR PROVIDENCE

EVERY NED B SAT.
NIGHT AT 4:43 P.M.
PLAY A U CANES TOR
$ 1 8 .0 0
2 - S 2 S 0 JA C K P O TS

A U REGULAR GAMES
PAY $50
FREE C0TTEE ANO
DOUGHNUTS ■LIGHTED
PARKING LOT
son SEATS.

■INGO

HELP!

Tired of watching reruns!
Turn your hobby into cash!
Florida Polymers, Lake Mary, is
growing so fast that we need to
expand our sewing operation into
a second shift.

TRANSPORTATION can

COLUMBUS

S35 -S40 -S50

Pharmacist

KIWANIS CLUB
OF CASSELBERRY
FRI0AY NIGHT 7 P.M.
S2S-SSO-S100
(2) S2S0 IACKPOTS
Senier Citizen* Center
Secret lake Park,
Casselberry
695-9421

be provided!

Full or part tim e available. W ill Tra in .
G o o d Pay
H e a lth P la n
M o d e rn a ir -c o n d it io n e d o p e ra tio n

Call or come see us at 1000 Sand
Pond Road, Lake Mary. 321-5500.
EEO
MHV

SANFORD POLICE
BENEVOLENT
ASSOCIATION

SATURDAY
$250
JACK POTS
EARLY BIRDS
6:30

BINGO
FULL OR PART-TIM E^
NEEDED
FAST FOOD COOKS
CASHIERS
GAS ATTENDANTS

America's oldest licensor
of ice cream shops
needs qualified families
to operate their own

CqaM \

ONE STOP CENTERS

Ice Cream Factory

Gas *Convenience Store
• Top Hourly Wages

Carvel representatives
wi!l be in
ORLANDO. FL

- Fast Food

* Free Medical A Lite Insurance

at the

• Paid Vacations-2 Weeks Per Year

The Holday Inn
7BOO S. Orange
Blossom Trail
June 27 A 2B

* Profit Sharing A Other Benefits
M A K E A P P L IC A T IO N IN P E R S O N A T

202 N. Laurel Ave.,
Sa n fo rd

|To make an appointment
CALL COLLECT

914-969-7200

0 8 CALL

894-4515

Federally Insured student loans available lo qualified appHcenlt
without regard to peet credll or amptoymenl history.________

a*

LABORERS
No experience necessary. Work
on* day or every day I Paid
dally. In Oviedo................. Call
Add A Man.................. 344 1114
LA N D S C A P ER S A Grounds
keeping. Exp’d. WOMEN A
men Between I 5........I l l 3914
LPN OR M E D IC A L RECORD
TEC H N IC IA N : Looking for an
Individual lo take complete
control ol our Medical records
section with other related
duties In * 93 bed skilled
Nursing facility. Musi possess
excellent organizational A
people skills Previous experi
ence highly desirable. Call
DeBary Manor between I am
A 4pm, Mon. Frl. for ap
polntmenl. 44* 4434.......... EO E

CARVEL CORPORATlOh
YorJUfft Mob Yorti 10701

vf*

71— Htlft Wanted

k T *
~

r , , • r r * r F ' • '

r ?r r i r

71— Help Wanted

7 1 -H e lp W anted

by Berke Breathed

ire s
W A tfm V N .

i m ft

f r

-S-k

L

Monday Thru Friday 1:10 AM • 4:30 PM

j^ ^ _ ^ O ^ H O N I^ A tty &gt; tE A S t^ ^ ^

FREE
REFRESHMENTS
LOCATED ON
LAKEFR0NT

P.B.A.
BUILDING
Did ye* knew that
ya w cfctb or erfaalzaUaa caa appear la this
Bstiag each weak tor on­
ly S3.50 par weak? IM*
ft an ideal way t* krfena
the public ot yeur chib
activities.
If ye w club or erteaiuUeit
wauM Bke t# ha included In
tM* Iwttef cafL

S a n lb r d H e r a ld
C L A S S IF IE D
D EP A R TM EN T
332-241)

�4 r r tN T r-

KIT ‘W CAWLYL1 *-by Larry Wrifhl
71-Help Wanted
F A R T -TIM E BA B Y SITTE R
In my house, Syr. old.
Cell------- ---- I l l 7751 aft, ):10
PART T IM E JA N ITO R - Main
(•nance Handyman needed
tor new shopping center.
Write P O. Box 140 Longwood
17791 SW0 with relume' or
letter ot background tnlormationorcall.......... I I00-4714910
PLUMBERS. Experienced, all
phaiai. apply in panon Sun
LakaApti..... 474 Sun Lake Clr
P R E V E N T IV E M A IN T E ­
N A N C E T E C H IC IA N 5440
wk. ♦ . Your auto expertise is
needed to detect cuitomer'i
upcoming auto problem i!
Superl AAA Employment. 700
W. 75th St.................... 3715174
Q U A L IF IE D O R Y W A LL
HANGERS wanfedl Top pay!
Unexperienced need not
apply Cell 441 tS770RMa 4049
ADO TO INCOME! It
SELL AVON NOWIIt
177 0459............Of............171*044
AIR COND. INSTAL. A Service
men, experienced, perma
nent. good pay. benefit*. call
904 775 7797 or MS 471 7713
ALARM IN STALLER Tralneet t t Rare chance to learn
elactronlci Held) Proteuional
carter! AAA Employment.
700 W. 23th St.............. 113 5174
A P P O IN TM EN T S E T T E R S M
hr. Mult be experienced tor
home Improvement! .240 7773
REAL E S TA TE ASSOCIATES
wanted Liberal commiulon
w bonus override! Excellent
location
121 0577
R ECEPTIO N IST- IS hr Train!
Gorgeoui oltlce benetlti!
Meet A greet client! A direct
callll AAA Employment. 700
W 11th St . ................173 5174
REHAB. A ID E : Looking lor an
individual highly motivated,
enthusiastic A creative with
the ability to work well under
minimal lupervitlon H $
graduate or the equivelant
with at leatt I yr. exp in a
geriatric or rehab lettlnq
required Contact DeRary
Manor between I A 4pm.
Mon Frl. lor appointment.
4414*74............................ EO E
R E SID EN T MANAGER- Couple
to manage the F la g ih ip
Apartment Community In
Sanlord under the direction ot
one ot the nation! larqeit
developer! Previoui man
agemenl exp A supervisory
skill! are required Duties
include renting, bookkeepinq.
A Inside-outside maintenance
Compensation includes salary,
apt . utilities A bonus To
apply send letter or resume'
with phone number to P.0
Box 247, Casselberry 37707
SEM I D R IV E R - 17 hr Slop
here! Be home every night A
enjoy great benefits including
retirement! AAA Em ploy
ment. 700 W. iilh SI
1715174
SOM ETHING NEW
U N D E R TH E S U N I
Reps needed lor Busmen Ac
counts. Part Tim e 111.000
Potential. Full Time 140.000 *
Potential Work own Hours
T ra in in g p ro vid e d . C a ll
I 412 931 0019 M F. 8 00 am
1:00 pm.......................(C .S.T.)
TA K IN G APP LIC ATIO N S for
Manager A Assl Manager
Trainee Also. Cashier posi
lions opened tor all shuts. FullA part time available Good.,
benefit package Apply at
^C O L. I 4 ASR 44. Sanlord
EM P LO YM EN T
O PP O R TU N ITIES
Full A pari lime w/local chair
manulacturer Woodworking,
upholstery, sewing, assembly
To apply please call 321 9990
lor directions to our location
TRAIN IN G INSTRUCTOR lull
time or on call, to work in
ICF-M R with the mentally
r e la r d e d
I r i e n d l y at
mosphere good benefits
Call..............
331 7231
U T IL IT Y M AN /YA R D MAN
A p p ly in p e rso n. G a to r
Culvert. Sanlord Airport
W A ITR E S S . F T . Apply in
person lo Gaynelles Country
Kitchen........ 110 S Palmetto
W AREHOUSEM AN- 15. M/F
Non smoker self starter
Must be dependable. . 371 4111
WAREHOUSE M AN AG ER - 111
Key spot! Class
A " co !
Needs your ability lo take
charge! AAA Employment.
700 W 25th SI....... ....... 133 5174
★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

WORK IMMEDIATELY
N E E D M EN A WOMEN NOW)

LABOR
OAUf ROM

FORCE
~

06H» M l

DAILY PAY
Work Assignments
• Dally • Weekly • Monthly

321-1590
N OFEE

N O FEE

WALK A N O G E T PAID
H e l p u p d a t e th e D e
Ilona Orange City. City Direc
lo r y
No s e llin g
No
experience we tram Apply »
lo noon R L Polk A Co . 3000
S Orlando Dr , Sanlord. Sun
Bank Bldg (2nd floor) START
NOW I .......................... E .O. E.
1500 W E E K L Y , mailing circular
in your spare time ScndSASE
lor details lo P O Bo» 1*91,
Apopka. FL 32704 1891

73— Employment
Wanted
DO MOM A DAD
N E E D A HOME?
Will care lor the elderly Nice
secure home with kind people
reasonable r a l e s ___ 4*8 I00|
W IL L C A R E F O R e ld e rly
person In my Deltona home,
reasonable Call
574 J7/»

91— Apartments/
House to Share

93— Rooms for Rent
☆

☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
THE VILLAGE

96— Retirement
Homes
EN JO Y A FA M ILY S E TTIN G
lor your golden years I We
have rooms tor both men and
women. Willow Wood Re
tirement Center Call .373 5111

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
APTS TO COME HOME TO
Quiet, single story living wilh
e n e rg y saving features
E F F IC IE N C Y apts with attic
storage A private patios
A SK A B O U TFR E ER EN TA
Senior Cltliens Discount
5A N FO R D CO U R T APTS.
3301 S. SANFORD A VE

371-llOtext. I l l _______
A T T R A C T IV E I br Downtown
area S100 wk incl. util. Sec
dep STOP Call ......... 321 4947
C U T E ' E F F IC IE N C Y , SIS 00
wkly , util paid, block Irom
town 17149*3. o r. 445 *030
ONE BORM. APT. 1245 mo •
1700 sec. dep References re
quired. Call
377 3147 alt. 4
O S TE EN - Lrg. downtown I br. 2
entrances, parking, quiet
neighborhood 1250......327 1771
RESPON. M A R R IED Couple or
Single No children or pets.
SI80 mo &gt; SI00sec..... 177 3117
SAN FOR D Efficiency apart
ment, near town S4S wk.
Call ____ 371 S99Q
SANFORD- 1 bdrm efficiency,
complete privacy, S90 week r
1700 sec , includes ullltties
373 7749.........or..........321 4947

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
LA K E JE N N IE APTS.
Pool. Uke. Adults only

RENTING NOW!
________ 331 0741 _____ _ _

APTS TO COME HOME TO
Quiet, single story living with
energy saving features. 3
bedroom apartments with at
tic storage A private patios.
ASK A BO UT F R E E R EN T
S140 MOVES Y O U IN
SANFORD COURT APTS.
3301 S. SA N FO R O A V E
173-3301 ext, l i t
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
S315 Moves In
Qualified Applicants
ONE YEA R LEASE
300 E. Airport Bl.............313 4401
Tues. Frl. Sam 4pm
Mon. 8 30am 5 30pm
Some Sat lo 4_____
CLEAN, new paint, mini blinds,
one yr lease, city util Incl t
br duplex, S280 m o, 7 br
duplex S3S0 mo » sec. 377 3717

GREAT LOCATION
Attractive 7 bdrm ., I bath,
single story duplex on bus
line, large pool, water, sewer.
A trash pick up included
Separate adult section, re
tirees welcome Ask about our
move in SPECIAL.
SHENANDOAH V ILLA G E
A P A R TM E N TS .............. 773 2970

eeee
DON T
eeee
eee
RENT
• ••
••
until you've seen
•a
• TH E MOST SPACIOUS
•
• • 1 bdrm . 7 balh apts ••
•••
In Sanford
•••
to e s
371 0584
ssss
H ID D E N V IL L A G E , Now 1
bdrm . many up grades, lease
1575 00 Mo Avll Now Ralston
A ASSOC........................ 747 1213
ID E A L FOR R E TIR E E S ! San
lord 3 br . 1 ba , liv rm.. kit
appls . a-c. new paint 1375 mo
1st, last, sec Ret
311 0779
M ARINERS V IL LA G E . LAKE
ADA, I bdrm 1300 a Mo A 7
bdrm 1340 a Mo CaJI 32JJ470

NEW LEASE ON LIFESTYLE
Near 14
Located in country setting yet
near conveniences
7 Bdrm . I bath 2 Bdrm , 2balh
Carport
Garages
ASK ABOUT OUR F R E E R E N T
S140 MOVES YOU IN
C A N TE R B U R Y at LK M ARY
331-1911...................... Ext. 707
ONE BDRM . lrg rooms, screen
porch, carport No pels S7S
wkly 1200 sec
323 43*5
RIDGEW OOD ARMS APTS
Ask about our
MOVE IN SPECIAL
ONE Y E A R LEASE
3500 Ridgewood Ave.... .373 4420
Tues Fri 8am 4pm
Mnn 8 10am 5 30pm
Some Sal 10 4______
SANFORD 4 br apt Upstairs,
newly renovated Downtown
area 5450 mo SJOO sec Call
321 053* leave message
SANFORO, I bedroom unit. 1st,
last * se cu rity deposit.
............. ■...............904 771-4SI3
SANFORD- 2 be-1 b 1311 A Pine
Av Adults, no pets. 580 wk
S325mo ♦ sec Days 479 0085
Eves644 1417 or
349 5474
SPECIAL!
SI75 move in through end ol
month lo the tint 10 new
residence who quality
Cali today!
Geneva Gardens Apts.
___________ 377-7090___________

☆

C L E A N A A T T R A C T IV E
REASONABLE RATES
W E E K L Y M AID SERVICE
Call:.............................773 *507

w
w
w
THE VILLAGE

C L E A N A A T T R A C T IV E
REASONABLE BY TH E W EEK
E F F IC I A 2 BDRM APTS
FURNISH A UN FURN ISHED
Celt.............................. M l 4507
TW O BDRM.. large kitchen,
fenced yard No pets 545
wkly 5200 sec
323 4145
• I BDRM.. I BA TH ...... IMS MO
• Pool A Laundry Facilities
e Just oft 17 97
Near Jayre Plain
FR AN K LIN ARMS
1130 Florida Ave.
313 4450
1300 D SA N FO R D A V E , 1
bdrm air heal carport, no
pels Call
*58 7157

LIN K N IW - Ex.-.-'tl*# blkt.
Power Pack l t d A Ocla gym.
S100 for a lt) piece*.
Call att. a g m .-..-........ m«sn

RlClKfa CAPtVlE'.

Tm* is Ri(i|i

i n — Pets ft Supplies

•eta 2 bdrm., I bath. S mile*
from town lovely tatting large
d o ck o v e rlo o k in g m i n t ,
excellent location built In cabIrvata vary private all tor
tlf .e o o pay 17,000 dow n
auumaloan

R E N T W ITH OPTION J/2. 7
car garage, convenient loca
lion. 1475 month

321-2237

L l acne Hurt dltlance from
M urphy good gardon ipot
reedy to build on owner said
M il S H A H pay ttJOO down
pay man! auume loan

D ELTO N A . 3 2. Country Club
area. 5500 per. mo d ll
counted, e sec. Call 171*791
FR ESH LY R EN O V A TE D - 7 br .
fireplace, large fenced yard,
quiet street. 1340 mo Deys
133 1744
Eves 372 1155
• e e IN D ELTO N A e e e
• e H O M E S FOR R E N T a e
______e e 574-1414 e #________
OAKLAN D V IIL A O E ! 2 Master
bedroom. 2' &gt; bath, only 1500 a
Month
119 4117

and reedy to build on paved
road county water under­
ground utilities very desirable
Iota. U4.000 pay *000 down
payment auume loan

FIRST REALTY INC.
5ANFORD-2 bdrm . 2 ba . nice
yard, close lo route 17-92
shopping Call.....
791 oao3
SANFORD- 7 br possible 3rd . ]
bath, ciosa to Hamilton Sch
5425mo S700 tec.
373 5131
SAN FOR D - 2 bdrm . family
room, workshop. 1*75 mo Call
830 4133 or.... 319 471) eves
SANFORO. 1 b / t'j b. garage,
appls . microwave. 1450 mo
2830 Gale Place
495 4300
S U N L A N D E S T A T E S , 717
Haywood Clr , 3 bdrm . ) ' i
bath, appliances, a-c. 1440 00
345 57*0 ...................... eves
TW O BORM.. 1 bath, large
yard, eat in kitchen. S375 Mo .
Call . ...................
371 5990
704 S. SUNLAND- 3/1. lanced,
new carpeting A paint, no
pets Lease. S400 mo dis
counted.Call:
471 3344
1 BDRM., liv. A din. rm l, eal In
kit . washer hook up. fenced.
W 1400 mo - 1100 dep
371 083^
1 B E D R O O M H O M E S IN
SANFORD. 1400 A 1550 mo ♦
security Call
371 3151

105— DuplexTriplex/ Rent
C A S S E L B E R R Y - Townhouse
duplex. 1415 mo Will accept
kids 340 3723 ... or
339 9414
L A K E M A R Y , new custom
duplex. 1 bdrm , 7 balh. dou
hie garage, privacy lenced.
easy access lol 4 and 17 97.
377 0785

107— Mobile
Homes / Rent
ONE A TWO BORMS. Furn .
mature adults only, no pets.
Park Ave Mobile Pk. 322 7841

109— Mobile Home
Lots / Rent
R.V. LOTS Now avail. Mature
adults only, No Pals, Park
Ave Mobile Park
.377 7841

111— Resort/Vacation
Rentals
M O UN TAIN HOMEI New mod
ern In resort area, near Blue
Ridge Parkway, 3 br 2 ba ..
picturesque view, tennis, lish
ing. golf A horseback riding
Brochure
*m 744 40*4

GROVEVIEW VILLAS
1000 Lake Mary Blvd

1 « -0 u f of Slate
Property/Sale

R E N T / L E A S I OPTtOM. 770*
Coronado Concourse, 1/1,
carpetad. good neighborhood
1350 per m o . part applied to
tala price ol SJ1.000 altar 11000
down................... Take a look!
Call............... 331 4441/3237013

321-0759

w

FURN ISHED RM. FOR REN T
with kitchen-laundry privl
leges, prlvale home in nice
neighborhood.references re
quired 371 0411 or 648 4743
PROFESSIONAL N EED S same
•o -Jiare house (S250 Leave
message it no answer 371 7311

☆

CASSELBERRY- 17 97. Mature
lady pratari same Private
bath A entrance. mlcrovaav*,
retriq.STOwb.............W T 3 1 I
FLO R ID A H O TE L
Reasonable weekly ratal
100Oak Are
........
311-9994
LONGWOOD room lor mature
per:on Lakelront home 175 a
week. Call:......... ........ 332 4*04
NICE C LEA N ROOM. MO week,
dapotlt required, downtown
Sanford Call
177 50*4
SANFORD Independent room,
private belh, kitchenette, re
trig .1740 Call
373 9174

103-Houses
Unfurnished / Rant

121— Condominium
Rentals
PINERIO G E CLUBI Luxurious
2-2. condo Pool, tennis,
washer and dryer.

STARTING AT $400
Landarama Fla . Inc

322 1734

141— Homes for Sale

xAttwood
^ Group,
767-0606
BY OWNER Spacious 2/2. LR.
DR. kit., large Iron! porch A
carport on large shady lot.
sas 000 Call: 323 1031 anytime
BY OWNER! Immaculate. 3/2,
Sanlord Home, garage, lenced
yard. 123 Reel Ct. (Sanora S.)
154,000 .......... , , ,904 985 4984

G O V ER N M EN T HOMES from
11.00 (U Repair) Alio tax do
llnquent A foraclotura propartial. Avail. Now. For ItsfIng C a m 115-7114013 ext G77«

11 \ i 1

» u ; u n

itixiroii
E X C E L L E N T TER M S A VA IL­
A BLE on this 3 bdrm. home!
Lovely real cedar paneling I 5
paddle lens I Fenced yard with
privacy! A t condition I New
carpetl Large shade trees!
Low down A low monthly!
Sailer will pay closing costs
for buyer 1.................... 149,500
GORGEOUS HU GE OAKS sur
round this 4 bdrm. home on
large 120x114 loti C/H/AI
Sprinkler system) Nothing
down lor VA buyers! 51,500 for
FH A I Sailer will pay closing
cost i l ........................... 150,000

323-5774
1404 HWY. 17-97

Ml toil NMD
to mow
IX Sill fSFATt

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford's Salts Laadtr
W E LIST A N O S E L L
M ORE PR O PER TY THAN
A N YO N E IN NORTH
SEM INOLE COUNTY
SANFOROt 2 bdrm., I'y bath
home, needs some TLC, heat
A air, dining room, porch A
morel............................ 174.900
BOATERS A FISHERM EN I 3
bdrm., 7 bath home. ad|acent
to fish camp with use of boat
ramp, many line feature*,
good condition...............144,100
SAN LAN TAt 3 bdrm , Us bath
home, large lenced yard, lots
01 closat A storage space,
•at In kitchen, heat A air.
.......................................... 149.500

HID D EN LAK E Townhous*. 3
br.. 2 ba., sit-in kitchen,
cathedral callings. Amenities
Incl. pool, tennis, ate. Garage,
private backyard. 177.500. Call
Mary TaMn Remix Unlimited
241-7111......... er......... 3217M4
ID Y LL W IL D E POOL HO M E.
3/7. great room, fireplace,
paddle Ians, must tee. Mid
ISO's. C a ll:................... 371-7117

JAMES LEE

321-7123----- Em . 323-0809
LARGE 3/1, country kitchen, on
2ls or 5 acre*, near all Laka
M a ry school*, 1119,000.
Call............................. 373-5073
L O V E L Y H O M E, Baautllul
Straat. Assuma 9 % , Low
down, only serious Inquiries
please......................... 373 5551
M O D U L A R ’ S / M O B IL E S on
acraage, 5 acrat, fenced, 3/1,
plus 1 stall barn, low 170'*
1 ACRES oil Lockwood, 3/1,
owner financing, low 140'*
V1+ ACRE TR E E D L O T, 3/1,
reduced, make otter, low 130'*
Oviedo Realty, Inc.Call 345,4413
SANFORD Beautiful Idyllwllde.
3/2, large lamlly room with
fireplace. A home for gracious
liv in g . 119,100. J O A N N
TO M P K IN S P R O P E R TIE S .
INC. R E A LTO R .......... 140-SU1
HI I k H U S

STEM PER
T H R E E BDRM., 7 bath, new
home, concrete block, price
only 153.750
T H R E E BORM., I ll bath, con­
crete block home, new paint,
only 154.900

■
R E A L T O R ................,173-499)
VA NO DOWN P A Y M E N T
3 bdrm., 7 ba . central heal and
air, I7xl2screenedporch.

CALL BART
REAL E S TA TE
R EA LTO R _______
377-7491

W O N D E R F U L C O U N TR Y ! 3
bdrm., 1 balh mobile home (I
yr. old) on 5 acres, eat In
kitchen, garden tub. utility
shed, perfect tor horses.155.500

Take over payments A move
right In. Beautiful 3 b r . 7 ba..
7 car garage on quarter acre
In lovely, convenient new area

CLASSIC F EA TU R ES I 3 br., I
ba.. hardwood floors, (pi.,
utility room, screened porch,
open landing, walk in closets.
A much more................ 144.900

NEW L IFE R EA L T Y INC.
4 BDRM., 2 BATH, lamlly room
w/tpl., formal dining room,
enclosed porch A work shed,
(•need back yard, treed lol.
144,500 Call alt. 4pm...3?7 1577
9 ROOM RANCHER, 3 ba. 7 lrg
screen pallo, old shade A
citrus on &lt;&gt; acre.
Naar
Mayfair C C. S87.500 377 5597

LOTS OF ROOMI 4 bdrm . 7
balh home. Fla. room. 27 X 70
game room, breaklast bar,
dining room, cenlral H/A.
split plan.................... 179,500
W ALK TO GOLF COURSE! 3
bdrm . 3 ba . w/huge hot tub
oil patio, central H/A. eat In
kitchen. 515.000 A assume
.........
114.000

I4f— Commercial
Property / Sale
APPRAISALS A N D SALES
BOB M. BA LL, JR . P.A..C.S.M.
R E A L T O R ....-............ US-41 It
F lor Ida. .Virginia.-Mary land
CA SSELSER R Yi 1 acre toned
PR 1 .115.000 W. Maliciewshl
Reelter
■30-7913
SANFORD- 3,M0 sq.ft, metal
building, corner location.
SI70.000 with terms.
■OB M. B A LL, JR. P.A.
R E A LTO R
................1W-4MI

153— AcreageLots/Sale
OCALA N A TIO N A L FO R EST
High and dry wooded lots
Mobile home, cabin, camping
O K. Hunting and fishing.
15.450 w/1130 dn . 143.71
monthly......(9041734 4579 days
or
(904)477 2431 eves
O N E ACRE- 5 miles east San
lord 11.500 Owner financing.
Wallace Cress Realty, Inc.
^ ^ ^ ^ 3 7 ro 5 7 7 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
USED HOMES
From St,700
Gregory Mobile Hemes..323-5700
13x40 IN PARK
15.995 Easy Terms
Gregory Mobile Hemes..123-5200
35 X I , with 74 X 9 Manulactured
rm odd Ideal lor hunting
campor storage U50 .377 7841

181— Appliances

Wa have rentals

LA K E SYLVAN E 5 TA TE I 7 br..
7 ba , on dbl corner lot, dining
room, fpi.. den. screened
porch, shed-work shop 155.000

BRAND NEW HOMEI 3 bdrm .
2 bath, tile toyer, formal
dining room , split plan,
walk in closet, central H/A,
eat In kitchen.,............. S72.50Q

and up. We have smell tract*,
large tracts, cabin*, house, old
terms, lake front lot*. Etc.
Write or call today for a free
listing brochure. You can call
free by dialing M00-43B-7HI.
Write or call today. Charokaa
Land Ca., Morphy, N.C....Itoi*

$10,000 DOWN

869-9100

143— Out of State
Property / Sale
NORTH CAROLINA, sell/trada
lor FL property, new, 7 bdrm .
7 ba on 1.73 acres. ]40 deg
view. Maggie Valley. 151.500
505-951-4410
_____

S ET FOR LIV IN G ! 3 bdrm . 7
balh home, breakfast bar.
family room, lots ot storage,
living room, dining room,
screened porch A more
..............
195.000

JU N E PORZIC R E A L TY , INC
L A K EFR O N T. All brick 3 bdrm.
3 bath home overlooking Lake
Dupont. Reduced lor quick
sale Call
C H A R LO TTE ..............574-9551
D E L T O N A E S T A T E AREA*
Low down to assume mtg. on
Ihls executive home Only
1129.900 Call
C H A R L O TTE ............. 174 9555

322-8678

BUILD YOUR NEW HO M EI 5
4- acres w/well, septic A
electric, S34.000. Cat! John
Bulner, Broker-Salesman
W EK IV A R IVER E5 TA TE 5 I 5
acres partially cleared, greal
location, 155.500. Call Rhonda
Gortney Realtor-Associate
RARE O P P O R TU N ITY ! 12 r
acres lor possible comm,
devmnt in Lk Ma-y 1400,000
Call Beth Hathaway, Real
tor-Assoc Iale

R E A L T Y INC.
D E V O TE O T O E X C E LLE N C E
LONGWOOD) Meadows West
G r e a t v a l u e ! 3 b d rm
showpiece In lamlly oriented
neighborhood Super schools.
(Rock Lake Middle A Lake
Mary High) Excellent access
lo I 4 A Altamonte Mall. Very
motivated seller ....
182,900

322-9031
International Business Clr
150 International Pkwy
Heathrow. F). 33744 __
FOR SALE BY OWNER Must
see lo appreciate. 7 br., 1 ba
Drive by 143 Bieder off S.
Sanford Av In S3Q's 32t 0772

• G EN EV A OSCEOLA HO. •
Z O N ED FO R M O B ILE S I
5 Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
70% Down. lOYrs. atl2 % l
From 118,5001

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720
Call toll free 1 800-323-3720
7545 PARK A V E ............ Sanlord
SOI Lk. Mary Blvd........ Lk. Mary

B A T P E L O IN O , 1500
Big end Beautiful
Call.333 04*7..or..371 77*1. evet

203— Livestock and
Poultry

213— Auctions
BRIDGES AND SON
Auction every Thursday 7 PM

WE BUY ESTATES!
Hwy 44.........................323 7101

215— Boats and
Accessories
■ ASS l O A t . '71‘, 35 horse
Evlnrude, trailer. 11500. Call
173 0417.... or.....373 771). eves
C ITA TIO N '*3'. cuddy cabin. 140
hp Marc. Cruiser 17500 Call
373 0417.-.or
373 7211. eves
O H E E N O E , 13*» It . Galvanized
trailer, all new. 1900 00 OBO
Call......................
3211444
G HENOO '44'. with trailer A
swivel seals Like Naw. 1500
Call 373 0417 or 323 7211. eves
H O U S E B O A T ‘ 17. deluxe
llberglass c a t. 24x8. sleeps 4.
gas ret, stove A w h. toilet A
shower, 90 hp Yamaha, trailer
117,000 Call
349 5405
11 F T . MFO, excellent condition
with 50 Johnson, loaded. 11700
Phone 173 4147
14 F T SKIP JA C K ’ 90 HP
m ere- power trim, hoi tool
13400 Cal) .................371 7174

217— Garage Sales
HOU1EWARES, FU R N ITU R E.
Antiques, Sat.,77lh A Sun.
71th, 104Orange Dr

219— Wanted to Buy
111 Aluminum Cans.. Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Metals.......... Glass
KOKOMO.......................371)100
JU N K A W R E C K E D CARS
Running or not. lop prices
paid. Free pick up 171 775*

WE BUY FURNITURE
Try Us......................'...... 723 4121

221— Good Things
to Eat

/ r x n . V . r s , -----BDRM. S E T - Queen size pedes
lal water bed w/4 drawers,
healer, liner, bumpers Mai
chmg nlghl stand. 7 dressers A
mirror Comforter S400 Call
321 4830__ or_
834 4477
B U N K B E D S W I T H
M A TR E S S E S - good cond ,
1100 P h o n e ____37J4I47
E X E C U T IV E TEA K DESK with
matching table and tile cabi
nel Emaculale condition!!
SJ00oller^CaJ[_
372 1430
Good Used T V 175 and up
M ILLER S
7419 Orlando O r......... - 377 0353
LADY KENM ORE Gas Dryer
Excellent condition Asking
*100 C a l l : ______
371 4984
LARRY'S M ART. 715 Sanlord
Ave New/Used lurn A appl
Buy Sell-Trade 322 4132__
NICE KINGSIZE W.iterbed with
wooden headboard A mirror
(SI50I 7 Peacock chairs (130)
Maple 4 draw dresser A mlr
ror 111 IS) with matching desk
A chair (1751 Matching cottee
A end tables (1701 7 wicker
TV tables (SlOea ) Call
371 1747...or.,.373 4215 anytime
T W IN B E D S - Separate or
together Imitation rattan A
wicker. C a ll:....
_ 123 0534
W H ITS full slie canopy bed w/3
drawer chest, SI50 Wood table
S30 Bunkbeds. good condition,
5115 Call 377 5140 after 4pm

LET AN

NON-RESIDENTIAL
NICE BUILD IN G LOTSI Each
lot is 94 X 140. located in quiet
area. Ideal lor single family
residence............. S9.000 each I
Call: Nancy Butler,
Realtor/Associate

COCKER SP AN IELS a mate*. 1
female, AKC registered pup
plat. Call:................... 771 *434
F E R R E TS . I month old. SJO00
each. Healthy, playful peti.
Cell after 5.50.............J21 S413

SI. 1213 Randolph SI

O O LF CARTS
150 to 1550 uMd riding carte
Call
30S-J23 *790
F E A V E V COMBO. 100 ben. 100
watt. 1/IS In BW woofer,
patch A cron ever capable.
1150 or otter........H I 0117 aval

Bad Credit?
No Credit?
W E FIN AN CE
W ALK IN ................ D R IV E O U T
N A TIO N A L A U TO S A L E S
Sanlord Ave A 17th St 171 4075
CH EV Y NOVA- '74. Concour*.
auto, cold air. runt excellent.
1750 Call:.....................377 1014
DATSUN 2M JX 'll. Like new,
5 spd . air. every etlra. 14.250.
Call
........................ 33) 1470
M A N Y V.W. Bug*. Van* A
Camper* to choote Irom I
E R N IE JA CK SO N A U T O S
...................................... 171-IMi
TR IU M PH S P ITFIR E . I V . lair
condition 1750 00 Call Dean

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories
GOOD USED MOTORS
and Iransmittiont
Call ............................. 171 77*4

235— Trucks /
Buses/Vans
CHEVY PICKUP SWB, ’4 r 7 1
cyt. 3 spd . good dependable
Iruck U00 or trade lor good
van ....................
371 4210
CH EV Y B E A U V IL LE VAN- *.
ton '79. dual air. remarkable
condition......................... 13,450
Ken Rummel Chevrolet, MIS
Orlande Or...................311-7100
FO RD F1M- '79. 4 cyt. p/*. now
lire*, clutch drive, camper
top. Excellent condition. 41.000
mile* Call .......
377 3114
IN T E R N A T IO N A L 1944, red
P U Ideal lor mechanic or
farmer 1900 Call
332 1854

237— Tractors and
Trailers
C L E A N . SM ALL T R A IL E R ,
with 17x14 room, lor rant In
Lake Mary Call
171 0974

238— Vehicles
Wanted
W E PAY TO P M tor wrecked
car*/truck*. We Sell

377 3457

223— Miscellaneous

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes

A IR LIN E T IC K E T One way lor
June 30lh Orlando Cleveland.
OH or lo Rochester. NY S59
Call:............................ 377 0641

HONDA 700. Nignth.iwk S. 84
4 000 m i- garaqe kept, exc
cond . 7 helmets S2.200or best
otter Call
372 4844

AIRLINE/TRAVEL SCHOOL

DIIV

U C D C

LU fV

Train to b&lt; a
TRAVEL AGENT
TOUR GUIDE
AIR R E S E R V A T I O N S !
Start locally, lull llmetpart time.
Train on Uve airline computer*.
Horn* tludy end leildent IrtinIng. Financial aid available. Job
placement eetlelince. NeFl
Hdqlt. Lighthouse F.T., FL

DOWN PAYMEN1
GOOD CREDIT BAD C R E D IT
NO CREDIT '
NO INTEREST
c a u f^ re s r

A.C.T. Travel School

1 800-432-3004
Accredited member NH.AC.

USED CARS

3? 19 S HWY 17 9 ?
SANFORD 323 ?! ?]

C
V
P
C
O
T
*
C A r CVl I

TO PUT THIS DIRECTORY T O WORK FOR YOU CALL 322 2611

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B.E. LINK CONST.
Remodeling........ 305 122 7079

Financm^^^^Xt^CHC0CO47^

Carpentry

Fence

Landclearing

Nursing Care

FENCE INSTALLED-AII
types no job too small or
larqe Call:........... 305 323 8798

BUSH HOO. Box Blading. Dll
clng A Tractor Roto Tilling
Call...............................377 7597

OUR R A TES ARE LOWER
Lakeview Nursing Center
919 E. Second St., Sanford
131 4707

House Plans

MK

Custom blueprints
813 Orlenta Ave
Alt Spgs .37701
112 9344

A L L T Y P E S Of Carpentry
Remodeling A home repairs.
DOWNS
Call Richard Gross 321 597?
R EM O D ELIN G PRO'S. Addt
lions, remodeling, decks,
Home Improvement
docks, boathouses, pole barns,
new homesWe do II all St.
C A R P EN TR Y BY EO O AV IS
Lie. CBC78190.................... 3712411
REM O DELIN G/REPAIR S
RICHARDS C A R P EN TR Y
A IN S TA LLA TIO N SERVICE
18 yrs in Central F lor Ida
Lie. Sanford res.............. 371 0442
T a ll ............................... 373 5787
COLLIERS
HOME lA'iP R O V FVEN T
Cleaning Service
No job too small
Call 371 4477
C O M P L E T E REPAIR
HOUSE CLEAN IN G by week
SERVICE bath reralr, ceram
monlh.oltices alto
Ic tile. Mobile home repairs
Call
_
321 3487
also. No Job too imall.
NEW BUSINESS seeking clients
Call 4 am to 9 pm......... 373 5457
Offices A Retail businesses
C O M P LE TE HOME REPAIRS,
preferred A to Z Cleaning
plumbing, electrical, painting,
Service................................3231771
la n d s c a p in g , c a r p e n tr y ,
anytlme/anyplacet
371 4210

Concrete

CO N CR ETE slabs.drives,patios
walks. 25 yr exp Lifelong res
Lie A ins...... 349 9758 alter 5

Electrical
D A S E L E C TR IC ........... I l l 4050
New A Remodeling additions.
Ians, secur'ty, lights, timers.
A all electric service Quality
Service.... Licensed A Bonded

Home Repairs
HOME REPAIRS A Remodeling
No job too small)
28 yrs. exp
............ 323 9445

Landclearing
BACK HOE. Dump Iruck, 3ush
hog. Box blading, and Discing
Call 322 1804
or
322 9313

Landscaping
BOGUESI Expl Professional!
Lawn A Garden Maim A chain
saw work Trees and shrubs
planted! Free Estl
373 8387

SEMINOLE LANDSCAPING
Call............................... 372 1131

Lawn Service
B A R R IE R ’S Landicapingl
Irrlg . I.nwn Care. Res A
Comm. 321 7444. F R EE E1TI
C E N TR A L FL. LAWN M AIN­
TE N A N C E , satisfaction guar
anleed, FR EE ESTIM ATES.
Call chuck or R ic k ......371 2004
G EORGE'S LAWN CARE
Fast reliable service Res A
Comm Free est
377 0901

LAWN SERVICE
___________321 3018
"S U N N Y S " Mow, edge. trim,
planting, mulching SPRING
Spec Freeesl
377 7879

Nursing Care
Hillhaven Healthcare Center
950 Mellonvllle Ave.
Santord....................... 123 1544

Painting
FRANK BAR NHAR T Painting
Contractor interior A Extort
or painting, pressure cleaning
Free esl All work Guaran
teed Ret upon request Paint
Ing since 1970
373 1141
MARSH P A IN TIN O
Inter lor/Exterior
Call
173 440b

Paper Hanping
PAPER HANGING
ING (Interior
Res A comm 15
Free Estimates
favlor at

A PAINT
Exterior).
years exp.
Call: RoV
371 4021

Tree Service
E C H O L S TR E E S E R V IC E
Free estimates! Low Prices)
Lie Ins Slump Grinding, Too!
323 2229 day or nite
"Let The Professionals do H"

Windows
G LA SSO M ETR YI Comprehen­
sive window cleaning service.
Comm A Re*
... 373 47IA

�r

A t— Sanford HoraM, Sanford. FI.

B L 0 N D 1E

k

r r * f

»

r

&gt; r ' #' t '

Tuesday. Juno 23, 1N7

by Chic Young

r

r

Better See Physician
About Large Goiter

DEAR DR. G O TT - There la a
very large growth on the right
side o f my throat that makes It
hatd to swallow. Also, m y right
ear Is very tender and aches.
People tell me It's only a goiter.
Should I worry?
DEAR READER - Yes. You
need an accurate diagnosis. See
by Mort Walker a doctor. Neck swelling can have
many potentially serious causes.
Including enlargement o f the
lymph glands. Goiter (a painless,
benign swelling of the thyroid
gland) used to be a common
c o n d it io n b e c a u s e p e o p le ,
especially those In Inland areas,
often did not obtain enough
Iodine In their diets. Today,
goiter is rare. In part due to the
facts that table salt Is Iodized
and that, with refrigeration, fish
Is more commonly consumed
than It was previously.
Goiter Is often treated with
Iodine
supplements. However,
by Art Santom
when It causes difficulty In
swallowing or breathing, it may
have to be removed surgically.
Therefore, you need an exami­
nation by a physician.
DEAR DR. GOTT - What Is
acute neuronal ceroid
lipofuscinosis? It struck my
healthy stepson at 4. and seven
years later, he Is losing sight,
speech, movement, etc.
DEAR READER — Neuronal
ceroid lipofuscinosis Is an un­
usual hereditary disease charac­
terized by accum ulation. In
nerve tissue, of fat pigments
called ceroid and llpfuscin. This
untreatable disease causes de­
terioration of nerves, blindness
and seizures.
DEAR DR. G O TT — My wife Is
a seml-Invalid with multiple
sclerosis. Her biggest problem Is
the burning sensation In the
buttocks area. There Is constant
friction sliding from bed to
wheelchair to commode.
DEAR READER Multiple
sclerosis is a nerve disease of
unknown cause that produces
numbness In certain parts of the
body, visual difficulties, loss of
muscle control and weakness.
As the disease progresses. In­
creasing disabilities result.
In your wife's case, the burn­
ing o f the skin over her buttocks

BEETLE BAILEY

TH E BORN LOSER
p

r * r r r

# r

V

may be due to friction and the
constant pressure of lying and
sitting on that area. She needs
scrupulous attention to her skin.
Frequent turning, application of
creams and lotions to reduce
irritation and the use of a fluffy
sheepskin pad (or an oscillating
air mattress) on which to sit and
lie are useful methods to prevent
burning, breakdown o f skin and

pressure sores. Her doctor or
visiting nurse can advise you. In
addition, you can obtain more
information about M.S. by writ­
ing the National Multiple Sclero­
sis Society. 205 East 42nd St..
New York. NY 10017.

ACROSS

Answer to Previous Puule
4 Metal
decoration
□g e
d e e d
□ □ □ □
1 Basaballtr No­ 5 Platform
lan _____
6 Be sorry
about
5 Afr. manure
9 Bataball official 7 Goose genua
□ E D G E D
EG O
(abbr.)
8 Bring into
E
E
E
G
ED G ED
12 40a film star
harmony
□
D
E
E
D
D
G
EG E D D
Paul_____
9 Yen
□ G E E
E E E E
D D E
13 Female relative 10 Unkind
14 Sandpiper
11 Football's
□ E E
E G G E
D E E D
15 Moat inclined
Rozetle
□ D E E D E D
G G ED G
to doia
16 Insects
□
D
E
E
D
□
O
D
D
17 Channel
20 A whole lot
O
D
D
E
E
D E E
18 French article
21 Bumpkins
□ □ □ D E E D E D
G E E
19 City in Oregon 22 Tennis term (2
21 Paaaagewaya
wds.)
□D D E
D E E D
GGG
24 Yea_____
23 8ign of the
□ D E E
D E E D
D EO
zodiac
25 Stupid
24 Happens
36 Baseball's
49 Full of zest
27 Dark wood
26 Olympic board
_____Speaker
50 Wading bird
31 Com apike
(abbr.)
38 Twig
53 Firearm
32 Punch
28 Margarines
41 Vibration
owners' gp.
34 Wild plum
29
________ Dame
43 Park bird
54 Caviar
35 Author___
30 Irish poet
45 Hostile force
Vonnegut
55 Actress Clairs
33 New Zealand
47 Lumber
37 Oives aignal to
parrot
48 Soup green
56 Sup
39 Airline informa­ 1
z
3
4
tion (abbr.)
40 Onaet
12
42 Accord
44 Angara
IS
46 Floats upward
47 Deteriorate
50 Arrange
It
Z!
Z&gt;
51 Type of tuber
52 Place for
IS
animala
57 See mammal
11
58 Biblical king
59 Mrs. Charles
SB
Chaplin
60 Twenty-four
40
hours
61 Old English
coin
47 . 4 S
48
62 In applspie
order

□an nDBn neon
non

nnncnnnnn

si

DOWN

57

1 Royal Mail
00
Service (abbr.)
2 Actor Brynnar
3 Chemical suffix ozz*

n
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(0 1 9 8 7 by N IA. Inc

WIN A T BRIDGE
By James Jacoby

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

BUGS BUNNY
WHATARE W E GOING
TO EAT PILING T H IS
SPA C E V O Y A G E ?

PEHY(7KATE(7 CARROTS,
fro zen c a r r o t s,
R2W PEREP CARRO TS.
ANP C A R R O T J U IC E /

Now here la some aggressive
bidding. North could bid only
three spades, and the king of
by Hargreaves A Sailers diamonds was a wasted card
given the bidding, but South
nevertheless cue-bid four dubs
and then five diamonds. When
North showed both the ace and
the king of hearts. South went
for the small slam. You've read It
here before: If you’re going to bid
'em up. you had better be able to
play 'em up. The play Is not
really difficult.
The acc of diamonds was led
and the suit continued, declarer
ruffing. The analysis is easy —
you have a club loser unless you
__ __________ '
by Warner Brothers can park It on an established
heart. If the hearts split 3-3,
i KNEW 1(7 HAVE A P R O BLEM WHEN
playing A-K and ruffing a heart
HIREP HONEY 0U N N YA S IT S NU TRITIO N IST/
will do It. However, that 3-3
division is not as likely as 4-2.

That means you may need some
extra transportation to dummy.
It w ill be c u rta in s If you
routinely draw the opposing
trumps before attacking the
heart suit. Instead, try this.
First, ruff the second diamond
with the six of spades. Next, play
the spade ace. Then, without
drawing the outstanding trump,
play A-K of hearts and ruff a
heart with your 10. Now play
any spade other than the deuce
to the king In dummy. You are
now able to ruff another heart
high and get back to dummy by
leading your spade two. You can
now discard your losing club on
the good heart. You would lose
the hand through criminal care­
lessness If you ruffed the first
time with the spade deuce or if
you pulled two rounds of trumps
before attacking the heart suit.

NORTH

S-ZJ-S7

♦ K 43
f A K 653
♦ 76
♦ 764

WEST
♦ 75
* J9
♦ A Q J 10 9 5 4
♦J 5

EAST
♦9
♦ Q 1087
♦ 832
♦ q 10 9 8 2

SOUTH
♦ A Q J 10 862
♦ 42
♦K
♦ A K3
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

West

North

East

3♦
Pass
Pass
Pass

3♦
4V
SV
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
1♦
4♦
5♦
6♦

Opening lead: ♦ A

HOROSCOPE
come on too strong and tell
others how things should be
done.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
and and an associate may come
YOUR BIRTHDAY
up with a brilliant Idea today to
JUNE 24. 1987
achieve an Important objective,
An exciting upsurge Is In store yet you both may lack the skills
to pull It off.
for you In the year ahead. You
are not likely to trip over the
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Your
same stum bling blocks that
faith tn your present plans could
previously robbed you of suc­ be rather fragile today, so it's
cess.
best to avoid discussing them
with negative thinkers who
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be could deflate them further.
a nice guy today, but don't take
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
a back scat tn a situation where
Don’t take anything for granted
you should be asserting yourself.
In your business dealings today.
The control could go to someone The opposite may be true In a
undesirable. Get a Jump on life
situation where you think you
by understanding the influences
have the upper hand.
governing you In the year ahead.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.
Send for your Astro-Graph pre­
21) A relationship that has been
d ic tio n s today. Mail $1 to
of dubious value could come to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper,
an abrupt end todhy. Nothing
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH will be lost.
44101-3428. Be sure to state
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
your zodiac sign.
19) Be a bit more attentive to
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A
common-sense health matters at
distasteful chore your friends
this time Eat wc'l. and get
have beer, doogiag could he
adequate rest and sufficient
dumped in vour lap today. If you
exercise so you'll feel your best.

What The Day
Will Bring...

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thavas
p
o
F5/?y TO

T H IS S T U O io

• DANCE
5TUPIP
4
—

TH E

TEACH

TANGO ON THE INSTALLMENT

Pl a n .

IT'S CALLED
"fiANCING
CH EO /c 1 b
##

' ~- ®i

-

GARFIELD

T

m av

« 5

&amp; -Jj

by Jim Davis

ANNIE

'(U

t

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Covcrups have a way of being
uncovered today. If you have
done something that will dis­
appoint one who loves you. all
can be rectified If you don't try
to hide It.
ARIES (March 21-Aprtl 19) If
you arc too intent upon your
own ideas today, you may turn a
deaf car to the suggestions of a
concerned friend who will be
trying to help you.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Be
very careful how you handle
your Involvements today. You
may get trapped Into carrying all
the burdens when you try to
help another.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It
may seem like everything you
want to do today is either
opposed by associates cr Im­
peded by obstacles you cannot
control. Keep your cool.

by Leonard Start

- P O T SHE FOJNP

I ' l l h ample

CUR HID EO UT,

THAT. LET

•STINGER0!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 10)
An agitator In one of your social
groups may stir something up
to d a y and put you In an
awkward position. You may
have to choose a side.

HER GO.

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‘ i ” &lt; X t;

ijQ'i&amp;rSaen&amp;y^i-

.-. i f

Price

Sanford, Florida — Friday, February 6 , 19t7

79th Year, No. 143

Teen Shot In Fiaht

» * v ^ nw

25 Cents

L a n d s c a p in g
P la n n e d F o r

F a th e r
7

G e ts

Y e a rs

K illin g
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W riter
H w * M PfwH fey u * * » R iliM A fe

Victim Extricated

Seminole County firefighters tear back the roof of a car to free a woman
trapped In a small truck following a two vehicle accident on Interstate 4
Thursday around 3:45 p.m. June Halberg, city unknown, was transported
to South Seminole Community Hospital In Longwood where she was In
serious condition with a fractured pelvis and rib in|urles. Details of the
accident were not available early t o d a y . _____________
—

Clinic To Eliminate 3 Jobs
•

By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
In a belt-tightening move, the board
of directors of Central Florida Commu­
nity Clinic In Sanford approved elimi­
nation of three staff positions that will
save 9132.000 this year, according to
clinic Executive Director Susan Moore.
Positions eliminated were those of
fln a n lc la l p la n n e r, p atien t flow

coordinator and a physician. The
physician's position has been vacant
since one of six clinic doctors resigned
to work elsewhere. Mrs. Moore said.
Curt Davidson, who has been finan­
cial planner for 13 months, said he will
receive severance pay and compensato­
ry time and will be leaving by the end
of the month.

See CLINIC, page 14A

A family squabble claimed Its second
victim when a father was sentenced to
7 years for killing his son during a fight
while drunk.
Willie Lee Campbell. 34. of 1504 W.
15th St., was sentenced Wednesday
for the death of Tracy Campbell. 18.
Circuit Judge S. Joseph Davis Jr. also
ordered Campbell to serve eight years
probation after the Jail time. Davis gave
Campbell credit for 166 days he has
served since the August shooting.
The men fought around 11:30 a.m.
A ug. 23.
according to a Sanford
Police Investigation.
Campbell had reportedly confronted
hfs son about bringing cocaine home,
though police did not find any of the
drug in the house. The teenager struck
his father In the eye during the
argument, prompting Campbell to arm
h im s e lf w ith a .3 8 -c a llb e r gu n .
Campbell, who pleaded guilty to man­
slaughter. shot his son in the stomach,
according to police records.
Delores Campbell, the teen's mother.

F o r
S o n

said they were not arguing about
cocaine. She said her husband was a
problem drinker and picked a fight with
the boy when he came home.
"It ended up that Tracy got the best
of him and and he ended up shooting
him. which I really think he didn't
mean to do." she said.
“ I was so angry. I don’t know why he
did It. But I forgave him. It was kind of
hard, but I forgave him. You can’t love
God and hate someone. I tell the
children not to hate him." she said.
" I go to see him. And I’d do
everything I can for him. As long as
you’re alive, you've got hope," said
Mrs. Campbell. "Maybe someday we’ll
be back together."
After the shooting, another son.
Willie Lee Campbell Jr., called police.
Responding officers found the wounded
teenager In a bedroom. Paramedics
worked on him for about 30.minutes,
according to police reports. He was
then taken to Central Florida Regional
Hospital where he was pronounced
dead 30 minutes later.
— Deane Jordan

Boil Water Order Depends On Inspection Today
Ah Inspection today will determine
whether customers of the Lake Monroe
Utility west of Sanford will have to
continue to boll their drinking water.
The state Department of Environ­
mental Regulation was to Inspect the
private utility today. If repairs the DER
ordered arc complete the order will be
lifted, said George Glonls of the DER.
Customers of the utility were ordered
to begin boiling their water Feb. 6 after
a high bacteria count was found In the

system that serves the business area
around the intersection of Interstate 4
and State Road 46.
The bacteria bulld-up was caused by
a broken line on a chlorine machine,
said Russell Miller. Seminole County’s
environmental health director.
While the bacterial problem has been
resolved, the utility was told by the
DER to clean or replace portions of the
plant's machinery and aeration filters.
That was to be done by today. Glonls

said.
He said the utility's owner said
Thursday the plant was ready for
Inspection. If the plant has met the
DER’s demands, the DER will tell the
county to lift the boll order. Miller said.
The county detected a high bacterial
count in the water Feb. after receiving a
complaint. Miller said.
A check at the plant showed a line on
a chlorine machine had broke reducing

the amount of bacterla-kllllng chlorine
in the water to zero, he said.
Normally, ibe oblovtn* count in tbo
treated water Is one-fifth of a part per
million. The DER ordered the plant to
increase the chlorine level to at least
1.5 parts per million for two days to
disinfect the system, he said.
The utility pumps about 100,000
gallon of water per day. according to
DER records.
— Deane Jordan

1 7 -9 2 M e d i a n
By Kathy Tyrity
Herald Staff Writer
The median of U.S. Highway
17-92 from South Park Drive to
27th Street In Sanford will be
landscaped according to plans
unanimously approved Thursday
by the Beautification Committee
of the Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce.
If all goes according to plan, the
medians with be enhanced with
(lowers or plants and Irrigated
with a new system to be tied to an
existing water main beneath the
median. The work should begin
by summer.
Further segments of the road
will be beautified as money
permits, but the Initial costs are
expected to be around $10,000.
said chamber Executive Director
Dave Farr.
The project was spearheaded by
Bill dlelow, Sanford, and other
members of the Beautification
Committee, which Mrs. Glelow
heads. A subcommittee has been
working on the project for two
months, and Its chairman. Mike
Burkett, presented its plan to the
chamber Thursday.
Additional meetings are sched­
uled for March and April to select
the plant materials to be used.
The chamber plans to work
with the city’s Scenic Improve­
ment Board (SIB) and Its new
chairman. Ray Priest. Farr said
the SIB has some expertise and
drawings of proposed materials
for the plantings.
The chamber Is also looking for
some other civic organizations
and corporate sponsors to Join in
the effort. Farr asked anyone who
can help to call him at the
chamber at 322-2212.
Other subcommittee members

working on the project tm*

Becky Courson. Ann Bri
L o r r a i n e F l o r e l l l , B arbai/a
Bradshaw and Jim Jernlgan.
»
Farr said that before the project
can become a reality, approvals
will be needed from the city
commission and Department of
Transportation.

Consultants Praise Schools' F o o d Service Im p ro ve m e n ts
By G enie Lin d b erg
*
H erald S ta ff W rite r
Seminole County food service
employees are "excellent" and
the district’s food service pro­
gram has Improved dramatically
during the past year In many
critical areas, according to con­
su lta n ts w ho presented an
overall assessment of the pro­
gram to the school board.
Peat. Marwick. Mitchell &amp; Co.
of Miami, whose consulting work
Includes food service evalua­
tions, was hired after school
board members last year re­
quested a study to address the
continued Improvement of the
food service program, said Karen
C o le m a n , s c h o o l d i s t r i c t
spokesman. The report pres­
ented to the School Board
Wednesday makes short-term
recommendations In areas for
Improvement between now und
when all schools will have fullservice dining facilities as part of
the district's $120 million build­
ing program.
About 19 schools do not have
self-contained kitchens and food
being transported to these "sat­
ellite ’’ facilities gets cold, ac­
cording to Marwick consultant

Jon Simon. Simon said students
at these schools also have to
carry their lunches great dis­
tances to dining areas before
they can eat.
Tuskawllla and Teague middle
school students. Simon said,
have to walk more than 50 feet
to an outdoor facility after get­
ting their food.
"It’s hard to serve good hot
food u n d e r n o r m a l
circumstances but under these
conditions, it's im possible."
Simon also cited the recently
built Greenwood Lakes Middle
School as having the most effi­
cient. m odern food service
o p e ra tio n . T u s k a w llla and
Teague are scheduled to have
new modem cafeterias bull! as
part of the $120 million building
program.
Despite poorly designed kitch­
ens with limited space, the
district food service employees
are "excellent." Simon said.
"They have a hearty attacking of
th e ta s k an d a rc g o o d
employees."
He added that the employees
have " a much higher caliber of
care for the students and their
satisfaction with school lun­

TO D A Y
Bridge................... 10A
Classifieds...... 11-13A
Comics.................. 10A
Coming Events.....3A
Crossword............ 10A
Dear Abby..............9A
Deaths...................14A
Dr. Gott................ 10A
Editorial................ 4A
Financial........... 14A

Florida....................3A
Horoscope.............10A
Hospital................ 14A
Nation.....................5A
People.....................9B
Police..................... 2A
Sports............... 6A-8A
Television.LEISURE
Weather..................2A
World...................... 5A

•Inside•

• Court changes execution appeal rules,
2A
• C llve r guilty In trooper shooting, 3A

• Waite shooting denied, 5A

H * r»M Photo by Lo vli Roimondo

Tu sk a w llla M iddle School students c a rry lunches from
service area to outdoor area, a distance of m ore than 50 feet.
ches" than other employees he
had observed In other counties.
"They like to know students are
getting a good meal."
According to Simon, consul­
tants who visited the food
service operations observed posi­
tive improvements to the pro­
gram being made on a dally
b a s is by E ldon C h am b ers,
director of food services. Their
report says that "based on

interviews with school prin­
cipals. the director of food
service has done an excellent Job
In coordinating and cooperating
with them to ensure that an
effective food service program Is
operated at each campus."
Since Chambers was hired In
March of 1985. there has been a
net gain of $158,000 with no
board subsidy. According to Mrs.
Coleman, this means the food

service operation was operating
on a break-even basis and did
not have to dip Into school funds
that would be used for such
things as teacher salaries, texts
and other m a te ria ls. A lso ,
participation in the program has
Increased u n d e r C h a m b e rs
supervision and food preparation
and serving facilities were up­
graded. the report said. And In
preparation for the bond pro­
gram funds. Chambers
has
started planning for the Installa­
tion of kitchens and dining
rooms In all schools lacking
those facilities.
C h a m b e rs a lso Im p ro v ed
Communication am ong prin­
cipals. m an agers, and food
service staff through weekly
newsletters, monthly kitchen
m anagers' meetings, weekly
staff meetings, financial feed­
back reports to principals, man­
agers. and staff and a monthly
food service handbook was de­
veloped and distributed to man­
agers.
In addition, the report said
that under Chambers manage­
ment food pattern changes were
Initiated, In-service programs
were established for food servlre

personnel and dining area de­
cors were Improved.
The steps taken by Chambers
to Improve the operation of the
food service program, according
to the report, "arc positive In­
d ic a t o r s o f e ffe c tIv e d e ­
partmental management und
administration."
The board plans to appoint a
food service committee at Its
February 11 meeting.to evaluate
the study and to report back to
the board by March 25.
Superintendent of Schools
Robert Hughes said the food
service committee should be
made up of people who are
interested and who would volun­
teer to help In making recom­
mendations that would serve to
improve the food service pro­
gram for the future. He said the
committee would Include prin­
cipals. food service managers.
PTA and advisory committee
members, representatives from
the private sector, food service
employees and probably some
students and other volunteers
who would be form ally appolnted-by the board.
See FOOD, page 14A

Inmate Releases May Satisfy Judge
From S ta ff A n d W ire Reports
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - State of­
fic ia ls b e lie v e F l o r i d a ’ s new
emergency prisoner release pro­
gram. sought by Governor Bob
Martinez and worked for by
Lt.
G o v e r n o r B o b b y B r a n t le y .
Longwood. will satisfy a federal
judge until the Legislature can
convene in April to consider a
comprehensive program to ease
prison overcrowding.
They acknowledged Thursday that
if U.S. District Judge Susan Black Is
not satisfied, even more Inmates
could be ordered released than Is
planned under the administrative
gain time program the Legislature
approved during a special session
Wednesday.
Larry Pollvka. an adviser on pris­

ons to Gov. Bob Martinez, said the
governor Is serious about Solving the
problem he Inherited.
"It Is not rhetoric when we talk
about the long-range plan." Pollvka
said. "The governor doesn’t want to
spend the next four years dealing
with a crisis."
The legislature, called into session
Wednesday by Gov. Bob Martinez,
passed an emergency In-mate re­
lease law to avoid automatic court
Intervention when the state's prisons
reached 99 percent of capacity. The
bill allows prison officials to grant
more gain time to certain prisoners,
thus allowing them to selectively
lower the prison population.
Brantley said the battle for the
emergency bill was fought on the
floor of the state Senate and not the

House of Representatives, where the
measure passed without oposition.
Brantley, fresh from the first and
successful passage of Martinezwanted legislation, said It was a
different ball game working for a bill
from the governor’s ‘office rather
than in the house where he was a
representative.
He said It was a lot of hard work
but a coalition of Republicans and
conservative Democrats prevailed
and the emergency bill passed.
He said the next battle Martinez
will wage Is passage of the budget
when the legislature meets In regu­
lar session In April.
M e an w h ile. Ju stice B lack Is
w e ig h in g a series of m o tio n s
challenging the stale’s version of the
system ’s legal capacity. Sharon

Jacobs, a lawyer for Inmates In a
class action suit over prison condi­
tions. contended officials Improperly
used temporary shelters including
tents, plywood barracks and an
unused cann ery to Inflate the
system’s capacity.
The temporary structures have
room for about 1.500 convicts,
according to prison officials. As of
midnight Wednesday, the prisons
held 32,555 convicts — 150 more
th a n th e n u m b e r w h e r e a d ­
ministrative releases would be trig­
gered under the new program.
If the system passes 100 percent of
legal capacity. Black could find the
state in contempt and take over the
prison system . The population
See R E LE A SE S, page I4 A .

�IA -Im M

HaraM, Sanfart, FI.________FrKay, Fa$. 4 ,1M7

IN BRIEF
WUmSprayed With
Sho S h o w n ,

Husba

Candy Helnman called Altamonte Springs police to *200
A Pearl Lake Apartments, 203 Pearl Lake Causeway, at
about 7:50 a.m. Wednesday after her husband allegedly
threw hot coflee on her as she showered at that home.
Mrs. Helnman met police at a telephone booth near the
home. They went to the home and reported seeing
furnishing In disarray and some things broken. Mrs.
Helnman told police the suspect also hit her in the face.
A witness reportedly said the couple had been arguing
over Mrs. Helnman's clothing before she got Into the
shower where the assault allegedly occurred.
Carl Helnman. 23. of 218 Crown Oaks. Longwood, was
arrested at the Pearl Lake Apartments address at 7:53 a.m.
Thursday. He has been charged with battery-spouse abuse
and released on $500 bond to appear In court Feb. 12.

Driving Under Influence Arrests
The following persons have been arrested In Seminote
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
—Thomas Edwin Shetler. 40, of 2415 Howard Ave.,
Oviedo, was arrested at 1:30 a.m. Thursday after his car
was clocked traveling 62 mph In a 45 mph zone on State
Road 426, Oviedo.
—Dennis Joseph Bregar. 21. of Orlando, at 5:20 a.m.
Wednesday, alter his car, with an expired license tag,
crossed a median on State Road 436, Altamonte Springs.

Burglaries A n d Thefts Reported
A 1982 Crown Victoria Ford LTD automobile valued at
$5,000 was taken from the car lot of Truck World. 317 W.
1st St.. Sanford between 5 p.m. last Wednesday and 8:45
a.m. Thursday, according to Truck World manager George
John. 58, of Deltona.
Rosemary Allen, 38, of 719 Oaklando Drive, Altamonte
Springs, reported to sheriffs deputies she recovered a
wedding ring set stolen from her at the Winter Park pawn
shop where she thought a suspect she named might have
taken the set and several other items of Jewelry stolen from
her home this month. At the pawn shop she was told that
other Items of hers that had been pawned had been sold.
The wedding ring set was pawned on Jan. 14, a sheriffs
report filed Tuesday said. Deputies have the name of a
suspect In the case.
James F. Matheny, of the Britt Construction Co.. 910
Britt Court. Altamonte Springs, reported that business was
burglarized twice, once between 9 p.m. Tuesday and 7
o.m. Wednesday when two forklift batteries valued at $400
were stolen.
The second burglary was between 9:30 p.m. Wednesday
and 7:15 a.m. Thursday, when two wheelbarrows valued at
$160 were stolen from a shed, a sheriffs report said.
Timothy Allen Wilson. 25, of 2105 Howell Branch Road
*27-B, Maitland, reported to sheriffs deputies his 1978
Kawasaki-motorcycle valued at $550 was stolen from his
home Friday or Saturday.
George M. Holland. 34. of 646 Moss Drive. Altamonte
rings, reported to sheriffs deputies that $2,500 worth of
gear was stolen from his home Wednesday or
hurMay.
Two kitchen ranges valued at $433 each were stolen,
along with a $230 dishwasher, from 2937 and 3105 S.
Horizon Place. Oviedo. A sheriffs report said the items
belong to the Babcock Co., 631 Palm Springs Drive,
Altamonte Springs.
Judy W. Bowles, 38. of 9200 Bear Lake Road. Apopka,
reported to sheriffs deputies that about $950 worth of
Jewelry was stolen from her home Monday along with five
firearms with a combined value of $500 and a $150 bag of
bull riding equipment and a $150 televlson.
About $3,000 worth of Jewelry and a few other Items
were stolen from the home of William Richard Sloan, 33, of
3535 Lockwood Road, Oviedo. Monday, a sheriffs report
said.
A $1,500 ring was among $1,735 worth of Jewelry stolen
from the home of Gregory Charles Richmond. 40. of 2500
Howell Branch Road *127, Winter Park, Monday, deputies
reported.
Patricia P. Slncler. 46. of 3645 Marquette Ave„ Sanford,
reported to sheriffs deputies that a bank bag containing
$300 and about $2,200 In checks were stolen from her car
while parked at the Indian Hills Bowling Lanes. 115
Wilshlre Blvd.. Casselberry, Tuesday.
Sheriffs deputies have the name of a suspect who may
have stolen two heaters and a stereo with a combined value
of $200 from the home of Rosetta Madison. 32, of 2180
Granby St., Sanford. Tuesday.
A diamond ring and other Jewelry with a combined value
of about $600 were stolen from the home of Penny B. Cook.
26, of 2808 Regal Lane, Oviedo. Wednesday, a sheriffs
report said.

FIRE CALLS
The Sanford fire department
has responded to the following
calls. Details are based on fire
department reports:

WEDNESDAY
— 12:43 p.m., 4220 S. Orlando
Drive, car fire, out on arrival.

(U S P S 411-114)

Friday, February 6, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 143
Published D aily and Sunday, except
Saturday by Tha Sanford H tr a ld ,
Inc. 704 N. French A v e ., Sanford.
Fla. 17771.
Second C la n Poitage Paid at Sanford,
Florida 37771
Home D elivery: Month, W.7J; 3 Month*.
114.75; 4 M onth*. 177.00; Y e a r.
UI.OO. By M a il: M onth. 14.74; 3
Month*, 120.25; 4 Month*, 1)7.00;
Y e a r, Mf.OO.
Phone (70S) 733 34)1.

Fire w a s caused by motor
backfiring while gasoline was
being poured Into the carbure­
tor.
— 5 :2 0 p.m.. 2530 Jewett Lane,
false alarm caused by malfunc­
tioning alarm system.
— 5 :5 9 p.m ., 2615 Marshall
Ave., stove fire. Fire was caused
by plastic utensils In gas stove
broiler. Out on arrival. Smoke
damage to kitchen and stove.
TUESDAY
— 1:57 a.m., 2499 Old Lake
Mary Road, rescue call. A man,
age not reported, appeared
drunk. No action taken.
— 5:37 a.m „ 2530 Jewett Lane,
false alarm possibly caused by
fluctuations In water pressure.
City to be notified of the pro­
blem.
— 8:03 a.m., 2530 Jewett Lane,
false alarm, city working on
waterline caused surge trigger­
ing alarm.
- 8 : 1 4 a.m., 519 E. 8th St.,
rescue call. A woman, age un­
reported, was 111. No action
taken.

Rules

Court Changes Execution
TALLAH ASSEE (UPI) - The
chief lawyer for Florida death
row Inmates aays a new rule
setting Ume limits on capital
case appeals could become a
problem for death row lawyers.
Larry Spalding, head of Capi­
tal Collateral Review which de­
fends condemned prisoners who
have no outside lawyers, said the
new rule could result In lawyers
preparing delicate and Intricate
capital appeals under a tight
deadline. Spalding said he hoped
to talk to representatives of Gov.
Bob Martinez and Attorney Gen­
eral Bob Butterw orth about
problems the new rule could
cause.
The Supreme Court adopted

the new rule Thursday, saying It
could prevent last-minute ap­
peals of death warrants. The
court enacted the rule on Its own
initiative. Chief Justice Parker
Lee McDonald wrote, because
"In numerous Instances, peti­
tions and motions for poetconviction relief have been and
are being filed scant days, and
even hours, before scheduled
executions. Such late filings
leave little time for Judicial
consideration and have resulted
In many stays o f execution
simply because the courts, both
state and federal, have had
insufficient time to rule."
The new rule, which will take
effect April 1. says that when a

governor signs a death warrant
and sets the execution for at
least 60 days later, all appeals
and requests for stays must be
filed within 30 days o f the
warrant's Issue. Motions for re­
hearings on appeal orders must
be filed in two days, and appeals
from any appeal court ruling
must be filed within two days.
"T h e court believes this rule Is
n e c e ss a ry to provide more
meaningful and orderly access to
the courts when death warrants
are signed," McDonald wrote.
Under Florida law, death row
cases must (lie their appeals
within two years of. their final
court ruling. Spalding therefore
has his lawyers work on cases on

Snuff Theft Arrest
Brings Drug Charge
Sanford police vice agents on a
stakeout at Winn-Dixie. 419 E.
First St., S an fo rd , reported
watching two suspects enter that
store and come out with goods
believed to have been shoplifted.
Police saw the two get Into a
car with a third man. Police
stopped the car on Seminole
Boulevard at 7:35 p.m! Thurs­
day, and reported recovering a
six pack of snuff from the floor of
the car. The snuff was reportedly
Identified by a Winn-Dixie man­
ager as having been stolen from
that store, a police report said.
All three men were arrested In
connection with the retail theft.
The driver of the car, Tommie
Lee Isaac. 26, of 125 Yale Drive,
Sanford, was also charged with
possession of cocaine after a

| r

0,

*, T 3^}

a predictable schedule, assigning
cases well In advance of the
deadline.
When a warrant Is signed, that
person is " fo rc e d " Into the
appeals process, often long be­
fore h's two years are up. Under
the old rules. Spalding said, he
could appeal right u p to the
execution date, and so had time
to prepare cases. But that might
not be true under the new rule.
"Instead of havtng six months
to assign a case, we're back to
square one — we'll have to do It
all in 30 days," Spalding said.
"T h e warrant Just compacts
everything."

Murderers Escape
B y U n ite d P ress
llt W M t iO M l
A convicted bank robber
awaiting trial on charges of
first-degree murder, a con­
victed murderer and rapist and
a convicted murderer were all
at large today after staging
separate escapes, authorities
said.
James Martin Bowman, 41.
w as discovered missing from
the Loxahatchee Road Prison
at 4 a.m. Thursday when a
guard went to wake him for
kitchen duty, said Lt. Pal
McCutcheon o f the Palm Beach
County SherlfTs offlee. He had
arranged his pillows to resem­
ble a sleeping man.
"H e's been gone long enough
now that he's probably long
gone," a sheriffs spokesman
said today.

small quantity of cocaine along
with a razor blade w as re­
portedly found under the seat of
the car. He was also charged
with driving with a suspended
license and on a warrant for
failure to appear In court. He
w as being held in lieu of $1,000
bond.
Leron Redfln. 37, of 1822
Colldge Ave., Sanford, has been
charged with retail theft and was
being held in lieu of $500 bond.
Renard Alonzo Brown, 26, of
2971 W. 23rd St.. Sanford, has
been charged as a principal in
the first degree to retail theft,
resisting arrest without violence
and on a warrant charge of
violation of probation. He was
being held without bond.
— S atan Loden

Lake County officials were
looking for Arnold Anderson
who escaped from South Lake
Memorial Hospital Thursday
after beating a guard with a
shower head.
Authorities say Anderson
was In the hospital for surgery
and apparently took the fixture
at a restroom when he was
taken there by the guard. He
was serving a life prison term
for the 1978 rape and murder
of a 14-year-old Naples girl.
Michael Savlch, 53. a con­
victed bank robber who was
transferred from Pennsylvania
to Miami to face a first-degree
murder charge, escaped from
the exercise yard at the Dade
County Jail between 10 and
10:30 a.m. T h u rsday, said
M etro-D ade C o u n ty police
spokesman Jim Hutton.

WEATHER
Nation T e m p e ra tu r e s
City S Forecast
Albuquerque pc
Anchor ago pc
Ashavlllacy
Atlanta r
Billing* ty
Birmingham r
Boiton pc
Brownsville Tex.r
Buffalo pc
Burlington VI. in
Charleston S.C. r
Charlotte N.C. r
Chicago sy
Cincinnati cy
Cleveland cy
Columbus cy
Oalla* r
Denver ty
Das Moines sy
Detroit pc
Duluth sy
El Pasosy
Evansville cy
Hartford pc
Honolulu »y
Houston cy
Indianapolis cy
Jackson MU*, cy
Jacksonville r
Kansas City pc
La* Vegas ty
Little Rock cy
Lot Angela* sy
Loultvlllacy
M am phlicy
M iam i Beach t*
Milwaukee ty
Minneapolis sy
Nashville cy
New Orleans r
New York sy
Oklahoma City r
Omaha sy
Philadelphia sy
Phoenix sy
Pittsburgh sh
Portland AM. sy
Portland Ora. sy
Providence pc
Richmond pc
St. Louis pc
San Francisco sy
Washington pc

HI U
Pep
40 34 .71
37 09
41 34
40 43 , , , ,
43 37 „ „
47 44
30 33 «**•
74 44 1.39
33 27
30 07 .03
43 43
OS
41 34 tee*
34 27 • tee
47 34 . . . .
37 30 tea a
44 24 . . . .
49 4) .42
47 24
34 34 . . . .
34 14 . . . .
34 27 * » « •
44 74 . . . .
S3 33 m te
37 04 »
71 40
43 S3 **•*
43 33 ||1(
43 44 .09
44 S3 1.19
34 34 .33
47 39
40 47
4t S3 tee*
42 31
47 St te r t
74 47 4.41
41 34
43 27 • tea
43 37 . . . .
44 41 .09
34 30 . . . .
44 34 .10
34 34
37 24 . « « •
74 49 # . . .
41 33 t , . e
24 04 t*ea
47 33 • tie
31 13 * t ie
44 24 * t t «
44 34
44 49 • tea
43 37 . . . .

Five-Day Forecast

41
M
SO
IS
71
71
44
74
40
70
71
73

41
S3
71
49
73
43
44
43
44
41
44
49

1.19
1.19
0.30
O.tr
144
0.04
0 14
0.71
0.40
0.04
0.09
0 40

Moon Phases

U*1
F* b.31

First
M jr . 7

B e a ch C o n d it io n s
Daytona B each: Waves are
about 4 feet and rough. Current
Is slightly to the north with a
temperature of 60 degrees. New
Sm yrn a Beach: Waves are 5
feet and semi-choppy. Current Is
slightly to the south; Water
temperature, 60 degrees. Sun
screen factor: 9.

Thursday's high temperature
In Sanford w as 67 degrees and
the low was 61 as reported by
the University of Florida Agricul­
tural Research and Education
Center on Celery Avenue. Rain­
fall recorded was .48 inch. Rainy
today with high near 73 and
mild tonight with showers.

For Control Florida
C*Y

P ttyC M y

P tly C M y

p tlyC ld y

A r e a F o re c a s t
Low*

Sot.

Mon.

Sun.

Wed

T im *.

Sourco: Nnttenol Woothor Sorvkt

Rain, Fog, Wind
Blanket South
By United Press
International

Rain fell from T exas to
Florida and In the Plains today,
while fog covered parts of the
Midwest and snow scattered
over upstate New York as mild
winter weather continued in
most of the country.
The precipitation was part of
a quiet weather pattern across
most of the country caused by
PC partly cloudy
C O O ES
strong high pressure systems
r rain
ccloor
centered over southeast Idaho
»h showers
cl clearing
and the middle Atlantic coast,
*m smoke
cy cloudy
*n snow
1 fair
the National Weather Service
ty-tunny
fy foggy
said.
t* thunder storm*
hi haia
A warm front extending
w w ln d y
mmining
across central Florida was the
only frontal system In the
F lo rid a T e m p e r a t u r e s country. Showers and thun­
derstorms were scattered over
Florida.
M IA M I (U P I) - Florida 34 hour
Temperatures stayed near or
lurt* and rainfall a l l a.m . E O T today
City:
Hi L o Rain above normal over most of the
S3 0.30 nation, but remained very cold
Apalachicola
»
Cr**tvl*w
44 44 0.70 In New York State and New
Daytona Baach
44 41 33*
Fort Laudtrdala
71 44 3.13 England where readings late
Fort M ya rt
49 44 1.11 Thursday were mostly In the
Galn#*vlllt
Jacksonville
Kay Watt
Lakeland
M iam i
Orlando
Ptntacola
Sarasota-Bradenton
Tallahassee
Tam pa
V tro Baach
West Palm Baach

Lo cal R e p o rt

single digits and teens.
A gale warning was posted
for the coasts of Georgia and
northeast Florida because of
high winds produced by a low
pressure system over the coast
of west central Florida, the
weather service said.
A band of light rain extended
from southeast Louisiana and
Mississippi across Alabama and
Georgia into South Carolina.
Another band reached from
southwest Texas across central
and eastern Oklahoma into
eastern Kansas and Missouri.
Patchy light snow was scat­
tered over south central Kansas
and central Illinois and snow
flurries extended across up­
state New York.
F og c o v e re d so u th e rn
Nebraska and eastern Kansas
across northern Missouri and
southern Iowa Into northern
Illinois and southwest lower
Michigan.
Skies were mostly fair over
the western half of the nation.

Today...cloudy and periods of
r a in a n d s c a t t e r e d t h u n ­
derstorms. Rain may be locally
heavy at times. High In the mtd
60s to lower 70s. Wind mostly
cast and southeast 10 to 15
mph. Rain chance 80 percent.
T o n ig h t ...r a in a n d th u n ­
derstorms likely. Low in the 50s.
Wind variable around 10 mp
becoming north 15 to 20 mph
late tonight. Rain chance CO
percent.
Saturday...decreasing cloudi­
ness breezy and cool with rain
and a few showers tapering off
during the afternoon.

A re a Read in gs
The temperature at 9 a.m.: 63:
overnight low: 63: Thursday’s
high: 71; barometric pressure:
29.99; relative humidity: 97
percent: winds: North at 7 mph:
rain: .04 Inch: Today's sunset:
6:09 p.m., Saturday sunrise:
7 :10a.m.

Extended Fore ca st
The extended forecast. Sunday
through Tuesday, for Florida
except northwest — W idely
scattered showers over southern
sections early Sunday..otherwise
generally fair and dry over the
state through Tuesday. Temper­
atures slightly below seasonal
normals with lows ranging from
the middle 30s north to middle
50s south except near 60 In the
Keys.

F oreign T em p eratu res
Temperature and weather from
tha world at 9 a.m. E S T Fab. 4.1917
Tim a
C ity
13n
Abardatn r
Am sterdam r
1pm
2pm
Ankara c
3pm
A th e n s cy
lia
A u ckland c
Ipm
B alling c
2pm
B e iru t
1p m
B e r l i n cy
1p m
Bonn c y
1p m
B r u s s e l s cy
3pm
Cairo c
12n
C a s a b l a n c a pc
tpm
Copenhagen r
1 2n
D a k a r pc
tin
D u b l i n cy
1pm
C o n a v a cy
3pm
H e l s i n k i cy
3pm
Jerusalem c
4pm
Karachi c
I3n
L i s b o n ty
t 2n
L o n d o n cy
Item
M adrid c
tpm
M a l t a pc
■ pm
M a n i l a cy
3pm
M o s c o w cy
3pm
N a i r o b i cy
7am
Nassau c
Spm
New Delhi c
1p m
N ice c

around
F
44
47
40
41
44
41
—
40
44
47
49
41
40
44
40
34
34
43
12
44
44
47
49
73
31
77
70
74
44

C
07
01
04
10
11
09
—

05
07
04
21
14
04
13
10
02
07
17
21
07
13
01
14
33
03
34
21
24
13

O a 1o r
P a ris cy
P r e t o r i a pc
R iyadh c
Romo c
Seoul c
S o fia cy
S t o c k h o l m cy
Sydney c
Ta lp a l c
Tokyo c y
T u n i s pc
V i e n n a fy
W a r s a w cy
. Latin America
Buenos A lr a t cy
C a r a c a s cy
H a va n a
L i m a pc
M e xico City c
R io da J a n e i r o c
Santiago c
. Canada
C algary c
E d m o n t o n pc
M o n t r a a l cy
O t t a w a pc
R tglna c
Toronto c
V a n c o u v e r cy
W i n n i p e g pc

1 p m 14 0 1
1 p m 4 1 05
2pm
• 4 .10
3pm
72 32
1 p m 49 I S
9pm
31 04
2pm
34 01
t p m 31 04
74 33
10pm
I p m 144 42
9pm
4 2 1t
1pm
49 1 9
2 7 - •03
1pm
i p m 37 03
f am
lam
7am
7am
4am
9am
lam

S A T U R D A Y : Dayton
Beach: highs, 3:06 a.m., 3:J
p.m.; lows, 9:29 a.m., 9:22 p.m
N e w S m y rn a B each : high
3:11 a.m.. 3:29 p.m.: lows. 9:i
a.m., 9:27 p.m.; B ay po rt: hlg
6:40 a.m.: low. 3:22 a.m.

B o a tin g

73 23
44 11
73
49
14
43

23
09
30
17

41 10
31 03
1 4 - -10
1 7 - -01
34 01
3 0 - -01
44 11
33 00

St. A u g u stin e to J u p ite r
Inlet — Small craft advisory is
In effect...
T o d ay ...w in d southeast to
south around 20 kts. Seas 5 to 8
ft. Bay and Inland waters rough.
Occasional rain and scattered
thunderstorms.
T o n ig h t ., .w in d s o u t h to
southwest 15 to 20 kts shifting
to northwest 15 to 20 kts north
of Melbourne. Seas 4 to 6 ft. Bay
and Inland w ate rs choppy.

�. . . --------~ .

PrtRar, M . A. HS7- M

Security Tight
.
As Case Made |
Against Lehder

FLORIDA
INBRIEF
LakelandButlnestman Receives
Human Heart To Replace JARVIk
GAINESVILLE (UPI) — A surgical team at Shands
Hospital nave replaced an artlflcal heart with a human
heart In the chest of Lakeland businessman Rollie R.
Murray, hospital officials said today.
A spokeswoman at the hospital said Murray was In
critical but stable condition following the surgery early
today. The condition Is norma) for heart transplant
. patients.
She said the surgery began at 9:40 p.m. Thursday, after
doctors learned the hert would become available. The heart
arrived shortly after 11 p.m. and the transplant was
* completed at 1:55 a.m.
Officials did not release any information about the donor
of the heart.
Murray, a trailer park owner who Is married and the
father of four children, had a JARVIK-7 artificial heart
Implanted 10 days ago when a quadruple bypass operation
on nls own heart failed.
The artificial heart w as Implanted only'top keep him
alive until a suitable donor heait became available.

Abused Children Found In Van
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Two Washington area men have
been jailed on child abuse carges after Investigators found
them with a van loaded with six "filthy" and hungry
children. police said today.
They said they arrested the men In a city park
Wednesday and discovered the unidentified children, aged
2-6, Inside their van.
The men, who Identified themselves as Michael Houlihan
and Doug Ammerman, are believed to be part of a
commune-style home In Northwest Washington, according
to neighbors quoted by W USA-TV. a CBS alflllate in
Washington.
A 6-year-old girl told Tallahassee police they all had lived
together In Washington, but the men denied any family
relationship.
Tallahasse police Lt. George Creamer said the children
"were filthy — they obviously hadn't had a bath for a
while. They were covered with bug bites. And they were
really hungry."
&gt;

Slain Boat Designer Mourned
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) — Mourners at a brief funeral
service for murdered boat designer Don Aronow paid
tribute to a man eulogized as " a man’s man. a woman's
man, a man for all seasons."
The memorial service for Aronow, who designed the
hlgh-seed powerboats that transformed offshore racing,
drew about 100 family members and friends from the
racing world to Riverside Funeral Chapel Thursday,
In the eulogy, eye surgeon Dr. Bob Magoon, a three-time
national powerboat racing champion, recalled Aronow’s
personality and loyalty.
Police said Thursday they had few leads In Aronow's
murder, although they had released an artist's sketch of a
possible suspect.
Aronow, 59, was gunned down on a North Miami Beach
street lined with boat-bulldlng companies he had founded.
Witnesses said the killer shot Aronow while he sat in his
white Mercedes and then sped away In a dark-blue Lincoln
Town car.

J A C K S O N V IL L E (U PI) Prosecutors
assembled their case against drug czar
Carlos Lehder Rivas and U.S. marshals
erected a security web around the Colom­
bian who sits In an undisclosed location in
northeast Florida.
Lehder Rivas. 37, arrived In the United
States early Thursday, appeared before a
federal magistrate at Tampa, who denied
h im b o n d , a n d e n d e d th e d a y in
Jacksonville under heavy guard to await
legal action on Monday.
Lehder Is thought to be one of a half-dozen
le ad e rs o f a vast cartel, which U.S.
authorities say processes, ships and distrib­
utes more than 80 percent of the cocaine
consumed In the United States.
His arrest and quick extradition from
Colombia — all accomplished In less than
12 hours — was hailed by federal officials,
who also warned of the potential dangers
from the action.
U.S. installations around the world In­
creased securityTo guard against retaliation
by the murderous Medellin drug cartel of
Colombia.
Lehder arrived In Tampa shortly after 1
a.m. and appeared nine hours later before
U.S. Magistrate Elizabeth Jenkins, who
denied bond and ordered a detention
hearing Monday before Magistrate Harvey
Schleslnger In Jacksonville.

H trs M P I M t k y Ta m m y Vtacawt

Here's Looking A t You
An elephant at the Central Florida zoo
looks back at visitors Thursday. The
Central Florida Zoo, west of Sanford off

U.S. Highway 17-92, Is open everyday 9
a.m. to 5 p.m.

Oliver Guilty In Trooper Shooting
O RLAND O (UPI) Indiana
fugitive Jerry Cllvcr will be
s e n te n c e d n ext m onth for
first-degree attempted murder in
shooting a Florida Highway
Patrol trooper and kidnapping a
deliveryman to make his escape.
Cllver, 34, also was found
guilty Thursday of using a gun
In committing a felony after 13
hours of deliberations by a Jury
of five women and one man.
But the Jury reduced a second
charge of first-degree attempted
murder and Instead found Cllvcr
guilty of attempted manslaugh­
ter for shooting at witness John
Harvey, who stopped to help the
trooper on his way to work.
Harvey, a Wells Fargo security
g u a r d a n d fo r m e r M a rin e
weapons expert, testified he re­
turned fire when Cllver shot at
his car, Cllvcr said Harvey fired
first.
"It was difficult to show pre­

meditation." State Attorney
Robert Eagan said of the reduced
verdict. "I agree lt was difficult
to prove Mr. Cllver was not
surprised w hen that fellow
pulled up in that car."
Cllver. a former Indiana State
Police veteran, abducted news­
paper deliveryman William Pope
and commandeered his van to
escape a m assive m anhunt
launched after the shooting of
trooper Harry Dennard near an
expressway entry ramp outside
Orlando before dawn Oct. 9.
"The way I feel is sad for
him." Dennard said of d iv er's
conviction. "But once you cause
these problems, you have to pay
the consequences."
Dennard. 28. survived thq shot
fired point-blank Into his chest
— above the heart — thanks to
the bulletproof vest that is
s t a n d a r d e q u i p m e n t fo r

patrolmen.
C llv er w as stopped for a
burned out ‘license plate light
and was arrested about 100
miles north of Orlando 4 Vi
hours after the shooting. Pope
Jumped from the van at an
intersection In Ocala and alerted
police.
Neither Pope nor Harvey were
harmed.
Cllver admitted on the witness
stand he shot the trooper but
insisted the gun accidentally
discharged during a struggle.
Cllver rejected a plea bargain on
the eve of trial, saying he wanted
to tell his side of the story.
Until his arrest. Cllver had
been sought by authorities In the
Terre Haute, Ind., area for the
March 1984 attempted murder
of his cx-wlfe, Jerri Lynn Cllver
of Dugger, Ind., and the murder
of her boyfriend. Donald Clayton
of Linton. Ind.

Cllver (led Indiana after the
shootings and eluded authorities
until the FBI arrested him In
Florida A p ril 23, 1985 and
returned him to Indiana. But
C llver escaped the Sullivan
County Jail Oct. 12. 1985 — Just
16 days before trial.
Orange County Circuit Judge
James Stroker set sentencing for
M arch 30. C llv e r Is Jailed
without bond.

□anbury Mill Un 7A. 573.000
Calton Homes lo Mae H Shirley, Lt 4
Woodbridge Al Country Creek, $72,900
Calton Homes to Henry O Johansson A
Daisy J. Lts 33 A 34 The Glens At Country
Creek. 5111.000
Hooker Barnes Homes lo Marlin E Wilson
A Roxanne A Edward E Wilson. Lt 82 Alataya
Woods Ph IV, 352.500
W Scott Richardson A W F Dianne to
Alejandrlna M Pottage, Lt 160 Sausallto Sec
4. $70,900
Stephen P Glunfa A WF Joette lo John S
Harison A W F Christine M , Lt 314 Weklva
Hunt Club Fox Hunt Sec 2, $103,000
M /l Schotlenslein Homes to Brenda H
Williams. Lt 67 Alataya Woods Ph IV, 343.100
John L Passero 1 Donna K to Robert S
Madden A W F Diane L. LI 41 Southridge At
Country Creek. $92,000
Hooker Barnes Homes to Ferrel C McLeod,
Lt IS Alataya Woods. Ph IV, 352.900
Calton Homes to Constantine D Dunn A W F
Paulire. Lt 84 Woodland Terr Country Creek.
$109,300
F R C Inc lo Melina M Chain, Lt 78
SummerhltlPh I, 348.000
G ary D Morrow A WF Deborah to John D
Summerville A W F Helen. Lt 23 Taam rak.
382.900
Alex Gentile A WF Teresa to Laura F
Gillespie. Lt 59 Fernbrook T rlr Ph III, 342.500
Saratoga Group lo Alan J Gragnam A W F
Lisa M. Lt 75 The Estates Al Springs
Landing, $283,700
John Porter A Barbara to Gary T Inglis. Lt
185 Hidden Lake Ph II Un V. 343.900
Sabal Fairway P lr to Lola A Maroon. Lt 10
Saba) Fairway Villas At Sabal Point. $145,400
Okey J Barker A Velma to William O
Powell J r A W F Margaret A, Lt 348 (less E
L32'l Black Hammock, $45,000
Gordon Nutt to Richard L Paul A W F
Evelyn. Lt 31 Wing held North, 388.000
Catalina Homes to William E Miller J r , Lt
I3J Deer Run Un MB. $74,400
William Cunningham A Philip Dailey to
Patrick B Hartnett. Beg 459' E A 10' W ot N W
corol Lt t Irendale. 344.000
Richard Nolen A W F Jill to John W M urphy

Winter Homes. $79,900
B illy H Glult A W F Debra to Dorothy A
David. Un S Southport Cond Ph 3.332.000
Kathleen Salmierl to John O Griffith A W F
Eli/, L I 130 Winter Spgs. Un 3.5130.000
General Homes to Valleta Inclan. Lt 72 Blk
A Lakewood Al The Crossings U n 2 .5100.300
General Homes lo Randall Sonoskl A
Lucille Stegall, Lt 137 Blk B, Lakewood At
The Crossings. 5543.100
General Homes lo Deborah S Wing, Lt I IS
Alataya Woods Ph 11. 579.700
General Homes »o William A Edwards A
W F Anita M. Lt t6 Hollowbrook West, 557.500
General Homes to Edward W Tllke A W F
Norma. LI 44 Hollowbrook, 5109,300
General Homes lo Raymond M Landry J r,
LI 75 Alataya Woods Ph II. 593.000
General Homes to A|ems R Aldrich A
Judith A, Lt 43 Blk A Lakewood At The
Crossings Un 7.591.400
Gallon Homes to Allred P Sanchez &amp;
Patricia A A Caroline A, Lt 2 Woodbridge At
Country Creek, 549.100
James Lewis A Roger A Pierce A Nancy to
John Borgallo A W F Em il. Lt 15 Highlands
Glen. 544.900
Del Prop lo Thomas E Wallen A Roberta B
Hyatt. Un 203 Bldg I3A Hidden Spgs Cond.
344.400
Ralph P Smith A Carolyn to Christopher G
Beehner A Vivian. L I 39 South Plnecrest.
340.500
Hospital Corp to HCA Health Serv D B A
West Lake Hosp. Un 104 So Sem Medical
Pla/aCond. $70,500
Donald A Stebbins A W F Susan to Mae O
Chappell A Lillian A Lucas A Douglas
Wesson, Lt6etc P ra irie Lake Hts, 342.000

Cllver could face life in prison,
and he also awaits Florida trial
on two armed robbery charges in
Marion County, where he appar­
ently had been living for about a
m onth be fo re shooting the
trooper.
Sullivan County special pro­
secutor Robert Miller and Florida
prosecutor Eagan agreed to try
Cllver In Florida first and then
Jail him In the state that handed
him the longest sentence.

REALTY TRANSFERS
CanaraI H o m e to Edward C F r e e &amp;
Atarlna C M a rin . &amp;! Edward D Fraat. Lt M

COMING EVENTS
F R ID A Y , F E B . 6
Weklva AA (no smoking), 8 p.m. Weklva
Presbyterian Church. SR 434, at Weklva Springs
Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian
Church. SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same time
and place.
Tanglewood AA, 8 p.m.. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same time
and place.
Sanford AA Step. 5:30 p.m.. closed discussion,
and 8 p.m. step study. 1201 W . First St.. Sanford.
24-Hour AA. 8 p.m. (open discussion). 317 S.
Oak Ave., Sanford.
SAT U R D A Y, FEB. 7
Families Together Teen Support Group, 11
a.m. to l p.m. at Suite 206 Sweetwater Square.
900 Fox Valley Drive, (off W eklva Road)
Longwood. Call 774-3844.
National League of American Pen Women
Winter Park Branch luncheon meeting. 11 a.m.,
Langford Hotel. New England Avenue. Winter
Park. Art demonstration, 1 p.m. by area artist
Jennifer Kirton. For reservations call 6 7 1-1427.
Dance to Big B an d m u sic. 7:30 p.m ..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry. Bring snacks and $1.50
donation.
STANDING MEETINGS
Sanford Women's AA. 1201 W. First St.. 2
p.m.. closed.
Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m. The Grove
Counseling Center. 580 Old Sanford/Ovicdo Road
(off SR 419). Winter Springs.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St., noon and 8 p.m.,
open discussion.
Casselberry AA Step. 8 p.m.. Ascension
L u th e ra n C h u rc h , A s c e n s io n D riv e (o ff
Ovcrbrook). Casselberry.
Sanford Grace AA 11th Step (closed). 8 p.m..
Weklva Assembly of God, Longwood.
SUNDAY, FEB. 8
Sanford-Semlnole Art Association Annual
Membership Show, noon to 5 p.m.. Sanford Civic
Center. Tea. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Open to the public.
The Metro Orlando Urban League will host its
first annual Urban League Sunday at 4 p.m. at
the Loch Haven Neighborhood Center. 610 N.
Formosa St.. Orlando. Performances by area
gospel choirs.
Gary Paul from Leu Gardens will speak at
3:30-5 p.m. at Orlando Science Centeron new
ideas for landscaping, planting, and preparing
gardens for climate changes. Members free,
non-members regular $3 Scfence Center ad­
mission.
STANDING MEETINGS
Sanford Big Book AA. 7 p.m.. open discussion.
Florida Power and Light building. N. Myrtle
Avenue, Sanford.
Under New Management AA. 6:30 p.m. (open),
corner Howell Branch &amp; Dodd Road, Goldenrod.
REBOS AA. 5:30 (closed) and 8 p.m. (open).
Rebus Club, 130 Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m. The Grove
Counseling Center. 580 Old Sanford)Ovicdo Road
(off SR 419). Winter Springs.
Sanford Family Group Alanon meeting. 8 p.m..
Christ United Methodist Church. County Road
427 and Tucker Rd.. Sanford.

f-

Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30 p.m., closed. 8
p.m., step. 130 Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos at noon, closed.
M O N D A Y , FEB. 9
Sanford-Seminole Art Association. 7 p.m.,
Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E. First St.
Guest lecturer. Ralph Bagley. Winter Park oil
painter.
Manna Haven serves free lunch for the hungry,
11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Monday through Friday:
Sunday. 1-3. at 519 Palmetto Ave.. Sanford.
Cardiovascular screening, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m..
County Health Department. 240 W. Airport Blvd.,
Sanford. Call 322-2724 Ex. 370 for appointment.
Free Income tax help for retirees. 9 a.m. to 1
p.m.. Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce.
400 E. First St. Mondays through April 15.
STANDING MEETINGS
Central Florida Blood Bank Florida HospitalAltamonte Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave.. 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m.
PEP Personal Exercise Program. 9 a.m..
Westmonte Center, 500 Spring Oaks Blvd.,
Altamonte Springs. Light exercise for those with
disabling ailments.
Rotary Club of Sanrord. noon. Sanford Civic
Center.
Sanford AA. 5:30 p.m.. open discussion: 8 p.m,.
closed discussion. 1201 W. First St.
Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m., 317 Oak Ave.,
Sanford.
Apopka Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p.m.. closed,
Apopka Episcopal Church. 615 Highland.
Al-Anon Step and Study. 8 p.m.. Casselberry
Senior Center. 200 N. Triplet Drive.
Young and Free AA. St. Richard's Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Winter Park. 8 p.m.
closed, open discussion. Last Monday of the
month, open.
Sanford AA. 8 p.m.. closed. 1201 W. First St.
Fellowship Group AA. senior citizens, 8 pan.,
closed, 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Overeaters Anonymous. 7:30 p.m.. West Lake
Hospital. State Road 434. Longwood. Call Mary at
886-1905 or Dennis at 862-7411.
T U E S D A Y , FEB. 10
Free income tax help for retireees. 9 a.m. to l
p.m. at Florida National Bank. West SR 434 at
Markham Road: V F W Club. 420 N. Edgemon
Ave.. Winter Springs; Longwood Recreation
Center. W. Warren Avenue. Tuesdays through
April 15.
Heart of Florida African Violet Society. 7:30
p.m., 115 Larkwood Drive. Sanford. Second
Tuesday. For information call 322-3976.
Surgery Obesity Support)SOS group for pa­
tients. 7 p.m.. South Seminole Medical Plaza, 521
W. S.R. 434, Longwood Room 103. John Beecher
of Florida Psychiatric Consultants will speak on
Addictive Personalities. Free to the public. Meets
second Tuesday of the month.
STANDING MEETINGS
C a s s e lb e r ry K iw a n ls C lu b . 7 :3 0 a .m .,
Casselberry Senior Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive. Casselberry.
Sanford Lions Club. noon, every- Tuesday,
Cavalier Motor Inn Restaurant. 3200 S. Orlando
Drive. Sanford.
TOPS Chapter 79, 6:15*8:15 p.m.. Howell
place. 200 W. Airport Boulevard. Sanford.

Blk BB Lakawood
Blk

550.000

Ganorai Horn** to E ric J F o »» &amp; W F
T h e r m , Lt 37 Blk A Lakewood At The
Crossings Un J, 594.600
General Homes to John C White &amp; Delta L
White, Lt 53 Hollowbrook. 593.300
General Homes to Andre Barca A W F
Marianne, Lt S3 Blk A Lakewood A l The
Crossings Un 3,597,400
General Homes to Aristides J Me/a, Lt 35
Blk A Lakewood At Th e Crossings. Un 3.
5103.000
General Homes to Donald A Bryan A W F
M a ry, Lt 53 Blk B Lakewood At The
Crossings Un 3,579,900
Oak Harbour Lid to Donald F Gravenmler
A W F Janet E. Bldg 33 Un 3 Oak Harbour Sec
3. 517,000
Hamptons 01 H ea throw to Fra nk W
Murphy A WF M arcia A, Un D 9 The
HamplonsOf Heathrow 1,5170,400
Suda Inc to Alexandria Krot A Alexander
A. LI 39 Ha/el Glen, 571.400
Shadow Lawn Sav to Leon H Slndllnger, Lt
33 A E ' s o l 33 Blk J Lake Wayman Heights
Richard P DaPore A W F M argie to Nell W
Humlenny A William W Landrum J r, Lt 14
Blk I Shadow Hill. 574.000
Laurlanne M McCann to Linda F Tice. S
135.3' ol E 100' ol Lt 13 Blk D. Prairie Lk
Park. 533.000
William G Foulkes J r A W F Lou Ann to
Anthony J Mllai/o A W F M ary Ann J, Lt 5
Shed Grove Homes. 553.000
Lloyd Haile A W F Gwendolyn to Michael G
Maxwell A WF Ava F, L t 75 Sleepy Hollow 1st
addn. 5104,000
Keith McGuire A Valerie G M cGuire Ryan
lo Norwood K Jackson, Lt 77 Deer Run Un II,
571.900
Winter Spgs Dev to T C H Inc, Lt 35 Bear
Creek Ests, 557,000
Ryland Group to Luis A Duprey A W F
Joselina. Lt 44 Stillwater Ph 1.5100.700
Norbert N Missing A W F Kathryn to Victor
J Incinelll A W F Paula J, Lt 414 Wrenwood
Un 3 3rd addn, 597.000
Sherburn Homes to Virginia Ruprecht A
Robert Matthias. Repr E Est ol Sherburn
Ruprecht. Lts 14 5.15 Blk 35 Townslte N
Chuluota, 541,100
Alvin B Lem A W F Ethel to David B Lloyd,
Lt 41 Blk C Spring Valley Ests. 5133.000
John O Dahl A W F Lonnie lo Calvin C Dahl
A Daniel Dahl, LI I Blk 9 Heftier Homes. O rl
Sec 1,530,000
Dennis M Jones A W F Donna to George C
Grant A W F Alice M, L t 19 Un t Garden Lake
Ests, 553.300
Paul Urlcchlo to Thom as J Stagnltta A W F
Kathryn. Lt 30 Blk D . The Meadows West,
390.000
Oonald A Weeden A W F Caroline lo David
A Jencka A WF Maureen R, Lt 350 Wrenwood
H Is Un 3,557,500
J Nauman Prop to Jim m y L Bo/eman A
W F Sharon K. Lt 403 Blk D Wlntergreen,
541.000
Polyak Corp to Eve lyn T Reich, Un 7 Bldg
H. Goldenrod Villas Cond. 539,300
20th Century Homes to James R Oglesby A
W F Ida L. Lt80 Tuscawllla Un U A . 3197.300
J C Brown A Co to David K Forbes A W F
Mary L. Lt 23 Northrldge. 5144.000
Richmond Amer Homes lo Robert J Wen/el
A W F Nancy, Lt t Blk 4 The Reserve At The
Crossings Ph I, 593.400
Calton Homes to George J Reiner A W F
Paula. Lt 55 Southrldge At Country Creek.
595.100
Weklva Reserve Ltd to Jewel A Dufresne,
Lt 102 Weklva Reserve Un 2,572.400
Ruhard E Werner A W F Wilhelmlna to
Johr J Stelnlger A W F Sue. Lt 70 Blk A.
Sweetwater Oaks. Sec 9. 5119.900
Murphy Bldrs to D avid B Am ore A W F
Christine, Lt 74 Northridge. 5129,500
M, I SchoMensiein Homes to L a rry L Smith
A WF Susan W, LI 2 Alataya Woods Pn V II.
595.400
M l Schotlensteln Homes to Richard J
Jurewicz A WF June, Lt 72 Alataya Woods.
P h IV 341.000
M 'l Scholtensteln Homes to James S
Johnson A WF Linda. Lt 71 Alataya Woods Pn
I Un A. 370.500
Paul F Richart lo Eugene Brown. Lt 3 repl
Ltsl 3Brouk3ide.3S4.700
Hooker Barnes Homes to Kathy J Hanbury
A HB Mack L Jr. LI 12 Alataya Woods Ph IV,
351.400

*

VALENTINE'S
SPECIAL

55°° Off
CHAMPAGNE
HAMPER OF GIFT FRUIT
Help your SWEETHEART flay In ltiape, send
soma Indian Hirer Fruit Instead ol candy or
llowars. A gill lor the heart Irom the heart.

P A C N ’ SEND
^

104 E. Commercial St.
Doonlown Sxnlatd 123 t i l /
Mon. Sit

V V

NOTICE
I have retired as of 12)31/86.
I want to thank the people of
Seminole County and the
people o( the surrounding
counties
lor the nice
business and association
you have given me over 42
years.
My office will be open
January and February from
10:00 a.m. till 1:00 p.m. for
anyone who wishes to in­
quire about their animals
records.
Thanks

Zh. £

J.. 2 W

FREE SPINAL EVALUATION
A S i:S U A l

T H IS IS K H EF,

W AR N IN G S IG N A LS O F PINC H ED N ER V ES
Frequoni Headaches
L o w B ac k or H i p Pain
D i z z i n e s s or L o s s o l S l eep
N u m b n e s s of H a n d s or F ee l
Nervousness
N e c k Pai n or S t i l l n e s s
A r m and S h o u l d e r Pain
Eiiluition Include Posture Anslprs, tuition Tel. Shut
Ltf Tel, Sho/t Arm lei And Nit With Ooclor.

A U INSURANCE* ASSIGNMENTS
ACCEPTED'
Sub|«cl l i Pnlicy Limite A ik ubout o u r "M a k in g C h iro p ra c tic A lto rd a b la " P rogram
• r « E PA’ lEN ’ AND ANf O ’ Mf H PERSON RESPONSIBLE FOR R AIM EN T MAS A RIGHT TO REFUSE tO
PAv CANCEL P A (M tN » OH BE REIMBURSED FOR P A fM E N T FOR a n t O ' - E H SERVICE EiAM INA
•IO»« OR -H E * ’ M E M Wh i c h IS PERFORMED AS * RESULT OF ANO W ITH IN U HOURS OF RESPON
•-in c . t . i i m , a d v e r t i s e m e n t f o r t h e f r e e s e r v ic e e x a m i n a t i o n o r t r e a t m e n t

LAKE M A R Y BLVD.
C H I R O P R A C T I C C L I N I C , IN C
* 0 3 ■. la l t o
M a r y B lv d .

322-9300 ..

S u it e 107

T H O M A S P . Y A N D I L L , J R . D .C .

&gt;f

�F

I H^W* if

Sanford Herald
iu tn «i-M i
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
A n a Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993
Friday, February 6,17*7—4A
Wayne 0. Dayta, PvMItlMr
Tfwmas flKrdaw, Maaa|le» Eiltar
Metvin Adkins, Advarttalnf KNractar
Home Delivery: Month. 94.75:3 Months. • 14.25:8 Months.
•27.00: Year. 951.00. By Mail: Month. 96.75: 3 Months.
920.25: 6 Months. 937.00: Year. 969.00.

Retraining Better
Then Retrenching
A ft e r m o r e th a n a y e a r o f s tu d y , a
b lu e-rib b o n L a b o r D epartm en t committee has
decided that the federal governm ent needs a
better p ro gram to help A m erican w orkers
w h o have lost their Jobs becau se of im ports or
structural shifts in the econom y.
N o w o n der. T h e B u reau of La bo r Statistics
estim ates that from 1981 through 1985 m ore
th a n 5.1 m illion U .S . w ork ers sa w their Jobs
d isap p e ar in the riptides o f a fluid world
econ om y. A lth o u g h m an y o f those w orkers
ultim ately latched onto other em ploym ent,
h u n d re d s o f thou sands o f others, m an y o f
th em m iddle-aged and lacking up-to-date
skills, h ave floundered.
T h e plight o f these w ork ers has been a
d riv in g force beh in d C o n gress' protectionist
m ood. B ut from the perspective o f the overall
econ om y, retrainin g an d relocating the af­
fected w ork ers offers a cheaper an d m ore
efficient response than im port quotas and
tariffs. R etraining provides a m easure of
security for w ork ers w ithout freezing the
econom y. T h e com m ittee's recom m endation
for a $1 billion consolidated program to
provide rem edial education and on-the-job
train in g w ill thus d ra w few com plaints, and
m a n y cheers, in C ongress. A lready, key
con gression al leaders have an nounced they
w ill c a rry le gislatio n to im p le m en t the
com m ittee's recom m endations.
Unfortunately, the federal govern m en t's
previous efforts in this field have not been
v ery successful. T h e old T ra d e Adjustm ent
A s s is t a n c e p r o g r a m , w h ic h p r o v id e d
s u p p le m e n t a l c a s h g r a n t s to d is p la c e d
w orkers, w a s expen sive and didn't result in
m u ch retraining. Its successor program , Title
III o f the J o b Partnership T rain in g Act. hasn't
been extensively funded o r widely used.
T h is time, C ongress needs to assure that a
n e w program delivers a high proportion o f its
fu n d s into retrainin g in real-world skills for
w h ich Jobs exist, that incentives exist for
displaced w ork ers to use their retraining
o p p o rtu n ities seriou sly, an d that, w h ere
possible, com panies closing plants bear som e
o f the bu rden for helping their displaced
w o rk ers find a new niche in the Job market.
: In a n in c r e a s in g ly c h a n g e a b le w o r ld
econom y, helping w ork ers adjust to change is
an im portant, perm anent national responsi­
b ilit y th a t h a s to b e 1 p e r fo r m e d bo th
h u m an ely a n d efficiently.

Cynical Standards
T h e Soviet U n ion has a general policy o f
e n c o u ra g in g larger families. But only som e
fam ilies, ap paren tly. In the largely Moslem
Soviet R epublic o f Tadzhikistan, the govern ­
m en t is trying to reduce the birthrate.
Slavic, o r E uropean, R ussians m ake up
sligh tly less than h a lf the Soviet population.
T h e ir proportion o f the population 19 drop­
pin g, reflecting the fact that their birthrate is
a m o n g the w o rld 's lowest. Part of the reason
is that they have one o f the w o rld ’s highest
abo rtio n rates. S om e authorities estimate that
the av e rage R ussian w o m an has six a b o r­
tions.
In the M oslem Soviet republics o f central
A sia, by contrast, abortion is frowned upon
a n d large fam ilies are m ore com m on.
S lavic R u ssian s, w h o hold most positions of
au th ority in the govern m en t an d arm ed
forces, m a y be w orried about eventually
b e i n g o u t n u m b e r e d by their A s la n
co u n try m en . T h is w o u ld n 't be the first time
som eon e foresaw that possibility. Franklin
Roosevelt once said that eventually the Soviet
U n io n " w o u ld fly apart like a cracked plate"
becau se o f U s ethnic nationalities.
For the Soviets to prom ote big fam ilies for
the S lavic R u ssian s w hile discouraging them
in the M oslem sections o f the country,
how ever. Is a cynical w a y o f addressing the
problem . In som e countries it would be called
a dou ble standard.

BERRY'S WORLD

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“I wouldn 't come on real strong, amigo — to
me you're just another guy from a debtor
nation."

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CHUCK STONE

President's 'State Of Confusion' Address
I went to New York City the day after
President Reagan's State of the Union Message
to visit my aspiring actress daughter, Krishna.
She's really good, but still hasn't broken
through the Iron curtain for black actresses.
After lunch, t visited my friend In Harlem.
Booker Leroy Jackson. He had written another
prayer to God. I can’t resist sharing it:
"Yo. God:
"Just checkin' In.
"This Is me again. Booker Leroy Jackson,
your main man.
"I know you be havin' a iot of names to
remember with folks everywhere hollerin' at
you, so i'll hip you to my name one more time —
It's Booker like in Washington. Leroy like in
Jones, and Jackson like in Jesse.
"Lord, the last time we hooked up, I got a
fcelln' that you was goin' straighten out some of
this mess, but you ain't done right by us cuz we
still catchln* hell from President Reagan.
"Did you hear his sorry State of the Union
address?
"M y friend. Malcolm (he's a numbers runner,
lives In the apartment above me), said It was a

ROBERT WALTERS

Intriguing
Elections
This Year
BELLE CHASSE, La. (NEA) With the memory of the 1988
political campaigns fading rapidly.
It's fashionable to focus on early
maneuvering for the 1988 presi­
dential election — but first there are
some intriguing, little-noticed 1987
contests.
V o t e r s In t h r e e s t a t e s —
Louisiana. Mississippi and Ken­
tucky — elect governors In this
odd-numbered year. The race in
Louisiana is likely to be especially
fascinating if flamboyant Democrat­
ic Gov. Edwin W. Edwards seeks
re-election.
A politician characterized as Ir­
reverent by his friends and outra­
geous by his enemies. Edwards has
twice thwarted federal prosecutors
who secured criminal indictments
ch a rg in g him with fraud and
racketeering. The first trial ended
with a hung Jury and the second in
acquittal.
In a recent statewide survey
commissioned by the Baton Rouge
Morning Advocate to ascertain voter
perceptions of politicians, Edwards
scored near the bottom, with 59
percent ot th e r e s p o n d e n ts viewing
him unfavorably.
In response to another question.
42 percent of those surveyed
thought he was doing a "poor" Job
as governor, while another 21 per­
cent classified his performance as
"not too good."
Nevertheless, some astute ob­
servers here believe he has a fair
chance to win another term, in part
because his notoriety will give him
the advantage of name recognition
In the large field of Democrats
gubernatorial contenders.
The leading candidates In that
field are believed to be Rep. W.J.
" B i l l y " T a u z ln , w h o s h a r e s
Edwards* Cajun heritage, and Rep.
Buddy Roemer. an articulate and
formidable contender whose father
was a senior aide to Edwards and
was convicted on federal criminal
charges in 1981.
Bowing out of the race In recent
weeks were three potentially strong
Republican contenders — former
Gov. David C. Treen. former Rep.
W. Henson Moore and Attorney
General William J. Guste Jr. Their
withdrawal means that Rep. Robert
L. Livingston will be the leading
GOP candidate.
In neighboring Mississippi, a
constitutional amendment approved
by the voters last November makes
in c u m b e n t D e m o c r a t ic G o v .
William Allain the first chief execu­
tive in the stute's history eligible to
seek a second term.

State of Confusion address.
"T h e president turned me off when he be
sayin' he regret Iran.
"I'm like everybody else in the country, God. I
ain't into no Iran. And I don't be carin' about
w ho stole all that money in the White House to
buy back them hostages.
"Only one who care about all that mess is the
newspaper, the television and the politicians.
" I f President Reagan want to regret somethin',
why don't he regret Forsythe County In Georgia
or Howard Beach In New York or the Citadel In
South Carolina?
"A ll over the country, we got white people
kickin' black tall and takln' names, baby, and
what's our Jive-talking president doin' 'bout It?
"N ary a thing.
"H e more worried about makln* peace with
Iranians than helpin' black and white Ameri­
cans makin' peace with theyselves.
.
"H e only regret Iran cuz it didn't work.
"That’s like some dude be robbin' your house
and accidentally bum it down and then the
brother say. "Hey. man, I didn't mean to fry
your house. I regret that.” (I didn't mean for you

OF HEARING ALU THE
CRITICISM Or COL. NORTH AHP
THE NATIONAL HEROES WHO
WERE COVERTLY FLYING ARMS
TO THE CONTRAS/
4

IT SAYS HERE THE FLIGHT
CREWS WERE SMUGGLING
p o r e INTO THE U.S.A. O N
RETURN RUNS...

to think. Lord, that President Reagan is my
brother, cuz he ain't. He's the Ku Klux Klan's
brother.)
"A n d he act like he's Big Brother for Central
America.
"Lord, he ought to leave them folks alone. Let
them fight they own battles.
"A in ’t that nothin'! President Reagan Is
makln* white folks richer, black folks poorer and
everybody happier.
"Folks dig Ronald Reagan. Lord — I don't care
what them polls say.
"A ll the dude gotta do la grin, blush, wiggle
his ears, act dum b and everybody freaks out.
" I ’m goin’ call my man Jesse Jackson, and
hip him — if he want to be president, he got to
act dumb like Ronald Reagan.
"Jesse can't blush. But he can learn to wiggle
his ears.
"OK. Lord? Gotta split.
"A n d if you hear from Pat Roberston, tell him
Booker Leroy Jackson wants to know how come
he couldn't pray you into shipping some of this
snow to Florida.
"A m en ."

SCIENCE WORLD
THEY RESERVE RECOGNITION
FOR. WHAT THEY'VE PO NE
F O R THIS COUNTRY/

y —

SO HOW ABOUT A MUFFLE
—

c r —

Chwi i w »w w w &gt;-v h «w i

JEFFREY HART

Appropriate Speaker
(Editor’s Note: Professor Jeffrey
H art, who leach es E n glish at
Dartmouth, sent the following letter
to the " Dartmouth . " the campus
newspaper. It raises Issues of gener­
al Interest.)
To the Editor:
It Is stunningly appropriate that
we entertained Rep. Ron Dellums
on the occasion of Martin Luther
King’s birthday.
Rep. Dellums has been a consis­
tent apologist for totalitarian re­
gimes. even regarding the Soviet
Invasion of Afghanistan as an effort
on the part of the USSR to "protect
their borders."
He used his congressional post to
become a virtual PR man for the
communist regime In Grenada. As
recorded In the January 1987 Issue
of Commentary magazine, Dellums'
aide Carlotta Scott described DeHums’ attitude toward Grenadan
communism In the following terms
to the late dictator Maurice Bishop:
"B on has become truly com­
mitted to Grenada, and has some
positive thinking to share with
you... He Just has to get all his
thoughts In order as to how your
interests can best be served... He's
really hooked on you and Grenada
and doesn't want anything to
happen to building the Revo and
making It strong. He really admires
you as a person and even more so as
a leader with courage and foresight,
principles and Integrity. Believe me.
he doesn't make that kind of
statement often about anyone. The
only other person that I know of
that he expresses such admiration
for Is Fidel."
Rep. Dellums. obviously, belongs
at Dartmouth.
When the Reagan administration
thought that Grenada was becom­
ing a Sovlet-Cuban base. Rep. Delluins went to Grenada on a "factfinding" expedition. The American
administration thought that the

Cubans were building a military
airport in Grenada. Perish the
thoughtl Dellums “found" that the
airport "w as not for military use"
and so reported to Congress, but not
before submitting his script to the
Grenadan dictatorship for correc­
tion.
In the wake of the U.S. invasion of
G ren ad a, num erous docum ents
came to light, Including a March 22,
1980 entry by then Defense Minister
Liam James: "The Revo has been
able to crush counter-revolution
Internationally. Airport will be used
for Cuban and Soviet military.”
As I began saying, the appearance
at Dartmouth of Rep. Dellums was
stunningly appropriate.
Maybe he should have given us a
few interpretations of the Boat
People, or of 1he Crozco murals.
Of course. Rep. Dellums does not
udmire all dictatorships. Neither
Assad nor Pinochet makes his heart
go pit-pat. The dictatorships he
admires are exclusively communist
ones — Cuba. Grenada, Nicaragua,
and the Kremlin "defending" Its
borders by Invading Afghanistan.
Of course, there arc many black
Americans and Americans of other
hues who could have meditated
with us on Martin Luther King.
Well, we got Dellums. One gathers,
daily, that it will be a cold day In
Hades when Dartmouth represents
Itself firmly as a friend of freedom
and free Institutions.

PLEASE WRITE
Le tte rs to the editor are w e l­
come for publication. A ll letters
m ust be signed and include a
m ailin g address and, if p ossible, a
telephone num ber. The Sanford
Herald reserves the right to edit
l e t t e r s to avo id li bel an d to
accommodate space.

Sporadic
A nxiety
Norm al
By Gayle Young
UP1 Science Writer
N E W Y O RK (U P I) Sweaty
palms and a feeling of impending
doom are common reactions to
e v e r y t h in g fro m life 's m ajor
traumas to the prospect of making a
public speech.
Doctors say anxiety Is a normal
physiological response to fearful
thoughts and situations, triggered
by a complex chemical mechanism
in the body that can affect almost
every organ.
“ Anxiety is normal and good, a
warning that something might be
wrong and the body should prepare
for It.” said Dr. Marc A. Schucklt.
professor of psychiatry at the Uni­
versity of California at San Diego.
" I f I didn’t get anxious before a
speech I wouldn't prepare for It.
"T h e problem Is when anxiety
becomes a regular, dally part of
life," he said. "W hen It Interferes
with your life, then something is
wrong."
Most people who suffer dally
bouts of anxiety are reacting to a
traumatic event in their life, such as
the death of a loved one, illness or
divorce, doctors say.
U s u a l l y , o v e r t im e , t h e ir
symptoms ease as they re-enter
life's mainstream, but doctors often
prescribe tranquallzers for short
periods to help such patients relax.
Im m e d ia t e ly fo llo w in g a
traumatic event, physicians may
even sedate patients to help them
sleep. But Dr. Truman G. Schnabel,
a professor of medicine at the
University of Pennsylvania Medical
School in Philadelphia, said at a
recent conference on anxiety that
sedation interferes with the ability
to think clearly and should only be
used for a few days.
There are other reasons why some
people have dally bouts of anxiety.
Thyroid problems can send a rush
of chemicals through the body that
create the symptoms of anxiety.
Heart problems, such as Irregular
palpitations, can also cause anxious
feelings.
"If someone came to me shaking
with the awful feeling they are going
to die, I would give them a complete
physical first," Schucklt said. "This
is not something that Is always In
your mind."
Doctors say stimulants such as
caffeine, cocaine and diet pills can
cause anxiety In some people, a
problem that can be solved simply
by removing the stimulants.
For many people with dally anxi­
ety. however, there appears to be no
physical cause for their concern.

JACK ANDERSON

Casey Knows More Than He's Saying
By Jack A n derson
A n d D ale V an A tta
WASHINGTON CIA Director
William Casey knew more than he
told — or was able to remember —
when Senate Investigators ques­
tioned him about the Iran/contra
arms scandal, according to our
sources.
These sources say Lt. Col. Oliver
North, who ran the operation out of
the National Security Council, con­
ferred privately with Casey, whom
he greatly respected. These secret
meetings and telephone calls were
unrecorded for the most part, so
only North or Casey could say for
sure what the CIA chief knew and
when.
Private, one-on-one meetings were
typical of Casey, who cut hts teeth
on the c la n d e s t in e O ffic e o f
Strategic Services during World
W ar II. When he traveled he liked to
have secret meetings v/lth foreign
officials, and In Washington he
cultivated a wide range of private
contacts.
On occasion. Casey would even
meet with an individual reporter.

not at the C IA ’s Langley. Va.,
headquarters, but In a hideaway
office near the White House. No
other CIA official would be present.
"I can’t always trust those boys at
Langley." Casey has confided.
In a 1983 profile of Casey that was
more prescient than we knew, we
wrote that he was "a lone wolf (who)
loves the covert-action side of his
Job." We added: " ‘The cowboys
down In the ranks will send up a
harebrained proposal, and the next
thing you know they're In his office
plotting with him.' complained one
source. Other sources expressed
concern that this sidestepped the
checks and balances designed to
prevent preposterous clandestine
operations."
North's gung-ho undercover activ­
ities at the NSC were right down
Casey's alley. One source involved
In the Iranian deal told us Casey
spoke of North with such fondness
thal It seemed as If the younger
man were a prolcge working for the
CIA director.
This source said that private
meetings he had with Casey In 1985

make it clear in retrospect that
Casey’s early knowledge of the
Iranian affair was "substantial" and
certainly more than he acknowl­
edged to the Senate Intelligence
Committee.
Medical experts have suggested
that the 73-ycar-old CIA chief may
have been affected during his testi­
mony by the malignant brain tumor
that was discovered Just hours
before he was to have appeared for
renewed questioning on Capitol Hill.
The nature of his tumor, the experts
explained, could have Impaired
Casey's ability to recall events or
concentrate on details of his testi­
mony.
Casey did tell the senators enough
to convince them that he knew
about the arms deal before any
other CIA official. The agency's
involvement was significant, from
buying the weapons from the Pen­
tagon to providing the primary
Swiss bank account used In the
complex transactions. A CIA repre­
sentative attended each of the
meetings with the key Iranian
middleman. Manucher Ghorbanlfar.

And It was the CIA that gave
Ghorbanlfar the polygraph tests he
reportedly flunked.
The Senate committee report says
the following CIA officials were
Involved In the Iranian arms deal or
knew about lt: John McMahon,
deputy director until his resignation
a year ago: Robert Gates, deputy
director for intelligence, who suc­
ceeded McMahon: Charles Allen,
national Intelligence officer for
counterterrorism: Duane Clarridge.
chief of the European division; and
the chief of the Near East/South
Asia division. Two of these officials
have retained private attorneys.
In addition, at least two retired
CIA officials. George Cave and
Thomas Clines, were involved.
But none of these people has
Casey's comprehensive knowledge.
The C IA 's inspector general Is
trying to reconstruct Casey’s In­
volvement from limited records.
Agency officials would like to come
clean, but this can happen only if
Casey recovers *— or North testifies
fully and frankly.

�*****

T* *—-f*

pm ugpiii

-&lt;

laniard HsrsM, lufcfd, FI.

NATION
N BRIEF
Chairman Cites Dlscrepencies
Bafwaan Testimony, Documents
W ASHING TO N (UPI) — The Senate Intelligence Com­
mittee chairman, comparing the Reagan foreign policy
process to "the amateur hour,", says his panel's report on
the Iran-Contra crisis raises new questions about key
witnesses' testimony.
Sen, David Boren, D-Okla.. said In an Interview Thursday
he has not reached conclusions as to whether any of 36
witnesses lied In testifying before the committee two
months ago In the most extensive probe of the scandal so
far.
But Boren said the committee report released last week
reveals discrepancies between testimony and documents,
particularly relating to former national security adviser
Robert McFarlanc.
Boren also said former CIA Director William Casey, who
has resigned while struggling to recover from brain-cancer
surgery, has Indicated he wants to return for more
testimony before the select congressional panels now
probing the scandal, if his health allows it. Several
members of Congress have said Casey was less than candid
in earlier testimony.

Nuke Site Protesters Arrested
MERCURY, Nev. (UPI) — More than 430 protesters,
including entertainers and scientists, were arrested during
a demonstration by 2,000 people at the Nevada Test Site,
the biggest anti-nuclear protest In the history of the facility.
Actors Robert Blake, Kris KristofTerson and Martin Sheen
were among those handcuffed Thursday when they
stepped across the cattle guard forming the border of the
test site, where the first U.S. atomic weapons test or the
year was conducted Tuesday.
The Soviet Union said it would resume Its testing as soon
as the United States detonated Its first blast of 1987, and
the Kremlin confirmed Thursday that It plans to resume
nuclear testing after an 18-month unilateral moratorium.
Astronomer-author Carl Sagan, his wife, Ann Druyan.
and peace activist Daniel Ellsberg also deliberately walked
onto government property and were arrested. They and the
others were taken to nearby Beatty, Nev.. where they were
booked and released pending trials in March.

Coroner Probing Liborace's Death
RIVERSIDE. Calif. (UPI) — Llberace's burial apparently
will be delayed until the coroner can determine If the
flamboyant entertainer died of AIDS, it was reported today.
Riverside County Coroner Raymond Carrillo rejected the
death certificate signed by Llberace’s physician, Dr. Ronald
Daniels, who announced the cause of death as congestive
heart failure brought on by encephalopathy, a general term
for degenerative brain disease.
State law requires county coroners Investigate deaths
that are suspected of having been caused by contagious
disease.
Liberace died Wednesday at his Palm Springs home and
a requiem mass was scheduled for today In Palm Springs.

ErMsy, Fsfc. L W W -M

Reporter Arrives In Zurich
ZURICH, Switzerland (UPI) — American
Journalist Gerald F. Seib. expelled after
being detained six days
[o on spying
charges in Iran, returned to the West today
on his 31st birthday.
The bearded Wall Street Journal Middle
East correspondent hugged his waiting wife,
also a Cairo-based Journal reporter, as he
got oft Swissair Flight 365 from Tehran to
Zurich.
"Just being here Is the best birthday
present I could possibly have." Selb told
reporters gathered In an airport lounge. "I
am feeling fine. I came to no physical harm
in Iran.”
Selb. who turns 31 today, detained on
spying charges Saturday while visiting Iran
with about 50 foreign Journalists invited by
the Iranian government.
Selb made a one-mlnutc airport statement
and refused to answer questions.
"F o r the past day-and-a-half I have been
living comfortably as the guest of the Swiss
Embassy," he said. "I am still not sure why
I was detained or how I was released.
"A ll I know Is any suggestion I was
Involved In any kind or espionage Is
completly false," he said. "I am a Journalist,
that's all. I was simply doing my Job."
Selb wore a light gray tweed Jacket, a blue
pullover and cream open-necked sports shirt
as he left the plane that arrived at 2:35 p.m.
(8:35 a.m. EST). 15 minutes behind ached-

His wife, Barbara Roaewlcz, had down to
Zurich when his expulsion was first an­
nounced on Wednesday.
Selb said he had been " a n Invited
representative" o f his newspaper and was
traveling with a valid American passport.
Selb was arrested In Tehran Jan. 31 after
his visa had expired.
He wanted to extend his visa to stay on a
few more days but was accused of being a
Zionist spy — an apparent reference to
Israel although Iran also uses the term to
refer to Iraq, Its Persian Gulf war arch­
enemy.
At the Seib family home in Hays. Kan., his
parents and three brothers had awaited
word he had reached the West.
"People are very happy but are almost too
tired to actively celebrate," said Dennis
Famey, a W all Street Journal reporter based
In Kansas City. Mo., who was helping Held
media Inquiries.
There was no mention of Selb's situation
In today's edition of his New York-based
newsaper.
Negotiations for his release were con­
ducted by the Swiss Embassy In Tehran as
Switzerland has represented U.S. interests
In Iran since 1980, when Iranian students
took 52 Americans hostage and held them
for 444 days.

to launch a military attack on
T he W est Germ an, newspaper Bfld
reported Thursday that Waite, the special
envoy o f the archbishop o f Canterbury
feared held in Lebanon, w as shot with a
machine pistol while trying to escape his
kidnappers.
The moss-circulation newspaper de­
scribed W aite's w ound os Hfe-iheatenlng.
The Church of, England discounted the
report as "sensationalist." and the State
Department said the story could not be
confirmed.
Watte, on his first trip to Lebanon since
the U.S. arms-for-hootages deal with Iran
surfaced In November, w as last seen Jan.
20, when he left his Beirut hotel to meet
with the Islamic Jihad kidnappers of two
Americans.

NOTICE OF CHANGE OF LAND USE
PUBLIC HEARING TO BE HELD
FEBRUARY 10 AND 11, 1987
TH E SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD O F COUNTY C0MMS8I0NERS (BCC) WILL CONDUCT A PUBLIC HEAR­
ING ON REQUESTED AM ENDM ENTS TO T H E SEMINOLE COUNTY COMPREHENSIVE PLAN (S H O R T
R A N G E D E V E L O P M E N T PLAN ) AND OFFICIAL LAND USE MAP. T H E PU R P O SE O F T H E H E A R IN G IS
T O R E C E IV E PUBLIC IN P U T A N D C O N S ID E R R E C O M M E N D A TIO N S O F T H E L O C A L P U N N I N G A G E N C Y / P U N N IN G A N D ZO N IN G CO M M ISSIO N R EGARD IN G T H E S U B JE C T A M E N D M E N TS A N D C O N TIN U E D
A P P R O P R IA TEN ES S O F U N D U S E D E S IG N A T IO N S W ITH IN C E R TA IN P O R TIO N S O F T H E M AP C O N ­
T A IN E D W ITH IN T H E A D V E R TIS E M E N T. T H O S E A M E N D M E N TS T H E B O A R D O F C O U N T Y C O M M IS ­
SIO N ER S IN TE N D S T O A D O P T W ILL B E TR A N S M ITT E D T O T H E D E P A R TM EN T O F C O M M U N ITY A FFA IR S
FO R REVIEW A N D C O M M E N T PRIOR T O FIN A L A C TIO N BY T H E BOARD O F C O U N T Y C O M M IS S IO N ER S .

U.S. Rejects Nuke Treaty
•&gt; W ASHINGTON (UPI) — The administration's rejection of
a treaty declaring a nucletir-free zone In the South Pacific Is
straining U.S. relations with Australia and other Pacific
nations.
State Department spokesman Charles Redman an­
nounced the rejection Thursday, saying the United States
"h as decided that in view of our global security Interests
an d re s p o n s ib ilitie s , w e are not. u nder cu rren t
circumstances. In a position to sign."

Reagan Celebrates 76th Birthday
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan, celebrating his
76th birthday today, is completely recovered from prostate
surgery, according to the first lady — but aides say he is
still moving gradually toward resuming a full schedule.
Reagan's health and his oversight of the Oval Office have
drawn sharper focus in recent weeks as he has stayed
mostly out of the public eye. The situation put his wife and
his chief spokesman under the spotlight of media questions
on the eve of his birthday.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
Soviet Soyuz Rocket Blasts
O ff O n Five M onth Space Mission
MOSCOW (UPI) — In a blast of orange flame, two Soviet
cosmonauts blazed through the night sky atop their Soyuz
TM-2 rocket early today, bound for the Mir orbiting space
station and five months of experiments and construction.
"Flight normal." the flight announcer at mission control
said every few seconds as the rocket carried commander
Yuri Romanenko and engineer Alexander Lavclkin toward
orbit.
The 160-foot spaceship, an upgraded version of the
Soyuz spacecran in operation for two decades, was
"functioning normally" during Initial stages of the mission,
the official Soviet news agency Tass said. The cosmonauts
were reported to be "feeling well."
The launch, broadcast live on national television, went
off on schedule at 12:38 a.m. without a hitch. It was the
second Soviet manned mission since the U.S. space
program was grounded by the Challenger disaster Jan. 28,
1986.

Philippines A w a it Response
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) — The government said today
that the 60-day truce in the nation’s 18-year-old
insurgency will be allowed to expire unless the rebels reply
by Saturday to President Corazon Aquino's call for an
extension.
The government today was awaiting the rebel response
to Its call for the resumption of peace talks.

3

Jeremy Cooper

4

L D R L IO O F F

IB LO TS

Nodh and soulh ol O'Brien Road. 900 leel west ol U S 17-92

4

Alev Greenspoon

4

HDR/PRES COMM

11.24 ACRES

West side ol Oiford Road, 1/3 mile soulh ol Fernwood Boulevard

5

Ken McIntosh

2

UU

e

Keewln Company

1

GR/PRES PUD

7

Jim HuckeDa

1

B

Jetl Garner

t

9

Duda Lands. Inc.

2

SITE
NUMBER
t

■
COMM

3 SO ACRES

Easl side ol Tuskawllla Road, 300 leal south ol S R 434

25 00 ACRES

South side ot Red Bug Lake Road ad|acent lo the west side ol Keewln

GR MOR

22 50 ACRES

Soulh side ol S R 426, adjacent to the west side ol Aloma Bend PUD

GR/PRESPUO

92 00 ACRES

Easl side ol S R. 426 ediacanl lo nodh side ol Aloma Bend PUD

GR/PRESLOR

294 00 ACRES

Nodh side ol Fed Bug Lake Road. 2/3 mile wesl ol S R 426

APPLICANTS TO BE CONSIDERED ON FEBRUARY 11, 1987
10

Iraqi Jets Bomb Iran
U n ited P ress International
Iraqi warplanes bombed two Iranian cities todry, killing
or wounding several people and damaging houses, the
official Iranian News Agency said.
The raids on Tabriz and the holy city of Qom came hours
after Iran fired a surface-to-surface missile at Baghdad in
retaliation for Iraqi raids against civilian areas In Iranian
cities.
In Tehran. President All Khamenei said 500 people were
killed In two recent air raids on Urumich. In northwestern
Iran. The attacking Iraqi planes hit 200 points In the city,
he said.

2

APPLICANTS TO BE CONSIDERED ON FEBRUARY 10, 1987
V
BCC
DISTRICT
LOCATION
SIZE
APPLICANT NUMBER FROM-TO
Nodh side ol Florida Ave . 400 leel east ol U S 17 92
I0 8S ACRES
LO R ■
COMM
2
Jack Zimmer
£&lt;3&amp;
tside ofLongwood'Lake M
aryRoad, 1/2mile northotCR 427
LIU/PRES COMM
3 76 ACRES
Edwavds/Young
2

Z0M Company

It

Jon Marlin

12

Paul Vines

S

66 40 ACRES

1

GR/PRESPUD

138 00 ACRES

1

GR/PRES LDR

129 00 ACRES

West side of Lockwood Roar], t/2 mile nodh ol McCulloch Road
West side ol Lockwood Road, 3/4 mile nodh ol McCulloch Road
West side ol Lockwood Road, 1 mile nodh ol McCulloch Road

11

James Moore

1

GR/PHES-LDR

111 81 ACRES

14

ZOM Company

1

GR/PRES LDR

217 56 ACRES

IS

Robed Cantu

t

GR/PRES MOR

LIU LIC/OFF PUD -

Nodhwesl corner ol S R. 46 and 1-4
On McCulloch Road, 2,200 leel wesl ol Lockwood Road

LEGEND:
General Rural
onlo r

UR COMM

Low Intensity Urban
Low Density Residential
Low Inlenslly Commercial/Oltlce
Planned Unit Development

71 60 ACRES

PRES —
MOR —
MDR —
COMM —
IND —

Easl ol Palm Valley Mobile Park, 3/4 mile west ot Lockwood Road

Preservation
Medium Density Residential
High Density Residential
Commercial
Industrial

IN O R D ER T O PROVIDE A L L IN T E R E S T E D P E R S O N S AN O P P O R TU N ITY T O BE H EA R D R EG A R D IN G
T H E R E Q U E S TE D LA N D USE D E S IG N A T IO N S S H O W N IN T H E MAP A B O V E , T H E B C C W ILL H O LD A
PUBLIC H EAR IN G T H A T W ILL O C C U R O N TW O S E P A R A TE EVENINGS: FEB R U AR Y 10 AN D 11,1987 W ITH
ITEM S T H A T H AV E N O T B EEN S U B J E C T T O PU B LIC C O M M E N T B EIN G C O N T IN U E D FR O M E V EN IN G
T O EV EN IN G . T H E PUBLIC H EA R IN G W ILL B E G IN A T 6:00 P.M. E A C H E V E N IN G , OR AS S O O N
TH E R E A F TE R AS POSSIBLE, IN ROOM W120 O F T H E SEM IN O LE C O U N TY SERVICES BUILDING L O C A TE D
A T 1101 E A S T FIR S T S T R E E T IN S A N F O R D . A L L IN TE R E S TE D P E R S O N S A R E U R G ED T O A T T E N D .
Persons are advised that if they decide to appeal any decision made at this meeting, they will need a record ot proceedings and, for such pur­
pose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which includes the testimony and evidence upon which the
appeal Is to be based.
For additional information, contact the Seminole County Planning Office. 1101 East First Street. Sanford, FL 32771. 321 1130, extension 371

�Rozelle: Olden Decision
s Due Early Next Week

G ators
D um p
Daw gs

Byi

Herald Sports Editor
LAKE MARY - Fred Rozelle.
executive director of the Florida
High School Activities Associa­
tion. said he expects a decision
"early next week" concerning
Lake Mary High School girls'
b a s k et b a l l p la y e r Ga b rl el l a
"G a b b y " Olden and charges of
possible violations of activities
association rules.
R o z e l l e I n t e r v i e w e d f ou r
parties Involved In the case
Thursday at Lake Mary High
School and received a written
statement from a fifth party who
was unable to attend because of
a Job committment.
L a k e M ary Principal Don
Reynolds said he decided to hold
Olden out of Lake Mary’s games
until a decision has been made.
Lake Mary won Its 22nd in a row
Thursday night with a 71-52
victory over Lake Brantley.

GAINESVILLE (UPI) - Vernon
Maxwell scored 23 points. In*
eluding 8 Tree throws In the final
two minutes Thursday night, to
lead co-No. 19 Florida to a 66-52
v i c t o r y o v e r G e o r g i a In a
■Southeastern Conference game.
D en n is W illiam s scored 6
straight Georgia points to bring
the Bulldogs within 51-42 with
s ix m i n u t e s left. B u t the
Bulldogs got no closer as Max­
well scored 10 points In the final
two minutes, going 8 for 8 from
the free-throw line.
Maxwell, the second leading
scorer In the SEC at 22.5 points
per game, led Florida In scoring
for the 17th time In 22 games
this season.
Melven Jones added 14 points
for Florida. 17-5 overall and at
9- 2 In sole possession of second
place In the SEC. one
behind Alabama.
Williams scored 20 points for
the Bulldogs, who have lost
twice to Florida this season.
Georgia fell to 12-8 and 5-6.
Georgia moved In front 12-9
after seven minutes. Florida
Coach Norm Sloan then sub­
stituted for all five starters. and
the reserves reeled ofT a 12-2 run
to give the Gators the lead and
control of the game. A Jones
slam dunk In the final 30
seconds gave Florida a 37-24
halftime lead.

Rozelle questioned Lake Mar}’
g irls ’ basketball Bill Moore,
Ju ni or v a r s i t y c o a c h Mike
A v e r lll. Olden and Judy
M cNaughton. McNaughton Is
serving as the host family for
Olden. Ken Patrick, assistant
coach for the University of
Miami Lady Hurricanes, sub­
mitted a notarized statement.

S e n io r i c e n te r

Jo e

W o lf

and

senior guard Kenny Smith —
both listed as questionable be­
fore the game — led North
Carolina with 21 points apiece.
Wolf played despite the flu and
S m it h w a s c o m in g o ff
a r t h r o s c o p ic k n ee s u rg e ry
performed Saturday.
Dave Popson. a senior forward
rec o v e rin g from a severely
bruised lower left leg. added 8
points on 4 of 4 shooting. Jeff
Lcbo. also suffering from the flu.
contributed 13 points.
North Carolina's starting five
c o n v e rte d 34 o f 46 shots.
Freshman J.R. Reid, the lone
healthy starter, recorded 16
points. The Tar Heels, who lead
the nation in field-goal percent­
age. hit 39 of 60 shots. 65
percent.
"It’s a real surprise to win like
this over here." North Carolina
Coach Dean Smith said.
Sophom ore center Charles
Shackleford led the Wolfpack
with a career-high 26 points.
Senior forward Bennie Bolton
added 14 points and Junior
guard Kenny Drummond had
11.
The T ar Heels Improved to
19- 2 and 8-0 In the ACC. The
Wolfpack dropped to 12-9 and
4-4 with its fifth straight loss.
In other gam es Involving
ranked teams. No. 1 Nevada-Las
V e g a s flattened Utah State
113-78 In a P a c ific C oast
Athletic Association game. No. 5
Temple downed Rhode Island
87-75 In an Atlantic 10 game.
No. 6 Purdue flipped Wisconsin
70-62 In the Big Ten. No. 14
Illinois crushed Big Ten rival
Wisconsin 72-43 and co-No. 19
Florida defeated Georgia 66-52
In Southeastern Conference ac­
tion.

HATS TOP 8AMFORD
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (UPI) Guard Gary Coachman scored
17 points and center Martin
Jenkins had 17 points and 10
rebounds to lead Stetson to a
72-60 victory over Samford In a
Trans America Athletic Confer­
ence game Thursday night.
Stetson forward Randy An­
derson had 15 points and 9
rebounds, while guard Terry
Johnson added 11 and 8 assists
to lead the Hatters.
F o rw a rd R em bert M artin.
T A A C leading scorer, had 24
points. 11 rebounds and 5
assists to lead the Bulldogs.
Stetson. 9-11 overall and 7-5
In the conference, opened up a
15-6 lead with 11 minutes left in
the half, but Samford went on a
11-5 scoring spree to make it
2 0 - 17 at 7:40. Martin hit a
10- footcr for the Bulldogs one
second before the Intermission
buzzer, but the Hatters led
28-23.

*1think It It ridiculous that
I havo to go through thlt.'

— Gabby Oldan
T h e 18-year-old O lde n is
averaging nine points, seven
assists and six steals per game.
The 5-foot-6 point guard has
been the catalyst behind Lake
Mary’s 23-1 record and No. 3
ranking In the Florida Sports
Writers Association Class 4A
Poll.
Rozelle said three areas are
being scrutinized:
• Was Olden recruited?
• W as there
out-of-schoolzone participation?
• Why did Olden change her
host family twice?
"You can leave no stone un­
turned when you do an in­
vestigation of this n a tu re ."
Rozelle said. "I probably won’t
make a decision until Monday or
Tuesday of next week."
If Rozelle determines Olden
did play out of school zone. Lake
Mary would have to forfeit its 23
victories. If It was found Olden

Bee OLDEN, Page 8A

Patterson's 27 Overpower Lady Pats
By Mark Blythe
Herald Sports Writer

UNC BLISTERS WOLFPACK
Even with four ailing starters.
North Carolina Impressed North
C a r o lin a S tate C o ach Jim
Valvano.
"They Just shot the ball so
well." Valvano said Thursday
night after the third-ranked Tar
Heels defeated his Wolfpack
96-79 In an Atlantic Coast Con­
ference game. "T h ey’ve got a
great team, as good a team as
I’ve seen s in c e I've been here."

Basketball

was recruited. Rozelle said the
penalty would be stlffer since the
FHSAA guideline — losing a
year's eligibility — would not
affect Olden since she is a senior.
He did not detail a penalty for
c h a n g i n g the ho st f ami ly
without ofTlcial approval.
Olden was placed at Lake
Mary by the Education Devel­
opm ental Resource Trust, a
F o r ei g n E x c h a n g e Student
p l a c e m e n t a g e n c y In Los
A ngeles. Roger D. Rlske. a
placement officer, said Olden
was recommended to him by Ed
Vlsscher. an employee of EDRT
who works In Sweden. Vlsscher
formerly coached at Orlando
Luther.
Olden said Wednesday It was
her decision to apply for a
F o re ig n E x c h a n g e Student
application.
"I think It Is ridiculous that I
have to go through this." Olden
said. "A t the beginning of my
last year at school. I decided I
wanted to learn English good.
“ E v e r y b o d y t a l k s how
America Is so good. I wanted to
come here and see how It was."
Olden arrived In August and
moved In with Patrick, a tex­
tbook salesman, who lives In

HoraM

toyBtuftla WtofctMt

Lake M a ry 's Gabby Olden, left, drops In layup as Seminole's
Leticia Strickland arrives too late. Sweden Foreign
Exchange Student will sit out until inquiry is completed.

Lake Mary’s Cynthia Patterson
scored 27 points to propel the
L a d y R a m s o ver the Lake
Brantley Lady Patriots. 61-52, In
Seminole Athletic Conference
Thursday night at Lake Brantley
before 204 fans. The victory was
the Lady Rams’ 22nd In a row.
Lake Mary Improved to .23-1
and 7-0 in the conference. Lake
Brantley fell to 11-8 and 4-3.
Lake Mary played without point
gu a rd G a b b y Olden w ho is
currently under investigation by
the Florida High School Activi­
ties Association for possible
rules violations. Supcrsub Gina
Dawson was also sidelined with

Basketball
a strep throat, according to Lake
Mary coach Bill Moore.
"It was a big win for us."
Moore said. "It shows we can
play with the stronger teams
without Gabby (Olden) and Gina
(Dawson)."
The Lady Patriots, who were
without sixth man Susan Asplen
(flu), started the game In a
zone-press defense to test the
L a d y R a m s b a ll h a n d li n g
without Olden.
After Lake Brantley took a 6-0
lead Lake Mary cooled down and

began to get Into the flow of the
game. Patterson scored the next
six points of the game to tie the
score. Patterson ended with 10
first-period points as the Lady
Rams took a 16-11 lead.
"T h e shots were going In
tonight." Patterson said. "We
played team ball and I happened
to get the ball where I wanted It.
The Lady Patriots went on a
six-point run to cut the lead to
18-17 e a rly In the second
quarter only to see Patterson
s c o r e a g a i n to kill their
m om entum . Patterson ended
with 17 first half points as Lake
Mary took a shakv 35-28 lead.
See P A T T E R SO N , Page 8A

District 4: Lyman's In, Brantley's Out
By C hris F lste r
H erald S po rts W r it e r •
The much-anticipated Lyman-Lakc
Brantley District 4 ch am pion sh ip
showdown will not materialize this year.
Lyman’s top-ranked Lady Greyhounds
arc In: Lake Brantley’s second-ranked
Lady Patriots are out.
At Longwood. Lyman pulled out a
hard-fought 3-2 victory over Lake Mary
while at Altam onte Springs, Lake
Brantley fell victim to the upset, losing a
2-0 decision to fourth-ranked Melbourne.
Unlike the district semifinals the past
three years, the Lady Greyhounds did
not Just waltz In. get their hair wet. and
waltz out with an easy victory Thursday
night.
Although Lyman has had Its share of
cakewalks in the past, it also never backs
away from a fight. The Lady Greyhounds
had to get some mud on their uniforms,
get aggressive and fight every Inch of the
way to pull out a victory over a
hard-charging Lake Mary team Thurs­
day night before 151 hearty fans at
Lyman High.
Lyman. 18-1-5, advances to the Dis­
trict 4 Tournament final Saturday night
at 7 agalns* once heaf*-n Melbourne.
"W e were moving the ball around well
despite the rain." Lyman coach Laura
Dryden said. "A ll of our people up front
played well and we got some excellent
defensive play from Stacey Roy. Julia
C allarm an and (go alk ee p er) Tracy
Wortham."
Lake Mary, ranked eighth In the state.

Soccer
concluded an excellent season with an
18-5-4 record.
"I told the girls after the game I was
proud of them." Lake Mary coach BUI
Elssele said. "They played hard and
fought back from being behind early."
After playing to a scoreless tie for the
first 14 minutes, fleet-footed Lyman
senior Mayc Belle Bryant struck for a
pair of goals In a flve-mlnute span. The
first came when Bryant took a long ball
from Dana Boycsen and stuffed the ball
through the hands of goalkeeper Tammy
Scott. Lyman took a 2-0 lead when
Bryant scored on a breakaway. On
Bryant's second goal, Kerry Musante
placed the ball over the Lake Mary'
defense and It appeared at least two
Lyipan players were offsides but no call
was made.
Lake Mary fought back wlthln-2-1 with
7:36 left In the half when Michelle
Mattingly made a nice run toward the
goal and dropped the ball off to Donna
Rohr who poked It In. Led by senior
Kelley Broen. Lake Mary kept up the
offensive pressure but could not tie the
score before the half ended.
The Lady Rams tied the score at 2-2
with 21 minutes left to play when Vicky
Warner looped a shot from 35 yards out
over the head of Wortham.
The remainder of the game was played

in a downpour and was a back and forth
battle with each team having scoring
opportunities. With Just over six minutes
remaining. It was Bryant again who
m ade the b ig play for the Lady
Greyhounds.
Bryant streaked into the open and was
breaking toward the goal when she was
tripped Inside the penalty area and
Lyman was awarded a penalty kick.
"It was a good call because it was a
definite trip.” Dryden said. "At that
point, I was pretty confident we had the
game.”
Dryden was confident before the
penalty kick was taken because the
person taking the PK was senior mid­
fielder Karen Aberncthy — she of the
booming kicks. "A be r" didn’t let Dryden
and the Lady Greyhounds down either
as she blasted the ball between the pipes
for the winning goal.
It was a different story at Lake
Brantley.
Against a weaker opponent. Lake
Brantley may have been able to get by,
but the sluggish Lady Patriots were In
t r o u b le fro m th e s ta r t a g a i n s t
Melbourne’s Lady Bulldogs.
M e lb o u r n e took a d v a n t a g e o f
Brantley's sloppy play with two first-half
goals and the Lady Bulldogs went on to
avenge their only loss of the season with
a victory before 201 fans at Lake
Brantley High.
Melbourne, with a 19-1 record In Its
first year of girls soccer, advances to
Saturday night’s district finals against

Lyman Finds Cure To Road Woes;
'Notes Host Silver Hawks Tonight
Tonight's SA C G am es
Lake Howell at Seminole

WUEZ AM (1400). 7:50p.m.
Lake Brantley at Lake Mary
Lyman at Oviedo
By Sam Cook
H erald Sports E ditor
Lyman’s Greyhounds do not
have any trouble winning at
home. They are unbeaten In
their last 16 contests at the "Dog
Pound." And after losing their
first live road g a m e s , the
'Hounds wen their next three In
hostile gyms.
Lyman coach Tom Lawrence
said he does not have an answer
for the on-ihe-road turnaround,
he Just hopes it continues.
"Maybe we've Just been lucky.”
he said Thursday night. “ IVe do
have three pretty good clutch

Basketball
players, but to win on the road
anywhere you have to play
well.”
Robert Thomas. Craig Radzak
and Vince Florence have been at
their best when the chips are
down. Thomas is the county's
best free-throw shooter. Radzak
Is a nigged rebounder and scorer
while Florence Is an explosive,
penetrating performer.
Lawrence said his big three
will have to shoulder an even
bigger burden since Lyman lost
guard Darryl Starkes to u serious
knee Injury last week. Earlier the
'Hounds lost two players to
academic Ineligibility. The con­
tinued development of 6-foot-6

Shawn Hester has also been a
plus. Rick Moulton has moved
into the starting lineup In place
of Starkes. Delmon Simpson, a
6-1 sophomore, was promoted
from the Junior varsity.
“ We are very thii. right now,”
Lawrence said. "W e're real small
and not real deep."
While Seminole sprinted to an
unbeaten Seminole Athletic Con­
ference start. Lyman has quietly
put together a five-game winn­
ing streak. Lawrence's squad
has not lost since It dropped a
70-55 decision ut Sanford. The
Greyhounds are 4-1 In the SAC.
one game back, with a Tuesday
showdown on the horizon at
home against Seminole.
Lawrence, though. Is quick to
keep ills 'Hounds nearsighted.
See SAC , Page 7A

top-ranked Lyman. Lake Brantley con­
cluded Its best season ever with a 23-2-2
record.
"The game that you hope will never
show up snuck up on us tonight." Lake
Brantley coach Wolfgang Halblg said.
"There was not one thing we did that
looked nice."
Melbourne took a 1-0 lead less that
four minutes Into the game when
Christy Maxncr drilled a corner kick that
eluded goalkeeper Wendy Vickery and
bounced into the goal.
Beth Schaefer and Julie DelRusso tried
to get Lake Brantley's olTense cranked
up but the Lady Patriots could not
pe n etrate M e lb o u r n e ’s defense or
goalkeeper Leslie Heins.
The Lady Bulldogs cast even more
gloom over the Lady Patriots with 2:57
left In the first half when Christy Platt
launched a towering shot toward the
goal which slipped out of the grasp of
Vickery and Maxncr was there to knock
in the rebound for a 2-0 lead.
"Lake Brantley was obviously flat
tonight but our girls did what they had
to to w in ," Melbourne coach Larry
Kaskey said. "It gave us a big lift when
Lealle (Heins) was back In the goal and
Kelley Barnes back on the field."
Heins was taken to the hospital after
Tuesday's game with Bishop Moore and
was reported to have a bruised kidney.
Barnes took over In goal In that game
but Heins was able to start Thursday’s
game.

SAC PREVIEW:
TONIGHT’S PREP LINEUPS
Seminole Semlnoles (IB S )
Forward....... Roderick Henderson, 4-4, Senior
Forward...................Jerry Parkar, 4-1. Sanlor
Cantor........................ Craig Walkar. 4-4. Junior
Guard.................Michael Edwards. 5 7, Sanlor
Guard................... Andre Whitney, J it, Junior
Bench: Brad Baird, 4-10, Sanlor: Reginald
Bellamy, 42, Sophomore; Steve Hathaway,
4 5, Senior: Mike Franklin. 4 0. Senior;
Walter Hopson. 44. Junior; Earnle Lewis,
42, Junior; Leonard Lucas. 40. Junior;
Freddle Gad son. 40. Junior; Clay Walton,
4-1. Junior
Lake Howell Silver Hawks (4-11)
Forward......................... Phil Clark. 4 0, Junior
Forward....................Randy Keller, 44. Senior
Center..... ............ Alonio Robinson, 4-4. Junior
Guard.............. Steve Johnson. 43. Sophomore
Guard............................... C. Gibson, S I , Junior
Bench: Aaron Gammons. 40. Junior; Matt
Johnson, 44, Junior; Steve Johnson. 4 ) ,
Sophomore; G a ry Weeden, 6 2. Ju n lo r;
Lowell Buffington, 4 0. Junior; David Yapo.
51. Junior; J .J. Banks. VO. Senior; Shane
Johnson. 6 2. Sanlor
Lake Brantley Patriots (6-4)
Forward.........................Brent Bell. 4 1. Senior
Forward................. Darren Leva. 6-2, Junior
Center....................... Barri Shirley. 4 4, Senior
Guard............................. Joe Nolll. 4 0. Junior
Guard ....................Doug Lawson. 5-10, Junior

BASKETBALL
Bench: Bo Pamplln, 44. Sophomore; Steve
Morse. 5-10. Senior; Bob Methven, 4 4.
Junior; Darren Hlnshaw, 40. Junior
Lake M ary Rams (7-11)
Forw ard...................... Matt Napoli, 44. Senior
Forw ard..........E ric Ciernle|ewskl. 41, Senior
Center........................Oscar Merthle. 41, Senior
Guard.................. Mike Mandevllle, 4 1, Junior
G u a rd ......................... Te rry Miller, S*, Junior
Bench: Cory Prom, S I0 . Junior; Bernard
Mitchell. 42. Sophomore; Brad Compton. S t,
Junior; Jim Stewart, 41, Senior; Jim Aelker.
5-1, Junior
Lyman Greyhounds (145)
Forw ard.................... Craig Radiak, 6-2. Junior
Forw ard...................Vince Florence. 41, Senior
Center.........................Shawn Hester, 4 4, Senior
Guard.-......................Rick Moulton, 5-11, Senior
G uard..................... Robert Thomas. 5-10, Senior
Bench: Matt Lamb. 41, Junior; J .J . Miller.
4-1, Sophomore. David Kendrick. 42. Jun'or;
Delmon Simpson. 41. Sophomore
Oviedo Lions (11-4)
Forw ard...................... Robb Hughes, 44, Senior
Forw ard......................Chris Griffith. 6 3, Senior
Center........................Steve Kandell. 6 5, Junior
Guard........................ Brian Wilson. 5-11. Junior
G uard........................... Garth Bolton, 40, Junior
Bench: Te rry Campbell. 5-10, Senior; Dana
Hill, 4o. Senior; Roby Bowers. 6 0. Sopho­
more; Dwight Everett. 6 0, Junior, Alan
Greene. 6 2. Junior; Juan Ola*. 5 », Senior

�am

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'

Yarborough Yearns For
D A YTO N A BEACH Cale
Yarborough has done just about
everything positive you can do in the
Busch Clash — except win it. The
legendary driver from TimmonsvlHe,
S.C. Is h o p in g to correct that
oversight Sunday at Daytona In­
ternational Speedway.
"I've run well in most every Busch
Clash I've driven." Yarborough said.
"A n d I've come dose a few times. I
never knew how much I liked the
race until I missed it last year."
To qualify for the Clash, a driver
has to win a Busch Pole Award on the
NASCAR Winston Cup circuit in the
previous year or win the "wild card"
spot from among the Busch Beer
fastest s econd-round qualifiers.
Yarborough qualified for the first
seven Busch Clashes, then missed
last year's race.
"I guess every driver's dream at the

Betsinger
Lifts Rams
Past Tribe
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer
Scott Betsinger had the Midas
t o u c h T h u r s d a y n ig h t as
practically every pass the senior
midfielder made turned into a
goal for Lake Mary's Rams.
Betsinger dealt out a schoolrecord six assists as the Rams
rolled to an 8-1 victory over
Seminole in Seminole Athletic
Conference action at Seminole
High.
■ "Scott (Betsinger) Is a very
knowledgeable player and if you
give him time, he'll find the open
m an." Lake Mary coach Larry
McCorkle said. "A n d that’s what
happened most of the night
tonight."
Lake Mary Improved to 16-3-4
overall and 7-2-1 In the SAC.
The Rams conclude the regular
season Saturday at Daytona
Beach Seabreeze. Seminole now
stands at 3-11-1 overall and
finished its SAC schedule at
0-10. The 'Nolcs host Apopka in
their regular-season finale Sat­
urday.
While Betsinger did the dis­
hing, Ernie Broennlc. Tony
F lo re n tin o an d Steve S app
scored two goals each while Jon
Brooks and Chris Riske also
scored. Rick and Ernie Broennlc
also had assists.
Chris Ray scored his eighth
goal of the season for Seminole
while goalkeeper Scott Taylor
had a good game with 19 saves.
Lake Mary outshot the Tribe,
33-7.

HOWELL: 10-0 IN SAC
Lake Howell concluded its
Seminole Athletic Conference
schedule with a 10-0 record as
the Silver Hawks, ranked sev­
enth in the state (Class 4A),
b la n k e d n in th -ra n k e d (3 A )
Oviedo. 3-0, at Lake Howell.
The Hawks. 17-2-2 overall,
conclude the regular season
S a t u r d a y at hom e a g a in st
Gainesville Buchholz. Oviedo
now stands at 10-6-3 overall and
finished at 3-5-2 In the confer­
ence.
"A t first, we were trying to
push the ball too deep instead of
shooting,” Lake Howell coach
Glen Griffin said. "I told the kids
to keep pressing and start rip­
ping a few shots. Once we got
the first goal, we got going well."
The first goal was on a penalty
kick by Kenny Higgins while the
second was a nicely worked goal
by Alejandro Ballaudo on assists
from Jeff Philips and Todd
Miller. Javi Ortiz made it 3-0
with an unassisted goal.
Lake Howell outshot the Lions,
17-4. and had fiver corner kicks
to O v i e d o 's z e r o . O v ie d o
goalkeeper Gordon King made
nine saves while Howell keeper
Joey Schulman made two saves
in recording the shutout.

LYMAN RIPS BRANTLEY
Chris G rah am scored two
goals and keeper Kelly Walden
recorded his third consecutive
shutous as Lyman’s Greyhounds
ripped Lake Brantley’s Patriots,
3-0, Thursday night at Lake
Brantley High.
Lyman concluded the regular
season at 11-5-4 and 5-3-2 In the
c o n fe rn e c e w h ile B ra n tle y
finished at 6-12-4 overall and
2-6-2 in the league.
"From offense to defense, this
w as our best gam e o f the
seaso n ," Lym an coach Ray
Sandldge said. "N ow we're ready
to go for the district tourna­
ment."
Lyman took a 1-0 lead in the
first half when Gerard Mitchell
scored on an assist from Shailer
Bowers. Graham then scored on
Mark D u b in 's assist as the
‘Hounds took a 2-0 halftime lead.
Graham added an insurance
goal In the second half on
Anthony Godhino's assist.
Lyman outshot the Patriots.
16-7 and Walden made three
saves in recording the shutout.

beginning of each season Is to make
the Clash a two-car race: win all the
poles and then It's just you and the
wild card." Yarborough said.
Other drivers who qualified for the
Busch Clash Include Benny Parsons.
Darrell Waltrlp. Ricky Rudd, i Dale
Earnhardt. Terry Labonte. Harry
Gant. Bill Elliott. Geoff Bodine. Tim
Richmond and "wild-card" drawing
Alan Kulwlckl. Richmond will not be
able to race due to poor health.
" T h a t ’s a pretty stout fie ld ,"
Yarborough said. " I f we can win
against that kind of competition, then
I'd say we'd be off to an awfully good
start for 1987."
Yarborough's best Busch Clash
finish was his second place to Nell
Bonnett in 1983. He has finished in
the top five In five of his seven Busch
Clash starts and won 190,500. He
will become the seventh driver to

PREP LEADERS:
K E Y ) Stm lnolt (S ). L t k t M ary (L M ),
Lyman ( L ) , O vltdo (O ). Lake Howtll (L H ),
L tk t Brontlty (L B ).
BOYS L E A D E R !
Scoring
Name
O GO
AVG
Greg Brick ( O ) .....................
23
1.3
Ernie Broennle (L M )..........
0.9
22
Dougle Lee ( L H ) .................. ....21
15
0.7
Todd Smith ( L H ) .................
11
0.5
Chris Ray (S ).......................
7
0.5
Rick Broennle ( L M ) ............ ..... 23
10
0.4
Jon Brooks ( L M ) .................
9
0.4
•
Todd Luka ( L ) ...................... ..... If
0.4
Jerry Philips ( L H ) ...............
0.4
•
Alejandro Ballaudo (L H )... .....21
8
0.4
7
0.4
Gerard Mitchell ( L ) ............
4
0.4
Darren Forde (5 ).................
6
Jim Guggenheim (O ) ..........
0.3
.....
21
6
Pablo Garzon ( L B ) ..............
0.3
Greg Marko ( L B I ................ ..... 21
6
0.3
Tony Florentino ( L M ) .........
6
0.3
Chris Graham ( L ) ................
5
0.3
Greg Bailey ( L ) ................ .
5
0.2
Cory Sheffield ( L B ) ............
3
0.2
Lee Alexander ( L M ) ........... .....23
5
0.2
Je ll Philips ( L H ) ................. ..... 21
4
0.2
Paul Ahrens ( L B ) ................ .....21
4
0.2
Steve Sapp ( L M ) .................. .....23
4
0.2
Shailer Bowers ( L ) .............. ..... 13
3
0.2
Mike Moody ( O ) ..................
2
0.2
Todd Miller ( L H ) ................. ..... 21
0.)
3
Erik Bird ( L H ) ..................... ..... 21
3
0.1
Frank Ramseur (L M )......... .....21
3
0.1
Kenny Higgins ( L H ) ........... ..... 21
3
0.)
Frank Baranowskl (L M ).... ..... 23
3
0.1
Pet* Kinsley ( L M ) ...............
3
0.1
J .J . Partlow ( S ) ................... ..... IS
0.1
2
0.1
Mark Dubin ( L ) ...................
2
Tom Sail* ( L ) ....................... ......19
2
0.1
Bernard Harden ( L ) .................19
2
0.1
Chad M ar ton ( L B ) ...............
2
0.1
Bill Langston ( L B ) ...............
2
0.1
Brian Mills I L H ) .................. ..... 21
2
0.1
o.t
Dan Nila ( L B ) ............................21
2
1
0.1
Marc Dixlon (S )................... ....... (
1
Mike Altlzer ( S ) ...................
0.1
Alex Plquer ( S )................... ...... 15
1
» .)
Scott Taylor ( S )...................
1
0.1
Malt Albert ( S ) .....................
1
0.1
|
David Hall ( S )...................... ..... is
0.1
Gary Gotwalt (O )................
1
0.1
1
Derek Bates (O )..................
0,1
Je ll Grlflln ( O ) .....................
1
0.1
Duncan Jones ( 0 ) ...... ......... .......18
1
0.1
|
Tim Wslsanen ( 0 ) ...............
0.1
E rik Boyle ( O ) ............................18
)
0.1
Scott Welsenen (O )............. ......18
I
0.1
1
Chris Walden ( L ) ....................... If
0.1
Brett Wortham ( L ) ............. ...... 19
1
0.1
t
Brian Nichols { L ) . . . .......... ...... |f
0.1
Jett Shlrkay ( L H ) ...................... 21
1
0.1
Bryan Droza ( L H ) .............. ...... 21
1
0.1
Assists
Jim Guggenneim (0 ) 11, Sttva Sapp (L M )
10. Jeft Philips (L H ) 9, E m it Broennlc (L M )
0. Dougle Lee (L H ) 7. Kenny Higgins (L H ) 4,
Jerry Philips (L H ) 4, Scott Betsinger (L M ) 4,
Tony Florenllno (L M ) S. Jon Brooks (L M ) 5.
Duncan Jones (O ) 5. Javl O rtli ( L H ) 3, Mark
Dubin ( L ) 5, Mike A lllre r (S ) l Scott Schmitt
(L M ) 4. Lee Alexander (L M ) 4, Chris
Graham ( L ) 4. Mike Moody (O ) 1. Todd Luke
( L ) 3, G reg M arko ( L B ) 3, Alejandro
Ballaudo (L H ) 3, Tom Sells ( L ) 3, Rob Saltier
(O ) 3. Todd Smith (L H ) 3. Rick Broennle
(L M ) 3. E ric Luben (L ) 3, Frank Baranowksi
(L M ) 2, Dave Daniel ( L B ) 2, Bryan D ro it
(L H ) 2. Chad Marian ( L B ) 2. Greg Brick (O )
2. Brett Wortham (L ) 2, Gerard Mltchall (L )
2. Tim Walscnen (O ) 2. Pablo G arion ( L B ) 2,
Mark Welsgerber ( L B ) 2. M ark Gardberg
(L H ) 2. Darren Forde (S ) I. Dan Nlta (L B ) ),
Elvln Carrero ( L B ) 1. Gordon King (O ) t,
Paul Ahrens ( L B I I, Erik Bird (L H ) t, Ralph
Padilla (L M ) ), Alex Plquer (5&gt; 1. Derek
Bates (O ) I, Jim m y Abbott (L H ) 1, Chris
Riske (L M ) I, George Kourtls (L I t, Frank
Ramseur (L M ) 1, Brian Nichols ( L ) I, Chris
Ray (S) 1, Kevin Sowers ( L B ) 1, Cory
Sheffield ( L B ) 1. J .J . Partlow (S ) 1. Chris
McCumber (L H ) I, Shailer Bowers (L ) ),
Anthony Godhino (L ) t.

GA
8
IS
22
27
32
39

V a n z u ra
SANFORD
HERALD
MOTOR
SPORTS
WRITER

£

have surpassed S100.000 In Busch
winnings when he starts thts Su n­
day's event.
Terry Labonte thinks the tradi­
tional race strategy might change In
this year's race of Busch Pole Award
winners. "The strategy in the past
has been to set yourself up for the
final lap," Labonte, who will be
driving the Budwelser Chevrolet of

SOCCER

SamlneJ* Athletic Contort net Socctr Leaden
Statistics through Thursday's games

Goalkeepers
G
Name
.12
Joey Schulman (L H ) ...............12
Pete McNally ( L M ) ................. .17
17
.18
Kelly Walden ( L ) .....................18
19
Gordon King (O )...................... 19
Scott McCullough ( L B ) ........... ,10
20
.11
Sean Sundvall (S ).....................1
1

C a rl

AVG
07
09
1.2
1.4
1.4
3.3

Saves
Gordon King (O ) IS4, Sean Sundvall (S)
107, Scott M cCullough ( L B ) 124, Pale
McNally (L M ) 101. Kelly Walden (L ) 94, Scott
Taylor (S ) 53. Scott Betsinger (L M ) 34.
Martin Nystrom (L H ) 33, Joey Schulman
(L H ) 33, Todd Hamilton ( L ) 10
Shutouts
Pete M cNally (L M ) 7, Joey Schulman (L H )
4Vs, Kelly Walden (L ) 4V», Scott McCullough
(L B ) 3, Scott Betsinger (L M ) 3. Gordon King
(O ) 4, M artin Nystrom (L H ) 2Vl. Todd
Hamilton (L ) Vs.

...S A C
Continued from 6 A
Tonight. Lyman Invades Oviedo
and the Lions' Den has always
been a tough stop for the
Greyhounds. He knows another
loss could be fatal, since Lyman
may not receive any assistance
for the rest of the league.
Although the SAC race Just
passes the halfway mark to­
night. tt ts a two-team race —
Seminole and Lyman. In other
games. Seminole. 5-0. hosts
Lake Howell, 1-4, and Lake
Mary. 2-3, en tertain s Lake
Brantley. 2-3. Oviedo Is 1-4.
Count out the last four teams.
Coach Dale Phillips’ Lions

legendary car owner Junior Johnson
this season, said.
"H o w you set yourself up. of
c o u r s e , d e p e n d e d on y o u r
circumstances." he added. "How well
you were running, where you were
starting, who w as In front of you and
who was behind you.
"Things might be a little different
this year, and ought to be pretty
exciting to watch."
Labonte said $35,000 In lap leader
awards could make a difference in
how teams approach the 50-mile
dash of speed. The Busch Clash offer
$10,000 to the leader of lap 5.
$10,000 to the leader of lap 15. and
$15,000 to the leader of lap 10.
"The big prize Is still the $50,000
for leading the final lap,” Labonte
said. "B ut I think you're going to see
a lot o f people shooting for those
other lap leader awards, too."

000
S a n f o r d ’ s H a r o ld "F a t R a t "
Johnson called to say that be has just
finished re-vamplng his race car and
will be running his 1967 Celebrity at
New Smyrna Speedway.
Tonight, the 21st Annual World
Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing
starts its nine consccutlvet nights of
ground-shaking action. Phil Dorman
of Lake Mary has hls&lt; "Dorm an
Racing" Camaro also entered In the
strong field of late models.
Junior Simmons, Marc Klnley, Bill
Klnley. Jim Taylor, Randy Smathers,
James Carter and Don Roberts are
just a few of our local racers entered
In the Thunder Car class.
Watch out for Simmons. He has his
'86 Thunderblrd running real strong
and could be feature winner during
the prestigious event.

Elliott Draws Busch Clash Pole

f INAL 01RLS LEADERS
Scaring
Nam*
O OO
Julie DeUtussa ( L B ) .............
31
Kelley Broen ( L M ) ............... ....24 24
21
M ay# Belle Bryant ( L ) ......... ....22
Cara Marian ( L B ) ................. ....23
19
Donna Rohr ( L M ) ................. .... 34 11
Cathy Bergman (O )..............
14
Michel 1*Mattingly ( L M ) ..... ....34
13
Karen Abernathy ( L I ........... ....30
13
13
Sherri Rumler ( S ) ................. ....22
Colleen Llevertz (L B )..........
11
Randl Huddleston ( L ) ..........
10
Dene Boyasan ( L ) .................
10
Crlssla Snow ( L M ) ................ ....34 10
Kim Mitchell ( L ) .................. ...31
9
9
Beth Schaefer ( L B ) ............... ....30
7
Klrstln Reesman ( L H ) ......... ....)f
Michelle Herbst (L B ) ........... ....33
1
Jennifer Josephe (L B ).........
7
Vicky Pakovlc ( S ).................
4
Melissa Shuckman &lt;S)......... .... 17
5
5
Kelly Price ( O ) ...................... ....14
Dawn Towla ( L H ) .................
3
Cindy Benge ( S ) ....................
3
Brook* Taylor ( L M ) ............
3
Nicole Compton (L H )........... .... 19
4
Heather Brann ( L H ) ............ .... 19
4
Doris Arcomone (O )............ .... 10
4
Bonn! Sleeves ( L ) .................
4
4
Tracey Farrelly (S ).............
4
Reenle Deaver ( L B ) ............ .....23
Becky Trevino ( L H ) .............
3
Jennifer Whitaker ( 0 ) ..........
3
Shannon Sundvall (S )........... .....32
3
Julia C a lla rm a n (L )............. .....32
3
Shannon Anderson ( L B ) ......
3
Chris Frenkenberger (L H ).......19
3
20
2
Jill Knutson ( O ) ........ ................
Karen Kopp ( L B ) .................. .....31
2
Unde Scfiulthels ( L ) ............ .....33
2
Debbie Bray ( L B ) .................
2
Michelle Schroth ( L B ) ..............31
2
Leslie Hobek ( L M ) .................... 24
2
Tori Campbell ( L H ) .............
1
Am y Gerglck ( L H ) ............... .19
1
Dan E l Blanay ( L H ) ............ ....19
1
Jenny Lambousls (O )........... ... 20
1
1
Bobble Bowersox (O )........... ...20
1
Rachelle Denmark (S )......... ....22
Jenniter Llndamood (S )...... ...22
1
1
K erry Musante ( L ) ........... ....22
1
Karen Brown ( L B ) ................
1
Erica Josephs ( L B ) .............
1
Jenniter McMaster* (L B )..,.....22
1
Teresa Gatewood (L M )...... .
1
Jolle Hodm an ( L M ) .............
Kristen Jones ( L M ) ...................14
1

AVO
1.1

1.0

O.f
O.t
0.7
0.7
0.«

O.t
o.t
0.4
0!
0.4
0.4
0.4
0.4
0.4
0.3
0.3
0.3
0.3
0.3
0.3
0.3

0.1
0.3
0.3

DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) - Bill
Elliott drew the pole position
Thursday for Sunday's Busch
Clash, a 50-mlle race at Daytona
International Speedway for stock
car drivers who won pole posi­
tions last season.
E l l i o t t , w h o w o n 11
superspeedway races and $2.3
million In 1985 and still holds
the qualifying record at Daytona
with a speed of 205.114 mph.
was awarded the pole for the
20-lap race In a blind drawing.
Ten drivers are entered In the
$210,000 race, which will be run
the day after pole qualifying for
this year's Daytona 500.
Benny Parsons will start on
the outside pole, while Cale
Yarborough will start third and

0.3
0.3

0.2
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1

The Busch Clash offers at least
$50,000 to the winner, and no
less than $10,000 to the lastp la ce f in is h er . T h e r e is a
$10,000 bonus given to the
leader of lap 5, $15,000 to the
leader of lap 10. and $10,000 to
the leader of lap 15. meaning
one driver could pick up as
much as $85,000.
The 20-lap race around the
2 .5 -m lle D a y to n a trloval
n o r m a l l y t a k e s a b o u t 15
m i n u t e s to c o m p l e t e , a n d
doesn't call for scheduled pit
stop.

Hankins Drives By Sem inole;
Jenerette Propels Lady Lions
B j Chris Plater
Herald Sports Writer

S O U R C E : Seminole County boys and
girls soccer coaches. — Chris Flster

have posted a 16-11 mark but
just two of the victories have
come against Class 4A schools.
Phillips said he will need
strong performances from his
guards (Garth Bolton. Brian
Wilson and Terry Campbell)
along with 6-4 Robb Hughes and
6-6 Dana Hill against Lyman.
• Seminole, meanwhile, plays
flesty Lake Howell at Bill Flem­
ing M em orial G y m n a siu m .
Coach Bill Klein's Tribe. 18-5.
has won 12 of Its last 13 games
and Is in great shape for Us
second SAC title.
"Lake Howell Is playing well, I
don't know what to expect,"
Klein said, "T h e y 'r e giving
everybody fits."
Howell, like Oviedo, has been
In several close encounters, only
to falter down the stretch. Coach

Greg Robinson's club employees
Just one senior and Robinson
said finding a leader has been a
problem.
Robinson needs a good game
from 6-4 Junior center Alonzo
Robinson tonight to keep pace
w ith S e m in o le 's 6-8 C ra ig
W a lk er. 6*4 Roderick H e n ­
derson, 6-1 Jerry "Stick" Parker
and 5-11 Vi Andre Whitney on
the boards. Michael " S p u d "
Edwards completes Sanford’s
starting five.
• Lake Brantley at Lake Mary
is another Interesting SAC test
tonight squares off Lake Mary
and Lake Brantley. Brantley's
Joe Nolff hit a last-second shot to
heat Oviedo Tuesday while the
Rams played Seminole tough
before falling apart In the last
four minutes.

0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1

0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1

Assist*
Julia DalRussa (L B ) 30. K allty Broan (L M )
24. Cara M arlon (L B ) If , Col loan Llavartx
(L B ) 12, Crlssla Snow (L M ) 7, Donna Rohr
(L M ) 7, Bath Schaafar (L B ) 4. Dana Boyasan
( L ) 4, Karan Abamathy ( L ) 4, Maya Balia
Bryant ( L ) 5, Krlstan Jonas (L M ) 3, Tori
Campball (L H ) 3. Kim Mltchall ( L ) 3. Diana
Boyasan (L ) 4, Jennifer Josephs (L B ) 4,
Michelle Mattingly (L M ) 4. Cindy Benge (3 )
4, Shannon Sundvall (S ) 4. Michelle Herbs!
( L B ) 4, Debbie Bray ( L B ) 4, Jill Knutson (O )
3. Kelly Price (O ) 3, Randl Huddleston (L ) 3,
K erry Musante (L ) 3, Bonn! Sleeves (L ) 3,
Leslie Hobek (L M ) 3, Tracey Farrally (SI 3,
Jennifer Whitaker (O ) 2. Chris Franken
berger (L H ) 2, Stacey Roy (L&gt; 2. Carol
Lykans (S ) 2, Karen Kopp ( L B ) 2, Sherri
Rumler (S ) 2, Michelle Padilla (L M ) 2,
Michelle Blslgni (S ) 2, Melissa Shuckman (S)
2. Michelle Schroth (L B ) 2, Jennifer McAvoy
( L ) 2. Doris Arcomone (O ) I, Heather Brann
(L H ) I. D a n -E l Blanay (L H ) 1, Mindy
Gardberg (L H ) 1, Becky Trevino (L H ) 1,
Am y Alexander (L M ) ), Vicky Pakovlc (S ) I,
Teresa Gatewood (L M ) I, Klrstln Reesman
(L H ) I, M ercy Lazar (L M ) I, Jenniter
Llndamood (S ) I. Jennifer Sutherlin ( L ) I.
Rachelle Denmark (S ) ), Bobble Bowersax
(O ) t, Mario Baumelster (L M ) I, Shannon
Anderson ( L B ) 1. Reenle Deaver ( L B ) 1,
Nicole Compton (L H I I.

GA
14
18
26
25
IS
32
44

1986 Winston Cup champion
Dale Earnhardt will start in the
fourth position.
Other drivers in the race are:
Terry Labonte, Ricky Rudd,
Darrell Waltrlp, Harrry Gant.
A la n Kulw lc kl, and Geoff
Bodine.
Elliott started the 1985 season
by finishing third In the Busch
Clash, then going on to win the
Daytona 500.
"In a race like this It doesn't
make much difference where
you start'," said Elliott, who will
drive the Coors-Melllng Ford
Thunderblrd. "But if I had my

0.2
0.2

CASSELBERRY E rin
Hankins proved Thursday night
she's effective even when she’s
not hitting from the next county.
The 5-2 senior guard scored
eight of her game
on drives lo Tbe boop in the
fourth quarter as Lake Howell's
Lady Silver Hawks claimed a
66-61 Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence victory over Seminole High
before 101 fans at Lake Howell
High.
Lake Howell ran Its record to
17-3 overall and 5-2 tn the SAC
with Its third conference win in a
row. Seminole fell to 9-10 overall
with Its third consecutive loss
and now stands at 3-4 tn the
league.
With Seminole holding a 49-48
lead early in the fourth quarter,
Hankins saw an opening and
twice drove In for layups that
gave the Hawks a 52-49 lead.
Seminole rallied back to take the
lead but Hankins made a layup
with 20 seconds left and made
two free throws with 11 seconds
remaining to seal the victory.
"I hadn't drove to the basket
all night.” Hankins said. “But
Mary (Scfinitker) was drawing
the defender and It was wide
open so I went for it."
Behind Hankins for the Lady
Hawks. Tammy Lewis pumped
In 15 points. Denise Arriola
added eight and Kelley Grider
contributed seven.
"W e changed defenses and
tried to make Seminole beat us
outside," Lake Howell coach
Dennis Codrey said. "And we
worked (Adrian) Hlllsman and
didn't let her bcai us like she did
before."
LaShon Cash led Seminole
with 14 points, Liz Long tossed
In 12, Hlllsman added 10 points,
five assists and six steals and
Leticia Strickland chipped In
with nine points. Sheri Heddlck
contributed eight points, nine
rebou nds and four blocked
shots.
"W e had a chance to win It In
the end but the girls never set

Goalkeeper*
G
Name
Wendy Vickery ( L B ) ...............
..... 24
24
Sarah C jbb ( L ) .........................
21
..... 21
Tam m y Scott ( L M ) ..................24
..... 24
Kim Walsh (S )...........................18
.....18
Sherri Rumler (S ).....
.....10
..... 119
9
Sherri Raynor ( L H ) ..................

Auto Racing

choice. I'd rather start first.
While I'm happy to be up front.
I'm not starting to count my
chickens or anything. It's going
to be an awfully close race."

AVG
0.4
09
l.l
1.4
1.5
1.7
72

Saves
Lori Blackburn (0 ) 207, Kim Walsh (S) 173,
Ta m m y Scott (L M ) 142, Sherri Ra/nor (L H )
132. Sarah Cobb (L ) 1)4, Wendy Vickery ( L B )
108. Sherri Rum ler (S ) TOO. Darcy Mislak
( L H ) 21, neither Brann (L H ) 17. Kris
Botlicallo (L M ) 9. Julia DelRusso ( L B ) 2.
Tra c y Wortham (L) 2.
Shutouts
Wendy Vickery ( L B ) 12Vi, Sarah Cobb (L )
11, Tam m y Scott (L M ) 8. Kim Walsh (S) 7 ^ ,
Sherri Raynor (L H ) 3Vs, Lori Blackburn (O )
3, Sherri Rumler (S) 1V». Heather Brann
(L H ) Vs. Laura Derden (L B ) Vs.

Basketball*i
the offense up the way I told
them t o , " Semi nole coach
Charles Steele said. " T here a
i w e g u n e w n e re

the girls are losing their con­
centration."
Seminole, on a layup by Red­
dick and two free throws by
Strickland, took a 47-44 lead
Into the fourth period. Seminole
was up by three, 49-46, when
the Lady Hawks reeled ofT 10
unanswered points for a 56-49
lead with 4:04 remaining.
Seminole came back within
one. 60-59, with 1:10 left, then
took a 61-60 lead with 25
seconds left on Cash's layup.
Hankins came right back with a
layup and a 62-61 Lake Howell
lead and Seminole then turned
the ball over and was forced to
foul Hankins with 11 seconds.
Hankins, the county's leading
free throw shooter, hit both foul
shots as Lake Howell avenged an
earlier SAC defeat. The Lady
Hawks now set their sights on
league-leading Lake Mary.
"Every team that has beaten
us we have come back to beat
the next time," Hankins said.
"W e'll see if we can keep it going
against Lake Mary."
S E M IN O L E (41) - Cash 14. Hlllsman 10.
Strickland 9. Stephens 4. Long 12, Reddick 8.
G ilchrist4. Totals 2313 2961.
L A K E H O W E L L (M ) - Arriola 8, Hankins
22. Keeton 4, Grider 7. Kuhl 4. Manuel 4.
Lewis 13 Totals: 24 II 2944
Halftime — Seminole 26. Lake Howell 23.
Fouls — Seminole 22. Lake Howell 23. Fouled
out — Kuhl, Hlllsman Technical — nona

SEMINOLE JV TRIUMPHS
Three players scored in double
figures as Seminole's Junior
varsity claimed a 42-37 victory
over Lake Howell Thursday
night. Shawna Cohen led the
way with 11 points while Patrice
Brown and Cindy Lyons tossed
in 10 apiece. Coach Julius
Francis' team Improved to 4-3
for the season.

Coach Willie R ichardson's
Rams. 7-11, rely on the shooting
of the Terry "The Cat" Miller.
Erie " C Z " Czcrnlejewskl and

Bridget Jenerclte led three
players In double figures with a
c a r e e r - h i g h 15 p o in t s a s
Oviedo's Lady Lions won their
first Seminole Athletic Confer­
e n c e g a m e o f the s e a s o n
.Thursday night w it h .a 48-29

m r u n o n Iw g o f L yms an * a
Greyhounds at Lyman High.
The Lady Lions Improved to
6-15 overall and 1-6 In the SAC
while Lyman, which dropped Its
10th In a row, now stands at
1-16 and 1-6.
Jenerette, a sophomore cen­
ter-forward. also grabbed 10
r e b o u n d s w h ile soph om ore
forward Suzanne Hughes added
12 points and 10 boards and
junior center Bobble Kelley con­
tributed 10 points.
"Jenerette had her best game
of the season tonight.” Oviedo
coach John Thomas said. "W e
got a lot of good play from our
Inside people. They moved the
ball well amongst each other and
played some tough defense."
Thclee Bouey’s 10 points led
Lyman while Kim Boyle and
S h a ri S ie g rls t ad d ed eight
apiece.
Oviedo led by Just three, 12-9,
at halftime hut exploded for 19
points tn the third quarter and
held Lyman to six as the Lady
Lions look a 31-15 Ifcad Into the
fourth period.
"The third quarter Is usually
our nemesis but the girls came
out firing in the third tonight."
Thomas said. "It was definitely
our best third-quarter of the
season."
O V IE D O (64) Malchow 1, Wilton 2.
Hughes 12. Switzer 4. Kelley to, Jenerette 13.
Buntt 4 Totals 1910 14 48
L Y M A N 129) — Bouey 10, Boyle 8. Clark 3.
Siegrlst8, Tctels: 125 1129.
Halftime — Oviedo 12, Lym an 9 Fouls —
Oviedo 13, Lym an 15. Fouled out — none.
Technical — none.

OVIEDO JV WINS
Michelle Wynn poured in 17
p o in t s T h u r s d a y n ig h t as
Oviedo’s junior varsity upended
Lyman. 51-34. Brigette Szobar
tossed tn 12 points and grabbed
7 rebounds for the JV Lady
Lions. Lisa Calloway had a
game-high 19 points for Lyman.

Mike Mandevllle along with the
inside play of Oscar Merthle,
Matt Napoli and 6-3 Bernard
Mitchell.

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FIGURED FR EE
B rin g U s Y o u r In co m e T a x R eturns
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Use Your Refund As Your
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USED CARS
3219 S. HWY. 1792 - SANFORD
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ORLANDO 425-5088

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Connors Posts Grueling Victory
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Jimmy Connors thinks he
knows why tennis crowds like to watch him play at 34.
"They might feel sorry for the old fart and say. 'The poor
old guy, he doesn't want to go home so he comes out and
plays tennis.'*' Connors said.
The real reason, however, is the kind of tennis Connors
plays, the kind he displayed Thursday night In a grueling
6-3. 4-6, 7-5 victory over Scott Davis In the third round of
the U.S. Pro Indoor Tennis Championships.
Connors, the No. 2 seed in the tournament, is no longer
the top player In the world, as he was in the mid 1970s. but
he plays the game with the same effort and intensity.
"T h e crowd roots for him because he's such a hustler,"
Davis said. "I'm glad it was good entertainment but I wish
It was the other way around."

Pavin Pursues Second Win
H ONOLULU (UPI) — Corey Pavin, who has already won
one tournament this year, took the first step towards
winning his second Thursday when he grabbed the first
round lead at the $600,000 Hawaiian Open.
Pavin. the defending champion, shot a 7-under-par 65 to
take a one-stroke lead over Mac O'Grady and Jack Renner.
The former UCLA star, who last month won the Bob
Hope Classic, heads the PGA Tour money list with
8200.000 In earnings. Pavin won $304,000 in 1986 and
has become one of the PGA's youngest millionaires.
th e p o i n t s i n c e l w a s a
freshman." Thomas said. "I was
nervous at the start of the game
then I settled down.”
"I got tired early but thought I
could do the Job." Lawson said.
" I had to make the adjustment
quick and was glad to have
Ashley to help me.”
Thom as finished the night
with 12 points and Whyte added
10. Tracy Brandenburg led the
Lady Patriots with 16 and Laurie
Rivers added 14.
L A K E M A R Y (71) - Pattorwn 37. Thom pt
11, Borvevdntur* P. Lawson P, M ullhclUnd P.
Whyte US Roldan 4. Total*; 3) &gt;13 71.
L A K E B R A N T L E Y t i l ) - Brandenburg
14, Tutlord I , R I vrt * 14, Abarny a, Billm yer 7,
M ull 3. Total*; IB 14-35S3.
Halftime — Lake M ary 35, Laka Brantley
3B. Fouls — Lake M ary 1*. Lake Brantley 14.
Fouled out — Bona venture Technical —
none. Record* — Lake M a ry 33 1 (7 0 ). Laka
Brantlay 111(4 3).

LAKE MART JV ESCAPES
Lake Mary used two threeolnt plays by Tara Jackson who
nlshed with a team-high 20
p o i n t s to o v e r c o m e L a k e
Brantley. 57-54. In Junior varsity
a c t i o n T h u r s d a y at L a k e
Brantley.
Lake Mary Improved to 12-1
and also used the scoring power
of Amy Kuvach who finished
with eight and Lisa Johnson
who added seven.
The Lady Patriots were led by
Barbara Billmyer with a gamehigh 21 points. Lori Bunce and
Krista Kranze each added 11.

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O ld e n
Continued from 6A

Lake Mary but in the Seminole
High school district. Patrick has
been one of the prime movers
and shakers for girls' basketball
in Florida. He is a good friend of
both Averlll and Moore and has
worked closely with them over
the past several years to promote
girls' basketball.
Patrick said he. Averlll pnd
Visscher attended a sales' pro­
motion meeting together and
Visscher approached them about
sending a basketball player to
Lake Mary.
Patrick’s address — 110 W.
Greentree Lane. Lake Mary — Is
listed as the host address with
the EDRT. In his statement.
Patrick said. "It was my Inten­
tion that Gabbi (sic) would live
with the Avertlls."
To further compound mutters.
Patrick was offered and accepted
the assistant coaching position
for the Miami L. dy Hurricanes
On Sept. H. He said he felt It
would violate the NCAA rules to
have a "recrultable player" liv­
ing at his home. Patrick also said
there were seven people living In
his house when Olden arrived
and Olden had to share a bed
with hts daughter Jill.
"I called Roger Rlske at ERDT
and told him that the Avertlls
should be listed as the host

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T E N N IS
TENNIS: U.S. Pie ledmr

Third round
Jimmy Connor* Senibel HertOrt. Flo. del
Scott Davit. Badmoor. Fie, P I 44,7 S John
McEnroe. Glen Can. N Y . dot Tomet Smld
Ciechetlovekle. 41. PI Paul Amecono.
Bridgohempion. N 1.. del Bredaick Dyke,
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S p p l n . i 7( 4 71, 7 S . l 4
Tim Mayotte. Bradenton. Fie, dot. Bon
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Weil Gorman, 2 A 74 17 31,44 Milan Sro&gt;b*.
Cctchotlovakle. dot Tim Will ton. Athevillt,
N.G, 2AP4P2
TENNIS: Grand Prit TpaHNMd
AI lyen. Franco
Yannick Noah. I, Franca, dot Amend
Boehch. France. 74 (74), 7). Kelly Jonm.
San D u * dll Pet* Lundgrin. Sneden. IA
A2. Blaine Wlllenborg. Miami, del Libor
Plmek.l.Cnctwtert.4 P44A

HOCKEY
HOCKEY: NHL STANDINGS

GF
22*
IH
214
in
in
in

GA
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17*
307
200
342
m

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177
171

174
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171
177
701

GF GA
18 111

Two rare happenings occurred
In the NBA Thursday night
when Manute Bol helped some­
one else score and Alex English
failed to score In double digits.
B ol Joined the r a n k s o f
pla yma ker s T h u r s d a y after
spending the first 45 games of
the season passing on passing.
At Landover. Md., Bol handed
out Eut assist to Moses Malone on
the go-ahead basket in the
Washington Bullets' 94-85 victo­
ry over the Cleveland Cavaliers.
It was Bol’s first assist this
season, and It took, the 7-foot-6
n a t i v e o f S u d a n Just 6 62
minutes of playing time to ac­
complish the feat.
"I don’t want to be a guard,
but I can pass the ball like other
b ig g u y s . " s a i d Bol . w h o
managed 23 assists in 80 games
last season, or one every 91
minutes of playing time. "I'm a
good passer."
At Phoenix. Arlz., Phoenix
held Denver to 36 percent
shooting in beating the Nuggets
113-110. English, the N B A ’s
second-leading scorer with a
28.7 average, scored Just 8
points, breaking a string of 93
straight games In double figures.
English, who was benched for
all but one minute In the second
half, shot 4 of 13 In the first half
as Larry Nance, and the Suns'
guards shut down the Denver
forward. Nance also led the Suns
with 25 points.
"I thought we had a good
effort defensively, especially
during the first three quarters."
Suns Coach John MacLeod said.

Tecome a SI. lawtt. mgM

SotIon - Signed Drat bemmon Pm DkMn
and *lcher Wh Gardrnr to I yea contTKti
Clncmnell - Signed *tden I d D«Me end
Hugh Kemp, and cetdwi Mart Barry aid J «
Other Hr 1417.

Mid Ama. SibU IS Arl ingkn Be*. 44
NE Ohlinom* 71 Cemoron 11
ONI* Beplitl 74. Confrol SI (Ohlel 44
Okie Chhtlian Ca 74. length*!44
SouttemMelhoditt N Tout ALMd
Wilt
Air Face 71, Hmeil 14
Arlione tl. Oregon 1]
Biole BA TheMatt* i II
BOiteSI TAWobaSt.l*
Brighem Young N. Nre Mtrlco 71
CeliHmle N Seutrern Cel U
ColoredoSI 4A Sen DiegoSt 42
FullatonSt M, HoeMtncoSI H
Idaho SUN44. IdMOl
comet Noemen 7A Rogn CN. (CMcl d
Long Beech SI. II. Sente Bahaa 77
Mor.cnelo. Horttem Ai ,.sr oil
Montane Si 7a Novede Reno 72
Nevada Let Vtget US Utah St. 71
OrtgcnSI N Ar roneSI 71
SenJnell 41 Cel InrinoTO
SoCelil.Cd 4AWntmonl7I
Tore! El Pew 74, Utah 7)
UCLA 41 Stanton! U
Wethingtei 74. WeNi ingtei SI U

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ManIfMl
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17 X 1 X
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Harttordel WeNiHgrtn.1 Bpm
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DIALS; Ttortdoy'i Eperft Tranecfaet

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llllnoit 71 NorWieeitee 4)
irrterviIlTO. OriU42
Kaitucty WoiMyat 71. IndpnepNd 74
Lewit IS Ind Pm.' Ft. Wayne 17'0T1
MecANrray 77, PrlndpU 47
MendeslerlL Gomn 71
Merloi 44, IndUm ISouth Bond) 74
NUryvIlU 71, GroatvIlU 41
MeKondroeCN OA Weuimgron U 14
North Conlril 71 III. WnlryonU
Nethem MWi. N MIcMgw Toch O
Northwed 71 Sagtew VNley I*
OhtollflMAMgonl?
Piaduo 7k Wltcaitin 42
PurdupCetvmet 71 Rooery 71
SI llv itH Eoitorn llllnoit H
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Urtenid, lien* Htighdli

R lske said no ch an ge of
address was ever recorded.
Patrick said Olden stayed at
hts home from seven to 10 days
before m ovin g In with the
Avertlls In late September or
October. Averlll said Olden ar­
rived in late Septem ber or
October. Averlll lives at 215
Crown Oaks In Longwood. It Is
In the Lake Mary school district.
P rio r to O ld e n 's a rriv a l.
Averlll. who works for Shcarson
Lehman Brothers Inc., said he
did not hold the position as Lake
Mary JV coach. When he ac­
cepted the position, he said he
atid Ills wife Karel did not feel
they would have the time to
devote to a Foreign Exchange
Student. He also said he felt It
would be better for Olden to be
with a family which had a
student Olden's age.
Averlll then said he arranged

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DEALS

Tte Citadel ri.UNC AMvilNd
Union IKy J41. Trontyl.anUd
USC SpatlrOrtl 7t Centre) MNlNywi 17
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family since that was where she
would be living," Patrick said.
"Mr. Rlske said ‘that it would
require the papers going back to
the state department to make
that change.’ He (Risk) said ’we
could place her Into another
home tf we wanted.' He (Risk)
did not see a problem in that."
When Rlske was Interviewed
Tuesday by this reporter, he said
Patrick "mentioned a possible
p ro b le m c o n c e rn in g O lden
staying at his home and that
Patrick already had another host
in mind."

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Travis Perkins poured In 32 paints for the losers. Ray
Perkins and Derrell Jackson each had a pair.

l
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LatoBnrtrty*
Lyman
Lafatory
LaMHaafal

DOGS

SPRINGFIELD. Mass. (UPI) — Flashy playmaker Walt
Frazier, sharpshooter Pete Maravlch and high-scoring
forward Rick Barry have been elected to the Basketball Hall
o f Fame.
Joining Frazier. Maravlch and Barry as new electees are
Bob Houbregs, the 1953 NCAA player o f the year, and
Bobby Wanzer, a six-time all-star with the NBA Rochester
Royals, officials announced Thursday.
They will be enshrined at ceremonies May 5 at the
Springfield Civic Center.
This year marked the first time in the Hall's 28-year
history all Inductees will be players, said executive director
Joseph O'Brien. Other categories Include coaches and
referees.
The Hall of Fame inductees number 161. Nominees must
receive 18 votes from a 24-member Honors Committee for
enshrinement.

McCoy's Cleaners, 41-32. Sean Bumgardner and Alloylus
Battles each has Six while James Gtll added a bucket.

B
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1pm W1A WMmmgM Own*
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ESPN. NHRA Wmtei Mrtd

Uaittd Press International

• p m . — O rlando Colonial a t Laka Howwll; S p .m . — O ak
Ridge. Daytona Beach M a in la n d at La k a Brantley

Lrt*Mar,*S*mno*1
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III

7 .X R * .-U S A . US Pro Inter Otengl
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First Union received scoring from five players to hang a
24-22 setback on Tip Top Supermarket In Sanford
Recreation Department Junior League Basketball at the
Salvation Army Gym Thursday.
Deandre Ware and Dontac Bell each tossed in six points
for the winners while Maurice Terrell added five. Eric
Ingram had four and Clifton Robinson three. Dementry
Beamon (16} and Corey Bennett (six) had all of the losers'
points.
In one other game. Andrcaus Key and Corey Anderson
combined for 27 points to lead Salvation Army past

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onto

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S O Y S : • p .m . — Lake H ow e ll at SamlnolR; 9 p .m . — L a k t
Branflay at Lake M e ry ;• p .m . — L y m a n at O v W d

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Frazier, Maravlch Join N BA H all

Balanced First Union Triumphs

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Boston Mayor Raymond Flynn might want to take a look
at videotapes from Friday night's Bruins-Pengulns game.
He'd find some more ammunition In his w ar against sports
violence.
Following Boston's 6-5 victory, a bench-clearing brawl
ensued in which two Pittsburgh players and one Bruin
drew game misconduct penalties. Boston Coach Terry
O'Reilly blamed referee Bob Hall Tor the melee.
"I don't know what was going through his head," said
O'Reilly, himself a noted pugilist during his playing days.
“ Maybe he had three batteries up there, all running low."
Pittsburgh’s Dan Frawley and Terry Ruskowskl. and
Boston's Jay Miller drew the game misconducts.
The light capped an Intense game that w as decided when
Boston's Keith Crowder scored while falling down with Just
S3 seconds to play, helping the Bruins overcome a
live-point performance by Pittsburgh's Mario Lemieux.
In Thursday night's other game. St. Louis beat Calgary
2-1 as Doug Gllmour and Jocelyn Lemieux each scored a
goal and added an assist to lilt St. Louis. The triumph w as
the Blues' first on the road since Dec. 9 — a span of nine
road games. John Tonelll scored for Calgary.

After trading a pair of baskets
the Lady Rams went on a
16-point run that opened the
game open at 55-32.
" ( A s s i s t a n t ) Bob W a g n e r
mentioned going to a zone press
defense at half instead of staying
In the man defense we were In."
Moore said. "W e put Terl Whyte
on the ball and it seemed jo
confuse them plus we didn't foul
as much so It was a big factor."
Whyte opened the run with a
pair of Inside baskets and was
fueled by a Tonya Lawson
Jumper and another six-point
scoring spree by Patterson.
The Lady Patriots got back on
track In the fourth quarter but
the ru n w a s too much to
overcome. "W e didn't play our
gam e an d couldn't get any
breaks." Brantley coach Cindy
Frank said. "O ur press began to
hurt us and we got in foul
trouble."
Wi thout Olden, two Lady
Rams had to adjust to sharing
the point-guard duties for them.
B o t h A s h l e y T h o m a s and
Lawson switched off playing the
point, a position they had played
earlier In their careers, and ran
the Lake Mary offense starting
off a little shaky before returning
to their old form.
"It was the first time I'd played

4 I
I I
1 4
I 4

TIL IV IM N

— K M . Cate* St. Jrtn’t It

Braw ling Boiton-Pltfiburgh A d d
Support For M ayer
W ar

Continued from 6A

U

7 I - »1
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U fa Heart
Lrtafalrtrr

TV/UIMO: M a t e Urn*

TONIGHT'S SCHEDULE

«IU

T V / R A D IO

INBREF

...P a tte rso n

Bol Rejects
12, Assists
Bullets' Win

Fritfty, Feb. i. 1W7

tconiMM! wsuMoturteii

\

V ’x1
- g'.w.eji 't’l y ’ T y *

B O W L IN G
BOWLING; PBA Tonnemeet
A) Grand PrMne. Tout
(The lop 24bpntet nlth matchplay record!
and pinlell WaN tw lour round! - 14garnet I
I. Ron Wllllemt, Cahrtla. Ill, TGI. LBI S
Brian You. Tacoma. Warn. S I 1B7 s Bob
Benoit. Oailet. PS 1141 A Craig Rourke.
Sente Cl*A Call!. PS l B i l Del Warren.
Lake Worth. Fie. *4 1171 A Eddy Kelley.
Amarillo. Ttiee &gt;41.5.BPP
7, Mart Fatty. Chicago. IX U34 L Mark
Baa*. Gardm Grove. CNIf. IA 111) I.
Amleto Monocelll, YonemeM. PS IBS

for Olden to move In with Judy
M cNaughton. who lives two
b l o c k s fr o m h im at 100
Bridgeway Circle, also In the
Lake Mary zone. Averlll said he
asked Olden where she would
like to go and she said to
M cNaughton's. McNaughton's
daughter. Jennifer Casto, is a
senior at Lake Mary and had
become good friends with Olden.
M c N a u g h t o n s a id O ld e n
moved In "ab o u t Halloween
(Oct. 31) or a little before."
"I knew that she was a very
good little basketball player and
wanted to stay at Lake Mary."
M cNaughton said. " W e just
viewed It as a Foreign Exchange
Student who had a need."
Rozelle asked each party
whether Olden had been a pro­
blem while living with them.
Averlll and McNaughton said
Just the opposite was true —
Olden was an Ideal addition to
the faintly.
Both Averlll and McNaughton
said they did not know whether
Patrick contacted the ERDT.
Both said they felt It was his
responsibility to do so.
Rozelle also said he received a
report from Eunice Alexander,
C o o rd in a to r o f E n g lis h for
Speakers of other Language
(ESOL) and Foreign Language
for Seminole County Schools. He
said It listed Patrick as the host
family. Averlll as the address
a n d M c N a u g h t o n 's p h o n e
number.

Pacers 98, Pistons 93
At Pontiac. Mich., Vem Flem­
ing scored 24 points and rookie
Chuck Person hit for 17 o f his 22
points In the second half to help
Indiana snap a seven-game los­
ing streak.

Knlcks 135, Nets 118
At New York. Patrick Ewing
collected 38 points and 14 re­
bounds. and Gerald W ilkins
added a career-high 34 to enable
the Knlcks to send the Nets to
their eighth straight loss.

Rockets 120, Warriors 110
At Houston. Robert Reid hit for
23 points, and Akcem Olajuwon
contributed 21 points. 11 re­
bounds and 9 blocked shots to
power the Rockets out of a
three-game losing streak.

Bucks 130, Bulls 105
At Milwaukee. Ricky Pierce
scored a season-high 32 points
and Terry Cummings added 29
to help the Bucks end a threegame losing streak. Milwaukee
outscored Chicago 41-23 in the
final quarter. led by Cummings'
11 points and Pierce's 10.
Michael Jordan paced Chicago
with 36 points, but had Just 6 in
the fourth quarter.

Spurs 117, SuperSonlcs 111
At San Antonio. Texas, Jon
Sundvold scored 25 points and
Mike Mitchell came off the bench
to notch 6 of his 18 points In the
fourth quarter to push the Spurs
to their seventh straight victory.

Jazz 126, Clippers 103
At Los Angeles. Karl Malone
scored 27 points, and reserve
Dell Curry chipped In 20 to lift
Utah to Its third straight victory.

Blazers 105, Lakers 104
At Portland. Ore.. Terry Porter
sank 2 free throws with four
seconds to play, allowing the
Blazers to end their 10-gamc
losing streak against the Lakers.
Porter registered his first career
triple-double with 18 points, 13
assists and 10 rebounds.

DOG
RACING
NOW!
NIGHTLY 7:30 p.m.
Except Sunday, thru May 2nd
Matinee* Monday, Wednesday,
&amp; Saturday 1:00 p.m.

Play the txdtlnf A Ugh
paying “Plc-8" - miali
lackpot $5,000. Also two
“Double Qulnlelas" and tba
“Superfocta".
THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission for ladies
Visit our too climate-controlled
clubhouses tor your fire dining
and entertainment pleasure!

CLUBHOUSE RESV.: 831-1600

SANFORD-OHLANDO
KENNEL CLUB
North of OilGmlo, Just on Hwv. 17-92
301 Do« Trick Road, Longwood
Sorry. No On* Under 18

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hardening

*' *

Trees Offer Protection In Summer And
From the SO or so different species or trees that
jw In our area, you can choose one or two
[ultable ones Tor planting In your landscape. A
Horida home without at least one tree Is sad.
mse trees offer shade In the heat of the
muner as well as protection in the winter. You
lon't have to start with a big one. It's easy to
)Iant a small one.
Some varieties of trees take a lifetime to develop
caf canopy, others may develop one In five to 10
[ears — fast enough so you won't need to move
[our lawn chair around to keep the hot summer
in, off of your tender skin. Do keep In mind
lough, usually you’re planting trees for the next
cneratlon. And, properly placed trees In your
indscape will Increase the value of your
property, too.
Some of the more desirable broadleaf evergreen
ees include: cherry Laurel, live oak. Laurel oak
id southern magnolia. For energy-conscious
^Iks, you can plant red maple, tulip tree,
reetgum or sycamore, as they lose their leaves
i the winter.
{ Few of our native trees are as magnificent as a
’ ige, old live oak. This long-lived, usually
cat-free, tree Is among our must valuable and
ilstorlc shade trees. They grow In hammocks and

A lf r e d

Besseten
U rban

Hortlcultrlst
323-2800
Eat. 181

along lake margins all over Florida. Old timers
may be 20 to 30 feet around the trunk with limbs
spreading over 150 feet. Usually they aren’t more
than 40 or 50 feet high.
Live oaks grow In the wild from seed and
sprouts from the roots. They even have flowers,
but they aren’t very showy. The acorns mature in
the fall, and I they fall on a moist, warm site, they
germinate rapidly. Live oaks are very hard to kill.
When a tree Is cut or the trunk limbs arc
destroyed, even main root may send up three or
four sprouts.
It’s a good bet that most of the historic trees In
the south are live oaks. But. most arc not as old
as we may think. Even the largest aren't more
Ilian two or three hundred years old. Some of the
huge, low-growing live oaks actually developed

X

Man Who Sewed Wild Oats
Needs To Explain Harvest

E

■ ■ I■

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H trild Photo by Morvo Howhlnt

M r. and Mrs. Benny Alexander, from left,
Icome F A M U President Frederick
mphrles while Raymond Gaines, presi-

dent of the FAMU Alumni, Seminole County
Chapter, looks on.

C o u n ty A lu m n i C h a p te r Hosts
Reception F o r F A M U P resident
The Florida A and M University Alumni,
Seminole County Chapter, recently hosted a
reception In honor of FAMU President Frederick
Humphries at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Benny
Alexander on West 8th Street,
j Over 50 alumni and guests attended. Highlight
of the evening was the announcement of the
100th anniversary of Florida A and
University
with many of the guests pledging $100 or more to
help raise the necessary funds for Improvements
and scholarships for needy students to attend
FAMU. A special fund raiser will be held In the
Central Florida area and the date will be
announced.

Vi

Attending the reception were Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Taltort. Mr. and Mrs. Darryl Baker.
Deborah Jones. Anita Everett. Carmen Hunt.
Beverly Mims. F.M. Mobley, Richard U. Hall.
Grace Miller. Ralph Offer. Betty Washington.
Myrtle Brown, Marie R. Radford. Gloria Hill.
Annie O ’Neille. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Baker. Mr.
and Mrs. C.B. Pringle. Samelta D. Phillips. Earl
Mlnotl. Mr. and Mrs. Turner Clayton. Gwendolyn
Numa. Mr. and Dr. Richard Evans. Mr. and Mrs.
Loman Oliver. Queen S. Jones, Rev. and Mrs.
Robert Doctor. Natalie Jackson. Dr. Velma
Williams. Robert Thomas. Altamease Gonsalves.
Bernice Madden. Sheryl Joseph and others,
jjj The chapter meets In the annex of St. John
Baptist Church East 10th Street and Cypress
Avenue. For Information call Raymond Gaines,
presiden t of the Chapter.

S

For the celebration of National Black History
Month. Second Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church,
1925 Airport Blvd. will present a program in
honor of tills event. Guest speaker will be Dr.
J Velma Hayes Williams.
The community Is Invited to Join Second Shiloh
In this spectacular ethnic celebration. Craig E.
Cooper and W.M. Boggs are sponsors and the
Rev. W. James Pope Is church pastor.

slightly higher. Add more soli around the root
ball, tamping and watering until the hole Is filled.
In sandy, well-drained soils, be sure to leave a i
saucer-like depression around the base of the tree
to make future watering easier. Two Inches of
mulfch, such as wood chips, pine bark, or pine
straw, around the base of the tree will help keep
the grass away. Water your tree at least once a
week after the Initial application for the first year.
Be sure to apply It slowly and deeply. Shallow
w aterin g encourages shallow rooting. The
amount of water put out by most lawn sprinkler
systems Is Inadequate for newly planted trees. Do
not fertilize your newly set tree for the first season
as this, too. will encourage shallow rooting.
If your tree Is planted In an exposed area, you
may want to stake it with a couple of 2x2-lnch
stakes driven a couple of feet Into the ground. Tie
the trunk to the stakes with sturdy wire strung
through cut sections of old garden hose. Usually,
no hard pruning is needed for the first couple of
years. Later, you can trim off any branches on the
stem that are lower than six to seven feet from
the ground to save you a bump on the head. And.
be sure to remove the plant label attached to the
tree to prevent accidental girdling.
Happy gardening!

from sprouts or groups or several trees which
grew together. This tends tomake them look older
than they really are.
You can raise live oaks from seed, or transplant
them from the woods. If you do a good Job of
root-pruning and top pruning, you can suc­
cessfully transplant a live oak with a trunk
diameter of several Inches.
The live oak as well as many other desirable
shade trees can be purchased already started In
containers. They arc available now at your
favorite nursery or garden center. A little extra
care and preparation Tor planting your new tree
will certainly help It get off to a good start and
future growth. Start by digging a hole at teast a
foot wider and deeper than the size of the
container In which the tree is growing. If your soil
Is very poor, discard It and locate some good
topsoil to back (111 the hole. The backfill soli can
be half compost, peatmoss, or bagged potting soli
and half original soil. Be sure to mix It
thoroughly.
Shovel a foot of the prepared soil mix Into the
hole, then carefully remove the tree and ball of
soil from (he container. Discard the container and
set the tree Into the planting hole so It will
continue growing at Its original growing depth, or

M arva
Hawkins
:r&gt;2-5tl8

Allen Chapel AME Church will observe Its
annual Men's Day Sunday. Feb. 8. at 11:00 a.m.
The guest speaker will be Clem Boyer, a member
of Flowers Temple Church. Winter Park, who Is
presently employed by the Seminole County
School Board. Music will he presented by The
Male Chorus.
,

DEAR ABBY: Four years ago,
while I was still in college. I got a
young woman (older than I)
pregnant. Marriage was out of
the question, but I faced up to
my responsibility and agreed to
pay child support. I have since
moved 500 miles away and have
been paying child support ever
since.
Now the problem: I'm in a new
area with new friends and peers,
and none are aware of my past. I
have fallen In love with a
wonderful young lady and we’re
talking marriage. She Is' not
aware of this episode in my life,
and as we m ove closer to
marriage I don’t know what to
say or how to say It. How should
1 go about letting her know
about my past mistake? I Just
can't find the words.

CHICKEN

and noticeably while conducting
us.
Who can snicker In God's'
house as your conductor mops
his brow between movements of
music, when you arc facing the
audience or congregation? At
intermission, he pleads. "Does
anyone have a cure for sweat­
ing?" The poor man looks as
though he hus been standing
under a shower!
X a a you oOM a irte tfu l solu­
tion to this awkfard dilemma?

DEAR CHICKEN: Try this:

PRAYERFUL TENOR
IN PHOENIX

"W hen I was In college I fathered
a child by an older woman.
Marriage was out of the ques­
tion. but 1 faced up to my
responsibility and agreed to pay
child support."
Be prepared for some follow-up
questions such as: "Have you
ever seen your child?" "Do you
plan to have a relationship with
this child?” And many more.
Your future wife has the right to
know the extent of your In­
volvement. and the sooner you
tell her. the better.

DEAR ABBY: My prayers and
suggestions culled from my ex­
perience as a registered nurse
have done little to aid my
s u ffe rin g ch o ir director at
church, who sweats profusely

A belated birthday to Eric Stephen and happy
birthday to Larry Allen. Sherri Wilson. Willie L.
Allen Sr. and Tellle A. Armstrong. Rochester.
N.Y.

CONCETTA CICERELLA.
PITTSBURGH
DEAR CONCETTA: Thanks
for the reminder. Over the years
1 have published this warning
many times, and ,1 am grieved,
when \ read that this, type of^
accident has occurred again.
Readers. If you sec a temporar­
ily stored or discarded refrlgerat o r o r f r e e z e r In y o u r
neighborhood — or anywhere
else — you could prevent a
possible trageey by calling the
potential safety hazard to the
attention of the ow ner, or
telephoning the police depart­
ment for prompt attention In
eliminating the danger.

DEAR TENOR: Prayers won't
help. Your choir director is
suffering from "hyperhldrosls”
— excessive sweating. He should
consult a family physician, de­
rmatologist or endocrinologist
(gland specialist) — all or none of
whom may be able to help him.
Sweating is a natural function
that can be controlled to some
degree by medication, but some
possible side effects could be
worst- than sweating. In which
case it might be healthier to Just
sweat it out.

CONFIDENTIAL TO W.W. IN
SANTA ANA: "There's a time to
wink as well as to see" (Ben­
jamin Franklin). Wise man. Ben.
You should have been seeing
Instead of winking.

DEAR ABBY: I appreciate
your alerting readers to various
dangers — the most recent
concerning children riding on
escalators.

Shower Down o f Blessings Deliverances Center
First Born Church of The Living God. 201 Elm
Avc., will have Its First Fellowship Day. Sunday,
Feb. 8, at 3:00 p.m.
Evergreen Temple No. 321 will celebrate Us
62nd anniversary on Friday. Feb. 13. The
Anniversary Ball will b»- held from 10:00 p.m. to
2:00 a.m. at the Elks Home. 7th Street and
Cypress Avenue. It Is semi-formal. Donation Is
$5.00 per person.
Saturday. Feb. 14,from 9:00 p.m. until 2:00
a.m., a Disco Valentine's Day dance will be held
at the Elk's Hall. Donation Is $2.
The Sunday Morning anniversary worship
service will be held at 11:00 a.m. at Zion Hope
Missionary Baptist Church. 8th Street and
Orange Avenue. Guest speaker will be Dr.
Stephen C. Wright, instructor at Seminole
Community College.

Several years ago you cau­
tioned readers who stored their
old refrigerators in their garages
or basements to either turn the
refrigerator with the door facing
the wall, or to remove the
refrigerator door so that small
children could not crawl into
them and have the door close
behind them and suffocate them
to death.
Recently, three young children
were found dead In a refrigerator
stored in a barn. Please repeal ,
that warning. It could 9avc lives.

Dear
Abby

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Youth A r t
Exhibitors

THIS WEEK OHLY

Lake Mary High School art
students whose works were
selected for exhibit at the
Florida State Fair Youth Art
Symposium in Tampa are,
front row, from left, Kathy
Maragh, Michelle Harmon
and Cindy Fraustro. Stand­
i ng, Chad Dr i scol l and
Chanin Conway.

110 W. 1st ST.
DOWNTOWN
SANFORD
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Young

W «U -,M A W * « W l'L L ,
®W* HIM A N B tfn tA
RVH MINUTHS

by Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

WHATSs th e
GOOD WORE

4 r *

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THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

by Bob Montana

ARCHIE
i t 's c u e a e e xA f M cw s* ,'
/W P S , A N C W 6 W S ,„ 8 U T W E
C A N 'T 0 U V I T /

by Howfe Schnoidor

EEK A MEEK

MX) KlUOMi
THINK ABOUT
~y

■v»v - * ^r ^ ■

Finding Cause O f
Chronic Head Pain
AR DR. GO TT — I have a terrible
pain In my head, and the doctors
say it's neuralgia. Before the
pain began, I had an ear Infec­
tion. Could this have caused the
neuralgia? Is there a cure?
DEAR READER — Neuralgia Is
a troublesome and puzzling type
of nerve pain that can be difficult
to control. ! am not aware of a
direct relationship between ear
Infections and neuralgia. How­
ever. pain from chronic ear
trouble can be misdiagnosed as
neuralgia. I suggest that you see
an ear, nose and and throat
specialist. If you have a conti­
nuing infection. It could be
contributing to the pain and will
require treatment.
DEAR DR. GOTT — I’m male,
in my 70s and being treated for
high blood pressure. Four times
each year. I have to go to the
hospital and have a unit of blood
removed because the hemoglo­
bin Is too high. What level Is*
considered high and why does
this happen?
D E A R
R E A D E R
Polycythemia — the presence of
too many red blood cells — will
make the blood too thick and
viscous. The removal of blood
(phlebotomy), produces a tempo­
rary thinning of the blood. It’s a
u s e fu l r e m e d y that w o r k s
quickly; however, there are more
e f f e c t i v e w a y s to t r e a t
polycythemia, depending on the
cause.
For example, polycythemia
can often be the result of lung
diseases that lower the amont of
oxygen in the blood. Treatment
of the pulmonary disorder will
allow the blood to return to It*
proper consistency.
However, polycythemia can be
c a u s e d p u r e l y by an
overproduction of red blood
c e l l s .
U n d e r t h e s e
circumstances, doctors usually
choose to give drugs that slow
down blood-cell production.
The quantity of red-blood cells
Is expressed as the '‘hematocrit’’
— the percentage of celts per
total fluid volume. For adults,
the normal hematocrit Is 40 to
50 percent. Figures above 55
percent indicate polycythemia.
Values below about 36 percent
are seen with anemia, the op­

posite of polycythemia.
DEAR DR. G O TT - I have a
rectal prolapse, but the pro­
trusion Is through the vagina.
The condition Is not painful. Just
distressing. When the diagnosis
w as made, no solution was
given. Do you know of any?
DEAR READER - The rectum
and vagina are separated by a
relatively thin shelf of tissue. As

ACROSS

2
3
4
5

women age. this tissue may
weaken, allowing part of the
rectum to protrude Into the
vagina. Although this Is not
harmful, it can be upsetting and
uncomfortable. Surgeons can
often repair the weakened shelf
and currcct the abnormality.
Ask your doctor about this.

Answer to Provloui Punto

Fanatic*

Dinar
z o o
n o c n o
n o n
1 OlMisIspooh
Salutation
□g d
n n n n c
g e o
(Iwtto.)
Exclamation of
n ts o
n n n n n
n n o
7 Solar foaturo
aurprlM
nnnnn
nnnnn
13 Canod
e Languor
non cn c
14 Mountain range 7 Egyptian daily
□
n
o
n
oE unnnnn
15 Kind of Mil
8 On sama aida
□
ed
non
nnc
16 Water
(prof.)
□
D
E
E
D
E
O
E
E
DD
aurrounded
9 Snakatika fish
n n n n n n
e e e e e e
land
10 Child's coloring
□ E E
D E E
17 Single thing
pencil
□ d e e d
n n n n n
18
________and
11
________Schwar*
S E E
□ □ D D E
E D O
□
E
E
E
E
D
E
E
B E E
20 Hebrew latter
12 Rice field
□
E
D
E
E
D
E
E
E
E D
21 Vegetable
19 Tum the pegs
23 Pronoun
(abbr.)
31 WWII area
43 Let in
24 Sacred
45 Howdy____
35 Drive forward
22 Rootle**
25 “Auld Lang
36 Tors
47 Marriea
-nest
50 UnclOM (poet)
37 Basketball
24 Exciting
group (abbr.)
51 Weight of India
27 Miff
28 Rama' mates
53 Silkworm
39 Getting along
30 Be beholden to
28 Not skinny
40
Grain
of
corn
54 Man's
32 Former nuclear
nickname
41 Warehouse
29 Achievement
agency (abbr)
33 Was introduced
to
34 Make an
edging
35 Penitentiary
38 Watch aound
41 Indian
42 College degree
(abbr.)
44 Collage woman
48 Toy
47 Soft plug
48 Athletic star
49 Place In
proximity
52 Sheep
SB Looked
56 Flattened
57 Seniors
SB Prickly

DOWN
1 Arctic abode

am

(C )t S S 7 by N E A . Inc

WIN A T BRIDGE
By James Jacoby

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
o h .n o

/ I o crx

A '£&gt;' IN ENGLISH

by Hargraavaa A Sallars

GOT AN A IN
ENGLISH , BU T
I G O T AN F '
IN ARITHMETIC»

THE (51RU Fr o m
WHOM I (SET M Y
A N S W E R S
W A&lt;5 A B S E N T S

by Wamar Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

JP VOLI POUT LIKE MY
M USIC A L L YOU HAVE TO
DO te W /&amp;S A U T T LE.)

Only favorable vulnerability
justifies W est's anemic twodiamond overcall. It did achieve
the favorable result o f forcing the
opponents to play In three
spades rather than In two.
After the heart 10 was led,
declarer was on thin ice for his
contract but he found the winn­
ing line. East won the ace and
returned a heart. Declarer was
now confronted with construct­
ing what West had held for his
overcall.
West would hardly try for a
heart ruff unless he had what he
considered to be a trump entry,
so he surely held the king of
spades; It was also likely that he
had started with three spades,
since It is less attractive to try for
a ruff when the trump king is
doubleton. If declarer played ace

and a spade. West would win his
king and put his partner on lead
with a diamond to get a heart
rulT. Fortunately his spots in the
trump suit were good enough
that he could defend himself
against the threatened ruff.

NORTH
♦ J 86
* 9 7 52

♦ 62
♦ A QJ 7
EAST
♦ 32
♦ A J 83
♦ K 10 8
♦ 9 832

WEST
♦ K 54

♦ 10 4
South therefore played club
king, club ace and club queen —
pitching his high heart. West
had to follow. Now declarer
played a diamond. East could
w in and lead a heart, but
declarer’s spade spots would
prevent West from making more
than the spade king. If East
played back a spade, the defend­
ers could keep declarer from
ruffing the third diamond In
dummy, but he would simply
win the third round of spades in
dummy and cash the fourth club
to shed a diamond.

♦ Aq J95
♦ 1064

SOUTH
♦ A Q 10 9 7
VKQ6
♦ 713

♦ K5
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

North

East

2♦
Pass

2♦
Pass

3♦
Pass

South
1♦
sa

Opening lead: V 10

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring.,.
FRANK AND ER N ES t

by Bob Thsvas
t f e p E 'S

Y o u f*

Bu s in e s s m a n s
l u n c h

, j&gt; ip . —

I M P 5 T P A I G H T

*. P/?om JA PA N *
•"%;/ .
*» *■

GARFIELD

*
2-c

by Jim Davis

LOOK, GARFIELD. IT 'S PO O K^ I
WOUR FA V O RITE P O S S E S S IO N
A N P C LO S E S T F R IE N D . PO
VOO R E M E M B E R POOKq* ?

YOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUARY 7, IB S 7
Benefits will be derived In the
year ahead from your social
affiliations. In addition lo lots of
activities and pleasant experi­
ences. you’re also likely to do
more traveling than usual.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
There’s a possibility that you
might find a new social Interest
today. It will just be temporary,
yet it will provide a stimulating
change of pace. Know where to
look for romance and you’ll find
It. The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
set instantly reveals which signs
are romantically perfect for you.
Mail $2 to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428.
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Forego your outside Involve­
ments today and do something
with your family that everyone
can enjoy. It will be time well

spent.
A R IE S (March 21-April 19) A
friend you've been eager to
contact may get in touch with
you today. You'll both have lots
of small talk to catch up on.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Prudence is required again today
in the management of your
resources. Make letting go of
your money as difficult as ac­
cumulating it was.
G E M IN I (May 21-June 20) A
heavy schedule could cause
others to cave In. but this won’t
be true in your case today. The
busier you are. the better you’ll
perform.
CA NCE R (June 21-July 22)
Your wit and keen sense of
humor are your most effective
tools today. You’ll get your
points without offending anyone
in the process.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Select
companions toJay who don't
take them selves or life too
seriously. It will do your heart
good to be around blithe spirits.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) An
objective that is Important to

ANNIE

by Leonard Star
OHNO! ! I DON TI -Tupac wQiu'Tflf

TUMBLEWEEDS

THIS MONTHTHE

&lt;TOVFTEV SLACK FEA1HBR
GO£5 ID THE TRIPE'S
(\)RVVf&gt;Y(£HlAmi*n

PETULANT nJMA, I NAME YOU
IN D IA N 0 F 1 H B M O N T H !
is

you personally cun.be achieved
today, provided you' can adjust
to the clrcumslances and change
tactics quickly.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You
are both a good teacher and a
receptive student today. Others
will be enlightened by your
knowledge: and what you learn,
you'll later use wisely.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Your material prospects look
good today, especially through
channels other than your usual
sources. Something profitable
m igh t d e v e lo p for you by
chance.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Normally it’s not a good
policy to let others do our
thinking for us, but today you
could benefit from the ideas of
one who has your best Interests
at heart.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) If things haven't been getting
on too well with co-workers, this
is a good day to have a dis­
cussion. Conditions can be Im­
proved through a meeting of
minds.
,

“P

H O S P IT A L I P U H JA B !

185St?‘I

«&amp;"

- I CAN 5TIIL COME OUT OF
THIS AHEAP- STELLA HAN
DOESN'T HNOW THAT
DON'T HAVE ANNIE
ANY/MOBE-

�Military Use Of
Space Station
Said Limited
B y A lKo— lt w Jr.
UFI Bcftnce Editor
W ASHINGTON (UPI)
N A S A ' s a d ­
ministrator says the
Pentagon will be able
to conduct peaceful
m ilitary research
a bo a r d the civilian
agency's planned space
station If It wants to,
but he would prohibit
i n s t a l l a t i o n of
weapons.
James Fletcher told
the House Science and
Technology Committee
T h u r s d a y that an
agreement between the
Defense Departm ent
and NASA limiting mil­
itary use of the station
should clear the way
fo r I n t e r n a t i o n a l
participation In the
orbital base planned for
the 1990s.
Although the Pen­
tagon says it has no
plans to use the space
station, it had raised
the issue of possible
military use in the
future. That apparent
shift in Pentagon policy
delayed N A S A 's nego­
t i a t i o n s w i t h t he
European Space
Agency and C anada
and Japan.
NASA plans to meet
next Wednesday with
it s i n t e r n a t i o n a l
partners, expected to
c o n t r i b u t e an
estimated 93 million
worth of equipment to
the permanent base In
orbit.
F l e t c h e r told the
c o m m i t t e e the a d ­
ministration's senior
interagency group on
space settled the issue
Wednesday, conclud­
in g w e e k s o f d i s ­
cussions between
N A S A and the Pen­
tagon.
"They wanted to be
sure we weren't aclng
t he m out of the
picture." Fletcher said
of the Defens e D e ­
partment concern.
"They have not In­
dicated any require­

ment for the space sta­
tion." he said. "They
Just wanted to be sure
that In the future if
t he y h a d s o me r e ­
quirement, they would
not be excluded from
use of that space sta­
tion. provided It was
for peaceful purposes."
Rep. Robert Walker.
R-Pa., asked If it would
be possible under the
a g r e e m e n t to d o
w e a p o n s research
aboard the space sta­
tion.
" I think wea po ns
research In the sense of
laser beams or some­
thing of that sort, no."
Fletcher said. "But In
terms of, let's say. re­
search on semiconduc­
tors. which they use as
well as we. that would
be fair gam e."
Walker pressed his
question again.
"W eapon s research
covers a lot of territo­
ry ." Fletcher replied.
" I f we're talking about
c o m p o n e n t s of
weapons, the answer is
yes.” Walker also re­
peatedly asked Flet­
cher If weapons would
be allowed aboard the
space station.
"W eapons is a broad
category. Mr. Walker."
Fletcher retorted, but
added that the station
w o u l d not h o u s e
nuclear weapons nor
"the kind that would
be used by the Defense
Department."
W a lk er pressed,
a s k i n g : * ' I s It
specifically excluded
from putting weapons
aboard the space statlon u n d e r your
agreement?"
" T h e International
space station is for
peaceful p u r p o s e s . "
sai d Fletcher. " W e
could not put a major
Defense Department
weapon on the space
station and have it ac­
ceptable to our foreign
partners."

FCC Chairman Named
W ASHINGTON (UPI)
— President Reagan
picked Dennis Patrick
to succeed Mark Fowler
as chairm an o f the
Federal C om m u nica­
tions Commission, a
move expected to con­
tinue the s w e e p in g
deregulation of the na­
tion’s airwaves.
* ’ I

a m

d e e p l y

honored by the presi­
d e n t 's i n t e n t io n s ."
Patrick, 35. said in a
statement after the a n ­
nouncement Thursday.
" I welcome this op­
portunity to serve and
hope to Justify the con­
fidence the president
has expressed In me. I
share the view of many
that Mark Fowler has
been and continues to
be an o u t s t a n d in g
chairman."
Because Patrick, a
c o n s e r v a t iv e R e ­
publican, Is already an
FCC commissioner, his
appointment will not
require Senate co n ­
firmation.
White House officials
said Patrick, who has
served with the FCC
since Dec. 5. llibJ. v. Ill

Legal Notice
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice it hereby glvtn that I
•m engaged In business at ttt
Brentwood O r . , Sanford.
Seminole County. Florida 327X
under the Fictitious Nam e of
United Motor Sales A Leasing
Co., and that I intend to register
said name with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court. Semlno'a County.
Florida In accordance with the
Provisions of the Fictitious
Name Statutes. To-W It: Section
MS 09 Florida Statutes 1957.
United Food Processors. Inc.
/s/ Joseph G a ill. Pres.
Publish January IS, 23. X A
February 4.1997
D E K 94
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 970
Sunshine Lane. Suite 0 , Alta­
monte Springs. Florida 32714.
Seminole County, Florida, under
the fictitious name ol Ml T E C H
M A R K E T IN G , and that I Intend
to register said name with the
C lerk ot the C irc u it C ourt,
Seminole County. Florida. In
accordance with the provisions
of the Fictitious Name Statutes,
to w lt: Section 145 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
N O R M A N T M O O O IE . IN C.,
a Florida corporation
B y: N orm a n T. Moodle
Its President
Publish February 4. 13. 20. 27.
1997.
D E L 40

step into the Job after
F o w le r le a v e s , but
P a t r ic k n o ted that
Fo w ler has said he
plans to stay "until a
new commissioner Is
confirmed" — a pro­
cess that could take
months.
A lt h o u g h he an d
Fowler share a strong
conservative Ideology.
Patrick, who w as a
White House aide be­
fore Joining the FCC. Is
considered more likely
to press for further
deregulation in areas
where Fowler — con­
fronted with opposition
on Capitol Hill — re­
treated.

legal Notice
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle* Is h*r*by glvtn that w*
are engaged In business at 4274
U.S. Highway 17/92, Sanford,
Seminole County. Florida 32771
under the Fictitious Nam* ot
The Body Shop, and that w*
Intend to register said name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with the Pro­
visions of the Fictitious Nam*
Statutes. To-W It: Section 945.09
Florida Statutes 1957.
/*/ Clayton E. Jenkins
/t/ Michel* P. Jenkins
Publish February 4, 13. 20. 27,
1997.
DEL-57
F L O R ID A
D O C U M E N T 14
N O T IC E O F
P U B L IC S A L E
U -S T O R E -IT
hereby gives notice of sal*
under said act. to w it:
On Feb t4. 1997. at 10 00 AM
at U Store-It 2905 S. Orlando D r.
Sanford FI
Lessor will conduct a subtle
sal* with reserve to the highest
bidder lor cash ot the contents ol
the following space numbers:
C 31 — Jean Asbury, 134
Bedford Santord. F L
C 53 — Karen Porper, 149
Bethun* Sanford. F L
D 53 — Pennl* Hess. P.O Box
44. Geneva. F L
D 44 — Laura Smith. 315
Polnsetta. Santord. F L
D 109 — Peggy Johnson. 104
Dorchester Sq. Lake M ary. F L
E 57 — Christopher Meglll.
1000 W Hwy 44A. Lake M ary.
FL
E 90 — L i t R i v e r a . 502
Ridgewood Av*. Holly Hill. F L
F 20 — John Van Ooren. P.O.
Box 3239. Ft. Walton Beach. F L
H It — John Falls. 1920 E
Landing Apt. Santord. F L
Household Items. Tools and
Mlsc. Items
Tenant has the right to re­
deem contents anytime prior to
sal*. This sal* Is being made to
satisfy a landlord's lien.
The public Is Invited to attend
Publish: January X .
February 4. 1997
D E K 195

legol Notice
IN T M C IR C U IT C O U t T
BO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E O IV IS IO N
F He Num ber 97-53-C P
C IR C U IT C I V I L - P R O B A T E
IN R l t E S T A T E OP
C LA U D E L. BER TR O M ,
N O T IC E OP
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
T h e adm inistration o l the
os t a l a of C L A U D E L .
B E R T R O N . deceased. F ile
Number I7-S3-CP, It ponding In
the Circuit Court for Seminole
C o u n t y , F l o r i d a , P ro b a ta
Division, the address of which It
P R O B A T E D IV IS IO N . Pott Of
flea D ra w e r " C ” , Sanford,
Florida 32772-04J9. Th e name*
and addresses of the personal
representative and the personal
representative's attorney are
set forth below.
A ll Interested persons are
required to file with this court,
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N T H S O F
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E : (1) all claims
against the estate and ( I ) any
o bjectio n b y an Interested
person on whom this notice was
served that challenges the valid­
ity of the w ill, the qualifications
of the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of the
court.
A L L C LA IM S A N D O B J E C ­
T IO N S N O T SO F IL E D W IL L
BE FOR EVER BARRED
Publication of this Notice has
begun on Friday. February 4.
1997.
Personal Representative:
OSCAR L . B E R T R O N
109 Shepherd Tra il
Casselberry, Florida 12707
Attorney for
Personal Representative:
TH O M A S L. S T E P H A N
E S Q U IR E
531 Dog Track Road
Longwood. Florida 32750
Telephone: (105) 747 5522
Publish: February 4, 13,1997
D E L 45
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A .
Cat* NO. 94-1979-C A -99-0
S O U T H E A S T B A N K . N .A .. a*
Trustee for the Florida
Housing Finance Agency,
under a Trust Indenture
dated as of M ay 15.1995.
Plaintiff,
vs.
A L A N E . ROZON, JR . and
P A M E L A M. ROZON. his wife.
Defendants,
N O T IC E O F
FOR ECLO SURE SALE
BY C LE R K O F
C IR C U IT C O U R T
Notice Is hereby given *hat the
undersigned Hon. D a v id N .
Berrien Clerk of the Circuit
C o u rt of Sem inole C o u n ty,
Florida, will, on the 10th day of
March, 1997. at 11:00 A M ., at
the West front door of the
Seminole County Courthouse. In
the City of Sanford, Florida,
offer for sal* and sell at public
outcry to the highest and best
bidder for cash, the following
described property situated In
Seminole County, Florida, to­
w lt:
Lot 4. Block 31. CASA PA R K
V IL L A S PHA SE II. according to
the Plat thereof as recorded In
P la t Book 30. P a g e t 97-99.
Public Records of Seminole
County, Florida.
pursuant te the final decree of
foreclosure entered In a case
pending in said Court, the style
ot which it: Southeast Bank.
N .A .,v . Allen Roion
W ITN E S S m y hand and seal
of said Court this 3RD day of
February. 1997.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
B y: Phyllis Forsyth*
Deputy Clerk
Publish: F * b ru a ry 4 .13.1997
D E L 71
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice it hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 140
Sunnytown Rd., Casselberry.
Seminole County, Florida 32707
under the Fictitious Nam* of
P H E O N I X F U T U R E S
L IM IT E D P A R T N E R S H IP , and
that I Intend to register said
name with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
Provisions of the Fictitiou s
Nam* Statutes. To-W It: Section
945 09 Florida Statutes 1957.
/ t / O . Robin Hagln
Publish January X &amp; February
4. 13. 20. 1997.
D E K 177
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 7101
Orange B lvd ., Sanford,
Seminole County, Florida 32771
under the Fictltlcus Name of
D IV E R S IF IE D S E R V IC E S , and
that I Intend to register said
name with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida in accordance with the
Provisions of the Fictitiou s
Nam* Statutes. T o W it: Section
945.09 Florida Statutes 1957.
/s/Charles E . Allen J r .
Publish January X A February
4. 13. 20. 1997.
DEK-191
N O T IC E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
EXPRESSW AY
A U T H O R IT Y M E E T I N O
The Sem inole C o u n ty
E x p r e s s w a y A u t h o r it y a n ­
nounces a public meeting to
which all persons are Invited
D A T E : Wednesday. February
19. 1997
T IM E ; 4 O OPM .
L O C A T IO N : Seminole County
Services Building. Room W 170
(West E n tra n c e ). 1101 East
First Street. Sanford. Florida
32771
G EN E R A L S U B JE C T
M A T T E R T O BE O IS C U S S E D :
Progress on the alignment and
environmental studies for an
expressway In Seminole County
will be presented and discussed.
Additional Information may
be obtained by co n ta ctin g :
Gerald N. BrInton. Executive
Director of the Seminole County
Expressway Authority; phone:
321-1130. extension 3SS.
PERSONS A R E A D V I S E D
T H A T . IF T H E Y D E C ID E T O
A P P E A L A N Y DECISIONS
MADE AT THESE M E E TIN G S /H EA R IN G S T H E Y W IL L
N E E D A RECORD OF TH E
P R O C E E D IN G S A N D FOR
SUCH P U R P O S E . T H E Y M A Y
N E E O TO EN SU R E T H A T A
V E R B A T IM R E C O R D O F T H E
P R O C E E D I N G S IS M A D E .
W H IC H IN C L U D E S T H E T E S
T IM O N Y A N D E V I D E N C E
U P O N W H IC H T H E A P P E A L
IS T O BE B A S E D . P E R SEC
T I O N 294.OIOS, F L O R I D A
STA TU TES
Publish: F e bru ary4. 1997
DEL-49

l a &lt; lJ

U n ilf w

IN T M I C IR C U IT C O U R T
FOR T M 3 IIG M T IIM T M
J U O IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
IN AM O F O R
r.
S IM IN O L I CO U N TY
O I N I R A L JU R IS D IC T IO N

fMVitioat

M ID L A N T IC H O M S
'
M O R T G A G E C O R P O R A TIO N
f/k/a C O L O N IA L
M O R T G A G E E C O R P ..
. P L A IN T IF F ,
JO H N J . P Y T E L and. B E T T Y
A N N P Y T E L , his wife,
O EFEN O AN TS.
N O T IC E O F S A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
pursuant to an O rder or Final
Judgment of Foreclosure dated
F E B R U A R Y 2. 1997, entered In
C ivil Casa No. 94-1291 of the
Circuit Court of the Eighteenth
Ju d ic ia l C irc u it In and for
S o m ln o l* C o u n ty , F lo rid a ,
wherein M ID L A N T IC H O M E
M O R T G A G E C O R P O R A T IO N
f / k / a C O L O N I A L
M O R T G A G E E C O R F ., plaint
IN Is ), and JO H N J . P Y T E L and.
B E T T Y A N N P Y T E L his wife.,
are defendant(s). I will sell to
cash, at the West front door of
the Seminole County C ourt­
house. Sanford, at 11:09 o'clock
to 2:00 o'clock, on the 2ND day
of M A R C H . 1997, the following
described property as sat forth
In said Final Judgment, to wit:
Lot 12. W O O O G A T E . accord
Ing fo Ih* P la t thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 21. Pago
49, of the Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida.
O A T E O at Sanford. Florida
this 3RO day of F E B R U A R Y .
1997.
(C IR C U IT C O U R T S E A L )
David N. Berrien
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 4. II, 1997
DEL-74
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C IV IL A C T IO N N O .:
97-9499-CA-99-0
B A R N E T T M O R TG A G E
C O M P A N Y , a Florida
corporation.
Plaintiff.
R A Y H O L T Z C L A W , et al.,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T O : L L C C O R P O R A TIO N ,
a United States corporation
A D D R E S S : Unknown
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action to foreclose a Mortgage
on the following described pro­
p e rty In Sem inole C ou n ty,
Florida,
Lot 22. L A K E H A R R I E T
E S T A T E S , according to the Plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
12. Pages 15 and 14. Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
has been filed against you and
you are required to serve a copy
of your written defenses. If any.
to II on Grace Ann* Glavln.
Esquire, Plaintiff's attorney,
whose mailing address Is 1079
West Morse Blvd., Suite B. Post
Office Box 1177, Winter Park.
F L 32790-1177, on or before the
10th day of March, 1997 and file
the original with the Clerk of
this Court either before service
on Plaintiff's attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter: otherwise a
default will be entered against
you for the relief demanded In
the Complaint or Petition.
W IT N E S S m y hand and seal
of this Court on Ih* 3rd day of
February. 1997.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
CLER K OF TH E COURT
B y: J a n e E . Jasawlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 4,13,
20.27.1997
D E L 73
N O T IC E O F SALE
NAM E
SPACE
J E R O M E W A S H IN G TO N E5
J E A N N E L Y N N B E A U L IE U .
M ONICA K E L LY . FELIX
FER NANDEZ
B17. B13
SHARON FERGERSON
O U TD O O R STO R AG E OF
M O T O R V E H IC L E 1944 GMC
D O 9V 40L9 G7447E Model
45 1099 Body 1152
Personal property consisting
of sofa, mattresses, lamps,
dressers, clothing, m iscella­
neous boxes, camper bus and
other personal items used In the
home, will be sold for cash at
public sal* on Sat., Feb. 7, 1997
at 10 A .M . at below address to
satisfy owner lien for rent due In
accordance with Florida Stat­
utes Self Storage Facility Act
Sections 93.904 and 93.907. All
Items or spaces may not be
available at date of sal*.
A .A .A . Security Storage
425 Airport Blvd.
Sanford. Florida 32771
305 323 9122
Publish January X A February
4. 1997
DEK-179
I N T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
FO R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
P R O B A TE D IVISIO N
File Number 14-925-CP
Division Probate
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
SHARO N R. C H IR C H IR IL L O .
Deceased
N O T IC E O F
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
The adm inistration of the
estate ol Sharon R. Chirchirlllo.
deceased. File Number
94-925 C P . Is pending in Ih*
C irc u it C o u rt for Seminole
C o u n t y . F l o r i d a . Probate
Division, the address of which Is
P.O. Drawer C. Sanford. Florida
32772. The names and addresses
of the personal representative
a n d th e p e r s o n a l r e p r e ­
sentative's attorney are •**
forth below.
A ll Interested persons are
required to file with this court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O N TH S O F
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E : ( I ) all claims
against the estate and (2) any
obj ecti on by an Interested
person on whom this notice was
served that challenges the valid­
ity ot the will, the qualifications
of the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of the
court.
A L L C LA IM S A N D O B JE C
TIO N S N O T SO F I L E D W IL L
BE FO R EV ER BARRED
Publication of this Notice has
begun on Friday. February 4.
1997
Personal Representative:
/S/Lisa M. Chirchirlllo
340 Cedarbrook Lane
Altamonte Springs. F L 32714
Attorney lor
Personal Representative/»/ W J . Helfernan. Jr., Esquire
Suite C. 220 N Wesfmonte Drive
Altamonte Springs. F L 32714
Telephone: ( X 5 I I X 1444
Publish: February*. 13,1997
D E L 59

legal Notice'
IN T H B C IR C U IT
COUNT OF TM «
ICTM J U D I C I A L
C IR C U IT IN A M O
C O U N T Y , P L O N IO A
C A IIN a B M B X C A X I
C I T Y F E D E R A L S AV IN O S
B A N K , f/k/a C I T Y
F E D E R A L S A V IN G S A
LO A N A S S O C IA TIO N ,
etc..
Plaintiff.
vs.
S A M U E L A . W IL L IA M S O N ,
eta!.,
D efendant!!).
N O T IC E OP A C T IO N
T O : W IL L IA M A . W IL K IN S O N
B O N N IE S . W IL K IN S O N .
If alive, and/or d M d
h it (thetr) unknown
heirs, devisees,
legatees er grantees end
all parsons or parties
claiming by through,
under or against him
(them ).
C O -E Q U IT Y G R O U P . INC.
Its heirs, devisees.
legatees or g r antees
and all parsons or
portlet claiming by.
through, undaror
against It.
Address unknown.
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D that an
Action for foreclosure of a
mortgage on the following pro­
p e rty In S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Florida:
L O T 9. B L O C K 7. N O R T H
ORLANDO RANCHES SEC­
T IO N 9, A C C O R D IN G T O T H E
P L A T T H E R E O F AS R E ­
C O R D E D IN P L A T BO O K I I .
P A G E S 11 A N D 12 O F T H E
P U B LIC R ECO R D S OF
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY .
F L O R ID A .
hat been filed against you and
you are required to serve a copy
of your written defenses. If any,
to II on S P E A R A N D H O F ­
F M A N , A t t o r n e y s , wh o s o
address Is Coral Gablet Federal
Building. 1541 Sunset D rive .
Second Floor. Coral Gable*.
Florida 3314], on or about the
14th day of February, 1997, and
to file the original with the Clerk
of this C o u rt e ith e r before
s e r v i c e on S P E A R A N D
H O F F M A N , attorneys or Imme­
diately thereafter: otherwise a
Default will be entered against
you for the relief demanded In
the Complaint or Petition.
W IT N E S S m y hand and the
seal of this Court on this 11th
day of January, 1997.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
A t Clerk of the Court
B y: SUSAN E . T A B O R
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 14.23.
X , February 4,1997
D E K 19
N O T IC E O F
R E S O L U T IO N C LO S IN O ,
VACATINOAND
A B A N D O N IN G
R IO H T S -O F -W A Y OR
D R A IN A O E E A S E M E N T
T O W HOM IT M A Y CO N CER N :
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that th* Board of County Com ­
missioners of Seminole County,
Florida, at It* Regular Meeting
held on th* 27th day of January,
A .D ., 1997. In th* County Com ­
missioners' Meeting Room al
the Seminole County Services
Building In Sanford, Florida,
pursuant to Petition and Notice
heretofore given, passed and
adopted a Resolution dosing.
vacating and abandoning, reflouncing end disclaim ing"4h9
and all right ot th* County of
Seminole and th* public In and
to the fo llo w in g d e s crib e d
rlghts-of-way or drainage ease­
ment, to-wlt:
Th* South 5 feet of th* 15-foot
s ld o w a lk / u tlllty easement ,
along North property line of Lot
4. W E K IV A H IL L S . S E C TIO N 9.
according to th* Plaf thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 21. Pag*
90. of th* Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida.
By th* Board ot County Com ­
missioners of Seminole County.
F l o r i d a , th is 27th d a y of
January. A .D ., 1997.
BO AR D O F C O U N T Y
C O M M ISSIO N ER S
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
B Y : Fred Slreelman,
C H A IR M A N
A T T E S T : D A V ID N. B E R ­
R IE N .
CLER K
Publish: February*. 1997
DEL-15
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle* Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business al 1300
South French Avenue, Sanford.
Florida 32771. Seminole County,
Florida, under th* fictitious
name of R V S. IN C. d/b/a
STATE M A R K E T RESTAU
RANT (DAY AND NIGHT
G R IL L ), and that I Intend lo
register said name with th*
Clerk of Ih* C irc u it C ourt,
Seminole County, Florida, In
accordance with Ih* provisions
of th* Fictitious Nam* Statutes,
towlt: Section 945.09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
R V S . INC.
By: R lcklV . Stuart
President
Publish February 4. 11, X . 27.
1997.
D E L 41
N O T IC E O F S H E R IF F 'S S A LE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that by virtu* of that certain
Writ of Execution issued out of
and under th* seal ot th* County
C o u r t of O r a n g e C o u n t y ,
Florida, upon a final judgement
rendered in the aforesaid court
on th* 24th day of October. A .D .
1994. In that certain casa an
titled. Barnett Bank of Central
Florida N .A .. Plaintiff, — vs—
Priscilla A . Dutton. Defendant,
which aforesaid W rit of Execu­
tion was delivered to me as
Sheriff of Seminole County,
Florida, and I ‘-tv * l*v!«d upon
th* following •brib e d p ope ty
owned by Priscilla A. Dutton,
said property being located In
Seminole County, Florida, more
p a r t i c u l a r l y d e s c r l b a d as
follows:
1990 Oldsmobil* Delta 99. V IN
« 3N49RAXI2171I being stored at
Cornell's Tow ing . Winter
Springs. Florida,
and th* undersigned as Sheriff
of Seminole County, Florida,
will at II :00 A M . on th* 23rd
day of February, A .D . 1997,
otter lor sale and sell to the
highest bidder, tor cash, subject
to any and all existing leins, al
th* Front (West) Door at th*
steps ot th* Seminole County
Courthouse in Sanford. Florida,
th* above described personal
property
That said sale Is being mad*
to satisfy th* terms ot said W rit
of Execution
John E Polk. Sheriff
Seminole County. Florida
To be advertised January X .
February 4. 13 and X with th*
sal* lo be held on February 23.
1997
D E K 149

n.

lif il Notk*
River Water

i Storage of Surface
Waters from :
L A K E M A R Y
P A R T N E R S H I P . IS IS
P E R N B R O O K L A N E N.
P L Y M O U T H . M N SS441.
A p p lic a tio n 44-117-9ISSA. an
1/21/97. Th e prefect Is located In
Seminole Coun^f, Section 19.
» South. Range X
The application It tor a
39.19 acre S U B D IV IS IO N to So
known ao P A R C E L P-1 A T T H E
CR OSSIN G S.
L E C E S S S CO R P. OF
W I N T E R S P R O , 2411
T E C H N O L O G Y D R , S T E . 100.
O R L A N D O . F L 11904. Applica­
tion #4-117-9974AM, on 1/21/97.
T h e p r o l a c t I t lo c a te d In
Sem inole County. Section 17,
Township 2i South. Range 11
East. Th e application Is tor a
31.13 a c re M U L T I - F A M I L Y
R ESID EN TIAL D EVELO P­
M E N T to b* k n o w n at
G R E E N B R IA R . The
water body It B E A R C R E E K .
Th e Governing Boord ot the
District will taka action to grant
or dtny Ih* appOcatlen(i) no
sooner than X days from the
date of this notice. Should you be
Interested In any ot ltw listed
applications, you should contact
the St. Johns River Water Man­
agement District at P.O. Box
1429. Palatfca. Florida WOTS
1429, or In person at Its office on
S t a t e H i g h w a y 100 W e t l,
Palatfca. Florida. 994/WPOttl.
W r i t t e n o b j e c t i o n to th*
application may bo mad*, but
should bo received no later than
14 d a y s fro m the data of
publication. Written object Ions
should Identify the ob|octcr by
name and address, and fully
describe the objection to th*
application. Filing a written
objection does not entitle you to
a Chapter 120. Florida Statutes,
Administrative Hearing. Only
hoao substantial
iftoctod by th*
application and who file a peti­
tion mooting the requirements
of Section 29-S.X1, F .A .C ., may
obtain an Administrative Hear­
ing. A ll timely filed written
objections will b* presented to
the Board for Its consideration
In Its de l i b e r a t i o n on th*
application prior to th
taking action on the application
Dennis* T . Kemp, Director
Division of Records
SI. Johns River Wafer
Management District
Publish February 4.1997
DEL-41
IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R T . IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C AS E NO. 97-H1-CA-44-0
IN R E : T H E M A R R IA G E O F
E D O IE B. W IS E,
Husband.
H A Z E L A. W ISE.
Wife.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
T H E S T A T E O F F L O R ID A T O :
E D D IE B. WISE
1349 Boston Road
New York, New York
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that H A Z E L A.
W IS E ha* Iliad a Petition In th*
C i r c u i t C o u rt of Sem inole
County. Florida, for Dissolution
— . . __ ■___

LfriU ftte i
IN T H E C IR C U IT
COURT OF T N I
19TN J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT

F L O R ID A
C I V I L A C T IO N NO .
X X X CA 99 F i t )
S O U T H E A S T B A N K , N .A .,
Plaintiff.
vs.
M IC H E L E E . F R E D E N B E R O .
E T A L ..
Defer Sants
N O T IC E O F B A L E
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
M at on ltw 3RD day of M A R C H .
1997, at 1 1 : « a m . at Mo West
Front Door of Mo Courthouse of
S E M IN O L E County. Florida, at
S a n f o r d . F l o r i d a , th o u n ­
dersigned Clerk w ill offer tor
sat* to M o highest bidder tor
cash tho fallowing described
roof property:
Lot IS. Block B. T H E M E A D ­
OW S W E S T , according to Mo
F la t ther eof as recorded In Flat
Bosk 17. F a gs 5. Public Records
of Seminole County. F lor Ido.
T O G E T H E R wfM all Mo lm------------------------- . r .
. . . . Jnd all
easem ents, rights, ap­
purtenances, rents, royalties,
mineral, oil and ges rights end
profits, water, wetor rights and
water stock, and all fixtures now
o r hereefter a p a rt of the
p ro p e rty. Including replacemonte and additions thereto.
This sal* Is made pursuant to
a Summary Final Judgm ent In
Foreclosure entered In C ivil
Action No. 95-4207 CA-09-P now
ponding In tho Circuit Court In
and for S E M IN O L E County,
Florida.
D A T E D this 3 R D day of
F E B R U A R Y . 1997.
(SEAL)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February*. 13.1997
DEL-72
N O T IC E O F
P R O C E E D IN G S FO R
T H E V A C A T IN O ,
A B A N D O N IN G .
D IS C O N T IN U IN G .
A N D C L O S IN O O F
R IO H T S -O F -W A Y
O R D R A IN A O E E A S E M E N T
T O W HOM I T M A Y CONC E R N :
Y O U W IL L P L E A S E T A K E
N O T I C E that the Board of
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e r s of
Seminole County. Florida, al
1 :X p.m. on the 24th day of
February, A .O ., 1997. In Me
County Commissioners' Meeting
Room at Mo Seminole County
Services Building In Sanford.
F lo rid a , w ill hold a public
hearing to consider and de­
term ine whether or not th*
County will vacate, abandon,
discontinue, close, renounce and
disclaim any right of th* County
and th* public In and to th*
fo llo w in g r l g h l s - o f - w a y o r
d ra in a g e easem ent ru n nin g
through or ad|ac*nt to th* d*
scribed property, to-w it:
That portion of Pearl Street
c o m m e n c in g a l the N o rth
r i g h t - o f - w a y of S e m o r a n
Boulevard (SR 414) northerly to
Ih * S ou th r i g h t - o f - w a y of
Amanda Street and lying be­
tween Lots 22 and 11, Block 5
and Lots 4 and 1, Block 4.
Lake view Subdivision according
to th* plat thereof recorded In

'ij&amp;svs Wm^SatStSSS.

| w
w ritten
ritten data
defenses, If any. on
K E N N E T H W. M clN TO S H . of
S TE N S TR O M . MclNTOSH.
J U L I A N , C O LB E R T A
W H IG H A M . P.A., Attorney for
Petitioner, whose address Is
Post Office Box I3 X . Sanford.
Florida 12772 1I X . and file th*
original with th* Clerk of th*
above-styled Court on or before
M arch I I . A .D . 1997. otherwise a
default and ultimate judgment
will be entered against you for
th* relief demanded in th*
Petition.
W ITN E S S my hand and of­
ficial seal of said Court on this
4th day ol February, A.D. 1997.
(SEAL)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N . JR .
Clerk of th* Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
B y: Cecelia E. Ekern
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: February*. 13.
X . 27. 1997
DEL X

C IT Y O F
LO N O W O OD . F L O R IO A
N O T IC E OF P U B LIC
H E A R IN O T O CO N S ID ER
A D O P T IO N OF P R O P O S ED
O R D IN A N C E
T O W H O M I T M A Y C O N C ER N :
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by th* C i t y of Longw ood,
F lo rid a that Ih* City Com
mission will hold a public hear­
ing to consider enactment ot
Ordinance No. 774, entitled:
A N O R D IN A N C E O F TH E
C I T Y OF LONGW OOD.
F L O R ID A . P R O V ID IN G FOR
T H E G R A N T I N G O F AN
E X C L U S IV E F R A N C H IS E TO
----------------------------------------------- FOR
T H E C O L L E C T I O N OF
H O U S E H O L D R E F U S E AND
Y A R D TR A S H A N D IM POSING
C E R T A I N C O N D IT IO N S RE
L A T I N O T H E R E T O : PR O
VIDING SEPARABILITY.
C O N F L IC T S AN D E F F E C T IV E
D A TE
Said Ordinance was placed on
f i r s t r e a d i n g on M o n d a y ,
January 19. 1997, and th* City
Commission will consider same
for final passage and adoption
after th* public hearing, which
will be held In th* City Hall. 175
West Warren Av*.. Longwood.
Florida, on Monday, th* 14th
day of February, A .D ., 1997, at
7 :X p m ., or as soon thereafter
as possible. At th* meeting
Interested parties may appear
and be h-,ard with respect to th*
proposed Ordinance. This hear
Ing may be continued from time
to time until final action Is taken
by th* City Commission
A copy ol th* proposed Ordl
nance Is posted at th* City Hall.
Longwood. Florida, and copies
are on file with th* Clerk of th*
City and same may be inspected
by th* public.
A taped record of this meeting
Is mad* by th* City lor its
convenience This record may
not constitute an adequate re
cord tor purposes ol appeal Irom
a decision made by th* Com
mission with respect to the
foregoing matter. Any person
wishing to ensure that an ade
quat* record of th* proceedings
is m aintained lor appellate
purposes Is advised to make the
necessary arrangements at his
or her own expense
Date this 24th day ot January,
A D 1997
C I T Y O F LO N G W O OD
D L. Te rry
City Clerk
Publish February*. 1997
DELS

Florida, lying and being In
Section 19. Township 21 South.
Rang* X East, all In Seminole
County, Florida.
PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D
M A Y A P P E A R A N D BE
H E A R D A T TH E T IM E AN D
P L A C E A B O V E S P E C IF IE D .
B O AR D O F C O U N T Y
C O M M IS S IO N ER S
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
B Y : Fred Streetman.
C H A IR M A N
A T T E S T : D A V IO N . B E R
R IE N .
CLER K
Publish: February*. 1997
DEL-14

N O T IC E O F
P R O C E E D IN G S FOR
T H E V A C A T IN O ,
A B A N D O N IN G .
D IS C O N T IN U IN G .
A N D C L O S IN O O F
R IG H T S -O F -W A Y
OR D R A IN A G E E A S E M E N T
T O W HOM IT M A Y CONC E R N :
Y O U W IL L P L E A S E T A K E
N O T I C E that th* Board of
C o u n t y C o m m i s s i o n e r s ot
Seminole County. Florida, at
1 :X p.m. o'clock on the 24th day
of February. A .D .. 1997. In th*
County Commissioners' Meeting
Room at th* Seminole County
Services Building in Sanford,
F lo rid a , w ill hold a public
hearing to consider and de­
termine whether or not th*
County will vacate, abandon,
discontinue, dose, renounce and
disclaim any right Ot th* County
and th* public In and to th*
f o l l o wi n g r i g h t s of w a y or
d ra in a g e easem ent running
through or ad|acent to th* d*
scribed property, lo-w it:
E X H IB IT B
Legal Description (Vacation)
A portion of Lot 152. Block
''A * ' L A K E W O O D A T T H E
C R O S S IN G - U N IT TW O . as
recorded In Plal Book 31. Pages
49 thru S3 ol th* Public Records
of Seminole County, Florida,
being m ore p a rticu la rly d*
scribed a* follows:
Commence at th* Northeast
corner of said Lot 152; Thence
run S 43*O9'01"W. along the
Northerly line ol said Lot 152 lor
a distance of 37.50 feet; Thence
S 0**50'S9" E tor 4 distance of
4.50 leet to th* Point ol Beglnn
Ing of th* follow Ing described
parcel:
Thence continue S. 04*50'59"
E . for a distance of 1 00 foot to
th* E a ste rly line ot a 7.50
Drainage Easament as shown on
th* atgrementloned Lot 152,
Block " A ” of L A K E W O O D A T
T H E CR OSSIN G S; Thence run
S. *3*09 01'' W along said
Easement line lor a distance of
15.00 feet: T h e n c e ru n N
04*50'59" W for a distance ot
1. 00 f o o t ; T h e n c e r u n
N 43*09 01 " W parallel with th*
aforementioned Ensement line
lor a distance ot 15 00 leet to the
Point of Beginning.
Containing 15 00 Square Feet
PERSONS IN T E R E S T E D
M A Y A P P E A R A N D BE
H E A R D A T T H E T IM E A N D
PLACE AB O VE S P E C I F I E D
BO AR O O FC O U N TY
C O M M IS S IO N ER S
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
B Y : Fred Streetman,
C H A IR M A N
A T T E S T : D A V ID N B ER
R IE N .
CLERK
Publish: February*. 19*7
D E L 11

Ertigy, Hfc. B. H W -iiA

l e g a l I BHX gW fG lBc^ Wg a
I X T N I C IR C U IT C O U N T
F O R 1 R M IN O L I CO USfTY,
F L O R IO A
P R O M T ! Of V IS IO N
FftoNe saber 97-37-CP
IN R l t f t T A T I O P
E M M A L. P E T E R S ,
N O T IC E T O C R E D IT O R S
( I sf
srsAG H e litrstlse)

TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
C L A I M S OR O E M A N O S
A G A I N S T T H E ABOVE
ESTATE:
Plea** be advised Mat an
O rder of Summary Administra­
tion hat bean entered by the
ebeva styled Court and Mat the
total value ot Me above estate It
930.1X09 consisting ot a 1972
Zim m e r 12* x 40* 2 bedroom
mobile homo; TU I* I49B9251;
Serlal IF-J039 and a promissory
note from George Peters. J r.
secured by a mortgage dated
Juno 14. 1*47, and filed In Book
3144. Pag* 192. Public Records
of Monroe County, New York
clerk's office, and Mat said
assets have been assign** to
George Peters. J r . and Robert
WIMIn
time of tho first publication ot
this notice you are required to
til* w lM Me clerk of Me Circuit
C o u rt of Sem inole C o u n ty.
Florida. Probate Division. Me
address of which Is Somlnol*
County Courthouse, Sanford.
Florida. 32771, a written state­
ment of any claim or demand
you m ay have against Me estate
of E m m a L. Peters, deceased.
Each claim must be In writing
and must Indicate th* basis for
Me claim , th* name and address
of Me creditor or his agent or
a t t o r n e y , and the a m ou nt
claimed. It Me claim It not yet
due. the date when It will
become duo shell be stated. If
Me claim It contingent or unli­
quidated. th* nature of Me
uncertainty shall be stated. If
the claim It secured. Me securi­
ty shall be described. Th *
claimant shell deliver a copy ot
Me claim to the clerk who shall
serve Me copy on the personal
representative.
A LL CLAIMS AND D E ­
M A N D S N O T SO F I L E D W IL L
BE FO R EV ER BARRED.
Dated January 27.19*7.
Patrick A. Raley
Attorney
Inlantlno and Berman
P.O. Draw er X
Winter Park. F L 32790
Telephone: 305/444-447]
Publish January X A February
4.19*7
DEK-179
CITY OF
LO N O W O O D . F L O R ID A
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H E A R IN O T O CO N S ID ER
A D O P T IO N O F P R O P O S ED
O R D IN A N C E
T O W H O M IT M A Y CO NCER N:
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
b y Ih* C i t y of Lo ng w ood,
F lo rid a that M e C ity Com
mission will hold a public hear
Ing to consider enactment of
Ordinance No. 794, entitled:
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
C I T Y OF LONGW OOD.
F L O R ID A P R O V ID IN G FOR
TH E G R A N TIN G OF A
NON EXC LU SIV E FRAN
C H I S E T O ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- FOR
T H E C O L L E C T IO N O F COM
M E R C IA L SO LID W A S TE . T O
IM P O S E C E R T A IN T E R M S .
&gt;C O N D I T I O N S A N D R E - .
Q U I R G M t M T f t .J I R L A T t N O v
T H E R E T O ; P TO VID IN G '
S E V E R A B IL IT Y . C O N F L IC TS
A N D AN E F F E C T I V E D A T E
Said Ordinance was placed on
f i r s t r e a d i n g on M o n d a y .
January 24. 19*7. and th* City
Commission will consider same
for linal passage and adoption
after th* public hearing, which
will be held In th* City Hall. 175
West Warren Av*., Longwood.
Florida, on Monday, th* 14th
day of February, A .D ., 1997. al
7 :X p m ., or as soon thereafter
as possible. At th* meeting
interested parties may appear
and be heard with respect lo th*
proposed Ordinance. This hear
ing may be continued from time
to time until final action Is taken
by th* City Commission.
A copy ol th* proposed Ordl
nance Is posted at th* City Hall.
Longwood. Florida, and copies
are on file with th* Clerk of th*
City and same may be Inspected
by Ih* public.
A taped record of this meeting
is mad* by the City for Its
convenience This record may
not constitute an adequate re
cord lor purposes of appeal Irom
a decision made by the Com
mission with respect to the
foregoing matter Any person
wishing to ensure that an ad*
nuat* record ol. the proceedings
is m aintained tor appellate
purposes Is advised to make the
necessary arrangements at his
or her own expense
Date this 74th day of January,
A D 19*7
C I T Y O F LON G W O OD
D L. Terry
City Clerk
Publish February*. 1987
D E L 7*
l
o
IN T H E CIRCU IT^
C O U R T. IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
CASE N O .: 94-2470 CA 09- E
L E O N A R D SIMONS and
JE R O M E A. SIMONS.
Personal Representatives
ol the Estate ol
S AR AH SIMONS.
Plaintiffs.
vs.
R O B E R T H PEN N ELLand
JUDITH M PEN N ELL.
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that David N. Berrien, as Clerk
ol th* Circuit Court. In and lor
Seminole County. Florida, under
and by virtue ol a final Judg
men! is.ued out ot tt.» above
entitled court, in the above
styled cause, dated the 24ln day
ot Jan . 1997. will sell at public
auction to the highest bidder.
Ih* following described property
located In Seminole County,
Florida, to wit:
Lot 22 H O W E LL E S T A T E S
RE P L A T , as recorded In Plat
Book 19. Pages 47 and 4t. Public
Records ol Seminole County.
Florida
as th e p r o p e r t y of the
above named Defendants, on
the 2S!h day ol February. I9S7.
at 11 00 a m . belore the West
Front Door ol the Seminole
County Courthouse, In Sanford.
Florida Said sale will be to the
highest bidder tor cash In hand,
the above described property as
the property ot the said Delen
dants. to satisfy said judgment
(SEAL)
D A V ID N BERRIEN
Clerk of the Circuit Court
B Y /s/ JeanBrlllant
Deputy Clerk
Publish January X .
February 4. 1987
D E K IS4

�r

•y-r-

Legol Notice

N O T IC K
The St. John* River Water
Management District he* re­
c e iv e d an a p p lic a tio n lo r
Stormwater tram ;
M CCRACKEN ROAD TR U ST.
P.O . B O X m . O R L A N D O . F L
31101, A p p l i c a t i o n
f a n U -O lM A N . on 1/7/07. The
prelect Is located In Seminole
County, Section 33. Township i f
South. Range M E ast. Th e
a p p l i c a t i o n !a t or e
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
serve 10 acres to be known as
M C C R A C K E N IN D U S T R IA L
PARK.
CED AR W O O D C O N STR U C ­
T IO N C O M P IN C . 170S M E R R IM A N R OAD, A K R O N . O H
44313, A p p l i c a t i o n
«41-117-0111AN. on 1/31/07. The
protect Is located In Seminole
County, Section 1. Township I I
South. Range I f E ast. Th e
a p p l i c a t i o n Is for a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
serve 1.43 acres to be known as
T H E G R E E N E O N D O U G LA S.
C A Y E T A N O A C R IS T E T A
C R U Z A D A , 1100 T U S K A W IL L A
R O A D . O V IE O O , F L 317*3.
Application 143-117-0107A N , on
11/14/1*. The protect is located
In Seminole County, Section 13,
Township 11 South, Range 30
East. The application Is for a
S T O R M W A T E R S Y S T E M to
serve 10.01 acres to be known as
C R IS T A N A C R E S . The recelv
Ing w a fe r body Is G U L L Y
LA KE.
Action will be taken on the
above listed application within
30 d a y s of re c e ip t o l the
application. Should you be Inter
ested In a n y o l the listed
applications, you should contact
the St. Johns R iver Water Man­
agement District at P.O. Box
I4 lf. Paletka, Florida 31070I4lf. or In person at Its office on
S l a t e H i g h w a y 100 West .
Paletka. Florida. 904/m m m i .
W r i t t e n o b | e c tlo n to the
application may he made, out
should be received no later than
14 d a y s Iro m the d a le of
publication. Written objections
should Identify the objector by
name and address, and fully
describe the objection to the
application. Filing a written
objection does not entitle you to
a Chapter 110, Florida Statutes.
Administrative Hearing. Only
those persons whose substantial
Interests are affected by the
application and who file a peti­
tion meeting the requirements
ol Section It -3.101, F.A .C ., may
obtain an Administrative Hear­
ing. All timely tiled written
objections will be presented to
the Board for Its consideration
In Its d e lib e ra tio n on the
application prior to the Board
taking action on the application.
Dannlse T . Kemp, Director
Division ol Records
St. Johns River Water
Management District
Publish February*. If*7
D E L *2

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
FO R T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
CASE NO. M-42f 1-CA-Of-O
G E N E R A L JU R IS D IC T IO N
D IVISIO N
K IS L A K N A T IO N A L B AN K .
P L A IN T IF F ,
■vs
B R U C E G . M IL L E R .
U N K N O W N 1 E N A N T (St
N/K/A C A R O LY N W ATSO N.
A L T A M O N T E H E IG H T S
C O N D O M IN IU M
A S SO C IA TIO N . IN C .
D EFEN D A N TS.
N O T IC E O F SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
pursuant to an Order or Final
Judgment of Foreclosure deted
F E B R U A R Y 1. 19*7, entered In
Civil Case No *4 4391 C A 09 G o t
the Circuit Court ol the Eigh­
teenth Judicial Circuit In and lor
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo rid a ,
wherein K IS L A K N A T IO N A L
B A N K , plelnllltls), and BR UC E
G. M ILLER , UNKNOWN
T E N A N T IS ). N/K/A C A R O L Y N
WATSON. ALTAM ON TE
H E IG H T S CONDOMINIUM
A S S O C IA TIO N . INC., are del• ndant(t), I will sell la lha
highest and best bidder tor cash,
at the West Iron! door ol the
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanford, at 11:00 o'clock to 100
o’clock, on the 2ND day ol
M A R C H . 19*7. the following
described property as set forth
In said Final Judgment, to wit:
U N I T 439. A L T A M O N T E
H E IG H T S . A C O N D O M IN IU M .
A N D A N U N D I V I D E D .9373
IN T E R E S T IN T H E COM M ON
E L E M E N T S AP P U R TEN A N T
T H E R E T O IN A C C O R D A N C E
W IT H T H E D E C L A R A T IO N OF
C O N D O M IN IU M F IL E D F E B
R U A R Y 14. 1979, I N O F F I C I A L
R EC O R D S BOOK 1709, PAG E
170*. P U B L IC R E C O R D S O F
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A .
D A T E D at Sanford. Florida
this 3RD day ol F E B R U A R Y .
1917.
(C IR C U IT C O U R T S E A L )
David N. Berrien
CLERKOFTHE
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 4.13.19*7
D E L 73

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notlca It hereby given that we
are engaged In business al P.O.
Box 104, Casselberry, Seminole
County, Florida 33707 under the
Fictitious Nem o of M E A D E
P R O D U C TS , and that we Intend
to register said name with the
C lerk of tho C irc u it Court,
Semlnolo County. Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
of the Fictitious Nemo Statutes,
To-W it: Section M3.09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/«/ M arilyn Voorheos
/a/ Henry M . Voorheos
Publish February *, 13, 30, 37,
IN7.
DEL-49
L E G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T
T N E BO AR D OF
C O U N T Y C O M M ISSIO N ER S
C O U N T Y O F S E M IN O L E
Saparatf sealed bids tor Items
as lilted below will bo received
In the Office of the Purchasing
Director, Seminole County until
ItM P.M ., Wednesday, March
M , 1907 llecel time). Bids will be
publkly opened end read aloud
(at the above appointed date
and tim e ) In the O lllc e of
Purchasing, Seminole County
Servlcos Building. 1101 E . First
Stroot, Room W133. San lord.
F L . Tho Officer whose duty It is
to open submissions will decide
when the specified time has
arrived end no submissions re­
ceived thereafter will be consid­
ered. Lele bids will be returned
to sender unopened.
IF M A IL IN G BIDS, M A IL T O :
P.O. B O X 1 II9
SAN FO R D . F L 33771 1119
IF D E L IV E R IN G B ID IN
PERSO N, D E L IV E R T O :
C O U N T Y S E R V IC E S B L O G .
1101 E . 1ST S T R E E T
ROOM W114
SAN FO R O . F L .
B ld f7 5 i— F U R N IS H / IN
S T A L L L IB R A R Y S H E L V IN G
P K E H ID (.O N f-fcM bN C k: A
Prebid Conference will be held
on Monday. February U , 1907 al
10:00 A M In the Casselberry
Library, 3713 South U S. Hwy.
17-92, C a s s e lb e rry , F lo rid a
( S a m l n o l e P l a n S h opping
Center — Corner of 17-92 and
434). The purpose ol the Prtbld
Conference Is to onswer questlons/clarlty Scope ol Work for
Bid I7S0. Attendance at the
P re b id Conference Is m a n ­
datory. All vendors must be
represented at the P rtb ld Con­
ference. O N L Y BIDS FR O M
VENDO RS ON R ECO R D OF
A TTEN D A N C E AT THE
P R E B ID C O N F E R E N C E W IL L
BE A C C E P T E D O N M A R C H 94,
1917.
F O R B ID *731 O N L Y : Bid
must be accompanied either by
a cashier’s check upon an Incor­
porated bank or trust company,
m ade payable to Board ol
County Com m lsslonars,
Seminole County, Florida; or a
bid bond with corporate surety
satisfactory to the County, for
not less than live per cent (3 % )
ol the total amount ol the bid. A
com bination of any of lha
former Is not acceptable; bid
guarantee must be In a single,
acceptable Instrument. County
will accept only such surety
company or companies as are
author lied to write bonds of
such character and amount
under the laws ol the State ol
Florida, and as are acceptable
to live County.
U p o n a w a r d , su cc essf u l
bidder w ill be re q u ire d to
furnish Payment and Perfor­
m ance B o n d i, each In lha
amount ot 100% of the total
amount bid. Bond forms will be
furnished by Ihe County and
only those forms will be used.
Proof ol Insurance In amounts
equal to or axceedlng amounts
as specified will also be re
quired. All Insurance policies
shall be with Insurers with an
acceptable rating; registered
and licensed to do business In
Ihe State ot Florida
A ll work shall be In ac
cordance with specifications
available at no charge In Ihe
O l l l c e ol the P u r c h a s i n g
Director.
N O T E : A L L P R O S P E C T IV E
BIDDERS ARE H E R E B Y
C A U T IO N E D N O T T O C O N ­
TA C T AN Y M EM BER OF TH E
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y BO AR D
O F C O U N T Y C O M M IS S IO N
ERS R E G A R D IN G A N Y O F
A B O V E BIDS. A L L C O N TA C TS
M U S T BE C H A N N E L E D
T H R O U G H T H E O F F IC E O F
P U R C H ASIN G .
FOR F U R T H E R
IN
FORM ATION C O N TA C T:
IR E N E P AIN O , C O N TR A C TS
A N A L Y S T ; (MS) 321 I I X . E X T
312.
The County reserves Ihe right
to re|tct any or all bids, with or
w i t h o u t c a u s e , to w a i v e
technicalities, or to accept the
bid which In Its best judgement
best serves the Interest ol lha
County. Cost ol submittal ot this
bid Is considered an operational
cost ol the bidder and shall not
be passed on to or borne by the
County.
JoAnn C. Blackmon. C P M
Purchasing Director
County Services Building
1101 E. First Street
Second Floor. West Wing
Sanlord. F L 32771
Publish February 4.1947
DELS*

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R
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people, past and present
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another Today tck re rV eguarr C

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “ A touch of dealness lightens
one ol life’s heaviest chores — listening to bores." —
Ogden Nash.

BLOOM

legal Notice

^ rr

* * 'V 7r r v r r . ^ r v T T ^

C IT Y O F
LO N G W O O D . F L O R ID A
N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H E A R IN G T O C O N S ID E R
A D O P T IO N O F P R O P O S E D
O R D IN A N C E
T O W H O M IT M A V C O N C E R N :
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
b y th e C i t y o l L o n g w o o d ,
F lo rid # that the C ity Com ­
mission will hold o public floor­
ing to consider enactment of
Ordinance No. 773, entitled:
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
C I T Y OF LONGW OOO,
FLORIDA. E N T I T L E D
" P R I V A T E C O M M E R C IA L
S O L ID W A S TE C O L L E C T IO N "
P R O V ID IN G F O R C O L L E C ­
T IO N BY P R I V A T E C O M ­
M E R C IA L G A R B A G E COL
L E C T O R S ; P R O V ID IN G T H E
A U TH O R ITY TO AWARD
NON EX CLU SIV E F R A N ­
C H I S E S ; P R O V ID IN G T H E
T E R M OF FRANCHISES;
PROVIDING A U TH O R IZA ­
T IO N B Y C I T Y R E O U IR E D ;
P R O V ID IN G FOR COM ­
P E N S A T IO N T O C I T Y : P R O
V ID IN G USE OF F R A N ­
C H I S E E R E Q U IR E D ; P R O
V ID IN G U S E D O F A P P R O V E D
CONTAINERS REQUIRED;
P R O V ID IN G FOR H A U L
SERVICE OF HAZARDOUS
M A TE R IA L S ; PROVIDING
R E M E D IE S ; PROVIDING
S E P A R A B IL IT Y ; C O N F L IC T S
A N O A N E F F E C T IV E D A TE .
Said Ordinance was placed on
l l r t l r e a d in g on M o n d a y ,
January 19, 19B7, and lha City
Commission will consider same
tor final passage and adoption
after the public hearing, which
will be held In the City Hall, 173
West W arren Ave., Longwood.
Florida, on Monday, the 14th
day of February. A .D ., 1997, at
7 :X p m ., or as soon thereafter
es possible. A t the meeting
Interested parties may appear
and be heard with respect to the
proposed Ordinance. This hear­
ing m ay be continued from time
to lime until final action Is takan
by lha City Com ml tslon.
A copy of tha proposed O rdi­
nance Is posted at the City Hall,
Longwood, Florida, and copies
are on file with the Clerk of Ihe
City and tame may be Inspected
by the public.
A taped record of this meeting
Is made by Ihe City lor Its
convenience. This record may
not constitute en adequate re­
cord lor purposes ol appeal from
a decision mode by the Com ­
mission with respect to the
foregoing matter. Any person
wishing to ensure that an ade­
quate record ol the proceedings
Is m aintained lor appellate
purposes is advised to moke the
necessary arrangements at his
or Iter own expense.
Oate this 74th d4y of January,
A .D . I9B7.
C I T Y O F LO N G W O O D
D. L. Terry
City Clerk
Publish: February 4 , 19B7
DEL*
L E G A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T
TH E BOARDOF
C O U N T Y CO M M ISSIO N ER S
T H E C O U N T Y O F S E M IN O L E
R E A L P R O P E R TY
FO R SALE
In accordance with Section
123.35, Florida Statutes 119*4
Supplement), Seminole County
oilers tor sale by P U B L IC
O U T C R Y to Ihe highest bidder
making a bid at the front door ol
the County Services Building.
ItOt Cast First Stroot, Sontonl,
Florida 32771 at 11:00 A.M . on
the 9th day ol February, 1917,
real proptrty commonly known
as S.R. 415/Osteen Bridge Out
P a r c e l and ba lng m ore
specifically described es:
A triangular shaped parcel ot
property that measures approx­
imately 32 leet by 40 leet by 44
leet and contains *401-/- square
leet. The sub|ect Is a remainder
parcel ol the old Osteen Bridge
Tender's house out parcel. The
parcel Is contiguous to the West
rl ghtot- wey line of the new
State Road 415 and Is approxi­
mately 40 f / - leet South of the
Southern banks of the St. Johns
River In Section 27, Township 19
South, Range 31 East, Seminole
County, Florida.
Seminole County otters said
property lor sale under the
following terms and conditions:
A M IN IM U M oiler ot (550 00 is
required on said property and
the successful bidder shall pay
all closing costs.
Bid offers shall be for the total
pri ce ottered lor p ro p e rty,
Paym ent shall be made by
cashier's check and/or cash
paid lo the Finance Clerk to the
Board ol County Commlsslonars
which shall be held In escrow by
the Clerk until a County Deed is
executed and delivered lo the
successful bidder.
The property will be conveyed
by County Deed with Ihe County
retaining all oil and mineral
f i gh t s pursuant to Section
123.411, Florida Statutes 11985),
and Section 770.011. Florida
Statutes 1198a Supplement).
Sale Is considered llnal upon
payment ol Ihe accepted bid
price.
The Board ol County Commis­
sioners ol Seminole County re­
serves the right to re|ect any or
all bids, with or without cause,
to waive technicalities or to
accept Ihe bid which. In Its
lugdment. best serves the Inter
est ol Ihe County. Costs ot
submittal In response to this bid
Is considered an operational cost
ol Ihe bidder and shall not be
borne by the County.
Information concerning this
otter may be obtained et Ihe
Of f i ce of P u rch a sin g -R o o m
W729, Seminole County Servlets
Building, HOI East F lrsl Street.
Sanford. Florida 22771, or by
telephoning Pat P a r k e r at
X5/32I I I X . Extension31*.
Attest:
Sandy Wall
Clark to board of
County Commission,
David N. Berrien
Chairman:
Fred W. Streetman, Jr.
Publish: January X ,
February 1 . 1987
D
E
K
1
I
0

CLASSIFIED ADS
Sem inole
322-2611

t:3 0 A .M .. 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATUROAV 9

l JUST
a

cfftstciiifi m utt t t v i
10 CGflMCEtfrf tbRM 50C B
V M u K l R im

R TIIH V V V

3U mb

DEADLINES
Noon T h e Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
M onday - 9:00 A .M . Saturday
NO TE In Ihe even: ot Ihe publishing ol errors in advertisements, the San
ford Herald shall publish Ihe advertisement alter It has been corrected at
no cost to the advertiser but such Insertions shall number no more than on#
(11.

71— Help Wanted

12— Legal Services
S O C IA L S E C U R IT Y Disability
Free Advice. No Charge Unless
W # W i n l W a rd W h ite A
Associates............ .3*3-321-1319

21— Personals
A L O V E R 'S K N O T
W E D D IN O S B Y D O T
Notary Public________ Ml-3143
A L L A L O N E T Call Bringing
People Together. Sanford's
most respected dating service
since 1977. Men over 50 (43%
discount)............. 1 *00-921-4477

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
A B O R TIO N C O U N S E L IN G
F R E E Pregnancy Tests. Con
(lit* n &gt; a I , I n d i v i d u a l
assistance. Call lor appt. E va .
H r i Available..............311-7*95.

23— Lost &amp; Found
F O U N D - M ixed Spitz, white
male. Near Sanford airport.
C a ll:...............................371 0449

25— Special Notices
BECOME A NOTARY
F or Details: 1 100-432 4254
Florida Notary Association

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care

A P P O IN T M E N T U T T E R S
Pleasant w orking conditions
with 40 yr. old local company.
New department seeks expe­
rienced appointment setters
only. S3 hr. plus tremendous
bonus structure. Call 322-3*43
ext. 32*............. Chariot Bordet
C A N V A S S E R S - Door to door
making eppts. Training. 1100
sa la ry plus commission A
bonus. C a ll:................. .2*0-7773
C E R T I F I E D N U R S ES A ID E lor
3-11 shift lor senior retirement
community. Please apply to
200 W . Airport Blvd.
C H E F 'S A S S IS T A N T - Serving
breakfast, lunch A banquet.
Airport Restaurant. Apply in
person. C e ll:............... MI-1303
C N A : Immediate full time posi­
tions. 7-3 or 3-tt shifts. Good
benefits A atmosphere. Apply
Debary Manor, 40 N . Hwy.
17-91, DeBary**»-*42*..... E O E
C O L L E C T O R - Part time for the
Rich Food Plan. Work phone
collections only (no outside).
Monday through Thursday, 3
to I pm . Must have collection
exp. Apply 401 W. 13th St. or
call M rs. Jam es et 322 3443

W A N T E D : 1 S P E C IA L Toddlers
to play A learn with 3yr old In
m y h o m e . 43 y r . o l d
Grandmother with child dev.
trng. A local childcare centers
exp. N/elde + CP R . exc. refs.
Mi-1347days/373 4047 aft 4pm

55— B u s i n e s s
O p p o r t u n it ie s

63— Mortgages
Bought &amp; Sold
W E B U Y 1st a n d 2nd
M O R T G A G E S Nation wide.
Call : Ray Legg Lie. M tg
Broker. 940 Douglas Ave.,
Altamonte..................... 774 7752

71— Help Wanted

DRIVERS WANTED, Domino'S
P in a , Inc. Wages, tip*, A

G E N E R A L O F F IC E C L E R K Apply In person: Lowe's Truss
Plant, 2901 Aileron C lr. San
tord Airport Incutfrlal Park
H A I R D R E S S E R : A p p ly a t
Halrblt. 1*40 Hiawatha Ave.
Call..................................3M32S3
L A N D S C A P E R S A Lawn Mainfinance personnel needed.
Exp. A driver's license re­
quired. Pay equal to proven
experience....... ............M M I1 3
L E A D IN G F IN A N C E CO. In
Sanford. F L It looking for pert
time Customer Service Rep.
Hours ere Monday A Friday
9-4, Wednesday 1-S. M u tt have
e x c e lle n t c le r ic a l s k ill* .
Potential tor full time. Cell for
appointment 323-2*10........E O E

DAILY WORM/DAILY PAY
N E E O M E N A W O M E N NOW I

la b o r

fo rce

Milt » * «

ouu Mr

! NO ^ F E E !
Report ready (or work at * AM 407 W. 1st. St................. Sanford
★

★

★

★

★

★

W W W

DAY T R E A T M E N T W ORKER
Fo r adult A geria tric,
psychiatric clients. Prater
Bachelor’s Degree or license
in related Held. Chauffeur's
License required.
C a ll:.................... 8312411ex. 19

EXP. OVEN OPERATOR,
Apply 2533 S. Laurel Ave.,
Sanford or call 371 3311________
P A R T T I M E E X P . O F F IC E
PER SO N tor fast paced olllce.
Musi have typing A calculator
experience. Non smoker only.
A p p ly in person: San-Del
Manufacturing, M40 Old Lake
M ary Rd., Sanlord...... M l 3*10
F U L L T I M E A L T E R A T IO N S
P E R S O N lor Boys Sportswear
Shop. Must be experience on
Industrial sawing machine.
Apply In person only: San-Del
Manufacturing, 7740 Old Lake
M a ry Rd., Sanford...... M l 3*10

commission. 33 hr. guaran­
teed. M u tt have own car with
liability Insurance.
A p p ly: 1910 French Ave. or
call MI-3000 after Item
O P P O R T U N IT IE S open lor full
A part tim e teachers in a
trend-setting pre-school/chiId
care corp. Love et children a
must. Exp. A education a plus,
but we will provide training
and education..............JttS A O l

P A R T -T IM E SEWING
MACHINE MECHANIC
WANTE Ok must be expertenced, on all typos at Industri­
al sowing machines. Apply in
p a rs o n o n ly to : S a n -D e l
Manufacturing, 2140 Old Lake
M e ry Rd.. Sanford...... M l 3SI0
P H O N E O P E R A T O R S needed 3
afternoons A evenings a week.
»4 hr. -t- bonus. Cell M14307
P R O O R A M A S S I S T A N T to
work In direct coro/tralnlng
position with m entally reterded. C ell: M l T i l l . _________
NECONDS COM M UNICA­
T IO N S S P E C IA L IS T for part
tim e shirt work. Must demon­
strate proficiency In office
skills............................ Contact:
M s. Liberator*, Laks M ary
Police D tp !................. J M 1151

M A ID S : Days, pert time, no
exp. nec. M utt have car end
................Call: 7*7*940
M A IL IN S E R T E R O P E R A T O R
T R A I N E E . JCPenney Credit
Processing Center currently
has pert time end full lime
positions In our M all Service*
D e p a rtm e n t to r M a ll I n ­
serters. Positions will entail
operating a Pitney Bowes
C D M System A an Insertamax
Inserter. Previous experience
helpful, A lifting required.
T h e qu a lifie d candidate
should be production oriented
and willing to work a Monday
thru Saturday work schedule
with flexible hours according
to mall volume.
We otter e good training
p ro g ra m , o p p o rtu n ity for
advancement end on excellent
benefits package which In­
cludes a discount plan In
JC Penney stores,
Pleasa apply In person be­
tween I am -3:30 pm , Mon.- F rl.

REPS NEEDED
F o r Business accounts. Full
tim e - M 0 ,000 310,000. P art
tim e tll.000-3ll.000. No sell­
ing, repeat business. Set your
own hours. Training provided.
1-*ll *3**070 M -F . I am 3 pm
(Central Standard Tim e )
R N O R L P N needed. Full time.
3 to I I shift. Experience es
Charge Nurse and geriatrics
helpful. Apply DeBery Manor,
*0 N. Hw y 17-91. *40-441* E O E
SALESPERSONS
....are made not bom I Have tun
while training- Advancement
...start nowt C a ll:........MO-3173
S A L E S S E C R E T A R Y - Boat
manufacturer hat opening for
Sales Secretary. Com puter
exp. helpful. See Sharon Atchley. Coble Boat Co., 500
Silve r Lake R d., Sanford.
M o n .-F rl.9 a m -4 p m . Dally

JCPannay
Credit Processing Center
H I Weklva Springs Rd,
Longwood, FI. 32779

7MM1M

M E D IC A L R E C O R D S /S U P P L Y
C L E R K , p a rt tim e , good
banallls. H lllh aven Health
care center 950 Mellonvllle
Av.,373t544..................E .O .E .

D I S H W A S H E R w anted, lu ll
time. Responsible person only.
Galleria Restaurant....32 1 7217

E X T R A T O F U L L Income from
your home operated business,
training provided. 321 4194

I X P . B U IL D E R / L A M IM A T O R
for store display A fixture*.
M u * t h a v e k n o w le d g e of
commercial toot*. E . Sanford
location, benefits. M3-*494
e E X P . H A IR S T Y L IS T e
e wttfi seme foftawtng e
e e e MM991 e e e

CONTRACT LABORERS

★

AR E YO U W IL L IN G TO
S P E N D money on sell Im
pro jernent? C a ll:.........321-1893

7 1 -ttelp Wanted

Earn 39 to 313 per hr. Must
en|oy working outdoors. No
exp. nec. For lull or part time
positions In Seminole Co. call
9am to 9pm ........... 813 *84 7151

321-1590
31— Private
Instructions

N -tte lp Wanted

Equal O p 'ly Em ployer, M /F
M E C H A N IC needed, e x p e ri­
enced with diesel A gas with
own tools............... C a ll:M I 523l
M E D IC A L N E C P T - P ari time.
Sanford/Deltona. Insurance
knowledge helpful.......3M-5313

M O T H E R ol 3 yr old will care
(or your child with T L C In my
home weekdays........... 32) 3941

S A L E S P ERSO N S Wanted, earn
high commission on sales, also
bonus commissions paid for
big producers. Training pro­
vided. Apply In perion to A A
B Water treatment at 2597 S.
Sanford Ave. Palm Plata, or
call.................................M l 4207
S A L E S P E R S O N : T o sell small
business telephone systems.
Non-smoker preferred, part
time O K . 3M 777*........ 311*9*9
S C H E D U L IN G C L E R K - A r t
you an organlied person with
a smile In your voice? Rich
Food Plan In Sanford needs
person Immediately to sched
ul* deliveries In FI. It Inter
ested call B .J ...............172 3443
S H IP P IN G / R E C E IV IN G
No experience necessary. Per.
manent position. Never a fee 1

NOW A C C E P T IN G A P P L IC A ­
TIO N S , Ready-Mix concrete
truck d riv e n . Apply In person
at 1375 Old Lk. M a ry Rd..
Sanlord. Exp, preferred.

NOWHIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
O p e ra to rs w a n te d on a ll
operations. We offer paid holi­
days, paid vacation, health
care plan, and modern air
conditioned plant. Pleca work
rates. W ill tra in qua llllad
applicants. San-Del
Manufacturing, 2240 Old Lake
M ary Rd., Sanford...... Ml-3010

TEMP PERM_____260-5100
T A X P R E P A R E R Needed until
4/11/17, Call Phil Bettis
n

93— Rooms for Rent
• REASONABLE RATES
• MAIOSIRVICE
• PRIVATE ENTRANCE
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

u lie

Hili;ii

k

3234507
R O O M F O N R E N T - Kitchen
privileges own both, all modern convtnkrico*.......JM-379S
R OO M F O N R E N T
Quiet neighborhood
Call.................................. JM -U 2 4
S AN FO R D - Unfurnished room,
privileges. 3*0 week. Celt:
m-4117.......... o r.......... W-S74S
S A N F O R D : I lg. bdrm .. with
private bath, kit. p rlv ., ten.
h/a. 3*3 wk 1st 4- lest. Non-

smokerjjon^rtnkerjMLMI^

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
A T T R A C T IV E I bdrm . 3100 wk
Includes all utilities. Sec. dep.
STOP C e ll:........................MI-4947
C O ZY - 1 bdrm . apt. furnished,
fireplace. 3270 mo. plus sec.
C a ll:...............................MI-3190
F u rm Apt*, tor Senior Cltliens
311 Palmetto Ave.
J . Cowan. No Phone Cell*
N E A R T O W N , I A 2 bdrms., 1*5
to 3*3 wkly. 3130 sec. ALS O
Ettlclency. 323 8294, evenings
O N E I E , adults, no pets, quiet
residential, all alec. 3273 plus

dep. Call:................. 3131019
4 ROOMS, Private. 390 week or
3293 month 4- $150 dep. Pets
ok. C a ll:........................ M l 0021

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
A T T R A C T I V E - 1 bdrm ., yard,
carport. MO week, sec. dep.
3100. C a ll:..................... Ml-4947
B A M B O O C O V E A P TS .
Ask about our move-In special I
309 E . Airport B l............. M3 44I1
• E F F IC . 1 A l B D R M . A P TS .
• FURN. A UN FU R N .
• PAYWEEKLY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

(Ilir

H ilU iiK

323-4507
H IS TO R IC D IS T R IC T : Charm
Ing 1 story older home, French
doors to sun porches, new
ca rp e t. In these up-dated
apartments. (350 to 3340
444-4500 Attwood Phillips Inc.
H U G E I A 2 bdrm . in stunning 4
unit co m p le x. C o m p le te ly
remodeled. Laundry facility.
Adults only. 3345 3475. 2015
Sanlord A ve .................. 444-5473

LUSH LANDSCAPING
Surrounds these single story,
knergy efficient. 2 bdrm . apts.
SANFORD C O U R T A P T.
J792S. S A N F O R D A V E
________ 373-3301 ext. 110________
M A R IN E R S V IL L A G E
1 A 2 bdrms................... Irom 3325
Call..................................... M31470

323-2123

N U R S E A I D E ; All shifts, expe­
rienced or ce rtifie d only.
A p p l y L a k e v l a w N u rs in g
C e n te r.9 l9 E .ln d St., Sanford

T E L E P H O N E S A L E S : 33 per
h r.-f bonus. Full or part 11m*.
A LS O L I G H T D E L IV E R Y : 9am
to 3pm or 5pm to 8pm
Noexp. neceisary....... 4*2 4594
W O R K E R S N E E O E O I It you
need steady work paid dally,
Call Sam alter 3 pm ..... 321 7554

NURSES, AIDES.
COMPANIONS
H A P P Y N E W Y E A R . We need
you now. New benefits In­
cluding group Insurance and
vacallon. Free C E U 'S . Dally
pay. Stall A private duty.
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L P O O L
C a ll:740 51*4

Medical
Personnel
aPool a
O P E R A T O R S lor answering
service. Part A Full time. Hrs
varied, exp. preferred but will
train. 941 Altam onte A ve,
Atamonte Springs. 834 0503

AIRLINE/TRAVELSCHOOL
■ WL

91— Apartments/
House to Share

Train To Be A
Trivel Agent • Tour Guide
Airline Resenrationist

FEM ALE ROOMMATE: 2
bdrm ., 2 bath home. 323 4245
or 323-4*40 ask tor Renee
S A N F O R D 124th St. A 17-91
area) house to share. Prefer
non-smoker, 3250 m o...3 M ll50
1 B D R M ., 1 bath In very nice
n e i g h b o r h o o d , ki t chen A
la u n d ry p rivile ge s. Prefer
(•male. 321 0411..o r ...574-9419

Start locally, lull tlma/pad
lima. Train on llv* airline com­
puters. Home study and resi­
dent training. Financial aid
available. Jo b placement
assistance. National head

quartan LH.P..FL

A.C.T. Travel School
1-800-432-3004
*cc radii ad mam bar N.H.5.C

Employment

CONSULT OUR

323-5176
700 W . 23th SI.
A D D T O Y O U R IN C O M E
Sell Avon Nowl
322 0459.......... o r........... 323 4*88
A D M IN IS T R A T IV E
A S S IS TA N T
50 W PM
+ typing. Experl
enced. professional Image.
Permanent position. No Feel

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

TEMP PERM......... 260 5100
A S S E M B L Y W O R K at home,
plus many othars. Earn good
wages In spare time. For
Information 504 441 0091 ext.
1449. 7 days...........C A L L NOW t
A S S IS TA N T P L A N T M A N A G ­
ER wanted lor rapidly grow
ing Boys Sportswear Shop.
Must be experience In all
phases ol garment construc­
tion and p r i c i n g . S a l a r y
comensurate with experience.
Apply In person only: San Del
Manufacturing. 2240 Old Lake
M ary Rd ■Sanlord...... 3213810
A U D I T O R 'S H E L P E R - P art
time, lor Inventory crew. 18
hours m i n i m u m . Ab ove
average wage. Apply at X I E.
23lh St., Sanlord.______________
A U T O M O T IV E S A L ES P E R S O N
N E E D E D . ACR experience
preferred. C a ll;...... Phil Betlls

7Z7T/

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
H U B E R T PEARCE
Exp, Income Tax Servlca
313-0009 lor appt.

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B .E . L IN K CO N ST.
Remodeling,.,........... 305 1M 7039
Financing........... Llc.lCRC000*71

Appliance Repair

323-2123

O N E C A L L G E T S B E S T R EP AIR S O F A L L . Any kitchen
A laundry appl. 90 day guar-

Sell that old car

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Blinds &amp; Drapes
C U S TO M D R A P E R Y , balloon
curtains, minl-bllnds A
verticals. Free est. In home
service. Madeline....... 323-4301
O R A P E t/ T O P T R E A T M E N T S
DUST RUFFLES/PILLOW
SHAM S B Y D tA N E ..... 323 8344

332-2611

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O rla n d o - W in te r Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED D E P T.
R ATES
1 ttiM •*«• i •* * » i 72C i
HOURS
3 CMMorthrt t a t s M C •

C O U N TY

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A 56N TH/tT T»B ROA
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Friday, Fafc. *. 1W7

ISA— Sanford HeraM, Sanford. FI.

legal Nolle*

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a s m t e s s :.

Kleenex.

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Cleaning Service

Landclearing

A P T . H O U SES. A O F F IC E S .
References. Day or night.
C e ll:.............................. 499-9175

B U SH HO G . Box Blading, D ll
clng A Tractor Roto-Tllling.
C all................................. 122 3597

General Services

THO R N E LANDCLEARING
Loader and truck work/septlc
tank sand Free est. 377 1433

F R E D ’S ERRANOS
24hr. service. Reasonable
C a ll:................................. M l 0795

Handy Man
P A I N T I N G , ca rp e n try, w ell
papering, home repair. No |ob
to lrg o rs m . Hauling .327-741!
R O O FIN G , P A IN TIN G ,
C A R P E N T R Y W O R K . Lie. A
Insured. C a ll:............... M l 4257

Health &amp; Beauty
A B S O L U T E L Y M AS S AG E
Massage at home or workpiece.
Gift certlllcates. 345 8549

Home Improvement

Landscaping
B A H IA A St. A U G U S T IN E SOD,
W a x M y r t l e s al l sl i es,
Call................................. 349-9223
B O G U E S t Expl Professional!
Lawn A Garden Malnt A chain
saw work) Laka M ary Rest
dent. F R E E E S TI M3 *387
S E M IN O L E LA N D S C A P IN G

R E -R O O F you: home now
lime for spring rains. 1
discount on all types of rc
during month ot Feb. SI
Lie. IC0CC 0337I0CC...3211:

Secretarial Service

Lawn Service
B A R R IE R 'S Landscaping!
I r r l g , Law n Care. Ret A
Comm, MI-7844, F R E E E S TI
G E O R O E 'S LA W N C AR E
Reasonable prices
Call now to reserve service
Free est............................ 323-75*2
" S U N N Y S " . Mow, edge, trim,
planting, mulching. SPR IN G
Spec. F re e e s t.lM 7329

House Plans

Home Repairs

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C U S TO M B L U E P R IN T S
Fas' Service) Good quality!
KK D E S IG N S ...................7*7-5914

R E M O D E L I N G . Carpentry.
P a inting . Sm all electrical
repairs A Installation, plumb
ing A Installation. Hauling A
lawn service. Call:
Ed or Allan........................M l 4210

Nursing Care
O U R R A T E S A R E LO W ER
Lakeview Nursing Center
919 E. Second St„ Sanford
127 4707

Landclearing

Painting

BACK H O E . Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing
Call :1M -1804..... o r....... 322 9313

A L A N 'S P A IN T IN G A Paper
Hanging. Interior A exterior.
No job loo small. Llc.M l-30M

A L L T Y P E S Of C arp e ntry
Remodeling A home repairs.
Call Richard Gross MI-5972
R IC H A R D S C A R P E N T R Y
ISyrs In Central Florida
Call............................... .....323 5787

Roofing

Custom Typing- Bookkeeping
Notary Public. Call: D .J. Er
terprlses. (3051 322 7492.

N E W H O M ES FR O M 529,900.
LIc.iCBCOWtao. Commerlcal
remodeling specialist, malntenance. additions....... 323 4837

Carpentry

P R O F E S S IO N A L, Q U A L I T Y
Painting by Dave
Interior, Exterior, Residential.
C om m ercial. Pressure
Washing, Dryw all Repair A
Popcorn Ceilings.
Lie..... Bonded......Ins......M3 4074

322-8133

C A R P E N T R Y B Y E D DAVIS
R E M O D E L iN Q / R E N O V A T IO N
Large And Small Jobs Welcome
Sanford Res. 18 yrs. 321-4443
C O M P L E T E H O M E R E P A IR
Door....... window........ cabinets
Call Russell at 774 45*4

Building Contractors

Painting

Masonry
Concrete Walks, slabs, patjov
drives 25 y r exp. lifelong

Sewer/Septic Tank
HOW ARD'S S E P T I C SERVI Cl
Repair Lines A Clean Tank
Free Estimates.............322 025

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
A U T H O R IZ E D E L E C T H O L U i
Sales A Services. Vacuums i
shampooers. S e rvicing al
makes. Ken Echols..... 3M-207:

Tree Servic
A L L T R E E SER
Firew ood Woodsf
hire Call Alter 4 P A
ECHOLSTREESI
Free Estlmatetl Loi
Lie...Ins ..Stump C rl
331 2229 day or
"L e t the Profession;
S TU M P G R I N D I N G
Insured...............Free Estimates
Catl.....................................774-750*

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f - * •’ 1 '* * f

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197—Mobil*

W— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rtnt
NICC. rawly remodeled, new
carpet, I bdrm. apt. tN 5 mo.
4 rap- CalhttMOW_________

PPtVATB SARAS B APT. - 1br.
a/c, w/w carpal. 1st mo. +
*ac.Nopate.l22-t4**tft.4:io
■ IOOCWOOD ARMS APTS.
Aik about our move-ln ipoclall
« a a R MaawoaS A m ........m -s a i*

SANOLI WOOD VILLAS- * br. I
ba. wa*htr/dry*r, downstairs.
SMS -f SOC. Alt. 7, 433-1734
SANPORO DUPLEX; 2 bdrm..
private yard, laundry room.
4175 -t- dip- 333-5711 or 43* 5313
SANPORO: I bdrm., 2 bath,
water paid, POO mo. -t- UCO
sac. Adults, no pats. Call
Kathy ter appl...........12107*3
SHENANDOAH VILLAGE
★

★

*1M ★

141—H*ntM For Sal*

E L D E R I P R I N O B Trailer
Park, (oft H w y «27) j bdrm ., I
bath. 173 weak 4 1200 dap.
..................... ......... 774-1MB
3 B R . furnished. Mature adutte
o n ly. Park Avenue Mobile
Park. C a ll:.................... 132 2*41

111— Resort/Vacation
Rental;
NEW SM YRNA REACH- 3
b d r m . lu x u r y o c e a n tro n t
condo. Tennis court, garage.
1400 per week or 13,000 mo.
WJ-1233.......... OT.......... 447-3200

113— Storage Rentals

_________ i m t w _________

1111-A PINE. 2 br., 1 ba, adults
only, no pets. MO wk. or 4315
mo. '+ dap. Days. *2* 00*3,
Eve*. *44-1*17or 34*3*7*

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
SAN PO R O - 3 bdrm. In country.
1st A deposit. Call: 323 545*
_ a tta r j£ m ^ —

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
D E L T O N A -2 bdrm., nice yard.
Near library. No pets. 433*
mo. MOO sac..................374 1040
1-4 A S R 44 W . A R E A : 3 b d rm .,2
bath, central air A heat. Full
privileges of all amenities at
ed|acent RV resort Including
sw im m in g pool. 1400 m o.
Adults only. «4»-)iaa__________
a a a IN D E L T O N A a a a
a a H O M E S FOR R E N T a a
a a 174-1414 a a________
L A R G E w o rk s h o p wi t h
eletrldty. 2 bdrm, carport.
New electric stove, lanced
backyard. No pets. 134* mo,
1300 sec.........................574-1040
LONOWOOD/SANFORD- 3
bdrm ., carpeted, heat A air,
1430 4- security. 33* 3444
M E L L O N V 1 L L E A R E A . 3 bdrm
1 bath. 1430 mo. t sec. Avail,
2/1/17........... 373 1333 attar 1:30
R E N T OR S A L E 1312 S. Elliott
St., 2 bdrm ., I bath. 13.000
down, 1400 mo........... 1 423 3315
SA N F O R D - 3 BR., H* B T H ,
Garage, C/H/A. 1420 mo. 2145
Gall PI. C a ll:................ 321 7332
SAN FO R D - 3 bedroom. 1 bath
1471 m onth plus deposit.
C a ll:...............................13! *443
SAN FO R D , Rant or Sale, 3/H i .
central H/A, garage, 1443 +
dap. 114*,*00)................4*3 2001
SAN FO R D - Large 2 bdrm ., 1
bath, heat pump, no pets. 7
children max., 1430 mo. +
dap. C a ll:.........
322 4**!
S A N F O R D - 3 bdrm ., fam ily
room , clean, new ca rp a l,
lanced, appl. Nice area oil
Mellonvllle Ave. 1425 month.
Venture I Properties...774-7400
SA N F O R D : 3 bdrm.. 1 bath,
1330 month t- 1st A last A 1100
dep. 303 Holly Ave....... 321 01*9
S A N F O R D - Lovely 3 bdrms.
with live In atllc, perfect for
artist. 1 car garage. 1300 mo.
o rlllS w fcly. 4- s a c.....331 3231
W A S H IN G TO N OAKS: 4 bdrm ..
1W bath, garage. Exc. cond.
Option Avail. 1373 mo. 14* 7217
3 B D R M ., 1 B A T H , fenced back
yard, 1425 rent 4 sec. dep. No
Call....................... 323 4441
3 B E D R O O M , Ife Bath. 2 story
home with screened porch.
1310 S. M yrtle. 1473 Mo. avail
able 2/1. Call 322 3443 ext, 223
3 ROOM H O U S E - with refrlg . A
stove and a ir. F o r rent,
fenced. 1st A last, 34* *4*2

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
C E D A R A V E .- 2 br., ] ba. all
electric, Inside util., carport
1400 mo. 4 sec. 13* 7444
R ID G E W O O D ACRES- Deluxe
Duplexes. 2 bdrm. Families
welcome Call Tam l... 321 1211
S A N F O R D - 2 bdrm . duplex,
complete kitchen. 1345 mo. 4
sac. Adults. C a ll:....... 143 *840
S A N F O R D : 2 bdrm . 2 bath
duplex all appll., screened
porch. 1425 mo. Crank Const.
Realty World.............. 130 4041
S C EN IC PARK AVE. - 2 large
bdrm ., new paint, 3 paddle
fans, B mi ni - bl i nds, w/ w
carpel, new relrlg. 1350 mo. 4
sec. Water, sewer, garbage
p/uIncluded C a ll:......322 3717

L A R O E S T O R A G E ROOM
140 month
C o ll:............................... 3314*47

117— Commercial
Rentals
B U S IN E S S O P P O R T U N IT Y !
3 bay, 3 lift auto shop. Fenced
parking on French Ave. Rent
reasonable........M r. V. 321-2344
1-4 IN D U S T R IA L P A R K : 3300 to
10.000 sq tt„ . 1st month's rent
tree. Call.......................331-3443
O F F IC E S 700 A 1000 *q.ft. In
growing 4-Towns/Debary area
on Hw y. I7*2.64*4*15ev*4.
S A N F O R D - 1,000 sq. It. retail or
office space. 1400 m onth.
C a ll:...............................331-19*0

121— Condominium
Rentals
L E A S E O P T I O N : Beautiful
lownhousa condo near Disney
A M artin Marietta. Avail now.
1325 mo. Call 4** *137 eves
S A N F O R D : 3 bdrm ., 3 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer. sec. 1425 Mo.
Landarama Fla., Inc. 323-1734

127— Office Rentals

L IQ U ID A T IN G Slack af ughol
tte ry * ctecaratec furniture.
Pd BN i n Cart, m M. M N b
A ve ., Dele ad.--------------- 744-If**

N E A R D O W N T O W N Naaf 3
bdrm. horn* on double lot.
......................................... 133,000
B E A W ILL IA M S O N ...... .333-4741

213— Auctions
B O G 'S U S E D F U R N IT U R E
W E T A K E C O N S IG N M E N T S .
B U Y O R S E L L ....._____ J D - I I M

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Real Estate Broker
2440 Sanford Ave.

321-0759----------- 321-2257
After hours 122-744]

^ ^ l^ ttw o o d

^ 7 [Group,

767-0606
P E R F E C T H O M E FOR A
Y O U N G F A M I L Y I A p p ll
ances tor convenience A a
lovely pool on a corner lot with
privacy fence lor relaxing.
Th is can be yours for only
173,000. C a ll me, B arbara
M achnlk, Realtor/Assoclate
lor details.
O W N Y O U O W N T A R A I This
historic, spacious home can be
turned Into your own palace.
Owner is very motivated and
II even has an Income pro­
ducing apartment. Call M ary
Burkhart, Realtor/Assoclate
B Y O W N E R a houses on 4
adjoining lots with 2 outbuild
Ings. Total Package
1100.000 ...................... 323 1730
C a s s e l b e r r y ' cute 3 bdrm
house, 1 block oil H w y. 17 92.
O n ly ................................ 135.000
B O B M . B A L L . JR . P.A.
R E A L T O R ................... 323-411S
L A K E M A R Y - Huge corner
shaded lot. 3 bdrm 2 bath
screen porch, many exlras.
Wallace Cress Realty, Inc.
____________ 321 0377____________
L A R G E 2 story colonial on
wooded I acre. Fam ily room,
game rm , 2 fpl.. many extras.
1137.000 W . M a l l c i o w s k l
Realtor..........................122 7**1
LO G A-Fram e. Sx complete on 2
acres 2,500 s q l t . 4 , 185.000
Term s, Owner/Broker3132440
M A Y F A I R SE C T I O N
Price cut lo 1110,000 Old listing.
Need lo sell! Completely re
done older 2 sto/y home 4
bdrm ., 11&gt; bath, family room,
dining room, eat in kitchen, 2
car garage, large lot.
220 N. Scott Ave

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR
322 74*1

3 Backroom - 3 Bathroom - 2 Car Garage

Standard
Features
e Heal Pump
* Lot included
e Mint-Blinds
e Volume
Ceilings (par
pb n)
e BukJer pays
closing coats
• Covered

17-SB lo Lorv~&lt;*»! Linton
Mwary. (ten Marti on 437
U iM h e to B a
■

O W N E R F I N A N C I N O I Low
down A move In. 3 bdrm ., raw
carpal A paint Inside A out. A
pleasure to see...............143.000
B E A W ILL IA M S O N ....... 327-47*2

N E A T 1 S TO R Y N O M E naar
downtown, screened porch,
large rooms, low price..144,300
• E A W ILL IA M S O N ........331-4741
D E L T O N A : D O N 'T MISS
P R E V IE W IN G of this pretty 2
bdrm ., 3 bath home has many
extras. G a ra g e , screened
room , appliances A more.
......................................... 131,300
B E A W ILL IA M S O N ...... 127-4712
P A R K R ID G E : Anxious sellar
will aide on financing. Lovaly
3 bdrm. 3 bath c/h/a. spotless
You'll love III................. 137,300
B E A W ILL IA M S O N ....... 72*4741
F O U R CAR O A R A O E with like
new In-ground pool. 3 bdrm.
home on double corner lot.
..........................................143,000
B E A Wl LLIA M S O N ....... 721-47*1
D E B A R Y LO G H O M E : On I
acre, cuttom built, top quality
construction. Feature* Include
fireplace, microwave, satellite
dish, pool, 2 car garaga A
more................................1*9,000
B E A W ILL IA M S O N ........33*4741

322-M7I

*454“

•Prindpta &amp; interest based on mortgage
of $59,150. Down payment *2500.
FHA 6'A% 30 year fixed. Price subject to
change.

ItlMIOIt
W E N E E D LISTIN G S
E X T R A N IC E C USTO M B U IL T
H O M E I Almost new, 1/3 spill
plan, tlreplaca, garaga. CHA,
heat pump, good tarms.isa.f00
L O V E L Y V I L L A In Hidden
Lakal Extra clean and nlca. 2
bdrm., 2 bath I Assume, no
qualifying I Can. air. 133.300.
Rant or lease purchase.

323-5774
2404 HW Y. 17-92
HI At T f) Ms

ST em per
C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R ....................... 121-4*91

£^'■'"'•*&gt;4
■ Sit/*.

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10 Mton

mnt*i isuu

STENSTROM
Sanford's Sales Leader
W E L IS T AND S E L L
M O R E P R O P E R TY T H A N
A N Y O N E IN N O R TH
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y

G R E A T FO R B E G IN N E R S I 2
br., I bath home, could be 7
b r’s, neatly landscaped, eat in
kitchen, heat A air, nice area!
..........................................144.500
S E E IT T O O A Y I 3 bdrm , IVi
bath home, appl i anc es,
assumable mtg , eat In kitch­
en. heal &amp; air, and Much
M orel...............................444,900
4 Y E A R S N E W I 4 bdrm , 2 bath
energy elfIc Ian* home, solar
water healer A panels on rool,
central H/A, near schools A
shopping 1....................... 149,000
ST. JOHNS V I L L A G E I 4 bdrm.
I balh home, treshly painted
Inside and out. new carpet A
roof, fenced yard, utility
room, central H/A........ 349,000
S U N L A N D E S T A T E S I 3 bdrm. I
balh home. den. Florida room,
new k i t c h e n , w o r k s h o p ,
sprinkler system, satellite
dish optional, more right In.
..........................................133.900
GREAT POTENTIAL
lor
outdoor entertainment A lor
adding on a porch or family
room, ] bdrm., 3 balh, central
H/A and m ore!............. 159.V0C
R A V E N N A PARKI 4 bdrm . 2
bath home In Idyllwllde school
district, fenced yard, central
H/A. spilt br plan, great for
kids.................................. 15*,»00
LO TS OF CHARM I 7 bdrm, 2
bath home, central H/A, eal In
kitchen, I year home w a r­
r ant y. In great locallonl
..........................................S43.500
C U R B A P P E A L I 3 bdrm ., 2
bath home, sunken llvalng
room. fpl.. dining area, paddle
I ans , p a l i o , g r e e n h o u s e
window, washer/dryer.. 145,*00
I D E A L F A M I L Y L IVI NGI 3
bdrm, 2 bath home, central
H/A. pool, lamlly room, lots ol
close! space. 1 year home
warranty and much moral
....................................... 148.800

CALL ANY TIME
C-427, Sanford
PM* IB lexeme

323-5076

INKJM Mercury, me* N

.w

tsL

PL ACI

j*

322-2420
321-2720
Call loll free 1-800-323-3720
2543 PARK A V E ............. Sanford
tot lk Mary Blvd........ Ik Mary

Auction every Thursday 7 PM .

Nf BUY ESTATES!
• IN I k MAM

H w y 44..........................m » 0 1

215— Boats and
Accessories

141— Homes For Sale
I D V L L W I L D E I Rsducad by
110,0001 Stately 2 Story, 4
bdrm ., 2 balh brick home with
over 2200 sq. tl. nestled among
Oaks on 174- acre w ithin
walking distance of elementa­
ry school. Available Immedi­
ately. Call M arti Sensekovlc
323-3200...... o r.......322-2217 aval

l&amp; U es

l -;i M
V
J

in ton v t n
io mow
H Dili ( M i l l

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

m
III

JAMES LEE
\ I I &lt; I !&lt;

321-7123-----Em. 323-0109
C H A R M IN G W E L L K E P T 2
bdrm ., 1 bath home In Country
Club Manor. Large corner lot
with 2 util, bldgs. A fenced
backyard.........................141.000

Energy Realty In*......*11-2*1*
Julia Boyd Rea Iter/ Assoc.
3*9-3007 eves. * weekends

Gpenffm
T H IS S U N D A Y O N L Y . 1pm lo
3pm, 1 bedroom home ottered
by owner. Immaculate and
re a d y to mov e In, great
neighborhood. Priced to sell In
low 150’s. Serious buyari only.
IS05 Paloma Ava., Sanford or
call 321 3777 tor directions
O S T E E N - 1 bdrm ., 2 bath, can.
h/a, fenced backyard. 38,000.
Move In..........................122 42*0
S A N F O R D : ? h d r m , I bath.
1317 Douglas, owner financing
or F H A . U S ,900............ 343 7111
S A N F O R D : New 1 bdrm ., 2 bath
homes. Block, F H A , low down
134,900.........4*9 1100 or 682 1472
S A N F O R D : 3 bdrm., 2 bath,
close to schools &amp; shopping
w/many extras. Sailers will
help with flnaclng to qualified
buyers. 137,900,............ 743-2373
S A N F O R D : 2 b d „ 2 ba, Ig
backyard, convenient loca­
tion. Assumable lit.,,1 1** 0*01
SPACIO US H O M E , 2/2, living
room, dining room, kitchen,
porch &amp; carport on large
shady lot. Call 323-1031.3-7.
W E K IV A E S T A T E S - Reduced!
Rambling executive 4 bdrm .
s p ill. B ig pool, screened
porch, tlreplaca.........1149,300.

FIRST R EA LTY INC.... 119-4481

LET'STRADE!
Y O U R HO M E
FO R O N E O F OURS
Y O U R P L A N OR OURS
O U R L A N O O R YO UR S
C A L L BOB S A N D E R NOW
TO SEE IF YOU Q U A L I F Y

S TEN S TR O M

2l

i

S TU M P

CcMirmriiMi DmionuivT Comkma ixw

2559 Park Drive
(305)321-0140
YOU DE SERVE T H E BESTI
Homeseekers can find It tor
you. Give us a call....... 711-8813
7 BD R M . H O M E close lo Lake
Jessup, together with 2 bdrm
mobile home, rented lor 1273
per'mo Both for only S44.000
Dwayne Ruby, Assoc...727 3138
B O B M . B A L L . JR . P.A.
R E A L T O R .....................*73 4111
3 B E D R O O M , 7 car garage. 1700
(t. house on 2 lots, enormous
possibilities. In superior con
dttlon. upper S60'i........ 74* 3345

149— Commercial
Property / Sale
A P P R A I S A L S ANDSA1. ES
BOB M. B A L L , JR . P.A..C.S.M .
R E A L T O R ........................117*118
C O R N E R L O T I 1 acre ►, zoned
C l, Hwy 30 E .. 2 blks Irom
East West E x p w y , varied
uses. J. Strong, 100 % Real
Estate Inc. 847 1280or 2*9 8100

151— Investment
Property / Sale
S A N F O R D - 7 b d r m hom e,
newly built, lor combination
olflce and p r i v at e liv in g
quarters. Best location on
French A ve 3*1,000 Call
Owner/Realtor......... 777 224*

153— AcreageLots/Sale

V A L C R A F T SASS B O A T , 14’ , 31
H P E vln ru d o , fully equip.
&lt;1300......................Call:321-4417
14 F t. O L A S T R O N Bowrlder. 43
Jo h n s o n , wi t h g a l v a n l t e d
trailer. M any extras, must
sal 1143,4*5...........444-4735 aft- 4

REALTORS

217— Garage Salas

CLOSE TO A LL C O N V E ­
N IE N C E S . 71 x 130 lot. In
established neighborhood, tor
that home that you've bean
dreaming of. 111,000, Call Rad
Morgan, Broker/Selesman

B A R Y I T E M S , maternity,
women's B men's clothing B
m lsc. Items. Sat. only, *-3, NO
aorly birds..... 311 Setiuma D r.

L A K E M A R Y I Potential for
duplex site, high traffic ares,
great Investment, adjacent lot
available, 111.000, Call Bath
Hathaway, Raallor/Assoclata
L A K E A S H B Y E S T A T E S ! 10
acr e p a rce l w /u nllnlsh e d
house, wall B nlca trees,
located In Osteen. 174,000, Call
Tarry Llvla, Rial tor/Assoclale or Batty Kapp,
Raallor/Assoclata
S T JOHNS - W A T E R F R O N T ,
2.13 acres, he a vily tread,
private B secluded In area of
nlca homes..177,000, Call Linda
Morgan, Realtor/Assoclate
O R E A T IN V E S TM E N T OP­
P O R T U N IT Y ! 6.4 acras zoned
lor 15 units par acre, Ideal
location lor multi residential,
17*3.000, Call Te rry Llvla. Re
alter/ Associate
•

• G E N E V A O S C EO LA R D .a
Z O N E D FOR M O B IL E S !
5 Acre Country tract*.
Wall tread an pavad Rd.
20% Dawn. It Yrs. at 12%I
From 318,3001

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720
Call toil (rat 1-800-323-3720
1543 PARK A V E ..............Sanford
TCI Lk. Mary Blvd.........Lk .M a rv

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
C A R R I A G E C O V E : F a mi l y
section. 1*07 Scott. 14X40. 2
bdrm., 1 bath. Priced lo sell at
317.300
A D U L T S E C TIO N : 24X 48. 1*80
Fleetwood. 2 bdrm., 2 bath,
cen. A/C. washer, dryer, large
walk In closets. A good buy at
313.500
Call: 137 8140
F A M IL Y SPACES A V A IL A B L E
Carriage Cove Mobile Home
Park Come see us 111
Gregory Mobile* Homas.713-320(l
F O R S A L E - 48 F u rn ish e d
Mobile. Good condition. Rea
sonable Call ............. 727 723*
SPR IN G HAM M O CK PK- Hwy
17 *2/41*. Resales from 33.000.
Adult community....... 721 0081
7 OR. nicely turn., a/c, awning,
17x50. Adult*. Lot *16. Park
Ave Mobile Park....... 711 7341
JS'xl*. with 24'x*' m lg room
addition. Ideal tor hunting
camp or storaqe. 1850 .322 2041

163— Waterfront
Property / Sale
ANXI OUS O W N ER 4t- acres
with home and cottage on the
Wekiva River.
Energy Realty Inc..... 121-2*5*
Julie Boyd Realtor/Assoc.
14* 5107 eve*. B weekends
SAN FO R D : Lakefront lot In the
city limits. Sewer 8, water,
ready lo build on. Fish, ski,
swim. Call Now I......... I l l 12*7

181— Appliances
/ Furniture
A L M O S T N EW microwave, one
ot Sears' best. Paid 1450,
asking 3130 Call...........721 8117
A L T E R N A T IV E T .V A AP P L.
1*34 Hwy. 17 *2
311 3000____________
CHI L DS B U N K B E O w/starter
mattress Good condition
SIQQ/Oller Call
323 44*4
C O LO S P O T Refrigerator. 22 cu
It., Irostfree, Ice maker,
excellent condition
323 0244
C O N T E M P O R A R Y dining room
set, like new, 3200 or best
otter Bahama style sofa. &amp;
loveseal, like new asking 3400
Bedroom set 3130....... 323 7480
K E N M O R E W AS H E R *
D R Y E R . Excellent condition.
3l33each Call
7214X14

D E B A R Y - Corner lot with trees
on Matan/as, 2 homesltei
117,000. F o r d e t a i l s
call
B E C K Y COURSON.
R E / M A X 200 n. realty Inc.
*1* *770.......... or...........I l l *410

L A R R Y ' S M A R T. 215 Santord
Ave New/Used turn. B appl.
Buy/Sell/Trgde 321 4172
M A Y T A G gas dryer 3115 Light
l i xl ures. reasonable.
Call
......................322 7141

7.7% APR
CONSTRUCTION FINANCING
FOR UP TO 2 YEARS

PORCH F U R N I T U R E - Couch B
chair C O U N T R Y C O U C H .
Both good cond. 322 542/

SAVE ON H IG H LABOR COSTS
and build II yourself No down
payment Quality pre cut rna
terlals Step by step Instruc
tlons. Call tor details or attend
a seminar
705 432 1*41

M A N A T E E : ' B , 17ft. bow rider,
TOHP/Out Board, G al. trailer
B coast guard equip.. 44000 or
boot otter........................34K7S4

Sanfotd's Sates Uider

nomoa me. a i 4iro n s

K E Y E l l l IN T H E S O U TH

REALTY, INC.
REALTORS

—

—

—

.

frtt&amp;f, Fa*. 4,1FE7-11A

—

ra u M M e xiM ie n u m
tn Y W W y »

'v"™»

nping. Cargo,
Q U IN S T A R :
U t ilit y , T ilt in g T r a ile r .
Unique.
Bab O m m Tra ve l
Trailer* »
N. ABHte Ave.,
J B I
B E E T N E N E W H t-L O T R A V ­
E L T R A IL E R S at Bab Oman
Tra ve l Tralter* m N Adtite

b u y A L U ... CatI »2&gt;-7774 te see.

T E M P O R A R Y e le c tric pete
41M. M travel trailer n » .
Call.---------------- ----------U P R IG H T P IAN O .
te be teen
Fer

Call.

Ave., Deland............. 7M-4B4*

N IC E 1 B D R M . C O T T T A O E
with whoalchalr ram p naar
Laka Monroe Excellent tor
retirees...........................139.300
E R A W ILL IA M S O N ........*23-4743

141— Homes For Sale

CALOOSA

Santa. Xlecei

211— Anttqws/
ColloctIMt*

J U N E P O R Z IG R E A L T Y , INC

II M l K L \ l / n

Is Where Your Future Begins
From *53,500
F H A e V A Financing

m

P R E C IO U S R E T , G reom lng,
c lip p in g , BBlhlflf. P Ibb
treatment* Pick up B de­
l i v e r y , discount* av ai l.

C e n lu i)^

S A N F O R D , tit St.: 3 offices.
Secretarial service avellable.
S135 mo. each, utilities In­
cluded..................Cal 1:321 -3297

Sanford Place

ee c -tar is

—

A C C E P T O U R I V to da y list Inf
contract A saa your hem*
advartlsad at m cost to You.
F I E I T R E A L T Y IN C ..

D ELTO N A , FIRST AR EA : •
Vary clean 2 bdrm. nlca decor
throughout. Central heat A
air, screened room + patio A
garage............................. 143,000
• E A W ILL IA M S O N ........*23-4741

1r i

lERfcr*, Ft.

*

Aik about movo In special I
Call............................. 323-2*20
SINGLES: 1 bdrm. apartment,
partially furnished, 4110 mo.
Iutilities Included)......... Call:
3330*04 after 3pm__________
t bdrm., 1bath............. S235mo
2bdrm.. I te bath...........4340mo
a Central Heat A Air
O Pool A Laundry
PRANKLINARMS
1120 Florida Ave.

*G. •• 4 *

FIT ‘ff CAM.Y U 3 t»y Larry Wright

Hom*s/Ront

r r

199— P e ts &amp; S u p p lie s
F R E E - * mixed plt/labs 6 wks
old Makegood wdteh dog yet
lovable
321 64*4

B IO Y A B D S A L E - Sat. 9-2. 3510
S. Oak A ve . Furn., clothing,
mlsc._________________________
F R I. B S A T., Feb. 6th B 7th,
furniture , houieweres,
clothes. B mlsc. 3011 Lake
A ve .lo U lO th S t.)_____________
O A R A O E S A L E : Sat. only,
children's clothe*, household
furnltr.lngt, B mlsc. Items. 300
Lake E lv d .. oft 44 A near
M ayfa ir Country Club.333 40*4
O A R A G E S A L E - Sat. 2/7, IDem
to 1pm. '77 Calico. 4x4 utility
trailer with I ft. tool box. 1*44
5 H P com m ercial Snapper
m ow er, edger, weed eater,
sofa, La iy-B oy. tables. T V ,
adult B children's clothes,
baby Items, much morel Cash
p l e a s e . 104 A l d e a n D r . ,
Idyllwllde____________________
H U G E Y A R D S A L E : Saturday
only, tools, (urnltura, clothing,
carpal, hundreds of women's
B children's shoes (new) S3
each. Much more. Starting at
*am . 111* S. French Ave.
(C ornerot t3tt&gt;B French)
H U G E 2 F A M IL Y S A L E - Thurs
* 5, F rl. I S, Sat. *4, 339 S.
Country Club Rd., Lk. M ry.
(C-15 oil 427). Tools, turn.,
baby Items, toys, art, mlsc.
L A R O E S ID E W A L K SALEClothing all ages B sites,
shoes, fu rn itu re , B m lsc.
W IL -W IN beside Dollar Gen
eral Store. *-4, Sat. Feb. 7.
M O V IN O S A L E : Hide a bed.
sofa, bar. marble top coffee
table, animal ca rrie r..Jm i4 2 4
M O V tW d
&gt; o rrv H
D r ., Loch Arbor area. San
lord. F rl. B Sat., *:00-3:00

221-Cart

T E R R Y T R A I L E R : 147*. X T,
air awning, sugar llaar plan,
excellent condition..... J R R M

V W R A B B IT D IE S E L L - ' « .
Baby blue w/bal«e cloth Int.
A/C, S sp-» 53,404 m l., 4B mp*
city, 55 mpg hw y., 3 mo.
M khelln tires. Like ra w cond.
Must Selll 43.1*4 rae. 574-I7TC
Bed Credit?
No Credit?
W E F IN A N C E
W A L K IN .................D R IV E O U T
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L ES
Santord Ave. B 12th SI. ..32I 4073

OATSUN III OX- '41, 7CI44B,
411*3. tamteete Ford. 374*
r. 17-to..................... 313 1441

^old^^Freepiclujg^JT^TTS^^

223— Miscellaneous
Brown River Rock Palio Slones
Grease Traps Sand D ry Wells
Ready M ix Concrete
Miracle Concrete Co.
122-3731....................10* Elm Ave.
B U Y ........... S E L L ............ T R A D E
Most Anything
Huey's Crown Pawn........722 4744
FO R S A L E : 4x7 storage shed,
373. Upright refrigerator, 430.
Call alter 4pm............. 321 1471
H O M E M A D E Q U IL T S Irom N
Carolina T-*ln330. Dbl.-sao,
queen 330 king 373....... 732 *302
M U S K IN 74 It. above ground
pool. 3700 Good condition
Call alter 6 p m ............. 723 4433
S TO N E M O R TA R M I X E R 430
D bl. batch, excellent cond.
Used little 3800 311 4770

i )|

0. j ’

NO

J.

'

( , f O 1)11

NO

IN K

Rf SI

uk

n -ip

t . M't S HW&lt;
SANf O R O

P O N TIA C PAR R ISIANE
Brougham: 1*43. small V -l.
with overdrive, low m l., super
clean. A real deluxa auto!
Asking 4*300 Call 111 31*0 days
or *44-4055 eves, ask ter At
P O N TIA C O R A N D P R IX - ‘75,
C44M, 117*3, Seminal* Ferd,
1714 Hw y. 17 *3...................... 1331441
R E N A U L T A L L IA N C E 'll,
7T257B, 411*5, Seminole Ford,
3744 Hwy. 17 *2............... 133 1441
( S L E E P E R ) ' l l Vega V -l. auto.,
power steering Coll 333 5134
oiler 4pm____________________
T H U N D E R B I R D - ' l l . 11.000
miles, outo., air. Vory clean,
must talll Take over payments................... 331*453 a l t *

i.l

l.i

SANFORD
MOTOR CO.
AMC JEEP
74/UK MIAMI 4 Ml
•1495
70 DOME PICK UP
•1995
80 JEEP CJ5

bln feci

u^T

*4495

II PONTIACGRAMMIX
h r] Rk. Ca. I C*.
Vrtx. Mr, f n

•2995

83 AMC ALUANCE
&gt; Or. Or 4 h , be

•2995

lev Cm In

77 AMC GREMUN
*695
Urn H Mne Can ibdn V t t t

3419 S. OHerNb Br.

VW B U G - '73, 4 T 1021B, 43*3.
Seminal* Ford, 1744 Hwy.
17*3................................. 122 14*1

233— Auto Paris
/ Accessories
I RIDE FOR AS U T T IE
T an3 Iransrnlulons
C a ll:................................. 121 7234

238— Vehicles
Wanted

333 Alum inum Cans.. Newspaper
Non-Farreus Metals............Glass
K O K O M O .......................,,.321- MOO
J U N K B W R E C K E D CARSRunning or not, lop prices

DOWN P A Y M E N I

H O N D A A C C O R D L X - ’ 41,
4T443Z, 439*5, Seminole Ferd,
3714 Hw y. 17 *3,.............333-14*1
L I N C O L N M A R K V I - '40,
4T439A, 439*5, Seminal* Ford,
3744 Hwy. 17-93..............333 1441
M E R C U R Y M A R Q U I S - '74.
7CI44A, 44*5, SemlMte Ferd,
3744 Hwy. 17-93..............333-1411
O L D S C U T L A S S : 1*10. new
p a i n t , r u n s v e r y g ood.
43te5/otter............................. 3335114
O LD S C U TLA S S - ' l l , 7C147A.
41**3, Semlrata Ford. 1744
Hwy. 17 *1,.................... 333 1441

Y A R D S A L E : 2 families,
lurnlture B household appll
ances. Sat. B Sun.. Scarlet
D r., near airport,

2 1 9 — W a n t e d to B u y

LOW

O O D O I MAONUM XR- '74,
loaded. Good tran*. Bought
truck, mutt toil I &gt;7*3...327 3*41
DODGE:'73, Good engine A
tram. Body rough. 4204 See at
11I Avocado Ave. after 5pm
FOND FAIRMONT 4 dr., 10.
C4374A. 414*5. 5*m Irate Ford.
3744 Hwy. t7 W„.........133-1441
FORD ORANADA- '74, 4TTC3B.
44*5. Seminal* Ferd. 3744
Hwy. 17 *1...................333-1441
FORD MUSTANG '79, 7T1BI7B.
117*5. Semlmte Ferd, 374*
Hwy. 17-to.................. 3311441
FORD MUSTANG '74. C4S77A.
M*S. Seminal* Ferd. 3744
17 *2,................. 333-1441

FO R SALE
)*7» CJ-7
Call............................... 121-0 W

It H P S N A P P E R riding mower,
mlsc. tool*. Everything must
_go_CaM ji ; i ; ™ ™ &gt;7 2 r « 5 2 e v ^

B U Y HERE
PAY HERE

C H E V R O L E T C IT A T IO N
7CI74A. 44*5, lem lra l
7744 Hw y. tf-H ............. 333-1441

S A T U R D A Y , lam 4pm. 1305 S
Palmetto A ve.; Lots ol kltcHen B mlsc. Items....... C H E A P I
S A T U R D A Y O N L Y , lurnlture,
bikes tools, elc. M arkham
Woods Rd. to Long Pond Rd.
to 113 Orange Ridge Dr._______

Y A R D S A L E - Sat. * 7 Lots ol
clothing, mlsc. W A N T : 2 chest
ol drawer*. Every Wed. 31 day
Y a rd Sale. 113 M cKay Blvd.

T R A V E L T R A IL E R - Premier,
'17.35 ft. Sell contained, many
•xtras. Will consider small
t r a i l e r or c a r on tra d * .
Seminote Tra lte r Park, 454
H w y. 17 *7, Fern Park

“

A

U

» * ^ e —

•

74 C H E V E L L E
$ 2 0 0 DOWN

235— Trucks/
Buses/Vans

77 M O N A R C H
$ 2 0 0 DOW N
74 S A T E L L IT E
$ 2 0 0 DOWN
75 M O N A C O
$ 2 0 0 DOWN
78 F O R D L T D
$ 2 0 0 DOWN

W E PAY T O P 31 for wrecked
cars/trucks. We Sell guaran
teed used parts. AA A U T O
S A L V A O E o t D e B a ry-**&gt;-*0*2

79 B O B C A T S .W .
$ 2 0 0 DOWN

4 CYUNDER/4 SPEED
EXTRA CLEAN
79 MUSTANG S500 Dn.
82 PONTIAC $500 Dn.

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
H I-LO Travel Trailer: '42. 21 It
57,700 Exc. cond. Bob Owen
Travel Trailers 11? N. Adelle
Ave., Deland............... 714-3030
M A Y F L O W E R : '40, P a r k
Model, IS'XS' Tip outs. Neat B
clean 47,400 Bob Owen Travel
Trailers 111 N. Adelle Ave.,
Deland......................... 714-3030

79 A U T O M A T I C C A P R I
$SOO D o w n

N A TIO N A L
A U T O SALES

1120 S. Sanford Ave.
Sanford
^

^

$

321-4075

$

IN C O M E T A X E S
F IG U R E D F R E E
Bring Us Your Income Tax Returns
We’ll Figure Them FREE!!
Use Your Refund As Your
Down Payment — Drive Home Today
Why Walll We've Got Your Deal)
Limited otter - Expires April 15, 19B7

U SE D CARS
3 2 1 9 S. H W Y . 1792 - S A N F O R D
S A N F O R D 3 2 3 -2 1 2 3
O R L A N D O 4 2 5 -5 0 8 8

legal Notice
N O T IC E O F I N T E N T I O N
TO REGISTER
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that the
undersigned, desiring lo do
business under the fictitious
n a m e d ) ol CBS, CBS B A N K .
CITIZENS
&amp;
SO U TH ER N
BANK.
CITIZENS
AND
SO U TH ER N BANK. CI TI ZEN S
8. S O U T H E R N . C I T I Z E N S A N D
SO U TH ER N . CI TI ZEN S AND
S O U TH ER N
C O R P O R A TE
B A N K IN G G R O U P , C I T I Z E N S
AND
S O U TH ER N
COR
P O R A T E B A N K IN G G R O U P
O F F L O R I D A . CBS B A N K O F
F L O R ID A . CBS C O R P O R A T E
B A N K IN G G R O U P and CBS
C O R P O R ATE
BANKING
GROUP OF
F L O R ID A
at
Highway 414, Longwood. Florida
72730 Intends to register said
nam e(s) with the Clerk of tne
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida, In compliance with
Section 843 09 Florida Statutes.
The undersigned corporation
Is the only person Interested In
the business
THECITIZENSAND
S O U T H E R N N A T IO N A L
B A N K O F F L O R ID A
B y : RonaldG. Englert
Associate Counsel
Publish February 4. 13, 20. 27,
1*87
D E L 58

SPECIAL

J i m L a s h ’s

SPECIAL

BLUE
* C A R S

321-0741

W

830-6688

HWY. 17-92 SANFORD
77 Ford LTD
W a g o n ............................

$ i)

w a

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

79 Toyota Corolla

$

CM8C8

76 Plymouth Fury

$

4M48C8

34,000 M ile * .............................................

81 Escort Wagon
Air, Aute.. P.S............................................

82 Toyota Starlet

Nice, Super M.P.G......................NOW

*9*9*9

$ ■n n w
1 *9*9*9

$ «9 Q Q t?

z£*9*9*9

5V*
%

�•V

^ v y r * '!

t 1

n * ■!

« «r I ' T ^ r ^ V ^ f r &lt; ” « " ' \ I

v !■ » &lt;

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v n r r

n r r r t r r

■ f r-

*

1«A— taittecd HtraM, taster*, FI.

Friday, Ft*. &gt;. 1W7

N e w Tax Forms Promised

Stocks Open Mixed
NEW YORK (UPI) — Price* opened mixed today
in active trading o f New York Stock Exchange
Issue*.
The Dow Junta Industrial average, watch
climbed 10.26 to close abdve 2200 for the first
time Thursday, was down 3.24 to 2198.25
shortly after the market opened.
Gainers led losers 503-377 among the 1,301
Issues crossing the New York Stock Exchange
tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 11.774.100
shares.
The stock market posted another gain Thurs­
day. pushing the Dow Jones Industrial average to

Local Interest
These quotations provided by
m e m b e r s o f th e N a t i o n a l
Association of Securities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
prices as of m ld-m om lng today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.
Bid Ask
American Pioneer
Barnett Bank
First Union
Florida Power
&amp; Light
Fla. Progress
HCA
Hughes Supply
Morrison's
NCR Corp
Plessey
Scotty's
Southeast Bank
SunTrust
Walt Disney World
Westinghouse

7*
34%
25%

8
34%
25%

34%
43%
33%
25%
25%
59%
29%
14%
44%
22%
57%
61%

34%
43%
33%
26%
26%
59%
31
14%
45%
23
57%
61%

G o ld A n d Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted in dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold
London
Previous close 399.25 ofT 5.50
Morning fixing 402.20 up 2.95
Hong Kong
402.45 up 0.60

New York
Comcx spot
gold open
402.50 ofT 2.30
Comcx spot
silver open
5.57 up 0.009
(L o n d o n m o r n in g fix in g
change is based on the previous
day's closing price.)

D o w Jones
Dow Jones Averages —
30 Indus
2198.40
20 Trans
921.88
15 Utils
227.08
65 Stock
844.41

10 a.m.
off 3.09
up 4.49
ofT 0.41
up 0.25

Its first close above 2,200 and other market
indexes to record highs In the second-busiest day
ever.
*'
Traders cited strong bond prices and a more
optimistic view of the economy as reasons for the
market's climb. But they also said investors' fear
of being left behind a rising market spurred
buying.
Traders said the market's seemingly unstop­
pable gains have left many Investors feeling that
they must buy or be left behind.
"N o one wants to be caught with much cash."
said Jerome Hlnltle of Sanford C. Bernstein &amp; Co.

Dollar And Gold
Both On Rise
By United Press International

The dollar opened higher on
major foreign money markets
today. Gold prices moved higher.
In earlier trading in the Far
East, the dollar strengthened
against the Japanese yen on late
buying, closing at 154.15 yen.
up 1.23 over Thursday's closing
rate of 152.92.
The dealers said the dollar was
sold In the morning In the
absence of fresh Incentives.
Buying was spurred by reports
from W a sh in g to n that the
Reagan administration supportsa view that the dollar's rapid fall
is harmful to economic recovery,
they said.
In European trading, the dollar
opened at 1.8650 marks in
Frankfurt, up from Thursday's
close of 1.8343; at 1.5775 Swiss
fra n cs In Z u ric h , up from
1.5482. It was 6.1975 francs In
Paris, up from 6.1210, and
2.1050 guilders In Amsterdam,
up from 2.0675.
The British pound sterling
slipped In London to $1.5070
from $1.5180. In Brussels the

dollar opened at 39.0450 Belgian
francs, up from 38.4050. It was
1.327 Lire in Milan, up from
1.304.70.
Gold rose $3 in Zurich to
$402.50 an ounce from $399.50
at T h u rsday 's close. It also
gained $3 in London to $402.25
from $399.25.
The morning fixing in London
was $402.20.

Silver rose by 5 cents In
Zurich to $5.55 an ounce from
$5.50 and gained 4.5 cents in
London to $5.5350 from $5.49.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, gold closed at $402.20 an
ounce on the Hong Kong Bullion
Exchange, off 50 cents from
Thursday's close.
In early trading on New York's
Comex. a 100-troy-ounce gold
futures contract for current de­
livery in February opened at
$403.20 an ounce. ofT $1.40
fro m T h u r s d a y 's c lo s e . A
5.000-troy-ounce silver futures
contract for delivery In February
opened at $5,556. ofT 0.5 cent an
ounce.

Unemployment Remains Steady
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
nation's unem ploym ent rate
remained at 6.6 percent In
January, but non-farm payrolls
grew by nearly a half million and
the average number of hours
yvorked rose slightly, the Labor
Department said today.
The civilian labor force totaled
1 19.03 m illion people last
month, up from Decem ber's
118.59 m illio n , w h ile the
number of unemployed grew
from 7.95 million In December

to 8.02 million last month.
The unemployment rate for
both months was 6.6 percent,
essentially the same as It has
been for the past year, the Labor
Department said.
T h e e m p lo y m e n t pictu re
n o rm a lly b rig h te n s as the
economy grows, but the sluggish
business scene In America has
tended to slow the creation of
new Jobs.
Som e economic Indicators
have pointed to slightly more
growth In 1987 than last year.

Cosm onauts Rocket Into Space
MOSCOW (UPI) — Two cos­
monauts aboard a new Soyuz
TM-2 spacecraft rocketed Into
the night sky in Soviet Central
Asia early Friday and headed fo r.
the new Mir space station and a
stay In orbit expected to last at
least five months.
Cosmonauts Yurt Romanenko,
a veteran of two previous space
flights, and Alexander Lavelkln,
an engineering making his first
trip to space, were "feeling
well.” the Soviet news agc.ncy
Tasssald.
Tass said the spaceship, an
upgraded version of the reliable
Soyuz spacecraft that has been
in operation for two decades,
w as "fu n c tio n in g norm ally"
during the initial stages of the
mission.
The launch from Baikonur was
shown live on state television
and in the United States and
occurred according to the pre­
viously announced schedule 38
minutes after midnight Friday
Moscow time.
The 160-foot rocket rode a
brilliant orange plume of flame,
then contracted to a glowing
point as it disappeared from
camera range.
At Intervals of a few seconds
an announcer at the control
center said "flight normal" In an
unemotional voice. A camera
aboard the Soyuz showed the
two cosmonauts strapped into
place.
The cosm onauts will dock
with the orbiting Mir station two
days after liftoff. The Mir, whose
nam e m eans " p e a c e . " was
launched In February 1986 and
is to be the base for a permanent
manned Soviet space station,
now the chief goal of the Soviet
space program.
It w as the second Soviet
s p a c e f l i g h t f o l l o w i n g the
explosion of the American shut­
tle Challenger a year ago. It also
was the second Soviet launching
shown live on television.
Soviet television, picking up
the style that has always marked
A m e r ic a n s p a c e la u n c h e s ,
earlier showed the crewmen
moving out of their Baikonur
station and boarding a specially
equipped bus for a nine-minute
ride to the launch pad.
Romanenko (lew aboard Soyuz
26 for 96 days In late 1977 and

&amp;

early 1978 and again on Soyuz
38 for eight days In September
1980. His crewmate for that
(light was the first Cuban to
reach orbit.
"W e have an interesting pro­
gram of research to carry out
and we are looking forward to
our work in space." Lavcikin
told Radio Moscow In a pre-flight
Interview.
The Soviets' return to their
orbital laboratory comes at a
time when the U.S. shuttle
program is gounded and NASA's
planned space station project is
struggling to win congressional
approval despite a possible $5
billion cost overrun and concern
the project will be delayed.
Diplomats said the advance
announcement down to the ac­
tual scheduled time of liftoff
represents renewed Soviet con­
fidence In Its space program In
the face of failures in the U.S.
and European programs.
NASA Is still reeling from the
Jan. 28. 1986, Challenger dis­
aster — the next shuttle flight Is
scheduled for launch in Febru­
ary 1988 — and the European
Space Agency’s French-built
Ariane rocket remains grounded
because of a 1986 failure.
The new Soviet flight aboard
the Soyuz TM-2 and the Mir
station is expected to last more
than five months, according to
diplomats, and will Include a
linkup with a Joint Soviet-Syrian
cosmonaut pair in July.
The world record for space
endurance was set in 1984 by
co sm o n a u ts L e o n id K lzlm .
Vladimir Solovyov and Oleg
Atkov, who logged 237 days
aboard the Salyut-7 space sta­
tion.
The Soyuz TM-2 flight marks
the first Soviet manned space
shot In six months and only the
second since the Challenger ac­
cident. The mission Is the 60th
Soviet manned one since 1961
and will enter Romanenko and
Lavelkln in the record books as
the 199th and 200th men In
space.
The cosmonauts will conduct

a series of medical and scientific
experiments and are expected to
make several space walks and
continue construction of addi­
tional chambers to the Mir that
Klzlm and Solovyov began dur­
ing their 125-day stay In space
last year.
Earlier this year, a Progress
space ferry was launched Into
orbit and docked automatically
with the Mir station, which has
six docking ports. In preparation
for Friday’s launch.
Soviet space expert James
Oberg said Mlr's orbit was raised
Jan. 27 to allow the upcoming
rendezvous.

Th e W orld Almanac

Q&amp;A
1. What percentage of the people of
the Principality of Monaco are Ital­
ian? (a) 58 percent (b) 27 percent (c)
17 percent
2. Which rock group Is noted for the
song "Yakefy Yak"? (a) The Five Sat­
ins (b) The Coasters (c) The Four Sea­
sons
3. In which sport is the Calder Trophy
awarded? (a) track (b) hockey (c) ten­
nis
ANSWERS
1. c 2. b 3. b
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Central Florida Rational Hospital
Thursday
ADM ISSIONS
San lord:
Boverly E. Am lro
Robert R. Donley
Nell Herring
Vera 0 Jehn$on
Jodi Johnson. Deltona
Irene E . Levine, Deltona
Ly n n M Ouelette. Deltona
Jean Splnneweber. Deltona
Gerre A. Strobel. Deltona
Marjorie P M oiler. Orange City
DISC H A R G ES
San lord
John J . McMInamen. Deltona
Herring Baby Girl
Deirdre Enam all and baby boy. Deltona
BI RT HS
Nell Herring, a baby girl
Jodi Johnson, a baby boy. Deltona
Lori Moore, a baby girl, Geneva

they would be ready for this tax
year.
.
,
Officials have warned people
that if they fall to fill out a form,
they run the risk of having too
little federal Income taxes being
withheld from their paychecks.

W ASHINGTON (UPI) IRS
Commissioner Lawrence Gibbs,
trying to quell the storm over the
new penalties for taxpayers who
make honest mistakes with the
complex document.
Gibbs, under questioning from
a Senate Finance subcommittee,
said IRS technicians had been
sent " b a c k to the draw in g
board" to come up with a new
fo rm an d w o rk sh e e t m any
American taxpayers.
The IRS chief said he hoped
that In the next several weeks
the IRS would have a simpler
form that could be filled out by
"m ost middle- and lower-income
taxpayers."
"O u r goal is to try to come up
with a form that for most, if not
all taxpayers, will be simpler."
Gibbs said. "W e 're going to work
until we find a way to do it."
He added that he was "sym pa­

thetic ... to alleviating penalties
for people who are trying to
complete and are having trou­
ble" with the 300 million W*4
forms recently printed.
He promised to "com e back
with a proposal to try to address
that." but cautioned that he had
"not yet figured out how to do
It."
The new forms were required
because of last year's enactment
of the sweeping tax reform
changes.
However, the four-page form.
In c lu d in g a c o m p lic a t e d
w o rk s h e e t, h a s s ty m ie d
thousands of taxpayers and
prompted a huge public outcry.
Employees are required by law
to file a new W-4 by Oct. 1.
The Internal Revenue Service
has previously stressed that
while It is trying to work on new
forms, there are no guarantees

...Clinic

salaries, malpractice coverage h a t/ B H a p n
"Essentially all of the line
and benefits.
The clinic's operating budget Items were the same." she said,
approved for the calendar year is "so personnel was the only place
$1,128,327.
s we could cut. There was a big
As a condition of the latest I n c r e a s e In t h e c o s t o f
federal grant of $884,706, the m alpractice Insurance." The
Oviedo satellite clinic is sched­ malpractice premium for the
uled to close by April I. A plan is first six months was $32,000.
being formulated by the board to
The board will meet at 7:30
transport patients of the full- p.m. Feb. 23 at the center at
service family practice from
Park Avenue and 25th St. to
Oviedo to the Sanford clinic for discuss the closing of the Oviedo
treatment.
clinic and setting up transporta­
Mrs. Moore said there Is tion for the Oviedo patients. The
$2,300 In the budget for trans- meeting is open to the public.
portatlon, but there is also a line
A lth o u g h serv ices o f the
item for travel for the staff C en tral Florida Com m unity
m em bers now t r a v e lin g to Clinic are available to anyone,
Oviedo three days a week to see the p a tie n ts are p rim a rily
patients at the clinic. Mrs. Moore categorized as medically un­
said she will be moving $5,000 derserved. financially Indigent.
from travel to transportation
Medicare or Medicaid. The total
because of the closing.
Income the clinic received last
The grant is% for the same year from patient fees w as
amount as last year, while costs $214,000.

Continued from page IA
Oulda Stacey Barrineau is the
patient flow coordinator and has
been with the clinic since April
1978.
In September. 1983. Mrs. Bar­
rineau filed a complaint with the
Equal Opportunity Commission
alleging the clinic board denied
her application for directorship
of the organization because of
her age. did not review her
application, did not Interview
her for the position until after
they hired Mrs. Moore and failed
to follow Its own guidelines as
published in ads seeking a new
director. However. Mrs. Bar­
rineau said this had nothing to
do with her losing her Job as
patient flow coordinator.
The amount to be saved in­
cludes (he three staff members'

The new tax reform law also
requires taxpayers to have a
more accurate amount of tax
withheld from their paychecks
and calls for stiff penalties If a
taxpayer has too little withheld.
S u b c o m m it t e e C h a ir m a n
David Pryor. D-Ark.. chided
Gibbs for the W-4 forms and
stressed that time was running
out for a new form to be
developed. The longer people
have too little tax withheld from
th eir p aych eck s, the m ore
chance they have of being underwlthheld at the end of the
year.

that I feel our major food service
problems stem from inadequate
facilities and not from food
service employees and not from
the way the program Is run. I
think that as soon as our facili­
ties are up-graded, negative
com m ents c o n c e rn in g food
services will be unwarranted."
Recommendations made In
the report to continue the im­
provement of the food service
program Include:
• Increase the director of food

service position authority.
• Create two area manager
positions.
• Improve kitchen employee
training program.
• Establish Incentive pro­
grams for kitchen personnel.
• Improve food quality and
consistency.
• Consolidate serving lines
where possible.
• Provide pocket thermome­
ters and temperature check
sheets to food service employees.

The adm inistrative release
program is Intended to keep the
prison population within a cap
C ontinued from page 1A
established in the settlement of
the class action suit. The new
would exceed the legal cap by
release program allows releases
943 inmates if
Black rules
when the prison population hits
against the temporary structures.
98 percent of legal capacity. The
Black has given no Indication
releases could continue until the
when she might rule on the
population shrinks to 97 per­
challenges. Jacobs speculated
cent.
the Judge was waiting to sec
Only convicts already eligible
what action Martinez and the
for gain time may benefit under
Legislature would take. A federal
the new plan. F irst-d e g re e
Judge In Texas declared tents
murderers, drug br firearms of­
Illegal under a similar court
fenders serving mandatory sen­
order In that state.
tences. habitual criminals and
sex offenders who have not
"T h ey are playing a shell
completed rehabilitation pro­
gam e." said Jacobs. "The only
grams are ineligible.
question Is when and where the
Officials got to work Thursday
ax is going to fall."

targeting Inmates for release
under the new program. David
Bachman, the corrections de­
partment's assistant secretary,
said staff were reviewing com­
puter flies for Inmates who fit
within the narrow category-eli­
gible for release under the pro­
gram.

...Food
C ontinued from page 1A
Seminole County Council of
PT V s P r es i dent Diane
Thornton, attended the food
service work session and said
she was concerned that parents
were not interviewed by the
consultants In their evaluation of
the food service program. She
said, I want to make the point

...Releases

T h o s e n a m e s wi l l be
forwarded to prison superin­
tendents and double checked,
and convicts could begin hitting
the streets sometime next week.
Bachman said.
Bachman could only guess at
the number of prisoners who
would be freed. Estimates of the
eligible convicts ranged from
650 to as many as 1.900.

AREA DEATHS
E V A L. B E R R Y
Mrs. Eva L. Berry. 78. of 1435
Lake Drive. Casselberry, died
Wednesday at Florida Hospital.
Orlando. Born Aug. 12. 1908 In
Jackson City. Tcnn., she was a
homemaker and a Baptist. She
was a volunteer worker for the
C a ss e lb e rry S en io r Citizens
Center.
Survivors include a daughter.
Betty Laws. Casselberry; son,
Jam es Walter. Marietta. Ga.:
sister, Beulah Fuller, Durham.
N.C.; eight grandchildren: 10
great-grandchildren.
Winter Park Funeral Home,
Winter Park, in charge of ar­
rangements.
D A L E D eFO R EST JR.
Mr. Dale DeForest Jr.. 24. 981
County Road 427. Longwood,
died Tuesday In Orange County.
Born July 18. 1962 In Peoria.
III., he moved to Longwood from
t h e r e In 1 982. He w a s a
warehouseman and a Baptist.
Survivors include hls father.
Dale Sr., Longwood; mother.
Linda Rice. Pontiac. III.; two
b r o t h e r s . M ic h a e l J e n s e n .
W inter Park, and Jerry De­
Forest. Altamonte Springs; four
sisters. Ruth Draffef. Pontiac.
Ramona Edwards. Winter Park.
Sherry Horner. Atlanta, and
C h a r l e n e DeFor es t.
Bloomington. III.
C ox-Parker Funeral Home,
Winter Park, in charge of ar­
rangements.
E LK IN K R E ITZE R
Mr. Elkin Kreltzer. 72. of 200
N. Maitland Ave., Altamonte
Springs, died Wednesday at hls
residence. Born April 8, 1914 In
Philadelphia, he moved to Alta­
monte Springs from there in
1959. He was a supermarket
district supervisor. He was past
president of the Central Florida
Tennis Confederation.
Survivors include a brother.

Meyer R.. Fort Lauderdale; sis­
ter. Gertrude, Philadelphia.
B a ld w ln -F a irc h lld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangements.
SAM L E V Y
Mr. Sam Levy. 74. of 604
DcSoto Drive. Casselberry, died
Tuesday at hls residence. Born
Nov. 12. 1912 In Turkey, he
moved to C a sse lb e rry from
Miami In 1967. He was a retired
chief executive officer for Toy
King. Inc.
Survivors Include two daugh­
ters. Myrna. Miami. Harriet
Tsocheff, Fort Lauderdale; son.
B y e rs . C a s s e l b e r r y ; t wo
brothers. Albert. Fort Myers, and
Murray. New York: sister. Alice
Bellar. Los Angeles: five grand­
children.
B a ld w ln -F a irc h lld Funeral
Home. Orlando. In charge of
arrangements.
GEORGE W IL L IA M S
Mr. George Williams. 50. of
430 Franklin St.. Oviedo, died
Monday In Oviedo. He was born
Feb. 19. 1936 In Alabama and
moved to Oviedo 25 years ago.
He was an agricultural laborer
em ployed by Mr. and Mrs.
George C. Means of Oviedo.
Survivors Include hls wife,
Brenda.
G o ld e n 's F u n e r a l H om e.
Winter Park. In charge of ar­
rangements.
M YR TIE LE E R A U B
Mrs. Myrtle Lee Raub. 101, of
919 E. Second St.. Sanford died
Wednesday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Born In Ken­
tucky. Jan. 1. 1886. she moved
to Sanford In 1986 from Miami.
She was a homemaker and a
member of the Church of Christ.
Miami. She was a member of the
Three Score and Ten Club.
Survivors include two daugh­
ters. Lera Harris. Sanford, Iris
Harris. Miami; two granddaugh­

ters. Patsy Marshall, Miami.
Myrtle Pcnlck. Sanford: two
g r e a t - g r a n d s o n s . J o h n E.
Marshall Jr. Miami and Billy
Benick. Tallahassee; one greatgranddaughter. Tammy Penlck.
S a n f o r d ; one g r e a t - g r e a t granddaughter.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary. In charge of arrange­
ments.
A R T H U R B. W IL B U R
Mr. Arthur B. Wilbur. 88. of
175 N. Sprlnglake Drive. Alta­
monte Springs, died Tuesday at
Longwood Health Care Center.
Born Nov. 15. 1899 In Stillwater,
N.Y.. he moved to Altamonte
Springs from Coral Gables in
1986. He was a retired insurance
a g e n t a n d a m e m b e r of
Montgomery Lodge 504 F&amp;AM.
Stillwater.
Survivors include a son. Earle
R., two daughters, Dorothy
Ellsworth. Washington. D.C..
and Mari l yn Haskel l ,
Pennsylvania: brother. CHIT. New
York; sister. Mabel Lapc, New
York: eight grandchildren.
B a ld w ln -F a irc h lld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
G E R TR U D E L. SCH EPERS
Mrs. Gertrude L. Schepers, 85.
of 519 E. First St.. Sanford, died
Tuesday at Centeral Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Born In Ham­
burg. Germany. June 1. 1902.
She was a homemaker.
She is survived by a niece.
Crystal Pflster. Bronx. N.Y.
Brlsson Funeral Home. San­
ford. In charge of arrangements.

I CREMATION SPECIALISTS I

OAKLAW N

FUNERAL HOME &amp;
PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER
3 2 2 -4 2 0 3
Eat. 1 0 0 4
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D

�fcTirtstyitiKiX*uvftfraC

in s o im c M M ilio i n * fluid* to whatthe
reader found mo*t meenlngful *nd*,Jt'*f
und*rlin*d or *labor*t*d on It within th*
msrgln

Some books contain words, notes and
doodles that their authors didn't pen. One of
these additions might have started with you
as a youngster in geography class when
without even realizing It your pencil was by
some unknown force drawn to circle all of the
state capitals on a map In the textbook.
O r perhaps It was in algebra that as the „
teacher explained a thorny equation you
followed right along In the book with your
yellow felt tip marker.
Such student scribblings are usually
frowned upon by those who follow the penman
in use of that particular text. But In some
cases book collectors and historians are
intrigued by messages that have been added
to printed pages.
Bibles not only log the vital family
statistics of births, marriages and deaths, but

•*[ ayo ]

*.

•

fellow and red I pale blue, pale red. T V IX.
■meter of the brand Crown mcifurcd frit*
(ho middle cf the yellow and rrd on one fait
of the bun, to the middle of tbc fame Colon,
OH the other fide vat » ; Drgrrn. or thcrob o v a T h e Dtuncten of the lirft and thud
J had not time to mcafarr, but that of the rat*
Trained to he about lire or.fa Dfjptrt, and
that o f the third about twelve. T V like

Cravw appear fometimet about the Moon i
Car is the beginning of ilw Year 1664 , J-rtr.
tfth at Nieht, I fa* to o fitch Cnnrat al**j
Her. The Uumctcr of the Hrft or innernMit*.
araa about three Degree*, and that of the lie.
ro o d kraut bet Drgrrn tad aa half. Near afacNt the Morava* aCircle of whirr, and next
knot that the inner Conn, which wat of a
biaifc green within oca the white, and of 1
t t JJo * » d red without, and next about rhefr
Cohan were bioc aod green on the infidc ef
the award C re a m «n J red on the ourtide cf
it. At the fame tine there appear’d a Hilo a
h o w aa LVgrcci j f duLint from the crater d
the Moon, h waa dkjxicil, and hi long Diametee wat perpendicrlar to the Hornno. mtla g bribw tarthrd from ihc Moon. I am told
(tit the M oon baa fometimea three or mac
concentric k Cnrwm of Coloan cncoaipaitirg
one another near about her Body. T V more
npaJ the giobnlea o f Watrr or lee arc to one
another, the' more Crownt of Coloan, will ap­
pear, and the Coloun win he the more Hvtf*.
The Halo at the dbtancc of u i IVgrcv. firirt
the

On* thing such markings Indicat* It that
the book In question hat been read. And
according to Sanford's Duane Harrell who
collects old books, such notations can also
reveal something about the book's former
owner.
...
' .„
'•'I've got all kinds of treasures like that, .
Harrell said. He has a number of books that
are more than 100 years old that have been
inscribed by the author. O r to him, there Is
added meaning If there's a simple Inscription
saying 'M erry Christmas,' to the books
original owner from Its giver.
“ Unless It just defaces the book, I en|oy It,"
Harrell said. “ It makes It more Interesting. I

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cosi &amp;*9lfr*™****** ® ,'z&gt;Trt"

This page of a 1508 German book has* been
underlined to alert readers to the medical
conditions alleviated by plants Included In the
herbal. This text describes the uses of
chrysanthemum.

�1—Sairtard HraM , SaMard, FI.

Friday, Fab. 4, 1W7

Doodles
C o n tin u e d fr o m p a g e I

back road In Georgia was a copy of the
Report on the M syo Clinic, inscribed by both
Mayo brothers. That book also held an
additional treasure of a letter from the wife of
one of the Mayo brothers to the owner of the
book, who was apparently a family friend of
theMayos', Harrell said.
Ellen Wells of the Smithsonian Institution
Libraries In Washlnton, D. C. said,
"Everybody writes in books. It's a way of
creating an Image so the reader with catch
some Important point. Annotated books
represent hard evidence someone handled the
volume, read its author's words, reacted to
them and responded by marking passages or
writing In between the lines or In the
margins. An annotated volume teaches you
something about the learning process."
Some books, she said, printed from at least
the early 16th Century, contain pages bound
into the books with the suggestion that the
reader correct mistakes made by the author
or typesetter.
Often, Ms. Wells said, readers disagree
with authors and correct the writer's

assertions or write rude or laudatory
comments In response to the text.
Not all comments are words of praise. In a
1513 volume, a commentary by Matthias
Quelle on Aristotle's Physics and other
books, one of the work's many annotators
wrote In Latin, "E v e ry man (Is a) Thief."
In an 1718 edition of British scientist Isaac
Newton's Optlcks, or a Treatise of
Reflections, Refractions, Inflections and
Colours of Light, was in the hands of an 18th
Century Cambridge University astronomy
professor, Robert Smith, who added his own
observations on atmospheric effects and
halos around the moon.
In another historical work printed In 1888 a
British physicist added his own notes
predicting the existence of the Ionosphere, an
electrically conductive layer In the upper
atmosphere.
Book collecting today, Ms. Wells said,
emphasizes the pristine volume at the
expense of the annotated copy. Unless the
note writer Is a recognized person of such
importance that his or her comments on the
book might be interesting, most collectors,
unlike Hat'rell, she said, prefer a clean book.
Many books have been discarded because
of the added markings, she said. "Marginal
notes were of so little value after the 15th and
16th centuries that they were otter cut

through when a book was trimmed for
rebinding."
Although Ms. Wells doesn't advocate
writing In books, she said, " I fully expect that
someday we will have a rare book library
with a future Einstein's textbook marked
with yellow hjghllghter and It will tell us
something special about what that person
was thinking when the book was read."
However Intriguing that possibllty might
be, branch librarian Richard Gardiner,
stationed at the Seminole County Library In
Sanford, said he and most librarians*consider
books somewhat sacred. To m ark In a book
that is public property, he said, Is something
he frowns on, although he might make notes
in books that are his own.
" It defaces the book and reduces its value.
The next person doesn't want to read a book
that's marked up," Gardiner said.
Works of fiction are generally safe from
these phantom penmen, he said. Small
children are likely to take a crayon to books
for tots, but likely to be marred are reference
books that students would use In report
writing. And the ultimate In book abuse
sometimes occurs with these textbook-type
volumes, pages are ripped out by a user who
won't go to the trouble of photocopying the
information they need, Gardiner said.

Recapturing Hollywood's Bygone Days
and she’s the salt of the sea.
Together, they make plenty of
NEW YORK (UPI) - In the waves.
O n th e d a n c e flo o r o f
four-hour miniserlcs "The Two
Mrs. Grenvilles." NBC hopes to Manhattan’s famed El Morrecapture the bygone days of rocco, they squeeze so close the
Hollywood, when a kiss was TV screen steams. Now the
not just a kiss, men and women World W ar II Navy ensign has a
danced cheek to check and reason to fight — he has a girl
back home.
everyone was filthy rich.
"The Two Mrs. Grenvilles."
NBC’s mini starts out with
the same old swoon. Broadway airing Feb. 8 and Feb. 9 over
showgirl with unclean past WESH-TV. Channel 2. (9-11
meets playboy from one of New p.m.). packs the cast with
York’s most aristocratic fami­ grand, names from the silver
lies. He (s a hunk of a sailor. screen. Oscar nominee Ann-

By Mark Schwed
UP1 TV Editor

NOW is the time
There Is no time like the present to
organize your clutter. Shop and co m ­
pare, then come to Sheds America.
You won't be
disappointed!

v

Margret plays the showgirl, and
Oscar winner Claudette Colbert
Is the Imperial mother-in-law.
Stephen Collins Is Billy, the
man In middle ol "T h e Two
Mrs. Grenvilles."
Everything Is red roses until
Billy brings Ann home to a
treasure-filled mansion to meet
the future In-laws. Ann Is in
awe of the riches and immedi­
ately puts on airs. But you
can’t fool Mother Grenville.
Ann Is deemed unworthy and
cast aside by everyone but
Billy, who marries her.

The differences In upbringing
plague Ann Grenville and final­
ly threaten the marriage. There
is a bitter argument in which
Billy asks for a divorce. That
night. Ann mistakes Billy for a
prowler and shoots him dead in
their bedroom.
There arc whispered accusa­
tion s that A n n shot her
husband to collect his riches.
To protect the family name.
Mother G re n ville and her
high-society pals draw together
and protect Ann Grenville.
“The Two Mrs. Grenvilles"

5 W A Y S T O
IN C R E A S E T H E
V A L U E O F Y O U R

H O M E

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Flnanclhg Available
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Phone; 831 -8522
Toll Free: 1- 800-432- 1874
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^ CRCOt 2929

A n n M a r g a r e t Is the
younger M rs. Granville, a
ambitious showgirl who
marries into a powerful
aristocratic family.
possesses the same soapy af­
tertaste a s m ost network
miniseries. There is romance,
heartbreak and tragedy. But at
least there’s no Joan Collins.
The fact that NBC landed
Colbert and Ann-Margret to
play the leads helped qpgrade
the final product considerably.
Colbert, 81. who had not
made a film In 25 years, was
drawn to the project by the
quality of the book written by
Dominick Dunne, on which the
minIscrles was based.
" A s I read this book. I wanted
to play Alice Grenville. I had no
doubts or second thoughts
about It. And then strangely
enough, I went to a dinner
party on Long Island where I
was Introduced to friends of
Dominick Dunne. The friends
relayed my interest to Dunne
and he called m e."
A year went by and Colbert
was offered the part.
Colbert has worked with
some of the greatest directors
(Frank Capra. Cecil B. DeMille]
an d a c to rs (C la r k G a b le .
Charles Boyer) in American
film history over her 64-fllm
career.

�Sanford HoraM, Sanford, FI.

TELEVISION

Frfdoy, Fob, 4, 1* 7-1

W h a t ’s H a p p e n i n g ?

In

Fe bruary 6 T h ru F e b ru a ry 12

T h e

Specials O f The W eek
career* and private Nves of Spencer
Tracy and Katharine Hepburn ar*
recalled through Itlm dips from
movies in which they coatarrad
("State of th* Union.” "Desk Sat")
1130
® 0 CBS STOMYBMAK "The as w*a aa from thoa* they mad*
Doubt* Disappearance Ot W*lt*r separately.
FoiM h" Animated. W*lt*r discov­
EVENING
er* how It M * lo t&gt;* *n outsider
530
when h* wskes upon* morning and
dl*cow*r* that everyone's a dino- ■ (10) TEN WHO OARED "Frandsco Ptxarro" In 1S32. Ptxarro
*eur and human* ar* extinct. (R )g
landed in Peru, and with a tiny
EVENING
army, managed to destroy tha In­
can empire
7:00

th* coast ot Nantucket.

SA TU R D A Y

■ (10) IN SEARCH OF ANCIENT
ASTRONAUTS Thrt special sup­
ports tha premise that aarty space
iravaiars vlsllad Earth bafor*
recorded time and profoundly al­
tarad iha Ufa of primitive man,

W EDNESDAY

1030
B (W ) THE BWtOMGN A oocumarttary on th# first World Hang Gliding
RaPyln th* HWnafaya*.

5:50

TU ESD A Y
MORNNQ

1130

B

(10) AMERICAN CAEBAR This
biographical portrait of Gan. Doug­
las MacArthur conclude* with hi*
clash with President Truman during
th* Korean War and Ms amottonpackad homecoming following his
dismissal. Film lootag*. interview*
and narration by John Coicos and
John Huston. (Part 5 ol S| Q

S O A P S

By

Nancy

EVENNQ

530
B HO) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Narrated by Robert Foiworth, this
look al Ufa within the shadow ol
southern Italy's Vesuvius volcano
focuses on th* Inhabitant* of both
Iha excavated ait# of ancient Her­
culaneum that was destroyed In the
eruption of A.D. 79 and th* mod­
ern-day fishing vMaga of PoczuoN.
In stereo. Q

■
(10) COUNTRY MEMORIES
WITH WtLLIE NELSON WlDle Nel­
son hosts highlights from "Austin
City Limits." featuring perform­
ance* by Janie Frick*. Mari* Hag­
gard, Loratla Lynn, th* Ricky
1130
■ CD l a t e n i g h t w i t h o a v io Skaggs Band. Emmytou Harris.
AFTERNOON
LETTERMAN "Fifth Annlvarsary John Anderson, B B. King, Krta
12:05
Spadal" Schadulad guests include Kristoffarson, Roy Orbison and Ala­
( B CENTENNIAL Paul Garrett (Da­
"Lata Night’s" Chris Elliott snd bama
vid Janssen), ifia currant owner of
comics Jay Lano and Carol LaHar;
th* Venneford Ranch, ratals* th*
Jo* Cockar. Bryan Adams. Wilson
history ot the city ol Centennial lo
Plckatt, Harbl* Hancock. Patar
two magazine writers (Andy Griffith.
Frampton. Dizzy Glllaspia and Fred­
die Hubbard appear with th* "1st*
Shir on Gloss). (Part 12 ol 12)
AFTERNOON
Hlght" band: also, dips featuring
IJolty Parton, Char and Johnny Car135
EVENING
non. In stereo.
(QD CENTENNIAL Tragedy stalks a
homestead family during th* De­
5:00
pression; Mexican immigrants turn
to th* Vannatord Ranch operators ( D Q rrs YOUR 20TH TELEVI­
(Lynn Redgrave, William Atherton) SION ANNIVERSARY, CHARLIE
altar being harassed by local bi­ BROWN Animated / llv* action A
gots. Philip Wendell (Doug McKaon) look at two decades ol specials
AFTERNOON
perpetuates his family's dubious featuring th* Peenutland charac­
ters. also, interviews with th* vole**
2:00
land dealings. (Part 11 ot12)
behind th* scones snd an animated
0 (10) INGRID Narrated by John
EVENING
musical number produced lor the
Gielgud, this documentary presents
20th-annlvarsary catabrallon. (R)
an overview ot Ingrid Bergman's ca­
9:00
reer. featuring Him clips, home B (10) ANOREA DORIA THE Ft10:00
movie* taken by har father, and In­ NAL CHAPTER A filmed chronicle ® O CAROL BURNETT SPECIAL
terviews with Colleen Oawnurst. ot under*alar cameraman and “Carol. Carl, Whoopi A Robin" Cart
Angela Laos bury. Llv Ullmann, An­ deep-sea dlvtr Patar Gimbet's ex­ Reinar. Whoopi Goldberg and Ro­
thony Quinn and Jos* Farrar. (R)
pedition. assisted by his wit* Elga bin Williams loin Carol Burnalt tor
Andersen, to salvage the wreckage an evening of comedy and music.
3:15
O (10) HEPBURN AND TRACY Th* ot tha ocean liner Andrea Dona olt a

M ONDAY

TH U R S D A Y
EVENING

1035
0 BREAKING THE SPELL It: A
U S. / SOVIET DIALOGUE Ameri­
can and Soviet nuclear expert*
gather to discuss th* currant status
01 relation* between th* two super­
powers concerning nuclear arm*
and |oint protects, such as a
manned night to Mart.

SUNDAY

FR ID A Y
EVENING

5:00
B ® DISNEY’S OTV DOGGONE
VALENTINE An animated tribute lo
Valentina's Day featuring Disney
cartoons sat to Iha music ol Huey
Lewis A the Now*. Kenny Rogers.
Whaml and Deniece Williams in
starao.

5:30
® B
EMMANUEL LEWIS: MY
VERY OWN SHOW Tha star ol
"Webstar" it Joined by guests in­
cluding Debbie Allan. Bob Hops.
Sammy Davit Jr., members ot the
L A. Raiders, and impressionist
Frank Gorshin. g

Phoebe's old friend. Bltay. and her
daughter. Cecily, arrived for a vi*H.
F ra nctne a n d M ark touched off an
exptoalon at the Chateau while trying to
freebear cocaine. Ellen waa trapped In Ihe
burning building along wtlh other patron*
of the restaurant. Palmer relumed from
hla secret trip and waa stunned to learn
that Natalie had moved out of hla
mansion. Skye fumed that Brooke gave
her a gofer job while Hillary la Brooke's
assistant- Jerem y nearly strangled Malt
because he let Jerem y atay In Jail when he
knew he didn't kill Earl. Julie didn't like
Cecily's interest In Charlie. Ro m thought
of hla romp In the sack wtlh Natalie while
he was making love lo Ellen. Yvonne
fretted that O ils w ill take her son
1correction from last week. Yvonne had a
■on. not a daughter) away from her. After
Malt told the police he saw Mark kill Earl
In aelf-defense. Mark was c leared of
m urder charges. Matt nixed making love
w ith Robin, then warned her gambler
friend. Ford.

ANOTHER WORLD
Peter poured his heart out lo hooker.
Linda, who was taler found murdered In
un alley. After u talk with Milch. Rachel
patrhed things up with Mac and Ihe two
■pent a romantic nlghl In New York Ctly.
Adam helped Michael Investigate Donna's
disappearance. Michael learned lhat
Donna was taken from the mental hospital
In an ambulance owned by Reginald. M.J.
Is finding II hard lo resLst her lingering
frellngs for Chad. A terrified Donna, who
has amnesia, tried lo remember her past
Peter Instigated Donna's removal from the
hospital In the hopes that Reginald would
be pleased that Peter Is keeping Donna
and Michael separated. Ambulance driver
Paul had a car accident Just before Mlchdrl
tracked him down. A recuperating Re­
ginald nipped out to learn lhal Peter has
dlsgrarrd I h r family name by being
Involved with Linda. Jamie had fantasies
about finding the perfect woman.

AS THE WORLD TURNS

Sports O n The A ir
S A TU R D A Y
MORN1NO

8:00
32) WRESTLING
AFTERNOON

130
0 ® WRESTLING
CD Q
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
VUlanova at Gaorgslown (Liya)

3:00

0

® COLLEGE BASKETBALL
North Carolina Stata al LguiiviIIs
(U va)
(D O
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Miami at Navy (Ltva)
(D Q PBA BOWLING S ISO,000
Quaker Stale Open, from Forum
Bowling Lanes In Grand Prairie
Texas (Live)
d ) (A) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Tennessee at Louisiana Slate (Live)

o

4:30

(E
WIDE WORLD OF 8PORTS
Scheduled U S Figure Skating
Championships, ladies' competition
(live) Irom Tacoma. Wash ; sameday reports on the World Alpine Ski
Chemptonehips (women's slalom)
Irom Crant-Monlana. Switzerland
and Ihe America's Cup Yachting
Race. Irom Perth. Autlralia.

4:35
32) SALTWATER ANGLER

5:00
0 ® PGA GOLF Hawaiian Open.
trjrd round. Irom Warlae Country

Club in Honolulu (Live)
CD O
SPORTS SATURDAY
Scheduled: Tony Montgomery vs.
Oonald Curry lor the USBA Junior
Middleweight Hlle. scheduled lor 12
rounds, irom Las Vegas (Live)

5:05
32 FISHING WITH ROLANO MAR­
TIN

5:35
32 NBA SLAM-DUNK CONTEST
AND THREE-POINT SHOOTOUT
Some ol the National Basketball
Association s more notorious
"slemmers" and outeide shooters
compete in tha*r respective competitions, Irom Seattle (Live)

SOCIATION: FLORIDA BASKET.
BALL
® Q AUTO RACING Busch Clash
(Live)

12:45
® G
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Michigan at Indiana (Live)

0

1:30
® 0 HANK PARKER OUTDOOR
MAGAZINE

2:00

.12 WRESTLING

10.05
32 NBA LEGENDS CLASSIC Bob
Cousy. Walt Frazier. Oscar Robert­
son and John Havticek are among
the former NBA greats scheduled to
taka part in this 'old-timers game,
from Seattle iSame-day tapal

SUNDAY
MORNING

0

11:30
® WRESTLING
AFTERNOON

12:00
0 ® UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC AS­

5:30
32 WRESTLING*
EVENING

11:00
32 SPORTS PAGE

TU ESD A Y
EVENING

® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Notre Dame at Kansas (Live)

10:05

3:00

32 NBA BASKETBALL Lo* Angelas
Lakers al Sacramento Kings (Uva)
ISubject to blackout)

EVENING

7:35

1:00

® COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Virginia at North Carolina (Live)

4:30
0 ® PGA GOLF Hawaiian Open,
final round. Irom Honolulu ILhra)

0

® SPORTSWORLD Scheduled
Vmny Pazienza (21-1. 17 KOsI vs.
Roberto Elizondo (30-S. 23 KOs) In
a lightweight bout scheduled tor 10
rounds (live) Irom Providence. RI.;
World Mixed Pairs Bodybuilding
Competition {taped! from Toronto,
Canada
® o NBA ALL-STAR GAME Live
from The Coliseum in Seattle

W EDNESDAY
EVENING

8:00
( B (|) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Louisiana Stale al Georgia (Live)

4:00
® O WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled U S
Figure Skating
Championshipa (five) men's, pairs,
and Ice dancing program*, from Ta­
coma. Wash.; World Alpine Skiing
Championships (sama-day tap#)
men’s slalom Irom Crans-Montana.
Switzerland, a report (same-day
tap*) on tha America's Cup Yacht­
ing Race.

Shannon rrlu rn e d to Oakdale and
agreed to m arry Brian after hr said that h r
dorsn'l love llealrlcr. Mr. Dlgnam. an
artist that Sabrina hud modeled for. luld
the Hughes lhat Sabrina Is afraid that
snmrone Is trying lo kill her. Bob. Fannie,
rt al.. hoarded the Orient Express looking
for Sabrina. Dob Is suspicious of Howard,
who la following Sabrina. Meg la dtsrourugetl with her nurse's training courses.
Holden learned lhat Craig and Shannon
sold Ihelr Walsh Enlrrprtsea stocks to
McNeil Associates Hick lold John that
Howard Is nut In kill Sabrina. Hoy dldn'l
hit It nil with Jrsalra CirtfTIn. Ihe lawyer
who look over Toni's nfllce. Lucinda
rra ll/ rd that Jam es probably has u
Conner lion to McNeil Associates. John told
Em m a that h r krpt Meg's serrel because
h r fru rn l lining Emm a John warnrd
Susan lhal Ja m rs Is a dangerous man
Jatnrs plans In gu nil Inin the sunset und
takr Emily with him

CAPITOL
Sam s Institu tio n a lize d first wife.
I.aurern. suddenly snapped out of a
20-year catatonic state Tre y caught
Angrltcu straltng from the Cleggs and shr
admitted dial she's still married In
Crawford and lhal Crawford Is blackmail
lug her. I.runnr ftrukrd In see Sam and
K u lr In a passionate embrace Urenda
frnded oil tlir advances of a record
pluditrrr- thru frit guilty lhal she botchrd
a record ilr.il tor Wally. Sloanr lold All
that shr wants to team everything about
llaracq At Kelly's urging. Thomas agreed
to try to make amends with Baxter. Dylan
searched lor a missing Meredith.

DATS OF OUR LIVES
Adrienne admitted to a stunned Patch
that she's hLs sister. Victor, iki and Hope
were shocked when Victor's nephew.
Justin, w ho’s been living In Parts, an­
EVENING
nounced that he's moving Into Victor's
mansion Frankie saved Glenn from Coach
10:05
31 NBA BASKETBALL Boston Lock. Before he was arrested. Loch shot
Celtics al Portland Trail Blazer* Max. who lied been following Frankie.
Mike and Robin performed surgery that
(Ltva) (Subject to blackout)

FR ID A Y

M. R c i c h n r d t
saved Mas s life. Late end Mellaa* ramped
tn the aack for the first time. Patch
searched for proof of Adrienne's claim that
they are siblings. Chris warned Shane and
Kimberly not to spend time together
before her murder trial since their peal
romance la reason for Kimberly to have
wanted Emm a dead. W hen Mellaaa talked
of marriage and kids. Lara reminded her
that they have careers to think about.
Allre rendezvoused with Simon. a.k.a..
"Tig e r." Nell punched out a reporter who
badgrred Kimberly. Tam ara freaked out
when Mr. Coleman confronted her.
O E R E R A L H O S P IT A L
Angus died after Ingesting poison,
which he got from Jonathan. Before he
died. Angus told Duke and Camellia Bud
hla death would end Ihelr problema wllh
organized crime members. Jake and Bobbl
had a hitler fight over hla obsession with
defending Lu ry. Jake and Lucy made
passionate love after h r found her hiding
tap In Jennifer's house T e n y and Patrick
wrnt lo New Orleans lo hide from Ihe
mystery person who has threatened their
lives. Camellia hid her jealousy while
watching Anna and Duke embrace aller
Duke was paroled from prison. A mystery
woman "rescued” Lucy from Jake after
knocking Jake out cold. Th e mystery
woman look Lucy lo New Orleans. Orelclirn Ls reluctant la go through with Bobbl
and Juke's surrogate mother agreement.
Monica realized lhal she's si 111at tract rd to
Alan. Frisco and Ja k r headed for New
Orleans lo rescue Lucy from the mystery
woman.

OUfDINQ LIGHT
Cal was found hanged In his cell after he
was arrrslrd by Ihe police. Josh suspects
that Cut dldn'l commit suicide. Johnny
slipped between Ihe sheets with Christine,
who said she dorsn'l expect htm lo ntakr a
commitment lo her. A salesman rrlrasrd
II.U . und Alex from Ihe fur vault
Chtlstlnr's ex-husband. Roland Valrrr.
and a henchm an arranged to meet
Jo h n n y , w ho’s m aking another clan­
destine flight (or ALin Philip und Chelsea
freukrd In find out that someone had
stolen the files for Ihelr article un art
scums. Maurren and Ed were pleased In
see Tina. Maureen’s replacement as huspl
tal administrator, put down Alan. Maevr
feels that shr can't do anything to make
Fletcher happy. Ftrlchrr und Josh learned
that they're both Investigating Gerhart.
Husty was wounded saving Hawk, who
had been held hostage by Cal. Mindy and
Husty sharrd a pusslonulr kiss. Dinah
rejected Vanessa's offer to throw her a
party.

LOVtNO
To ny saved Cabot, who had a sudden
heart attack. Trisha, who recovered From
her drug overdose, had a happy reunion
wllh Clay Nick warned Clay lhat no arte
will takr Trisha uwny from Nick. Steve
sneaked Into Trisha's hospital room and
vowrd Hull somehow, someday, they'll be
log rlhrr again. Ava was In lrrrslrd In learn
llial Tony Ls a doctor even though he's
working as a handym an Curtis rescurd a
snowhound Lottie and Eban. hut didn't
realize lhal Eban had tried In rape Lottie.
T o protect Steve. Trisha rrlurned to Nlrh
after shr rh rckrd out o( thr hospital

ONE LIFE TO LIVE
Cusslr dipped when shr Irurnrd lhal hrr
friend K rllh had been murdered. Kate and
Jonathan suspect that Jam ie killed Krllh.
look his passport und w rnl lu South
America. Cord didn't b rlirv r Tin a when
shr told him lhat she's p rrg ru nl Pamela
and I’r l r made up utter quarreling over
Asa Pamela convinced Asa to donate
money lu rebuild M ulukrvj Elizabeth tuld
Charles and Ju dith lo get a quiet dlvorrr
lo save the family name Irom scandal. Asa
fulled lo keep Pamela Irnm testifying al
Cllnl and Vlkl's divorce hearing. Jonathan
hr gun to check out Diane's past, then
Hipped when Dorian said she's Included
Diane In her will. O n Ihe witness stand.
Thom as lold Ihe Judge lhal he's not
having an affair w llh Vlkl. Elizabeth
pressured Charles, who pulled strings lo

See S O A P S, p ig e 8

fTTV

�r

r

F rid a y , F a b . 4 , 1H7

4— S a n f o r d H e r a l d , S a n f o r d , F I .

FRIDAY
EVENING

6.-00
csaaoD
01)

S

F e b ru a ry 6

10*0

*:

6:35
7:00
• ® NEW LYW ED G AM E
( D B m M AGAZINE The results
ot a pod on favorite movfea. writer*,
actor*, alngera and cart
0 B JE O P A R D Y
0 (11) BARNEY MILLER
a (10) AM ERICAN C AESAR Thte
biographical portrait ol Gan. Doug­
las MacArthur concludes with his
clash with President Truman during
the Korean War and his emotionpacked homecoming following his
dismissal. Film footage. Interviews
and narration by John Coilco* and
John Huston. (Part 5ol S) g
8 ( 8) W ONDERFUL W O RLD O F
DISNEY "Pluto's Day"

■
( 8) CAR O L B U R N E TT
FRIENOB

7:30

10:35

11*0
• ® (D O C D C hew s
O (11) LA TE SHOW Host: Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: Anthony Quinn,
■dor Francesco Quinn ("Platoon"),
Grace Jones. In stareo.
■ (10) M O N TY P Y TH O N 'S FLYING
CIRCUS
■ ( 8) BARGAINS TO N IG H T

11*5
93 NIGHT
PLAY

a (3) E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N IG H T
Kris Krlstofferson discusses his role
In the mini series "Am enka"; Inter­
view with actress Theresa Russell
("Black Widow” ). In stereo.

QD a DATING GAME
8 W HEEL OF FORTUNE
(11) BENSON

7:35
9 3 HO NEYM O O NER S

B

8:00

® STIN G R AY An arllst. ap­
prehensive about her first exhibition
In years, receives a daath threat. In
stereo.
CD O SCAR ECR O W ANO MRS.
KING Lee's Injected wtlh a deadly
strain of bacteria during a mugging.
CD O W F 9 S TE R The children at
the com m unlly canter mock
George's father, q
(11) H A R T T O HART

*

(10) W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW g

a ( 8) M OVIE "Rope" (1048) James
Stewart, Farley Granger. Directed
by Alfred Hitchcock. Based on the
Le opdd-loeb murder case. Two
college students murder a friend for
the thrill of It, and then celebrate
the deed by hosting a party for the
victim's friends and relatives.

8:06
9 3 MOVIE "Fort Apache" (1048)
John Wayne, Henry Fonda. A stub­
born cavalry officer Is held respon­
sible for rampant Indian attacks
against a military outpost.

9:00

B ® MIAMI VICE Castillo helps a
Vietnamese detective (Halng S.
Ngor) who has been pursuing the
murderer of a Saigon prostitute tor
13 years. In stereo.
CD O
D ALLAS J.R. and Bobby
send their families to California to
escape Calhoun’s threat; Donna
continues to see Senator Dowling.
3 ) O G U N G H O Hunt's successful
brother cornea to town and subse­
quently Impresses the managers at
Asaan Motors, g
B (11) TR A P P ER JO H N . M.D.
( D (10) A FINE ROMANCE

CD O

9:30

D A 0 8 Kelly takes too much
lime preparing herself for an eve­
ning el a fine restaurant, g
CD (10) F A W LTY TO W ER S Basil

L

TR A C K S

• POW ER

11:30
■
®
TO N IG H T 8 H O W Host:
Johnny Carson. Scheduled: come­
dian Bob Nation, actresses Christi­
na Pickles end Shelley Long. In
atoreo.
|M*A*S*H
I NIGHTLINE Q

12:00
( D Q TAXI
(D u
NIGHTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. Scheduled: actor Judd
Nelson ("From the Hip"). In stereo.
O (11) ASK D R RUTH Topic: teen­
agers and contraception. Quest: ac­
tress Valerie Harper, g
■ ( 8) MIGHT O W L FUN

12:05
93 NIGHT TR A C K S Included: Van
Helen ( "Beat Ot Both Worlds"); Don
Johnson ("H eartach e A w a y '');
Cameo ("Candy"), In stereo.

12:30
O
®
FRIDAY N IG H T VIDEOS
“ Family Tiea" co-stars Michael J.
Fox end Justine Bateman Introduce
videos by the Bar busters ("Light of
the Day"), A/etha Franklin ("Jim m y
Lee'*). Bon Jovi ("Livin' on ■ Pray­
er"), Peter Gabriel ("B ig Tim e"),
Beastie Boys ("Fight for Your
Right"). In slereo.
UN TO UC H ABLES
MOVIE "Hush... Hush. Sweet
Charlotte" (196S) Bette Davie, Oli­
via da Havllland.
® (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

8

8'30
( D O MR. BELVEDER E Kevin's re­
lationship with a girl Is threatened
when she becomes convinced that
he’s seeing his sister's friend, g
SO (10) W A L L E TR E E T W EEK
"Which Junk to Keep Away From"
Ouesl: James Grant, editor of
Grant's Intareat Rate Observer.

ANO

93 M OTORW EEK ILLU STR A TED
Motor sports competition, ranging
from airplanes and autoa to snow­
mobile*, will be examined In Ihle
weekly series, plus e "Racer Ot The
Week" segment and profilee ot rac­
ing personalities. Host; Dave Deepain (Taped)

7:05
0 3 SAN FO R D AN O SO N

F e b ru a ry 7

Guest; James Gram, editor
Grant's Interest Rate Observer.

of

B (8) IT S A LIVING
92 NBA SLAM-DUNK CO N TEST
ANO THREE-POINT SHO O TO UT

finds one gueet he likae and one he
dislikes, and gets caught m com­
promising situations by hla wife Sy­
bil.

B ® C R B 4 I S TO R Y Luca plans to
use e union strike lo gain control ol
the Lae Vegae caalnos. In stareo.
( D • FALC O N C R E S T Manatee
strange behavior costs Lance a
8:08 .
chance tofoinan exclusive club, g
&lt;B BEVER LY M U M 1 H0 • S T ARM AN A hitchhiker's se­
cret leads George Fox closer to ap­
6:30
prehending Star man. g
NBC NEWS
■ (11) INN NEWS
C M NEWS
■ (10) OPEN A L L HOURS
B ABC NEWS q
(11) T O O C L O S E FOB C O M ­ S (8) MARY TY LE R M O O R E
FO R T Andrew's hungry and hit
10:30
nursing mother I* at work, 10 Henry ■ (ll)B O B N E W H A R T
take* the baby to the photo »es- ■ (10) TW O RONNIES

9 3 ANO Y GRIFFITH

SATURDAY

5:35

(10) M ACNEIL / L IH K K
NEWSHOUR
a (8) KNIGHT NOCR

i

__________________

1:05
9 3 NIG HT TR A CKS

1:30
® O NEWS
■ (11) BIZARRE Sketches: Super
Dave goal street dancing; Little
Stevie Byner.

2:00
■
®
A M E R IC A N B L A C K
A C H IE V E M E N T A W A R D S O ut­
standing blacks In athletics, busi­
ness and the professions, dramatic
arts, fins ana and public service are
recognized In this eighth annuel
presentation from Hollywood. In­
cludes ■ musical tribute lo Net King
Cole end performances by Little
Richard. James Brown end George
Benson. Hosts: Natella Cole,
Oeorge Benson. (Taped)
0 ( 1 1 ) DUKES O F HAZZARD

2:05
O

NIG HT TR A C K S

3:00
0 o M OVIE "The Assassination
Bureau" (1969) Oliver Reed. Diane

B

g.

( 11)BJ / LOBO
0 ( 8 ) NIG HT O W L FUN

M ORNING

5:00
B BARMABY JONES
(11) CNN NEWS

S

5*5

S 3 NIGHT TRACKS

5:30
■ (11) CNN NEWS

6:00
KIDS ARE PEOPLE TO O
(11) CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
M ONfTOfl REPORTS

■ (11) MOVIE "Thunderbolt And
Lightfool" (1974) cunt Eastwood.
Jeff Bridges. A thief robe the same
bank tor the second time when he
can't find tha money he stole the
firs! time.

(10) GROWING YEARS
(8) MID-DAY BARGAINS

*

( 8 ) SUNRISE SHOPPING A T A

_

SAVINGS

6'30
B ® MUPPETS
0

O

KIDCO T V

o (11) ITS YOUR BUSINESS
93 BETWEEN THE UNES

7:00
® K IO O VIDEO
(11) THREE STOOGES
G ET8M A R T

S
O

(£ )

7*30
y o u n g u n iv e r s e

( D O THIRTY MINUTES
9 3 HOGAN'S HEROES

1:00

o ® WRESTLING
ffi O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Vltlanova at Georgetown (Live)
0 B MOVIE "The Maltese Fal­
con” (1941) Humphrey Bogart.
Mery Aator. Baaed on the novel by
Dashletl Hammett. San Francisco
prtvata ays Sam Spade become*
caught up In the search for ■ price­
less, )ewef-*ncrust*d statu*.
B (10) EARTH, S E A ANO SKY

1:30

S

(10) EARTH, S EA ANO SKY
MOVIE "They Died With Their
Boots O n" (1941) Errol Flynn, Olivia
de Havllland The events that led up
lo the Battle of Little Big Horn In­
volving General Custer end Chief
Sitting Bull ere explored.

8:00

) ® KISSYFUR
) O BERENSTAIN BEARS g
) ■ W UZZLESg
I (11) IMPACT
1(10) LAP QUILTING
) W RESTLING

8'30
O ® DfSNEY's'ADVENTURES OF
TH E GUMMI BEARS g
CD Q WILDFIRE
0 O CARE BEARS FAMILY g
O (11) MOVIE "Terzan And The
Amazons"
(1945)
Jo h n n y
Weissmuller, Johnny Sheffield. Ter­
zan becomes involved with en ellwomen tribe.

0 (1 0 ) HOMETIME

9:00
■ QDSMURFS
CD O JIM HENSON’S MUPPET
0 O F U N T 8 TO N E KIDS g
* 3 (10) FLORIDA HOM E GROW N
.12 N ATIO N AL G EO G RAPHIC EX­
PLORER
■ ( 8 ) S H O P -A T-H O M E AN O SAVE

O

9:30
(10) FR U G A L G O U R M ET

10:00
( D a F EE -W E E ’S PLAYHOUSE
0 O R EAL G H O 8 T B U 8 TE R S g
O (11) MOVIE "The Taking Of Pelhem One. Two. Three" (1974) Wel­
ler Msttheu, Robert Shaw. Four
men hijack ■ crowded subway train
and threaten to murder one hos­
tage for every minute the ransom
demand la lata.
■ (10) M AGIC OF OIL PAINTING

10:30
O
®
ALVIN ANO TH E CHIP­
M UNKS
( D Q TE E N W OLF
(D O POUND PUPPIES
0 ( 1 0 ) TH IS O L D HO USE

O®

11:00

FOOFUR
( D O G ALAXY HIGH
0 O BUG S BUNNY A N O TW EETY SHOW Q
■ (10) INDOOR Q AR 0EN S
9 3 M OVIE "Sinbad The Sailor11947) Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Mau­
reen O ’Hara. After landing on an Is­
land, Sinbad discovers treasure
and e beautiful princess.

11:30
■ ® FUNKY BREW 8T E R
® O C B S 8 TO R YBR EAK "The
Double Disappearance ol Walter
Fozbek" Animated. Walter discov­
ers how It Ieels to be an outsider
when he wakes up one morning end
discovers that everyone's a dino­
saur and humans are extinct. (R )g
0 O A LL-N EW EW OKS
0 ( 1 0 } BO O YW ATCH
AFTER N O O N

12:00
O ® LAZER T A G ACADEM Y In
stereo.
® Q HULK H O G AN 'S ROCK ’N‘
W R ESTLING
0 O DANCIN' T O T H E H IT 8 Mu­
sical guest: Veala Williams ("Once
Bitten Twice Shy” ). In stereo.

2:00
■
® LITTLE HOU 8 E ON TH E
PRAIRIE
■
(11) MOVIE "The Mechanic"
(1972) Charles Bronson, Jan-M icheat Vincent. A naw syndicate
member Is forced to kill the man
who taught him how to sat up ‘‘acci­
dental" deaths for syndicate vic­
tims.
■ (10) AMERICAN GOVERNM ENT

2:30
■

EVENING

12:30

O ® AMERICA’S TO P T IN
0 ■ PUTTIN’ ON THE HITS
■ (10) GROWING YEARS

O

S

Some of the National Basketball
Association's m ore notorious
“ stammers” and outside shooters
compete In their respective com­
petition*. from Seattle. (Live)

(10) AMERICAN GOVER N M EN T

3:00
■
®
CO LLEG E BASKETBALL
Norlh Carolina Slat* at Louisville
(Live)
®
O
C O LLEG E BASKETBALL
Miami at Navy (Live)
0
O
PBA BOW LING 1150,000
Quaker Slate Open, from Forum
Bowling Lanes In Grand Prairie,
Texas. (Llvs)
( 10) FACES O F JAPAN
( 8) CO LLEG E BASKETBALL
Tennessee at Louisians State (Live)

S

3:30
■ (10) TONY BROW N S JO UR N AL
The Hrst of ■ lour-part Black History
Monlh special entitled "The Booker
T. Washington Freedom Trail" pro­
files the pioneering educator's early
years.

4:00
O
( I D MOVIE "Bullltl" (1988)
Slave McQueen, Robert Vaughn. A
San Francisco detective tries to
prevent tha murder ol a prospective
witness for ■ political hearing.
B (10) W E R E CO OKIN G NOW

4:30
0 B WIDE W O RLD OF SPO RTS
Scheduled: U.S. Figure Skating
Championships, ladles' competition
(live) from Tacoma, Wash.; sameday reports on tha World Alpine Ski
Championship* (women's slalom)
from Crans-Montana. Switzerland,
and the America's Cup Yachting
Race, from Perth. Australia.
B
(10) M O D ER N M A TU R ITY
Scheduled: a training program for
older entrepreneurs; a profile of the
Baltimore Longitudinal Study on
Aging; historian John Hope Franklin
discusses Ihe U.S. civil rights move­
ment (Pert 1 of 2). q

4:35

8:00
B 0 B N E W 8
(11) SM ALL W O N D ER Bonnie
Brindie Is furious when Vicki com­
petes against Harriet In a "Uttla
Mlsa Shopping MaM" contest.
■
(10) FRUG AL G O U R M E T To ­
day’s menu Inctude* green onion
pasta and temoUna dumpling*.
B ( 8) CHARLES IN C H A M E
Charles is reluctant lo ask ■ French
foreign exchange student for ■
date.

S

6*0
■

® NEWS
® B CBS NEW S
0 O A B C NEW S □
■ (11) NEW G ID G E T Gldgefs role
on ■ popular T V soap opera (parks
trouble on tha set.
■
(10) H O M E D M E Successfully
designing ■ kitchen. Including the
removal end replacement of cabi­
nets end couriers, q
B ( 8) ONE BIO FAM ILY Kata's in
for a disappointment when eh*
breaks a date with the neighbor­
hood nerd.

7:00
■ ® TH R O B Zach steals Sandy'*
brilliant Idea for a music video.
® O HEE HAW Co-host: Hank
Williams Jr. Guests: Sawyer Brown,
Sweethearts of tha Rodeo.
0 O RUNAW AY W ITH T H E M CH
AN O FAM OUS (Premiers) Tours of
exotic locations around the world.
The first episode features Bob
Hop* In Tahiti and ectresa Maud
Adam* vialtlng the Italian coastal
resort Poslteno. Host: Robin Leach.
B (11) T E D K N IG H T S H O W Lisa
learns an Important lasaon when
she spends too much money on lot­
tery rickets.
8 (10) IN SEARCH O F AN C IEN T
A S TR O N A U TS This special sup­
ports the premise that early spec*
travelers visited Earth befor*
recorded Urn* and profoundly al­
tered the life of primitive man.
B ( 8) DEMPSEY A M AK EPEACE
Dempsey sets out to determine the
connection between ■ New York
police commissioner end e London
robbery ring. (Part 1 ot 2)

B ®
CDO

FLORIDA’S W A TC H IN G
W HEEL O F FO R TU N E
B (11) 9 T O 5 Bud suffers from •
midlife crisis.

7:35
9 2 W RESTLING

8:00
O ® F A C TS O F LIFE While on ■
ski trip, Blair runs into a childhood
friend who's celebrating hla upcomwedding. In stereo, q
O O U TLA W S The Outlaws' lat­
est assignment involves protecting
■ large parcel ol land scheduled lo

S

become a nature preserve.
0
O
SIDEKICKS Ernie tracks
down an ax-con who seriously Inlured Rizzo, q
B (11) MOVIE "Topper" (1937)
Cary Grant. Constance Banned.
The ghosls ol a sophisticated, funloving married couple return to
Earth to complicate the life of a
wealthy man.
B (10) PROFILES O F NATUR E
B (8) S TR E E T HAW K

9 3 SALTW ATER ANGLER

5:00
O ® PGA G O LF Hawaiian Open,
third round, from Wallas Country
Club in Honolulu. (Live)
®
O
8 P O R T 3 S A TU R D A Y
Scheduled: Tony Montgomery vs.
Donald Curry for I ha USBA Junior
Middleweight title, scheduled for 12
rounds, from Las Vega*. (Live)
■
(10) W ASHINGTON W EEK IN
REVIEW Q
B ( 8) MAMA'S FAMILY Mama vies
lor the title of Grandma USA.

5:05
9 3 FISHING W ITH ROLAND MAR­
TIN

5:30
O
(10) W ALL STREET W EEK
"Which Junk lo Keep Away From"

7:30

8:30
O ® 227 Sandra leaks Mary's
help whan her straight-laced
mother visit*. In stereo.
0
O SLED G E HAMMER! Dori
Doreau undergoes ■ bizarre per­
sonality change. In stereo, q
B (10) ARTHUR C . C LA R K E’S
W O R LD OF S TR A N G E POW ERS
Topic: magical spell* thal end In Ill­
ness or daath.

B

9:00

® G OLDEN GIRLS The room­
mates reminisce about the wacky
adventures they've shared. In iter• o .q
® O MOVIE "A Place To Call
Home" (Premiere) Linda Levin,
Lane Smith. Frustrated by the curreni state of American society, a
large family buy* a aheap ranch In

rural Australia, not realizing Us con­
dition or the problems awaiting
them q
0 B OHARA Ohara helps a trou­
bled youth who's linked to an Illegal
arms-trefflcklng ring, q

B (10) UNOCRSEA WORLD OF
JACQ UES COUSTEAU
B (8 ) FATHER MURPHY

9:30

B

®
AMEN The choirmaster
confesses that ha had an affair with
a woman In tha congregation, in

B®

10:00

H U N TE R Dae Dee has rea­
son to believe that her husband’s
death was not manslaughter, but a
contracted kHling. In stereo, q
0 B SPENSER: FOR HIRE Rita
regrets having Introduced Spenser
to an attractive chant, q
(11) INN NEW S
(10) D O C TO R W H O "Slate Of
Decay" Imprisoned In an alternate
universe, the Doctor and Romans
land on a planet where science hea
been suppressed by a barbaric ty­
rant.
B (8) BONANZA

«

10*5

93

NBA LEG EN D S CLASSIC Bob
Cousy. Watt Frazier. Oscar Robert­
son and John Havllcek are among
tha former NBA greets scheduled fo
take part In Ihla "old-timer*" game,
from Seattle. (Same-day tape)

10:30
BdOBOBNEW HART

11:00
)® ® a O D B N E W 8

fB&lt;i

I (11) MAUDE
) (8) BARGAINS TONIGHT

11:30

a
® L A T E N IG H T W ITH DAVID
LE TTE R M A N "Fifth Anniversary
Special" Scheduled gueata Include
"Lets Night's" Chris Elliott and
comics Jay Leno and Carol Laifer;
Jo* Cocker, Bryan Adams, Wilson
Pickett. Herbie Hancock, Paler
Frampton, Dizzy Gillespie and Fred­
die Hubbard appear with the "Late
Night" band; elio, clips featuring
Dolly Parton, Char and Johnny Car­
son. In stereo.
® Q S TA R TR E K
0 O LIFES TY LES O F TH E RICH
A N D FAM OU S Scheduled: Ihe Bev­
erly Hills Hole! (Pert 1 of 4); Bill
Cosby at ■ celebrity tennis tourna­
ment; Bavaria's Prince end Prin­
cess Von Thurn Und Taxis; actress
Nancy Dusaautt ("To o Close lor
Comfort” ).
B
(11) M OVIE “ The Seduction
(1982) Morgan Fairchild. Michael
Sarraztn.

B

12:00

( 8) N IG H T O W L FUN

12:05
9 2 NKJHT TR A C K S ; C H A R TB U STER 8

12:30
® Q U N TO U C H A B LES
0 O M OVIE "The Deadly Track­
ers" (1973) Richard Harris, Rod
Taylor

1:00
B ®

O FF T H E W ALL

1:05
(ED NIG HT T R A C K S Included: Iggy
Pop ("Real Wild Child"); Tlmbuck
3 * ("Lite I* Hard” ), Sieve WInwood
("Th e Finer Thing*"); Pretender*
("Room Full O l Mirrors"). In stereo.

1:30
B
®

® M TV VID EO CO U N TD OW N
B NEW S
B (11) M OVIE "Mountain Man"
(1980) Charlton Haslon, Brian
Keith.

2:05
9 2 N IG H T TR A C K S

2:30
0 Q M OVIE "Blood. Sweat And
Fear" (1975) Lee J. Cobb. Franco
Gaaparri.

3:00
B

( 8) NIG HT O W L FUN

3:05
9 3 NIG HT TR A C K S

3:10
f f i (11) M OVIE "The Wild And The
Free" (1980) Granville Van Dusen.
Linda Gray.

4:05
9 2 N IG H T TR A C K S

4:20
0
Q
M OVIE "G o Ask Alice"
(1973) William Shatner, Jamie
Smith Jackson.

�Febru a ry 8

SUNDAY
MORNING

9:00
OBRANOCO
(11) CNN n e w s

S
O

5:09

n ig h t t r a c k s

5:30
( 0 ■ M M C U L T U M U.8.A.

0 |1 1 ) CNN NEWS

6:00

S

LAW ANO YOU
VWWNOtNT ON N u m m o N

|(11) IMPACT
CNN NEWS
I (I) SUNRISE SHOPPtNO AT A
■AVINOS

6’30
■ ® FLORIDA'S WATCHtNQ
5 ) 0 FOR OUN TIMES Orlgnxlty
broadcast as a ooa-boor spactal In
1977. this program chronldas two
canturM ol black Amarican art.
focusing on lha work and Nvas ol
black artists and tha pr oblama Ihay
axparlancad. (fl)
( D O ESSENCE
(11) W.V. GRANT
0 WORLD TOMORROW

0

7:00

o

a) r s COMPANY

CD 0 ROBERT SCHULLER q
0 0 COVER STORY
0 (11) BUGS BUNNY ANO PORKY
PIG
93 IT 18 WRITTEN

7:30
0 HARMONY ANO GRACE
0 JIMMY SWAOGART
(H )P O P EY E

1

0 3 ) V O C E OF VICTORY
0 O WORLD TOMORROW
O (11) WOODY WOODPECKER
O (10) SESAME STREET (R) g

6:30
0 ® SUNDAY MASS
3 ) Q DAY OF DISCOVERY
( D O ORAL ROBERTS
0 (1 1 ) JEM

0:00

0 (3
) REAL T O REEL
® O SUNDAY MORNING Schadulad prolUa ol |azt musician Frank
Morgan: tha pllglis ol rafugaas In
ThaUnrd
0
O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANOO
O (11)IN HU M AN 0l0S
O (10) OWL / TV Raising rabbits:
Dr 2sd looks al optical illusions, a
new bask lor an infurad pallean, lha
Hoot Chib builds an InDalabla
spacaship. |R)g
0 ) ( » SHOP-AT-HOME ANO SAVE

0:30
O 3 ) WORLD TOMORROW
ffl O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
0 ( 1 1 ) TOM ANO JERRY
O (10) FRENCH CHEF
93 ANDY GRIFFITH

10:00
O ® VIBRATIONS
O (11) MOVIE "Tha Main Evant"
(1979) Barbra Strsisand. Ryan
O'Naal. A bankrupt partuma com­
pany prasidant Is lorcad to fall back
on har ona ramaming assat - a
prlnfightar who's alrtld lo fight
0 (10) JO T OF PAINTING
93 GOOO NEWS

10:30
O ® T 0 0 A r S BUSINESS
® O FOR YOUR HEALTH "Man
And Cancar"
0 O IT IS WRITTEN
S ) (10) WOODWRIGHT'S SHOP
93 MOVIE "King Of Kings" (1962)
Jaffray Huntar, Robart Ryan. Tha
coming ol Jasus and tha avants ol
tus lit* gsva birth lo a naw raligion

11:00

® O THIRTY MINUTES
D O SPEAK EASY
S&gt;(10) NEWTON S APPLE

11:30
Q ® WRESTLING
® O F A C E THE NATION
® O THIS WEEK WITH OAVID
BRINKLEY g
O (10) GOURMET COOKING
AFTERNOON

O

12:00

® UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC AS­
SOCIATION: FLORIDA BASKET­
BALL
® O AUTO RACING Busch Clash
(Uvai

4:30

PGA QOLF Hawaiian Open,
final round, horn Honolulu. (Live)

O (11) MOVIE "in Tha Custody Of
Strangars" (1992) Martin Shaan,
Jana Alaxandar. A raatlass and
high-strung laan-agar arrastad al­
tar a drunk an binga it lockad In jaM
with hardanad criminals.
O (10) WONDERWORKS "Haclor’S Bunylp" A poor Austrslian
family lights to kaap ona of Its fostar childran, a 6-yaar-old handtcappad boy, altar ■ walfs/a counaalor daclarai Ihalr homa
unauitabla lor tha child. Start Scott
Bartta.g
O (S) MID-DAY BARGAINS

12:30

O ® MEET THE PRESS
(DO

BISKEL A EBERT A THE
MOVIES Schadulad ravtaws: "Light
of Oay" (Michsal J. Fox, Gana Row
lands): “ Black Widow" (Onora
Wlngar. Tharasa RussaH); "Caad of
Wlntar" (Mary Staanburgan. Roddy
McDowaii)

12:45

® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Michigan at Indiana (Uva)

1:00

O

® COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Virginia at North Carolina (Uva)
0 O HEROES: MADE IN THE
U.8JL
O (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Lost Empires" Richard falls in leva
with Nancy Ellis: Uncta Nick Invotves Richard In his plan lo hatp a
sultragatta avida tha law. Sisrs
Colin Firth. John Cattla. Baatla Ednay and Carman Du Sautoy (Part 2
of 7 )g

1:30

m O HANK PARKER OUTDOOR
MAGAZINE

TOM E JERRY AND FRIENDS

8:00

Margret. Claudette Colbert After
marrying into one of New York's
most prominent femmes, former
showgirl Ann Arden’s attempts to
5:00
w m the favor of the family matriarch
(10) FIRING UNE
turn Into an obsession with fitting
(I) WILD. KINGDOM
Into Manhattan's social ante in
iter60 Q
5‘30
® O D C B fQ tito WOMEN The
WRESTLING
women are forced to consider the
(8) WHAT A COUNTRYI Marta
ethics Involved In their Isteat, and
moonlights as a dancer.
most lucfiliv*. iitlgrunont
MOVIE "Romancing Tha
EVENING
Stone" (1M 4) Michael Douglas.
Kathleen Turner. A romantic novel­
ist reluct antty teems with ■ macho
6:00
adventurer m a South Amarican
m om oN Ew s
jungle to ransom har sister with a
0 ( 1 1 ) SILVER SPOONS
fabulous legendary jewel. In stareo.
O (10) TEN WHO DARED "Fran­
cisco Ptzarro" In 1532. Ptzarfo
3 d (10) MYSTERYI "The Return of
landed m Peru, and with a tiny Sherlock Holmes: The Empty
army, managed lo destroy the In­ House" Three years after his appar­
can empire
ent death at Raichanbadi Fans.
0 ( 1 ) STAR SEARCH
Holmes (Jertmy Brett) returns to

m

0®

2:00

0
O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Notra Dsma at Kansas (Uva)
0 ( 1 1 ) MOVIE "Play Misty For Ma"
(1971) Cunt Eastwood. Jassica Wal­
ter An obsessed woman tries lo
force har enactions upon a disc )ockey who Is already involved with in other giil.
O (10) INORIO Narrated by John
Gielgud. Ihls documentary presents
an overview ol Ingrid Bergman's ca­
reer, featuring film clips, home
movies taken by her father, and in­
terviews with Colleen Dewhurst.
Angela Lansbury. Uv Ullmann. An­
thony Quinn and Josa Farrar. (R)
93 MOVIE "Knights Ol Tha
Roundlible" (1°S4) Robart Taylor,
Ava Gardner. Tha famous love tri­
angle ol King Arthur. Lancelot and
Quean Guinevere n brought to lite
In thu tale of sixth-century England.

O

3:00

® SPORTSWORLO Scheduled:
Vlnny Panenia (21-1, 17 KOs) vs.
Roberto Elizondo (30-5. 23 KOs) In
a lightweight bout scheduled for to
rounds (live) from Providence. RI.:
World Mixed Pairs Bodybuilding
Competition (taped) from Toronto.
Canada.
® O NBA ALL-STAR OAME Uva
from Tha Coliseum in Seattle
Q (10) PLEDGE BREAK Regularly
scheduled programming may be
delayed due to pledge breaks
CD (8) MID-DAY BARGAINS

3:15
0 ( 1 0 ) HEPBURN ANO TRACY The
careen and private lives of Spencer
Tracy and Katharine Hepburn are
recalled through him clips trom
movies in which they costsrred
("State ol the Union." "Desk Set")
as well as from those they made
separately

4:00

® O WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled U S Figure Skating
Championships (live) men's, psirs.
and ice dancing programs, from Ta­
coma. Wash.: World Alpine Skiing
Championships (same-day tape)
men’s slalcm trom Crant-Montana,
Switzerland, a report (same-day
tape) on the America's Cup Yacht­
ing Race
0 ( H ) MOVIE "Bonnie And Clyde"
(1967) Warren Beatty. Faye Duna­
way Bonnie Parker and Clyde Bar­
row. a pair of brutal bank robbers,
blaze a bloody trail throughout the
Southwest during the 1930s
0 (10) ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL II
9 J MOVIE "Pride Of The Blue
Grass " (1954) Lloyd Bridges. Vera
Miles. A proud and noble horse out­
does himself on the racetrack cir­
cuit.
0 (8) AMERICA'S BIQQEST BAR­
GAINS

8

8

CD O

5:30
O ® NEWS
_____I CBS NEWS
® O ABC NEWS □
O (11) W HAT'S HAPPENING
NQWII Raj's look-alike cousin
sparks trouble when he escapes
from prison
93 NEW LEAVE IT TO BEAVER Ed­
die Haskell's purchase ol a pizza
parlor turns out lo be a financial
disaster

0

6'50

England determined to bring Prolessor Mortarty'i right-hand men to
justice This episode Ronald Adair
Is murdered Edward Hardwicke
portrays Dr Watson. q
93 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
PLORER Slrael paintar Kurt
Wanner, the collapse of the whaling
industry on the Isle of South Georg­
ia In lha Falkland Islands; killer
beet; a pagan tribe trom the Hindu
Kush mountains In Pakistan
O (•) GLOW: GORGEOUS LADIES
OF WRESTLING

(tO) COUNTRY MEMORIES
9:30
WITH WILUE NELSON Willie Nel­
® Q NOTHINO IS EASY
son hosts highlights from "Austin
City Limits," featuring perform­
10:00
ances by Jinie Fricke, Merle Hag­ ® Q HARO COPY Blikt investi­
gard. Loretta Lynn, the Ricky gates a junior high-school drug
Skaggs Band. Emmylou Harris. ring's involvement In the grisly
John Anderson. B B. King. Kris death ol a teen-ager.
Kriatofferson. Roy Orbison and Ala­ 0 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Lost Empires” Richard's Infatua­
bama
tion with Julie Blane la consummat­
7:00
ed during ■ secret tryst on Christ­
O ® OUR HOUSE Krts wins a ra- mas Day. 1913.|Parl 3 of 7 )q
dio-slalton contest that enables her 0 (9) TALES FROM THE DARKand Gus to visit an Air Forca basa SIDE A young man wants to get rid
(Part 1 ol 2) In stareo q
01 an unwanted guest in his Man­
CD O 80 MINUTES
hattan tpartmenl
m O MOVIE "Tha Liberators"
10:30
(Premiers) Robert Carradtne, Larry
B Scott, in the antebellum South, a 0 ( H ) INN NEWS
plantation owner's nephew and his 0 ( 8 ) NIGHT GALLERY
best Irlend. a slave, join torces to
11:00
lead escaped slaves to freedom via 0 ® ® 0 N E W S
lha Underground Railroad A "Dis­
(11) MAUDE
(10) ADAM SMITH’S MONEY
ney Sunday Movie" presentation
WORLD
93 SPORTS PAGE
&amp; (11) FAIL GUY
93 MOVIE "The War Waoon" O (8) BARQAINS TONIGHT
(19671 John Wayne, Kirk Douglas A
11:15
cowboy defrauded of his gold-rich CD Q NEWS
land plans a special type of ven­
11:30
geance with the help of e gunsling­
0
®
ENTERTAINMENT THIS
er. an Indian, a drunk and a thief
WEEK Interviews with actor Judd
0 (9) MOVIE "The Way Wa Were"
Nelson ("The Breakfast Club") end
(19731 Barbra Streisand. Robert
country singer Ricky Skaggs, Patty
Bedford A young college couple in
Duke and Paul Petersen ("The Don­
the 1930s discover that their politi­
na Reed Show") discuss their expe­
cal differences are strong enough
riences as child aclors. In stereo
lo jeopardize their marriage
CD O WKRP IN CINCINNATI

I

0

7:50

(10) PLEDGE BREAK Regularly
scheduled programming may be
delayed due lo pledge breaks

0 ( 1 1 ) HAWAII FIVE-0
(Q) JERRY FALWELL

11:45
m o SUNDAY EXTRA

6:00
B ® EASY STREET Bobby be­
comes the star witness a I a hearing
contesting the will of L.K.’s late
husband In stereo
® O MURDER. SHE WROTE Jes­
sica narrates her latest mystsry
novel, the story of three bright
graduate students who find them­
selves involved in plegiarism and
murder Q
0 (11) MOVIE "Rio Bravo" (1959)
John Wayne. Dean Martin An old
cripple, a former deputy-turneddrunk. a young quickdraw gunsling­
er and a girl help a sheriff to
outsmart a powerful rancher who
wants lo get his killer brother re­
leased trom prison.
0 (10) NATURE An examination of
the need to balance Ichkeui's stilus
as s migratory wildlife oasis with the
utilization of this important Tunisian
wetlands area for agricultural pur­
poses In stereo q
MAX-YANKEE DOOOLE
' DANDY with J
Cagney on CINEMAX

CINE MAX

XXV

12:00
CD a
CHECK IT OUTI Edna's
mother begins making wedding ar­
rangements alter seeing Marlene’s
engagement ring on Edna's hand
0 ( 8 ) NIGHT OWL FUN

12:15
m O SOLID GOLD "Countdown
'86" IPerl I ol 2) Pertormarces
Kenny Loggins ("Danger Zone").
Nu Shoot ("I Can't Wait"). Ctrl An­
derson and Gloria Lonng ("Friends
and Lovers") Interviews Robert
Palmer, Kenny Rogers, the Monkees in stereo

12:30
8 ®

AT THE MOVIES
CD O UNTOUCHABLES
0 ( 1 1 ) DREAM GIRL U S A.
93 JOHN ANKERBERQ

1:00
8 ® EBONY / JE T SHOWCASE
Interviews Lionel Richie, actor Ted
Lange ("love Boat"), ventriloquist
Willie Tyler with Lester
93 JIMMY SWAOGART

1:15
8:30
B ® VALERIE Atler taking the
proper precautions. David consid­
ers consummating a relat.or.ship
with longtime tamiiy Iriend, Lon
Morgan
(Viewer Discretion
Advised; In stereo q

O

9:00

® MOVIE The Two Mrs Gren­
villes'' iPremiere) (Part 1 of 2) Ann-

m O YOU WRITE THE SONGS

1:30
® O MUSIC CITY U S A.

1:45
® Q MOVIE "The Unlorgtven"
11960) Audrey Hepburn, Burt Lan­
caster

2:00
® ONEW S
93 WORLD TOMORROW

Sanford Horald, Sanford. FI.

Friday, Fob. 4 ,1W7-5

Cloris Leachman:
40 Years After
B j Vernon Scott
UPI Hollywood Reporter
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - ClorJs
Leachman lost out In the 1946
Miss America beauty contest
but she has been a winner ever
since, possibly achieving more
as an actress than any or the
young women who have worn
the crown.
In the 40 years since she
entered the pageant as Miss
Chicago — she was the only
contestant not representing a
stntc — Leachman has ap­
peared in 27 movies, 18 plays
and more than 100 television
shows.
Along the way she picked up
six TV Emmy Awards and an
Oscar lor her role in "T h e Last
Picture Show.'*
To celebrate her four decades
as an actress In films. TV and
theater, Leachm an will be
honored at a testimonial dinner
hosted by Paul Newman. Betty
White and Colunibia-Embassy
Television.
Al the moment. Leachman is
starring In the TV scries "The
Facts of L ife " and in the
two-hour TV movie. "T h e Facts
of Life Down Under."
"It’s not easy for a woman to
succeed at anything for 40
years." Leachman said the
other day. She was only half
kidding.
" I knew exactly what I
wanted to do when the Miss
America contest was over. I
look the train to New York from
Philadelphia. Dad had given
me $60 to enjoy myself for
three days In New York, hut I
had other plans.
“ t( was a ste am in g hot
August day when I arrived at
Grand Central Station. I had
met a press agent. Joe Russell.
In Atlantic City during the
contest. He told me (o rail him
when I got to New York." she
said. "I railed and on my first
day In town he got me a Job as
an extra In a movie. 'Carnegie
Hall.* for $30.
"I went to New York for three
days and stayed for eight
years.”
Leachman laughed as she
recalled that three months later
she won Ihe role of an under­
study In a play titled "M r.
Peebles and Mr. Hooker." It
survived only a few nights, but
tier fortunes changed when she
won the lead role on Broadway
In the hit "John Loves Mary."
It wasn't that simple, howev­
er. Alter the first performance
she was replaced by Ntna Foeti
at the request of director
N o r m a n K r a s n a . But
Leachman stayed on as an
understudy.
"Then along came live televi­
sion. and I worked in tlie
theater at nights and did TV
during (he day." she said. "I
also attended the Actors Studio
and did Maxwell House coffee
commercials."
Leach m an w as lu red to

Hollywood In 1954 to co-star
with Ralph Meeker in the early
Mickey SpiUanc thriller "Kiss
Me Dvadly." It was her first
major rote in a movie.
"B u i it wasn't my first film."
Leachman said. "W hen I was
17 years old Warner Bros,
wrote a part for me in 'Women
at War.* Faye Emerson was the
star.
"I had no doubts I would be
In show business for 40 years. I
tried lo play down the beauty
contest thing while I learned
how to be funny between the
fines In comedy roles. Really,
what I have is a silly bone and
timing."
Over the years Leachman
has starred in four television
series, "Lassie." "The Mary
Tyler Moore Show." “ Phyllis"
and "The Facts of Life."
Despite steady work In the
theater and TV and 10 movies.
Leachman did not become a
recogn izable face to most
Americans until her brilliant
performance as the pathetic
small town housewife In "The
Last Picture Show" In 1971. for
which she won the Oscar as
best supporting actress.
In all. Leachman has ap­
peared In 27 films.. the two
most recent of which will be
released this year — "Bobo"
and "Hansel and Grctel."
“ I play the mean old witch In
'Hansel and Gretel* and have
the time of my fife." she said.
"In ‘Bobo' I play the mother of
Howie Mandcll, a wolf boy. The
mother ts a real whacko and
was a delight for me.
"W hat 1 like best Is playing
really off-beat, slightly mad
women, like Frau Blcucher in
'Young Frankenstein.' who was
love-starved and more than a
little addled.
"1 don't think of myself as a
trained actress In the sense of
going to school. But I learned
from Ella Kazan at the Aclors
Studio that all actors must take
responsibility for themselves as
performers. And I do take
responsibility for my work."
stie said.
"Another Important thing I
learned for myself: never lo put
my career ahead of my family.
And I'm very proud of that.
" A s for my first year In 'The
Facts of Life,’ it's wonderful.
Like falling back Into a warm
bath.
"If I have my way, l will put
In another 40 years as an
actress before I think about
retirement.”

�Friday, Fob. 4,1187

4— Sanford Herald. Sanford, FI.

DAYTIME

0:46
■ (10) A M . W EATHER

7:00

ftOO
• (3 ) THM WEEK M COUNTRY
MUSIC (MOM)

8 ® r* COUNTRY (tUE-FRI)
(11) CNN NEWS
■EVENLY H E L I U M
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O W OULD A T L A M E (R E )
M O

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■ OOOO MORNMQ AMERICA

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0
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&lt;25

DUNS OF WNX SO N N ETT
(TH U )
■ (11) CNN NEWS
■ ANDY GRIFFITH

0:00
NSC NEWS
SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
EYEW ITNESS DAYBREAK
1 (1 1 )0 0 0 0 DAY1
ICN N N EW S
_ i (S) SUNRISE SHOPPING A T A
SAVINGS

S

7:30

Q MORNING PROGRAM
(11) TRANSFORMERS
(10) SESAME STR EET (R )g

S

8:06
Q I DREAM OF JSANM E

8‘30
(11)FUN T8TO N SS
(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

) ® TH E JUD GE
) ■ DONAHUE
) ■ OPRAH WINFREY
) (11) GREEN ACRES
) ( 10) SESAME STREET (R) □
iVE
) (0) SHOP-AT-HOM E AND SA1

9:05
■

6:05
■ NEW LEAV E IT T O BEAVER Kip
C iM v tf catches the "hitting dlsh m " Irom Ms girlfriend's bast
friend.

0®

6:30

N BC NEWS
® Q C B S MEWS
(7) O A B C NEW S g
■
(11) T O O C LO S E FO R C O M ­
F O R T Henry takee justice into his
own hands aflsr Monro* It raptd by
two woman.

6:35
■
DO W N T O E A R TH Richard
thinks ha hat a hot naw Ham lor hit
mall order bualnasa. In llarao

7:00
■ ® NEW LYW ED G A M E
CD O
PM M AGAZINE A planwcrash victim's story; a man who
makaa draams coma trua.
( S O JEOPARDY
■ (11) BARNEY MILLER
B (10) G R E A T SP AC E R ACE This
tanas staminas man's lutura In
spaca. Episoda 1 looks within tha
spaca programs ol China and tha
Soviet Union as wall as savor si Eu­
ropean counlrlaa. Japan and tha
Unltad Stalaa.
■ ( I ) M OVIE "Tha Thraa Llvas O l
Thomaslna" (1944) (Part 1 ol I ) Pa­
trick McQoohan. Susan Hampshire
Tha Itvas ol thraa people are deeply
aftacted by the apparent death and
miraculous rebirth ol a child's be­
loved cat. A "Wonderful World ol
Disney" presentation.

7:06
DC SAN FO R D AND SO N

7:30
O ® E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N IG H T
Interview with actor Michael J. Fox;
the Ilia ol Marilyn Monroe In ster­
eo.
( 3 ) 0 D A TIN G G A M E
( D O W H EEL O F FO R TU N E
0 ( 1 1 ) BEN SO N

7:35
■

MONEY M O O N ER 3

DO W N T O EAR TH

F e b ru a ry 9

M ONDAY
640

8:35
9:00

hew s

■ (3 ) ( D a (Z ) O NEW S
■ (11) GIM M E A BREAK)
■
(10) M ACNEIL / LEHRER
NEW 8HOUR
■ (•) K N IG H T RIDER

946

■

pirates threaten to destroy a chari­
table ocean reaearch protect, g
■ (11) H A R T T O HA R T
■ (10) PLANET EAR TH An examlnatlon ol how a collision with a
comat could have destroyed the di­
nosaurs; mass extinctions possibly
caused by a “ death star"; a tour of
the tolar system. (R) Q
■
(6) M OVIE "Father Figure"
(I960) Hal Linden, Timothy Hutton.
Based on Ihe novel by Richard
Pack. Altar their mother's death,
two boys are tan! to live with Ihelr
lather, whom they have not seen
since their parents' divorce Ihre
years earlier,

8:06
■ MOVIE “ Death O l A Gunflghter"
(1969) Richard Wldmark, Lana
Home. A small-town marshal stub­
bornly refuses to relinquish his po­
sition even though the town no
longer needs him.

8'30
f f i ■ M Y BISTER BAM Patti de­
cides to play matchmaker (or her
sister Sam. g

9:00
■ ® M OVIE "The Tw o Mrs. Gren­
villes'' (Premiere) (Pan 2 ol 2) AnnMargret, Claudette Colbert. As
Ann’s acceptance among high soci­
ety grows, her marriage collapses,
leading to revelations about her
past, a shocking act ol violence and
an effort by the family to keep Ihe
Grenville reputation spotless. In
stereo, g
( J ) Q NEW HART Larry, Darryl and
Darryl are accused ol stealing a
cow. g
(!) O
MOVIE "The Last Fling"
(Premiere) John Ritter. Connie Sailecca. A bride-lo-be'a last flirtation
belors marriage takes an unexpect­
ed turn when she tails In love with
her p re y .g
0 (11) TRAPPER JO H N . M.O.
CD (10) ANDREA OORIA: T H E FI­
NAL C H A P TER A (limed chronicle
01 underwater cameraman end
deep-sea diver Peter Gimbei's ex­
pedition. assisted by hie wile Elga
Andersen, to salvage the wreckage
*of the ocean liner Andrea Oorta off
the coast ol Nantucket

9:30
® O TH E C A V A N A U G H S There’s
trouble In the Cavanaugh house­
hold when two ol Kit's chorus-girl
friends pay a visit.

8:00

(10) NOVA (TH U )

(10) E YE S O N T H E P R O S:
A M E R K A ’S CIVIL R IG H TS YEARS.
IB S *-1906 (FRI)

11:30

I LOVE LUCY

10:00
(3 ) O
C A G N E Y 4 LA C EY An
armed-robbery gang targets Al­
coholics Anonymous and Al-Anon
meetings, g
■ (11) INN NEW S
■ (■) MARY TY LE R M OO R E

(D ■

■

10:05
MOVIE “ The Wild North" (1992)

_ W EBSTER (R)
(11) MAUDE

) ® SALE O F TH E CENTURY
) ■ HOUR MAGAZINE
) ■ TRUE CONFESSIONS
i(1 1 )FA LLG U Y
I (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (R)

1046
■ MOVIE

1040
■ ® BLOCKBUSTERS
® 0 SUPERIOR COURT
■ (10) W E D AMERICA (M ON. FRI)
■
(10) PROFILES OF NATURE
(TU B )
■
(10) PHENOMENAL WORLD
(W ED)
■ (10) NEW TON'S APPLE (THU)

1140
■ ® W HEEL OF FORTUNE
PRICE IS RIGHT
® ■
FAME FORTUNE 4 RO0 ( 1 1 ) ALICE
■ (10) DISCOVER: TH E W ORLD
O F SCIEN CE (M O N)
(10) AM ERICAN CAESAR (H IE )
(10) T H E BRAIN (W ED)

1

Stewart Granger, Cyd Chartsse. A
group ol Northern fur trappers bat­
tle against nature.

10:30

■
®
A L F Tha Tanner Iamity
comas to A LF's aid whan the furry
alien suffers from amnesia, in ster­
eo.
( D ■ K A T E 4 ALL1E Emma con­
siders attending U C LA so tha can
be near her father, who Rvee In Loo
M A C Q YV ER Contemporary

® LOVE CONNECTION
(11) PETTICO A T JUNCTION

■ BEW ITCHED

S

EVENING

M O

■ (11) DENNIS TH E M ENACE

*

9:30

1040

(11) O X JO S
(10) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

0:30
CSS MORNING NEWS
) (11) CENTURIONS
|(10) FARM DAY
) TO M A JERRY AND FRIENDS

D aytim e Schedule
I*
1
«
21
1

(11) BO B NEW HART
(10) T H E BIRDMEN A documen­
tary on the first World Hang Gliding
Rally in the Himalayas.
O
(•) CAR O L B U R N ETT AND
FRIENDS

12:00

i

® ® 0 (Z )0 N E W t
(11) BEW ITCHED
(-M ) BERGERAC (M ON)
(10) M ASTERPIECE THEA'

(10)SM
IJ mio
n YSTERY! (W ED)

■ (10) A LL CREATURES G REAT
AND SMALL II (TH U )
(10) ANNA KAREMNA (FRI)

S

(t ) MRVOAY BARGAINS

1245

O PERRY MASON (M ON, W EDFRI)
■ CENTENNIAL (TU E)

12:30
WORDPLAY
YOUNG ANO TH E R EST-

8%
S

■ LOVING
(11) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

140

11:00

«

11:30
■
® B E S T O F C AR SO N From
October 1903: actress LUa Minnatll,
humorist Roy Blount and comedian
Bobby Keflon Join host Johnny Carson. In stereo (R)
® 0 M*A*S*H
( T O NIG HT LINE g

12:00

® © S I M O N 4 8IM ON (R)
$
0 NIGHTLIFE Host: Dsvtd
Brenner. Scheduled: Betty White. In
stereo.
■ (11) ASK OR. R UTH Topic: over
90 and single. Queet: actress Angle
Dickinson, g
■ (B) N IG H T O W L FUN

1245
■ N ATIO N AL G EO G R A PH IC EX­
P L O R E R Street painter Kurt
Wanner; the collapse ol the whaling
Industry on the Isle ot South Georg­
ia in the Falkland Island*; killer
bees; a pagan tribe Irom tha Hindu
Kush mountains In Pakistan

12:30
O ® LA TE N IG H T W ITH DAVID
LE TTER M A N Scheduled: comedian
Fred Willard. In stereo.
CD O M OVIE "N o Highway In The
Sky" (1991) Jam** Stewart. Mar­
lene Dietrich.
■ (11) HAWAII FTVE-0

1:10
® O MOVIE Mrs ft* Daughter"
(1979) Clone Leachman. Season
Hubley.

1:30
© (11) BIZARRE Sketches: a deal
mule and his Intarpratar; Mr.
Qodwrtnch, a former evangelist
who heals cars.

2:00
0

(11) D UKES O F HAZZARO

2:05
■ M OVIE "O n *- Minute T o Zero"
(1992) Ann Btyth, Robert Mltchum.

2:20
CD o M OVIE “ Destination Gobi"
(1993) Richard Wldmark. Don Tay­
lor.

2:30
® ■

NEWS

246
© W OMANW ATCH (FRI)

146

340

CENTENNULfMON)
MOVIE (W ED-FRI)

140

• AS TH E WORLD TURNS
(11JF-TR 00P
(10) NEW SOUTHERN COOK­
ING (MON)

I C T S S r a w

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0 ® SANTA BARBARA
® 0 QUIOfNG LIGHT
® 0 GENERAL HOSPITAL
0 ( 1 1 ) 8COOBY DOO w
0 (10) M ISTER ROGER* (R)
0 (0) M NM M Y BARGAINS

346
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B O N E LIFE TO LIVE
(IIJAN O YGR M FTTH
(10) WONOERFUL WORLD OF
ACRYLICS (MON)
(10) JO Y O F PAINTING (TU E)
(10) MAGIC OP OIL FAINTING

{
«

S K lO ) MAGIC OP FLORAL PAINT­
ING (THU)
■ (10) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

2:30

(11) SMURFS’ ADVENTURES
(10) SESAM E S TR E E T(R )Q

«

440

0 ® MAGNUM, PJ.
3 ) 0 TAXI
&lt; ? ) 0 JEOPARDY
■ (11) THUNOERCATB Q
0 (0) AMERICA’S BIGG EST BAR­
GAINS

445
O SCO OBVD O O

4:30
® 0 THREE’S COMPANY
&lt; 2 )0 CARD SHARKS
0 ( 1 1 ) 8ILVERHAW K8 □
' 0 ( 1 0 ) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

® B CAPITOL

Fe b ru a ry 10

TUESDAY

1046
© NBA B A S K E TB A LL Lo t Angeles
Lakers at Sacramento Kings (Live)
(Subject to blackout)

10:30

2

® ® 0 ® O NEWS
(11) LA TE SHOW Host; Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: Ia n recording
artist Wyr.ton tyassails. Emmanuel
Lewis ("W ebster"). In stereo.
■ (10) M O N TY PY TH O N ’S FLYING
CIRCUS
■ (•) BARGAINS TO N IG H T

0
(11) MY U TTL E PONY T f
FRIENDS
0 (1 0 ) SECRET C ITY

DAYS OF OUR LIVES
_ ALLM YCM LDRBN
(11)0fCK VAN DYKE
• &lt; (10)
W W TR * COOKING NOW

EVENING

6:00
0 ® ® 0 ® 0 N E W 8
0 ( 1 1 ) GIM M E A BREAM
B
(10) M ACN EIL / LEHRER
NCW SHOUR
■ ( I ) KN IGH T RIDER

6:05
■

BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6:30
0 ® N B C NEW S
® 0 C B S NEW S
CD O A B C NEW S g
■ (11) T O O C LO S E FOR C O M ­
FO R T Henry breaks hie arm, and
Mr. Wainrlght hires sn over-embllious anisl to help him with Cosmic
Cow.

6:35
■

ANDY GRIFFITH

7:00
0

® N EW LYW ED G AM E
PM M AGAZINE Alan Thick*
("Growing Pains"); tha world's larg­
est shopping mall.
® 0 JEO P AR D Y
0 ( 1 1 ) BARNEY MILLER
0 (10) P LA N ET EAR TH An exami­
nation ol how a collision with a
cornel could have destroyed the di­
nosaurs; mass extinctions possibly
caused by a "death sier"; a tour ol
the solar system. (R) g
0 (0) M OVIE "The Thraa Uvea Ol
Thomaslna' (1904) (Part 2 ol 2) Pa­
trick McQoohan, Susan Hampshire.
The lives ol three people ere deeply
affected by the apparent death and
miraculous rebirth ol a child's be­
loved cal A “Wonderful World ol
Disney" presentation

35 B

7:05
© S A N F O R D AN O SO N

7:30
O ® E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N IG H T
Burt Reynold* discuss** hie up­
coming movies, the Ills ol Marilyn
Monroe In stereo.
® O D ATIN G G AM E
CD O W HEEL O F FO R TU N E
0 (1 1 )B E N 8 O N

7:35
© HONEYM O O N ER S

8:00
O ® M A TLO C K Matlock gals a
second chance to clear tha name ol
a man who was un|ustty jailed seven
years ago. In stereo.
® O I T S Y O U R 20TH TELEV I­
SION ANNIVERSARY. CHARLIE
BROWN Animated / live action. A
look at two decades ol specials
featuring Iha Paanutland charac­
ters; also. Interviews with the voices
behind the scenes end an animated
musical number produced lor the
20l h-anniversary celebration. (R)
CD O W H O ’S T H E BO B S? Tony

enters the boxing ring against a
typing teacher from Brooklyn, g
0 ( 1 1 ) HART TO HART
0 (10) N O VA Within the rain for­
ests ol Borneo, scientists live In
trees among tha orangutan* to
study these human-ilk* apes In
their natural habitat, g
0 (0) M OVIE "Finnegan Begin
Again" (1903) Mary Tytar Moor*.
Robert Preston. The friendship of a
S3-year-old. married lonely-hearte
columnist and an Independent, forlyish schoolteacher blossoms Into
an unllkaly romance.

8:05
©
M O V IE "M a rlow a" (1999)
Jamas Gamer, Gayle Hunnlcutt. Al­
ter being hired by an alluring
blonda to locala har missing
brothar, a privets eye sets oft in
pursuit ot a stripper he Isels Is con­
nected with the disappearance

CD O

8:30

GROW ING PAINS Mike
must make a difficult decision when
he find* himself at a cocaine party.
Q

9:00
0 ® HILL S TR E E T BLUES While
Furiilo't away on business. Bunts
rule* the roost st the Hill Street pre-

(11) BO B N EW H A R T
(0) C A R O L B U R N E TT
FRIENDS

«

10:00
O ® REM INGTON S TEE LE The
newlywed Steeles travel to London
In pursuit ol a stolen painting, but
Roselii blackmails Remington Into
participating In a dangerous mis­
sion (Part 2 ol 2) In starso.
CD Q CAR O L B U R N ETT SPECIAL
"Carol. Cart, Whoopi 4 Robin" Carl
Reiner. Whoopi Goldberg srd Ro­
bin Williams join Carol Burnett lor
an evening ol comedy and music.
0 ( 1 1 ) INN NEWS
0 (10) IN TH E FAC E O F TERROR­
ISM FBI Director William H. Webiler, A B C News anchor Pater Jen­
nings and Los Angeles Times
bureau chief Jack Nelson ere
among the panelists discussing a
theoretical terrorist attack on tha
airport of a fictional Wastarn city.
O (9) MARY TY LE R MOORE

1140

® 0 ® 0 N EW S
(11) L A T E S H O W Host: Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: film critic Rex
Reed. In stereo.
0 (10) M O N TY P Y TH O N ’S FLYING
CIRCUS
0 (0) B AR GAINS TO N IG H T

«

®

11:30

0

®
TO N IG H T S H O W Host:
Johnny Carson. Scheduled: actor
Michael J. Fox ("Family Ties"), mu­
sician Peter Schickel*, in stereo.
® 0 M * A ’ 8*H
(D O N IG H T L IN E g

12:00
® O T J . H O O K ER (R)
CD O
N IG HTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. Scheduled: Joseph Bolo­
gna tod Renee Taylor. In stereo.
0 (11) A S K OR. R U TH Topic: love
and music. Guest: recording artist
Isaac Hayes, g
0 ( 0 ) N IG H T O W L FUN

12:20
©
M OVIE "Chain Lightning"
(1990) Humphrey Bogart, Eleanor
Parker.

12:30

cin ct,

(3 ) O MOVIE "Silltwatch" (Prem­
iere) Lynda Ctrier, Angle Dickin­
son While In Washington to proflla
a prominent senator, a TV news re­
porter is drawn Into the mystify
surrounding her subject's connec­
tion to a house with e disturbing
history.g
CDO M OONLIGHTING Q
0 ( 1 1 ) TRAPPER JO H N , M.O.
0 (10) SOLDIERS: A HISTORY O f
MEN IN B A TTLE Tha evolution ot
war tanks, from experimental preWorld War I models to the modern
radar-controlled machines Narra­
tor: Fradarlck Forsylh.

ANO

0

® L A T E N IG H T W ITH DAVID
LETTER M A N Scheduled, singer Del
Shannon, comedian George Millar.
In stareo.
CD O M OVIE "Goodbye. Colum­
bus" (1999) Richard Benjamin, All
k iitn / ^ r g u u

0 ( 1 1 ) HAWAII FIVE-0

o

1:10

®
M OVIE "Taka Your Baal
Shot" (1992) Robert Uriel). Mere­
dith Baxter Birney.

1:30

O

(11) BIZARRE Sketches: movie
critics, Super Dave's stunt school:
24-hour news networks.

2:00
0 (11) D U K ES O F HAZZARO

2:20
©
M OVIE "Angel Face" (1993)
Robert Mltchum, Jean Simmon*.

2'30
( D O NEW S
CD O M OVIE "Th e Bits* O l Mr*.
Blossom ' (1999) Shirley Maclaine.
Richard Attenborough.
®

S

3:00
0 N IO H TW ATC H
(11)BJ/LOBO
(0) N IG H T OW L FUN

4:00

0 ( 1 1 ) DALLAS

(Z) O

4:10

M OVIE "Dark Alibi" (1940)
Sidney Tolar. Benson Fong.

�■ &gt;
Friday, Fob.«, 1W7-7

Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

W hat's The Real Scoop O n G a ry C o o p e r
Dear Dick: Gary Cooper, quite a few years
ago, ■tarred aa a boat captain with no seaman's
knowledge. It was a great comedy! What was
the morle7 — B.D., Morgantown, W.Va.

complished. and "W hite Christmas" is again being
shown: In fact, it was often on TV thjRpest season.

Ask Dick
Kleinar

Dear B.D.: From what little you have told me. It
sounds like the 1951 release “You're In the Navy
Now." not one of Cooper's best.

Dear Dick: Can yon tell me what Is the type or
weapon that Don Johnson uses on "Miami
Vice”? I say that It la a Bren 10 and my friend
says that it's a .45 automatic. We have a small
bet riding on this. The loser has to shovel the
winner's snow for the next 30 days. Also, can
yon tell me If the gun Is American-made or
foreign-made. — R.G., Westvllle, Ind.
Dear R.G.: I hope for your friend's sake you have a
mild wtnter..For all you gat bufTs out there. It Is a
Bren Ten, as the manufacturer prefers to spell it.
The weapon, which goes for around $600, Is made
by Domaus and Dickson, an American manufactur­
er.

Dear Dick: I am writing In hopes yon can
track down the name of a Uttle girl I saw in a
movie. I have seen the movie many times but
for some reason I have forgotten her name. The

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

6:00
( 2 ) 3 ) a ( D O NEW S
(11) GIM M E A BREAK!

&gt;

(10) M AC N EIL
NEW 8HOUR
S ( I ) KN IGH T RIDER

/

LEHR ER

6:05
©

BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6:30
8 ® N S C NEW S
3 ) 8 C S S NEW S
CD O A B C NEW S Q
8 (11) T O O C L O S E FOR C O M ­
FO R T Henry and Monro* find a bag
ol money and plan lo kaap It, until
Ihay discover that a neighbor'*
homews* robbed.

6:35
&lt;Q) ANDY GRIFFITH

7:00
8 ® NEW LYW ED G A M E
3) a
PM M AGAZINE Brook*
Shiaida; a California man who
brlghtana th* lives ol commutara In
hia homatown.
O T O JEO PARD Y
a (11) BARNEY MILLER
8 (10) W O N D ER W O RK S "Rida A
Northbound Horaa" Carroll O ’Con­
nor portraya a dlahonaat paddiar In
thla waatarn about an orphan’a (Mi­
chael Shea) adventure* altar he
purchase* a horaa. Othara In lha
cast Include Ben Johnson. Andy
Devine and Jack Elam. g
8 ( » M OVIE "The Computer Wore
Tennis Shoes" (1069) (Part 1 of 2)
Kurt Russell. Cesar Romaro. Attar
accidentally gaining access to a col­
lege's computer system, a student
reveals some Iact4 concerning
gambling operations owned by a lo­
cal businessman. A "Wonderful
World of Disney" presentation.

7:05
© SANFO RD AN O 8 0 N

7:30

a

GD E N TE R TA IN M E N T TO N IG H T
Academy Award nomination*; th*
Ilf* of Marilyn Monro*. In stereo.
3 ) Q D ATIN G G AM E
GD O W H EEL O F FO R TU N E
a (11) BENSON

7:35
(Ol HON EYM O O N ER S

8:00
a ® HIGHW AY T O HEAVEN Fear
grips a neighborhood when a half­
way house for th* mentally handi­
capped open*. In stereo, g
3)
N EW MIKE HAM M ER Mike’s
hope for a simple solution to th*
mysterious death of e novitiate nun
is dashed when the woman's exhusband, whom Hammer suspected
all along, is gunned down.
&lt; D 8 P E R FEC T S TR A N G ER S Lar­
ry becomes convinced Ihst Balki'a
new friend Is a juvenile delinquent

a

Februorv "

■ ( H ) HART T O HART
B (10) NATIO NAL GEOGRAPHIC
Narrated by Robert Foxworth, this
look al Ilia within th* shadow of
southern 11*1/* Vesuvius volcano
focuses on the Inhabitants of both
the excavated site of ancient Her­
culaneum that was dastroyed In tha
eruption ot A.D. 79 and tha mod­
ern-day fishing vtllags of Pozxuoii.
In stereo g
8
(B) C O LLEG E BASK ETBA LL
Louisiana Slate at Gaorgla (Live)

6:05
3 2 M OVIE “Network" (1976) Faye
Dunaway, William Holden. An aging
television newsman, whose ratings
tre steadily slipping, Is turned Into a
ranting prophet ol tha airwaves by a
crafty female programming execu­
tive.

8:30
3 ) 8 HEAD OF TH E C LA SS Char­
lie's students discuss their thoughts
about Valentine's Day. g

a

9:00

® GIMM E a BREAKI Joey s
hero, a T V spaceman, turns out to
be a bigot. In stereo, g
3 ) O M AGNUM , P.I. As his 40th
birthday approaches. Magnum be­
come* Involved In ■ baffling case.
CD O DYNASTY Alex1* files to Los
Angeles to confide In Jeff Colby af­
ter striking an energy development
deal with Michael Culhane. g
8 (11) TRAPPER JO H N . M.O.
8 (10) M YSTERIES O F PERU

a®

9:30

TH E TO R TE L U S Loretta be­
comes frustrated when her career
as a singer appears to be going
nowhere teal. In stereo.

10:00
8 ® 8 T . ELSEW HERE Eliot's la­
ther (Louis Nye) check* Into the
hospital for cancer treatment - with
nls beloved dog In low. g
3 ) O EQUALIZER Time's running
out as Yvetts tries lo learn Ihe Iden­
tity ol th* person who's been giving
Information to her police Inspector
lather. (Part 2 ol 2)
( J ) Q H O TE L Peter s torn between
Christine and his dying ex-wlle; th*
fraternity that Dave once belonged
lo is died In a brutal haring Inci­
dent. g
0 ( I t ) INN NEWS
S ) (10) EYES ON T H E PRIZE:
AM ERICA'S CIVIL R IGH TS YEARS.
1894-1969 A look al Ihraa masa
demonstrations: sn unsuccessful
antl-segregalion campaign In Alba­
ny ( G * ) by the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr.. th* Birmingham (Ala ) Chil­
dren's March and the 1963 Wash­
ington, D.C.. rally at which Dr. King
made his famous "I Had a Dream"
speech, g
8 ( I ) MARY TY LE R M OORE

10:30
© (t l)B O B M E W H A R T

movie was "The Gift of Love" with Lauren
Bacall and Robert Stack, made la 1BS8. Who
was the little girl? — P.P., Coshocton, Ohio.
Dear P.F.: That was a cute tyke named Evelyn
Rudle.

Dear Dick: My wife and I have a bet on this
one. She says that “White Christmas" hasn't
been shown on TV over the last three years due
to some type of litigation Involving Bing
Crosby. Is this true? — K.W., Conroe. Texas.
Dear K.W.: No. You win, although maybe she can
wriggle out of the bet on a technicality. Bing
Crosby's people tell me there has been no litigation,
but for some years the film was not televised. The
owners were waiting until the video was Issued and
became established. That has now been ac­

a
(ft) C AR O L
FRIENDS

B U R N ETT

AN O

10:35

11:00

a ® o new s
L A T E SH O W Host: Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: Pee-wee Her­
man, Roy Orbison. In stereo
8 (10) M O N TY P Y TH O N 'S FLYING
CIRCUS
8 &lt;•) BAR GAINS TO N IG H T
cd

11:30
a
®
TO N IG H T SHO W Host:
Johnny Carson. Scheduled: actor
Tony Darua ("W ho's Ihe Bo**?"),
cellisl Yo-Yo Ma. In atarao.
I M*A*8*H
I NIGHTLINE g

EVENING

6:00
® ( S O 0 9 0 NEWS
(11) GIMME A BREAKI
«
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEW8HOUR
a
(ft) KNIGHT RIDER

6:05
© BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

8:30
0 ® NBC NEW3
&amp; ) Q CBS NEWS
ffl O ABC NEWS g
(11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Through flashbacks, tha

a

Rush family reflects on how they
met Monroe end how they came to
love him in spite ol his silly mishaps.

12:00
S ) O ADDERLY
(D O
NIGHTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. In stereo.
8 (11) A S K DR. R U TH Valentine's
Day special edition. (Part 1 ot 3) g
a (8) N IG H T O W L FUN

12:30
O ® LA TE NIG HT W ITH DAVID
LE TTER M A N Scheduled: actress
Olivia Brown (“ Miami Vic*"): also.
Brooklyn. N.Y.. fourth-graders per­
form ■ mini-opera. In stereo
CD Q M OVIE "Paint Your Wagon"
(1969) Lee Msrvln, Clint Eastwood..
8 (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

12:35
3 2 M OVIE "A l Sword'S Point"
(1952) Cornel Wilde. Maureen
O'Hara

1:10

® O M OVIE "Valantlna Magic On
Love Island" (1980) Janls Paige.
Adrienne Bar beau.
a ( I D BIZARRE Skatches: talking
tombstones: Candid Camera

2:00
a

v

( I D DUKES O F HAZZARD

2:20
3 2 M OVIE "Tha Locket" (1946)
Laralne Day. Qana Raymond.

2:30
3) Q

NEWS

3:00
® O NK3HTW ATCH
© (11)8J / LOBO
a (8) NIG HT OW L FUN

3:20

(2 ) O M OVIE "in Old Chicago"
(1938) Tyrona Power. Alice Brady

4:00
a

(11) DALLAS

4:05
3 2 W O RLD A T LAROE

4:30
© G E T SM AR T

Dear Dick: Who was the actor who played on
the old "Superman" aeries? Is he related to
C h r i s t o p h e r R e e v e , w h o Is t he n e w
"Superman"? — S.P.B., Houston.
Dear S.P.B.: Thai question gets asked so often.
George Reeves — with an " s " — was the old.
Superman. No relation to Christopher Reeve —
without an " s ." And. anyhow. George's real last
name was Bessolo.

F e b ru a ry 12
Charlton Heston and Betty Furness.
f t (11) HA R T T O HART
8 (10) W ILD AM ERICA A look at
the varied wildlife within th* six dif­
ferent ecosystem* lound In lh «
state ol Texas, g
8 (S) MOVIE "Th e Pope Of Green­
wich Village" (1984) Eric Roberts.
Mickey Rourke. Dreams ol escape
from humdrum Manhattan jobs har­
bored by distantly related buddies
ire jeopardised by an ill-conceived
salecracking job that gets them Into
hot water with ■ local crime kingpin.
Nuclear Wari Letters
* From A Deed Man.
FROM U S8R /TO N IQ H T

WTSS

© ANDY GRIFFITH

7:00
8 ® NEWLYWED GAME

3 ) O PM MAGAZINE Actor

Timo­
thy Dalton, th* new James Bond; a
look al the upcoming minlserles
"Amerlka."

(D O

S

JEOPARDY
(11) BARNEY MILLER

(10) N ATUR E An examination ol
the need lo balance Ichkeul's status
as a migratory wildlife oasis with the
utilisation of this Important Tunisian
wetlands area for agricultural pur­
poses. In stereo, g
8 (8) MOVIE "The Computer Wore
Tennis Shoes" (1969) (Part 2 ol 2)
Kurt Russell. Cesar Romero Alter
accidentally gaining access lo a col­
lege's computer system, a student
reveals some facts concerning
gambling operations owned by a lo­
cal businessman A "Wonderful
World of Disney" presentation.

7:05
7*30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Dan Aykroyd discusses his role In
"Dragnet ’67"; Leonard Maltln on
th* porlraysJ ol war In film. In ster­
eo

3 ) O DATING GAME

GD O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
CD (11) BENSON

7:35
© HONEYMOONERS

8:00
a ® COSBY SHOW Clin spends
a hectic night In the hotpllal de­
livering babies. In stereo, g
3 ) O SHELL GAME Jennie bets
John that she can tolva a possible
arson case before he does
ffl O OUR WORLO Slones from
September-October 1949 include
the Soviet Union's first sipiosion of
■n atomic bomb. Ihe opening of
"South Pacific" on Broadway, and
the revolution in China which led to
the establishment ol the People's
Republic ol China; also, talk* with

▼

ASv

8:05

5:35

© SAN FO RD AND SON

1:30

Dear L.C.: Susan Seaforth Hayes got a better Job.
She is now on “ The Young and the Restless." But
the people at "D O O L " tell me there Is no divorce in
the works. On the show, Julie is supposedly In
Europe and Is Just being forgotten. (In real life, by
Ihe way. the Hayeses are doing fine.)

THURSDAY

3 2 MOVIE "Ned Kelly" (1970) Mick
Jagger, Clarissa Kaye. An outlaw
raluses to submit to authority as he
carves out his legend on the Aus­
tralian frontier.

a®
a (ID

Dear Dick: Aa a dally listener to “ Days of Our
Lives,” I have a question. I know that BUI
Bayes, as Doug Williams, and Busan Beaforth
Hayes, aa Julie, are really husband and wife.
Now Doug soya JuUe la getting a divorce, and
she Is not In the story. Can you tell me why she
Is not, and what happened? — L.C., LaPorte,
lad.

© MOVIE "Latter* From A Dead
Man" (1966) Rolan Bykov, Yossll
Ryklln Stricken with cancer as a re­
sult ol ■ nuclear explosion, a Soviet
scientist attempts to put what's left
ol his Me in order.

8:30
a ® FAMILY TIES In Chicago.
Rebecca gels steamed when Alex
refuses to tell her what happened
the night before. (Part 2 of 2) In
stereo. Q
8 (10) THIS O LD H O U S E A lour ol
Ihe completed renovations si Ihe
Cape home, g

9:00
8
® CHEERS Sam and Diane
agree lo allow each other one last
fling before they get married. In
stereo g
3 ) O SIMON A SIM ON Th* Simon
brothers try lo locale the kid­
napped star ol a hit detective se­
ries.
® O TH E C O LB Y S Fallon and
Jett worn Channtrvg to atop Interfer­
ing In their lives; Jelt and MUes
learn who fathered Fallon's baby

&amp;

_ (11) TRAPPER JO H N , M.D.
8
(10) G R E A T S P A C E R ACE
American and Soviet oclentlats at­
tempt to answer questions about
the nature ol the universe arising
from recently acquired knowledge

9:30
8 ® NIG HT C O U R T Dan's con­
vinced he has rabies after being bit­
ten by Harry's dog.

10:00
8 ® L A LAW Becker attempts
to charm his secretary out ol her
desired raise in stereo
® O K N O TS LANOINQ The open­
ing ol Lotus Point Is marred by the
danger Jean Hackney poses for
Valene and her children, g
® Q 20 / 20 Scheduled: Interview
with Brigitte Gerney, victim ol an
accident In May 1085 when *h* was
trapped under a construction crane
m Manhattan, repori on sal* sax,

focusing on efforts by the public
and prlvata sectors to prevent Ihe
spread ol AIDS, g
a (11) INN N EW S
8
(10) EXPLORE Explorers lace
headhunters and carnivorous plants
in Ihe jungles ot Borneo in South­
east Asia. (Part t ol 2)
8 ( » M ARY TY LE R M O O R E

10:05
© BREAKING TH E S P E LL lb A
U.S. / SO VIET D IALO G U E Ameri­
can and Soviet nuclear experts
gather lo discus* 1 h* current statu*
of relation* between th* two super­
power* concerning nucieer arms
and joint projects, such as t
manned flight lo Mars.

10:30
8 ( 1 1 ) BOB N EW HAR T
8
(8) C A R O L B U R N E TT
FRIENDS

ANO

11:00

a ® 3 )a ® a news
a (11) LA TE SH O W Host:

Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: actor Don
Amec he. Jeff Smith ("T h e Frugal
Gourmet"), comedian Louie Ander­
son. In stereo.
O (10) M O N TY P YTH O N S FLYING
CIRCUS
a (8) BARGAINS TO N IG H T

11:05
© MOVIE "Logan’s Run" (1976)
Michael York, Jenny Agutter. Lo­
gan. a young man living In a futuris­
tic society, Is assigned to discover If
life exists somewhere beyond his
sheltered city.

11:30
8
®
TO N IG H T 8 H O W Host:
Johnny Carson Scheduled: tennis
player Boris Becker, singer Jos*
Jose, Him critics Gene Sisk el and
Roger Ebert. In stereo.
3)OM*A*S*H
CD O N IGHTLINE g

12:00
3) O

NIG HT H E A T
CD O N IG HTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. In stereo.
8 ( 1 1 ) ASK DR. RUTH Valentine’s
Day special edition. (Part 2 of 3 ) g
© ( 8 ) NIG HT O W L FUN

12:30
e ® LA TE N IG H T W ITH DAVID
LE TTER M A N Scheduled: actress
Jane Seymour, blues guitarist Al­
bert Collins. In stereo.
CD Q MOVIE "Young Mr. Lincoln"
(1939) Henry Fonda, Alice Brady.
© (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

1:10
3) O
MOVIE "The C ity" (1976)
Robert Forster, Jimmy Dean

1:30
© (11) BIZARRE Sketches a blind
organ grinder; the Bigots: the U S
Gentlemen's Football League

1:35
© MOVIE "Best O l The Badmen"
(1951) Robert Ryan, Claire Trevor.

2:00
© ( 1 1 ) DUKES O F HAZZARD

_

3 )0

2:30
NEWS

......... .

�IT
•— Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday. Fab. 4. 1M7

G O GUIDE
‘Barefoot tat. the Park.* the tion begins at 8:30 a.m. and the
Nell Simon comedy hit. playing 5-K Walk begins at 9. Entry fee
at Ice House Theatre. 1100 N. of $7 benefits the American
Unscr St.. Mount Dora. Jan. Heart A ssociation , Central
30-31 and Feb. 1 with perfor­ Florida Chapter. For Informa­
mances at 8 a.m. Friday and tion call the AHA at 843-1330.
John Young Planetarium
Saturday and 2:30 on Sunday.
Call the box office at (904) feature show. "Have You Heard
the Stars Tonight?” . Feb. 7
383-4616 for reservations.
Greater Orlando Stamp, th ro u g h M ay 31. M onday
Coin and Poatcard Show. through Friday. 2:30 p.m.:
Jan. 31-Feb. 1. Quality Inn Saturday. 2. 4 and 7:30 p.m.;
High Q. 5905 International Sunday, 2 and 4 p.m.. Orlando
Drive. Orlando. Admission free. Science Center. 810 E. Rollins
St.. Orlando.
Door prizes.
Dinner-Dance sponsored by
Chinese Golden Dragon
Scmlnolc/Sanford
Chapter or
Acrobats and Magicians. 2:30
the
Deborah
Hospital
Founda­
p.m.. Feb. 1. Seminole Com­
tion In support of the Deborah
munity College. Sanford.
Energised Day. Feb. 3. 9 Heart and Lung Center. Feb. 7.
a.m. to 2 p.m.. Orange County Knights of Colum bus Hull.
Agriculture Center. 2350 E. 2 5 04 O ak A v e .. S a n fo rd .
Michigan Ave.. Orlando. Exhib­ Cocktails at 7 p.m.: dinner. 8
its. speakers, slides, lunch, p.m.: and dancing. 9 to 1 to
games, and prizes presented by music by the "Continentals."
O ra n g e C ounty E xten sion Call 323-5152 for ticket In­
Hom em akers. Open to the formation.
Mount Dora Art Festival.
public.
Florida State Fair. Tampa. Feb. 7 and 8. Two Park N
Feb. 4-15. Over 1.000 free Shuttle lots available for trafTlc
entertainment acts. Livestock from H igh w ay 441. Enter­
tainment In Donnelly Park and
shows, rodeo.
Rallrider Club one-day rail children’s art show. Book sale
trip between Winter Park and to benefit library.
Annual Members* Show by
Tampa. Feb. 7. Trip begins 8
a.m.. Winter Park Amtrak sta­ Sanford-Semlnolc Art Associa­
tion. Leave Tampa 7:53 arrive tion open to the public Feb. 8 at
Winter Park 10 p.m. Chartered Sanford Civic Center, noon to 5
bus service, escorts. In Tampa. p.m. Tea served 2:30-4:30 p.m.
Call 644-6912 for reservations, D e d i c a t e d t o t h e l a t e
which are awarded on basis of R o sam u n d e C h apm an , the
show will feature an exhibit of
paid reservations.
Heart Walk *87 followed by her work.
20th C e n tu ry Music
a family health fair. Saturday.
Festival.
Feb. 13-24. Stetson
Feb. 7. Orlando’s Turkey Lake
Park Ecology Center. Registra­ University. DcLand. featuring

...Soaps
Continued from page 3
get Dorian on (h r prison reform commitire Cllnl admitted In court that he's ujewi
that Vlkl (loran'l remember him

RTAN'S HOPE
Jacqueline confronted Krlk (Joel with
Ihe fact that she Knows lie's her husband
Joe Jacqueline prevented Stolihan and
Joe Irom escaping from Mas's clutches
Jacqueline dldn'1 hellevc Slobhan. who
Insisted that Max ts 'he head of a major
criminal network Alter rrallxlng, that
Slagle Is pregnant. Huger lird to Magglr
and said hr dldn t sleep with Dee Magglr
rushed oil to an abortion clinic after she
saw Huger in a coxy scene with l&gt;er. Max
continued to drug Slobhan'x lea Pat and
Dakota discussed Mrllnda's Illness Max.
who doesn't know Erik's real Identity,
warned Erik (Joel to slay away from
Slobhan

Nikki snrakrd a peek at her medical
rerords and realized that Casey has been
keeping Nlkkt In the daik about her
Illness. Philip returned lo Kav's home allrr
the Judge gave Kay custody of Philip The
lodge refused Kay's petition lo adopt
Philip and to change Ills name to Chan
crllor Philip told Kay and Jill lhal hr
blames them bolh lor his (alhrr's death.
Victor's detective reported lhal Hirer's no
irro rit ol Ashley having arrived for her
vacation In Uarhados. Ashley had a dream
In whk ti Victor tried lo r t w u r her from
the menial hospital Paul told Evan lhal
Karen iM lchrllr) may never rrgaln h rr
memory. Lauren worried that Evan will
•ell Paul und Andy lhal La urrn led Evan In
Karen IM lchrllr) Andy was shorkrd w hrn
Evan said that h r and M lchrllr iKarrnl
have a daughter. Delay. Te rry to Jealous of
Danny's relationship with Cricket. Ashley
resisted Julie's physical advances.

the touno
and

f.

THE RESTLESS

p.m.. S u n d a y . W e d n e s ­
day .Thursday. and Friday.

Central

Rol l i ns Col l e ge Ca mpus .
Winter Park, through March
29. Saturday and Sunday. 1-5
p.m.. Tuesday through Friday.
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission
free to the public.

Square Dance for singles.
1:30-4:30 p.m.. each Sunday.
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N. Triplet Drive with. Peter
Richard, caller. $2 donation for
lessons and refreshments. For
more Information call Louise
Slmunck at 767-5411.

PM
9 PM
7

Zoo.

adults. $3.50: children 3-12.
$ l .50: and senior citizens. $2.

Handicap Singles
Nlghtblrda Dance for 18 years
and older. Westmonte Park.
500 Spring Oaks Blvd.. Alta­
monte Springs, every second
an d fourth Friday. Hours.
7:30-9:30 p.m. Admission 35
cents. Call Claudia Harris.
Westmonte Park. 862-0090.

“ Let Th e Professionals Dp It”

ECHOLS TREE SERVICE
LIC E N S ED - F U L L Y IN SU RED - S ATISFAC TIO N G U A R A N TEED

• COMPLETE TREE SERVICE
. FREE ESTIMATES • STUMP WINDING
. 24 HR. ANSWERING SERVICE
2405 Grandvitw Avsnue

Sanford, FL 32771

D h rm o

Contact Pete or Terry Echols r l l U l

323-2229

General Sanford Museum
and Library. Fort Mellon Park.
520 E. First St.. Sanford. 2-5

Irj Floyd The a tre s I

bored

W it h

?

tv

RAM m u i

QQc1

EDDIE MURPHY IS BACK

" I T

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GOLDEN CHILD]
K A M !W N II

ST€V€ MARTIN
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CHOSE

Me.
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iThree
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\ n i/ i6

MUVIUANO fl

SOMEWHERE OH EARTH.

DON’T JUST SIT THERE
Go to Movie Adventure’s II and choose the movie
you want to watch from their great selection.

J

TI-»€

vovagc hom c

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frH F S F A ftfH F O R S P O C K

r VCR &amp; 3 MOVIEST “ 5 ~ 0 0 0 F F 1
FOR 3 DAYS
ALL
ONLY $ 19.95 MEMBERSHIPS

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Florida

Highway 17-92. Lake Monroe.
Open dally. Weekend animal
feeding times, primates. 12:30
p.m.: otters. 2 p.m.: cats. 3
p.m. Elephant rides weekends
and holidays. Video camera
rentals a va ilable . N e w ad­
mission prices Including tax:

Caider “Tapestries’* exhib­
it. Cornell Fine Arts Museum.

e y r o f K iA

SANTA BARBARA
Mason askrd Tori to marry him after
C.C. learned that Tori ts pregnant Mason
nixed C.C.'s offer lo pay Mason big bucks
to marry Tort since C.C. suspects that Tort
ts currying Crux's baby. Julia learned that
she's pregnant by Mason. Jake erashed
his truck while driving llayley home.
Jeffrey and Kelly eluded Ketlh and his
men. who tried lo rapture Kelly during a
costume ball held at the museum where
Kelly and Jeffrey have been hiding out. In
a roundabout way. Crux proposed mar
rlage ullrr he and Eden patchrd up their
past differences. Ketlh refused to take
money from C.C.. who Irtcd to pay Ketlh
to lay off Kelly s ease As C.C. planned.
Gina gleefully rmbexxlrd money Irom
C C .'s bank account Caroline to grateful
thal Jane to giving her another rhancr to
be her mother Jeffrey drnletl Kelly s
accusation that he's only helping her to
collect a reward from C.C.

Craig Maddox, baritone: "A n
Evening of Benjamin Britten:"
Stetson Concert Choir. Jack
Coldlron. baritone, and the
Audubon String Quartet. Per­
formances at 8 p.m. each night
In Elizabeth Hall. Admission by
$2 donation for School of Music
Fund. Free performance by
Stetson music students. 3:30
p.m.. Feb. 23.
Black Artists Show - Four
Plus Four. Crcaldc Fine Arts
Gallery, through Feb. 27. 600
St. Andrew Blvd., Winter Park
(off Aloma Avenue).

M LOONIES!, NUim SJ.M OSr
OUTRAGEOUS MOVIE MUSICAL
COMEDY IN YEARS."

Exp. 2-5-87

1 YEAR
M E M B E R S H IP W ith
P roof O f P u rch a se
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Exp. 2-5-87

ANNUAL
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A N Y O N E W H O IS
A M EM BER OF
A N O T H E R C LU B .

'movie" adV entures”ii
2491 S. Airport Blvd., Sanford

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at a s t h

st.

New Winn Dials Plata)
OPEN 7 DATS A WEEK

irv rr M R a n r A T E

(D E L T O N A B LVD . A T L A )

�</text>
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___

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Sanford, F lo rid a — Tuesd ay, M a rc h 3, 1987

R e c o r d T u rn o u t P r e d ic t e d F o r F e s t iv a l
By K aren T alley
H erald S ta ff W riter
With turnout projections reaching as high as
10.000. Sanford's "St. John's River Festival" this
weekend may be the largest outdoor event In the
city's history.
A combination regatta, arts and crafts fair and
plant sale are planned to attract visitors from
across the state, sponsors say.
The 10.000 attendees projection comes from
considering attendance for comparable events
and estimates offered by their planners and
participants, said Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce Executive Director Dave Farr.
The greater the response, the more economic
benefits for Sanford through dollars spent on
lodging, meals and shopping. Farr said.
The Riverfest regatta will be held Saturday and
Sunday, from Marina Isle. Races are to begin at
noon and run until about 5 p.m, both Saturday
and Sunday. The arts fair will be held those days

Apartments
Get Go-Ahead
Despite P&amp;Z

In nearby Ft. Mellon Park. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The
plant sale Is set for Friday and Saturday, across
from the lake on the civic center patio. 8 a.m. to 5
p.m.
The Rlverfes* is a cooperative elTcrt between
the Sanford Chamber of Commerce, the Friends
o f the St. Joh n's River, the Sanford Art
Association and Marina Isle businessman John
Smith, w hr Is chairing the regatta.
"It's all one big festival," Farr said. "W e ’re
planning this as a terrific weekend In downtown
Sanford."
Farr also said "careful planning,” Including
police assistance, will be relied on to handle
anticipated crowds.
Indications arc as many as 100 sailboats,
catamarans and sallboarders will take to the lake
this weekend, regatta planners say. Farr said
about 160 artists and craftsman are expected in
Ft. Mellon Park for the fair, which will be hosted
by the chamber and Sanford Art Association.

»»
nvfAM

i
^ViBWSIfTy
—— Wf MIN

F a y Siler displays her raccoon painting and
Ralph Russell shows baskets that w ill be for
sale at festival.

On 3-2 Longwood Vote
i *y.*■

O ffic ia ls

Hanford commissioners Monday unani­
mously overturned a Planning and Zoning
Board decision that had denied approval for
construction o f a 140 unit apartment
complex.
Commissioners' approval o f developer
Joseph (Cantor's site plan came after they
were told by engineering staff the project’s
design meets all applicable city codes. P
members voted 5*4 on Feb. 19 to deny the
plan, based on stairs’ reservations at the
time, an well as several other concerns cited
by board member Brent Carll.
Staffs' reservations have since been ade­
quately addressed. Planning and Engineer­
ing Director Bill Simmons said Monday. The
roughly 95 million project will be built this
year on a 10-acre parcel bounded by
Georgia and Hartwell avenues and '24th and
25th streets. Kantor said

O K

Although Monday's commission session
was not a public hearing, two local resident*’''
turned out to oppose tnc project, saying It
will add to the area's existing drainage
woes. The residents’ assessment was dis­
puted by Simmons, who said the project's
d e s ig n has s u ffic ie n t m ea su re s fo r
stormwater to run-off without Impacting the
surrounding area.
Street Superintendent Jerry Herman also
said the city has plans this year to Improve
the overall area's drainage by installing new
piping and drainage lines. According to
comments made by commissioners as well
as the residents, drainage in the HartwellGeorgia avenue area has always been a
problem, particularity near 20th Street.

The plant sale Is a ' chamber beautification
committee effort and the regatta Is being headed
by the non-profit Friends o f the St. John's River.
The regatta Is hoped to draw attention to the
Friends of the St. John's efforts to promote the
river's preservation, said the group's president.
Daryl McClain. The regatta's starting point. Lake
Monroe, lies along the St. John's River system.
In addition to attracting attention to the St.
John's preservation, and hopefully expanding the
group's membership, the Riverfest "w ill bring
new people to Sanford, hopefully Increase their
Interes* In the city and make them want to come
back." McClain said.
All events are planned "to draw attention to the
river: how we use It and how we care about It."
Farr said.
The lakeside arts fair will feature local artists as
well as those from nil over the county and
Canada. Farr said. Displays will provide "a bit of
See FE STIVA L, page 12A

Joe B ak er and w ife Jo A n n of Lake
M a r y p ro u d ly d isp la y second-place
trophies their Central Flo rida Polo C lub
team of four received Sunday in polo
tournam ent at Lee Vista Polo Fie ld |ust
north of O rla nd o International A irp o rt.

Baa OO-AHEAD, paga 12 A

P ro b e

H erald S ta ff W riter
In the latest political maneu­
t o B it u p t h o r n a n d
vering In Longwood. City Com­
B a y I 'm d c r i m i n a l
m issioner H arvey Sm erllson
moved for an Investigation of the
-D a y * G u n ta r
background of all five city com­
m issioners. The motion was
approved 3-2.
Waller's wheels.” Gunter said
Commissioners David Gunter after the vote. "H e can't pass it
an d L y n e tte D en n is v o te d
on to the police department or
against the probe.
get court records unless there Is
It is to be carried out by City evidence o f criminal activities.
Administrator Ron Waller, who
"T h e y are not going to set up
Is already Investigating the city's there and say I'm a criminal. If
they have proof let them come
HoctM
toyTtm QkaceocBS police chief at the request o f Mrs.
Dennis.
out with it Instead o f circulating
B aker, a fo rm e r Sanford m a y o r, and
“ I w an t an u n biased In­ unsigned letters and making lies
vestigation, tell It like It Is," and Innuendos. They think by
Jo A n n advance to S tra w b e rry Festival
Smerllson said.
Polo To u rn a m e n t set M a rc h 14-15 at
Smerllson. who has been criti­
P lant C ity . B ak er la y s polo's new to the
cal
o f Mrs. Dennis because she .
_____________________________
a re a , and the 8 -m o n th -o ld C e n tra l
asked for the Investigation of Job. These allegations were origF lo rid a club is gro w ing fast.
Police Chief Greg Manning, said Inally made up by one Individual
with a vendetta and were un­
founded 10 years ago and arc
unfounded now ."
C ity A tto rn e y Ann C olb y
advised the commission that
Waller would have only limited
Jurisdiction. Whatever an in­
house was Kimberly Ann Hodge, 19, w
vestigation turned up he could
apparently heard a prowler and dialed I
take no action unless the com ­
911 emergency number. Police respond
mission wanted it and he could
to the scene and looked for the suspect, t
Investigate only In his Jurisdic­
were unable to locate him.
tion under the terms o f the
Police Chief Charles Lauderdale beg
charter. He also would not have
tracking the suspect by exiting the hot
access to public records.
through a broken living room window, t
" I suppose the charter could
apparent point of entry, and followed t
allow an Investigation, but the
trail to a swampy area behind the Linda
affect would be very lim ited,"
property.
Ms. Colby told the commission.
Chief Lauderdale told local workmen
Earlier in the meeting Martin
encountered to keep an eye out for anyo
Israel of 910 Alameda Drive,
looking susplcous and police and workm
Longwood, said. "W e've been
then surrounded the area. The chief call
hearing about a letter, we would
in more men and they sealed off the an
like to have It read Into the
After that, a detective still in the house wl
record about a commissioner. If
Ms. Hodge, apparently noticed the sustx
there Is no such letter, that's the
B M M r s m n. « . 1QA
■ h LONGW OOD, page I2 A

Escapee Suspect In Lake Mary Burglaries
®7
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
An escapee from Georgia, captured after a
chase in Lake Mary. Is being held In
Seminole County Jail on outstanding warrants on various charges, and may be linked
to recent burglaries In Lake Mary, which
Include one at the home o f Lake Mary Mayor
DickFesa.
. ^ c u s to d y today In lieu ofglO.OOO bond
Is Christopher Mullins. 25. o f 222 Lake Mary
Blvd.. Lake Mary. Mullins was being held for
theft in a car-break-ln when he escaped from
the Lowndes County Jail In Valdosta,
°® org la' „
„
,
i.ake Mary police are continuing their
Investigation Into Mullins' possible connectlon with at least two daytime Lake Mary
burglaries in which a combined total o f

more than 94.000 worth of Jewelry and
other household items, such as appliances
and a rifle, were taken. Most o f the loot from
those burglaries has been recovered, according to police, but some of It apparently
was stolen from where the burglar had
stashed It In a swamp.
Mullins, who has at least three cases from
1986 charged against him and seven since
1980. was taken Into custody Feb. 23 at
County Road 427 and the railroad tracks
near Oen. Hutchinson Parkway by Lake
Mary police who had been tracking him
after responding to a 911 emergency call by
a Lake Mary woman who reported her home
hadjust been broken Into.
That Incident occurred at about 9:30 a.m.
at the residence o f Robert Lindsey, 63, o f
130 Calico Road. Lakfc Mary. Alone In the

T O D A Y
S
r P — — fcWBBB
raid f aff Writer
ir Worid «U d "nyet” to
ember Soviet boxing
rhen their sponsor
* free tickets to tour
fCtioo
left the Greater OrS p o rts O rg a n is in g
tt» hunting to find

publicist with Dtaoey. con
firmed that the Russians wen
told to nay like everyone efaa
but said that was not unusua
for most requests for frei
tickets are turned down
BrtnkmoeUer M id the dccltfrrc
had nothin# to do with the fact
the team will be at Sea Work
for their match wtth the Amer

to John Foih of the committee
that helped bring the amateur
1— ton boxers to town to
****** American Olympic eontenders. Fohl said Monday
that be found three people
to pay for the entrance
i for the athletes but he
d late Monday to name
General admission tickDisney Worid cost 926.
ling to Its Information

considered amateurs, the ma
jority o f the cost of havinj
them in the centra! Florida
area for the match la un
denrritten by local corpora
tions. said Col. Don Hull.
Boxing Federation. Monday
the team was dined at the
OUve Oarden in Casselberry
and Saturday were outfitted in
Levi's at Panto U.8.A in San-

H erald S ta ff W riter
Two men arrested by Seminole County Jail
administrator Capt. Jay Leman and his wife
Sandra Leman, following a brawl at Burger King
In Fern Park Saturday, have been released from
Jail.
Leman reported that he and Mrs. Leman, who
Is a former Seminole County sheriff's deputy,
were In their car In drive-ln line at the restaurant
on U.S. Highway 17-92 at about 9 p.m. Saturday
when they saw the two men run In front o f the
building.
The suspects fought each other, he reported. As
one man was punching the other In the head the
Lemans got out of their car.
Leman approached the men and Identified
himself as a policeman and told them to break up
the fight.
Mark Michael Shaffer. 25. o f 121 Lido St..
Winter Springs, who was allegedly punching the
second suspect, allegedly cursed Leman. Mrs.
Leman grabbed Shaffer and Leman grabbed the
second suspect. Carl Ross Lunetta. 28. o f the
same address.
As the Lemans were restraining the suspects.
awaiting arrival o f other lawmen. Shaffer broke

u

b

d

u

e

B

r o

w

l e

r s

away from Mrs. Leman and again reportedly
attacked Lunetta.
They fought and again the Lemans Joined In
the fight to break up the fight.
After that round of fighting, during which
Leman was allegedly knocked to the ground by
Shaffer and caught Shaffer on the neck with a
police club to try to subdue him, Leman held
Shaffer and Mrs. Leman restrained Lunetta.
Shaffer allegedly continued to struggle and a
witness assisted in holding him until other
lawmen arrived. Leman reported.
Shaffer was charged with affray, resisting arrest
with violence and battery on a police officer, has
been released on 91.000 bond to appear in court
March 16.
Lunetta was charged with affray and resisting
arrest without violence. He has been released
without posting bond.
Leman, who received a kidney transplant In
July and returned to duty In November, reported
that In the scuffle his left elbow and hand and
right knee were injured. The Injuries were not
serious and there was no report of Mrs. Leman
having been Injured.
• A reason for the fight betwern the suspects was
not given In the arrest reports.

Brldg*............................ 4B
Classifieds................ 2B.3B
Comics...................... .... 4B
Coming Evsnfs.........
Crossword................ ..... 4B
Dtar Abby................ ...... 1B
Deaths.......................,...12A
Dr. Goff.................... ..... 4B
Editorial.................... .... 4A
Financial.................. ....UA
Hospital.................... ... 12A
Nation....................... .... 5A
People....................... .... IB
Police........................ .... 9 a
Sports.................. 1...9A-11A
Television.................
Weather....................

School Mono
W e d n e sd a y : S a lis b u ry
steak with g r a v y ,
whipped potatoes,
garden peas and carrots,
favorite fruit, fresh roll
and lo w fa tm ilk .

�r

r
l A - S a n f o r d H tr a ld , Sanford, F I,

T u a td a y , M a rc h 3, If f ?

POLICE
IN BRIEF
Bouncer S lothed W ith Knife
B y M a n H e Evicted From Bar
A man who allegedly slashed with a knife the finger and
elbow o f a bouncer who made him leave Fern Park Station,
Fern Park, following a fight In the bar, has been charged
with aggravated battery, carying a concealed weapon, use
o f a weapon In a felony, Improper exhibition of a weapon
and resisting arrest with violence.
The suspect allegedly drew the knife from his pants
pocket outside the bar. He allegedly thrust it twice at
bouncer Kurt David Kaufman. 23, o f Orlando, who was
treated for cuts at Florida Hospltal-Altamonte Springs and
released.
w itnesses reportedly restrained the suspect until
Seminole County sheriffs deputies arrived and tthe struggle
with the suspect continued. The man was transported to
the hospital, but refused to be treated for Injuries received
In the fracas.
Thomas Leland Hedgcock, 22, of Frultland Park, was
arrested at Florida Hospltal-Altamonte Springs at 3:07 a.m.
Sunday. He was being held In lieu of 98,000 bond,

G unm an Robs Yogurt Shop
A gunman who first asked for change then showed a gun
to a clerk at PJ's Yogurt, 4270 Aloma Ave., Winter Park,
took about $158 from that store’s cash register.
The gunman told the clerk to lie down In the back o f the
store before he fled with the cash. She waited five minutes
before telephoning her boss to report the 8:30 p.m. Sunday
robbery, a Seminole County sheriffs report said.

Teens A rre ste d F o r B urglary, P ot
Longwood police who responded to a burglary In
progress call reported finding and arresting two youths
who had apparently been smoking marijuana In a shed
behind a home at 436 Longwood Circle, Longwood. at
about 8 a.m. Saturday.
Police reported smelling marijuana smoke In the shed
and found four marijuana cigarettes and a pipe for smoking
In the suspects' possession.
Arrested along with a 16-year-old boy on charges o f
burglary and possession o f marijuana and drug parapher­
nalia was David Christopher Rodgers. 18, o f 434 Longwood
Circle. He was being held In lieu o f $1.000 bond.

t

•* *

Two Face Charges For
Dumping Raw Sewage
B y Susan L od en
H era ld S ta ff W r ite r
Both the owner of a Lake Mary septic tank
cleaning company and the driver of one of
his tank trucks who was allegedly caught
dumping a load o f raw sewage onto private
property on Oregon Avenue west of Sanford
on Jan. 27. have been ordered to appear in
court to face charges March 6.
Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish
Officer Jesse Baker reported Monday that
both the owner of Sun City Septic Service, of
2040 Richardson Lane, David Gould, and
the driver of the truck, James Frank Davis,
o f 2405 Jefferson Court. Sanford, arc to face
charges of depositing a deleterious sub­
stance into a lake, river or stream and
creating a nuisance injurious to public
health.
They were both served with summonses
Feb. 24. but were not Jailed while awaiting a
hearing. Baker said.
The site where Davis was allegedly caught
dumping about 2,500 gallons o f raw sewage
taken from septic tanks Is about 30 feet
from two drainage canals that lead to the St.
Johns River, Baker said, and that resulted
In the first charge. The sewage. Baker said,
could wash Into the nearby river.
Testa on sewage samples taken from that
site showed the dumping was of untreated

Woman Jailed
For Trafficking
In Cocaine

human waste and no authorization had
been given to dispose of sewage In that way
or at that site, which belongs to Howard
Pomp. Pomp has not been linked to the
waste disposal in any way and officials have
accused Davis of trespassing on Pomp's
property, but he has not been charged with
trespassing.
Davis was spotted by Norman Kenneth
Mims, 44. of 755 Oregon Ave.. Lake Monroe,
at about 3 p.m. Jan. 27 as Davis was
allegedly emptying the tanker truck on
Pomp's property. Mims flagged down a
passing Florida Hlgway Patrol trooper who
confronted Davis and called Seminole
County sheriff's deputies, game wardens
and health department and environmental
services Inspectors to the scene.

The woman was arrested at 10:15 p.m.
Saturday after she allegedly bought one
pound o f cocaine for $32,000 from an
undercover .Altamonte Springs police­
man.
The suspect allegedly arranged to meet
the policeman In the parking lot of Sun
Sun Bank on Palm Springs Drive,
Altamonte Springs. They reportedly ne­
gotiated the deal and the wom an
allegedly handed over the cash and police
turned over one pound o f cocaine to her.
before other police moved In to arrest the
suspect.

Davis reportedly said that site was Just
one o f several unauthorized locations where
Gould had allegedly ordered him to dump
the sewage he cleaned from septic tanks
during his four months as a driver for that
company, Game and Fish Commission
Investigator Michael Wlwl Bald.
Other sites named were Lukas Nursery
and a field across from Jones Electric
Supply. Co., Sanford Avenue In Sanford.
The Investigation was conducted by Baker
and Wlwl, because of the possible Impact of
the dumping on the environment.

In the first sales o f lo tte ry

Betty Jean Inman has been charged In
the cose.

- s a w , Loden

Pool Tournament
For Teenagers Set
A pool tournament for Sanford young
people ages 13-18 Is scheduled to begin
March 9 at the city's Westslde community
center, on Persimmon Avenue.

Lottery Bill Veto Possible
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Lawmakers risk
a veto by tiov. Bob Martinez If legislation to
create a state lottery dilutes the governor's
power to appoint members o f a lottery
oversight commission, a Martinez aide has
warned.
,
Such a veto could well mean a year delay

A 47-ycar-old Lakeland woman re­
mained In the Seminole County Jail
without bond Monday after Altamonte
Springs police arrested her on charges of
trafficking In cocaine and resisting arrest
by obstruction.

tickets.

Meanwhile, legislators say constituents —
especially shopkeepers eager to rake in
lottery ticket sales commissions — are
pressuring them to get the lottery running
as quickly as possible.

Tournament registration runs until March
6. between 3 and 9 p.m. at the center.
Awards will be given to top finishers In
different divisions. Further Information may
be obtained by calling the center office.
322-3161, ext. 292.

WEATHER

Husband Ja ile d F o r Spouse A buse

!

A 64-year-old Casselberry man who fiad reportedly been
drinking allegedly hit his wife when she tried to keep him
from driving away from their home at about 1:50 p.m.
Sunday. The couple's son reportedly restrained the man
and called police.
When Casselberry police arrived at the home o f Anna L.
Banyalskl, 51. they met her and her son, Allen Banyalskl,
21. In the driveway. While police were talking to them the
suspect came out and was reportedly shouting at Mrs.
Bunyalskl and yelling at the police telling them to leave.
Mrs. Banyalskl told police she Is In the process o f filing
for divorce and had tried to keep her husband from driving
away because he had been drinking.
Police kept Banyalskl from reentering the home, because
they feared he might get a weapon inside the home, a
police report said. H e allegedly continued to make threats . . .
arid whenarrestedstruggled with police.
' ' "C?!
Andrew Banyalskl Jr.. 64. of 508 Helm W ay Casselberry,
was arrested at his home on a charge o f battery-spouse
abuse. He has been released on $500 bond.

D rivin g U n d e r Influence A rrests
The following persons have been arrested In Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
—John Charles Willett, 24, o f Orlando, was arrested at
2:10 a.m. Sunday alter his car failed to maintain a single
lane on U.S. Highway 17-92. He was also charged with
driving with a suspended license.
-E lb e rt Ray Poston Jr.. 25, of 210V4 W. 14th St..
Sanford, at 9:20 p.m. Friday, after he failed to dim his car's
headlights on U.S. Highway 17-92, Sanford. He was also
charged with possession o f less than 20 grams of
marijuana and drug paraphernalia.
—Michael Ray Foster. 19. o f Orlando, at 12:53 a.m.
Saturday, after his car was In an accident on State Road
436, Altamonte Springs.
—Jody Jay Dlmmlck, 28, o f 200 C Mango Trail,
Longwood, at 1:50 a.m. Saturday after his car was seen
weaving on Mango Trail. Longwood.

:

B urglarl9» A n d Thmftt
Rosemary A. Johnson. 66, 1756 W. Cheryl Drive, Winter
Park, reported to sheriff's deputies that $2,000 worth of
Jewelry was taken from her home between Friday and and
Sunday.
I

Winston McKenzie. 61, o f New York, N.Y., reported to
sheriff's deputies that hts room at the Day's Inn, State
Road 46, west of Sanford, was burglarized around 6:40
p.m. Sunday. An $8,000 cashier's check was stolen along
with $400 cash.
A televison. a microwave oven and stereo gear with a
combined value of $2,580 were stolen form the home of
Ashley P. Ashmore, 19, of 501 W. Lake Brantley Road.
Forest City, Thursday, a sheriff's report said.
BUly R. OriffUh, 26. of 1326 Maryland Ave., Sanford,
reported to sheriffs deputies that two pistols were stolen
along with a television and a total o f $1,250 in items from
his home Thursday.

IRE CALLS
Sanford fire fighters and resue workers have responded to
following calls, details based
i file department reports;

Tu e s d a y; M a rc h 3, IM 7
V o l. 7fi No. 144
i.SMWttiw* Daily ana SwiSay, aacast
1
SatvrSay by Tbs Santos* HaraW,
Inc. MS N. Franck Ava., taafsrS,
Fla. M ill.
SacsaS Class Paitasa Fata at Santos*.

mn
Hama Oattvary: Manth.S4.rS/1
IM IS; s Manttii, lit .M i Vaar,
SS1.SS. By M ail: Msnth, 13.71/ i
; Msntbi, I H J I j S Month*, 337.03;
Vaar. 33*43.
(MS) 1 IM S II.

SU N D AY
- 3 : 8 $ p.m.. 2561 S. French
Ave., rescue. A 71-year-old man
suffered a cut on his mouth In a
fall. He was transported to the
hospital.
—S tiff p m . 118 Cypress Ave..
rescue. An 81-yetfr-old man suf­
fering from difficulty breathing
was transported to the hospital.
311 W. 10th street,
rescue. A 16-year-old boy suf­
fered a possible seizure. He was
left with his parents for hospital
transport.
— 4 t l 0 p A . , *65 Sanford Court
A p a rtm e n ts , fa t a lit y . An
o f reportedly natural causes.
— 4 i$ 7 p.m ., 116 Sycam ore
Court, rescue. A 70-year-old man
suffering from a number o f
aliments was transported to the
hospital.

N a t i o n Temper alui os
CttrSFarecstt
Albuqusrqu* sy
Amarillo ay
Anc tw f pc
Ashavlltosy
Atlanta sy
Baltimore ay
Bill Inf* pc
Birmingham iy
Bismarck pc
Sot** pc
Boston cy
Brewmvlltocy
Buffalo »n
Burlington VI. m
Cttartoston «.C. *y
Ctiartotto N.C. *y
Otlcafo*

's &amp; m

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31 33 ....
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a

37 ....

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n

37
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33
33
33
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DaIla* pc
Danvariy
Dm Main** ty
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Duluth f
El Pa*ot
Evansvtttosy
nacfroco cy
Holanacy
Honolulu sy
Houston pc
Indianapolis sy
Jackson M lu. pc
Jacksonville iy
Kansas City sy
LMVogMsy
LIMIo Rocksy
Los Anga lost
Loulsvlllasy

43
13
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33
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....
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....
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.11
....
....
....

— ....

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33 47 ....
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33 40 ....
33 33 ....
33 37 ....
31 43 . ..
37 31 ....
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31 IS ....
74 33 43
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if II ....
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43 43 ....
47 34 ....
31 43 ....
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34 30 ....'
31 It ....
7) 4* ....
33 .01
IS II .14
34 47 44
40 33 ....

Miami Baachsh
Mllwaukaa sy
Minneapolis sy
Naihvlllsty
NowOrlaansty
Now York pc
Oklahoma City ty
Omaha ly
Orlando sy
Philadelphia pc
Phoanlssy
Pittsburgh cy
Portland Ma. in
Portland Ore. r
Richmond sy

For Central Florida
FHyCMy

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34
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5»

F iv e -D a y Fo recast

Sat.

t

0

Thursday's high temperature
In Sanford was 64 degrees and
the low during the past twen­
ty-four hours was 44 degrees as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural and Educa­
tion Center. No rainfall recorded.

A r e a For o c a si

T o d a y ...m o s tly sunny and
mild. High near 70 to mid 70s.
Wind northeast 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight...partly cloudy breezy
and mild. Low near 50 to mid
50s. Wind northeast 15 to 20
mph.
W e d n e s d a y ...p a rtly cloudy
Wtiilef Seyvlce
and windy with only a slight
chance o f showers. High near 70
to mid 70s. Wind norhteast 15 to
20 mph and gusty.

Storm Lingers

In Northeast

B y U n ited Press
an ice Jam at the mouth of the
In tern atio n al
creek.
“ T h e w in d s h ifte d and
The last vestiges of a destruc­
tive storm system blamed for allowed the Ice to flow out Into
21 weekend deaths lingered
the lake (Erie) and everything
o v e r the N orth east today,
c le a re d u p , " said R o b e rt
spreading snow from New York
Kladke. chief of the Sunset Bay
and New England to Michigan.
Volunteer Fire Company.
Light anow dusted upstate
The stormy weather during
the weekend was blamed for 21
and w e s te rn N ew Y o rk ,
northern and cen tral New
deaths, including seven from a
/
m a s s i v e t o r n a d o In
England
and
northern
upper
pc-pertly clooOy
COOI*
southeastern Mississippi that
Michigan, the National Weather
rrain
c-daar
■I* sKnuwrs
chctoarlng
Service said. Rain and snow fell
injured 145 others and caused
am-amok*
cy-ctoudy
In eastern Ohio and western
as much aa $25 million in
Malr
;
Pennsylvania.
damage.
sy-sunny
tytomr
tsthundsrstermi
tu h a n
Up to $50 million in federal
Wlnda clocked at 30 mph
w-wtntfy
mmlsalng
disaster aid may be needed for
blew anow Into 2-foot drifts In
victims o f a tornado that killed
parts o f Michigan, but the
storm waa expected to lose
seven people, injured 145 and
Florida Tem p e r a fa re s whatever punch H had left later left m ore than a thousand
today.
homeless amid growing fears of
"It's
hanging
fn
there,
but
a
tetanus outbreak, officials in
MIAMI (U P I) — Florida
ture* and rainfall of •a.m. EO T
It's going to be Juat about over . Laurel, Miss. said.
City i
S t
Tetanus shots were ordered
b y th e m o r n in g h o u r s , "
Apalachicola
44 43
Monday for those who suffered
weather service forecaster Pete
C m tvlaw
34 13
Reynolds said. He said alight
any kind o f cut or abrasion
Daytona Baach
30 43
73 31 0.17 accumulations o f more anow
Fort Laudardate
during the weekend storm.
Fori Myers
33 33 0.11
were
likely
today
in
parts
o
f
With all o f the Injured off the
0
-0
0
OatoMvIlto
31 41
Jacksonville
critical list, health officials have
31 40 0J0 New England and New York.
Kay West
73 33 143
In the West, rain doused the
turned their attention to preLakeland
34 40 040
v e n t i n g d i s e a s e , a a ld
Miami
73 33 041 northern half o f the Pacific
spokesman Buz Tanner o f the
34 SO 040 Coast and parts o f the northern
Orlando
37 43 040 Plateau. Qulllayute. Wash., re­
Fanaacola
Jon ea C ounty C om m u n ity
Sarasota Sradonton
M 33 040
Hospital.
4f 34 040 ceived more than an inch o f
rain. The ).42 inches that fell
"W e are In a situation where
Ta
33 31
Vara Baach
34 37
at Astoria. Ore., Monday set a
the threat o f an outbreak of
West Falm Baach
71 30 0.11
new rainfall record for the date.
tetanus'is very real. Anyone In
The storm In the Northeast
the damaged area with even
dumped up to 9 Inches o f snow
the slightest break in his akin is
at risk," he aald.
in western Maine Monday.
Damage assessment teams
SUckened roads In northern
New England caused scores of who toured the stricken area In
southeast Mississippi planned
m o rn in g ru sh -h ou r fen d er
F«N
benders and prompted school
to announce their estimates
.11
officials In New Hampshire to
today. T h e tornado tore a
delay the atari o f classes,
20-mlle awath through Jonea
in New York, about 200
County about 9:30 a.m. Satur­
day.
residents were evacuated from
" I am s u i t we will go to the
h o m e s a lo n g C a tta ra u g u s
aveo are C re e k in th e C hau tau qu a
governor to ask for federal aid,"
about 2Vi feet and aeml-choppy. County community of Sunset
Carl Carlos, Jones County Civil
Current la slightly to the south Bay, as up to 2 feet o f water
Defense director, said Monday.
with a temperature o f 57 de­ f l o w e d t h r o u g h t h e
Carlos aald the only question to
grees. New t a f r s f e B e s sfft neighborhood. Residents were
be resolved was how much
Waves are 2 to 3 feet and permitted to return to their
money to request, likely be­
aeml-glasay. Current la allghtly homes at midday, after gusty
tween $25 million and $50
to the south; Water temperature,1 30 mph winds shifted, moving
million.
57 degrees. Sun screen factor.
12.

k

Local R ep o rt

An'ct K«*ot)intt*&gt;
The temperature at 8 a.m.: 53;
overnight low: 50; Monday’s
high: 64; barometric pressure:
30.12: relative humidity: 90
percent: winds: NNE at 7 mph;
rain: None; Today's sunset: 6:27
p.m., Wednesday's sunrise: 6:48
a.m,

or o&lt; ust
T h e e x te n d e d fo r e c a s t,
Thursday through Saturday, for
Florida except northwest —
Partly cloudy with a chance of
s h o w e rs n orth and m o s tly
cloudy with a goood chance o f
rain south through the period.
Tem peratures sligh tly below
seasonal norm als with lows
r a n g i n g fr o m n e a r 40
north...around 50 central to near
60 south except mid 60s in the
lower keys. Highs from the lower
60s north to the lower 70s south.

A roo

T id o s

W B D N B B D A Yt D a y to a a
B sadit' high, 11:16 a.m.; lows,
4:59 a.m ., 5:04 p.m .: N s w
S m y rn a Baach: high. 11:21
a.m.; lows. 5:04 a.m., 5:00 p.m.;
Bnyportt highs, 3:53 a.m „ 3:06
p.m.; lows. 9:20 a.m.. 10:34 p.m.

m

St. A u g u s tin e to J u p ite r
Inlet— Today...wlnd northeast
10 to 15 kts increasing to around
15 kta this afternoon. Seas 3 to 5
ft but higher In the G ulf Stream.
Bay and Inland waters a light to
moderate chop. Wlr*ely scattered
showers north part. Scattered
s h o w e r s a n d a fe w th u n ­
derstorms south part.
T o n ig h t and W e d n e s day...wlnd northeast 15 to 20 kts
Increasing to 20 to 25 kta by
Wednesday.

�I

■iir%* *v*»*
■

^’*•**"*
v •

1

V

B rian Robinson, a W inter Springs E le m e n ta ry student, in photo at right,
participates in the "W h o A m I ? " portion of T h e B lack Experience
program Saturday at the G re a te r Sanford C h a m b e r of C om m erce. T h e
p ro g ra m was sponsored b y Kappa Sigm a O m ega Chapter of A lp ha Kappa

Black H e rita ge
R ecalled

A lpha Sorority, the nation's oldest black sorority and w as p a rt of
so rority's Black H isto ry M onth observance* Lurlene Sw eeting, sorority
president, In photo at left, shows a pictorial display of black heritage
d u rin g S aturday's p ro g ra m .
•

i.

••

*•

rv.tuigif

REALTY
TRANSFERS
Calton Horn** to Michael O Merck A WF
Sandra S, LI la Tha Trail* At Country Craati,

tnjoo

Danbury Ltd to Ralph N Morrlion, Lt *5
Danbury Mill Un JA, 4*9,000
Stockbridge Ltd to Jama* B Laaparanoa A
WF Jana H, Lt i n Stockbrldge Un 2, I7J.*00
Bal AIra Homat to Thorn** JWalch a WF
Debbie, Lt 514Oak Forad Un I. *95,700
Ralph C Bulger A WF Ruth to Laonard J
Fry A WF Diana S, land In lac 3720-33,

Waklva Ratarva Ltd to Kirby Scarberry A
WF Mary, Lt 31 Un I Waklva Ratarva, 1*0,100
Clinton H Wattbreok A WF Catharlna to
Mlchaal R Gaudraau A Taml L Jena*. Lt 4
Blk 4 Falrlana Elts, *49,*00
Maxmllllan M Cook 111 A WF Carol to
Latlla A Shafflald A WF Imogana F, Lt *0
Lynwood, *47,400
Robert T McDowell A WF Garaldina to
Edna I Allen, Lt 5* Wildwood, (44.500
Richard A Cooley to Henry J Smollntkl A
WF Diane L, Lt 7* Dear Run Un 10, *94,500
Cal Ion Home* to Richard J Plotrowtkl A
WF Aurl, Lt 131 Stillwater Ph I, (44,300
Calton Home* to Bernhard G Kloppanburg
, A Patricia A Brl**on, Lt It Southrldg* At
1 Country Creek. (47.900
Calton Home* to Jam** N Zauner, Lt *1
Soutbridge At Country Creek, *12,700
Calton Home* to Mlchaal J SanAngelo .A
WF R Anne, Lt* 143 A 144 Tha Glen* Al
Country Creek, *104,500
Rendy H Zwlrn to Grace Montgomery
Hawk Ini, Lt 43 The Landing*, 140,500
Monroe Ventura II ate to Robert E Car Iion
A WF Sherry J, LI 27 Greenbrlar Ph I, *95,900
Daniel D Klein A Terata to Howard M
Watkln* A WF Sandra G. LI 137 Lake Searcy
Shore*, *74,500
Kenneth Levitt A Jacqueline to Noll S Long,
Un 4* Ph 14 Southport Cond, *44,000
Beatrice R Lynch to Marlon Sugarmen, Lt
54 Wadgewood Un 2, *72,000
Raymond Sutphln A WF Cheryl to John D
Gilbert A WF Janie, Lt 1*2 Sunrlta Un 2C,
(44,900
Ronald W Black A WF Mary to Raymond
Sutphln A WF Cheryl, Lt 471 Winter Spring*
Un 4, *45.000
Laonard D Schmidt A WF Dolore* to
Varnon E Smith A WF Nancey L, Lt 51
Tiber on Cove. *40.500
William R Sharp A WF Chari to Erika A
Cannlce, Lt 14 Blk J Fox moor Un 2, (74,500
Huntlay* Jiffy Store* Inc to Loul* L
Huntley A William T Clay Co, Lt * Lorraine
Commerce Park, *244,100
Laonard J Fry A WF Diana to Edgar F
Walker, Lt 2 Blk 2. unrec Chula Vida, (73,000
Robert A O'Connor A WF Malania to
Stewart L Colling A WF Nancy K. Lt 10 Blk F
Tanglewood Sac 1 rep I, (45,000
Victor Maxcaranha* A WF Noalla to
Eugene C Grlggt A WF Patricia, LI 41 Spring
Oak* Un4.Uf.500
Edgar B Roper A WF Mary to E H Love A
Evelyn Thllmony, S 125' of Lt 2 Blk A Slovak
Village, *75,000
Jack Whit* at ux at al to Martha S Harrod,
Lt * Grill In Wood*, (93,000
Ruth A Johnion to W Kenneth Edward*, Un
E Bldg 1 Sautallto Cond Ph 1,450,000
La* R McKinney J r A WF Kathleen to
Dana Whittaker. LI 12 Cedar Ridge Un ill,
(77.400
Franklin Realty Fund Ltd to Samlnol*
Homat Inc, Lt 4 Blk C Starling Park Un I,
447.000
Franklin Realty Fund Ltd to Samlnol*
Horn** Inc, Lt 7 Blk O Camalot Un 1,457,000
Maxim Bldg Corp to Jotaph E Rlchkar A
WF Ruth. Lt 2 Blk M Lake Mill* Shorn,
474,100
Paul E Haug A WF Diana to Laurence G
Chlvart, Land Ip Govt Lot 1. Sac 24-29-29,
477,900
Gary M Stubb* A WF Charrty to Blair E
Parrlth A WF In** O, Lt 40 Garden Lake Ed*
Un 3, M1.000
William Itnackar A WF Bernice to Juan M
Parai A WF Marta B, Lt II Blk A, Maltbi*
Shore* 2nd addn, 457,500
Richard Deutich A WF Janet to Juanita C
Bauar, LtAtTratlwood Ed*. (52,900
AFHE Corp to Jotaph A Conti A WF Sonia
E, Lt 14Tha Colony, 4174X100
Carlo* Cuervo A WF Patricia to Carol Q
Earley, Lt 34 Wadgewood Tennlt Villa*,
(41,000
Feather Edge Jt Van to Diana E Davit, Un
*D Faatthar Edge Cong, (94.400
Donald A Newman A WF Dianna to Hayden
M Chan A WF Umllta M, Lt 21 Lake Ann Ed*
Un 2. (115,000
Dream Home* to William J Ladu* A WF
Smanna, Lt t Shady Oak*, *90,000
Cantax Hama* to Gary P Moynlhan A WF
Eleanor, Lt 54 Foxchat* Ph II, (102,000
Barney W Betka A WF Mary to Walton K
Edward*, Lt 44 Raplat of Grovavlaw Village,
(49,900
John Palumbo A WF Ann to Steven W
Hilton A WF Carol, Lt 47 Waklva Club Ed*
Sac 3,4115,000
Richard W Teach A WF Robin to Ronald A
Turn m InIa, Lt 23 Country(Ida, (110,000
Mary Cothran A HB Norrlt to Tal-Sam
Chang A WF Janni*, Lt 395 Wranwood Un 1,
479,500
Alton Development to Angelo M Napollello
A WF Marla, apt 743 Lika Lotu* Club I1',
455.000
Jama* S Womatkl A WF JacquaiUna to
Chari** E Kratk A WF Danlte, Lt 2
1 Oak
291
Forad Uni, *103,900
Donald F Rice A WF Margaret to David A
Johnton, Lt 7 Blk F Tempi* Terrace Annex,
O R . Gallltn to Danlat Gallltn. Lt S
Oakland Vlllaga Sac 1,454.000
Thomat A Davl* A WF Gael to Jama* E
Clark A WF Joy A. Lt 24 Tha Etlata* At
Spring* Landing. *53.000

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300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305 322-2811 or 831-9993

Tuesday, March 3, 1987—4A

Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Manaflnf Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home D eliver Month, M.75; 3 Months, • 14.23:6 Months.
•27.00; Year. §51.00. By Mall: Month, ae.75: 3 Months.
•20.25; 6 Months. *37.00; Year. 859.00.

Welfare Reform
Consensus Near
For decades, widespread disillusionment
w ith A m erica’s welfare system has generated
contentiou s debate betw een liberals and
.conservatives over the causes and potential
cures o f poverty and governm ent depen­
dency. Now, at long last, a rare alignm ent o f
view s promises to produce the first extensive
reform since Lyndon Johnson's "w a r on
p o verty ” m ore than 20 years ago.
In both W ashington and the state capitals, a
consensus Is em erging that the solution to
welfare dependency must focus on work
requirem ents, education and Job training.
;The current system, w ith Its institutional
tendency to discourage recipients from taking
jo b s an d b e c o m in g e c o n o m ic a lly selfsufficient, must be replaqed by one that
stresses Individual incentives and rewards
initiative.
Th e place to begin the overhaul Is Con­
gress. which must clear decades o f federal
underbrush that restricts states from being
Innovative. T h e Reagan administration has
irrectly proposed lifting federal welfare rules
rnt inhibit the states from tryin g new
approaches on a w ider scale. Decentralizing
the system w ill allow those w ho have been
adm inistering welfare — prim arily the states
— to take the lead in overcom ing Its chronic
fallings. T h e m ost prom ising experim entation
in recent years has been occurring at the
state level, anyway.
• Lim ited form s o f workfare, which requires
Welfare recipients to accept em ploym ent or
training in exchange for their benefits, have
been Implemented In a grow ing number o f
•tates, most successfully in California and
Massachusetts. Now the concept Is being
expanded to encompass larger numbers o f
ihe poor. Th e National Governors Association
has drafted a reform package that required all
ble-bodled w elfare recipients, excep tin g
rothers w ith children age 3 or younger, to
take Jobs or enroll In Job-training programs.
For mothers with older children, govern ­
ment-subsidized day-care would be provided.
. Many states n ow are considering a fun­
damental revam ping o f the central program
for the poor. Aid to Families with Dependent
Children. AFDC provides benefits- to 3.7
m illion families, including 7 m illion children,
at a cost o f about 918 billion a year. Fully h a lf
o f AFD C fam ilies are headed by single
m others w h o have n ever been married:
another 40 percent are headed by wom en
whose husbands have left home.
A m on g the critics' ch ief complaints against

S

present. Thus, a poor father em ployed in a
minimum-wage job would actually boost his
fam ily's Income by leaving home, allow ing
the m other and children to qualify for welfare
benefits that are far more generous than hls
wages. T o rem ove this disincentive to work,
about half the states now pay benefits to
two-parent households as well.
A m on g ghetto teenagers. AFDC often has
been seen as a ticket to Independence from a
tense hom e environment. But, to qualify, a
teenage girl must have a child. Thus, som e
experts believe the rise In Illegitim ate births is
due partlv to AFD C eligibility rules. T o
c o rre c t this, som e states a re req u irin g
m others under the age o f 18 to live in their
parents' hom es In urder to receive benefits.
It is estimated that 80 percent o f all welfare
recipients have received public support, o ff
and on. for a decade or more. Breaking the
cycle or dependency Is m ost difficult for this
underclass trapped In a system that pays
m others to stay at hom e and encourages
fathers to shirk their responsibilities. W ith
experts across the political spectrum finally
agreeing on these problems, there Is reason to
hope that solutions will not be far behind.
)

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D IC K W E S T

A Middle Name? TV But No Marquee
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A West Virginia
reader who obviously spends a lot o f time
reading theater marquees and television credits
reports that modem TV performers are different
from old-Umc motion picture players.
"M ovie stars almost always used two names
— Clark Gable, Cary Grant. Van Johnson, Betty
Grable, etc.," writes Tony Lolll o f Waverly. who
used two names himself. "T h ey were guided by
the size o f the theater marquees."
"T h e restriction does not apply to the TV
screen," his letter adds. " I f you study the
credits, you will see many people behind the
scenes and lead actors using three names."
Tony, by the way, may be a short form o f
Antonio. If the nickname Is spelled Toni, It
usually Is feminine.
What If what Lolll construes as an ego
outbreak spreads to the 1988 political cam­
paign.
During a previous campaign, when the
opposition discovered that an " H " In Hubert
Humphrey's Initials stood for Horatio. I felt
obliged to warn that a middle-name gap might
develop.

I recalled a time when It was fashionable to
give a boy baby what later w iv t considered
nicknames — Jimmy Joe. Bobby Tom, etc.
Rep. Richard Gephardt t; Missouri, the first
Democrat to announce his candidacy, appar­
ently doesn't have that trouble. My parents
named me Dick, instead of Richard, probably
because a Texas governor was named Pat.
We now have a potential presidential can­
didate called Pat, but since his real name Is
Marlon G. Robertson, maybe he la one o f a kind.
Politicians tend to use a middle Initial,
however. Take California, for example, to
choose a state at random. Its congressional
delegates Include Douglas H. Bosco. Robert T.
Matsul. Ronald V. Dellums and Norman Y.
Mlneta.
Who knows what political evils lurk behind
those middle initials?
And how account of the fact that Rep. Fortney
H. Stark goes by the name Pete?
When last I checked, Pete usually was short
for Peter, although another declared presidential
candidate, the former Delaware governor, Pierre

S. du Pont, prefers It.
But there Is no letter " P ” anywhere in Stark s
name.
Massachusetts may be even worse than
California from one standpoint.
Not only do Massachusetts House members
have names like Rep. Silvio O. Conte. The
governor (Michael S. Dukakis) and both senators
(Edward M. Kennedy and John F. Kerry) use
middle initials.
Kennedy, o f course. Is better known as Teddy,
but that Is another story. W e are talking about
1988 here. This brings us to Rep. Jack Kemp of
New York. Jack, which was one or my older
brother's legal names, normally stands for John.
Can you Imagine anyone named John Kemp
having politlclal Impact? Politically speaking, he
would be In the same boat with m y one o f my
uncles, whose given names were Paul Wyman
but
was known as Jack.
As the 1988 campaign approaches, let us ask
ourselves this question: Was it egotism that
caused Franklin Delano Roosevelt to become
known by three initials, or did FDR fit better on
a marquee?

JEFFREY HART

VIEWPOINT

Kemp's
Committed
Followers

Congress
Usurps
Authority

Reports o f political apathy on the
college campus have been much
exaggerated . Rep. Jack Kemp,
except for the formality o f an official
announcem ent, hit the ground
ru n n in g fo r p resid en t In New
Hampshire last week and drew an
overflow crowd o f Dartmouth un­
dergraduates and local citizens. It
was a spirited, cheerful and com­
mitted audience. Kemp has so far
trailed In the opinion polls but —
you read it here first — he's going to
rise. Right now Bush appears to be
sinking, Dole gaining, and Kemp
moving up on the outside. In the
k e y p r im a r y s ta te o f N ew
Hampshire, Kemp has been picking
up Important support from local
Republican leaders, and during the
next six months hls potential politi­
cal strength should become dramat­
ically visible.
Kemp Is the heir apparent to the
conservative surge that won the
nomlnaUon for Goldwater in 1964,
propelled Ronald Reagan to the
California govemership In 1966 by
a million votes, and gave Nixon and
Wallace 60 percent o f the. vote
the liberal Hubert Rumtn 1968. The conventional
"radical decade." V ^ , * i f t t o fangs?
lng amounts to radicalism, let's
have more o f It.
This political surge boiled forward
Into the 1970s as Nixon carried 49
states against McGovern, losing
o n ly th e P e o p le ’s R epu blic o f
Massachusetts, and — after the
Watergate-Carter Interregnum —
continued as Reagan carried 49
states against Mondale.
Kemp's strength is that he Is more
than Just a Republican. He Is an
optimist with the bouyancy of FDR
and Reagan. He stresses the themes
of growth, expansion and progress.
He believes that policies that en­
courage economic growth benefit
everyone, and he Is prepared to
carry that message Into the blackest
o f black ghettos, Including the
District o f Columbia. He says that
he will not let Mario Cuomo get
away with claiming "compassion"
because so many in New York are
on food stamps. Real compassion,
Kemp says, means that Tew people
are on food stamps. He advocates
getting people o ff welfare by allow­
ing them to earn tax-free Income
well above the minimum wage.
Hls economic bouyancy has a
global reach. He sees the walls of
regu lation and cen tral con trol
trem bling' and crumbling In Asia
and Africa — and, as prosperity
s p re a d s , he fo r s e e s g r e a t ly
expanded markets for U.S. goods.

W illia m R . H awkins
WASHINGTON — As Congress
intrudes more and more Into arms
control negotiations and African
politics, It compromises the presi­
dent's constitutional role as the
maker o f defense and foreign policy.
Yet It was the failure of Congress In
foreign policy that led to the Con­
stitutional Convention In 1787, and
to the framers' creating a strong
presidency-

ROBERT W AGM AN

Why Oil Prices Go Up?
WASHINGTON (NEA) - A recent
Increase In gasoline prices — widely
blamed on OPEC production cut­
backs and the Iran-Iraq war — has
some experts questioning whether
the world oil supply *has, in fact,
been reduced and others suggesting !
that ELS. companies are Taking
advantage o f headlines to make
more money.
Supposedly the jump In price
between last summer and Nov­
em ber was the result o f sharp
production cuts engineered by
OPEC — less oil being pumped and
placed on the market translating
Into higher prices.
But the exp erts are sharply
divided as to whether there have
really been production cutbacks.
Last year, when the world oil
market virtually collapsed, oil was
selling at only 97 to S8 a barrel.
This was in extreme contrast to the
•30-a-barrel price at the height of
the oil crisis.
By November 1986 the price of
Saudi light crude, the benchmark
oil price, had climbed back to about
916 a barrel, and It continued to
edge upward to about 918 a barrel,
where It stands today.
Saudi Arabia, which controls
about one-fourth o f the world's
supply o f proven oil and natural gas
reserves, has, In a very real sense,
the pot
power to control the world oil
market
In addition, Saudi oil Is easily
pumped. By some estimates it costs
the Saudis less than half a dollar per
barrel to obtain their oil. By compar­
ison, It coats about 918 a barrel for
Britain to pump North Sea crude
and as much as 925 a oarrel to
extract some oil in this country
using secondary recovery methods

In almost depleted fields.
So the Saudis can still make a
decent profit even with prices hov­
ering In the 910 range.
However, the Saudis have had
difficulty controlling their OPEC
brothers.
’-A&gt;

‘i

S a u d i A r a b ia 's lo n g tim e o il
m in is te r , S h e ik A h m e d Z a k l
Yamani. had advocated a policy o f
slow growth. But more radical
producers like Iran and Iraq, with
relatively small ‘ reserves and a
monetary crisis, demanded a new
boycott in an attempt to drive prices
back up to the 930 level.
Yamani held out by threatening to
open Saudi production and flood the
market with very cheap oil. But hls
position became politically untena­
ble for Saudi Arabia.
Yamani was replaced, and the
Saudis announced that they would
be willing to make very sharp
production cutbacks — If other
producing countries would go along
— In an attempt to push prices up.
And what about this country's oil
production?
Evidence suggests that domestic
production here has been cut much
more than previously Indicated. At
the same time, more crude has been
needed for the winter months to
Mluce heating oil. So U.S. refiners
ve had to buy more oil on the
world market — and they'll buy at
any price as long os they can pass
that price along to the consumer.

K

But the public ends up sitting still
for higher prices at the pump
because headlines say OPEC Is
closing down the spigot to drive
prices up.

Under the Articles of Confedera­
tion. there was no president, only a
Congress. Congress proved Itself
Incapable o f acting with dispatch or
secrecy, or o f speaking with one
voice in pursuit of a long-term
policy. So weak was this Con­
gress-centered system thnt several
s t a t e s c o n d u c te d th e ir ow n
diplomacy to fill the void.
T h e 1783 peace treaty with
England that won the U.S. its
independence was. In fact, the
result o f a violation of congressional
orders. Congress was dominated by
the charm and gold of French
diplomats, and it had ordered that
the Americans follow the French
position in the talks. France, how­
ever, wanted to keep the U.S.
bottled up behind the Appalachians.
Congress' Secretary for Foreign
Affairs John Jay, and John Adams,
held their own unauthorized secret
talks with the British and won a
western border all the way to the
Mississippi River.
Jay never forgot how Congress
had nearly thrown away the na­
tion's future. He pushed for a new
Constitution which made the presi­
dent commander-ln-chlef of the
armed forces and gave him Ihe Job
of negotiating with foreign govern­
ments.
When the powers o f President
Washington were challenged In
1793, Treasury Secretary A lex­
ander Hamilton defended executive
prerogatives. "T h e Legislative De­
partment Is not the organ o f In­
tercourse between the United States
a n d f o r e i g n n a t i o n s . " s a id
Hamilton. The Senate was to ratify
but not n egotiate o r Interpret
treaties. The House was to play no ,
role In diplomacy short of a formal
declaration o f war. The Framers
knew that most foreign policy was
conducted without formal treaties
o r d e c la r a t io n s ; P r e s id e n ts
Washington. Adams and Jefferson
all committed American military
forces to combat without formal
declarations of war.

t.

JA C K ANDERSON

I

BERRY'S WORLD

Soviets G et Embassy; U.S. Gets Concrete

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WASHINGTON - Ever since the
heyday o f the late Vyacheslav (Iron
Pants) Molotov. American diplomats
have rarely been a match for their
Soviet opponents at the negotiating
ta b le . T h e s to r y o f th e tw o
s u p e r p o w e r s ' h a lf-c e n tu r y o f
bargaining over new embassies In
th eir respective capitals Is in ­
structive.
From the 1934 American am­
bassador's im possible dream o f
duplicating Monticclio on the out­
skirts o f Moscow, State Department
officials have now reached the point
where they'd just like a new em ­
bassy building sometime In the
20th century.
What they have, as we reported
earlier, is an unfinished, crumbling
c o n c r e t e s h e l l lo a d e d w it h
state-of-the-art KGB electronic bugs
Installed by Soviet construction
workers. Though it may never be fit
for human habitation — even by the
spartana o f the Foreign Service —

the Moscow embassy has already
amassed a cost overrun exceeding
9100 million.
The State Department cheerily
predicts occupation o f the new
embassy by 1989. But congressio­
nal critics point out that the un­
finished structure is now being
checked over by National Bureau of
Standards experts, if they find that
Soviet workmanship Is below par,
the whole building may have to be
donebver again from scratch.
Meanwhile, the Soviets are put­
ting the finishing touches on their
spanking-new embassy building,
high on a hill above Georgetown,
overlooking most o f Washington.
D.C. Monticclio it ain't, but then,
the Soviets never act their sights so
quixotically high. All they wanted
was a large, strategically situated
embassy compound with a view o f
Uic federal city — and that they got.
What exasperates congressional
critics is that this lopsided situation
was supposed to have been rigor­
ously guarded against by U.S.

negotiators. "Reciprocity" was the
key word, but it appeared to lose
something in translation.
A nine-page State Department
report m ade availab le to Sen.
Edward Zortnsky. D-Neb., (and ex­
amined by our associate Lucette
Lagnado), stoutly proclaims that
U .S . n e g o tia to r s In s is te d on
"parallel, 'brick-for-brlck' progress
on construction in Moscow and
Washington." This insistence was
supposed to be the guiding light for
embassy construction when, after
35 years o f haggling, the two
governments agreed on mutually
acceptable sites in 1969.
But here's how reciprocity worked
out In practice:
— In 1970, the U.S. negotiators
"began to back away from our
original position," and agreed to let
Soviet workers and Soviet materials
be used for the Moscow embassy.
Money was the main reason for this
concession. "It would have cost too
much to Im port an 'a rm y ' o f
American construction workers,"
the report explains. Using Soviet

i

personnel has resulted In a cost
overrun of more than 9100 million
so far.
— In 1977, the Americans agreed
to let the Soviets begin building a
school, clubhouse and apartments
on th eir W ash in gton site " In
exchange for a new Am erican
school, 14 new apartm ents ...
warehouse space and a new dacha
site." Tw o years later, the Soviet
buildings were completed and the
Americans still hadn't wrung a
construction agreement out of the
Kremlin bureaucracy.
— By 1985, the Soviet embassy
buildings — chancery, consulate
and reception halls — were com­
pleted (by American contractors)
except for interior finishing work,
n o w b e in g d o n e b y S o v i e t
personnel. That was the same year
construction was halted on the
Moscow embassy after Inspectors
found electronic bugs, leaks in the
roof, gaps In supporting walls,
cracks in the exterior mortar and
other deficiencies.

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Sswlerd HsrsM, SaMsrd, FI,

Tuesday, Mirth &gt;, 1H7—SA

Reagan Searches For Fresh Start

N A TIO N
IN BRIEF
W alsh, G o ve rn m e n t M ove
To Dismiss N orth Law suit
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A federal Judge will hear
arguments next week In the legal fight between Indepen­
dent prosecutor Lawrence Walsh and Lt. Col. Oliver North,
the fired White House aide trying to stop Walsh's criminal
probe of the Iran arms-Contraald scandal.
U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker has scheduled a
hearing for Monday on a motion by Walsh to dismiss the
constitutional challenge to his probe that was lodged by
North In a lawsuit last week.
Walsh said In his motion North's suit "represents an
Illegitimate collateral attack" on his Investigation — which
had the blessing o f President Reagan and Attorney General
Edwin Meese — by challenging the 1978 Ethics In
Government Act under which independent federal pro­
secutors are appointed.
Justice Department prosecutors said they would Join
Walsh in fighting North's suit, but U.S. Attorney Joseph
dIGcnova said Monday the department had not decided
"on what grounds the motion for dismissal will be,"
leaving open the possibility the department may yet assist
a challenge to the 1978 law. •

R ex Reigns Today
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — The Crescent City, whipped to a
fever pitch following a marathon weekend o f prc-Lenten
debauchery and the arrival o f the king o f Carnival, eagerly
awaited the annual Mardl Gras blowout today.
The Fat Tuesday agenda featured 13 street parades, with
the Krewe of Zulu kicking o ff the fun at 8:30 a.m. and the
Comus parade completing the day's activities with a 6:15
p.m. starting time. Carnival ends on Ash Wednesday.
Lundl Gras marked the beginning o f the reign o f Rex.
king of Carnival, who arrived at the city Monday evening
by boat procession. Rex Issued a proclamation calling for
all businesses and schools to be closed.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - White
House efforts to shake the grip of
the Iran-Contra scandal were In
full gear today, with President
Reagnn casting aside political
liabilities In search of a fresh
start for his em battled ad ­
ministration.
A process that began with the
replacement o f White House
ch ief o f staff Donald Regan
escalated when Reagan agreed
M o n d a y to w it h d r a w th e
n o m in a tio n o f a c tin g C IA
Director Robert Gates to become
director of central Intelligence.
And as'administration officials
hinted at a possible dark-horse
choice now to succeed William
Casey as the nation’s top spy.
Reagan's political "rebuilding
process" gained ground with
Howard Baker moving to Instill a
changed, upbeat mood as the
president’s new chief of staff.
Finally. It was announced that
Reagan will address his worst
political crisis In a nationally
televised speech W ednesday
night.
The (lurry o f White House
action. Intended to show Reagan
as on the move and eager to put
crisis behind him, was prompted
by the Tower Commission re­
port. which last week faulted the
president and his top advisers
for their handling o f the policy
that, despite denials, became a
swap of arms for U.S. hostages.
Former Sen. John Tower of
Texas, the Republican Reagan
loyalist who led the presidential
commission In Its review of the
crisis, was considered one o f the

presidency.
Gates as the new CIA nominee.
llmlstlc attitude.
But The Washington Post re­
It w as u n certa in M onday
“ It's full speed ahead." he was
ported today Tower was offered
whether Reagan, us urged by
said
to
have
told
his
Cabinet
at
a
the Job and rejected It, and
friends and' associates, would
another potential candidate, re­ meeting about the Tow er report ndmlt his Iran Initiative was an
and
lu
aftermath.
Alluding
to
tired Navy Adm. Bobbj R ,y
error Aides expect him to go
Inman, told United Press In­ priorities for the next 23 months
beyond his previous statement
—
a
modest
agenda
o
f
welfare
ternational he would not accept
reform, catastrophic-illness in­ that "m istakes were m ade," but
the Job even If It was offered.
Reagan offered no Indication he
That narrowed the list o f likely surance and trade policy — he would be contrite.
declared:
"W
e're
going
to
get
candidates to Include retired Air
these things done."
Reagan has moved to address
Force Lt. Gen. Brent Scowcroft,
the ex-national security adviser
that specific perception with two
Still, Reagan’s determination
to President Ford who served on to move ahead is clouded by
major •steps .since the Tower
the Tow er Commission, and concern among some or his
report was released. Replacing
John McMahon, another former c lo s e s t a d v i s e r s th a t h is
Regan with Baker was the first,
Casey deputy.
televised address will fall short of and Monday he accepted "with
FBI Director William Webster what Is needed for him to calm
great regret" the withdrawal
was not approached about the the storm that has shaken his
request from Gates.
CIA Job In the wake of Gates's
withdrawal, an aide said.
T h e T o w e r C o m m is s io n
blamed Reagan's lax manage­
ment and out-of-control sub­
. M
■ordinates for the scandal that
has engulfed the administration
s in c e N o v e m b e r. R e a g a n 's
speech Wednesday could be a
BALTIMORE (UPI)
An
The article said the saint
watershed of his presidency.
article by a Roman Catholic fasted and took icy baths to
" I think it's a m arvelous
p r i e s t p r o p o s i n g , a s a. control his "carnal impulses ...
speech," Baker said Monday. "I
homosexual role model a me­ but naver considered the
think It's going to be a good
dieval salnt whq took Ice baths - predehetkm Itself as unnatural
speech and I think lt will have a
to control ! his “ carnal Im­ or reprehensible."
profound effect on the country's
pulses" has caused an uproar.
Thomas’ .article suggested
perception o f his role as presi­
In the church.
that homosexuals use St.
dent and his future ability to
In January, the Rev. Paul Aelred’s example as their role
govern."
Thoms* published an article model.
Baker acknowledged Reagan
In the Baltimore archdiocesan
The newspaper has received
’ ’was damaged" by the Tower
-newspaper,: The Catholic Re­ letters from across the country
report but said. " I think he’s
view, about St. Aelred. Thom­ sttscklng the notion the saint
going to grow from this point In
as wrote that the I2th century was homosexual. Baltimore
strength and popularity and ...
saint’s "erotic attraction to Archbishop William Borders
will resume his role as a very
men remained a dominant called the piece "way off base"
popular president of the United
force throughout his entire and said he wished lt never
States."
life.’
Reagan adopted a similar op-

As G ay

Sanford G irl, 12,
Tells Of Assaults
A 12-year-old Sanford girl has
told Seminole County sheriff's
deputies she was knocked off her
bicycle, dragged to a shed near
Brlsson Avenue and 20th Street
by three boys and beat and
sexually assaulted by them at
about 6 p.m. Feb 23.
The attack was reported to
sheriff's deputies Saturday and
the girl has also said that she
was victim o f a similar assault In
September. Tw o o f the same
suspects were Involved In both
Incidents and each time three
youths participated In the at­
tacks, a sheriffs report said.
Deputies have the names o f

suspects tn the esse and the •
investigation
Monday.

was continuing

—Susan Loden

Schools
Settle
Suit
By Genic Ltndberg
Herald S ta ff W riter
A Sanford woman will receive
$28,400 in damages from the
Seminole County School Board
as a result o f inju ries she
received when a car In which she
was a passenger was hit by a
school bus, board attorney Ned
Julian, Jr. said.
Gertrude Hampton, 30, sued
the board after her wrist was
hurt In the 1985 accident. Julian
said he and Ms. Hampton's
attorney. Ray Dalton, settled the
matter out o f court Wednesday.
Ms. Hampton's sister, Sabrina,
was driving the car when the
school bus hit It. but the car
belongs to their mother. Ida Mae
Hampton, who Ms. Hampton
also sued. Julian said that
Florida Insurance Guarantee
A s s o c ia tio n w ould pay Ms.
Hampton $5,800 In damages.
T h e accident happened In
January 1985 when the school
bus m ade a left turn onto
Melionvllle Ave. from east State
R oad 46, Ju lian said. T h e
Hampton car was headed west
on S.R. 46 when tt collided with
the school bus and the bus
driver did not see the Hampton
car which was behind a large
truck, Julian said, but because
the driver was making a left
t u r n , th e a c c id e n t w a s
automatically her fault.
Ms. Hampton was out of work
for six w eeks and incurred
$6,000 in medical treatment for
torn tendons. Julian said that
Initially Ms. Hampton asked for
$85,000, but the settlement will
only cover her lost wages and
medical expenses.

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Consumer: Lim it-ora coupon per purchase Not to bo translerred. sold or reproduced Any other use commute* Iraud
Limited to smokers 21 yearn ol ago or older Participation &lt;n
this promotion at discretion ol retailer Oiler good only in
U S A Consumer peys any tales tax
Retailer: Philip Morris will reimburse you Ihe taco value ol
this coupon plus W handling and postage providud you and
the consumer have complied with the terms herein Void
when submitted by unauthorised agent Invoices showing
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taxed or restricted
Cash value 1/20* Re­
deem by mailing to
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kakee.IL.60902
J " 28200 612

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•A— Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.
la♦**&lt; ffv%

Tuosday, March 3 ,IM7

TO GET ACQUAINTED
DEBI IS OFFERING

___
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Say " I Love You'
With Flowers

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of
1/2 M

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Herald Advertiser

m

Good ttiru J-IJ-47

H a ir b iz
F A M I L Y H A IR C A R E

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2640 Hiawatha Ave

(17-92) Sanford

DEBI PECK

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Ite AktauI er Drap ASdoed)

FURNITURE • BOATS • CARS
Quality Malarial* A Workmanship • Froo Estimates

DAV I'S UDHOLSTMY
490 N. 17-92

Longwood

* ‘ 9'’ • *
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HWY. 17 9/
, ' SANFOR

695-6900

NIX C U S T O M BED DING

Hendrix
Antiques &amp;
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IIPHOI STI RY OHAIM HU S
mhvini

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• C U 8 TO M D R AP ER IES
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F H II

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3 2 2 -2 117

day or night
estimates, pick-up G delivery

HO O BLIGATION

WASHING POLISHING (
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RUSTPROOFING/UNDERCOATING

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I Seminole Centre • Sanford

1060 N. MWY. 17-92
111 Light N of 434)

3 2 1 -2 7 3 0

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• Party Ooods G Novelties
• Latex Mylar Balloons
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(2nd Light N. of 434)

$ C

Longwood

I

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ESTIMATES
FREE

ANTIQUES

ff

A F F

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With This Ad

321*2063

C&amp;B AUTO
PARTS
Completa Line Of Auto
Parta And AceessoHea

SPEC IA L O RD ERS • DELIVERY
• OVERNIGHT AVAILABILITY
I; " I f We D on't Have It. We'll Get I t ."

| HOURS: M-F, S 7
Bat., S-l

Barry Barks, left, executive vice president of Seminole Moneytree, Inc., and
Gib Edmonds, president.

CAMUS* PASTE HU
IT HMD

210 S. French Avo.
Sanford
321-7169

THE RUNCIBLE S P O O N
TEA R O O M
At Brawler's Barn
in Lana wood's Historic Dlitrlcf
IM W .J m iuo Avanua
I awch Buhlad Putt Offic»
Lunch Sorvod II A.M. - 1: JO F.M .
T M lU r •Saturday
Hot await Soup, Salad, SiaOarfchw
IddClllly Oauartt
D ELIC IO U S LY D IF F E R E N T

111-44*1

MON-SAT.
EVEN. BY APPT.

T H E N EW

RENT
AMERICA
2701-B 8. ORLANDO DR. •HANFORD

(Plnscrast Shopping Cantor •27th 1 17-92)
Ph. 321-4780

VIDEO CLUB

FSEE M C M K M M P PUIS
12 n o MOVES

&gt; e a n e II, line.
airscane

'O f —
A ER O B IC S-H A M A BEAUTY CARE

Senior Citizens
Beglnnera/lnterm.
InlormJAdvanced

Hair •Nolls
Tanning
Skin Waxing

C A LL 3 21-7136
______________ Zayra Ptaza, tantord

R E N T •T O O W N
T V ’S •V C R ’S
F U R N ITU R E A
A P P L IA N C E S

FIRST WEEK

QQC
*757

BLAIR AGENCY
SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOM OBILE INSURANCE
SR 22’e FILED

DISCOVER...

A L 8 0 INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, M OTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES

l
f
Serving Sanford tor 27 Years
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 9-5

“CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE

320-7710 or 323-3866

251OA OAK AVI. SANFORD
Corner of t. Park Ava. A Oak

A “ UNIQUE” Mobil*
Home Community

IT IV t BLAIS-

FREE SPINAL EVALUATION
1. Frequent Hoadachoe

— DISSATISFIED with your prosaot kcatlmf
— WANT e ckaoco to own your own Romo
Instead of routine on eparlmaetf m
•* OttCOVIR •*Corofrao Uvte« at CARRIAOK
COVI locatedoN SR. 07 (Sonterd) (wst Ite miles
MStof 1741. Our ateills Hama Community has:
o ADULT eod FAMILY Secttans
o ClyMtaws, Bwimming Poof, A Laundry
FaelHHot.
a A listing of routes and now teas sates
iV tlilW t

CALL m o itt or 931-3783 ter furlhor
Intermotion

, u o m h *i

2.
3.
4.
5.
fi.
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EtehMteatedteiePWteeeMtek.nl-

Mfnt ll Ndq Uadi

■teeTte,ItertIn Tte,StartAm Tte
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• Atataoot ool'
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C H I R O P R A C T I C C L I N I C , I NC.
i.Mll- 10/
Mui , 111- il

i-

Low Bach or Hip Pain
D luineee or Load of Sloop
N u m b n a n ol Hondo or Faal
Norvoudneea
Nock Pain or Stlllnoaa
Arm and Shoulder Pain

3 2 2 -9 3 0 0

1

Uo yin-u&lt;i Cu-1,1 im

M ake M oneytree
Your M oney Source
At Seminole Moneytree. Inc., they make first
and second mortgages on homes, rental property
and commercial real estate for purchase, re­
finance and construction. They make any type of
mortgage loan and even make house calls.
Today there arc a lot o f alternatives and
becauee Moneytree is not tied to one particular
lender and they deal with rtiany lenders, they are
flexible and can ofier many different types of
mortgages.
Seminole Moneytree, located In Suite 202 In
Driftwood Village. 549 W. Lake Mary Blvd., Lake
Mary, has correspondent relationships with
several conventional and private lenders, which
enables them to be very competitive on the
standard FNMA conventional loans.
Sem inole M oneytree opened Jan. 1, but
licensed mortgage brokers Olb Edmonds and
Barry Barks are not new to the business or the
county.
Edmonds, president of the new company, is a
longtime resident of Sanford and was formerly
president and director o f First Federal of
Seminole. More recently, he has been involved
with arranging financing for targe commercial
real estate loans through hla own company,
Edmonds Financial Corporation.
Barks Is Moncytrec’s executive vice president,
who brings to his position 16 years of experience
In mortgage loans. A Sanford native, he attended
Seminole High School and graduated from
Murray State University In Kentucky. He taught

In the Seminole County School System for two
years before his entry Into the savings and loan
business in Orlando. After several years as vice
president In charge o f mortgage operations with
First Federal o f Brevard In Melbourne. Barry
ventured out Into mortgage banking and has
managed two national mortgage banking pro­
duction offices as their regional manager.
"Borrowers and properties do not always fit the
rigid standards o f FNMA, b o w e also have lenders
who are more flexible in underwriting." Edmonds
said. "Our many years o f experience and our
wlcle range of tenders enables us lo structure
financing to meet most any situation."
They buy existing mortgages at competitive
rates.
With CD rates in single digits, carefully selected
mortgages can be an excellent alternative In­
vestment. Yields o f 12*18 perccnl are available
from time to time. The term of investment Is
typically three to five years, but longer terms are
available.
Seminole Moneylree’s location makes them
convenient to many people In the Lake Mary and
Sanford area, but they are not limited to any
geographic area. They arc open 8:30-5:30 p.m..
Monday through Friday, but arc also available by
appointment cvenlngB and weekends at the office
or your home.
Call 323-8990 for professional and confidential
service.

Philippines Enchants Investors
By D aniels Deane
MANILA (UPI) — Rene Knecht. a businessman
financially ruined and forced Into exile during the
years of ousted ruler Ferdinand Marcos, has
relumed to his homeland - optimistic he can
regain his fortune.
Knecht. who fled to the United States with his
72-ycar-old mother In December 1983, ictumed
lo the Philippines a year ago. Just one month after
President Corazon Aquino swept to power In a
civilian-backed military uprising.
" I ’ve always made money here." said Knecht.
who owns two downtown Manila hotels, a theater
restaurant, a cannery and several luxurious
homes.
Knecht left Ihe Philippines after soldiers closed
one o f his hotels and one o f Marcos' sisters moved
Into the other. He blamed the "relentless
intimidation and threats" on his refusal to sell a
compound of homes to make way for a Marcos
highway project.
"W e reached rock bottom during the Marcos
years. We couldn't have gone any lower. But now
we're on the way up." he said. "In economic
tcrmB, this (a the sleeping beauty o f Asia."
The question Is. when will the beauty wake?
Many analysts said they are convinced the
country — with its educated English-speaking
population. Its rich mineral resources and Its vast
pool of cheap, underemployed labor — soon will
Btlr out of the long slumber.
The 0.13 percent growth In 1986 — the first
gain In three years — signaled the first mstllngs
of a reawakening under Aquino, who has made
economic recovery her top priority since she
came lo power in February 1986. The country's
gross national product last year was the
equivalent of $4.42 billion.
But, Investors still are sitting on the sidelines,
and the grinding poverty that affects threefourths of the country's 55 million people
continues.
"Investors ore euphoric about Aquino." said
Leo P. Gonzaga o f the American Chamber of
Commerce In Manila. "But it's still a fear of the
unknown. They're waiting for the economic
clim ate to stabilize and things to become
clearer."
Gonzaga said Investors are waiting to see the
composition of the country's new Congress,
which Is to be elected May 11. Aquino's newly
ratified constitution gives Congress the power to
regulate foreign Investment.
Gonzaga said investors also are looking for the

long-awaited Omnibus Investment Code, which
w ill re g u la te fo r e ig n In v e s tm e n t In the
archipelago.
He said the government Is determined to make
the Philippines match other Aslan capitalimporting countries, "Incentive by Incentive."
The government's main thruBt, however, to
attract create a climate In which businessmen
feel their Investments arc safe and returns are
good.
"In the 1990s, the Philippines can undoubtedly
be one of the newly Industrializing countries" of
-Asia, said Bernardo Villegas, chief economist of
the Center for Research and Communication, a
Manila think-tank.
Although Investors are not yet (locking in
droves, more money Is circulating within the
country than In the recent past.
Coconut prices doubled over the last year,
directly affecting 15 million people. Coconuts and
sugar are the main exports. Transportation costs
have been substantially reduced as world oil
prices have fallen.
Interest rates are at their lowest levels since
1962, with the prime rate hovering at about 9
percent.
The government also has Injected $620 million
Into the economy In the form of housing projects
and an emergency employment program.
The May congressional elections and local
elections In August also are expected to provide
the economy with extra cash. Analysts predict
each senatorial candidate — 24 seats are up for
grabs — will spend about SI million to campaign.
"W ith that kind of money being pumped Into
the economy, I am very confident that the
multiplier effect will create the growth that wc are
looking for," said Finance Minister Jaime Ongpin.
The government Is predicting a booming 6.5
percent rate o f economic growth this year, but
much depends on the rescheduling o f the nation's
$27.8 billion debt.
The country recently restructured $860 million
In debts maturing within the next 18 months.
O ngpin said the reschedu lin g Included a
moratorium on all o f the principal and 70 percent
o f interest payments.
The Philippines currently Is negotiating with its
483 creditor banks to reschedule $3.6 billion in
debts maturing up to 1992. The government also
wants to renegotiate the terms of debts re­
structured In 1984 by the Marros re g im e .

�4 t—4. V

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1 « ' » • r T T ^ N H r 1^

Tuwday, March 3,1787-7A

Sanford Htrakl, Sanford, FI.
"

FO UR J A Y S

Review

125°°
c%'Sm
WITH PARTICIPATING STYUST

L o ts and A cre a g e
m
R easonable Rates
^
^
C lean F ill D irt
ik ^ a i
P ro m p t S e rvic e

H e r a ld A d v e r t i s e r

BUSINESS ON TNI MOVI

ADVERTISING

Land Clearing

Prepared by Advertising Dept, ol

CaCS 322-2611 Howl
• P U T TO O *

______

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Let Our Reputation Go To Your Head"

'f o x c U in v ii

Scn lng Central Florida Over 15 Vrara

Phone 305-321-7018

a d v e r t is in g

Sanford

%*«*MONEYSOURCE i

MEN’S WORK PANT &amp; SHIRTS

ftrthtu a! hitting

m !

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Wm

* SALES: U n irn ex

jd S &amp; h k . lti ^
V iffiT /

law

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RttUmlitl and

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W e W e lc o m e ...
CHRISTY CASTO U Our Staff

J im
L a sh ’s ^ — v
B lu e B o o k C a r s

■

j

WE DESIGN THE LOAN TO SUIT YOUR NEEDS
fad haMaaal
tadCoafidaatialStniet.

Rent America
Video Club
Manager
Barbara Clark,
left, has a
wide selection
of films for
home viewing
and store
Manager Vicki
Christoffer
will rent
furniture or
appliances to
meet your needs,

2303 Franch A»onue
Ph. 305-321 5851

GET ACQUAINTED SPECIAL

PERMS a *2000

321-0741

* SERVICE: Sin™ ***..

,**” *“ 2

* RENTALS: •‘Jf0*°«

Cbrtsty Caste
UNISEX H A IR S T YL IN G
607 W. 25tti St PH. 322-8711
Sanferd

sanforo

ALL SMALL CAR PARTS
M arch’ s B irthstone
S e e Our W ide S electio n O f
. A q u a M arine J ew elry

j
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CattamJawatry A Rapa*

jfZ '.

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Store Hours:
9-6 M-Sat.

H B
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iflH

WANT REAL IMPORTED CAR PARTSf
call

us — 323-7200

{t r e a s u r e is l a n d j e w e l r y
H107 8. French Ave. (17-92) Sanloid

3BS-0 B18

Rent A m erica Offers 2 5 %
O n First M onth's Rental
Rent America, located at 2701-B S. Orlando
Drive in the Plnccresl Shopping Center, Sanford,
offers 25 percent off the first month’s rent on
temporary rental or rent-to-own appliances and
furniture.
These appliances Include washers, dryers,
refrigerators. dlBh washers, microwave ovens,
television acta, VCtts. and stereos. /
They rent furniture for dinettes, living rooms
and bedrooms.
There are no credit cheeks at Rent America.
The first week’s rent is only 99 cents for
everything except VCRs. Rent America also
features cash Bales o f UBed merchandise.
Rent America was purchased Dec. 1. 1986 by a
new owner, who has seven other stores In the
franchise around the state. Vicki Christoffer Is
manager.
Barbara Clark Is Video Club manager. She
offers free club membership and 12 free film

rentals for new members.
The Video Club has a huge selection of all types
of film available Including current and up-to-date
(Urn releases, family films and classics such as
Cone With The Wind and African Queen.
Evcryllme someone rents a Video Club family
film or. Kid's movie they get a "Kiddie Duck"
which coh.he.uffid.jU). purchase books, p u n k a or
toys from the Kiddle Buck Korncr ut Rent
America.

w

stronger than It has
been In over 20 years,”
Joseph W. Duncan.
Dun fit B ra d strect's
corp orate econom ist
and chief statistician.
said.
Preliminary Dun fit
B rn d s lrc c l data on
business failures for
1986 show that the
n u m b e r of U.S.
m anufacturing com ­
panies that closed their
doors last year declined
2.6 percent from 1985.
In comparison, busi­
ness failures for all U.S.
indu stries rose last
year by 6.9 percent.
Duncan said that
Am erican com panies
competitive enough to
have survived (he last
recession are now In a
good position to not
o n ly c o m p e te w ith

manufacturing, led by
reorganized and vis­
ionary small com pa­
nies. is strong and get­
ting stronger despite a
public perception o f
weakness, a study by
Dun fit Bradstreet Corp.
concluded.
In the March-April
issue of D&amp;B Reports,
the Dun fit Bradstreet
m agazine for small*
huslncss management,
editors detailed what
they believe to be the
resurgence of Am eri­
can manufacturing In
an article called "Made
In the U.S.A.: Small
M an u factu rers’ S u r­
prising Strength."
"W ith certain excep­
tions. manufacturing is
fundamentally

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2640 Hliwathi Ave.

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DO C &amp; C A T
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• Insurance And
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JAY*S H A IR S TY L IN G DEN
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WO*OUTHWWT IIP .

A m e r i c a n
m a n u fa c tu r in g has
been growing at a rate
o f heller than 4 percent
a y e a r since 1980.
white output In the rest
o f the economy has
been risin g sligh tly
more than 1 percent a
year.

I AHOY MARINE f

COUPON

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SOUTHWEST ROAD

The store Is open Monday through Friday. 9
a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturday. 9 a.m. lo 6 p.m.
Come In and meet the pleasant and friendly
managers. Any questions, call 321-4780.

( O M I ' l 111

W P-W r-*

CARRIE HARTOTElDWo/Wnj Welcome
fM - So' 9 S

If you don't have a VCR to play the film on. no
problem. You can rent one from Rent America.
The minimum rental period for a VCR Is a week.
Rent America maintains service on whal they
rent during the time you arc paying rent.

Imports In their home
markets, but also to
ta k e a d v a n t a g e or
stronger demand for
their products
overseas.
The magazine cited
Commerce Department
figures showing that
the p ro d u c tiv ity o f

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1401 S. H W Y . 17-92
(305) 322-4652 • S A N F O R D

STEVE MEADORS

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17 92
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113 W. 27th St.. Ssntoid

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linAM W I PHONE

F R E E L A Y -A -W A Y
PM

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�•A— Sanford Harold, Sontard, FI.

Tuoxfoy, March 3, 1M 7

U.S. Response To Soviet Proposal Expected

COMING EVBMT5
TO PS Schedules Session
A t H o w e ll Place, Sanford
TOPS (Takr* OfT Pounds Sensibly) Chapter 79 meets.
6:15*3:15 p.m., Tuesdays at Howell Place, 200 W. Airport
[Boulevard. Sanford.

Lake M a ry Toastmasters
T'oastmastcr International Club of Lake Mary/Longwood
meets at 7:15 p.m. Tuesdays at Seminole Community
College. For additional information call Rosclla and Tom
Bonham. 323*8284.

O vereaters To M eet
Ovcrcatcrs Anonymous meets at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday at
Florida Power &amp; Light, 301 S. Myrtle Ave., Sanford.

A A G roups M e e t Tuesday
The following area Alcoholics Anonymous groups meet
on Tuesdays:
' • Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30 p.m., closed, 8 p.m.. step.
130 Normandy Road, Casselberry. Clean Air Rebos Club,
noon, closed.
• Sanford AA. noon, 5:30 p.m.. 8 p.m., open discussion. 8
p.m.. Living Sober closed, 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
• 24-Hour A A group beginners open discussion. 8 p.m.,
317 S. Oak A ve., Sanford.
• 17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m., closed, Messiah Lutheran
Church, 17-92 and Doglrack Road.
• Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m. (closed). West Lake
Hospital. State Road 434, Longwood,

Casselberry Rotary M eets
Casselberry Rotary Breakfast Club will meet at 7:30 a.m..
Wednesday, at Casselberry Senior Center, 200 N. Lake
Triplet Drive.

Sanford Sets Rotary Breakfast
Sunford Rotary-Breakfast Club will meet at 7 a.m.,
Wednesday, at Skyport Restaurant, Sanford Airport.

Optim ists Set M eeting
Sanford Optimist Club will meet at 11:45 a.m.,
Wednesday at Western Slzzlin Restaurant, Sanford.

Sanford K iw anis To M eet
Sanford Kiwanis Club will meet at noon, Wednesday,
Sanford Civic Center.

GENEVA (UPI) - The United
States will soon match a Soviet
arms proposal with an offer to
ban m ed iu m -ra n ge n u clear
missiles from Europe without
making concessions on "Star
W ars" research. American of­
ficials said.
A group o f senators monitor­
ing arms talks In Geneva said
Monday that the U.S. proposal
would stress the need to verify
compliance and include shortrange nuclear missiles.
"W e will soon put a draft
treaty on the table," Sen. Albert
Gore, D-Tcnn., said at a news
conference, warning that "a
limited amount o f time is left”
for an agreement during the
Reagan presidency.
American and Soviet dlpomals
in Geneva also expressed the
view that little time remains to
finalize an agreement before
campaigning begins for the 1988
presidential election.
In Washington, White House
spokesman Marlin F ltzw ater
said U.S. negotiators would
present "s p ecific treaty lan­
guage" soon for an Intermedi­
ate-range weapons agreement.
In Moscow, Soviet officials said
a new summit meeting between
President Reagan and Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev de­
pended on the U.S reaction tn
the Intermed'.ite Nuclear Forces
proposal and other arms issues.
Reagan and Gorbachev agreed
In principle at their summit In
Reykjavik last October to elimi­
nate medium-range missiles in
Europe, with each side retaining
100 s u c h w e a p o n s b a s e d
elsewhere.
But Gorbachev demanded a
package deal in which longrange strategic weapons would
be cut by half and space arms
would be banned entirely. This
last demand would have limited
the U.S. Strategic Defense Initia­
tive or "Star W ars" program for
a space-based missile shield.

Gorbachev, In announcing his
"dc-llnklng" o f medium-range
missiles from the latest proposal,
reverted to the Soviet position
prior to the Reykjavik summit.
"1 thought it was an old
proposal rehashed but we will be
glad to see It," chief U.S. negoti­
ator Max Kan. pel man told re­
porters Just before receiving the
proposal.
Confidentiality rules at the
arms talks prevented-either side
from disclosing precise details of
the latest Soviet proposal.
Fltzw ater said the Reagan
administration saw Gorbachev's
statement as "a positive devel­
opment, thus we welcome this
apparent Soviet agreement to
move forward on INF."
In Moscow, Deputy Foreign
M inister A le x a n d e r

Bessmertnykh
ment could be
fewer than six
deadline U.S.
suggested if a
signed before
office.

said an agree­
worked out in
months — the
o fficia ls have
pact is to be
Reagan leaves

When the Geneva arms talks
firs t began tw o years ago.
Washington demanded above all
strict verification Including on­
site m onitoring to guarantee
missile elimination and con­
tinued compliance.
Officials In Moscow said the
Soviet Union also wants "e ffi­
cient verification Including on­
site Inspections by both sides."
But the United States addi­
tionally wants restraints on
short-range missiles and shares
the concern o f its NATO allies

about the Warsaw Pact superior­
ity in tanks and other conven­
tional weapons.
American delegation
spokesman Terry Shroeder said
negotiators on medium-range
missiles would extend their talks
after the scheduled conclusion
Wednesday o f the current round.
U.S. officials said Secretary of
State George Shultz may soon
visit Moscow to discuss chances
of any early INF accord.
NATO has 316 single-warhead
Pershing II and cruise missiles in
Europe, against Moscow's an­
nounced total o f 243 triplewarhead SS-20 missiles in the
European theater. Therefore, the
balance of warheads in Europe
currently is around 316 for the
West against 729 for Moscow.

Gemayel Awaits Peace Proposals
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) P re s id e n t A m in G c m a y e l’ s
en voy to Syria arranged to
return to Lebanon today to brief
the Christian head o f state on a
package o f political reform s
p ro d u c ed in D am ascu s by
Lebanon's Moslem leaders.
Envoy Hanl Salam will give
the Moslem proposals. alm”*d at
ending Lebanon's 12 year-old
civil war, to Gemayel when he
returns from Damascus today.
Salam met Monday with Syrian
V ice President Abdel Halim
Khaddam.
Moslem ministers refused to
give details o f the proposed of
r e fo r m s , d r a ft e d o v e r th e
weekend under Syrian media­
tion. until the president exam­
ined theth and responded.
"T h e matter Is left to President
Gemayel and In the light o f his
choice o f decision, the fate of the
country stands," Prime Minister
Rashid Karaml said the Cabi­
net's powers at the cost o f the

president, who has always been
a Maronltc Catholic since In­
dependence in 1943.
The changes also included
new procedures to elect the
prime minister, traditionally a
Sunni Moslem appointed by the
p resid en t, the In d ep en d en t
newspaper said.
C h r i s t i a n Posts and
Telecom m unications Minister
Joseph Hashem said that during
talks between Syrian officials
and a Christian team that In­
cluded the presidential envoy,
"con cession s were made on
some points that triggered con­
flict."
In January 1985, Gemayel
and other Christian leaders re­
jected a set o f Syrian-backed
reforms aimed at ending the
dominant role o f Lebanon's mi­
nority Christians in the political
sphere.
The question o f power sharing
is a central cause o f the war that
erupted in 1975, but in recent

months much o f the violence has
been among and within the
nation’s Moslem militias. Seven
thousand Syrian troops entered
west Beirut Feb. 22 to end a
week of Moslem fighting.
Nablh Berrl, leader o f the
Shiite Moslem militia Amal, re­
turned to Beirut after a fourmonth stay in Damascus in a bid
to defuse a mutiny threatening
his pro-Syrian leadership.
The revolt against Berri's fol­
lowers in southern Lebanon
Sunday was led by Hassan
H ashem , a fo rm er head o f
Amal's executive committee. It
was the gravest split within
Am al since radical Hussein
Musawl broke away and formed
his Islamic Amal In eastern
Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley in 1982.
S p o ra d ic cla sh es eru p ted
M onday b e tw een H ash em 's
forces and followers o f Amal
Sldon com m ander Mahmoud
Fakih. At least seven people
were killed and 15 wounded.

Dance
For Senior Citizens
*
*
Sanford Sercnaders Dance for seniors will be held
2:30-4:30 p.m.. Wednesday, at the Sanford Civic Center.
Free admission with live band.

NOTICE OF CHANGE OF LAND USE

Blood Bank Hours

PUBLIC HEARING TO BE HELD
MARCH 10, 1987

Central Florida Blood Bank is open Wednesday at the
Seminole County Branch, 1302 E. Second St., Sanford, 9
a.m.-5 p.m., and Florida Hoapital-Altamonte, State Road
436, 11 a.m.-7 p.m.; Longwood Branch, South Seminole
Community Hospital, Suite 103-A, 5 2 1 W. State Road 434.

Sem oran Optim ist* M e e t
Optimist Club o f Semoran will- meet at 6 p.m.,
Wednesday at Quincy’s Steakhouae, Live Oaks Center,
Highway 17-92, Casselberry.

Take O ff Pounds
TOPS Club (weight loss) meets 6:30-8 p.m., Wednesday,
Salvation Army. 700 W. 24th St.. Sanford. Open to the
public.

THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF SEMINOLE COUNTY WILL HOLD THE FIRST OF TWO
PUBLIC HEARINGS TO CONSIDER REQUESTED AMENDMENTS TO THE SEMINOLE COUNTY COM­
PREHENSIVE PLAN AND OFFICIAL LAND USE MAP.THE PURPOSE OF THIS HEARING IS TO CONSIDER
TO* PUBLIC INPUT AND RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE LOCAL PLANNING AGENCY' REGARDING RE­
QUESTED AMENDMENTS DIRECTLY RELATING TO SMALL SCALE DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES, AND
THE CONTINUED APPROPRIATENESS OF LAND U8E DESIGNATIONS WITHIN CENTAIN PORTIONS OF
THE MAP PRINTED IN THIS ADVERTISEMENT. SMALL SCALE DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES ARE DEFIN­
ED AS RESIDENTIAL LAND USE OF FIVE ACRES OR LESS AND A DENSITY OF FIVE UNITS (OR LESS)
PER ACRE, OR OTHER LAND USE CATEGORIES OF THREE ACRES OR LESS.

Support F o r M e n ta l Patients

SEMINOLE COUNTY
FLORIDA

COPE support group for families of mental health
patients meets Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., Crane's Roost
OITlcc Park. S-377, AltamonteSprtngs.

A A G roups Set M eetings
Area Alcoholics Anonymous groups meet Wednesday as
follows:
• Sanford AA. noon and 5:30 p.m. open discussion,
1201 W. First St.
• REBOS AA. noon and 5:30 and 8 p.m.(closed). Rebos
Club, 130 Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
• Sanford Bom to Win AA, 8 p.m., open discussion.
1201 W. First St.
• Sanford Grace A A 11th Step (closed). 8 p.m.. 122 N.
Fifth S l„ Lake Mary.
• Altamonte Springs AA, 8 p.m., (closed). Altamonte
Community Chapel, 825 State Road 436.
• Casselberry AA. 8 p.m., (closed), Ascension Lutheran
Church, Ascension Drive, Caaaclbcny.

Narcotics A nonym ou s M eets
Narcotics Anonymous, 8 p.m. The Grove Counseling
Center, 580 Old Sanford/Ovledo Road (off SR 419). Winter
Springs.

Tax H elp Fo r Elderly
Free Income tax help for retirees will be offered on
Thursday through April 15 at the following locations: 9
a.m. to 1 p.m., Oviedo City Hall, 42 E. Central Ave.; Sun
Bank, 3000 Highway 17-92, Sanford; Hacienda Village,
500 State Road 434. Winter Springs; and 1-3:30 p.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive,
Casselberry.

B lood ProtM w o

Cho

Free blood pressure checks are offered 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Tuesday and Thursday at the American Red Cross
Sem inole Service Center. 705 W. State Road 434.
Longwood.

SITE
HUMMER

East W e s t Sanford Club M eets

Lee Munis!
John Wilson
Elwyn Babbitt
Richland Properties
Hobart Lomtf
Lexington Homes
Thomas Brooks
Jane Adrtallco
Myron Freedman
Circle K Corp

East-West Sanford Kiwanis Club meets Thursday at 6
p.m. at Friendship Lodge, Seventh and Locust.

FR EE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N
■

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■ .•:»

Frequent Headaches
Low Back or Hip Pain
Dizziness or Loss ol Sleep
Numbness of Hands or Feet
Nervousness
Neck Pain or Stlffnase
Arm and Shoulder Pain
tsdsEBm lufeta fMvit tsstfds, nuttM Tut,
U| Tat. Start Ina T«l tod Tai UNO Dec*
■ TH( PATIENT ANO *NT OTMM PEft&amp;ON M P O h M U PON PAYMENT HAS ANtONT TO M fL IK TO

&lt;PAf CANCEL PAYMENT ON M NtlMNUNSEO PON PAYMENT PON ANY OTHEN U P VICE EAAMMA-

HON ON TNIATMENT WHICH It PCNPONMIO A t A NEIULT OP ANO WITHIN » HOUNt OP NEtPON
DtffC TOThT ADVENTiamtNT TONThe LAEE UNvCt EXAMINATION ONTHEATMENT

LAKE M A R Y DLVD.
C H I R O P R A C T I C CLINIC, INC

322-9300
I MOM A t

f

T A N U Ill

IN

DC

...

BCC
DISTRICT
APPLICANT NUMBER FROM

OS —
n iO —

Oeneral Rural
Planned Unit Development

S
2
4
4
2
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1
1
1

OR
LOR
MOR
LOR
LOR
OR
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OR
LOR

TO

SIZE

LOR
LtCfOFF.
COMM
COMM
COMM
PUD
COMM
COMM
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COMM
PRES—
COMM—
IND LIU —

SCO ACRES
.70 ACRES
1.40 ACRES
S3 ACRES
■22 ACRES
2.30 ACRES
ISO ACRES
134 ACRES
.40 ACRES
.43 ACRES

Preservation
Commercial
Industrial
Low Intensity Urban

LOCATION

aiM«MMBaHai a
Northwest comer ot Henderson Lana and Old S.R. 44
Southeast corner ol C.R. 437 end Lake Ruth Drive
Southwest comer of S.R. 43S and Lake Howell Lane
South side ol South Sheet, 400 last wsst ol US. 17-93
North aids ol Seminota SNd. 400 lest east of US. 1743
Waal aide of Clean Pnad surrounded try Atoms Send PUD
Waal aids of SR. 43S 173 mtts north of Mtalar Rood
West aids of S.R. 43S, 10 mils north of Ulkler Road
Southwest comar of CJL 411 and 6th Street In ChutuoU
Southeast corner of SR. 434 and Carrion Avenue
LOR —
Low Density Residential
MOR —
Medium Density Residential
HDR High Density Resident!*
LICiOFF— Low Intensity CommerciaVOffice

THE PUBLIC HEARING WILL BEGIN AT 6:00 P.M., OR AS SOON THEREAFTER AS POSSIBLE, IN ROOM
W120 OF THE SEMINOLE COUNTY SERVICES BUILDING LOCATED AT 1101 EAST FIRST STREET, SAN­
FORD, F L ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE URGED TO ATTEND. THE DATE OF THE 2nd (ADOPTION)
HEARING WILL BE ANNOUNCED AT THIS HEARING. HEARINGS MAY BE CONTINUED FROM TIME TO
TIME IF NECESSARY.
PER80N8 ARE ADVI8E0 THAT IF THEY DECIDE TO APPEAL ANY DECISION MADE AT THIS MEETING, THEY WILL NEED A RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS, AND FOR SUCH PURP08E, THEY MAY NEED TO ENBURE THAT A VERBATIM RECORD OF THE PROCEEDINGS IS MADE,
WHICH RECORD INCLUDE8 THE TESTIMONY AND EVIDENCE UPON WHICH THE APPEAL I8 TO BE MADE, FLORIDA 8TATUTE8 288.0105.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, CONTACT THE SEMINOLE COUNTY PLANNING OFFICE, 1101 EAST FIRST STREET, SANFORD, FL 32771,
(306) 321-1130. EXT 371.

�t Chris
r , Fister
'
'

SANFORD
HERALD
SPORTS
W RITER

Q u ite A N ig h t
Fo r Lake M a ry :
F rid a y , Fe b. 28
For about a three-hour span
Friday night, Lake Mary High
Sch ool d om inated the prep
athletic spotlight. It was perhaps
the most successful single day In
Lake Mary sports history and It
all occurred within a 25-mile
radius.
• In the Class 4A State Soccer
Tournament at Lake Mary High,
underdog Lake Mary pulled off
one o f the biggest upsets in state
history with a 4-2 overtim e
victory ovi
Miami K illian's
Cougars ir t)
' 'e semifinals.
• In th e 4 A -9 D i s t r i c t
B a s k e tb a ll T o u r n a m e n t at
Seminole High, the Rams came
back from an 11-point deficit in
the final six minutes to oust
arch-rival Seminole. 71-69, in
the district semifinals.
• In the 4A State Wrestling
Tournament at Lyman High,
Lake M ary ad van ced three
wrestlers to the semifinals and
compiled 22 points, Just nine
and a half points out o f first
place.
In the soccer match against
Killian, coach Larry McCorklc's
Rams fell behind, 2-0, in the first
half but bounced back to tie it at
2-2 behind goals by Steve Sapp
and Lee Alexander to force
overtime. In the first overtime
period, Rick Broennle scored to
give Lake Mary a 3-2 lead and
Manny Roldan later put the
finishing touches on the Cougars
with his first varsity goal.
In advancing to the state final.
Lake Mary knocked off a Killian
team that had won the state title
three times since 1977 and was
ranked second In the state most
o f this season. Lake Mary had
never advanced past the district,

Raines: No Rolls Royce For Toyota
Braves' Kasten, Reich Huddle In Atlanta
B y Sam Cook
H erald Sports Editor
Atlanta Braves President Stan Kasten
and agent Tom Reich huddled Monday
In A t la n t a to d is c u s s c o n t r a c t
possibilities, Tim Raines said Monday
night.
"T om (Reich) called me told me they
were meeting with the Braves." Raines
said. "But he also told me not to be any
more 'optimistic about this meeting than
the others.'"
Raines said he expects to hear from
Reich today and will probably go to
Sarasota Wednesday to meet with Reich
and his partner Bill Landman. Reich and
Landm an have a branch ofTlce in
Sarasota.
The Kasten-Reich meeting comes one
day after San Diego Padres' owner
Ballard Smith said he was withdrawing
his two-year, 92.2 million offer. Smith
said he felt the Padres’ offer was the best
deal which had been proposed for Raines
and to "bid against ourselves makes no
sense."
United Press International also re­
ported Reich had publicly and privately
said he will not allow the 27-ycar-old
former Montreal Expo outfielder to sign
for less than a three-year, 95.5 million
contract.
Raines, however, said Monday night
that is not true. "First of all. Tom Reich
would never put (dollar) figures in the
newspaper," he said. " I don't know
where they got that from. I never said I

B a s e b a ll
Wanted that much m oney."
The former Seminole High three-sport
standout said he Is aware that some
people may perceive him as being
greedy, but all he wants is the fair
market price for a player of his ability.
"T h e owners want to sign a Rolls
Royce for a Toyota price." Raines said.
" I have been one o f the better players In
baseball the past six years and 1 would
like to get paid for what I'm worth.
" I f you look at a the market value of a
Tim Raines, you're talking some big
dollars. I won 91.2 million two years ago
In arbitration. And the last two years I've
done better. How can 1 not be worth
what I made last year?"
Raines made 91.5 million last year
with the Expos. Then, he went out and
i won the batting title with a career-high
.334 average, drove in 62 runs and stole
70 bases. His average hrs improved
every year since 1983. He has been
selected to the National League All-Star
team each of his six years in the majors.
" I am not going to set a dollar
amount." Raines said. "But I would be
satisfied with the money I made last year
but I would also think it would be
negotiable. I don't want the fans or
anybody else to think I want 92 nVlIlon,
but how can you Justify me making less
money that last year?"

B e rth

f WEahwfiftSHlB!

soccer game had concluded, a
group of Lake Mary fans leaving
D on T . R e y n o ld s S ta d iu m
gathered around Assistant Prin• c lp a l Don S m ith w h o w as
L listening to the Lake MaryBi Seminole basketball game on
R Sanford’s WUEZ-AM radio sta■
tion. Smith gave play by play of
: I about the last two minutes of
;
play and, as Lake Mary built and
maintained the lead, the crowd
grew bigger. When Smith leaped
Into the air when Lake Mary nad
won. the crowd let out a thun­
d e ro u s c h e e r to c e le b r a te
another Ram victory.
The basketball victory over
Seminole High was about as big
an upset as the soccer triumph
over Killian. Lake Mary had lost
to Seminole twice before this
season, Seminole was the top
seed in the tournament, was
playing on its home court and
iiadwon 19 ofits last 20 games.
Cory Prom hit three consecu­
tive Jump shots to get Lake Mary
back in the game in the late
going while Matt Napoli had a
pair clutch hoops. Terry "T h e
C at" Miller, Oscar Merthie and
Eric Czemlejewskl all hit key
free throws down the stretch.
The victory brought tears for
coach W illie Richardson and
Prom along with relief for Miller.
Merthie and Bernard Mitchell, all
o f whom reside In Sanford but
have never beaten Seminole.
L a k e M a r y 's w r e s t le r s ,
meanwhile, had an outstanding
day in the first and second
rounds of the state tournament
led by T ro y Jackson, Scott
Flores and Bill Richards, all of
whom made the semifinals. Lake
Mary was in position for its best
finish ever going into Saturday's
decisive rounds.
On Saturday, Lake Mary High
School came back down to earth
as the soccer team put up an
excellent fight before falling to
top-ranked Tampa Lcto. 1-0, the
basketball squad dropped a
70-60 decision to powerhouse
Daytona Beach Mainland and
two o f the three wrestlers lost in
the semifinals as Lake Mary
finished ninth in the state.
Richards ran into Brandon's
defending state champion (142
pounds) Bret Gustafson and
finished second at 149 pounds
while unlimited Jackson and
109-pounder Scott Flores were
both fourth-place finishers. The
ninth-place finish was the best In
the school's history for coach
Doug Peters.
While neither o f the three
teams reached their ultimate
goals. Lake Mary and Seminole
County sports fans will not soon
forget the night o f Friday, Feb.
28. 1987.
v
&amp;
t

H*r*M f M i Sr Timmy Vincent

Richards
Runner-Up

Lake M a ry 's B ill R ichards, top, w orks over
M ia m i Southridge's B ria n Stew art during
sem ifinal round victo ry. R ichards' victo ry

BASKETB AL L

PREP LEADERS
Teem
Seminole*
Lyman
Lake Mery
Oviedo
Lake Branlley
Lake Howell
‘ SAC Champion*

W L
10 0
4 4
4 4
17
3 7
2 4

OB « l
— 24!
4
121
4 12-U
7 U K
7 7-1!
1 1)1

K EY , Seminole (S). Lake Mary (LM),
Lyman (L ). Oviedo (0 ), Lake Howell (LH),
Lake Brantley (LSI.

Roderick Henderson (S).
J*rry Parfcar (S)............
Otc«r Marthl* (LM ).......
Craig Radiak (L )...........
Robert Thomas (L )........
Tarry Millar (L M )..........
Robb Hogha* (O )...........
Vinca Floraoca (L ).........
Eric Ct*ml*|*wtkl (LM)
Andra Whltnay (S)........
A ionjo Robinson (LH)....
Oarran Lava (L B )..........
Doog Lawson (L B ).........
Slava Johnson (L H )........
Brian Wilson (O )............

Garth Bolton (0 ).........
Craig Walkar (S ).........
Shawn Hastar (L )........
Tarry Campball (0)....
Mart Napoli (LM )........
Chris Griffith (O )........
Aaron Gammons ( LH).
Barnard Mltchall (LM)
Randy Kcllar (L H )......
Mlchaal Edwards (SI..
Phil Clark (L H )............

Robb Hugh** (O )...........
Shawn Httftr (L )...........
Craig Radjak (L ) ...........
Darren Lava (L B )..........
MaH Napoli (LM )...........
Barri Shlrlty (L B ).........
Eric Ciarnlajawskl (LM)
Andra Whltnay (S)
Dana Hill (0 )..............
Jarry Parker (S).........
Darryl Starkaa IL )......
Stava Hathaway (S)....
Barnard Mltchall (LM)
Slav* Johnson (L H ).....
Randy Kallar (L H )......
Vinca Florence (L )......

Assists
Andra Whitney ($ )........
Robert Thomas (L ).......
Michael Edward* (Si....
Roderick Henderson (S)
Brian Wilton (0 )...........
Joa Nolff (L B )................
Tarry Millar (L M )......... ........23
Jarry Parker (SI........... .
Garth Bolton (0 ) ............
Tarry Campbell (O ).............. 23
Matt Napoli (LM )...........
C. Gibson (L H )............... ........1|
Steals
0
Andra Whltnay (S ).........
Rodarlck Henderson IS).
Mlchaal Edwurds (S )....
Brian Wilson (0 ) ............
Tarry Millar (LM ).......... .......31
Robart Thomas (L )........
Jo* Nolff (L B )................ .......22
Matt Napoli (LM )...........
Jarry Parker (S )............
Garth Bollon ( 0 ) ............
Oscar Marthl* (L M ).......
Robb Hughes (0 )...........
Tarry Campball (0 ).......
Stava Johnson (L H )........
Eric Cz*rnl*|*w*kl (LM)
Phil Clark (L H )..............
Btackad Mots
Craig Walkar (S)...........
Robb Hughes (0 )..........
Rodarlck Handarson (S)
Shawn Hastar (L )..........
Stava Hathaway (S)......
Alonio Robinson (LH)
Stava Kandall (0 ).......
Fra*-Throw Mooting
O
JO ar mar* attempts
Robart Thomas ( L )............ 10
Jarry Parkar (S)..................It
Andra Whltnay (S )................I t
Eric Citrnla|twskl (LM ).....25
Brant Ball (L B ).................... 23
Craig Radiak (L ).
Robb Hugh** (0)..
Darrin Lava (LB)
Garth Bolton (0 )......
Brian Wilson (O )......
Tarry Millar (LM)....
Mlchaal Edwards (S)
Las* than Saattempts
Slava Johnson (LH)....
Ooug Lawson (L B ).....
Randy Kallar (L H )....
Tarry Campball (0)....
Slave Hathaway IS)....
Alan Green* (O ).........
Mika Mandtville (LM)

MA
74-14
11-104
7S tt
71-101
111-142
70-t7
77-107
4310
51-73
34 53
50 75
71-121
4044

was one of m a n y for the Ram s during a
successful F rid a y night. He lost Saturday
for a state runner-up finish at 149 pounds.

Bell Captures Scoring Title,
Whitney Tops Assists, Steals
By Bom Cook
H erald Sports Editor
Lake Brantley's Brent Bell
wrapped up the county scoring
leadership w h ile S em in ole's
Andre Whitney captured two
categories in final regular-season
statistics released by the county
coaches.
No district tournament games
were used.
Bell, a 6-1 senior forward,
finished with 400 points even for
an 18.2 average in 22 games for
the P a tr io ts . T h e ta le n te d
swlngman was a good perimeter
shooter also also picked up a
valuable points by driving to the
hoop and hanging around for
offensive boards. Bell was also
adept at drawing fouls as he
attempted a county-leading 162
free throws while converting 118
for 72.8 percent.
S e m in o le 's R od erick H en ­
derson (469. 16.2) and Jerry
"S tick " Parker (455, 15.7), Lake
Mary's Oscar Merthie (360, 14.4)
and Lyman's Craig Radzak (282,
14.1) completed the top five.
Whitney, a Junior guard, was a
solid all-around performer for
the second consecutive season
for the Seminole Athletic Con­
ference champion Semlnoles.
The 5-11 Vi guard led the
county in assists with 6.7 per
game and steals with 3.7 per
outing. He also pulled down an
a m a zin g 5.3 rebounds and
scored 10.7 points. Lym an's
Robert Thomas was second In
assists (111, 5.6) and Seminole's
Henderson was second In steals
(78.2.7).
In other departments. Lake
Mary's Merthie came on strong
to w in t h e r e b o u n d i n g ;
Seminole's Craig Walker had the
m o s t b lo c k e d s h o ts ; an d
Lyman's Thomas had the best

B a s k e t b a ll
free-throw percentage.
Merthie, a mere 6-1 senior
center, snatched 255 boards In
25 games for a 10.2 average for
the Rams. Seminole's Walker
(235, 9.8), Lake Howell's Alonzo
Robinson (148. 8.2), Seminole's
H e n d e rs o n (2 2 0 , 7 .6 ) and
Brantley's Bell (160. 7.3) were
next In line.
Walker, a 6-8 junior center,
was a runaway leader In blocks
as he rejected 91 shots for an
average of 3.8 In 24 games.
Oviedo's Robb Hughes (40, 1.6),
H e n d e r s o n (4 6 . 1 .6 ) an d
Lyman's Shawn Hester (23, 1.3)
followed.
Thomas, a 5-10 senior, was an
carly-season leader, then fell
back a couple of notches before
reclaiming the lead for players
who attempted 50 or more free
throws. He converted 74 of 96
fo r 77 p ercen t. S e m in o le ’ s
P a rk e r (8 1 -1 0 6 , 7 6 .4 ) and
W h itn ey (75-99, 75.7) were
closely behind.
For players who attempted
less than 50 free throws. Lake
Howell's Steve Johnson con­
nected on 39 of 42 for a fine 92.8
percent.

W h itn e y

United P ress International
Navy, which failed to qualify
for postseason play 24 straight
years before the David Robinson
era. clinched Its third consecu­
tive trip to the NCAA Tourna­
ment.
Robinson hit 2 free throws
with 20 seconds left in the
Colonial Athletic Association
T o u r n a m e n t c h a m p io n s h ip
game Monday night to preserve
Navy’s 53-50 victory over North
Carollna-Wllmington and give
the Midshipmen an automatic
NCAA Tournament berth.
The triumph was Navy’s 13th
straight. Improving its record to
26-5, and m arked its third
straight conference-tournament
title. Robinson scored a gamehigh 23 points and earned
to u rn a m e n t M ost V a lu a b le
Player honors.
"Anytim e you have won the
championship twice in a row, of
course there's pressure on the
team ." first-year Navy coach
Pete Herrmann said. "B ut 1
think for the most part ... wc
handled the pressure.”
Navy has qualified for the
NCAA Tournament In all three
o f Robinson's years os a starter.
Tlte M idshipm en won three
tournament games last season —
beating Tulsa. Syracuse and
Cleveland State — before being
eliminated by Duke. In the 1985
tou rn am en t. N avy d efeated
Louisiana State, then lost to
M aryland. Before 1985, the
Midshipmen's last postseason
appearance was in 1960, when
they lost to West Virginia in
their first game.
Navy became the fifth team to
qualify for the tournament and,
later Monday, was Joined In the
64-tcam field by Fairfield. Also
having qualified for the NCAAs
as either a conference touma- i
ment champion or league cham­
pion arc Penn, Xavier, Marshall ;
and Alabama-Blrmlngham.
At East Rutherford, N.J., Jeff
Gromos scored 24 points, in- ;
eluding short Jumper with 24 i
seconds left in overtime to lead :
the Stags to a 73-70 victory over
Iona and their second straigh t;
Metro Atlantic Athletic Confer?.;
ence tournament title.
Elsewhere in tournament play,
Tulsa tripped Southern Illlnola
61-56 and Wichita State topped
Illin o is S tate 56-53 In th e
M issouri V a lle y C o n fe ren c e
semifinals; and Akron bombed
Youngstown State 103-74 anq
Austin Peay edged Morehcad
State 78-76 In the Ohio Volley
Conference tournament.
In non-tournam ent action,
Providence dumped Vlllanova
97-80, North Carolina State de­
feated C hicago State 86-78,
C le v e la n d S ta te d o w n e d
Northern Iowa 81-72. No. 18
Notre Dame blitzed Brooklyn.
76-57 and Fresno State dipped'
UC Santa Barbura 47-46,

i

�10A— Sanford Herald, Sanford, PI.

Tuoeday, March 3, m ;

Rogers Takes Late Model —
N EW S M Y R N A BEACH After scoring a strong second
p lace finish In the 125-tap
N A S C A R All A me r i c a n
C h a llen ge Scries at DeSoto
Speedway the previous week.
David Rogers came back to New
Smyrna Speedway on Saturday
night to win the 50-lap End of
the Month late model Champl&gt; onshlp.
Fastest qualifier Stan Eads
was second, followed by Tim
i Nooncr, Joe Middleton and Don
Hcsscll.
In the championship event for
the Thunder Car Division. Bill
• Kinley Inherited the lead and the
win, after early leader John
: Cochran lost an engine at half
i way. Pete Starr was second,
follow ed by new com er Jim
GrofT. Darrell Cole and Buddy
Whltford.

D ave M cC ab e d ro v e Don
Smith's Mustang to victory In
the street stoc'u nnln. In Florida
open-wheel action, young Ted
Hodgdon. a student at EmbryRiddle Aeronautical University,
won the End o f the Month
Championship event.
Wayne Marshall bested Mike
Kubanek (o win the road runner
feature. Four cylinder feature
winner was Gene Van Alstlne.
This coming Saturday night,
the monthly 100-lap Enduro will
be an extra added attraction to
th e s ix r e g u la r s p e e d w a y
divisions.
in
LA TE MODELS
Fa*t**t Qualifier: Sten Eed*. Tltutvill*.

If.Ofl KC

End of ttw Month Chomptonihlp lSO lap*)
— 1. David Roger*. Orlando; J. Stan Eadt,
Tltutvill*; 3. Tim Noontr, Llvo Oak; 4. Jo*
Middleton, South Daytona; S. Don H ** m II,
South Daytona; t. Rick Lokay, Orlando; 7.

Auto Racing
Don Fann. Frullland Park; I Hal **«rry.
Mlmt; 1 Buddy T**d, cylando; 10, Tommy
Patterson, Scotttmoor; II. Bully Berry,
Orlando; 11. Roger Lund, Rock Falli.
Wltcomln.
Lap Leaden: Tim Nooner; 1-4. David
Roger*: ISO.
THUNDER CARS
Feifetf Qualifier: Pete Starr, Rockladge,
10.43tec.
Heat (• lap*) — 1. John Cochran. Oak Hill.
End ol the Month Championthlp ( X lap*)
— 1. Bill Kinley, 0*t**n; I. Pet* Starr,
Rockledge; 3. Jim Grofl, Fort Pierce; 4.
Darrell Cole, Daytona Beach; 5. Buddy
Whltford, Daytona Beach; 4. Granny Tatroe,
Ormond Beach; 7. Suiy Whltford, Daytona
Beach; I. John Cochran, Oak Hilt; ». Jim
Voth, Melbourne; 10. Junior Simmon*. San­
ford.
Lap Leader*: Don Robert*: 1-J. John
Cochran: 4-14. Bill Kinley; 17 X .
STR EET STOCKS
Heat (I lap*) — I. Day*McCabe, Cocoa.
End of the Month Champlonthlp (IS lap*)
— 1. Dave McCabe. Cocoa; 3. Joey Warmack,

Kinley W ins Thunder Car
Sanford; 3 David Snodgrau, Melbourne; 4.
Marc Ktnley, 0»t**n; S. Phil Berg, Tavar**;
4. Gary Klein, Orlando; 7. Randy Lokey,
Orlando.
FOUR CYLINDERS
Heat (4 lap*) — 1. Gen* Van Atitlne.
Rockledge.
End of the Month Championship (IS lap*)
— t. Gen* Van Alttlne, Rockledge; 3. Jerry
Symon*. New Smyrna Beach; 3. Chuck
Shank, Orlando; 4. Jimmy Trevarthen, New
Smyrna Beach; S. Greg Cecil, Spring Hill; 4.
Bobby Shear*, Oiteen; 7. Tommy Symon*.
New Smyrna Beach; I. Tripp Carpenter,
Ocoee; f. Bill Martin. Sanford.
ROADRUNNERS
Heat (4 lap*) — 1. Mike Kubanek,
End of the Month Champlonthlp (IS lap*)
— 1, Wayne Marthall. Malabar; 3. Mike
Kubanek, Longwood; 3. Terry McDade, Lake
Mary; 4. Ricky Marthall. Malabar; S. Don
Ewen Jr., DeBary; 4. Chuck Ruth, Orange
City; 7. Rotemary Pltlor. Deltona.
FLORIDA MODI FI EDS
End of tha Month Champlonthlp (13 lap*)
— 1. Ted Hodgdon, Daytona Baach; 3. Wray
Shafer, Lake Helen; 3. Tommy Patterton.
Scottimoor; 4. Jeff Blehr. Deltona; S. Gary
Salvatore, Daytona Baach.

Earnhardt, Elliott Tie For Lead
DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) - Defending NASCAR Winston Cup
champion Dale Earnhardt and Daytona 500 winner Bill Elliott
arc tied fut the lead In thr national stock car racing standings
after Sunday’s Goodwrcnch 500 In North Curollna.
Earnhardt, who was fifth after the season-opening Daytona
500. moved Into a tie with Elliott by winning the second race o f
the 29-cvcut season. Each driver has 345 points.
Elliott, a Dawsonvlllc, Ga.. native, has never won the Winston
Cup championship. His best finish was second to Darrell Waltrlp
In 1985. Earnhardt of Kannapolis, N.C.. won the title last season
and also won It In 1980.
Ricky Rudd of Chesapeake, Va.. moved Into third In the
NASCAR Winston Cup standings with 313 points. Nell Bonnctt
of Hueytown. Ala., Is fourth with 302. and Waltrlp of Franklin,
Tenn., Is fifth with 293.
Rounding out the top 10 arc Ken Schrader. 290; Richard
Petty. 288; Morgan Shepherd. 275; Bobby Allison, 274: and Phil
Parsons. 260.
Terry Labontc. Bobby Hillln, Benny Parsons. Buddy Baker and
Davcy Allison round out the top 15.

'Flake' Is
A b n e y : L a d y S e m in o le s W ill C o n t e n d No Fluke,
Wins 2nd
SOFTBALL

S A C PREVIEW:

Carl
Carlson
HERALD
BOATING
W RITER

Weekend 'Skips'
Need Knowledge
For Emergencies
Not all the people who enjoy
boating are "weekend skippers."
. Many of them are "weekend
passengers" Someone else runs
, the boat, and they are Just along
, for the ride.
But what If the skipper falls
overboard or Is the victim of a
.sudden stroke or heart attack
while you are fishing 16 miles
cast of Cape Canaveral? Sud­
denly you are In command!
Suddenly you need to know the
basics of how to run the boat,
how to use emergency equip­
ment, how to use the radio, how
to survive.
The time to learn is before an
emergency like this happens —
plan ahead, be prepared. Ask
questions about the boat and
how it operates. Most skippers
■will talk your ears off, If you give
, them half a chance. The more
,you know, the safer you'll be if
something unfortunate happens.
Before you leave the dock, find
out o f the skipper or anyone else
‘ o n b o a r d Is t a k i n g a n y
medication and what to do If
there Is a problem. Find out how
to start the engine, and how to
shift it Into forward and reverse.
Make sure the life Jackets are
Immediately available, and If
you're not sure, ask how to put
them on. Have the skipper show
you where the distress signals
' are and how to use them. There
should be a first aid kit. Where Is
it?
Many boats are like old houses
(or my garage) — there are many
nooks and crannies. The skipper
can find things — but can
a n y o n e e ls e ? A few e x tra
minutes asking questions at the
dock could save your life.
Keep asking questions while
underway. Ask about the com­
pass and how It works. Always
be aware o f your position. There
: Is a big difference between being
16 miles southeast o f Canaveral
or 16 miles northeast. From time
to time ask the skipper what
compass heading he would take
! to get back to port.
Learn how to call for help
using channel 16 on the VHF
radio. If necessary, the Coast
{ Guard can help you get back to
port or make arrangements for
medical assistance.
If you are a "weekend passen­
g er" with any regularity, you
will want to know more about
boating. Attend a safe boating
class offered by the Coast Guard
Auxiliary or Power Squadron.
These classes can help you
become a better passenger, crew
member, or skipper. For addi­
tional Information contact Carl
Carlson. 323-0416.

0 00

J

B O A TIN G T IP - Pyrotechnic
Visual Distress Signals — Coast
Guard approved pyrotechnic v i­
sual distress signals Include
hand-held or aerial red flares,
hand held or floating orange
smoke devices, and launchers
fo r a e r ia l re d m e t e o r s o r
parachute flares.
Pyrotechnics devices have a
very hot flame, and the ash and
slag can cause serious burns or
Ignite other materials. Pistol
launched and hand-hold meteors
have many of the same charac­
teristics o f a firearm and must be
: handled with the same caution
{and respect.
! Never fire a 12 gauge flare in a
;shotgun — choking the barrel
'can obstruct the meteor and
:cause serious injury. Only Are 12
Gauge flares In Coast Guard
approved launchers. Be sure to
keep pyrotechnic devices away
from children.

By C hris F itter
H erald Sports W riter
Seminole High has not been banging
down district championship doors the past
few years on the softball diamond. This
year, however, coach Lancy Abney feels his
Lady Seminoles have all the tools necessary
to build a Seminole Athletic Conference
contender.
With solid defense, strong hitting and
experienced pitching, Seminole hopes to
have one Its most successful seasons ever.
Second-year coach Abney's team Is 1-0
going Into this week's action which Includes
the SAC opener Thursday against Lake
Howell at Fort Mellon Field In Sanford.
" I think we have a chance to be much
better than last year," Abney said. "W e
basically have the same team, only with
more experience."
Semlnqle has Its entire starting Infield
returning from lost year’s team Including
senior Sheri Peterson at first base, sopho­
more Bobble Osborne at second, sophomore

V lk k l O liver at shortstop and Junior
Showonda Walker at third. Senior Shelly
Sanders Is the catcher and Junior Jackie
Suggs handles the pitching duties. Sanders
and Osborne were First Team All-County
selections a .year ago. Peterson Is a threeyear starter for Seminole and has been one
o f the team's top hitters since her sopho­
more year.
"T h e Infield Is Just as solid as It can be."
Abney said. "Osborne was outstanding last
year and has Improved and Vlkkl (Oliver)
has settled In at shortstop and has a lot
more confidence In herself. Shelly (Sanders)
has Improved her hitting quite a bit and she
has always been probably the best defensive
catcher In the county."
The outfield has four new starters thlB
season but Abney said It Is stronger than
last year's outfield. Freshmen Natasha
Beasley starts In left field with sophomore
Tammy Bailey In left center, sophomore
Leticia Strickland In right center and
sophomore Amy Hawkins In right.
"I'm really happy with the girls In the

outfield." Abney said. "Beasley has blazing
speed and a strong throwing arm and hits
the ball real hard end Strickland will really
ado a lot t.. the team in the field and at the
plate."
Others who will contribute for the Lady
'Nolcs this season Include senior Lisa
McGrotha, Juniors Kim Walsh and Lori Bird
and .sophomores Sarah Kline and Kim Allen.
"1 know everyone else In the conference
has gotten better than last year," Abney
said. "It's going to be a really tough and
Interesting season.”

The Lady Seminoles hope to start off their
SAC schedule with a victory over Lake
Howell Thursday. The Lady Sliver Hawks
were the only team Seminole did not cither
beat or stay close to last season.
"W e'll see what we can do with the Lake
Howell Jinx Thursday," Abney said. "Last
year. Lake Howell was the only team that
really blew us away. Coach (Jo) Luciano
said she'd like lo put everyone she plays In
our uniforms."

Nolen: Bigger Sticks To Bolster Lake Mary
Songer.
Lake Mary has a 1-3 record so far this
season but was without Frey and Bonaven­
ture the first two games. In two games, Frey
has a .625 average while Bonaventure Is
hitting .555 with two homers and seven
runs batted In. Taylor and Songer arc both
hitting at a .385 clip for four games. The
Lady Rams will also look for offensive
production from returning starters Reedy
Metz, Am y Adams, Laurie Lelffer and Val
Smith.

IjC h r iir t it ir
Harold Sport# W rite r
Last season. Lake Mary’s defense could
hold its own with anybody In Central
Florida. The Lady Rams' anemic offense,
though, was the major factor In a sub-par
season.
With some added offensive firepower, and
another solid defensive alignment, its# Lady
Rams hope to make 1987 a banner year for
first-year coach Karen Nolen,
"W e've got a couple more big sticks In
there this year," said Nolen, who previously
was head coach at West Orange High and an
assistant at Lake Mary. "W e're working a lot
on hitting and need to have hitters up. and
down the lineup contributing.”

Defensively, Lake Mary Is solid and
experienced at almost every position. The
Infield Is anchored by Frey at second base
and Lelffer, a Junior, at shortstop while
Sm ith w ill play third and Stephanie
Woodard Is at first. Lelffer, who has one of
the best gloves in Seminole County, moves
from third base to shortstop while Smith
moves from' first to third. Metz, the only
senior on the team, will start at catcher for
the third year In a row.

Brooke Taylor and Mamie Frey, a pair of
Juniors, are the top returning hitters from
last year’s club while Nolen Is also looking
for production out of newcomers Sharon
Bonaventure. a junior transfer from Winter
Park, and freshman designated hitter Paula

...Raines
Continued from BA
probably could have gotten $2 million.
"But I think 1 am the leader of the free
agents. Whatever happens to me will
determine whether free-agency lives or
dies. If the owners can break me, they
probably figure they can break anyone
and free-agency will go down the drain.
"T h e owners are talking real tough
now, but wait until the fans stop coming
to the ball park. All of this Junk (alleged
collusion) Is messing up the game. There
are too many star players not able to get

Jobs. It Is not like they are at the end o f
their careers.
"A n d I’m the youngest of all of them ."
he added.
Along with Raines, Bob Homer, Lance
P a rris h , fo r m e r te a m m a te A n d re
Dawson, Rich Gedman, Ron Guidry. Bob
Boone and Doyle Alexander are still
unsigned.
Despite his role as free-agency leader,
Raines sajd he did not know If he would
become a martyr for free agency and sit
out this season.
"Th at Is something I would really have
to think about." he said. " I don't know
now what I would do. But I don't think I
will be sitting out. 1 still think I will sign
with somebody.

T h e ou tfield w ill Include returning
starters Adams, left field, and Taylor, right
center, along with freshman Terry Peters In
left center and Bonaventure In right.
Adams, a Junior. Is one o f the top returning
outfielders In the county and Is working to
add another good stick to the lineup.
The. pitchers for (he Lady Rams include
Monica Frakcs and Janice Paris both of
whom have no varsity experience but have
pitched In youth leagues. Frakes pitched the
first two games while Paris is 1-1 with a
two-hit shutout In her last outing.
Others who will contribute for the Lady
Rams this season arc Junior outfielders
Tonya Colvin, Sherry Alderson and Colette
Davis and sophomore Inflelders Susannc
DubrouiUct and Tam my Northam.
"Our defense Is os solid as last year and
our hitting is improved." Nolen said. "W e ’ll
play competitive softball In the conference. I
think wc proved we can play with anybody
by giving Boone a real tough gam e."

"I'm pretty sure I'll be playing Open­
ing Day for somebody."

00m

YES, V IR G IN IA — Although Raines
may have wavered as to where he would
like to play, wife Virginia said she has
her mind B et on Atlanta. "There Is no
doubt In my mind.” she said Monday
night. " I always wanted to go to
Atlanta."
And the San Diego falling out did not
bother her one bit. "I'm glad It's not San
Diego." she said. "I didn't want to go all
the way out there."
Father Ned Raines agreed. " I didn't
want San Diego," he said Monday night.
"T h a t would be further than going to
Montreal.”

By Gam Cook
H erald 8ports Editor
When a team's No. 3 starter
opens the season with a pair of
shutouts. It Is no wonder the
Florida Sports Writers Associa­
tion ranks that team No. 2 In Its
prep baseball poll.
Scan "F lak e" Flaherty, who
labors behind Steve Shakar and
Anthony Laszaic for the Lake
Mary Rams, does not take a back
scat when It comes to statistics.
Flaherty hurled his second gem
of the season Monday, blanking
Daytona Beach Mainland on
three hits as the Rams posted a
10-0 victory at Lake Mary High
School.
L ak e M ary. 6-0, op e n s
Sem inole Athletic Conference
play Friday at home against
Lake Brantley.
" F l a h e r t y m ow ed them
down," Satisfied skipper Allen
Tuttle said Monday night. "H e
didn't hit too badly cither."
Flaherty, who struck out eight
and walked three while hurling
75 pitches, put the Bucs out of
their misery with a one-hop
double o ff the fence In left center
to bring on the "slaughter rule"
In the bottom of the sixth Inning.

The Rams, ranked second
Uehiud unbeaten (7-0) Miami
Columbus, Jumped on loser Tom
Phillips for two runs In the first,
three In the second and three
more in the third.
In the first, ail-state shortstop
Shane Lcttcrlo doubled down
line and one out later went to
third on a wild pitch. He scored
when Ryan Lisle grounded out
to the shortstop. Laszaic doubled
over left fielder’s head to restart
the outburst and and second
baseman Wes Wcger doubled to
right center for a 2-0 lead
In the second. Jeff "L e fty "
Hagen rapped a one-out single to
center before Matt Messina
singled and Lcttcrlo reached on
an error to load the bases. Kelly
Hyscll forced Hagen home but
Lisle singled off third base for
another rlbbie and a 3-0 lead.
Laszaic walked to force in Letterlo and Wegcr drew another
pass to score Hysell for a 5-0
bulge*.
In the third, Eric Blrle walked
b e fo re A a ro n " T h e S h e i k "
latarola flew out to second.
Messina walked and Birle went
to third on a wild pitch. Messina
Btole second and Lcttcrlo scored
Blrle with a groundout. Kelly
Hysell was hit by pitch and then
stoic second before Lisle scored
both runs by reaching on an
error.

C a r t e r 'P u s h e d Too F a r / B o lts In d i a n s ' C a m p
ing one-year pacts were outfielders Eric
Davis and Kal Daniels, and pitchers Tom
Browning. Ron Robinson. John Franco
and Frank Williams.
While the Reds would not disclose the
terms o f the contracts. It Is believed
Davis. Franco and Williams signed for
$300,000, B row ning for $275,000.
R o b i n s o n $ 1 8 5 , 0 0 0 an d D a n i e l s
$85,000.

United Press International
TUCSON. Ariz. (UPI) - Joe Carter,
who last year led the major leagues with
121 RBI, Monday left the Cleveland
Indians spring training camp when the
club forced him to accept a $250,000
contract.
Saying he was "pushed too far."
Carter departed after Indians senior vice
president Dan O'Brien gave him a
$250,000 pact Instead o f the $380,000
he was seeking. Carter Is only 29 days
short o f the three years o f major-league
experience necessary to qualify for
salary arbitration.
"Joe Carter ts certainly going to earn
millions o f dollars In his career. But he
won't get all o f them in 1987," O’Brien
The renewal contract also1Includes a
$25,000 bonus should Carter make the
All-Star team. Carter, slated to switch
from the outfleld to first base this year,
earned $190,000 In 1986.,
"N ext year, I'll have three years in and
I'll set the rules." said Carter, who turns
27 Saturday. "W hat goes around, comes
around, I've dealt with them fairly, but
they haven’t done the same with me and
m y agent (Richard Bry o f St. Louis)."
Carter, a .302 hitter with 29 homers In
1986, said he had reduced his demands
from $437,000. He pointed out that Eric

B a s e b a ll
Davit o f Cincinnati earned $90,000 In
1986 and was offered $300,000 by the
Reds.
" I f he can get that, asking to double
my salary is not unfair,” he said.
VERO BEACH (UPI) - Reliever Ken
Howell and shortstop Mariano Duncan
had their 1987 contracts unilaterally
renewed by the Los Angeles Dodgers,
who did not disclose the salaries.
However, It was learned Duncan was
renewed at the same salary he earned In
1986, while Howell was given a slight
cut in pay.
Duncan hit .229 In 109 games last
year with eight home runs and 30 RBI.
Howell appeared In 62 games, posting a
6-12 record with 12 saves and a 3.87
earned-run average.
Both players had sought raises for
1987.
"W e felt what they were asking for was
beyond what was fair,” said Dodgers
Vice President A1 Campanls.

FORT LAUDERDALE (UPI) - The
New York Yankees renewed the con­
tracts o f left-handed pitcher Dennis
Rasmussen and third baseman Mike
Pagllarulo. the club announced.
ST. PETERSBURG (UPI) - St. Louis
Cardinal Manager Whltey Herzog an­
nounced, John Tudor will make his
spring debut Sunday against the New
York Mels.
Tudor, a left-hander, was 13-7 last
year and missed the final three weeks of
the season with a shoulder Injury.
He will be follow ed by Mets by
left-hander Tim Conjoy and right-hander
BUI Dawley, who was acquired from the
Chicago White Sox In the offseason.
In Saturday’s spring opener, nonroster rookie Joe Magrane will start
against the Mets. Left-hander Dave
LaPoint, a former Cardinal who has

TAM PA (UPI) - The Cincinnati Reds
reached contract agreements with all six
of the club's remaining holdouts. Sign­

t

returned to the fold, also is expected to
pitch.
ST. PETERSBURG (UPI) - The re­
maining 11 months o f probation for New
York Mets Tim Teufel and Ron Darling
were set aside yesterday by a Houston
Judge, who ruled that charges stemming
from an Incident Involving the players
and police officers outside a bar last July
have been dismissed.
Teufel and Darling were arrested July
18 on charges o f resisting arrest with
violence and felonlouB assault as (he
result of a fight with off-duty policemen
sanctioned as security personnel for a
Houston nightclub.
The players pleaded guilty to reduced
charges Jan. 26 and were fined $200 and
placed on a year's probation each by
District Judge Joe Kegans, whose ruling
yesterday came after Teufel and Darling
had com p leted one mont h o f uns u p e r v i s e d p r o b a t i o n .
" K makes It sound as If It never
happened." Teufel said after the Mets*
workout here.
SCOTTSDALE. Ariz. (UPI) - Fiery
righthander Joaquin Andujar. whose
late arrival plans angered Oakland Man­
ager Tony La Russa, reported to the A's
training camp.

�■r

I 4 • « 'I $

SCOREBOARD
TV/RADIO

TenlgM'i Prep/JarCe I t t a M i
TR ACK* FIELD
BOYIt 4 p.m. — Triangular Waal: Orlando Oak Ridge and
Orlando Edgewater al Seminole
ROYS * OIRLSt 3: JOp.m. — L -ske Mary al Lyman

TV;.*./CiO: T a O p ri Unary

K lim a N otches Third H a t Trick,
Red W ings Slip B y Bruins, 4-3
BOSTON (UPI) — Petr Klima. whose name has surfaced
In trade rumors, is making himself appealing to a
playoff-contending team — his own.
Klima completed his third career hat trick with eight
seconds to play In overtime Monday night to give the
Detroit Red Wings a 4-3 victory over the Boston Bruins.
The Red Wings have reportedly been dissatisfied with
the play of Klima. 22, who defected from Czechoslovakia in
August 1985. He Joined the Red Wings last season and was
expected to .be a proficient scorer this year but struggled
early. Last season, he collected 32 goals and 24 assists for
56 points, fourth-high on the team.
"Best game of the season," said Klima when asked to
describe his pcrformence. "But you never know, two bad
games and I might be back again (In the doghouse)."
" A t the beginning o f the year, I thought he’d be a 50-goal
scorer." Detroit Coach Jacques Demers said. "H e strug­
gled, but now he’s getting it going. This was his best game
of the year,

Rizzuto A m o n g H a ll Contenders
TAM PA (UPI) — After 30 years In the broadcast booth
perfecting his trademark phrase. Phil Rizzuto Is poised to
deliver a heartfelt "H oly C ow l"
Rizzuto and two other former New York Yankee
lnflelders are among the leading contenders tndiy for
election Into the Baseball Hall of Fame In voting by the
Veterans Committee.
Tony Lazzerl and Joe Gordon, a pair of power-hitting
second baseman who were members o f championship
Yankee teams, also are on the candidate list that will be
placed before the 18-member Veterans Committee. The
committee, consisting of Hsdl of Fame players, executives
and baseball writers, has scheduled a news conference at
noon EST to announce a maximum of two selections.
Considerable support has been growing for the Induction
o f Vic Willis, a tum-of-the-century pitcher who won 20 or
more games in a season eight times. Former Phillies’
outfielder Richie Ash bum, fiery manager Leo Durocher
and umpire A l Barllck are also included on the ballot.

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Purdue Surges To N o . 3 Ranking
NEW YORK (UPI) - The basketball-crazed state of
Indiana has two o f Its major college teams peaking and a
third slumping as the NCAA Toumamcn{. approaches.
Purdue used three Big Ten victories to gain the
conference lead and surge three positions to No. 3
nationally In voting Monday by United Press Interna­
tional’s Board o f Coaches. Notre Dame capitalized on a
week of upsets to make Its first appearance this season In
the Top 20.
Indiana was beaten in Big Ten games by Purude and
Illinois, losing Its grip on the conference title and dropping
two places to No. 4.
Nevada-Las Vegas earned 29 first-place votes and 598
points to capture the top spot for the fifth consecutive
week. The Runnln’ Rebels, 30-1, held off a strong bid by
No. 2 North Carolina, which received 12 No. 1 votes and
878 points in moving up a notcli,..Forty-one o f thc 42
coaches on the Board voted.

WtiMifton
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e^

Akccm Olajuwon scored 32
poIntB and grabbed 10 rebounds
to guide the Rockets to their
sixth straight triumph over San
Antonio.
The Spurs trailed 90-82 with
7:24 remaining after a pair of
free throws by Olajuwon. The
Spurs put together a 14*6 run.
tying the score 96-96 on a basket
by Walter Berry.
After the Robertson pass was
knocked away, the Rockets
opened a 102-98 lead with 12
seconds remaining on 2 free
throws by Robert Reid.
H aw ks 121, B u llets 91
At Atlanta, Dominique Wilkins
scored 33 points, and Kevin
Willis colllectcd 26 points and 17
rebounds to pace the Hawks.
W a sh in g ton s J e f f Malone
finished with 22 points. Moses
Malone hit only 2 o f 10 shots
from the field for the Bullets.
M avericks 138, Suns 112
At Dallas, Rolando Blackman
scored 25 points and James
Donaldson added 22 to lead the
Mavericks. The Suns lost their
second straight under new coach
Dick Van Arsdale and seventh
straight overall.
Kings 117, Nnggeta 114
At Denver, Mark Olberdlng hit
for a season-high 21 points.
Including 9 o f 9 free throws in
the fourth quarter, to rally Sac­
ramento. Denver’s Fat Lever
collected his 13th triple-double
of the season with 15 points, 16
rebounds and 10 assists. The
victory was the Kings’ third on
their eight-game road trip.
S oeeI cs 123, C avaliers 107
A l Seattle. Tom Chumbcrs
scored 36 points and Maurice
Lucas contributed 18 ulf (he
bench to carry Seattle past
Cleveland. Alton Lister pulled
down 21 rebounds and Nate
McMillan dished out 16 assists
for Seattle. Cleveland was led by
25 points apiece from rookies
J o h n W i l l i a m s and Brad
Daugherty.

,,

JN
&gt;

TO O O H C H A L L E H a e .
YOU S H O U LD C O H tlO a *
T H E O H TIO M OH A
OHJOF* C L E A H s. BVEM
TH O U G H
YOU'D INC.UA
u n pla v a o le

tradi
Ottruil - Ranraad tha contracts at third
batman Daratl CaHt pitch* Eric King and
inlmd* Doug Btk*
Nra York (ALI - Rtnraad It* contracts at
third bowman Mika PagUarvH and pitch*
DanniRaimuran

United F ree* International
Alvin Robertson, known best
for his defensive skills, com­
mitted an offen sive m istake
Monday night that helped send
the San Antonio Spurs to a loss.
With San Antonio trailing by 2
points, Robertson tried to force a
pass to a double-teamed Artis
Gilmore and had It knocked
away with 26 seconds left as the
Houston Rockets went on to a
105-100 triumph over the Spurs.
" A lot o f things happened
tonight. There were a number of
t h i n g s t hat s e e m e d to go
wrong," Gilmore said.
Robertson, who entered play
averaging 3.47 steals per game,
has made the All-Star team the
past two years because o f his
defensive prowess, and was
named the league’s defensive
player of the year last season.
Monday night, he finished with o
t e a m - h i g h 26 p o i n t s and
Gilmore added 18.
"W e thought the Spurs would
go to (Mike) Mitchell with 25
seconds left," Houston Coach
Llll Fitch said. "T h ey decided to
go to Gilmore. W e were de­
termined to make them hit a
shot rather than foul and send
five people to the boards. In last
second-situations like that the
Spurs have about five people
who can really hurt you.”

THK
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Eagles Will Not Guarantee Jaworski Pact
Jaw orski; 'gned with the Eagles
last summer, the team was
required to Inform him by March
1 If It wished to guarantee his
salary for the following season.
S in c e the tea m did not,
Jaworski, who will tum 36 on
March 23. can sign with another

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II. SraaM (Jail

The Sanford Men’s Softball Association will hold an
organization meeting Wednesday at the Sanford Civic
Center's youth wing at 6:30 p.m.. SMSA spokesman John
Whigham said.
Interested parties should attend or call Whigham at
321-8280 for information.

Football

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Softball To M e e t W ednesday

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - The
Philadelphia Eagles protected
themselves from having to pay
q u a r t e r b a c k Ron J a w o r s k i
$600,000 next season In case
the 14-year veteran faUed to
tnake the club.
The Eagles Informed Jaworski
over the weekend that tt would
\ not guarantee his contract for
"the 1987 season.
Under a four-year contract

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KEY BISCAYNE (UPI) — Rain upset the schedule at the
$1.8 million Llpton International Tennis Championships
Monday and ninth seed Claudia Kohde-KUsch provided a
mild upset In eliminating seventh seed Zina Garrison.
Despite the wet weather. Stefan Edberg of Sweden,
ranked No. 2. managed to move Into the quarterfinals with
a 7-5,6-3,6-4 victory over Kevin Curren of Austin, T cxeis.
Kohde-Kilsch, o f West Germany, turned back Garrison,
o f Houston, Texas. 6-4.4-6,6-1.
Other scheduled matches were washed out by the rain,
and weather forecasters predicted wet weather for the
remainder o f the week.

The Oviedo Lady LionB trimmed winless Kissimmee
Osceola. 8-3. In softball Monday for their fifth victory In
seven games.
No results were reported.

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Rain Upsets U p to n Schedule

O vie d o Trim s O sceola, 8-3

VOLLEYBALL

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Friday'! Gama)
C a n AAA .
Gull B i«a « ( H I ) n . HaiiandiH (It II. J.M

HOUSTON (UPI) — Former University of Houston football
coach Bill Yeoman admitted he gave small cash payments
to players he considered In need, documents released by
the school revealed.
Yeoman made his comments to attorneys hired by the
university to Investigate the school’s football program. The
Information on the payments was contained In documents
the university was ordered to release Monday.
During an Interview with an attorney from a Houston law
firm, Yeoman also said he sometimes gave money to
players' parents to help with rent or utility bills. He told
Investigators the funds generally came from his own
pocket, but that he sometimes sssked alumni to contribute.

Sanford’s Clifton Campbell, a sophomore at Auburn,
finished second to Florida’s Dennis Mitchell In the 400
meters In the Southeastern Conference Indoor Champion­
ships Sunday at Gainesville.
Mitchell, who was redshlrted last year, won the 400
meters In 46.92 to Campbell’s 47,12. Mitchell also
anchored the 1.600 meter relay team to a narrow victory,
3:10.09-3:10.39 for Campbell’s War Eagles.

SOFTRALL
4:13 p.m. — Samlnolo at Orlando Boona
4: JO p.m. — Laka Brantlay al Orlando Evan*
4: JO p.m. — Lyman al Wlntar Cardan Wool Oranga

Roplaa J - Jackionrlllt Unluanlty Ckr litian
al Hilliard
Raplaa t - Ealonvlllt Wynton Tack
Roplaa J - St. Ptttnburp Kaxrlck at
Tampa Baytkon Ckrht lan
RapNa I - Van Stack St. Edaardi pi

Yeom an A d m its Cash Paym ents

C a m pb e ll Runs Second Indoors

RASCRALL
3 p.m. — Santa Fa CC al Samlnolo CC
4 p.m. — Laka Howell at Orlando Blihep Meora

Rl|loa I - Jockwnvllit Waliaan ot
JacktanriHaRW
fagMa I - Tonga G*M*r ol Loktitn4

Robertson
Flubs
Spurs Fall

play*/* lor San Dlago outfialdar Kavln McRaynoldt and touthpaw
ralitvar G*na Waltar. McRaynoldt will III anugly into Iha No. A spot,
pro»*cllng Darryl Slrawbarry, who had mor* itrlkaouta (141) than
hit* (173) laataaaaon.
"Frank'* bran vary good in Improving argaa uu* fra I w* nrad help
and w* d*llnlt*ly ahould b* tlrongar that latl yaar," aayt Johnson,
who can't concaal a trnUa whan dracrlblrtg Naw York'* primary
nrad* at "a backup thortitop and a rasarve catchar."
STRKNOTHI — Daap. balancad starting stall In Dwlghl Goodan,
Ron Darling, Bjb Ojada. Sid Fernanda! and Rick Aguilera;
formidable mldda of tha linaup with Kalth Harnandt!. Gary Carl ar,
Strawberry and McRaynoldt; outstanding relievers Jess* Orosco
and Roger McDowell; smart, peaky tabla-satlars In Lenny Oykstra
and Wally Beckman.
WKAKNKISKS — Shortatop Ralaal Santana had IJ extra base hits
and batted .JIB; Ray Knight's departure leave* uncertainty at third
between veteran Howard Johnson and rookie Dave Magadan; team
leader* Carter and Hernendei could both slow down at age JJ.
NEW FACES — Lett-handed batter* hit |ust .131 against Waltar,
who can pitch both long and short rellaf; McRaynold* hit 34 homars
last season and batted .33f vs. southpaws; Magadan has never hit
below .30* In lour minor league seasons but has shown no power.
OUTLOOK — Johnson has averaged *9 wins per season In three
years In New York. His combative nature won’t tolerate
complacency and It will taka a monumental allort to dislodge tha
Mats.

“Let The Professionals Do It“

team.

E C H O L S T R E E S E R V IC E

Jaw orB k i’ s lawyer. John
Langcl, said Sunday the team’s
decision made Jaworski a free
agent. But he agreed with Gam­
ble Monday there Is a procedure
that must be followed before that
can o c c u r , s t a r t i n g w ith
Jaworskl's request to be waived
because of the team’s decision
concerning his contract.

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2405 Qrsndvlsw Avenue
Sanford, FL 32771

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P h O D fi

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HA-Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday,

March' J, 1M7

M a rk e t G ains P o w er

NEW YORK (UPI) — Price# edged higher today
in moderate trading of New York Stock Exchange
Issues as nn earlier gain of almost three points
eroded rapidly.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which fell
3.52 Monday, was up .42 to 2220.89 shortly after
the market opened.
Advances led declines 482-402 among the
1.420 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 11,901.000
shares.
The stock market finished narrowly lower In
moderate trading Monday after late selling erased
very modest gains.
'
•
“ It was a know-nothing day and a do-nothing

Local Interest
These quotations provided by
m e m b e r s o f t he N a t i o n a l
Association o f Securities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
prices as o f mid-morning today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.
American Pioneer
Barnett Bank
First Union
Florida Power
&amp; Light
Fla. Progress
HCA
Hughes Supply
Morrison's
NCRCorp
Plessey
Scotty's
Southeast Bank
SunTrust
Walt Disney World
Westlnghouse

Bid
8%
3 5 ft
28ft

A sk
9
35ft
28ft

32
39ft
34 Vi
28
25
64 Vi
3 7 ft
15
29ft
26ft
58 ft
6 3 ft

32ft
4 0 ft
34 ft
2 8 ft
25 ft
64ft
38ft
15ft
30
26ft
58ft
63 ft

Gold And Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold
London
Previous close 405.00 olT 0.50
Morning fixing 403.70 o(T 1.30
Hong Kong
404.00 off 1.25
Now York
Comex spot
gold open
403.70 up 0.10
Comex spot
silver open
0.447 up 0.020
(London m orning fixin g
change Is baaed on the previous
day's closing price.)

Dow Jones
Dow Jones Averages — 10 a.m.
30 Indus
2221.46 up 0.99
20 Trans
940.77 up 0.73
15 Utils
217.07 up 0.35
65 Stock
848.94 up 0.59

day," said Peter Fumlas, an equities trader at
Smith Barney, Harris Upham &amp; Co. "W ith the
market nt these high levels, the Investor and the
decision maker wont to sit back and see what
direction the market’s going to take."
Fumlss said Investors also wanted to sec If the
market would respond to White House changes.
Indudihg the appointment of Howard Baker as
chief of stafT and to President Reagan's response
to the Tower Commission Report on the IranContra arms affair, set for Wednesday night.
Upcoming economic reports also encouraged
Investors to stay on the sidelines. Fumlss said.
The U.S. Commerce Department reported
Tuesday before the market opened that the
government's Index of leading economic In­
dicators fell 1 percent in January.

D o lla r H ig h e r A s
G o ld Ta k e s Fall
By United Press International
The U.S. dollar opened higher
against most major world cur­
rencies today. The price of gold
was lower.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, the dollar edged slightly
higher against the Japanese yen
in slow trading, closing at
153.60, up 0.18 from Monday's
close o f 153.42.
In European trading, the dollar
opened in Frankfurt at 1.8355
German marks, up from Mon­
day's close of 1.8264: in Zurich
at 1.5442 Swiss francs, against
1.5382: and in Paris at 6.1125
French francs, against 6.085 on
Monday.
The dollar began the day
higher In Brussels at 38.325
Belgian francs, against Monday's
close o f 38.20; In Amsterdam at
2.073 Dutch guilders, against
2.0645; and in Milan at 1,305.50
lire, against 1,299.60.
In London, the British pound
sterling continued strengthen­
ing, operilng at $1,565, against
Monday's close o f $ 1.5625.
In early New York trading the

dollar edged slightly higher
against major foreign currencies
in moderate trading.
Gold slipped 50 cents In
Zurich to open at $404 per troy
ounce and opened $1 lower In
London at $404 an ounce.
The morning llxlng In London
was $403.70, off $1.30 from
Monday's close.
Silver opened unchanged In
Zurich at $5.45 per troy ounce
and edged slightly lower in
London to open at $5,445 per
troy ounce, against Monday's
close of $5.45 an ounce.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, gold closed at $404 an
ounce on the Hong Kong Bullion
Exchange. ofT $1.25 from Mon­
day's close.
In early trading on New York’s
Comex, a 100-troy-ounce gold
futures contract for current de­
l i v e r y In March op ene d at
$403.70 an ounce, up 10 cents
from M o n d a y 's close. A
5,000-troy-ounce silver futures
contract for delivery in March
opened at $5,447, ofT 2.5 cents
an ounce.

Economic Indicators To k o Plunge
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A poor
performance in factory orders,
building permits and orders for
consumer goods caused a 1
percent plunge in the index o f
leading economic indicators for
J a n u a ry — the sh arp est
downturn In 2 Vi years, the
government said Tuesday.
Six o f the 10 indicators con­
tributed to the decrease in the
composite Index, which fore­
shadows economic growth.
Other negative factors were

prices for sensitive materials, the
pace o f deliveries and average
weekly claims for unemploy­
ment insurance, a Commerce
Department report said.
Th e Jan uary downturn
followed six consecutive months
o f index increases. Including a
0.9 percent rise in . November
and' a: 9.3 percent Jump in
December.
The last time the index de­
creased at a greater rate was in
July 1984.

Comedian Danny Kaye Dead A t 74
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Danny
daughter.
A f t e r c o - s t a r r in g wi t h
Kaye, whose zany television and
Kaye married composerKatharine Hepburn In " T h e
movie comedy contrasted with
lyricist Sylvia Fine In 1941, and
Madwoman o f Challlot" In 1969,
three decades o f raising money
It was she who wrote his early
he returned to Broadway In 1970
to help sick and hungry children
material and novelty songs. But
to star for a year in the critically
around the world, died early
the song that brought him fame
acclaimed "T w o By T w o."
today. He was 74.
on Broadway was a number,
Kaye was hospitalized for
A hospital spokesman said
written by Ira Gershwin, in
bronchitis In 1984 after his
Kaye died at 3:58 a.m. from
which he recited the lengthy a p p e a r a n c e as t h e g r a n d
heart failure.
names of 50 Russian composers marshal o f the Tournament of
Kaye. 74. who appeared in
in less than a minute.
Roses Parade.
s u c h m o v i e s as “ W h i t e
Christmas" and "Hans Christian
Anderson." was admitted to
Cedars Sinai Medical Center on
Sunrfay suffering from Intestinal
BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. (UPI)
bleeding and hepatitis as a result
W e s t e r n as t h e B r o o k l y n
Bridge."
o f transfusions he received dur­ — R a n d o l p h S c o t t , w h o s e
ing heart surgery in 1983, hospi­ rugged, poker-faced good looks
Known as Hollywood's gen­
made him the embodiment of tleman from Virginia, Scott was
tal spokesman Ron Wise said.
the cowboy hero in scores of bom at his parents' country
Kaye clowned his way through
Westerns, died peacefully in his home near Orange. Va.. the son
a series o f movie misadventures,
making 17 films. For four years sleep, a family spokeswoman o f Geo-ge and Lucy Crane Scott.
said. He was 89.
he had his own television series,
Scott was educated at private
Scott died Monday at his home
which won four Emmys and the
schools, then attended Georgia
o f natural causes with his wife,
George Foster Peabody Award.
Tech where he played football
He also won an honorary Oscar P a t r i c i a , an d h i s a d o p t e d
for a year. His gridiron days were
in 1954 for his service to the children, Sandra Scott T yler and
cut short by Injuries, and he
entertainment industry and the Christopher, at his bedside, his ‘ transferred to the University of
Academy o f Motion Picture Arts nurse said. He had been in
North Carolina where he studied
failing health for several years.
and Sciences' Jean Hersholt
engineering.
.
Scott dominated Westerns for
Humanitarian Award for 1981.
After leaving college, he trav­
For more than 30 years, Kaye 30 years as the strong and silent
eled in Europe for a year before
gave benefit concerts to raise hero most recognizable as a tall
returning home to work With his
money for UNICEF, the United and erect figure who was slow to
father In engineering and then
Nations organization that helps anger but quick to act when
deciding he preferred acting.
sick and needy children. His necessary.
After arriving in Hollywood,
efforts were honored by the
The lanky, handsome film star Scott, a good golfer, found
queens o f England and Den­ also was a multimillionaire real h im self on the course with
estate investor, and was one of movie mogul Howard Hughes,
mark.
H ollywood's wealthiest stars,
He was bom David Daniel
who asked him if he was inter­
partly because he was one o f the ested in acting. Scott said he was
Kaminsky in Brooklyn, N.Y.. on
Jan. 18, 1913, and aspired to a first to form his own production but he didn't know how to get
performing career when he was company and take control o f not past the studio gates.
a boy. He began working in only his work, but Its profits.
Scott was advised to get some
He retired from acting in 1962 acting experience, whereupon
summer theater after quitting
high school.'
after making the classic "Ride
he worked with the Pasadena
Kaye went to Broadway in the . the High Country." The role was
Playhouse for two years. After
1930s, appearing in "Straw Hat one of the few In which he
a p p ea rin g w ith a n oth er
Revue." "T h e Play’s The Thin g" abandoned the hero's mantle.
soon-to-be star. Carole Lombard,
and "L e t's Face It," among Co-starring with Joel McCrae,
as an extra in Cecil B. DeMIlle’s
Scott played an . aging lawman
others.
first talkie. "D ynam ite." Scott
He shot to stardom in his first who runs a carnival shooting
was signed to a contract by
movie, "U p In Arm s." in 1944. gallery. Critics said It was his
Paramount Studios.
w o w i n g au diences w ith his best work.
A lt h o u g h he appeared in
A l t h o u g h S co t t p re fe rre d
quick patter, wild dancing and
"Rebecca of Sunny brook Farm"
r u g g e d o u t d o o r r o l e s In
uninhibited mugging.
and a few other non-Westems
Kay e m ade such hits for Westerns and other adventure
with such stars as Cary Grant —
films,
he
was
In
private
life
Samuel Goldwyn as "W onder
w h o b e c a m e hi s b a c h e l o r
Man." "K id From Brooklyn," considered one o f Hollywood's
roommate
— Scott concentrated
" T h e Secret L ife o f W alter best dressed men. and his home
primarily
on
Westerns, shunn­
showed
no
evidence
that
he
was
M ttty" and "T h e Inspector Gen­
in g th e use o f d oub le s In
a cowboy actor.
eral."
dangerous scenes.
Columnist Hedda Hopper once
In 1952 the comedian formed
his own movie company. Dena w r o t e that o f f the s creen.
At his request, there will be no
Productions, nam ed for his "R a n d y ... looked about as services, the family said.

Randolph Scott Dead A t 89

a ii" "

•*

has not been charged In the
Lake Mary burglaries, according
to Chief Lauderdale, pending
completion o f the investigation.
Mayor Fesa' home had been
burglarized the same day, which
Lauderdale estimated at be­
tween 7:30 a.m. and 9:30 a.m.
based on when Fesa and his
daughter left the house that
morning, but the break-in was
not discovered until later that
day when Fess' daughter came
home from school and reported
to police that the house had been
ransacked.
Mullins was taken to the Lake
Mary police station for ques­
tioning and afterwards arrested
by Seminole County sheriffs

• • • Esca

‘a

' o'

Continued from page 1A
walking along railroad tracks
headed for County Road 427.
The detective notified other
lawmen and they converged on
that area. When the suspect saw
the lawmen, he ran toward some
underbrush, but was tackled by
Lake Mary Pol ic e Lt. Sam
Bclflore. By then Longwood
police and the sheriffs depart­
ment had also responded at the
scene.
Mullins was taken Into custody
on the outstanding warrants and

...G o -A h e a d
Continued from page IA
Herman said this year's upgrades "should
address a lot of these problems."
Impacts on nearby homeowners, including
alleged drainage and trafftc problems, were
among criticisms Carll levelled at Kantor before
moving for site plan denial at the P&amp;Z's Feb. 19
meeting.
Commissioner A.A. McClanahan charged last
week the P&amp;Z denial was example of "too damn
much personal opinion," Instead of strict reliance
on city building codes when Judging site plans.
The allegation was disputed by P&amp;Z chairman
John Morris.
In addition to city staffs' concerns about
dumpster locations and site proof landscaping.
Carll said the project's building materials were
potential fire hazards, and too much construction
was planned on the 10 acre parcel.
According to city records and codes. Sanford's
fire department had OK’d the plan before It went
to the P&amp;Z, drainage had already been reviewed
by the engineering department, traffic flow was to
be facilitated by Kantor's agreeing to pave
Hartwell Avenue, from 25th to 24th streets, and
density requlrments for the 10-acre site allow It to
contain up to 200 units.
The project's stucco and woodframe building

...L o n g w o o d
Continued from page 1A
end o f lL_Is there such a letter?"
Ms. Colby answered, "T o my knowledge there
is no letter with which the city commission
should concern Itself."
Unsigned letters with charges and innuendos
against Gunter were distributed during the
campaign and again last week. At a recent
meeting Bernard Linton, chairman o f the Land
Planning Agency. Interrogated Gunter and made
accusations.
Smertlson also made a motion that passed 3-2
to eliminate a $35 payment for Mrs. Dennis to
attend a seminar from the list o f bills approved
Monday night. Smerilson attacked Mrs. Dennis
for not obtaining the approval o f the city
commission before attending the seminar.
Mrs. Dennis said. "I will be gald to pay for It. I
was encouraged to go xo seminars and was told
the city would pay for »L".
Smertlson demanded Mrs. Dennis give a report
on what she had learned. She said she would
make copies o f the program and her notes for
each commissioner.
Deputy Mayor June Lorman, who along with
Gunter voted against the motion, said. " I frankly
thing since she went and Mr. Terry (City Clerk
Don Terry) did give her a check to go. we should
pay for It. From now on she'll know."
Terry explained to the Herald today that a
check had not been given Mrs. Dennis. He said
the normal procedure Is to give each commis­
sioner notices of appropriate courses and semi­
nars offered by University o f Central Florida and
Valencia Community College and they then let
him know If they wish to attend. Applications are

...R u s s ia n s
Contlnnsd from page IA
Hull said local sponsors are
lined up for the teams because

HOSPITAL
Central Florida Rsgloaal
A D M IIIIO N I
hyj

Victor Raton
Choryl A. Long. Casselberry
Thornes M. Mahon. Deltona
OISCHAROKS
Eleanor L. Plvec
CherVl A. Long. Cauolberry
Henry Dorn, Orange City

deputy John Sams on'the out­
standing warrants charging him
with burglary, petty theft and
violation of probation on three
counts of burglary. His arraign­
ment In Seminole County is set
for Maicu 16. and there Is an
ou ts ta n d in g warrant from
Georgia on the escape charge.
According to records at the
Seminole County courthouse.
Mullins is charged with burglary
and criminal mischief for an
August Incident at 390 Raccoon
St.. Lake Mary, grand theft auto
stemming from a September 22
Incident, and burglary and petty
theft from an August 2 Incident
at a Longwood business.

materials arc apparently not as safe as some other
construction materials, but are accepted by the
city's fire department, listed In the Southern
Standard Building Codes and have been used for
several projects In Sanford. Simmons said
Monday.
As part o f his response to McClanahan's
charging the use o f personal opinion. Morris, who
voted against Carll's motion, said the P&amp;Z feels
some city codes arc Inappropriate or outdated
and hampers Its efforts to Improve Sanford. The
board is reviewing the city's codes to make
certain changes It feels will Improve them, he
said.
Morris' response to McClanahan came at
commissioners' Feb. 23 meeting. The P&amp;Z
chairman also attended Monday's meeting, but
did not comment during commissioners' deliber­
ations.
-K a r o n T alley

...F e s tiv a l
Continued from page IA
everything." including oil and water color works,
wood sculptures and wicker baskets, he said.
Proceeds from the plant sale will be used
primarily for the beautification committee's
landscaping project along the city's southern
entry way on U.S. Highway 17-92. Farr said.
completed by city staff and a check Is prepared
for the registration fee and mailed In to the
college offering the course. In Mrs. Dennis'case,
he said, somehow the application and check were
not sent, so a check was drawn up to send to UCF
after she attended.
There are funds Included in the budget for
attending these courses. Terry said there Is
usually not time to bring It up at a regular
meeting so the checks are listed with bills to be
approved at the next meeting. He said he is not
aware of an policy against this, but perhaps It
should be clarified.
At the meeting. Mrs. Dennis again asked Waller
when he would have a report on the alledged
unprofessional behavior o f Manning and the
assessments o f each city department which she
had asked for. Waller said he would have the
report In writing by March 6 and was aiming at
April for completion of the assessment of all the
departments.
Mrs. Dennis asked for Waller to report back on
Manning's behavior a l a Jan. 15 work session in
an outburst against Gunter.
.

T w o power outages caused by a truck accident
dimmed activities near downtown Sanford today.
A truck struck and snapped a pole on west First
Street near Poplar Avenue at about 10:23 a.m.
The first outage lasted four minutes affecting
customers north o f First street including the
Seminole County Courthouse. Sanford City Hall,
Florida Power &amp; Light offices and the Sanford

Herald.
The first outage occurred when
into the pole, the second when
commenced, said Larry Hayes.
engineer. The second outage
minutes.

they have little m oney,
especially the Soviet members.
"W e give them a spending
allowance of about ten dollars a
day. They could spend a $1,000
(If they had It). And I see them
buy things that are going to be
worthless when they get home
and the batteries run out, things
like recorders and walkie-talkies.
The American team, com ­
prised mostly o f college stu­
dents. will be giving an exlbltloa
today 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at
H o o t e r s In C a s s e l b e r r y .
Open-to-the-publlc weigh-ins are
Wednesday. 6 p.m.. a Church
Street Station In Orlando, and
the 12-bout match 7:30 p.m.

the truck ran
repairs were
F PaL district
lasted seven

Thursday at Sea World. Tickets
are $15. ACB Sports Is sched­
uled to be there to tape the
event.
Three American amateur
c h a m p s w e r e be f i g h t i n g ,
f eat he rwe igh t Kel cl e Banis,
welterweight Ken Gould, and
middleweight Darin Allen.
The Soviet superheavy weight
and the reigning Olympic World
Champion, Viacheslav Yakolev.
will also be fighting. Yakolev
won gold medals In 1972. 1976,
and 1980.
After the tour of Disney, the
Russians fly to New York Satur­
day and then home to Moscow.

AREA DEATHS
KATH RYN E. K « x
Mrs. Kathryn Ellen David Kirk.
80, o f 7 1 0 T r o p i c a l A v e . ,
Chuluota. died Sunday at Winter
Park Memorial Hospital. Bom
Dec. 16. 1906 in Keene. N.H.,
she moved to Chuluota from
Winter Park in 1963. She was a
retired quilt maker and was a
Catholic. She was a secretary
and past p r e s i d e n t o f the
Chuluota Volunteer Fire De­
partment Ladies Auxiliary and a
member and past president of
th e R e t i r e d F o l k s C lu b .
Chuluota.
S u r v iv o r s in c lu d e her
husba nd. R a w s o n W.; two
daughters. Marilyn Van Wormer.
O v i ed o, J un e Feuerbacher,
M ai tl an d ; b ro the r , E dwar d
David, Keene; seven grand­
children; one step-grandchild.
Cox-Parker Guardian- Funeral
Home. Winter Park. In charge of
arrangements.
TH ELM A 8. W RIGHT
Mrs. Thelma S. Wright. 78, of
1160 Hamilton Ave.. Longwood.
died Sunday at her residence.
Bom Dec. 14. 1908 in Coffee
County, Ala., she m oved to

»*

,,

Longw ood from Alabama 1m
1934. She was a homemaki t
and a Protestant.
S u r v i v o r s I nc lude a son,
George E., Dothan. Ala.; two
daughters. Mavis D. Kearce. Or­
lan do. M ild red Paschal.
Longwood; eight grandchlldme;
10 great-grandchildren.
B al dwl n-Fal rc hl ld Funeral
Home, Orlando. In charge of
arrangements.
BESSIE P. STEPHENS
Mrs. Bessie Pittman Stephens,
98, o f 2361 Sipes Ave.. Sanford,
died Monday at her son's resi­
dence. Bom Nov. 23. 1888 in
Marianna, she moved to Sanford
from there In 1931. She was a
homemaker and a member of
New Zion P ri mi ti ve Baptist
Church. Sanford and the Pall­
bearers Society No. 1.
Survivors Include four sons,
Ned Sr.. Sanford. Amos. Shepard
J. an d H o w a r d , al l of
Philadelphia; three daughters,
Floyzell Williams. Miami. Willie
B. McGriff, Philadelphia. Mozell
Johnson, Sanford; sister, Mary
Louise Gi lliam. T am pa ; 22

g ra n d ch ild re n ; 40 g r e a t ­
grandchildren: 17 great-great­
grandchildren.
Wilson-Elchelberger Mortuary,
Sanford, in charge o f arrange­
ments.

Funsral Nolle*
CORDKN, CLIFFORD C.
— Memorial funeral service* tor Mr. Clifford
Curtis Cordon, M. of Casselberry, who died
Friday, will be 11:30 a.m. Wednesday at
Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses In
Longwood with Elder Clarence Willard of­
ficiating. Arrangements by Gramkow
Funeral Home, Sanford.
STIFH K N S, BKSSIK P.
— Funeral services for Mr*. Bessie P.
Stephens, *•, of US1 Sipes Ave., Sanford, who
died Monday, will be held II a.m. Saturday at
New Zion P rim itive Baptist Church,
Greanway SI., East Sanford, with Pastor
Abner Jackson Sr. officiating. Interment to
follow In Restlawn Cemetery. Calling hours
lor friends will be held 10 p.m. Friday at the
chapel. Wilson Eichelberger Mortuary In
charge.

I CREMATION SPECIALISTS I

O A K LA WN
FUNERAL HOME A
PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER
fto i

1 s t. 1 * 0 4

�•V

^ ^ ^ ^

\

r*#*r ^ ' * * * * * Y '

Lowery Merkerson
Nuptials
Spoken

Words Of Love And Comfort
Help Widows Bear The Pain
Ing cards I didn't receive from
friends I had always heard from.
We widows and widowers need
(o get through the holiday time,
and It's very Important to hear
from loved ones.
3. I have Just passed the
first-year milestone of my dear
husband's death. I received
many calls and personal notes to
let me know they remembered,
and missed him, too.
In closing, if there's a doubt In
your mind, write or get in touch.
A RECENT W IDO W

You did not disregard my pain
with cliches; Instead you com­
forted me with simple, loving
words, and ended with, "H e
must have been a wonderful
m an." Abby, I needed to hear
thatl Thank you.
It's clear from Webster's Dic­
tionary definition that Webster
was never a widow. The defini­
tion should be: " A frightened
woman hanging onto threads of
sanity, one who Is totally alone,
no matter how many people
surround her."
I wish I could go to every
widow and say. "You are not
crazy, and believe It or not, you
will survive this overwhelming
pain."

DEAR ABBY: I am a single
parent of a lovely 15-month-old
daughter. Her father (I’ll call him
Brad) and his family do not
acknowledge her socially, but
Brad Is paying child support.
Brad plans to marry in three
weeks, and says he does not
intend to tell his fiancee that he
has a daughter to support. I feel
that his fiancee has a right to
know before she marries him.
Would it be wrong for me to
tell her? I am fairly certain that
nobody In Brad's family will. If I
were in her shoes. I would
consider it a favor to be told.
SU ZIE '8 MOTHER

It took me t wo y ea rs to
understand the words of a young
widow who came to console me.
She said, "You wonder when the
pain will go away. Well. It never
goes away completely, but I
p r o m i s e It b e c o m e s m o r e
bearable as time goes on."
My dear widow friends: Be

DEAR MOTHER: The
bride-to-be has a tight to know.
Tell Brad that If he doesn't tell
her. you will. Then do It. If yoli
have to. But I'm betting you
won't have to.

SCC Leisure Time
Classes To Start
Designed for those
to have acquired
knowledge and exruction will Include

Alberta P. Lowery and Willie
J. Merkerson Sr. of Sanford,
announce their marriage today.
They were married Dec. 6. 1986.
In the garden at the Sanora
Club. The Rev. Thelma S. Young
performed the double ring cere­
mony.
Given In marriage by her son
Herbert L. People, the bride
chose for her vows a light blue
tafTeta long-sleeved dress with a
V-neckllne and modified draped
skirt. She wore pearl Jewelry and
a gold heart pin. Her headpiece
was a cap arranged In a cloud of
blue Illusion. She carried a
bouquet of light blue flowers
accented wuth baby's breath
and streamers.
Susr.n P. Boolhart attended
her sister au matron of honor.
She wore a royal blue dress with
a high neckline and a flared
skirt. Her headpiece was a spray
of baby's breath.
Dorothy James and Cathy B.
H olloway, bridesmaids, were
gowned Identically to the honor
attendant.
Leroy V. Johnson served the
b r i d e g r o o m as b e s t m a n .
Groomsmen were Harry Irvine
J am e s and Dr. S a mm l e L.
Tomblln.
A reception In the Sanora
clubhouse followed the ceremo­
ny. After a wedding trip to South
Florida, the ne w ly w ed s are
making their home In Sanford
w h e r e t h e b r i d e g r o o m la
employed as a teacher by the
Seminole County School Board.

■ iid c n n n e w s
3 ANOY GRIFFITH

*00

Forsyth.

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10:00

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tor hstp In finding a mass murdarar.
CD 0 JACK AN0MKE An ai-YlppM throws a costums party to ertabrata tns turbuiani '60s In Chicago
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0 (1 1 ) CENTURIONS
B (10) FARM DAY
3 YOU A JCMY ANO FAttNOS

6:46
0(1O)A.M.WEATHEA

7.-00
0 0 JEOPARDY
0 (1 1 ) BARNEY MXLER
0 (10) PLANET BARTH Earlh a
part, mwt'a rota In I t Mura and Itw
poaaibtHy of a "nudaar wintar'' ara
aaaminad. (R)Q
0 (S) MOV* "Tha Ohoat Of
Cypraaa 8wamp" (1677) (Pari 7 el
7) Vic Morrow. Noah Baary. A laanagar purauaa a woundad black
panlhar into a ramota twamp and la
capturad by a haH-craiad harmll. A
"Wondartui World of Otanay" praa•nlrtton

7.-06

0SANPOROANOSON
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tnfc’Yiaw with actor-comadlan
Howia Mandat; tha making of a
"Night Court'' aptaoda. In alaiao.
0 0 DATING GAME
0 0 WHEEL OP FORTUNE

11.-oo
(I) ( D 0 ( Z ) 0 NEWS
(11) LATE SHOW Host: Amo
Rfvart. Scfwdutod: actor Jama*
Broun ("Molar). In itarao.
0 (10) MONTY PYTHONS FlYBM

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0 ( S ) POLICE WOMAN

11:30
0 0 BEST OP CARSON From
January 1M6: actor Gaorga Sagal,
comadtan WM Shrlnar and LA.
Lafcara canlar Karaam Abdul-Jabbar |oln hot! Johnny Carton In
ttarao. (R)
0 1 M*A*8*H
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12.-00
0 0 T J . HOOKER A ptychic
haipt Hoofcar anarch lor a kidnappad girl who wM dia H aha A nol
found toon. (R)
0 0 NMHTUPS Hott: David
Brenner Scheduled ecireet June
Hagarty ("Bayond Tharapy"! In
itereo
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harpaa Quart: Or. Alan King. □
0 (S) NMHT OWL PUN

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0 (1 0 ) SQUARE ONI TELEVISION

0(S)CZ SHOW (MON)

7:30
0 0 M0RMN0 PROGRAM
Q (It) TRANSFORMERS
0 ( 1 0 ) SESAME STREET(R)g
*00
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8.-06

QIOREAMOFJEAMME

8:30

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1:35

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9.-00
0 0 T H Q JUOOE
0 0 DONAHUE
0 0 OPRAH WWFREY

0 (10) VYOOOWWOMTS SHOP
(THU)
0 (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FW)

*00

0 0 ANOTHER WORLD
0 0 0NK UPS TO U VI
0 (1 1 ) ANDY ORFFITH
0 (10) W0N0SRFUL WORLD OP
ACRYUCB (MON)
(10)JOYOFPAMTMQ(TUE)
(10) MAOfC OP OX PAWT1NQ

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0 (10) MAOfC OP FLORAL PAJNTPM (THU)
0 (10) PAMTMQ CERAMICS (FW)

2:30
0 0 CAPITOL
0 (11) MY LITTLE PONY ‘W
FAJENOB
0 (1 0 ) SECRET CITY

2:35
(B WOMANWATCH (FRI)

3.-00
0 0 SANTA RARSARA
0 Q Q U K M N G LIGHT
0 0 GENERAL HOBPITAL
0(11)SCOOSYOOO
0 ( 10) MNTER ROGERS (R)
0 (!) MIO-OAY BARGAINS (MON-

0(K&gt;) SESAME BTRBET(R)Q
0 (•) SHOP-AT-HOME ANOSAI
(MON, WEO-PRO
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0 0 HOUR MAGAZINE

SUPERIOR COURT
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0) PROFILES OP NATURE

4:35
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*0 0
0 0 DIVORCE COURT
i i M 'A 'S 'H
0 0 MOLLYWOOO SQUARES
0 (1 1 ) FACTS OF UPB
0 (10) OCEANUS (MON)
0 (V0) UNOERSTAHOPM HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUB)
(10) BURMESE FILE (A) (WED)
1101MONEY PUZZLE (THU)

S

(10) ART OP BONG HUMAN

0 ( W) UN0ERSTAN0SM HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUB)
0 (10) BURMESE FXE (A) (WED)
0 (1 0 ) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
S (10) ART OP BEMQ HUMAN
0 (I) I DREAM OP JEANNE
(MOM-WED)
0 (t) KNIGHT AIDER (THU. PM)

6:36
S tm Barry Boatetck. Brrtt Cuban
and Roban Add* (Part 3 o» 410

0 ROCKY ROAD (MON-THU)
3 SAFE AT HOME (FRI)

appreciation for music and total
e n jo y m e n t. Jane Fonda's
workout Is taught In this class.
SLIM 'N TRIM - This exercise
class is designed to achieve
results In reducing body fat.
toning, stretching, and firming
up your body. There will be a
c ardiovascu lar workout of
a e r o b i c r o u t i n e s and f loor
exercises. Nutritional hints arc
provided by the instructor. This
class should be taken twice a
week for adequate results.
AEROBIC DANCE/EXERCISE
— A cardiovascular workout
using free weights and learning
low Impact dance routines along
with Jane Fonda floor exercises.
Leotards, shorts, and tennis or
Jogging shoes are recommended
by the instructor. For best re­
sults this course should be taken
twice a week.
BECOME I N TI MA TE WITH
YOUR CAR — Basic instruction
In the care and maintenance of
your car. The students will learn
about the functions o f the
v ar ious c o m p o n e n t s o f the
automobile and will get Involved
hands-on" experi­
with some
ence on their own vehicles.
CONVERSATIONAL FREL^H
II — The course Is designed for
those students who have had
some formal study in the lan­
guage. The units of study will
focus on travel vocabulary, but
sentence constructions, gram­
mar and conversation will be
more Intense than Conversa­
tional French I.
HOME L A N D S C A P E
GARDENING Designed to
teach the f u n d a m e n t a l s o f
gardening and landscaping. The
student will learn how to pro­
perly plan and evaluate home
landscaping, how to select the
proper plant materials, and how
to properly care for them follow­
ing planting, Including how to
maintain a lawn, how to effi­
ciently manage water and fertil­
izers. mulching and winter protectln. pruning and pest control.
A "m u st" course for new resi­
dents. DRAWING &amp; SKETCHING Emphasis on fundamentals of
charcoal sketching in prepara­
tion for painting and working in
color. Students will work from
still life and landscapes.
BEGINNING SOCIAL DANC­
ING — An easy and enjoyable
learning method will give the
b e g i n n i n g student a basic
foundation on Fox Trot. Waltz.
Swing and a Latin Dance. A
variety of steps will be taught at
a moderate pace, so each stu­
dent can progress according to
his/her own ability.
INTE R M E D IATE SOCIAL

reed: Melon or Fanny basket,
Wall basket and Hen basket. The
first class meeting will meet for
one hour to cover the supply list.

SALES B SERVICE
Wa cany all taading
manufacturer'! clocks!

D E L T O N A
C I N E M A

3 Piece Dinner!

3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and two fresh, hot biscuits
COUPON

ii

Look at what you get: 8 pcs. of golden brown
—
k
i
mm_ * __ a M L I _I . — _
A ^1^6
«n n n k n rf
Famous Recipe Fried Chicken, 1 pint mashed
potatoes, Vz pint gravy and 4 biscuits. An entire
family dinner for only $7.99.
Qood Thurs., Frl., Sat., Sun.
COUPON

ousjtecige
A Taste of the Country
SANFORD
&gt;5 FRENCH AVE.

CASSELBERRY
41 N. MWY. 17-92

�r

i

2B— Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice

Tuesday, March 3 ,1M7

Baker Brings Humor To Job
WASHINGTON (UPl) - New chief of staff
Howard Baker, "acutely aware" of the style that
led to Donald Regan's downfall, Is sweeping Into
the beleagured White House with humor and
openness.
Baker, who gave up his own presidential
aspirations to help President Reagan out o f the
Iran arms-Oont«» aid scandal, made It clear In his
first day on the Job that he does not Intend to
assume the mantle o f predecessor Regan, who
was accused of autocratic rule and dubbed "Mr.
Prime Minister."
Nor does Baker plan to run afoul of Nancy
Reagan — the kiss of death for Regan when the
two feuded over the president's schedule and how
he should respond to the Tower Commission
report on the Iran-Contra scandal.
The new chief of staff described the first lady
Monday as a "great lady" and told news reporters
he would confer with her often. Asked what they
would talk about, the former Tennessee senator
drew a big laugh by drawling with a grin:
"W hatever she wants to talk about."
Baker planned to meet with his former Capitol
Hill cronies at a bipartisan leadership session
today.
Assuring reporters he will not overstep his role
with Reagan, who was faulted by the Tower
Commission for excessive delegating and shun­
ning details. Baker Bald Monday: "I'm acutely
aware that Ronald Reagan Is president and I am
not."
He also said that In his whirlwind first day at
the White House. " I do not see a hands-off
president or an AW OL president."
A former Senate Republican leader, Baker, 61,
Is a political pro who won over the press corps in

legal Notice

Legal Notice

C ITY OF
CITY OF LAKE
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
MARY, FLORIDA
N O TIC IO P
R IQ U IS T F O R
PUBLIC HEARINO
PROPOSALS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Th# City of Lake M ary,
by th* City Commission ul th#
Florida, It accepting quotation*
City ol Lake Mery, Florida, that
from appralMrt to determine
said Commission will hold a
th# valu# of a »lt# In Laka Mary,
Public Hearing at 7:10 P.M. on
rhraa (1) appralMrt will ul­
March If, 1ft7, to consider th*
timately ba chotan. Lump-turn
first reading of an Ordinance
ation* mint ba received by
entitled:
City Clark no later than
twalva o'clock (noon) on Mon­ AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C IT Y OF LA K E M A R Y ,
day. March V, 11*7. Th* Scopa of
FLORIDA. REZONING CER­
Work and tha appropriate that!
TA IN LANDS W ITHIN TH E
for quotation art available In
C IT Y OF LA K E M A R Y ,
tha City Clark'* Otflc*. 134 N.
FLORIDA, AS HEREIN D E­
Country Club Road, Laka Mary,
FINED FROM TH E PRESENT
Florida, et no charge.
ZONING CLASSIFICATION OF
City of Laka
A-1 AGRICULTURE TO RCE
Mary, Florida
RURAL COUNTRY ESTATES
Robert Norrlt,
PURSUANT TO TH E -TERMS
City Manager
O F T H E F L O R ID A S T A T ­
Dated: February 13, IM7
UTES: PROVIDING FOR TH E
Publlth: March 1.IM7
AM ENDM ENT TO TH E OF­
OEM-13
FICIAL ZONING MAP; PROV ID IN G C O N F L IC T S ;
S E V E R A B IL IT Y A N D E F ­
FECTIVE DATE.
changing tha toning on th*
following described property
INTHECIRCUITCOURT
eltuet* In th* City of Lake Mery,
FORSIMINOLRCOUNTY,
Florida:
FLORIDA
Parcel "A ": The West to of
PROSAT1DIVISION
ttw SW te *f the SW to of th* SW
FileNum
ber17-tKP
U of Section 14, T&lt;
INRIt ESTATEOF
South, Ranee X Beet, Seminole
BARBARAJ. HEWITT, S/k/S
County, Florida) LBSS th*
BARBARAJOHNSTON
South IS toat tor Humphrey
h ew ett,

r

NOTICEOF
ADMINISTRATION

The administration of th*
eelate s i Barbara j . Hewett,
d e te s te d , F ile N u m b e r
17-n-CF, I* pending In the
Clrcutl Court lor Seminole
County* F lo rid a , Probale
Division, the eddroia of which It
P.O. Drawer C, Sanford, Florida
0771. The name* and addrettet
of th* penonal repretentatlv*
and th* perso nal re p re ­
tentatlv*'* attorney are M l
fiv*
ni jin
Kalmn
in W
low.
All Interested parson* are
required to file with this court,
W ITHIN TH R E E MONTHS OF
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS N O TICE: (1) all claims
against the estate and (1) any
objection by an Interested
parson on whom this notice was
served that challenge* the valid­
ity of the will, tha qualIdeations
oi the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of th#
court*
A LL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication of this Notice hat
begun on February 14,1W7.
Personal Representatives:
GEORGE H. HOLSAPPLE
•01 Douglas Avenue
Altamonte Springs. FL 37214
and
PENN H. HOLSAPPLE, JR.
SOO Fairbanks Street, Suite l
Anchor age. A laska tt x t
Attorney tor
Personal Representatives:
/*/ Ernest J. Hewett
S TEEL HECTOR B DAVIS
|H| I aiiIIi u a ARi- . - &gt; i .I fM lb f
Miami, FL3311U374
,
Tatephans: IMS) S77-X4*
Publlth: February 14 B March
3,1X7
DEL-113

Parcel “ B": Th* East Vi ot
tha West to of th* SW U at th*
SW U of th# SW U of Section U,
Township to South, Rang* 10
East, Seminole County, Florida;
LESS th* South IS toot tor
Humphrey Road.
More commonly known at ISO
Humphrey Road.
Tha Public Hearing will ba
held at th* City Hall. City of
Lake Mary, Florida, on th* itth
day of March, Ifl7, at 7:10 P.M.,
or as soon thereafter at possible
at which dm* Interested parties
tor and against th* request will
ba heard. Said hearing may be
continued from time to time
until final action It taken by th*
City Commission of th* City of
Laka Mary, Florida.
This notice shall fa* posted In
three public pieces wllhln the
City of Lake Mary, Florida, and
published In ihs Evening
Herald, a newspaper of goneraI
circulation In tha City prior to
th* aforesaid hearing, in addi­
tion, node* shall bo potted In th*
are* to ba considered at toast
fifteen days prior to th* data of
th* Public Hearing.
A taped record of this meeting
It made by th* City tor Its
convanlane# This record may
net constitute an adequate re­
cord for th* purposes of appeal
from a decision mode by the
City Commission with respect to
th* foregoing matter. Any
~ wtehing to ensure that on
card of tha proceed
togs is maintained tor appellate
It advised to make th*
rrangamant* at his
w oar owft oxaaftBO*
C ITY OF
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
Corot A. Edwards,
City Clark
Publlth; March 1,11.1*7
DBM-to

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Tha media land* to Epotteht
ma — and not what I'm doing and not tha people who
raoMy did It." — Amy Cartor.

his debut appearance by making news, promising
they would be able to quiz Reagan soon after a
long drought and displaying hla own easy
accessibility. His lighter touch began to dissipate
tensions Immediately.
His first order o f business was to reassure the
shaky senior staff there will be "n o wholesale
firings or wholesale requests for resignations."
But already chief White House counsel Peter
Walllaon Is being replaced by A.B. Culvahouse, a
partner In Baker’s Washington law firm, Vinson
&amp; Elkins.
Baker also tried to lead reporters away from the
perception o f Reagan, 76, as a president who Is
out of touch and whose management style led to
the Iran arms-Contra aid debaple.
Baker showed up for work Monday at 7:35 a.m.
EST and had a stafT meeting at 8 a.m., telling
reporters his first task was "to find m y office." He
later met with Reagan and was escorted Into the
Cabinet room at 11 a.m. to be Introduced to
Cabinet members, who stood In his honor.
"It's been an exciting day for me ... hard to
b e l i e v e , " B a k e r s ai d . " I t ' s a b s o l u t e l y
extraordinary. I thought I was busy In the
Senate."

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF CHANGE OF U N O USE
PUBLIC HEARINO
MARCH It, 1*7
TH E BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF SEMINOLE
COUNTY WILL HOLD TH E FIRST OF TWO PUBLIC HEARINGS
ON MARCH 10. 1*7 TO CONSIDER REQUESTED SMALL SCALE
A M E N D M E N T S T O T H E S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y C O M ­
PREHENSIVE P U N (SHORT RANOE DEVELOPMENT P U N ),
AND ANY ASSOCIATED REZONINGS. TH E PURPOSE OF THIS
HEARING IS TO RECEIVE PUBLIC INPUT ANO CONSIDER
R E C O M M E N D A T IO N S O F T H E L O C A L P L A N N IN O
AQENCV/PUNNINQ AND ZONING COMMISSION REGARDING
TH E REQUESTED AMENDMENTS.
THE HEARING W ILL BEGIN A T 4:00 P.M., OR AS SOON
TH ER EA FTER AS POSSIBLE, IN ROOM W-1J0 OF TH E COUNTY
SERVICES BUILDING. 1101 EAST FIRST STREET, SANFORD,
FLORIDA.
Lee Munlrzl — located at th# norttwast earner of Old S.R. 44 and
Henderson Lana. Amendment from General Rural to Low Oanelty
Raeldantlal; Raton* from A-1 (Agriculture) to R-tAAAA (Single
Family Dwelling District) on property daecrlbod at follow*:
Th* Watt 3)7.34 teat of th* East 101743 teat of th* South 707 hot of
th# Northwatt to ol Section 30, Township 17 South, Rang* 30 East,
Semlnol* County, Florida, test th* South 33 teat for rood right of
way, containing 3.0 acres more or test. ( BCC District 3)
John Wilton — located at th* southeast corner of Laka Ruth Drive
and C.R. 417. Amendman) from Low Density Residential to
Intensity Commarclal/Offlco; Rtiena from A-1 (Agriculture) to OF
(Office District) on property described as follows:
Lot 3 Nelson’s Lakevlew Heights amended plat, recorded In Plat
Book 13, Peg* 73 of lh# Public Records ol Semlnol# County. Florida,
containing 0.70 acres mere or less. I BCC District 1)
Elwyn Babbitt — located at tha southwest comer of S.R. 434 and
Lake Howell Lane. Amendment from Medium Density Residential to
Commercial: Ratan* tram A -l {Agriculture) to C-3 (Retail
Commercial) on property described at to! lows:
Beginning 10 feet South of th# Northwest comer of the Northwest
V* of th* Southeast te of Section 31, Township 31 South, Rang* 30
East, Semlnol* County, Florida, run East 113.0 toot to th* westerly
right of way line of State Road 434. thane* southeasterly along said
right ol way line 374.33 teat thence Watt 1*4 0 feat to th* West line at
■aid Northwest to, thence North along said lino 333,0 teat to th* Paint
of Beginning, and alto Lot 13 and th* North 114 foot of Lot 13 of Opal
Terrace as recorded In Plat Book 13on Pago 3* of tho Public Records
of Somlnote County, Florida, containing 1.4 acre* more or test. (BCC
District 4)
Rlrtdsad Prepw tlaa — located on tha south tide of South Street,
approximately 400 toot woof ol U.S. 17-73, Amaadmaet from Low
Density Residential to Commartial; Raton* from R-1A (Single
Fjjmliy^Dwellto^lstrlcI) to C-3 (Retail Commercial) on property
Lot* t and 3. Stock B, Oak Ridge Park a* recorded In Flat book •.
Pogo II of tho Pttolle Records of Seminole County, Florida,
containing oA3 acre* more or tee*. &lt;BCC Otetrtcf 4)
Robert Lamer - located approximately 4 * toat south at th*
Intersection of Somlnol* Boulevard and U S. 17-n, an tha east aide of
Samtnota Boulevard. Amendment from Low Density Residential to
Commercial on property described** follows:
Th* North 70.0 (sot of th* Watt 111.7 toot of Lot 11, Block 31,
Kathryn Park, Addition Number One, according to tho Plat thereof
a* recorded In Plat Book 3, Pago* 43 through 47 of tha Public Records
of Somlnol* County, Florida, containing 0.33 acre* more or lass.
(BCC District 3)
Lexington Hamas — located on tho watt tlda of Dean Read
surrounded by tha Atom* Band PUD. Amendment from General
Rural to Plannod Unit Davelopmonti Ratan* from A-1 (Agriculture)
to PUD (Plannod Unit Development) on property described at
follows:
Commonc* at th* Southwest corner of tho Northeast 14 of
Southeast 14 of Section 31, Township 11 South, Rang* 31 Eaat,
Somlnol* County, Florida; thence run North OriFOl" West, along th*
Wait lint of tho Northeast te of tha Southeast 1* of said Section 31,
714.44 toat; thane* run duo East 377.71 toat to th* Southwest earner
and tha Point of Beginning of th* tract about to be described: thence
run due North, 373 toot; thence run due East 311.17 feat to
Westerly right-of-way line of Doan Road; thane* run Southeasterly
along said right-of-way Una
“
and along a curve concave
Southwesterly, having tor Its elements a radius of 17447 toot, a
central angle of tOtoT* and a chord bearing
of South 33*07'30'
_____________
__ East,
tor an arc distance of 103.14 toat to th* P.C.C. of a curve concave
Southwesterly; thence run Southeasterly along the at
right-of-way Jin* and along th* said curve having for Its i
radius of *774 toat and a central angle of 14*H'X",
distance of 334J* teat; thence run due West, 3MS4 feet to the Point of
Beginning. Situated, lying and being In Seminal* County, Florid*,
containing 1.30 acres more or leu. ( BCC District 1)
Themes Breaks — located on tha watt tlda of S.R. 431,
approximately to mil* north of Mlktor Road. Amendment from
General Rural to Commercial; Harm* from A-1 (Agricultural to C-3
&lt;Retail Commercial) nn property described as follows:
Lot 4 (1044 North 4X toot) Slavla Farms Plat Book 4. Fag* 77,
containing 34 acre* more or lot*. (BCCOtetrktl)
Jan* Adriatic* — located on the west side ot S.B. 434,
approximately to mile north of Mlklor Read. Amandmtnt from
Oonorol Rural te Commercial; Remus from A-l (Agriculture) to C l
(Befall Commercial) an propart)1described as fellow*:
Let 4. Begin 300 toat South of Northwest earner, run East 4(0.71
feet on Best tow. 14344 test Watt, 414.71 leaf North 110 toot to
boginning of Slavla Farm*, Flat Book 4, Fag* ft, containing 144
acre* mar* ar toes. (BCC District 1)
Myra* Freadme* — touted at th# southwest corner ef Fifth
Avenue and C.R. 41*. Am ted meal from General Rural to
Commercial; Rama* from R-3 (Multi-Family Dwelling District) to
RP (Raeldantlal Profession*!) on property described at Mlow*:
Lets A 7 and A Black 41. TewnsJto of North Choiuete, torn reads
right of way, recorded In Flat Saak I, Paged) 34-31 of lh* Public
Records of Semlnol# County, Florida, containing 0.41 acres mare or
lau. (BCC Otetrtcf I )
Orel* K Carper*tie* - touted at th* southeast center ef t.R. 434
and Corrigan Avenue. Amaadmaaf from Low Density Residential to
Commercial an tha pnwgrty dsscrlbs das follows:
Late 1 and I In Block E of Semlnol* Terrace Replat according to
- i, *_____
J ,,C
______ In Flat Book II ot “Pago i t of -(he
Records of Samlnote County, FlorldA containing 043 acre* mar* or
tea*. (BCC Ptetrlcf tl
Tha public Is encouraged te attend this hearing. Those In
attendance will ba heard and written comments may b* filed with
•h* Beard of County Commissioner*. Hearings may ha continued
from time to time at found necessary. Further Intormetln pertaining
to the proposed amendments may ha abtotoed tram the Office at
Planning, Ream N »1 . laminate County Services Building, m i Boat
First Street, Santord, Florida 33771, or by contacting lh* Office ef
Flaming (304) 31H1JA extension 371.
..................... II they decId* to .
mad* al the** meetings, they will need a recard el Hi* i
and tar such purges*, they may naod to anaura that • verbatim
of tha
te made, which record Include* the
BtotutoA Section 3H41M. BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS,
B IM IN O L K C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A . B Y : A N TH O N Y VANOIRWOBP, P U N N IN G DIRECTOR.
Publish February 174 March A tft7
D EL-100

BLOOM C O U N T Y
„
oh.

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im w e o m t r

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1t€ fML Of 2007..

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-M r n m f
trtUPCHT

C ITY OF
U K I MARY. FLORIDA
N O TIC IO P
PUBLIC HEARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by tha City Commission of tha
City of Lake Mery, Florida, that
said Commission will hold a
Public Hearing at 7:30 P.M. on
March it, 17S7, to consider th*
first reeding of an Ordinance
entitled:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C IT Y OF L A K E M A R Y .
FLORIOA, REZONING CER­
TA IN LANDS W ITHIN THE
C IT Y OF LA K E M AR Y.
FLORIDA, AS HEREIN DEF'NCD FROM TH E PRESENT
ZONING C USSIFICATIO N OF
A-l AGRICULTURE TO RCE
RURAL COUNTRY ESTATES
PURSUANT TO TH E TERMS
OF T H E F L O R ID A S T A T ­
UTES; PROVIDING FOR THE
AM ENDM ENT TO TH E OF­
FICIAL ZONING MAP; PROV ID IN G C O N F L IC T S ;
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AND E F ­
FECTIVE DATE.
changing th* zoning on th*
following described property
situate In th* City ol Laka Mary,
Florida:
Parcel "A ": Th* North to ot
th* South to ot tha NW to of the
NW to of th* SW to of Section &gt;4,
Township 30 South, Range X
East, Semlnol* County, Florida,
LESS th* East 13 tael for Wood
Straat.
Parcel "B ": Th* South to ot
th* NW to ol th* NW to ot the
SW to of Soctlon 14, Township 10
South. Range X East, Semlnol*
County, Florida, LESS th* East
13 teat for Wood Street.
Tha Public Hearing will b*
held at ttw City Hall, City ot
Lake Mary, Florida, on th* 17th
day of March, 17t7, at 7:30 P.M.,
or at toon thereafter at possible
at which time Interested parties
tor and against tha request will
be hoard. Said hearing may b*
continued from time to time
until final action Is taken by tha
City Commission of tha City ol
Lake Mary, Florida.
This notice shall b* potted In
three public placet within tha
City of Laka Mary, Florida, and
published In lha Evening
Herald, a newspaper of general
circulation In th* City prior to
tho aforesaid hearing. In addi­
tion, notice shall b* potted In th*
area to b* considered at least
fifteen days prior to th* date of
ttw Public Hearing.
A tapad record of this mooting
It made by th* City for Its
convenience. This record may
not constitute an adequate re­
cord tor ttw purposes ot appeal
from a decision mad* by ttw
City Commission with respect to
tho torogolng matter. Any
person wishing to enturo that on
adequate record ot ttw proceed­
ings It maintained tor appellate
purposes It advised to make ttw
necessary arrangement* at hit
or har own expanse.
CITY OF
U K E MARY, FLORIOA
Carol A. Edwards.
City Clark
Dated: February H . 17S7
Publlth: March3,13,1717
DEM-13

IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR IIM IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
FROBATC DIVISION
Flto Number 17-n-CF
IN RE: ESTATE OF
HAROLD H. W ESLEY, SR..
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION’
Tha administration of tho
•state of HAROLD H. WESLEY,
SR-, deceased. File Number
47-77-CP, Is ponding In tha
Circuit Court lor Samlnote
County, F lorid a , Probata
Division, tho address of which Is
P.O. Drawer C, Sanford, Florida
JJ771. Tha names and addresses
of ttw personal representative
and tha personal re p re ­
sentative'* attorney are sat
forth below.
All Interested persons are
required to file with this court,
WITHIN TH R EE MONTHS OF
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims
against tha estate and (1) any
objection by an Interested
parson on whom this notice was
served that challenges ttw valid­
ity ol the will, ttw quallllutlons
of ttw personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of tho
court*
ALL C U IM S ANO OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publlutlon of this Notice erne
begun on March 3,1717.
Personal Representative:
JANET ELISE WESLEY
4011 N.B.ath Avenue
Pompano Beach, Florida 33044
Attorney for
Personal Representative:
BARRY P.BILLINOTON
THOMAS ANO RILLINGTON
3333 N.E. 34th Avenue, Suite 1M
Pompano Beach, Florida 33041
Telephone; (MS) 741 7300
Florida Bar No. 110X1
Publish: March 1,10,1W7
OEM-33
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME U W
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y GIVEN
that th* undersigned, desiring to
angaga In business under th*
fictitious name ef Bobby
Rubliw's Place tor Rib# at
number SOS Douglas Avenue, In
tha City of Altamonte Spring*.
Florida. Intends to register th*
said nam* with the Clark of tho
Circuit Court ot Samlnote
County. Florida.
Dated at Fort Laudardsls.
Florida, this 13th day of Febru­
ary, 1K7.
Semlneto Riba. Inc.
by; Frank Getgima, President
Attorney tor Applicant
Dominick P. Minted. P.A03) Eaat Broward Blvd.
Fart Lauderdale, PL 33J01
Publish March 3,10,17,34,11*7
DEM-33
NOTICE UNORB
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notice Is hereby given that tha
undersigned pursuant to th*
’Fictitious Name Statute'',
Chapter S4I47, Florid* Statute*,
will register with the Clerk of
th* Circuit Court, In and tor
Semlneto County, Florida, upon
receipt of proof of tho publica­
tion of this notice, lha fictitious
Nam*,: SEAL-A-FORCH under
which M A M Classics. Incorpo­
rated, aspects to engage In
bmlnaaa ot; 741 Willow Drive,
Spring*, F lorIda 3370*.
rporatlon Interested In
Th#
ttw bustoeta enterprise It: M A
M CLASSICS. INC.
Dated at Altamonte Springs,
Samlnote County, Florida, tnte
Itth day of February, 1707.
Publlth Morch 3. 10. 17, 14.
1N7
OEM-34

71— H «lpW ant*d

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
HOURS
J C M ta c im v i

• * 0 A .M .. 5 :9 0 P.M.
M ONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATUR D AY 3

72C ■ wftg

MC a Hue

M C i
SOCa
Available
*■.BeVrW

/ coftMctrava
10 CBRMCNthrg
vavttraci
3 U tm

D E A D L IN E S
N o o n T h e D a y B e fo re P u b lica tio n
S u n d a y • N o o n F rid a y
M o n d a y • 9 :0 0 A .M . S a tu rd a y
NOTE: In ttw event ot ttw publishing ol error* In advertisement*, ttw San­
ford Herald shell publlth th* advertisement, alter It has been corrected at
no cost te ttw advertiser but such Insertions shell number no more then on*
(II.

12— Legal Servlets

25— Special Notices

SOCIAL SECURITY Disability
Free Advice.No Charge Unless
W* Win) Ward White A
Associates.............3d*-331-t3l7

BECOME A ROTARY
For Details: 1 NX413 4154
Florida Notary Association
HEADACHE A MUSCLE FAIN
R E L IE F through massage
therapy, by eppt.........143-4347

21— Personals
A LOVER'S KNOT
WEDDINOS BY DOT
Notary Public_______ 333-3143
A LL ALONET Call Bringing
Paopla Together. Sanford’s
most respected dating service
since 1777. Men over SO (43%
discount)............ 1400-733-4477
CRISIS PRIONANCY CTR.
Fro* Pregnancy Tost, con11den
till. Call tor appt.........33) 7473

NEWCREDIT CARD!
No ona reluted. Visa or
Mastercard. Call 1-417-343-1333

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Cere
CHILD CARE. My ctean, loving
homo, 3 blkt, from, but not
associated with, Pool# Woods
Daycare. Playmate wanted 1
to 3 days a weak (or 3 yr. old,
but will taka Infant..... 133-3X7
FO R Q U A L IT Y C A R E A
NURTURING ot your child's
development call Ellen at
1103) 111 4414

55— Business
Opportunities

23— Lost O Found
FOUND
RC Sailboat
Idantlfy......................... 433 733a
LOSTi VerbthIre Terrier typo
puppy, black A tan. mate, 3
lbs.. Loch Arbor araa. Call:
333-1(73 days, .or..333-4347 avas

EARN CASH with th* ALL
NEW "MAILMALL •#*". Call
313-4073 for recorded message.

63— Mortgages
Bought A Sold

Legal Notice
CITY OF
U K E MARY, FLORIOA
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARINO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
by ttw City Commission ol ttw
City of Lakt Mary, Florida, that
Mid Commission will hold a
Public Hearing at 7:10 P.M. on
March 17, 1N7, to consider th*
first reading ot an Ordinance
entitled:
AN ORDINANCE OF THE
C IT Y OF LA K E M A R Y ,
FLORIOA, REZONING CER­
TAIN LANDS WITHIN TH E
C IT Y OF LA K E M A R Y.
FLORIOA, AS HEREIN D E­
FINED FROM TH E PRESENT
ZONING CUSSIFICATIO N OF
A-1 AGRICULTURE TO RCE
RURAL COUNTRY ESTATES
PURSUANT TO TH E TERMS
OF T H E F L O R ID A S T A T ­
UTES; PROVIDING FOR THE
AM ENDM ENT TO TH E OF­
FICIAL ZONING MAP; PROV ID IN O C O N P L IC T S i
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AN O E F ­
FECTIVE DATE.
changing th* zoning an ttw
following described property
situate In ttw City of Lake Mary,
Florida;
Ttw South to of ttw Northwest
to of ttw Northeast to of ttw
Southwest to (leu ttw Eest 13
feel and ttw West 13 teat for
road), Section 11, Township X
South, Range X East, Samlnote
County, Florida.
Tha Public Hearing will bo
hold at ttw City Hall, City of
Laka Mary, Florida, on ttw 17th
day of March, 17(7, al 7 :X PJM..
or as soon thereafter at possible
at which time Interested parties
tor and against th* request will
ba hoard. Said hearing may b*
continued from time to time
until final action It tskon by tha
City Commission ot ttw City of
Lake Mary, Florida.
This nolle* shall ba posted In
throo public places within ttw
Cite of Lakt Mary, Florida, and
published In the Evening
Herald, a newspaper of general
circulation In tha City prior to
ttw afortMld hearing. In addi­
tion, notice shall be petted In ttw
area to ba considered at least
fifteen days prior to ttw dale ef
th* Public Hearing.
A taped record of this moating
Is mad* by ttw City tor It*
conyentenet. Thl* record may
not constitute an adequate re­
cord for ttw purpose* of appeal
from a decision made by th*
City Commission with respect to
the foregoing matter. Any
person wishing to ensure that an
id M iiiti record of tho pfocaodIngs Is maintained tor appellate
purposes it advised to make tha
nacatsary arrangements af his
OP1fior ©KUOOKMOFMa*
C ITY OP
U K E MARY, FLORIOA
Carat A. Edwards.
City Clark
Dated: February 33.1M7
Publish: March3,13.1N7

DIM-11
N O TIC IO P
P IC TITIO U ! K A M I
Notice I* hereby given that wt
are angigad In buelnata at H0
East Lake It. So. C.R. 1417,
Longwood, tamlnol* County,
F lo rid a 33710 under tha
Fictitious Nemo of East Laka
Office Centra, and that w#
to register Mid nam*
ttw Clark af th* Circuit
Court, Samlnote County. Florida
In accordance with tha Pro­
visions af lha Fictitious Name
Statutes, To-Wit: loci Ian *43.07
Florida Statutes 1737.
lit Albert L. Land Jr.
/*/ Dominick F. Cavon*
Publish February 14 B March
1. It, 17, Ilt7.
DEL-173
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice it hereby given that w*
are engaged In butineea at 48&gt;
Evesham P I., Langwaad,
Samlnalo County, Florida 31777
tha Ftctmaw Name ef
Specialties, Etc., end that wa
Intend te register Mid nam*
with lha Clark of the Circuit
Court, laminate County, Florida
In accordance with ttw Pro­
vision* of tha Fictitious Name
Statutes. To-Wit: Section 14307
Florida Statutes 1737.
lit Barbara Frank
/t/Eva Nawshutz
Publish March 3. 10, 17, 71.
1N7.
OEM-31

^ # * / * ■*

W E B U Y 1•7 a n d I n d
MORTOAOES Nation wide.
Call: Ray Logg Lie. Mlg
Broker, 7*0 Douglas Av*.,
Altamonte..................774-77J3

71— Help Wanted
ADD TO YOUR INCOME
Sell Avon Now!
gross*.........or..........333 4411
ASSEMBLY WOBK at home,
plus many others. Earn good
wages In spar* lima. For
Inlurmatlon 304-441-0071 ext.
1447.7 days......... CALL NOW I
ASSBM BLY, W AREHOUSE,
LIGHT U B O R . Jobs avail,
now. 14-13 hr. No teal

DELIVERY DRIVERS- Local
and ovar th# road. Many
positions avail. Up to 1400
weak. Call:............. ...740-7433.
DOOR MANUFACTURING
3 openings, axparlanc* fwlpful
but will train. Good work
axparlanc* a must. Apply In
person. Tag Door Co., 473
Hlck'. a-i Circle, 1-4 Industrial
Park, Sanford. Wednesday
only 7am to 1pm.
DRIVER •Top pay and banallts,
local and overnight Florida
delivery. Chauffeur* license
necessary. M VR Will ba
checked. Apply X I W. 17th St.
Sanford or call 333 1441
EXP. ONLY with furniture rafinishing A repair. Spalnlng A
coloring vsry helpful. Resposlbl* person needed for
expending business. Sanford
are*.... 333-7474between 13A 4
NURSES- CNA, Physical Ther­
apists. A Live-In's urgently
needed. Call: Cere-At-Home
774-1133........................ E.O.6.
FLOWER PREPARATION and
Delivery. Mutt have Frl. tree
A dependable car with good
a/c, M-t- hrs.wk. 331-4X4
F U L L T IM E Banallts. Will
train. Up to 34 hour. Start
today. Call:................740-7433
OROUNDSKEEPER OAL- S4.X
hour. Great hours, M/F1/4: X I Full training! En|oy
the outdoors and earn your
payl AAA Employment, 700
W. 13th St................... 333 3t74
HAIR STYLIST. Excallant pay,
mutt b* 100% motivated,
Call............................. MI-4114
HIRING) Federal Gov. jobs, In
your araa A overseas. Many
Immediate openings, without
w a itin g lis ts or la sts.
113-144.000. Phone call rafundabla.......403-4X 4X5*x1. 1344
LAN D SCAPE Maintenance:
Experienced, over it yr*. old,
drivers license. No calls after
......................... 331 3734
U N D IC A P ER S A Lawn Main­
tenance personnel needed.
Exp. A driver's license re­
quired. Pay equal to proven
experience..................333-4113
MACHINE SHOP OENERAL.
Exp Individual capable of th*
following: Light sheet metal,
lath*, mill, hall-arc. torch
w e ld in g , other re la te d
mechanical apparatus. All
manual operations, no CNC,
Florid* electronics, 331-3400
NEW CONSTRUCTION
CLEANINO
Call i.......................... .434-4141

NOWHIRING
Exparlsncad Sawing Machine
Operators wanted on all
operations. W* otter paid holi­
days, paid vacation, health
car* plan, and modern air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rates. Will train qualified
a p pl i c ant s . San-Del
Manufacturing, 33X Old Lake
Mery Rd., Santord......331-1110
Ax

N O TICE

,.260-5100

TEMP PERM..

ASSISTAN T M ANAO ER S A
CASHIERS, full lima. Apply
In parson at Tenneco,
1X0 French Ava., Santord
A U TO PORTER- 14.13 hour.
TRAIN I Simple duties, mov­
ing cars tor this busy dealer!
Torrltlc advancement! AAA
Employment, 700 W. 13th
Street.......................... 131-3174
CANVASSERS earn U to S7 hr.
plus bonuses gelng door to
door making appointments.
Will train............ Call:34bS441
CARPENTER with teats
Call B.E. Link Construction
................ 333-7037..... ...........
CASHIER: Full tlm*. Equal
Opportunity Employer. Apply
at: Little Food Town, 710 Laka
Mary Blvd................. 331-0X1
CASHIER- 14.10 hr) Great! No
nlghtsl Will train w/coinmon
sensei AAA Employment, 700
W. 33th St................... 333-3174
CASHIERS A CLERKS- Full A
part tlm*. Will train. 1373 A
UP-Call:.....................740-7433.
CASHIER- Full A Part time.
Afternoon A midnight shifts.
Weekends. Will train. Apply In
person at ECOLI -4 A SR 44.
CLERK TYPISTS

KNIGHTS
OF

COLUMBUS
JACKPOT *250
S IG N
*250
B IG X
*250

BARKS
$35*$40-550
Thm. A $m . 7p.x.
2504 OAK AW.,
SANFORD
TEM PLE SHALOM

1-3 yrt. general ofc, exp. Typing
X WPM. Part tlm* A perma­
nent positions. Never a Fool

TEMP MUM----------266-5100
CNAi Immediate full tlm* post(tens. 71 or l it shifts. Good
benefits A atmosphere. Apply
Oabary Manor, X N. Hwy.
17-73. Pe Aery 444-404.....EOE
COOKS- Taw full tlm# positions
open. Apply in parson. Hungry
Howte’s, 1400 French Av.,
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
COUNTER OAL- I X Bubbly
smite wlnsl Train to answer
phones A handle customer
accounts I Promote quick Into
mgnt. spoil AAA Employ­
ment, 700W. W i l t . . ..m i l l s
CUSTOMSB S IB V IC I- S3 hour.
Cheery smite lands III Must
an|oy people and figure work I
Nice oftlcel AAA Employment, 700W. 33th St.... 333-3174
★

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AN Rigiilar Om n i
$ 5 0 .0 0
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PbHbga, FL

W W W * * *

DAILY W0RR/DAJLY PAY
N EED MEN A WOMEN NOWI

sail m s

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Report ready for work at 4 AM
X7W. 1st. St............... Santord

12M5M

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OF CASStiMRVY
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1 8 0 0 1 i J 100 I
rmJtS.C.

CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
323-2611

�\ / i‘ 1 ^ i r t t

'•/W7W4,^

71— H e lp W anted

9 3 - Rooms for Rent

E X P E R IE N C E T R U C K A
HEAVY equipment mechanic.
Call:........................... *34*330

SANFORD) Furnished room* A
kitchenette *55, 1*5 weekly A
up. Walk to town, park and
taka. Call*45-4030..or..33t 4*43
UNFURNISHED ROOM, House
privilege*. *373. Mo Includes
utilities. Mutt have refer-

NURSES, AIDES,
COMPANIONS
HARRY NEW YEAR. Wa need
you now. Now bon*(lit In­
cluding group Iniuranco and
vacation. Rrae CEU’S. Dally
pay. Staff 1 private duty.
MEDICAL PERSONNEL POOL
Coll i MO-)1U

Medical

Personnel
P o o l.
O FFICE HELP needed part
time. Nam* you own hourt.
Call............................. 133*501
OFFICE QAL- *5 hour. In San
ford I Pleating atmotpheral
Variety of dutleat Bailee all
you needl AAA Employment,
700W. 21th St.............. 333 5174
ORDERLY* Completion ol acute
care nurte't aide training
court* or equivalent hospital
exp. 7 3 A 3 11 thltt. Mutt be
cerltlfed. Apply: W. Volutla
Memorial Hotpllal, 701 W.
Plymouth Ave., Poland, Fla.
PAINTSEALANT
TECHNICIAN
EARN UP TO *13.50 HR. No
experience nocettary. For full
or p a rt p o tlflo n t call
............. UI3M4-715I..............
PART-TIME, Exp. prettman,
A.B. Dick MO, flexible hourt,
Call............................. 33)1131
PEST CONTROL TECH.- SSS
F u ll tra in in g provldedl
Brlllent career you can count
on I AAA Employment, 700 W.
15th St......................... 333 317a
PLANT WORKERS
Plant worker* lor entry level
potlflont required tor Sanford
manufacturing facility. Good
work record required. Call
333-3300....................Pertonnel
PRE-SCHOOL teacher needed.
Special perton for a tpeclal
opportunity. II you are career
oriented, have a chauffeur*
Meant*, over 35 yrt. old, have
clattroom exp., able to com­
municate eetlly A function at
part of a team, w* would like
to hear from you. All replyt
confidential. Thlt It a growth
potldon for the right perton.
Send return*’to: Bex 34* c/e
Sanford H’ rald, P.O. Box
U57, Sanford, FL. 12772-1457
PUBLIC RELATIONS REP. for
Club Sunthlne Lin* Inc. Boat
rental A memberthlpt located
at Monro* Harbour A Marina
In Sanford. For appointment
call........................ *04-773-3033
R E S P O N S IB L E O R IV E R
needed. Florida d rlv o r’t
11cent* required... Cal1333 5000
RN NEEDED. Full time, Exp*
rlence at Charge Hurt* and
geriatric* helpful. Apply DoBary Manor, 40 N. Hwy 17 *3.
44*4424........................... EOE
ROUTE TR AIN EE- 1335 week.
Ideal company hiring today I
Your chance to get behind the
wheel and accelerate your
career I FOL all you needl
AAA Employment, 700 W. 35th
Street......................... 333-517*
S A IN T L E O C O L L E O E It
teeklng additional ad|unct
faculty for teaching assignmentt In the Leetburg/Deland
/Sanford/Daylena Beach
a re a , P h .D . p re fe rre d ,
Matter’* acceptable. Pleal*
tend letter of Inquiry to:
Philip McClung, ESO, P.O.
Box 33*1, Saint Leo, FI. 33574
SALES S E C R E T A R Y ) Full
time for telephone, order
entry, talet record*, Interna­
tional corretpondenc*. telex.
Require* typing, light bookkeeplng. Longwood 333-1340
SCREEN PR INTER , experi­
enced. Call for appointment to
apply In perton........... 33*550*
SCREEN INSTALLER- *M Top
pay for your tkllltl Local firm
you can grow with I Hurry I
AAA Employment, 700 W. 35th
Street.......................... 333 3174
SECRETARY) Typing and all
general office dutlet. Sanford
Office. Call *04-775-3033 for
appointment_______________
SHOP FOREMAN- S7.30 hour*.
Your chance to run the thowl
Keep thlt fleet of truck* run­
ning imoothl Career I Make
your move I AAA Employment,700W. 35th St.... 333 3174
SOLDERERS- Exp. In wiring
homettet A J hook connection
a mutt. Apply In perton be­
tween 4:30 A 5:30 at Mathew*
Attoc. *41 Hickman Clr., 1-4
lndu*trlal Park, Sanford
APPOINTMENT SETTERS
Pleetant working condition*
with 40 yr. old local company.
New department teek* expe­
rienced appointment tetters
only. SS hour + tremendous
bonus structure. Call: 333 34*3
ext. 334............ Chari** Bordet
TRACTOR TR AILER - S7.35 hr.
Any school or experience fine I
Hiring todayl Deliver In
Central Fla. area A be home
every nlghtl AAA Employment, TOOW. 35th SI.... 333 3174
TRUSS ASSEMBLERS, experi­
enced preferred. Apply In
perton to Lowe’s Trust Plant,
3*01 Aileron Clr. (Sanford
Airport Industrial Park)
WELDERS N EED ED : Apply In
perton at KAD Trailer, 1*01 E.
Celery Ave. Sanford....ra-ftM
WORKERS NEEDBDI If you
need steady work-paid dally,
Call Sam after 3 pm.....333 755*

91— Apartments/
H ouse to Share
FEM ALE Reammato" to there
1/3 house. Call:.......... JJJ-434J
or 333-4*40atk tor Renee
ROOMMATE N EED ED or take
over leete at Sanford Villa*.
*335. Include* water A elec.
Call 333AMI 1:30 to *:00 AM or
7:00to*:00PM_____________
3 BDRM., 3 bath In very nice
neighborhood, kitchen A
laundry privilege*. Prefer
tamalet33l-041l...or...57«-*4lt

93— Rooms for Rent
LAROE ROOM- Near town. *50
per week. Privet* entrance.

Phene:

.......331-5**o

L O N O W O O D , Room w ith
private bath. Lakefront home.
Mature »*5wfc............. 7*7 3*4*
a r ea so n a b le r a te s
• MAID SERVICE
• PRIVATE ENTRANCE
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Uve Ip

&lt;J 111’ I I I I L l l U '
323-4507

141-Hom es Fo r Sale

.jncMjsroiNanerePjM.

97-Apartm ents
Furnished / Rent
LAROE 1 bdrm.. tao wfc., effi­
ciency 1*5 wk„ plot *tso dap.,
near town Call........... 333 *3*4
CLEAN 3 bdrm., I bath, living
room, eal-ln kitchen, carpet,
a/c, turn. *113 week. 331-31*0
FUR N ISH ED A P A R TM E N TNice for tingle working man.
Call after 3 pm............ 333-3*30
Fern* Apt*, for Senter Citizen*
311 Palmetto Ave.
J . Cowan. No Phone Call*
NEAR DOWNTOWN- I bdrm.
apt, Nicely tumlihed. Complate. MS week............ 331 31*0
SANFORD- Hug* 3 bdrm. co
plat* p riv a c y , close to
downtown. Looking for family
with 3 children. *100 week +
*350 tec. Call:............. 333-33**
STUDIO A 1 RR„ Adults,
pats, qulat rat. no down. *335
ond up por mo, + dop, 333*01*
SANFORD- Lovaly t bdrm.,
tfflclancy. Complete privacy,
1*0 week + 1300 tec. Include*
utilities............... Call:323 334*
1 BDRM. apartmant. 1100 wk.
ulMlllat Included, plus t
Mt-*tt4.....or.....133 413*evet.

99— Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
Move In botoro March tlth A
receive t i n oft May’s rant. 1
bdrm. or efficiency available
lor Immediate occupancy.
3M E. Airport » t ............ 311-Mat
• EFFIC.1 A3 BDRM. APTS.
• FUR N .AUNFURN ,
• PAY W EEKLY
Why Contldor Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

&lt;Thr

U illc u u '

3234507
EFFICIENCIES- 1 A 3
bedrooms. Call: Southern
Rentel* after 4 pm.......337 144*

GROVEVIEW VIUAS
3*M Lake Mery Blvd.
DON’T RENT...Until you M
Sanford’s most spacious 3
3 bath apt*.......131-0544
LAROE 3 bdrm., 3 lull bptht, all
appl., wathar/dryar, cant.
H/A, w/w carpal, Ig* pool,
IMS, no pot*, lease, 333 *040

LUSH LANDSCAPING
Surrounds the** elnglo ttory,
energy •(Helent, 1A 2br. eptt.
SANFOED COURT APTS.
1301S, SANFORDAVE
_____ J1J-JJ0Iext. 21*

MARINERS VILLAOE
Special 1bdrm.....................*3*5
2 bdrm*...................... from *335
Call............... .................333 *471}
Rl DOEWOOD ARMS APT*.
Atk about our movo-ln tpeclal I
3541 Rldgeweed Ave «*«*«**323-441*
1AHDLEWOOD, I bdrm, 1bath,
downstairs, *300 Mo., *300
dtp.. Call....................-133-MI*
SHENANDOAH VILLAOE

i t * Am a z in g w *o m u q t t im
A &amp; T n » C A H S A « V6u /N

Onnip,

BY OWNER, speclout
3/3. living room, dining room,
kitchen, porch A carport on
largo thady lot. 333-1031.3 7.

Centum

J

C O M P L E TE L Y Rafurblthad
with naw carpal. 4/3, Blk., 2
car garage, consider leete
option............................*49,500

REALTY, INC.
141— Homes Fo r Sale
INVESTORS, LOOK A T TN IS I1
bd. home with fireplace A
largo troos........Call Anytime I

M ICE SLASHED TO $29,900!
Alan B. Johnson, Ro/Max
Unlimited, 335-41*1or 344-3*00

BATEMAN REALTY

JAMES LEE

Uc. Real Etfata Broker
IMS Sanferd Ave.

321-0758----------- 321-225)
After heurt 333-7*43

321-7823----- Em . 323-0809

ii

m

i

i t i u / n

ui: \i ion
BEST LOCATION IN 10WNI 5
bdrm., 2to bath on huge tree
covered lot, family room, 2
screened porches, can. H/A,
clot* to Mayfair Country Club.
Sellers motivated.........**7,500

LAK EFR O N T-LO C H ARBOR
312 Crystal Dr. S. Beautiful
Us acre lot, 21* ft. on lako,
nice shrubs, largo Oak troos,
variety of fruit trees, older
home w/plenty of room. 1 br.,
2 ba, family room, dining
room, sun room, hardwood
doors, llroplaco, oat-ln kitch­
en, now roof, c/h/a. With little
work could bo a dream home I
Ownar financing........ 1119,500

AFFORDABLE! 3 bdrm., home.
Hug* 110 x 110 ft. lot, detached
garage, screened porch.
Priced to toll I.............. *30,*00

CALL BART

323-5774

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR_________
333-749*

2*01 HWY, 17*3
LO N O W O O D ) Lake M a ry
school*. 1 bdrm., Ito bath plus
m o r t. A ttu m a b la F H A
*5*.*00/o»or................774-1013
LONOWOOD/Lake Mary area.
By ownar, 3 br, 3 ba, qulat
nalghberttood. fenced yard,
cathedral callings, Laka Mary
tchoolt.M1.W0...........333-13*0

D ELTO N A- Clot# to Osteen
school A 1-4. 1 bdrm., 3 bath,
screen porch. Assumable mtg.
Owner/Reeltor........... 333-W73
FOR U L E , Leae* option- 1
2 bath on 1 aero or
more, air A heat. 331-015*

ENERGY REALTY
115 N. COUNTRY CLUE RD.
1131*1*

LOO-A-Freme, te complete on 2
acres 2,500 sq.ft.+ , *45.000
Terms. Owner/Brfcer. 333-3*40
W A T E R F R O N T , Executive
home on like with dock. Lako
Mary, 3 bedrooms, 2Vy baths,
w/tunken tub In matter, pool,
hot tub, e/c, fpl., cathedral
callings, 3 car garage, full
porch, kltchon with all appli­
ances, roc. room, living room,
dining rbom, utility room,
possible 4th bdrm., Specially

LETS TRADE!
YOURHOME
FOR ONE OF OURS
YOUR PLAN OR OURS
OUR LANDOR YOURS
CALL BOB U N D E R NOW
TO SEE IF YOU Q UALIFY

STemper

I-;
.

POOL HOME- 3 bdrm., 2 bath,
fireplace, screen patio A pool,
central heat A air, large
corner lot...................... *45,000

.A .

J

in

Ill &gt;Ni m
xi Hi i 1 &lt;ari

STENSTROM

Visit l l l l Chat* Avo,
Tun* your AM radio fo 1050
and hear th* dalallt of this l
br, I to ba. homa. Price *44,*00
U N F O R D 3 bdrm., 2 bath CB
home, central heat A air. •
Only.-.
.TJJrtl.'.'.t::.*m ,wo

1 BDRM., I BATH FRAME.
Ownor financing...........13*.WO
ZONED MR-3- Extra largo 3
bdrm., ivy bath. Adutt-cara,
daycare or duplex use...MS,000
LAROE 3 bdrm., 2 bath CB.
Good area, large Fla. room.
......................................*51.500
PAOLA- Lake Markham Rd. 3
bdrm., 3 bath. Ownar will twlp
with naw financing...... 154.900
HIDDEN LAKE- Old taction.
Largo 3 bdrm., 2 bath doublt
garage.......................... *4*.*00

G?ntuiy„
JUNE PORZIO REALTY, INC

REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford's S*kiU »d«r
W E U t T AND SELL
MORE PROPERTY THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
IEM IN O LECO U N TY
OAK T R E E D S T R E E T I
bdrm., 2 bath home,
floors, oat-ln kitchen, family
room, haot A air, needs some
TLC ...............................*44.000
PINE VIEWI 1 bdrm., 2 bath,
breakfast bar, beamed cell­
ing, mirror wall In dining
paddle fans, outslda
area, workshop and
mor*.............................*40,500
GOROEOUI LOTI 2 bdrm., 1
bath home In Laka M ary,
eat-ln kitchen, dining area,
heat and air, priced just right 1
..................................... *44,*00

LAKE MARY- 4 bdrm. Family
Funl On qulat ratldantlal
strati A thady large lot. Inground pool with privacy
fanca.............................113,500

EXC ELLEN T VALUEI 3 bdrm.,
1 bath homa. Screened porch,
pool, oat-ln kitchen, breakfast
patio, paddle fans, cantral h/a
and much moral........... IM.SOO

U N O R A SO U TH -1/2, Immacu­
late. Tastefully decorated.
High balenc* FHA mortgeg*.
Owners motivated........**5,*00

DECORATED TO A “ T " l 2 br.,
ivy bath home, garden room,
fpl., vaulted calling, wet-bar,
peddle fans, C/H/A,....*112,000

U N F O R D 1/2 With Hot Tubl
Large oat-ln kitchen and fami­
ly room with trench doors to
screened porch, 2 car garage.
Excellent location on largo lot.
Priced at......................IM.000

A L L T H E A M E N IT IE S ! 3
bdrm., 3 bath homa, 1 wells,
greenhouse, nursery business,
completely lanced and land­
scaped, workshop, central
H/A. and lots morel...4175,000

OROVEVIEW- Lovely 4/2 with
groat eat-ln kitchen, family
room. Low down payment
putt you in this homo. Priced
af........................... ......*71,500

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720

OLD U N F O R D Charming and
H isto ric 1 tto ry homo.
Hardwood floors, slain glass
windows. Architect’* horn*.
Qualify and ipaca.........Mf .000

Call toll fru 1-800-323-3720
3545 PARK AVE...
M l U . Msrr Blvd..

■Lk. Mery

WE BLOW FLAT
B d

IM ACHES • OSTEEN, 5 ecr*
parcels, agriculture, owner fi­
nancing . M3,500 •179,500, Call
Red Morgan.
Broktr/Satetman
OENEVA, 10 acres, can ba sold
as 1 five acre parcels, near
Laka Harney, *43,000. Call
Linda M organ, Realtor/
Associate
WATERFRONTI 5 -I- •acres, on
Lako LIHIe, ownor financing,
*35.000, Call Tarry Llvte. Re­
al tor/Associate
O R E A T IN V E S TM E N T OPPOHTUNITYI 4.4 4crtt toned
tor 15 units per aero, *3*5.000,
Call Tarry Uvla, Realtor/
Associate

Insulate safely for
year-round com fort &amp;
lifetime economy/

FOR FREE ESTIMATE
CALL

ENERGY SAVINGS SYSTEM S

(3051 8 3 0 -4 0 3 5

MASONRY Cut-OH Saw
ter salt.................................*300
Call................................ 331-1743

AKC MINI POODLE PUPPY.
All shot*........................... 1349
333*373.........or,........4*5-3547
AMEEICAN Terrier Pit Bull
puppies. M0-*50. • weeks old.
Celt:.......... 331-403* otter 4 pm
P ET U T T E R A BIRD TAM ER3 yr. exp. handling exotic pots.
Taking e trip? Call me. I'll
baby your pot. Impossible
bird? til tarn* II. Reas, foot,

^ovmjcaro^tL^^^j^TTsqtso

V ,

P roperty/Sale
APPRAISALS A N D U L E I
BOR M. BALL, JE. P.A..C.S.M.
REALTOR................... 313-4110
Florida...Virginia.. .Maryland
CASSELBERRY: I acre toned
PR-1. MS,000. W. Mallcxewtfcl
Realtor...................... 333 79*3

153— AcreageLots/Sale
OSTEEN- Just under one acre In
Farm ton hunting area. Re­
duced to 17400. Call: MARTI
SENSAKOVIC............ 333 1300
1331307 ave*.

fc u e s
4 1 00(04 M C , M 4 lT O f t X

1 Vy ACHE HOMESITE, high
and dry, paved road, *3000
down, 1140 month, good water,
O STEEN .....................131*040

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories
OOOD USED MOTORS
and transmissions
Call:...............................33133)4

HORSE BOARDINO,
Qulat country tolling In
Genova. Call
34*5*33
QUARTER HORIES- AQHA.
Bay Mara, Palamlno Mare.
Both b e a u lle t/ p lo a tu re
horses. Also, 1 Bay Coll. All

CHEVY eastern van.'ii, auto,
air, cruise, stereo, murals,
ate. Very ctean......... -223-1411
JE E P PICK UP- 71, 4x4. Run*
good, needs body work.
Call:.......................... .313-*3*7

213— Auctions

322-2420
321-2720

BOA’S AUCTION
E VERY MONDAY NIOHT
7PM. REAR OP B O H USRD
FUR N ITUR E..............-M U 17-*1

WE BUYHOUSEHOLDS

R H I W j j ------- Mr............331-70*7

BNIDGCS MD SON
Auction every Thursday 7 PM.

VIE MIT ESTATES!
215— Boats and
Accassorias

CASSELBERRY- Wooded lot,
redecorated. Owner Terms.
4*»-1113. Also Mf. Dora I acre
FAMILY SPACES AVAILABLE
Carriage Cove Mobile Home
Perk. Come see usl 11________
FLEETW O O D ) 1**4. Must be
moved. 14 X M. a bd:, cantral
air, take over pymts. *1*5.33
mo. Call.Bl llt5..or..333 1433
LA TE MODEL- Air, furnished,
super clean and reedy. *500
down, low monthly. Owner
financing lo adults. No pots.
340 *732.........or......... 345-0535

1*3— Waterfront
Property / Sale
U N F O E D ) Lakefront lot In th*
city limits. Sewer A water,
bulk) to suit. Fish, ski, swim.
Call Nowl....................331-13*7

ALTERN ATIVE T.V. A AFPL.
1*14 Hwy. 17-93
312-5044
BOX SPKINOS AND M A T­
TRESS. Queen site.
Phono:........................ 331-74*7
O.E. D E TE R
Good condition....................*40
Call:...........................331-0714

Bad Credit?
No Credit7
WE FINANCE
WALK IN...............DRIVE O U T
NATIONAL AUTO U L H S
Sanford Ave. A 13th St....331-4873
C H EV Y MONZA) 'M , S dr.
hatchback, PS, PB , auto
trans. A air. Sate Price M*f
for gulch sate.....C*ll:31M47t.
D A T S U N llltW -IN I
Good condition
Call:............................333-8343
F O R D L T D - ‘ *0. 4 d o o r,
excellent condition. M.400.
Call:...........-331-11**Otter 4:JD
PLYMOUTH ARROW. '•*, Ssp..
air, am/fm stereo, S I M or
best offer. Call 331-243* after 5

2 3 5 -T ru c k s /
Buses /V a n s

CALL ANY TIME

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

231-Cars

201— Horses

DEALERS A CONSIGNMENT*
for onflquo A collectible
mlni-mall. Special rate* for
first 10 dealers. Clean store,
Longwood..................333 1550

157— Mobile
Hom es/Sole

1.3% IN TE R ESTI Affordable
home with can. h/a, fam. rm,
dog lot, garage, A much more,
only 144,900.......Cell Anytime!
Alan B. Johnson, Re/Max
Unlimited, 123-41Mor MO-MO*

MELROSE DtMW*
ring set. Ilk* naw.
will sell MOO or
c h i .......j33-3aa* eak ter
POOL) IM*. ABOVE OR*
In good condition. MOO
Call............ *31-0371 offer
TEA K dining rm. tabla A
*4)0. TRS40 color —
w/m*ny extras. *4)0
U T IL IT Y TR A IL E R -1 «4 heavy
duty, dally, me**, ramp.
Call:........................... J M I I M

238— Vehicles
Wanted

211— Antiques/
Collectibles

• OENEVAOSCEOLARD.a
ZONED FOR MOBILES!
5 Aero Country tracts.
Wall tread on paved Rd.
10% Down. )• Yrt. a tll% l
From s i m **i

S U B M IT A L L O F F E R S ! 3
bdrm, 3 bath homa, possible
laasa option or assumption, 1
yr. homo warranty, lovaly
home!...........................Mt.SOO

IO Y L L W IL O E - 4/2, lamlly
home on extra large lot.
Mature tree* and landscaping.
Executive area, good school*.
Priced at appraisal.......*10,000

* * * * * * * * * * * * * *

CUSTOM O AR D EN TILLIN O
The Troy-Blit* way. Fra# ast.
Satlfactlon guaranteed.
Gardens, flower bods, lawns.
333-1337 off. 4— .or... .weekends

Hwy 44........'■...............333-3*01

2959 Part Drift
(305)321-0140

K E V E S fllN TH E SOUTH

SHADY LOCATION I 1 bdrm., 2
balh homa with privacy
fancad back yarJ, spill plan,
family room open to enclosed
porch with In-ground spa,
breakfast b a r. vaulted
callings......................... M*,*00

322-8878

Sanford'* Salts Laadar

3S4S PAEK AVE *•*•*•*****«L
eat Lk. Mary I M ........ Lk. Mary

B EAU TIFU L CONDOI 2 bdrm..
3 balh, equipped kitchen
w/breakfest bar, dining area,
cantral H/A, br overlooks
lake,..............................*54,000

141-Homo* For Sale

OSTEEN AEEA- Handyman's
Special. *4,000 down and no
qualifying. Mobile homa on 7
acres. *13,000. Call: EOOAR'S
A REYNOLDS N EA LTY INC.
for details.......... *43-4441.........
OWNER D E IP E R A T B I Re­
located last week. Wants told.
Extra nice 3 bdrm., naw
carpet A paint, cantral heat A
air. Lass than *3400 down.
Sol lor pays closing costs.
S4f,«00. Don’t mist out I Call
nowl........BECKY COURION,
RE/MAX 300 n. realty Inc.
*3*4330......... or.........333443*

223— Mfscella

193— Lawn A Garden

199— Pots A Supplies

REALTORS

CaN M l fra* 1-800-323-3720

WE HAVE RENTAL HOUSINO
C ALLAN YTIM E
REALTOR......................332-4W1
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ WWW

i bdrm., 2 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
wather/dryer, tec. *415 Mo.
Landarama Fla., Inc. 333-173*

141— Homes Fo r Sale

•4| Os ( I MS

(TALKING HOUSE)

I* INCH COLOR TV
Good picture.....................
Call:.......................

IX XI Ii I Mill

STENSTROM

0 1BE7 M|A *•

COUNTY 3 rental units all for
..................................... 153,W0
COUNTY- 3 houses on 2 sepa­
rata lots, 3/1to A 1/1. Noodt
TLC. Owner financing. Asking
..................................... 1*4,wo

Ml • w in

183— Television /
Radio/ Stereo

195— AAachlnery/Tools

Unfurnished / Rant

SANFORD:

LARRY'S MART. 215 Sanford
Avo. New/Utod rum. A appl
Buy/Stll/Trado, 333-4133,

1 •- 1 { , 1

1JACR E IN O IN E V A ....*33,000

121— Condominium
Rentals

•Y O W NER- Ostevn. * + /acres. Maytown Rd. area.
M7.500.Call:............... 333*347
OCALA NATIONAL FORESTHigh and dry wooded lots.
Mobil* homa, cabin, camping
O.K.-Hunting and fishing.
*5,450 w/ *150 dn., *41.71
monthly......((04) 134 457*days
or..............(*041*331434 eves.

TnoEHaYa AAercHjt

/ Furniture

si: inn nit(i

DELTONA ESTATES AREAPool horn* w ith ttono
fireplace A family room. 3
tithing lake*..... CHARLOTTE
CROSLYN.................. 333-4072

103— H ouses

^jjwjcomj^irfam^JlIAlll

ill— Appliances

JUNE PORZIO REALTY. INC

BUILDING LOTS....From *4,000

CEDAR AVE) 3 bdrm., 2 I
carport, tntldo utility,
mo. 4- tec............ Call 33* 7*44
LAKE MARVi 115 E. Laka
Mary Ava., Deluxe, brand naw
3 bdrm., 2 bath duplex. All
appliances, weth/dry hook up,
vaulted callings, colling font,
wooded lot. Really ideal *450
mo. 331-Ota*......or......747-Er iQ
RI DOEWOOD ACRES- Deluxe
Duplex**, i bdrm. Families

153— Acreage*
Lots/Sale

OW NER F IN A N C IN G !0.*1
wooded acres, *74 II. on
highway 44.
Wallace Crete Realty, Inc.
__________ 311-4577

ENJOY LIFE In thlt 3 bdrm.,
IVy bath homa, central h/a,
dining area, garage, located In
Winter Springs!............ *55,000

105— DuplexTrip le x / R e n t

c

767-0606

322-8478

r* t

Sanford Hw a M, SERferit FI.

C O S T IN G .

Atk about move In tpoclall
Call..............................7.31*2*30
T IE E D OF EORINO, Cramped
ApttT See our Irg. 1 A 2 bdrm.
eptt. In charming 4-plex.
Formal dining A living rm..
tun rm.. * ft. ceilings, C/H/A,
fully equipped oat-ln kitchen A
..444-1473..... *5*5-MOO
1bdrm., 1bath...............*335 mo
3bdrm., m bath........... t3Mm
# CanfralHaatAAIr
• Pool A Laundry
FRANKLIN AEM I
til* Florida Ave.
__________ I33-44M_________
1*3* F A R K A V E i La rgo
downstairs apt. 2 bdrm., *450
mo. plus tec. dep. Call 42*-00*5
days. 337-1047 or 337-3*3* night*
114*MOVE IN SPECIAL
ADULTS. POOL. LAKE
LAKE JEN N IE APTS....333-I743

LAKE M AEY. 3 bedroom.. 1
bath, *340 Month, *200 dopotll.
Call..............................331-5***
MOVE RIOHT IN- 3 bedroom
homatl Clean I Naw carpet,
Only *430 mo................3313*51
U N FO R D , 3 bedroom, 1 bath,
*3*5 M onth, (300. Dep.
Call..............................33I5*M
U N FO R D - 2 br, dining rm. a/c,
applt. tcreanod perch. *3*5
mo 4- lit A latt. Special price
for eenlor cltltent........331-04*5
U N FO R D - 3 bedroom, 1 bath
Avallabla on March 7.
Call:............................*3041133
U N FO R D - 3 br., I ba. large
yard with fruit treat. carport.
*400 pair mo. 4- eoc. 321-5W0
SANFORD Rent or Rant to
own. Like now, 3 br, 3 bo, dbl.
garage, 113 McVay, Sonora
subdivision, USOmo....43* 4470
SANFORD 1/2 home to rent.
Nice area. *441 mo. with
discount + dop. Call:. .333 4540
U N FO R D , 2 bdrm.. I bath. *335
mo. -i- *300 dop. Include*
water A to gas Call... ..331-1
SUNLAND Etta tot for qualified
tenant. 3/1, children ok, no
poll *425. 4- tec. 333 44*1

*4 •+**

KIT ♦N'CARLYLE ^by Larry Wright

, A ltw o iu l

^7

T 1 T T

BOAT REPAIR A
AM types of fiberglass repair
A custom painting 30yr exp.
Free ast. 331-5444 or 333 413*
II FT. H O il CAT.- w/traller.
Excel, cond. *2,500. 313-2110
ex. 337.... or.....lll-OTMafterl
71 AOWRIDER SUCCESS. Incl.
‘15 traitor, 145 Mor. cruiser.
Exc. cond...........333-15*3 aff. 4

WE PAY TO P M lor wracked
cars/trucks. Wa Sail guaran­
teed used parts. AA AUTO
SALVAOEaJ Oaiary..

239— Motorcycles
and Blkas
K A W A U K I U4 O P li 71, MM
mite* nxcellent vcondition,
helmets, UtM/ofter....323-4477

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
HMSTravaTyjaliarT

111 tt.
*7,700 Exc. cand. A
Travel Trailer* SO N. Addle
Ava.,
KROWN H A R D TO P Pap-Up
camper) *77, eteept 7, rxlO*
add a room, 2 awnings, laval
lacks, many more extras.
Absolutely llko now. Coll
331-0131, set atlilBodterdCf.
PARK MODEL TR A ILER with
Florida room. *0,100. Located
In Twelve Oak* RV Retort.
Call:........... ................ 331-154*
SEE TH E NEW HI-LO. TR AV­
E L TRAILERS at Bob Owen
Travel Trailers 333 N. Adell*
Ave., Deland.............. 73* 5050

217— Garage Sales
MOVINO SALE- AppliancesWather/dryer, T.V.. stereo,
and small applt. Furalturedlnlng. living, bdrm. Ceram­
ics. glassware, trlcycte, bicy­
cle A other. 3004 Grandview
Ave. N. 323-M54 after )pm.
ALL DAY U T . A SUN.

BUY HERE
PAY HERE
low

219— Wanted to Buy

D O W N I’ A Y M I N I
out*
Nan-Farraut Metals. *******M
KOKOMO................ ......333-1IM
JUN K A W RECKED CARSRunnlng or not, top prlco*

Nil l Ilf III I
Nil I N I ! Ill SI

_j»aldi Frao£)kku£;23IJlll^_

223— Miscellaneous
Brawn River Reck Petto Stones
Great* Traps Sand Dry Walls
Ready Mix Concrete
Mired* Concrete C*.
113-5751..................Mf Elm Ave.

i r . 1 1) l A W
] 'f

■i

MW f

.AMUHI)

1

i

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE J OB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
Accounting A
T e x Service
H UBERT PEARCE
Exp. Inc*me Tax Sarvke

^ n itN iis iiip l^ ^

Additions A
Remodeling
E.E. LINK CONST,
Remodeling............. 105-113-703*

Cleaning Service

Landscaping

Paper Hanging

A F F O R D A B L E A thorough
homo cteanlng for *40.00. Rtforoncos available. 4*»*730
H O U S E C L E A N I N O - Fast ,
thorough, and re lia b le .
Call:........................... 333 7541

KINO A EBBS Landscaping A
Lawn care. Ctean up *30 A up.
Hauling, cutting, trimming.
Call:............................345-4443
SEMINOLE LANDSCAPING

PAPER HANOINO A FAINTINO (Interior • Exterior).
Rot. A comm. IS years exp.
Fra* Estimates. Call: Roy
Taylor af.....................331-4033

Lawn Sarvlca

FlnancIng^^jjXIc^CRCOOOJTI

Blinds A Drapes

Handy Man

DRAPES/TOP TR EATM EN TS
D UST H U FFLES /P ILLO W

HANDYMAN Repair*
Nothing loo small.
Call Ralph..................... 337-17*5

Bookkeeping

Horn* Improvement

A O O K K E E P IN O T Tecraterlal
Services ai reasonable rate*.
Days, 331-3405. Eve*., 44* ATI*

Ca!^ustellal774-*5#^^_^

Carpentry

Landclearing

SHAMM1^IANI^J3M144

A L L T Y P E S Of Carpentry.
Remodeling A home repairs.
Call RIchard Gross 331-5*73.
RICHARDS CARPENTRY
IS yrt In Cantral Florid*

Carpet/Floor
Coverings
FLOORINO- All types. Wood
Install, sand, raflnlth, slain,
wax. Til*, terracotta, te rm zo. llnollum, ale. Ctean, polish,
saal, wax. Llc/Bond 7*71104

322-8133

Res •Comm. •Now Const.
For that special touch.

COM PLETE HOME REFAIR
Door.......window....... cabinets

EAcTTIoE^um^nKk^ush
hog. Box blading, and Olsclng.
Call: 333-1104.... -Of...... 333 *3)1
BUSH HOO. Box Blading. Dlt
clng A Tractor Roto-TIIIIng.
Cell..............................33115*7
TH O R N E LA N D C L E A R IN O
Loader and truck work/septlc
la n k ia n d ^ F re e »»rj7 2 J C I3 ^

Landscaping
BOGUEII

E*pl

Proletilonal!

Lawn A Garden Melnt A chain
taw work, mulch. Spring
clean up 1Free Estl 323 1317

■ AER IEE’S Landscaping I
Irrlg., Lawn Cara, Ret A
Comm,311-7*44, FR EE ESTI
OEOROE’S LAWN CARE
Reasonable prices
Call now to reserve service
Free**!........................ 333-75*3
"SUNNYS” . Mow, odge, trim,
planting, mulching. SFRINO
Spec. Free ast............ 331 711*

Masonry
Cencrete Slabs, drives, patios A
walks, 15 yr. exp. Lifelong
res.. Lie. A Ins. 34* *754aft. 5

Nursing Care
Hillkeveo Healthcare Center
*50 Mcllonvlll* Ave.
Sanford.......................... 333 45*4
O URRATESARELOW ER
Lakevtew Nursing Center
t it E. Second Si., Sentord
133-47*7

Roofing
RE-ROOF your homo now In
time tor spring rains. 14%
discount for a limited lima
Slate U c. ICOCC-O31710CC
Call............................. 331 1555

Sacratarial Service
Custom TypingNotary Public. Call) D.J. En-

terjrteotJIMmrTaWj^^

Sewer/Septic Tank
HOWARD’S SEPTIC SERVICE
Repair Linas A Ctean Tanka
Fra* Estimates...........1314135*

Tre e Service
ALL TREE SERVICE +
Firewood Woodtplllfor for
hlro Call Alter 4 P.M.3
ECHOLS TR E E SERVICE
Free E til metet I Low Prices I
Lie... Ins...Stump Orlndlng,Tool
13MZ3* day or nlte
"Let the Protesstenals do It".
STUMP ORINDINO
I nturod .......... Froo Estimate*
Call................................. 774 7501

i

�1
41— Sanford HrsM , Sanford, FI.
l e t s a l l m avh *
LUNCH TOGETHER

Tuttdsy, March 1,1H7

I HAVE THE PERFECT M
SOLUTION...WE'LL EAT AT
MV REGULAR LUNCH m
- a.
&gt;. COUNTER ■

Proper Body Functions
Dependent On Liquids

we s h o u l o have

TAKEN MORE TIME

anemia Is an unusual condition
caused by a failure of the bone

S E T TH A T MESS
_ CLEANED UP!

WASH THOSE

OTHER WOMEN/.
NAG...I O RD ER

&gt; CARRY
.OUT THAT
GARBAGE.'

T W IN D O W S /

\|

/\

DEAR DR. G OTT - I had a car
accident 10 years ago and hit my
left forehead on the steering
wheel. Last summer I started to
get dizzy spells and faint feelings
that have become progressively
worse. It finally was determined
that I had some Interference in
the electrical current In the left
frontal area o f m y brain. I'm now
on Dilantin, but I am not4Im­
proving. I don't understand why
this problem began so suddenly
and am confused as to whether
the car accident had anything to
do with it.
DEAR READER - A blow to
the head (concussion) can cause
the sym ptom s you describe,
because It can Interrupt the
brain's normal electrical activi­
ty. This consequence of Injury
can be temporary or It can last
for several months. Apparently
you are under the care o f the
appropriate specialist — a neu­
rologist. He or she may want to
alter the dose o f Dilantin or
change It to a different drug.
Even though your symptoms
developed nine years after the
injury, they could have been
caused by It. Ask your neurolo­
gist about this.
DEAR DR. GOTT - My blood
condition Is called "red-cell
aplastic anem ia." What's the
appropriate treatment and how
rare Is It?
DEAR READER Aplastic

“

THE BORN LOSER
pah,vi%

ero.-M cm FFieT*

&gt; - m* a wise mam who &lt;1
p e im

s e r* m

by Art Sanson )

tocommutxwvt aancw,
T p E V E P B U P L / T a W SW EET! 7

wife 's

BPTHCAY, BUT

fl- —*■’ ll —

^ARCHIE'S WORKIN©
PWRT TIME AIT yOUR
FATHERS BUILDING f

HEV. LISTED
TOTHIS...

r YES/ PA PPY GAVE
HIM AN

'

th a n k

X mv

V Y*O U ! X

pleasur e,

SIR/

ifim m

THEV WANT (QAXERT
PRDA/OTRS T0 GME.
WU&amp; TES1S TO ROCK
MUSICIANS...

7 Virginia willow
8 Snug ratraat
9 3000, Rom
an
10 Wida shoo lira
11 Coma togothar
12 Compass point
16 Modorn
19 Wastam haml10 Spreads forth
sphara organiia13 TVs talking
tion (abbr.)
horse (2 wds.) 21 Songstress
14 Strangeness
Delia
15 Ostrichlike bird 22 Yorkshire river
16 By birth
23 Modem painter
17 Fruit of a palm 24 Gravel ridges
18 Runnar
25 Smill shelter
Sebastian

ACROSS

waic

FIGKI5 BACK!

27 Give Injection

hematologist, a medical doctor
who specializes In blood dlsorders.
It’s Important that you find a
doctor who suits your needs —
and Dr. Oott tells how In his new
Health Report. CHOOSING A
PHYSICIAN: MAKE A DECISION
FOR GOOD HEALTH.
Anawtr
fTTTTTTr* ;
l-H— I—/— H
In1 n8 nE oE9 l n G n n
|0 | E |A l * 1 ^
I s J a I m I o |A
_

marrow to manufacture blood
cells. Because It has many or*
Iglns — Including bone-marrow
cancer, radiation, allergic reactlons to drugs and contact with
poisonous chemi cal s — the
t r e a t m e n t d e p e n d s on the
specific cause. To find out which
treatment Is best for you. see a

/A N O V * ^
SPENT MORE
-.MONEY /—*

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D O D D

□ □ □ □

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L□L L

□ □ □ □

28 In good order
□ n n
□ □ □ □
□ □ □ □
20 Loyal
29 Long times
23 Naw York
32 Ocean liner
4S Actor_______61 Comparative
Indian
(abbr.)
Novallo
auffli .
26 Valuabla fur
culpa
46 Cats have
30 Egyptian dally
63 Comedian
Tse-tung
_____lives
31 Phraaa of undar- 38
DeLutae
Marcos
48 Hockey great
atanding (2
54
Octane
man
Bobby---------wd».)
numbers (abbr.)
42 Small sword
60 Greek god of
33 Now (prof.)
88 Actress Farrow
44 Baseballer Ott
love
34 Racad
35 Flowartaaa
i
* i
plant
’
36 Complain
ii
37 Wild partlaa
39 Calls for
12
41 Manufacture
43 Paper of
it
indebtedneta
44 Colliary
"
47 Luau food
Rf?
28
i*
49 Flower
”
necklace
■ 37
62 Villain
65 Female horae
W M j#
66 Cockney
57 Believe____

■

■

rm

r
rh ■■
■
F fi
r
* ■ 39

40

41

41

I

41

to

■1

[H
•7

2 Ughtening
3
4
5
6

Say further
Play b y____
Black bird
Bicycle for two

tt

■

WIN A T BRIDGE
Mjr Jam es Jacoby
Since trumps are apparently
After a laborious auction. West going to spilt nicely, you can
leads a diamond. In this sltua- guarantee your contract by ra­
tion you should always ask fusing the trump finesse. Play
yourself. "W hy didn’t he lead a A-K of spades and then concede
heart?" Since the obvious an- a diamond trick to East. You can
swer la that the diamond Is a subsequently shed your heart
singleton, you should go right up loser on -a good -diamond In
with dummy's ace. Now what dummy. If you greedily took the
about trumps? Is either oppo- spade finesse. West would take
nent likely to have four spades?
the queen, put his partner on
The bidding tells you that the lead with the club ace. and the
one defender who cannot have king and a diamond would set
four spades is East. If he did, you via a trump promotion. O f
West would have only one spade course, foolishly finessing the
as well as only one diamond, and diamond at trick one would give
he would surely have bid more you the same negative result,
than a mere two hearts at his
F i n a l l y . W e s t s h o u l d be
first turn. What If West started censured for his opening lead,
with four trumps? He would With a probable trump trick, he
ha ve r e m e m b e r e d the rule should quietly lead his partner's
against a defender trying for suit. Declarer would then be a
ruffs when he has extra length In little unlucky to lose both the
the trump suit and would cer- diamond flnesse and the trump
talnly have led a heart. What finesse later, but he would be set
docs all this mean?
In a routine manner.

W H A T W OULD
W
L IK E ,
A A K .d R G E P T T

fbuce

Po l i c e

JUST CHECKING

W H AT A P E YOU

YELLIN G FOR ?

[ST/CKEM UP!

W OT

EAST

4 Q 10 5
*10 902
♦3

*97
VKQ054
* K 076

♦ K 107 6 2

* A9

SOUTH
* A K J3
*J7
♦ 02

* Q J 54 3
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

Opening lead: * 3

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring.,..
NOW THAT Wff’PE
o v e p
M

w

e r e

t u b

h

i l

l

a p b

TUB VALLEY eipL* ?
THAVB5 -R-3

A N IT T Y W M 0 P B L W I T H
s k a .t v

a

l

l

AR IES (March 21-April 19)
Should material stakes become
an Issue today, do not be too
complacent or easygoing. If you
h o p e to c o m e o u t a d v a n ­
tageousl y. mai ntai n a firm
stflncc.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Several people upon whom you
are counting might not be able
to come through for you today.

ARRRGH/

s ^ f t n e r r

,

YOUR BIRTH DAY
M A R C II4 .1987
Exciting times socially are In
the offing for you in the year
ahead. You will widen your
circle of friends and acquain­
tances, but you must be careful
not to Ignore old pals.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) In
order to make your points today,
you might come on more force­
fully than you need to. Soft
words will serve you better than
severe ones.

.

K J c x r r s ir e r

&gt;

BUT ITM M # BECAUSE
O F U H JA 3 TH A T — • r KNOW,
ANGELA MADE IT
ANNIE, S0T~
ID TH'HOSPITAL
IN TI4M,'GAPPY'/

Don’t let the loss of their support
overwhelm you.
G EM INI (May 21-June 20)
You w o n 't m ind le n d in g
assistance to others today, pro­
vided It's your Idea. However. If
demands are made upon you,
you might react In a contrary
manner.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Innately you may be feeling a
trifle antl-soclal today, but the
real y ou wi l l e m e r g e , and
grumpy feelings will flee once
you get Involved with pals you
like.
L E O (J u ly 2 3 -A u g . 22)
Associates are apt to have more
faith in you today than you will
have In yourself. Focus on their
positive assessments and not on
your negative ones.
V IR O O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
There may be two sides to your
personality today. One Is hap­
py-go-lucky and self-assured: the
other is apprehensive and overly
sensitive to the slightest pro­
vocation.
L I B R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)

MOPERN SCIENCE TENDS
TO BE SKEPTICAL ABOUT
ANCIENT HEAUNti r i ------ PRACTICES, .xr— NRkS

Treat others equably today, but
be careful regarding one who
expects too much. He or she
could deplete your resources as
well as your emotions.
SCORPIO (Or«. 24-Nov. 22)
Take time to study the motives
behind your mate's behavior
before rendering Judgment to­
day. You may not think so
harshly of him or her If you
know all the facts.
SA G ITTA R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You won't mind attending to
chores today If you also do tasks
that you find gratifying. Create a
happy, productive balance.
C APR IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) A social Involvement with
friends today could get a little
disorganized. Take control If you
think you can run things better.
A Q UAR IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Guard against tendencies today
to set unrealistic goals for
yourself. If you are reasonable
about what you hope to ac­
complish. you'll do so without
frustrations.

IT MUST SEEM ALMOST

UKE AfAfi^T'THEM. r

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for the P u r c h a s e
of 1 0 0 Lin e a r Ft.
or M o r e

YES
low
L I ' ^ 1 ° . % “ 8 " flppy Face on my h0u8e Tell me about the
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y

ASK ABOUT OUR SENIOR CITIZENS DISCOUNT
Mirot________________________
Address

City.

State

Zip

Telephone

Please call in the.
□ Morning □ Afternoon
My home is:
□ wood

□ Evening

□ brick □ cement block □ stucco

□ other siding □ mobile
home

�NO POSTAGE
NECESSARY
IF MAILED
IN THE
UNITED STATES

BUSINESS REPLY CARD
HHbl CLASS I'LIIMII NO JJMSANKJHt) H 32711 ‘JWO
POSTAGE Will Bi PAID BT ADDRESSEE

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of Fla. Inc.
240 Power Ct.
Sanford, Fla. 32771-9530

1111It ••I ■111■■III......... 111111&gt;111, 11,1&lt;1111,• II i •11

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                    <text>Prefers County Contract

Longw ood
By J u « C u M lb « n y
Harold B U ff W riter
Spuming the advice o f its finance
director, city attorney, and consulting
engineer on the financial feasibility of
hooking up with the Seminole County
sewer system, the Longwood City
Commission Monday night, by Inac­

S e w e r P la n t

D ro p s

tion. dropped the option of building its
own 600.000 gallons-pcr-day capacity
Grant Street Sewage Treatment Plant
In favor o f Joining the county system.
Longwood commissioners were up
against two deadlines:
• A Jan. 20 bank-imposed deadline
for deciding how money borrowed for

• f. ..

building a new plant was to be used if
the plant wasn't built
— with a
$300,000 penalty If the deadline is
missed; and
• A Jan. 22 deadline for acceptance
o f a construction bid on the proposed
new piani.
Sun Bank loaned the d ty $2.5 million

to build and operate the new plant.
When the city signed a contract with
the county to wholesale the sewage
treatment instead, which will cost more
than building and operating the plant,
the bank wanted assurance there
would be revenue enough to meet the
debt.

/ 't \

v*

* •*

4

City Administrator Ron Waller said.
" I f we don’t get approval from Sun
Bank, we can't go forward (with Joining
the county) without It."
The bid for construction of the Grant
Street plant which has been on hold
See P L A N T , page 10A

P a re n ts J a ile d
F o r A lle g e d
C h ild A b u s e

Tw o-year-old Ian Schaber, Sanford, gets
lesson in
feeding gulls and ducks at Lake Carola behind the
Sanford museum In F t. M ello n P a rk Tuesd ay. First he
checks bread supply provided by m o m , Sally Schaber.

B y S atan Lodes
H erald S ta ff W rite r
A fo rm e r Sanford couple
charged in connection with
alleged abuse of their daughters,
ages 3 and 2 years, remained In
the Seminole County Jail today,
following a Tuesday move from
the Volusia County Jail, were
they were arrested Friday.
T h e father o f the victims.
Christopher Bauder. 25. Orange
City, has been charged with four
counts of aggravated child abuse
and two counts of child abuse.
In October 1986. when the
family resided at 212 W. Fourth
S t . . S a n f o r d . B a ud c r was
charged In connection with the
abuse of his daughters.
According to the initial San­
ford police arrest records of
Bauder. he is accused of depriv-

VolUsla County. The children
have been In foster care, follow­
in g th e I n i t i a l r e p o r t s to
authorities of the alleged abuse.
Sanford Police Chief Steve
Harriett said today that initially,
on Oct. 16. Baudcr was charged
by Sanford police with one count
of child abuse. Following that
arrest Baudcr was released from
the Seminole County Jail on Nov.
3. 1986. with the abuse charge
a p p a r e n t l y h a v in g been
dropped.
S em in ole C ounty S h eriff's
Department records show that
Baudcr was released without
posting bond. He was not given a
court appearance date and the
case was labeled "discharged."
Harriett said apparently the
state investigators have up­
graded and added to the charges
aUfllnat i jUuder and added die

T rT ra tr'b e e n rtportecTlhat he
sometimes beat them with his
fists, striking up to 20 blows at a
time.
A witness to the alleged abuse
told Sanford police the girls
would "scream so hard they had
trouble breathing and then they
would be spanked again for
screaming."
According to records of the
B revard/S em in ole State Attorncy, the latest arrests arc in
hopes to reduce the chances o f such calls by
installing a recording system in February, connection with the alleged
so the recorded voices can be matched to abuse In Sanford.
This time the arrest also in­
suspected students. If the problem con­
tinues after that, the school could ask the cluded the girls’ mother, Nancy
Bauder, 22. who Friday was
phone company to remove the pay phones.
charged with one count of ag­
In Sanford about a dozen calls have been gravated child abuse and two
made from Seminole High School and a few counts o f child abuse. The
from the lower-grade schools since the 911
Bauders were being held in lieu
system went Into effect. The county’s of $8,000 each.
sheriffs department has had no problem
The latest arrests were spurred
with prank calls.
by tips to officials that the couple
—D eane Jordan
was planning to move from

a result of a ’ continued probe.
Harriett said Assistant Seminole
County State Attorney Jeffrey
Dcen ordered a warrant for the
arrest o f the Banders. The up­
graded arrests were made by
Volusia County sheriffs deputies
and the suspects returned to
Seminole County to face the
charges.
Baudcr Is accused of locking
the tots In their Sanford apart­
ment and leaving them without
supervision for up to four hours
at a time. He also allegedly heat
Tamar for wetting her pants and
ut times made her sit on a toilet
for up to three hours. She would
have to wear her wetted under­
pants for several days some­
times. the police report said.
T h e s t a t e d e p a r t m e n t of
H e a l t h an d R e h a b i l i t a t i v e
Services participated in the in­
vestigation and took custody of
the girls.

C a rry in g out the feeding requires a toss In the right
direction. Bag e m p ty, Ian leaves his feathered com pa­
nions to other pursuits. But he'll feed them again next
week, especially his favorites, the big muscovies.

2 Oviedo High 911 Pranksters Nabbed
T w o pranksters m a k i n g f a ls e 911
emergency calls at Oviedo High School were
caught Tuesday and one has been suspend­
ed from school for 10 days.
The pranksters' pick-up followed more
than two dozen false emergency calls from
pay phones at the school. The calls, starting
in October when the emergency system
became operational, ranged from obscene
calls to those falsely reporting a murder.
Until Tuesday, only one student had been
caught.
Carole A n d r e w s , c o m m u n i c a t i o n
supervisor for Oviedo Police, said the kids

were nabbed by a cooperative effort by
students, school officials and police.
"N ow that we've shown 'we can catch
you’ we may have stopped the calls." she
said.
When the 911 number is called, the
com puterized system tells dispatchers
where the caller is phoning from and in
whose name the phone is contracted. An
officer is then sent to the address.
Officers believe the major problem with
the prank calls is that they tie up officers
who may be needed elsewhere.
Besides catching the two students. Oviedo

Refuse Pick-Up Firms M a y Face City Fee

H«raM Photo by Tammy Vlnctnt

D ow npour

Dow ntow n Sanford pedestrian requires
u m b rella in dow npour today. M ore rain
is predicted for tonight and Th ursday.

Sanford is considering charg­
ing private refuse collectors fees
for permission to operate within
the city.
The city could collect about
$100,000 a year by setting up
the non-exclusive franchise with
these refuse collectors in Its
commercial and business zones,
according to City Manager Frank
Faison.
C om m ission ers began dis­
cussing the franchise Monday In
work sessio n and d irected
Faison to come back with further
details next month.
Faison said the $100,000 was
a "con servative" estimate of
annual earnings frbm a non­
exclusive franchise. He also said
establishment of the franchise
ordinance would give the city a
better chance to monitor private
refuse operations, some of which

are presently damaging property
during collections.
Faison said he will continue
c o l l e c t i n g d a ta , on b o th
exclusive and non-exclusive
franchise arrangem ents. An
exclusive agreement would give
one refuse company the city
territory, while a non-exclusive
arrangement would open the
area to several com p an ies.
Faison said there are four or five
private companies "operating in
a non-regulatcd environment" in
the city's business and commer­
cial districts. One city crew also
picks up refuse in these areas,
which lie along U.S. Highway
17-92 and surrounding First
•Street In downtown Sanford, he
said.
The city crew would be trans­
ferred from the com m ercial
pick-up to the residential refuse

dlvisiuu ii me iranchisc ordi­
nance is adopted. Faison said.
Refuse In the city's residential
areas is picked up by Sanford
crews and there are no plans to
change the arrangement, he
said. Commissioners also in­
d i ca te d Monday they were
satisfied with the city crews
continuing to handle residential
collections.
City crews ullow more latitude
to customers than private cornp an i e s . w h i c h set s tr ic t
g u id el i ne s in term s o f the
number of cans and the amounts
of refuse that can be placed for
collection, said Public Works
Director Bob Kelly.
Under the business and com­
mercial franchise, the private
companies would set their own
pick-up price and the city would
charge for the territory they

S a n f o r d D e b a t e s V a l u e O f W e ll S ite
By Karen T a lle y
Herald S ta ff W r ite r
A well site Sanford recently
purchased has become focal point
for a city commission debate over its
value as a land holding and potential
use as a recreation facility.
Commissioners' deliberations also
Include a staff proposal for a city
employee to move into an aban­
doned house at the site.
The 16-acre parcel lies west of
Sanford, in unincorporated Seminole
County. Commissioners agreed to
pay $400,000 for the site last fall.
As proposed, the site will be used
for three to four wells and possibly a
recreation facility for western San­

ford. when the city's borders reach
that area. City staff are also saying
an employee should be allowed to
rent the site's abandoned home,
which is subsequently proposed to
s e r v e as h e a d q u a r t e r s f o r a
municipal recreation facility.
A city commissioner seated after
the purchase said Monday he feels
the home and two acres surrounding
it should be sold. He said the sale
would garner between $150,000 and
$200,000 and this money could be
used for "im m ediate" recreation
needs of "inner city youth."
"I didn't realize we were on such a
long term plan for recreation.”
Commissioner Whltey Eckstein said

Monday when told of projected plans
for the site. " I think it's something
we should deal with here and now."
Eckstein's proposal for sale of the
home was not supported by three of
his colleagues. The city's fifth com­
missioner was not present for Mon­
day's work session.
The commission majority said the
parcel is too valuable a holding to
consider selling, even in part. The
site lies north of County Road 46A.
near the city's Oregon Avenue well
field.
Commissioner A.A. McClanahan.
also s eated af t er the p a rcel's
purchase, said the entire tract
should be held by the city because

land values in the area are increas­
ing. as is the city's growth.
He said a 70-acre parcel near the
well cite is on the market for $7
million. He also said, "I see the city's
limits going to 1-4 eventually — I
don't know how many lawsuits it
will take — and I would not like to
turn loose any of the well property at
this point.”
A number of Sanford's western
annexations are being challendged
in court by the county. The city
expands its borders through annex­
ation of unincorporated county land.
The acquisitions are the result of
See SITE, page 10A

collect In.
Faison said he recommends
the non-exclusive arrangement,
allowing "open, free enterprise
competition." rather than one
firm handling the entire area.
Either franchise would also
give the city better opportunity
to m o n i t o r the c o l l e c t o r s '
methods of operation. Faison
said.
The opportunity to "p olice"
the companies would cut down
on damage he said some o f the
trucks are causing in the busi­
ness and commercial zones.
Faison showed commissioners
photos of torn lawns and cracked
curbs to Illustrate Ills point, He
sald the damage was caused byrefuse trucks the city Isn't able
to adequately monitor.
— K aren T a lle y

TODAY
■*' " , •

B rid g e .................... . ,.2B
C la s s ifie d s .......... 4B ,5B
C o m ic s.................. .......2B
Com ing E v e n ts .......3A
C ro ssw o rd .......... .......2B
D ear A b b y .......... .......IB
D e a th s.................... . . . 10A
D r. G o tt................. .......2B
E d it o r ia l............. .......4A

*

mmi

F in a n c ia l. . . ..........10A
H o ro s c o p e .... ............2 B
H o s p ita l.......... ..........10A
P e o p le ............... .............I B
P o lic e ............... ............2A
S p o rts ............... ... 6A-9A
T e le v is io n . . . . ............3 B
W e a th e r.......... ............2A
W o rld ..............................3A

School M enu
Thursday: Salisb u ry steak with gra vy ,
mashed potatoes, green beans, freshbaked roll and lowfat milk.

�91,1*1

INBRIEF
S u tp a ct
Fmm

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V/..'# . V %

In B urglary O f
Park Ham a C h a rga d

Seminole County sheriffs deputies reported charging a
19-year-old Altamonte Springs man In connection with'the
Jan. 3 burglary In which goods valued at 91.400 were
stolen from a home at 207 Maid of the Mist Drive, Fern
Park.
Some of the goods stolen have been recovered and Rufls
Morse o f P.O. Box 923 Lake Howell Road, charged with
burglary and grand theft after questioning at the
Casselberry police station at about 3 p.m. Monday. He was
being held In lieu o f 91.000 bond.

D a a r, F lth

ThaftSuspacCaught

A n 18-year-old Sanford man has been charged with
burglary and petty theft in connection with the theft of
three deer and a case of catfish from a cooler on the
property of Raymond Parker. 4200 State Road 46. Geneva.
Blood from the deer carcasses was reportedly found In
the trunk o f the suspect's car. Arrested at 9:25 a.m.
Monday at the Seminole County Jail was Jeffrey M. King, o f
942 Country Club Road. He has been released on 91.000
bond to appear In court Feb. 9.

D rivin g Under Influence A rre s t
T h e following person has been arrested In Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
—Paul E. Berger. 45. of Winter Park, was arrested at 5:05
p.m. Monday on Tangerine Avenue near Casselberry. He
was also charged with careless driving.

Burglaries A n d Thefts R eported
Hubbard H. Button. 68, of Columbus, Ind.. reported to
Seminole County sheriffs deputies that 9250 was stolen
from his van while parked at Sylvan Lake Park. Lake
Markham Road. Paola. between Jan. 16 and Sunday.
About 9220 worth of tools with a tool box were stolen
from the car o f Jef Alan Laroche, 21. o f 551 E. Semoran
Blvd.. D-19. Casselberry, while the vehicle was in an
impound lot at Mike’s Fina, Fern Park Blvd., Fern Park,
between Jan. 14 and Monday, a sheriffs report said.

R o w d y D rug Suspects A rre s te d
T w o men who were allegedly disturbing neighbors with
their loud cursing outside Building 30 Moree Loop. Winter
Springs, were arrested on charges o f possession of
marijuana and disorderly intoxication.
Winter Springs police reported smelling marijuana
smoke in the suspects' car. The men were ordered out and
police reported finding marijuana and a beer can used for
smoking in the car. Police said both men were apparently
Intoxicated.
Arrested In the case at 4:54 a.m. Sunday were Gregory
Andrew Sutherland, 18, of 807 Buckle Drive. Winter
Springs, and David Charles Tuell, 18, o f 30-43 Moree Loop,
Winter Springs. They were being held Monday In lieu of
9500 bond each.
fen
Seminole County sheriffs deputies who questioned four
suspects. Including two boys, a 16- and 17-year-old.
reported Spottirfffln' their car stolen goods taken from four
cars in the Creek Bend subdivision.
T h e four were each charged with four counts o f burglary
at 8 a.m. Sunday after having been stopped on Wekiva
Springs Road. Longwood.
T h e boys were charged as Juveniles and they were
arrested along with Robert Vincent DeVore, 20. o f 811
Mason Ave.. Apopka, and Randle Lee Davis. 18. o f 2114
Shcclcr Ave., Apopka. The adults have been released on
91.000 bond each to appear In court Feb. 2.

Sanford Burglaries and Thefts
Sarah Luther. 81. of 202 S. Jessmlne Ave.. Sanford, told
police that a man walked up behind her. grabbed her tote
bag and knocked her down, then ran away. The Incident
occurred at 1:15 p.m. Friday.
T h e parking lot o f Sun Bank. 200 W. 1st St., Sanford,
was the scene o f a robbery at 11:05 a.m. Friday. Marshall
Waddle. 51. of 1305 Sanford Ave. told police that he was
getting into his car In the parking lot when a man grabbed
him by the arm and hit him in the forehead causing a
laceration. The robber reached into Waddle's car, grabbed
his bank bag. then fled on foot.
Carling Keltt. 37. of 1000 Holly Ave.. Sanford, reported to
police that about 9800 worth o f tools were taken from his
shed at 8 a.m. Saturday.
Tools valued at 9840 were taken from a van at 1229 W.
13th St.. Sanford, at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, according to
police. Mack W. Gamble, 33. o f 503 Mattie St., the owner
of the van. told police that unknown persons entered his
van and took the tools.
Maurice D. Isbell. 44. of Sanford, reported to sheriffs
deputies that a $1,000 saw belonging to Joseph V.
Sllvestri. 60. of Sanford, was stolen from the bed of his
pickup truck at the Post Tim e Lounge. U.S. Highway
17-92. Longwood, around 1 p.m. Wednesday.
About 9250 worth of tools In a box were stolen along
with a 830 camera from the home of Danny C. Jacobs, 38.
of 1639 Tiffany Woods Circle. Oviedo, Saturday, a sheriff's
report said.
A microwave oven valued at $500 and a televlson were
stolen from Gerber Children’s Center. 295 Oxford Road.
Fern Park. Saturday or Sunday, a sheriffs report said.
T h e 1976 AMC Pacer of Aggie Hardem. 30. of 2200
Airport Blvd., Sanford, was reported stolen Sunday.
Deputies said the vehicle Is valued at 91.500.

Cop Tria l Jury
(USPS 4I1-240)

Wednesday, January 21, 1987
Vol. 79. No. 129
Published Daily and Sunday, except
Saturday by The Sanlord Herald,
Inc. 300 N. French Ave., Sanlord,
Fla. 13771.
Second Class Postage Paid at Sanlord,
Florida 33771
Home Delivery: Month. *4.75; 3 Months,
IU.3J; * Months. *37.00; Year,
$51.00 . By M ill: Month,
1
Months, *30.35; * Months. *37.00,
Year, *4* 00.
Phone (305) 322-24II.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Vice
President George Bush has con­
firmed that William Buckley, the
CIA's station chief in Beirut.
Lebanon, was tortu red and
murdered by hts Islamic Jihad
kidnappers.
The vice president, speaking
to a conference on terrorism
Tuesday night about the . Iran
arms-Contra aid scandal, said
Buckley, seized off the streets of
L eb an on 's an arch ic c a p ita l
March 16,1984. was murdered.
Bush, the first administration
official to confirm Buckley's
murder, did not give any further
details. Buckley’s Islamic Jihad
k id n a p p e rs a n n o u n c e d In
October 1985 that Buckley had
been killed because he was a CIA
agent.

More Protesters In Court Today
TITUSVILLE (UPI) - Tw elve
people arrested last week for
trespassing on federal property
and being held in Jails in Orange
and Seminole counties will ap­
pear today before U.S. Magis­
trate Donald Paul Dietrich in
Orlando.
Three anti-nuclear activists
who were arrested last week for
trespassing on property at Cape
Canveral Air Force Station dur­
ing a week-long protest against
the Trident missile were freed
Tuesday.
Dietrich granted the three,
who Identified themselves, a
“ pre-trial diversion" for a sixmonth period. The activists
must report to an official who is

Defense attorneys Tuesday
said spilt verdicts returned Fri­
day and the Jury's Inability to
reach a verdict since then in­
dicated the panel is hopelessly
deadlocked.. T h ey want U.S.
D istrict J u d ge K en n eth
Ryskamp to accept the unani­
mous verd icts the ju r y has
reached and retry the other
defendants.

similar to a probation officer for
six months, and charges will be
dropped if they are not arrested
during that period.
Officials reported that a total of
58 p e o p le w e r e a rre s te d
throughout the week on the alr
sta tio n p rio r to Satu rday's
massive demonstration.
Joan Heller, a spokeswoman
for the Brevard County Sheriffs
Department, said 128 people
were arrested Saturday when
they climbed over the air sta­
tion's fence. A paperwork error
resulted in reports that 138
people had been arrested during
the rally, which was not violent.
Of those, 103 remained in the
Brevard County Jail in Titusville
Tuesday.

MtraM PHato by Tammy Vtucwrt

Salute To 911
D ave F a r r , left, executive director of the G rea ter Sanford
C ham b er of C om m erce, receives the first of the new
Southern Bell Sanford directories, delivered b y L a rr y
S trickler, area m an ager for corporate and external affairs
for the telephone com pany. M ore than 82,000 directories have
been printed w ith an Initial delivery of 65,000, com pared w ith
49,000 last year. A staff of 47 w ill be used to m ake the local
deliveries w hich begin today.

WEATHER
N ation

T om p oiatu ro s

City&amp;FaracMt
Albuqutrqutiy
Anchorage cy
Athovlllocy
Atlanta r
Billing* w
Birmingham r
Bo*ton pc
Brown*vlll«Ttx.r
Buffalo in
Burlington Vf.cy
Charlotton S.C. r
Charlotto N.C.cy
Chicago pc
Cincinnati ty
Cleveland
CaVwnUwt jy
JoHat pc

Donvorw

DotMolnatcy
Dotroltpc
Duluth tn
E lPaiof
Evantvlllo pc
Hartfordpc
Honolulu ty
Houston r
Indian*poll* pc
Jackson Ml**, r
Jacksonville cy
Kansas City pc
LasVogassy
Ultll# Rock pc
Los Angolas sy
Loulsvlllopc
Memphis pc
Miami Baach pc
Milwaukee cy
Minneapolis sn
Nashville cy
New Orleans r
New York I
Oklahoma City sy
Omaha w
Philadelphia pc
Phoenix sy
Pittsburgh pc
Portland Me. pc
Portland Ore. f
Providence pc
Richmond cy
St. Louis pc
San Francisco sy
Washington cy

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40 34
37 35
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37 21
It 00
51 45
45 10
34 15
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smtmokt
tn snow
sysunny
ts-thunderstorms
w-wlndy

Florida T e m p o r a t u r e s
MIAMI (UPI) — Florida 34 hour tempera­
tures and rainfall at I a.m. EDT today:
R4ln
HI 1
City:
5* 44 0.01
Apalachicola
4t * 0.02
Cr#*tvl«w
44
0.53
Daytona Baach
t l 73 0.00
Fori Laudtrdal#
•1 M 0.00
Fori Mytrs
42 47 0.04
Calr.e.v'll#
57 44 0.03
Jackionvllla
•3 74 0.00
Kay W#*t
74 54 0.00
Laktland
14 44 0.00
Miami
71 54 O.tr
Orlando
50 34 0.02
Ptnsacola
Sarasota-Bradonton
77 41 0.10
54 43 O.tr
Tallaha**##
4t 54 047
Tampa
74 44 0.00
V#ro B«ach
•2 47 0.01
W«*l Palm B#ach

Mbon Phase*

Last
Jan. 10

Jan. is

First
Feb. 5

For Central Florida

.03

pc partly cloudy
rraln

CODES
c-clear
cl clearing
cy-cloudy
Hair
fyfoggy
tuhaze
mmlulng

Five-Day Forecast

Pep

Out

MIAMI (UPI) — Jurors in the
Miami River cops trial today are
deliberating for the 11th day and
defense attorneys say recent
actions by the court may have
prejudiced the panel.

The CIA has never claimed
Buckley as one o f their own, but
it reportedly was his situation —,
and that o f lour other Americans
held hostage by pro-ban extremlata — that at fln t prompted the
adm inistration to pursue its
arms-for-hostages deal with Iran.
Bush touched on the frustra­
tion felt within the administra­
tion over the prolonged deten­
tion o f the American hostages in
Lebanon and the determination
to “ explore every channel, run
down every lead.”
He said President Reagan op­
poses trading arms for hostages
but. “ At the same time you
should know the concern that
the president feels, that we all
feel, when an American in terror­
ist hands is tortured, and in the
case o f William Buckley, killed."

Full
Feb. I I

Boach C o n d it io n s
Daytona Beach: Waves are
about 1 foot and choppy. Cur­
rent Is slightly to the south with
a temperature of 60 degrees.
N ew Sm yrna Beach: Waves are
1 foot and choppy. Current is to
the south; Water temperature.
60 degrees. Sun screen factor: 9.

PltyCMy

Local Report
Tuesday's high temperature In
Sanford was 71 degrees and low
of 54 today. Trace o f rain. High
today near 72 and showers.

PtlyCMy

A re a Forecast

B ..0 . 0 .. 0

nrJ
•tMf;r»tf*' **
Lows

3

Thors.

■• fWt

0

Frl.

0

Sat.

0

Sun.

Rain, Haze Hit
Seminole County

Todav...mostly cloudy with a
good chance of rain or showers
by afternoon. High In the upper
60s to lower 70n. Wind.lljfixfc
variable. Rain chance 50 per­
cent.
Tonight...mostly cloudy with a
chance of thunderstorms. Low In
the lower to mid 60s. Wind
south to southeast 10 mph. Rain
chance 40 percent.
T h u r s d a y . . . r a i n or t h u n ­
derstorms likely then ending
and becoming windy late In the
day. High In the upper 60s to
lower 70s. Wind south 10 to 15
mph shifting to northwest and
Increasing to near 20 mph late in
the day. Rain chance 60 percent.
Area

S t a ff A n d W ire Reporta
Chilly air. rain and haze
g re e te d folk s in Sem inole
County this morning as the
long threatened showers began
falling. Varying from mist to
actual rain, the amounts also
varied, from a trace to fractions
of an inch.
The next few days should
continue on the same theme,
c lo u d y wi th tem peratu res
ranging from lows in the 50s to
highs in the 60s and 70s.
Weekend temperatures should
dip Into the 40s as a front from
the west crosses the peninsula.
Snow, sleet and rain fell from
New Mexico to the Gulf Coast
today, as hundreds of Navajo
families remained stranded by
an earlier snowstorm and Tex­
as cattlemen struggled to feed
snowbound herds.
National Guardsmen deliver­
ed food, medical supplies and
blankets to lslolated communi­
ties In New Mexico Tuesday
and tow truck crews in west
Texas said they had pulled
36-hour shifts clearing aban­
doned cars from snow-covered
roads.
The snow was expected to
taper off In New Mexico and
Texas early today as the storm
spread rain and sleet across
M ississippi. Louisiana and
Florida, the National Weather
Service said.
Flooding from earlier rainfall
kept about 60 families away
from their homes today in
Laurel. Miss., authorities said.
A blast of Arctic air swept out
o f Canada and across the
northern Plains today, dusting
parts o f Montana and the
Dakotas with snow early today.
The snow was expected to
move Into Minnesota and trav­
eler's advisories were posted
for accumulations of 1 to 5
Inches.
The weather service said
snow, sleet and freezing rain
could extend as far south as the
Carollnas. and winter storm

watches were posted for to­
night for the mountains and
foothills of both states.
E x t r e m e c ol d s t r e t c h e d
a c r o s s t h e c o u n t r y . In
California, frost warnings were
posted today In San Diego
County, and four nights of
record cold In Los Angeles
prompted the City Council to
open up Ci ty Hall to the
homeless Tuesday.
An overnight low o f 15 de­
grees below zero was recorded
at Hlbblng. Minn., and temper­
atures In the single digits and
teens stretched across from the
northern Plateau and southern
Rockies across the nation's
mldsectlon to New England.
The latest storm that moved
out o f the Southwest Into the
Gulf Coast followed a giant
winter storm that swept the
Rockies a week ago and ripped
across the country, killing 43
people In 14 states before it
passed off the East Coast.
At least 7 Inches of snow
have fallen at Corona, N.M..
and the mountain areas east of
Albuquerque since Monday,
adding to last week's snowfalls,
the weather service said.
An estimated 500 families
remained snowbound today on
the Navajo Indian Reservation
about 150 miles northwest of
A l b u q u e r q u e , w h e r e t h ey
awaited emergency airlifts of
supplies, tribal officials said.
National Guardsmen using
four- and six-wheel vehicles
and two helicopters to deliver
food and supplies to isolated
families In four southwestern
New Mexico counties already
declared disaster areas by Gov.
Garrey Carruthers.
Snow In the Texas panhandle
made it difficult to feed live­
stock and was keeping herds
on their feet, both factors that
could cause the animals to lose
weight, said Jan McElhaney.
manager of Sugarland Feed
Yards Inc., in Hereford.

R ead in gs

The temperature at 8 a.m.: 5C
overnight low: 56: Tuesday'
high: 71: barometric pressure
30.04: relative humidity: 8&lt;
percent: winds: NE at 7 mph
rain: Trace: Today’s sunset: 5:5(
p.m.. Thursday sunrise: 7:11
a.m.
E xtended

Forecast

The extended forecast. Frida;
through Sunday, for Florid'
except northwest — Turning fal
and colder Friday except i
chance o f showers extrenv
south. Generally fair and rathe
cold through the w eekend
Average lows near 30 extrerm
north ranging to 40s soutl
except near 50 southeast an;
50s In the Keys. Highs mosth
50s north and 60s elsewhere bu
around 70 south Friday am
again Sunday.

T H U R S D A Y : D a y to n *
Beach: highs. 12:25 a.m., 12:43
p.m.: lows. 6:29 a.m.. 6:47 p.m.: :
N ew Sm yrna Beach: highs. :
12:30 a.m., 12:48 p.m.; lows,
6:34 a.m.. 6:52 p.m.: B ayp ort:
highs, 5:52 a.m., 5:22 p.m.;
lows. 11:56 a.m.. 11:30 p.m.

Boatin g

St Augustine to Jupiter 1
— Today...wind variable
than 10 kts becoming soutl
to 15 kts by afternoon. Seas
than 2 ft Increasing to 3 to
by afternoon. Bay and In!
waters a light to moderate cl
Scattered showers mainly n
part.

�Sanford’s downtown business
district Is to be enhanced with
$65,000 worth o f city com ­
mission-approved road work.
The projects, it Is hoped, will
begin next month. They call for
repaving of First Street, from
Park to French avenues, and
e x p a n d in g its S tre e ts c a p e
landscaping from Park to Oak
avenues.
The rosd plans were endorsed
by c o m m is s io n e rs in w ork
session Monday. Funding pro­
posals will be worked up by staff,
h o p efu lly In tim e for p res­
entation to commissioners In
regular session next week, said
P la n n in g an d E n g in e e rin g
Director Bill Simmons.
The First Street efforts are part

o f com m ission ers* road re­
habilitation program, which uses
local option gas tax accruals and
supplementary city funding for
projects all over Sanford.
C om m ission ers' o rig in a lly
planned for First Street to be
rebuilt from Park to French, but
the plans were dismissed Mon­
day when staff said low bid for
the work came at $175,000.
around twice the anticipated
cost.
Commissioners agreed with
staffs' recommendation for re­
paving. rather than rebuilding.
In light o f the cost. The repaving
Is to provide a one-inch thick
overlay for about $30,000. The
covering will also level the road
and should last at least five to 10

T r ie d m
Ju n io r Shufferbug
A fte r having her picture taken for w inn in g a
downtown m erchants coloring contest prize
recently, K elly Foster, who turns 6 today,
turned the tables and took the photogra*
pher's cam era to snap a photo of her dad,

M

B ill Foster, and step-m om , B arbara Foster.
K e lly won first place In the coloring contest
for ner age category. Th e re 's no w o rd on
how her picture turned out. K elly Is a
student at H am ilton E le m e n ta ry School.

Cost for the Streetscape breaks
down to about $20,000 for a
private contractor to Install new
c u r b in g an d h e a d e r s a n d
$15,000 for city crews to Install
brick work and plantings, he
said.
The city will close one side o f
First Street and then the other
during the projects, but two w ay
traffic will be maintained by
prohibiting parking In the o f
fected areas. Simmons said.
- Itm T ills y

a n ’s

JEWELERS

7th Annual

P t t o t o b y C * m y F »m m n d f t

years. Simmons said.
The $30,000 repaving cost will
be added to $35,000 in planned
Streetscape spendings. S im ­
mons said.

L

COMING EVENTS
W EDNESDAY. JA N . 21
STANDING MEETINGS
Sanford AA. 5:30 p.m. open discussion. 1201
W. First St.
. Sanford Born to Win AA. 8 p.m.. open
: discussion. 1201 W. First St.
COPE support group for families of mental
health patients, 7:30 p.m.. Crane's Roost Office
Park. S-377. Altamonte Springs.
Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m. The Grove
Counseling Center. 580 Old Sanford/Ovicdo Road
(ofTSR419). Winter Springs.
Altamonte Springs AA. 8 p.m.. (closed). Alta­
monte Community Chapel. 825 State Road 436.
Casselberry AA. 8 p.m.. (closed). Ascension
Lutheran Church. Ascension Drive. Casselberry.
TH U R SD AY, JA N . 22
Seminole Chapter Florida Audubon Society. 2
p.m.. Florida Power &amp; Light Sunshine Room.
Myrtle Avenue, Sanford. Bernard Yokel. Florida
president, will speak on,"Wetlands and

Cardiovascular screening, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m..
County Health Department. 240 W. Airport Blvd.,
Sanford. Call 322-2724 Ex. 370 for appointment.
STANDING MEETINGS
Sanford Toastmasters. 7:15 a.m., Christo's
Restaurant. 107 W. First St.. Sanford.
Non-denomlnational Bible study and prayer,
noon. Cavalier Inn Restaurant. Highway 17-92.
Sanford.
REBOS AA. noon, 5:30 and 8 p.m. (closed).
RebosClub, 130 Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
Tough Love/Parents With Love weekly daytime
support group, noon. Suite 206. 900 Fox Valley
Drive. Longwood (off Wekiva Springs Road).
International Training in Communication
G r e a t e r S e m in o le C lub ( p r e v i o u s l y
Toastmlstress), 7:30 p.m., Altamonte Chapel
Education Building on State Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.

dinner m eeting. 6 p.m.. Capri Restaurant
(formerly Major's). Springs Plaza. County Com­
missioner Bill Kirchhoff will speak at 7:30 p.m. on
charter government.
Manna Haven serves free lunch for the hungry.
11 a.m. to 1 p.m.. Monday through Friday:
Sunday. 1-3. at 519 Palmetto Ave., Sanford.

Drive (V4 mile' east o f Fashion Square).' Meets
second and fourth Thursdays. *
Maitland Bridge Club. 7:30 p.m., Maitland Civic
Center.
B-Slim Diet Club for behavior modification and
improved self-image, 7 p.m.. Howell Place.
Airport Blvd.. Sanford. Phone or 668-6783.

I II N
KINGS

DIAM ONDS!

I R IO S

PEARLS!

Central Florida Clvltan Club for single men and

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Police Say Second G e rm a n Left
Lebanon Before Kidnapping Claim
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — An anonymous caller today
told a Western news agency In Beirut that his group
kidnapped a second West German citizen, but Lebanese
police sources said the man left the country Tuesday.
The West German Embassy in Beirut first confirmed the
reported kidnapping, but was not available for comment on
the police report that the man had already left the country.
The anonymous caller identified the man as Alfred
Schmit and claimed his group — which he did not name —
snatched him from outside a seaside luxury hotel Tuesday.
The Summerland Hotel, where Schmit was staying, said
he had disappeared and said. "German Embassy embassy
officials came to sec him this morning but they could not
find him."
The Christian radio station Voice o f Lebanon also said
Schmit had been kidnapped from Moslem west Beirut.

PLO Retaliation Threatened
WASHINGTON (UPI) — American law enforcement
officials say they arc working to prevent any terrorist
attacks in retaliation for a formal U.S. request for the
extradition of a Palestinian hijacking suspect from West
Germany.
The stepped-up security measures both in the United
States and abroad were taken as the Justice Department
delivered Its formal extradition request Tuesday for
Mohammad All Hamadel, accused o f air piracy and murder
in the
June 1985 hijacking of T W A Flight 847 and the
death of a Navy seaman on board.
The West German government said Tuesday the Sunday
abduction of German businessman Rudolf Cordes In
Lebanon was linked to Hamadei’s arrest, and a report from
Bonn today Indicates his captors intend to execute him if
Hamadel is extradited.
Abdullah Frangi. Bonn representative of the Palestine
Liberation Organization. In an interview published in the
Bild newspaper today warned. "Ham adel’s extradition to
the U.S. A. would be a death sentence for Cordes."

F r i e d m a n 's R e g u la r ^
T ic k e t e d R e t a il P r ic e s !
Friedman’s Regular
Ticketed Retail Prices!

* ALL
WATCHES!

Immigration Law
Guidelines Set
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
government, expecting up to 4
million illegal aliens to apply for
U.S. citizenship tinder new
landmark i mmigration law.
plans to bar those who qualify
from most financial aid pro­
grams for five years.
The Immigration and Natural­
ization Service, which released
Its first tentative guidelines
Tuesday for Implementing the
law, also would require both
Americans and aliens seeking
Jobs in the United States to
produce proof of their eligibility
to work within a day.

Savings From
M I N ’S

2 5 % to

75%

OFF!

KINGS!

Friedman’s
Regular Ticketed
Retail Prices! ^

F r ie d m a n ’s R e g u la r
T ic k e te d R e ta U P ric e s!

Mark E ver son , e x e c u t i v e
associate commissioner o f the
INS. told a news conference
Tuesoay the agency expects up
to 4 million Illegal aliens to apply
for U.S. citizenship, at a cost of
$ 150 to $250 for each applicant.
The tentative rules are the first
indication of how the govern­
ment will implement the Immi­
gration Reform and Control Act
o f 1986, signed Nov. 6 by
President Reagan and meant to
stem the flow of Illegal Immi­
grants Into the United States.

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Basra Battle Continues
U nited Press In tern ation al
An Iranian missile fired at the headquarters of Iraq's
ruling Baath Party slammed into a Baghdad nelgborhood.
killing an unreported number of people, as Iranian forces
continued their siege on Basra.
The reports from Tehran and Baghdad could not be
independently confirmed. Both sides have frequently
exaggerated claims of battlefield operations since the war
erupted In September 1980.
In Washington. Defense Department spokesman Robert
Sims said up to 25.000 Iranian troops — many of them
teenage revolutionary guards — have been killed since Iran
launched Its latest offensive Into Iraq on Christmas Eve.

BRING THIS AD IN AND RECEIVE YOUR FIRST ORDER OF CHECKS FREE

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Wednesday, January 2 1 ,1M 7-4A
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Home Delivery: Month. §4.75; 3 Months. $14.23; 6 Months.
•27.00. Year. $51.00. By Mall: Month. $6.75: 3 Months.
$20.25; 6 Months. $37.00. Year. $69.00.

Silencing Late
Night Chit Chat
T h in k th e u n th in kab le: A n A m erica n tele­
vision talk sh ow h ost w ith no on e to talk to.
H ow ever u n lik ely in th is nation dT open ears
and open m outh s, th e celeb rity talkshow is in
crisis, and n ot b eca u se th ere’s n o th in g left to
say.
’
T h ere has been an Incredible increase o f
talk show s in recen t years. J o h n n y Carson.
Joan R ivers a n d D a vid L etterm a n head up
the popular late-n igh t show s. B ut d ozen s o f
sim ilar p rogram s h a v e en tered national and
regional m ark ets d u rin g oth er tim e periods.
One reason for the increase is th at second to
talking, A m erican s lik e to listen, w h eth er it
be to a su p erstar en terta in er o r to the
execu tive d irecto r o f th e W o rld K azo o C on ­
gress.
A n oth er reason fo r talkshow em in ence is
that besides b e in g sim p le, talk is. w ell,
in e x p e n s iv e . T h e p ro d u c tio n fe e s fo r a
one-hour T V talk s h o w are o n ly 9100,000.
about a tenth o f w h at a supercharged “ M iam i
V ic e " episode costs.
But gab b in g does h a ve its price, and in this
case it is Dullish hosts in a bearish guest
m arket. “ T h e r e ’s n o b od y left to talk to,” said
Jack Paar w h en he le ft " T h e T o n ig h t S h o w "
in 1962.
Perhaps he w a s ex a g g era tin g. But a lim ited
celebrity pool d ocs m a k e th ings rough for the
talk show talen t scout. A s In tim ated b y one.
Vince Calandra, you can a lw a ys g e t Charles
Nelson R eilly, D avid Brennar. C haro o r a
G abor sister. B ut th e real c o u p in the
com petitive talk sh o w m arkets is in landing
bona fide superstars lik e “ R edford. Eastwood.
D iN iro" says Mr. C alandra. In o th er words,
those persons w h o ra rely ap p ear on talk
shows.
One w ay to beat th e gu est drought is
practiced best b y tw o p op u lar d a ytim e hosts.
Oprah W in fre y a n d P h il D on ah u e h a ve
achieved a kind o f c u lt status b y taking the
show o ff the sta g e a n d into the laps o f the
studio audience. T h e re , th ey usually receive a
dose o f refreshing, d ow n -h om e spontaneity.
T h is p u lse-of-A m erlca route could w ell
becom
e ail
all tne
the rage. H
Bu
ne
utt in the m eantim e, the
C ris is o
n n lln u a a
m lf n
aA
n Ulk
#
continues.
“ A ll tYOU
nmeed
for na 4ta
show r^rm ce Joked A'Tbrtnet'nost, S teve Alten;
n l s n i n i t f ■w\nrvt n
n m a m h n M rl
“ Is a n
'em p ty room , a cou p le off ncam
eras and a ‘
person w h o speaks~ln sentences and ow ns
three su its." E n ou gh said.

Wrong's Wrong
Brian B osw orth. th e p ro va ca tive U n iversity
o f O klahom a lin eb ack er, says th at a doctor
prescribed an ab olic steroid s to help him
recover m ore q u ic k ly from a m u scle injury.
A fter traces o f the stero id s sh ow ed up In a
pre-Orange B o w l d ru g test, B osw orth w as
banned from th e g am e.
Bosworth h a sn 't id en tified the doctor or
produced a w ritte n p rescrip tion to docum ent
his story. N on eth eless, if his version o f how
the drug g ot Into his system Is accurate, it
points up on e o f the reason s that steroid use
by you n g ath letes is a g ro w in g problem .
Ath letes p ay the p rice, but w h at about the
coaches, trainers an d oth ers in college and
p r o fe s s io n a l a t h le t ic s w h o p r o v id e th e
steroids o r look the o th e r w a y ? T h e y are Just
as m uch to b lam e.
Ath letes take a n ab olic steroids — m an ­
m a d e v e r s i o n s o f t h e m a le h o r m o n e
testosteron e — to h e lp th em accelera te
grow th. But steroid s also have b een linked to
liv e r tum ors, p ro s ta te c a n c e r and heart
disease. In w o m en , steroid s can cause grow th
o f facial hair, b ald n ess and sterility. In m en.
steroids can cause th e d evelo p m en t o f fem ale
characteristics.
Bosworth said. " I d eserve in y righ t to g ive
m y body the u ltim a te ch allen ge and be as
healthy as I can b e ."
Steroids h ave le g itim a te m edical uses. T h e y
are used to h elp re c o v e ry in b u m patients and
to treat an em ia and ch em oth erap y patients.
C onsidering th e risks, h ow ever, using them
m erely to speed a fo o tb a ll p la y er’s recovery is
a questionable p ractice. U sin g them Just to
m ake a p layer b ig g e r and stron ger reflects
m isplaced values.

BERRYS WORLD

DICK WEST

Now, A Look Ahead Into The 21st Century
Judging from the
WASHINGON (UPI) i, a lot o f aeere are
year-end articles I have teen,
predicing what w ill happen this year.
It is. however, fairly easy to foresee a few
months ahead. T h e real trick is peering all the
way to the next century, which at last count was
roughly 13 years in the future.
I take m y hat o ff to the "14 great minds"
assembled by Omni magazine. In the January
issue, they look forward 20 years.
So I don't necessarily agree with Omni as to
what constitutes a "great m ind." There is no
gainsaying that we stand on the threshold of the
Age o f Information. Just as we once stood,
palpitating and perspiring, at the dawning of the
Age o f Aquarius.
Nor is there any denying, as one computer
whiz predicts, that “ a lot o f things are going to
vanish," including credit cards and bank
checks. I may even disappear myself.
Still, I found the Omni article strangely
lacking' ih prescience. Here, based on current
trends, are some o f the things I believe will

happen at some point during the 21st century:
—A single airline w ill fly all U.S. routes,
foreign and domestic. It will be called Trans
Dogpatch in honor o f the late cartoonist A1 Capp
and will be conglomeratlzed by Ivan Boesky.
—Wall Street will require at extra digit,
making five as opposed to the four currently in
use by Dow-Jones. to report stock market
averages.
—First lady Nancy Reagan will run for
president and will be elected although there will
be widespread speculation that it actually is her
husband. Ronald, who Is making policy for the
administration.
—Male hats, which were pretty well done In in
the 1960s when President Kennedy Insisted on
turning up at state affairs bareheaded, will make
a fashion comeback.
Already, some television commentators are
wearing hats to football games. By next century,
1 predict, no self-respecting male fan would be
caught dead at a sporting event without a hat.
From the stadium, or arena, it is only a short

distance to covering one’s pate at all levels of
*°^Ctoning w ill become scientifically possible,
rendering moot the question "a re men neces­
sary." raised by another magazine writer.
u .tm vtah*r of the American Museum or
Natural History asks: •What are men good for?"
in this century?
__ __
" A trip to the Caribbean, perhaps some extra
hands around the house." she concludes,
answering her own question.
As she potato out. when Charles Darwin
referred to "th e survival of the fittest." he
wasn’t measuring "y o u r bank account" , or
"you r turbo-powered Porsche.”
"H e was counting your children.
Fisher
opines, and since the average woman lives a
longer and healthier Ufe than the average man.
who needs "to dilute their genes with those of
the male?"
Cloning is the answer. But females in the next
century may miss a ll those trips to the
Caribbean. Particularly if. as predicted in Omni,
bank checks vanish.

VIEWPOINT

AN THO N Y HARRIGAN

Deficits
Imperil
Nation

Foreign
Investors
Cosily

By W illiam R. Hawkins
The Mobil Corporation has been
running editorials in support o f free
trade as a part o f its paid advertis­
ing. A recent ad attempted to use
history to support the thesis that
"world trade and national great­
ness" were synonymous.

WASHINGTON - In a brilliant
essay in Journal o f International
Law and Politics. Dr. John M.
Culbertson o f the University of
Wisconsin explains that "the United
States has gone quietly into eco­
nomic decline, with little thought to
the causes and the implications."
He warns that the U.S. is "unable to
provide its younger generation with
the income levels that have pre­
vailed."
One of the causes o f decline is a
mistaken notion about the effect of
foreign Investment in the United
States. An official of an auto parts
company recently provided me with
the draft of a speech he was giving
at a college in the Midwest. He
pointed out that the Reagan ad­
ministration encourages foreign
investments to help our enormous
budget deficit: state governments
want foreign investment to create
local Jobs. Indeed, he said. 20 states
maintain offices in Tokyo, not for
promoting American exports but
rather to encourage Japanese bu sl-.
n e *»m e rt«m d m a n u f a c t u r e ™ ^
locate facuttlVs itYthe these States.
, In addition, hundreds of millions
of dollars have been set aside by
state governments to fund incen­
tives for foreign investments. These
provide for direct loans and loan
guarantees. Interest subsidies,
property, corporate profit and In­
ventory tax statements, industrial
training, foreign trade zones, re­
search and d e ve lo p m e n t, and
dozens of other generous handout
programs.
New Jobs are attractive to local
communities, but consider the eco­
nomic effects of these policies on
American Industry and on the
number o f Am erican Jobs. For
example, the communities o f Flat
Rock. Mich.. Marysville. Ohio, and
Smyrna. Tenn. are delighted to
have Mazda, Honda and Nissan
locate assembly plants In their
communities. Hundreds, perhaps
thousands, o f new local factory Jobs
have been created with the subse­
quent m u s h r o o m in g of o p ­
portunities for grocery clerks, bowl­
ing alley attendants, and other
service employees.
These communities also welcome
the influx o f Japanese managerial
staffers and their families, who add
an important new cultural element
to the area. But as employment goes
up in Marysville. Smyrna, and Flat
Rock, employment goes down in
Flint, Detroit, and Toledo.

SCIENCE WORLD

Doctor-Patient Talk
By G ayle Young
UPI Science W r ite r
NEW YORK (UPI) - A generation
ago. the women who patiently sat in
Dr. Harry S. Jonas's waiting room
were largely ignorant o f obstetrics
and not Inclined to question his
diagnosis, let alone treatment.
Their children's generation is not
ouite so docile.
They rcaJmedtcal reports' In the .
popular press and view the latest
I
surgical techniques on television.
"They are much more informed
than they were a generation ago.
even 10 years ago," Jonas, presi­
dent of the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists,
said In an Interview.
"T h ey ask Informed questions
and want informed answers," he
said. "Most of them don't want the
old ' ‘ whatever you think best,
doctor' kind of treatment."
A virtual explosion of medical
news in the popular media has
created tension in the doctor's office
and changed — probably for good —
the way the medical profession and
patients view each other, doctors
said in Interviews.
Recent polls show the majority of
patients feel doctors do not spend
enough time answering their ques­
tions. while doctors overestimate
the time they spend talking with
patients.
In a poll released this month,
most doctors surveyed said their
patients want more information and
most admitted they don't commu­
nicate that Information very well.
"There's real change going on."
Jonas said. "Most think it's a good
thing, as I do. But I imagine there
are a few older-fashloned physicians
who are having trouble adjusting."
The major problem today between
doctors and their patients may be

the amount of time ‘ they spend
togemer talking, said doctors who
study the health field.
In a recent study conducted at the
University of California Medical
S c h o o l at I r v i n e , d o c t o r s
overestimated by nine times the
amount o f time they actually spent
providing information to their pa­
tients.
' ( fi ■ i ,*
i .
T h e - , stu d y ,

c o n d u c te d

by

Dr.

Howard B. Waltzkln, who teaches
medicine at the school, also showed
that doctors spend more time talk­
ing to women than men and more
t i m e w i t h u p p e r class, we ll educated patients than with those
perceived to be o f a lower class.
But the study Indicated all pa­
tients. no matter what their income
or education level, wanted more
information from their doctors and
were equally frustrated by their
inability to get answers to their
questions.
Waltzkln said studies have shown
a vast majority o f patients from all
walks of life have always wanted
more information from their doctors
— it is Just in the past decade they
have been aggressive about de­
manding It.
Doctors may be aware there is still
a communication problem, accord­
ing to the results of a recent survey
c o n d u c t e d by M i l e s
Pharmaceuticals of West Haven.
Conn.
Almost two-thirds of 300 doctors
who responded said they did not
communicate very well with their
patients and half of those believed it
was because they did not have
adequate time to spend answering
questions.
The solution may be for doctors to
give their patients more information
via pamphlets, books and even
videotapes.

Unfortunately, the Mobil ads fall
to distinguish between types of
trade. T h is error reveals Mobil’s
focus to be trade rather than
national greatness. Great powers
usually have been major players in
world trade, but weak and minor
powers have also been Involved,
often with great powers In rela­
t i o n s h i p s t h a t c o n f i r m e d or
established an Imbalance o f power.
The a d 's historical examples
taught broader lessons than Mobil
realized. In Ming China, In 14051433, Chinese fleets plied the Indian
Ocean and Persian Gulf. Chinese
merchants were active from Africa
and Arabia to Java and the Philip­
pines. Shipbuilding stimulated new
technology. Chinese commercial
colonies expanded thrvuMhout the
"southern seas." However, when
emperor Yung-lo died in 1424, the
isolationist Confuclan bureaucrats,
who feared both contact with
foreign religions and the new wealth
o f the merchant class, moved to end
this economic expansion. This was
a major strategic blunder from
which China has yet to recover.
Europe also expanded In the 15th
century, and. eventually. European
merchants reached China. By the
19th century. China was dominated
by the world economy: foreigners
divided the country into territorial
markets. This tim e, trade was
associated with weakness and
exploitation, rather than with power
and greatness. Instead of Chinese
business p ene tr ati ng overseas
markets to sell. Invest and make
money. European interests were
controlling China.
It is not trade or commerce but
the balance of trade and control of
markets that is decisive. In his
two-volume work. Tide of Empires.
in which Mobil's example is studied
In detail, the distinguished British
historian Peter Padflekl concluded
that the policies of a successful
nation w ere "concerned almost
exclusively with control o f the
largest possible markets for its own
exclusive use ... sea power, wide
m arkets. ind u strialization are,
therefore. all parts of the same
system."

JACKANDERSON

Anti-Khomeini Rebels Gain Strength
B y Jack A n derson
A n d Dale V an A tta
WASHINGTON — Opposition to
the Ayatollah Khomeini Is bubbling
inside Iran — but not from the
“ m o d e r a t e s ” that P resid ent
Reagan’s eager emissaries went
looking for. Unbeknownst to most
Americans, a determined group of
anti-Khomeini rebels is actually
fighting the ayatollah's conscripts
Inside Iran and along the Iraqi
border.
These unsung warriors are the
People’s Mojahedln, and they form
the largest, most effective Khomeini
opposition Inside or outside Iran.
Their charismatic leader. Massoud
Rajavi. was anti-American during
the days o f U.S. support for the
shah, but he proclaims himself
neither for nor against the United
States now. Rajavt's politics are best
described as nationalistic at home
and socialistic in his world view,
with a Moslem cant.
Last June Rajavi was expelled
from exile in France in a secret deal
with Khomeini for the release of
some French hostages. Rajavi found

refuge in Iraq — a "defection" to the
enemy that Khomeini carefully did
not publicly exploit to discredit his
most serious rival.
He had good reason: Khomeini
was afraid that if Iranians knew
Rajavi was just across the border,
military deserters and others dis­
illusioned with Khomeini's tyranny
would rush to Join the Mojahedin. In
fact, according to sources in Iran
and Iraq. Khomeini held a special
session of his cabinet within days of
RaJavl's expulsion from France to
discuss its effects.
"I hope the day won't come when
we regret asking France to kick
Rajavi out." one minister reportedly
said at the meeting. A direct result
o f the strategy session was to
nllocate six of the few operational
Irani an ai r cr af t f or b o m b i n g
missions against a Mojahedin base
on the Iraqi border.
Recently Dale Van Atta flew to
Baghdad to assess the People's
Mojahedin efforts. He was the first
Journalist to meet with the organi­
zation's top officials inside Iraq.

Nader Kaflnejad, the group’s in­
ternational secretary, gave a brief­
ing on the situation- as Iranian
bombs dropped on the city. RaflneJad said the Iraqi government has
been supportive, partly because
Rajavi and Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein have agreed to end the war
(now In its seventh year) if Rajavi
eventually takes power in Tehran.
"There are no Iraqi restrictions to
our operations along the fronts.”
Raflnejad said. "Incursions Into Iran
are a dally affair for us. The
principal aim is to go to the towns
and cities, where our strategy is
based on overthrowing the Kho­
meini regim e through massive
o p e r a t i o n s . * '
The main concentration o f Mo­
jahedin fighting forces is in Iranian
cities. Raflnejad explained. Rajavi is
leading the Mojahedin's military
forces personally, operating mainly
in Iranian Kurdistan. The Kurds
have fought many battles against
Khomeini's army, both on their own
and in temporary alliance with the
Mojahedin.
Raflnejad acknowledged that Ra­

javi Is not pro-American but insisted
that the Mojahedin are not Marxists.
Noting that Khomeini tries to
discredit the Mojahedin as "A m eri­
can hypocrites" for seeking aid from
the West. Raflnejad said: "B ut it is
very important to realize what the
Iranian people think. They have
seen Khomeini, and they know how
he acted when he came to power. In
the first few days. 6 million people
came out to cheer him. Now they
are arresting people in movie lines
to send them to the front."
Rajavi has promised elections
within six months of Khomeini's
overthrow. The Mojahedin execu­
tive committee felt it would take
that long to stabilize the country.
Acknowledging that power cor­
rupted both the shah and Khomeini.
Raflnejad said this couldn't happen
with Rajavi — because the people
wouldn't stand for it. "R eally," he
said, "th e Iranian people cannot
wait for democracy any longer. The
glue that sticks us all together is
this conviction for the freedom of
Iran."

�■

.

Iran Arm s Question
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Preaident Reagan's former national
security adviser warned him
twice to scrap a falling policy o f
arms sales to Iran — a policy
Vice President George Bush says
the president Is “ certain to this
very day" had not become an
arms-for-hostages swap.
Congress is not so certain,
however, and lawmakers called
Secretary o f State George Shultz
and the acting CIA director to
Capitol Hill today to answer
more questions about the policy
even GOP loyalists say was
“ doomed to failure."
F orm er n a tion a l s e c u r ity
a d v is e r R o b e rt M c F a rla n e .
frustrated at the failure of his
secret May 1986 mission to
Tehran to free U.S. hostages In
Lebanon, said early today he
advised Reagah upon his return
to halt the arms sales.
In an Interview on AB C ’s
“ N ig h tlln e " that w en t past
midnight. McFarlane said he
could not explain why the deals
continued until their exposure In
November.
McFarlane. who said he was
forced to leave his Iranian con­
tacts a planeload of U.S. military
“ spare parts” he brought with
him to exchange, had told
Reagan once before he doubted
the policy would work — In
December 1985. based on meet:
ings with other Iranian contacts
and Israeli middlemen.
Reagan at that time “ seemed
to concur,” McFarlane said, and
he resigned that month as na­
tional security adviser assuming
the policy was dead. He was
tapped for the mission in May by
his successor. Vice Adm. John
Poindexter.
“ If you spend as much time as
you can talking to these people
... you develop some ability to
come back and report to the
president that *Yes. there Is

there isn't
McFarlane told
ABC.
" I came i____ .
convinced that there was not,
Bush issued his defense of the
president Tuesday night to a
c o n fe r e n c e o n t e r r o r is m .
Without delving deep into the
issue, he asserted the ad ­
ministration now has a chance
“ to restore the credibility of our

po Mc* v ’

.........

Bush was the first administra­
tion official to admit “ mistakes
were m ade" in the Iran arms
sales that spawned the scheme
to divert profits to Nicaraguan
Contra rebels. Tuesday he ac­
k n o w led ged . *'A widespread
perception exists that this ad­
m inistration traded arms for
hostages, thereby violating our
own strong policy o f making no

“ When an the facts are out.”
he said, “ the American people

logel Modes
u na r*
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•nt s
s sc iir
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SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA

CAM NO. SMatf-CAM-St L&gt;
tasfroferty

INVESTMENTS, INC..
• FiorMacorporatton,
FleMttff.
JOHN A. PALMER. SR.,
and SHEILA A. PINCH.

NOTICE OP ACTION

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
H ,

Ph. 322-0285

1 1575 S. P re a c h A ve ., 8 a a ftr 4
% A u to -O w tte r s In s u r a n c e
l.ifr. Home. Cur. Business. One name sa&gt;s it all.

T C i /m

m il

) MI

i

f

W K O X V m B I
S T 3 1 1 I 0 W N T 1
Acam s*
Sahjert Ta Palsy

1. F r e q u e n t H e a d a c h e s
2. L o w B a c k o r H i p P a in
3 . D iz z in e s s o r L o s s o f S le e p
4. N u m b n e s s o f H a n d s o r F e e t
5 - N e rv o u s n e s s
6 . N e c k P a in o r S t if f n e s s
7- A r m a n d S h o u l d e r P a in
(nhutiea ladsdas: Fosters Aastyus, Rutwa Tost, Shari
1*1 TfiL Slwrt Arw Tost tad TsR With Decter.

Uwttes Ask about our “ Making Chiropractic Affordable" Program

* TH f PATlINT AND ANr OTHER PERSON RESPONSIBLE FOR PAYMENT HAS A RIGHT TO REFUSE TO
PAY CANCEL PAYMENT OR BE REIMBURSED FOR PAYMENT FOR ANY OTHER SERVICE EXAMINA­
TION OR TREATMENT WHICH IS PERFORMED AS A RESULT OF AND WITHIN 13 HOURS OF RESPON
DINO TO t h e ADVERTISEMENT FOR THE FREE SERVICE EXAMINATION OR TREATMENT____________

LAKE M A R Y BLVD.
C H I R O P R A C T IC C L IN IC ,' IN C
902 ( Ldk

3 2 2-930 0
TH O M A S

r

YAN D ELL,

JR

...

D C

TO: Jshn A. Palmar, Sr.,
and Sheila A. Finch
RESIDENCE: Unknown
All portlas claiming Interests
by, through, under or against
Jehn A. Palmar. Sr. and Shelia
A. Finch and fa all parties
having or claiming to have any
right, title, ar Interest In Nw real

following tool property In
Seminole County, F torWo:
Lot SX Oacoolo Acres, being
that parcel of lend tying In
Section 9, Township 30 South,
Range 33 E ast, S em in ole
County, Florida, datcrlbod os
follow s: Baginning ot the
Southeast comer ot m M Section
9. run along Nw East lino ot u M
Section 9. and Nw centerline of a
JO toot right-of-way of Osceola
Road. North 00*00'20” W..
3*4147 tart; thence run North
00*074*'' E.. *39.17 feet; thence
run North erSS’OS" W.. 33.00
feef to the West right of way of
laid Osceola Road; thence run
North •9’ JS'N" W.. 3310.00 foot,
ttwnce run North 00*0 7 J4" E..
09*J*'0S" W., 990.00 feat; thence
run North 00*07S4" E „ 330.00
teat to the point of beginning;
thence run North 09*M'0t" W..
1031.13 loot to the East line of
the West *34 feat of said Section
9. thence run North 00*07'J7" E „
340.19 feet to the North lino of
said Section 9. thence run South
•9*49*44" E „ along said North
1031.73 foot, thence run
South 00*03'S4" W.. 33fl.fi teat to
the Point of Beginning.
has bean tiled against you and
you art required to servo a copy
of your written defenses. If any,
to It on R.L. Russoll of Russell A

(SEAL)
CLERKOFTHC
CIRCUIT COURT
By: Jana E. Jaeewtc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January

SUZANNE C. SOUSA.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO:SUZANNE C. SOUSA
Address Unknown
YOU ARE H ERE BY
NOTIFIED that a Petition tor
Dissolution ot Morrloge has
boon filed against you. and that
you ore required to servo a copy
of your response pleadings to
the Petition upon the Peti­
tioner's Attorney. THOMAS S.
RICE. ESQUIRE. Ot 3001 Aloma
Avenue, Winter Park, Florida
33793, and file the original re­
sponse or pleading In the office
ot the Clark of the Circuit Court,
on or before the 37th day ot
February, A.O., It97. If you tall
to do so a default judgment will
ba taken against you lor the
rail*! demanded In the Petition.
DATED ot Orlando. Orange
County, Florida this 13th day of
January. A.O., 1907.
(CIRCUIT COURT SEAL)
W.D. GORMAN
CLE3KOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
LINDA N.AMIC

DC.

Publish January 31, 3S A Febru
ary 4, It, 1*07
OEK-117

Seminole County Purchasing
Ordinance.
Separate Naiad propoMls for
above equipment listed above
wilt ba received in the Office of
Purchasing. Samlnota County
until 3:00 PM. local time. Wed­
nesday, February It, IW .
Proposals will bo publicly
opened and road aloud In the
office of Purchasing. Room
«W133, t ill E. First Street,
Sanford, Florida at Nw above
appointed data and time. The
Officer whose duty It Is to open
proposals will decide whan the
specified time hat arrived and
no proposals received thereafter
will bo considered. Bids re­
ceived attar the 3:00 PM
deadline will ba returned to
sondtf unoponod.
IP MAILINO PROPOSAL.
MAIL TO: P.O.BOX 3)10
SANFORO.FL 33771 3110
IP DELIVERING
PROPOSAL IN PERSON,
DELIVER TO:
COUNTY SERVICES
BUILDING
ItOt E. FIRST STREET
ROOM W ilt
SANFORO.FL 33771
Proposals shall address each
area at Indicated In RFP I7S
package, to enable proper
•valuation.
The RFPI7J package It avail­
able In the Office of Purchasing
at no charge.
Proposal must ba accom­
panied either by a cashier's
check upon an Incorporated
bank or trust company, made
payable to Board ot County
Commissioners,
Seminole
County, Florida; or a bid bond
with corporate surety sollsfoctory to the County, for not lass
than tan par cant (10%) ot the
total amount of the bid. A

Florida, and aa are acxaptaUa
fottw County.
PON
FU R TH IR
IN­
FORMATION
CONTACT:
W ILLIAM
OOLAMORI.
PURCHASING AOCNT, ( « )
331-1130. EXT. 311.

NOTE: ALL PR0SMCTIV1
BIDDERS ARE NBRBEY
CAUTIONED NOT TO CON­
TACT ANY MEMBER OP TNE
SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD
OF COUNTY COMMISSIONBUS
REOAR DINS
TNE
ABOVE PROPOSAL. ALL
CONTACTS
MUST
BE
CHANNELED THROUGH TNE
OFFICE OP PURCHASING.

Any actual or proapaettva
bidder who disputes Nw raaaanabtonaM. necessity or compatltlvoneu at Nw tarmo andto r
conditions at Nw Invitation to
bid; m tort Ion or award racammandat Ion shall flla such protart
In wrttlns to Nw Purchaalnf
Director In compllanca with Nw
Seminole County Purchasing
Ordinance
MJ-I
and
any
Bwa^w
^MBawwa
•rnwfKImWflTs. BrrU
LEuU
tfS

Saw

such tiling/sett lament ot claim*
are outlined In Article X —
Appeals and Remedies, of said
ordinance; which It ported In
the Office ot Purchasing lor
review.
The County reserves the right
to re(ect any or all otters, with
or without cause, to waive
technicalities, or to accept Nw
bid which In Its best Judgment
bast serves the Interest ot Nw
County. Cost ot submittal ot this
bid Is considered an operational
cost ot the bidder and shall not
bo passed on to or borne by Nw
County.
JoAnn C. Blackmon, CPM
Purchasing Director
County Servlets Building
1101E. First Street
Second F loor, West Wing
Sanford, FL 33771
Publish: January 31.1907
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Tests revealed evidence of
marijuana in the blood and urine
o f the Conrall engineer and
brakeman.

An Army brigadier general
was among five people pre­
sumed killed In the crash of a
military plane and a private craft
In sunny skies over Missouri, a
short time after two small planes
brushed each other near a Rhode
Island airport but landed safely,
officials said.
Brig. Gen. David Stem, com ­
mander of the Military Police
School at Fort McClellan. Ala.,
was one of three people on the
Arm y plane that collided with a
Piper Navaho with two people
aboard about 12:30 p.m. CST
Tuesday at 7.000 feet over
Independence. Mo., an Army
spokesman said.
The debris fell on the grounds
o f a privately owned ammuni­
tion plant 45 miles southeast of
Fort Leavenworth. Kan., but did
not hit any buildings, and there
were no Injuries on the ground,
MaJ. Bill Auer said.
The military plane, a twine ngi ne Beechcraft King Air
based with its crew at Anniston
Arm y Depot In Alabama, was on
Its way to Fort Leavenworth.
Details about the private craft
were not Immediately released.

an ar fcetorw Fokrvary m . HS7;
otherwise a Safaalt will ba
antarad atalnsl you for the
raltol dw w dr t In Nw complaint or oofttion.
WITNESS my hand and Nw
•oat of Mid Court on January 5.

YOU A R E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that on action to

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
head of Amtrak assailed a Conrail c r e w ’ s “ o u tra g e o u s
behavior” Tuesday for the crash
o f an Amtrak train and a Conrall
locomotive that killed 16 people,
a l l e g i n g the e n g i n e e r an d

Plane Crash
Kills Five

AvemuR. Orlando. Florida m il.
and flit the original with Ida
Clerk of Nw sbovostytod Court

prO M rI j imTsin o t K i IM v .

Amtrak Chief
Blames Crew
With Crash

The Jan. 4 catastrophe north
o f Baltimore also Injured 175
people and paralyzed Am trak’s
heavily used Northeast Corridor
between Washington. New York
and Boston.
In testimony to a Senate panel
i n v e s t i g a t i n g the t r a g e d y .
Amtrak Chairman W. Graham
Claytor placed sole blame on the
“ outrageous conduct o f the
Conrall crew in violating not one
but a whole series of Important”
operating procedures.
Sen. Frank L a u t e n b e r g ,
D-N.J., the chairman o f the
Senate panel, noted during the
h e a r i n g that U .S. r a i l r o a d
engineers arc not required to
hold driver’s licenses.
“ We need federal licenses for
railroad engineers.” Lautenberg
said. "Today, no license of any
sort Is required. They don’t even
need a driver’s license.
Federal Investigators also
believe the primary fault may He
with the Conrall crew, said to be
disregarding several warning
devices. Including a stop signal.
“ Amtrak was the victim, not
the perpetrator of this accident.”
Claytor testified.

that key question. But the Amer- * this ve ry day that be did
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SPORTS

Isstscd MsraM, I m M , Pi.

h Jan. 21, 1M 7

t-A, ■

C L A S H
No. 1 Daytona Invades
SCC Gymnasium Tonight

Merthie Returns Home,
Anxious To Flash Skills
Special to U m Herald
W hy would a kid want to
leave his hometown to play
community college basketball
at Daytona Beach?
B etter surfing? A bigger
town? Spring break? All of the
above?
"M aybe they have better
coaching" Seminole Commu­
nity College coach Bill Payne
said.
Sanford's Darryl Merthie.
w h o played four years o f
varsity basketball at Lake
Mary High School, could have
decided to stay home and play
basketball for Payne and the
Raiders.
But Merthie said he wants to
continue playing hoops — not
Just for two years, but for four.
And who knows after that? He
said although he has great
respect for Payne and the SCC
program, that it would be In
his best Interests to play at
Daytona Beach.
"1 wanted to get away from
home to see how It Is outside
o f San ford ," Merthie said.
" I 'v e been In Sanford my
whole life, and I know what it's
like there.
"Besides, I have a girl friend
and a kid there. If I would have
stayed home I wouldn't have
got anything done," he added.
" I go home alm ost every

Basketball
weekend now as It Is. But I can
concentrate more on basket­
ball and school over here."
Tonight, though, Merthie
w i l l p l a y In S a n f o r d as
Daytona Beach Invades the
SCC H ealth C en ter fo r a
crucial Mid-Florida Conference
encounter. Tlpoff Is 7:30 p.m.
There Is no charge for ad­
mission.
Merthie has worked hard on
his game. At 6-foot-1, Merthie
had to adjust from playing
power forward In high school
to guard at the JuCo level.
Furthermore, he has to learn
to p l a y p oint g uar d and
shooting guard If he Intends to
play major college basketball
next season.
The numbers are good for
Merthie and the Scots. The
sophomore guard Is averaging
19.7 points and four assists
per game. He has filled both
sh ootin g guard and point
guard roles. The Scots are
22-1. ranked No. 5 in the
nation and N o.l In the state.
They lead the Mid-Florida Con­
ference with a 6-0 record.
O ff th e c o u r t , h i s 2.4
grade-point-average doesn't
qualify for any all-academic

Mikler Induction A t Halftime
Legendary Oviedo High basketball coach Paul Mikler, who was
voted Into the Seminole County Sports Hall of Fame in
November, will be Inducted tonight at halftime o f the Seminole
Com m unity College-Daytona Beach Com m unity C ollege
basketball game at the SCC Health Center.
The ceremony will take place at approximately 8:30 p.m.
Mikler, a 1935 Oviedo graduate, coached the Lions to a Class
A State Basketball championship in 1957. He finished his career
with 314 victories and 126 losses.
Mikler becomes the 11th member. He Joins Tim Raines, Joe
Sterling. Red Barber. Buddy Lake. Emma Spencer, Larry Castle.
Mary Rose. Whitney McLucas. Davey Johnson and A1 Latimer.

Herald Sport* Editor
Seminole Community Col­
lege's Raiders and Daytona
Beach's Scots get together at
the SCC Health Center tonight
In a Mid-Florida Conference
basketball game which should
be a spectator’s delight. Tlpoff
Is 7:30 p.m;
There Is no charge for ad­
mission. but there should be
tonight. T his classic clash
brings together two o f the best
teams and two of the best
coaches In one of the best
rivalries In the state.
The names and numbers
Darryl Marthte hopes he
alone Justify a packed house.
will still be smiling tonight
• Daytona Beach. 22-1. is
a f t e r D a y t o n a and
ranked No. 1 In the state and
Seminole battle.
No. 5 In the nation. The Scots
were a unanimous choice for
teams, but It Is a mark he Is
the former. They have won 18
proud o f and won’t keep him
consecutive games. They are
from attending a major college
atop the MFC with a 5-0
next year.
record.
But he said he wants to
•Sem inole. 21-2. Is ranked
Improve on the court and In
No.
4 in the state. The Raiders
the classroom this year In
have
been as high as 14th
order to attract scouts Into
nationally. The Raiders have
o ffe rin g him a basketball
won seven consecutive. They
scholarship to a major univer­
are tied for second place in the
sity.
" A lot of people have seen ' MFC with a 4-1 mark.
• DBCC's Ray Ridenour and
me play, and they know I'm
SCC's Bill Payne are an evengood." Merthie said. "But I
i n g ’ s e n t e r t a i n m e n t In
know I can still Improve my
themselves on the coaching
game. 1 have Improved my
sidelinea. Ridenour becomes
Jump shot since last year, but I
disheveled In a hurry, shirthave a lot of work to do on
tall, tie, hair and glasses all
handling the ball.
g o in g d ifferen t directions.
" I think If I can Improve as
Payne is not as active but
much In that area os I have In
demands
and beseeches In an
shooting, and If I keep bring­
I
m
p
l
o
r
i
n
g m a n n e r o f his
ing m
grades up. I will
players and the officials.
d efin itely be able to play
somewhere next year."
• Darryl Merthie. a Sanford
Ridenour said Merthie was
native and Lake Mary High
labeled when he cam e to
standout, is one of the Scots'
Day ton a. " E v e r y o n e said
stars. The sophomore guard Is
Darryl was a great athlete —
averaging 19.7 points and four
and he is," Ridenour said. "Bit
a s s i s t s p e r g a m e . He
because of his size no one
performed suberbly in last
knew what to do with him ."
year's battle at SCC.
Rldenoer said he prepared
• M a l c o l m Houst on, a
25-year-old freshman for the
See M E R TH IE . Page 9 A

tt tt tt

PRO-AM — Today's Mayfair
Pro-Am began with a 1 p.m.
shotgun start. Lesnlak said
1 2 0-150 p la y e r s w ould
p.u'tlcipate.

Raiders. Is coming off a 41poin t p e rform a n ce. H e is
averaging 22 points. Houston
first wanted to go to Daytona
Beach, but Ridenour said he
thought it would be better If he
stayed closer to home since
Houston Is married. "A fte r
seeing how h e's played. I
wouldn't be so worried about
his marriage now ." Ridenour
quipped about the prolific 3point shooter.
• T h e Raiders are In a
must-win situation. Two losses
— both at home — would be a
devastating blow In the MFC
race and to hosting the MFC
P layoffs a fter the regu lar
season.
•T h e Scots have never won
at SCC under Ridenour despite
always playing well in San­
ford. Ridenour hopes this Is
they yea r th ey play well
enough to take snap the jinx.
• Darrls Gallagher. SCC's
slick point guard. Is playing as
well as any player in the state,
according to both coaches.
The 5-7 sophomore Is handing
out 11 assists and scoring 13.9
points while handling all de­
fensive pressure and applying
much of his own.
• Levertls Williams. DBCC's
two guard. Is considered one of
the best outside shooters In
the state by both coaches. The
6-1 sophomore is averaging
21.0 points per game. He can
flat fill It up.
• Vance Hall. SCC's 6-8
center. Is considered the best
center In the state — regard­
less o f division — by Payne.
Hall Is averaging 16.8 points
and eight rebounds per outing.
Ridenour calls Hall the key to
the game.
• Anthony Dunhp[.0^ 6 J .

HtraM m s fcy Bmm M WtoktMt

S C C 's Vance Hall slams
hom e tw o. H a ll's Inside
attack is a key for the
Raiders tonight.
185-pound freshman, gives
Daytona an unaccustomed
scoring punch In the paint.
Dunbar is averaging 14.5
points per outing for the
usually guard-oriented Scots.
t t t t tt

It is a game which has each
coach gloating over the other
team's strengths and promotSee D AYTO N A. Page 9 A

Broncos Face
Heaviest Task

Mayfair
Tees
For Open
B y 8am Cook
H erald S p orts E d itor
Brian Merena, who had a bag
under his arm and two more
under his eyes in last year's
Mayfair Open, vows the same
thing won't happen again.
"I had Just gotten back from a
tournament in Arizona." the
Mayfair Touring Pro said earlier
this week about last year's
tournament.' " I was all right the
first day. but I fell apart the next
day."
A well-rested Merena. popular
S e n io r s T ou r player Walt
Zembriski and defending cham­
pion Joe Kruczek will be among
the favorites os the 27th annual
M a y f a i r Op en b e g i n s p lay
Thursday at 7:15 a.m. The
second round o f the 36-hole
tournament begins at 7:15 a.m.
Friday. Merena will tee ofT at
11:30 a.m. Thursday while Or­
lando's Zembriski is set for
12:10 p.m. and New Smyrna
Beach's Kruczek for 12:20 p.m.
Kruczek's 131 was a twostroke winner last year over Jim
Hallet and Keith Parker. Merena.
whose highest finish is fourth in
1981, was way back at 148.
Kruczek won 91.800.
"W e're expecting 184 players
and it might be 192,” Mayfair
Club Pro Mark Lesnlak said. "It
will all depend on the weather if
we go to 192."
Lesnlak, who also must be
considered among the favorites,
has prone *.nced the course In
excellent shape. "T h e people
who have been around here for a
while say that it Is in the best
shape ever."
An overseeding of the greens
in late November brought them
around, according to Lesnlak.
"T h e greens are soft and rolling
w ell," he said. "They arc medi­
um fast.”
Merena, a Connecticut native,
said the greens could hold the
key to the tournament. "I figure
10-under should win It." he said.
"B ut If someone gets hts blade
(putter) going, it might be lower
than that."

Basketball

H*r*M Photo by Tommy Vincant

Seminole's T r a c y T u rn e r, top, w orks his
w ay to a 10*3 victo ry over Lake Howell's

Chris Clna at 148 pounds. Lake Howell
pulled out a 37-32 vic to ry over the'N oles.

Valle's Decision Nips 'Noles
Lake Mary Tops Winter Park; Bishop Moore Bops Lyman
By Chris F is te r
H erald Sports W rite r
Al Valle came up with the biggest win of the
night as he pulled out a one-point decision over
Seminole’s Randy "Pork” Bryant at the 223
pound weight class to lead Lake Howell's Silver
Hawks to a 37-32 victory over Seminole High in
prep wrestling action at Lake Howell High.
The Silver Hawks, 9-1-1 In dual meets, and the
Semlnoles. 6-3. now direct their attention to the
Seminole Athletic Conference Championships
Saturday at Lake Mary High School.
The Semlnoles came back from an early deficit
to pull within striking distance and needed a win
from Bryant to keep their chances alive. Bryant
did everything he could but Valle came away
with a 14-13 victory In what turned out to be the
deciding match for the Silver Hawks.
Lake Howell got off to a strong start Tuesday as
It won the first three matches. John White took a
13-6 decision from Titus Manning at 101 pounds.
Mike OudshofT followed with a pin at 108 and
Marcel Demarla outscored Thomas Brendle. 19-6.
at 115.
Seminole came back with two victories as Larry
Nathan dominated Todd Miller. 16-1. at 122 and
Don Sellers outlasted Jimmy Kress. »2-10. at
129.
A key match for the Silver Hawks came at 135
pounds where Dave Flgler claimed a 9-4 decision
over Seminole senior Sheralton Mays. Sean Kobla

W r e s t lin g
followed with another close win. 8-5 over
Seminole's Tim Tennon. at 141 as Lake Howell
built up a big lead.
In a match between two of the top wrestlers In
the county at 148 pounds. Seminole's Tracy
Turner downed Chris Clna. 10-3.
Nate Hoskins kept the Hawks In control as he
pinned Keith Redwine In 3:10 at 158 pounds, but
Troy Turner kept Seminole within striking range
as he blanked Jose Collazo. 12-0. at 170.
Lake Howell then sewed up the win. though,
with consecutive victories at 188 and 223. At
188, Henry Heim stuck the Tribe's Keith Denton
in 2:26 and Valle then outfought Bryant.
Seminole closed out the match with consecu­
tive pins by Julius Bennett and Derrick Butler.
Bennett stuck Marty Golloher In 51 seconds at
the heavyweight division and Butler pinned Jack
Benedict In 53 seconds at unlimited.
LAKE H0WELL37, SEMINOLE »
101 - Whit* (LH) d. Manning. 13 *; It* - Oud*holl (LH) p. 0y*M,
l : « i; IIS - DtMjrla (LH) d. Brendl*. I» * ; 111 - Nathan IS) d.
Millar. 1*1; m - Sallart ,3) d Kr*»l, 12-10; 1,5 - Flgler (Lit) d.
May*. *4; Ml - Kobla (LH) d. Tennon * 5; 14* - Tracy Turner (S)
d. Clna. 1(73; 15* — Hotklns (LH) p Redwine. 3; 10; I/O - Troy
Turner (S) d Collazo. 12 0; IM — Helm (LH) p. Denton. 2:2*; 223 —

See W R E STLIN G . Page 8A

PASADENA. Calif. (UPI) — The
Denver Broncos, who have de­
feated 13 teams heavier than
themselves this season, will take
on their "b iggest" challenge In
Super Bowl XXI.
The Broncos are the NFL’s
lightest team. Their Super Bowl
opponents, the New York Giants,
are the heaviest. The Giants
average 229.5 pounds per man
and Denver 222.4, according to
their listed weights.
The difference Is larger along
the teams' offensive and de­
fensive lines.
The Giants offensive line
averages 271 compared to the
Broncos defensive line of 256.7
pounds. New York's defensive
line outwclghts Denver’ s of­
fensive front. 269.3 to 263.2
pounds per man
The weight difference is by
design. The Giants' coaches like
s i z e and p o w e r w h i l e the
Broncos' staff emphasizes brains
and quickness, bringing about
an Interesting brains vs. brawn
battle.
Players on both sides agree the
Giants are 10-polnt favorites
because o f their 11 straight
victories and 16-2 record rather
than their weight advantage.
"There's a lot of teams bigger
than the Broncos but they’ve
won a lot o f g a m e s ." said
Lawrence Taylor, part o f the
Giants' four starting linebackers
who average 238 pounds com­
p a r e d to 2 2 6 f o r D e n v e r
linebackers.
"You know in this league,
there are a lot o f great athletes
and everybody’s big," Broncos
quarterback John Elway said,
downplaying the size o f the
Giants.
Broncos defensive coordinator
Joe Collier likes to shift his
players to different positions and
the movement often takes place
Just before the ball Is snapped.
The Broncos are known as a
"multiple front” defense. Denver
defensive end Rulon Jones said
they have 200 fronts.
"T h e people we have fit into
ou r sys te m w e l l . " Karl
M ecklenburg. D enver's 230pound linebacker, said. "I'm
sure we couldn't go out and play
their style of defense and they
couldn't play ours."
The Giants offensive linemen

F o o t b a ll
arc hardly anxious to press their
weight advantage against thti
quick Broncos.
"T h ey like to move around
and shift, and they exploit con­
fusion more than most teams.'1
Giants guard Chris Godfrey said!
" I f you stop and hesitate and
think, they’ll run by you."
"T h e y ’re the lightest team Irj
the league on purpose." Giants
center Bart Oates said. "T h ey
want small, quick guys. They
don't want two-gappers like we
have on defense.
you have to make, the odds of
making mistakes Increase."
?
Denver outside linebacker Jim
Ryan, a mere 218 pounds, said
the Giants refrain from bullying
teams around despite their size
and strength.
"T h ey're big but a finessq
team." Ryan said. "They try to
shoulder you more than knock
you down.”
That Is news to Giants Coach
Bill Parcells, who considers hlq
offense a power attack. The
Giants like to get powerhouse
5-foot-7 running back Joe Morris
a head of steam and run him.
behind 265-pound G o df r ey .
245-pound ti ght end Mark
Bavaro and 225-pound blocking
back Maurice Carthon.
"I would say we’re more of a
tradional team.” Parcells said.
"W e like to run the ball with
power If we can. We like to be
dominant on defense."
D IT K A TO HONOR PACT
CHICAGO (UPI) - Chicago'
Bears coach Mike Dltka has
dampened speculation that he;
won't be back as coach for 1987.
For now.
•
Dltka Insisted Monday he'
would honor his contract and
that he could work "with any-'
o n e . " including President'
Michael McCaskey. Dltka did'
concede he toldhls assistant'
coaches "in the heat of emotion
and anger" that 1987 would be
his last season with Chicago.
"O f course. I mention a lot In
the heat of emotion and anger.
I’ m not sure everything I said
would stay that way." Dltka told&gt;
WBBM-TV.
!

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way* K ’W » wf i r i 9» p» &gt;i i^ u m m i pi i

"T T 'u i t # p'P J:

w5.c‘

^
•

•*, .- v ” «
I*

ay-Albert Combo
Trims Trinity, 2-1

w

Matt Albert drilled home a
^perfect paaa from Chris Ray as
{S e m in o le tr ip p e d O rla n d o
5Trinity Prep. 2-1. in prep soccer
^Tuesday night at Trinity Prep.
T h e v ic to r y im proved
^Seminole's mark to 3*6*1. one
'more victory than coach Carlos
'Merlino’s club had last year.
{ T r i n i t y d ro p p e d to 3*7*5.
/Seminole returns to Seminole
^ A t h l e t i c C o n f e r e n c e play
^ T h u rsd ay a t hom e again st
^Oviedo.
T m getting the progess that 1
lought I could.” Merllno, a
id-year coach, said about
’Notes. "Sometimes I expect
£too much. Right now. I got three
£guys out with injuries and it is
£tough to go In with only 14 guys.
£ "B ut I’m real pleased with
(•those 14. They give It all they
(•got all the tim e."
jj Merllno had to wait through a
scoreless first half for one of his
m i oat pleasant surprises. With
jjseven minutes elapsed in the
/second half. Seminole's Marc
Dixlon. a Junior midfielder, took
'the ball down the left side, beat
;one defender and left-footed the
;ball between the pipes for his
s
*

Soccer
Seminole High's girls soccer
team
took another step forward
first varsity goal and a 1*0 lead.
Tuesday
night as it broke the
"M arc has only been on the
.500
mark
for the first time in
varsity three gam es." Merllno
two years.
said. "H e made a great shot."
T ra c e y F a m ily and V icky
Four minutes later, though.
"S
p u ffy " Pakovlc scored two
Trinity Prep knotted the score
g
o
a l s e a c h as t h e L a d y
when Brent Sm ith got a
Semlnoles
Improved to 8-7*2 for
breakaway.
the
season
with a 6-0 rout of
The 1*1 deadlock held up until
D
e
L
a
n
d
’
s
L
a d y B u lld ogs at
Ray and Albert worked their
Seminole High.
magic with 9:57 left to play.
T h e Lady Semlnoles return to
Setting up for an indirect free
action
Friday at 5 at Oviedo in a
kick. Albert broke Just at the
Sem
inole
Athletic Conference
right time while calling out to
match.
Ray who dished it off to the
"It took us a while to get
right.
warmed
up. but then the girls
Albert boomed the ball Into ’
played really w ell." Seminole
the left com er for a 2*1 lead.
coach Suzy Reno said. "Our two
Seminole turned it over to the
leaders (Cindy Benge and Sherri
defense who kept the Saints
Rumler) didn't play much and
away from the net for the rest o f
the other girls did an outstand­
the game.
ing Job filling in their positions."
"Th at was a perfect play."
DeLand's tough defense held
Merllno said about the RaySeminole scoreless most of the
Albert combination. "It was like
SyTMasr vacant first half, but Farrelly broke the
you see in the movies.”
Seminole's M ike A ltize r, left, outm aneuvers T rin ity P rep's ice for the Lady 'Noles as she
Merllno cited fullbacks John
scored on an assist from Melissa
Stewart and David Hall along
R icky Machado. Sem inole nipped the Saints, 2-1, Tuesday.
Shuckman with 4:29 left in the
with keepr Sean Sundvall for
saves. Trinity’s Mike Tuazon shots on goal and five com er half. Less than a minute later.
their defen sive play.
Shannon S u n d vall gave
Sundvall finished with four had 10 saves. Each team had 12 kicks.

©

Seminole a 2-0 lead w hen she
scored on Farrelly's assist.
Seminole took 25 shots o n goal
cimpared to three for DeLand
and the Lady 'Noles had six
c o rn e rs to D e L a n d ’ s s e r o .
Seminole goalkeeper Kim Walsh
had eight saves and registered
her fifth shutout o f the
and third in a row.
Opportunisltlc senior K e lly
Price- took advantage o f a de­
fensive mistake to score the
game's only goal Tuesday as
Oviedo's Lady Lions trimmed
Trinity Prep's Lady Saints. 1-0,
at Oviedo High.
The Lady Lions, 5-8*3 overall,
return to Seminole Athletic Con­
ference play Friday at 5 p.m. at
home against Seminole.
Oviedo took 34 shots on goal
Tuesday compared to eight for
the Lady Saints but T rin ity
goalkeeper C h ristin e E m e ry
made 24 saves to keep the Lady
Lions at bay. Oviedo keeper Lori
Blackburn made four saves In
recording the shutout.

ft

|Nichols Kicks Lyman To 3-1 Upset Of No. 4 Bishop Moore
By Chris Fister
Herald Sports W riter
Brian Nichols scored one goal
;and assisted on another Tuesday
-night as Lyman's Greyhounds
; upset fourth-ranked (Class 3A)
Orlando Bishop Moore's Hornets,
3-1, in prep soccer action at
Lyman High.
Lyman. 8-3-4 overall, returns
: to Seminole Athletic Conference
:play Thursday at Lake Mary.
. Bishop Moore now stands at
: 11-3-2.
"T h e guys came out tonight
.and played their best game of
.the season." Lyman coach Ray

Defensively. Chad Welnkauf,
Kevin Smith and Shaller Bowers
led the way for Lyman while
midfielders Tom Sells, Gerard
M i t c h e l l . L u k e and B r e t t
Wortham kept Lyman in control
for a good part of the game.
"T h e main thing we did that
stopped them (Bishop Moore) at
m idfield." Sandidge said. "T h e
guys did a good Job preventing
them from coming forward."
C O R R E C TIO N — Bi sh op
Moore’s record was Incorrectly
listed with an extra tie in the
Class 2A-3A State Soccer Poll
T u e s d a y . T h e Hornets are

Sandidge said. "W e got a couple
of breaks early and that gave us
Soccer
some more confidence."
Bishop Moore had a chance to
take the lead five minutes into Bishop Moore pulled within 2-1
the game but missed a penalty at the half on Eric Ross' penalty
kick and Lyman came back two kirk.
minutes later to take a 1-0 lead
Lyman, which outshot Bishop
when a Todd Luke unloaded a Moore. 14-10, got an Insurance
shot that deflected ofT a Bishop goal in the second half when
Moore defender and into the Chris Graham scored off a throw
goal.
in frotp Nichols.
Lyman made It 2-0 later in the
"W e lost a few players to
first half when Nichols controlled
grades so Brian (Nichols) got a
a ball that was knocked out of . chance to start and did an
the penalty area and popped in excellent Job," Sandidge said.
his first goal o f the season. "Everyone played well tonight.”

11-3-2.

’CRABS BLANK BRANTLEY
Benji Frlcke scored three goals
T u e s d a y n i g h t to l e ad
Seabreeze's Sandcrabs to a 5-0
rout o f Lake Brantley’s Patriots
at Daytona Beach.
Brantley's winless streak was
extended to seven as the Patriots
fell to 5-7-4 overall. The Patriots
have a big Seminole Athletic
Conference game Thursday at
ninth-ranked (Class 4A) Lake
Howell. Lake Brantley's last vic­
tory was against Lake Howell In
the Pi zza Hut Tournam ent.
Seabreeze now stands at 10-3-3.

'Seabreeze was up for the
game and outhustled u s." Lake
Brantley coach Jim Brody said.
"Our guys weren’ t w illing to do
the work. I Just hope they guys
can come back with a positive
attitude in practice tom orrow."
Seabreeze took a 2-0 lead at
halftime and tacked on three
second-half goals. Brett Stoner
added one goal for the 'Crabs
while the fifth goal was an own
goal.
The Sandcrabs took 17 shots
to B r a n t l e y ' s 12. B r a n t l e y
goalkeeper Scott McCullough
made 11 saves.

&gt;viedo Netters Look For 'Solid' Season
■Solid" is the only way to
iescribe Oviedo High School
tennis. Year after year the Lions
Jtne up with quality teams.
The boys have won the Orange
sit Conference for,the last three
has folded. Now the main goal of
the teams at Oviedo Is to do well
in Seminole Athletic Conference
and District 3A.
Last year, the boys team was
runner-up In the district and the
girls were district champions
and finished fifth in the state.
Impressive records for both the
girls and boys teams over the
past few years and it seems that
that record o f success will con­
tinue this year.
Enthusiastic and energetic
boys coach Dan Gustafson lost
three Important employees off
last year's fine team. Gone are
Jeff Goen, Brian Kramer and
Greg Gaul. These young men
were good players and will be
missed but Oviedo has some fine
young players coming along to
take up the slack.
In fact, coac h Gustafson
believes that there are some
truly outstanding newcomers to
the team that could more than
take up the slack.
R e t ur n i ng at the
No. 1

Larry
H ERALD
T E N N IS
W R IT E R

position will be senior Greg
Lampke. Lampke was runner-up
at No. 1 In district play last year
and It looks like he is ready for
another great year. Lampke is
also a super doubles player and
was runner-up in the state last
year while teaming with Greg
Brick.
The No. 2 spot will be handled
by senior Brick. He will come out
for tennis late because he is also
a super soccer player and is
involved with that team at the
present time.
Pat Schuerman. although only
a sophomore, will step in at the
No. 3 singles spot. Schuerman
was on alternate on last year's
team, but has worked very hard
over the summer and looks like
a much Improved player.
Other outstanding prospects

wmmmmm

SCC Stuns Rockland
B y M ark B lyth e
H erald Sports W rite r
Seminole Community College
used the play of power forward
Lisa Starks and guard Pam
Jackson to upend New York’s
Rockland Community College.
65-58, at the SCC Health Center
in front of 33 fans. It was
Rockland's first setback of the
year.
The Lady Raiders upped their
record to 12-6 including five
consecutive and will host na­
tionally-ranked Florida Commu­
nity College-Jacksonvllle and
form er Sem inole star Mona
Benton Thursday. RCC fell to
12-1.
Starks capitalized on the weak
Inside play of the Lady Rockets,
scoring a team high 20 points.
Jackson was hitting from the
perimeter, adding 19 points to
pace the Lady Raiders.
After a lethargic start. SCC
pulled away with the play of
Jackson and Starks scoring the
last eight points of the half
taking a 35-24 lead.
"W e played Just well enough
to win,” coach Ileana Gallagher
said. "W e didn't come out ready
to play and never really got in
the game.”
Paula White started things off
right for the Lady Raiders In the
second half with a nice Inside
move.
S»CC outrebounded Rockland
35-19. Starks pulled down a
game high 12 boards and Alleen
Patterson snared 10 more.

immediate contribution to this
years team. Cindy Wood Is this
Impact player and looks to have
the type of tennis ability and
background to give lots of im­
mediate help.

for this years team are senior
Tony Teano and sophomore
Scott Lugering.

B a s k e t b a ll
Jackson upped the SCC lead to
14 with a short Jumper with
17:35 remaining.
J ack son and Starks then
warded ofT the red-hot shooting
of Rockland with their play
inside and on the break to keep
SCC in control.
King who finished with 12
points and six assist aided the
Lady Raiders with clutch outside
shooting down the stretch as the
Lady Rockets could come no
closer than seven, though forc­
ing Gallagher Into calling a pair
of time outs.
"W e weren't taking the ball to
the basket." Gallagher said.,
Seminole will face a major task
Thursday when FCC-J. the sixth
ranked team in the nation,
invades for a Mid-Florida Confer­
ence clash.
The Lady Stars are unbeaten
and ripped the Lad*' Raiders in
t h e i r l a s t m e e t i n g at
Jacksonville.
SEMINOLE (45) Jackson 4 17 33 It.
Whit* 2 5 3-7 7. King 4-10 0 0 12. Starks 7 17 41
20. Nalson 1-3 0-0 2. Patterson 0-1 1-2 I. 1-4 0-2
2. Lalond 1-50-0 2. Totals: 24 4213 2245.
ROCKLAND (54) - Dlckarson 12-17 0-1 24.
Millar 4-10 0-1 12. Hutton 4-tt 00 12. &lt;72 00 0.
Cannon 0-t 0 0 0. Billiard 3 4 2 2 4. Morris 0 0
7 2 2. Totals: 27 49 4 4 54.
Halltlm* — Samlnola 35. Rockland 24.
Fouls — Samlnola II. Rockland 17. Fouled out
— Billiard. Assists — Saminoi* 17 (King 4.
Jackson 5. Patterson 5). Rockland 4 (Millar
4). Rebounds — Samlnola 35 (Starks 12.
Patterson 10). Rockland It (Hutton 4).
Records — Samlnola 12 6. Rockland 12-1.

The Lady Lions, coached by
Louie Tulp, had a really great
player. Elena Evans, have grad­
uated and they will be greatly
missed.

being hurt a lot by graduation,
will nonetheless be right up
there in conference and district
play and will carry on Oviedo’s
fine tennis tradition.

Tulp said if the younger girls
mature rapidly on the court It
could be another fine year for the
girls. Right now It is simply a
wait and sec situation. Five girls
return from last year's team.
They Include No. 3 Adrlanne
Wood. No. 4 Mandy Ehrhart. No.
5 Ashley Ehrhart. No. 6 Lisa
Franglpane and No. 7 Chris
Meyer.

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League starts early M arch and runs until the end of M ay.
Players fro m Casselberry, Lk. M ary, Longw ood, Sa n fo rd ,
W inter Sp rin gs and surrounding areas are eligible to play.
A ll gam es played at league .xin p le x
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All of these girls had very good
seasons In 1986 and. Indeed,
w e r e e ithe r c h a m p i o n s or
runners-up at their positions.
The problem facing the Lady
Lions will be the fact that most
likely all will be forced to move
up at least two positions.
Tulp said the hopes are high,
though, that this can be done
successfully and that the hard
work the girls have put In during
the off season will pay off.

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I Apr) ( M l

) Caaaataa

Kansas Pulls O u t 71-70 Victory
United Press International
Kansas Is either quite foolish or supremely confident.
The No. 20 Jayhawks trailed Missouri by 7 points with
seven minutes remaining, and by 4 with Just over a minute
to go. After their 71-70 Big Eight victory, they said the
outcome was never In doubt.
" I don't think It ever entered our minds we weren't going
to win,” said Chris Piper, who hit a free throw with five
seconds left Tuesday night to lift Kansas to Its 42nd
consecutive home victory since Feb. 22.1984.
"W e don't get beat here." said Danny Manning, who
rebounded Piper's miss on his second free throw to Ice the
victory. " I looked up (with seven minutes left), and I knew
there was plenty of time left. We've been In a lot o f tight
ballgames this year and I knew It was time to perform."
Missouri's Derrick Chlevous finished with 29 points.
Kansas Improved to 11-5 overall and 3-1 in the Big Eight.
The Tigers dropped to 12-7 and 2-1.

A m e rica 's C u p : Battle O n Land
FREMANTLE, Australia (UPI) — Stars &amp; Stripes and
Kookaburra III fought a land battle Wednesday for the
allegiance o f New Zealand, with each camp convinced a
fiberglass ally Is a strategic key to winning the America’s
Cup.
New Zealand syndicate chief Michael Fay met with Stars
&amp; Stripes Chairman Malln Burnham and then rushed to
the Kookaburra III camp, where the newly-crowned
defenders urged Fay to help them keep the prized trophy in
the southern hemisphere.
Fay. a 37-year-old banker, said he will announce his
choice Thursday. Fay has received telephone calls and
telegrams from m em bers’&amp;f the‘*K 2 T Supporter’s
Supporl
Club
urging him to "back Australia."

W ilson Earns HM A ll-A m e ric a
Oviedo High graduate Dave Wilson was an honorable
mention selection to the 1986 NAIA Division 1 AllAmerican football team.
Wilson, a 6-2, 240 pound senior center, was a three-year
starter on the offensive line for Evangel College In
Springfield, Mo. Wilson was also honored with first-team
status on the all-district team.
Wilson played for Oviedo High during its glory years in
the early 1980s and was a Sanford Herald First Team
All-County selection as well as an All-Orange Belt
Conference First Team choice. Wilson graduated from
Oviedo In 1983.

Pats H ost J V W restling Ja n . 31
Lake Brantley High School will be the site of the Patriots
Junior Varsity Wrestling Tournament on Saturday. Jan.
31, Brantley coach Kevin Carpenger announced Tuesday.
The tournament Is being sponsored by the Seminole
Optimist Club.
Saturday’s tournament will begin with welgh-tns at 8-9
a.m. followed by a seeding meeting at 9-10. round one from
10-12, semi-finals from 12 noon to 1 p.m.. wrestle backs
from 1-2, consolations from 2-3 and finals from 3-4.
For more Information on the tournament, contact coach
Kevin Carpenger at Lake Brantley High at 862-1776 (ext.
43).

M o rris W ants $1.85 M illion
DETROIT (UPI) — Jack Morris wants $1.85 million to
pitch for the Detroit Tigers next season, and the team is
willing to pay him $1.35 million.
Thus are the battle lines'drawn. Unless the Tigers and
Morris reach a compromise, an arbitrator will choose one of
those figures sometime in February.

Valla (LH ) d. Bryant 14-13; HWT - Bannall (S) p. Gollohtr, :J1;
UNL - Buflar (S) p. Benedict. :33. JV icera — Lake HoymII 44,
SamIrvla 13.

LAKE MART UPENDS WINTER PARK
Lake Mary’s Rams ran their dual meet record to
4-0 Tuesday night with a 48-29 victory over
Winter Park's Wildcats at Winter Park High.
The Rams have a big dual meet Friday at
fourth-ranked (Class 3A) Orlando Bishop Moore.
"W e wrestled extremely well tonight after
coming off the trip from Georgia." Lake Mary
coach Doug Peters said. "It was a good win going
into the Bishop Moore m atch."
Peters said the key performers for the Rams
Tuesday Included Robert Donlero at 101 pounds.
Enrique Carbla at 129. Rob Ritliards at 135,
Shane Stanley at 141 and Tad Roman at 170.
Donlero came through with a major decision
over BUI Lampe. 15-7 and Carbla totally dominat­
ed JefT Cato, 16-0. Richards, who has won every
match by pin this season, kept his unbeaten
record Intact aa he pinned Robert Moore In 5:45.
Peters said Stanley's win. a pin at 5:59 over
Barry Gordon, was the match of the night for the
Rams.
"It looked like he (Stanley) was going to lose."
Peters said. "But, with 10 seconds left, he used a
head and arm throw and pinned Gordon with one
second left."

f p* - (tail cahir vtturo** a
It p m. — SOU NBA: Nee Yak Knkk* a

The Washington Capitals* period o f mourning Is over.
Beset by problems for the first three months of the
season, the Capitals languished In last place In the Patrick
Division until two weeks ago. In their last seven games,
however, they have looked like the team that has
•seasons,
winning streak
the New Jersey
Devils and moved past the Rangers Into third place, five
points behind the second-place Islanders.
"W e built our whole team around two centers and
they're gone." Capitals Coach Bryan Murray said o f Bengt
Gustafsson. who chose to play In his native Sweden this
season, and Bobby Carpenter, traded to the Rangers Jan. 1
after a feud with management.
"Im agine If somebody took (Mike) Bossy and (Bryan)
Trottler from the Islanders. Look at Quebec; what
happened when they lost their top two players (Peter
Stastny and Dale Hunter to Injuries)."
In other games. Boston whipped Quebec 5-3. Calgary
tripped the New York Islanders 3-1, and Minnesota shut
out Buffalo 5-0.

Continued from SA

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BASKETBALL: Son&gt;Nolo AtWottc tonNronco

FOOTBALL
FOOTBALL. NPL Pt*y*ll SdNCtCt
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SI. lout*it TironV. 7 8 pm.
PNioWpMo at CMcofa, 1:8 pm.
Edmontonot Wknipno. 1 8 p m
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Pimburpi at Lm AnpHuv N 8 pm.
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BASKETBALL: TwiMy'l CHWyi Rnuttl

DEALS:ToaiCty'iIpartdTrantoctlan*
Ckorlttton (Soutti Atlantic Looputl NomadLorry WVtmor* pooral monogv.
Pittiturgh - Signac tliertUepa Houatan
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DOGS

HOCKEY

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T E N N IS
TERRIS: AodraUooOpao
Al Kwywg UoWum. MoMourw
M n 'ilu fM
O^dtr f m$Ii
Pat Cod. Auokroiio. dot Yannick Noah.
Franco. IA I ). )A 14 SVIon Edborg.
Sudan, dot MiM oy Mocir. CMChodOYOklo.
41.44.44 Woiiy Mow. Amir olio, dot Kelly
Emmdm. Now Zooiond. A t 7 t 44 Won
Land. CtKhoVOYOk a. dot Andwt Jorryd.
Sudm .t40SI.4l.4t

Roman, a first-year wrestler, won his second
match In a row at 170 pounds as he pinned Mark
Bromfleld In 3:24 The quickest pin.of the match
Tuesday was turned In by Lake Mary's BUI
Richards who stuck Jim Grant In 25 seconds.
L A K I MARY 44, WINTER PARK 14
141 - Donlero (LM ) md. Lkmpo. 15-7; 104 - Wolloc* (WP) p.
Jonnton. 1:01; IIS - Floret (LM) md. Robert*. U J; m - Clayton
(LM ) tied Loft. S-S; I l f - Carbla (LM) tf. Cato. 14-0; 111 - R.
Richard! (LM) p. Moor*. 3:43; 141 - SDnloy (LM) p. Cordon, 3:3f;
144 - Orlt (W P) d. Stowart, 13 4; 131 - B. Richard* (LM) p. Grant,
:23; 170 - Roman (LM? p. Bromflald. 3:24; 144 - Huggln* (WP) p.
Goob. 1:40; 113 - Robort* (WP) p. Kolior, 1:14; HWT - Carrlaon
(W P) p. Wright. 1:10; UNL - Jackson (LM) won by forfeit. JV acere
— Winter Pirk 37. Like Mery 20

BISHOP MOORE ROUTS L T M A N
Orlando Bishop Moore, ranked fourth In the
state In Class 3A, ov er po we re d Lyman' s
Greyhounds Tuesday night, 58-9, in prep
wrestling action at Lyman High.
Lyman picked up only two victories on the
night, the first by Gregg Hunzlker who declsloned
Brad McKechnen. 7-4, at 135 pounds and the
second by David Callgiuri who pinned Todd
Morgan in 3;57 at 223 pounds.
The Greyhounds. 1-8. return to action tonight
at home against Seminole.
BISHOP MOORE 34. LYMAN t
101 - Koerner (BM) d. Mongol, 14-4; IM - McKochnl* (BM) p.
Yomomoto. 2:33; IIS — Cisneros (BM) d. Skrtpek.4 0; 122 — Gentile
(BM) wen by torfelt; 124 - Morino (BM) d. Chiodo. 5 2; lU Hunilkor (L) d. McKechnen. T-4; 14) — Notion (BM) p. Cenedoy.
1:37; 144 — Riveron (BM) p. Cooperider. 2:44; 1S4 — Groono (BM)
•von by torlelt; 1T4 — Cumbl* (BM) p. AAcElhinney, 4:40; IM —
Spltulskl (BM) p. Terry. 1:17; 221 — Ceiiglurl (L ) p. Morgan. 3:57;
HWT - JoBailey (BM) p Smith (L ). 3 03; JV tcere - Bishop Moo-e
14. Lyman I

SOCCER
SOCCER: MISLSTANOINCS

MsryNcmsOiisk

todar* DhrHIan

t W tffB tH l M. Dominican INY10

ClOYfiond

Btoomlield It E. Slrauddurg 44
Eod
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BoatonCsnagaV. Solon HoMH
Control Conn. II. Eod Cordno 44
CV*(l4ndSI.StM4rW4f
Comma, HamiltonM
Dartmouth It Vermont 44
Eodvn Com. I t Roger Allllom, n
Ferddm )*. Cdumbo T7
Fromnghom St. ML Worenter SI. II
G*argaWMhingtonB.Du*Mina4S
HortNrdMlMtinoM
HorhWck 42.1lh*co SI
Hawthorn* SBLyndon St. N (OT)
Holy Crow 71 Iona44
KingaCdlagaSB NE Bibit M
DSoiNUStPatonM
ManholtonrilN 4). llhmon M
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PuneoynoWO* t«4*y««o 44
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Mt Formingtonll.Mt Morltlmod
WwNngion Call. TV. J. Hopkim14
Wtynorturg V. Point Pwk 7*
Wllkott*. Abrightn
William, 44, Middobury U
South
AJo Blrmlnyomia.VCUTO
Bryan if. Tw m w o TampN 4*
Conan Htwmjn Wt Loo W
ContraM.LMwyWU*on SI
Cdmon 47. Cuargio Tach M
CumOorlond IB Trimyt«tnio 4)
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DuitYilN IA VlrgMo Toch 4)
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Wodhngton A LooIB E. Momonrto40
Cardinal Strlkh 01. Mar Bopiitt SO
ChicagoM. D U PornttS
Hotting, College Ft Ml. Morty 4)
low* Stalk 41. NobreiU is
Kama, 71. Mdiouri 71
lowronc* V. St. Nortart S4
Melont II. Urbane II
Ml SonarloI t Vilortk 14
Tiffin IT. Mount Vomen 8
Ohio Dominican I t CodaryllN 71
Ptru SDN 71 Midland Lutharm4)
RdCrmda74W4ld4l
Spring Arbor 77, ALch Oojrbom 4
ThiulfL Hiram 75
WH. PartaldeV. Marian 44
Wit. Stout 41. Wt DCrouoM
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TVndoy'lOomu
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It 81

B O W L IN G
BOWLING: SkrakMt hniUttn*!
At Da Vugtk N*v.

Central Okie ttSNaurmo 7)
Okie O ra l ionas. Langston It
OrelRotortstt. S F AutlmSe
Pan Amur icon 74, Lamar it
Nutt
Bole 71 So Cal. CaiNgoM
CanWalWad 47. PugHSnmdU
Gonaega If. EaMm WtkhmgVn 04
Humboldt U V. Mania SI
Loyola Marymount MB Chapman tS
Ortgan Tach 8. NW CVIttian 74
Popper*™ It Chicago $t 7)
Portland 71. Pk ilk LutVran SI
Sacramento St IX SlanHlaui SI t)
So Utah St. 8. Adam* Slav 71

A persecution complex helped
Derek Smith Tueoday night
Smith was upset because he
thought he was being blamed
unfairly for the Sacramento
Kings' poor showing lately. The
8-foot-6 guard scored 27 points.
Including 8 In a decisive thirdquarter run, to help Sacramento
to a 123-114 triumph over the
Golden State Warriors.
" I play beat when I'm angry."
•aid Smith.
The victory was the King*'
third straight. Before that, how­
ever, Sacramento had lost eight
o f nine. Though no player* had
publicly blamed Smith, the loefd
press was pushing for rookie
Harold Pressley to replace him In
the starting lineup.
"T h e last live games, I’ve felt
m y teammates' fingers pointin
at m e." said Smith. " I got mad.
decided to go out and Just play
my game and stop worrying
about whether people like me. J
don't need any more hugs and
kisses for a while."
W i t h Sacram en to trailing?
66-65 trnd 7:19 to go In the third,
period. Smith sank 2 baskets,
and 4 free throws in helping,
Sacramento to a 16-4 tear that;
put the Kings ahead 81-70 with.
2:30 remaining. Golden State
was never closer than 5 points;
after that.
,,
Reggie Theus finished with a
gamemlgh 31 points for Sacra-,
men to. Otis T h orp e had q
game-high 11 rebounds and also,
tossed In 19 points for the Kings.,
Sleepy Floyd led the Warriors,
with 24 points and Joe Barry,
Carroll added 19.
Said Warriors Coach Georg?,
Karl: " I tip m y hat to Sacra^
mento because they got ofT to a
bad start, but they rebounded,
from It. It was one of the best
games played against us so far
this year."
Franklin Edwards clinched th&lt;^
victory for Sacramento with an;
outside shot that put the Kings
ahead 120-113 with 57 second*,
left In the game.
0
B ulls 103, Bucks 90
'I
At Chicago. Michael Jordan
scored 31 points and reserve,
forward Gene Banks added 18 to*
lead Chicago. Terry Cummings*
led the Bucks with 27 points;!
while Ricky Pierce added 17 and*
John Lucas 14. Milwaukee
played without regular starters'
P a u l P r e s s e y and S i d n e y '

(Tkt to* H kroHn witk M a li M*h Nr hn
ruuudi -14 gamut)
t, Kunt Mogntr. Polmutta. Fla . D U l
Pun* Granger. Ulorotif. La . 1ST) 1 Eart
Anmonr. Dublin. Calif. 3.S4) 4. Ton,
WttMokt. Edmond. Okt*. LS34 L Oo.u
Huitod. Mituoukiu. Or*. LSD A Don Jofmon.
DoVogovNtv.UII.
f. Ouvid Olio. Vidor. Tout, loft t Tom
Maiton, Si. PtNnburg Fla. 14N f. SWvt
Ciijum. Craifuood. Mo. 1413 lOi Omnit
Horon Jr. Sort* Oort. Colli. U N II. Norm
Dull. Fort Worth. Tout. L4X I I Ron
Wiliam. Cmoklo. III. 148
a AmON Monocdli, Vontiutlo. 148 IA
Mark William Bkkumont, Tout. 1431 I I
Lo t t lorakk. WouchuU. Ft* . ) 48 D. Ron
Polamki Jr.. ErW. Pk. 14)1. 17. Bob Cham
borloin. Auburn Htighlv Midi. 148 IA
Romt, Morrvo. SI Dud. 14)4.

O liv a d o tti’
To M ia m i;
t
MIAMI (UPI) - The Mlamj,
Dolphins hired Tom Ollvadottj,
Tuesday with the hopes he cap!
restore greatness to the team’si
defense.
p
Olivadotti. who spent the last1
two years with the Cleveland*
Browns, was named defenslvd
coordinator by the Dolphins.'*
who finished 1986 ranked 26th(
in total defense.
Former defensive coordinator/
Chuck Studley will stay with thq
team as linebacker coach, whileBob Matheson. who coached!
linebackers for four years ln&gt;
Miami, resigned after being
passed over for the top defensiv?&gt;
job.
The Dolphins allowed 50 o^
more points In two of their first’
three games, and surrendered’
4 0 5 p o i n t s on t h e y e a r .

Poor Shooting Dooms Pats
B y C hria P la ter
H e ra ld S p orts W r ite r
Lake Brantley's Lady Patriots
might have pulled off a major
upset Tuesday night if they
could have put the ball In the
basket. Brantley made Just 7 of
26 shots (27 percent) from the
floor in the first half In a 60-41
loss to lOth-ranked (Class 4A)
O rlando Edgewat er at Lake
Brantley High.
' The Lady Patriots. 7-7, return
to Seminole Athletic Conference
play (1-2) Friday at Lyman.
Edgewater now stands at 14-3.
"W e should have been up by
10 points in the first half,"
Brantley coach Cindy Frank
said. "Seven for 26 tells It all.
And everything was In the paint.
It would have been a different
game if some o f the shots would
have fallen."
T r a c y B r a n d e n b u r g led
Brantley with 15 points, four
assists and four steals and
Laurie Rivers added 14 points
and s ix rebounds. Vanessa
Taylor had a game-high 20
points to lead Edgewater.

KDOKWATCR (M) - Taytof 20. Johnaoo 4.
Butler 4. Wilton 12. Paugh 14. M «xw«ll 2.
Total*: 244 )440.
LAKE BRANTLEY (41) - Brandenburg
IS. Rlvwrt 14. Atpltn 2. Blllmyor 0, Abaray 0.
Tufford 4. Mull 0. Pctart 2. Lldka 2. Hamltt 0.
Total*: 1311-1441.
Halftlma - Edgewater 23. Laka Brantlay
17. Foul* — Edgewattr 17. Laka Brantley 13.
Fouled out — Wilton. Technical — none.
Record* — Edgewater 14-1, Laka Brantley
7-7.

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(except Sun.)

Matinees Mon., Wed.
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• •

court, and If the Scots can
keep their oppontents off the

Merthle to accept both guard
role*. H e brought Merthle
along akm ly last season and
d id n 't force him into the
starting lineup until the 18th
game o f the year. Merthle
responded by averaging 12.5
points, 3.4 steals and 3.0
aaststa per game.
"D arryl Is the most im­
proved player on our team,"
Ridenour said. " I didn’t realize
he could turn Into such a great
passer. UCP really wants him
and I think Darryl would like
to go there.
'T m still surprised, though,
that he hasn't had more offers.
He's had a tremendous year."
Merthle's biggest contribu­
tion to Daytona Beach Is he
adds the fast break dimension
to Its offense. Merthle admit­
tedly operates best In the open

offensive boards,' Merthle will
usually be found at the other
end of the floor for a layup or
three-point play.
" I f 1 can't get the fast break
going for us. we're not going to
run," Merthle said matter-offactly. "W h en we play some o f
the better teams. I know we
are going to need the fast
break to w in.”
Ironically, one o f the teams
standing in Daytona Beach's
way this season is Seminole.
"Seminole. Florida Commu­
nity and Central Florida are all
tough, but Seminole has the
best team I've seen," Merthle
said. “ It's going to take a great
effort to beat them. I'm looking
forward to going home to play
them more than any other
game this year."
After all. It will be his chance
to show everyone at home he
made the right choice.

L

..D a yto n a
Continued from 0A

ing his own weaknesses. Payne,
i successful prep coach at Colo­
nial and Seminole, would like
nothing better than to beat
R i d e n o u r . R id e n o u r, who
a p p r e n t i c e d u n d e r Gene.
" T o r c h y " Cl ark at Central
Florida, would like nothing bet­
ter than to beat Payne.
* ‘ T h e truth Is we are Just not
t hat g o o d . " R i den ou r said
Tuesday afternoon via telephone
from his Daytona office. "W e
Just blew by Florida Junior at
the end. Heck, we were trailing
E ckerdJV ."
Payne, o f course, is the first to
I &gt; disagree. "T h e 12 coaches who
vote on the poll should know
What they are talking about," he
dald W e d n e s d a y morning.
"There has not be a unanimous
|Jick In a long tim e."
Payne said more depth this
year for the Scots' could be the
key. too. “ I still kind think their
» strength this year Is In num,i» bers." he said. “ They have eight
or nine kids who can do Job. In
; the past, it was five or six."
Cedric McCoy Joins Merthie
and Williams in DBCC's threeguard alignment. Dunbar and
6-6 Tony Bates form the front
line. The bench gets bigger with
6 -8 D e r r a l l D u m a s from
Jacksonville Ribault and 6-6
Derrick Jones, a Stetson transthan us." Payne
c o m p a re s o m e w h a t to FJC
( F l o r i d a C o m m u n i t y at
Jacksonville), but they are bet­
ter. They are very, very big and
strong."
Gallagher and Houston Join
Hall, 6-7 Claude Jackson and 6-3
James Morris for the starting
five. Jackson Is averaging 11.3
points while Morris Is con­
tributing 9.5 a game. Barry
Dunning, a 6-7 freshman. Is the
front line relief with 8.6 points.
Rob Williams, a 6-6 enforcer.
Holly Keller, a 6-4 swingman.
and Kenny Gordon, a 6-1 shoot­
er. provide more depth.
, Daytona's only loss Is to North
Broward (82-80), but Ridenour
said he Is worried to death about
Wednesday. "W e've never won
dt Seminole, so why would a
person be Interested in going
there?” he asked. "I want to play
On a neutral court.”
' The only thing neutral may be
the talent. Both teams love to
run. Both like to score points In a
hurry. Long passes may become
the rule and not the exception on
fast breaks tonight.
Ridenour said he used to know
how to beat Seminole, but the
3-pol nt g oal — along with
Houston and Gallagher — has
(jhanged that. "W e used to be
dble to play a zone and pack It
ih ," he said. "But they are so
diuch bigger and they have that
p u ts ld e ro c k et launcher
(Houston). With the 3-polnt goal,
you can't afford to do that.”
J Ridenour pointed quickly to
the game's two factors. "The
dame will boll down to Vance
Hall and Gallagher." he said.
"W e have to stop Hall Inside and
tf. wo ul d be nice to guard
Gallagher. He means so much to
them/’
! SCC assistant Dean Smith
dgreed. "Team s know the key to
lieatlng us is to take Gallagher
away from us. Malcolm gets a lot
o f points but he gets them
because Darris gets him the
ball.”

I

J Payne said, however, that
Brooks would not play tonight
even if he became eligible.

Robb Hughes, a ' 6-4 senior,
came through on his transfer
from wing to power forward with
a game-high 21 points as Oviedo
downed Wymore Career Educa­
tion Center. 62-57, Tuesday
night at Eatonville.
Oviedo Improved to 9-4 and
will host Seminole Friday in
Seminole Athletic Conference
action. Wymore fell to 12-5 on
the season.
"W e slowed things down and
held on to our lead In the second
half." Oviedo coach Dale Philips
said. "W e put Hughes Inside and
he came through well, our entire
Inside game was good tonight."
Oviedo held a 31-22 lead at the
half and Hughes caught fire with
eight, third-quarter points which
boosted the lead to as high as 14

S V M rii
a OrMMSlaTatete: M M ia

B a s k e tb a ll

I IP ) -

Omto II. IHSM 4,

u. mum rt few* 4 Ms«*r *.
K M W 4 WIHiMMt. TstaU: 33 1 &gt;B B .

H*lf1lm* - OvM* It. Wrmrt M. F*wN Ovtert* 13, Wymsrs 13. Foutert Wt — nan*.
Rscsrrtt — Ovfcrts *-4,. Wymtrs 11*.

points.
Oviedo also used the Inside
play o f Chris Griffith who came
out of a scoring slump with 13
points for the Lions.
"T h e y ’re a real quick team."
Philips said. "W e did a good Job
o f keeping the boards."
Another key performer for
Oviedo was Roby Bowers who
came o f the bench and scored
eight clutch points down the
stretch. Rodney Davie led the
way for Wymore with 13 points.
Anthony Nichols added 12 and
Ben Herman added 11.
"W e're happy with the win. It
makes practice a lot easier."
Philips said.

Guard Rick KeUy scored 18
points leading the way for Mount
Dora who used a strong third
quarter for to topple Lake Howell
59-48 Tuesday night at Mount
Dora.
Lake Howell fell to 3-7 and will
host New Smyrna Beach tonight
at 8.
"T h e Intensity was there we
Just gave them (Mount Dora) too
many unearned points.” Lake
Howell coach Greg Robinson
said. "W e turned the ball over to
many times and they capital-

woeful 18 of 55 shooting, a 33
performance from Lake
lonthenliht*
*
After a 2 0 2 0 d e a d lo ck Mount
Dora came out and outacorad the
Sliver Hawks. 21-12. In the third
quarter for a 41-32 lead .going
Into the final eight minutes.
Alonzo Robinson led the way
for the Silver Hawks with 16
points: Steve Johnson. Phil
Clark and Randy Keller chipped
In eight apiece.
UOOUT OOKA Iff) - J*efc*on 4 Bad 14
D*b*» 4 Smith 7, Stewart 14 K*4ly 14
Totelt: **7-MJ*
U N I NOWIL L ( « ) - Clark 4 Kstlar 4
S. JNw on 4 M. Jofwtton 4 Gteaan 4
Gammon* 4 RoSintan 14. Total*: IS 11-I I 44
Halftlma - Ml. Dora 34 Lafca Hawaii 34
Foul* — Mt. Dora 14 Lafca Hawaii 14. FouteS
out — non*. Technical — nan*.
Lafc*How*ll3-7.

WE BEAT ALL LOCAL ADVERTISED W INE &amp; LIQUOR PRICES!,
BRING IN ANY COMPETITOR'S CURRENT ADI

SUPER BOWL%

illli

A B C H A S T H E L O W E R E V E R Y D A Y W I N E A N D L I Q U O R P R IC E - S A V E U P T O 4 0 %

AVLLORS R1.E5G9. 1.29
F
L
A
TO
HUHDF
OILLANDHOUSE

*6 *

ABC HAS KEG
BEER - AIL
POPUIAR BRANDS

O LD MILW AUKEE

COOKS

P A R 1Y S U P P LIES

In n

KEG. O R LIG H T
6 - 1 2 0 Z . CANS
A
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REG. O R LIGHT
SUITCASE

S
6 * 9 9 ss?
Z * 5
MIXES sale
7501,11.69
BEER OR ALE cou&gt; . . u d l c m * 1.59
APLANTERS
LLFLAVORS drpe5S“? di6oz. 1.99 ABC
6 -1 2 0 Z .C A H S 1*99
DAILY'S MIXES GALLON3.69 PEARL REG. OR LIGHT
L GUSTAFSON
ft
M 0 1S 0 N
8
H E IN E K E N
Im
p
orted
from
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to MILK LOFAT
GALLON1.99 BSt
H ollan d
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6-12 o z. Btls.
1
6 • 12 o z. Btls.
OVER8LB.BAG
Iced
M
j
Prices Good ICE CUBES
Thru Jan. 27 CIGARETTESORM
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3 * 6 9 s s r!
B
3 .9 9 ss*
NG CTN.1CI

CUP-AND-SAVE

COUPON SPECIALS

it

SEAGRAM'S
GOLDEN SPIRITS

GOODWED.,JAN.21

KESSLER B LEN D

STOLICHNAYA
TAAKA

sm*
sau

.13.99
11.19

1
I

6.99 UTERI

VODKA

S M IR N O F F

3*99 SALE

TWO PERCUSTOMERWflOUPOH

I

GOOD WED.. JAN. 2.

CARLOROSSI CHABLIS
2 •. 9
7 791mj .5
LTR.
r*M?nni|
u v w

1 i v w i m p •« u m

ABC G IN

1 2 * 9 9 SALE
■ 4 . 0 0 REBATE
NET
COST
AREN REBATE

8.99

1 2 .4 9

ROYAL DELUXE

-2.00 SKi

SEAGRAM'S

ARFTE
EBARTE

ROYAL
IS LA N D ER
R U M C R EA M
6 . 9 9 SALE

SW EET O R DRY

99
1

AFTER
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SEAGRAM'S V0
WALKER'S1TBS*
CANADIAN LTD
SCHENLEY OFC
WISER'S 10YR.

CASE OF 12:23.50

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POUILLY FUISSE
ts. ml14.95
J. Vercherre - France'sFinest
ASTI SPUMANTE Beccaro 750 ML 8.99
WHITE ZINFANDEL Sebastian! 750 ML 4.49
LIEBFRAUMILCH *83? mm 9.49
GOLD PEAK CALIFORNIA 3LTR. 4.69
Chablis, Rose. Burgundy, Rhine MIXANY 4•18.50
G A LLO

B ian co o r
L am b ru sco

C h a b lis , R h in e, Red
R o se, Pink C h a b lis ,
B urgundy, V in R ose

1.75 LTR.

SALE
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10*69
LTR. 6*79
LITER 7*19
1.75 LTR. 13*49
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J&amp;B
CHIVAS REG/ .
SC0RESBY..USHER'S

'

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liter

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MIX ANY 4-23.95

19*79
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B O U R B O N S • B LEN D S

SCHNAPPS P8RoofBeer,e’ SALE 750 ML 5.79
E &amp; J BRANDY SALE 750 ML 6.39
SOUTHERN COMFORT lo^soml 6.99
BAILEY'S IRISH CREAMsau ^11.79
B0ULAINE
SCHNAPPS sau
liter 3.29

ANCIENT AGE
m * LITER
TEN HIGH
sale 1.75LTR.1 1.99|
SEAGRAM'S 7 SAli 1.75 LTR. 12.99
OLD THOMPSON BLEND SALE1.75LTR. 10.99
FLEISCHMANN'Sblend
6.99

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»

•. 1

Peach, Apple, Peppermint Strawberry___________________

SANFORD
Hwy 17-92 SOUTH CITY LIMITS

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• • A LTA M O N TE

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_£A S TO P _P 4______^_^_

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- - CASSELBERRY

Hwy 17-92 AT 436

GOOD FRI., JAN. 23
BACARDI RU M

I
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13.891.75LTR.|

GOOD SAT., JAN. 24
H EA V EN H IL L B RB N .

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GOOD SAT.. JAN. 24

B&amp;GPARTAGER
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TWO PER CUSTOMER W/C0UP0H

BEER N U T S

liter

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TWO PER CUSTOMER W/C0UP0N

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C A N A D IA N S

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C E L IA

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12e99
GIN SALE
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MUST PUKHASE BY MU. 25, 1987

5.49 LITER.
TW O PER CUSTOM ER W /C0UP0N '
I

EA R LY
TIM ES

B LA C K V E L V E T

•

{ Although Ridenour has put a
lpt o f emphasis on the inside
ame, Smith said the Raiders are
o rrie d about D aytona's
uickness.
Their quickness is comparale to ours. Handling the prejure will be important." Smith
4ald. "W e ask Darris to do a lot.
ft might be better to give him
dome help.”
The Raiders are still waiting
for third guard Efrem Brooks to
(ear up his eligibility status,
rooks needs to pass an “ exit
test” to regain his eligibility.

a

- * r~

I
i

2 .3 9

12 0Z.
CAN

C R IC K E T
L IG H T E R S

1 .0 9

*

,

PA K

GOOD MON., JAN. 26
j
FLEISCHM ANN'S V O D K A |

GOOD TUES.. JAN. 27
R &amp; R C A N A D IA N

I

it r .

oc*t*i Lounqq i Pe*.j \

HAPPYJW UR DAILY 4 TIL 6

VISA

�r

• »" i &lt; » *ti

HA tewtiri H w M , B a -ifi, FI. W i i M ^ i

11,1 W

•w t- r

N A S A To

Record Rise May Falter W lth B a|, Q u t sy8tem
ooened lower today
NEW YORK (UPI) — Prices opened
In acUve trading of New York Stock Exchange
Issues.

The Dow Jones Industrial average, which
gained 1.97 Tuesday, was down 10.83 to 2093.64
shortly after the market opened.
Declines led advances 940-223 among the
1.537 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 15.498,000

Gold And Sllvsr
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; sliver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold

London
Previous close 415.00 off 7.00
Morning fixing 408.50 off 6.50
Hong Kong
407.25 off 11.25

New York
Comex spot
gold open
408.10 up 0.70
Comex spot
silver open
5.496 up 0.02
(London m orning fixing
change is bascdAn the previous
day's closing p rift.)
&lt;

Local Interest
These quotations provided by
m e m b e r s o f t he N a t i o n a l
Association of Securities Dealers
arc representative Inter-dealer
prices as of mid-morning today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.
Bid Ask
American Pioneer
Barnett Bank
First Union
Florida Power
&amp; Light
Fla. Progress
HCA
Hughes Supply
Morrison’s
NCR Corp
Plesscy
Scotty's
Southeast Bank
SunTrust
Walt Disney World
Westinghouse

7% 7%
34% 34%
25% 25%
33
42%
32%
23%
24%
55%
29%
12%
41%
22%
52%
64

33%
42%
32%
23%
24%
55%
30%
13%
42
22%
52%
64%

Dow Jones
Dow Jones Averages — 10 a.m.
30 Indus
2090.41 off 14.06
20 Trans
871.49 off 6.30
15 Utils
223.80 off 0.46
65 Stock
805.87 off 4.97

...Plant

Continued from page 1A

since the city asked for bids In
October 1986. Since there Is no
meeting before then Jan. 22 and
commissioners took no action
Monday night, the bids
will
expire automatically.
Finance Director Barry Weeks
projected a $1.5 million cost
overrun with the county and a
$1.2 million cost overrun if the
city built Its own plant. He said
there Is no guarantee the county
will not raise rates to the city,
which will have to make up the
difference In some way.
W aller, who recom m ended
going with the county even
though It will cost more, was
instructed to huve all of the
figures necessary at the Feb. 2
meeting on what the city will
have to do to make Its contract
with the county financially ac­
ceptable to Sun Bank and the
bonding company.
Deputy Mayor June Lormann
said In view of disagreement
among c ity staff, the com ­
mission should hire the city's
auditing firm of Kane &amp; Shuck to
r e v i e w the c o n t r a c t and
Longwood's ffnunclcal capability
In order to make a recommenda­
tion to the commission by the
Feb. 2 meeting.

shares.
Most stocks managed weak gains Tuesday,
giving the P o w Jones industrial average a small
Increase aAd an unprecedented 13-day winning
streak.
T h e s e s s io n w as the N ew Yor k St oc k
Exchange’s seventh-buslest. but the market
seesawed throughout the day,
IBM reported its fourth-quarter earnings fell to
82.28 a share from $4.36 a share a year earlier.

WASHINGTON (UPI)
In a
m a j o r p h ilosop h ical change
prom pted by the Challenger
disaster. NASA has decided to
give astronauts parachutes and
a w ay to ball out of a disabled
space shuttle to avoid a poten­
tially fatal ditching at sea.
The escape system would not
work, however, for a launch
failure like the one that doomed
Challenger and killed its seven
crew members Jan. 28.1986.
Rear Adm. Richard Truly, the
associate NASA administrator
for space flight, announced
Tuesday the three remaining
shuttles will be modified so their
cabin hatches can be Jettisoned
by explosives In an emergency.
But Truly said there may not
be time to modify the shuttle
Discovery In time for the first
post-C hallenger launch, still
scheduled for Feb. 18.1988.
He also noted that he and
other officials have not decided
y e t w h e t h e r to p r o v i d e
astronauts with tiny rockets that
would pull them away from a
disabled ship. Engineers are
c o n c e r n e d th e “ e xt r a c t i o n
rockets" might create more haz­
ards than benefits.
Astronauts fear that by merely
Jumping out o f a shuttle, the
200-mph-plus wind speed would
carry them Into the wing or a
rear control rocket pod.

Dollar On Rise
As Gold Falls
By United Frees International
. The U.S. dollar opened higher
on maJor; world money markets
today as f the United States and
Japan prepared for talks on
stabilizing the dollar.
The price of gold continued Its
decline, which began in Tuesday
In New York.
In earlier trading in the Far
East, the dollar strengthened
substantially against the Japa­
nese yen in active trading on the
Tokyo foreign exchange, closing
at 153.60, up 1.35 from Tues­
day's close of 152.25.
Dealers In Tokyo said market
participants turned to buying
dollars following news reports
f rom W a s h i n g t o n that the
Reagan administration would
c o o p e r a t e w i t h J a p a n In
s ta b iliz in g the d o lla r -y en
exchange rate.

Market players also waited for
the outcome of a meeting be­
tween U.S. Treasury Secretary
James Baker and Japanese Fi­
nance Minister Kllchl Mlyazawa,
who (lew to Washington earlier
W e d n e s d a y . The BakerMlyazawa meeting has been set
for Thursday morning.
In European trading, the dollar
opened in Frankfurt at 1.8507
German marks, up from Tues­
day’s close o f 1.8356; In Zurich
at 1.5505 Swiss francs, up from
1.5400; In Brussels at 38.825
Belgian francs, up from 38.50;
ana In Amsterdam at 2.0820
Dutch guilders, up from 2.0685.
The dollar began the day in
Paris at 6.1875 French francs,
up from 6.135. and In Milan at
1.315.50 lire, up from 1,305.70.
In London, the pound opened
at $1,515, compared to Tues­
day's close o f $ 1.519.

W A S H IN G T O N (U PI) America's inflation rate crept 0.2
percent higher In December
1986 to conclude a year In which
prices rose Just 1.1 percent —
the smallest Increase In a
quarter century, the Labor De­
partment reported today.
A 19.7 percent fall In energy
prices takes almost all the credit
for the 1.1 percent difference In
the Consumer Price Index be­
tween last month and December
1985.
Without that d ecrease —
brought on by the recently
ended OPEC oil price war —
Inflation for the year actually

would have risen 3.8 percent,
government statistics revealed. •
Food prices rose 3.8 percent
from December 1985 to De­
cember 1986 and shelter costs
Increased 4.6 percent.
The 1.1 percent Increase In the
annual Inflation rate compares
with increases near or at 4
percent since 1982. It was the
smallest Jump since 1961, when
prices rose Just 0.7 percent.
The Consumer Price Index
reflects the average change in
prices for food, clothing, shelter
and other common Items needed
for day-to-day living In the Unit­
ed States.

The commission voted unan­
imously on a motion by Com­
missioner Harvey Smerllson to
hire the auditor to do the
Independent study.
An ordinance to Increase Dev­
elopment Assistance Fees for
new sewer hookups was tabled
until all the rate Information Is
In so that It w i l l c o n t a i n
whatever will be necessary to
meet the shortfall.
Criticizing Weeks for what he
said were conflicting figures at
different times. Mayor Ed Myers
at one point suggested the city
get a new finance director.
"I'll never vote to build our
own sewer plant...," Myers said.
"W e have a million dollar piece
of property and I want it made
into a park."
In December, before going out
of office after losing his reelection bid, former mayor Larry
Goldberg signed the contract
with the county, pending ap­
proval by the bank. Under the
agreement the city would Ini­
tially purchase 325,000
gallons-per-day treatment capac­
ity at the rate of $5.75 a gallon,
or a total of $1,868,750. and
subsequent capacity at a rate
equal to $1 below the county's
capacity fee at the time o f
purchase, up to the 600.000
gallon-per-day reserve capacity.
In addition, Longwood Is re-

qulrcd to build a master lift
station at the estimated cost of
$220,000 to pump waste water
from the city to the county
c o l l e c t i o n system. The
associated transmission pipe line
cost is Incorporated In the
c o u n t y ’ s capaci ty fee. T h e
master lift station would be
located at the Skylark Treatment
Plant site, which would be dis­
mantled along with Columbus
Harbour’s treatment plant and
percolation ponds.
T h e a g r e e m e n t wi th the
county requires Longwood to
pay $1.50 per 1.000 gallons of
s e w a g e m o n t h l y tr eatment
c h a r g e s . It g u a r a n t e e s
L o n g w o o d ' s rates will stay
e q u i v a l e n t to the l o w e s t
wholesale treatment rates the
county charges for the 10-year
term of the contract. This docs
not preclude the county raising
rates at any time.

C«ntM Horn** to Lbwronco 8 Murphy 8
WF ConiUncv, Lf 51 Foxchdto, Ph II,
&lt;113,500
Contox Horn** to William J Kl*lnkn*cht IV
&amp; WF Kathy L, Lt S3 Foxchasa Ph llm
&lt;113,100
Matthaw S Patiaglla 8 Joyca to Othmao M

ROSE F. BOWMAN
Mrs. Rose F. Bowman. 75. of
800 Santa Barbara Drive. San­
ford. died Tuesday at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. Bom
Jan. 1. 1912 In Monroeville. Pa.,
she moved to Sdnford In 1962
from there. She was a retired
restaurant owner. She was a
Protestant nnd a member of
Americun Legion Auxiliary Unit
03. Sanford.
S u r v i v o r s I n cl ud e a son,
William S. Anderson. Sanford;
two grandchildren.
B rlsson Guardi an Funeral
Home. Sanford. In charge of
arrangwments.

Continued from page 1A
property owners' requests to be
Included within the city.
Com m issioners haven't de­
cided whether they want to lease
the abandoned home to a city
employee or place it as a rental
on the open market.
The employee, street superin­
tendent Jerry Herman, would
rent the home for a nominal fee
In exchange for the or.-sltc
security he would provide, ac­
cording to staffs' proposal.
Sem inole C ounty's govern­
ment and school board have

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Central Florida Rogtoiul Hospital
U fld ltf

ADMISSIONS
McCartnoy C. Dougherty. Casselberry
Clifton L. Whltchor, Deltona
Claudia D. Mahoney, Geneva
DISCHARGES
Tanlord:
Alphonse Amlro
Ann M. Perry
Sharon L. Becker. DeBary
Fleurette Nash and baby girl. Deltona

FANNIE B. SMITH

JOHN SABO
Mr. John Sabo. 84. of 2083 W.
State Road 426, Oviedo, died

MEETING THE NEED O F EVERY FAMILY
• Pre-Need Planning
• Out Of State Transfer
• Local Burial
• Cremation
• Burial In All Military Cemeteries

PH. 834-8550

G ]G G ra m k o w -G a in e s
pT^I
Funeral Home

fi

Brisson G U A R D IA N F u n e ra l H o m e

cor fm f n t tractor*

1 st. 1664
MWH/Cftltlff.)

Cs*4lf

CO.
DISMAY YARD
17*92 — F«m Park
Ph. 3394968
Gena Hunt, Owner
■raau, MacMe A firaatte

W HAT ABO U T
PRE-ARRANGING
A FUNERAL?
T h is is s o m e tim e s p ru d e n t.
However, if you are thinking about
pre-arranging a specific funeral
you are urged to contact an exper­
ienced Funeral D ire cto r. Careful
counseling with him can avoid u n ­
wise planning w ith a salesm an.
We offer a m e th o d of F R E E Z IN G
T O D A Y S F U N E R A L C O S T S through
our new Pre-need Funeral Plan; brief­
ly, here are som e of the plans m ajor
features:

WILLIAM L. GRAM KOW
L.F.D.

GRAMKOW
F U N E R A L HOME

r - 7=-—

.J

4k

. ‘&gt;

1JOWEST AIRPORT BOULEVARD
SANFonO. FLORIDA

T E L E P H O N E (305) 3 2 2 -3 2 1 3
Locally Owned And Operated Since 1956

JAM ES E. SC H UITEM AN
L.F.D.

1

322-2131

Member NASO A RFC

SMITH. FAN NIE BAO LEY
— Funeral Mrvlces for Mrs. Fannie Bagiey
Smith. 74, 3350 Church St., Sanford, who died
Monday, will be held 3:30 p.m. Sunday at
Greater New Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist
Church, 1730 Pear Ave.. Sanford, with Pastor
James Lynn officiating. Interment to follow
In Restlawn Cemetery. Calling hours for
friends will be held 4 0 p.m. Saturday at the
chapel. Wilson Elchelberger Mortuary in
charge.

OAKLAW N
FUNERAL HOME
fhg 66/f

«k'V k«

BOWMAN, ROSE F.
— Funeral tarvlcat for Rom F. Bowman, 75,
of &lt;00 Santa Barbara Drive. Sanford, who
died Tuesday, will be held 10 a.m. Friday
with the Rev. Leo King officiating Viewing
will be Wednesday A t p.m. and Thursday 3 4
and tt. Survivors; son and daughter In law,
William S. and Mary Anderson, Sanford; two
grandsons. Jeffrey S. Anderson. Fort Pierce,
and Scott Anderson, Sanford. Burial will be In
Highland Memory Cardens. Forest City.
Brlsson Guardian Funeral Home In charge ot
arrangments

I D IREC T C R E M A T IO N $ 3 9 5 1

3 2 2 -4 2 6 3

aj* i

IF YOU WISH TO CANCEL. 100% OF TH E
MONEY PAID W ILL BE REFUNDED

FOR YOUR FREE REPORT CALL

Investment Banker*

F u iM ra l Notlcmm

• You M ake Th e D e cisions T o d a y A b o u t
Your Funeral A rra n g e m e n ts A n d C o sts
• Convenient Installm e nts If Needed
W ithout Finance C harges
• The Plan Is N o t Insurance

905 LAUREL AVENUE
SANFORD

S tuart-j a m c §

John Bagley. Rochester. N.Y..
Dennis Bagley. Sanford. Alonzo
Bagley. Tampa; brother. Robert
Plummer. Sanford; five grandc hi l dr en; six g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Wllson-Elchclbcrger Mortuary.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

Mrs. Fannie Bagley Smith. 76.
of 2250 Church St.. Sanford,
died Monday at Hill Haven
Health Care Center. Sanford.
Born Dec. 9. 1910 In Raleigh.
N.C.. she moved to Sanford from
North Carolina in 1925. She was
a homemaker and member of
Greater New Mt. Zion Missionary
Baptist Church. Sanford. She
was a member o f Pallbearers
Society 1.
Survivors Include three sons.

PENNY STOCKS
KEN MacFARLANE
1-800-331-5943

Monday at Lutheran Haven.
Oviedo. Bom June 14. 1902 in
Passaic. N.J.,* he m oved to
Oviedo from Garfield, N.J., In
1982. He was a retired postal
worker and a member of St.
Luke’ s Lutheran Church.
Oviedo. He was a past president
of Lutheran Athletic Association.
Garfield.
Survivors include his . wile.
Elisabeth; daughter. Eleanore
St. John. Alexandria. Va.; two
brothers, A n dr e w. Garfield.
Steve M „ Palm Bay.
B al dwl n-Fai rchl ld Funeral
Home. Goldenrod, in charge of
arrangements.

EDITH M. GLASS ANOS

PROUDLY SERVING OUR COMMUNITY FOR OVER 100 YEARS.
An Opportunity of the 80*

WF Kay K. land In Lt 50 8 55. Me Nall Oranga
Villa. &lt;173.300
Ganaral Homai to Mlchaal F Hanlon 1118
WF Sandra, Lt 45 Blk A Lakawood At Tha
Crowing* Un 3. &lt;100,300
Ganaral Horna* to Jo*a F Garcia 8 WF
Christina L. Lt I f Hollowbrook. &lt;103,300

Mrs. Edith Mirlnda Glassanos.
86. 997 Lake Marlon Drive.
Altamonte Springs, died Monday
at Life Care Center. Altamonte
Springs. Born Feb. 16. 1900 In
Lyme. N.H., she moved to Alta­
monte Springs from Daytona
Beach In 1972. She was a retired
restaurant manager.
Survivors Include a daughter,
Ani ta Borkowskl, Altamonte
Springs: son. Winston Judd,
A l b a n y . N. Y. : ni ne grandchildren; six g re a t­
grandchildren.
B a l d w ln -F a ir ch l ld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

LOCALLY OWNED A OPERATED

...Site

Amiri, Lt 31 Rlv«r Run Sac 1,383,300
Jannlfar Smith to John J Pytal 8 WF Batty,
Lt 35 Tlbaron Hills Ph I-A. MMOO
David W Ahlgraan 8 WF Katharlna to
Anthony Calabro 8 WF Graca. Lt 33 Woklva
Club E»t» Sac I, &lt;150.000
John T Warran 8 Norma to Mika M Hong 8

AREA DEATHS

150 DO Q TR A CK RO. • LON QW O OD

made slmlllar arrangements
with employees for rental of
"rem ote facilities," said City
P l a n n i n g and E n g i n e e r i n g
Director Bill Simmons.
City Manager Frank Faison
said he supports the rental to
Herman, for security reasons
and to avoid extensive upgrades
that would be necessary before
the home could be rented on the
open market. The city would
plan only to make the home
"habitable" for Herman. Faison
said.
Herman was the only city
employee who expressed an In­
terest in livong at the site, city
officials said.
Faison said he'll look Into
overall restoration costs and
report back to commissioners In
regular session next week.

system was necessary because
they said the shuttle was de­
signed with fail-safe backups.
The Challenger accident proved
the fallacy o f that assumption.
A crew could only parachute
out o f a shuttle If it were in * r z .
controlled glide, such as should
occur in the event of an englnp i
failure after the two b o o s tb V '
ro c k ets are J e ttis o n e d * ,^
Astronauts would ball out be­
tween altitudes of 20.000 feet
and 10.000 feet.
*
A way to bail out In
flight la required. Truly sak f
because studies Indicate a crew
would not survive If a shuttla
ditched In an ocean at 200 m ph.&gt;
O 'Connor said when;
astronauts practice computersimulations of a ditching, they
stop when the imaginary shuttle
is down to 25,000 feet above the ;i
ocean.
’ ,J|
"Th at’s the point." he said, '
"where we all kind o f look at '
each other and say. 'W ell con'
gratulations, you got us this far
but we all know we're going to
die anyway, what was the use of
trying so hard?"*
The emergency escape hatcH •
could also be useful In landing
accidents.
"W e really don't have a good
way to get out of the vehicle If
we have a crash l a n di n g . "
O'Connor said In the Interview.

REALTY TRANSFERS

Inflation Rate Creeps Up

F(*d&lt;rlc F. Qalntt Jr.
Funtral Director
Ownar

■
"One o f the problems with
simply Jumping out the hatch
right now is you're probably
going to run into the wing or the
OMS ( o r b i t a l m a n e u v e r i n g
system) pods." said astronaut
Bryan O'Connor in a recent
Interview. He was the astronaut
representative in a NASA study
of crew escape possibilities.
Truly said he and other of­
ficials "d o not feel comfortable at
this tim e" In ordering installa­
tion o f a ro c k et extractio n
system. It is still under study.
Astronauts Frederick Hauck.
Richard Covey. George Nelson.
John Kounge and David Hilmers
are assigned to the milestone
1988 m i s s i o n . C o v e y said
Thursday he and his colleagues
place " a very high priority” on a
bailout system.
Truly, a former shuttle com­
mander and Navy test pilot, said
every effort would be made to
provide a bailout hatch for the
first flight.
"I have every hope and we'll
do everything In our power to
make the first flight." he said.
" I f we can make either the first
flight or the second (light, that's
what I want to do. The crew
knows that's what I want to do.”
Before the Challenger acci­
dent. National Aeronautics and
Space Administration officials
did consider that an escape

CBS!

The GUARDIAN PLAN® r*~
Prearranged Funeral Program

GRAM KOW FU N ER A L HOM E
130 W . A IR P O R T B L V D .
S A N F O R D . F L 32771
I would Uka la k « in m o(« about your funtrtl arrangement plan. P!c«*« *«nd booklet.
I undcrtt«nd there l i no obligation.

NAME
ADDRESS
CITY ____
ZIP

STATE
PHONE

�Romanian Refugee Recalls Happy Childhood
In Austria Before Family Moves To America

M ic ro w a v e M agic

By Dorothy Oreomo
Herald Correspondent

Seafood Ideal
For 'Lite' Diet
T o continue our series on the
use of the microwave oven to aid
in the preparation o f food for
persons on special diets or Just
w a itin g to reduce caloric Intake
and) eat "llte " this column Is
about microwaving o f fish and
seafood.
Seafood Is an excellent source
o f low fat protein. There Is little
or no waste and when using the
microwave for the preparation
no additional fat is needed.
Cooking tim e is very short,
approximately 3-4 minutes per
pound, or until the fish flakes
easily or becomes opaque. Avoid
overcooking because the product
becomes tough.
My favorite fish Is grouper and
then red snapper. One pound
cao serve four nicely and is so
easy and quick.

MICROWAVE GROUPER
OR RED SNAPPER
'4 teaspoon tarragon
V4 teaspoon black pepper
Vt teaspoon onion powder or 1
teaspoon fresh chives, chopped
1 pound g rou p er, or red
snapper
6-8 slices of lime or lemon
Dash o f paprika
C om bine tarragon, pepper,
and onion powder. Arrange fish
In 8x8 Inch baking dish with
thickest portions to the outside
o f the container. Sprinkle with
seasoning mixture. Cover with
wax paper, microwave on 100%
pow er 3 minutes, rearrange
pieces and top each with a slice
o f lime; cover. Microwave on
Makes 4 servings.
Prepare the vegetable and fish
in the same container. It's a low
calorie meal In one.

PISH FLORENTINE
2 packages (10 ounce each)
frozen chopped spinach
2 tablespoons dry minced on­
ion
14 teaspoon grated lemon peel
■4 teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon pepper
Vi teaspoon dry mustard
2 tablespoons grated
Parinesan cheese
1 teaspoon parsley flakes
■4 teaspoon paprika
L pound fish fillet — such as
sole
Place spinach packages In
oven- Microwave on 100% power
minutes or until packages
a re no longer frozen. Drain
sppiach well and place In an 8x8
Inqh baking dish. Stir in onion.
letjlon peel. salt, pepper, and dry
mqstard. Spread spinach mixtuijk evenly over bottom of dish.

Com bine Parmesan, parsey
and paprika. Set aside. Place fish
on top o f spinach mixture. Cover
with wax paper. Microwave on
100% power 4 minutes; rear­
ran ge and s p r in k le with
P a r m e s a n m i x t u r e . C o v e r.
Microwave on 100% power 2-6
minutes or until fish flakes
easily.
This recipe makes a good
luncheon salad that is a little
different than the ones usually
found

HOT TUNA SALAD
2 ribs celery, chopped
2 green onions, chopped
114 tablespoons lemon Juice
V4 teaspoon dill weed
14 teaspoon tarragon leaves
2 cans (7 ounces each) tuna,
drained
1 (2 o u n c e ) j a r c ho pp ed
pimento, drained
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
2 cups alfalfa sprouts
1 la r g e to m a to , cu t Into
wedges
In a 1 quart casserole combine
celery, onion. lemon Juice, dill
and tarragon: cover. Microwave
on 100% power 3-5 minutes or
until heated. Stir In mayonnaise.
Serve over sprouts with tomato
wedges.
A pound o f shrimp can serve
four when It is used In this easy
Creole dish. In Louisanna this is
often Friday night supper.

SHRIMP CREOLE
1 can (1 6 o u n c e ) w h o l e
tomatoes, or stewed tomatoes
1 medium oulpn, chopped

Vi teaspoon pepper
Vt chill powder
1 hiedlum bay leaf
1 pound fresh shrimp, shelled
and develned
C o m b i n e al l I n g r e d i e n t s ,
except shrim p In \Vi quart
casserole, breaking up tomatoes
with spoon; cover. Microwave on
100% power 8-12 minutes or
until green pepper Is tender and
sauce Is bubbly, stirring once.
Stir In shrimp cover. Microwave
on 100% power 3-5 minutes or
until shrimp Is Just opaque,
stirring several times. DO NOT
OVER COOK. Let stand 3-5
minutes. Remove bay leaf. Serve
over rice.

MICRO-COOKED RICE
1 cup long grain rice
2 cups water
1 teaspoon butter
V* teaspoon salt.
Measure rice, salt and fat
(butter) Into a 3 quart casserole,
stir In hot water. Cover and

See PISH. SB

All In a day’s work Is some*
thing Wanda Peltzer takes in
stride, whether It's homemaking
or helping to run the family
owned business at home. Our
Cook of the Week Is a petite
bundle of energy with a quick
smile and a charming accent
t h a t s he d e s c r i b e s as
"southem-German."
From her spacious home, deep
In the woods o f Lake Mary. Mrs.
Peltzer reflects on a time when
she was a child and her family
fled their homeland o f Romania
to escape the Russian army
during World War H. "W e lived
In Austria for seven years." she
says, "but things are not as bad
to you as a child. You don’t
worry about things as an adult
would. My mother had to worry
about feeding us. Right after the
war. there was very little to eat,
my dad had to work away from
home, and we lived with 21
people to a room."
Happier times arc foremost In
her thoughts, though, as Mrs.
Peltzer recalls. " I had a very
happy childhood. I remember
relatives baking things for us,
the children, because my mother
worked In the store and didn’t
have too much time to cook or
bake. I have aunts who brought
us goodies, and I'd go over there
and they always cooked my
favorite meal. At that time. I
l i k e d C r e p e s S u z e t t e and
chestnut puree, which is un­
heard of here, but one aunt
made that for me with whipping
cream and I always requested
that. She made unusual dishes,
and anything I wanted, I g ot."
Along with her parents and
brother. Herbert, young Wanda
came to the United States In
1951. " W e l i v e d w i t h my
mother's sister In' Minnesota
until my dad built us our own
home," says Mrs. Peltzer. After
high school, she attended the
University o f Minnesota" and
become a lab technician, work*
lng In the hemutology lab o f a
local hospital. Mrs. Peltzer's
brother now lives In Vermont
and Is a computer analyst. "W e
see each other about twice a
year,” she says.
Mrs. Peltzer enjoys visits to
Vermont especially during the
winter. "It’s beautiful there,"
she says. "W hen I visited there,
it was supposed to be snowy but
It wasn’t, and 1 Just loved It.
Even without the snow, they
think It's so bleak, but It looked
beautiful. I paint; I do water
colors, and for that, you have to
look at It with a different eye.
But I love It here, and I love
Minnesota, too. Every place I
have lived so far. or visited. Is
great.”
When Mrs. Peltzer met her
future husband. Erwin, she re­
calls, "He was a good dancer."
They met at u soccer club
attended by various Europeans
who were all fans of the sport

H«raM Photo by Tommy Vlncont

Wanda Peltzer likes to make good meals that are quick and easy.
which was not yet popular In the prep
U.S. The club was formed by a s ' I
new Immigrants from all over sauc
Europe explains Mrs. Peltzer.
sala
"T h e St. Paul-MInneapolls area salai
had a lot of clubs going at that anot
tim e," she says, "and I met a lot Kiwi
o f people. We all had things In frier
common, because we had all ball:
come to the United States Just rclls
recently and there were all alon
different 'nationalities.: W e . h id ;tldn:
dances, and It wos a lot or fun.”
flnl*
Marriage and a family came casU
next, and the Peltzcrs are the cxcl
proud parents of five children,
beat
Michael, the oldest. Is married to tree
Barbara and they have a 5- whk
month-old daughter. Holly Ann.
tics.
"She Is our first grandchild." day
says Mrs. Peltzer, proudly,
near
Daughter Heidi was recently
Fll
married to Mark Bell, and theirs 89-y
was a festive holiday wedding.
Frar
Two more sons. Paul nnd Kurt, that
and another daughter. Chrlstl.
In t
c omp let e the family circle,
horn
"T h ey all know how to cook." ever
says Mrs. Peltzer. "T h ey can me I
survive. The boys are good was
breakfast cooks more than any- "an;
thing, but they do cook, because cour
they hunt and they cook all their thin
own gam e."
horn
For her daughter's recent
Or
wedding on Dec. 27. Mrs. Peltzer hobl

ikw ic tor ncr lamuy * cn*
Joyment. "1 w ent to North
Carolina on a palming holiday
this year with a group o f artists."
she says. "It was a beautiful
occasion. It was Just for artists to
sketch t ogether , and I did
charcoal sketches and brought
them home and painted them In
watcrcolors. It was nice and I
hope I get another chance like
that."
During the day. Mrs. Peltzer is
kept quite busy handling phone
calls and appointments, among
other things, for the Peltzer
Construction Co. "I am mainly

1 SALE STARTS THURSDAY
¥ PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY

C O N T IN U E S F U L L B LA S T !

And
More

Valentine Day, February 14th
Is the day to give the one
you love the gift she'll
love - See our beautiful lingerie

■■
EVERY BOLT OF
FABRIC. EVERY FABRIC ITEM.
EVERY NOTION, EVERY CRAFT ITEM
EVERY TOWEL, EVERY UPHOLSTERY
ITEM. EVERY DRAPERY FABRIC ITEM
YES. EVERY ITEM ON SALE!

J if

NOTHING H ELD BACK FOR THIS SALE!
ENTIRE STOCK IS REDUCED UP TO 100 O FF
3 2 3 -4 1 3 2
116 W. F IR S T ST,
.
C V

&gt;

HISTORIC
DOWNTOWN

ORLANDO

.

S A N FO R D ^Tt

Kim Bierfreund '
Models an Ensemble
by Vanity Fair

Westgate Square
2657 Hiawauee Rd.

ORLANDO
949 N. Semoran
Blvd.

SANFORD

FERN PARK

APOPKA

3832-34 Orlando Or.
Hwy. 17-92 Lake Mary Blvd.

131 S.R. 436
Fern Park

2303 L Semoran
(Piedmont Plaza At Wekhra)

�th e y’re
SimiYes
But Not The Same
that men can develop a condl-

I HAP A
\ WHAT A
PREAMABOUT ICOlMCJPFHCE
YOU L A S T
L
HlSHT.MlSS

tfH*T TH AT

Z PREAMBP Z F IL E D
HARASSMENT C H A R S ES

A SA IN ST YOU. YOU

WHAT W A S
Y0UAPREAM*

WERE P E M O TE P ^ --------\
T O PRIVATE / , , ^
AHPRHEP

420,000

P U fA M ?
WHAT
PftFAM ?
iM tV fd
. prcam ;

s il l y ? h o w

epectallata at a medical center.
DEAR DR. G O TT - I had
villous adenoma removed from
the lower part of m y colon,
Every six months, m y doctor
does a complete colonoscopy,
Just what is this condition?
DEAR READER - Villous
adenoma is a slow-growing,
spongy tumor o f the Targe intestln e. A lth o u g h m ost
adenomas are benign, some are

pre-mallgnant (that Is. they cal
lead to cancer). Once a patieij
has had a villou s adenomi
removed, he or she must b
periodically checked to mak
sure that no new growths hav
appeared. Y ou r d octo r'
approach is appropriate in orde
to save you from more serlou
trouble in the future.

□Eon B o n e n o n
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n n n n
n n n n n n n n
n o n
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(s N s jY

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group

Knmm SgSSJTT,?)

O P IN IO N ^

o w n a r fip .

tgFlightiMB bird

22 Aetraaa Franela 21 Homan bronta
23 Sprint month 24 Period of time
28 Wiahee (at)
28 Scold
rtptatMly
27 Lagand
31 Master In India
28 Air (comb,
34 Consbeoring
form)
shrub
35 8mear
37
________ monstsrS
s
1
38 Playing card
40 Actress Martha IS
T H IN S S WERE S IM P L E R
WHEN I W AS V O L IN S ...
N O C A H T R O U B L E S ...
LESS P A T I N O . . . p=

F E W E R SOCIAL FUNCTIONS
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Declares
Government
agent (comp,
wd.)
49 Short for Susan
50 M sl_____
(cocktail)
52 Beast of burden
54 Pallid
58 Fencing sword
60 Bound
62 Cry of
affirmation
63 Ancient musical
instrument
64 Atomic number
(abbr.)
65 551, Roman
66 Tennis player
Arthur
67 Sinister look

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30 Farewells
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41 Andes country
44 Light beam
46 Legal matter
48 Of birth

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51 Conatallation
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55 Jekyirs
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57 Rivsr nymph
59 Wide ahoa tin
61 Compass point

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MIL MEN AND LITTLE MISS
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.Sometimes an unblocking play
is needed for a reason other than
simply taking tricks In the suit,
Unblocking can create additional
e ntr ies to the dummy , for
example. When dummy's seven
of spades was played at the first
trick. East played low. Declarer
also played low. unthinkingly,
und then took the A- K of
diamonds. Now he played the 10
of spades, intending to finesse
the Jack and play the diamond
queen. But d ecla rer's carelessness had given West an
opportunity to exercise some
Ingenuity. Realizing that declarcr might Just need two
entries to dummy and hoping
that declarer had not started
with a four-card spade suit. West

put up the spade king smartly.
D e c l a r e r c o u l d n ow take
dummy's spade ace and try the
queen of diamonds. When 'the
Jack of diamonds did not fall, he
could not come to nine tricks
b e f o r e the d e f e n d e r s took
enough tricks to set the contract,
Declarer gained nothing by his
play to trick one. It's easy to see
that either defender might have
started with four diamonds to
the Jack. If that Is the case. It Is
imperative for South to win the
opening lead with his spade
queen. That way. he cannot be
d ep ri v ed o f two entri es to
dummy and will easily make his
contract, even with the unfortunate diamond distribution. The
lesson is simple — plan the play
before playing to the first trick.

NORTH
♦AJ 7
*65
♦ Q 1095 3
♦ 842
WEST
.
♦ K 986 5
♦KJ 9
♦ 86
♦ K 97

EAST
432
*Q 1
♦J 7
♦ Q1
SOUTH
♦ Q 10 4
♦ A 742
♦AK
♦ A J 53

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West

North

East

Sooth
14
2 NT
Pass

Opening lead: 4 6

HOROSCOPE
kept in perspective.
A R IE S (March 21-Aprll 19)
Proceed cautiously with any new
business contact you make at
YO UR B IR T H D A Y
this time; don't get too closely
J A N U A R Y 2 2 ,1 0 8 7
tied to someone who Isn't all
In the year ahead you may be you’d hoped,
a bit impatient and tempted to
TAU R U S (April 20-May 20)
abandon ventures before they Too many overlapping interests
fully mature. However. If you could complicate life for you
stick things out, your rewards today. Be sure what you un­
will be substantial.
d e rt a ke you can serve
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)' satisfactorily.
There Is a fine line between
GEM INI (May 21-June 20) Be
assertiveness and aggressive- prepared to cope with your own
ness in career situations today, problems today where your work
Stepping over the line could is concerned. People on whom
have negative effects. Get a Jump you were counting may have
on life by understanding the other involvements,
influences which are governing
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A
you in the year ahead. Send for speculative, venture may sound
your Astro-Graph predictions good when you first hear of it
today. Mall $1 to Astro-Graph, today, but before you take the
c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box plunge, you’d be wise to in91428, Cleveland. OH 44101- vestlgate It more thoroughly.
3428. Be sure to state your
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) An old
zodiac sign.
issue which caused discord bePISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) tween you and your mate may
Guard against tendencies to be resurrected today. If it does
make mountains from molehills pop up. don't let It get out of
today. Trivial mishaps must be hand.
IA/SII D - ; m m
W ill D lin g ...

FRANK AND ER NE8T

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FOfl V A P P Y V

V IR O O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Instead of being your usual
helpful self, you may turn down
a request for assistance today
because it is demanded of you
rather than asked politely.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) De­
sires for Instant gratification
could cause you to spend funds
thoughtlessly today. Think of
tomorrow's needs, not Just im­
mediate ones.
8CORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If
you show the same consid­
eration toward the family that
you show outsiders, everything
will be harmonious on the
homefront. If not, be ready to
duck.
8 A G IT TA R IU 8 (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Responsibilities which you
leave unattended at this time
will weigh heavily upon your
mind and thus spoil what could
have been a happy day.
C APR IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Participation In frivolous
activities today could end up
costing you a bit more than you
counted on. Having a good time
may prove expensive.

1 S-SANPY?-. IT'S
REALLY YOUlm

■ ■ ■ ■ ■

W n a Tin e U a y

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Words For
TV Baiters

VIDtOT

really fair to T V . The bad
television is so spectacular, so
wondrously awful, that the good
is often overlooked. But there's
plenty o f It.
Ted Koppel performs superb
Jounalistic l e ge r d e m a i n on
“ N igh tline" Monday through
Friday. Bill Cosby still makes
family life look like fun. “ St.
Elsewhere’ ’ proves that weekly
dramatic series don't have to be
boring and predictable.
The people on "Washington
Week In Review" do a fine Job
sorting out the news. The people
on "T h e McLaughlin Group"
and "Agronsky and Company"
do an equally fine Job arguing
about it. "Our W orld" provides
keen historical perspective about
a culture that is treated by some
as disposable.
"Growing Pains" and "W h o ’s
th e B oss?’ * e vo ke l aug ht er
without too much accompanying guilt about watching TV.
"P ee Wee's Playhouse" enter­
tains kids (and. be quiet about
this, some older folks) without
mor al i zi ng or w a v i n g guns
around. "Our House." too. is
pleasant viewing for children.
“ N ova" makes a scientific
subject understandable and. in­
teresting each week, even to
someone like me who once
considered dropping out o f
school rather than trying to
memorize the periodic tables.
“ Crime S t o r y " occasion ally
pumps life into the old gangster
format. Even "Miami V ice," a
series nobody ever suspected
had much to say. was capable of

O e y M acM U M a

“ S to n e 's W a r ." a brilliant
episode about U.S. ties to the
contras In Nicaragua. It was first
broadcast last October, before
the recent unpleasantness, and
was rerun Dec. 26.
Then there are special events.
"J . Edgar Hoover." running
this month on Showtime pay
TV. is a fascinating docudrama
about the life o f the late FBI
d ire c to r. Su rpr isingly, h e's
portrayed as a sort of ACLU
civil-liberties advocate who was
corrupted by a security-obsessed
Franklin D. Roosevelt. By the
end o f his reign, this TV Hoover
has b e c o m e a vulgar,
blackmailing, dishonest, racist
fruitcake.
In other words, you won't
confuse this film with the 1959
FBI m o v i e star ring J i m m y
Stewart.
Then there's music. "O n e
Voice." Barbra Streisand's first
live concert in years, has been
running on HBO. Streisand gave
the stirring $5.000-a-couple per­
formance last September to raise
money for liberal political can­
didates. Now conservatives and
people who don't have $5,000
can watch.
So give credit where It's due.
T V- bal te rs . A n y o n e with a
reasonably good cable system or
a satellite dish should be able to
find at least a few things worth
watching on T V once in a while.
Incidentally, later at that party
I mentioned, the fellow who said
he never watches TV put a pizza
cardboard on this head and sang
all three choruses o f "T h e Brady
Bunch" theme song.

NEW YORK terday (Jan. 20). Caaale
on "One Life to Live
different 'look now that HoU
Gagnier has taken over the rol
vacated several months ago b
Ava Haddad
Holly is well known to "Day
of Our Lives" viewers for he
taro-year stint on that show
Ivy Jannlngs. Because HoOy wa
working on a non-contract boa
for "DOOL." she was free t
accept the role of Caasie. whic
she did without healtatlor
"DOOL" does not plan to recai
the role of Ivy.
- .
Holly's acting career begii.
nlngs are made o f the sarr
fabric as a soap opera p lo t T I
story goes like this: Holly wi
working as a waitress. She Jui
happened to serve lunch to
Hollywood agent who told hi
she ought to pursue an actir
career. The agent sent Holly c
an I nt er vi ew: H o lly won
guest-starring role on "Quincy
and her career has been ofT ar
running ever since.

1*00

S(U)QSSMASMAIU/ LSHMfl
• (e)KI*QHTNOCR

lit* to GoofQB urinwin tutufM
mnsirsi norformficRR bv Sarah
Vaughan, Tha Manhattan Tranatar,
opara slogan Qaorga Martitl and
Prisdia Baahaoia, and boat com*
poaar-parformar Marvin HamHach.
AJa°, M ty Cariala Hart sharoaparaonal vnamortaa of tha compoaar.

•

AN NE SW ARD! w ho pla:
nurse/nlghtclub sin ger Ly
Montgomery on “ As the Wor
Turns." helped to make this pa
holiday season pleasant f&lt;
nearly 3.000 American Indh
children in South Dakota.
For several months before tl
holidays. Anne collected near
700 gifts from her "A T W '
co-workers and personnel at t
CBS Broadcast Center
M a n h a t t a n . A n n e and hr
" A T W T " castmate. Lisa Brow
(Iva Snyder) then flew to Sou
Dakota to distribute the gift
With a little help from a bo&lt;
com pany. Anne had enouj
gifts for all of the children w
arrived to greet her and Lisa.
Lisa, by the way. will Joum
to Albuquerque. N.M.. in Febi
ary. where she will be one of t
Judges for the Miss U.S.A. Pt

12:06

MUSfCjMOM)
n ® rtC O U K T K Y (T U «-rW )

IF

6'35
© ANOY GRIFFTTH

7 *0
® NEWLYWED GAME
PM MAGAZINE Format
Apollo aatronaut Walter M. Schlrra
Jr.; a factory that manufacturaa
NFL footballs.
O JEOPARDY
(11) BARNEY MILLER
(10) W0N0ERW0RK8 "Wafting
on Air" Baaad on tha itory by Ray
Bradbury, this drama focuaaa on
Danny, a wheelchair-bound young
boy who tight, to bocoma pari of
tha space program. Lynn Redgrave
star*, g
• (I) MOVIE "Tha Young Runa­
ways" (1978) (Part t of 2) Gary Cotkn», Anna Francis. Out lo raunlts
har brother, and listers, a feisty
12-year-old must outwit her par­
ents. tha ponce, a TV news craw
and tha bank-robbing owners of har
trailer hideout. A "Wonderful World
of Disney" presentation.

So

(DAYS OF OUR LIVES
i f) ALL MY CHSJDRM
(tt)OICK
VANPYItt
jib
(W)
im WE’RE COOIONG MOfff
1 *6
©M
©
MO W

to raduoa har hua-

7:05
IB SANFORD AN0 SON

7:30

• (3) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with actress Afy Shasdy.
® O BETTER SHOPPING WITH
PAT BOONE
O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(11) BENSON

7:35
© HONEYMOONERS

S

8:00

® HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN An
out-of-favor |tzz pianist tries lo
start a new lie after suffering a
heart attach. In atsrso. g
® 0 NEW MIKE HAMMER An
amnesiac (Tony Dow) loads
Hammer into a deadly confronta­
tion with American and Soviet
3Tb*PERFECT STRANGERS Lar­
ry and Baftl try to outdo each other
M tha kitchen to Impress their re­
spective dates g
■ (11) MOVC “ Hawaii" (1968) Ju­
ke Andrews. Richard Harris. A mis­
sionary tries to change tha
Hawaiian,' customs, but time and
his wife's deeth change him Instaed.
O (10) AN EVENING OF CHAMPI­
ONSHIP SKATING US. amateur
and professional skaters star In thia
Harvard University skating exhibi­
tion that Includes • filmed retro­
spective ol former champions.
B (I) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Kentucky at Vanderbilt (live)

m
(M l r a
O N T H S PROS;
A M E R IC A ’S CIVIL R IG H TS YEARS.

1964-1966 (Premiere) Julian Bond
narrates this examination ol black
America's light lor equal rights. In
this episode: Mote Wright testifies
agamsl the two white men accused
ol murdering his nephew; Rom
Parks refuses lo give up her seel on
a Montgomery (Ala.) but. g
a m MARY TYLER MOORS

10:30
10:35

11:00
) a® © 0 ® O new s
(11) INN NEWS
(10) DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
|(8) BARGAINS TONIGHT

i8
(«

11:30

© © TONIGHT SHOW Host
Johnny Carson. Scheduled: come­
dian Robert Klein, singer Phytlts Hy­
man. In stereo.
© O M*A*8*H
© O NtGHTUNEg
© (11) LATE SHOW Hoal: Joan
Rivers Scheduled: author Nancy
Friday ("Jealousy"), comedian
Sieve Mittlemen In stereo.

12:00

IADOERLV
NIGHTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. Scheduled: actor Omar
Sharif. In stereo,
a (S) NIGHT OWL FUN

12:30
B ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVI0
LETTERMAN From February 1986
actor Alec Guinness, magician Kamaar, |an musician Tito Puente
and “ Lets Night's" Chris eiiioii
make appearances. In tlarao. (R)
© O MOVIE "A Place To Go"
(1964) Bernard Lae. Rita Tushingham.
a (11) ASK DR. RUTH Topic: cou­
ples In business together. Quest
author Sharon Mellon ("In Love and
InBusmeM").

12:35
©
MOVIE Once You Kim A
Stranger" (1969) Paul Burke. Carol
lynley.

1:00
a (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

1:10
©
O MOVIE "Fm I Friends"
(1978) Susan Hetdfond. Carrie
Snodgrass

2:00
a (i i) dukes of hazzaro

8:05
© MOVIE "Tha Sons Of Kalla
Eldar" (1965) John Wayne. Dean
Martin. Four brothers avenge the
deaths ol their parents and the toss
ol their ranch.

830
© O HEAD O f THE CLASS Char­
t ' s forced lo consider cheating on
an aiam m orde* tu itUJn I s li­
cense aa a teacher g

9:00
B ® GIMME A BREAK! Tha Kiniskts and Nak part ways with Kalla
moving to San Francisco. Juke and
Jonathan getting a place of their
own and Samantha attending cdi in New Jersey Insiereo (R)g
O MAGNUM. P.I. Mac. a dead
ringer for Magnums deceased
Navy buddy, passes Mmsell off t l
the private detective.
© O DYNASTY Krystle searches
lor Blake and Alens In Singapore;
Nick Kimbell rescues Dominique g
ff) 110) IN PERFORMANCE AT THE
WHITE HOUSE From the East
Room ol tha While Mouaa. this Irlb-

»

AT A
8AVINOS

6:30
hews

S

I&lt;
CSS MORNING NEWS
M il) CENTURIONS
© TOM S JERRY ANO FRIENDS

6:45
a (10) AM. WEATHER

7:00

(8) CAROL BURNETT ANO

© MOVIE "Short Walk To Day­
light" (1972) JantM Brolln. Don
Mltcf.e1 A smaf group of peockt
ara trapped In a subway after an
earthquake destroys New York City.

2:20

© O MOVIE "Not Now. Com­
rade" (1976) Leslie Phillips. Roy
Kmnear.

2:30
©©NEW S

2:50
© MOVIE Countdown" (1988)
Robed Duvall. Jsmws Csan.

3:00
© O NIQHTWATCH
O (11) BIO VALLEY
B (6) NK1HT OWL FUN

4:00
© O MOVIE "On The Buses"
(1971) Reg Varney. Dons Hare
• (11) DALLAS

4:50
©WORLO AT LARGE

MORNING

5:00
O ®

THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY

Sanford
Dental Centre

Food

QOOO MORNING AMERICA
8 8 100”

i

(11)0.1. JOE
(10) FARM DAY

7:15
a (10) AJ6 WEATHER

7:30
© a MORNING PROGRAM
BdDTRANSFORMCRS
B (10) SESAME STREET (R) g

8:00
B (11) DENNIS THE MENACE

8.-05

9:30
a ©LOVE CONNECTION
B (1D PETTICOAT JUNCTION

9:35
© H O V E LUCY

10:00
a © SALE OP THE CENTURY
© O HOUR MAGAZINE
f fiO TRUE CONFESSIONS
ffl 111) FAIL GUY
(10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (R)

a

10:05
©MOVIE

10:30
a ©BLOCKBUSTERS
0 SUPERIOR COURT

8

(10)8-2-1 CONTACT g

11*0
O © WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(J) O PRICE IS RIGHT
© Q FAME FORTUNE 6 RO­
MANCE
• (ll)AUCE
B OO) M REMEMBRANCE OF
MARTIN (MON)
(10) AMERICAN CAESAR (TUE)
(10) THE BRAIN (WED)
B (10) NOVA (THU)
•
(10) EYES ON THE PRIZE:
AMERICA’S CIVIL RIGHTS YEARS,
1964-1968 (FRI)

8

11:30
O © SCRABBLE
© O WEBSTER (R)
• (11) MAUDE
AFTERNOON

12:00
O © © O © O NEWS
• (11) BEWITCHED
(10) BERGERAC (MON)
(10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
(10) MYSTERY! (WED)
• (10) ALL CREATURES GREAT
ANO SMALL D(THU)
“ (10) 1915 (FRO
(I) MID-OAY BARGAINS

iu— usN.

$340 *.

k h r u m is m

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itoewantawwi

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.UMIWUSM $44t I
Advadlsad Fees Da Nat IneluS* X-Rsya- ASSHIanal Isfwaa*
May S* Incurr*d Oapawdlas On iwakHSual Caneillww. _
H kltsd 019ft Is too WSffll,

CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT

321-3820

Ono

— pot Soufh in ■worm-

Man. Fri • sou. Is • pun, Sst • sun. In 1 pun.

aa dvwi irmav w» nui woofi wyj moq
law
8|a wll^k |lawSwft
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uvan wwaa
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OOO

Sanford Dental Centre

i

Laftovtr potato**? Cut up bolltd
potato** for hash brown*. Cut bak­
ing potatoes into wodgos, brush
with garllc-acantad oil, and roast
until brown.
OOO
▼awe

*------- -ilkk----- a -----Iijf cmcian 9
ii*vfo
a cnvrafaVif way*
Mut* with rod poppor strip*, *Uosd »callton&gt;. and aHead watar
ctwstnuta (or whatoaor'a loft otror
In YOUR rafrlgaratof). Add aalt and
if* anna
Md m
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mjivoa
itlOt SofAM ^w
UPfifNl
|M
PWM
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— a apiaah of balsamtc trtnogar.

" General D entistry"

Pntnr D. Wnisbruch. D.D.3., P.A.
Jomns D. WWksmson. D.M.D.

W EDNESDAY SPECIAL
3 P is e s Dinner!

OOO

A warm knit# cuts amoolhly
through frozon mouaa* or Ico
cream cakt. Dip knife In hot watar
and dry before aiicing.

*2

OOO

3 pieces of golden brown Fam ous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and tw o fresh, hot biscuits.
COUPON

OOO

r

Evan calorie counters love to eat at

Featuring ■■■
WEDNESDAYS SPECIAL
■ m a in u M r a

y t. n m ft

DELM0NIC0 STEAK

*2.95

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

4 FO R

i
i
i
i
i
i
i
i

COLONIAL ROOM RESTAURANT

of two

79

«

y

a

a

Look at what you get: 8 pcs. of golden brown
Famous Recipe Fried Chicken, 1 pint mashed
potatoes, Vi pint gravy and 4 biscuits. A n entire
family dinner for only $7.99.
Good Thura., Fri., Sat., Sun.
C O U P O N

J

1

I
Colonial Room
115 East Flrel SL
Downtown Sanford Florida

2*0
) ANOTHERWORLO
© o &lt;) ONE UFE TO UVl
i oI (1n1) ANOY GRIFFITH
© H(1
O0]) MORE MAGIC METHfS
MOIL (MON)
« (10)JCYOFPAMTMG(TUI
(10) MAGIC OF OIL PAST Q
(WED)
B (10) PAINTING SOUTTfN
LANDSCAPES(THU)
a (10) PAINTING CERAMICS $)

8

2:35
© WOMANWATCH (FRI)
3 *0
K SANTA SARSARA
QUONG LIGHT
GENERAL HOSPITAL
l ( 11)SC008YD00
) ( 10) MOTER ROGERS (R)
) (I) MIO-OAY BARGAINS
3 *5
© TOM 4 JERRY ANO FR1ENI

SANFORD
1905 FRENCH AYE.
HWY. 17-92

Who toys the food's good at
C O L O N IA L R O O M
JUm

JSV fOmf ifmHB WOO m OtOtO Wttfl MS.

M

.

P.O . M E A T S

PRESH MEATS and FRESH SEAFOOD
I

THE MOST MODERN BUILDING AND EQUIPMENT IN THE STATE.

|

UPPER ROOF PARKING FOR YOUR COMFORT A CONVENIENCE.

2 3 9 7 S . French A v e . Ph. 3 2 1-2 3 9 8 S a n fo rd , Fla .
COMPUTE LINE OF
SEAFOOD FROM M ULUT
TO CAVIAR

3:30
* (11) SMURFS'AOVENTURI
(W) SESAME STREET(R)C
4 *0
MAGNUM. P.L
DfFFRENT STROKES
_ JEOPARDY
(11) THUNOERCATSg
_ 8COOBY DOO(TUE)
B (S) AMERICA'S BIGGEST
GAINS
4 *5
© SCOOBY OOO(MON, WE^RI)
4:30
© O THREFS COMPANY
© O CARO SHARKS
(11) 86VERHAWKSg
(W) 3-2-1 CONTACTg
FUN! STONES(TUE)
4*35
© FLINT8TONES (MON. WE^RI)
5:00
©DIVORCE COURT
O M*A*8*H
O HOLLYWOOOSQUAB
(It) FACTS Of UFE
(10) OCEANU8 (MON)
(10) UNOCRSTANOMQ H|lAN
BEHAVIOR(TUE)
00) BUSINESS niE(R)&lt;*»
(W) MONEY PUZZLE(TH
8 (10) ART OP BEING ►4AN
(FRO
©OILUQAN-8 ISLAND(TU
• (I) RAMBO

a
a

©

5 *5
OllUQAN'3 ISLAND 40N.

WED-FRt)

5:30
O ® PEOPLE S COURT
© •© © N E W S
• (11) JEFFERSONS
• (10) OCEANU8 (MON)
• (10) UNDERSTANDING I MAN
BEHAVIOR(TUE)
0 (10) BUSINESS FILS(R)(tD)
0 (10) MONEY PUZZLE(TF
• (10) ART OF BEING NMAN
(FRO
ROCKY ROAO(TUE)
(•) I DREAM Of ,‘EANNII
5:35
© ROCKY ROAD (UOnWeO.
THU)
©SAFE AT HOME(FRI)

CASSCUERRY
41 N. HWY. 17-92

MEAT PRODUCERS OUTLET

(11) MY UTTLE PONYK

FRIENDS
a (10) SECRET CITY

A Taste of the Country

700 AM ■700 PM CiOMd Sun.
Entor Thru Touchion-, Drug Storo

2:30
©BCAPITOL

9:00

9:05

'

T.

COOKING(WED)
a ( 10) WOOOWRKJHT8 8(P
(THU)
flP (10) FLORIDA HOME 0RI N
(FRO

8:35

©DOWN TO EARTH

$ I7 S

(10) FRENCH CHEF (TUE)
(10) MICROWAVES ARE

© BEWITCHED

the juoqe
© O DONAHUE
© O OPRAH WINFREY
• HD GREEN ACRES
(10) SE8AME STREET (R) Q
(S)
SHOP-AT-HOME ANO BA’VE
..............

IS L S S .

Z X S Z J T $334

Ih f

630
(11)FUNT8TONES
(10) MISTER ROOERS(R)

8!!

&gt;Slit« $ IS .

Thought

Q I DREAM OF JEANNIE

a ©

(Nos! To Fubfed
3407 OrksndO Dr.
Hwy. 17-W
FI 32771

HOPS TAKE THE BITE O U T O F D EN TAL COSTS!

for

© B AS TIE

chancee of passing

t i

if-

1.-00

EQUALIZER A Judgo aaka a

the bar exam. □

B

12:30

© (1 1 ) BEVERLY MUJNJjm

® ST. nStWHCRI Elwiteh

Lfrtk..
_
r o e com POST Hanry and Muhat'* tabta
doaan’t include a Mtttng for a aon
that wandar, Into their dinner party.

m

) WORDPLAY
YOUNG ANO THE

woman toe aosual favor, aa part of
O BKVmLY MLLSS4JU

130

©PERRY MASON

)CNN NCWS

want, to baftava mat tha Oaararv
afcya ara raatty hta long-fo*! parent,,

^

s m iii. (M m , . H u g h e , o s '
SOAP OPIttA BUFFS have ' "A T W T ") are signed to cottar ttg
p r o b a b ly already realised that
t h e C B S - T V movie “Shariai"
Anthony Ponxlni la the actor Wchanl.'* The romantic comedy
portraying Detective BoreBl « f vts‘Mated to air by the end cf
••A
ll My
14w Children.''
P h lM t e n •• "One
"D
tLife
l b to
In
I S M7.
‘All
1M
Live'.' fans fondly remember
ANN MARCUS has taken oyer
Anthony from his 7-year run as aa head writer on "General
Vlnnle Wolek. Anthony, aa Hospital" m the wake of Pat
Vlnnle. was one of the lint Falken-Smith's departure from
daytime soap acton to inject the Job.
humor Into his story lines.
EILEEN DAVIDSON (ASHLEY
Abbott on "The Young and the
Restless") and Hillary Bailey

Low-calori* “ cream” sauce for
paete calls for a cup each of lowtel - " f t * chaaaa and low-fat mUk,
buzzed together with an agg yolk.
Warm before toeelng Into noodles.

1(h00

§) S

106

f

aps ■;

SHORT T A U M t

TONIGHT'S TV

® ® a 0 «N «* s

9pt

out.

A fellow came up to me at a
party the other day and said he
never watchea TV. He reads this
column, he said, to find out what
he's not missing.
That's nice for me. but It's not

IYBSNQ

VW . i I ' l l f

OPEN
MON - SAT S A.M. - S P.M.
CLOSED SUNDAY

FR ESH IN S H E L L - O A K HILL

OYSTERS $1
SHUCKED PINTS

$4.95

ea.

J

495
1

I T BAG

PRICES GOOD WED., JAN. 21 THRU WED., JAN. 28
W E S TE R N •G R A IN FE D

BOSTON
BUTTS

U.S.D.A. C H O IC E •E X TR A LEA N
*

y 9 G R O U N D ;^
a

1

CHUCK

G U L F -P I N K -S M A L L

C A N A V E R A L •W H IT E

FRESH j a 9!_5
SHRIMP *1

FRESH
JU M B O
S H R IM P

FRESH

W HOLE

,a

FRYER
LEG
Q UARTERS

1

»

$Q49
O
lb.

FRESH
$A29
r
FLOUNDER
Z
3
.

LB&gt;

F IL L E T S

$5.95

lb.

• *

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L &lt;j‘

Jar. 21,1*7

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71— Help Wanted

CLASS!
S«minol«

CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA.
IN AMO TOR
SEMINOLI COUNTY
CAIBNO.!4M944-CA-t9-K
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION

jy s s n s s r

Orl

322*2611

CLASSIFIED D EP l
HOURS
Z

PLAVCO MORTGAOE
COMPANY.
INC

• t M U L -i c M P J L

RATES

Whaq Yaw Can Live In

Z

Plaintiff,

»*.
D A N E M S C H U T T E AND.
LYN D A D.SCM UTTE.
HIS WIFE,at al.,
_
Defendants.
NOT 1CI OF SALE
NOTICE N hereby given that,
punuent to to# Order of Final
Judgment el Foreclosure en­
tered In IMa cauaa, in toe Circuit
Ceurt al Seminole County,
Florida. I will toll toe property
altuatod In Seminole County.
Florida, daacrtbadaa:
L e t IS O . T R A I L W O O D
E S T A T E S S E C T. TW O , ec-

Florida, al 7:X o'clock P.M. on
February *, )X 7 . t o canaidw
Zoning Ordlnanca al toe City al
A portion a l that certain
property lying Eaat al Saoboard
Coaatllno Railroad RlgM-al-Way
•na DiTwnn nirpon souivviro
and Mto Street (C R MA I la
N UM IM uttlpto-Fam lly Realdantlal Dwelling) Dlatrlct to
being more particularly de­
scribed ee follows:

N O TIC E O F ACTION
To: CHA R LES I . F R Y '
Residence somewhere In
Pennaytvonla
44ta Chipmunk Rd.
i i l i l l t l a l u-oe ---------- *
ifiiuuifciury,
Y O______
U AR E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that a Petition tor
Diaealutlon of Marriage haa
been tiled agatoat yaw by your
praaant wlto, PRANCES LYNN
PRY, In toe above-atatod Court
and you are required to eerva a
copy at your written datanaaa. II
any. an Hotel no M. Blum, Ee
quire, wife's attorney, whoee
addroaa Is 701 E. Altamonte Or..
Suita lie, Alternant# Springs.
Florida 23701. on or before
February 23.1107, and to file the
original ot u id datanaaa with
Clark al I ha Circuit Court,
Seminole County Courthouse,
X I N. Park Avenue, Sanford,
Florida 12771, either before
service on too wile's attorney or
Im m e d ia t e ly th o r a a fta r .
Otherwise, a default will bo
entered against you for the
relief damandad In too Petition
for Dissolution of Morrlogo.
WITNESS my hand and aoal
ot this Court on too Itto day of
January. 1117.
(CIRCUIT COURT SEAL)
David N. Berrien
Clark of toe Circuit Court
By: Cacalla V. Ekom
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January It, X.
Februery4.11.Ha7
O E K - t H ___________________
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice la hereby given toot I
am engaged In business at II
uiNpy nonow l o w * lcxtqwooo#
Seminole County, Florida 33730
under the Fictitious Noma of
EDUCATION A INNOVATION
ENTERPRISES, and toot I Intond to register sold noma with
too Clark ot too Circuit Court,
Stmlnolo County, Florida In
accordance wlto too Provisions
of too Fictitious Noma Statutes,
To Wit: Section $45.01 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/a/Charles T. Walsh
Publish December ]|, ISM A
January 7,14,11, IM7.
DEJ-1X

recordsd In Plat Book )A Pages
t l and IA of the Public Records
of Seminole County, Florida.
at Public Soto, to too highest
and bast biddsr, tor cosh, at too
West front door of too Seminole
County Courthouse, Sanford,
Florida, at 11:00 a.m. on FEB­
RUARY II, 1X7.
WITNESS my hand and too
Seal of this Court on JANUARY
M, 1007.
(S E A L )
DAVID N. BERRIEN
Ctork ot too Circuit Court
By: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 11,20.1107

19*15'50" West 300.13 toot to the
point at curvature of a curve
concave Southeasterly and
having a radius of 42S.00 ft.;
thence run Northeasterly along
said curve a distance at 579.01 ft.
through a central angle of
7 i* l0 ’ 0 0 " to the paint at
tangency of said curve; thence
run South 09*1S'32" East ISO.OO
ft.; thonca run North 00*44W‘
East ltst.00 ft., thonca run
North a r M 'l l " West 775.2S ft. to
the Right-Of-Way of Seaboard
Caasfllna Railroad Rlght-afWay; thonca run South 3**ir09"
17J.S1 ft. to the paint at
curvature of a curve concave
Northwesterly and having a
radius of 11X 01 ft.; thonca run
Southwesterly along sold curve
o distance ot 030.70 toot through
o control angle of tr43'30" to

GE RAR DO H. LAGUA and
LUC IANA LAGUA, his wlto.

In too Circuit Court of Somlnola
County, Florida. I will soil too
property situated In Seminole
Courtly, Florida, described as:
Lot 29. and too West X.02 toot
of Lot X . Block 43. SANLANOO
THE SUBURB BEAUTIFUL,
PA LM SPRINGS SECTION,
according to the plat thereof os
recordsd In Plat Book A Pago
4Sto, P u b lic R e c o rd s o f
Somlnola County, Florida.
ot public sale to too highest
and bast bidder tor cash, at the
West Front door of too County
Courthouse In Sanford. Florida,
at 11:00 A.M. on the 12th day ol
February, 19S7. Dated this 11th
day of January, 1107.
(SEAL)
DAVID N. BERRIEN
CLERKOFTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Phyllis Forsythe
Forsythe
DEPUTYCLERK
Publish: January 21, X. 1X7
DEK-119

c u r v e ; thonca run South
52‘ 04'JI" West continuing along
sold Right-Of-Way I7I.X ft. to
tooPOB.
All parties In Interest and
citizens shall hove an opportuni­
ty to bo hoard at said hearing.
By order of too City Com­
mission of too City of Sanford.
Florida.
ADVICE TO THE PUBLIC: If
a parson decides to appeal a
decision mode wlto respect to
any matter considered at the
above moating or hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record ol
too proceedings. Including the
testimony and evidence, which
record Is not provided by the
City of Sanford. ( FS 3M.0I03)
H.N.Temm, Jr.
City Clark
Publish: January 21 A February
1.1X7
DEK-43

N O TIC E OP
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 2195
Orlando Dr., Sanford, Somlnola
County, Florida 32771 under the
Fictitious Nemo of PRETTY
PRESS, and toot I Intend to
register said nemo with the
Clark of the Circuit Court,
Somlnola County, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
ol the Fictitious Noma Statutes,
To-Wit: Section S4S.09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/s/ Alfred A. Lossard
Publish December 31, 19S4 A
January 7,14,21,19t7.
DEJ 200

D E C LIN ES
Noon The Day ifo ro Publication
Sunday • Don Friday
Monday • 9:0( A.M . Saturday
NOTE: In too event ot toe publliM^at errora In advertisements. toe San
lord Herald shell pukilth toe advor anent, after It haa been corrected el
necMttotoeadverttcerbuteuchln ttene ahell number no more toen one
ID.

12— Lagal S trvicts

55— Business
Opportunities

* * * * * * * * * * * *

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY

CHRISTINE
************
25— Special Notices
ATTENTION SINOERSt
Write tor free catalog- Over 700
songs. Sing wlto your vary
own band.
Nashville Sound Flus You

For Details; 1-400-422 425*
Florida Notary Association
REWARD $M for Info on loco
lion ol homemade steal gala
hinged on 4*' steal post. "M iss­
ing" from farm on W. 4i
across from Fleet Reserve.
Call 211*431 or leave message
at lOllW.lst St.

Logoi Notice

?8smg 9Mk

m

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the City Commission of the City
of Lake Mary, Florida, that said Commission will hold a Public
Hearing on February 19. 1917 at 7:X P.M., or as soon thereafter as
possible to consider tha second reading of on Ordinance entitled;
ORDINANCE NO.2S7
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA, TO
EXTENO ITS TERRITORIAL AND MUNICIPAL LIMITS TO
ANNEX AND REDEFINE THE BOUNDARY LINES OF THE
MUNICIPALITY AND TO INCLUDE THE HEREINAFTER DE­
SCRIBED LANDS SITUATE AND BEING IN SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA, PURSUANT TO FLORIDA STATUTES
171.044; PROVIDING FOR THE AMENDMENT OF THE OFFICIAL
ZONING MAP; PROVIDING DIRECTIONS TO THE CITY CLERK;
SEVERABILITY ANO EFFECTIVE DATE.
A copy ot too proposed Ordinance and the complete legal
description by metes and bounds con bo obtained from toe Of lice ot
too City Ctork. IX N. Country Club RoaJ. Lake Mary. Florida, from

Estates (Webstar Strati), and was! and south ot Lake Mary Woods
Subdivision, and Is shown In too mop below.
The Public Hearing will bo hold In the City Hall, IX N. Country
Club Road, Lake Mary, Florida, at 7:X P.M.. on February 19,1X7 or
as soon thereafter as possible. Said hearing may bo continued Irom
time to time until o final decision Is mada by the City Commission.
A TAPED RECORD OF THIS MEETING IS MADE BY THE CITY
FOR ITS CONVENIENCE. THIS RECORD M AY NOT CON­
STITUTE AN ADEQUATE RECORD FOR PURPOSES OF
APPEAL FROM A DECISION MADE BY THE CITY WITH
RESPECT TO THE FOREGOING MATTER. ANY PERSON
WISHING TO ENSURE THAT AN AOEQUATE RECORD OF THE
PROCEEDINGS IS MAINTAINED FOR APPELLATE PURPOSES
IS ADVISED TO MAKE THE NECESSARY ARRANGEMENTS AT
HISORHEROWN EXPENSE.
Publish: January 21,X,
February*. 11,1947
DEK-101

m
1r:

f it/ :
&amp;
7
-3- V
•Vr
•-*

PRO PO SED
S I T E TO

r
nit n

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by CONNIE WIENER

“ PWAK

JG

RWN

KTRBCHA,
MHR

OB

H

NU W TP U
YBCX

HKKH JCQ."

—

DWNU

QHL
D BC RHC L

LHCIJR.
P R E V IO U S S O L U T IO N : "II Is preoccupation with
possession ... that prevents men Irom living freely and
n o b ly." — Bertrand Russell.

Legal Notice
N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am angagad In business at 10S
Forest Avo., Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Comfy. Florida under
the Fictitious Name ot PRO­
TO TYPE. and that I Intend to
register said name with the
Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordanca with tha Provisions
ot the Fictitious Nome Statutes,
ToW II. Section 145 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/*/ Robert W. Herring
Publish January 14. 21, X A
February 4,1X7.
DEK-S2

UfOL. 7H6VS/1

ptnmn on mephons.

sex ,vs avjNG fran
wipe AToeer oanl~

.xzm eeefA N w m i
INAS (JNPeXMM MHPNO
UfANP PLANONme IB
mmiENN6 HB Lite.
IS IT
UNGCNT'

m

S t,

Legal Notice
N O TIC E OF
FIC TITIO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am angagad in business al 109
W o o d flt ld C l . , S a n to rd ,
Seminole County, Florida 32771
under the Fictitious Name of
PROCOMP, and that I Intend to
register said name wlto tha
Clark ol the Circuit Court,
Somlnola County, Florida In
accordanca with tot Provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes.
To-Wit: Section 145.09 Florida
Statutes 1157.
/*/ Rod Le Rocque
Publish December 31, 1X4 A
January?, 14,21.1X7.
OEJ-Xl

by Berke Breathed

BLOOM C O U N T Y

I

B E ANNEXED

/AL

CeWbnty Cipher cryptogram* are created horn quotation* by famous
peep**- Pa*t and present
Each tartar In tha cipher stands for
another. Today* eft* Ytqujls V

g a i)

t ) IT

UNStNT:

Mary Rd., Santord..... 32) x to

sez me vy-p -a m t
A&gt; tMltirtNO

mevrroexs.

' ^

HANGUP.

INTERNATIONAL Motal Build­
ing Manufacturer selecting
bultder/deeler In some open
areas. High potential profit In
our growth Industry. (101)
750-2200 Esl.1402_____________
OPEN YOUR OWN Beautiful
s h o o s t o r e . L A D IE S CHILDRENS MENS. Over 200
nationally known brans- Over
1.500 stylos • 40 50% btlow
wholesale prices. S13.100 to
S31.100 Incl. beginning Inven­
tory - training • fixtures A
grand opening promotions.
Coll: Prestige Fashions
_________ I 000-2*7 9127_________
AFTERNOON PAPER ROUTE
for solo. Longwood area.
Coll......... .................. 323-0X3

53— Mortgages
Bought A Sold

BOAT BUILDERS- Coble/
R o b a la h as Im m e d ia te
openings for boat riggers,
cabinet makers A assemblers.
Exp. helpful but net neces­
sary. Competitive wages A
benefits. See Walt Hamilton,
Cable Boat Co., M0 Silver
Lake Rd., Sanford Mon.-Prt.
0:Xom-4:Xpm. 322-33*0
CHURCH Y O U TH W O RKERPart time from Sept.-May.
Full time during summer.
Exp. In working wlto youths
roqulrod. Apply by colling
221-4271 Mon.-Frl.0to4:Xpm
C LE N IC A L OAL. 0200 wk.
Friendly smile wlnsl Handle
phones A light bookkeeping!
Train on computer I Terrific
future I AAA Employment, 700
W. 23to St..................222-5)74
CNA: Immediate full time posi­
tions. 7-3 or 1-11 shifts. Good
benefits A atmosphere. Apply
Debory Manor, 40 N. Hwv.
17 92, PeBary 4404*24.... EOE
COMPANY NIKD S YOUNO
Inexperienced A willing to
travel Individual lor rewordIng sales career. Call 747-0X5

CONDUCT UUMCftS
Earn $9 to t i l par hr. Musi
en|oy working outdoors. No
•xp. nec. For lull or part time
positions In Seminole Co. coll
tom to 1pm..... .... 013-000-7131

W E B U Y 1 st an d 2nd
MORTOAOES Nation wide.
Call: Roy Lagg Lie. Mlg
Broker, 1*0 Douglas Ave..
Altamonte................. 774-7757

71— Help Wanted
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
BOOKKEEPER
THE SANFORD HERALD Is
currently accepting resume’s
for an experienced A/C Book­
keeper. Duties Include pric­
ing. posting B billing on o
manual eystsm.
Requirements Include:
eTypIng Skills
o Calculator by Touch
a Pleasant Personality
o Computer Exp. a Plus

• Friendly Atmosphere"
•Job Security

! NO

FEE!

Report reedy tor work at 4 AM407 W. 1st. St..............Sanford

I you meat the above require­
ments and would like to be a
part of the Sanford Herald,
send resume' to:
SANFORDHERLAD
P.O. BOX 1457
SANFORD, FL. 32772-1657
Attn: Office Manager

FREE TUITION
TO REAL ESTATE
LICENSE SCHOOL

Legal Notice
MOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
ul by virtue ol that certain
Tit ot Execution Issued out ot
id under the seal of the Circuit
ourt o l O ran ge County,
lorlda. upon a final judgement
mdered In toe aforesaid court
t the 15th day of October, A.D.
X . In that certain case to ­
lled. Home A Commercial Irgation, Inc., Plaintiff. —vs—
|rtww Landscaping Inc. and
ralg Blam lre, Defendant,
hich aforesaid Writ ol Exacuon was delivered to mo as
fsqrlff ol Somlnola County,
lorlda, and I have levied upon
le following described property
wned by Kathy S. A Pllone S.
ltd Michael J. Weaver end
alg Blamlre. said property
Ing located In Seminole
o u n ty . F lo r id a , m o re
r tlc u la r ly described as
lows:
The Interest of Crelg Blamlre
f: East to ot Lots 324 and 329
lAP OF THE VAN ARSDALE
&amp;BORNE BROKERAGE CO'S
ID D IT IO N TO B L A C K
AMMOCK according to the
at thereof as recorded In Plat
xik t. Page 31. Public Records
Somlnola County. Florida,
d tha undersigned as Sheriff
Seminole County, Florida.
II at 11:00 A.M. on the 22nd
y of January. A.O. 1X7. otter
’ sale end Mil to the highest
Ider, for cash, subject to any
d oil existing lelns. at tha
ont (West) Door at tha steps
the Seminole County Courtjse In Sanford. Florida, tha
)ve described real property,
rhal said Mia Is being mada
Mtlsfy tha farms ol Mid Writ
i Execution.
ohnE. Polk. Sheriff
am Inote County, Florida
be advertised December 31.
tuary 7, 14 and 21 with tha
i e to be hold on January 33.
7
I J 202

NOTICE OF
. FICTITIOUS NAME
nice Is hereby given that I
ar»;ngagcd In business at 5*9
WJ.ake Mary Blvd.. Lake
M «, Seminole County, Florida
32 under the Fictitious Name
ol -IE REALTY SHOPPE OF
CQTRAL FLORIDA, and that
I lend to register said name
wi tha Clark ol the Circuit
Cod, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with the Provlms ol tha Fictitious Name
Sh tes. To-Wll. Section 445.09
Flfda Statutes 1957.
t JoeM . De Fill ppl
Pu sh Janua-y 14. 21 X A
FeLary 4.1X7.
0B S3

o A New Careeer
• A New Beginning
Call Fran Or Stu

323-3200

PIPE FITTER- 07 hour. Excep­
tional company I Local I Any
experience! Needs you now I
AAA Employment, 700 W. 2Sto
Street....... ................ 323-5174
PRODUCTION TRAINER. 04.X
hr. No weekends I Diversified
duties keep this spot Inter­
esting! Work In to# plant A
make del Ivaries I Fast raises
A sxcsllent bsnslltsl AAA
Employment, 700 W. 2Sth St.
Celt...........................222-SI7S
PRO O RAM ASSISTANT to
work In direct cere/trelnlng
position with msntolly re­
tarded. Call: 13) 7731.
PUBLIC RELATIONS/OFFICE
OAL, M hr. Classy company I
Will train! Must want career I
Handle customer orders A
process. Plush surroundings
you'll sn|oyl Will hire today I
AAA Employment. 700 W. 25th
St...................... Call:323-3174
R.N.- Full time. 11-7. Mad Surg.
Apply: West Volusia Memori­
al Hospital. 701 W. Plymouth
Avo., Deland. FI.____________
R O O F IN O / R S T IM A T O R /
SALESMAN Large single ply
rooting contractor soaking ex­
perienced soles Estimator for
Florida office. Sand Resume A
Salary requirement to: CFE.
Inc. IDS Thornhill Rd. Box 10,
Aubumdalo. FI. 13422________

T I R E D O F E A E N I N O for
someone else? Want to be
your own boss? Our successful
dealers are Independent busi­
ness people earning an above
average Income.
e
o
o
o
o
•
•

We Provide:
Established Accounts
Free Training
Immediate Cash Flow
Leased Vehicle
Group Medlcal/Uts
too Franchise Fee
Sto Royalty Payments

Small Investment required
secured by accounts receiv­
able end Inventory.
For details and confidential In­
terview, Call: Bill Butkus
_________ MOO-314-5451
SECRETARY ASSISTANT, S32S
wk You'll like thlsl Basics ara
all you needl Land It todayl
Handle phonos with o smile A
keep tha office In ordarl AAA
Employment, 700 W. 23th St.
Call...........................323-5174
TAX PREPARER Needed until
4/15/47, Call Phil Bettis

K e y e s
rt oaioa ;nc ..*c airons
KEYESH IN THE SOUTH
FULL-TIME/PART-TIME, Ca
ehler, lor alternoons/mldnlght
shirts A week ends. Apply In
person to ECOL, I * 1 W. *4
OROWER OR ASST OROWER.
to supervlM growing opera­
tion lo r sm all Dracana
Nursery, Call 1917079 or write
70S Terrace Blvd., Orlando.
FI. 1X03____________________
HAIR STYLIST, Experienced,
In Santord area, work your
own hours. Call 3221711_______
HOUSEKEEPER. Live In or
llveout. Child care. 4 days.
References........Call: 323 3229
LEOAL SECRETARY, with
word processing knowledge,
needed lor Lake Mary area
Immediately. Assignment to
last 3 months or more. Top
pay. no tee. Call: Ablest Tem­
porary Service at 321-3940 or
424-3279.
INSURANCE OAL FRIDAY,
S27S Personal lines axp. pre­
ferred, but will train people
person! Handle small office
while boss Is away. Lots of
varletyl Fun carMrl AAA
Employment, 700 W. 35th St....Call: 323-5174
LIOHT DELIVERY- Neat A
dependable, economy car j
must........................32)44*7
LIOHT OELIVERY TRAINEE$4 hr. Hay guys A galsl Great
chancel Local deliveries In
company pick-up. Learn In­
ven tory! Prom otes Irom
wlthlnl AAA Employment, 700
W. 75th St................. 323 5174

323-2123
TELEMARKETERS- Calling to
co. only. No residential calls.
Advance Mias for local benefit
concert. No weekends or night
work. 9:30 am to 5 pm, M-F.
331 48*7
TELEPHONE SALES- $5 per
hr. + bonus. Full or port time.
ALSO LIOHT OELIVERY: 9
am to I pm or S pm to 4 pm.
No oxp. necessary.....442 459*
TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs
mature person lor short tripe
surrounding Sanford. Contact
customers. We train. Write
H.T. Dickerson, Pres.. South
w estern Petroleum , Box
XIOOS, FI. Worth. Tx. 7410)
WELDER- SIS Top pay tor your
skills! In Sanfordl Est. com­
pany I AAA Employment. 700
W. 25th St..................323 5174

MARKETING DEPARTMENT
Of tha Rich Plan ol Florida
needs help In our Inside
advertising efforts. Exciting
part-time work wlto opportu­
nity to earn lull-time Income.
Pleasant work atmosphere,
flexible hours, $5.00 per hour
h TREM END O US bonus
structure.
Call today lor the details.
372-3443. ext. *02 or ext. 214.
ask tor Charles Berdet or
Jeanette Hell

NOW HIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
Operators wanted on all
operations. Wa offer paid holl
days, paid vacation, health
care plan, and modern air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rates. Will train qualified
a p p l i c a n t s . San- De l
Manufacturing. 73*0 Old Lake
Mary Rd- Santord.....331X10
NURSE AIDE: All shirts, expe
rlenced or certified only.
Apply Lekovlow Nursing
Center. 919 E. 2nd St- Santord

NURSES, AIDES,
COMPANIONS
HAPPY NEW YEAR. We need
you now. New benefits In
eluding group Insurance and
vacation. Free CEU'S. Dally
pay. Start A private duty.
MEDICAL PERSONNEL POOL
Cell:740-S244

ecxMedical
Personnel
'.Fool.

S A N F O R D ; 1 Ig . b d r m .
w/prlvato both, kit. prlv.,
non smoker, non-drinker. 045
wfcly + Iwkdep........ J31-4413

97— Apartments
Furnishad / R tn t

321-1590
* * * * * * * * * *
DENTAL ASSISTANT
TRAINEE- SSS No school or
•xperlence. needed! Will train
good worker I What an oppor­
tunity! AAA Employment. 700
W. 23th St....... .......... 323 5174
DIESEL MECHANIC- SI hr.
Needs today I Will consider
school or any exp. I Perma­
nent career I AAA Employment, 700W. 75th St....221-S17S
DRIVERS WANTSO. Domino's

liability Insurance.
Apply: 1910 French Ave. or
call 321 5000after Dam
EXP. PIZZA MAKERS A PREP
COOKS. Apply In person at
2*005. French Ave.

AD D IO YO UR INCOME
Sell Avon Now I
322 0459........o r.........223*

PART TIMR HELP NEEDED.
Gregory Lumber/True Value
ntrowtrv is now occwpvwvw
applications tor part time
stocking and cleaning parson.
X0M4ptoAva.,lontord.

ROOM FOR BIM TI
440.04weekly
X ) BrlortllflSt.
ROOM TO RBWTt Prlveto home
ecroea from ttoothrow, work­
ing tomato pritorred. Coll:
31119W. Aft. 4:333-4434
SANFORD- Clean room
Hoot. eir. uee ot
private; both.
I
____ Large posture for
kitchen.
horses avail, on property.
Cell:.........................333-5450
SANFORD, Furnished, walk to
town, park, toko. 455.45
weekly, 445-4030or 1313400

73— Employment
Wanted

SAMFORD, largo 2 bdrm.. wlto
screened porch. Complete
privacy. OX wk. + S2X sec.
dap-Call..............— .322-2X0

NEAR TOWN- 1 A 2 bdrm.. 075
A 005 weak. 0 IX deposit.
Call;_______ _______ 422-0214

RELOCATING
Short term leases, furnished
efficiencies, single story,
private, near conveniences.
SANFORD COURT APT.
222-2X1ex.N1________
SANFORD, Lovely 1 bdrm.
cottage wlto front porch 110
wkk. -t- 0200 soc. d ap.

ft— Apartments
Unfurnished/ Rtnt
a lF F IC .tA lB O R M .A P T S .
• FURN. A UNFURN.
• PAY WEEKLY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Elsa Whan You Can Live In

(T lir

H i lin in '

323-4507
MARINERS VILLAGE
ibdrms................ from $225
............................. 323 0470
NEAT- 2 bdrm. apt., kitchen
equipped, carpal, c/h/a. $330
mo. Includes water/Mwer.
garage lead. Call:...... $31-4013
RIDOEWOODARMS,
2540 Ridgewood Ave.
323 6*20
BAMBOO COVE,
200 E. Airport Blvd.
323 6441
SPECIAL on any available site
apts. $50 oft tha 1st 3 months
otafm onlhlaaM .. . .
SANFORD: 2 bdrm.. 2 bath,
waaher/dryer, carpet, central
air, mini blinds. $375 dis­
counted. British American
Realty....................... 629-1175
SANFORD: 2 bdrm., t bath,
adults only, no pets. $40 wk. or
1320 mo. + sec. dep. 479 0085
days.327- 1X7 or 327 2929 nights
SANFORD: 2 bdrm., 2 both,
can. heat A air, Ig living room,
eat-ln kit. wlto dishwasher,
washer/dryar. Adults or small
Child. 4*5 X I* .... or.... 194-3441
SHENANOOAH VILLAGE

* * $199 * *
Ask about move In special I
Call............................ 323-2920
1bdrm., I bath.............$335 mo
2 bdrm.. 1to bath..........$340 mo
o Central Heal A Air
o Pool A Laundry
FRANKLINARMS
1120 Florida Ave.
323-4450
SANFORD- Largo elllclency.
$75 a week plus Mcurlty.
Phone:......................321 5990

$299
MOVE IN SPECIAL
• New 2 bdrm. villas o Mini
Blinds o Hook ups
PARKSIDE PLACE APTS.
Just W. ol 17 92 off 25th St. Turn
tort on Hartwell. We're on tha

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent
GENEVA, 2 bdrm., I both
houM. turn, or unlurn.. big
yard. $500 Sac. Dep. $350 Mo.,
days 331 4*91, eves 332-2911
SUNLAND- Fully furnished
home, 3 bdrm.. Fla. rm., w/w
carpets, appliances A micro.,
storage tree. 1st. last, A sac.
_ li» » 1LJ32 *3X tor appointment

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
e e e IN DELTONA
•
e 4 HOMES FOR R E N T e *
__________ 4 e 574-1434 4 # __________
LOO HOME, Hwy. *15. 3 bdrm..
2 be., central H/A. water
cond. $550. Mo . 912 2S5 M1I.
$31-1412 after4, dep required
SANFORD- Large house. 4
bdrm.. 2to baths. Iron! porch,
plus 4 additional bedrooms/
study/ortlces: $425 per mo. +•
sec 322 4410..... or..... 372 4779
SPACIOUS- 3/2. family room,
fenced, c/h/a. no pets. $475 1st
A lest..............323-2711 alter 3

BABYSITTINO In my Sanford
home. Day or night, part or
full tim e.allege!...... 321 0974

91— Apartments/
House to Share
FEMALE ROOMMATE- 2 br„ 2
be. completely lum. houM.
$250 mo. Incl. util. 323 4245 or
323 4440 esk for Renee________
ROOM IN PRIVATE HOME.
Weekly rent, house privileges.
Call: 7*04790.... or....323 4193
SANFORD: Will share 3 bdrm..
2 both low nhouie. Rant
negotiable. + utilities A $200
dap Responsible person(s)
only.........321 0420,8!k for Bill
3 BDRM, 2 bath In very nice
neighborhood, kitchen A
laundry privileges. Prefer
female. 321 04l4.-.or...574 9419

Train To Be A
Traxl Agent • Tour Guide
Airline Reservationist
SUit locally, full tlma/part
time. Train on live airline com­
puters. Home study and resi­
dent training. Financial aid
svsllsbls. Job placeman)
assistance. National head­
quarters. IM P.,FI.

A .C .T . Travel S ch o o l

1-800-432-3004
Accredited member H.H.S.C.

�r-»-r # v y

f

&amp; W1»
V.vV
FsL-VytS

•* ja &amp; e
141— Hemet Fer Sale

141-Hamat Far Sate

WOULD YO U ”
! * te so*
YOUR HOME aRvarttaw

BALE BY OWNER- S fedrm.. 2

x w ir e a a L n a &lt; w r U m &gt; «M iM

117-0«ra«t totes

w iiiv in V lv IM / RfVn

»T. ipHN'B RIVERFRONTLarga 3 bdrm., 3 bath, can.
h/aplua turn, guast hatm .
non riwvv
l-blt-HIlar t-ao-Tttti
SUNLAND- 734 Owrakaa Or.. 3
bdrm., t bath, mzs mo. + aac.

Hopat*. CHI-........J334N1

3 BEDROOM. IV* Bath. I Nary
homo with acrasnad porch.
I31B S. Myrtle. $47* Mo. avail-

abtaiyi.CHI3a-3M3ast.333

H no coat la You? Ask

bath, Hr. f * m d yarB. *47,730
CHI:................-4*7-4337avaa.

MHFORDt Quiet, V I, MW
kW/feHh. Hew Hum. wvm ft

twinul
Y(), A
*&gt;
ntU
l|&gt;,

A * . ------ -glBEM

w s s r '-

•OOD USED MOTORS A
transmission*. Installation

eveaeBte.......JCa^jaHB*

W U 4 H C e M «!

T

LETS TRADE!

2)4— Trucks/

MP.ta-n.Dvt--------- .um-.
A AUTO lN*U*A*4CE WOULD
2344S. French Av«....... »73B3

CHEVROLET VAMSi

■bK.Fra*»khu».Ml-m4

7 67-0606

185— DuplexTriple*/Rent

CHIVY LUV- *48. 4*4. rail b*r.
with wtnch. •/«. fel.Nfe.
CHI:........ JM-THi After Bytl

aaaaaaaaaaaa****

HOT W A T IR Solar System,
new. Balng transferred. mwt
aall.MOOO..................3403434
.30-183137 pm

238— VthlclM

Wanted
SprlnB«.CallT7A.HH

W I FAY TOY H tor wracked
can/trucka. Wa Sail guarantaad uaad parts. AA AUTO
IA L V A O I at P a l i 9 i m w

14t— Commercial
Property/Sail

1»S— Macfiintry/Tools
EQUIPMENT AUCTION
10 AM SAT., JAN. 24
PARTIAL LISTING
Deters, rubber tire leader*,
loader beck hoes, fork lifts4AM to 14.000 Ibe.. traffic A
vibrator rollers, hubor grater,
term tractors, a ft.. 40 ft.. 43
ft. bucket truck*. 1 Wayne
Chipper*. BAM lb. A 14AO0 lb.
■earn truck*, unit truck
c r a n e , *79 C a t o M 0 R
excavator, *7] John Deere
MIA. *79 John Deere 742A
Scraper, 79 CAT 930 with tree
shear, 4400 Graded, 3 diesel
anginas. 4 Inch pump*. 133/140
CFM Compressors, Cummins
power gen erator. Otkoth
truck mixers, 23 trucks In­
cluding tlnglo. double, A trlaxtes, chasay cabs. A dump
trucks. B tractor units soma
with wet lines, 7 drop deck A
tall-a-long machinery trailers,
3 tiro truck*. A dbl. dackar bus
More A more equipment A
mlsc. Item* arriving dally.
Sal* conducted by:

OWNER MUST S IL L I 3 bdrm
It* bath, no q u a llly ln g
assumable, Call 3334B34

.107— Mobile
Homes/Rent
ELDER SPRINOS MOBILE
HOME PARK, 3/1. MS wk.,
*300 deposit. Call 7741340

STENSTROM

117— Commercial
Rentals

REALTY*REALT0R

OFFICES 700 A 1000 sq.ft. In
growing 4-Towns/Debary area
on Hwy. 17-71. *4*4*13 avas.

WE LIST AND SELL
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

121— Condominium
Rentals
SANOLEWOOD VILLAS- 3/3,
kit. sppl., wather/dryer, pool.
*3*0 mo. -t- sac. 331-0740,
333 4447....or.... 1 400-433 3534
SANFORD: 3 bdrm.. 3 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer, sac. *430 Mo.
Landarama Fla.. Inc. 333-1734

141— Homes For Sale

ii \ i . i . i t i : \ i n
in

\i

ioit

WE NEEDLISTINOS
COMPLETELY FURNISHEDI
Nice 3 bdrm., with family rm„
In good locallonl Racantly
palntadl Larga trees! Approx­
imately *1,300 dn„ 7.3% 30 yr.
*344 p ar m o. P . l . T . I . I
Appraised........... eeeaeeaa,.*3t,aoo
INVESTOR'S OREAMI 3 bdrm.
IV* bath, huge shad* treat and
lush landscaping I Large eat-In
kltchenl Fenced corner loti
Sellar will pay all closing costs
forbuyarl.................. *43.300

323-5774
3404 HWY. 17-73
HOMESEEKERS REALTY
"SERVINO AREA BUYERS"

322-8825
CHARMINO OLDER HOME
Complatety itfurblshad and
modamliad. For *43.300 you
gal plenty of space Including 3
bdrm. &amp; cantral h/a. In town
and convenient. Raady In a
taw days........... CALL NOWI

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
REALTOR____________ 333-747*
DO YO U P R E F E R Q uits
Country Sotting Yat Closa In
For Convanlancas? It so. your
family will lova this baautlful
3 bdrm. brick homa w/sunkan
f ami l y room A vau ltad
callings, brick accent wall, big
country kitchen, french doors,
on 1 acre of lowering oaks.
Asking *140.000. To pravlaw
call:....... BECKY COURSOH.
RE/MAX 340 n. raalty Inc.
437*330........ or........ 133-7430

ENERGY REALTY
323-

2959

HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL! *
Laka Jassup araa, 3 bdrm., 1
bath, saparata Mother In law
quarters detached from main
house. IN NEED OF RE­
PAIR. Lot sli* 150x40. *33.000.
Cell:........................ 331-3410

Sanford** Sates Uadtr

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
IT W O N'T LAST LONOI 3
bdrm., Us bath homa. garaga
converted to family room,
breakfast bar, paddle fans,
and 1yaar warranty 1....*43,300
FEELING OF COUNTRYI 3
bdrm., IV* bath, w/doubla lot,
extra double lot. ad|olnlng.
paddle fans, breakfast bar.
cantral H/A, dining room and
moral......................... *47,700
PICTURE THISI 3 bdrm. 3V*
bath lown-housa. kitchen
garden window, breakfast
bar, living A dining rooms,
open staircase, floor to calling
mirrored closet In masterl
...................................*34.700
SUNLAND ESTATESI 4 bdrm.,
3 bath, energy effecient home,
fenced
beck vyw'
ird
iwviwww swmw
w with
wssia weed
deck, patio A storage shed,
family room, central H/A A
morel......................... S43.800
VERSATILEI 3 bdrm. 1 bath
homa, RMOI toning (could ba
duplex or office), celling fans,
garaga converted to rac.
room. 2 utility rooms....*43,000
FANTASTIC BUYI 4 bdrm. 2
bath homa on IV* acres,
fenced and cross fenced, din­
ing area, screened porch, split
plan, cantral H A A1..... 147,000
A REAL PLEASUREI 3 bdrm. 2
bath mobile homa on 3 acres,
vaultad callings, fpl.. great
room, breakfast bar. watar
conditioner, stereo system and
mora.......................... 347,700
SERENE PEACEFULNESSI 2
bdrm., 3 bath homa with
screened porch overlooking
lake, fpl., eat In kitchen, din­
ing araa. cantral heat and air.
..................................*73,000.
3+ ACRESI 4 bdrm., 3 bath
homa. aat ln kitchen, dining
araa. family room, pool. In­
come producing fornery busi­
ness..........................3335.000.

SANFORDAREA
H ACRES WITH LARGE
FARMHOUSE ZONED
INDUSTRIAL.......... J

•

MACRESZONED INDUSTRI­
AL............................*300.000
3ACRISAT AIRPORT
ENTRANCE............. *130.000
3 ACRES STATE HIGHWAY
FRONTAGE ZONED HEAVY
COAAMERCIAL......... *170.000
134* X 170' LOT ZONED HEAVY
COMMERCIAL........... (30.000
100'XI34'CORNER ZONED
INDUSTRIAL ON EAST 23th
ST..............................(30,000

LAKE MARY OFFICE
Call toll free 1-800-323-3720
2343 PARK AVE............Sanford
701 Lk.Mery Blvd....... Lk.Mary
WEKIVA ESTATES- Reduced!
Rambling executive 4 bdrm.
split. Big pool, screened
porch, fireplace....... *147.300.
FIRST REALTY INC....339 4*42

Desired...

Come home to a vacation... Sailpointe, the
newest adult community in old historic
Sanford, offers a lifestyle you’ve been dreaming
about... It’s designed for people who love
sailing, skiing and swimming. Who prefer to
spend their free time laughing with friends at
poolside barbeque or strolling along a moonlit
dock. If you're this person, Sailpointo at Lake
Monroe was made for you.
Convenient to Orlando and surrounding areas.
Sailpointe Apartments are spacious, stylish and
feature all the luxury amenities you’ve come to
expect and deserve.
Come see why Sailpointe is the desired place to
live. Located on Seminole Boulevard at Lake
Monroe In Sanford.______

SAILPOINTE

HUHMDHOtOEBnH
401 West Seminote Boulevard
Sanford. Florida 32771 + 322-1051

904-255-8311

Sanford** Sates laadaf

199— Pat&gt;4 Suppltes

ON 17-73 ZONED HEAVY
COMMERCIAL*
ACRES....................... *70.000

WE LIST AN D SILL
M O R I PROFIRTYTHAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMIHOLE COUNTY

DOO OBEDIENCE CLASSESStart Set. Jan. 34. Call:
Shirley Reilly............ 32**343

ALL THE ABOVE HAVE LIB­
ERAL TERMS AVAILABLE
BY MOTIVATED SELLERS.

CAU ANY TIME

DEBARYAREA

5EIGLEA
H

A L T Y l

LEND
321 Qti4D
153— AcreageLots/Sale

LHND
SANFORDAREA
5 ACRES A T "ASTO R FA R M S"
WEST OF 1-4 O N LY *33.000.
TERMS
CANALFR ONT TO "L A K E
M ARKHAM " 173.000. TE R M S
C A N A LFR O N T TO " L A K E
JESSUP"*15,000. TER M S
3 ACRES ON SMALL L A K E IN
OENEVA(33.000. TER M S

W O O D E D 73 X 140 N E A R
" R O L L IN G H IL L S G O L F
COURSE 123.000. TER M S

DELTONAAREA
4 A C R E S W O O D E D . (2
H O M E S I T E S ) *33. 000.
TERMS
10 A C R E S N E A R
B E TH E L " *30.000

'LAKE

2 V* A C R E S N E A R E N ­
TERPRISE ROAD (ACCESS
T O "LAKE B E T H E L " *14.300.
TERMS

CLOSE TO A L L C O N V E ­
NIENCES, 75 x 130 lot with
m an y t r a a i . In a w a ll
aitabllthad neighborhood,
s o llo r m ay h old t m a ll
mortgage, greet tor that new
homa th a t y o u 'v e been
dreeming.ef, I1M40. CHI Rad
^NOrg8fi| SrDftDY/ a8!88^t80

WATERFRONT) S +
zoned for mobile home
horses on Lake LIHIe,
financing, too, *33,000, Call
T a r r y L l v l e , Realtor/Auodat*
O R IA T INVESTMENT OP­
PORTUNITY! 4.4 acres zoned
for IS until par acre, over 300
ft. road front, Ideal location
for multl-rasldantlal, *373.000,
Call Tarry Llvl*. Realtor/
Associate
oOENEVA OSCEOLA RD.0
ZONED FOR MOBILES!
3 Acre Ceuntry tracts.
Wall treed on paved Ed.
30% Down. 14 Yrs.at I2%l
From 4144441

Call toll frat 1-800-323-3720

201— Horses
LAROE PASTURE FOR RENTSantord area. *30 month. Call:
33*3430

203— Livestock and
_______ Poultry
OOATS FOR SALE
CHEAPII

211— Antiques/
Collectibles
B L A N K E T C H E S T , Humpback

trunk, 4 oak kitchen chairs,
oak piano bench, drying rack,
appointment only, 33*4773
DEPRESSION OLASS
SHOW A SALE
Sanford Civic Center
Santord. FI.
Sat. Jan. 34th............10am 4pm
Sun. Jan 35th............ 10am 5pm
Pravlaw
Frl. Jan. 23rd............ 7pm-Tpm
Admission: *3.30
(with this ad *2.00)
LIQUIDATING Stock of upholstery A decorator furniture.
PaddHrs Cart, 333 N. Adalla
Ava., Oatond............. 734-1377
WOODBURNINO Cook stove
with bun warmers, lift top
school desk, 3V*x5 ft. solid oak
desk. 331 0447....or.....33*3*43

BOB'S USEDFURNITURE.
WE TAKE CONSIGNMENTS,
BUY OR SELL............. 33*3130

7.7% APR
CONSTRUCTION FINANCING
FOR UP TO 2 YEARS

BRIDGES AND SON

SAVE ON HIOH LABOR COSTS
and build It yourself. No down
payment. Quality precut ma­
terials. Step by step Instruc­
tions. Call for dotal Is or attend

P O I N C I A N A L A N E
W A T E R F R O N T . *13,700.
TERMS
DEL T ON A E S T A T E S
LAK EFR O N T *37,000
NORM ANDY
TERMS

BLVD. *27.300.

IEIGLER
R E A L T Y

III, m i IIT4TI m m

LIND
]2l°Dli4D
Nt A t T O R S

STEM PER

CALL A N Y TIM E
R E A LTO R ...................... 333-4771

1

J JL/1/xJVW .-JR

Buy Mara.

PayHara

USED CANS
Sealard_______________ 421-310
HONDA CIVICi'M..... Buy Hera
Pay Here.........Instant Cradlt

241— Recreational
Vehicles/Campers

^ IIS E D C A R S
samara------------------- 331-3113
IM PALA’47*
Buy Hara................... PayHara
Indent Credit
M A Y F L O W E R : '10. P a rk
Modal. 3S'X4' Tip out*. Naal A
claan 17.100 Safe Owan Travel
TrHIara 333 N. AdaIla Ava..

s i1
USED CANS
............................................... 331-3133
M O NTI CARLO *77*
Buy Hare...................Pay Hara
Instant Cradlt

QUINSTAR: Camping, Cargo.
U tility . T iltin g T ra lla r.
Unlqua.
Bab Owan Travel
Trallar* 333 N. Adalla Ava..

_______S i1

Oaland

USED CANS
Santord........................ 321-2133
MONTE CARLO7T
Buy Hara..................PayHara
Instant Credit______

FORD O RANAD AiTt Buy Hara
Pay Hara.......... Instant Cradlt

TR A V E LC R A FT RV Motor
homa. '13, Parfact cond. Ptv*h
*30,000 negotiable...... 3314)774
3r SKYLARK Traval trallar.
'13. Util. shad, Intulatad alum,
root, raady to movo Into.
Compl. turn. Saa at 13 Oaks
Campground, tits 331.....*7300

^ 2 2 2 2 5 2 2 3
USED CANS
Santerd.................... ...2212113
MONTE CARLO'77'
Buy Hara................. PayHara

FORD MIJSTAN0:7t.Buy Hara
Pay Hara............ Instant Cradlt

USED CARS

USED CARS
Santord........................ 331-2133
PINTO TO*
Buy Hara................. Pay Hare
Instant Cradlt

USED CARS
Santord........................ 331-1113
PLY OUSTERi'73......Buy Haro
Pay Hara............Instant Credit

USED CARS
Santord........................ 331-3133
PLYMOUTH VOLARE, 74' Buy
Her*....................... Pay Hera

A J lf le a f t M
USED CARS

........................................
SPECIALII JIM LASH RENT A
CAR, FROM *7.77 a day and
up.............................321 0741

rsa-sasa

SEE THE NEW HI LO TRAV­
EL TRAILERS at Bob Owan
Traval Trallar* 333 N. Adalla

BUY HERE
PAY HERE

Santord...................... 331-2133
FORD MUSTANG'73'
Buy Hare...................Pay Hara
Instant Credit

LOW
DOWN PAYMEN1

USED CARS
Santerd ************************* 331-3133
TR 7:74.................... Buy H*r*
Pay Hare............Instant Cradlt

W
S3t
USED CARS

f.nno

i

bad

13&gt; . ’

NO CRE 1)1!
NO IN IL R L S I

Santord........................ 331-2133
VOLKSWAGEN. 74'. 4400. Call
Mrs. Lanier, Mon thru
P eyHwra........... Instant

USED CARS
**ntwy|.........................331-2133

COMPLETE DETAIL SERVICE

95

-

r,lls 0 f f e r ,

A S K FO R LU D Y
OIL C H A N G ES • T U N E -U P S • S A F E T Y IN S P E C T IO N
S P E E D Y S E R V IC E ! LO W C O S T !

213— Auctions

2343 PARK AVE........... Sanford
701 Ur. Mary klvd........Lk. Mary

Auction ovary Thursday 7 PM.

WE BUY ESTATES!

USED CARS

3 2 1 9 S. Hwy. 17 9 2

P H . 3 2 3 -2 12 3

Sanford

Hwy 44...................... 33* 7401

C O N S U LT OUR

^ ja m ln a r jjjjjjj^ J O M M ^ IM I^

155— Condominiums
Co-Op/Sale
OIVEAWAY PRICEI
Sandlewood Villas condo. 2 br„ 2
ba, new pelnt A m ini blinds,
all appl. Only............ *37.700
The Raalty Star*.......471-1734

AND LET AN EX P ER T D O T H E JO B

157-M obile
Homes /Sale

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

To List Your Business-

IV* ACRES N EA R " S T O N E
ISLAND" *12.500. TER M S

PAOLA: 3 bdrm.. 3 bath CB
home on Lake Markham Rd.
Very desirable area. Owner
will pay points &amp; most othar
costs.............................*34.700

i

322-2420

ALTAMONTE SPRINOS AREA

SANFORD: Larga CB. 3 bdrm..
iv* bain, split plan homa.
Zoned MR 3 Adult car* or
•xlanded f a mi l y u i *.
Lakelront priced at *43.000

Professionally Managed By U.S. Shelter Corp.

Hwy. 73, Daytona Beach

REALTVREALTOR

P IN E AVE. 43 X 137 ACCESS
T O "BEAR L A K E " *22.000

321-2720

STENSTROM

DAYTONA AUTO
AUCTION

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes

FORD PINTO:'/*....... Buy Hara
Pay Hara............Instant Credit

.

porch, laan—y A atsraga n a „
lawn tarv. prat Ida 1...J31AHB
DELUXE DUPLEX: 1/3 can.
hoot A air. garaga. many
**tras. *330 mo Includes yard
cara. I yr. laaaa...............Call
Rad or Linda Morgan H
3333430.... or....333-3IMeves.
DUPLEX: 1 bdrm., carport,
clean, extras. *3*3 mo. plus
security. Call........... J33-3443
NICE, 3 bdrm., 1 ba.. central
haH/alr. no pats. *3*3 Mo.,
*330 dap. 1103 W. 3rd St. Call
Sharon at 443-3000. Latter
Kalmanaon, Assoc. Realtor
NICE. 1 bdrm., 1 bath, wall to
wall carpet, cantral heat A
air, dishwasher, w/d hook-up,
1st Month + security. No
Pats. Attar 3.............333-144*
SANFORD, Duplex 3 bdrm.,
u tilitie s , carport, many
extras. *3«3 mo. Call: 331-10*7

AARON MOBILE HOME, 3
bdrm., sat up In nlc* tamlly
park, will (Inane* part, phon*
331-44*4 eve* til 7.____________
DEL WIDE (21x40). V I. 7 rms.
total A vary spacious. Locatad
Carriage Cova. Moving, must
**111331 *404.....or..... 343-7*44
REPOS..... RESALES......HEW
Carriage Cove Mobile Home
Park. Com* saa utl 11
Gregory Mobiles Homes.7111300
2/1V*. enclosed Fie. rm. 7x12
attached util., adull park,
pool, sauna, *14.000. Must sail.
By owner..........477-4277 *_yoe

181— Appliances
/ Furniture
ALTERNATIVE T.V. A APPL.
3754 Hwy. 17-73
___________ 333-3000___________
LARRY'S MART. 213 Santord
Ava. Naw/Used turn. A appl.
Buy/Sell/Trada. 333 4)33.

183— Television /
Radio / Stereo
H ITAC H I Tape deck, good cond
t*0 Pioneer cassette deck.
exc.cond.S43......333 2510 att. 5

193— Lawn &amp; Garden
CY PRESS M ULCH A Chips
Good rich Top Soli delivered
by the yard
333 1090

Accounting &amp;
T a x Service
HUBERT PEARCE
Exp. Income Tax Service
373-0007 tor appl._______

TAX RETURNS
FEDERAL
FLORIDAIN1ANOIBLE
OUTOF STATE
Daytlma. evenings A Saturday
appointments. Fra* 1747 tax
protection. Individuals or
business#*. Qualified to r*pr*
sent taxpayers before the IRS.
103 E. Lake Brantley Rd.,
Longopod, FI..............447 3333

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B.E. LIN K CONST.
Remodeling..............303 333 7037
Financing...........Llc.«CRC00047l

Blinds &amp; Drapes
CUSTOM D R A P E R Y , balloon
c u r t a i ns , ml n l - b l l n d s A
verticals. Free est. In home
service. Madeline....... 333 4301
ORAPES/TOP T R E A T M E N T S
D UST R U F F L E S / P I L L O W
SHAMS B Y D IA N E .....333 4244

House Plans
CUSTOM B LU EP R IN TS
Fast Service! Good quality!
KK DESIGNS..................747 3734

Carpentry

Home Repairs

Nursing Care

A L L T Y P E S Ot Carpentry.
Remodeling A horn* repairs.
Call Richard Gross 371 3773.
RICHARDS CARPENTRY
II yrs In Central Florida
Call................................. 333 3717

A L L PHASES of household
repair A improvement.
♦ F R E E E S T I MA T E S * 333 142)

HILLH A VEN H E A LTH CARE
C E N TER . 750 Mellonvllle Av./
333 4544........................E.O.E.

Landclearing

Painting

BACK HO E. Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing
Call:333 1404......o r......333 7313
THORNE LANDCLEARINO
Loader and truck work/sepllc
tank sand Free est 333 1413

P A IN TIN G : Complete Interior
3375/Exterlor 1350 Satisfaction
guaranteed. Cell......... 434 3314
PROFESSIONAL. G U A L ITY
Painting by Dave
Interior, Exterior. Residential,
Commer c i al . Pressure
Washing. Orywall Repair A
Popcorn Ceilings.
Lie
Bonded
Ins
323 4074

Cleaning Service
SPARKLING CLEAN lor a dust
Ire* home or offlc*. 1 tlm*.
weekly A mthly rates..333 3154

General Services
FR ED'SER RANOS
24 hr. service. Reasonable
Call:............................... 331 0773

Home Improvement
CA R P EN TR Y BY EDDAVIS
REM ODE LINO/RE NOVATION
Larg* And Small Jobs W*lcom*
Santord R*s. I I yrt. 331-0442
R EM O D ELIN G A ADDITIONS.
Masonry A Concret* work.
Local number, 444 5345 EVES

Home Repairs
R E M O D E L I N G . Carpentry,
Painting. Small electrical
repairs &amp; installation, plumb
inq A Installation. Hauling A
lawn service Call:
Edor Allan..................... 221 4310

Landscaping
BOOUESI Expt Professional!
Lawn A Garden Main! A chain
saw work I Lake Mary Resl
dent F R E E ESTI 333 4347
SEM IN O LE LANDSCAPINO

Secretarial Service

322-8133

Custom Typing- BookkeepingNotary Public. Call: D.J. Enterprises. (305) 323 7472.

Lawn Service

Sewer/Septic Tank

BA R R IER 'S Landsceplngl
Irrlg ., Lawn Care. Res A
Comm. 371 7444. F R E E ESTI
"S U N N Y S " Mow, edge. trim,
planting, mulching SPRING
Spec. Free est 322 7427

HOWARD'S SEPTI C SERVI CE
Repair Lines A Clean Tanks
Free Estimates........... 322 0257

Nursing Care
OUR RAT ES A RE LOWER
Lakevtew Nursing Center
717 E. Second St.. Santord

Tree Service
A L L T R E E S E R V I C E 4Firewood Woodsplltter lor
hire Call Alter 4 P M 323 7084
ECHOLS T REE SERVI CE
Free Estimetesl Low Prlcosl
Lie...Ins...Stump Orlndlng.Tool
323-2237 day or nlto
“ Let Ihe Professionals do it".

s»

..

V *V&gt;

‘

.N

�M -Im M

NvraM, Im M . M.

...Cook
Contiaued P ro a IB
“ We used to have large dinner
parties, but It’s gotten smaller. I
have a lot or friends dropping In.
and customers, so we have small
dinners now.** Some o f the
things Mrs. P eltier likes to serve
are favorites o f her guests, such
as Rolladen or roast pork. “ It
depends on how much time I
have.” she says. " I really don't
spend that much time preparing
and cooking. I try to make good
meals that take the least time.”
B e l o w Is a l i s t o f east*
cr-than-you-thlnk dishes you will
want for your collection:

ROLLADBN

,

j m

.

i i

,

m v

Continued From IB
microwave on 100% power for 5
minutes, reduce power to 50%
and m i c r o w a v e f o r 10-12
minutes; fluff with fork. Allow to
stand 10 minutes (covered) and

Sanford D a ybra a ka rs
Toastmasters Club Installed
the following officers to serve
d u r i n g 1987: H e r m a n
Schroeder, from left,
Sergeant-at*Arms; Dot
Waller, secretary-treasurer;
Elisabeth Koll, Ad. vice pres­
ident; Leigh Horton, Ed. vice
president; Kathy Sundvall,
president; and N a n c y
Edwards, area governor. The
club meets every Tiesday, at
7.17 a.m., at Chrlstoo's, 107
W. 1st St., Sanford. Guests
are welcome.

Using two boneless chicken
breasts for four people, cut raw
chicken Into cubes
Garlic to taste
1 bunch green onions
flour
fresh mushrooms
V4 cup white wine
1 cup heavy cream or half anc
half
Dust chicken cubes with flour.
Brown in butter or margarine.
Add garlic. Add chopped green
on ion s along with s lic e d
m ushroom s. Add wine and
sim m er gently, covered, for
about 10 minutes. Just before
serving, add creanl and heat
through. Add salt to taste and
serve over hot. cooked rice.

It Is ready to serve, or be used In
any recipe that calls for cooked
rice.
MICROWAVE HINT: Use a
large enough container to allow
for the "bubble up" that occurs
when cooking rice. 4-6 servings.
A colorful and nutritious way to
prepare fish.

To

N o w O fH e o n

SAUTEED CHICKEN
BREASTS

Ask the butcher to cut your
beef for Rolladen. usually round
steak. Using one slice of steak
per person, add the following to
EACH slice:
‘A slice bacon, raw. chopped
1 teaspoon chopped onion
COTTAGE FRIES
minced garlic, to taste
For each person, use one
Vi teaspoon prepared mustard, medium to large potato. Leaving
spread on steak
skins on. slice into wedges.
salt and pepper
Wash, dry and salt the slices.
parsley
Toss slices In melted butter,
small slice o f dill pickle (op* about 1 stick per pound o f
tional)
potatoes, until well coated. Place
A f t e r s p re a d i n g p re p ar e d
in baking pan and bake at 375
mustard on each slice of steak, degrees for 1 hour until nicely
add above Ingredients. Roll each
browned. Can be baked along
slice up carefully, securing with •with your Sunday chicken.
toothpicks. Brown In a little oil.
SAUERKRAUT - MY W A Y
Remove meat from pan and
3 cans (16 ounces) Bavarian
place In baking dish. Add one
sauerkraut
can cream o f mushroom soup
1 small head of cabbage
and about Vi can o f water to
1 large onion
drippings In pan. Stir until well
1 clove garlic per can o f
blended. Pour over Rolladen In
sauerkraut,
crushed
baking dish and place In a slow
Vi
cup
white
wine
oven. 300 degrees for about 2
Kielbasa sausage, about 3
hours. Meat will be tender and
gravy Is delicious. A can of rings
Slice onions and cabbage. Add
mushrooms m ay be added to the
crushed garlic, canned sauer*
gravy before pouring over meat.
kraut, and white wine. Combine
S e r v e w i t h w i l d r i c e , or
all In a large pot and bring to a
whlte/wild rice mixture.
boll. Simmer for 2 hours. Trans­
BREADED PORK CHOPS
fer to a large glass baking dish.
Using one large pork chop per Slice Kielbasa and place on top
person, cither center cut or o f sauerkraut. Place In a 350
butterilled. season with salt and d e g r e e ov e n for a bo ut 15
pepper and pound to flatten. minutes until nicely browned.
Dredge lightly In flour, then dip May be placed under broiler to
In beaten egg. then In bread or brown, also, about 5 minutes.
com flake crumbs. Fry In hot oil. Good with cottage fries. Serves
If preparing a large amount.
10 to 15.

...Fish

Toott

place fried chops on cookie sheet
and cover lightly with foil. Place
In warm oven while frying re*
malning chops.

Smoking Habit
Big
Kick During 1986 Smokeout
DEAR READERS: The Great
American Smokeout o f 1986
broke all records for participa­
tion. with an unprecedented
23.8 million smokers trying to
kick the habit for 24 hours.
Through a Gallup survey. It
was learned that 43.7 percent of
the nation's 54.5 million smok­
ers took part in the 10th annual
Smokeout on Nov. 20, either by
avoiding cigarettes completely or
by cutting down.
Of the participants. 7 million
smokers were able to make it
through the day without lighting
up. and another 16.8 million cut
down. The survey findings con­
firm that smokers want to quit.
For smokers who need help
quitting, the American Cancer
Society offers the qult-smoklng
course, "FreshStart.” through
Its local divisions and units. The
course is also available on audio
and videocassette, as well os In
paperback. If you need help
quitting but can’t find the time
to attend a course, the tapes and
book give you the freedom to
take advantage of FreshStart at
your own leisure. The tapes,
p r o d u c e d by S i m o n and
Schuster, are sold at many
bookstores and retail outlets.
F or mor e informati on on
FreshStart classes, call your
local American Cancer Society.
To order the FreshStart audio
and vldcocassettcs. call (800)

\

D ear
A b b y I*

Here are a few definitions for
people who ask about adopted
children who look Chinese,
Korean or whatever:

445-3800 operator 866.
Smoking is hell
Quitting is heaven
Yours for a healthier ’87.

ABBY
DEAR ABBY: Thank you for
printing the list of questions
thoughtless and insensitive peo­
ple should not ask the parents of
Internationally adopted children.
I. too. am the mother of two
beautiful children (a boy and
girl) adopted from Korea.
Please add one more question
to that list: "A re your children
sister and brother?"
I have been asked this ques­
tion many times, and I always
respond emphatically. "Y es.
they arel" and would you believe
that some people have had the
n e r v e to c o n t i n u e pro bi ng
further with "...but I mean, arc
they real brother and sister?"
LUCKY MOTHER IN CANADA
DEAR LUCKY: Read on. You
may even want to clip it and

_______________ /

carry the next letter with you. It
speaks volumes:
DEAR ABBY: W e have eight
children, f i v e d o m e s t i c a l l y
adopted. They don't look like us
(there are four races among us),
but some people do ask the
cruelest questions.

Natural child: Any child who Is
not artificial.
Real parent: Any parent who Is
not Imaginary.
Your own child: Any child who
Is not someone ctse's.
Adopted child: A natural child,
whose parents arc not Imagi­
nary. chosen by us and Is now
ours.

RITA LAWS. HARRAH. OKLA.
DEAR ABBY: My co-workers
and I have a supervisor I'll call
John Smith. T o make a long
story short. John got a graduate
degree by correspondence. It
took only a short period of time,
and to my knowledge the college
(In California) Is not accredited.
A n y w a y , t h e r e Is no w a
diploma on the wull in John's
office that says: Doctor of Philos­
ophy in Small Business Man­
agement. He is beginning to
introduce himself to new clients

SALES

2619 C. South French Avenue
Sanford, Florida 32771
(305) 322-4961

and in correspondence aa "Dr.
Smith.” So far. he hasn't asked
any of us to address him as
"Doctor": but what should we do
if he requests it?

QJL IN NORMANGEE. TEXAS
DEAR OR: Since he Is your
supervisor, should he ask you to
call him "Doctor." though It
may be a hard pill to swallow,
call him "Doctor."
DEAR ABBY: My 58-year-old
husband has a habit of sitting
sideways at the table when we
are eating. He always has turned
his chair sideways, and now the
children, ages 27. 22 and 19. are
doing exactly the same thing.
This is especially annoying
when we have company for
dinner.
Would It be wrong to tell m y
family to please sit the proper
way. or leave the table?

E, A.K*
DEAR E.A.K.: Yes. It would
be wrong. However, you could
tell them before your guests
arrive to please sit properly at
the dinner table. And by the
way. If your husband has always
sat that way. your chances o f
breaking that Irritating habit are
slim. But you could work on the
19-year-old.

MEN’S BUDGET PRICE
CLOTHING
FACTORY CLOSEOUTS
DISCONTINUED &amp; SECONDS

REGULAR &amp; BIG MAN'S SIZES

SALE STARTS THURSDAY JANUARY 22nd AT 9 AM
M A N U FA C TU R ER C L O S E O U T

SWEATER SALE
O VER 1000 T O C H O O S E FROM
C LO S E O U TS -D IS C O N TIN U E D -IR R E G U LA R S
R E G U A L R S IZ E S - T A L L M A N ’S &amp; B IG M A N S IZ E S
CREWNECK PULLOVERS, V-NECK PULLOVERS &amp; CARDIGANS
1 0 0 % C O T T O N IN S O L ID A N D F A S H IO N D E S IG N S
S im ila r To
illustration

Reg. $19.95 to $45.00

YOUR
C H O IC E

A D U L T S 1 0 0 % C O T T O N ■ L O N G S L E E V E H I-F A S H IO N

SPORT SHIRTS
F IR S T Q U A L IT Y

The number one seller on the market today!
Seven button front, two pockets. Pre-washed
cotton In five fashion colors. Red - Black - Gold
•Royal and white. W ear tucked in or hang out.
S IZ E S : S M A L L - M E D IU M - L A R G E - E X T R A L A R G E
Reg. Store Price $19.95

OUR
SALE
P R IC E

&gt;4&lt;&gt;0
SPORT SHIRTS *400
DRESS SHIRTS &lt;

Sim ilar To
Illustration

M EN ’S “ IR R E G U A L R ”

M E N ’S “ IR R EG U LAR ”

M E N ’S “ IR R EG U LAR ”

Sim ilar To
Illustration

SLACKS
LAD IES “ IR R EG U LAR ”

SHIRTS

.

M EN ’S “ IR R E G U L A R ”

$1 Y S CASUAL PANTS *’6 “
4&gt;400 SHIRTS

BIG M A N ’S “ IR R E G U L A R ”

$1 0 0#
f

« Y 9

�After Super Bowl Sunday, Roll In Chinese
New Year Jan. 29 With Gala Celebration

Tasty Chicken low In cholosterol

Wheat Germ
Adds Crunch
To Chicken
%

By Aileen Claire
NBA Pood Bdltor

P 'P P ^
.
2/3 cup wah=r

containing a coin or two.
y ou may not ^ Chinese, but

Chicken baked In the oven
using a no-cholesterol oil makes
a lower-cholesterol entree. For
extra flavor and crunch, prepare
a special coating In which to dip
the chicken parts. Remove the
skin before baking for an even
lower cholesterol dish. Serve
w i t h a m i x e d g r e e n salad
dressed with a zippy topping and
baked potatoes with low-fat cot­
tage cheese.

fIn
n '^salt
a iT a
an
nd
d UhltipkUbnenm&gt;trr
b l ac k
pepper.
mustard mixture and
2/3 cup
t in d .^T.V.1.
water. Bring to a boil. Reduce

brCW
Up 80mC
tea and
warmwant
the
_jc_
w inc
you'also
might
*1CC wmc- * ou a»so m ignt want
to havc *°me d«7 rcd wine on
bandt 8jncc tbe Chinese serve

HONEY-WHEAT GERM
CHICKEN

C? ° i f a " d 9t r uni
thickened. 2 to 3 minutes. Re-

rdd wine on most happy occas|ona

S S g &amp; £ n acovered contain:

" " &lt; £ '° t r

w
h rk ‘ b^o7en£
™ in 7 oover
v e r aJ
la d
whisk
bef re serving
salad
greens or m xed fruit and
greens. This kitchen-tested reelpe makes 1 cup.

■* made
d|sbes“ and
otherstarm
that scratth
rely on
prcparcd foo(Js from the J c2er
case. y our guests will love theml

1 cup toasted wheat germ
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
y* teaspoon salt
y* teaspoon grated lemon peel
W teaspoon garlic powder
'A teaspoon ground black
pepper
Va cup safllower oil
Va cup honey
V4 cup fresh lemon Juice
3 pounds chicken parts (skin
removed, if desired)
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
In a pie pan or shallow bowl,
combine wheat germ, cinnamon,
salt, lemon peel, garlic powder
and black pepper. In another pie
pan combine safflower oil. honey
and lemon Juice.
Dip chicken in safllower oil
mixture and coat with wheat
g e r m m i x t u r e , shaking o f f
excess. Place skin side up on a
well-oiled shallow baking pan.
Repeat with remaining chicken.
Spoon remaining safflower oil
mixture over chicken.
Bake until chicken is golden,
about 45 minutes. Cover with
foil. Cont i nue bak ing until
chicken is tender, about 10
minutes longer. This kitchentested recipe makes 4 portions.

CREAMY MUSTARD DILL
SALAD DRE8SINO
Va teaspoon powdered mustard
Va teaspoon warm water

1 tablespoon flour
Va cup safllower oil

1 teaspoon salt
1/16 teaspoon ground black

nriUa
that’s 00 rcason to m ls» a party.
Vb teaspoon paprika
W h y not t h r o w
your own
?n
ChtaMe New Y ea r'. Celebration?
In a cup. combine mustard An(j
are busy on ^ 29th
and warm water; set aside for 10 tfiat&gt;8 y
oka
the £ hlnc9c
^
minutes for flavor to develop. In bra(c for ^ d
atIJllght
a small saucepan, combine flour
Dccorate w[ th iSO* e rabbltl&gt;
and safllower oil Cook and s r hcrc and lhere (the Chlnc9e wiU)&lt;

TEX-MEX PICKLED PEPPER
HERO SANDWICHES
1 medium avocado, peeled and
mashed
1 tablespoon chopped pickled
pepper
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
1 tablespoon grated onion
Va teaspoon hot pepper sauce
4 individual hero bread loaves.
cut in half lengthwise
V\ pound sliced Monterey Jack
cheese
'/i pound sliced roast beef
8 romaine lettuce leaves
2 m edium-size tomatoes,
sliced
8 pickled peppers, drained and
sliced
4 Mix avocado with chopped
pepper, lemon Juice, onion and
hot pepper sauce until well
blended. Spread over bread
bottoms. Layer cheese, beef.
romaine and tom atoes over
avocado mixture. Arrange
pepper s lic es e v e n ly ov e r
tomatoes. Place bread tops over
peppers. Garnish with pickled
peppers. If desired. This kltchcn-tcsted recip e m akes 4
sandwiches.

T

ORIENTAL BITES
WITH PEANUT SAUCE —
2 packages (7.25 ounces each)
frozen prepared chicken egg
rolls
% cup water
Vi cup peanut butter
2 tablespoons soy sauce
Vt teaspoon hot pepper flakes
l cucumber, sliced
l sweet red or green pepper,
cut Into strips
Prepare egg rolls according to
package instructions.
Meanwhile. In small saucepan.
combine water, peanut butter,
sny sauce and hot pepper flakes,
stir over low heat until smooth.
Serve warm as dip with egg rolls,
c uc umbe r and red pepper.
Makes 6 servings,
CHINESE ALM O ND O M E LLrf
3 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 medium onion, thinly sliced
1 rib celery, thinly sliced
V* pound fully cooked ham.
cubed
10 eggs
l tablespoon soy sauce
*A teaspoon ground ginger
Vi cup sliced almonds
Preheat b ro il er. In l a r ge

Sour Kabobs — are perfect fare for a
Chinese New Y e a r's p a rty . Decorate with
rabbits In keeping with the symbol.
id ginger
per
into 1-inch
oth
wl, combine
blespoon soy
blespoon cord pepper. On
:ach zucchini
ion. scoop out

zucchini cups. Makes 18 cups,
SW EET ’N SOUR KABOBS
1 can (11 ounces) Mandarin
oranges, drained
4 packages (7.25 ounches
each) frozen prepared chicken
egg rolls, thawed 20 minutes
1 can (8 ounces) pineapple
chunks, drained
1 cup apricot preserves
Va cup ketchup
3 tablespoons cider vinegar

Brush on tops of

On small bamboo skewers,
alternately place one orange
segment with two egg rolls and
one pineapple chunk. In small
saucepan, combine preserves,
ketchup and vinegar. Brush
apricot mixture on kabobs. Bake
on cookie sheet In 425°F oven 8
minutes or until hot. turning
once. Serve with remaining
a p r i c o t mi xtur e. Makes 24
kabobs.

In Good Taste

Passion Fruit M ight Prove To Be 1987 Craze
By John DeMert
UPI Pood Editor

"They begin. ’Take a cup of
pure, strained passion fruit
NEW YORK (UPI) - What has pulp.’ Today, in the United
a dusty purple rind, resembles a States, that could cost $25."
partly deflated rubber ball that
The good news is that passion
has been left out in the rain — fruit works best as a flavoring,
and Just might prove one of the like vanilla extract or cognac. A
hottest new food products in little bit o f pulp can Indeed go a
long way, and even the seeds in
1987?
It is the passion fruit, actually the proper dish can add a
named in r ef er en ce to the pleasurable crunch.
crucifixion o f Christ but now
Home cooks looking to chefs
being marketed with numerous for inspiration are tipping the
references to the sensuality of exotic essence into apertifs.-fruit
cups, sorbets, glazes, mousses
the tropics.
While the fruit may seem a bit and souffles — and even adding
too exotic (and expensive) to it to barbecue sauces and top­
munch on like an apple, it is pings for sauteed veal or chicken
turning up In every imaginable breast.
type of dish served in America’s
Passion fruit is thought to be
restaurants and is mixed with Brazilian in origin, but it has
cognac in a new liqueur from grown successfully all over the
Caribbean. South America. New
France.
What kiwi became a few years Zealand. Australia. Taiwan and
back and raspberry was in the Hawaii for longer than anyone
past 12 months, diners can can remember.
expect the passion fruit to be in
S a d l y , e x p e r i m e n t s at
the new year — despite its hefty cultivating the fruit in Florida
and California — a move that
price tag.
“ Most recipes I have read would have wrestled the price
come from places where the fruit down — have been victimized by
is grown on a large scale." said bad w e a t h e r a n d l a c k o f
Elizabeth Schneider, author of wholesale demand.
the recently published “ Un­
Another sure sign of passion
common Fruits and Vegetables" fruit’s popularity is that the
(Harper and Row. $25).
French have started turning it

Into a drink.
The people who make Grand
Marnier already offer a cleat
c o r d ia l called La G r a n d e
Passion. Even newer is Allze. a
blend of natural passion fruit
Juices and cognac. It has Just
been Introduced in New York.
Washington. Boston and Florida
by Kobrand Inc.
The drink, which can be
chilled and drunk straight or
used in a host o f culinary
preparations, is supposed to
capture "the sensual taste of the
t r o p i c s . ” W e l l , it m a y be
advertising, but that notion is
what the romance o f passion
fruit is all about.
Here are two classy recipes
using the taste of passion fruit to
great advantage. The first is
from "Uncommon Fruits and
Vegetables,” while the second
comes from the importers of
Alizefrom France.
CHICKEN B R E AS TS
W ITH PASSION F R U IT SAUCE
2 chicken breasts, halved and
deboned
2 Tbsp corn oil
4 Tbsp butter
Salt and freshly ground black
pepper to taste
2 scant tsp sugar

*

4 Tbsp light rum
4 tsp fresh lime Juice
Pulp and seeds from 4 passion
frufl
Remove any cartilage from the
chicken breasts and pound the
meat, flattening each "suprem e"
to about Va Inch thickness. In a
heavy skillet, heat the corn oil
and 2 tablespoons of the butter
over moderate heat.
When the mixture foams, add
the chicken breasts and brown,
adjusting heat to prevent tooqulck darkening. When richly
browned, remove the breasts to
a cutting board and season
generously with salt and pepper.
Pour the fat from the skillet,
then add the sugar, rum and
lime Juice. Stir over low heat to
dissolve all the browned bits.
Stir In the passion fruit and
barely heat through. Remove
from the heat and stir in the
remaining butter. Taste the
sauce for seasoning.
Immediately, slice the chicken
in diagonal Va Inch slices. Fan
out on warmed plates. Spoon the
sauce evenly over each portion
and serve at once. Serves 4.
CROUTE A L A NORMANDE
4 Tbsp butter
4 medium tart apples, peeled,
cored and thinly sliced

4 Tbsp sugar
2/3 cup Allze. divided
2 eggs, lightly beaten
Vi cup milk
1 tsp vanilla extract
Va tsp salt
4 W inch slices stale challah
bread
T oas te d sliced almonds for
garnish
In a large saute pan. melt the
butter over medium high heat.
Add the sliced apples and saute
for about 2 minutes. Sprinkle
with sugar and continue cook­
ing. stirring frequently until
golden, about 3 minutes more. If
necessary, cook In batches.
Don’ t overcrowd the pan.
Add 1/3 cup Allze and con­
tinue cooking until the liquid
has e v a p o r a te d , about 2
minutes. Turn off heat.
In a mixing bowl, beat the egg.
milk, vanilla and salt until well
combined. Dip the challah slices
into the egg mixture and brown
both sides on a hot. well-oiled
griddle.
Reheat the sauteed apple
slices. Add the remaining Alizc
and cook Just until heated
through. Serve over the grilled
challah slices and garnish with
sliced almonds. Serves 4.

W IL T E D CABBAGE
AN D SAUSAGE
2 slices bacon, cut Into Winch
pieces
Water
6 tablespoons cider vinegai.
divided
1 pound red cabbage, coarsely
shredded
3 tablespoons brown sugar
1 tablespoon dry mustard
1 teaspoon salt
Vfr teaspoon pepper
1 medium onion, sliced
12 o u n c e s f u l l y c o o k e d
bratwurst, cut into 1-inch pieces
1 m e d i u m pear, sliced
lengthwise
Cook bacon until crisp; drain
and reserve. Bring 2 quarts
water with 2 tablespoons vinegar
to a boil. Stir in cabbage and
cook 1 minute; drain we!! and
reserve. Combine onion, re­
maining Va cup vinegar. Va cup
water, brown sugar, mustard,
salt and pepper In large frying
pan. Cook and stir over moder­
a t e h e a t 3 m i n u t e s . Add
bratwurst and pears: cover and
c o o k s l o wl y until heated
through. Add reserved cabbage,
s ti rri ng li ghtl y to combine.
Sprinkle with bacon and serve
immediately. This kitchen-tested
recipe makes 4 servings.

�.*7 , ro
. r.

. iif'M-

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- aWsWif?'*'. SJtCiii.
T'‘ rT&lt;b
.
vl
$
vvjf,
2
^SSSfcj

THISAD
■FFICTIVI:

THUR.,
JAN. 82

JAN. as,
1087...

Nsw Holland

Brassa

Low Fat Chssss •••

Blsu Chaos#.......

Jarlabara

Swiss CHh

m ..... t
(Astortad Flavors), Lorraina

*1«

Low Salt
C h ssss................ tf; M*»

Alouatta

pkv.
Medallion, Pasto, or Cajun

Baby Brio..........

Chuttsr Chssss... T M ”

Pablos Plain or With
Pappar Nacho or

Assortad Flavors Of

Chili Con Qusso

« »•••■

U b pkg.

$2*§

Roast Boot Tray
Small........ .............................. &gt;23°°

Alouatta Soft
Cheese Spreads .. W: •1a#

/|6 to 20) ....... 13990
|_a r g 0 ......... (S e rv e s 26 to 3 0 )
15300
M e d i u m .......(S e rv e s

T h o y ’ll koop com ing back for mora whan
you aarva thla Irraaiatibla roaatta
arrangamant of fandar, juicy roast baaf
a t your main attraction. Bright rad
charry tomatoea a t a centerpiece help
top it off.

ARMOUR

*a

JUMBO

&gt;57

a

$N L&gt;

bUh0&gt;*&gt;9»

-\
-, jf

, j j r

Boiled Ham &amp; Swiss
Cheese with Garnish
in the Middle

.,
Armour Star Meat or Beef

Ring Leader
Jumbo Hot Dogs
Honey Kut
Sandwich 'i|,: 1-lb.
Spiral
pkg.
each
Sliced Ham
1 0 "
for

$&gt;|49
\

a

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_____

r $3 "

4-pk., 12-oz. bots.

XS! * 1 °»

J 2 ) ........$ -j qoo

S m a l l ........... .(.?S5Y£?...?.!?..! ?)........ * 10 50

Luncheon
Plates................. ..

*1! * 1 ° *
Chinet 6.75”
Dessert Plates... .. VS * 1 0fl
Chinet Bow ls.... .. V£*1°*

A deliciously different hors d'oeuvre
idea, this tray offers a combination of
pickled okra, ripe olives, green peppers,
pickled cauliflower and tiny pearl onions.

■ Fro ze n F o o d H

Potato Chips....... V.c,b 99*
Eagle Pretzels.... 99*

I’Kt Ml! |*. •
VMM ro O U R

Wise 6.5-oz. Reg., Lightly Salted,
or Ridgie Natural Potato Chips or
7-oz. Rounds or Triangles

..S ’ "

M&gt;r V y

LaChoy Lobster, Shrimp, Chicken

Egg Rolls........... . 7-p2k5gOI- * 1 19
Orville Redenbacher
Butter Flavor Gourmet

ICheese

99*

Garlic with Herbs, G a rd e n
V egetable, French O nio n o r P e p p er

Alouette

Microwave
Popping Corn.... . 10pk5g°Z- * 1 * 9
Classy Crisp Mozzarella

Cheese
Nuggets............. ..
Bee Gee

Shrimp Ring......

7
Pk°gx: * 1 79

'Sy * 1 0 ”

4 -o z .
cup

Drummette Tray

Hoffman 6.75-oz. Smokey Sharp
or Swiss or 9-oz. Hot Pepper,
Cheese/Onion, or

Cheese/Salami

S m a l l ....... .(.?S!YS?...?.!R.!?.l......... * 1 5°°
M e d i u m ..... ($.eAY.®.?. A®.!.°. 2.9)......... * 1 9°°
|_a r g e
(Serves. 2 6 to 3 0 )...... $25°°

l i t *17»

Up-sm acking fried chicken drummettes
made from the meaty piece of the chicken
wing. These easy-to-eat hors d ’oeuvres
are a cocktail party favorite.

Brie or Camembert
F ro ze n hors d ’oeuvres, delicious V- ‘
and e asy to prepare. All yo u d o is
bake and se rve .
1

Gourmet
|
Hors d ’oeuvres

Kolb-Lena
C h e ese ........... ...... 8
p-o
kgz.. $199
Brie or Camembert

Connoisseur’s
Choice Tray

G e ra rd ............ ...... 4p501
kg $ 1 8 9
May-Bud French Onion Gouda,
Smoked Gouda, Smoked Edam,
Edam, Caraway Gouda, or

G ouda................

g m a ||

is $19 9

Farmers Cheese... KS: $209
Dofino Plain or Caraway

Cream H avarti.... I?,1: *189

(S e rv e s ..8 to 12 ) .......$2 2 °°

M e d i u m ... $?SCYS?.A?.i.°. .? § ! ...... * 3 6 * °
L a r g e .......(S e rv e s 26 to 3 0 ) ....... $5400

May-Bud
$ 2.00

8 jo

T r a y

M e d i u m ...... .(.?.eAY.e.?.A?..,.0. . ? $ ........*18°°
L a r g e ........... (S e rv e s 26 to 3 0 )........ *27°°

Chinet

Frito-Lay Toasted Corn,
Nacho Cheese, or Cool Ranch
D O l l t O S ......................... beg* 1 1 9®
Eagle Crispy Cut 6-oz. Barbecue or
Sour Cream &amp; Onion or 7-oz. Reg.

5 0 -c t.
pkg.

e g g

*

Pickled Relish Tray
White Platters ... ..

Snack Crackers... £ M 49

.** •*

*

A devilishly delicious addition to any
buffet. Deviled eggs can be prepared in a
variety of flavors and garnishes. Sliced
ripe or green olives with chives or bacon
bits are favorites.

Chinet

*099

J

r

.

M e d i u m .......(®.eAY.®?. A®. i.° .i f i l ....... * 15°°
L a rg e
(S e rve s 26 to 3 0 )....... $20°°

S eagram ’s
Cooler

\
\\ i
. ..... V .\ » i •

&amp;

S m a ||........... (S e rve s

Premium, Gold
or Peach

PUBLIX RESERVES THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES SOLO

0

D o v n o a

s i « F

Nacho Bravos....

W

\ l i

,

Nabisco 12-oz. Better
Cheddars, 13-oz. Triscuits,
or 16-oz. Wheat Thins

,f .v

.

Our Highest Quality Ham,
Ready-to-Serve, Spiral
» N .
Sliced for Easy Serving.
- “I f
Free Ham Holder Available .. ~ \ s &gt;
with Whole Ham.

Publix

A gourmet assortment of roast beef,
ham and white meat turkey, garnished
with fresh parsley.

�L'-r-ef.

~nn jw jirothf i PB f

IW

Breakfast Club
Grads A Florida W hits

PuWix IMM or Hot

Heinz Keg 0 Ketchup

Pork
Sausage

Tomato
32*oz. b o t

1-lb. pkg.

$409
1
u rn

THIS AD EFFECTIVE: THUR.. JAN. 22
THRU WED., JAN. 28, 1987 . . .

Premium, Gold or Peach

Publix
Old El Paso 6-Inch

Taco Shells

•••

4.9*os.0^
pHQ.

Old El Paso Mild or Hot

8-ox. • 109
bot.

Taco Sauce
Old El Paso

Nacho Chips
Old El Paso Pronto

Nachos ...............

7.5^1.0^00
pkg.

6.5-01.0^00

Old El Paso
Publix Special Recipe
Buttercrust White or

Wheat Bread.... 2 leave* *1a®
Breakfast Club

Natural
or Busch

Salsa...................
Publix Stuffed Manzanilla
Queen Placed

Tom 's 5.75-oz. Cheese Popcorn,
6.5-oz. Hot Fries, 8-oz. Puffed
Cheese, or 6.25-oz.

O lives..................

l i f e :

16-ox.
bol.

7$ ? * i «

Vlasic
Publix Dry Roasted
Reg. or Unsalted

Peanuts...........
Choc. Flavored
S yrup...............

24-ox.
bol.

Gala Assorted Decorated

Paper Towels
(Lim it 2 Please W ith O th e r
Purchases of $7 50 or More
■xcluding All Tobacco Item s)

High Life or Miller Lite

Miller
6

B-ox. 9 4 0 0
pkg.

Freeze Dried
Decaffeinated Coffee

Brim .....................

8-°*- S 5 3 9

AD C or Electric Perk
Decaffeinated or
Dark Roast ADC Coffee

B rim .....................

pk

can

large
roll

59*

Aurora Soft Prints
or White &amp; Assorted

Bathroom
Tissue.................. pkg1
.199®
Fab Detergent....

$
Reg or Light Beer

Old
M ilwaukee

Faygo Drinks...... 4 !££ f 1
Mauna Loa Reg. or Honey Roast

Macadamia Nuts... *?QV 9249

24

Raisin
Pumpernickel
Bread

Delicious With O a t l R B S l
Cold Milk
I
- -

Cookies.......

C3K6 ...... .......

pk

12 oz cans

$059

Danish Bakery

1-lb.

$129

(Lim it Please With Other
Purchases of $7 50 o r More
Excluding All Tobacco Itom s)

Fab
D etergent
42-oz. box

$ ^29

BonusiPjnnte
With
ton of Kodacokw VR color print Film
or Due Film FubHi P i o c . i t . t. ,o u gal two to ft of
quolil, print, mid a FREE roll or due of K o d a k ', color
print lilm'

FILM
PUBLIX
RESERVES
THE RIGHT
T O LIMIT
QUANTITIES
SOLO.

.loaf

each
doz.

$

t 49

G.E. Soft White 40W,
60W , 75W, or 100W

Light Bulbs.......... X *198
2-Pk. C or 0 Cell or Single 9-Volt

each
for

$3 ® 9

Duracell Alkaline
Batteries............. X? *1B»

Items Above Available At All Publix Stores With In-Store Bakeries Only!
Items Below Are Available At All Publix Stores and Danish Bakeries

Pecans Wlth

Danish
11
Pecan Ring

Delicious
Tasting

Chocolate Pecan
Fudge Cake

Tender Danish

Full Strength Static
Free Lemon Fresh

(Lim it 1 Pleaso, W ith O ther
Purchases of $ 7 .5 0 or More,
Excluding All To b a c co Item s)

(Limit 4 Please, W ith O ther
Purchases of $ 7 .5 0 or More,
Excluding A ll To b a c c o Item s)

1can' S 3 89

Made With
C h e O S e
Fresh Straw- ^
.
berries (6-inch)

12-ox. j• 1 6 9

With Fabric Softener, New Liquid

12 oz. cans

Cherry Cola or
Assorted Diet Flavors,

Fresh Baked
Daily

2-liter bottle

bot.

Luncheon Meat

Oyster Snacks....

C oca Cola

10-ox.

Sweet Relish...

Spam

Keebler Country Blend,
Pizza, or Butter

• 1 «9

Publix

cans

24

Old El Paso Thick N’
Chunky Medium or Mild

Dinner Rolls........ 2P4*&lt;
9l. 79°
Popcorn................ p"gh 99°

!\ /

16-ox. 7 9 $
can

Refried Beans....

Sprite A&amp;W Root
Minute Maid Orange
Lemon-Lime, or
of
Assorted Varieties c

$

-lb .
size

each
for

i

199

■Health &amp; Beauty I
Shampoo or Conditioner,
Reg. or Extra Body,

Finesse................ 1Slf'$269
(25c Off Label), 6.4-oz. Reg.
or Gel Tartar Control or
Regular Gel or 7-oz. Regular

Colgate
Toothpaste..........
$139
Bayer Aspirin......*4f * 199

Reg., ADC, or Electric
Perk, Vacuum Packed

M axw ell
House
1-lb. bag

i$ ‘
(Lim it 1 Please, With Other
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�v

V.

•

.

*1

" r r r y r

ki water or Oa,CMek«n
Of Tha 8aa Light

Liquid

Publix B o f , Gov’t.-lnsptcUd

l y « Round
Roast........ ........

Seafood

PubNx Beef,
Gov’t.-Inspected Boneless

Smoked Chubs, Sable, or
K iiv ^ p tla ly

Top Sirloin

Gulf Maid Frozan

Turbot Filial........

par

DaNdoua Sousa Loaf or

Hoad Chooso......

Publix Beef,
Gov’t.-Inspected Round

Tasty Comad Baaf or

London Broil....... ft'
(Either End
or Whole)

Sm oked
Ham s

Publix Beef, G o v’t.- \
Inspected Boneless J\ \ /

per lb.

Pastrami..............

In the Publix meat department you’ll find
professional meat cutters who take extra steps
to make sure you take home the LXAWSIT
CUTS FOSSVBLI. Our steaks and roasts,
pork and lamb are trimmed to not over % INCH
AVKIVAQI. That saves you money. Because
less fat means more value lor your food dollar.
Look for “NUTM FACTS" brochures and displays
in your Publix meat department. They’ll tell you
how to choose delicious meat meals that are
low in fat, cholesterol and calories— but high in
taste and nutritional value. And look for your
favorite cuts of Publix meat— always lean,
always the best.
.......
s

Hot From Tha DaNl

ChSSM
Potato Soup ........
DaH-Bakad Pinsappla or

Bluoborry Pie......
Plain or Saadad,
Slicad or Unslicsd

Italian Broad.......
Sweat or Caraway,

Munchee
Chooso................

■B ice Cream
Publix Beef, Gov’t
Inspected, Fresh

Sunnyland

Boneless Ham..... ft.' *2
Swift Premium, G ov’t.-lnspected
Shipped Quick Frozen,
Evisc., U.S.D.A. Grade A

Duckling..............
Palm River

91

l

Sliced Bacon....... J5: *T

Q uarters, Land O L a k e s R eq

Pillsbury H un gry Ja c k
Buttermilk or Butter Ta stin

12-oz. pkg.

■Frozen Seafood I

Biscuits................... c.n l

M rs. Paul’s

Pepperoni Pizza.....iff: $

Fried C lam s........... U

Dairi-Fresh

Light C re a m .......... iC 1

M rs. Paul’s C risp ier Crunchier
7 .5 -o z . Fish Sticks o r 8 .5 -o z.

M aggio Reg. or Part Skim Milk

Fish Fillets ................. . . . .

Ricotta C h e e s e ..... cu°Px $

Chicken
Nuggets

pk|

Deviled C r a b s ....... &amp;

^ ■ P ro d u c e B H

Pub C heese....... FRI
Kraft Individually-W rapped .

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                    <text>Sanford, F lo rid a — Sunday, M a rc h 29, 1987

P ric e

50 Cents

Bell Rings Democratic Chords A t Banquet
By Kathy Tyrlty
Herald Staff W riter
Democrats arc a breed apart because of
thetr caring Tor the human condition and
their willingness to sacrifice today for a
better tomorrow, state ftep. Sam Bell.
D-Volusia County, told three hundred
Central Florida Democrats celebrating
the annual "JefTerson-Jackaon Banquet"
Friday night at the Park Suite Hotel in
Altamonte Springs.
The program was arranged by Shlela J.
Morgan, vice chairman of the Seminole
County Democratic Executive Commit­
tee, and hosted by Bob Hattaway. former
state legislator.
David McIntosh, chairman of the Exec­

utive Committee, presented an award to
O. Troy Ray, Jr., tax collector for the past
i4 years who is not seeking re-election.
Ray waa recognized for his 30 years of
public service, having also served as chief
deputy clerk for Seminole County Circuit
Court.
Bell complained about the lack of
unified leadership in Florida and its
institutions, stating that government
where there la no consensus is difficult.
We have much high tech Industry now
but there is no unifying leadership. And
the new companies aren’t bringing us
together either, but pulling us farther
apart." he said.
As lawmakers, he said, it is increasing-

to somehow magically find a consensus
and transfer that Into laws." he com­
plained.
How decisions in Tallahassee are made
reminds him of the early Italian city-state
days with Machiavellians around. "W e
have coalitions formed for a single, selfish
Interest. Then when they’re through with
their cause, they break apart." he
explained.
Bell is chairman of the Appropriations
Committee and also on the Finance and
Taxation Committee. One of the bills
passed which he is proudest of is the
Congregate Living Bill designed to. pro­
tect senior citlxens from unscrupulous
See B IL L , page 8 A

NweM n w t o t r Kstfty Tyrtty

3 to »# t o p . Sam t o l l

• Jo*— Got Ovation

Reagan &gt;
Highway

Now:
A Victim's Advocate
A Felon's Victim

trying to api

U n t o Kuhn 1

VictimfWitnott Coordinator
will probably be free on parole within the next
year or so.
During her recovery period Ms. Saldana
became an advocate for victims. She founded
the national Victims for Victims and has
received a commendation from President
Reagan for her work on behalf of victims, Mrs.
Kuhn said.
The Seminole County victims' luncheon and
other activities planned by Brevard/Seminole
State Attorney Norman Wolflnger are intended
to bring attention to the victims of crimes,
their right and needs, as well as those of their
families during "National Victim’s Rights
Week." April 26 through May 2.
Bm Victim, page SA

political instincts and vote to
sustain his veto.

the people In central Florida
who are taxpayers and Amerl-

road and mass transit projects
for individual congressional dis­
tricts — that he said demon­
strate only "the ability of con­
gressmen to bring home the
ham hocks."
The new bill would allocate
highway and transit money on
the basis of traditional formulas

b illion h igh w ay and
transit bill — that Includes a
provision allowing states to raise
the speed limit to 65 mph on
rural interstates — will come up
in the House on Tuesday and the
Senate Wednesday. Leaders of
both parties say they cannot tell
If there are two-thirds in each
chamber willing to override the
president.
,
"I predict the veto will be
overridden." said E. Everette
Huskey, a central Florida busi­
nessman who has supported the
bill because it Includes funds for
an Interchange at State Road
46A and Interstate 4, an area
he's developing.
Huskey said he thinks the veto
has more to do with Reagan

destiny any more, ft’a (Ayatollah
Ruhollah) Khomeini and Mr.
Reagan."
Huskey noted that the money
that was spent for a $161 million
rocket and satellite which was
destroyed Thursday in-flight at
Cape Canaveral would have paid
for all the project construction in
the southeast United States.
Huskey said Reagan should use
his office to assure such highdollar mistakes do not happen.
He said he knows o f at least 22
senators, 21 republicans and one
democrat, who will support
Reagan in the veto effort.
The president sent a strip­
ped-down version of the bill to
Congress Friday, removing 152
"demonstratlun projects" — pet

ites Instead of concentrating
on urban projects — a move thaT
could help sustain the veto in
the Senate, which more closely
represents state’s needs than the
House.
The Senate rejected 49-45
Friday a nonbinding resolution
to require action on the new
administration bill In seven
days.
Reagan has said he supports
the speed-limit Increase, "But
I'm not going to sacrifice this
country's economic well being.
"This bill is a textbook exam­
ple of special Interest, porkbarrel politics at work, and I
have no choice but to veto It," he
said in an Oval Office ceremony.
8 m REAGAN, page 8A

Warm Meals Produce Warm Feelings
By Genie L lad berg
Herald S taff W riter
Warm thoughts or a family
thered ‘round a dinner table
II of hot, nutritious food turn
into cold reality when a senior
citizen living alone, sits down to
dinner with a can of soup and
some crackers.
Many seniors lack incentive to
prepare adequate, nutritious
meals, Raiford W esley, site
manager for congregate mlals
for seniors at Lakeview Baptist
Church in Lake Mary. said.
"When there was a family, there
was greater Incentive to think
aboul nutrition."
The congregate meals pro­
gram is sponsored by the Feder­
ation of Senior Citizen Clubs of
Seminole County and provides
full, nutritious meals with fruit
Juice, bread and milk to senior
citizens 60 years and older at
seven Seminole County locations
Monday through Friday from 10

B

Margarat Wesley, standing, Is spooning croolo sauce over
fish dinners that senior citizens In the congregate meals
program sponsored by The Federation of Senior Citizen
Clubs of Seminole County are about to eat at Lakeview
I * 1?*1*:

5hurch'•N
. VI*akRuby
2if-1!:Reagan,
s®***M,rrs.
on#Weslev.
r,»ht •»Clara
,r«"«

a.m. to 2 p.m. No specific
ch a rg e s are m ade fo r the
services, but participants are
encouraged to make donations
according to their ability.
The Lakeview Baptist Church
location has been in operation
for four years. An average of
about 15 people eat there daily
and reservations two days ahead
are recommended.
"So many think thla is for
charity; it is not c h a rity ."
Wesley said. "T h e y are en­
cou raged to donate in a c ­
cordance with their means," All
contributions are used to expand
the services jhal senior citizens
will benefit from, he said.
From a nutritional standpoint.
Wesley says that seniors often
will not fix a balanced meal Just
for themselves or for themselves
and a spouse. The congregate
meals program enables them to
have at least one well-balanced
meal a day which provides half

Only Minor, Inexpensive Changes Recommended

Parking Study Completed
Herald S ta ff W rite r
Only minor and inexpensive parking
changes are recommended by a Sanford
study group that has been analyzing
ta doyPtown SanfafjL
Members o f the study group met Thunday to make minor adjustments in the
report which will be sent to the engineering
Arm o f Howard Needles Tammen and
jfcrgendofT of Orlando. s ^ J s y M a r d e r .
8snfords city planner. The Sanford study
will be Included inja larger traffic study the
firm is conducting for the city, Marder said.

Low-cost Improvements recommended by
the study group Include:
eBetter directional signs to where parking is available in the downtown area
Including near the courthouse and perhaps
on Seminole Boulvard and Second and
Third streets,
•Changing parallel parking on wide
streets to diagonal parking.
•Establishing all-day parking zones near
the downtown area for employees and
decreasing the two-hour parking limit to
one-hour which might increase customer
turn-over.

•Closing Hood Avenue (parallel to the
courthouse, east side) and using It for
parking.
The study said a downtown parking
impact fee proposal needed more study and
a way to encourage motorists to park on
spaces south o f First Street should be
identified. It also said a closer look is needed
at creating a parking lot between First and
Third street. An analysis "...should provide
Justification and emphasize recommenda­
tion for acquisition of property for surface
parking, including methods of financing, for
See STUDY, page 8A

TO D A Y
Bridge...............
Classifieds...... .
Comics..............
Coming Events
crossword..............
Dear Abby..............
Deaths....................
Editorial................
Florida....................
Hospital..................,

Opinion
People
Religion
School Menus
Sports......
Television
Viewpoint.
Weather...

• Sanford orders new ap­
praisal on potential waste
site, 5A

• Sanford heart specialist
Luis Perez suffers stroke,
page BA

�r

r
2A-S«nlord Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, March 2f, 1917

POLICE
IN B R IEF
Sale O f Stolen Jew elry
Cracks Burglary Case
The sale of four rings and a gold necklace lo Sanford
Gold at Flea World south of Sanford, brought the arrest at
7:34 a.m. Thursday of a 23-year-old Sanford man In
connection with a March 21 burglary at 3441 Country Club
Road, Sanford.
The Jewelry was sold March 22 and the buyers, who also
operate Five Points Jewelry and Pawn Shop, on U.S.
Highway 17-92. reported the buy to Seminole County
sheriffs deputies.
The victim of the burglary reportedly Identified as hers
the Jewelry In question. A suspect was stopped by a
sheriffs deputy on a traffic stop at about 7 a.m. Thursday
and found In his car was a .38-callbcr handgun taken In the
same burglary, a sheriffs report said.
Charles Lawrence Welbes. 23. of 1704-A Ridgewood
Lane, was charged with armed burglary, dealing In stolen
property and three counts of grand theft at 7:34 a.m.
Thursday on Ridgewood Avenue, Sanford. He was being
held In lieu or94.500 bond.

5 Arrested O n D UI Charge
The following persons have been arrested in Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
— Terry Gene Lamie. 33. of 3035 Suwanne Court,
Apopka, was arrested Thursday after a traffic accident at
3028 Orleans Way, Apopka.
— Janet Elaine Fulp, 30, 155 Sandlewood Way.
Longwood, at 8:55 p.m. after her car was In an accident on
State Road 434 at Rangcllnc Road. Longwood. She was
also charged with failure to use due care.
— Terry Dean Kaplan. 24, of 223 Dcbora Court.
Altamonte Springs, at 3:28 a.m. Thursday after his
weaving pickup truck ran a rcdllght on State Road 436,
Altamonte Springs.
— Anthony Edward Wise, 20. of 110 Sugar Maple Court,
Sanford, at 12:07 a.m, Friday, after he was seen driving on
the wrong side of Old Lake Mary Road. Lake Mary.
— Timothy Mlcheal Davis, 31. of P.O. Box 1106. Oviedo,
early Friday after he was seen driving north In the
southbound lane of U.S. Highway 17-92. Sanford.

M an Jailed In Dispute O ve r Baby
Altamonte Springs police called to a domestic dispute at
807 *2 Wymorc Road. Altamonte Springs, at about 6:30
p.m. Thursday reported having to force a man to hand over
his 4-month-old daughter before he was arrested on
charges of resisting arrest both with and without violence.
Police said when they arrived at the home they were mcl
outside by Wendy Curry, 21. who reportedly said she and
her husband had been In a dispute over a pending divorce.
He wouldn't let her or police Into the home, where Mrs,
Curry said her 4-month-old daughter was. She also said
there was a gun In the home.
Mrs. Curry opened the door and police confronted the
suspect, who. It was reported, ran from room to room
carrying the baby. At one point the baby's head was hit
against a wall. The suspect reportedly cursed police and
Mrs. Curry and refused to surrender the child. Mrs. Curry
eventually "grabbed the baby when police grabbed the
struggle with police the suspect’s head was'hU
against a wall and he suffered “ rug burns." which vitro 7.1
treated at Florida Hospltal-AItamonte Springs before hr
was booked into Jail.
Brian Thomas Curry, 23, o f the above address, has been
released on 91,000 bond lo appear in court April 13. There
was no reported injury to the baby.

Driving Under Influence Arrests
The following persons have been arrested in Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
—William M. Mero. 29. of 1615 W. Third St.. Sanford, was
arrested at 2:58 a.m. Thursday after his car with
headlights turned off was seen weaving on U.S. Highway
17-92, Sanford.
—Diana Lavett Smith, 27, of 3039 Weston St„ Box 11,
Oviedo, at 8:33 p.m. Wednesday after her car failed to
maintain a single lane on Third Street at Oak Avenue In
Sanford. She was also charged with possession of less than
20 grams of marijuana.
—David Czerwinskl, 26. of Orlando, at 10 a.m. Wednesday,
on Goldenrod Road at State Road 50 in Orange County
after he allegedly fled the scene of a traffic accident on
State Road 436 .near Howell Branch Road, Casselberry. He
was nabbed by an Orange County sheriffs deputy and
returned to the scene of the accident to be charged by a
Florida Highway Patrolman. He was also charged with
leaving the scene of an accident and careless driving.
—Ben Arnold Mewhlrter. 18, of Orlando, at 1 a.m.
Thursday after his southbound car veered into the
northbound lane of Markham Woods Road and collided
with another vehicle.

In
An 18-year-old Longwood
man, who allegedly hit in the
forehead with a bottle a man
who had accompanied a woman
to return some items to the
L on gw ood hom e o f her
exboyfriend on March 20. has
been charged with aggravated
battery.
A Seminole County sheriffs
report of the 11:18 a.m. Tuesday
arrest of David Robert Horvath o f
209 Ambergate Court, gave this
account of the Incident: Janet

tUSPS MI-MS)

'

Sunday, March J», IM7
Wf* », Vol. 7f,
i 7 No. IM
*

F u B H iM d Oslty and Sunday, t i c s *
Mu Y
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sufprAtld
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Sscsnd C U M N i t i p P s M s t Ssntord,
F U rld s M77I
H u m Delivery / Mewth, M i l l ) Msntfet,
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;
M1.SS. S y M s ili Mento, M.7SI I
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V ssr. ««S.M .
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IM S ) &gt;71 M i l.

• r
Ann Slone and the victim
Kristopher Ron Kevorkian ar­
rived at the home o f Ms. Stone's
cxboyfriend at about 11:30 p.m.
March 20. The exboyfriend. Jef­
frey Chase and the suspect came
outside and Ms- Stone and Chase
b e g a n a r g u in g . H o r v a t h
a l l e g e d l y w a l k e d up to
Kevorkian and blew cigarette
smoke In his face and asked if he
had a problem. Horvath was
carrying a bottle. Ms. Slone
stepped between Kevorkian and
Horvath and Hovath reportedly
pushed her away and cursed
Kevorkian and pushed him.
Kevorkian pushed back and
the suspect allegedly hit him
above the right eye with thebottle. Kevorkian and Ms. Stone
left. The next day Kevorkian
sought medical treatment and,
received six stttches to close the
wound above his right eye.
w h ich w as b la k e n e d a n d ,
bloodshot, the report said. The
Incident was reported to sheriffs
deputies.
Horvath was arrested at the
Seminole County Sheriff's De­
partment a fter qu estion in g
Tuesday. He was being held In
lieu o f95.000 bond.

Mobile Home
Seller Fined
Licenst

Oviedo Man Pleads Guilty
In Cirde-K Burglaries
A 23-ycar-old Oviedo man arrested In connec­
tion with December burglaries In Lake Mary has
pleaded guilty to grand theft and possession of
marijuana.
Douglas Martin Genton of Route 2. Box 1130.
entered the plea before Circuit Judge S. Joseph
Davis Jr. who set May 13 for sentenclngs.
Lake Mary Police Chief Charles Lauderdale said
Gcnton’s arrest and that of a 16-year-old boy with
him cracked a burglary ring that had hit six area
Clrcle-K Stores. Disposition of charges against the
boy was not available because of his age.
The duo were arrested In January after Lake
Mary police became suspicious of their vehicle
parked near a CIrcle-K store. Police reported
finding burglary tools In the vehicle and a
marijuana cigarette
The burglarized Clrclc-Ks were In Sanford.
Altamonte Springs. Casselberry. Longwood.
Maitland and Orange County.
In another case, a 20-ycar-old Orlando man
accused of taking a car a girl was In charge of for
a friend has pleaded guilty to grand theft.
Timothy James Clardullo. entered the plea
before Davis who set sentenclngs for May 13.
The car was stolen In December after the keys
were taken and the car gone from the home of
Angelo Albcnlz, 30. of 236 Orange Ave.. Alta­
monte Springs. The 1967 Pontiac GTO had been
taken on o Sunday or early Monday and was
returned Monday. Clardullo was arrested at the
scene.

In a third case, a 19-year-old Longwood man
charged In connection with the firing of a pellet
gun at two boys has pleaded no contest to battery
and Improper display of a weapon.
Sc ml-retired Circuit Judge Humes Lasher set
an April 30 sentencing date for Randall Baker or
968 S.E. Lake St. A boy was arrested the same
time as Baker, but how the Incident Is being
handled Is not available because of his age.
The pair were arrested. Jan. 4 In woods near
Forest Park Lane In Casselbeny.
Two boys told police that they had been
chased, threatened and assaulted by two sus­
pects. One of the boys had been shot In the finger
and the other said a pellet rifle had been held
within 5 Inches of his throat, by one o f the
suspects.
—Deane Jordan

Medfly Quarantine Imposed
WASHINGTON (UP1)- The Agriculture De­
partment Imposed emergency quarantine regula­
tions Friday to prevent the spread of the
Mcdlterrcan fruit fly from Florida to other states.
The rules prohibit Interstate movement of most
fruits, nuts, vegetables and berries from quaran­
tined areas unless they are accompanied by a
certificate or a limited permit Issued by an
Agriculture Department Inspector or they meet
other quarantine conditions.

A W in ter S prings ffl
round not guilty ot grand tli
but guilty of selling mol
hom es w ith ou t a prof
license has been fined 9100,'.
Howard Mlnner. 55.
fined by Circuit Judge
Eaton Jr.
Mlnner was found not.gull
by jury of grand theft chkr
ip February. He was. hoa
er. found guilty or not hav
the proper license to
trailers.;
Mlnner had accused
state attorney's office
W CPX. C hannel 6 .
orchestrating his arrest
the television station. Wr
and the State Attorney’s ol
have denied that accusatl
■" After his acquittal on
theft charges. Mlnner;. I
lib el suit against WC
claiming footage or his ar
has been used* to promote
station's action reporter.
He m aintains that con
tinued use o f the am
footage took the Issue out!
the realm of news and Int
commercial exploitation.

Suit D ropped A g a in st Casselberry Bank M a n a g e r
Barnett Bank dropped a civil
suit Thursday In which It ac­
cused Its former Casselberry
branch manager and some West
Germans with attempting to
commit a 95.7 million fraud.
The March 13 suit filed in
federal court III Orlando alleged
J. Stephen Blackwell of Orlando,

manager of the Casselberry
branch until Januury, approved
the Im m ediate crediting of
checks written by four West
Germans. It was dropped after a
large amount of the money was
repaid, a bank spokesman said.
The

accounts of five companies, were
returned for Insufficient funds.

Blackwell did not have the
authority to grant credit without
walling two weeks for the checks
to clear foreign bunks, according
to records. Th e withdrawn
'money
was deposited in three
12 checks, written on

Florida companies, according to
the suit. The suit also alleged
Blackwell received $33,000 be­
tween April and December 1986
from one of the check cashcrs.
Barnett reserved the right to
file the suit aguln.
—Deane Jordtai

I W EATHER
Not i on Ternpei at uros
Sy United Pres* Ini*n u t tenet
City S Fcst
HI Lo
Albutnm qu* cy
U 14
Anchor *9 * cy
41 37
A itov 11It pc
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Atlanta pc
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Billing* tn
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Birmingham pc
Button r
43 41
71 S3
Brownivllla Tax.pc
Bulla lope
34 43
Burlington Vt. cy
S3 13
CharlMton S.C. cy
M 41
Charlotte N.C. pc
74 31
a 41
Chicago cy
Cincinnati pc
43 41
Ctevalandpc
S3 40
Columbus pc
44 40
Dallaipc
.. ; ; i r w
a is
SIlHifcH
J7 37
Datrollpc
S3 43
Duluth pc
41 17
4* 43
E l Peso sy
Evantvllteiy
47 42
Hartford r
44 44
Honolulu ly
40 44
Houston pc
71 37
Indlanapollapc
41 40
77 44
Jackson MI m . pc
Jacksonville ts
73 44
Kansas City r
40 40
LasVagassy
41 44
Llttla Rock pc
70 33
Los Angola* sy
45 44
Loulsvlltosy
43 44
Memphis!
73 44
Miami Beach pc
71 74
Mllwaukaash
SO 13
Minneapolis sn
31 I t
Nashville f
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Near Orleans fy
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Maw York »h
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Oklahoma City r
43 47
Omaha sn
34 M
Philadelphia pc
71 30
Phoenix sy
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Pittsburgh pc
41 44
Portland Me. cy
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Portland Or*, sy
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Providence r
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Richmond pc
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4t 34

S8SEK

Five-Day Forecast

Pep
.17
Ml
04

For Central Florida
PttyCWy

Ptly CStfy

P tly d d y

.04

.01

83

.41

Th e n .
.10

.41

ot

Source/ Natteael Weather Servfc*

Blizzard Born
In Kansas

Apr. I I

.to

A pr.M

H orn h ( u n d i t t o n &gt;
__ ______ _____ _
Waves are
1-2 feet and glassy. The current
is going north, and the water
temperature under very foggy
sk ies Is 62 d egrees. N ew
Smyrna lo i c h i Waves are 2-3
feet, fair form, and glassy. The
water temperature is 62 degrees,
and skies are overcast. Current
is going north.

"There’s cara off the road,
but the people are being
assisted by Deptartment o f
Transportation crews who are
out In trucks w ith snow
plows," Weyand said, "The
plows aren't doing much good,
they're Just spinning their
wheels, with the wind blowing
40 miles an hour.
"W e had 16 Inches of snow
Monday, Tuesday and Wed­
nesday, and the new snow |s
blowing In on top of the old
snow and tee on the pave­
ment," Weyand said. "They’re
forecasting anywhere from 6 to
10 Inches o f new snow. It's

Friday’s nigh temperature in
Sanford was 79 degrees and the
low during the previous 24
hours was 68 degrees. A half an
Inch of rain was reported. Dreary i
but with less chance of rain over
the weekend and through Mon­
day.

84

.31

By United Press
International
A snowstorm that closed
'.is
.it
down highways and schools
and delayed (lights In Colorado
turned Into a blizzard early
today as tt brought snow and
.03
high
w in d s Into w estern
.44
Kansas.
Winds were blowing early
.10
today at more than 32 mph in
western Kansas, and peaked at
pc partly claody
'coots
48 mph, the National Weather
tra in
cctear
Service said. Between 3 and 4
sh showers
chc tearing
*m smoke
cy-cloudy
Inches of snow fell over the
sn-snow
I f air
area. It was (he second blizzard
sy-sunny
fy-logey
to hit Kansas this week.
ts-thunderitorms
h i-t o n
w windy
mmlsslng
The blizzard was moving
east, and a w inter storm
warning was in effect today for
H o n d a T o m p o ra tu ro s
the north central part of the
state.
The adjutant general's office
M IA M I (U P I) — Florida 14to u r tempera­
called out the Kansas National
tures and rainfall at •a.m. B D T today:
Ctfyi
Guard late Friday because of
la
Apalachicola
71 43 1-44 severe icing and stranded
Crastvtow
74 41 0.03
Daytona Saach
41 47 1.41 motorists on Interstate 70,
Far! Lauderdale
40 73 040 authorities said.
Fort Myers
14 71 0.13
Four enlisted personnel and
Gainesville
71 47 1.75
Jacksonville
TV 44 0.41 M548 track veh icles were
Kay West
It 77 0.00 called out for search and rescue
Lakeland
41 47 0.43 missions, said spokeswoman
Miami
43
0.00 Joy Cole.
Orlande
M
044
Petoacota
71
OH
More than 200 miles o f 1-70
Saraeota-Bradonten
7*
043 from Hays, Kansas west to
7]
0*3
Tampa
M
0.73 Llmon, Colorado was closed
Varo Beech
41
0.14 early Saturday, said Gerald
West Palm Beach
41 71 0.00 W e y a n d o f t h e K a n s a s
Highway Patrol.

Apr-0

Sunn

Local R ep o rt

pretty wicked."
A mixed bag of precipitation
was falling on central and
south central Kansas as rain,
sleet and snow fed waterways.
Flash flood warnings and
watches were posted Tor today
for several counties.
The arctic air produced gusty
north winds of up to 40 mph In
North and South Dakota Fri­
day. and spread snow and
freezing rain from Montana and
the.Dakotas to Nebraska and
Colorado.
Between 3-6 Inches of snow
fell Friday on the Front Range
o f the Rockies. The spring
snowstorm dosed 20 miles or
Interstate 25 from Castle Rock.
Colo., to Denver Friday night,
forcing motorists to Jam the
town's five motels.
The Red Cross set up three
shelters to handle the overflow.
A rash of accidents also
closed an 1 1-block section of
the highway in Denver Friday
night and blowing snow caused
delays of up to 1 *4 hours at
Stapleton International Airport.
Earlier Friday, the snow
made for a messy morning
rush hour In Denver, and
accident alerts were Issued for
much or the metropolitan area,
meaning people involved in
minor, non-injury accidents
should not call police unless
alcohol is related,
S ch ools east o f D en ver
started ciosfng before noon, as
wind gusts in excess of 50 mph
whipped up snow and reduced
visibility.
"T h e wind isn't blowing
super hard but it's blowing
e n o u g h to c r e a t e s o m e
whlleouts occasionally and U's
starting to drift." said Bill
Fears, superintendent o f the
Byers School District In Col­
orado.
Friday morning lows were
mostly in the 20s from the
northern and central Plateau
across the Rockies and Into the
northern half of the Plains.

A rea

F oreca st

S a tu r d a y th ro u g h
day...m ostly cloudy with
chance of showers or thun
derstorms. Highs in the lower
80s. Low In the mid 60s. Wind
south to southwest 10 to 15 mph
today. Rain chance 40 percent
today...30 percent tonight and
40 percent tomorrow.
A ft* n

R e a d in g s

The temperature at 9 a.m.: 74:
overnight low: 69: Friday's high:
80; barometric pressure: 29.88
relative humidity: 90 percent
winds: South at 12 mph; rain
.50 Inch: Today’s sunset: 6:42
p.m.. Monday sunrise; 6:19 a.m.
E x te n d e d

F oreca st

Th e e x te n d e d fo reca sts.
Monday through Wednesday, for
Florida except northwest —
Partly cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
statewide Monday then central
and south Tuesday and south
Wednesday. Mostly fair and
cooler north by Monday night
then central Tuesday night.
Lows averaging In the lower 40s
north to low 50s central and
lower 60s south except near 70
in the keys. Highs averaging In
the m|d 60s north to mid to
upper 70s south.
A ro n

T id o s
&lt;*v

s
MONDAY:
highs, 8:39 a.m „ 8:54 p.m.)
Iowa, 2:16 a.m., 5:25 p.m.: Naw
• ■ F * * * Busch: highs. 8:44
a.m„ 8:59 p.m.: lows, 2:21 a.m..
5:30 p.m.; Bayportl highs. 1:40
a.m., 2:22 p.m.: lows. 7:38 a.m..
8; 13 p.m.
B o o 11 n g

Saint Augustine to Jupiter
Inlet — Saturday .... wind south
15 kls. Seas 3 to 5 ft. Bay and
Inland waters a moderate chop.
Scattered thunderstorms with
gusty wind.
Saturday night and Sunday ...
wind south 15 kts. Seas 3 to 5 ft.
Bay and inland waters a moder­
ate chop. S ca ttered th u n ­
derstorms mainly north part.

�./v,.

f

Child Abuse
Prevention
Month Set
April Ib Child Abuse Pre
veiilion Month and this
y e a r’ s them e In central
Florida is "Family Fun for
Child Abuse Prevention."
"Experience tells us that
one of the most Important
first steps that we can lake In
the prevention or child abuse
Involves the support of a
strong family unit," said
Judy Jones, Florida Health
and Rehabilitative Services
c h ild abuse p re v e n tio n
coordinator for District VII.
"During April we will be
h ig h lig h t in g the m an y
services that are available In
Scmtnole Orange, Osceola
and Brevard counties to
support our families at a time
when they need assistance
the most." she said.
Statistics show that 80 to
90 percent of all reported
cases of child abuse occur at
hom e, which Ms. Jones
called significant.
"A s children, we first learn
how to react with others from
our families and the way In
which we learn this will
shape our attitudes for the
rest of our lives. If we begin
the learning process In a
negative environment, the
effect can be permanent."
Jones said parenting Is the
most Important Job many
people will ever face.
"However. It Is also the Job
for which we are generally
the least prepared because,
for example, we can’t major
In parenting In school. On top
of this, times have changed
drastically and that Is chang­
ing our families. Our mobile
society and the increase in
the number of two-income
families means that many of
the tr a d itio n a l su p p ort
systems so common in the
past no longer exist.
’ ’ We know that stress,
p a r t lc u la r y th e s tr e s s
associated with financial
problems, can be a potential
cause of abuse for some
parents. We also know that
c h a n g e s In th e fa m ily
structure, such as those
brought about by divorce,
can cause severe problems,
as well. However, it is Im­
portant for parents to know
that they are not alone and
that help Is available. While
some of the more traditional
family support systems may
no longer exist for some
parents, there are many
other systems now In place
throughout central Florida to
assist those In need."
The succesas of prevention
Is something that Ms. Jones
said Is difficult to measure
but she said she Is confident
that progress is being made
In the battle against child
abuse.
'We face many challenges
In our efforts biit we are
convinced that we can make
a difference by 'w orking
together to support pur fami­
lies and our children," she
said.
Seminole County's child
abu se p re v e n tio n team
number Is 339-1400.

Sanford Herald, Sanford, PI.

Svndoy, March it, 1fi7— »A

Board Investigating Rocket Failure Begins Probe
CAPE C ANAVERAL (UP!) - The
chairman of the board that will In­
vestigate the failure of an Atlas-Centaur
rocket after launch said Friday It Is too
early to draw conclusions despite
speculation that lightning may have been
a factor.
The rocket and Its military com­
munications satellite, carrying a com­
bined price tag of 9161 million, were
destroyed 51 seconds after a rainy
blastoff Thu rsday.
"My experience In the space business Is
until you get a lot of facts In your pocket
you shouldn't draw any conclusions,"
said Jon Busse, director of quality
assurance at NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt. Md.
The Atlas-Centaur failure was NASA's
first rocket loss of 1987 after five straight

successes dating to September that
seemed to Indicate the nation's space
program was back on track after the
Challenger disaster and two unmanned
rocket failures last year.
Busse said he will lly to Cape Canaveral
Saturday to begin overseeing the In­
vestigation. He said the accident review
board will be made up of about nine
members.
"My philosophy Is to come down and
look at all of the data with an open mind
and really scrub through It, to try to
recover hardware. look at all the
telemetered data, what we can get out of
the optics and go through the normal
scientific method to try to figure out what
happened." Busse said In a telephone
Interview.
Some debris has washed ashore and

Busse said he planned to order salvage
crews to recover significant pieces of the
broken rocket, now resting on the bottom
of the Atlantic Ocean.
The 137-foot Atlas-Centaur, one of only
two left In NASA’s inventory, roared off
the launch pad despite heavy rain, low
clouds and reports of lightning in the
area. Including one bolt seen on the
ground near the pad an instant before the
rocket was destroyed.
"Just after IlftofT. approximately a
minute into launch, we heard a BAM!"
said Bill Mitchell, a photographer near
launch complex 36-B. "And then 15
seconds or so later we heard another one.
Approximately 45 seconds after the
second explosion I saw a piece of flaming
debris falling to the ocean."
John Gibb. Atlas-Centaur project man­

ager, agreed It was too early to speculate
on what caused the failure, which
happened with the rocket Invisible
behind heavy cloud cover.
"W e have restrictions that in case of
lightning conditions that we are not
allowed to launch." he said. "W e were
not in any of those conditions. At the
time of launch wc were in a solid 'go'
condition.
"I don't have any data that we had a
massive electrical failure (that may have
Indicated a lightning strike)," Gibb said.
"That's what my guys arc looking at
right now."
The 878 million rocket, built by
General Dynamics and carrying an $83
million Navy communications satellite,
disappeared Into the clouds about 40
seconds after launch.

Duff
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Seminole County sheriff's in­
vestigator Dan Prast reported
c h a r g in g a 2 3 - y e a r - o ld
Longwood man with sexual
battery and committing a lewd
and lascivious act on a child In
connection with an alleged
assault on a young girl who was
a guest at his home.
The girl and her mother re­
ported the allegation to Health
and Rehabllation Services coun­
selors and they were referred to
Prast who questioned them
Wednesday. The girl alleges that
she was asleep In the suspect's
home on March 14 when he
carried her to his bed and
assaulted her. The girl stopped
the alleged assault by saying she
had to go to the bathroom. When
she left the suspect's bedroom
she telephoned her mother and
said she had been assaulted, a
sheriff's report said.
Arthur Robert Buteau, of 1224
Hamilton Ave.. was arrested at
5:35 p.m. Thursday after ques­
tioning at the sheriffs depart­
ment. He was being held without
bond.
—Susan Lodcn

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Sunday. March

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Idyllw ilde
Expressway
Briefing Set

Road Work This Week
H ere are the projects In Sem inole County that m ay affect the flow of traffic;

State Road 434 and
In te r s ta te 4 in te rc h a n g e .
W idening of 1-4 e x it ram ps.
W ork affecting tra ffic flow 24
hours a day. Jurisdiction:
F lo r id a D e p a r tm e n t of
Transportation.

Colonial W ay from
F r e n c h A v e n u e to O a k
Avenue; Cordova W ay from
Tw entieth Street to Tw entyfirs t Street; E dltha C ircle
from Coronado Concourse to
A m e lia Avenue; Tw enty-first
Street, Twenty-second Street
and T w enty-third Street from
S a n fo rd A v e n u e to P a r k
Avenue; Twenty-second from
P a rk Avenue to O ak Avenue;
Hibiscus Court from T w en­
tie th S treet to G ran d view
A venue N orth ; L ily Court
fro m G rand view Avenue to
Tw entieth Street. East N ine­
te e n th S tre e t fro m P a rk
Avenue to Sanford Avenue;
J e ffe rs o n A v e n u e fro m
T w e n t i e t h to B e l - A i r e
Boulevard; Adam s Avenue
fro m T w e n tie th to L a k e
D r iv e ; L a k e D r iv e fro m
S um m erlin Avenue to BelA lre B o u le v a rd ; T w e n ty fo u rth S tre e t fro m S u m ­
m e r l in A v e n u e to M e llo n v llle A v e n u e . P a v in g .
M in im a l tra ffic disruption.
E x p e c te d c o m p le tio n by
m i d - A p r i l . J u r is d ic t io n :
Sanford.

T u s k a w llla R oad
and D ike Road. Intersection
Im provem ents and In stalla­
tion of left-turn lanes. Onela n e t r a f f i c a t t im e s .
Expected completion by end
of A p r il. J u r is d ic tio n :
Seminole County.

Ridgewood A venue
and 25th Street County Road
46. In te rs e c tio n Im p ro v e ­
m ents. Flagm en and tra ffic
In one lane a t tim es. T ra ffic
on 25th Street should not be
affected significantly at this
tim e . Expected com pletion
by m id -A p ril. Jurisdiction:
Sem inole County.

P lu m o s a A v e n u e
fro m Locust Avenue to San­
ford Avenue; Eleventh Street
from P a rk Avenue to Sanford
A venue; T w e lfth Street from
P a r k A v e n u e to S a n fo rd
Avenue; Fourth S treet from
P e r s i m m o n A v e n u e to
P om egranlte Avenue; F ifth
Street from M y rtle Avenue to
Sanford Avenue and Sixth
Street from Laurel Avenue to
M a g n o lia A venue. P a vin g .
M in im a l tra ffic disruption.
E x p e c te d c o m p le tio n by
m id -A p ril. Jurisdiction:
Sanforc

, _
Quintuplet D rive
__ w e e n N . W in te r P a rk
D riv e and Lake, D riv e . New
p a v in g . R o ad s p a s s a b le
( E x p e c t e d c o m p le tio n by,
the end of M a rc h . Jurisdic­
tion: Casselberry.

(

Work Is scheduled to begin
lids week on right turn lanes on
State Road 436 in Altamonte
Springs, a Florida Department of
Transportation spokesman said.
Orlando Paving Company is
scheduled to begin construction
of the lanes, which will extend
from Montgomery Road to Grace
Boulevard, on March 27 with
estimated completion by the end
of May.
Upon completion of the lanes,
traffic on SR 436 should move
more smoothly, according to
Mtchcal Bella. DOT public In­
formation officer.

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DETROIT (UPI) - Chrysler
Corp. said It is recalling about
4,600 1987-modcl Dodge Ram
pickup trucks to install a heat
shield to protect Its clutch
system.
The company made the an­
nouncement Friday.
Only vehicles with six-cylinder
e n g i n e s a n d manual
transmissions arc afTectaL-Jte
automaker said the clutch cyl­
inder and hose could become
'overheated by the exhaust
system and cause them to fall.

Sun D r iv e off
'Rinehart Road. Installing
new paving and drainage.
Passage along Sun Drive will
be somewhaf limited. Sched­
uled for completion by end of
M arch. Jurisdiction: Lake
M ary.

IN B R IEF
Lake M a ry Band Bootter Plan
Rummaga Sola Fund Ralamr
Lake Mary High School Band Boosters will hold a
rummage sale at the high school from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m.
on April 4 to raise funds for the activities of the band, nag
corps and the Lake Mary Marionette Dance Corps, James
Gibson, band publicity chairman, said.
The rummage sale, with contributions from over 200
families, will Include a car wash, a bake sale and a grocery
raffle with the band, nag corps and Marionettes scheduled
to begin performing at noon, he said. Coffee, doughnuts,
hot dogs and soft drinks will also be sold.

Eastbrook Hosts N A S A Spoakmr
East brook Elementary School will host Les Gold, an
aerospace education specialist representing the Education
and Awareness Office o f NASA’s John F. Kennedy Space
Center, on April 2, Dorothy Ann Quest, media specialist
said.
Gold will be at Uie school at 0 a.m. and will remain all
d ay. His le c tu re -d e m o n s tra tio n , know n as the
"Spacemobile." uses models, dynamic exhibits, films,
slides, laser video discs and other props necessary to
demonstrate how NASA goes about it* assigned mission of
exploring air and space, she said,
f

Tutkawllla G oat International
Tuskawllla Middle School will celebrate International
Fair Day on April 4 at the school with featured speakers
who will present slides, show artifacts, posters, dance and
music from different cultures. Catherine Seyler, Tuskawllla
teacher said. Students will receive special passports that
will allow them to visit different countries and to eat ethnic
foods, she said.

Economists Raising '87 Inflation Estimates
WASHINGTON (UPI) • Innatlon
theme songs in the past year
have tended to be two-note
tunes, dealing only with energy
and food. That was not the c b b c
with February's Consumer Price
In d e x r e p o r t , a n d s o m e
economists are concerned.
The 0.4 percent Increase re­
ported Friday was not much In
itself, the experts said, but It
indicated the overall inffatlon
rate will reach 4 percent in 1987
— above or at the high end of
most econom ic forecasters'
expectations for the year.
"Innatlon Is starting off the
year on a bad note," added Allen
Sinai o f Shearson Lehm an
Brothers. "M y concern Is that
there’s a potential for an Infla­
tionary spiral: prices go up, run

A m . M i a 111
PL II7 B 1

TERMS TO
15 YEARS , M _ . ,
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ahead of wage increases, wage
earners catch up and you’re off
and running."
Inflation-adjusted earnings -spending power — Increased 0.6
percent In February, primarily
because average hourly earnings
went up 0.5 percent and average
weekly hours worked increased
0.6 percent, the Labor Depart­
ment said.
"T h ere's a little bit more
inflation out there than a lot of
people have been talking about."
said Dr. Donald Ratajczak. head
of the Economic Forecasting
Project at Georgia Slate Univer­
sity in Atlanta. "1 used to think It
might be as high as 4 percent for
the year. Now I hope we can hold
it to 4 percent."
Among their reasons lie that'

"SStSSf’

» Aprils.

Morch M
PluaW sdga
Crispy To tor Tots
Gordon M in d Vogof oblos
Fruit Juleo
Lowfol Milk
Tuotioy
Morch St
Ch orbrolM turgor
Ovan-Bekad Potato
Tender Broccoli Cuts
Strowborry Fruit Mis
Baked Dessert
LowfatMilk

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PATIOS •POOL DECKS •DRIVEWAYS

A tK AOOUT OUR
OUARANTCC

AKFIASNCES
ON RIOUEST

COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTAL

CO /
O VO

OFF WITH
THIS COUPON

OVER » YEARS SXPIR.
___________________

C U S TO M

D IC K S

I S « 1 -1 S S s l

Cheaper autos and car financ­
ing helped moderate prices in
February, but economists say
that kind of benefit cannot be
counted on. New car prices fell
1.1 percent last month while
auto financing costs were 2.5
percent lower.

'

Current distribution rate b a s e d upon share price of
S 10.66 and dividends paid or d ecla red during the ninety
d a y period e n d e d 3/20/87, annualized. Yield a n d share
price will vary accord in g to market conditions. For exa m ­
ple. the net asset value p er share on 9/20/85 w as S 10.00
an d on 3/13/87 was $10,54. For m ore co m p le te Informa­
tion, Including ch arges an d expenses, call or write for
a free prospectus. Please rea d the prospectus carefully
b efo re you Invest or send money.

E

"WK USS ONLY HIGH OVALITY
MATERIALS TO 00 WITH OUR
TOR QUALITY WORK"

Sinai pointed out that many of
the increases are in services,
which now constitute over half
the categories checked when
figuring Inflation.

The Thomson McKinnon U.S. Government Fund
Invests In U.S. government obligations which are
guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the United
States government. In addition to the safety and at­
tractive yields these securities provide, the Thomson
McKinnon U.S. Government Fund offers liquidity and
guaranteed monthly payments.
We believe serious Investors owe It to themselves
to explore the benefits our fund provides. If you
would like to receive further Information, without cost
or obligation, ccM IM a Beckman at (BOB) B41-4910
or FL toN free §00-432*1301 or return the coupon
below.

April I

Following or* ttw mono* to bo otforod In
Seminole County school* tho week of Morch

prices.
"Secondly, producers here are
starting to feel some breathing
room and arc starting to ralae
their prices." he said.

9 . 81%

Chlckon-Frlod Stock w/Gra vy
Whipped Potato**
Gordon Poos
Favorite Cookie
Roll
Lowfol Milk
Thursday
Aprils
Circus Chill Dog
Piccadilly Colo Slaw
Oven
I_________
~
i-BAkod
T
Oossort Delight
Lowlet Milk
Friday
Sprits
Crispy Flshwlch or Golden Sea Nuggot*
Macaroni'n Choose
Groon Goons
Jules Bar
Bun or Roll
LowtalMllk

SPRING V AC ATIO N

M 74S00

!740-6338

fact that the cost of goods other
than food or energy have risen
0.5 percent since the start of
1987.
Ratajczak attributed that to
the depreciation of the dollar,
which the Reagan administra­
tion has been pushing to make
U .S. g o o d s b e tte r p r ic e d
overseas.
"Until (the dollar fell in value
below) 2 deutschmarks and 160
yen. foreigners from the indus­
trialized countries were absorb­
ing the price Increases from
currency changes." Ratajczak
said. "They’ve finally decided
they couldn’ t absorb it any
more, and they are kicking up

SCHOOL MENU

S
M A R S H A LL M O H TQ AQ B
N 1 N.

Chrysler
Recalls
Pickups

.

i
V

SCHOOLS

Idvllwiltlc area residents art
Invlicd to a briefing and qUe*
tlon-answer session about the
proposed routes for the Setnlnok
Cmmtv Expressway that maybt
c o m i n g t h r o u g h the|r
neighborhood.
The meeting will be at 7 p,m
Tuesday (Mar. 31) at Idyllwilde
Elementary'School.
On hand wi l l be Gerald
Brlnton. executive director of the
Expressway Authority.
There will be n presentation
nbout the proposed routes with
time nfterwards for questions.
The routes will be accurately
shown on large scale map*,
which weren’t nvullablc at the
early March public meetings.

State Road 436
Turn Lane Work
Scheduled

:

■:£r-

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_______E . W ilbu r Avenue, E.
L a k e v le w A v e n u e , F ifth
Street and C rystal Lake Ave.
R e -p a v in g an d d ra in a g e
w ork. M in im a l tra ffic dis­
ruption. Scheduled for com­
p le t io n by m i d - A p r i l .
J u ris d ic tio n : L ake M a ry .

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Nome______________
Address.

City___

. State.
Home Tet.______ _
. Bus. Tel.
201E. Pine St.. Ste. 400
Orlando. FL J28U
(305) 841-4910
Attn: Ntta Beckman

�r.-&gt; / N

ianfsrd Hsrsht, Sanford, FI,

Burglaries, Thefts
Four fire extinguishers valued
at $484 were taken oIT of four
vehicles inside a fenced com­
pound at Florida Public Utilities.
901 W. 6th St., Sanford, be­
tween Monday at 5:20 p.m. and
Tuesday at 8 a.m.. Andy Thom­
as, a u t i l i t i e s c o m p a n y
supervisor toid police.
Patricia Lively. 24. 455 Mytle
St.. Sanford, reported to police
on Monday that sometime on
Feb. 19 someone had taken four
diamond rings valued at $1,403
from her purse at work or while
she was at Country Club Pub at
Country Club Square Plaza In
Sanford. She said she had to
leave town due to a death In the
family and reported the Incident
as soon ns she returned, ac­
cording to a police report.

A car was broken Into while it
was parked in the carport out­
side the residence of Jennifer
Jones, 30, 821 Persimmon Ave.,
Sanford, between 11:15 p.m.
Tuesday and 6:20 a.m. Wed­
nesday. a police report said.
Entry to the ear was gained
through the driver's window and
the overhead light valued at $5
was broken but apparently
nothing had been taken, the
report said.
An AM/FM stereo, a boat
motor and fishing equipment
with a combined value of $500
w e r e t a k e n fr o m J i m 's
Automotive Service. 201 N. Ma­

ple Ave.,' Sanford, Tuesday at
about 11 p.m.. Jim Dunn, 43,
the store's owner told police.
Dennis Dunvllle, a witness, told
police he saw a man running
wesi on Commercial Avenue at
that time carrying a small boat
motor and that he would re­
cognize the man if he saw him
again.
A $365 air compressor and
other tools with a combined
value of about $ 1,000 were
sto len from the bed oT a
Diamond &amp; Paquet Roofing, Inc,
of Orlando truck at 3025 Fox Hill
Circle *109, Apopka, Tuesday or
Wednesday, a sheriffs report
said.

A 28 year-old Orlando man
who allegedly broke Into Uie
Altamonte Springs home o f hit
ex girlfriend at about 12:30
a.m. Friday, was nabbed by
Altamonte Springs as he stood
over the, woman who was
cowering on her sofa and
screaming when police entered
her home, according to the
police report.
When police arrived at the
home o f Melinda S. Ottinger,
20, of 643 Jamestown *1135,
Altamonte Springs, they were
met outside by Charles E.
Cook. 26. of Winter Park, who

told police he had (M from t V
home through a window when
the suspect (breed his way Into
ihe home, Cook said tv- feared
for the safety o f Mwv' Ottinger.
who used to live with ' the
suspect, before having him
move out In July,
Police entered the home and
arrested the suspect who was
standing over Ms. Ottinger who
was screaming. She told police
that he had beaten her on other
occasions.
The suspect had allegedly
broken a window to enter the
home after Ms. Otungnr and

tun$sy, Martti It,1W 7— IA

onto the aofa just'before police
arrived.
Hardy Harrison Woodlee has
been charged with violent bur­
glary to an occupied structure.
He was being held In lieu of
$8,000 bond.

The manager of Country Club
Coin Laundry. Michael Mueller,
told police that between 10 p.m.
Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday,
s o m e o n e took d a lly cash
e n v e lo p e s from the Coke
machine where they were kept
and that he will notify police as
soon as he determines the exact
amount taken.
Someone broke the glass out or
windows at Sanford Middle
School between Friday at 4:30
p.m. and Monday at 7 a.m. and
entered both the boys and the
girls physical education offices,
an aid station and Room 37 by
prying open a window, a police
report said. The total value of
Items taken has yet to be
determined by the school, the
report said.
Lt. Sam Flanigan. 36. of the
Salvation Army. 700 W. 24th
St., Sanford, reported to police
that between Saturday at 4:30
p.m. and Monday at 8 a.m.
someone entered a side door of
the Salvailnn Army and broke
the glass on a Lance vending
machine and also attempted lo
break into a Pepsi machine and
a metal file cabinet In the gym
ofTice, a police report said. The
value of what has been taken Is
yet to be determined, the report
said.
A 19-Inch color television
valued at $335 was taken from
the home of Henry Jamerson.
70. 609 Palmetto Ave., Sanford,
sometime between March 11
and 12. a police report said.
Jamerson told police Monday
that when he returned home
from vacation, Camilla Kelley.
51. 608 Palmetto Ave., who wus
watching his house for him
while he was on vacation, told
him that when she discovered
the TV missing, the back door
was open and a window had
been pulled open.

1
i

Leland W. Jacobson, 42. of
820 Hobson St.. Longwood, re­
ported to shertiTs deputies that
two pool sweepers, tools and a
tool box and a stereo with a
combined value of about $2,000
were stolen from his backyard
between March 23 and Thurs­
day.
A compact disc player and 17
discs with a combined value of
about $500 were stolen from the
hom e o f S tep h en E dw ard
Kaplan. 18. of 1019 Princess
Gate, Winter Park, between
T u esd a y and T h u rsd ay, a
sheriffs report said.
Larin Lee, 19. of 620 N. Bear
Lake Road. Apopka, reported to
sheriffs deputies that $148 and
her sister's 1984 Datsun valued
at $4,000 was stolen from their
home W ednesday. Deputies
have the name of a possible
suspect.
A camera, radio and cash with
a combined value of about $175
were stolen along with a 1978
Lincoln valued at $2,500 from
the home of Mary C. Doney, 37,
of 1208 Wynn Drive. Sanford,
early Friday. A sheriffs report
said the car was recovered about
50 yards from Ms. Doney's
home. It had been In a minor
accident.
Carole C. Bentei. 43. of 213
Crown Oaks Way. Longwood.
reported to Bhertfrs deputies
that a $420 video recorder and a
$110 telephone were stolen from
her home between March 22 and
Thursday.

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4A— Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, March n , 1tB7

New Appraisal Ordered
On Potential Waste Site

COMING EVENTS

By Karen Talley
Herald Staff W riter
Sanford will pay 85.000 for a
third appraisal of a 2.200 acre
potential cflluent disposal site
before continuing purchase ne­
gotiations with Its owners.
City officials say thfey hope the
survey this spring will help
negotiations by closing a widely
divergent gap between the first
two appraisals. These came In at
81.872 million and 84.9 million,
doing little to foster a meeting of
the minds between city repre­
sentatives and the parcel's
owners.
Their purchase discussions
broke down In December when
the owners stood firm at 84
million, while the city wouldn't
exceed 82.2 million.
The latest appraisal will be
handled by Parduc. Hyde.
Church. Smith and Waller of
Orlando, through a contract
commissioners awarded Mon­
day.
The first two appraisals cost
Sanford 82,500 and 83.900.
They were the two lowest ofTcrs
on u list the city's engineering
firm developed. The Parduc
firm's 85.000 price equals the
third lowest offer.
Sanford is under a state edict
to stop disposing Its effluent In
Lake Monroe by developing a
land application system. City
owned sites such ns pnrklands. 1

A A Groups Schedule
Meetings For Sunday
Area Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous
groups meeting on Sunday Include:
• Sanford Dig Book AA. 7 p.m., open discussion, Florida
Power and Light building. N. Myrtle Avenue, Sanford.
• Under New Management AA. 6:30 p.m. (open), comer
Howell Branch &amp; Dodd Road. Goldenrod.
• REBOS AA, 5:30 (closed) and 8 p.m. (open). Rcbos
Club. 130 Normandy Lane, Casselberry.
• Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m. The Grove Counseling
Center. 580 Old Sanford/Ovlcdo Road (off SR 419). Winter
Sp.riT in
„ ford Family Group Alanon meeting. 8 p.m.. Christ
United Methodist Church. County Road 427 and Tucker
Rd., Sanford.
• Rcbos Club AA. noon and 5:30 p.m., closed. 8 p.m..
step, 130 Normandy Road, Casselberry. Clean Air Rcbos at
noon, closed.

BaseballCard Benefits NAPHT
A Baseball Card Show will be sponsored by the Central
Florida Chapter of the National Association of Patients on
Hemodialysis and Transplantations (NAPHT) Saturday,
March 28 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday. March 29. noon to
6 p.m. at Factory Outlet Mall. Orlando. NAPHT serves eight
counties including Seminole.

A W ord From Wall Street
Carter Randall, panelist on Channel 24 PBS network, will
speak on Economic Review and Investment Strategics for
1987 at a meeting of the Maitland-South Seminole
Chamber of Commerce on April 1 at noon in the Maitland
Civic Center. For reservations call 644-0741 by March 27.

the Mayfair golf course and
Sanford Regional Airport are
tagged to receive much of the
city's wastewater through un­
derground pipes leading from
the P o p la r A v e n u e w aste
treatm en t plant. S p rin k ler
systems will dispose the effluent
at the city-owned sites.
The 2.200 acre parcel lies east
of Sanford, beyond the airport.
ofT State Road 46. City officials
see It as a hedge to frequently
changing state requirements,
Including the posalblle loss of
conditional permission Sanford
has received to continue a
measure oftake disposal.
The city's program, without
the 2,200 acre site, is estimated
at 836.5 million, of which 88.6
million will be covered by state
and federal grants. Another
grant, between 85 and 87 mil­
lion. is presently being sought.
The city floated a 816.98
million bond last year to begin
paying for the program. Another
bond Issue is anticipated in the
coming years, city officials say.
The state's order gives Sanford
until May, 1989, to have the land
application system ready for
operation. The city has until the
early 1990's to finish other
project work. Including repairing
underground sewage lines and
Improving the Poplar Avenue
treatment plant.

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10 Min*. From Downtown Sanford
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Mon.-Ttiuro. SB:*0. Fri, M P.M.
Sat. 104 P.M.

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Ws also make 1st and 2nd mortgage
loans on Residentlsl or Commercial
Real Eststs up to $100,000.
Personal leans era n ailable Including
Revolving Credit Una.
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ANNOUNCINGOUR
GRANDOPENINGAPRIL6th
WORLDOFCARPET.

Sports Exhibit Opens

Lake Mary Senior
Awarded Scholarship

"Science of Sports" exhibit will be at the Orlando
Science Center, 810 E. Rollins St., March 27-May 31 and Is
open every day. Different lectures, activities, screenings
and demonstrations will be featured Thursday through
Sunday In conjunction with the exhibit. Admission is free
to Science center members and 84 for adults. S3 for seniors
and children.

Michael Turner of Lake Mary
High School has been selected to
receive a 81.000 scholarship
from the Wal-Mart store In San­
ford.
Store Manager Buddy Cole
said "W e arc very pleased to
award this academic scholarship
to such an outstanding student.
The Judges had a slate of well
qualified students from which to
choose,"
Turner, a senior, plans to
attend the University of Florida
at Gainesville. The scholarship
selection c rite ria 1s based
primarily on academic perfor­
mance and in volvem ent in
school and community activi­
ties, according to Cole.

Alcoholics Anonym ous Schedules
The following area Alcoholics Anonymous and Alanon
groups meet on Monday:
• Sanford AA. noon and 5:30 p.m., open discussion; 8
p.m.. closed discussion, 1201 W. First St.
• Narcotics Anonymous, 8 p.m.. 317 Oak Ave., Sanford.
Apopka Alcohollcs Anonymous. 8 p.m., closed, Apopka
Episcopal Church. 815 Highland.
ila
• Al-Anon Step and Study, 8 p.m., Casselberry Senior
Center, 200 N. Triplet Drive.
• Young and Free AA. St. Richard's Episcopal Church.
Lake Howell Road. Winter Park. 8 p.m. closed, open
discussion. Last Monday of the month, open.
• 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.

O vere a ten Anonymous
Overeaters Anonymous meets Monday at 7:30 p.m..
West Lake Hospital, State Road 434, Longwood.

Manna Haven serves free lunch for the hungry. 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m.. Monday through Friday; Sunday. 1-3, at 519
Palmetto Ave., Sanford.

Free Tax Help For Elderly

alternate.
This year 980 Wal-Mart schol­
arships will be awarded. Cole
said.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 1:304:30
CLOSED SATURDAY A SUNDAY

Turner has been active In
Ir
activities. Cole said.
Kenneth Echsteln of Seminole
High School was chosen as first

Free Income tax help for retirees is available on Tuesday
through April 15,9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Florida National Bank,
West SR 434 at Markham Road; VFW Club, 420 N.
Edgemon Ave., Winter Springs; Longwood Recreation
Center, W. Warren Avenue.

DOG

OR

CAT

G R O O M IN G
$5 °o
DENAS

Cardiovascular Screening

PETS

3212957

-

-o g n

i,

.

LX IA

f
j

Cardiovascular screening is available from 8 a.m. to 5
p.m.. Monday through Friday, at the County Health
Department, 240 W. Airport Blvd.. Sanford. Call 322-2724
Ex. 370 for appointment.
$ 2 .0 0

Toostm asten' Breakfast

That'* ell Pec N*
Sand th a rg e e t o r
hand la your UP8 — --------------shipping, plus fralghl charges. Ian t II ]
worth It, to gal out of traffic, out ot long
lines, out of aggravation.
Pec N ' Sand la still your bast aourca for
expart packaging services and supplies.
UPS Plek-Up Dally
.............................1 St

Daybreakers Toastmasters Club meets 7:15 a.m.,
Tuesdays at Christo's Restaurant. 107 W. First St.,
Sanford.

Klvranls Meets In Casselberry
Casselberry Klwanis Club meets Tuesdays at 7:30 a.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive,
Casselberry.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
CITY OF LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
PLANNING AND ZONING BOARD/
LOCAL PLANNING AGENCY
April 14, 1987
7:00 P. M.
Lake Mary City Hall

Public com m ent Is solicited regarding six proposed amendments to the Lake
Mary Adopted Land Use Map, an Element of the C ity ’s Com prehensive Plan.
Persons who appear at this Public Hearing will be heard orally. Written
com m ents may be filed with the City Clerk, 158 N. Country C lu b Road, Lake
Mary, and will be entered into the record. Q uestions regarding the proposed
amendments may be directed to the C ity Engineer at 323-7910.
Th e sites of the six requested amendments are keyed by num ber on the map
and the complete legal description may be obtained at City Hall.
C IT Y O F L A K E M A R Y

323-1137

Sanford Liens Club Meets

1.

Sanford Lions Club will meet at noon, every Tuesday,
Cavalier Motor Inn Restaurant. 3200 S. Orlando Drive,
Sanford.

ALA8KA

N a vy Relief Sets Course

2.

Navy Relief Society Orlando Auxiliary will hold a 15-hour
course from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on March 31. April 1*3 at the
Orlando Naval Training Center, Building 2010. For
members of the Navy and Marine Corps community and
others Interested in helping sailors and Marines in time of
emergency. Call 646-4468 o r6465132 to register.

■•3.

A free all-day "Fraud Against The Elderly" WorkBhoi&gt;P
will be held Wednesday
April 1.8 a.m. at the Harley Hotel,
" « a ...............
Washington St.. Orlando. For further information
151 E. Washington
call (904) 487-3712.

I

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6.

North of State Road 427,
A ssign Low D en sity
Residential to property
recently annexed Into
City - Earley
North of State Road 427,
Assign Low Density Re8ldo ntlal to property
recently annexed Into
City - Hagen Homes
415 E. Lake Mary Boule­
vard, change from Low
D en sity R esldntlal to
Commerclal/Offlce •
Thompson
North of SCC, Assign
Low Density Residential
to property to be annex­
ed Into City • Vergara
451 Paola Road - Change
from Medium Low Resi­
dential to Com m ercialSouthward
17-92 and Weldon Bou
yard, Change from Co
merclal to Light Indt
trial • Dance

P E R S O N S A R E A D V IS E D T H A T , IF T H E Y D E C ID E T O A P P E A L A N Y D ECISIO N
M A D E A T T H IS M E E T IN G , T H E Y W IL L N E E D A R E C O R D O F T H E PR O ­
C E E D IN G S , A N D F O R S U C H P U R P O S E, T H E Y N E E D T O E N S U R E T H A T A
V E R B A TIM R E C O R D O F T H E P R O C E E D IN G S IS M A D E, W H IC H R E C O R D
IN C L U D E S T H E T E S T IM O N Y A N D E V ID E N C E U P O N W H IC H T H E A P P E A L
IS T O B E B A S E D , S E C T IO N 286.0105 F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S .

�U.S. Imposes Punitive
Tariffs Against Japan
Pentagon Launches Probe O f
M arine Embassy Guards
WASHINGTON (UPIJ — Two Marine guards at the U.S.
Embassy In Moscow are accused of giving Soviet agents
unofficial tours of the building In a sex-and-spy scandal
that has prompted an Investigation of Marines at embassies
worldwide.
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, In an Interview to
be broadcast today by the Cable News Neiwork. said the
administration Is "very, very distressed" at the alleged
Involvement of the two Marines but that no assessment has

1
K

lwo years ago about the Walker famlly-and-friend ring that
gave top secret Navy codes to the Soviets.

I

Senate OKs FSUC B a ll-O u t Bill

H
■
1
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:?i”
|
|
■

WASHINGTON (UPI) — A bill to rescue the fund that
Insures savings deposits, ailing because of the large
number of recently failed thrifts. Is past the Senate but still
could face trouble due to other hotly contested provisions.
On a 79-11 vote Friday, the Senate approved the
legislation, which would authorize borrowing to provide
$7.5 billion In the next two years, for the Federal Savings
and Loan Insurance Corp., known as the FSLIC.
The government fund needs the money badly because of
the large number of failed and falling savings and loan
institutions.
Passage came only after the Senate rejected. 54-35. an
attempt by Sen. Jake Garn, R-Utah, to strip away other,
more controversial parts of t he bill.

I

Police Probe Cannibalism Report

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$
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I
ry;

PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — One of five women shackled,
raped and tortured In a self-styled preacher's "house of
horrors" told police the captives were forced to eat human
flesh Inside their basement prison, authorities have
revealed.
A police detective said Friday the unidentified woman
gave authorities a sworn statement saying Gary Heidnlk,
43, boasted to his captives that he addled ground human
flesh to their food rations.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - In the
stron gest trade retaliation
against Japan since World War
II, the United Stales will Impose
punitive tariffs on popular con­
sumer Items — possibly televi­
sions and tape players — from
Japan.
President Reagan announced
the retaliation on Friday, charg­
ing Tokyo with breaking a new
pact that was supposed to pre­
vent dumping of computer chips
In third countries and to open
the Japanese market to Ameri­
can supercomputers and other
high technology Items.
U.S. Trade Representative
Clayton Yeutter and Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige said
American consumers would not
be affected because the tariffs
would apply only to products
that are In plentiful supply
elsewhere.
Reagan's action, which must
await a two-week period of
public comment, would Impose
100 percent tatifTs on up to $300
m illion worth o f Japanese
exports — doubling their price
and effectively making them
unavailable. The $300 million
represents the amount lost by
U.S. semiconductor producers
because of the dumping In other
countries that then sell the chips

In the United States.
The action was the strongest
trade retaliation against Japan
since World War II.
Rep. Robert Matsul, D-Callf.,
praised Reagan's decision, but
said American business would
lose about $1 billion.
The penalized products are
made by Japanese firms Judged
to be dumping computer chips
In other countries that then sell
them to the United States at
about 60 percent of the fair
market price.
"W e take this action out of
sorrow, not because we want to
d em o n stra te A m erican
machismo," Yeutter said at a
White House news conference.
In Tokyo, a spokesman for the
Japanese Foreign Ministry said:
"T h e Japanese government
thinks there Is no violation, so It
regrets that the U.S. government
has taken a one-sided measure."
The statement added that
Japan would seek “ urgent"
talks with the United States on
Friday's action. "W e will make
our best effort to solve this
Issue." it said.
HaJIme Tamura, Japanese
minister of International trade
and industry, called tha action
"the most regrettable develop­
ment."

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h PTL Leaders Want Prayer, M oney
FORT MILL. S.C. (UPI) — The new PTL leadership Is
calling for something extra from the television ministry’s
A f viewers: chairman Jerry Falwell wants extra prayers and
j p president Richard Dortch wants extra money.
Both made the pleas In separate television appearances
Friday, the day following the first meeting of the new PTL
W board of directors at the Heritage Village USA complex
■
outside Charlotte, N.C.

SANFORD, FLORIDA

L O A N A P P L IC A TIO N F E E

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S P R I N G F E S T “ 87 ” F A I R
SA N FO R D PLA ZA
HWY. 17-92 e STATE ST.
SANFORD, FL.

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•A— Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.
•* . •' ‘ ' ‘

Sunday, March 29,1917

...Study
Continued from page IA
v L.,f • / '
'
’ **•/ *
(an) area between First and
Third. Considerations should
consider the need for (the) city to
allocate funds in capital budget,
authorizing city staff to negotiate
with property owners, a summa­
ry of the number of spaces
needed and when they are
needed..."
Eliminated from the list of
possible options was the use of
parking meters and a tiered
parking garage on the court­
house lot.
The parking garage was elimi­
nated because the city does not
want to Install parking meters
which arc usually the Initial
source of revenue to build such a
structure, according to the
study. The study also concluded
It was unlikely that the city,
downtown property owners or
merchants could find alternative
sources of funding for a parking
garage.
Resynchronlzatlon of First
Street traffic lights is not needed,
said the study, because the
traffic flow Is at manageable
levels. It was recommended that
future resynchronlzatlon be con­
sidered as the first major Im­
provement that could be made to
First Street tafflc flow. Left-turn
lanes should not be considered
because they would require
removal of streetscape. said the
study.
The study also recommended
that the marina be subject to a
separate study because Its traffic
and parking needs, which In­
cludes boats and trailers, is
different that the cars and trucks
t r a f f ic on s t r e e t s in th e
downtown area.
"Longterm downtown parking
and traffic needs should be
reevaluated on a periodic basis,
generally at five and 10 year
Intervals." said the study. It also
recommended that the larger
traffic study looking into and
Justify possible methods of rais­
ing money for a parking garage.

...Victim
Continued from page IA

,

IN B R IEF
Japanese Leaders Assail U.S.
Sanctions A s Irrational1
TOKYO (UPI) — Japanese government and Industry
leaders today assailed U.S. trade sanctions over computer
chips as "Irrational.” saying they should be withdrawn,
and left open the prospect of a trade war.
At a news conference today, Minister of International
Trade and Industry Hajime Tamura said Japan would ask
next week for "emergency consultations" at which It
would ask the Reagan administration to retract Its
decision!
The leading Industry group, the Electronic Industries
Association of Japan, said "It Is premature and even
Irrational to attempt an assessment of the Impact of the
agreement and our efforts to comply with It only six
months after concluding the agreement."
Tamura called the move "the most regrettable develop­
ment, In total disregard for the fact that the Japanese side
Is Implementing this arrangement In good faith.”

FLORDA
IN B R IEF
Governor's Proposed Sales Tax
Plan Said Harmful To Business
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Gov. Bob Martinez* proposal to
collect a sales tax on services would hurt owners of small
businesses, says a spokeswoman for the National Federa­
tion of Independent Bustncss-Florlda.
‘‘Small business can't afford to keep full-time lawyers,
accountants and advertising executives on staff and they
rely heavily on personal-service firms for temporary help,
answering services and the like," Bonnie Hamm said
Friday. "T o add a 5 percent surcharge on these services
would cat up the notoriously low profit margins of many
small firms, forcing them to raise prices or shut down."
Martinez has proposed raising $860 million In ncw&lt; tax
revenue by charging sales taxes on services, which
currently arc exempt from the tax. The proposal, which
has the support of House und Senate leaders, would tax
services Including legal fees, advertising and real estate
transactions.
Hamm released a survey of the group's 14,000 members
that showed 92 percent were opposed to the proposal.

...Meals

papers or gives them directions
ubout where they can gel in­
formation they arc seeking.

Continued from page 1A
all of us and Is concerned about
us." She said that if anyone Is
sick, Wesley will call to see If
they arc all right or they will
sign a get-well curd to send to
(he sick person.
Another participant. Eudora
Zimmerman, said that she likes
being a part of the program
because It provides "a good
break for people to get out and
have a change." Some of the
seniors who volunteer during
mealtimes are Lucille Mcro,
Lillian Kosa, Irene Sands and
Clayton Swain.
Frances Rablnowitz suid she
calls W esley “ Uncle R a y "
because It seems befitting and
"w e are like a family." She said
Wesley helps them to fill out

Wesley also picks up surplus
food from the Salvation Army In
Sanford for those seniors who
are eligible and brings If to the
meal site for participants to pick
up. He separates It Into packages
of rice and cheese or butter so It
will be ready to go when seniors
arrive. "Otherwise, they'd have
to go down there and stand In
line for who knows how long."
he said.
Most of the seniors are taken
to and from the church In a
senior citizen transport van by
Ruthla Hester who cheerfully
and enthusiastically escorted the
seniors to the van after a meal
last week. The food Is brought to
the church each day from the
Christian Service Center in Or­
lando.

...Bell
Continued from page IA
landlords.
In illustrating his point about
the need for people coming
together long enough to agree on
something and solve a problem,
he told a Joke about a man who
prayed to God that he would win
the lottery. He prayed night after
night with great fervor. Then,
God said, "Okay, my son, but
would you meet me half wuy and
buy a ticket?"
*
Bell’s talk was full of Jokes and
asides and the audience stood to
give him an ovation before he
was through;
But to leave no doubt why. he
was there, he made a hard­
hitting series o f points on why a
Democrat Is truly different from

a Republican.
"I believe there Is a distinct
and Im p ortan t set o f d if ­
ferences," he said.
"Democrats historically have
cared about the Individual, even
though he Is not rich, even
though he Is a minority, even
though he Is handicapped. There
Is a clear, historical difference.
"Democrats are altruistic and
believe U’s right to sacrifice so
that the future of the state can
be Improved, similar to the
Immigrant philosophy where the
parents will sacrifice so that
their children can have a better
life.
“ The Democratic party has
historically been for a wellfunded public education system.
T h e R epu blican s w ere for
private schools and tuition
vouchers — education for the
elite few.

ianford
By Stroke
Sanford heart specialist Dr.
,uia Perez is In Florida Hospltal-Orlando recovering from a
stroke that reportedly haa left
him paralysed on one side of his
body.
Perez. 59. Immediate past
president o f the Florida Medical
Association, suffered the stroke
about a week ago. according to
physicians at Central Florida
Regional Hospital In Sanford.
Perez's condition Saturday
was not disclosed by officials at
the Orlando hospital, but physi­
cian acquaintances In Sanford
said they understand he'a out of
danger for the moment and
undergoing physical therapy In
the hospital's rehabilitation
center.

Those acquaintances also said
they understand the stroke may
have been linked to Perez's
history of heart disease from an
accumulation of plaque In his
b lo o d v e s s e ls . O ne c lo s e
associate speculated a piece of
that plaque may have broken off
and traveled to a point where It
lodged and caused an embolism
which brought about the stroke.
" I f that is indeed the case,
although Lula Is out of danger
for the moment, there la always
that threat that there may be a
recurrence ... that he could have
another episode ... another
stroke." he said.
Perez has suffered at least two
heart attacks In recent years and
a couple of years ago underwent
bypass surgery to relieve some
clogged blood vessels.

Another primary guest speaker scheduled for
the luncheon Is Janice Rench. an Ohio author,
whose personal accounts of her experience as n
sexually abused child, "can bring tears to your
eyes." Mrs. Kuhn said.
Scheduled from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the
Park Suite Hotel. State Road 436. Altamonte
Springs, the buffet luncheon Is open to the public.
Tickets are expected to cost about $12 each and
reservations are required though Mrs. Kuhn at
322-7534.
Donations to help cover the expense of
sponsoring the speakers' visits arc being sought
from the public and from businesses. Mrs. Khun
said.
There Is no cost Involved In the other special
event scheduled to bring attention to the trauma
of victims and their families. A candlelight
"memorial" service beginning at 8 p.m., April 26
at the Seminole County Courthouse In downtown
Sanford, will give victims and their families an
opportunity to briefly speak out about their
memories. Mrs. Kuhn said. Wolflngcr Is also
scheduled to briefly address the gathering. '
Mrs. Kuhn, whose Job Is to work with victims
and witnesses to case their experience within the
criminal Justice system by Informing them about
the legal process and offering emotional support
as well as security checks and leads on receiving
financial compensation, said that victim's needs
have been a major concern ofWolflngcr’s.
Wolflngcr. she said, felt that the week declared
by President Reagan as victim's rights week was
an Ideal opportunity to focus on the plight of the
victims of crimes.
But. this Isn't the only Inroads Wolflnger has
made as an advocate for victims. Mrs. Kuhn was
already on the staff when Wolflnger took office,
but he gave her official duties as a vlctlm/witness
coordinator.
Her Job Is to assist In any way she can the
victims of felony crimes and their families. With
rape victims she takes over where the Seminole

...Reagan
Continued from page 1A
T ra n sp o rta tio n S ecreta ry
Elizabeth Dole, whose husband.
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole, will lead the fight to
sustain the veto In the Senate,
said that no matter how the

County Sheriff's Victim Advocates leave off. The
volunteer advocates supervised by sheriffs depu­
ty Doris Hundley assist victims on request
Immediately after the report of a rape. But Mrs.
Khun picks up the case after that and follows it
through the courts along with the victim. Mrs.
Khun's services are not limited to rape victims,
but cover all victims of felonies, she said. She at
one time was head of Sheriff John Polk's victim
advocates.
"Too often It seems the criminals get all the
attention and have all the rights." Mrs. Khun
said. "W e hope to get volunteers Involved with
this program. We want to bring out that It can
happen to you. You can be a victim. People Just
don’t relate to the trauma." She also wants
victims to know that such support Is available to
them. All they have to do is ask for her help.
Mrs. Khun, whose program Is Just getting
started, said she knows personally how traumatic'
It can be to be a burglary victim. "M y home was
burglarized. I was traumatized, even though I
was a deputy sheriff at the time. It can be quite
frightening. We try to give victims back their
sense of security. Wc give them follow up calls
later too."
Mrs. Khun said she’s there to help with almost
any problem. If she can’t personally provide the
assistance needed, she makes a referral. The
vlctlm/witness program focuses on felony cases —
rapes, robberies, burglaries, murders. She's
planning on developing a special program for
survivors of attempted murder.
" I ’m thrilled." she said of the planned events
for victims' rights weeks. She expects this to
become an annual project of the State Attorney's
Office and said for the scheduled luncheon there’s
room for 300 persons.
The luncheon guests will also hear brief
addresses from representatives for: the sheriffs
victim advocates. Guardian Ad Litem, MADD,
crimes compensation. The Child Protection
Team. Child Abuse Prevention Task Force and
Spouse Abuse. There will also be an awards
presentation and a question and answer period.
The candlelight ceremony at the courthouse.
Mrs. Khun said, will be a bit less structured and
there Is no limit to the number that might attend.

override votes go. the president
will come out politically strong.

HOSPITAL

"The president wins because
what he has done here Is to sec
the tenor for all of the budget
debate that's coming up. and the
Congress knows now that If they
send down a piece of legislation
which has flaws ... they're going
to have to deal with him on
that."

Centul Florida Rational Hospital
Friday
ADMISSIONS
Brenda A. Kramer
Jotin Wilton
Janel Buitell, DeBary
Daniel F McDonald, DeBary
Char let Clovanelll. Deltona
Frederic W. Mann, Deltona
DISCHARGES
Sanlord:
Thereto Norwood

Buldwln-Fairchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

March 2? at 2 p.m. al the Oaklawn Funeral
Home Chapel with the Rev. William J. Boyer
ollldaling. Interment In Oaklwan Memorial
Park. Violation lor lamlly and Irlendt will he
held Saturday 4 0 p.m Oaklawn Funeral
Home. Lake Mary/Sanlord. In charge.
O EAN ES, THOM AS C.
— Graveelde eervlcet lor Cdr. Thomat
Chilton Deant, U.S.N. Rel.. ol 414 W. Cryttal
Drive, Sanford, who died Wednesday, will be
held 2 p.m. Monday at Ihe Oaklawn Ceme
tery, Jacksonville, with Father John Riley
Officiating. Hardage Clddent Guardian Cha
pel, Jecktonvllte. In charged arrangement*.

AREA DEATHS
PERRY W . W HEATLAND
Mr. Perry Wayne Wheatland,
80. of 203 Villa Drive. Sanford,
died Thursday at Central Florida
Reglonnl Hospital. Born In
Pueblo, Colo.. Aug. 24, 1906, he
moved to Sanford In 1950 from
Apopka. He was a former owner
of Monroe Corner Grocery Store
1950-73. He was a Methodist
and aTormer
VFW Post Cross City. Fla.
Survivors include his wife,
Frankie Lee; son. Jack B., Pio­
neer. Calif.: two daughters,
Franclne Lavaty. Altamonte
S prings, and J erl Laxson,
Albuquerque. N. Mex.: eight
grandchildren and one greatgranddaughter.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary, in charge o f arrange­
ments.
.
THOMAS C. DEANES
Commander. Thomas Chilton
Deanes. U.S.N. Ret., of 414 W.
Crystal Drive, Sanford, died
Wednesday at the Veterans
A dm in istration H ospital In
Gainesville. Born In Goldsboro.
N.C.. he moved to Sanford lit
1956 from Jacksonville. He was
an Episcopalian.
Survivors Include his wife,
Dorothy: daughter. Dorothy
Hartsoe: three sons, Thomas.
Gordon and Jonathan: sister,
Mrs. Bedford Oakley, two grand­
children.
Hardage-GIdden Guardian
Chapel. Jacksonville, in charge
of arrangements.
IRENE I. POLK
Miss Irene Iva Polk. 79. 989
O r ie u ta A v e ,, A lt a m o n t e
Springs, died Friday at South
Seminole Community Hospital.
B o r n D e c . 9, 1 9 0 8 . In
Pennsylvania, she moved to
A l t a m o n t e S p r i n g s fro m
California In 1973. She was a
homemaker and a Lutheran.
Survivors include a niece.
E la in e C rs c n k o . South
Bethlehem. Pa.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Orlando. In charge of
arrangements.
Perez has been active In a
variety of civic and community
affaire, as well as in the medical
profession while maintaining a
private practice at his Sanford
Second Street offices.
Perez served about 18 months
as Florida Medical Association
president, as well as chief of staff
in 1078 at CFRH. He presently Is
a member of the CFRH's board
of trustees.
One close associate of Perez.
Dr. Orlando Garcia, said he
understood that Perez was at­
tending a meeting at CFRH a
w eek ago F rid a y when
symptoms of the Impending
stroke manifested themselves. "1
understand those symptoms
occurred before and after the
hour-long meeting." he said.
Other CFRH sources said that
after the meeting Perez left and
apparently suffered the full ef­
fects of the stroke later that day.
He reportedly was taken to the
Orlando hospital by his wife. Dr.
Maria Perez.

ELSIE H. BUNDLE
Mrs. Elsie Helen Rundle. 81.
650 Dunn Drive. Altamonte
Springs, died Friday at Life Care
Center of Altamonte Springs.
Born Feb. 24. 1906. in Buffalo.
N.Y.. she moved to Altamonte
Springs from there In 1980. She
was a retired librarian and a
member of Church of The An-

Funsral Notlcs
W H E A TL A N D , F E R R Y
— Funeral te rvlct* lor P orry Wayna
Wheatland. 70. ol 70) Villa Drive, Sanlord,
died ^Thursday will be held Sunday.

was a member of RSVP
Survivors include a daughter.
N o rln e G ra c e . A l t a m o n t e
Springs: brother. Edward Foxton. Spokane. Wash.: two grand­
children.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

Thank You
D o c to rs , N u rse s ,
F rie n d s &amp; R elatives
ipeclal thanks to Dr. G . Huaman during thej
illness &amp; loss of m y husband Lindon.
M rs. L .C . Heuer'’
&amp; Fam ily

MARIE A. BELTZ
Mrs. Marie Angellne Beltz, 86.
512 South St., Fern Park, died
Thursday at Florida HospitalAltamonte. Bom Feb. 8. 1901 In
Hamburg, West Germany, she
m oved to Fern Park from
Canonsburg, Pa., in 1958. She
wob
a practical nurse and a
member of St. Mary Magdalen
Catholic Church. Altom ontc
Springs.
Survivors include a daughter.
Anna Marie Kler. Fem Park: son.
Philip M.. Houston. Pa.: sisters.
Rose La ben. Hermlnle. Pa.. Doris
Barbara. Pittsburgh; four grand­
c h i l d r e n : six g r e a t ­
grandchildren.

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�SPORTS
R andy |
Minkoff

Blake Grades

A For Co

ru H

Jeff's .316 A ve ra g e , Stolen
Bases Signal Solid Recovery

*r.

Vitale's '
The Wall Talk
Peeves Packer

r.

CHICAGO (UPI) - Billy Packer
agrees with William
Shakespeare: "Th e play's the
thing."
The CBS color analyst has
grown tired of all the attention
announcers. Including himself,
seem to be getting at NCAA
Tournament time. He takes
particular exception to rival Dick
Vitale and all the publicity the
ABC-ESPN com m entator re*
celves about some "o ff the wall"
comments.
Packer, though. Is not trying
to start a civil war among
network announcers at Final
Four time. He Just wants the
attention to be on the court
rather than on the announcers.
" I don't know exactly what the
announcer’s role should be. I
Just know what CBS expects and
what I’m comfortable with,"
says Packer, who will team with
Brent Musburger on coverage of
the Final Four Saturday and
Monday.
"T o me, the story Is the game
— not me. I try to do the best I
can to articulate what happens
on the floor. I'm really not In the
self-promotion business. The
game of basketball has grown by
leaps and bounds, but I'm not
going to take credit for It. It
didn't advance because of hype
on the announcers: It advanced
because It has a solid founda­
tion."
Announcers who try to take
over any broadcast aren't going
to win points with Packer. He
says he secs too much of It and
would like the trend reversed.
"Hyping myself or having a
format to do that is one thing I Jeff Blake checks his swing on a low pitch.
don't have a format to do and I The Seminole High Junior shortstop has
ion/tbeMcve^ In It anyway."
Packer has had his rivalries
with other announcers In his 15
years on the air. He earned a
national reputation for his barbs
with former announcing mate A1
McGuire and now has some
advice for Vitale.
"Dick and I are good friends.
It's like when I used to go back
and forth with A l." Packer said.
"W e do have a philosophical
difference about what our role
should be. He does his thing and
I do mine differently. We have
different opinions on .basketball
and there needs to be a counter
against what he has thrown up
against the wall."
One Issue that Irks Packer is
any discussion by a network or
cable com m entator on pro­
spective hlgh-school recruits.
"A s an example, that's wrong.
Dick Vitale hasn't seen a highschool game and what he says Is
heresay. You have to Judge a
prep's progress and how he fits
Into a program." Packer says.
"You have to also wonder If he Is
qualifying for a program. You
are expected by the general
public to have first-hand knowl­
edge and it gives a kid sitting
home watching TV an unfair
advantage to people recruiting
him."
Packer Is one of the least
outspoken commentators during
game coverage. He usually saves
his critiques for Interview pro­
grams or his syndicated radio
show.
During the Final Four. Packer
wants to concentrate on the
action rather than using It as a
soapbox for his opinions on the
sport.
"I'd like to have a format other
than the game whereby we can
discuss the Issues." Packer says.
"You can't get Into depth during
the course o f a broadcast
because, as an analyst, you don't
know if you are going to have
one second or 10 seconds to
talk."
Packer does has some sharp
opinions, particularly on what
he believes Is too much pressure
on athletes to perform for what
may mean $1 million per school
for participating in the NCAA.
He would like to see part of the
extra $20 million CBS is paying
to televise the Final Four for
each of the next three years
allocated for post-graduate
scholarships at universities.
"T h e extra money will be
(wasted) with extra carpeting in
lockers and buildings, which
aren't the Job for players to
provide, or in first-class air fares
or for meetings at Hilton Head
(S.C.)." Packer says. "There are
no additional coots to get the
extra $20 million."

By Bam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Tragedy. It was once said, is
an athlete dying young. Just as
tragic, however. Is a young
athlete Impaired. When an
athlete has his ability taken from
him. he agonizes like a dying
man.
No longer able to enjoy what
he most loved, he whiles away
the hours thinking about what
might have been. Athletically, it
is a smybollc death since he can
no longer compete In the sports
arena.
Jeff Blake, a 16-year-old Junior
at Seminole High, had a brush
with death and Impairment
almost 11 months ago. The
police report said Blake was
riding his motorcycle through an'
intersection when another vehi­
cle ran a stop sign and collided
with Blake and motorcycle.
The fact that It was JefT Blake
involved brought shudders to
father Emory, football coach
Dave Mosure. baseball coach
Mike Ferrell and the rest of the
Sanford community.
The sentiment' was that Jeff
would be the last person a
happenstance such as this might
strike. A gifted football, basket­
ball and baseball player. Jeff was
a model athlete and student. He
was admired by students and
faculty alike.
Whether it was fate, bad luck

Preps
or being at the wrong place at
the wrong time, the misfortune
nearly wiped out the career of
S a n fo rd 's m ost p ro m is in g
athlete since Tim Raines.
But It did more than that.
Emory, already reeling from
the news that his father had
been "framed" when someone
placed marijuana in his truck at
Lake Mary High School two days
earlier, could not have conceived
what was about to happen
Sunday. May 5.1986.
"W e had Just returned from
church." Emory, who lives In
Midway east of Sanford, said. "I
told Jeff to get on his motorcycle
and run back these vid eo
cassettes. He wasn't gone that
long when I received a phone
call from a man.
"He said my son had been In •
an accident and he (JefT) told ;
him to call me. It was only about;
three minutes after the wreck, so j
I figured it must have been a ;
little bang-up, not too serious."
Emory drove to the accident’,
scene and was relieved to h ear;
Jeff call to him. "He was con- j
scious. that was a good sign,".!
Emory said. "But It was hard to
tell how badly he was hurt even

Rain Postpones Tourney Again

QfcrL—UtofM rti
rebounded nicely from an accident 11
months ago which jeopardized his career.

Lyman's Greater Greyhound Spring Invitational baseball
tournament was postponed by rain for the second day Friday
and has been rescheduled for Saturday.
There will be four games. At 11:30 p.m., Lake Brantley meets
Lake Howell in one losers' bracket semifinal while Oviedo takes
on Lake Highland in the second semifinal at 2 p.m. The winners
battle at 5 p.m. for third place.
In Saturday's championship game, Lake Mary tackles Lyman
at 7:30 p.m. Rams’ left-hander Steve Shakar (4-1) will oppose
Lyman right-hander Ross Urshan (4-2) on the hill. — f

Destiny Collides
NEW YORK (U PI) - Ray
Leonard says he always knew he
would fight Marvin Hagler. He
Just didn't know when.
Using boxing history as a
Judge, that makes sense. The
best of welterweights Inevitably
move up to challenge middleweights and the sport's biggest
names almost always make
comebacks.
That will be the case April 6 In
Las Vegas. Nev., when Hagler
fights for a guaranteed $12
million and Leonard for $11
m illion. Leonard, a form er
welterweight and Junior mid­
dleweight champion, has not
fought since 1984.
"I never lost that feeling for
Marvin, Marvin was always
there," Leonard said. "For me,
he Is the ultimate."
Champions from the 147pound division usually find the
160-pound title the ultimate.
Like light heavyweights who
often try the heavyweight ranks,
welterweights move up for the
e x tra gla m o u r and b ig g e r
p ayd ays the m id d le w e ig h t
division brings.
U nlike lig h t h eavyw eigh t
champions, who had no success
winning the heavyweight title
until Michael Spinks upset Lany
Holmes in 1985, welterweights

Boxing
have done fine at the higher'
weight. The history o f the
160-pound division is filled with
former welterweights.
Sugar Ray Robinson, Mickey
Walker. Carmen Basilio. Emile
Griffith, Tommy Ryan and Lou
Broulllard all successfully made
the Jump frqni welterweight to
middleweight champion. Many
other top welterweights. In­
cluding 147-pound champions
Henry Armstrong. Kid Gavllan.
Thomas Hearns. Roberto Duran
and J win the middleweight title.
Hearns and Duran — who lost
to Leonard In welterweight title
fights — failed against Hagler in
160-pound championship fights.
Leonard, 30, was undisputed
w e lte rw e ig h t ch am p ion in
1981-82 and briefly neld the
World Boxing Association Junior
middleweight title in 1981.
Hagler-Leonard was expected
to come off In 1982. but Leonard
retired after surgery to repair his
left retina. His 1984 comeback
again was to lead to a fight
against Hagler, but Leonard re­
tired again after stopping Kevin
Howard In nine rounds.
"Th e only reason this fight is

Sugar Ray Leonard, left, had a comfortable
existence with fellow announcers Barry
Tompkins and La rry Merchant while work­
ing for Home Box Office. Leonard, the
taking place is because I'm
giving him the opportunity."
Hagler said. "When I beat this
man. they won't say 'who did
you beat?' This will be the one to
make me satisfied."
During his 35-month layoff.
Leonard has grown Into a full

former welterweight champion, gives up
that peaceful existence on April 4 when he,
takes on middleweight king Marvelous,
M arvin Hagler In Las Vegas, Nevada.

middleweight. At 5-foot-10 Vi. he,
is an Inch taller than Hagler and
expects to weigh between 156
and 158 pounds.
"Weight doesn't matter. It's
the height and Leonard has the
advantage there," said Basilio.
who moved up In weight to take

the m iddleweight title from ’
Robinson in 1957. " I pick
Leonard to win because of his1
speed. He’s two years younger
than Hagler."
Basilio said he move^j up to1
See DESTINY, Page 3B

Styles Clash A s UNLV Tackles Hoosiers
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — One chews on
towels and prefers a wide-open offense.
The other chews out referees and
demands a disciplined attack.
The divergent coaching styles o f Jerry
Tarkanian and Bob Knight will converge
on the same court for the first time
Saturday when top-ranked Nevada-Las
Vegas meets No. 2 Indiana in the NCAA
Tournament semifinals. The first game,
set for 3:42 p.m. EST, pita No. 10
Syracuse against Big East rival Pro­
vidence.
The games are expected to be played
before a college basketball record crowd
of more than 63,000 in. the Superdome.
The previous record of 61,612 was set in
the Superdome for the Final Four in
1982. but officials have changed the
seating configuration to boost atten­
dance this year.
Tarkanian and Knight, who consider
themselves close friends, are both con­
troversial figures. Tarkanian has had
several run-ins with the NCAA, and
Knight has feuded with officials and the

* 't .U 4 •

Basketball
media.
"A lot of the stuff that has been
associated with Jerry's career unfortu­
nately has overshadowed what a good
coach he is." Knight said.
Indiana, 28-4, features a patient,
balanced attack led by shanihooting
guard Steve Alford. All five of Indiana's
starters are averaging between 13.8 and
20.5 points a game in the tournament.
The Hoosiers' bench, however, Is thin.
Seven weeks ago, Knight said his
Hoosiers were not a good team. He now
grudgingly admits he was wrong.
"I'm still not sure how good we are."
Knight said. "I'm not sure when we are
in practice if we're any good, but we
must be if we've gotten this tar."
Knight Is bidding to become only the
third coach since the tournament's
inception In 1939 to win the title more
than twice. The Hoosiers won the

J

V

- » rr- r I — -

tournament In 1976 and then again In
1981.
Nevada-Las Vegas. 37-1, will employ a
pressing full-court defense In an effort to
force Indiana to play at a faster tempo.
On offense, the Runnin' Rebels shoot
quickly, looking either Inside to power
forward Armon Gilliam or outside to
3-point gunners Freddie Banks and
Gerald Paddlo.
"Our defense has done It for us this
year." Tarkanian said. "When our shots
are not going In. our defense Is always
there."
In the other matchup. Syracuse. 30-6,
has beaten Providence 15 straight times.
Including twice this season. The Friars
have been the most Impressive of the
Final Four teams In the NCAAs, stomp­
ing Alabama 90-68 in the Southeast
R e g io n a l s e m ifin a l and r ip p in g
Georgetown 88-73 In the final.
"I would have preferred to play a team
other than Providence." Syracuse center
Rony Selkaly said. "They never give up.
They give you 100 percent and try to

N C A A Ti
i

I N m CMm

m

T»l»vl»km : Orlando'* WCPX-*
Radio: Orlando W MMA AM (0*0)
3:42 p.m. — Syracuta v ». Provldanca
« p.m. — Indiana v*. Navada-La* Vagai

devise things to keep you off balance."
Providence's most disarming tactic is
an aggressive press that will make!
Syracuse point guard Sherman Douglas
work to get the ball upcourt on every
possession. The Friars have 302 steals
this year compared to 129 for their
opposition.
On offense. Providence. 25-8. relies on
the 3-point shooting of Billy Donovan.'
Delray Brooks and Ernie Lewis.
Syracuse shoots few 3-polnters. In-’
stead, the Orangemen like to get the ball'
Inside to Selkaly and forward Derrick
Coleman. Selkaly. a 6 -foot-lO Junior'
center, has scored 59 points In his last
two NCAA games.

�2D— Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Nettles Slugs 2 HRs,
Eyes Backup Position

‘M y bigg est
asset going up
to the p la te Is
th at I d o n ’t think
ab o u t
anything. I Just
see the ball
a n d h it It. *

U n iie d Presa In te rn a tio n a l

FORT LAUDERDALE - Craig
Nellies, bidding to win a backup
Job on the Atlanta Braves' roster
at age 42, Friday slugged two
homers to power an 11-3 rout of
the New York Yankees.
Nettles hit a solo homer to
highlight a five-run fifth Inning
o ff Dennis Rasmussen and
another solo shot during a
four-run eighth o ff reliever
Cecillo Guante.
Rasmussen, scheduled to be
the Yankees' O pening Day
pitcher because of on injury to
Rick Rhoden, was shelled for 12
hits and six runs In six Innings
and has a 7.08 ERA for the
spring.
ST. PETERSBURG - Richard
Dotson pitched seven shutout
innings, helping the Chicago
White Sox to a 5-1 victory over
the St. Louis Cardinals.
Dotson allowed just live hits
until the eighth when Mike Laga
doubled. Laga eventually scored
on a single by Jose Oquendo off
reliever Ray Searagc. St. Louis
starter Tim Conroy surrendered
all five Chicago runs in three
innings.
CLEARWATER - Left-hander
Bruce Ruffin pitched seven
strong Innings and Mike Easier
hit his fifth homer of the spring,
lifting the Philadelphia Phillies
to a 3-2 victory over the Houston
Astros.
The game was called after
seven Innings because of rain.
RuiTin became the first Phillies
pitcher to go seven Innings this
spring. He gave up six hits,
walked two and struck out four.

A Tre n d y Euphemism: 'I
Feel G oo d About Myself'

Sunday, March W, 1W7

Baseball
hit a two-run homer In the ninth
inning to carry the Kansas City
Royals to a 5-3 triumph over the
Montreal Expos.
Quirk's two-run homer came
ofT losing pitcher Randy St.
Claire, who allowed four runs
but only two earned In 1 1-3
i n n i n g s . E r r o r s by Mi ke
F itzg e ra ld and Tom Foley
allowed Quirk and Buddy Blancalana to score unearned runs
for the Royals In the eighth
Inning.
PORT CHARLOTTE - Dave
Concepcion and Barry Larkin
slapped two-run singles to lead
the Cincinnati Reds to an 11-7
triumph over the Texas Rangers.
Concepcion went 3 for 4 and
scored twice to lead the Reds;
Paul O 'N e ill h om ered for
Cincinnati. The game included
the ejection of Reds Manager
Pete Rose and second baseman
Ron Oester by American League
umpire John Hirschbeck during
an argument in the bottom of
the first inning.
YUMA. Arlz. — Andy Hawkins
allowed five hits in six innings,
helping the San Diego Padres
defeat the Milwaukee Brewers
2-1.
The Padres scored two runs off
loser Ted Higuera In the third.
Stan JcffeYson and Randy Ready
scored when center fielder Mike
Felder lost Tony Gwynn's flyball
In the sun for an error.

SCOTTSDALE. Arlz. - Bob
Melvin delivered a sacrifice fly
with none out in the ninth
WEST PALM BEACH - Steve
Sax drilled a bascs-loaded triple Inning to give the San Francisco
to highlight a five-run seventh Giants a 7-6 victory over the
inning that carried the Los Chicago Cuba.
Candy Maldonado led off the
Angeles Dodgers to a C-3 victory
over a split squad of Atlanta ninth against Cubs relief pitcher
Dickie Notes and singled. Chill
Braves.
Gerald Perry provided the of­ Davis, after fouling ofT two bunt
fensive punch for Atlanta, driv­ attempts, singled pinch runner
ing in two runs with singles in Randy Kutcher to third to set up
the fourth and eighth Innings. Melvin's sacrifice fly.
The Giants, whose 16-6 record
The Braves took a 1-0 lead in the
first Inning when Dale Murphy leads the Cactus League, scored
six runs In six Innings against
singled home Perry.
Rick Honeycutt. 3-1, picked up Chicago starter Jamie Moyer.
the victory for Los Angeles while
PALM SPRINGS. Calir. Jeff Dedmon, 1*1. absorbed the
Wally Joyner drove in four runs
loss for the Braves.
v
and Devon White and Doug
DeCinces knocked In two each,
FORT MYERS - .Jamie

Bjr M ik e T a l l y
U P I B aseball W rit e r

ST. PETERSBURG — Heard
around the Grapefruit League:
At least one t r endy
euphem ism has Infiltrated
baseball. Players used to discuss
confidence. Now the big phrase
is. "I feel good aoout myself.”

Tony Gwynn

helping the California Angels
defeat the Seattle Mariners 15-2.
White led the Angels' 17-hlt
attack with three hits, including
RBI singles In the sixth and
seventh innings. Joyner deliver­
ed a pair of two-run singles, in
the third and sixth, when the
Angels sent 13 men to the plate
to score eight unearned runs.
They were Joyner’s first RBI
since March 13 and doubled his
previous Cactus League total.

Right-hander Mike Witt went
seven Innings for the victory,
holding the Mariners to seven
hits.
TUCSON. Arlz. - Tom Candlottl pitched a four-hitter — the
first complete game by a Cleve­
land pitcher this spring — to lift
the Indians to a 1-0 Cactus
League victory Friday over the
Oakland Athletics.

ALMANAC

Stillwell, Larkin Still Battling
IstvrSay'i Bs m Ss II AKim m c
(M IM P r tu IntomattoMl
Today It M ircti It, IIW . Optftlng Day It t
d iy t away. Kurt ttlllwall and Barry Larkin
of ttw Radt a rt battling In ttw final dayt of
spring training t v S'* Mu. 1 thortitop |ob.
Larkin was batting J*t. whlla Stlllwall wat
hitting JOO.
Ouataaftha Day
"Fran baiaball wat tomathlng avary on*
could thara for four dacadat. Batafcall may
now hava bacoma tomathlng of an allta
activity. Tha worfcar wilt no longar ba abla to
tlap tha bott t back and talk about last
night's gama." — Marty Appal, tpokatman
for W PIX T V In Naw York, altar hit station
lost tha rights to talavlia a majority of
Yank vat gamat to Sport tChannal, a cabla
station.SporltChannal will falavlta 100
Yankaat gamat, whlla W PIX will show 40.
Radt Managar Pata Rota It balng tuad for
110 million by lorm ar ttammafa Pata
Whltanant for broach of contract. Tha suit
tayt Rota grantad Whltanant oxclutlvo uta of
tha namat "Pata Rota. Pata. Rota and Llttla
Charlla Huttla," In connactlon with tha tala
of morchandlta haarlng Rota’s nama.
HotSaat
Commissioner Petar Ueberroth fined tha
Boston Rad Sox and pitcher Al Nipper
undisclosed turns at tha result of Nipper
hitting Oarry! Strawberry of tha Matt with a
pitch In an exhibition gama.
The Battle far Seattle
Mariners President Chuck Armstrong hat
begun a prattured attempt to form a
consortium of local Invasion to keep tha
baseball team In Seatlla. Armstrong said ha
hopes to hava a plan formulated by next weak
to purchase tha club from owner George
Argyros. who announced Thursday ha would
tall tha Mariners and buy tha San Diego
Padres.
Brothers In Arms
Rich Gedman and Roger Clamant, former
battery mates with tha Boston Rad Sox, are
working out together In Houston. Gedman is

an unsigned free agent and Clemens Is
holding out. Both players are unsigned and
are threatening to sit out the season If they
are not offered satisfactory contracts.
Going the Distance
Tom Candlottl pitched a four-hitter — the
first complete gama by a Cleveland pitcher
this spring — against O akland. Ths
knuckleballer needed |ust U pitches and, al
one point, retired IS men In a row.
Life Begins at so
Gralg Nettles, bidding to win a backup |ob
on the Atlanta Braves' roster al age 4],
slugged two homers In an 11-3 exhibition
victory over the Yankees.
Friday's fransactlens
Atlanta — Returned pitcher Luis Leal,
acquired during offseason on conditional
basts, to Toronto.
Chicago (N L ) — Returned catcher Steve
Christmas to minor-league camp for re­
assignment.
Commissioner's Office - - Fined Boston Red
Sox and pitcher Al Nipper for hitting Darryl
Strawberry with pitch In exhibition game.
Minnesota — Sent pitcher Randy Niemann
and Inflelder Gene Larkin to Portland of
Pacific Coast League (A A A ); released
minor league pitcher John Butcher.
New York (A L ) — Placed pitcher Rod
Scurry on waivers.
New York (N L ) — Traded catcher Ed
Hearn, right handed pitcher Rick Anderson
and minor-league pitcher Mauro Goiro to
Kansas City for right-hander David Cone and
minor league catcher Chris Jellc.
Pittsburgh — Traded right-handed pitcher
Jim Winn to Chicago White Sox for player to
be named.
Texas — Assigned pitchers Kevin Brown,
Keith Creel, Mike Jeffcoat and Billy Taylor to
Its minor-league camp.
Toronto — Sent pitcher Colin McLaughlin
to Syracuse of International League (A AA )
and optioned pitcher Jose Mesa to Knoxville
ol Southern League (A A ); optioned pitcher
Luis Leal to the Puebla of Mexican League.

Nostalgia made retired bigleague broadcaster Lindsey
Nelson visit spring training. The
Mets, who employed him for 17
years, next season switch their
training base across the state.
“ I thought I'd visit the memo­
ries,*' said Nelson, now an Ad­
junct Professor of Broadcasting
in the Communications De­
partment at the University of
Tennessee.
Many Yankee teams. Including
the 1927 club, trained In St.
Petersburg. Nelson recalls hear­
ing an old-timer tell him "Babe
Ruth once hit one on the balcony
of this hotel.”
"Th at's a good poke, but
nothing exceptional.” Nelson
quibbled.
"Back then, the ballpark was a
block further away." the oldtimer said.
Nelson smiled while recalling
the Mets' first manager, Casey
Stengel.
"W e were barnstorming our
way north," Nelson recalled.
"W e’re In Norfolk. Va.. and the
p e o p le th row us a g re a t
breakfast. Casey comes to me
and says. 'Would you please
Introduce the players so these
people can know who they've
entertained?1"
"Sorry, Casey, we've moved so
many players around. I really
don’t know them all by name,”
Nelson replied.
"T h a t's the trouble." the
manager said. "I don't either."
Manager Tom m y Lasorda
Jokes about what a bad year the
Dodgers had in 1986.
"Ferdinand Marcos called
me." Lasorda said. "He Just
wanted to talk to someone who
had a worse year than he did."

Track ft Field

Campbell ran a 46.7 split for
400 meters and was Joined on
the team by Daron Council
(48,3); Alex Huntley (48.1) and
Kevin Henderson (45.9). The
In the NCAA qualifying meet
team finished with a time of
In Indianapolis. Campbell, a '3:OB.72. Only seven teams In
1985 Seminole High graduate,. the nation met the NCAA
Just missed qualifying In the
qualifying time o f3:08.00.
' 500 meter dash with a time of
1:02.51 and he also ran a leg
In the Tiger Invitational held
on the 1,600 meter relay team
M a r c h 22 a t A u b u r n ,
that was seven tenths of a
Campbell was second in the
second, off the NCAA quali­
100 meters (10.50) and third
fying time.
In the 200 meters (21.15),

running personal records In
both events and serving notice
that he plans on having a
banner outdoor season.

000
Of those Aubum runners
who did qualify for the NCAA
Indoor Championships, Junior
Brian Jaeger led the way with
a fourth-place finish in the
3,000 meters. Jaeger, a 1984
graduate o f Winter Park High,
ran an 8 :0 1.1 in the trials but
came back in the finals with
an A ll-A m e ric a n tim e o f
7:58.93.
The NCAA Indoor Meet was
broadcast by ESPN and, along

FBI Investigates Threats
DALLAS (UPI) - Alleged threats by a
New York sports agent against a
Southern Methodist University wide re­
ceiver. who reportedly was told his
hands would be broken If he signed with
another agent, are befng Investigated by
the FBI, a source says.
An FBI official In Washington, D.C..
who Insisted his name not be used,
Friday confirmed to United Press In­
ternational the bureau Is looking into the
reported threat against SMU receiver
Ronald Morris by agent Lloyd Bloom,
and threats by unnamed parties against
SMU running back Jeff Atkins.

•

Football
The New York Times Friday reported
the FBI has a tape recording of a
conversation In which Bloom threatened
to have Morris’ hands broken If he
signed with another agent prior to this
spring's NFL draff.
Atkins, one of the leading rushers in
Southwest Confernce history, and
Morris, SMU's third-leading career re­
ceiver. are no longer enrolled at SMU but
are eligible for the draft.

\

t

Jks.

Clifton Campbell narrowly
missed qualifying for the
N CAA Indoor Champion­
ships In two events.

SAAU Wide Receiver

Atkins and Morris are under contract
to Athletic Associates, a Dallas agency
owned by former SMU star Sherwood
Blount. Blount said Friday he had no
comment concerning the published re-*
ports.
Blount has been banned for life from
associating with SMU football because of

i-fp-M . , 1.4
-

Third baseman George Brett
explained why the Royals expert
to shrug off their problems and
contend this year.
"W e put distractions aside
when It’s time to play baseball ”
he said. "You can have all t *
problems In the world before and
after the game but at 7:30 we're
ready to play and we have been
for years."
White Sox right-hander Jo*
DeLeon has popped the eyes of
one blg-league scout.
"How he ever went 2-19 m
never know.” the scout said
DeLeon, who now throws ■
split-fingered fastball, went 2-19
for the 1985 Pirates.
Here’s how deep the Mets are:
if lefty relievers Jesse Orosco
and Gene Walter stumble, the
club can try lefty Randy Myeri.
perhaps the hardest thrower in
camp. Manager Davcy Johnson
hasn't m ade up his mind
whether to keep him in New
York or send him to AAA
Tidewater. "H e can either be the
top dog there or the 10th man on
my staff” Johnson said.
Pirates General Manager Syd
Thrift could start a lively debate
with this observation: "We know
that baseball players are the
greatest athletes in the world to
begin with. You have to take
that as a statement of fact."
Tigers Manager Sparky An­
derson laughs at the Idea that
clubhouse problems necessarily
hurt a team. He mentioned the
Oakland A's, who quarreled
their way to titles in 1972-74. He
also recalled Cincinnati's Big
Red Machine.
"When I was at Cincinnati I
had players who did not speak,"
he said. "Some guys never said
hello until they got out on the
field."

IC B A M o v e s
T o S e m ifin a l*

with Jaeger, featured two
other former Central Florida
greats In LSU's Schowonda
Williams and Florida State's
Michelle Finn.
Williams, a 1984 graduate of
Lyman High, Is now a Junior at
LSU and she competed In the
NCAA meet in the open 500
meters and ran on the 1,600
meter relay team. Williams
finished fifth In the 500 and
ran a solid leg on the winning
relay team as the Lady Tigers
won the NCAA Indoor title.
Finn, a graduate of Orlando
Oak Ridge High, finished sec­
ond In the 55 meters for the
second year In a row.

Dallas FBI spokesman Don Baxter said
the agency would neither confirm nor
deny the reported investigation. Bloom
could not be reached for comment, and
Morris said he knew nothing of the
alleged threat.

territory and throw someone out
from his knees. Some peonu
could do It to their left. He did it
to his right."

Former big-league shortstop
Tony Kubck calls his one-time
Yankee teammate Clcte Boyer
the greatest field in g third
baseman he ever saw.
"There's Billy Cox and Brooks
Beat line of the spring is a
Robinson.” said Kubek, a Blue description or St. Louis Cardi­
Jays and NBC commentator. nals' rookie pitcher Joe Ma"But Clete had the arm. He was grane: "Not only does he use big
the only guy I've ever seen who words, but he even knows what
could dtvc to his right tnto foul they mean."

Just Misses 500-Meter Berth
Bjr Chris Filter
Herald Sports W riter
Although he failed to qualify
for the NCAA Indoor Champi­
onships, Sanford's Clifton
Campbell still had a tremen­
dous sophomore Indoor season
at Aubum University.

Baseball

what the NCAA said was Improper
payments to a prospect in 1984. The
NCAA last month canceled SMU’s 1987
football season, citing payments that
continued after the Mustangs were
placed on SMU probation In 1985.
Bloom's partner. Norby Walters, also Is
a subject of the federal probe, the Times
said. Authorities are trying to determine
If Walters was behind last week's beating
of a sports agent In Skokie. 111., who had
recently signed two players formerly
associated with Wa)ters7 the newspaper
satd.

The Inter-County Basketball
Association (ICBA) Semtnoles
won three of four games to
advance to the semifinals of the
Daytona Beach YMCA Invita­
tional. The Scmlnoles need a win
Saturday morning to advance to
Saturday night's tournament
finals at Mainland High School.
To get to the semifinals, coach
M ickey N orton 's Scmlnoles
routed Greensboro (N.C.) Blue,
64-29, Friday night at Daytona
Beach Community College.
Theron Perkins had 12 points
to lead the ICBA squad while
Chuckle Atkins tossed in 10,
Bobby Anderson added nine and
Mark Bellhom and Seth Rubin
c o n tr ib u te d e ig h t apiece.
Bellhom and Rubin also added
12 rebounds each and Atkins
handed out four assists.
In round robing play earlier In
the tournament, the Scmlnoles
won two and lost one. ICBA
opened with a 59-52 victory over
McMtnn.Tenn.
Atkins had 19 points to lead
the way followed by Anderson
with 12, David Brock with nine.
• Perkins with eight and Bellhom
with six. Brock also grabbed a
game-high 13 rebounds.
In Ita second round robin
game, ICBA upended Meigs
County, Tenn., 45-37.
Anderson's 14 points led the
way while Perkins pumped In 12
and Brock 10. Alton King led the
defense with six steals.

j

.. .Blake
’ though he could tell us where
the pain was."
It was an even more painful
diagnosis. Jeff, who was thrown
over the car by the collision and
landed on hi* leg on the road,
suffered a compound fracture of
hla right leg. a broken right arm
aqd a 60-plus stitches In his
right knee. One of the most
p ro m isin g sophom ore
quarterbacks In the South,
Seminole's "Franchise" would
miss hfs entire Junior year on the
gridiron.
"When It happened, the first
thing I thought about was foot­
ball “ Jeff said. "I knew the leg
w a s b r o k e n . O n e o f th e
paramedics told me I would be
all right. He said a lot of people
had come back from a broken

leg."
Emory and Jeff both feel that
his athletic training and ability
to react saved him from death
and permanent physcla) im­
pairment. The incident still re­
mains very vivid in Jeffs memo­
ry"I saw him coming and 1 kind
of pushed ofT at Impact." he said.
" If 1 had been a little quicker, I .
might have not gotten hit."
* If he had been a little slower...

000
If JelT Blake's Ufe had ended or
his athletic career had been
ruined that night at the in­
tersection of Mellonvllle Avenue
and 25th Street, tragic may not
have been a strong enough

Jeff and Emory had already
suffered through one famllly
tragedy, the unfortunate ac­
cidental drowning death o f
mother and wife Peggy.
Ironically, Jeff's accident came
one month short of 10 years to

the day after his mother's passing. Peggy Coleman and Emory
w ere c h ild sw eeth ea rts at
Crooms-High School. Emory said
Peggy was the main reason he
chose Bethune-Cookman College
in Daytona Beach to continue his
football career.
The summer o f '76 had al­
ready been disheartening for the
Blakes. Emory had tom the
ligaments in his knee while
preparing for the Canadian
Football League season. A tryout
with the newly formed Tampa
Bay Buccaneers was now out of
the picture.
He remembers Monday, July
5th with a heavy heart. "Jeff
was only six years old and he
was there." Emory said. "The
4th of July celebration was on
the 5th that year. She Just took
some relatives for a day at
Wekiva Springs.
"One of Peggy's baby sisters
fell Into the water. She went in to
get her out and was able to push

her sister up. but Peggy's lungs
took in too much water."

0 00

Jeffs fractured arm and stit­
ched knee healed well. Legs
broken with the severity of Jeffs
compound fracture, though,
have finished many athletic ca­
reers. Some feared he would
never be the same again.
For the then 15-year-old Jeff,
however, time was on his side.
One doctor felt It could heal
"stronger than before." It all
depended on the calcium. Would
it take hold? Would It solidify?
After limping through the rest
o f the school year and part of the
summer with his cast, Jeff was
eager to test the leg. A program
was arranged which he fouled
religiously. Even though he did
not play football In '87, he
worked out with the team and
dressed out on several occasions.
*Tve never seen a kid more
determined to come back," grid­
iron coach Mosure said. "He just

w o r k e d an d w o r k e d and
worked."
The work paid off. Jeff re­
gained the strength and mobility
In his leg. Still, there was the
question: How would Jeff react
the first time the leg received a
good shot? Would he shy away
from the contact? Would the leg
giveaway?
"I wasn't worried about that."
Jeff said. "I got hit a couple of
limes In football practice and It
was all right."
Baseball coach Ferrell said the
recovery appears to be complete.
"I haven't seen any problem
with his leg," he said. "Jeff
never complains and he did a lot
of rehabilitation things.
" H ts le g m igh t even be
stronger. He Is running well, as
evidenced by his stolen bases.
He has eight steals without
getting thrown out."
Jeff, a shortstop, has done
other things well. too. The
rlfle-armcd junior Is Seminolo-'s

best clutch hitter. He Is batti
.316 with a team-leading
runs batted In. Jeff has thi
doubles, a triple and a hon
among his 12 hits.
• JelT feels he is completi
healed and he looks back
being a fortunate young man.
can run faster. I'm taller an&lt;
weigh m ore." the 6 -2 . 11
pounder said."
Emory and Jeff, both w
strong religious convictions, si
It may have been God issul
them a test.
"It could have been a ti
from God." Jeff said. "It coi
have been worse. It might ht
been a Mack truck that hit me.
" I ’ve thought to myself seve
times, 'why didn't I Just u
him in the car to take back I
cassettes?"' Emory said. "Su
It tested my faith. But eve
thing happens for a reason. 1
can't question why. We're Ji
happy Jeff was able to survive.
And continues to thrive.

�»

.1 .1

'&lt; ”'1 — f— *-- « 4®

J J

m

■r » * -

6unday, March If, H g - H

ti PI.

LongshotJones Takes 1
-

P O N T E V E D R A (U P I) — T h e
normally rugged Tournament Players
Course, soaked by two days of rain and
missing the windy conditions that
make It one of the most difficult
layouts on the PGA Tour, yielded the
lowest 36-hole score In tournament
history Friday to a golfer named Steve
Jones.
Jones, who missed the cut In his last
four tournaments and who has never
finished better than 129th on the
money list since turning pro in 1981,
shot a 66*67—133 to take a one-stroke
lead over Scott Simpson midway
through the second round of the $1
million Tournament Players Champi­
onship. Rain again struck the TPC
Friday, forcing officials to call ofT play
at 4:42 p.m. EST, with half of the field
of 144 yet to finish the second round.
The second round Is scheduled to be
completed early Saturday, after which
the field will be cut to the low 70

scores and ties, and the third round la
scheduled to get underway at approx­
imately 11:45 a.m. The forecast called
for partly cloudy skies and a 20
percent chance of rain.
One stroke back of Simpson at
9-under 135 was Brad Fabel, and Curt
Byrum was another two shots back at
7-under 137. Three players still play­
ing the second round — Jeff Sluman.
Dave Stockton and Nick Price — were
at 6 under par.
Two days o f rain left the greens on
the par-72, 6.8B7-yard course soft and
willing to hold approach shots aimed
at the pins, and the lack of wind also
took away some o f the course's bite.
"The wind wasn't up and the course
was a little bit defenseless.'' said Ben
Crenshaw, who was at 6 -under 138
along with Buddy Gardner and Sandy
Lyle. "You could be more aggressive.
You should expect high winds, but we
haven't had them. The rain has made

NCAA MATCHUPS

he played Friday. The former Unlvemity of Colorado golfer Is using a new set
of irons and a new sand wedge, and he
holed out two shots with the sand
wedge Friday.
First, he put a 94-yard shot in the
hole for an eagle 3 on the ninth hole,
his final hole of the first round, then
followed that two holes later by holing
out from the bunker on the second
hole for a birdie.
"1 feel pretty good right now." said
Jones, 28, who was the medalist at last
year's qualifying school. "I'd like to
play another 18."

Golf
things soft and the conditions make
good scoring possible. When the wind
comes up. your hands are full again."
Because of rain Thursday, half the
field completed the first round early
Friday before turning right around and
beginning the second 18 holes. Fabel
played 32 holes, eating only a candy
bar, and said he was dragging at the
end of his round.
"I'm glad It's over." he said, easing
off his shoes. "1 played 32 holes today
and th a t's a pretty good haul,
especially on this golf course. I didn't
think I would have enough energy to
get In. 1 went around there so many
times I was dizzy."
Setting the 36-hole record had Jones
so pumped up he wanted to play
another 18 holes after finishing the 26

What Jones would like to do even
more Is avoid a repeat of his finish In
January's Phoenix Open, where he
also led after two rounds only to shoot
a 74-75 coming In to finish tied for
50th. His best finish this year Is a tie
for sixth at the Hawaiian Open, and he
has earned 821 .OOO.

N EW O RLEANS (U P I) — Kay matchup* In Saturday’* NCAA
M mlflnalc
PR O VID EN CE VS. SYRACUSE
Syracuse v». tha Provldanca pra** — tha Friar*’ fullcourt prat* It
on* ot tha mo*t withering In collag* batkatball and Providence can
run oft 10 point* In a hurry It tha oppotltlon bacoma* turnover prona.
Syracu** li not Immune to turnover*, but Howard Trleh* It a good
ball handling forward and Sherman Douglat I* capable of bringing
fheballupbyhlmtatt.
Provldanca canter* v». Rony Salkaly — The Syracuta cantor I*
playing tha best batkatball of hi* Ufa, averaging I t point* In hit four
tournament game* Including a again*! Florida. If ho It allowed to
got the ball down low h* will b* hard to atop. It will b* up to 4-foot-lt
Jacak Duda to »low down Salkaly early In th* gam* and perhap*
discourage him at tha contatt goat along.
Providence’* J point thootar* v*. Syracu**’* detent* - Th* Friar*
can turn any gam* Into a rout attar-they warm up from ]-polnt
range AlabamaBlrmlngham and Alabama learned that Iha hard
way. Orangeman guard* Crag Monro* and Sherman Oouglai mutt
patrol th* 3 point tine to keep th* Friar* from having *aty (hot* from
that rang*.
Under th* Board* — Syracu**, on paper, ha* a tramandou* edge on
th* Friar* In rebounding bated on tournament play. Provldanca wot
outrebounded by IS again*! Au»tln Peay whlla Salkaly and Derrick
Coleman have combined for 1* rebound* par gam*, In their two
prevlou* meeting*, however, Providence oufrebounded Syracuae by

10.

Bench Strength — Syracuse he* little depth, having coma up with
|u*t 22 bench points during the tournament. Provldanca brings In
Stevo Wright, Marty Conton, Carlton Screen and Darryl Wright, all
ot whom can add scoring punch.
Billy Donovan vt. everybody — Providence guard Donovan ha*
probably enhanced hi* reputation more than any other player during
the NCAA tournament. He It leading the tournament In scoring with
24.5 point* p*r game and hi* ball-handling skill* era exceptional. If
Donovan hat an excellent gam*, at ha hat had four straight time* Intha tournament, Provldanca will likely win. It h* It shut down, a* ha
wet In th* first halt agalntl Austin Peay, tha Friar* will be In
trouble. In Provldanca’* two gamat with Syracuse thl* year.
Donovan hit 10of 30 shot*.
IND IAN A VS. N EV A D A -LA SV EO A S
Steve Alford v*. UN LV guard* — Alford hat bean and should bo tha
catalytt for tha Hootlert and If ha warm* up from tha fletd early h#
could score a tot of point*. Th* pace ot th* gam* should allow Alford
a lot ot shot opportunities uniat* Mark Wad* and Freddie Bank* are
able to keep him from getting th* ball In good shooting position.
Rebel*' outild* (hooting vt. Indiana’* defense — Th* most certain
thing about thl* game I* that Navada-Lat Vagat will taka a lot ot
2 point that*, flow many they make It a different matter.
Navada-La* Vegas ha* mad* 30 of 47 3 point trio* during th*

■.teiwiiwmirirtliMJN " -

- ..

those long-i
trying the**
long-range
from that distance.
U N LV canter Armon Gilliam vt. R kk Calloway and Dean Garrett
— While tha Provldenco-Syracuta gam# may be decided outside, this
on* could b* decided Intld*. With tha Rebel* being pressed by
Wyoming and Iowa, Gilliam came through with 31 and 77 point*. Ha
It hit team’* pressure player. Garrett and Calloway hav* averaged a
combined If rebounds par game In th* tournament and need to keep
Gilliam from grabbing offensive rebound* and turning them Into
•tty shot*.
bench Strength — Neither team has a particularly dtap bench, but
Navada-Lat Vegas can count on Gary Graham to product torn#
often**. Ha hat scored 50 points during th* tournament. Th* Rabat*
also hav* enough substlluta* to allow their fait-tampo offensive
threat* to gain a little rati. Indiana ha* almost no bench. Th*
Hoot lac* hav* scored only seven bench point* In their last three
gamat.
Bobby Knight v*. Jerry Tarkanlen — No matter what tha coaches
say about th* player* deserving th* spotlight, the** two campaigner*
will rectivx much ot tha attention. Knight put on a moderately good
tamper tamtrum In hit team’* regional final and got away with only
on* technical foul. On* of th* Intare*ting 1 1deshow* In th* gam* wilt
b* how much Knight can gat by with It he choose* to start lathing at
tha officials.

Defense Shackles 3-Point Hoopla
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) - Despite all the 3-polnt hoopla,
tenacious defense still makes
team s th rive In the NCAA
Tournament.
Each member of the Final
Four ‘
bpetrt considerably
more time learning fundamen­
tals of defense than launching
3-polnt field goals. Unranked
Providence and No. 10 Syracuse
are still alive because in the Big
East, if you don't play defense,
you don't play long.
"C o a ch (R ick) Pltlno has
brought a lot of enthusiasm and
confidence to thla team," Pro­
vidence guard Billy Donovan
said, "and he's Instilled In us
that hard work is the key. We
never have a fear that missing a
shot will get you yanked out of
the game, but if you don’t play
defense, he's gonna take you out

TPC RESU LTS
At Fare*Vaire
(Par Til
III gairaretoftntahlatvrday)
Slav* Jena*
Scott Simpien
Brad Fatal
Curt Byrum
Buddy Gardner
Sandy Lyt*
Ban Crenshaw
Chrl* Perry
Mark Wtate
Mark Hay**
Bobby Cola
David Edward*
Bob Eastwood
Larry Mitt
Gen*
auers—*-*1- ■* S
*»j.
Dan Foreman
Mika Raid
Lannl. Clamant*
Scott Hoch
Rum Cochran
Clarence Roaa

4447-U&gt;
4*45-134
*7-44-115
*444-137
4444-134
47-71-13*
7044—134
4*71-134
70-44—134
TON—140
7070-140
7070-140
47-73-140
7070-140
4072-140
4071-140
71-44-140
ne»-i4i
74-47—141
744S—t4t
7270-143
73-44—143

Alford, Gilliam:
Keys To Victory

w in , lose &amp; DREW

Basketball
pretty fast."
Facing Alabama March 19 In
Use semifinals o f the Southeast
Regional, the Friars had to cope
with 6-foot*9 center Derrick
McKey, who shared
Southeastern Conference Player
of the Year honors with Ten­
nessee's Tony Whltie, Pltlno de­
vised a defense that collapsed
Inside and denied entry passes
Into the paint. McKey, averaging
25.5 points per game In the
NCAAs, took Just six shots from
the floor and was limited to 11
points.
In holding opponents to 77
points per game despite a
run-and-shoot attack, the Friars
use a fullcourt press designed to

make the ballhandler work hard
every lime up the floor. Led by
Donovan and backcourt mate
Delray Brooks. Providence also
excels in defending the 3-polnt
shot, limiting opponents to 31
percent shooting from that
range.
"W e have an all-out steal
Pltlno said. "W e have
athletic ability than most
teams, so we must make it a
94-fool game. 1look at every rule
from a defensive standpoint.
When the 3-polnt rule was put
In, I was more concerned with
guarding against It than In
shooting it. Because we're so
aware of it os a weapon for the
other team, we arc able to use It
to our advantage on offense. ”
Both Providence and Syracuse
shift easily between zone and
man-to-man defense..

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) — The anxiously awaited
NCAA semifinal between Indiana and Nevada-Laa
Vegas Saturday will unite two players of richly
contrasting styles.
For 60,000 Tans at the Superdome In New
Orleans and the millions watching at home, the
differences should make for a delightful after­
noon.
Indiana's Steve Alford represents the new wave
of college stars who have swept Into prominence
with the advent of the 3-polnt shot. He is 6-foot-2
and 183 pounds — the ''little guy" with the fine
touch from 19-9 range.
UNLV's Armon Gilliam, at 6-9 and 230 pounds,
symbolizes the traditional college basketball
power — the big man who dominates the wars In
the lane.
"H e Is like the heart that pumps the blood."
UNLV'e Mark Wade said of Gilliam. "He's the
key. When we need a big rebound or basket, he
gets It."
Of Alford, Wade said, "He's Just one o f the best
players In the nation. Their whole ofTense Is
keyed around him."
The delicious contrasts go on: Incredibly
accurate from the 3-polnt stripe. Alford he*
averaged 21.7 points per game this season.
Gilliam has averaged 22.9 for the Rebels.
The two players* points come from very
different places. Alford is a 47 percent shooter
overall, but hits 52 percent of hla 3-point shots.
Gilliam hits 60 percent of his shots, but has yet to
stray far enough from the basket to even attempt
a 3-pointer.
Gilliam's Job Is under the basket, as shown by
his 9.3 rebounds-per-game average. Alford la not
as likely to venture Into that dangeroua ground.
Their backgrounds are as dissimilar aa their.,
iRSR »
playing styles. A lford p l a y
basketball for his father and was named Mr.
Basketball In Indiana In 1983. Gilliam, from
Pittsburgh, did not play much In high school and
UNLV found him at Independence (Kan.) Junior
College while scouting another player.
“ Armon’a been consistent all year," said Gary
Graham, another teammate. "H e's been our
bread and butter."
"Steve Alford has gotten more out o f his
offensive abilities than anybody I've ever seen,"
Indiana Coach Bobby Knight said. "H e's scored
2,400 points as a Jump shooter. He doesn't get
many tlp-tns or drives.
"1 come away from him Just totally amazed. His
everlasting claim to basketball Immortality Is
what he's got out of himself."

Lawyer Urges Judge To Return Hagler's WBA Title
BOSTON (UPI) — A lawyer for middle­
weight champion Marvin Hagler. citing
the fighter’s Betf-estecm, urged a federal
Judge Friday to overturn the World
Boxing Association's decision to strip
him of his title.
First U.S. Circuit Court Judge Robert
Keeton told attorneys for Hagler and the
WBA he will hear further arguments on
Tuesday and hoped to make a ruling at
that time.
Hagler, who also holds the World
Boxing Council and International Boxing
Federation titles. Is scheduled to meet
Sugar Ray Leonard tn Las Vegas, Nev.,
on April 6 . Hagler Is guaranteed 812
million for the much-hyped bout.
Although Leonard last fought more

...Destiny

Boxing
than two years ago and Is unranked, he
is expected to make at least 811 million
from the bout. Only the WBC has
sanctioned the fight. The IBF is also
considering stripping Hagler.
Hagler. training at Palm Springs,
Calif., was not present at Friday's
hearing.
Morris Goldings, Hagler's attorney,
said the champion is contesting the
WBA's action for reasons of pride, not
money.
"U ’s mainly his own self-esteem. He
said he won the belts in the ring and so

been on the deck before, I
knocked him down and won the
title."
Gil Clancy, who trained Grif­
Continued from IB
fith and is now a boxing TV
middleweight because he had commentator, says Leonard
increasing trouble making 147 would be better off nearer his old
ounds. But he weighed only weight. The heaviest Leonard
53 1-2 pounds when he de­ has been was 153 for his Junior
feated Robinson, who won the middleweight title fight against
Ayub Kalule.
title back six months later.
"It was an opportune fight, to
"They have Leonard 157, 158
fight Robinson." Basilio said. pounds — I don't think U’s a
" T h e r e w e r e n ’ t a n y top good idea." said Clancy, who has
challengers In the middleweight worked with both Leonard and
division. Obviously, It was the H agler as a com m en tator.
"They've changed Sugar Ray
biggest payday of my life*"
Griffith also earned his biggest Leonard and 1 don’t think now
payday up until then when he that he’s a full-fledged middle­
won the middleweight title from weight he'll be able to out-cute
Dick Tiger in 1966. Griffith Hagler. He'll have to slug with
weighed 150 ‘/t against Tiger, him."
Griffith, who trains fighters
and la te r retu rned to the
Including former heavyweight
welterweight division.
"I moved up for the money.” champ James "Bonecrusher"
Griffith B a ld . "I was a freak. I Smith and former welterweight
could move up and down In champ Juan LaPorte, thinks
weight. Guys up there (middle- Hagler will win by kockout. But
weights) are bigger and stronger. he said It Is the layofT more than
I fell the weight difference, but I the w eight that w ill doom
Leonard.
was determined.
"Hagler's been working hard
“ It was a challenge for me. and
I came through. Tiger had never «*U his life: he didn't do It for

S

wants to lose them In the ring. This Is
psychologically Important. For his own
self-respect he doesn't want to be
stripped of the title," Goldings said.
James Binns, representing the WBA.
said Hagler had violated WBA require­
ments by not fighting for more than a
year. The middleweight champion last
defended his title March 10, 1986, when
he knocked out John "T h e Beast"
Mugabl In a rugged hrawl.
Btnns argued that Hagler knew he
must arrange another fight with a
WBA-aancttoned contender by last Dec.
11 or be stripped of the title.
The WBA's executive committee met
tn Marecy. Venezuela, last Saturday and
upheld the ruling of the championship

nothing." Griffith said. "He's not
gonna let Sugar Ray come out of
retirement after three years and
cut his winning streak short.
"And you can't tell me you
operate on his eye and later on
he can see tine."
History does not favor boxers
fighting In title bouts after long
layoffs. Of 14 champions who
fought in title bouts after two
years or more of Inactivity, only
three were victorious.
"I'v e never gone traditional
ways. I've always been unique,"
Leonard says of his comeback
without a tuneup. "I am such a
b ig u n d e r d o g , t h a t 's m y
tuneup."
"1 Just hope this doesn't hurt
boxing," said Hagler, a 5 to 2
favorite. "I'm taking this fight
very seriously."
Leonard has been working In
the gym for nearly a year to free
himself from ring rust, but he
has yet to face a champion like
Hagler In the gym.
"It's not the same in the
gym ." Griffith said. "It's not the
same as being out there in front
of the crowd, with all that
tension."

committee to strip Hagler of his title,
Goldings said the WBA had not shown
"good faith and fair dealing" In at­
tempting to reach an accomodation with
Hagler. But he said Hagler respects rules
designed to provide opportunities for
fighters.
“ Marvin was prevented from getting a
title shot for several years, so he Is not
interested In hurting the opportunities of
top contenders. He understands that
letting other contenders have a shot at
the title Is Important." Goldings said.
Binns said Hagler's plans are clear.
"It’s been In every paper. Marvin
Hagler says this fight with Sugar Ray
Leonard will he his last one and he will
then retire." Binns said.

“ Let The Professionals Do It"

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dlvlaton and In the teat 6 years, each
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Sunday, March at, 1TI7

Moon Beams O ve r Bowl America
'Sgt. Ike' Strings Together Games O f
. Marine Corps Recruiting Sgt. Ike Moon of
the Wlllct OMsmoblle Cadillac League led all
bowlers this week with a fantastic 754
scries.
Ike hnd games of 223, 278 and 253 In his
series. Beautiful scries Ike.
Bobby Barbour of the T.G.I.F. League
wasn't far behind as he also reached the
coveted 700 level with a 717 series. Games
of 235 215 &amp; 267 made up his series. Way to
go Bobby. Congratulations to both of you.
Moonlltc Bowlers — there are three. $200
Jackpots waiting to be broken. Maybe
Saturday's the night all three will go.
Shopping spree bowlers don't miss your
chance at the $500. This weekend Is your
last opportunity to win the Spree. If you
paid your dollar during league and bowled
your average or higher you are eligible to
bowl in the tournament.
Last year Laura Leahy from the Hi
Nooncrs League won the big money.
The Bowl America March Star Search is
also coming to the end. So far there are over
60 entries in the No Tap Singles event but
expect more than 100 by the end of the
month. BAS pays one out of evey 10 so
come on In and win some money.
###
Here's a look at the high rollers:
YOUTH LEAGUE - (5-8 yrs. old): Tasha
Burk 94, Michael Magner 111, Casic Rash
107, Brent Templeton 126. Kathy Murphy
102. Josllen Grover 110. Michael L 103.
(9-11 yrs. old): John Martin 137. Chris
Allman 153. Charlie Isom 125, Andrew
Butcher 133, Jeff Lane 163, Rebecca Everly
129, Bryan R o ttc n h a u s 155. Sean
Bumgarner 166. (12-14 yrs. old): Clint
Plnder 154. Chris RottcnhauB 157, Andre
Collins 167. Tommy Royal 162, Brandi 171,
Carrie Rash 160. (15-18 yrs. old): Chris
Bumgarner 240/582. David Sulllns 221. Ken
Tumln 181, Jimmy Roche 233, Steve Elland
199. Steve Hathaway 209 213/601, Pat Fish
170. Bobby Acker 189.
SHOOTING STARS — Fran Fowler 211.
GOOD SHEPHERD — Dan 208. Bernard
211. AMERICAN WEIGHT LOSS - Barry
Andrews 227 233/648. Tom Larson 201.
BLAIR AGENCY — Vince Cara 268 200/665.
March Quick 232. Tom Shclleby 221, Gil
Benton 235, Harold Sundvall 233. GATORS
— Jim Clark 206, Harold Robertson 215,
Charlie Lukens 201. Doc Mcnaguale 222,
Steve HIJa 212. Gene Clem 210. Bill Taylor
213. REBELS — Bill Anscll 208. Chan Voll
202. John Hall 209. AKU TIKI — Glen
Kacscr 213. Ron Allman 247 220/641.
Curtis Page 239. Mark Quick 209. Everett
Pierce 201, Tim Daigle 200, Mike Vincent
205, Ike Moon 223. Tank Grover 222, Monty
Montgomery 210, Ken Perry 200 202, Cindy
Besslngcr 224/549, Ron LcMond 203.'

IN BRIEF

j23 ,

278, 253 For 754 Series
CENTRAL FLORIDA REGIONAL HOSPl
— Cy Bulls 214. Suzie Arnold 207
Ernie Runion 222 201/607. Geo. Mansfield
201 Bob Richmond 201. Steve Page 229
Jim Clayton 201 . Tom Fablnsky 210.
TUESDAY NITE MIXED - Dean Hallton
202 Sharon Kramer 209. Ruben Blake 213.
Roger Warlock 223/600. Scott Kern 276
John Plnder 208. Don Gorman 203 244
236/683. Chuck Elliott 206. Gary Swtfl 226,
Bob Bemosky 216. Joe 202. Jay Norria 223.
Roy Templeton 209.
WILLETT OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC Doug Bumell 227. Roger Warren 204, Bill
.
rt • n
V Im
l i m i f n l l Hi *1C f l B B
.
Stoudenmlre
212. Jim
Howell 225 255, Bob
Stevens 214. Jose Luyanda 222. CHIT
Crawford 210. Kit Johnson 202. Don
Caniglla 206. Tank Grover 200. Charle*
Shaw 214. Bobby Barbour 205, Zach
Hunter 202, Bud Beatty 226, Bill Mania
216. William Stiles 214. Tony Dunklnaoo
2 2 0 . Don G o r m a n J r 2 2 4 . Ralph
Montgomery 237. Ike Moon 223 278
253/754, Ron Allmon 205. Roy Templeton
213. J. C. Carver 206, Don Gorman 21B
226/613. Kenny Snyder 200. Scott Kern
222, Charles Todd 201, Randy Slnnott 223
202/605. Harold Robertson 214.
JET BOWLERETTES — Kay Sassman
205. Elaine Kostival 234. HI NOONERS Laura Leahy 203, Darlene Woodworth 214.
FORESTERS - Dec Apgar 202. SANFORD
CITY LEAGUE — James Tanner 205. John
Plovisan 216. Brian O'Boyle 206 204,
Johnnie Taylor 205 215. Al Bowling 209.
Bob Orwlg 215, Bob Meyers 202, Gary
Larson 218, Dick Mlnlck 215. Dick Young
202. Richard Williams 204 235/600. Vince
Cara 229/614. Jim Morace 207, Bruce
Rogers 222, Al Beron 202. Al Fryer 213, D.
Scherpt 207 202. BOB DANCE DODGE
MEN'S LEAGUE — Rick Chesser 214, Joe
Addington 208, Vieira 200, Marcel Vandebeek 208, Daniel Hale 206. Scott Larson
200, Eric Larson 226 212/635. Jerry Farella
236/609, James Hackctt 221, Charles Mell
200. Richard Heaps 222/601, Don Mytrs
225.
tal

Roger
Quick
BOWL
AMERICA
SANFORD:

MYSTERY LADIES — Pearl Waite 202.
PINBUSTERS - Tony Milton 200. Gordon
Thompson 201, Myron Gates 203. T.G.I.F.
- Pee Wee West 202 265/623. Lonnie
Taylor 202. Jim Middleton 200 207. Tracy
Gooding 200, Ed Sautter 204. John Waugh
219. Charlie Plant 235. Bobby Barbour 235
215 267/717. Chuck 222. Cheryl Rash 215.
Bob Hosford 234/614, John Adams 209,
Fred Brown 205 234/619. Jim Morace 204.
W A S H D A Y D R O P O U T S - G o rd o n
Thompson 205, Barbara Richards 222.
Myron Gates 214. Bob Orwlg 209. Jim
Gunstcr 203. Betty Snyder 222.
SUN BANK MIXED - Ralph Bryant 201.
Ronnie Robinson 212, Pete Hoff 203, Buddy
Lawson 203, Richard Jett 232. Don Caniglla
200. Joe RuITln 213 206. Jeff Chestnut 201,
Dewey Smith 204 205. Myrtle Crcvler 213.
Bud Corbett 215, Cathy McNabe 200. Joe
McGuire 228, Richard Salmon 207. Tony
Dunklnson 204 210. Aaron Kaufman 203,
Dottle Hogan 247/615, Gil Benton 214, John
Adams 206, Lloyd Prock 232. Jim Barnes
201. Pepe Luyanda 213 203. Wendy
Gorman 202, Mark Crofoot 218, Donnie
Anderson 213, Gary Larson 204, Kit
Johnson 254/605. Ron Allman 201. Ed
Smith 218, Sharon Decker 200. Al Fryer
202.
DRIFT INN - Joe Ruffin 235, Bobby
Bradshaw 203. Vic Levltl 214, Lisa Emmons
209. Vernon Butcher 205. Dorothy Brown
211, Timmy Zimmers 210, Bill Slnnott 213.
Ed Smith 214. John Pindcr 210 245/625,
Willie Ransom 203. Jim Moyer 210 .

Monacelli Overtakes Holman A t Nationals
TO LEDO, Ohio (UP1) - A m leto
Monacelli of Venezuela overtook Marshall
Holman in the seventh round Friday
night and earned the No. 1 position for
the finals of the $260,000 Toledo Trust
Professional Bowlers Association National
Championship.
Monacelli, who trailed Holman by 140
pins after the sixth round, averaged 242
for his final eight games and finished

with a 56-game pinfall total of 13,198 —
148 pins ahead of Holman.
Monacelli. who has finished second four
times, Including once to Holman, will
have to win just one game In Saturday's
nationally televised finals to earn his first
PBA title and $49,000.
Randy Pedersen, Santa Marla, Calif.,
and Pete Weber. St. Louis, tied for third
with 12,968.

Ronald McDonald
Tees Up Charity
G o lf O n A p ril 13
Ronald M cD o n ald has plenty
of help while practicing for
his u p c o m in g two*m»n,
best-ball tournament at the
Country Club at Heathrow
Monday, April 13 at l p.m.*
Colin Galloway, left reer,
Instructs 4-year-old Bradley
Goembel while Carol Larson,
right, assists 3-year-old son,
Shane. The Junior Women's
Club of Sanford and the
Rotaract Club of Sanford are
sponsoring the fund-raiser.
Interested parties may enter
the Ronald McDonald House
C h a rity G o lf Tournament
w ith a $100 donation by
calling Ms. Larson at 323-1B51
or Galloway at 628-8850. The
entry fee covers golf, cart,
refreshments on the course,
appetizers and an open bar
after the round.

1977-78 seaaon, when the team was known as the
Colorado Rockies. That year, the Rockies lost two straight
games to Philadelphia In the first round. In the 13 seasons
o f the Kansas Clty-Colorado-New Jersey franchise, the
team has made the playoffs only once.
In other games, the New York Rangers topped St. Louis
6-4 and the New York Islanders tied Washington 2-2.

Bartlett I Johnston Wins First
Bartlett 6t Johnston Chiropractic Clinic got in the win
column In the Starlings Division with a 19-11 victory over
Tatyana McCall and Stacy Ritter drove In three runs
each to pave the way for the Clinic s first win while
Brittany Sam had three hits and two RBIs and Melynda
Lens had four hits, scored four runs and was also the
winning pitcher.
The defensive play of the game was made by Carolyn
Cragcr when she made a leaping catch in the second
Inning with the bases loaded and two outs.
1 ;■-***■ ‘ ’ '“y
- v i W * i* • ,.t'
j ,r. f
t * ' •t t-‘

P u h '72 Stands Up In Wind
" PHOENIX (UPl) — On a day to which she had problems
with her awing, the best thing that could have happened to
Penny Pula was to have the wind kick up.
Not that she played well In It. Rather, the finished her
round before breezes gutting up to 45 mph played havoc
with the other golfers In the $300,000Turquoise Classic.
* 5 ? ■*"* •M inder-par 72 oo Friday, then watched it

DARUNGTON. S C. (UP!)

Yarborough took the
_ his Oldsmoblle to an
d the 21st*place spot In the
today's TranSouth 500.
behind with a 154.603 mph
1.368-mUe Darlington International

top of the bottom F rid ay,,

ile To Start IS A n d Undar
In April, the Seminole Softball Club will start
nder league at the Five Points Complex. Any
ted In playing In the league should contact
1 788-0447 or Rod Bush at 830*7417.

M ayfair W om en To Hold
M ystery G o lf Wednesday
M argaret B o lts from the
Mayfair Women's Golf Asaoclaq
j
tlon wants everyone to be aware
K U Q Y
that next Wednesday the ladles
will have their annual Mystery
S £ ffP / *
Tournament, which is sponsored
by First Federal o f Seminole.
M AYFAIR 1
For more Information, contact
COUNTRY 1
Margaret at her home.
Here's a look at the tourna­ CLUB: 322-2531
ment resulta:
Last Wednesday the MWGA
held a 4-ball, best ball with the Alene HI __ both am.
This Sunday Scramble has
following results: First Place (30)
become
quite popular. Anyone
— Peggy Billups, Grace Sauers.
Miriam Andrews. Genevieve can play including a member or
Woodruff: Second Place (57) — non-member, male or female,
Miriam Andrews, Mary A n ­ with or without a handicap.
derson, Dottle Sullivan. Jonnle Check Into the Pro Shop about
1:45 p.m. on any Sunday. It
Elam.
costs
a non-Mayfair member 325
Last Sunday, there were five
teams entered In the weekly and a member $20. The fee
scramble. There was a 3-way tie includes cart and green fee. prize
at 9 under par for the winning money and a bullet dinner,
honors. By (lipping coins (odd
man wins), the winning team
was Tom Ball. Herb Heroy. Ted
Daum and Juanita Green.
SIMI VALLEY. Calif. (UP!) The other tied foursomes were Bob Charles recorded seven
Mark Lcaniak. Mark Cheeseman, birdies and a 67 Friday to take a
Art Perkins, Alice Daniels: Brian two-stroke lead .over Tommy
M c r e n a J im S a n t o s , P a t Aaron after the first round of the
Stenstrom. Nancy Wheeler. The $275,000 GTE Classic Seniors
other two (also-ran) teams were event.
Gene Green, Carol Oil. Bill
Bruce Crampton shot a 70 at
Crump, Earl Higginbotham: Ron the 6,727-yard Wood Ranch Golf
Howell. T. Lafferty. Jim West, Club.

Charles Leads GTE

STATE MAW BOOK

Eaoapt Sunday. thru May 2nd

7 * S K N 1N 6

* 1

r A M U 1ST
aOVSTKA
AVTOaOTTVECOfTB
‘‘Complete Car Cere
At The Lowest Price**

�’ T i t ' T T T T t 1 ^'1

■t T T T

(Editor's note: I realize this Is Fearless Flster's
prediction column, but before this nonsense goes
much further. It should be pointed out that good
normally wins out over evil. Squeaky Clean
Bobby Knight and the Hoosiers will flog Jaded
Jerry Tarkan Ian and Rebs, 78-71. — Sam Cook)
000

Syracuse has one of the best balanced teams In
the nation with Scikaly Inside, Howard Trlche on
defense, the shooting of Greg Monroe and the
point guard play of Sherman Douglas. But the
Orangemen have only taken 279 three-point
shots all season while Providence has taken about
that many In the NCAA Tournament. If Syracuse
gets behind. Its curtains as It cannot hit the bomb
consistently enough to come back.
Providence has a couple slow white guys on Its
team and that usually Isn't a very good sign in
the Final Four but one of them, guard Billy
Donovan, can shoot the daylights out from
three-point range and the other one, center Jacek
Duda. doesn't play enough to be a factor.
Syracuse will most likely try to put a fence
around Donovan and cut off his three-point
efficiency but Billy "Th e Kid” will pop In a few
long ones while Delray Brooks can carry the
Friars on his back If he gets hot from outside the
three-point stripe. And watch out for Darryl
Wright coming off the bench for a couple threes
to help the Friars on their way to a meeting with
UNLV.
... Providence 92. Syracuse 86
(Editor's note: I hate to keep Interrupting but...
Syracuse 1b much too strong Inside with Sclkaly

TV/RADIO

I p * - ESPN, NASCAR. Country Squirt

4 am. - ESPN, Ctltogt: Worm*. NCAA
Tounwnont, tat tomifinti
I N p.m. - WCPX4, Ctlltft NCAA
Ttumsmtnt. 71ml Four, Flat oomlftrul.
Srocuoo *s Pravtewra 11 1
5 pm. - WCPXf. Ctitogr NCAA Twms
moot, Final Four. Sorand tsmilMI. Indtom
in Mrrodi LaiVtgtt ill

\

In’ the final on Monday night. UNLV (which has
taken 888 three-pointers on the season) and
Providence (825 three-pointers) will engage In one
o f the best shootauts ever. Defending the
three-pointer may be the key but It will probably
come down to who hits the most long ones.
Like the game against Iowa. Paddio and Banks
will be In brick city In the first half while Brooks
and Donovan go bonkers. But the all the Runnln'
Rebels will get Into the picture in the second half
and It will come down to a three-point free for all
In the last two minutes.
And, In those last two minutes, the Runnln'
Rebels will stick in enough threes to carry them
to the promised land.
... UNLV 102, Providence 99
(Editor's note: If you have been paying attention
to the Inserts, you already know that the final will
Involve Indiana and Syracuse. Douglas hits one at
the buzzer for 90-88 Syracuse victory. This is not
the movies. — 8.C.)
000

Five Florida high school basketball players,
including 1986 Florida Mr. Basketball Chris
Corchlanl. have been named finalists for the 1987
Florida Mr. Basketball Award.
In addition to Corchlanl. a 6-0 senior guard
from Hialeah Miami Lakes, the finalists Include
Mike Polite of Daytona Beach Mainland. Liv­
ingston Chatman of Lakeland Kathleen, David
White of St. Petersburg Boca Ciega and Cesar
Portillo from Miami Senior.
Corchlanl averaged 24 points and 10 assists per
game this past season and finished hts career
with 3,435 points. Chatman averaged 21 points
and 10 rebounds per game as Kathleen advanced
to the Class 4A finals.
Polite, a 6-7 senior, averaged 20 points and 10
rebounds as the Bucs advanced to the state
semifinals. Portillo, a 6-916 center, averaged 21
points, 12 rebounds and six blocks as Miami
Senior won the 4A title with a 34-3 record. White,
a 6-6 forward, averaged 18 points. 16 rebounds,
five blocks and eight assists as Boca Ciega
complied a 32-3 record.
The award Is sponsored by Florida Sports
News. Inc., the publisher of "Gator Balt."

N o N TT In '88

1 p m - WFTV 9. PSA Holml Champion

we IU

t p m - WCPX s. PGA, Toumommt
PtoytnOamptomhip. Thirdmad IL1
4 pm - ESFN. IFGA. Turquoioo Clank.
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nov - ESPN. SntdiiA international Rally
1p.m - WOR, Spring training. Taronte Slut
Joys vs Nt* York M*tatU
SookottaR
I pm. - WCPX A Callogo Womtn. NCAA
Championthlp III

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BootonHI
golf
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naon- WCPX A Sport*Swdoy lain 1p m l
S pm. - NVL Amarkan Sporty Gvakadt
(aha tp-m., midnight)
4pm. - WFTVS. WideWWWat Speto

Ploy Brtter Golf with JACK NICKLAUS

C L E A R W A T E R (U P I) - A b u r o«-saaeon hat turned the
Philadelphia Phillies Into the New York Yankee* of the National

tliggi,

Lika their American League counterpart*, the Phillies will try to
bludgeon 1N7 opponents with a balanced, speedy lineup that could
realistically produce an average ol five runs per game. All-Star
catcher Lance Parrish and Mike Easier, a proven J 00 hitter, have
been added to a batting order that finished second to the Met* In N L
runs icttrid IRtf MRton.
But Manager John Petske laces the same obstacle plaguing
Yankee manager Lou Plnlella: shaky starting pitching.
"We've got several guys that are capable of winning In I
says pitching coach Claude Osteen. "If the ball bounces
II games." si
*
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even
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around 10
JO
right lor
for them,
them they might
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quit a bounce, Claude. Shane Raw ley, Don Carman and
Kevin Cross have been troubled by Injuries and JJ-year-old Bruce
Ruffin could develop Into the ace of the stall. The filth starting spot
Is open between Marvin Freeman, Fred Toliver and Mika Maddux.
The bullpen Is In far steadier hands with Steve Bedroslan, Kent
Tehulve and Tom Hume.
Three-time N L M V P Mike Schmidt Is protected by the Impressive
bets wielded by Juan Samuel. Von Hayes, Easier. Parrish and Glenn
Wilson.
S IR S M IT H S — Blessed with speed ol Samuel, Gary R o du and
Hayes and power of Schmidt and Parrish, Phillies* lineup will wear
out opposing pitchers; deep bullpen led by Bedroslan; confidence
engendered by besting Mats 10times last season.
W EA KN ESSES - Gross' II victories topped* stall In ISM;
shortstop Steve Jells hit .at* with no home runs; Redo* doesn't reach
base often enough to be effective leadotf hitter.
*
HEW FA C ES — Parrish provides leadership behind plate and JJ
homers If his back holds up; Easier gives Philadelphia another
respected left-handed batter behind Hayes.
O U TLO O K — Unless Gross. Carman and Ruffin consistently give
Felske quality starts, the Phillies will have problems winning the
close ones. Philadelphia's otlense is formidable, but the Mats simply
have too many arms.

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S IZE U P ; O E T R O IT T IQ K R S
L A K E L A N D (U P I) — Manager Sparky Anderson must summon
all of his trademark optimism to see a pennant for the Detroit Tigers
this season.
The Tigers did very little to Improve themselves over the winter,
other than re-signing pitcher Jack Morris and first baseman Darrell
Evans. They lost free agent catcher Lance Parrish to the
Philadelphia Phillies and that could prove to be devaslollng to the
club's chance* of contending In the Amelrcan League East. The
Tigers played without Parrish tor the last two months ol last season
and I Ini shad third.
Mike Heath pletooned with Dwight Lowry end Matt Hokes alter
Parrish's back acted up and will likely do so again.
"A t least we got used to being without Lance the lest sla weeks."
said /Anderson. "Th e only two clubs In our division to Improve
themselves were Cleveland and New York. I'd say It you finish
ahead of them you're going to win It."
"We can win It," Morris declares, "but we've got to catch the ball.
I look at New York, and Cleveland, and don't forget Boston — they
didn't win the World Series and that will give them Incentive — as
the teems to beat."
Essential to D e trrTs hopes Is a comeback by Dan Petry, who had
three bone chips removed from his elbow In the middle ol his poorest
season. Welt Terrell and Frank Tanana round out the starTeri along
with first-year llnd Eric King.
S TR E N G TH S — Sterling pitching It everyone pilches to form. Top
three lineup spots are solid with second basemen Lou Whitaker (.If f
average. 20 homers, 71 R B I), shortstop Alan Trammell (.277, 21, 75)
and outlieIdar Kirk Gibson I.2M. 21. U ) . Darnell Coles (.272. 20. S«&gt;
proved a good acquisition at third last year. ,
W EA K N E S S E S Serious catching deficiencies; defensive
liabilities In right Held and first base; lack ot depth In bullpen.
NEW FACES — Terry Harper, acquired in a trade with Atlanta,
adds outfield depih
O U TLO O K — Without Parrish, third piece Is an optimistic goal. A
drop to fourth or tilth is more likely.

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T R A C K A P IIL D
10: JO a.m. — Wtntsf Park Rplay s at Stwwaltw FlaM
4 :» p .m . — Florida Relays at Oalnaivllla

Roylosgot

1

Kenny Slier. Returning starters
Include Tournament MVP Ran­
dolph Keys, John White. Casey
Fisher and Derrek Hamilton.
The four will return as seniors.
"W e’ll lose Kenny Siler to
graduation, but we're returning
12 players and I can assure you
that th ey're going to work
harder in the ofT-season than
they did last summer and they
worked hard last sum m er,"
Turk said.
Larry Koretz was Salle's only
starting senior. Returning will be
Lionel Simmons, named to the
UPI Freshmen team; sophomore
Craig Conlin; and Juniors Tim
Legler and Rich Tarr.
"The NIT was great," Morris
said. "You look at last year's
final. I think it was Ohio State
and Wyoming and they did quite
well in the NCAA's this year. I’ll
be very disappointed If we're not
in the NCAA next year."

(gakgl.

1

S IZ It P H IL A D E L P H IA P H IL LIE S

Bail BALL: Sam
Tssm
LLMtry
LktHpMfl

I X pm — WTBS. S#rtng triWng. Altontt
Brovtm BattimertOrtototll)
) pm. — WGN. Spring training. Son
FrtnthoGimtmOitcopCuMIl)

Q|jf

AUSTIN. Texas (UPI) — Underdogs prevailed In the NCAA
Women's semifinals Friday, and Teresa Weatherspoon ol
Louisiana Tech and Melissa McCray of Tennessee were the
unlikely heroes.
Louisiana Tech. 30-2, overcame a Texas homecourt advantage
to defeat the defending champion and top-seeded Longhorns
79-75. Tennessee, 27-6. shut down high-scoring Long Beach
State 74-64.
Louisiana Tech and Tennessee, the only team not seeded No.
1 in Its regional to make the semifinals, will meet for the title
Sunday In a nationally televised game.

Ariitnai Miami!
FW I9 Atlantic I F torifllntoraatimii I
SI TTWtiot 71 Mxhgon II I

HOmMWIl)

000

La. Tech, Tennessee Prevail

• A lt B A L L
Lympn't Greeter G»»yhound InvttNtlonbl! 11:30 p.m. —
U k g Srpnthry vs. U k p Howgll. I p.m. — OvNdo vs. Lbfc#
Highland, * p.m. Thlrd-placa gama — »1:30 a.m, wlnnar v*. a
p.m. wlnnar, 7 : » p.m. ChamptomWp — Laka Mary vs.
Lyman; jp .m .-M a n n tp a C C a tS a m ln o N C C

B A fllA lli Friday'S

MatAdng

■J SANFORD
HERALD
SPORTS
WRITER

last year's NCAA champion,
Louisville. The Cardinals, re­
jected by the NCAA Tournament
selection com m ittee, turned
down a bid to play in the NIT
this year.
If history Is any Indication, the
fou r fin a lis ts this yea r —
Nebraska and Arkansas-Little
Rock Included — will be playing
In the NCAA Tournament next
year.
Last year's NIT final four of
Ohio State. Wyoming, Louisiana
Tech and Florida all played In
the NCAA Tournament this
year. In 1985/ the NIT final four
consisted o f UCLA, Indiana.
Tennessee and Louisville.
Southern Mississippi will lose
only one starter to graduation —

tsmday, March tt, l f E T - l l

totwsaay'o Prep/JeCe I

BASEBALL

TELEVISION

Chris
« . Fister

Basketball

h

SATURDAY'S SCHEDULE

I f f 7-11BAN
A -I M iN r t N t X S

K M IM M IO : UFliMIRAlO tlRVICII

I Kpi tuckr Buron
1 Ml Sonic Boom

NEW YORK (UPI) - Southern
Mississippi and La Salle had a
great time at the National In­
vitation Tournament, and they
hope they won't be Invited back
next year.
T h e 50th N IT con clu ded
T h u r s d a y w i t h S o u th e r n
Mississippi withstanding a late
La Salle rally to take the cham­
pionship game 84-80. Neither
team is Interested In an NIT
rematch In 1988.
Both will return four starters
and will be likely candidates for
that other post-season basketball
c o m p e titio n — the N C A A
Tournament.
"W e're happy with what's
happening at La Salle," Explor­
ers Coach Speedy Morris said.
"The program's going to get
better. Next year, we have an
Ideal situation and a good oppor­
tunity to go to the NCAA. That'll
be our goal. 1 am looking to sign
a couple of recruits that'll come
In and be impact players and
we'll be In good shape."
The NCAA Tournament, with
greater exposure and more
money, Is the tournament of
choice. Still, when you don't
qualify for the 64-team field It’s
nice to have someplace to play.
"Winning the NIT in New York
Is the best media center for us,"
Southern Mississippi Coach M.K.
Turk said. "It does wonders for
the exposure of our school and
our conference."
The Golden Eagles play In the
Metro Conference, which boasts

r r

• rr

f r »' f f ^ r r r

SCOREBOARD

TV/RADIO: SNikond Uotop

and overlooked freshman Derrick Coleman, who
by the way. is second only to J.R. Reid. Sorry,
Fearful, Orangemen paint Providence blue,
87*81. — S.C.)

* rrf f fT I T

iB B te rtf H tra h t, S anford. F I.

'Tark's Sharks' To Devour
Final Four With
Syracuse and Indiana both have some good
things going for them going Into the NCAA's
Final Four.
Syracuse has probably the most dominant big
man In the Final Four In Rony Selkajy and a
coach In Jim Boehelm who has always had talent
but never went all the way with It.
On the other hand, Indiana has one of the
game’s great coaches In Bobby Knight and has
quite a few motivating factors Including a motion
picture called "Hoosiers",
But. what the Orangemen and Hoosiers don't
have. Is the ability to consistently hit the
three-point bomb and that Is why Nevada-Las
Vegas and Providence will advance to Monday
night’s national championship game.
UNLV Is so devastating with the three-pointer
that almost no deficit Is Insurmountable and the
Runnln' Rebels can blow any team out In a
matter of minutes. The Rebels also have a good
Inside game led by Armon Gilliam and he will get
his share of points, but it will be Freddie Banks
and Gerald Paddio Jacking up threes at will that
leads Jerry Tarkanlan’s team into the final.
Indiana's Steve Alford Is not as deadly from
three-point range and won’t have enough picks to
cut ofT of to get away from the Runnln’ Rebels
and be a deciding factor In the game. In the end.
It will be "Tark's Sharks."
... UNLV98, Indiana 85

1 i i

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BOWLING

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Andes Jorryd. 7. M m dot. Boris lockar,
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(14). Ibio Gorrtaes 14). Hauston, dot. Am
Henrkkison. Mill Valley. Cdlil, 41 41;
ttotano tukwo ID. Cndmtorakia dtf. Lwl
McNfil III. Houston. 441441

RACING
MAKAR: TraeteoN IN MNytop
AIOwttoftoa.lC
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l. Cota Yortmush. 0 9 .1 * 9 1 4 1949 L
Jkk Wilson, Oidsmcbito. 15440.1 Kyto Petty,
Fori 1S4.S1S 4 Richard Petty. PwillOC
114447. I Rod buctork Oery. IS4J7I. 4
Tommy CttU. 0 *vy. ’.H fTl 7, Grad to*
Ponlioe. 1991. 4 Eddie Slendwit, Fora
111911. Rodney Ccmk. Chevy, 1940 X
dtoenrip. Chevy, 19 111

HOCKEY
MOCKITiMHLtYARDIIMt
Woles Ceolereoce
Patrick Dtvtatoo

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Sundsy's Gomes
MtonmOt tl Woshlngtoh
St Louis ol He* Jertey
Vtncouvor ol Hartford
Baton it Chicago, night
EOmontonol Buffalo, night
Montreal ol Pittsburgh night
Toronto ol Wbmiptg. night
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Ron Polombi Jr. Erit. P i, IMIS, UNO t.
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Mirk Rotti, Spring Lko Htighta. N J, 11,4)4,

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O UR T, E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT,
IN A N O F O R
S EM IN O LE CO U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO. S7-I071-CA-M-O
IN R E : T H E A D OPTIO N O F
J .Y .: J .Y .A B .Y .
William A. Wuod. Petitioner '
N O TIC E O F ACTIO N
TO : BruceBIrrteyJones
address unknown
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action tor the adoption ol the
children has been tiled and you
ara required to serve a copy of
your written delenses. It any. on
J . W IL L IA M M A S TE R S . II.
Patltlonar’s attorney, whose
address Is 1500 S. Semoran
Blvd , Orlando, Florida I2B07, on
or before April IS. 19X7, end tile
(he original with tha clerk ol this
court either belore service on
Petitioner's attorney or imme
dlatety lhereafter, otherwise a
dalault will be enlered against
you lor the relief demended In
the Petit ion.
W ITN ESS my hand and the
seal ol this court on March 12th.
1917.

(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk ol the Court
By Jana E Jatewic
As Deputy Clerk
Publish M arch It. 22. 29. A pril
S. 1917
D E M L2

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT,
IN A N D FOR
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO. B7-G5G7-CA-GJ-0
CHASE M A N H A TTA N
FIN A N C IA L SER VICES.
INC., d/b/e CHASE
MANHATTAN OF FLORIDA,
a nation. I banking
corporation,
Ptalntlft,
vs.
JOYCE MEYERS.
Delemtant.
N O TIC E O F ACTIO N
T O : JO Y C E M E Y E R S
lllfChaetah Trail
Casselberry, Florida 227DR
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D that
the above named P la intiff,
CHASE M A N H A TT A N FIN A N
CIA L SERVICES. INC., d/b/a
C H A S E M A N H A TT A N OF
FL O R ID A , has tiled e complaint
In the above-styled Court lor
damages from the Defendant,
end you ere commanded to
serve a copy ol your written
defenses. It any. on L E H N E.
ABRAM S, ol the Law Firm ol
Arnold, Matheny A Eagan, P.A.,
whose address Is IS } North
Orange Avenue, Post Office Boi
2947, Orlando. Florida 22B02, on
or belore April I, 19B7. end file
the original with the Clerk of
this Court either belore service
on Plelntltt's attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter; otherwise e
detault may be entered against
you for tha relict demanded In
the Complaint.
W ITNESS my hand and tha
Seal ol the Court at Sanford.
Seminole County. Florida, this
bth day ot March. I9G7.
(SEAL)
DAVIDN.BERRIEN
Clerk ot the Ctrrult Court
By Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publish: March B. 15,22.29,19t7
D E M 17

1

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71-H e lp Wanted

IN T H E CIR CU ITCO UR T O F T H E
E IO H T E E N T N
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
SEM IN O LE CO U N TY.
FLO R ID A
C IV IL ACTIO N NO.:
67-710-CA-89-L
FLO R ID A BAR NO.: 15860S
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION.
Plelnlltt,

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO UR T
E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT, IN A N D FOR
SEM IN O LE CO U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO. 67-1147-CA-04-C
IN R E : T H E M A R R IA G E OF
L IL L IA N E T T IO L E E CROSS
BLACKMON.
Wlte/Pelltloner,
B O B B Y S M E R R O N
BLACKMON.
Husband/Respondent.
N O TIC E O F ACTIO N
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D thel en
action lor dissolution ol m ar­
riage hes been tiled egelnst you
end you ere required to serve a
copy of your written detenses, It
eny, to it on C L A Y TO N D.
SIMMONS, of S TE N S TR O M .
M C IN TO S H , J U L I A N , C O L ­
B E R T A W HIGHAM. P A .. MO
West First Street. Suite II. Post
O lllc e Bo* 11)0. Sanford,
Florida. 1277} 11X. on or before
April X , 1917, end file the
original with the Clerk ot this
Court either before service on
Wlle/Petltloner‘s attorney or
Im m e d ia t e ly t h e r e a f t e r ;
otherwise a default will be
entered against you for the
relief demanded In the com­
plaint or petition.
O A T E D this l*th day ol
March. 1917.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IEN
Clerk o( Circuit Court
By: JaneE. Jesewlc
Publish: March 19, April S, II,
19,1987
O EM l i t

E V E L Y N P A U LIN E O LIV E R ,
et.al..
Defendants
N O TIC E O F ACTIO N
TO ; JOHN H. M IL L E R ,A L L Y N
S. B R IC E . A N D G IN A M.
BR ICE. AND A LL HEIRS AND
U N K N O W N O T H E R
P E R SON ( S) H A V I N G OR
CLA IM IN G A N Y R IG H T. T l
T L E , A N D IN T E R E S T IN AND
TH R O U G H TH E O E F E N
D A N T S JO H N H. M IL L E R ,
A L L Y N S BR ICE. AND GINA
M. B R ICE. N O T KNOWN T O
BE D EA D OR A L IV E .
R E S ID EN C E: UNKNOWN.
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D that an
action to foreclose a mortgage
on Ihe following property In
SEM IN OLE County, Florida,
C O M M EN C E A T T H E SW
CORNER O F LO T «. BLOCK
ED . LAK E E L L E N A D D ITIO N
TO C A S S E L B E R R Y .
F L O R ID A . AS P E R P L A T
TH E R E O F . AS R ECO R D ED IN
P L A T BOOK 7, P A G E *1.
P U B L IC R E C O R D S OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
FLO R ID A : TH E N C E TO TH E
NW CORNER O F SAID L O T;
TH E N C E ON A L IN E TOW ARD
T H E NE CORNER, *5 F E E T ;
T H E N C E T O T H E SE COR
N E R ; TH E N C E W EST T O TH E
P O IN T O F B E G IN N IN G ;
T O G E T H E R W ITH T H E LAND
IN T H E CIR CU IT
B E TW E EN ABOVE D E ­
CO U R TO FTH E
S C R IB E D L O T A N D T H E
N IN TH JU D IC IA L
W ATERS OF LA K E G R IF F IN
CIR CUIT, IN AND
AND IN CLUDING RIPARIAN
FO RORANOE
RIGHTS,
CO UN TY, FLORIDA
has been tiled against you and
CASE NO. 86-124*
you are required to serve a copy
IN RE - The Former
ol your written defenses. It a ny,. Marriage Ot
to G R A C E A N N E G LA V IN .
R O B ER T FLOWERS
ESQUIRE, Plalnllff's Attorney,
COCKCROFT.
whose mailing address Is 1079
Petlfloner/Former Husband.
West Morse Blvd., Suite B. Post
Olllce Box 1177, Winter Perk,
M A R Y
F R A N C I S
Florida 3’ 790 1177, on or bofore
COCKCROFT.
the 9th day of April, 1X7, and
Respondent/Former Wife.
lil« the original with the Clerk et
N O TICE OF ACTION
this Circuit Court either before I T O : M A R Y F R A N C I S
service on Plaintiff's Attorney
COCKCROFT
or Immediately thereafter;
YOU A R E N O TIF IE D that an
otherwise, a default will ba
action for Modification Of The
enterad against you ter the I Final Judgment Ot Oliaotuflon
relief demanded In the Com- [ Of Marrlago has boon Iliad
plain! or Petition.
! against you. You one required to
WITNESS my hand end seal [ **rv# a copy of your written
ol this Court on the 5th day ot
defenses. If eny. to the action on
March, 1X7.
Petitioner's attorney whose
(SEAL)
! name and address It BLAIR M.
DAVID N . BERRIEN
JOHNSON. Pott Office Bo* 494.
C LER K O F T H E COURT
i Winter Garden, Florida 177*7
and file th* original with the
Oeputy Clerk
Clerk ol this Court on or before
Publish: March 6.15.22. X , IN7
April 21. 1987, either before
DEM *5
service on Petitioner's attorney
or Immediately thereafter;
otherwise a judgment will be
entered to the relief demanded
In the Petition.
WITNESS my hand and the
seal of this Court an March 19,
1X7.
(SEAL)
D A VID N . B E R R IEN
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
B y: Cecelia V. Ekem
At Deputy Clerk

CHRISTOPHER HALEY,etc.,

efel.,

Defendants.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO ; CHRISTOPHER H A L E Y
A/K/A CHRISTOPHER JOHN
H A L E V .A SINGLE MAN
AND
A LL HEIRS AND UNKNOWN
O THER PERSONIS) HAVING
OR CLAIMING ANY RIGHT,
T IT L E , AND IN T E R E S T IN
AND TH R O U G H T H E 0 6
F E N O A N T C H R IS T O P H E R
H a l e y , a / k / a
CHRISTOPHER JOHN H A LEY,
A SINGLE MAN
RESIDENCE: UNKNOWN
YOU ARE N O TIFIE D that en
atlion to foreclose a mortgage
on the following property in
SEMINOLE County, Florida,
T H A T C E R T A IN C O N ­
DOMINIUM PARCEL KNOWN
AS U N IT NO. II4D. D ESTIN Y
SPRING*, A CONDOMINIUM,
AND AN U N D IVID ED IN TE R ­
EST IN T H E LAND, COMMON
ELE M EN TS . AND COMMON
EXPEN SES A P P U R TE N A N T
TO SAID UN IT, A LL IN AC­
C O R D A N C E W IT H A N D
S U B J E C T TO T H E CO V E
N A N TS . C O N D ITIO N S , RE
STR IC TIO N S, TE R M S . AND
O TH E R PROVISIONS OF TH E
D E C L A R A T IO N O F C O N -

IN T N I C IR C U IT
CO U R TO FTH E
IIT H JU D IC IA L
CIR CU IT IN ANO
FOR SEM IN OLE
CO UN TY. F LO R ID A
CAS I NO. 4M O 9-CA 07-L
BA Y T R E E V ILLA G E
CONDOMINIUM. INC.,
and HIGHLANDS H O M EO W N ­
ERS'
ASSOCIATION, INC.,each
Florida non profit
corporation!.
Plaintiffs,
vs.
C Y N TH IA F. P L A T T ,
Defendant.
N O TICE O F A C TIO N
TO: C Y N T H IA F . P L A T T
YOU ARE N O TIF IE D that an
action to lorocloet* th* Claims
ol Lien ol B A Y TR E E V IL L A G E
C O N D O M IN IU M . IN C . and
HIGHLANDS HOM EOW NERS’
ASSOCIATION, INC., Including
court costs and attorney's feet
on tho following property In
Seminole County, Florida:
That cartaln Condominium
parcel known at Unit 1 , Building
7X, B A Y T R E E V IL L A G E , a
Condominium, together with on
undivided interest In the lend.

»

wmi, m in M C W K i WWfl M *
s«d)jact X tot Covenants. Con­
ditions. Restriction*, Terms end
other Pravtston* at tot Declare
tl* n to C o n d o m in iu m of
B A Y TR E E V IL L A G E , o Con­
dominium, (Hod April 7, 1978 In
Official Records Book 114 ) ,
Fags
at. toq. along with
subs*quant Modifications filed
thereto oil of to* Public Records
of Seminal* County. Florida
hot boon filed against you and
you are required to m o o a copy
ot your written defenses, it any.
to ft on J . DON F R IE D M A N . Ot
Friedman A Friedman. P.A.,
P laintiffs' attorney, whoso

u^ o g »N rA!K

S c o lw ^ ^ ^ P A O f
A S .A M IN D 1 0 .IN OF
£&lt;C.AL RECORDS ROOK t)4«.
IM*. A L L O F T H E
P U B L IC R B C O R D B O F

COUNTY*
youororoqytrodtoowvgqc^y
ot your wrltNn detente*. if any,
O . ^ C t A IIN t O LA V IN ,
ESQUIRE, PlaintIff* Attorney,
yhoea .mailing Address i. x x
Weil Morse BlvdTsulto B, Post

IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R TO FTH E
E IO H T E E N T N
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D F O R
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO: 8S-1M7-CA-99-P
F E D E R A L N A TIO N A L
M O R TG A G E ASSOCIATION,
a corporation,
Plaintiff,

isx.

sssu n sa

IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R TO FTH E
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
SEM IN O LE C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
C IV IL A C TIO N NO,:.
ea-m i-CA-et-p
P H IL A D E L P H IA SAVINGS
FU N D S O CIETY.
Plaintiff,
vs.
O LIV E P. W AGN ER ,
etc.,etal.,
Defendants.
N O TIC E O F A C TIO N
TO : Spoors Construction, Inc.
ADDRESS: Unknown
YOU A R E N O T IF IE D that an
aitlon to foreclot* a mortgage
on th* following described pro
p a rty located In Som lnole
County, Florida •
L O T 10, B L O C K B.
S W E E T W A T E R O AK S, S E C ­
TIO N 16. A CCO RD IN G T O T H E
P L A T T H E R E O F AS R E CO R O EO IN P L A T BOOK 21.
A T PAG ES 9 TH R O U G H 11.
IN CLU SIV E OF T H E P U B LIC
R E C O R D S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY , FLO R ID A ,
tun boon Iliad against you end
you ore required to servo o copy
of your written defenses. It any,
to tt on Grace Anne Glavin,
Esquire, Plaintiff's attorney, th*
30th day ot April, 19*7 and tile
the original with the Clerk of
this Court either before service
on Plaintiff's attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter otherwise a
default will be entered against
you for th* relief demanded In
th* Complaint or Petition.
W ITN ESS my hand and taal
ol this Court on lha Mth day of
March. 1X7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
CO U R T
By: Ruth Kira
A t Dapuly Clerk
Publish: March X , April 5, 12,
19,1X7
DEM254
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
FO R S EM IN O LE C O U N TY ,
F LO R ID A
P R O B A TE DIVISION
File Number I7-17S-CP
IN R E : E S T A T E O F
M AXW ELL U P TO N .
Deceased
N O TIC E OF
A D M IN IS TR A TIO N
Th* administration of fh*
estate of Maxwell Upton, de­
ceased. File Number 17 I X CP,
Is pending In the Circuit Court
tor Seminole County, Florida.
Probate Division, th* address of
which It PJO. Drawer c, San­
ford, F L 31773. Th* nemos and
addresses of the personal roprosentotlveutnd the personal rep­
resentative's attorney are set
| u * L towdmsj
fufTfl DiWIw*
A ll Interested persons ore
required to til* with this court,
W ITH IN T H R E E M O N TH S O F
T H E F IR S T P U B L IC A TIO N O F
T H IS N O T IC E : ( U all claim*
against fha estate and (31 any
ob|*ctl*n by an interested
parson en wham this notice was
served that challenge* the valid­
ity ol tho will, too qualifications
ot to* personal representative,
venue, or jufisdicllon ol to#
cpgrt,
A L L CLA IM S A N D O B JE C ­
TIO N S N O T SO F IL E D W IL L
B E F O R E V E R B A R R ED
Publication ol this Nolle# hot
begun on March X . 1587.
Personal Representative: .
/*/Robert Pont Ltoton
1088 Don vor Club Bidf.
51117to St,
Donvor. CO 10302
Attorney for

IN V ITA TIO N FOR BIO
The City of Longwood, Florida
will rtcsiv* Meted bids tor the
following vehicle! until J P.M.
E.D.S.T, April 1*. 1987, et City
H ell, U S W . Werren Ave..
Long wood. Florid* 12750. end
bids will be publicly opened.
Bids shell be Identified at:
Bid — Pick-up trucks, Public
Work*
Two (I I lullsite one-helfCi)
ton pick-up trucks (1907)
Cylinders— 6
Transmission — Automatic
Steering — Power
Brakes — Power — Disc Front
— drum rear
Air Conditioning
Bench***! — 1 passenger
Rear slap bomber for hitch —
*000 lbs. pull
Spore lire — lullsite
Tire* - site P19S/73R-I4 Steel
belted redials
Corgo bo* — I toot minimum
Mirror* — I Inside end 1
outside
Delivery — within X deys
Publish: March 19,1987
D EM 719
N O TICC UN D ER FIC TITIO U S
NAM E S T A T U T E
TO WHOM IT M A Y CONCE RN
Notice It hereby given that th*
undersigned pursuant to th*
"Fictitio u s Name Statute",
Chapter 865.09, Florida Sts lutes,
will register with th* Clerk ol
th* Circuit Court. In and tor
Seminole County, Florida, upon
receipt ol proof ol th* publica­
tion ot this notice, th* fictitious
name, to wit: OON'S MOTOR
V E H IC L E S under which I
expect to engage In business et
909 W. Ird Street, Sanlord.
Florida 33771.
Thai fha party Interested In
said business enterprise Is at
f o llo w s : D O N A L D C.
B A U ER LE , JR .
Dated at Sanlord. Seminole
County, Florida, March It, 1987.
/*/ Donald C. Bauerlt. Jr.
Publish March 15. 21, 29 A April
5,1987
D EM 1)7
N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In business et 243
N. Westmont* Dr., Suit* 210,
Altamonte Springs, Seminole
County, F lo rid a under the
Fictitious Nam# of Local Pro ol
Canlral Florida, and that t
Intend to register said name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with the Pro­
visions of the Fictitious Nemo
Statutes, To Wit: Section 1*5.09
Florida Sle tut#* 1957.
/t/Sem Am id*
PiAllth March 15. 22. 29 A
Aprils, 1957.
D E M IX
N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given that I
am ongogod In business al 3170
W. SR 414, Ste. 340, Longwood.
Seminole County, Florida 32779
under th* Fictitious Noma ot
Equltpln Productions, end that I
Intend to register told nemo
with th* Clerk et th* Circuit
Court. Somlnole County, Florida
In accordance with th# Pro­
visions of the Fictitious Name
Statutes, To Wit: Section k j .ov
F lorid* Statutes 19*;.
/*/ Rota A. Neel
Publish March X A April 5, 12.
t», 1987.
D EM 2D
N O TIC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given that I
om engaged In business ol I SOI
Canary St., Longwood. Somlnole
County, Florida 12750 under the
Field lout Ham* ot Crass Roots
Lawn Service, and mol I Intend
to register said name with the
Clerk of th* Circuit Court,
Somlnole County. Tlorida In
accordance with tho Provisions
ol th* Fictitious Nam* Statutes.
To-Wit Suction 845.09 Florida
Statute* 1*57,
/*/ Stephen T . Powell
Publish March X A April 5,17.
19.1X7.
DEM7S5__________________
N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice ts hereby given thol I
*m engaged In business at til
W. Mth St., Sanford, Somlnole
County, Florida 37771 under the
F ic titio u s Nam * o l M otor
M otion, and that ( Inland to
register sold name with th#
Clerk of th* Circuit Court,
Semlrtol* County, Florida In
accordance with tho Provisions
of tho Fictitious Nam* Statutes.
T o w n : Section 445.09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/ i/ A Iv liE . McCollum Jr.
Publish March i j , n . X A
April 5,1X7.
D I M - 115

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
323-2611

O rlando - W inter Park
831-9993

*1— Monty to Lend

CLASSIFIED DEPT
HOURS
J!
•:30 A.M. • 5:30 M L
MONDAY thru FtfDAY
SATURDAY t • Nm n

RATES
Slow Credit OK.Tnd Mortgages
BOB M. BA LL JR .. Licensed
Mortgage Broker. 209 country
Club Rd„ Lake Mary., J23 4H8

J!
.1 *
,

63— Mortgages
Bought A Sold

DEADLINES
N o o n Thai D a y B oforo P u b licatio n
Sunday • N o o n F rid ay
M o n d a y &gt; 9:00 A .M . S a tu rd a y

W l B U Y ta t a n d 2nd
M O N TO A O E S Nation wide.
C a ll: Ray Ltgg Lie. Mtg
Broker, 940 Douglas Ave.,
Altamonte....................774-7757

N O TE : In in* event ot the publishing of errors in advertliements, in* Senford Herald shall publish the advertisement, alter If ties been corrected el
no cost to the advertiser but such Insertions shall number no more then one

71— Help Wanted

12— Lagal Servlets
SOCIAL S E C U R ITY DNoMllty
Free Advice. No Charge Unless
We W ln l W ard W h ite A
Asseclate*
jo s m iit*

A L L A L O N E T Cell Bringing
People Together. Sanford's
most respected doting service
since 1977. Men over 50 (65%
discount).............1 500 921 4477
CRISIS PR EG N AN C Y CTR.
Free Pregnancy Test, con 11den tlel. Call tor appl......... 121-7695
TH A N K YOU SACREO
H E A R T A ST. JU D E FOR
FAVORS G R A N T E D. M M "

IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R TO FTH E
IIT H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN A N D
FOR SEM IN O LE
C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
CASE NO. 16-13*4-CA-OAL
A LL IA N C E M O R TG A G E
CO M PANY,
Plaintiff,
v». '
RICHARD A. DeCANDIDO; .
#tal„
Defendants.
N O TIC E O F SALE
PU R S U A N T T O C H A P TE R 45
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
pursuant to an Order or Final
Judgment of foreclosure dated
Case No. 8*13*4 CA-09-L Ol the
Circuit Court ol th* Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit In and lor
S em inole C o u n ty , F lo rid a
wherein A L L I A N C E
M O R TG A G E CO M PA N Y,
plaintiff, and R IC H A R D A.
DeCANDIDO; et al. are defen­
dants, I will sail to the highest
end best bidder for cash at th*
west front door ot the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford.
Seminole County, Florida al
H:Q0o‘clock * m. until 2:00p.m.
on th* list day ol April, 19*7, the
following described property as
set forth In said Order or Final
Judgment, to-wll:
Lot 141. SUNRISE V IL LA G E
U N IT 4, a subdivision according
to the plat tharaof at rocordad In
Plat Book X , Pages X and X , of
th* Public Records of Somlnole
County, Florida.
Together will all structures
and Improvements now and
haraalter on said land, and
fixtures attached thereto and
ell rents, Issues, proceeds, and
profits accruing and lo accrue
trom said premlttt, all ol which
are Included wlltiln the forego­
in g d e s c r ip t io n e n d th*
habendum thereof; alto ell gat,
tlta m , electric, water, and
other heating, cooking, re ­
frigerating, lighting, plumbing,
ventilating. Irrig a tin g, and
power systems machines, appii
• n e x t, f ix t u r e s , e nd a p ­
purtenances. which now are or
may herealltr pertain to, or be
used with. In, or on said pro
mlsat, even though they be
detached or detachable.
Dated et Sanlord, Florida, th is,
15th day ol March, 1X7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IEN
C L E R K , C IR C U ITC O U R T
By: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: M a rchX , April 5,1X7
O E M 257

N O TIC E OP
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
« n ongogod in butlntt* At 408
Motf I# Street, Sanford. Somlnole
C ounty, F lo rid a under th*
Flctlttoue Nome of Butler a
Raid Motors Used Cert, end that
I Intend to register told name
with th# Ctork of the Circuit
Court, Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with the Provisions of fh* Fictitious Nome
Statutes. To-Wit: Section 845A t
Florida Stotutos 1957.
!%/ Bon f . Butler
Publish March X A April 1 f t
ft, 1912.
D E M -253

Ctork of th* Circuit Court,
Seminal* County, Florida In

LOST* 4 is year old Golden
Retriever. 3/30/17. 1*00 S.
Perk Ave...................... 31M779
R EW ARD - 550 for return ol
black A ten 7&lt;s wk. female
D o b e rm a n P ln c h e r p up.
Stolen trom yard 3/22/87 on W.
lifts SI. Sanford. No questions
asked. Or 8180 R E W A R D .lor
Information leading to lha
arrest and conviction ot the
person or persons respon. tor
the theft ol our pet. Cell:
122-7*12..........or......... 323 9X9

25— Special Notices

A D D T O VOUR INCOME
Sell Avon Howl
322-4*59......... o r.......... jjjM
A D M IN IS TR A TIV E
ASSISTAN T
JOBS! JOBSI JOBSI
International company expan­
ding to this area. 51200/mo.
beginning pay. Various posi­
tion*. Rapid advancement,
company training, no axperl•nce nacetsary. excellent
benefits. Call today lor In­
terview. 767 8195.
College Students Accepted
A IR P O R T A N D A IR L IN E
JOBS. All occupations. For
Information phone:
(111) 741 86Me*t. 198_________
A P P O IN T M E N T S E T T E R S Guaranleed 55 hr. Long wood
area.Cell M ike:..........831-4480

For Detent: I -800-422 4254
Florida Notary Association

A B L E BO D IED MAN to work In
gerden A yard for a few days.
Must know how to operate
yard A gerden equipment.
Others need not apply.
Cell..............372 3M* *tl«r 4pm
CANVASSERS- *611 hour. Go­
ing door to door. Will train
C e ll;.............................1*0-1711
CASHIER: Convenience Store,
top salary, hospitalisation. 1
week vecellon each « months,
other benefits. Apply M I N.
Laurel Ave. 8:Xarrv4:Mpm
Monday through Frldey.

C H ILD CARE W ORKERS- The
F l a . U n it e d M e t h o d is t
Childrens Home needs stable,
m arried couple* or tingle
adults to serve at child cere
workers. Th* position Involves
living In a collage with school
ege children and helping them
to grow and mature In e
loving, secure environment.
Annual starting salary per
couple It 5M.800 and 510,400
for singles. Sick leave, vaca­
tion. Insurance, retirement
end other benefits. High
School diploma and valid
driver license required. If
Interested call X5 668 4486 or
write to: Director of Cottage
Life. P .O . Bo* 4001, Enterprlse, FI. 31725____________

TR U C K DRIVES
H E A V Y EQUIP.
OPERATOR

27— Nursery A
Child Care
C H ILO CARE my home. Exp. In
child cere. References II
needed. C a ll:...............322-4149
LOVIN O M O TH E R will babysit
In my homo. Day or night,
port/full time, ell *00*111-0974

•COBBESPONDCNCr/
RESIDENT TRAINING
•LOCAL A NATIONAL JO&gt;
PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE
•FINANCIAL AJD AVAIL
•ACCREDITED MEMBER
N K JC
dm*. Train on live alrllna computon. Ho m o study and rootw n i irv n ir w . r v iw iv w i m h

SSi 645-3001

available. Jo b placement
aeoliUno*. Notional heedquartan. L H .F -.F L

Calory Ave.

CONSTRUCTION OPPORTUNITIES
• HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS
• CARPETERS &amp; HELPERS
• WELDERS
• PAINTERS
HELPERS
• PLUMBERS A HELPERS
• ELECTRICIANS A HELPERS
• DRIVERS
ALSO SOME WILL TRAIN
POSITIONS AVIALABLE

Slk way electric.
Coll:...............

it

PPC EMPLOYMENT
Cardinal Industries,
Inc. Is looking for In­
dividuals with Initiative,
drive, flexibility and the
desire to learn and earn
a good hourly wage.
These Individuals will
work in our assembly
plant where we build
modular homes. High
school diploma or G ED
equivalency preferred.
If Interested, please stop
by our Security Office at
our plant located at:

322-4474

Pharmacist
Now Accepting Applications
For A Pharmacist In The
Seminole County Area.
Starting Salary $39,000 +
Dally Hours 9-6 PM
42 hr. Work Week
Good Benefits

Send Resum e To

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

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

N U B IR T P E A R C E

(wulBAt
■ w w W * * WlUrl IrW r T f r l W i r H

of too Fkttttouo Name Stotutos.
P A Boa X X
Santoro, F L 12772

O a a n in g S a rv ic a

L a n d s c a p in g

J J Q U A L IT Y C L E A N IN G ,
M ain!., Janitorial A Meld
Service. 47A5505 A NA4453
SPRING C L E A N IN G
Rot •Comm. •New Conet.
For toot special touch.
F R E E E f T l . . . , -------- J O - 2387

B O O U IS l Expl Professional!
Lawn A Garden Main) A chain
ta w work, m ulch, Spring
ctoan-uwi Fro* Estl 3220)87

t t t t April A
jv.

F R R IM E D IC A R E
WORKSHOPS end help with
---------- *Call
- ‘|;................. 767-9*9*
claims.

H a m a Iw p w v a w a n t

. i ’ A'/-,":.*-' *

C O M P L E TE HOM E R EPA IR
tT*e**«wmswa »«*4*»
cell Ruoooil at 7744*5
CUSTO M POOL/SUN DECKS.
P R IV A C Y F E N C E , SCREEN
PORCHES....... ...........574-SJ72
P L U M B IN R . e le c tric a l,
carpentry. Fro* estimates.
Call Bo................ ...3)3-1561
Carpentry
Call Richard Pros* 331 *972

C S a a n in g S a r v ic a
AFFORDABLE

A I hoi

L a w n S a rv ic a

N u rs in g C a r t

B A R R IE R ’S toads toplixl
Irr lf ., Lawn Cart. Rst A
Comm, UI7S4A F R E E E f T l
CRAHto Lawn A Tree S ir. Mow,
sdgt. trim, 1 tim* clean up/yr.
round. Houllno.............323 *410
OBOROB'S LAWN CARS

O ^ R R A T t l A R E LOW ER
lokevtow Nursing Center

to

Call now retarv* sarvica
Froeesl.......................... 3270*01
O U A L IT V LAW N S E R V IC E I
Tim* to Thalch, Fertllli* A
Cleanup. Fro# EsI......321071*
"S U N N Y S". Mow, edge, trim,
planting, mulching. SPRINO
Spec. Froeesl..............3317179

L a n t f c t a a r in g
• A C E N O E, Dump truck. Buah
hog. Bax Wading, and Discing.
CoTl:3»-1SM.....-or.......322-8)1)
RUSH MOO. Box Blading. Dis­
cing A Tractor Roto Tilling,
Call.............................. 4311597
T N O R N C L A N D C L E A R IM O
Loader and truck work/snpllc
tank sand. Fre* est. 327 3433

Moving g Hauling

M a s o n ry
Coacrsto Slobs, drives, polios A
walks, 21 yr. exp. Lltotong
rot.,Lie. A Ins.....349-9754 all. s

0

P a p a r H a n g in g

W p« k handIITT a FlliJf.
IN O (Interior - Exterior).
Rot. A comm, x years exp.
Free Estimates. Call: Roy

S a w a r/ S a p tic T a n k
HOWARD'S S E P TIC SERVICE
Repair Linos A Clean Tanks
Fro* Estimate*.......... .227077*

TraaSarvica
E C H O L S T R ititM V ic i
Fro# Estimates I Low Prkotl
Lit... 1st...Stump Grinding,Tsoi
121-323* d*r erode

—
Insured
Call.......

.Fro* Estimates
............. 774-7108

f

�1

r r

71— Help Wanted

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

ASSEMBLY WORK si home,
plus many others. Earn good
wages in spare lima. Into
104 447 0091 ext. 1449. 7 davt
IA R Y S IT T E R N E E D E D Afternoon and tome ava*
Longwood/Laka Mary area
33IQ*05alfer4____________

L P N i 3 11 shill A 11-7 shllt. good
working environment, tuition
ra-lmburtamanl program I
Longwood Healthcare Center
___________ 319 9300___________

C L E R K T Y P IS T - Excel, typing
skills raqulred. Busy olllce,
growing company. Mon.-Frl.
A p p ly In p a rs o n : M eta!
Manufacturing, Upsala Rd. oil
Hwy. 41, Sanford......... 377AI90

ENA: Immadlala M l lima potl
Ilona. 7-2 or J-l! ahllla. Good
&gt;banaflta A atmoaphara. Apply
Dabary Manor, 60 N. Hwy.
17 91. DeBary 4*6 4411., EOE
3K- Soma txperlence halpful.
[ Apply at DaBary Manor, to N.
Hwy 17 97......................... EOE
I R U I I E SHIP JOBSI Graal
1 Incoma polanllal. All occupa
I Ilona. For Information call
1312) 747 (670 ext, 19*
kTA E N T R Y CLER K - Buay
I office, growing company.
I M on.-Frl. Apply In parion.
| Metal Manufacturing. Uptala
I Rd. oil Hwy. at. Sanlord.
3771190
lE N T A L H Y G IE N IS T , Pari
[ lima poalllon, top aalary. Send
I resume' to 7t)5 S. Volutla
I Ava. Sulla D2, Orange City,
I F L 37703
lE N T A L ASSISTANT, experllance required lor quality orI lenlad practice. Top aalary A
Ibanallta. Sand raauma' lo 7435
Is . Voluala Ava. Sulla D-7,
I Orange City, FL 37753
IE T A R Y A ID - Pari lima. No
experience necetaary. Apply
al DaBary Manor. M N. Hwy
17-97...................................EOE
DISTR IB UTO R S N E E D E D
LL N EW "M A IL M A L L HO".
1327 4075 lor recorded menage.
IR IV E R A Warahouaaman,
iMuat have valid chaullaur
Illcanaa.Call..,.............3711002
DRIVERS
Iring now! Exp. over the road.
Good driver rec. Single to
73&lt;/ml.: team 30&lt;/ml. Paid
va c./In s. + bonut. New
macka. Call Karan Allen. J A
P Proper! lea.........305 104 3003
RIVERS- Part time. Wed. Frl.
only. A valid Fla. drlvera lie.
required. Applicant muit be
I I yra. or older ano must know
how to drive atandard thill.
Apply In person at Sanlord
Auto Auction. 7715 W. lat St.,
Sanlord. See Dominic or Mike
IR IV E R S - Part lima. Expertlance A valid Fla. Drlvera Lie.
I Call Tommy all. 5.......095 7939
V E R Y O N E w it h p h one
quallflea. Pari lime work Irom
home. Choose own hra. Great
pay. Between 10 4. Call: 099
&lt;757 or alt. 4 pm..........373 3940
KP. A P P O IN TM E N T Salter lo
work in Sanlord with the Rich
Food C om pany. E ve n in g
houra nacaaaary. if hr. +
liberal bonua package. Call
To d a y ! 377-3403 ext. 375,
Charles Berdel______________
X P E R IE N C E D L A N D ­
SCAPERS pay equal to expeHence. Full time. 377 SI33
X P E R IE N C E D person to run
Independent automobile In­
surance agency In Sanlord
office. License preferred, but
no! necessary......Call:t57qQ97
AST FOOD PR EP AR A TIO N :
Top aalary, hospitalization, I
week vacation each 0 months,
other banaflta. Apply 707 N.
Laurel Ava. l:3oam 4.30pm
iv through Friday.
A M IN O C A R P E N T E R S ,
xperfenced In elevations.
Call 377-4119 evenings________
IR IN G T O D A Y I Top Payl
Work at heme. No axparlenca
neadad. Write Cottage In ­
dustries, 1407'a Je n k in s.
Norman, Oklahoma 73009
IIR IN O I Federal government
' lobs In your araa A overseas.
[Many Imm. openings without
waiting list or teal. (15 61.000.
Phone call refundable. (007)
M t M *i......................Ext. 1743.

[HOSPITAL STAFFING
NURSES NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
law benefits, tree C E U 'S .
Vacation, dally pay. flexible
houra.
Call: 74457(4
M E D IC A L PER SO N N EL POOL

9

M e d ic a l
P e rs o n n e l
•P o o l •

H O U S E K E E P I N G
SUPERVISOR, Good benefits.
Contact:
Hlllhavan Haalth Cara Canter
930Mellonvllle Ava.
Sanlord........... 377 15*0 E O E .
IF YOU T Y P E 75 WPM A have
good clerical skills coma to
Orlando for one lima In­
terview and go to work In the
Sanford Lake Mary araa. Top
pay. No Faa. Call Ablest
Tem p............................771-3940
IR R IG A TIO N IN S TA LLER or
Helper. Exp. required. Full
time. C a ll:................... 3771133
JAN ITO R /LO A D ER - Pari lima.
4-7 pm. Apply In person 401 W.
17th St.. Sanlord. 9-4 pm______
LAWN M A IN TE N A N C E - Expe
Hence required. Full lime.
C a ll:............................ 377 1133
L IF E O U A R D Ii Sanora Swim A
Te n n is C lub. P a ri lim a :
April-Juna, full lime: June
September. For Interview call
371 7111........or...........373 7007
LOCAL COM PANY needs ag­
gressive salesperson lo call on
Sanford araa businesses.
Paper A cleaning products.
Musi have car. Salary +
commission. Apply In porson:
I H Commerce Way.
LPN Needed lor busy Dr's oil.
P-T, * to 5 Thurs A 9 lo 1 Frl.
Musi be able lo draw blood,
start I.V. A typo. StoHIng sal.
M.S0 hr. Call Mrs. Thomas
T im o r Wad 373 7750
M A IN TE N A N C E M ECHA NIC,
Eloctrlcal/Hydraullc control
• y i t o m t M o ln t o n o n c o
Mechanic with at least J years
axparlenca needed for well
established A lu m in u m A
Copper fabrication operation
with experience, trouble
shooting electrical A large
hydraulic systems. Electronic
background holplul. Wage his­
tory, return* A woge re ­
quirements lo box P.O. Box
■1137, Sanlord. FI. 17777 7137
M A IN TE N A N C E
SUPERVISOR
■•snds on type individual naadad
lo supervise personnel In a
M il established aluminum A
copper fabrication operation.
M ust be p ro fic ie n t w ith
o le c t r lc o l a n d e le c t r o hydraulic controlled circuits
with some knowledge ol
electronics. Ability lo read
hydrollc diagrams a must,
•asuma' and waga require
menls lo Box 250, c/o Sanford
Herald. PO Box 1057. Sanlord.
F L 17777 1457

M A ITE N A N C E. h0u»4k**plng A
grounds personnel needed for
a 104 bed healthcare facility In
Lake M a ry . Sand name,
address A phone number lo S.
Murray, 1097 Sand Pond Rd.,
Lake Mary, FL 31740
M Y S TE R Y SHOPPER
lor last food chains, part lime.
Cell (711) 70)-1004..or..711-7731
Or write:
Kim Kelly
Quest Research
1705 Nantucket
Houston, T X 77057
N E E D E O IM M E D IA TE L Y , 15
people. Roofers A laborers.
Laborers no experience nec­
essary. Roofers need S yrs.
experience A tools........... Call;
371 7473 between Sam A 0pm
"N E W COMPANY IN TO W N "
Will train In new telemarket­
ing v e n t u r e . A d v e ra g e
earnings after training SI.7J
hr. + bonus. Call Faya lor
details Monday: AM- 373 5100
or AH. 4 pm.....' .......... 333 3940

NOW HIRING
Experienced Sawing Machine
Operators wanted on all
operations. Wa oiler paid holi­
days. paid vacation, health
care plan, and modarn air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rales. Will train qualified
a p p li c a n t s . S a n -D a l
Manufacturing, 7740 Old Lake
Mary Rd., Sanlord......371-3010
NOW HIR IN O: Manufacturer ol
wood components serving the
modular homa Industry has
full lima positions available.
Experience with carpentry,
sawing, painting, A malarial
handling helpful. Company
benefits. Apply In person 7am
lo 3:30pm, Trusso Mfg., 1143
E. 3CHh St., Sanlord Airport.
N U R S E S A ID E : AH shills,
axp'd. or certified only. Apply
Lakevlew Nursing Center
919 E. 2nd SI................
NURSES AID ES, 3 to 11 nhlft,
l u l l - l i m e , f r i e n d ly a t ­
m osphere, B e lte r L iv in g
Center. 099 5007. EO E MFVH
NURSES; CNA, Physical Ther­
apists, A Llve lns urgently
needed. Call: Care-At-Home
774-1153......................... E.O.E.
O F F IC E A D M IN IS T R A T O R S a n lo rd araa In s u ra n ce
agency seeks Intelligent Indi­
vidual for data entry, tiling,
m a ll, c o m p u te r p r in t e r
operations and other olllce
duties. Cash handling/laHer
experience A general otflca
experience halpful/ Good
company benollti........ 333 0797
O P P O R TU N ITIE S opan lor lull
A pari lima teachers In a
trend selling. Preschool- Child
Care Corp. Love ol children a
must. Exp. A education a plus,
but we will provide training
and education..............373 (435
O R D ER LIES. Full lima 3-11,
P a rt lim e 11-7. Must be
certified. Good benefits A
atmosphere. Apply Dabary
Manor, 00 N. Hw y. 17-91,
OaBory 00» 4420...............EOE
PAIN T S EA LA N T
TEC H N IC IA N
EARN UP TO SIJJO HR. No
experience necessary. For full
or p a rt p o s itio n s c a ll
— ...... .........................................o
P A R T T I M E E d u c a tio n a l
Director lor Child Care Cntrs.
Exp. A BS Degree In early
childhood a must.........173 1435
P B X /A C C O U N TIN O C L E R K ,
Prater title exp. Apply In
person only. Courtesy Used
Cars. 1119 5 Hw y. 17-97.
Sanlord. Mrs. Hammers
PHONE SOLICITORS
M onday through F rid a y ,
5:30pm lo (:30pm. Positive
attitude A pleasant phone
voice Is all you need I Experi­
ence helpful, but not neces­
sary. Call 327-3011 batween
«:30am A5:30pm
P LA N T M ANAGER
Wood product! Manufacturer In
S a n lo r d . o u p p ly ln g lha
modular home industry hat
opening. Individual must have
Industrial management expe­
rience with good organliatlonal, com m unication A
planning skills. Position re­
sponsible for all plant func­
tions, PAL, A customer rala
Hons. Send resume' to:
Box 251. c/o Sanlord Htrald
P.O. Bax MS7
Sanlord. FL. 33777-1057
PR O DUCTIO N PERSONNEL
Auto parts rebuilding. Located
on Sanlord Airport......323 497«
P R O D U C TIO N S C H E D U L E R
For growing manufacturing
plant. Experienced only. Good
benefits. Call 111 (190 for
Interview

REPS NEEDED
For Business accounts. Full
time, (40,000 (10.000. Pari
lima, S17.00OSII.000. No sail­
ing, repeat business. Sal your
own hours. Training provided.
1 0119310170. M/F, tom to
5pm (Central Standard Tima)
RN'S, LPN'S, CNA'S
(A L L P A R T-T IM E )
Contact:
Hlllhavan Haalth Care Center
950Mellonvllla Ava.
Sanlord............377 (500 E.O.E.
RN'o, Naadad lor i ll A 117
shills. NEW PAY RATES with
salary commensuratfng with
axparlenca. Geriatrics and/or
charge nurse experience
helpful but nol required.
Contact DaBary Manor. I to
4pm, Mon.-Frl. lor appointmen). 04(4430.................. EOE

SALESMAN WANTED
for last growing carpal store.
Salas exp. halplul. Must be
Irom Sanlord area. Apply In
parson, Florida Carpal A
Vinyl. 3097 S. Orlando Dr.,
Wal-Mart Plaza, Sanlord
S E C R E T A R Y /R a ce p tle n litLeka Mary. Mortgage exp. lo
helpful. 1030 hr. per week,
leading to lull lime. 371 (990
SEW ING M A CH IN E O P ER A ­
TORS Wanted, will train qual­
ified applicants, paid vaca­
tions A Holidays. Clark Ap­
parel. 147 Power CI-. 1-4 Industrlal Park, 177 7799________
S T A B L E H E L P - Pari lima.
Musi have own IranspoHallon,
be reliable, and Ilka horses.
Call:.............................3710530
CLER ICA L
P A R T T IM E
O F F IC E POSITIONS. Morn
Ing or altarnoons in Sanlord.
No contract or lae I

TEMP PENM---------- M O -S W
C LER K /TY P IS T lo lypa medl
cal records 10 hrs. a week.
Musi be accurate, type al
laasl 45 WPM. Medical knowl­
edge required................... Call
(31 7411 lor appointment.

KIT ‘N’ CARLYLE ®by Lorry Wright

99— A p a r t m a n t *

103— H o u s e s

U n f u r n it h a d / R a n t
a

U n fu r n is h e d / R e n t

P A H K S ID I P LA CE APTS
S299MOVE IN SPECIAL
N EW LOW R EN TS
2S30-A Hartwell A v........ .321 7477
SANFORD: 1 bdrm., I bath,
carpet, central e lr, appli­
ances. (350 mo. Discounted
British American
Realty.............................. 439-1175
S A N F O R D A R E A : Studio
ap a rtm e nt with separata
kitchen. Fu rnlth td (375 or
Unfurnlthed-(125. Utilities In­
cluded, no children.
Call raa-isia after fern

SAN FOR O: I9M W. lath SI.
Clean 1 bdrm., Ife bath (395
mo. + dap. Call............*34323
SANFORO, Rant or Sato, J / m ,
control H/A, garage, (445 +
dep. 1(49,(00)............... 4947001
SAN FOR D : 1 bdrm., 1 bath,
discount for carpenter willing
fo help renovate......... .371 737*
S A N F O R D -1 bdrm. on l acres,
private. S77S mo. -t- dep.
Cell:............................. 177-0354
S A N F O R D O il Lake M a ry
Blvd.. Clean, 3/1, with appli­
ances. screened porch, Ige.
fenced yard, S450 discounted,
sec. Call 371 4795 after 5

S A N F O R D : 1 bdrm. garage
apt., quiet neighborhood. (115
month. Call................. 322-3911
U N FU R N IS H E D One bedroom
apt., water Included. No pets.
Call alter 4 pm .............377-1449

105— D u p l e x -

REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATES
WE ARE LO O KIN O FO R
T H R E E V E R Y SPEICAL
ASSOCIATES T O JO IN OUR
LA K E M A R Y T E A M OF
PROFESSIONALS
WE O FFER :
• Conllnous Training
• Non Competing Managers
• Compel Hive Commissions
• Free Listings A Sales Tools
• Free Signs A Postage
• Toll Free LD Calls
• Newspaper/TV Advertising
• Relocation Service
• New Horn* Salts
• Professional Facilities
• Sanlord/Lk. Mary Olllcas
C A LL: B E TH HA TH AW A Y
Lake Mary Branch Manager
Far A Confidential
Interview Today I

ERASTENSTR0M REALTY INC
REALTORS
321-2720
322-9551, E m .

T I T L E SEARCHER/ Examlnar.
First American Till* Co. has
Immadlala' opening for exp.
searchtr/txamlner- Orlando
office. Excaltant benefits
program, salary commensu­
rate with axp. For confidential
Interview call Kalth Hendrix
41305 421 59(1......... EOE/M /F
TRUSS ASSEM BLERS A
EX P . F O R K L IF T O PER A TO R
Apply In parion, Low-r’l Truss
Plant. 7901 Aileron Clr. (Sanlord Airport Industrial Park
W A IT R E S S . E X P E R IE N C E
required. Apply to:
SANFORD'S N EW EST
SU P P ER C LU B
T H E BANK........ ........ I l l ( H I
W A R EH O U SE PERSON needed
at S a n fo rd fa s te n e r
warehouse, (am 5pm, 5 days a
weak. Full company benefits.
Call 321-7994 lor appointment
W A R E H O U S E - Come to Or
lendo lor a one lime Interview
and go to work In lha Sanfoid
Lake Mary ante. Call Ablest
T a m p . G r a a l p a y . No
fte............................... J7I-3940

WORK IMMEDIATELY
N E E D M E N A W OM EN NOWI

M aim

DAILY PAY
Work Assignments
• Dally • Weekly • Monthly

321-1590
NO FEE

NOFEE

WORKERS N E E D E D I II you
need steady work-paid dally,
Call Sam alter 3pm.....321-7554
YOU

NAME IT

RIDG EW O O D ARMS APTS.
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
M O VE IN SPECIAL
On l year least, you gat 1
month ol your choice free!
MM Rldgawnd Ave....... 317-44M
M0 E. Airport Bl............. 321-44(1

» W HIN * **

91—Apartm ents/
House to Share

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

S A N F O R D t N e a r C e n tra l
Florida Regional Hospital.
S375 rant, -t- ’ l utilities. Prefer
professional, female. Call
Ptant at 111 631*..or..3211(ll
SAN FOR D - Woman to share
home and expanias. Terms
nag.Call:....... - ........... 1771599

Quiet, single story living with
energy saving features. 1 A 1
bedroom apartments with at­
tic storage A private patios.
SAN FO RD CO U R T APTS.
IM IS . SANFORD A VE
________m -3M 1axt.H1________

93— Rooms for Rent
F LO R ID A H O TE L
Reasonable weakly rales
500 Oak Ava.....................371-9904
F U R N IS H E D - Large kitchen­
ette. (95 w eakly. Rooms
(60 (70 weakly. All util. paid.
645 4030........ or...........371-4943
LAR O E ROOM In private homa.
Bath, maals, laundry, cable,
telephone, shopping, taken to
Doctor II needed. Senior citi­
zen preferred. Lovely home
lor right person........... 323-7967
L O N O W O O D : Room w ith
private bath, lakelronl home.
Me lure. (65 wk. Call....137-4(04
• R EASON ABLE R A TES
■ M AID SER VICE
• P R IV A TE EN TR A N C E
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Elsa Whan You Can Live In

(F hr Utllsiur
3234507
ROOM FOR R E N T (40 wk
701 Brlardllf St.
Sanlord
Roommate. Rm „ private to ­
lerance, kit. facilities. (TOO
^ n o ^ h a r e j jll ^ x g ^ 7 7 ^ 0 8 ^ _

APTS TO COME HOME TO

GREAT LOCATION
Attractive 1 bdrm ., 1 bath,
single story duplex on bus
line, large pool, water, sewer
A (rash pick up Included.
Separata adult section, re­
tirees welcome. Ask about our
move In SPECIAL.
SH E N A N O O A H V IL L A O E
A P A R T M E N T S .............. 3717970

GROVEVIEVf VIUAS
7990 Lake Mary Blvd.
D O N 'T R E N T ...Unlit you see
Sanford's most spacious 7
bdrm., 3 bath apis.......171-05(4
M A R IN ER S V IL L A O E
Special 1bdrm...................... (295
Ibdrm s........................from (335
Call...................................373 (470
N IC E S T 1 A 7
bdrms. In
Sanlord. All eppls.. can. h/a,
new ca rp a l A paint, big
rooms. SMS to (470 Open Sat.
A Sun., 7pm-4pm, MIS Sanford
A v ......................Call:SS(-5473
O N E BDRM., newly decorated.
P o o l, a ll a p p l. In c .
washer/.dryer, 1 calling fans.
1 yr. lease. (325.1st, last, (100
sec, deg , no pats. 321-0421

OR

WEWILLGET IT

103— Houses
U nfurnished/R ent
A T T R A C T IV E 2 bdrm.. largo
fenced yard, carport, laundry
room, 1100 week, sec. deposit
U00. C a ll:.....................311-4947
D E B A R Y - V a ry nlco 2/1,
C/H/A. washer, dryer, refelg..
new carpel, verticals. 312-1421
or 445 4441. Adults S450
H ID D E N L A K E - 3 bdrm., 2
bath, ronlral heal A air,
g a r a g a . b ig y a r d , good
schools. Call Cent. Fla. Rtaltv. Inc. *9* 4*94 or (ll-M V J
« ♦ # IN D E L T O N A * * s
• • HOMES FOR R E N T * *
* • (74-1434 * *
R ESP O N SIB LE married cou­
ple, 31 yrs . or older, no
children, no pelt. (315 mo +
SIM toe. references. 317-3*17

PINK H ID O E CLU B. 1 bdrm!!
appliances, pool, tennis, teeth
rtty. &gt;M0 m e - .......■...-MI-IIM
SAN FOR D : 2 bdrm., &gt; hefti.
luxury condos. PWi, tennis,
wesher/dryer, ate. M U Me.
Lendereme Fle „ Inc. 312-1734

141— H o m o i F o r S o lo
A C O U N TR Y M O B ILE HO m T
( acres high land In beautiful
Geneva. Many extras Includ
Ing huge C.B., family ream,
T V, dish end more. New
listing. Priced far Immediate
sale............................... &gt;45,900

CALL BART

u u

needl Q uiet C o m m u n ity .
Spacious 2 br. duplex, c/h/a,
screen porch................ 32IS2t(
C A S S E L B E R R Y - Townhouse/
Duplex. 2 bdrm., Ife bath,
kids okay. S425 mo. Call:
340-1713......... or..........334*4*4
D U P L E X - Large 2 br., 1 ba.
c/h/a, wather/dryer hook-up.
(3*0 mo. + dep.............223 *990
LAKE M ARY D UPLEX, 2
bdrm., 1 be., large yard, child
A small pel O K. S375. +
security....................... 444 3491
2 BDRM, 7 ba. w/w, cent. H/A,
w/d hook-up, all kltchan appl.
alter 4 pm, no pets. 371-14**
1 BDRM., Ife ba.. S47S + dap. A
2 bdrm., U* ba., 1375 -t- dap.
No Pott....... J ............. .*644547

107-M obile
H om es/ Rent
A L T A M O N T I A R E A : 4)4 W. Of
1-4. t bdrm., fdoal for ono.
Furnished, elr, all ullllltot.
(250 + deposit. Cell 0644517

115— Industrial
Rentals
SANFORD- Leas*. 5000sq. ft. on
b u sy h w y . In d u s tr ia l,
warehouse, commercial, or
ole. Will remodel to suit te­
nant. From (917.50 per mo.
Contact Mike af 906-724- lit*

117—Commercial
Rantals
O F F IC E S : 700 A 1M0 tq.fl. In
growing 4-Towns/Debary area
on Hwy. 17-92...... 4444915 eves

R EA L ESTA TE
R E A LTO R ____________ 122-7*90
LOCH ARBOR: B Y O W NER.
Id y llic , p riv a te , lakeside
country living with city con­
veniences! Wrap around glass
doors bring beautiful vistas lo
newly renovated kllchen, liv­
ing room, family room 4
master bedroom. Floor plan
perfect for entertaining. *0 ft.
porch, 4 bdrms., a fens. "2
plus" car garage. Call 377-OS11
O P I N H O U S E , 110 Country
Club. Rd.. Sanlord; Saturday
A Sunday. 10am fo 1pm. Must
see this charming 2 bedroom,
l bath, well kept home In
Country Club Manor on large
comer lot with 2 utility build­
ings, Inside fenced tuck yard,
S4SJ00. D ir: Hwy 1791 to 20th
St.. West l ' t mile* to sign.
Hostess, Julie Boyd, Seles/
Associate

ENERGY REALTY
US N. C O U N TR Y C L U B RD.
___________ 111 7959
O S TE E N , 2 bdrm., 2 be., cha,
garage, fenced back yard,
SSOOO down. M O VE IN I 322 :
4191
R E T IR E E OR S TA R TE R
HOM E, 2 br., block, hardwood
floors, nice neighborhood!
........................................(55.900
C O U N TY , H AN D YM AN S PARA O IS E , 2/1 frame, *20.900.
Owner financing

BATEMAN REALTY
L k . Real Estate I
isae Sanford Ave.

321-0751----------- 321-2257

Country Living With City

After kaur i 372 /44)

”

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Furns Apts, tar Senior Citizens
3TB Palmetto Ave.
J . Cowan. No Phone Calls
SANFORD I bdrm.. apt., with
fenced yard, complete privacy
M5 week t STOP sac.....373 7769
SANFORD- Townhouse. 7 br„
1’ i b, (urn. c/h/a, w/w carpal,
lull kit. Incl. refrlg.. oven,
d/w, disposal, microwave,
w/d hook ups. shed, fenced
yard, freshly painted, real
clean. (395....................2ttKI51
SANFORD- Large 7 bdrm. with
fireplace A front porch, newly
painted. $90 wk-t- (250 tacurlly. Call:....................... 373-7769
U P S TA IR S , vary private. 1
bdrm.. Ilia bath, utilities Ineluded. (350 + dep....... 371-1917
1 BDRM., fenced yard, carport,
no pals, (75 wk. -t- (TOO sac.
Call 373 4145 avas A weekends
1 BDRM., Adults, no pals, quiet
residential, modarn, all alec.
(300 + (150 dep............373(019

&lt;0

(a

^

m

o

d

2, 3 &amp; 4 Bedroom Hornb e
With 2 Baths, a.E . Kitchens,
Cathedral Ceilings, Fire
Places, Double Car Oarages.

Priced From The Low

•70’» To ' 90’a
OPEN 1 PM TIL 5 PM DAILY
fo r InformMUoa Cett

3103 or 321-42 79

WE

HAVE IT

1bdrm., 1bath................ (315 mo
2 bdrm., 111 bath.............(3(0 mo
• Central Heal A Air
• Pool A Laundry
FR A N K L IN ARMS
H M Florida Av*.
2U-44M
2 B D R M . 1 u p s ta irs . I
downstairs. *11 Perk Ava. No
pets. 327 4434.....or..... 79*425*
.
U49M OVE IN SP ECIA L
A D U L TS , POOL. L A K E
L A K E J E N N IE APTS....1U-*741

121— C o n d o m in iu m
R o n to li

T rip le x / R e n t
A| 1 Y||R Pa ^ izaaIaxl^a *

n

i n —v, Kerch tfi 1*7-71

S s n fB rd H p r a M , B a s ta rd , F I .

STA R T NOW
Walk and gal paid! Help update
lha Senlord-Lakt M aiy City
Directory. No sailing. No
experience wa train. Apply
9 noon; R.L. Polk A Co. 7910 S.
Orlando D r., Sanford, 5un
Bank Bldg. Ilndlloor).....EOE
T E L E M A R K E TIN O : Are You
C L E A R . C O N C IS E . C O N ­
V ER SATIO N AL A CONVIN
CING. Than I want to talk lo
you about part lima work al
lull lima wages. NO S E L L ­
ING. Hourly wage plus bonus.
Will Train......................... Call:
Mrs. McDermott at 574 9550

r r r r r

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

BECAUSE

WE ARE THE BEST
A T W H A T W E DO

AAA EMPLOYMENT
100’s OF JOBS TO
CHOOSE FROM
700 W. 25th S t

323-5176

• E F F IC .IA 1 B D R M .A P T S .
• F U R N .A U N F U R N .
• PAYW EEKLY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In
f IN C ! i f M

&lt;i III* U l l l i l l K

COM M ER CIAL - R E S ID E N TIA L
2701 W. 23th St.
Sanford.

323-4507

Happiness is a Babcock Home

at Mayfair Meadows
Reflection Pointe Townhomes
from the $50's
with 8T* fixed rate interest!
T w o b e d r o o m , t w o b a t h s in g le s t o r y t o w n h o m e s
lo c a te d o n L a k e R e fle c t io n - d u s t a c r o s s fr o m
M a y fa ir C o u n t r y C l u b - l n t h e L a k e M a r y / S a n fo r d
a r e a . A n d e v e r y h o m e h a s o u r e x c lu s iv e B a b c o c k
" Q u a lit y C e r t a in " w a r r a n t ie s - - in c lu d in g a t e n y e a r
w a r r a n t y o n m a jo r s t r u c t u r a l d e fe c t s . S o y o u k n o w
y o u 'r e g e t t in g t h e b e s t v a lu e fo r y o u r m o n e y !

Call: 321-4760
•9.02% APR fixed rate Interest Available on most units.

T h e Babcock Com pany
A Weyerhaeuser Company

BROKER COOP INVZTXD
All Soles Oflkcs Houra:
Mon. thru SoL
10-6
Sundays
1-6

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141— Homes For Sale
141— Homes For Sale

141— Homes For Sale

LOO-A-Fram a, »• complete on 2
ocret 2.300 sq ft.-*. US.000.
Term t. Owner/Brker. 323-2*40
M A R K H AM W OODS RD.
Q U I C K S A L E ! B e lo w
assessment. large executive
home, 4/JHr, office. 2 dining
roomt. Owner/Asso. 3217133

ENERGY REALTY

G O V E R N M E N T HOMES
From 31 (U repair) Delin­
quent lax properly. C a ll:
• I *1* 3*3 1*37 ext. H102FL lor
currant repo list. _

233 N. C O U N TR Y CLU B RD.
222-2*30
A C C E P T OUR F IV E % listing
contract A see your home
advertised at no cost to You.
F IR S T R E A L T Y INC.....330-4M2
BY O W NER- Idyllwllde. 3 br.. 2
ba., great rm ., fireplace,
paddle Ians. Irg. fenced yard,
lots of tre e s , e x c e lle n t
neighborhood, assumable 1st.
333.300.323 0374 a lt.«

767-0606
SANFORDi New FH A hornet. 3
bdrm.. 2 bath, concrete block.
Low down. 1% mtg.....&lt;..333,300
C a ll................................. a n 2100
BY OW NER, Spacious home.
2/2. living room, dining room,
kitchen, porch A carport on
large shady lot......323 1031. 3 7
C A R E F R E E L IV IN O W IT H
S T Y L E A S E C U R ITY . (The
Oaks). Beautiful 3 bdrm., 2
story home, It It. screen
porch. Premium location next
to pool A tennis, amenities.
For appointment call Becky
Courton. Re/Maa 200 n. really
Inc. *20-*33t......er...... 221-0420

SANFORD- Motivated owner I 3
bdrm. home with detached
garage, with 34 x 34 area
overhead lor oillce. Price
r e d u c e d to 374, 300
Call:............................. 331 MJ*

C O L D L U C L i.
B A N ^ C R LI

G O V ER N M EN T REPOSSED
VA, Fm HA, HUD. HOMES
From 31 plus repairs. N A ­
TIO N W ID E ! F R E E 24 hour
re c o rd e d In f o rm a tio n
1 301-730-1100 / 1-5017301107.
Department NT-732__________

ii \

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IA.MES LEE

v i io n

STOP R E N TIN O t 1 3 % Fixed
rate mortgage lor JOyrs. 31330
down A only 33*5 per mo.
P .l.T .I. plus minimal closing
costsl 3 bdrm ., Uo bathl
Fenced Ya rdl Com er loll
Many treesl...................343.300

24MHWY. 17-02
H ID D E N L A K E t 3 bdrm.. 2
bath, 3 yrs. old, comer lot. 2
ca r g a ra g e , c a th e d ra l
celling*. 3*4,400...........322 0333

PROUDLY SALUTES THEIR TOP
REALTOR-ASSOCIATES FOR FEBRUARY

STEMPER
(TALKING HOUSE)
1117 O SCEO LA DX
Tun* your AM radio to 1030
and hear the details ot thlt 3
br. 2 ba. home. Price 313.000
SAN FOR D - 2 bdrm., * bath CB
home, central heat A air.
Only................................ 344,900
3 B E D R O O M , l i t bath, cb
home, Dreamwold taction,
FH A or VA. Only...........tS4,900
2 BDRM ., I B A TH F R A M E .
Owner financing............321,900

8 an ford F.nriV*

to r area

„,,,e

Sanford, Florida 32771

322-2420

9 0 1 W * U k * M« r y Blvd.

Lake Mary. Florida 32746

Call A nytim e

3 2 1 -2 7 2 0

» Till

W E L IS T A N D S ELL
M O RE P R O P E R TY TH A N
A N Y O N E IN NO RTH
S EM IN O LE C O U N TY
A D U L T C O M M U N ITY I 2 br.. 2
ba. home, needs a little TLC ,
central H/A. pool, priced at
appraised value 1.......... 344.000
SM ALL F A M IL Y H O M EI 3 br..
I 1* bath, split plan, central
heat A air. Inside utility room,
fenced rear y a rd , single
garage A morel............ 344.000
C O U N TR Y CLU B MANORI 3
bdrm., I ' i bath. 2 story home,
lot* of storage A closets,
family room, central H/A.
living room, dining room A
morel............................. 34*. *oo

S U B M IT A L L O F F E R S I 3
bdrm. 2 bath home, cathedral
ceilings, out door breakfast
courtyard, split plan. cent.
H/A I 379,000
PR ESTIG IO U S LOCH ARBORI
4 br., 2 bath, home on lovely
corner lot, sunken living
room, breakfast bar. central
H / A . b u y e rs p ro te c tio n
Pla" .................................3*9.900
SU PER LO C A TIO N ! 4 bdrm.
2 'i bath home, sunken living
room, solar water healer ,
patio A family room I 3*8.000
3 ACRES S E C L U D E D I 3 br.. 2
ba th h o m e , g re a t room
w/brlck fpt., glass door* to
screen porch, breakfast bar.
Inside utility, paddle Ians A
B E A U T IF U L PARK S E TTIN O f
3 br., 2 bath home on 2.*3
acre*, pool, small tithing lake,
sprinkler syst., sunken family
r o o m , b o o k c a s e s A to
on.................................. 3123.000
L IV E IN L U X U R Y ! 4 bdrm. 31*
bath, executive home on 13
acres with lake, pool, rtc A
family room face pool A lake.
3 fireplaces A many extrasl
3293,000

322-2420
321-2720

^

7

'Rl W| I,

I

III

REALTORS
S inford's S ilts L tid tr
O E N E R A L C O M M E R C IA L
ZON IN OI 3.4*0 sq. It.. 3 office
suites. 2 apartments, owner
financing. 3*9.000. Call: John
Butner. Broker/Salesman
B U S IN E S S R E L O C A T I N G ,
Commercial bldg.. In high
traffic area, 3104.000
Call: John Butner
Broker/Salesman
O A N CE STU O IO I Newly re
modeled, olflce. kitchen, rest
room*. 3120.000. Call Linda
Morgan. Realtor/Assoclate
FISH CAM P A M A R IN A I Newly
renovated restaurant, bar.
established clientele. 3430.000
Call Frank or Lisa Wickers.
Realtor/Assoclates

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720

157-M obile
H om es/S ale
CA R R IA O E COVE, 1/1. 12X33,
good cond., part, turn., Adult
section. 37300neq, 321 3410
F A M IL Y SPACES A V A IL A B L E
Carriage Cove Mobile Home
Park. Com* see usl 11
Gregory Mobile Hom*s..231-22tO
M A N A T E E i 'l l , 14x34. 7 bdrm.,
11» bath. Set up In trailer
park. Ready to move In. Call:
373 *390 between *am A 3pm
M A N A T E E - '7*. 2 bdrm. In
family park with pool. No
m oney dow n
Assum e
m (0............................... 371 3*43
NO M O N EY DOWN. Assume
mortgage Beautiful 24x40. 3
bdrm., 2 bath, living A family
room, tamlly section.,.321 49*0
O S TE EN /FA R M TO N Area, old
trlr A lot, fenced yard, owner
finance.
down *7500 For
Info, com* by 1301 Mellonvllle,
^Sa nfordiH te rS P M ^_________

AN IN VESTOR Wants to buy
Income property. Will look at
all, any cond. Call 322 4444

151— Investment
Property / Sale

181—Appliances
/ Furniture

3 INCOM E PR O DUCIN G apt*,
w ith co m m e rc ia l toning.
Corner ol French Ave. A 2nd
St. Gross annual Income
314.340. Asking 31*9.000 owner
will finance with 330.000 down.
Exc. Investment opportunity.
Call Atlantic Properties Real
&gt;V Inc.............323 9111 anytime*

AIR C O N D ITIO N ER , Reverse
cycle, G E . used less than 4
month*. Originally 3470. Sell
lor 3493. 322 749*. eves 349 5717
ALTERNATIVE T.V. A APPL.
2*34 Hwy. 17-02
127 3000
BED , D A VEN PO R T. Dresser,
other Items. (19 W. 1st St.
37J 204J
D IN IN G ROOM S E T . Exc.
cond., table. 4 chairs A china
cabinet. 3300 FIRM . 321 0421
O A S S T O V E : M ontgom ery
Ward, self cleaning. 1 yr. old.
never used, 3330 Call 371 *74*
LAR RY'S M A R T. 213 Sanlord
Ave. New/Used furn. A appl.
Buy/Sell/Trade, 322 4132W A TE R HEATR R .Elec (2) 40
gal. ea., warranleed. Like
new. Cheapl 321 7304_________
4 P IE C E R A T T A N sectional
couch, with 7 barcolounger
(recliner) sections. Excellent
condition call to see.... 372 39*7

153—AcreageLots/Sale

LAND
OREAT SANFORD LOCATION
ON EA S T 23th ST. tOO'xlX)'
ZO N ED L IG H T IN D U S TR I­
A L. *30.000 W ITH TER M S.
B U I L D T O S U I T . OR
POSSIBLE T R A D E .

3 ACRES, G E N E V A A R E A O FF
O S C E O L A R O A D 325.000
TER M S A V A IL A B L E .

5EIG IER
LUND
3ZI'Db4D
O CALA N A TIO N A L FO R E S T
High and dry wooded lots.
Mobile home, cabin, camping
O K. Hunting and fishing.
35.450 w/ 3150 dn., 343.71
monthly...... 1*04) 234 437* days

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR ________ 112749*

SANFORD: Bring your horses A
build your dream home on this
2*i acre mini estate. Close to
boating A fishing........ 314.t00
JoAnn Tompkins Properties
Inc. R E A L T O R ........... 24» - 3*22
1.3 ACRES, 200 II. frontage X
377, cash or term*, by owner.
3*7.000. Located on Old Lake
Mary Rd. oil 23th. 323 0110

2543 PARK A V E ............. Sanford
*01 Lk. Mary Blvd
Lk. Mary

3 ACRES ON P A V ED ROAD
W IT H S M A L L L A K E IN
G E N E V A ...................... 323.000

CALL BART

N O R T H F L O R ID A ! C L E A N
AIR • ELBOW ROOM • NO
T R A F F I C . R e t ir e m e n t
special, 2.3 acre home-site,
tree studded, high and dry.,
total 34.300. 3100 dn . 357 per
mo 374 pay.. 10%

159-R eal Estate
Wanted

Call to ll fre t 1-800-323-3720

O N E ACRE W ITH POND ON
LA K E M A R Y BLVD. 330.000
S E L L E R WI L L HOLD
M O R TG A G E

OLD PARK A SHOP BLDO.
13.000 tq. ft., also ad|ac*nt bldg.
Need* to sell to settle estate.
300 It. on Park Ave. 170 It on
Hwy 44 High traffic area.
Plenty ol parking. Owner
financing..................... 3495.000

217—Oarage Sales

F IV E A C R E S , 39.V30 total,
terms, located north Florida,
near 173. Georg* Willis Real­
ty. *04 *73 *3*3. P.O. BOX II*.
Madison Fl. 37340

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
T IL L E R , heavy duty, 3 HP.
forward A reverse gears, Ilk*
new 3230............... Call 323 54*4

199— Pets &amp; Supplies
LAB R A D O R /D ALM A TIO N
Shots. F R E E To good homo.
___________ 331-349*___________
S H E L TIE S : AKC * wks. Sable A
while, shots A wormed. 3700 to
3300 C a ll: 904-72B-142* or
*04 7*7 1411, Leesburg

2 ( W ) ACRE T R A C T S
P A S T U R E L A N D OR
W OODED TR A C TS IN OR
A N GE C IT Y A R E A FROM
Sit,500......... W ITH TER M S

149—Commercial
Property / Sale

I

■ •- i f

R11 Tim
f[i
in rmm

40 A C R E S F R O N T IN G ON
D O Y L E ROAD IN O S TE E N
3340.000 O R W IL L SU B
O I V I D E 10 A C R E S O R
M O R E .........G R E A T TER M S

3343 PARK A V E ............. Sanford
*0) Lk. Mary Blvd........ LK.M ary
14*7 B O N V IE W . D E L T O N A :
Living rm , dining rm, large
Fl. rm , 2 bdrm.. Its bath., all
new carpet, kitchen with new
appliances, la u ndry rm .,
screened porch, 2 out build
Ingt. fenced dog run, large
wooded lot. Call 373 5203
3 BDRM., 1W ba., new carpet,
kitchen appliances Included.
3*.000 down, assume mtg. ol
334.400, no qualifying, 323-4312
4 HOUSES on 4 adjoining lots,
New garage/workshop 24 X 34
A 1 storage bldg. 12 X 20.
323-1730 or *03(21-1729..collect

RIDGEWATE

LA K E M A R Y - E A O L E C R E E K
Builder'Developer has 34 on*
acre lots lor custom home*.
Lake Mary schools '
ENEROY DEVELO PM ENT
___________ 322-293*

274' FRONTING ON 7nd ST. A T
RAILROAD/OVERPASS O F F
A IR P O R T BLVD. SANFORD
A R E A ZO NED C 3........373.000

Call to ll f r n 1-800-323-3720

W E H A V E R E N T A L HOUSINO
C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R ......................222-4991

APPRAISALS A N D SALES
BOB M. BA LL. JR . P.A..C.S.M.
R E A L T O R ....... ...............222-411*
Florida...Virginia . Maryland
CA SSELB ER R Yt 1 acre toned
PR I. U5.000 W. Ma//crews*!
R*«H*r......................... 222-79*3
S A LE O R -L E A S E i 1*0‘x I03‘
Corner Property, c/h/a. *34
*q. fl. bldg. West First St.
Sontord.............. ...........3237*1*

LA R O E CORNER L O T A T I9TH
A N D PARK A V E ZO N ED
FO RJJP TO * U N ITS 343 000

• O E N E V A OSCEOLA RD. #
ZO N ED FOR M O BILESI
* Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
2*% Down. 1* Yrs. at 13% I
From 313,3001

L A R O E 3 bdrm., 2 bath CB.
Good area, large Fla. room.
............- ......................... 332.300

1.SACRE IN O E N E V A ....337.000

153—AcreageLots/5al&gt;

N E A T AS A PINI 2 bdrm., 1«s
b a t h , la k e f r o n t h o m e ,
screened porch, large storage
bldg., ad|ac*nt *.S acres
available. 3*4.000

CAU. ANY TIME

B U IL D IN O LOTS ...From 34.000

149—Commercial
Property / Sale

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

III * N nw
»h W f A i

ZO N E D MR-1- Extra large 3
bdrm.. Ik* bath. Adult-care,
daycare or duplex ut*.. 4*5,000

H ID D E N L A K E - Old taction.
Large 3 bdrm.. 2 bath double
garage............................ 349,900

ASSOCIATE

/

REALTORS
Sanford’s Salts L tadtr

PAO LA- Lake Markham Rd. 3
bdrm.. 2 bath. Owner will help
with new financing....... S3*.*00

JOHN BUTNER

A

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

L A K E M A R Y - Distress Sal*.
Lakefront Little Lake Mary,
3/2 home, LMH A Greenwood
Lakes Middle. Large shaded
lot, great room with fireplace,
screen porch. Don't wait
R E D U C E D ...................3141,000
TO M Q U IN N ............... 231-407*

SA N FO R D /LA K E M A R T - M m ,
selll 3/2, must see to apprecl
ate. 333,*00. Eves........ 323-3*43
SANFORD- 2 bdrm., 1 battT
cent, h/a, near Seminole
County lakefront offices,
Hamilton School. 322 1317
S A N F O R D . 3/2, lam. room,
screened porch, pool, fenced
yard, 37.000 cash to mtg. no
- R 0* 1............................... 322-3*13
*4| A« •|| *« S

K

V .

LONOWOOD D U P L E X - Oppor
tunlty knocks. 1 side pays the
mtg. Great rental area. Pro­
perty In exc. cond......... 370,ooo
TO M Q U IN N ............... 321-4*7*

322-8678

REALTY — REALTORS

•l| Yf!l 41111
■

L A K E M ARY. Convenient to 1-4.
3/2 spilt plan on shady wooded
lot. LMH A Greenwood M id­
dle. Reduced..................342.300
TO M Q U IN N ................331-4*7*

R E D U C E D I Country living with
access to Lake Monroe. Con
temporary 3 bdrm.. 7 bath
pool home. Master suit* ha*
balcony that overlooks pool.
Also has loft for private of»'C4 4»C..........................3117.*00
M A R N ITA C A R L I...... 12219(7

STENSTROM

L A K E M A R Y i Hug* corner,
shaded lot. 3 bdrm., 2 bath,
screened porch, many extras
Wallace Cress Realty, Inc.
___________ 711-4377___________
L A K E M A R Y i The Crowing*. 4
bdrm., 2 bath, family room,
screened porch, all appliances
stay. 310«,*00 Crank Const.
Realty World............... 32»-*o*l

SAN FO R D - 3 bdrm., 1 bath
home, fenced yard, corner lot,
Iru ll trfes, convenient to
schools and shopping. Owner
will help with financing and Is
a realtor........................ 341,000
TO M Q U IN N ............... 221-4*7*

N EW HOM E. Quiet residential
area ot Loch Arbor. 3 bdrm.. 2
bath spilt plan. Now Is the
time to pick your tile and
carpet. Over 1*00 sq.ft, under
h A a. Com* see. .22* Vine wood
M A R N ITA C A R L I...... 223-2M7

xxa

321-7823........E m . 323-0409

JU N E PORZIQ R E A L T Y , INC

O R E A T Opportunity For 1st
Time Buyer. Fam. 'rm . pos.
3rd br. Fenced yard...... 343.000
TO M Q U IN N ................231-407*

E X T R A N IC E CUSTOM B U IL T
HO M EI Almost new, 3/3 split
plan, fireplace, garage. CHA,
heat pumpj7oodJorms.33a.000

O IA N T R E D U C TIO N !
You mutt m thlt 3/2 split plan
with family room. Sits on 2
loll and good neighborhood
O N L Y 2 4 1 ,0 0 0 . C A L L
A N Y T IM E I
Alan B. Johnson, Ra/Mex
Unllmltad, 323-4102 or 240-2(00

141—Homes For Sale

O n tu tK -

E N T E R T A IN M E N T H O M EBeautiful overslie pool with
privacy fence. Large 3 bdrm.,
2 bath home In quiet residen­
tial area. Home ha* lots ol
axtras. tolar heat, new roof,
sprinkler system tor lovely
landscaped lot. Must see I
M A R N ITA C A R L I...... 222-30*7

E L IS H A "R E D ” M ORGAN
T O P SA N FO R D
A S S O C IA TE

r »•

Sunday, March If, 1M7

141— Homes For Sale

A m vood
(.ro u p .

f r

.............. (*04)422 243* eves

209—Wearing Apparel
I

BI O Y A R O S A L E .

New
a u t o m o t iv e s a le s m a n 's
samples, air conditioner A
much more. 104 Plnecresl Dr
Frl.-Sun, 9lo3___________ _

F U R N IT U R E , baby Item* A
mlsc. Saturday A Sunday, * 4.
_ WJjtrlderRdj^Sanor^^^^^

219—Wanted to Buy
*33 Aluminum Cans..N*w*pap*r
Non Ferrous Metals........... Glass
KOKOM O......................... 323-11*0
* I BUYOLD •
QuIH*........ Crocks..........Linens
* ....... Teddy Bears....... 322 4103
J U N K A W R E C K E D CARS
Running or not, top prices
paid. Free pick up 371-7254

223—Miscellaneous
A BO VE O R O UN D POOL. 74 fl
fully equipped Including de
cklnV.................... Call:377 7t*7
D A Y L IL IE S , 140) Potted, or
•ng*. *2.00 to *2.30 ea..
___________372 0144___________
SPECIAL
Luxury houseboating club.
Club Sunshine membership
Save 31300 No money down
Assume 31)0 per mo. pay
men). No gimmicks Call to
dayl Weekdays *:30 am to 5
pm. 904 494 4134. Sat. A Sun
*04 423 1)43 ask lor Bill

231—Cars
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
W E FIN A N C E
WALK IN...............DRIVE OUT
N A TIO N A L A U TO SALES
Sanlord Ave. A 12th St.., 371 4073
BU ICK C E N TU R Y . '7* C4J70B
3993 Seminole Ford, 37*4 Hwy
17 92 Sanlord............... JJJ U | |
C H EV C ITA TIO N , (0 C4424A
3993. Seminole Ford. 37*4 Hwy
17 92 Sanford............... 372 14*I
C H E V M O N T E C A R L O , '77
7C004 B 31493. Seminole Ford.
37*4 Hwy 17 93Sanlord322 14*1
C H E V Y M O N TE C A R L a '73,
Runs good. New Iran*., new
radial*. SJ/j/olfer___ 43*9499
C H R Y S L E R L e B A R O N , '7*
7T044A *1793. Seminole Ford,
37*4 Hwy 17-92 Sanlord327 14*1
C O L T: '*2. 4 cyl., auto. air.
Extra Clean! Can arrange
llnanclng............Call: 331 1470.
FO R D ESCORT WGN (2.C442I
31793 Seminole Ford, 37*4
Hwy 17-92 Sanford..... 372 14*1
FO RD FA IR M O N T WGN, 7*
C4433 B 31993. Seminole Ford.
37*4 Hwy 17 92 Sanford377 14*I
FO RD GRANADA. '74 6T1006B
3793 Seminole Ford. 37(4 Hwy
17 92 Sanford............... 372 14*1
FO RD L TD , '73, 4 dr 7TI94A
*493 Seminole Ford. 37*4 Hwy
17 92 Sanlord............... 332 14*1
FO R D L T D Crown Vic.'*) aulo,
a/c. all power. III! wheel,
cruise. 4 dr. loaded. 71000 ml,
t owner like new 37300 372 43*0
FO RD P IN TO '74. 7T040C. 3495
Seminole Ford. 37*4 Hwy 17 92
Senlord........................ 377 14*1
FO R D T BIR D . '79 C 444* A
314*3. Seminole Ford. 37(4
Hwy 17 *2 Sanlord___ 322 14*1
FORD T BIRD '79 C4404 31495
Seminole Ford. 37*4 Hwy 1? 9*
Sanford........................ 322 14*1
L IN C O L N M A R K IV- '74,
7C07IA. 3*95. Seminole Ford.
37*4 Hwy 17 92..............322 14*1
M ER C C O M E T, '74 7c7t3B *495
Seminole Ford. 37*4 Hwy 17 97
Sanlord.........................322 14*1
MUSTANG- 1979 *
Price:.'............................... U 00
Call................................322 1399
O LD S O M E O A , ' ( I C4417A
31995. Seminole Ford, 37*4
Hwy 17 92 Sanlord.......322 14*1

233-A uto Parts
/ Accessories
GOOD U SED MOTORS
and transmissions
Call:......... .......................321 2234

235-Trucks /
Buses / Vans

PROM DRESS, Mike Bent)
exclusive. Filled while se
quened strapless bodice, very
lull layered skirt, st. 12 Paid
*410 Matching whlla satin/
pearl shoes A clutch, paid 3*3.
Sacrifice all-3230....... 322 4417
PROM DRESSES- Lika new
Tea length, sir* 7/1, lavender.
Long length, site *. red Rea
soneble Call:.............323 *30*

211—A ntiques/
Collectibles

J E E P W A O O N E E R : '71, 4 wh
dr. runs good, new liras. *1700
or best olfer.................. 322 7451

238—Vehicles
Wanted
W E PAY TO P 33 lor wrecked
cers/trucks. We Sell guaren
faed used parts. AA A U TO
_ S A L V A O £ o lD # B a rj;;*4r*002

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

A R T -P r iv a t e collector liq ­
uidating original lithographs.
O ld e r p la c e s In c lu d in g
Chagall, Mlro. Agam. Caldar,
Pall A more. Call........443 4010
K E N A R U T H 'S A N T IQ U E
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�PEOPLE
Untold Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, March W, W 7 -1 C

At Home In The Governor's Mansion
First

LadyMary Jane Martinez:

By Susan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
TALLAHASSEE — Mary Jane Martinez
pulled up her Tampa roots, set through four
generations, resigned her 20-year high school
teaching post less than two months ago and is
now very much at home In the Governor’s
Mansion In a somewhat secluded nook
downtown Just a few blocks from the Florida
Capitol where her husband. Gov. Bob
Martinez, usually spends his workdays.
"Tallahassee Is our home now. They’ll have
to drag me out or here." Mrs. Martinez said of
her spacious, elegant brick home filled with
antiques, history and a round-the-clock securlty system Including several security agents.
Gracious and sort-spoken with an easy laugh
tempered with an air of authority honed In her
years as a teacher, Mrs. Martinez doesn’t doujit
that she will be at home In the Governor’s
Mansion for the- next eight years. When she
speaks she talks In terms of an expected eight '
years In her new home. That her husband will
be re-elected to a second four-year term Is a
fact to Mrs. Martinez. She’s as confident 6r that
as she was of his election to the state's highest
post In November.
"I had no doubt he was going to win,
because he’s the type of person that once he
gets before a group, or meets people, he can
reach out to them and talk to them about
Issues, and they can understand the way he
feels about certain things and usually they end
up agreeing with him. I think he has that
ability to make sense out of things in a way
people can understand and feci close to." Mrs.
Martinez said in an exclusive Interview with
the Sanford Herald.
She believes Floridians will appreciate her
husband's approach of running the state like u
business. "His major goal now Is being the best
governor Florida has ever had. So that’s the
goal we’re both going to work toward." she
said.
The only thing that mars the thrill of being
first lady of the state Is the heartbreak of
leaving behind family and friends In Tampa,
where Martinez, a restaurant owner, served as
mayor for eight years. Some o f her friendships
go back to her high school days when she and
the governor were In the same homeroom.
But one of the more difficult aspects of the
separation was leaving her 28-year-old daugh­
ter Sharon to maintain the "typical American.
Spanish-stylc" home Mrs. Martinez and her
husband shared for 18 years.
"My husband says I have the world's longest
jud of It. I think It’s
through that and ’ devefSp'^’Teatly close'
relationship." she said.
Mrs. Martinez keeps In touch with Sharon by
telephone and said her daughter has visited
her at the mansion a couple of times. Instead of
being on hand to see the antics and develop­
ment of Sharon’s eight-month-old Identical
twin daughters. Mrs. Martinez said. "I learn
about It over the phone, so it helps."
It’s not quite the same as being Just a five
minute drive away: "Both my husband’s
family and mine ... we’ve been very, very close
... so that's been the hardest adjustment for the
two of us ... that we’re away from our
families."
Their 25-ycar-old son. Alan, who Is a
graduate of Florida State University In
Tallahassee, "moved to Tallahassee two or
three months before we did. He’s always loved
Tallahassee and Just thought that It was great

•

‘They'll Have

.......

Florida's first lady, M a ry Jane M artin ez,
above, at home in the Governor's Mansion
in Tallahassee points out th at fa m ily
photos, like the one of her eight-m onth-old
tw in granddaughters, Lydia (le ft) and
E m ily , which a re prom inent in both the
public and p rivate areas of her new home,
help ease the pain of having to leave fa m ily
and friends behind in T am p a. In photo at
right, M rs . /Martinez takes tim e from her
busy day to cuddle w ith their basset hound,
Mascot. "H e 's a big buddy of both of us,"
she says.

I Photos by ttfton Lodon

that he was going to get a chance to come
back. We didn’t say a thing to him. He Just
made his own arrangements and came up here
and got a Job,” Mrs. Martinez said. Her son has
a degree in marketing, she said, and the family
is busy planning his May 2 wedding to a
Tampa woman In Tampa.
Martinez’s family, which Is of Spanish origin,
settled In Tampa five generations ago. Her
husband’s Spanish heritage has mixed "very,
very well" with her Sicilian. "W e’ve been
married 32 years, so it must be good.” she
said.
It was her loving touch that sent Gov.
Martinez to work wearing a green bow tie and
green handkerchief on St. Patrick's Day. "He
never wears a bow tie. I thought that would be
different. I went out looking for one. It’s
amazing how many shades of green there arc.

■ "T

* »

.

Of all things! I found one In a place called
Costumes and Magic. It’s a real nice green that
matches his eyes. He got to be Irish for a day,"
shcsald.
Her romance with her husbund began In
high school when he sat behind her In their
homeroom and couldn't "Ignore my 1950s-era
chestnut-color ponytail.”
"That kind of got things going." Mrs.
Martinez said. They had their first dale the
summer before their senior year. "W e went to
a class party and Just kind or hit It off. It was
Just one of those things that kind of snowballed
into getting married.
"I hate to say this. He was very shy. He was
of course very go6d looking. He was a great
baseball player and basketball player. He was
the kind the girls liked. He had a car."
They both were graduated from high school

In 1933 and they married In December or
1954. "W e were both 19. He was a student at
Tumpa University. I worked rullllmc us a
dental assistant while he went to college.
When he finished. I started.
"I have a degree In English and library
science. I started as a charter member out of
the University or South Florida In I960 when
there were Just three buildings there. It took
me six years to finish, because in between I
had my son.
"Bob and I have always been very, very
supportive of each other. When I went to
college Sharon was only three. And then Alan
wus born. Bob helped with everything. He
cooked. He helped me type my papers. He
would watch the kids. It was a team type thing.
He thought it wus good for me to go to school.
See FIRST LADY, page 4C

Patti B ra n tle y
En jo ys N e w R ole

H«raM Pbsto by Swun U 4 «n

iM c fa l i
•E d s a l l ^

n
f S ^

H

l*kn • th# batt,#shlP U.S.S, Florid a. The bowl, she says, Is a
r ^ - inJ2°ns I'hW'#. * h* p o rtra,t 0 , ,the * tate' showing all symbols, such as
X ' K
' t M
oran® **' Pa *m fronds and Chief Osceola.

41 O'* 4

4

By Susan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
TALLAHASSEE — He was a rock
’n’ roll drummer from the big city of
Jacksonville and she was a small
town schoolgirl from DcLand when
she decided to skip her usual Satur­
day night at the drag races, loaded
five of her friends into her father’s
Mustang and traveled to tiny Cres­
cent City to hear a live band.
It was the 1960s and there wasn't
much excitement In Central Florida.
During the band's performance,
perky, blonde and pretty Patti Moore
was "Just being silly with my
friends, and I said 'Will you look at
that good looking guy back there."'
The good looking guy was drummer
Bobby Brantley, who overheard the
compliment.
"He asked me for my address. I
never expected to hear from him
again. He wrote and we had an on-off
teenage time. It was difficult then.
He was still going to school in
Jacksonville and traveling around
with his band on the weekends. I
was a hundred miles away. But after
he Joined the Marine Corps we ended
up together."
That was the beginning for Patti
Brantley and her husband, who in
November, after eight years as a
state representative from Longwood.
was elected lieutenant governor of
Florida.
At 37. vivacious Mrs. Brantley,
who peppers much of her conversa­
tion with laughter, is excited over
her new duties as wife of the
lieutenant governor. Mrs. Brantley

receives no pay for the work she
does for Florida's first lady, Mary
Jane Martinez, as coordinator of
volunteer services at the Governor's
Mansion in Tallahassee.
" I ’m totally happy where I am. I*
have the option of saying when I
want to go and when I don’t want to
go. I don’t ever have to think about it
or make uny big decisions. I’ve got
the best of both worlds. I’ve Just
always enjoyed life and people." said
Mrs. Brantley, who also said her
husband Is a "people person."
"I would say politically‘ we're a
team. In his Job, no. We both enjoy
people and have been involved In the
Republican Party and the communi­
ty together. Everything we've done
has been together. We married when
he was In the Marine Corps, and we
used to go to the grocery store
tpgether.
*
"So politically we Just shared the
same friends and shared the same
life and shared the samt ideals. And
that’s worked very well for us. But
I've always had the attitude — It’s
not quite the same now — when he
was in the legislature. I’d work real
hard to get him there and then he
was on his own. I would get to go out
and have fun. I try to keep up. but
there’s so much happening In his life
and in the governor’s office that an
early night for him to get home is
eight o’clock and he’s exhausted. I
can't sit there and grill him on
everything that happened.
See PATTI, page SC

*

�r
1C— Sanford Herald, Sanford, F I.

Sunday, March at, 1»»7

In And Around Lake Mary-Longwood

Super Flea M arket To Benefit Com m unity Center
The city of Lake Mary’s Community Improve­
ment Association Is planning a super flea market
and dinner on May 16 at the CIA Building, and
they need community help. They are presently
looking for donations of new or good used large
and small Items for this event. If you have a
donation call 322-3118.
There will also be rental spaces Tor those who
would like to set up their own booth outside the
community center to sell their wares. If you
would like to rent a space call 323-9416.
Proceeds from this sale and dinner will
complete the first phase of the community center.
The CIA Building is currently being used by
many Lake Mary churches, organizations, scout
groups and Individuals. Be a part of the
community and help complete this busy Lake
Mary facility.
The Florida Bandmasters Association District
VII High School Band Concert Festival Competl-

Carol
G a n try
323-8308

On Saturday, April 4. the Lake Mary High
School Band Boosters will hold a rummage sale at
the high school, from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m.. to raise
funds for the activities of the band, (lag corps, and
Lake Marionette Dance Corps. The rummage sale,
with contributes from over 200 families and
businesses, will Include a car wash, bake sale,
and grocery ralTlc. The band, flag corps, and
Marionettes will perform at noon. ColTec. donuts,
hot dogs and soft drinks will be available.

tlon was held March 13 and .14 at West Orange
High School. Bands were Judged for performance
Longwood Woman’s club will meet April 7 at 1
p.m. In’ the Woman's Club Building; 150 W.
In three prepared concert selections, two sight
Church Awe. Their program will be election of
readings pieces, and an optional student con­
officers for next year.
ductor performance. The Lake Mary High School
Hostesses are Frances Wade, chairman Ida Cox.
Symphonic 1 Band, under the direction of Terry
Pattishall. received the top rating of superior in off
and Blanche Klssanc. Visitors and perspective
performances categories, as did the Lake Mary
members are Invited to attend
High School Symphonic II Band. Both bands are
now eligible to participate In the state competl- '
"AIDS in the Workplace." "Drug Detection."
tlon to be held In May.
and "Employment Termination Policies" will be

the main topics of an Employment Seminar to be
held at Seminole Community College on April lo
rrom 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Room J 100. Co-sponsor*
for this seminar arc the Job Service Employer
Committee and Seminole Community College.
The registration'fee is #20. Reservations may
be made by calling 322-7322.
Maps of Lake Mary arc now available from the
Chamber of Commerce. Indlldually they arc «1
each. If an organization or business wishes' to
purchase them for advertising purposes they are
1 to 99. #1; 100 to 499. $.75, and 500 and up,
$.50. Call 322*1213 for additional Information.
"Depression and Suicide on Young Children" is
the topic of a free community seminar on
Wednesday. April 8. from 7-8 p.m. at West Lake
Hospital.
Bee GENTRY. SC

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In And around Sanford

Funny Fashions Highlight

Herald Photo* by Louli Reimondo

Models tickling the funny bone of patrons
attending the Sanford Garden Club's annual
card p a rty, luncheon ond fashion show are
Ruby M ae Kloss, left, and Jane West,
ch airm an, above, who showed their own
orig in al creations In the "funny fashion"
show segment.

Models In a show at the
Garden Club o f Sanford tried to
see who could could come up the
tackiest when they put their best
foot (In separate shoes on one
occasion) forward In a "funny
fashion" show much to the
delight of the club members and
guests. The event was the club's
annual card party, luncheon and
fashion show. The conventional
fashion show segment featured
fashions from Kmart.
Guests began arriving at about
10 a.m. to play cards, followed
by luncheon and the fashion
show with card games continu­
ing after the show.
Florence Wehrweln was the
luncheon chairman. Jane West
was the fashion show chairman
and Chal Horrell was chairman
of the card party.
\
Modeling their own original
"funny fashions" were Jane
West. Ruby Mac Kloss. Abble
Owen and Eva Kapps.
Ann Brisson was the fashion
show commentator and narrator
who also showed a fashion from
Kmart.
Others modeling Kmart fash­
ions were: Stella Orltt. Georgia
Chorpening, Martha Swaggcrty.
Rose Mcssersmlth, Haze] Nlll.
Sara Albritton. Mary Myer, Emy
Sokol, Ann Warner. Linda DcIFIorc. Mary Elmore. Mary
Schm itt, Esther Anderson,
Ba rb ar a B r a d s h a w . Mary
McTavish. Mike Martin, Jo
Stankiewlcz and Julie Lambler.

PBOPLE

Editor

Tickets are $5 each. For information and tickets, call Holly
Falk. 323-8717.
Participating merchants In­
clude: Lois’ Place. Second Im­
age, Balloon Magic. Fables. For­
ever Fashion Formal Wear. First
Street Clothiers. Knight's Shoes
RoJay, Gaynellc Florist. Village
Inn, Gaynelle's Restauarant.
Jehan and Aloyse Fashions.
Diana Shops. J.C. Penney.
Wal-Mart and Hawkins Plumb-

And another big fashion
show-luncheon. "F ligh t Into
Spring." Is coming up Wednes­
day. April 8. at the Woman’s
Club of Sanford, beginning at
noon, at the clubhouse. 309 S.
Oak Ave.
The community Is invited to
come and bring a friend. Tickets
are $6.50 each which Includes
the luncheon and show. For
Information, call 629-4211 or
321-2720.

The event Is to benefit the
club's scholarship fund for a
deserving woman, over 25. who
Is returning to college. For In­
formation on applying for a
scholarship, call Mary Ann
"Vanity Fair." a colorful fash­ .Cleveland, 322-7311.
ion show and luncheon , is being
sponsored by All Souls Council
Danny Floyd of 25th Street
of Catholic Women and Sanford
area merchants Saturday, April Lawn and Garden Center spoke
4, at noon In All Souls Parish to members of the Wildflower
House, comer of Oak Avenue Circle of the Sanford Garden
and Ninth Street, Sanford.

A b b le O w e n , right,
shows off the funny
fashion she created
#

for the Sanford
Garden Club's spring
fling while Stella O rltt,
left, models a casual
outfit from Kmart,

Men. women and children will
m odel the latest styles in
swimwear, sports wear, formal
attire and Easter outfits.

Clubat the Marh meet Ing.
According to Shirley Simas.
Floyd brought a variety of trees
with him and explained the
different features of nunerous
citrus varieties, their care and
maintenance. He also answered
questions about citrus.
Hostesses were Elsie Brooks
and Eula Palmer,
Ballet Guild o f S anfordSeminole presented Its spring
c o n c e rt. B a lle t G u ild and
Friends, last Saturday and
Sunday In the auditorium of
Lake Mary High School.
T h e c o n c e r t wa s
s u p p l e m e n t e d by Damien
Stevens, a New York dance arttst
who Is a busy freelance choroegrapher and artistic director of
Elfeet Performing Arts Ensem­
ble. a perform ing company
based In New York City. The
other "friends" included the
Images Dance Company from
Kissimmee.
Robin Scott stole the show
with her spectacular "Great
Race March." a spirited patriotic
b a l le t that won her first
runner-up In the recent "Miss
Florida Dance" competition
held In Orlando,
B efore the concert, Beth
Freeman, president of the Ballet
Guild Board of Directors, pres­
ented Michelle Hinson with the
Walter Rye Silver Slipper award
for obtaining the most sponsors.
After the Saturday night per­
formance, a reception was held
for sponsors and supporters.
The guild's artistic directors
and choreographers since Its
inauguration In 1968, Valerie
Weld and Miriam Wright, can
take a bow for a job well done.

CHIROPRACTIC

A

FOR BFTTFR HEAL TH
Zlssman along with Jody
Continued from 2 C
"Children are not Immune to
the pressures of our fast-paced
world, and like adults can devel­
op severe psychiatric problems,"
says Kay G. Holt. M.D., child
psychiatrist at West Lake Hospi­
ta l and s e m i n a r l e a d e r .
"Statistics Indicate that any­
where from 1.500 to 2.000
children under the age of 13 die
each year by suicide." Dr. Holt,
who has conducted extensive
research In the field of child
psychiatry, will explain how
pre-adolescents develop em o­
tional problems, how these pro­
blems can be identified, and
types o f treatment available.
Attendance is free but reserva­
tions are requested by calling
West Lake Hospital's Communi­
ty Relations Department at
260-1900. ext. 102.
Jody Welsberg. a Lake Mary
High School Junior, was recently
selected to be an Intem for U.S.
Rep. Bill McCollum. R-Florida.
Welsberg Is also one of the six
Lake Mary High School students
chosen by the social studies
department to visit the Soviet
Union. Katie Wells. Kendra Lott.
Mike Locke. Stacie Hays and

In the Soviet Union as part of the"
A m erica n S o viet Youth
Exchange Program. This group
of high school juniors will leave
July 8 .
The Lake Mary Chamber of
Commerce will meet on April 1
at 8 a.m. In the CIA Building.
Lake Mary. The first guest
speaker will be Patti Brantley,
wife of Lt. Gov. Bobby Brantley.

Her topic Is "What's Going on in
sentativc from the new hospital,
Compu-Care, located in the
Longwood/Altamonte Springs
area. This facility deals in drug
and alcohol dependency.
There
awarded
breakfast
Members
tend.

will be door prizes
and a continental
served. All Chamber
are encouraged to at­

NEW ARRIVAL
*14.44
Mr. and Mrs. David (Cindy)
Willtumson o f Sunford, an­
nounce the birth of their first
child, a daughter. Kelly Anne, on
March 17. at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. She
weighed 7 lbs., 3 ozs.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.

and Mrs. Walter (Marlon) Bethea,
Sanford. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Russell (Anita)
Williamson. DeBary. Paternal
great grandmother Is Mrs. Rob­
ert (Thelma) Williamson. San­
ford.

MQ W .

Elaine’**
Hallmark
Shop
"W t S ft Still MM et

Mm Itrfnt IS* Sett tUllnurt
mum
tteei Is Mm SwthMit
3224912
SANFORD FLAX A Nm I Our T . S u m

If you're suffering from a stiff
neck, don't wait for it to take
care of Itself when treatment Is
available to correct It.
Of all the bones In the spinal
column, none are more easily
Injured or more vulnerable
than the seven vertebrae In the
neck. None are moved more
often. We ore constnatly turn­
ing our heads to look at people
und things.
Neck stiffness can have
muny causes, from sudden
und violent accidents to such
simple activities as painting a
celling or Just Bitting reading a
book for a long time. But
there's nothing simple about
the pain.
A careful examination will

Beca us e, Y o u ’re W o r t h It

reveal the source of the pain
and how best to treat It. Any
misaligned vertebrae In the
spinal column should be pro­
perly adjusted so there will be
no abnormal pressure on your
nervous system. Treatment
may b I b o include exercise for
the cervical muscles such as
gently rotating your head in all
directions This can help
restore muscle strength und
tone.

I

In the Interest of better health
from the office of:

Woodall Chiropractic
Center
1400 8. Park Ave.
Sanford. PL 332-4763

SALE STARTS SUNDAY
Prices Good Thur Wed. Opon Sunday 12 to 8

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SANFORD

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3132-34 Orlande Dr.
Hwj. 1742 Lika Mary Bhd.

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�4C-tanford Hsrkld, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, March a t, 1H7

B r ie f ly

Continued from page 1C

Casselberry Plant Sola
To Benefit Veteran*'Pork
A Plant Sale for Casselberry Veterans Memorial Park will be
held Saturday. March 28, at the park. North Lake Triplet Drive
und Sunset Drive. Casselberry. Over 430 trees, plants and
shrubs are offered for sale to be placed at the park which Is a
^memorial to the nation’s veterans.
The park, being built through donations by Individuals, area
merchants and companies and organizations, will hold Its
official opening ceremony on Memorial Day. Monday. May 23.
On April 25. an official “ Planting Day.'* will be held at the park
for all of those who purchased plants to come out and plant
their own plant or watch someone plant it for you. The plant
sale will be open 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. In the event of rain, the sale
will be held In the garage of Andrea Dennison located at 211
North Lake Triplet Drive. For Information, call Andrea
Dennison. 699-9721, Phyllis Sheppard. 695-7040, or the City
Parks and Recreation Department, 831-3551 ext. 260,263.

Flr*t Q uilt Show Set
The Nimble Fingers Quilting Guild of West Volusia will have
Its First Annual Quilt Show on Friday and Saturday, April
10-11 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the DeBary Community Center.
38 S. Shell Road. DeBary. The public Is Invited.
There will be a variety of door prizes and demonstrations
with many items on sale In the boutique. The highlight of the
afternoon will be the drawing for a "Maple L e a f quilt, which
the guild has created especially for this show.

Parade To Honor Veteran*
The Older American's Month Committee of Central Florida.
In conjunction with the Vietnam Veterans of Central Florida . Is
searching for older veterans entered Into military service at the
earliest date.
They wtll be honored at a parade and review Friday. May 1.
at the Naval Training Center In Orlando.
If you are a senior American veteran or know of one who may
qualify, please send your name, address, and telephone
number to Frank Wax, Vietnam Veterans of Central Florida.
• P.O. Box 19. Orlando 32802 or call Wax ut (305) 695-8619.
Applications must be received by April 1.

Lori** To Receive Degree
Kenneth Robert Lorisz, Casselberry, will graduate from
Seminole Community College April 28 with an Associate of
Arts degree. He also will graduate summa cum laude. the
highest grade point received Tor a student.
Lorisz Is a graduate of Lyman High School. Longwood, class
of 1982. He Is attending University of Central Florida majoring
In business finance. He Is the son of Eleanor and Robert Lorisz.
Casselberry, and grandson of Mabel Bartllng, Howell Place.
Sanford.

Library Conduct* Reader Poll
What Is the best book you ever read? This question and
others are asked as part of a “ Reader Poll" conducted by the
Seminole County Public Library System to celebrate National
Library Week. April 5-11.
t: President Reagan has proclaimed 1987 as the “ Year of the
Reader" and all readers In the community are invited to pick
tip a ballot at the Casselberry branch. Sanford branch or the
Bookmobile and vote on a number of categories, such as the
Scariest book you ever read, your favorite author and your
’ f a v o r i t e place to read.
Results wtll be compiled and announced at the Casselberry
ranch. For more Information, call 339-4000.

I

Donahue Speak* Tuesday
: Phil Donahue will speak on the topic of Soviet Jewry
Tuesday, March 31, at the Peabody Hotel, Orlando, at 5:30
p.m. on behalf of the Women's Division of the Combined
Jewish Appeal. .
i Donahue recently visited the Soviet Union where he taped
jfive shows, one of which was with Soviet dissidents. Donahue
also visited privately with many refuseniks. He will share his
Insights at the March 31 program.
■ **.

. .

» #

•

t **

Baton Le**on* Offered
Under the direction of Kathy Kersten, former Florida State
Baton Twirling Champion, monthly Baton Twirling Classes are
OfTered to area youth, 6 years on up. at Secret Lake Park West.
200 Ivey Road.
Classes will be held on Mondays, at 4 p.m. Class fees are paid
monthly at $12 for residents and $15 for non-residents.
Participants may register at the first class session on Monday.
April 6 . For Information call 831-3551 ext. 260.

GOP

'
|
♦ i■

Woman

HoarCPA

The Sanford Women's Republican Club met at The Bank
Restaurant for the March luncheon meeting, President Jerry
Keeth welcomed members and guests. New members Robert
and Orace Stanek, Oviedo, were Introduced and given a
welcome.
Following the opening ritual, a short business meeting was
conducted by the president A get-acquainted period followed
before the Introduction of guest speaker Charles Lansing C.P.A.
A native of Sanford. Lansing Is close to the city of his birth,
having attended Sanford schools and Stetson University. His
talk on “Tax Reform" was timely and informative. He gave a
capsule history of the changes In tax law over the past eight
years.
Following his- talk Mr. Lansing answered questions and
reminisced srlth those present about Sanford history.

The Central Florida Society for Historical Preservation will
Save the Bradlee-Mclntyre House, 133 W. Warren S t.
Longwood. open for tours from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. the second
grid-fourth W edn esday................................
of each month. A $1 donation Is the
gdmlaeionj
!) The 101-year-old Bradlee-Mclntyre 14-room vacation "cotfoge" shows the style In srhlch some of our winter visitors lived
|t (be turn of the century. The society is continuing to

f

\

MS ISOMrs TourSat
3 A two-day biking adventure, the MS 150 Bike Tour. wUl be
I by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society Central Florida
r on May 2 A 3. Cyclists will pedal a scenic route from
Garden to Lake Wales. There will be an overnight stay
Lake Wales with the tour returning to Winter Garden the
“

-a

** *

... First Lady's Busy, But Determined
rate role from being wife of the
mayor. It's a fulltime Job. I'm
beginning to find that out. I'm

Both Mrs. Martinez and her
husband think rock star Bruce
He was very, very helpful. I
Springsteen Is the greatest/They
couldn't have done It without his
dream of seeing him perm1™*
help or his parents and my really busy Just about all day "W e have all his tapes. That s
parents. You might say we were long here. I said I think I should • what I bought my husband for
kind of like the forerunners (of be back In the classroom , Christmas, his complete works.
equal rights). I mean you didn't because there, at least, by
even hear of the ERA back in four-thirty I'm through." But ns
Other personal favorites In­
1960," she said.
the g o v e r n o r ' s wife, Mrs. clude their basset hound.
Martinez said her day might Mascot, that has the run of both
A fter her graduation Mrs. extend well Into the late evening. the public and private areas^oj
Martinez got the first Job she "I do miss my friends at school, the mansion. Mrs. Martinez said
applied for as a media specialist the teachers and my students." Mascot might have won some
at King High School In Tampa. she said.
votes If they had taken him on
She served there for 20 years
Although she made her first the campaign trail. Frequently
and through her teaching expe­
she and the governor do Join
rience learned how to stay “ a visit to T allah assee as an Mascot for evening walks near
Jump ahead of what kids arc 8-ycar-old on a family outing to their new home. Mascot, she
doing. My children hated that, accompany her older sister when said, is getting a bit pudgy,
but we're still friends. I always she enrolled In what was then because he can't resist the choc*
told my children the only time the Florida State College for date chip cookies that are a
they will understand what I did Women, now FSU. Mrs. Martinez' specialty of the mansion cook.
and when I did It Is when they Is the new kid on the block when
For a bit of added exercise.
It comes to being a political wife
have children of their own."
Mrs. Martinez said she recently
Mrs. Martinez, whose mother on a state level.
surprised her husband with a
The wives of state lawmakers, tennis racquet and bought
reared five children and whose
father ran a neighborhood especially Patti Brantley, wife of another for herself, even though
grocery, "w h e re you could Lt. Gov. Bobby Brantley, who It's been years since they played.
charge your groceries," said.
" I figure If we get out there and
“ My mother and father were
lust hit the ball around for hall
Brucm Sprlngstoon ts a
v e r y I n s t r u m e n t a l In
an hour that's better than Just
establishing my values, which Martinos family favortto: sitting here." she said. She s
I'm pa s s in g a lo n g to my
thinking of equipping a room of
'Wo havo all hit tapos.
children."
the mansion as a gym. so her
That’s what I bought my husband can work out on the
Those values she said center
on hard work and getting a good husband for Christmas,'
days he doesn't make It out for
education. “ Bob and I are from
his morning Jog.
-M ary Jana Martinas
families of people who worked
In their quiet time, they enjoy
hard and placed a lot of em­
reading
periodicals and Mrs.
phasis on success being syn­
Martinez
said Cable Network
during
the
past
eight
years
has
onymous with education. So
that's the way we've always spent much time In Tallahassee News helps her keep up with
during her husband's tenure as current events. If she can re­
operated."
,a
representative from Longwood, member to. she also likes to
As a youngster Mrs. Martinez
took her turn along with her two have helped make Mrs. Martinez catch the Bill Cosby Show.
"W e also love to go saltwater
sisters and two brothers working feel welcome, she said.
In the family grocery store.
"I think I'm pretty astute In fishing. We haven't done that In
“ Whatever It Is you do. you try getting along. I have found that a long time. I’m trying to talk
lo do It the best you can. That's the people of Tallahassee are him Into It. I enjoy that. We used
how we’ve gotten where we extremely warm and friendly to do a lot of that in our younger
are." And Mrs. Martinez Is and have done everything to days when we had time." she
thrilled to be where she Is. make my husband and myself as said.
although she says she didn't well as my family feel at home."
Her husband. Mrs. Martinez
realize the demands of the "vol­ she said.
said, was more aware of the
unteer" services she engages in
scope and stress of his duties
as first lady would be as great as
Mrs. Martinez said It comes before winning the post of gov­
they are.
natural for her to be gracious to ernor than she was o f the
"It's not that it's been any­ those she meets In the public demands of her new position.
thing 1can't handle. It's Just that section of the mansion — which
"H e’s been the type who —
I didn't realize the great de­ Is open for public tours three and I always tease him about It. I
mands placed on my time. days a week — and to those she think that's why he has very
Absolutely It's worth itl I would meets throughout the state. "I little gray hair — has always
never consider doing anything don’t have trouble dealing with been able to come home and
else now that I’ve started* doing people and being nice. It's Just forget about the Job. I think
It." she said.
part of my personality. If I were that's a terrific asset.
Her husband three times each not that way then It would really
" I ’m not political In the sense
week starts his day with a 5 be different. I've always liked of being Issue oriented, because
.m.. two-mile Joa. It's a tradi­ being around people. It's not an he Is the office-holder. I'm not.
tion he has carried over from his effort for me to do something for I'm more of a support system to
days as m a y o r , but M rs. someone or to be nice. That's him. We've always been very
Martinez, who has a full work­ Just the way I've been brought supportive of each other.
day most days at the mansion or up to be and to me It's Just an
"M y schedule Is going to
at public functions. Is no longer Innate thing..! have been blessed alw ays revolve around my
able to Join him for the morning with good health so far and I've husband's, because I believe I
runs. "I must admit I get up always been a person that has a need to be where he needs me
later now." she said.
lot ofenergy."
first and we'll take It from there.
Instead, the governor Is ac­
Bui I do plan to do some things
companied by a security agent
When she and the governor on my own.who Jogs along with him. An arc at home together after his
"But my first commitment Is
agent is with the governor dur­ workday ends, usually around 6 to him and my family. Being
ing all but his private time at or 7 p.m., they generally dine on where he needs me. that's the
home. Mrs. Martinez said.
chicken or seafood prepared by way we've always operated. I
The entrance gates and public the household staff. "W e have think whatever works for the
rooms on the right side of the red meat maybe once a week. Individual Is the thing that
mansion are monitored via video Sometimes It's good to have a person needs to do. I'm very
cameras by security agents good ol* hamburger and french happy. I wouldn't change one
around the clock. Most times fries." said Mrs. Martinez, who thing In my whole life. Every­
when Mrs. Martinez leaves home has only cooked a couple of thing we've done together has
she is accompanied by a guard, meals since moving Into the worked for us. I'm certainly not
and Is never alone If she travels mansion.
going to change now."
out of state.
But there is one area Mrs.
She says she could slip away
All household services are Martinez said she would discuss
for a private outing, but would performed by long-time state with her husband: education.
tell the agents where she would employees, "who go out or their "I've been on the firing line you
be and might take along a way to spoil us." she said. In might say. I know what teachers
beeper In the even t o f an Tampa she had a housekeeper go through everyday. We've
e m e r g e n c y . T h e s e c u r i t y who worked for her once a week. been married 32 years. Hope­
measures, "haven't bothered me But as first lady of Tampa she fully I would be able to talk to
at all," she said. "People of didn't have the official state him about some things and
course know who you are imme­ duties she has as Florida's first sound Intelligent and knowl­
diately no matter where you go. lady. Mrs. Martinez goes out to
edgeable about them and that he
But that recognition happened have her hair styled maybe once
would at least listen. So I feel
with Bob as mayor of Tampa. a week, but typically does it
good about that." As for other
You Just accept that as part of herself. "I like to have my nails issues, she said, she would leave
the political process.
manicured maybe once every them In his hands.
"You know that when you're two weeks. I've always done
Mrs. Martinez does plan to
elected to office and that office Is that. That was my treat. I think become Involved In at least two
one of such prominence as being that's Important, because that's programs that are close to her
one of 50 in the nation, people the (Inal thing to being wellheart. "I've consented to being
are going to come up and talk to groomed."
the
honorary chairperson for the
you and everything you do Is
healthy mothers/healthy babies
newsworthy. But It doesn't
As first lady. Mrs. Martinez group that will have their
bother me. because we have said her clothing needs are
coming up in
security here 24 hours a day. great. "You need a lot. It's not April.
The private part of our home Is easy. You'll see me wearing the
Her interest stems from her
on the other side of the mansion same thing more than once,
and we have all the privacy that because it's very expensive. You daughter's problem pregnancy.
one could possibly want."
have to have nice clothes, but Sharon, during the last five
months of her pregnancy, bat­
Shortly alter the governor U's not a sin to wear something tled premature tabor before demore
than
once."
finishes his morning Jog, Mrs.
llvertng by Caesarian section
Martinet Joins him for morning
In Tampa. Martinez, even as healthy Lydia Marie and Emily
coffee and they read the news­ mayor, "used to love to work in Ida in July. Sharon wore a fetid
paper before he goes to his office. the yard. I'm afraid they'd think monitor for five months pnd Mrs.
That routine hasn't changed." we'd mess it up here." she said Martinez delayed joining . her
By ab o u t 8 :3 0 a .m . M rs. o f the ca refu lly cu ltiva ted husband on the c a ip S g S trad
Martinet has pnet with her secre­ mansion gardens of tulips and
tary and determined her sched­ pansies. "In Tampa we did ™
u ? i £ r “ ““ *
ule of the day.
everything. Bob was very metic­
Mrs.
•fe? wants to
iti The day Is likely to Be filled ulous. He’ d pull this little stunt b e c o m e i n v o l v e d in the
with appointments with "d if­ on me. He'd get out and work statewide campaign of the Amer­
ferent Interest groups, different and say 'Can you come out and ican Heart Association. "My
people who want to come talk to help. We'll be through in a mother at the age of 62 had her
me about their pet projects. I’m couple o f hours.' About four or first major heart attack. About
asked constantly to make ap­ five hours later we'd still be out 12 years later she died. When I
pearances for different causes. there working. That's good ther­ stop to think that I am 52, .t h e
U's a totally different and sepa­ apy. working in the yard.
governor's the same age — it

Oov. Bab Martinez
...wife had no doubt he’d wia
really makes me stop and think.
It's funny, because I was about
20 years old when my mother
had that first serious problem. I
thought at that time, 'my good­
ness. how old she really is!' Now
I realize she wasn't that old at
all!
"Those are the types of things
you feel close to and feel you
maybe can make a little Impact
on. Then again I'm very inter­
ested In youth services, because
I've been a teacher and I see a
big need in doing a lot of thing*
for young people. "
Mrs. Martinez’s husband en­
tered politics when then Gov.
Reubln Askew appointed him to
the South Florida Water Management Board. He was later
encouraged by friends and
patrons at his restaurant, where
he m et many people who
thought he should run for
mayor. He lost his first bid for
that office In 1975 In a field of
five. On a second try he won 57
percent of the vote and was
elected mayor In a field of seven
In 1979.
Mrs. Martinez never dreamed
she would someday be Florida's
first lady. " I really never did. It's
a real thrill. Things Just kind of
fell Into place. It's kind of turd to
believe. 1 think when you're out
campaigning you're so busy
doing lt that you don't really
think about what the ultimate
goal really Is.
"Then when it happens. It's a
great feeling, but It's still Idnd of
hard to believe. But it’s sinking
In more and more with eachday.
"I don't think Bob has ever
planned anything. Things Just
fall Into placp." But, Mrs.
Martinez emphasized, at this
point there arc no plans for a bid
for the White House.
Among the governor's major
concerns, she said, are the
revamping of the Department of
Transportation and Department
o f Health and Rehabilitative
Services. "Those are the things
In our travels in the state most of
the people had great reserva­
tions about. The need to see
some changes where the actual
human services went down to
the client. The red tape that one
has to go through. I think we're
going to be seeing a lot of great
things happen In HRS," she
said.
As for the Governor's Mansion.
Mrs. Martinez has made few
changes In their family quarters:
some new paint and wallpaper.
She is fascinated by her new
home, which In the public sec­
tion has been refurbished and
d ecorated by the Mansion
F o u n d a t i o n . In the state
bedroom (used for guests of state
In the public section of the
mansion) she pointed out a small
painting by Renoir, a boating
scene, which Is on loan to the
mansion, as one clement holding
her fascination.
Mrs. Martinez said she was
excited when she got to select
from a state warehouse full of
a n t i q u e s s o m e special
furnishings for the private area
of her new home..Favorite pieces.
are a kingslze. four-poster bed
bought in the Askew era and a
beautiful antique armolre that
had never been used. "It'® *
thrill to be able to use some of
the old furniture. I like It very
much." she said.
And for a real touch ol home
the governor brought along from
Tam pa his own desk. Also
nestled in both the public and
private areas of the mansion are
many family photos including
otfe of Martinez's 99-year-old
grandmother holding his twin
granddaughters.
Mrs. Martinez's priorities are
family and home, but there'® ®
&lt;*rtain sadness behind her Joy.
•he points out, because she had
J® tcave many of her loved ones
behind in her Tampa hometown.

t

100 Bike Tour la one of the National Multiple
society's major fundraising events acmes the country
to become one of the malar events of the Central
tapter. Money raised by pledges to the cyclists will go
i MS research and to pay for services needed by MS patients in
ie Central Florida area. Meals Will be provided along with
itertalnmsnfaad prises.
Those raising pledges In excess of $300 will have a chance at
Grand Prise — a trip for two to the Bahamas and outer
nds. Cyclists and volunteers wishing mote Information and
ibrochure should contact the MS Society at (306) 096-3873.

Calls
Music, Voice
Auditions

The Fine 0 Performing Arts Department
of Seminole Community College announces
music scholarship and placement auditions
for the 1987-88 academic year. Auditions
will be held Tuesday. April. 14. beginning at
2 p.m. In G-105 (choral room) In the Fine
Arts building.
Solo Instrument auditions must bring

P rep aid solo. Voice
Jrr
mu» l bring accompanist and two
E S S l S " P ° * ' Fbwfots will bring two
prepared solo numbers.
&amp; P e r f o r m i n g P lcase call the Fine

2 .S o T !S iAn* D' p*nm' n' « 323 M50

�...Patti Brantley Enjoys N ew Role
Continued from p ifa 1C
"I think as with any wife wc all
tend to put our two cents worth
in occasionally. Not that any­
body listens. He’s never really
done anything that I didn’t agree
with. I might ask him ’Why?’
Then when he explains it. he’s
such a good politician he con­
vinces me it's the right thing to
do." she said.
One of Mrs. Brantley’s primary
functions is to coordinate the
Governor’s Mansion docents,
volunteers — many of them
spouses or lawmakers, who on
three days a week give tours of
(he mansion to the public. She
also accepts some speaking
engagements and tries to ac­
company her husband at many
official functions he attends.
It’s a role that comes easy for
Mrs. Brantley, because during
her husband's eight years as a
representative she served as a
docent at the mansion. She
knows its history and* the story
behind each o f the state
treasures housed there. She also
knows and loves Tallahassee,
which is now the Brantleys’
home.
Her husband may well consid­
er her a treasure, with her
friendly air and a smile that she
says is "too big." "Bobby teases
and says someday l*m going to
turn Inside out." from such a big
smile. Mrs. Brantley seems to be
the consummate political wife.
It's a role that Bhe never
anticipated, but one she relishes.
"When I married Bobby many,
many years ago. who would
have ever dreamt we would end
up here. Oh, heavens no. 1 knew
lire with him would be exciting.
That much I can say. But 1never
dreamt it would be through
politics.
" I never envisioned being
where I am."
Docs she ever expect to be
Florida’s first lady? " W h o
knows? It could be in the cards,"
she said.
Their entry into politics came
a f t e r t h e ir 1973 m o v e to
Longwood from Jacksonville.
They were looking for friends
and Joined the Markham Woods
Homeowner's Association- and
got caught up in a zoning battle.
"It kind of opened our eyes to
the political process and wc got
involved in the Republican Party
and went on to ... here wc arc.
We never planned to be here. It
Just kind of happened." she said,
w it h , firyLJitUy winning Ha f l n t ,
try at the state IggH UnJre^^"Thls is definitely life in the
fast lane." Mrs. Brantley said or
their new lifestyle. "You're Just
going constantly. In Bobby's
case It's got a lot of good and a
lot of bad in that it's a lot of
stress. He's under tremendous
pressu re," she said o f her
38-year-old husband.
"He said everyday Is a major
crisis at the governor’s office. I
mean we’re talking life and
death. One o f the first things he
encountered, for example, was
that in Miami the doctors walked
out and wouldn't let people who
were having heart attacks into
the emergency room. And Bobby
had lost both o f his parents in
the last two years from heart
attacks and had personally
rushed his own father to the
emergency room. So he really
Identified with the horror of
those poor people trying to get
someone they loved Into the
eme rge nc y room and they
wouldn't let them in.
"Then when the oil spill hap­
pened In Jacksonville, Gov.
Martinez was out of town. So if
he’s out of state they call the
lieutenant governor. So, Bobby
was awakened that morning
with a phone call at six o'clock.
They said. ‘We've had this major
crisis. We've had 300 million
gallons of oil spilled and It's
killed the fish and killing the
birds. What do you want us to
do?' Awakened from a dead
sleep, you say. 'What???'
"For him in his Job he’s very
happy and he's probably got as
much input as any lieutenant
governor has had in the history
of the state, because he and the
governor started out so early
together. He tries to sit in on the
budget sessions and strategy
meetings. And then he travels
and gives speeches and keeps in
contact with the people.
"Thirdly, his Job is. and it's
really going to be rough in the
next two months, h e's the
legislative liaison for the gover­
nor's office. For the governor
who chooses his programs and
priorities, it’s Bobby's Job to sell
them to the legislators.
"It's nice that he’s doing that
because he was in the house
eight years. He knows the
players and the procedures. But
they've got a big Job ahead of
them." Mrs. Brantley said.
The only tarnish on the shine
o f her new status as the wife of
the man who is a heartbeat away
from the governorship, and who
may choose to seek election to
that post after his boss. Gov. Bob
Martinez has had an opportunity
to serve two four-year terms, is
the fact that Mrs. Brantley has to

i Sr Sw«n LeSen

M rs . B ran tle y on a frequent "w o rk in g " visit to the
Governor's Mansion takes a break In the ballroom In the
public are a of the mansion.
pay if she wants accompany her
husband on business trips in the
state airplane.
"W e're trying to get it worked
out so that I can go with him at
times. And I have sometimes.
And 1 intend to go one way or
another, because this is a special
time in our lives and wc want to
share It together as much as
possible."
Mrs. Brantley said she is
required to pay to fly In the state
plane even if the Beat she took
would otherwise be unoccupied.
And the rate charged her Is
sometimes more than commer­
cial airfare to the same destine-

governor and first lady who live
In the state-provided and main­
tained mansion.
"It's kind o f nice though,
because it gives us the best of
both worlds." she said. "W e stil
have a lot o f fun things to do and
come to the mansion quite often.
Yet we can still go home and put
on blue jeans. We happen to live
on a small lake and Bobby can
walk out and go fishing in the
backyard with our son."
So far they haven’t caught any
flBh and blame it on the season.
Mrs. Brantley said.
They brought with them to
their new home two dogs and
two horses. Mrs. Brantley, who

Brantley's clothing needs are
extensive. She and Brantley
maintain their own new home in
Tallahassee in a neighborhood
she said is similar to Sweetwater
Oaks in Longwood.
To their new neighbors, who
welcomed them with homemade
cookies and bread, they’re Just
Patti and Bobby next door.
T h eir new home is on a
six-acre tract on the shore of a
15-acrc lake. It's north o f In­
terstate 10. which cuts across
the upper edge ofTallahassee.
They have leased to someone
else their Longwood home and
sold a Tallahassee townhousc.
T h e B r a n t l e y s us ed the
townhousc as a Tallahassee base
when he was In the House of
Representatives. Mrs. Brantley
w as with her husband in
Tallahassee about two thirds of
that time, but she said they
a l w a y s r et u r n ed hom e to
Longwood on the weekends.
T h e permanent move to
Tallahassee was the first move
ever for their 14-year-old son
Bobby Jr. Mrs. Brantley said it
was hard for him to leave behind
his friends and Lake Mary High
School classmates as well as his
grandmother, who had lived
next door to him all o f his life.
"The move has been hardest
on him. but he's been a real good
sport about it and Is blending in
very well. He was a kicker on the
football team and was really set
at Lake Mary. It's been hard for
him to have to make new
friends. But he's doing well. He's
on the golf team now. We try to
go back to Longwood once a
month." Mrs. Brantley said.
Their 19-year-old son Lenny Is
l i v i n g at h o m e , at M r s.
Brantley's request, until he
m oves on campus to start
studies at Florida State Universi­
ty in Tallahassee in the fall. He is
attending Tallahassee Commu­
nity College.
"1 asked him to live at home
for a few months so we could
establish this as home for all of
us as a family. He found a
fraternity to Join at FSU. bo he
has instant friends and more to
do than he knows what to do
with," she said.
Lenny last year attended the
private Brevard C ollege in
Brevard. N.C., before trans­
ferring to Seminole Community
College to be on hand to help in
his lather's campaign. Mrs.
Brantley said.
In coming to Tallahassee. Mrs.
Brantley said she and her
husband were, "basically on our
own. You live wherever you
choose, wherever you can afford
to choose." as opposed to the

Seminole County, said a big
thrill for her was her participa­
tion three weeks ago for the first
time ever In a foxhunt in Thomasvllle, Ga., which Is Just 10
miles from her home.
"My house has always been
decorated with the hunt theme
with pictures of people in red
coats." she said. "I feel like I'm
finally authentic. I finally did it.
It was exciting. I really think
that's going to be my thing while
Bobby is out fishing with little
Bobby, although I hope we never
catch the fox.
"It's got a lot of protocol to it. I
had to go out and buy the black
riding Jacket. It waB a treat."
Mrs. Brantley Is busy de­
corating her new home, She also
still participates In a carpool for
Bobby Jr. and has the same
household duties she has always
maintained. Her husband's sec­
retary helps her keep track of
her appointments, but other
than that she's on her own.
No security guards are pro­
vided for her or the boys.
Brantley has a state-provided
security agent who travels with
him wnen he leaves town.
When Brantley comes home
from a 12-hour or longer work­
day that begins at 7:30 a.m.. six
days a week. Mrs. Brantley, who
was born in St. Louis, Mo.,
might sit him down in front of
the television and serve up fried
chicken and collard greens, a
reflection of her Alabama-born
husband's Southern roots.
A couple of times each month
t h e y m a y d i n e w i t h th e
Martinezcs, either alone or with
other people. Mrs. Brantley said
she and her husband have a true
friendship with the governor and
first lady. "W e’ve teen through
so much together." she Baid.
Mrs. Brantley is busy, "keep­
ing up with my obligations at the
Governor's Mansion and pro­
viding as normal a life as I can
for my children. I do hope to get
back involved with the drug
situation with our youths. That's
really been my hot spot for many
years In Seminole County. I was
chairman of the Drug Awareness
Task Force."
Over the years she has had
"little careers" as a realtor and
as bookkeeper for the Seminole
Golf Course in Longwood, which
her late father. Fred Moore,
founded.
After her father suffered a
stroke Mrs. Brantley and her
husband moved from
Jacksonville to Longwood In
1973 to run that family busi­
n ess. S i n c e her m o v e to
Tallahassee early this year. Mrs.
Brantley said she still returns to

Longwood once a month to visit
her mother. Nan Moore, and to
do the books for the golf course.
She also uses that time to visit
Seminole County friends and to
shop to he lp fill out her
wardrobe so she will look the
part of the lieutenant governor's
wife as she meets her social
obligations and the official duties
she has accepted.
Her husband's background as
a d r u m m e r , M a r i n e , ca r
salesman, golf course manager
and consultant for a private firm
that b u ild s prisons, wi th
Brantley having resigned from
that Job to run for lieutenant
governor, having sold the first
private prison in the world to
Bay County Florida. Isn't typical
Tor a politician.
"No. he’s not a lawyer," Mrs.
Brantley said. But his more
diverse background, she said,
serves well for both Brantley and
the state of Florida, which he
may someday serve as governor.
Mrs. Brantley said she is confi­
dent that her husband and
Martinez will remain a team for
the next eight years. She doesn't
doubt that they will be elected to
i second term. And although,
she said, it’ s too early to
speculate, she won't rule out the
possibility that Brantley will
hen run for governor.
She said she never thinks
about the fact that her husband
would almost Immediately
become governor If Martinez
were to die. "I know It's a
possibility and by the Constltulon. That's something Bobby
ihould think of and of course he
docs stay on top of what's going
m. But that's not something you

think about."
Mrs. Brantley said she has no
role models. "Although I cer­
tainly do respect Nancy Reagan.
I think she has been a tremen
dous first lady and a very loving
and supportive wife and political
wife. 1 admire her very much.
"The one thing all of this has
made me realize In terms of the
president, he's Just a normal
person. When you stop to think
that peop le like P residen t
Reagan really are Just normal
people with all the same strains
and stresses. And then when
you look at the weight of the
whole world being on their
shoulders, whether there's going
to be a war, the economy and all
that. It's still one person who has
a wife and kids Just like anybody
else. It Just makes me in awe of
the whole situation.
" I know Gov. Martinez has got
the same thing. He's had a lot of
responsibility In running the city
of Tampa, because he was a
hands-on administrator."
Mrs. Brantley said her new
r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s are v e r y
lightweight in comparison to the
v o l u n t a r y d u t i e s o f Mrs.
Martinez as well as those of the
governor and her own husband.
She takes pleasure in her
involvement with the mansion
programs and proudly points out
special items within the home
where she may someday be at
home. Of great interest to both
she and Mrs. Martinez arc ster­
ling silver Items that were
salvaged from the d e c o m ­
missioned U.S.S. Florida. From
about seven decades ago Is a
massive silver punch bowl
which reflects in relief design all

Lt. Gov. Bobby Brantley
...Patti admires his political
savvy
the elements that say Florida:
oranges and orange blossoms,
the state seal, palm fronds. Chief
Osceola, "everything that has
anything to do with Florida,"
Mrs. Brantley said.
Mrs. Martinez, a former teach­
er, is especially proud to point
out that Florida school children
raised $ 10,000 to buy the silver
for the state when the battleship
was decommissioned.
Mrs. Brantley also appreciates
th e b e a u t y o f h e r n e w
hometown, with spring flowers
and dogwoods in bloom. She is
truly on top of the world and
couldn't be happier In her new
role, but said she dues miss her
old friends and Seminole County,
home.

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advance your career or Increase
your earnings. You’re on the
track tosomethlng big.
SAOITTAJtlUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
2 1 ) You may be Introduced to
someone today who Is a trifle
different from your usual circle
oi Intimates. It's to your advanV? cu,t1vate this new
association.
C A P W e O R N (Dec. 22^an.
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ARIES (March 21-April 19)
You’re not apt to feel fulfilled
today unless you are Involved In
some type of stimulating activity
that challenges your Imagination
and resou rcefu ln ess. Major
changes are ahead for Aries In
the coming year. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions today.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) If
you get Involved in a delicate
business transaction today,
d o rt’ t e x p o s e all o f y o u r
strengths at one time. Save your

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passed on to you today through
the chance remarks of someone
with whom you’ll be Involved
■oclally. Do more listening than
talking.
V » G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
might have some Interruptions
In your domestic routines today.
However, .you’re not apt to (lnd
them annoying. In Tact, they
should turn out to be fun.
U B R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Keep
an open mind today regarding a
way to handle a particular
a s s i g n m e n t . D o n ’ t Ig n o re
alternatives if they pop Into your
head.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Continue to scout the horizon for
unique offerings that could be of
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ffi O SISKEL t EBERT t THE
MOVIE8 Scheduled reviews "Blind
Date" (Ken Basinger, Bruce W4bs).
' Dolls" (horror Mm by director Stu­
art Gordon). "Marlene" (Marlene
Dietrich documentary)

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(1957) Jamas Mason. Joan Fon-

6.-00

6:30

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© O SPORTS SUNDAY Sch*duled Wocld Figure Skating Champi­
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0 (11) MOVIE "My Bodyguard"
(1979) Chn* Makepeace. Adam
Baldwin Alter moving to Chicago, a
teen-ager it tormented by a gang
leader until he devises a scheme to
gev* the bully a dose of his own
met,"cine
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Night" A 14-year-old gwl sparks opPovhon m her smal. town when she
dons a hockey uniform and |&lt;xns ■
boys' championship team g
0 (8) MID-DAY BARGAINS

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9:30

10:35

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Audrey Hepburn, Burl Lancaster. A
pronee. family struggles against the
hostile Kiowa Indians, who eiatm
that the pioneers' adopted daugh­
ter is a member ot their tribe

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10:05
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lenders

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10:30

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search ol an escaped prisoner. (R)

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W IN A T B R ID G E
Light opening bids have pros
and cons. Pro: You might steal
the hand from the opponents or
help your partner choose the
right opening lead. Con: Your
partner may double the opponenta, counting on you for more
ffi* *l?fve •trenBth. or you may
tell the opponento where the
nigh carda are if they get to a
dose game contract.
East tried a light opening
because he did have two and a
half quick tricks (A. K-Q. K).
West Jumped right to five clubs
after the one-heart overcall, try-

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9:30

.

Slock* ' Guetl Loui* G Nevekier.
prewdenl ol ln*ight Capttnl Man-

If a particular friend la on your
mind today. It could be because
you are on his or her mind as
well. Try to get In touch.
■ W 8 CE 8 (Feb. 20-March 20)
An unexpected development
UUI, benefit you both
that W
could
financially- and careerwlse might
suddenly present
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be ready to
w o n '‘ lln S " ’
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10:00

0 ® VIBRATIONS
0 (11) MOVIE "Angel in My Pock­
et" (1969) Andy Gnllilh. Lea
Meriwether A newly ordained mmister seeks to unite his quarrelling
parishioners
0 (10) JOY OF PAINTING

0 ffi AMEN Deacon Frye's called
on to help deliver Ihe chad ol an un­
wed. pregnant teen-ager In stereo

X SALTWATER ANGLER

Final

9:35

© ANDY GRIFFITH

NTURV
BILL
MOYERSC6tThe
anpacl Wol,TH
the auto­
mobile on American Me. Q
IS (!) GLOW: GORGEOUS LADIES
OF WRESTLING

4:35

W CAA Tournament
Game Two (live)

S lL fM G f,
MAN'

VLJC

4:30

WIDE WORLO OF 8PORT8
Scheduled Perneil Whitaker ( 11 -0 .
IKOtlvs Roger Maywealher (26-4.
7 KOs) m a lightweight bout
cheduled lor 12 rounds, live from
lorlolk. V a . a replay ol the Marvin
lagter vs Thomas Hearns world
nddlewetght title boul which was
•ped AprM 15. 1985 and has never
»ed on network television
D (10) MODERN MATURITY
cheduled travel planning end
roup vacation options (Part t of 2).
1S News and World Report Editor
n Chiel Mortimer Zuckerman
liscusses the press’s role in nation/ sacunty issues rj

9

_

© O OHARA A man uses Ns
unwitting daughter as a courier lor
aloftunemstolenfewets g ‘
0 (10) WALK THROUGH THE

8

• U Q t BUNNY

SiSSSffiS,

)DO

disturbing you Is drawing to a
close. The vacancy will be filled
by something that will bring you
pleasure Instead of pressure.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
There’ll be a sudden turnabout
pertaining to something you’re
anxious to promote. Key people
who rejected your offering will
not take a second look.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Just when you think Lady Luck
has nothing special for you,
something good could drop In
your lap. It will make your wallet
happy.

4:15

0 © NATIONAL QEOORAPHIC
Nineteen city-bred teen-agers conIront some oi nature's greatest
challenges at the Colorado Out­
ward Bound School, graduating
only attar ckmtxng the lorbiddmg
18.715-loot Santa Rosa Peak m the
Peruvian Andes
0 (10) FIRING LINE News analyst
Jell Greenlieid and attorneys Har­
riet Piipei and Mark Green put se­
ries host Wiinm F. Buckley Jr in
the hot seat as he eipresses his
opinions on a variety ol subjects
(D (S ) WILD KINGDOM

(■ © W O R L D TOMORROW
ffi O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
0 (11) THREt STOOGES
9 (10) FRENCH CHEF

4:00

9 ffi MOVIE "The Master Touch"
1974) Kirk Douglas. Florinda Bol­
en A famous safe-cracker atHnpts to rob the impregnable vault
Ian insurance company
1 (11) MOVIE "Llllla Fauss And
■g Haisy" (1970) Robert Redlord
lichee! J Pollard Two motorcyttts leave behind a string ol N o­
rn hearts as they roar through the
test on battered b&lt;k*t with dos•rate dreamt
»(M )W F R E COCKING NOW
I (!) AMERICA'S BIGGEST BAR-

5.-00

9:30

(n )

3:30

11

ia

It

[W N S r y p u GET OLPEff,

3.-00

I ® LAUREL AND HARDY
I O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
K A A Tournament Final Four
lama One (Live)
■ (10) TONY BROWN S JOURNAL
I discussion ol why there are no
leek head coaches in the National
wot ball League

17

0 © OOLOEN OIRLS Blanche
leers she s pregnant - but she's
•ctuaSy gomg through menopause
In stereo (R )g
ffi Q MOVIE China Rosa" (1983)
Gaorge C Scott. Ak MecGraw An
American businessman visiting Chi­
na tom* forces with Ns tamale inter­
prater to search lor clues concernmg the lata ol Ns son. who had
disappeared there 15 years earfcer

D (10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT

14

ta

9.-00

2:30

i
18

O ® 227 Miiy and Sandra cornP*|«ag»nsi on* anciher on thj
Wham ol Fortune" game show In
stereo (R)
0 (10) ARTHUR C. CLARKE'S
WORLD OF STRANGE POWERS
Topic poltergeists

2:00

■ © LA U R E L ANO HARDY
p O FGA GOLF Tournament
Sjyers Championship third round,
pm Ponte Vedre. Fie (Live)
■ (11) MOVIE "Boeing. Boeing"
[965) Tony Curtis. Jerry Lewis A
pidon playboy ihmk* he has dahed a foolproof plan lor tuggfmg
M visits ol his three stewardess
Irltnends until, uneipectedty. their
lanes sit land on the seme day
D (10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT

;(es.™Vigor-rn 20
,#®
b
Clolatorod
April 19) 21 Allows
exciting 23 Filer of a
expressed
atairoaaa
our mind 27 Coded on map
ellent day 30 Envelop
new en- 32 MuaJeal pip#
igea are 33
----e coming „
•on*1
tro-Granh 33 f®«tboll coach

AFTERNOON

I

0 (11) MOVIE "Love Child" ( 1982)
Amy Mid.gsn. Beau Budge* A
pregnant mmata m a woman'1 pris­
on wages a battle to keep her child,
who ww litnerd by a married
guard
CD (10) ALL CREATURES GREAT
ANDSMALUI
O (I) AMERICA'S BIGGEST BAR.
GAINS

0 ffi REAL TO REEL
f f l O SUNOAY MORNING Sehedultd 1he danger* 0l b.g money in
coNege sport*
©
O
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANOO
§B (I I ) INHUM ANOIOB
0 (1 0 ) O W L/TV A 13-yaar-o.d e«parl on paleontology, the common
cold, the spadelool toad, building a
totem pole (R )g
O (I) SHOP-AT-HOME ANO 8AVE

,o p t y ? X " edandwantedh,mt£

••t
ssasjrsrjra sss.'sA.-sshai
IK-fear S r t3 ? * —

h u s b a n d w o rk s h a rd
fo r h is
m o n e y , a n d I t h i n k it is c i t h e r
s a d is t ic o r ’ ’p o w e r h u p p y ’ ’ t o
f o rc e a n e m p lo y e e to " a s k " f o r
-h is p a y c h e c k .
.
1
W h a t d o y o u th in k ?
A O H A B T IN S A N F R A N C IS C O
D E A R
A G H A S T :
Y o u r
h u s b a n d s h o u ld s u b m i l u w r i t ­
te n re q u e s t s t u lln g th a t h is
p a y c h e c k be " g iv e n "
to h i m
r o u t i n e l y w h e n II is d u e A n d If
h is f e llo w e m p lo y e e s a ls o re s e n t
h a v i n g (o u s k fo r (h e i r s , o n e

lo v e m y c a r . ” ” 1 lo v e ic e c r e a m . ”
” 1 lo v e a c e r t a i n b r a n d o f s o a p o r

t o o t h p a s t e .” Y o u g e t t h e Id e a .
T h e r e a r e n ’ t a n y t e a c h e r s lik e
M is s H r u d l c a r o u n d a n y m o r e .
.
M R8. R A LP H C R A M P TO N
L E M O N G R O V E , C A L IF .

Dear Mrs. Crampton: Unfortu­
nately. Miss Brudle isn’t around

n e e d l o a p o lo g iz e f o r s a y i n g
" d o c t o r s a n d d e n t is t s ,"
even
th o u g h y o u
p o in te d o u t th a t
d e n t is t s a r c a ls o d o c t o r s —
d o c to rs o f d e n tis try .
H o w e v e r , n o t to I m p l y t h a t
d o c to rs o f m e d ic in e o u t r a n k
d o c to rs o r d e n tis try —
when
s o m e o n e c r ie s o u t . " I s t h e r e u
d o c t o r In t h e h o u s e ? " y o u c a n b e

DEBRA WINGER

D ELTO N A
CIIME1V1A

“SONG OF

ON ELM STREET 3 _
D re a m W a rrio rs IBJ

^« 574-9000

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Sunday, March 29,1997

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Sunday, March 29,1H7-1D

St. Johns Has One Dam

W ater Historian Wants Rivers Left Alone
The best days of Tim Palmer’s life
find him deep In a mountain canyon,
maneuvering a raft through the
rapids of an American river.
But for Palmer, no day In the
Whitewater Is ever quite perfect. His
mind Is gnawed by the suspicion
that somebody Is scheming to dam
the river, flood the canyon and turn
his beloved rapids into a flat lake.
Often these fears are well founded.
As Palmer points out. the United
States today has about 50,000 dams
taming the flow of Its rivers. It has
only 269 stretches of wild river
where dams arc outlawed by federal,
state or local government.
The St. Johns River, which mean­
ders for about 300 miles from south
Brevard County to Jacksonville, has
one dam. a !3V4-foot weir at the
north end of Lake Washington near
M e lb o u r n e , a c c o r d i n g to Ed
Albnncsl. public Information officer
for the St. Johns River Management
District. Albancsl said the Saint
Johns Is not bothered by a dam
problem but does suffer water quali­
ty problems caused by old canals
that drain olT water and lower the
water level. Lake Washington
supplies drinking water for thr
Melbourne area.
Palmer Is a historian of American
rivers and a propagandist for pre­
serving the few left In their original
wild state. University presses print
his books, but his life Is not the
"publish or perish" grind of a
campus academic.
Raised In Pennsylvania, where he
spent most of his 38 years, he now
lives on the road, photographing
rivers and talking to people who live
by them. His address In Sacramento
Is merely that of a friend who holds
Palmer's letters for pickup.
"H om e Is the mountains and
rivers of North America," he says. "I
feel at home anywhere."
Somewhere between those river
trips he does an awful lot of work. In
1980. Palmer quit a an 8-year Job
with the planning agency In
Pennsylvania's Lycoming County
and became a full-time writer on
environmental Issues. He has
published four books and many
magazine articles.
The latest book. Issued In De­
cember. is "Endangered Rivets and

The north-flowing St. Johns R iver m eanders to Lake Jesup at the
bottom of the aerial photograph and into Lake Monroe. The riv e r has
one dam which In the M elbourne area w here 47 tributaries form the
riv e r. Sanford Is In the m iddle left of the photograph.
the Conservation Movement." It Is a
history of water development In the
United States and the outcry In the
20th Century for river protection.
(University o f California Press.
$24.95).
Palmer's Interest In water stems
from a childhood spent near the Ohio
River, with Its 14 staircase dams.
and also from his first Job. After
majoring at Penn State In landscape
architecture, he worked for an
environmental group trying to protect a northern Pennsylvania stream
called Pine Creek.
"The Ohio was my example of
what a river never should become."
he says, ‘it's totally dammed, and at
that time was badly polluted. I grew

up seeing r.u example of a river that
was severely abused, and then I
matured with the Pine Creek Job.
"I saw that the problems of Pine
Creek were duplicated all over the
country. Usually the best rivers were
the ones that were threatened. The
canyons and wild areas were usually
the places that made the best dam
sites.”
Palmer says his county government work was writing reports on
rivers and other Issues. " I could do
all that work I wanted, but not many
people were going to read It. So I
became interested in a more popular
form of writing."
Palmer’s third book, published In
1982. was “ Stanislaus
The

Struggle for a River." It told the
story of young — and at first
politically naive — nature lovers and
their fight In the 1960s and 1970s
against building of a dam In the
S ier ra m o u n t a i n s o f Central
California.
The story of the struggle over New
Melones Dam on the Stanislaus won
P a l m e r an a u d i e n c e a m o n g
environmentalists all over the
country. The young people who lost
the battle for the Stanislaus’ canyons
and rapids founded Friends of the
River, now a major public Interest
lobby on water Issues.
Palmer sees the Stanislaus
struggle as a turning point In the
river protection movement.
"It was the first time people had
tried to save a river purely for Its
esthetic and recreational values," he
says.
Through most of the United
States’ history, there was little criti­
cism of the concepts of "taming the
rivers’ and "making the deserts
bloom
The first big anti-dam struggle was
the losing battle of naturalist John
Muir to stop the city of San Fran­
cisco from assuring Its wotcr supply
by damming Hetch Hetcliy Canyon
In Yoscmlte National Park In the
early 1900s. Muir founded the Sierra
Club, still a lorcc In environmental
lobbying.
Palmer says the Issue In the early
anti-dam campaigns was protection
of national parks. Later the ques­
tions expanded to defending farms,
homes, fish and wildlife.
The concept of saving rivers for
their Intrinsic beauty didn’t become
official until 1968 when President
Lyndon Johnson signed the first
Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. granting
federal protection to eight streams.
Palmer Is scrupulous about histor­
ical facts. He shuns the good guys
versus bad guys approach. Some
political saints of the environmental
movement emerge from his books
with slightly tHtcd halos.
"Most American presidents have
mixed records on the environment."
he says.
In his Stallslaus River book, some
of the most sympathetic writing Is
See RIVER on 6 D

W hat’s Nmw In Setanea

Rockets Tests Critical To Shuttle Success
UPI teitnee W riter
H U N T S V I L L E . Ala. (UPI) Hanging beside the door to the office
of the new director of the Marshall
Space Flight Center Is a framed
picture of the seven men and women
killed when Challenger blew up last
year. The caption says: "Do It Right
— For Them — And Those That
Follow."
J. R. Thompson, an effusive rocket
engineer called In to run the
beleaguered space center In the
wake of the disaster. Is directing the
all-out NASA effort to fix the shuttle
booster rockets that triggered the
explosion.
He clearly believes In the senti­
ment represented by the picture
caption and he Just as clearly has
Instilled those thoughts in his
workers, who face a particularly
critical period In the next six months
in their drive to get the shuttle
program back on track.
The booster test program will
make or break NASA'a plans to
launch Discovery early next year on
the first post-Challenger shuttle
flight and few engineers believe the
official target date of Feb. 18, 1988,
is realistic. But they hope to come

close.
"T o get all the testing done within
the schedule Is going to be tough."
said James Odom, director of science
and engineering at the Marshall
Space Flight Center, where the
booster project Is managed. "It can
be done, but there's no margin for a
test failure."
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration now expects
to spend some $800 million to
complete fixing known problems
with the overall shuttle system and
another $600 million to implement
the recommendations of the Rogers
Commission that Investigated the
accident.
NASA originally expected to spend
$980 million for both aspects of the
recovery effort through fiscal 1988.
Thus, the two cost figures cannot be
directly compared, but the test
program has evolved Into a much
more detailed — and costly —
undertaking than anticipated.
Of the total that will be spent,
current budget estimates show some
$301 million will be devoted to the
solid fuel boosters responsible for
last year's Challenger disaster. The
flight readiness of the giant rockets
is clearly the major obstacle to be

crossed on the long road to recovery.
Challenger was destroyed and Its
seven-member crew killed when a
fuel segment Joint in the ship's
right-side booster ruptured, spewing
a deadly Jet of flame that breached
the shuttle's extemalfuel tank.
The redesign effort is aimed at
minimizing any chance for another
such failure and engineers at
Marshall, who bore the brunt of the
blame for the catastrophe, are op­
timistic the design they have come
up with will work as advertised.
"I think It's a damn good pro­
gram." said Thompson, whose dy­
namic personality has galvanized
the Marshall engineers. " I f I'm
wrong, we'll Just have to stop and
reassess that but frankly, I think
we've got an excellent shot at the
design being right."
Thompson frequently prowls the
halls at Marshall, dropping in on
engineers to discuss their work and
projecting an openness and will­
ingness to listen that serves as a
clear morale builder. And high
morale Is needed at this critical
Juncture.
The redesign of the fuel segment
Joint that doomed Challenger Is the
most visible aspect of the recovery

O
M
m
P
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project. But other major challenges

(Non)C*nt$

Soothsayer Predicts
Faltering Economy
President Reagan has summoned Madame
LaFargc to Washington.
The Denver fortune teller, part-time bookie, and
consultant to the Congressional Budget Office
was delighted to go. It Is illegal to tell fortunes for
a price In Denver, a small nuisance that keeps the
great seer moving around a lot.
In Washihgton. on the other hand, telling
fortunes fora price Isa revered profession.
White House staffers set her up In a small
storage closet In the basement. It was somewhat
noisy, what with the lieutenant colonel In the
office next door practicing the fifth amendment
and the clatter of a shredding machine down the
Hall, but Madame LaFargc Is used to working In
difficult conditions.
The President tapped three times at the door
and whispered "sees all. knows nothing." the
phrase necessary to gain access to the remark­
able powers of the amazing oracle.
"Enter." she whispered hoarsely. She was
already off In some other plane of existence.
" T h a n k you for s e e in g me. Y ou r
Soothsayershlp. As you know, we've been having
a difficult time these last few months, what with
the Iranamok scandal and all. and I thought It
might be good to find out what's ahead,
rcst-of-the-term-wlse."
"I know."
President Reagan waited nervously as Madame
LaFargc gazed deeply Into the somewhat chipped
and greasy crystal ball. Suddenly she started
muttering dark curs&lt; si
“ What Is It. your Augurlmes&amp;i*"
"Another chip In this blasted ball." she sighed.
"It's all this moving. Now. you wanted a fortune,
right? Of course right.
"Ah! I see shambles. I see destruction. I see a
loss of credibility. All seems lost! But wait!"
"Yes? Yes?"
"I need another $5 to go on."
“ Gosh. I don't carry much cash. But don't
worry. I'll divert some funds to you as soon as
we’re done."
•
"O K." she said, somewhat suspiciously. "A n y­
way. as I was saying. I see devastation. But out of
the devastation I see a powerful figure rising,
taking charge again, making key personnel
changes, charting a new course..."
o f that, in mustsayTT.
"It’s your wife."
"Oh."
"I see the flames of Inflation starting to heal
up."
"Inflation? Gee. I thought we’d pretty well, on
that. well, gotten rid o f It."
"Madame LaFarge secs It coming back In your
last years."
"Dam! It's that Board of Governors at the
Federal Reserve."
"It's your fault. You appointed all of them. Now
after the two years of explosive money growth
they've created, I see prices starting to rise very
fast. I see Interest rates rising as well."
"Gosh! How about the trade deficit? Any good
news on that?"
"I see dollars leaving. Billions and billions of
dollars. I see the trade deficit staying high as the
dollar stays high against most currencies. I see
protectionist legislation crippling the economy. I
see recession."

problems with bolt failures on the
giant fittings were caused by forces
at Ignition and during flight and not
impact In the ocean for retrieval as
previously believed.
—Redesign of the Joint between
the nozzle and the lower end of the
booster. Many engineers now are
more concerned about the operation
of this Joint than they are about the
case Joint that destroyed Challenger.
—Modifications to the big nozzle at
the base of the rockets. In some past
flights, the nozzle liner has had
trouble standing up to the tremcnS eeS H U T T L E on 6 D

mnr/
m m eer/

"Golly! How about things on the long-term side
of things? What do you see lastlng-legacy-wlse?"
"I see $120 billion."
"Huh?"
"$120 billion. That's the Interest on the debt
you'll have run up. Taxpayers will have to come
up with $120 billion to pay that Interest. Every
year."
"For how long. Your Dlvlnershlp?"
"Forever."
The President stuck his head out the door and
shouted to a gorgeous blonde down the Hall to
shut ofT the shredder. Madame LaFarge looked
puzzled.
"I think I'm going to want to keep this
Iranamok thing going a little longer." he
explained. "W e've got to divert attention from the
rest of It."

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NEW YORK (UPI) - A
non-profit group has sued
a concert violinist for a
• 100.000 violin it claims
he has not returned since

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The Cremona Fund Inc.
The group claims the
(Ued suit Monday in state
ruby-reddish violin Is
S u p r e m e C o u r t in
worth at least $100,000.
u.Bhiiiin claimlag that 1calling it a "unique chatin 1961 it loaned Francis
tel. In that it is of ancient
Fortier, a concert violinist
a n d u n u a u a l
In h i s 4 0 a , a 1 730
manufacture."
Dominlcus Montagnana
Cremona wants either
w“ “ 2?.
the violin or at least
while Fortier * M « j t u $100,000. as weU as un, V vJe
specified punitive damSchool in Manhattan, on
the condition that he
would return the inatruEfforts to reach Fortier
mentunonrequest.
w ere not successful.

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�Sanford Herald

SARAH OVERSTREET

(U SP S 4II-2SQ)

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Amnesty Rules
Too Restrictive
A year of amnesty for Illegal aliens begins
May 5. The clear intent o f Congress was to
provide a generous amnesty for millions of
people who immigrated to America illegally
before Jan. 1, 1982. But laws are determined
by implementation. After months of con•fusion, rumors and delay, the Immigration
and Naturalization Service finally has pro' posed Its regulations.
To Judge the amnesty regulations, you have
to look at their impact on people: aliens
getting caught in the legal technicalities, as
they were once caught on barbed wire;
workers excluded because they don't have
records, after they spent years making sure
they didn’t leave a trace: families being tom
•apart, because one parent qualifies and the
other doesn't.
The regulations are, indeed, too restrictive,
-No single regulation is completely at fault.
But together the restrictions add up. The INS
must not violate the clear Intent of Congress
vto grant a broad amnesty to millions of
'people.
• Fees. The INS application fees are not too
.high In themselves. But the fees are only a
portion of what a family must pay in order to
^legalize. The cost of documents, medical
;cxams and help in preparing the application
.add up. Those who can pay should. For those
who can't money must not stand in the way
•of legalization.
• Continuous residence. The requirements
'for continuous residence arc too narrow. If a
f person had to leave the country to take care
of a dying relative, he should not be denied
^.amnesty.
, • Agencies. The law creates “ qualified
^designated agencies" to serve as a buffer
between applicants and the INS. But the role
I of the agencies is unclear. It is a processor of
•applications — or is it an advocate for an
individual? Agencies should be permitted to
1serve as advocates.
• F am ily unity. Th e law does not
( specifically state what will happen if one
' member of a family can qualify and another
.can't. Legalization must not break families
.apart. Spouses and children who don’t qualify
tmust be granted some means o f remaining in
''AmerlcalegaVly.. .. „ .......................
■* • Public Information. The INS has been a
dismal failure In disseminating the informa­
tion about amnesty. The lack o f clear
directives has led to rumors, fears and
.e x p lo ita tio n by ch arlatan s prom isin g
legalization for exorbitant fees. The INS
promises a high-priced information cam­
paign. It should be aimed at the people who
need amnesty, people who may not read
English-language newspapers, people who are
■afraid to come to the INS to ask questions.
‘ • Fraud. “ We’re going to be tough as hell
on fraud," says the INS. Fraud endangers the
‘ rights of all people. But aliens' attitude about
documents must be taken into account. Many
come from countries where the law is
;oppressive and false documents are a way of
life. If aliens present false documents to a
voluntary agency, the agency should warn
them that they could be prosecuted, the INS
should do its best to distinguish between
conscious fraud and unwitting use of doubtful
'papers.
The INS expects 3.8 million people to apply
for amnesty. If restrictive regulations are in
:place, perhaps only half of them can expect
amnesty. That would be a tragedy for them
.and for America.

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L$tt$rs to Um editor ore welcome for
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(jt,

Just W hat Is This Humanism A n yw a y?
I owe this column to a friend who was upset at
the adverse press that humanism was receiving
a few years ago. A young man Interested In
philosophy and the state of the world, he found
lime as he was caring for twin sons to visit the
public library and study the philosophy that was
molding his young adulthood. He found a copy
of “ The Humanist Manifesto," first proposed in
1933 and updated in the 1970s.
When federal Judge W. Brevard Hand deliver­
ed his opinion recently that " s e c u l a r
humanism" is a religion and used his decision,
to ban 44 textbooks from Alabama schools
because they supposedly endorse secular
humanism. I got out "The Humanist Manifesto"
and re-read It. Again I agreed with my friend:
Anyone who believes "secular humanism" is a
religion doesn't know much about it.
For those who haven't bothered to find out
what "secular humanism" Is all about, I offer
these precepts from "The Humanist Manifesto
II," the updated version:
"W e appreciate the need to preserve the best
ethical teachings In the religious traditions of
human kind, many of which wc share In

common. But we reject those features of
traditional religious morality that deny humans
a full appreciation of their own potentialities and
responsibilities.
"Happiness and the creative realization of
ituntan needs and desires, individually and in
shared enjoyment, are continuous themes of
humanism.
" W i t h o u t c o u n ten a n cin g m indless
permissiveness or unbridled promiscuity, a
civilized society should be a tolerant one.
"The preciousness and dignity of the Individ­
ual person Is a central humanist value. ... Wc
reject all religious. Ideological or moral codes
that denigrate the Individual, suppress freedom,
dull intellect, dehumanize personality.
"T o enhance freedom and dignity the Individ­
ual must experience a full range of civil liberties
in all societies. This includes freedom of speech
and the press, political democracy, the legal
right of opposition to governmental policies, fair
Judicial process, religious liberty, freedom of
association, and artistic, scientific and cultural
freedom.
"The separation of church and state and the

separation of Ideology and state arc Imperatives.
The state should encourage maximum'freedom
for different moral, political, religious and social
values in society.
"W e believe in the right to universal educa­
tion. Everyone has a right to the cultural
opportunity to fulfill his or her unique capacities
or talents. The schools should foster satisfying
and productive living."
In short, humanists do believe in religion.
They Just believe religion should be based on
humanist principles. That’s a far cry from the
belief that their humanism is a religion.
Humanism is a form of ethical thought based
on the practical experience of living, and that
only. If^'secular humanism" Is a religion, then
any approach to ethical behavior which Is based
on the experience of living Is a religion. And if
so. there are as many religions as there are
thinking people who use practical experience as
a guide to ethical behavior.
And if so, 11 follows logically that all places
where these thinking people think about ethical
behavior and apply these thoughts to principles
for living are churches.
IRS. take note.

WILLIAM RUSHER

W A SH IN G TO N WORLD

Come
Off It,
Democrats

Baker
Fits
Right In

I think It's about lime that Ronald
Reagan's many millions of support­
ers around this country came out of
their bomb shelters and denounced
the Iran/contra investigation for the
cheap llb cra l-D cm ocra tic
grandstand play It has become.
When It was discovered, last
November, that President Reagan
had allowed a perfectly legitimate
diplomatic approach to Tran to
deteriorate into something approx­
imating a trade of arms for hostag­
es. many people, with the benefit of
hindsight, declared that this had
been a mistake, even though It
resulted In the release of two
hostages.
President Reagan has since
ruefully agreed, and the error has
been duly inscribed on the record of
his administration, where it is
v a s t l y o u t w e i g h e d by such
triumphs as the 1981 tax cut, the
deployment of the Pershing IIs and
cruise missiles in Europe, the cre­
ation or 10 million new jobs, the
liberation of Grenada, the near-total
elirpinatlpn of Inflation, ope o U h c .
longest economic booms since
tne
ce the
end of World War II, the proposal of
a space shield to end reliance on
mutual assured destruction, the
bombardment of Libya, the 1986
lax reform and much else.
But Reagan also discovered, and
promptly announced, that a profit
was apparently made by the
middlemen who sold the arms to,
Iran, and that all or part of this
profit was used to provide military
aid for the Nicaraguan contras.
Since two of Reagan's aides evi­
dently sanctioned this diversion
without telling him, the president
flred them both, called for a special
prosecutor to determine whether
any laws had been broken, and
appointed the Tower Commission to
find out how such things could
happen in his National Security
Council.
What then, precisely, was so
terrible about his conduct In this
matter? Why were two heavybreathing Congressional commit­
tees specially created to probe the
affair to Its uttermost depths? Why
are the liberal media Indulging in
operatic shrieks of excitement over
every Rifling "development"?
Assume they must. You know
perfectly well that this whole ex­
travaganza wasn't put together In
order to Jail John Poindexter or Ollle
North. It is Ronald Reagan whose
scalp the Democrats were longing
for. and that is why 1 say their
performance today Is a cheap
grandstand play.

SCIENCE WORLD

Mysteries Of Knots
By Delthia Ricks
are the geometry of DNA molecules,
UP1 Science W riter
the basic units of heredity In every
cell of every organism. Structurally,
LOS ANOELES (UPI) - Gordius
DNA is a spiraling double helix that
the King of Phrygia, as the Greek
folds Into a complicated knot Inside
myth explains, had a very big
problem — the great Gordian knot.
the nucleus of cells.
■T h e pblfe
n f l 'l s ja tm itu d ia .4 .P N A and its
fastened to the yoke with a Knot so
replication process wc have found'
entangled that it defied all efforts to
that e n z y m e s act on t h e s e
unwind it. The catch, of course, w b b
molecules in a way that is sensitive
that whoever managed to undo the
to the knotting of DNA," he said of a
knot would rule Asia, an honor
nat ura l u n r a v e l i n g pr oc ess .
eventually afTordcd to Alexander the
Enzymes are proteins that speed up
Great who solved the problem by
or cause chemical reactions in living
cutting the knot with his sword.
matter.
There are probably few things
The enzymes know exactly where
more confounding than knots —
to begin the unwinding of the DNA
knots in yam. knots in wire, string
while maintaining the Integrity of
or even DNA, the master molecule
the motecule and It is necessary for
of life.
this to occur in all of our cells for the
Scientists now think that they are
cells to reproduce themselves.
on the brink of finding a hidden
" If the DNA remains knotted then
meaning in knotting with the devel­
the cell will die," Millett said.
opment of new equations, that will
Secrets Inherent in the enzymes,
help solve — at least mathemati­
however, may ultimately reveal
cally — all of the thousands of
solutions to quickly unwinding a
Gordian problems that people en­
piece of wire or telephone cords
counter dally.
because "the enzymes are nature's
Knot theorists, as they arc pro­
solution to the Gordian problem,"
fessionally known, arc trying to
Millett explained.
develop equations for all of the
"Enzymes know a great deal
different kinds of entanglements
about knotting and we hope to use
that can occur in anyone's tele­
mathematics to understand more
phone cord or In complicated
about the enzymes and DNA."
molecules much too small to see
Of the 12.965 knots scientists
with the naked eye.
have identified, including knots in
So far the efforts have been
biological molecules, many have
successful. Knot theorists have
fewer than 14 crossings. But even
iden tified 12.965 distinct en ­
when one of these knots Is encoun­
tanglements but they say there are
tered in a length of fishing line, for
countless more.
example, they can pose perplexing
"Knotting occurs in nature," said
challenges.
University o f California, Santa
To mathematicians, a knot is a
Barbara mathematician Kenneth C.
closed loop that is twisted and
Millett who is studying the phenom­ tangled In various ways. A loop
enon or knotting in the natural
without any twists is called an
sciences. "But knots represent very,
"unknot," said Millett who analyzes
very big mysteries."
knotted structures by studying*thelr
Among the mysteries in nature
shadows.

By Helen Thomas
UPI W hite House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Chicr of
staff Howard Baker is less a new
"prim e m inister" at the White
House than a front man and
salesman, as well as counselor to
President Reagan In his hour of
need.
Baker and the few aides he
brought to the beleaguered West
Wing were astonished to find that
predecessor Donald Regan’s much
touted organization and corporate
style were a myth.
They found there was little flow of
needed information to the staffers
on hand, and not an excess of talent
among the aides,
But clearly Baker has not come to
the White House to do scut work.
Instead,
the former Senate Re­
publican leader from Tennessee has
arrived to repair the damage from
the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal
with lots of reassuring smiles and a
welcome mat for members of Con
gress who want to sec the presJcfenlJ
So Reagan, in his weakened statq
has hired a well-liked Washing,
establishment figure from ihc old
line moderate Republican wing of
the party to help him out of his
trouble.
In a matter of days. Baker has
changed the environment, lightened
the atmosphere, and made the
president come out of hiding with a
news conference and a major
speech responding to the Tower
Commission report on the scandal.
Much to Reagan's obvious dis­
comfort, Baker apparently has in­
fluenced him to go through more
"photo opportunities" where he can
answer questions, or smile and say
"no comment," or even feign laryn­
gitis. But reporters, after a fourmonth hiatus, are beginning to see a
president in action again.
Baker is surprised at how much
access he has to the president,
perhaps not realizing that Reagan,
or any other president, never moves
without an entourage, never walks
alone, and expects that his aides
will be at his side at all times,
programming him.
As a result of his new proximity to
the Oval Office, Baker Is at Reagan's
beck and call, and seems to be
happy to be there. He he Is fitting
right In, saying the right things
publicly, submerging his own views
that have been contrary to the
conservative line at times, going
along with Reagan's no-never taxes
to cut the deficit, although In the
past he may have differed.

JA C K A N D E R S O N

Reaganism Still Affects Turkey

"That covert the thank yoiia to the people
were so Important to me during the first
r of my life. Now, for the eecond year..:."

WASHINGTON - The "Reagan
Revolution" may be in trouble here,
but basic Reagan policies are thriv­
ing In a country almost halfway
around the world: Turkey. By coin­
cidence, this bastion of Reaganism
is next-door to tran. which has been
the root of the evils that have
befallen the president's agenda.
ll'a no accident that TurkishAmerican relations have flourished
In the concurrent administrations of
President Reagan and Turkish
Prime Minister ,Turgut Ozal. In a
recent Interview Ui the capital city
o f Ankara, Ozal made it clear that
he ts an enthusiastic advocate of
Reagan's two unshakable articles of
faith: private enterprise and anti­
communism. He also favors such
old-fashioned American virtues aa
self-reliance.

Ozal wants more American mili­
tary and economic did now because
his country needs it badly. But for
the long run, he wants Turkey to
take care of Itself.
"The most Important thing Is the
to solve
determination of a country
coui
ems." he told our
It* own
fan Alta, And, in his
book, a free and unfettered capital­
ist economy is the best road to take.
" 1-wlll give you an example," he
said. "Here In this country, at the
end of the 1970*. we still had
subsidies on petroleum. It was
unbelievable. Many other things
were subsidized. We have removed
those subsidies completely,"
Surprisingly, the Turkish people
seem to have accepted this, at a
time when other governments in the
region are afraid to Institute similar
economic reforms for fear of inciting
riots or worse. How did Ozal do it?
"W e have explained to our people

that we have to remove these
subsidies because they are being
paid for by the people." he said.
"Th e government doesn't have a
different purse. It's the same purse:
the nation's purse."
It takes a gutsy politician to end
subsidies and Impose free-market
policies on a depressed economy.
But. except for a production subsidy
on agriculture. Ozal has persevered
on his capitalist course.
It also takes a gutsy politician,
backed by his people's determina­
tion. to be rigidly and outspokenly
anti-communist when your country
shares such a long land and sea
border with the Soviet Union and Us
satellites.
But then, much o f Turkey's
foreign policy comes naturally. Over
the centuries, Turkey and Russia
have fought a dozen wars. The
Russian bear is no new menace to
Turkey Just because It wears a

commissar's cap.
' ' R u s s i a is b a s i c
expansionist." Ozal said, ref
to the broad historical view
now that Russia is ruled by
munlsts? "They are still pir
the same." he said, malter-of.fi
Unlike President Carter. Ozi
not surprised by the Soviet im
™ Afghanistan seven years
w hether it represented S
expansionism or merely the
tlonal Russian variety Is irrelev
Ozal has personal reason
concern about Afghanistan. H
visited the Afghan refugee can
Pakistan and found that Turk
Afghans have important thin
common. With obvious emotic
said:
...“ They look like us. Yes. the]
like us. And they have the
•pirlt. They're training in
comps to fight for their countr
the same spirit."

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OPINION
Privatization: Government For Sale?
By Ray Marshall
Privatization, the performance of
public services by private companies, is
a major policy question facing states
and local government throughout the
country.
It ’ s not hard to see why the
privatization trend has started. There
are a number of reasons. One of the
most important is that privatization is
big business. There is a lot of money
riding on this whole question. For
example. In 1982 at least a fourth of the
federal budget was contracted out, and
that came to $186 billion.
In 1980 another $66 billion was
contracted out by state and local
government. So we’re talking about a
lot of money. A number of private
corporations have gotten into this
business because they believe a lot of
money is to be made.
Proponents of privatization also
believe that It Is politically desirable to
reduce the size of government. If you
believe that government is inherently
inefficient, you believe that there is no
loss at all In reducing the size of the
federal government or the state and
local governments, and shifting those
resources Into the private sector.
The proponents of privatization have
also gained because of the budget

Whon you Bhift from tho
public Boctor, which Ib opon
to full dlaclosuro, to tho
moro cloBod prlvato Boctor,
It Ib vary much moro diffi­
cult to root out corruption
and abuBo.
squeezes and personnel freezes of state
and local governments in recent times.
There’s a presumption that somehow
privatization can help with budget
problems.
Well, what are the facts and what
docs the case show?
Contracting out often results in
higher costs, especially when you count
all the hidden costs — things ’like
monitoring of the contracts and the use
o f public facilities by the private
contractor.
Proponents Ignore the phenomenon
of low-balling contract proposals and
buying in, which is very common. That
Is to say, you write a low contract
which will get you in the door, and then
once you get In the door you raise
prices. That’s a fairly common phe­
nomenon. and is especially dangerous

when the delivery of the service, like
garbage collection, relics heavily on
expensive equipment. Once the public
agency sells its equipment It becomes
dependent on the delivery of services
by the private contractor and therefore
loses its ability to deliver those services
even If It wants to.
A second well-documented problem
is that many private contractors will
cut comers and deliver inferior quality
because of their preoccupation with
cost savings.
This is particularly serious when
you're talking about the services.
Quality is inherently difficult to
meastlre. If you bid to deliver a
particular service, and if you don't have
people who are dedicated to quality,
you’re not likely to get the delivery of
quality services.
A third argument against privatiza­
tion Is that the government usually
loses flexibility when it contracts out.
For example, cities use garbage col­
lectors for snow removal and a lot of
other things. Unless they clearly
specify other duties in the contract,
public managers are likely to lose the
flexibility to render those other services
and to use their workforce for purposes
other than those spelled out in writing.
The fourth argument Is that prlvat

tlzntion invites corruption, bribes, con­
flicts of interest and political favoritism.
Clearly the private sector doesn’t
have a monopoloy on those things, but
it seems to me that a strong case can be
made that when you shift from the
public sector, which Is open lo full
disclosure, to the more closed private
sector, It Is very much more difficult to
root out corruption and abuse.
, The fifth problem Is that privatization
reduces accountability to the people.
What you do is add a new layer: the
private contractor. If citizens complain
about the delivery of services It's much
more difficult for public officials to get
at those problems than If they were
dealing with their own employees. Now
they have to go through the contractor.
You've got the added problem of the
contract itself and what it specifies, and
that creates a very serious problem.
We should look at the contracting out
of government services very closely.
Proponents suggest that there is some
inherent advantage In the delivery of
services by the private sector. There
usually isn’t!
Editor's note: Mr. Marshall was Secrctary o f Labor In the Carter Ad­
ministration. and now teaches at the
University c f Texas.

Doctors' Day Honors America's Physicians

Care-Free
A Sad State
Re: A Risk-Free Life (Opinion page
Mar. 22).
Now at 15 years beyond my 3 score
and LO. It appeals to me that Mr.
Rubin is talking about a care-free
society and such Is not possible, for I
am continually being told to "Take
C a r e ". Now I know that 1 am
considered some kind of ” nut." so I
was suspicious that someone was
trying to make me break the law so
that I could be ‘ ‘put away." So I
started to Investigate and low and
behold I could find no ordinance, rule
or regulation or law that would,
prevent me from "Taking Care." But
on investigation 1 found there were
two kinds of care: one comes In a
Golden Box marked Love, Compa­
nionship and Understanding: one in' a
Black Box la guaranteed to make you
"C a re w o rn .” It contains; Grief.
Gloomy Gus's outlook and "there is
nothing I can do about it" attitude.
1 also found that the Ju n ior
Women’s Club of Sanford must have
dipped into the Golden Box when they
sponsored the re-establishment of The
Heart Park exercise trail — for a
couple turns around this, course will
eliminate most of the “ worn" from
"Careworn" and put one In position to
dip from the Golden Box of Love,
Companionship and Understanding.
However, one must be doubly
Carefully Careful when reapproaching
those boxes, lest one mistakes the
Gold from the Black, or misses both in
attempting to avoid one and thus
becomes care-free, a sad state to be in
for life Is made up of Taking Care. And
thus you are a caretaker and giving
though to Who’s Taking Care of the
C aretaker's Daughter while the
Caretaking is Busy Taking Care.
Just thought you might like to
know some of the things Involved
when you start "Taking Care."
S.B. "J im " Crowe
Sanford

use ether as an anesthetic agent in a
surgical technique.
Since that date 145 years ago. many
changes have been made In health
care. Yet, the physicians' dedication to
the science of healing hasn't changed.
Whether serving patients in hospi­
tals. private offices and clinics, or
continuing the care In the home,
physicians are committed to providing
the best health care possible.
Our community is fortunate to be
served by many doctors who work long
and hard to better the lives of others. It
is a pleasure for Upjohn Healthcare
Services to ,pay tribute to them on
Doctors’ Day. and to say "Thank you."
D. Calvin
Administrator
Upjohn Healthcare Services
Winter Park

‘Ths administration la anxious to sign a damaga control... I moan
ARMS control agroam snt."

Star Wars: Reagan's 'Peace Shield' Is Really Death Star
"Star Wars has nothing to do with
defense ... (but with) new offensive
weapons ... disguised as defense. It Is
th e m o s t g i g a n t i c fraud e v e r
perpetrated on the American people."
So writes Dr. Robert M. Bowman,
President of the Institute of Space and
Security Studies in Chesapeake
Beach, Maryland. "Even the crudest
of Star Wars weapons would be very
effective against satellites, their real
first military mission: ... may be
powerful enough to incinerate cities in
minutes... causing huge fire storms."
"A ir Force studies have shown" he
tells us, "that a few pounds of m etal...
fired at Earth from space, would
Impact like a meteorite, dig a crater
and destroy missile silos and com­
mand bunkers — totally without
warning."
These weapons would be ineffective
against ballistic missiles. But they

PLEASE WRITE

Letters to the editor ore wel­
come for pobllcetlon. A ll letters
mast be signed sod Include e
m slllng address end* If possible, a
telephone number. The Banford
Herald reserves the right to edit
letters to avoid libel and to

would be extremely effective against
satellites and. thus, vulnerable to each
other. "Th e minute both the United
States and the Soviet Union had Star
Wars weapons In Bpace, whoever fired
the first shot could disable the.other
side at the speed of light."
This would clear the way for their
nuclear missiles In an unopposed first
strike.
"Because of the great satellite vul­
nerability. penalizing whoever docs
not shoot first, the deployment of Star
Wars by both sides would probably

My mother suddenly cannot make
the single smallest decision on her own.
She doesn't Just want my opinion: she
needs me to tell her what to do. She
used to be so self-directed; what's
happened?
Mom spends the day alone, and then
insists I phone nightly for a long talk.
To combat her loneliness, I recommend
that she join neighborhood activities for
pooplc her age. The more I Insist, the
more she resists doing anything. Why
Is she suddenly so stubborn?
Faced with changes In behavior,
many adult children swear that age has
altered a parent’s personality, claims
Richard P. Johnson. As a geron­
tological counselor at St. John's Mercy
Medical Center In St. Louis. Mo.,
Johnson frequently helps both elderly
parents and their children. In early
sessions, he explains that personalities
really do not change as people a ge.

L O m P l I I vavr l i i n i i v T u n O v I T I ^ ^ i i v j T f e

make nuclear war immediate and
Inevitable." concludes Dr. Bowman.
The only alternative consistent with
our security I b to make sure that
neither Bide gets Star Wars;
If we could but get President
Reagan to realize that this is not a
"peace shield" he is proposing, but a
real "death star"! Then he might cash
In the Star Wars bargaining chip In
Geneva. He would go down In history
as one of the greatest peacemakers.
Hermlne W. Rand
Ft. Myers

Roads For Builders Pay Campaign Debts
Have the holier-than-thou con­
gressmen gone mad? Eighty-eight
billion dollars for developers roads! In
Florida the money would go to build
roads where traffic is light — not the
ones the state says we need.
On a Sunday afternoon recently, o
friend took me to see Heathrow. It’s
really beautiful. Of course we did not
see the homes — the gate was locked.
The landscaping was lovely.
It was after 2:30 and our car was the
only "traffic," We saw one other car
parked by the fire station. No traffic!
It seems Bob Graham is not the only
sinner. Most of the politicians — both
senators and representatives — seem

Learning To
Cope With Aging

" I ask adult children whether they
saw their parents display this kind of
behavior before. Do they remember It
from childhood? When they think
about It, they’ll say. 'Well, yea. but It
wasn't this bad,'" says Johnson.
The parent's behavior often makes
the adult c h il d r e c o n s i d e r the
expression "growing settled in our
ways." Johnson explains. "A s people
grow older, their personalities intensify
and patterns are exacerbated. Mrs.
Jones Is the same as she was her whole
lire, Just more so. It looks like a
different personality, but It's not."
Although positive traits may in­
tensify, Johnson says those changes
are easily accepted. People usually see
him when negative behavior becomes
too worrisome. ,
Adult children often are most puzzled
by their parent's Indcclslveness,
alarming sense of Incapacity and at­
tempts to manipulate. According to
Johnson, all of these behaviors revolve
around one Issue, dependency.
Older people have a built-in excuse to
feel more and more dependent, because
they believed all the myths about
aging. They accepted that being elderly

OUR READERS WRITE
Since 1933, March 30 has been
designated as Doctors’ Day, to honor
America's physicians. It was on March
30, 1842, that Dr. Crawfqrd W. Long
became the first acclaimed physician to

Taking
Cara

lo be paying their campaign debts
with roads for developers. 1 like
Lawton Chiles' rule for his campaign
next year — no gift of more than
$100. He can't give $14,000,000
rouds to ull us little people.
Let's own up! Aren’t large campaign
gifts legal bribery? I hope Senator
Dole Is right — that there arc enough
honcBt lawmakers to support the
President's veto of the $88 billion
dollar bill.
I think I like Duda’s suggestion. But
he has offered to help pay for the road
near his land.
Luclle Campbell
Sanford

80, and they've grown into the frail,
bumbling, unpredictable character
portrayed in those myths.
Adult children frequently complain
that they are the target of the parent's
anger and guilt, even though the parent
Is well-behaved and charming to
others. That's such a familiar tune,
Johnson often points out the song lyric.
"You always hurt the one you love."
"It's true," he says. "W hy do we do
that? No. 1, loved ones are easy targets
because they're close at hand. No. 2. we
have the greatest expectations of those
we love. And perhaps more than
anything else, we expect these people
to save us from ourselves, from the
world. If we feel crummy, it's natural to
project all our bad feelings onto loved
ones. That's why love relationships
become so most conflicted."
Old age. of course, docs have unset­
tling problems. A person may suffer the
loss of a spouse, siblings or friends.
Their grief may deepen their sense of
dependence and depression.
"Everyone of us has an inferiority
complex. And loss deepens that com­
plex, whether we're 21 or 91 — and
older people suffer from loss overload.
We react." says Johnson. "W e wish
somebody else would take over our

lire."
He offers both adult children and
their parents the same advice: learn
about aging, and accept it as both a
physical and emotional process.

Human Ineq uality Idea Ju stifie s Lib erals' A g e n d a
By Robert C. Jeffrey, Jr.
One of the most instructive coincidences In
American history is that the same arguments
John C. Calhoun used to defend the rights of
slave owners before the Civil War are used today
by the libera) advocates of affirmative action for
"minorities." In both Instances, moreover, the
argument that Justice requires special protection
for Interests or classes of people is used to
undermine equal Individual rights which are the
basis of majority rule.
As readers of detective stories know, so striking
a coincidence as this is never coincidental. It
must have a cause. And in this case the cause has
been a wholesale rehabilitation of Calhoun's
anti-democratic arguments by liberal historians.
Toward the end of the 19th century. American
intellectuals came under the influence of certain
European ideas, among which was Marxism.
Marxism denied that men were free and equal
and that the people (through the majority) were
able to rule. A consequence of all this was that
American history came to be reinterpreted: the
Civil War. for example, was said to be a class war
or a sectional war. rather than a war fought
b c tm P Qf slavery and to determine the moral
for the Union, in essence, what was
American about America was twisted beyond
recognition.
, .
„
One of the most representative of the so-called
"progressive historians." whose Influence still
dominates American universities today, was
Vernon L. Parrington. In an Important passage

from his main work, Parrington praises Calhoun
for understanding that numerical majorities don't
really rule, that representation of Interests is
superior to representation of Individuals, and for
having "put behind him the philosophy of
Jefferson" that by nature "men are free and
equal."
Parrington then asserts that Calhoun's denial of
human freedom and equality represents an
advance In democratic theory. "Democracy." It
turns out, is only possible "in a society that
recognizes Inequality as a law of nature." Only
then can "the virtuous and capable enter into
voluntary co-partnership for the common good,
accepting wardship of the Incompetent in the
interests of society."
According to Parrington. a cruel minority will
Inevitably rule as long as the people think they
are equal and free. This will be "the rich." (It
doesn't matter that the "Incompetent" people are
the majority, for they are too Incompetent even to
vote In their own Interest.) But the virtuous
minority will rule once the people admit their
inequality. ThlB minority is distinguished not by
wealth, but by "compassion." It is composed of
the experts or the intellectuals.
Parrington thus reveals with breathtaking
simplicity and candor the political assumptions
and strategy which lie behind the welfare state.
For both Calhoun and Parrington. democracy Is
the very opposite of self-government.' It is a
regime in which a common Interest binds a
protector class and the incompetent people. To

work, this "democracy" entails convincing the
people that they are unequal to the task of
handling freedom. Thus convinced, the people
can only choose what kind of slavery they will
live under: will it be benevolent, or will It be
malevolent? Naturally, the people will choose the
more "compassionate" form of enslavement.
Just as Calhoun's arguments were part of a
political strategy to sustain an oligarchy in the
South on the pretext of caring for inferiors, so
were Parrington's arguments part of a revoluntionary political strategy to substitute the rule of
intellectuals and their schoolmarmlsh regulatory
handmaids for the rule of the people, or for what
our founders called democracy.
But these modern Calhounians had a problem.
America was not rife with the class conflict which
would lead a majority to give up their freedom.
Rather what marked America was the existence
of a vast middle class, whose self-confidence had
only increased us the benefits of free labor and
equal opportunity produced a prosperity un­
equalled in all of history. Even the mythologizing
of the Great Depression did not turn the middle
class agulnst its belief in equality. Individual
rights and Its own ability to rule.
Thus the progressive agenda came to require
more direct attacks on the middle class. On the
one hand, this meant undermining the virtue and
piety of the American people. Thus it advocated
the removal of religion and moral instruction
from the public schools, and propogated a new
and false history by denying the nobility and high

principles underlying the American founding and
the Civil War. On the other hand, the new
revolutionaries sought to make allies o f those who
could be persuaded that the majority could not
rule In their (the minority’s) interest. Here, the
most promising source of recruits seemed to be
the blacks — ironically, the group which had
benefited the most from the majority's belief In
freedom and equality.
Indeed, by the time that the affirmative action
society became an explicit goal of liberalism In
the late 1960's, the majority of the American
people had granted all the constitutional and
statutory provisions necessary to Insure equal
opportunity for blacks. But the goal of affirmative
action is not. as we have seen, equal opportunity.
Rather, the goal Is to create Inequality or
"incompetents" by persuading people that their
advancement and success cannot be due to
themselves as men. but rather to the class which
alone can offer them "wardship." If enough
"minorities" (blacks, students, farmers, etc.) can
be persuaded that they can't rule themselves and
that they don't have equal opportunity. American
dem ocracy will have been destroyed and
Calhounlan (one could almost say Marxist)
"democracy" will be ushered in.
The pro-slavery tradition is thus alive as the
"liberal" tradition, represented by advocates of
the welfare state and affirmative action.
Dr. Jeffrey Is Visiting Assistant Professor o f
Political Science at Lamar University.

�SMQMFMMPl

* *■ * * I • I l * I ■

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4D— Sonford Herald, Sanford, FI.

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Sunday, M arch 2 9 ,1M7

Adventist
the u m n n -o ir
ADWHTttT CHURCH
Cam*, (I 7th a (ha

a*r w«»i
totartop tank**
Sabbath k M
W m hf la th i
Wrtnttdir NI|M
Peart* torekt

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11:00am.
7:00p.e/.

Assembly O f God
NEW lift ISU M IIT Of COO
100 Haaaal U .
Pbaaa 1U0221
S*ki| Mamin,
Saakap ( a t a l i
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1090am
1:10p.M.
7.-00pm

Episcopal

Baptist
w tm rnw »* rru r church
4100 Pm U taa4 («4A|
U alirl. Harida
Da. Haiti W. Math.
fat
totoaj k M
9:00 I
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10:00 a
Chvrth Iraki*,
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7:00 p

Baptist
CENTRAL RAPT15T CRUNCH
1)11 Oak A*t., I n Ih I
1121414
Fra44ia IflMth
Pi
Satoa* t ( M
MS
Hamlin NmMp
11:00
Charch TraMiti
A:00
ttt.tap WartMp
7.-00
Wa4. Ptapte tonka
7:00

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
S19 Part Aiaaai, Saalarp
Rat. P»fll I Narph*, J».
Paitflf
Ra4.tr Baaafca
MM,It* al Raik
tonka* Sebaal
9:45» m
Mamta, WanMp
11:00 a *
Church TraMap l u l l )
0:00 p.M.
(ttalfli WanMp
7:00p.M.
Wa4. Prartf tonka
S:M p.M.

• MiVCtMI

Batting

Gordon Potest nsils us to the rail of
reality: “A man's possibility Is always
greater than his ability." I not only
wish I had said that but I wish I could
live like that and really believe that
statement in m y less-achieving
moments.
In our better moments, we know
Dr. Poteat is on target There is always
more in us than we can ever get out
We feel an upward urge; a desire
btyond what we can be or produce in
our lives.

.1000

lanMp Sank*

t-.M m l

Norn
Denominational
WiMam 1. tortf
Pattaf
totoap Sebaal
9:41 »-M .
WanMp tonka
10.45 t.».
Taatk f i l aaiMp
S:M p.aa.
Tuaaiap MMa IM |
10:00 am
Hunan pnrWad far a* atnkaa.

And it is this "possibility greater
than ability" that moves persons
toward a goal that is unattainable. No
major league player has ever batted
the perfect .1000. Yet. it Is precisely
this illusive goal that has produced a
Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron, a Ty
Cobb and Pete Rose.

Catholic

We take comfort in Browning's
phrase, that "a man's reach should
exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven
for?"

IORDAN BAPTIST CHURCH
970 Upaaia R4.
(Ida Htmb*
Patlac
Ifl.Aar Sebaal
10:00am
ManM , Sank.
11:00a.M.
EaaMa, Sanka
7-J0p.M.
Wa4att4ar Sanka
7iM p.aa.
044 Tratbt lar a Haw Bap

Lutheran
LUTHERAN CHURCH Of
TV “Tbit It Tba Ufa'
2S2S Oak Aaa.
Hat. (hate A. Raptehae
toaka* Sebaal
I
WanMp Sanka
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KMarpartaa aa4 Hurttrp

Christian Science

Presbyterian

7MST CHURCH OP CHRIST
SCKNTtST, 10MW000
STS Martha* Waa4a R4.
Canar 01 U WHBamim R4.
S*a4ap: Chareb Sanka
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Congregational

Scnpturto flttscfd by ThB Afftsrican ftWf Soooty

PAuUfro Ainnm
BAPTIST CHURCH
2*2* Patoatta Baa.
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Paslar
kbaal
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WanMp
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191 pm
•par A Mil SM4p 7JO pm

ay Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday Thursday
Friday
Satui
ins Romans l Corinthians 2 Corinthian* Ephesians Ephesians Coloi:

18 15:1-13

1:18-31

63-18

1:15-23

2:11-22

3:1-

Coppngtt IM7. Kawwr-WPbam* kaaapapar SarvtcM. P O Bo&gt; kOOS. OwHoHaM M, VA 77900

Th# Following Sponsors Moko This Church i Nolle And Dlrocfory Pago Posslblo
FIRST UNION
Sanford, Fla.
Howard H. Hodgas and Staff

SSNCY

. SUN BANK and Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Or.

ORBOORY LUMSSR
TRUK VALUE HARDWARE
500 Mapla Ava., Sanford

FUBLIX MARKSTS
end Employees

Downtown Sanford
Don Knight and Stall

FUSLIX MARKSTS
and Employata

WILSON-SICHBLBBROSR
MORTUARY
Eunica Wilson and Staff

MSL'a
OULF SSRVICB
Mai Dakla and Employtas
SM ITTY'S MOWERS

HARRBLLS BSVBRLY
TRANSMISSION

Behind Shall Station 25th S Park
Family Ownad Butlnass

David Bavariy and Staff

SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY

l

WINN-DIXIE STORKS
and Employees

�~ H ^ «1 *

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RELIGION

Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

■*.*■'*•/*

•
»*

Briefly
Catholic Woman To Hold
Installation O f N o w Officers

Lenten Services Planned
Good Shepherd Lutheran Church. 2917 Orlando Drive,
Sanford, will celebrate the fourth Sunday In Lent with a Holy
Communion service at 10 a.m. this Sunday. A congregational
meeting is scheduled immediately following the worship
service. The midweek Lenten service will be at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday with the Rev. Robert E. Kromcr of Emmaus
Lutheran Church In Orange City speaking.

Dinner A n d Concert Scheduled
Lakcvlew Baptist Church, 126 W. Lakcview Ave.. Lake Mary,
will hold a dinner on the grounds this Sunday after the
morning service. A vocal concert will be presented st 1:30 p.m.
■by Leah Moss and Leslie Seeds, students at Stetson University,
DcLand. The duo has performed extensively In the Central
Florida area presenting a mixture of gospel and contemporary
Christian music. The activities arc open to the public.

Donohue Talks O n Soviet Jew s
Phil Donahue will speak on the topic of Soviet Jewry
lesday at the Peabody Hotel at 5:30 p.m. on behaff of the
fomen's Division of the Combined Jewish Appeal. Donahue
cently visited the Soviet Union where he taped five shows,
le of which was with Soviet dissidents. Donahue, who also
ilted privately with many refuseniks, will share his Insights
tthe program.

vo/r Plans Easter Musical
w

&lt; \

he Adult Choir of Killamey Baptist Church will present the
ter musical and drama presentation at 7 p.m., April 5 at the
rch located at Fairbanks Avenue and Formosa Street In
ter Park.
X he musical will be directed by the Rev. Bruce Edwards,
later of music. The presentation features the Florida Youth
phony Orchestra. The presentation will be aired on
nel 2, Easter Sunday morning. April 19at 6:30 a.m.

ms '87 Festival
ie 12th annual Jesus Festival will he held Wednesday
jugh Saturday at the Central Florida Fairgrounds In
mdo. Musicians, speakers and entertainers from across the
ilted States will participate In the four-day camping event.
ir Information call 788-3450.

Exploring Religious Ufa
An Exploring Religious Life weekend will be held at San
edro Center (off Howell Branch Road in southeast Seminole
iunty) April 10-12 for the single, widowed or divorced
srsons of all ages who arc questioning or contemplating the
sllgious life. The weekend is set aside as a time to listen, pray,
llsccm and share about the varieties of ways God calls us to
:rve him In the church. Cost is $65 including meals and room.
ror further information, call 671-6322.

\Former Presley Valet To Share
Kenny Hicks, former valet to the late Elvis Presley, will
[present music and testimony during the 10:45 worship service
this Sunday at Lake Mary Church of the Nazarene, 171 E.
Crystal Lake Drive. Lake Mary.

ILenten Service Set
Sanford Congregational Church will hold a midweek Lenten
service at 7 p.m. Wednesday. There will be special music and
the Rev. Willis Patten will preach.

Women's D ay Observed
Reddick Memorial First Born Church of the Living God, 3155
Kings Road. Sanford, will observe Women's Day this Sunday at
the 11 a.m. service. The speaker will be Missionary Orsceola
Owens of Rochester, N.Y. Chairman for the program is Millie
| Jones and the pastor is Elder J.J. Llgon.

M ayors' Breakfast Slated
The 20th annual Mayors' Prayer Breakfast scheduled for

7:30 a.m. on Wednesday. April 8 at the Orange County
Conventlon/Clvlc Center, will focus on "The Family." Dr.
Anthony T. Evans, senior pastor of Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship
in Dallas Texas and chaplain for the Dallas Mavericks, will
discuss the importance of the family lo the Greater Orlando
business community. Special music for the breakfast will be
provided by the Orlando Deanery Boychoir and Jill Williams.
Violinist and soloist. Tickets are $15 per person. For more
Information contact Marlin Ferrell at 425-1234, Ext. 231.

Lenten Program Set
An Old-Fashioned Spelling Bee will be the theme for the
Lenten midweek program Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at Lutheran
Church of the Redeemer. 2525 Oak Ave.. Sanford.

Workshops O n The Fam ily
t
Dr. Roland D. Martinson, associate professor of Pastoral
I Theology and Ministry and Pastoral Care o f Luther
r: Northwestern Seminar. St. Paul. Minn., will conduct
; Workshops In youth and family ministry at St. John Lutheran
Church. 1600 S. Orlando Ave.. Winter Park.
On Thursday the workshop on "Bringing Up Our Children
Will be held from 7:30-9:30 p.m. for $5. On Friday. 9 a.m. to 3
the topic will be "Youth and Family Ministry... A New
— del. The fee will be $ 10 and It is especially geared to pastors.
youth directors and adult volunteer youth workers.
_
„
' A retreat on "Christians: Their Friendships and Families
will be held by Dr. Martinson Friday evening through noon on
^-Sunday for $65 at the Hilton International Drive, Orlando.
Registration Is limited, call the church at 644-1783 for space
tvatlabillty and Information.

•**■*■*

•
.
*
Pope's Chilean Visit
Stirs Up Controversy
•■

By Anthony Boadle

Newly elected ofnccra of the All Souls Council of Catholic
Women will be honored at their Installation dinner at 6:30 p.m.
on April 6 at Quincy's Family Restaurant. Sanford. Guest
speaker will be Glnny Loso. Central Deanery president.
Honored guests will be Kathy Bonner, Diocesan president and
former president of All Souls Council of Catholic Women.
Winkle LcFlIs. who has been recently appointed the National
CCW representative to the World Union of Catholic Women's
Organizations.
To be Installed arc Karen Rcllly-Morton, president: Holly
Falk, vice president; Marla Rlchardc. secretary; Joan Hoenlng,
treasurer and outgoing president Susan Faulk, Deanery
representative.

Central Florida Helpline, a new telephone helping service
loffcrcd 24 hours a day. seven days a week, Is officially open.
n*hc Helpline number Is (305) 740-7477. The telephone
lelpllnc will be staffed by persons who have completed a
50-hour training course In helping people. The volunteer staff
dll also have access to agencies and organizations If a referral
&gt;needed.
The Helpline Is designed to assist persons who are hurting
^nd need someone to talk with on a confidential basis.

&lt;*«*•. Vi,

Sunday, March It, 1117— ID

$

{Helpline O n Round The Clock

n

r 14

t

Parish Plans Kickoff mM'
The Rev. Robert M . Anderson, v ic ar of St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, Lake M a ry , displays model of proposed church
facilities to be built on a six-acre site on Rinehart Road, The
building fund d riv e w ill be launched on A pril 10 a t a special
presentation. Construction on Phase I is scheduled to start
this sum m er. The parish m eets each Sunday In the Lake
M a ry Com m unity Building.

SANTIAGO. Chile (UPI) Pope John Paul 11 will land In the
eye of a political hurricane when
he arrives April 1 for a six-day
visit to military-ruled Chile, his
second stop on a three-nation
South American tour.
Opposition groups seeking the
return to democracy In a pre­
dominantly Roman Catholic
country want the pope to en.dorse their cause and speak out
against human rights violations
by President Augusto Pinochet.
The authorities, bracing for
trouble at mass m eet ing s
planned with slum dwellers.
Indians, and fishermen, hope the
first-ever papal visit to Chile will
legitimize Pinochet's 13-year-old
regime.
The pope will stop one night In
Montevideo, Uruguay before
(lying to Santiago, and after his
Chilean trip he will tour Argen­
tina for six days.
Of the three nations of the
pope's eighth trip to Latin
America. Chile is the only one
under military'rule.
Church leaders In Santiago
say John Paul II Is bound to give
Pinochet some rebukes, in
private If not In public.
"The pope will not be silent In
Chile," Bishop Camllo Via) said.
"Pinochet will not listen to
anyone. The pope is the only
authority that can tell him what
to do."
Many priests and bishops did
not want the pontiff to visit while
Pinochet remains in power.
The church hierarchy, howev­

y

v

*

* ■: L t r:

:

&gt;~~~

;

er, believes the pope's presence
will contribute to national re*
con claliatlon and save the
country from escalating political
violence.
In some moves in that direc­
tion, Pinochet recently legalized
non-Marxist political parties and
permitted the publication of an
opposition newspaper, La Epoca.
The pope and Pinochet will
meet alone at the La Moneda
government house, but the pres­
ident. at the government's re­
quest. will not attend any mass
meetings with the pontiff.
The visit comes at a time of
increasing friction between
church and slate.
Negotiations over the planning
of the visit almost broke down in
January when the the govern­
ment refused to cooperate with
television coverage and broad­
casting.
Three weeks ago. a Catholic
bishop accused the government
of being "essentially Immoral"
and defended the moral Inten­
tions of Communist guerrillas
who attempted to assassinate
Pinochet last year.
The government protested in a
diplomatic note to the Vatican.
On March 4. the bishops con­
ference Issued a strongly-worded
statement calling for the restora­
tion o f political rights and
freedom of expression.
A conservative In matters of
church doctrine. Pope John Paul
Is also known to speak out firmly
on social matters and human
rights.

America Needs To Recover Its Ideals
It’s only a story. No reason to
be alarmed. Or Is there?
Fred Pohl's chilling talc takes
place In New York City in 2000,
just after the Unlcd States has
lost the war — not to Russia, but
to Grand Cayman, a tiny Island
In the West Indies. Grand
Cayman Is 93 square miles In
area and has a population of
16.000.
To add to (he humiliation.
Manhattan is being occupied by
a peace force from Nepal.
Saskatchewan and the Apache
nation.
The writer blames America's
fall on a decadence traceable to
"the yuppies and their designer
Jeans."
What the author Is saying,
says one British reviewer. Is
thls:"So busy were the U.S.
voters with grading their clothes,
their possessions, each other and
their politicians, that between
opinion polls and talk shows the
Initiative to do anything at all
eroded."
This story belongs to a genre
of current science fiction cen­
tering on the
theme of a
neutered America fallen lo sec­
ond-class status.
Another science-fiction work
"opens in Islamic USA. Every
mortgage Is Arab money, beer Is
Illegal, they cut your thumbs off
for stealing and men swimming
topless Is the height of In-

Saints And
Sinners
George Plagenz

decency."---In other stories it is the
Japanese, Mexicans. Chinese or
Africans. Or Russians: This was
the theme in the recent TV
mlnlserles, "Amcrlka."
The common thread appearing
In all these tapestries Is that of
an America, which has lost Its
moral fiber, becoming an easy
mark for enemies and other
mischief-makers.
If It Is true that America Is
slipping from its pedestal of
greatness, perhaps we need to
recover our idealism. This Is
what it tukes to make u country
strong — Just as It Is what It
takes to make a person strong.
L e t m e g i v e yo u t h r e e
e x a m p l e s o f p e o p l e w it h
Idealism:
• Martin Luther King Sr. had
It. He lost both a wife and a son
lo assassins' bullets.
After his wife was shot as she
sat at the church organ, the old
Baptist preacher said: "Y ou
know It hurts, when you live

M ayor Honored
Sanford M ayo r Bettye Smith
wilt be honored by A lien
Chapel A M E Church, 1203
O liv e A v e ., S a n fo rd , this
Sunday a t 11 a .m . service.
M arch 29 has been declared
H o n o ra b le M a y o r B e t t y e
Sm ith's D ay a t the church In
recognition and appreciation
of her outstanding support of
the M a rtin Luther King J r.
B irthday Celebration as well
as her leadership In the city's
anti-drug program and other
h u m an itarian efforts. Rev.
John H . W oodard, pastor,
and S h irle y W. A lle n ,
chairm an of the A llen P lan­
ning C om m ittee Invite the
public to attend.

25

• Michel Edde has it. He has
refused to board up the arched
windows on the side of his house
In wur-tom Lebanon that offer a
panoramic view of west Beirut.
Three times the windows have
been shattered by exploding
shells. Boards would have pre­
vented the destruction, but Edde
never considered It.

mmeemmeut'

15-year-old Jewish girt wrote, It Is a passion for the highest and
"It's really a wonder I haven't best — for what yet can be. It
dropped all my ideals. I see the "ain't got time" for the pain of
world gradually turned Into a cynicism and despair. Through
wilderness. I can hear the the darkness and cold of winter
ever-approaching thunder. I can it keeps its faith in everfeel the sufferings o f millions — returning spring.
It admits into consciousness
and yet if I look up into the
heavens, I think It will all come only "whatsoever things arc
right, that this cruelty too will lovely and of good report" and
end, and that peace and tran­ rejects those things that would
quility will return.
hide from our eyes the beauty In
"In the meantime, I must the world.
uphold my ideals, for perhaps
It is in Idealism's quiet con­
the time will come when I shall f i d e n c e that we find our
strength.
be able to carry them out."

Spring Celebration O f Faith
"Spring Celebration of Faith" with dlnncr-on-thc-grounds
and festivities is planned for Sunday. April 5. at First Baptist
Chuch of Oviedo.
The day will begin with u Bible Study at 9 a.m. Daylight
Savings Time, morning worship at 10:20 a.m. and dinner will
be served at noon, All arc asked lo bring a covered-dish to
share.
At 1:30 p.m. special guest speaker, Lcn Turner, pastor of
First Baptist Church. Merritt Island, will bring the message.
The services and dinner are open to the public.
First Baptist Church is located at the Intersections of State
Roads 426 and 434.

SPRINGS OF JOY
C o m m u n it y C h u r c h
SUNDAY'S 10:30 A.M.
AIRPORT BANQUET ROOM
SANFORD, FLA.

,

3 2 3 -5 7 8 7
m M F IL U D

W ELCOM E

THE MUSIC MINI8TRY
OP

Father Joseph C. Martin
Will Speak On Alcoholism
Father Joseph C. Martin, in­
ternational authority and con­
sultant on alcoholism and chem­
ical dependency, will speak at
Bob Carr Auditorium on April 27
as a kick-off to Alcohol Aware­
ness Week, according to Jerry
KlnBler. executive director of the
Metropolitan Alcoholism Council
of Centra! Florida.
Martin, who spoke to a soldout audience at Bob Carr four
years ago. is the author of No
Laughing Matter and made the
film. Chalk Talk on Alcohol for
the U.S. Navy. The film is used
as the principal educational

with a woman 48 years, a
partner, to have her taken from
you In a minute like that. You
know it hurts. But I’m Just not
going to hate. I carry no ill will in
my heart toward any man. You
want to debate that? You do
that. I ain’t got time. Cm going
on with my Job of being every
man’s brother."

vehicle on alcoholism for most
branches of the Federal Gov­
ernment. He Is co-founder of
Ashley. Inc., a non-profit center
for treatment of the chemically
addicted in Maryland.
He will appear under the
auspices of the "Friends of
Father Martin" committee as a
benefit for MACO. For ticket
Inormallon call 740-7105. Tax
deductible donations with a
minimum of $5 per ticket may
be sent to 935 Orange Ave.,
Winter Park. FI. 32789 with a
self-addressed return envelope.

The First Baptist Church of Sanford

The Southern-Gospel
Quartet Spectacular
Saturday, March 28
Sunday, March 20
7:00 PM

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
519 Park Ava., Sanford
Paul Murphy. Pastor
Rodney Brooks. M inister o f Music

�♦D— Sanford HaraM, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, March n , 1M7

What's New In Health

Babies' Emotional Development Studied
By Oay le Young
UP! Science W riter
NEW YORK (UPI) - Babies
first smile around their second
month of life, say their first word
when they arc approximately
7-months-old and take their first
tottering steps sometime around
9 months.
: The stages of motor develop­
ment are well known and antici­
pated by most parents.
But doctors say babies also go
through simitar stages of emo­
tional development. Although
less pronounced than the physi­
cal skills of grasping and crawl­
ing, the emotional development

• • •

Shuttle
Continued from ID

dous heat and a failure In flight
would be catastrophic.
The redesign elements arc
beginning to come together and
engineers arc gearing up for the
first of five full-scale booster
firings at the Morton Thlokol Inc.
rocket plant in Brigham City,
Utah, in mid-May — more than a
month behind schedule. The are
continuing dozen of small-scale
tests to verify the performance of
the new design.
" I think the real area we’re
going to be watching very
closely during those static firings
Is the performance of the
nozzle." said veteran shuttle
c o m m a n d e r Rover " H o o t "
Gibson. " I f we get an anomalous
bum In any of those nozzles, I
think we’re back to square zero
in that area."

of falling In love and protesting
authority may be Just as impor­
tant.
"I try to describe the stages of
emotional development In the
same way we think of motor
development," said Dr. Stanley
G r ee n s p a n , a noted child
psychiatrist and author of the
book First Feelings.
"A ll babies have their own
styles of development." he said.
"But there are some things in
common.”
Greenspan, professor of child
development at the George
Washington University Medical
School In Washington, said re­

search — both hls own and that
of others — has shown newborns
as young as a few days can be
calmed by voices, especially
those ot their mothers.
And by two months, babies
should not only be smiling but
"In love with the world." He said
well-adjusted babies between the
ages two and seven months are
"Joyful, giggling and gurgling.
"It Is an experience In Joyful­
ness unmatched In later life."
Greenspan said. "It Is love In Its
purist form."
But somewhere between 3 and
9 months, other emotions are
added to a well-adjusted baby's

A test that is crucial to meet­
ing the launch schedule Is on tap
In July when Morton Thlokol
engineers fire up a full-scale
booster to check the perfor­
mance of most of the new design
features. If NASA has any
chance of meeting an early 1988
launch date, this test and three
that follow must go well.
A National Research Council
panel monitoring the booster
project has recommended an
additional test firing before Dis­
covery is committed to flight.
That test, the sixth in the series,
currently Is sch edu led for
mid-April 1988, which probably
would delay Discovery's launch

that one." he said. " I ’m inclined
to say with the changes we’ve
got on the motor ... we ought to
fire more than we have currently
planned."
Chief astronaut John Young
and other shuttle filers have
made no secret of their wishes
for an additional firing. And
these days, astronauts tend to
get their way.
"John Young Is always In
favor of more (tests) and I think
we wouldn’t be disappointed at
the sixth one _get
all to see
fired before flight," said Gibson,
th e s h u t t l e c o m m a n d e r
monitoring the booster redesign.
"John would probably like to
see us fire 16 of them (but) we'd
probably kind of go along with
the NRC."
Engineers also will gain valu­
able data on performance of the
booster Joint In a "flight readi­
ness firing” of Discovery’s three
liquid-fueled main engines,
which the agency Is expected to

until at least m id-sum m er.

Most top managers at Marshall
say If the current test program
goes well, an additional filing
would not be necessary before
launch. But others, like pro­
pulsion engineer Judson Lovingood. are hedging their bets.
"I'm sitting on the fence on

repertoire. Including anger,
confusion and frustration.
It is around this age that
babies gesture to be picked up
by holding out their arms. With
these gestures. Greenspan said,
go demand and protest — two
vital feelings used in com ­
munication between humans.
"It’s very important for babies
to have interaction with adults
at this tim e." he said in a
telephone Interview. " I f they are
ignored. If they don’t have In­
teraction. they don’t know how
to give their emotions meaning."
From 9 to 15 months. Infants
approve even though it would
delay the first launch by a
month to six weeks.
Ironically, managers with the
main engine program say they
do not need the test, in which
the engines are fired on the
launch pad for about 20 seconds
to v e r i f y t h e i r o p e r a t i o n
together.
But during such firings, the
entire shuttle vehicle bends from
the offset thrust o f the engines,
putting heavy stress on the afi
booster Joints. Engineers will be
able to Instrument the solid fuel
rockets to check theory against
fact when It comes to forces
caused by this "tw ang" phe­
The shuttle boosters, the larg­
est solid rockets ever con­
structed for manned space filght
arc 14 stories tall. 12 feet In
diameter and weigh 1.3 million
pounds each at launch. Unlike
liquid-fueled engines, once ig­
nited. the solids cannot be

"Jelly Roll Morton’s bands were hls
sounding boards. There are no stray hairs
or ragged cufTs on the 1926-27 sides.
Everything fits and flows, and there is
never any loss of spontaneity or swing.
Each side is multilayered but clear, highly
tinted but gaudy, tailored but not stlfT."

W hitney
Balliett

Perhaps surprisingly, writing about
music sometimes demands a limited
vocabulary. The writer must avoid bom­
barding the reader with technical terms,
but still bring home the differences in
style, sound. Influence and genre.
Whitney Balliett. Jazz critic for the New
Yorker, can do that and niore. "American
Musicians," hls collection of Jazz profiles,

covers 24 years of writing, and provides
testimony to his encyclopedic knowledge

turned o(T or their firing even
controlled.
Packed with solid propellant
that feels like a pencil’s rubber
eraser, each rocket provides 3.2
million pounds of push at IlftofT.
burning for about two minutes
before falling Into the ocean
under parachutes for recovery
and reuse.

The upper rim of each seg­
ment Is an upward-facing Ushaped groove called a clevis. On
the inner leg of the clevis two
grooves are machined for a pair
of rubber O-rlng seals that work
like giant washers.

The boosters are made up of
four fuel segments that are
bolted together at three field
Joints, so named because the
rockets are assembled at the
Kennedy Space Center launch
site In Florida — in the field.

River
Continued from ID
based on Interviews with farm­
ers on flood-prone lands who
wanted the protection the dam
could give them.
" I always tell people where I’m
coming from." he says. "And If
they don't agree with me I ask
them to give me their best shot.”
Albancsl said he doubted any
environmental agency would
now allow any new canal to be
connected to the St. Johns
River.
He sai d ma n y c a na l s ,
especially dead end' ones, were
build to control flood waters

In the Challenger design, the
lower rim of a segment, called a
"tang." was eased Into the clevis
of the segment below and the
Joint m em bers were bolted
together. Special putty was used
at the propellant Interface to
prevent hot gas from reaching
the O-rlngs when the rockets
were fired.
after the flood plains were con­
verted over for agriculture In the
192Qs. 30s, and 40s.
He said the canals also are
causing problems with the
brackish Indian River, a 90-mllc
long Inlet In Brevard County.
The canals dump fresh water
into the salt-water environment,
he said.
The Lake Washington weir Is
underwater since the river's
level Is now at about 14 feet.
During a record low. however,
water behind the weir bus
dropped to 914 feet and the bed
downstream from the dam dry
for about a mile, according to
Melbourne Water Department
personnel. — This story compiled
from staffand wire reports.

Travelin' About

Melodious Prose Collection
B j PsterL. Robertson

Social Research who studies
children In an observatory.
"They seem to realize they can
love someone even If they're
mad at them." Greenspan said.
"It Is a very crucial time In their
development."
Greenspan said toddlers.' from
18 to 30 months, begin to view
emotions in the abstract.
"D olls start hugging each
other," he said. "You don’t see
this type of play before then.
They know how to give emotion
meaning and apply It to a
situation.
"It’s very exciting to see." he
said.

nomenon.

A unanimous chorus of praise Is not an
assurance of survival: authors who please
everyone at once are quickly exhausted.
— Andre Paul Guillaume Glde

Amerteen Library Assn.
AMERICAN MUSICIANS, by Whitney
Balliett. Oxford. $22.95.415 pages.

begin to understand the com­
plexities of human communica­
tion. Greenspan said children
this age learn to be satisfied with
verbal reassurance rather than
physical reassurance.
"Mommy can say 'that's nice'
from across the room and
they’re happy." he said.
By the time they reach a year
and a half of age. most children
learn to control and even ma­
nipulate their emotions, doctors
said.
"You can see them gulp a few
times before they start crying,"
said child psychologist Patricia
Nachman of the New School For

of music. Balliett Is witty and informed:
hls effortlessly readable prose brings hls
subjects to life.
From the interviews with legends and
unknowns, each piece resembles a short
vignette, us Balliett captures the sung and
unsung heroes of Jazz.
Some are
first-hand conversations with the subject,
some are recollections of family and
friends.
As an interviewer, Balliett is skilled; hls
methods almost Innocuous. As he lets hls
subjects talk, their recollections arc some­
times verbose, but often insightful.
From the pages of "American Musi­
cians." the reader Ib given the historical
context and the sense of being present at
the events.
.
"American Musicians" includes such
greats as Jelly Roll Morton. Duke
Ellington and Ornette Coleman, from the
scraping for a living on the streets of New
Orleans to fancy cars and sharp suits in
New Vork City.
PERFECT PIECES, by Aaron Latham.
Arbor House. $17.95. 354 pages.
A contributing editor to "Rolling
Stone," Aaron Latham has perfected hls
stance as a practitioner of the "New
Journalism." as "Perfect Pieces." hls
collection of articles, previously published
in Esquire. Playboy and New Vork maga­
zines illustrates.
In the three opening pieces. Latham
searches for new variations on the mating
game.
Under the heading "T h e New Saturday
Night," these semi-documentary articles
examine the alternative social environ­
ments of the ’80s. Here are wild fashions
and the fast life in the punk drinking
clubs In Los Angeles: the evolution of the
health club into meeting place and disco
alternative; and’ "Gilley’s ,"’ the cowboy
bar-rodeo-dance hall in Texas.
•
All three articles demonstrate the tech­
nique of fictional narrative, an Integration
of dialogue and dramatization of events
Itlonal investigative reporting. All
into traditional
three utilize composite characters who fall
In and out o f love.
Compared to Whitney Balliett's precise
use of language. Latham occasionally
appears heavy-handed and Inelegant. Hls
Interview technique relies on relentless
probing, and often results in taciturn
interviews. In the Paul Newman article,
the author hammers home hls points,
while the subject seldom rises above a
one-word response.
Among several previously unpublished
articles In "Perfect Pieces" Is a sensitive
examination of the life and times of
Cynthia Ann Parker, a white woman
captured as a child by Comanche Indians.
She was raised as an Indian before
returning as a mother to white "civiliza­
tion." Her history and that of the other
Comanche prisoners Is Juxtaposed against
her present-day descendants.
Elsewhere. "Perfect Pieces" follows
Linda Ronstadt on her controversial
concert tour of black South Africa; Warren
Beatty battling to create hls Russian
revolutionary epic "Reds." and author
Gay Talese on an erotic romp through
New \^ork City’s massage parlors.

Cuisine Cruising Popular
Diners hooked on splashy scen­
ery arc finding cuisine cruising'
to be an unbeatable combination
on San Francisco Bay.

provides
rovldes a prime
p
rib bunet wlm
ar servlet? on the ship, which is
B
built In the style of a classic

turn-of-thc-ccntury steamer.
Saturday and Sunduy brunches
Elegant lunch and dinner cost $29 and sit-down dinner
cruises float under the Golden cruises cost $49.
Gate Bridge, often timed to
"It's a business where people
coincide with spectacular events
aren't buying something they
like A m e r i c a ’ s Cup yacht
need." said Watson. "They're
warmups, and provide a relaxing
buying something they really
and romantic interlude.
want — satisfaction.".
Wi t h a new breed of
Hornblower also runs two
entrepreneurs at the helm, vessels on San Diego Bay and is
dinner cruises are also churning branching out to Portland, Ore.,
the waters around Boston. New w h er e it plans to have a
York. Philadelphia. Baltimore. 40-ycar-old stern steamer In
Toledo, Pittsburgh. New Or­ operation by 1988. The com­
leans. Chicago and San Diego.
pany is scheduled to have a
On San Francisco Bay. the "C ity" look-alike churning the
cuisine cruise business is riding waters off Los Angeles by next
a high tide of success, according summer.
to T erry MacRae and Mike
"W e don't have to go looking
Watson, the youthful partners of for places to expand." said
Hornblower Yachts Inc.
Watson. "People try to attract
"It’s an Interesting business us." He said the dining boats
that attracts interesting people," have become a "signature" for
said MacRae. whose service the ports where they’re located
because of their popularity and
operates five vessels on the bay.
elegance.
The flagship of the licet is the
On San Francisco Bay. special
151-foot custom-built "City of
Hornblower
cruises have coin­
San Francisco." a $3 million
cided
with
such
events as Fleet
floating restaurant. Originally
launched as a charter vessel for Week. the. U.S. Air Force Blue
corporate outings, weddings and Angels aerial show. Jazz In the
s p e c i a l e v e n t s , th e 800- City, the Bay Bridge 50th anni­
passenger " C it y " features a ver sa ry c el e br at io n and a
nightclub, two dance halls and a sightseeing special when Hum­
phrey the humpback whale got
bagpipe-playing captain.
lost in protected waters. Next
" T h e excursion business year, the "C ity" offers special
shows a high growth potential." "landmark" cruises highlighting
said MacRae. who fills up most historic sites along the San
o f the dining and dancing Francisco waterfront.
cruises on the three-deck ship by
The whole town is gearing up
advance ticket sales. "People In for the 1987 celebration of the
the excursion business across Golden Gate Bridge's 50th anni­
the country are finding more versary and the "C ity” Is already
and more interest ... Maybe booked solid for the party.
.
there’s a touch of nostalgia for
"T h e opening day of the yacht
the d a y s w h en p a s s e n g e r season Is one o f our most
steamers were so abundant."
popular days to be out on the
Watson said Hornblower still bay." said Watson. "But there's
gets 80 percent of its business something happening all the
from charters, mostly corporate time to make a cruise inter­
clients in the bay area. A recent esting."
The best time to enjoy cuisine
bankers' convention of 18.000
_ o ot___
___o d
______
people b
k e d tw
o z en cruising, he said, is during the
charters and some of the regular winter months when the days
customers include IBM, Hewlet- are fogless and crisp, offering the
t-Packard. Chevron. Levi Strauss be8t v i e w s o f the passing
and the Fairmont Hotel.
sailboats, sea birds, bridges.
Most business dinner cruises
H .
Involve awards banquets and
.
U|*
other company functions, but
” 688
and
there also are some off-beat
™ rt,6
8
,hourB ®nd
celebrations. A consortium of
rewards
accounting firms always charter
™“ ke .**
“ f"*
the ship for April 15 to celebrate
J®1 J81“
88168
"tax day" and Ford Motor Co.
n?n lo X i l° more
used the ship to unveil Its
Taurus
model .
s also
a lot
of fun being
Taurus mooe
on It
|he
water
» he
from out
the
For tourists and sightseers. 8h|ny deck or the wood-panelled
Watson recommends the $24 ship. "Look around. You call this
Friday lunch cruise, which goes work?”

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                  <elementText elementTextId="222329">
                    <text>Reagan Brings Budget Battle To Florida
M E LB O U R N E (UPI) — President
Reagan brought the battle of the budget
to Florida's
"Space Coast" today,
asserting Ills opponents In Congress
"seem determined to destroy our eco­
nomic expansion and send us right
back to the malaise and stagnation of
the 1970s."
On the eve of House debate of a SI
trillion budget plan — and resumption
of the Iran-Contra hearings. Reagan
hammered away at tenets of his
domestic political agenda In a con­

tinued challenge to Democrats on
Capitol Hill.
In remarks prepared for delivery to
employees at a Dictaphone Corp. plant
along this high-tech corridor south of
the Kennedy Space Center. Reagan
charged two Democratic proposals now
before Congress — the budget resolu­
tion before the House and a trade bill
before the Senate — have the potential
of torpedoing the economic growth of
the last four years.
Applauding Dictaphone's own record

of Improved productivity over that
same period of time. Reagan sounded a
note of concern in warning. "This
miracle — all you've worked so hard to
accomplish, all America has worked so
hard to accomplish In the last 6 1/2
years — all this Is now In Jeopardy."
" I’ve got something to say. and I’m
going to use plain language." he
declared. "I'm not going to pull any
punches. There are some people up in
Washington who seem determined to
destroy our economic expansion and

M a n D ie s
A f t e r D iv e
O f f B r id g e

O n

TO D A Y
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Comics................. ............4B
Coming Events__ ............3A
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Financial............. ............8A
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Hospital:............... ............8A
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Bee REAGAN, page BA

G ro w th

library volumes, but recom­
mending assessing the fees for
Still battling with Its cities fire-rescue operations in unin­
over imposition of Impact fees corporated areas.
The committee. In a 5-4 vote,
for roads. Seminole County
commissioners are to consider concluded the library fees repre­
Tuesday Imposing Impact fees sented "lifestyle" enhancement
on developers to pay for library
ru th e r th a n an e s s e n tia l
and fire-rescue services.
growth-related need. The fees
would cost developers $54 for
In other business. County
Environmental Services Director each dwelling unit built.
Jim Bible will ask the com­
The panel, voting 5-4. re­
mission to delay a public hearing commended the fire-rescue fees
set for 1:30 p.m. Tuesday on the on new development in unin­
county's proposed purchase of corporated areas. If adopted,
Lake Monroe Utilities. Bible said developers would pay $75 for
the owner’s consumptive use each residential unit built. The
permit from the St. Johns Water m o n e y w o u ld go to w a rd s
Mangement District must be establishing a fire-rescue reponsc time of five minutes and
renewed before the county can
decide whether to.buy.the water offsetting any deficiency In the
and sewer utility for S I.2 mil­ stnndttrd of services caused-by
lion. That will require at least a growth.
County commissioners ure to
two month delay, he said.
M eshelle Nathan, 12, h as a first place Recreation Departm ent's "Su m m er F lin g "
consider
the committee's rec­
Concerning
the
possible
Im
­
bubble on the rise, left, then faces the bubble blowing contest. Tangela Roberts,
ommendations
at a work session
pact
fees,
a
committee
charged
sticky afterm ath. M eshelle won the "b ig ­ 8, took second place in F rid a y 's event at
Tuesday morning.
with studying new development
gest bubble" accolade in the Sanford the Sanford C iv ic Center in Sanford.
The session Is likely to Include
Impact fees Is advising against a
a commission decision whether
countywide Impact levy to boost
to schedule public hearings on
the Ore-rescue and library Im­
pact fees In August.
The library fees would be
assessed countywlde and would
lx* aimed at providing a per
capita rate of 1.5 books over the
AMESBURY. England (UPI)
next 10 years, at a cost of $3.6
the police wanted to be rea­
— Forty-three sell-descrlbcd
million. The money would buy
sonable and hud agreed to let
hippies who tried to break
217.353 volumes, according to
the hippies near the monu­
are many proposed city hull
through
wire
barriers
to
the
the Impact fee review commitment
"provided
that
the
trav­
'Let's go find property related Items that should be
ancient stone monoliths of
teee.
elers
are
reasonable
in
return"
Included In this year's proposed
somewhere else.'
Stonehenge were arrested
Commissioners can expect
and
stay
behind
the
barriers.
budget, he said. Estimated costs
while 60 white-robed Druids
objections to both fee proposals
It
was
the
first
time
such
for
properly
acquisition,
con­
-Charlie Webster
held their unnual summer
I r o m the H o m e B u ild e r s
permission had been granted
struction and design total $3.8
solstice
ceremonies
at
the
Association
of Mid-Florida, an
at
the
summer
solstice
since
to $4 million for the new city
for the proposed city complex.
monument.
organization representing devel­
the
hippies'
annual
-festival
hall
complex
which
will
house
But the site the elty selected
Some 500 long-haired hip­
opers in Seminole. Orange and
there was banned two years
earlier is immediately adjacent all city administrative functions
pies marched eight miles to ago. The ban followed often
Osceola counties.
to the present city hall. Norris and the police department.
the site In England's west
Cheryl Lynch, the associa­
violent
clashes
with
police
and
said he had received seven Norris said. The complex Is
country from their Devil's
tion's governm ental affiars
complaints
over
the
noise
and
scheduled
to
be
built
In
phases
replies from property owners of
Dyke busc camp Sunday to
director, said the homebuilders
unsanitary conditions created
the site Indicating titey did not over a number of years.
watch the sun rise on the
recognize Impact fees as a viable
by
the
hippies.
The commission In March
wish to sell their land at all or
longest day of the year. They
revenue source for growthThe
60
modern-day
Druids,
chose
Catalyst
Incorporated
not for the amount the city was
were
given
permission
to
related
Infrastructure needs.
clad In white robes and clut­
Architecture of Orlando over two
offering.
march to the area provided
"As
long
as they are address­
c h in g tic k e ts issued by
The replies were In response to other firms to design their new
they
stayed
behind
wire
bar•
ing
basic
Infrastructure
needs.
English Herituge. the founda­
a letter from Norris asking the city hall. An architect's report Is
rlers around the ancient
we have accepted them as part
due
to
come
before
the
com­
t
io
n
th
a
t
m
a
n
a
g
e
s
the
property owners to Indicate their
monument.
of doing business." said Lynch.
monument, were allowed to
willingness or unwillingness to mission on June 29. However,
As some 250 reporters, pho­
" H o w e v e r . Im p ro v in g the
the commission has already
hold their annual rite within
accept appraisal offers.
tographers and television
lifestyle of the community —
the
prehistoric
ring
of
stones.
authorized
the
architect
to
go
Th e letter said. "A ll final
camera crew members looked
such as with libraries — we feel
ahead
with
(he
data
gathering
decisions relative to acquisition
on. some of the hippies tried to
Followers of u pre-Christian
s h o u ld be fu n d e d b y an
will, of course, be the prerogative and space planning phases of the
Celtic cult, the Druids believe
break
through
the
barriers
to
across-the-board tax Increase."
city
hall
complex
because
the
of the elty commission.”
the s to n e s th e m s e lv e s .
Stonehenge was possibly
Lynch said the commission
I n f o r m a t i o n w o u l d be
C o m m is s io n e r C h a r lie
Forty-three were arrested after erected and certainly used by
neglected
to study how many
Webster said he thought It was appropriate to the complex
scuflllng with scores of officers
others of the cull as a religious
library
volumes
It would need
"ludicrous" to try and obtain whatever location was selected.
surrounding the monument.
center thousands of years ago.
when It begun an ambitious
Commissioner
Jo
hn
Percy,
people's land when they don't
Police said the hippies were
English Heritage for the past
library construction program.
want to sell It. "Let's go find w h o s t r o n g l y f a v o r s a
decade has allowed the public
re le a s e d w it h o u t b e in g
Now. concerned about empty
"downtown" site, reminded the
property somewhere else."
charged.
no closer than about 20 yards
book shells. It Is trying to force
commission
that
there
arc
sev­
Norris urged the commission
from the monument as a
Wiltshire Assistant Chief
developers to absorb the cost of
to advise* him concerning the eral different sites In the
result of damage from graffiti.
Constable David Cooke said
See S ITE , page 3A
See C O U N TY , page 3A
selection of a site because there
By Ted Carter
Herald Staff W riter

Lake Mary Continues Search
For Downtown City Hall Site
Even though the property
owners object, there Is no reason
R-ake Mary can't condemn the
land it wants for site of Its new
city hull complex, according to
City Attorney Frank Kruppenbaeher. But the city commission
has decided to take one more
look at other "downtown” sites
lx*fore making a final decision.
K ru p p c n b a c h cr had been
asked by City Manager Bob
Norris to address the condem­
nation question question at
Th u rsd a y 's meeting. It was
raised by citizens who ques­
tioned the legality of the city
condemning property for use as
a city hall when other property Is
readily available. Kruppenbacher said that because the city
tVants to use the land to begin
developing a "downtown core,”
it can sustain taking the pro­
perty.
Norris said the city owns
property on Rinehart Road and
since the Capital Facilities
Committee Identified a need of
less than four acres for the entire
city complex, there is. in fact,
adequate land on Rinehart Road

Reagan ripped into Congress for
"that old-time deficit spending" despite
Democratic charges that he shares the
blame for record deficits and a national
debt that has more than doubled since
he took office.
Recalling the "giant veto pencil"
Republican senators gave him last
week to repel Democratic efforts to use
higher taxes to reduce the deficit.
Reagan stood his ground In the face of

C o u n ty Eyes

A Sanford man Is dead follow­
ing a dive from the Weklva River
Bridge west of Sanford on State
Road 46 at the Setnlnole-Lake
county line..
Michael Dean Bcdenbaugh. 28.
of 108 S. Holly Avc.. dove from
the bridge at about 4:30 p.m.
Sunday. He was found floating
face down In the water.
Bcdenbaugh. a carpenter, was
pulled from the water by Daryl
S. Hokey. 22. of 318 Palmetto
Avc. *D. Sanford. Then Keven D.
Rudcbcck. 23. of 5378 Orange
Blvd.. Sanford, tried to revive
him with mouth to mouth re­
suscitation. a Seminole County
sheriffs report oald.
At about 4:54 p.m. sheriffs
deputies, firefighters and an
ambulance arrived at the scene,
where Bcdenbaugh had been
swimming with his girlfriend.
Ellen Marie Hcrbcrger. 19. of
230 Lake Ellen Drive. Cassel­
berry.
A sheriffs deputy reported
Bcdenbaugh had "a slight pulse
and was barely breathing." He .
was transported to Central ‘
Florida Regional Hospital In 1
Sanford, but apparently died
cnroutc.
An autopsy was scheduled for
early today at CFRII.

By Genie Llndberg
Herald Staff W riter

send us right back to the malaise and
stagnation of the 1970s. "
While Reagan did not Identify those
"people up In Washington." his pique
was clearly aimed at Democrats who
rebuffed him with House approval of a
trade bill he denounced again as
"anti-Jobs, anti-grow th and an ti­
consumer and with conference com­
mittee endorsement last week of a fiscal
1988 budget plan that Includes some
$65 billion In additional taxes over
three years.

Hippies Crash Stonehenge
Summer Solstice Ceremony

Broward A rrests May Push Mob Into Central Florida
By Brian Sullivan
Herald Staff W riter

Seminole County has not been ruled
out as a location for probes of suspected
mob activity, following the recent arrests
In Broward County of members of three
organized crime families, said Broward
Sheriffs Deputy Steve Bertucelli. The
arrests there, he said. may. "turn up the
heat." on organized crime In that region
und extend the influence of the mob's
illegal enterprises to Central Florida.
Bertucelli said the Tuesday arrests of
members of the Gamblno. Busalino and
Maggadlno crime families will lead to
additional arrests throughout the
country and Florida. He said 24 crime
families operate In South Florida. 16 of
them In Broward County. Together it Is
estimated that 300 to 400 people are
Involved In organized crime Btoward
County alone and (hat for many of the

'The amounts of money and
the levels of violence are
so vast now that it makes
the days of A l Capone and
old Chicago seem like petty
crime.'
families south Florida is home base.
"I was involved with Investigations in
the Orlando urea in 1976 regarding
syndicate gambling." Bertucelli said.
"There’s no reason to suspect that mob
activities aren't still theie or that they
haven't gotten bigger.”
According to Bertucelli. the potential
for organized crime exists wherever big
money and gambling are present.
"It would be shortsighted to think that

%%

organized ctlme Isn't present In Central
Florida, or that there Is nothing local law
enforcement agencies can do about It."
Bertucelli said. "Once you start digging
and uncover a thread of mafia activity it
just doesn't stop; it extends Into almost
every area of soclo-econmoic life."
Bertucelli said that he isn't Just talking
about conventional mob activity of the
Al Capone variety.
"Th e central and south American drug
cartels...specifically C olum bia, are
springing up all over the country al a
surprisingly sophisticated level of crimi­
nal activity." he said. "What local law
enforcement agencies need to do Is tap
into an 'intelligence base' that Is created
for the use of all law enforcement
agencies."
Bertucelli said such a base Is expanded
every time there Is an arrest. In the
Broward countv case an undercover

police officer wore a microphone for two
years to get close to powerful members
of the three crime families. When It
began to look like the officer was In
danger of being discovered, the task
force made their move. The Information
and procedures of (hat operation will
now lx* available for law enforcement
people across the country.
"No single law enforcement agency
has the resources to combat organized
crime on Itsown." Bertucelli said.
"You need to task force big opera­
tio n s ...w ith different departm ents
working together on these cases. We had
sheriffs deputies, the FBI. DEA...several
different agencies that had to get
together and work as a team to make
arrests on the scale of our operation."
See MOB. page 3A

•

�r

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3A t— lari NwraM,

FI.________ Maaday, Jana M, 1W7

IN BRIEF
M an Hit With Radio
Robbad O f C a th , W allat
An Enterprise man told Sanford police that he was
robbed early Saturday morning while sitting In his pick-up
truck at the 1300 block of West 13th Street.
Michael Lawrence. 860 Lake Shore Drive, said that he
was in his truck with another man at about 2:30 a.in. when
a man and woman opened the door of his truck, pulled him
out, lilt him over the head with a radio, and stole his wallet
containing $200 iij cash.

Thief Fscapos Through W indow
An unidentified man stole a nurse’s pocket book from
behind the nurses station at the Sanford Nursing and
C o n v a le s c e n t C e n t e r at 9 5 0 M e llo n v llle A v e .
Elma L. Harvey' purse was taken by a man who fled Into a
bathroom. When police arrived the suspect had already
escaped through out of a window in the bathroom. The
Investigation continues.

Youth* Stono Squad Car
A group of youths stoned a Sanford police patrol car early
Saturday morning In the vicinity of 13th Street and
Persimmon.
The officer said In the Sanford police report that he was
on routine patrol at about 1:45 a.m. when a group of
Juveniles broke his front headlight and damaged the rear of
the vehicle with rocks.

G un Stolon From H ouse
A .38-caliber revolver valued at $100 was stolen from
1405 W. 17th St., according to a report filed by the
resident. Maggie Brownlee.
Brownlee said that when she returned home at about 7
p.m. on Friday evening she noticed the weapon missing.

Thief Takes Sofa, Chair
A burglar entered the residence of Johnnie May Kelly.
126 Castle Brewer Court, some time before 9:30 p.m. on
Friday. According to u Sanford Police report filed by Kelly,
the thief entered through a livingroom window and made
off with a sofa and chair valued at $500 together.

Je w e lry Stolen From H ouse
Allle Ruffin. 319 Pecan Ave.. reported the theft of four
gold chains valued together at $600 that were taken from a
rack in her bedroom some time before 9 p.m. on
Wednesday.

Store Holdup Su sp ect Ja iled
A Sanford man was charged with robbery after a store
manager Identified him as the person who robbed a
convenience store Friday In Sanford..
Whether the man took money, goods or anything and
how the robbery transpired was not mentioned In the
Sanford police report.
A man entered the Circle K store at 1806 West First St. at
approximately 10:30 p.m. Friday night and appeared as If
he was going to buy a pack of cigarettes.
The man put $2 on the counter and when the cashier
opened the cash register drawer the man swung a club he
had been carrying and warned the attendeat to stand back.
He then reached into the till and grabbed a handful of bills
before fleeing.
A suspect was taken into custody shortly after the
alleged incident. He fit the description of the robber and
had in his possession a club-like weapon supposedly used
in the robbery, police said.
Arrested at 8:52 p.m.. and charged with robbery was
Murray Lee AnderBon. 22. of 104 McCray Blvd. Bond was
set at $8,000.

G un Draw n A fte r Car A ccident
Seminole County sheriffs deputies reported charging
William E. Slaughter, 25. of Palm Bay. with aggravated
assault after he allegedly drew a gun from the glovebox of
his car during an argument with three men following a
Seminole County traffic accident.
Slaughter was arrested at 8:10 p.m. Wednesday at state
roads 419 and 434. where the accident occurred. The
gunplay reportedly occurred at the Handy Way on the
corner of State Road 419 and Tuskawilla Road, a sheriffs
report said. Slaughter has been released on $1.000 bond to
appear in court Ju ly 6.

H om e-G row n Pot Crop Found
Daniel Bruce McDonnough, of 3517 Palm Way. Sanford,
was arrested on charges of cultivation of marijuana and
possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia after City
County Invesigatlon Bureau agents with a warrant
searched his home at about 10 p.m, Wednesday.
The agents reported finding potted pot plants in the back
yard and additional marijuana and drug paraphernalia in
McDonnough's possession. He has been released on $2,000
bond to appear in court Ju ly 6.

SUNDAY
p .m . , L a k e

M a ry
Boulevard one block west of Art
Lane. Firefighters checked on
the sight of a previous muck fire
for continuation. All signs of the
fire were extinguished.
— 3:38 p.m., 110 W. Airport
Ave. A 55-ycar-old woman fell
down. When rescue workers
arrived she claimed not to be
— 2 :1 2

(U S P S 4 II 110)

Monday, June 22, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 259
PublitlMd Daily and Sunday, **c*pl
Saturday by Tha Sanford Herald.
Inc. 1M N. French Ave.. Sanford,
Fla. 11771.
Second C la n Pottage Paid at Sanford,
Florida 11771

•

P O S T M A S T E R : Sendaddresi changes
to T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D . P.O.
Boa US7, Sanford. F L 11771.

r«

Home Oelivery: Month. 14.75; 1 Months,
SM.11/ a Months. 127.00; Year,
151.00. Sy M ail: Month, 14.75; 1
Months 110.15; t Months. $17.04;
Year, 147.44.
Phone (1051 1111411.

Injured. She refused treatment
and transportation to hospital.
—7:37 p.m., 207 Laurel Dr. A
trash fire was started when hot
ashes thought to be cool were
dumped from a grill Into a
garbage can. Firefighters extin­
guished fire.
8:37 p.m., Sixth Street and
Hickory Avenue. No patient was
found and no action taken.
— 11:00 p.m., 815 S. French
Ave. A 37-year-old man was
assaulted. He received bruises
on his forehead and upper lip
and was bleeding from the nose
and mouth. The patient refused
transportation and was left In
the care of the Sanford Police
Department.
— 11:10 p.m„ 2011 Summerlin
Ave. A 50-year-old man had
chest pains. Rescue workers
treated und transported him to
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal, Sanford.
MONDAY

— 3:01 a.m., Seventh Street and
Cypress Avenue. Shooting inci­
dent. No patient found at scene
and Sanford Police Department
cancelled any action.
—6:55 a.m.. 25th Street and
Country Club Lane. Auto acci­
dent. Cancelled enroute by the
Sanford Police Department.

•

9 *-i

Prosecutor Takes Overturn in Stride
The assistant state attorney he did not know tt was two
who prosecuted a drug convic­ ounces of cocaine that he and a
tion overturned this week by the co-dcfcndant sold to sherlfTs
Florida Supreme Court does not 'agents for S4.000 In December
put much significance on the 1984.
high court's ruling that pro­
"It’s always been up to the
secutors must prove accussed prosecutor to show the defen­
drug dealers knew the sub­ dant knew it was dope." said
stances they sold were illegal.
Catto. "It's a matter of InT h e Suprem e C o urt, said ' terpreting the law as it applies to
prosecutor B ill Catto. was Dominguez* particular case."
merely "reiterating the law"
Dominguez, of Orlando, was
when it ordered a new trial In sentenced to three years in
Seminole County Circuit Court prison after a jury in Ju ly 1985
for Antonio Dominguez. The found him guilty of trafficking in
court ordered the retrial on the cocaine.
basis of Dominguez' claim that
S h e riff’s agents arrested

Dominquez and Job Brooks, also
of Orlando, after the two sold an
agent the two ounces of cocaine
In the parking lot of an Alta­
monte Springs bank.
In overturning Dominquez'
conviction, the court ruled 7-0
that Judges must tell Juries that
one of the essentail elements of a
drug-trafficking offense is the
accused person's knowledge of
what the substance was.
Catto said It could be the State
Attorney’s Office will drop pro­
secution and let Dominquez,
who was 22 when arrested, go
free for time already served.
’—Ted Carter

Reaction To Creationism Ruling Mixed
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - Scien­
tists and c iv il libertarians
applauded Friday's Supreme
Court ruling banning the re­
quired teaching of "creation
s c ie n ce " and con servative
Christians acknowledged their
movement needs to regroup.
"Somewhere In heaven. John
Scopes Is celebrating." said a
Jubilant Ira Glasscr. executive
director of the American Civil
Liberties Union, referring to the
Tennessee biology teacher con­
victed of teaching evolution In
the original "monkey trial" In
1925.
The court. In a 7-2 ruling, said
the Louisiana law that required
the concept of creation science
— an attempt to put a scientific
foundation under the biblical
six-day account of creation — be
taught on an equal basis with
evolution, is an unconstitutional
effort to promote religious beliefs
in (he public schools.
Supporters of the law were
stung by the size of their defeat

" W e w o n . G o o d ." s a id
Stephen Jay Gould, a professor
of geology at Harvard University
and an outspoken critic of the
te a ch in g of c re a tio n is m .
Gould, who testified In a
similar case in Arkansas and
was involved in filing a brief in
the Louisiana case, said he
expected to win but thought the
vote would be closer.
"I think this decisively ends
the legal phase of this particular
struggle." he said. "But the
battle is far from over. Scientists
and c itize n s interested in
furthering science arc still going
to have to be watchful and keep
up the battle."
Walter Slocombe. who repre­
sented 72 Nobel laureates op­
posed to the Louisiana law. said
he was delighted with the ruling.
"I think it will make it much
harder for states to do this sort of
thing." he said. "Th is ruling
frees the teaching of science
from this kind of confusion with
what are bnsicully religious
concepts."

and the strongly worded opinion
of Justice William Brennan.
" I ’m shocked and disap­
pointed." said former Louisiana
state Sen. Bill Keith, who pushed
the legislation.
"What this means Is that the
vast majority of American school
children will continue to be
Indoctrinated in evolutionism
and will be denied the right and
the freedom to hear the evi­
dences that p o in t to c r e ­
ationism." Keith said.
"We will have to regroup now
and find out where we are." he
udded.
President Reagan, who has
endorsed the restoration of
Christian religious values In the
schools. Including the teaching
of creationism, was asked about
the court ruling Friday and said.
" I haven't seen that."
Scientists, teachers and civil
libertarians as well as mainline
Protestant and Jewish groups,
however, warmly praised the
court ruling.

C hild’s Injuries
Investigated
A 7-month-old rural Winter
Park boy was in fair condition
today in Florida Hospital —
Orlando.
He was found unconscious
on the living room floor of the
home of hls babysitter at
about 4 p.m. Thursday and
was taken to the hospital
where he was Initially listed in
serious condition. Seminole
County sheriffs deputies arc
investigating the boy’s condi­
tion as a possible case of child
abuse.
Joshua T . Glachetti. the son
of T e r e s a a n d T h o m a s
Glachetti. of 2709 Red Lion
Square. W inter Park, was
taken from the home of hls
babysitter. Sheri Lee Durkec,
23. of 2831 Red Lion Square,
after Durkee called rescue
workers to her home after
finding the baby unconscious.
The boy was first taken to
Winter Park Memorial hospi­
tal and then transferred to
Orlando Regional Medical
Center, where doctors alerted
sheriffs investigators and
Health and Rehabilitative
Services counselors that he
might be a victim of abuse.
Sheriffs investigator Sgt.
Greg Barnett said Joshua
shows signs of having been
"shaken," but tests arc being
conducted to attempt more
spcclffically to determine the
cause of his condition.
—Susan Loden

WEATHER
Nation T em p e ra ture s
City A Forecast
Albuquarqu* ty
Anchorage cy
Ajhevllle pc
Atlanta t*
Billing, t»
Birmingham t*
Boilon cy
Brownivllla Tax.ty
Buffalo li
Burlington Vt. ih
CharlaitonS.C. It
Charlolto N.C. pc
Chicago pc

HI Lo Pep
90 54
IS
41 51
15 44 .14
14 71 .04
91 5a
44 71
44 40
91 74
41 49 09
45 41
47 49
19
49 73
44 70
9 T M C I 4 4 44 41
§f if f ilB H
47 71 .44
Columbuipc
49 71 .04
91 75 -4
Uvn»frpc
49 40 ....
44 44 ...t
D*s Molrtas sy
Oatroltts
41 70 1.14
7] 50
Duluth ty
97 43
El Patoty
47 74 .17
Evantvlllopc
Hartford th
70 45 .01
Honolulupc
47 74 ....
Houston pc
91 75 .04
Indianapolis pc
44 47 1.03
92 71
Jackson Miss, pc
91 75 .72
Jacksonville ts
90 70
Kansas City pc
10173
Las Vagas sy
93 72 27
LlttloRockpc
Lot Angales f
77 41
47 70 •IS
Loultvllla ts
Memphis pc
19 71 .24
44 40
Miami Boachpc
45 44 1.12
Milwaukee pc
44 44 .02
Minneapolis pc
Nathvllla pc
47 71 .20
Ntw Or loans ts
14 75 1.37
New York ts
71 44 ....
Oklahoma City pc
49 70 ....
Omaha sy
93 47 ....
Philadelphia ts
84 71 .34
Phoanlx sy
105 71
Pittsburgh ts
44 49 .11
Portland Me. sh
74 40
Portland Ore. pc
44 54
Providence sh
74 45
Richmond pc
90 71
St. Louis ts
U 71
San Francisco sy
44 51
Washington pc
49 74 OJ

g*2J&amp;Y

•

pc partly cloudy
r rain
sh showers
sm smoke
in snow
sy tunny
It thunderstorms
w windy

COOES
c dear
Cl~t leering
Cy cloudy
I fair
ty loqgy
hi h.ue
m m i’s&lt;ng

Florida Te m p e ra tu re s

FIRE CALLS

f

MIAM I (UPI1 — Florida 34 hour tempera
lures and rainfall at 4 a.m. ED T today:
City:
HI U Rain
Apalachicola
47 75 0.16
Crestvlew
40 73 0 44
Daytona Beach
91 73 0.00
Fort Lauderdale
48 M 0.01
Fort Myers
95 75 0 00
Gainesville
93 71 000
Jacksonville
92 75 0 73
Key West
89 I I 0 00
Lakeland
92 70 0 00
Miami
90 It 001
Orlando
95 74 0 00
Pensacola
45 74 0 01
Sarasota Bradenton
90 75 0.00
Tallahassee
la 74 0 51
Tampa
91 77 0 00
Vero Beach
90 7a 0 00
West Palm Beach
19 77 O.tr

Moon Phases

N«W
Jun.l*

Firtt
July 4

Full
July 19

Last
July 17

Beach Conditions
Daytona

Beach:Waves are

about 1 foot and glassy. Current
is to the north with a water
temperature of 78 degrees. New
Smyrna Beach:Waves are two
to three feet and glassy. Current
Is slightly to the north. Water
temperature Is 78 degrees. Sun
screen factor: 21.

Five-Day Forecast
For Central Florida
raatvvci
. t t

Ptly Cldy

M gnm ayr

.t t

PtlyCldy

tt

tt

►WVTCtOUC

tt

Local Report
The high temperature Sunday
In Sanford was 94 degrees and
the overnight low was 71 de­
grees as reported by the Univer­
sity of Florida Agricultural Re­
search and Education Center.
Celery Avenue. There was .07
Inches of rain recorded.

Highs

91

93

92

91

92

Lows

72

74

74

73

72

Tues.

Wed.

T h u rs.

F r i.

Sat.

Sourca: National Waalhar Service

Summer Makes
Violent Entry
United Press International

Violent storms ushered in
summer In the Midwest and
the South us lightning killed
an Alabama fisherman, floods
closed Detroit highways and a
tornado struck a Michigan
trailer park, killing one person,
injuring four und damaging as
many as 75 homes.
Tw o people were killed when
their plane crushed in dense
log Sunday night near Mitchell
Airport in Milwaukee, and an
Indiana man died earlier in the
day when hls plane went down
In the rain in LaPorte County,
authorities said.
S i o r m s S u n d a y , w it e n
summer begun at 6:12 p.m.
E D T. hurled wind gusts of up
lo 116 mph near Quemudo,
T e x a s , and p ro d u c e d
tornadoes in New Mexico.
M issouri. T e x a s . Flo rida.
Georgia and Michigan, the
Nallonal Weather Service said.
Heavy rain prompted Hash
flo o d w a tc h e s to d a y in
s o u th e rn New Y o rk and
southern lower M ichigan,
where about 15.UOO homes
and businesses remained
w ithout pow er, a Detroit
Edison spokesman said.
Floods up to -l feet deep in
the Detroit area closed a slew
of roads including sections ol
Interstates 75. 94 and 96.
forcing some 10O motorists to
abandon their cars, police said
early today.
"II you don't have some­
where to go today. I'd say stay
home." said Stale Police Sgt.
Douglas Parvlaincn In Detroit.
■'We've got sections of every
freeway in the city closed."
A killer twister struck Sun­
day afternoon ai the Chateau
Estates trailer park in Novi.
Mich., near Detroit. Michael
Muscalello. 24. was killed. His
wife. Vanda. 27. was in serious
condition at the University of
M ichigan Hospital w ith a
broken buck. T h e ir sun.

Michael Jr.. 19 months, was in
critical condition at Detroit’s
C h ild re n ’s H ospital, Novi
police said.
"Th e re was no w arning
whatsoever." said resident
Skip Nafe. "It wusjusl swirling
In the air. I could see stuff
Hying in a circle in the air."
The tornado damaged 50 to
75 of the 725 trailers at the
park, police said. The homes
are worth about S 15.000 each,
but no damage estimate was
available. Between six and
eight of tile trailers were
overturned, police said.
Leonard Terrell, whose trail­
er Hipped over, said debris Hew
into the air "like someone
turned on a fan and threw a
bunch of stuff up.
"I went through one wull
and landed in the bathtub." he
said.
The only tiling left standing
at the dead man’s home was a
slalrway. neighbors said.
Sgt. John Johnson of the
Novi police said several minor
Injuries did not require hospi­
talization. The Red Cross set
up emergency housing for the
mobile home residents in the
Walled Lake Ju n io r High
School.
To rn a d o e s also caused
minor damages in Roswell.
N.M.. and damaged trees und
roofs at Cohutta. Ga. Other
twisters struck near Monett.
Mo., and Jacksonville. Flu.,
und ut McCamey. Texas, and
an unconfirmed tornado dam­
aged homes in Dunnclton.
Fla., the NWS said.
A fisherman was killed by
lightning on the Tennessee
River near Swan Creek in
Limestone County. Ala., the
county sheriffs office said.
Lightning also sparked a fire
Sunday at a grain elevator in
A s h v 111v . O h i o . F i f t y
firefighters from six depart­
ments responded to the blaze
und one firefighter suffered an
arm injury.

A re a Forecast
To d a y...p a rtly cloudy with
s c a tte re d a fte rn o o n t h u n ­
derstorms. High in the lower
90s. South wind 10 mph. Rain
chance 50 percent.
Tonight...partly cloudy with
widely scattered evening thun­
derstorms. Low in the mid 70s.
Light wind. Ruin chance 20
percent.
Tuesday...partly cloudy with
s c a tte re d a fte rn o o n t h u n ­
derstorms. High in the lower
90s. South wind 10 mph. Rain
chance 40 pc. cent.

Ext ended Forecast
Tlie extended forecast. Wed­
nesday through Friday, for
Florida except northwest —
Partly cloudy with a chance df
mainly afternoon and evening
thunderstorms. Highs near 90 to
the mid 90s. Lows lower 70s
north to around 80 extreme
south.

A r e a Readings
The temperature at 8 a.m.: 78:
overnight low: 74: Sunday’s
high: 95: barometric pressure:
30.00; relative humidity: 87
percent: winds: SE at 6 mph:
rain: None; Today's sunset: 8:26
p.m
Tuesday's sunrise; 6:29
a.m

A re a Tides

TUESDAY:
SOLUNAR TABLE: Min. 3:

a.m.. 3:50 p.m.: MaJ. 9:40 a.n
10:05 p.m. TIDES: Daytoi
Beach: highs. 6:55 a.m., 7:
p.m.: lows. 12:47 a.m.. 12::
p.m .: N ew Sm yrna Beac
highs. 7:00 a.m.. 7:28 p.n
lows. 12:52 a.m.. 12:42 p.m
Bayport: highs. 12:59 a.n
11:33 p.m.: lows. 5:38 a.in.. 7:‘,
p.m.

Boating

St. A u g u stin e to J u p ite r
Inlet— Today...south wind 10
kts. Seas 3 It or less. Bay and
inland waters a light chop.
Scattered thunderstorms.
Tonight...south to southwest
wind 10 kts. Seas 3 ft or less.
Bay and inland waters a light
chop. Scattered evening thun­
derstorms.

�*

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Korean Chief A g re e s To M e e t
With O pposition ; Riots Continue
SEOUL. South Korea (UP1) — President Chun Doo Hwan
today agreed to meet with opposition leaders to discuss
ways to end violent anti-government protests but students
battled police for the 13th straight da&gt;.
Roh Tae-woo. chairman of the ruling Democratic Justice
Party and Chun's handpicked candidate as his replace­
ment. told reporters the president had accepted Roh's
suggestion he meet with opposition leaders such as Kim
Young-sam within a few days to seek a solution to the
current crisis.
The latest protests have Included some of the most
violent demonstrations and at least one death. They began
June 10 after the ruling party nominated Roh as Its
candidate to succeed Chun. Under Korea's electoral college
process, Roh is guaranteed the presidency.

Kurdish G uerrillas M a ssa cre 31
ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) — Suspected Kurdish guerrillas
seized a village In eastern Turkey Saturday, herding
residents Into the streets and killing at least 31 people In a
sudden hail of gunfire, the Anatolian news agency said.
The semi-official news agency said gunmen surrounded
the village of Plnarclk. Mahdln province, near the Syrian
border at 10 p.m. and used megaphones to order the
residents Into the town's main square.
Eyewitnesses told the news agency the rebels opened fire
with automatic weapons, sending people fleeing In all
directions to escape the bullets. Many of the residents
briefly escaped Into three houses, but the guerrillas
demolished the buildings with hand grenades before
escaping.

1

Cantinuad from page 1A
Joe Keefe, spokesman for the

Orlando office of the Drug En­
forcem ent A dm in istratio n .

agreed.
“ You have to have task
forces." Keefe said. "We have a
drug task force In Seminole
County and Sanford, and we
encourage our people to work
together with local agencies that
may not have the expertise to
recognize and deal with possible
organized crime In their com­
munities."
Sanford Police Chief Steve
Harriett said the Influence of
mob crime Is everywhere.
"There are Indirect results of
organized crime In almost every
walk of life." Harriett said.
"Many legal business operate far
removed from the heart of the
network, and the organizer's
Influence extends like Invisible
tentacles that, as we work on a
case, may be difficult to follow In
every direction."
Seminole County Sheriff John
Polk said that as far as he knows
organized crime has not really
s u r f a c e d In S e m i n o l e
County...yct.
"I'm sure there Is some (orga­
nized crime) here." he said. "But
I haven't seen strong evidence of
It."
Keefe said the DEA Is always
looking for mob ties.
"Everybody should be looking
for It." he said. "We (law en­
forcement) have better com­
munication systems than we
ever had before. There Is so
much cooperation between de­

NATION

...Site

IN BRIEF

downtown ureu lo be considered
because initial site selection was
basically limited lo that area
designated in ihe city's Com­
prehensive Plan as "downtown."
Commissioner Paul Trcm cl
suggested the commission start
looking at property that has only
one owner. "I agree with Charlie
(Webster). I don't want to take
someone's land."
Percy said that if the com­
mission started giving in to
those who did not want to sell, lt
would become vulnerable. "I
grew up In a small town with a
town center, churches and all
that." Percy said, "and I frankly
don't envision that on Rinehart
Road."
, Trcmcl agreed tha^ the city
-would become' vulnerable If It
did not establish condemnation
policies soon. ,
Mayor Dick Fess emphasized
that the city had the property for
the city complex appraised by
MAI (Member of Appraisal In­
stitute) appraisers and that
based on those appraisals, the
city was offering the property
owners "a fair and Just price."
To let 11lose- property owners try
to stand in the way of progress Is
just not right. Fess said, "if we
pull city ball from tills urea
(downtown), we're going lo have
a blighted area." lie said. "1
don't want city hall out on
Rinehart Road. The city needs to
be a viable, service-producing
city and we've got to bite the
bullet on this one."
Webster said It would be
foolish for tite city to fight the
properly owners because "those

M agazine Links North To Plot
To A ssa ssin ate Iranian Leaders

:

...M o b

W ASHINGTON |UPI) Now added to the list of
congressional questions for Lt. Col. Oliver North In the
Iran-Contra scandal Is the subject of his role In an alleged
plot to assassinate Iranian leaders.
With the congressional hearings In the case resuming
Tuesday, however, more lawmakers have questioned
whether the Marine at the heart of the scandal will testify
at all to those who have dogged him through seven months
of silence.
The alleged assassination plot Is raised In this week's
edition of U.S. News &amp; World Report, which was published
Saturday, the same day Sen. William Cohen. R-Malnc, one
or the congressional Investigators, said In an Interview that
he thinks North is ready to go to Jail rather than testify
about the scandal.

COMING EVENTS
Soil St W ater Conservation
G roup Holds District M eeting
Seminole Soil ft Water Conservation District meeting to
be held at 8:15 a.m. Tuesday at the Seminole Agricultural
Center. 4320 S. Orlando Drive. Sanford, is open to the
public, according to Chairman Gene Weldon.

Alcoholics Anonym ous G roups
Area Alcoholics Anonymous groups meeting on Tuesday
Include:
• Reims Club AA. noon and 5:30 p.m., closed to the
public, 8 p.m.. step. 130 Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air KebosClub. noon, closed to the public.
• Sanford AA. noon. 5:30 p.m.. 8 p.m.. open discussion.
8 p.m., Living Sober (closed to the public). 1201 W. First
St.. Sanford.
• 24-Hour AA group beginners open discussion. 8 p.m..
317 S. Oak Ave.. Sanford.
• 17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m.. (closed to the public).
Messiah Lutheran Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack Road.
• Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p.m. (closed to the public).
West Lake Hospital. State Road 434. Longwood.

Weight Loss G roup M eets
TO P S (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Chapter 79 meets from
6:15 p.m. to 8 p.m. every Tuesday at Howell Place. 200 W.
Airport boulevard. Sanford.

...County

Winter Springs have balked at
signing agreements to allow
col lift ion of the fees.
C o n c e r n i n g th e u t i l i t y
Continued from page 1A
purchase. Lake Monroe Utilities
the new books, she said.
owner JAV. Hickman said today
The llre-reseue fees also are the plant lias never had dif­
proposed as way to fill a void left ficulties meeting stale stan­
by the reluctance of county dards. although the stale De­
c o m m is s io n e rs to bu dget
lia rt in cut of Enviro nm e ntal
enough tax money to ensure Regulation found a high bacteria
a d e q u a te fire a n d rescue count in the treated water In late
services. Lynch argued. She January and ordered customers
claimed the county has been to boil the water before drinking
unable to show the fees would go tt.
Officials declared the water
for anything more than reme­
safe in mid-February after re­
dying "today’s problems."
"They need to take care of pairs on a chlorinating machine
today's problems with current were completed.
Lake Monroe Utilities a private
revenues." said Lynch. "We
would work w ith the com- water and sewage treatment
misison and county stall to help operation, provides water and
sewer service lo between 1,000
find alternative revenues."
She also stressed that develop­ to 1.500 people at commercial
ers have nrt choice but to pass establishments in the area of
the cost of the Ices onto Stale Road 46 and Interstate 4.
The near 15-year-old utility
homebuyers.
Meanwhile, the county is which serves the Fort of Sanford
seeking a declaratory Judgment and several hotels near the
from the c irc u it court on interstate, has a daily water
whether its road impact fees can treatment capacity of about I
be levied inside city limits. The million gallons and a sewer
countywide fee collections are in treatment capacity of about
100 OOO gallons, Hickman said.
begin .Ittlv 1. but Sanford and

Continued from page 1A

partments...• lot of the In­
terdepartmental rivalries aren't
as strong as they were and now
the emphasis is getting the Job
done. With that in mind I think
It would be hard for the south
Florida mafias to become as
entrenched up here as they got
down there 30 or 40 years ago."

But Maurice Dettmer. chief of
the Internal Revenue Service's
Criminal Investigation Division
for north/central Florida, said
that In many ways the mob's
operations are extremely subtle:
but that if people know what to
look for even the average citizen
can help combat them.
"Most people in relatively
small communities know who
belongs," Dettmer said. "One
good way of telling If organized
crime Is moving Into an area is
to look at people who are making
large cash purchases of busi­
nesses with a high rate of cash
flow...businesses like bars and
restaurants. In these kinds of
enterprises it is easy to run large
amounts of money through the
operation so that nothing looks
abnormal."
Dettmer said the first thing
members of organized crime do
when they move Into an area Is
look for ways to legitimize their
large amounts of cash.
"They may buy a bank or
some other lending Institution,
or claim that they received a lot
of money In an insurance action.
They need to say 'I own this
business' or. 'I got hurt In this
accident'...anything that will
give a reasonable explanation for
large am ounts of available
cash."
Dettmer said communities
need to watch for people who

**---- »-*

----a ■■

day, Jaw M, 1f»7—3A

N n i P U M V IIM / W n r w f lf F I.

suddenly appear In the commu­
nity and start throwing around
lots of money. By law banks and
stock brokers must report people
who make deposits or Invest­
ments of more that 910.000 In
cash.
"If someone buys a car with
more than 910.000 in cash from
an automobile dealer we need to
be notified by law too." he said.
“ C ash P u rc h a s e s o f such
amounts can be suspicious."

Dettmer warns citizens to be
aware that the mob Is active and
to do something about It.
"Th e y come to your communi­
ty and they aren't going to do
you any favors," he said. "They
come In to milk It dry and then
leave to go somewhere else and
do the same thing."
Dt timer's other main concern

REALTY
TRANSFERS

la to try and dissuade people
from getting Involved, even If it
seems Innocent at first.
"The sums of money Involved
In organized crime are. so vast
these days." Dettmer said, "that
the straightest people in the
community can be corrupted
and people that would never
consider getting Involved with
criminal activity can have their
lives ruined."

The prime mover of the mob's
money is narcotics, he said.
Through narcotics the mobsters
get the funding io do many of
their other operations. Conse­
quently. Just like law enforce­
ment's networks and methods
have vastly Improved, so have
the mob's.
"Th e amounts of money and
the levels of violence arc so vast
now that it makes the days of Al
Capone and old Chicago seem
like petty c rim e .’’ .D e ttm e r
said.

I

J«*n Hall S HB Grannatt 1 Cartagana
Sarvlca to Joan Barrow. Sonia Allison t,
Btvarly Y. Murphy, Lt f t Wahlwa Ratarva Un

J, 171.100
Calton Homat to Robarl C Pllallii A WF
Charyl. Lt tt Woodland Tarr. At Country
Craak.SlM.J00
Cation Hornat to Slovar K. Hollittar. Lt 4)
Woodbrldga At Country Craak. f 71.700
Calton Homat to Curtlt L. Coniglio A
Rotamary Smith, Lt 3 Woodland Tarr. At
Country Craok.S11l.100
Domonic A . Macalono A WF Lorralna to
Randy W. Otlar A WF Kathryn. Lt 120
Springs Landing Un 4. S310.000
Wllfrad Hamilton A WF Mo* to Garry
Thor Ing ton A WF Gwandolyn A Glyna, Lt 6t
Sunrise Village Un 3. U7.000
Peoples 1st F in a n c ia l S a vin gs to
Wastmonta Partnership. L117 Blk A.S410.000
Wescotf Inv. Day. to Sanford Arms Dav.
Inc., Blks 1A 3 Dreamworld. SM0.G00

m
something that makes sense."
Talmadge said. "You're putting
yourself Into a had situation by
nol moving forward: you may
eonte up with more people who
aren't willing to sell their pro­
perty.
Webster protested. "Let’s Just
investigate other sites."
Fe ss s a id t h a t b y p r o crasttouting the city could lose a
lot of money.
Tahnudge agreed. "Tim e is
money." he said.

people believe their properly Is
worth what Ihey are asking —
and those people have rights."
Tremcl suggested that the city
revisit the other downtown sites.
"This was the ideal she. We may
find another less than Ideal site
— but downtown."
Planning and Zoning Board
Chairman Jim Talmadge en­
couraged the commission to take
action concerning the site.
"We've spent some money: let's
go forward with it toward doing

MON. * WED. * FRI.

BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
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As Low As $0.34
Per Day

I
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We Love You,
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KOKOMO
TOOL CO.
PH. 323-1100 !
918 W. 1st St. Sanford

Boat Insurance?

I

&lt; &gt;llt‘ I I J I I H - sa\ s it l u - s l .

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
it

P h . 322*0285
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%s4uto - O w n ers In su ra n ce
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“ F e e l G o o d A g a in ”

LAKE MARY

I

H ELP!
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B EFO R E A U G U ST 1, 1987

BLVD.

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C L IN IC
DR THOMAS F YANDEIL D C
Chiropractic Family Health Center

902 E. Lake Mary Blvd.
(Suite 107 Bayhead Center I
Sanford. Fi. 32771

• ACUPUNCTURE
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UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

THE SANFORD CHRISTIAN SHARING CENTER
MUST MOVE

TROPIC’S
TAXI

(NOW AT 4th &amp; MAGNOLIA)
We Need 2500 Sq. Feet For 6 To 12 Months.
If You Can Help — Please Call
Rev. Richard Oanielak At

24 HR. SERVICE
AIRPORT SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES
CALL

322-2662

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�■i ■

Sanford Herald
(USPS 481-210)
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Monday, June 22, 1987—4A

Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Motvin Adkins, Advertisinfl Director
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'D is t r a c t in g
S id e s h o w s '
T h e T h ir d International Conference on
A ID S has come to an end and some 6.082
participants have left W ashington after five
days of conferring.
T h e ir presence in the nation's capita), and
their sense of urgency, has helped to force the
A ID S Issue to the top of the legislative agenda
— w hich is where It ought to be.
T h e challenge now facing the Reagan
adm inistration Is how to deal responslblly
with what Sen. J o h n Danforth. R-M o.. has
called “ the most serious health problem we
have ever faced in the United States."
Som e of the m ost sensible advice in
W a s h in g to n ca m e fro m D r . R o n a ld R.
H opkins, deputy director of the Federal
C enters for Disease C o n tro l In A tlanta.
Hopkins urged national leaders to “ keep our
eye on the real ball" — the need to reach and
counsel people already infected with the virus
in order to stop the spread of A ID S .
Hopkins said that public officials must
“ avoid distracting sideshows." such us culls
for quarantines and widespread m andatory
testing, that m ight drive infected people
underground. And he warned that an over­
emphasis on providing information about
A ID S to the general public would be less
productive than focusing efforts on the people
most likely to be exposed.
“ T h e m ain task, sim ply stated." Hopkins
told the conference. "Is to Identify all Infected
persons as quickly as possible and persuade
them to avoid transm itting the infection to
others, w hile sim u lta n e o u sly seeking to
convince everyone else to avoid puttin g
themselves at risk of the Infection."
T h e general public needs to be informed
about A ID S , of course.
Hut as Hopkins pointed out. information
directed toward the general public In North
Am erica, where infection rates arc still low.
"w ill probably not be the most productive
intervention in terms of num bers or cases
prevented."
He urged that "highest p rio rity" be given to
providing education, voluntary testing and
counseling “ where they are most needed."
And they ure most needed am ong those
who share sex or needles with know n infected
people; at venereal disease and drug abuse
clinics and am ong people with any sexually
transm itted disease or evidence of d rug
abuse.
" T h e m ain public health objective in regard
to A ID S ," Hopkins pointed out. "Is to prevent
Infection. T h u s , if the net effect of widespread
m andatory testing w ould be to reduce the
num ber of persons at higher risk who are in
lacl counseled and tested, because m an y
others are scared aw ay, then m andatory
testing would not serve that crucial public
health objective."
In a ne w ly released s tu d y, the Rand
Corporation concludes that the nation's total
bill for treating A ID S between 1986 and 1991
probably will be about $37.6 billion, though it
could am ount to as m uch as $112.5 billion.
Th a t's one reason for Congress and the
administration to heed Hopkins' advice.
'1 lie fact that 270.000 Am ericans are likely
to develop the fatal disease by 1991 is an even
more com pelling motivation.

PLEASE WRITE
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publicatioa. All letters must be signed and
Include a mailing address and, If passible, a
telephone number. The Saaford Herald re­
serves the right to edit letters to avoid libel
and to accommodate space.

BERRY'S WORLD

■ v i-V -v

t u

DICK WEST

And Why Not It's OK To Soil Diapers'?
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - A New York publisher
has started a new scries of children's books, the
titles of which seem tailor-made for our
permissive society.
Published thus far arc "It's OK To Be Angry."
"It's OK To Be Different." "It's OK To Be Shy"
and "It s OK To Be Afraid."
If I may suggest a fifth title. I would propose
"It's OK to Beat that Toy Drum some Misguided
Adult Santa Gave You at Christmas." In fact. 1
may do an entire new scries under the title "It's
OK To Make Noise."
Admittedly. I'm no licensed psychologist, as is
one of the co-authors of the four books listed
above. I have had. however, a great deal of
experience with small children and I can attest
that most of their activities arc not OK.
Being angry, for instance.
A blurb says that "It's OK To Be Angry"
contains a "very important message
for
children, namely "It really is OK to be angry at
ImHIi circumstances beyond our control and
frustration with ourselves."

This book, the blurb adds, "teaches children
how to understand the potent emotion of anger
and how to direct It tn a positive way."
OK. I agree a person of any ugc should act
natural, and if that includes not keeping potent
emotions under control. It may be less stressful
to give vent to them.
But throwing a temper tantrum definitely is
not OK. At least around m y house.
My experience has been that a child who lets
anger or some other potent emotion run out of
control is likely to turn blue In the face from lack
of oxygen while throwing himself or herself on
the floor and kicking his or her feet.
Sometimes, grown-ups act that way. too.
particularly If they have had too much to drink.
I'd like to sec how a licensed psychologist would
deal with that situation.
My own Inclination. If I'm bigger, is to pick up
a child or a cocktail guest and shake him or her
until his or her teeth rattle.
After all. most of the circumstances we are
likely to encounter throughout life are "beyond

our control." aren't they? I say the sooner a
person starts learning to handle them without
(lying off the handle, the better.
As for the second point raised by the blurb, if
we can't be frustrated with ourselves, who can
we be frustrated with?
As for being different, the blurb says that book
"addresses with simplicity and Joy the fact that
we are all different in one way or another." It
says children "find comfort" both from being
like their little friends and from being
themselves.
Yes. I still remember the simplicity and Joy I
felt the first time my differences were pointed
out. and I wouldn’t want youngsters today to
miss It.
Shyness, we are given to understand. Is a
"normal, human emotion." Luckily, the book
doesn't call it a "healthy" emotion. Otherwise,
my cook would start trying to prepare shyness
for supper.
As for being afraid, they can read the book,
provided they aren't afraid to read.

WASHINGTON WORLD

ROBERT WALTERS

Axing
National
Forests
BEDFORD. Ind. INEA) The
beech, maple, oak and hickory trees
lliul nourish in the Booster National
Forest provide a verdant canopy for
the surprisingly diverse unlmal and
plant population that also thrives In
southern Indiana.
Plaster Creek meanders through
the pristine area that people only
occasionally visit. Claw marks on
the *sundslonc cliffs suggest the
presence of bobcats.
Suddenly, that undisturbed set­
ting gives wuy to an ugly seur — a
massive clear-cut area where lum ­
berjacks operating chain saws,
sklddcrs and bulldozers have de­
stroyed and hauled away every
single tree.
It shouldn't be that way. The
country's 155 national forests and
the U.S. Forest Service were
established by the federal govern­
ment specifically to prevent repeti­
tion of the Umber industry's wanton
devastation during the I9ih centu­
ry.
More recently, the National Forest
Management Act of 1976 re ­
emphasized the Forest Service's
conservation mission und inundated
balanced plunnlng and manage­
ment of the country's 191 million
acres of national forests.
But the Forest Service's plan to
elear-cut ulniosl the entire iloosier
National Forest during the next 80
to 120 years Is only one example of
its systematic violation of the Intent
of the 1976 law. Among the other
cases cited by the Sierra Club and
other conservation groups:
(B U I In V i r g i n i a 's G e o rg e
Washington National Forest, the
Forest Service proposes to double
the rate of logging and triple the
rale of road construction, destroying
both valuable hardwood stands and
wlldllte habitat.
(BU) In Montana's Lewis and
Clark National Forest, the Forest
Service wants to allow oil und gas
drilling in an area that is home to
four endangered species — grizzly
bears, gray wolves, peregrine
falcons and bald eagles.
(BU| In California's Shasta-Trlnlty
National Forest, the Forest Service
is culling for elimination of half of
the old-growth timber — an un­
warranted move that will require
const ruction or rebuilding of 1.200
miles of roads.
The Forest Service long has been
notorious for emphasizing limber
harvesting (as well as mineral, oil
and gas extraction) at the expense
of encouraging recreational op­
p o r t u n i t i e s and p r o t e c t i n g
watersheds, wildlife and fisheries.

Taking
It To The
People

* MFFLMPH

* GLasnost :

the new openness

JEFFREY H A R T

Tragedy At The Zoo
An Incident took place recently at
Brooklyn’s Prospect Park Zoo In
New York City that has provoked
public outrage, ami rightly so. It
also contains matter for reflection
about public policy and police
training.
Al tlie zoo, police opened lire with
12-gauge shotguns and .38 caliber
revolvers and killed a male and
female |M)lar bear. Police spokesmen
have offered a shadow of Juslifieatlon. but only u shadow. The
general public knows that the event
was an atroelty of the first order.
Tiie tragedy Ix-gan when three
1 I - y e a r - o I d b o y s fro m th e
neighborhood, fourth graders,
slipped Into the zoo around 7 p.m..
after it had closed. Making their way
to the polar bear enclosure, they
took off their clothes, preparatory to
climbing Into the bear cage and
swimming In the pool there.
When the moment came to enter,
two of them hesitated. The third,
and the apparent instigator threw
their elolhes into the cage. This
boy’s name was Juan Perez.
The iwo boys, including Juan
Perez, entered the bear enclosure.
One of these two left almost imme­
diately. and Perez was alone with
the two tblg bears. A m azingly
enough, he began to taunt the bears
by hurling sticks and bottles at
them.
"Th e n ." recalls one of the sur­
vivin g boys, "th e father bear
grabbed Juan by the shoulder and
dragged him toward the cave. The
two bears started to stretch his
body." Perez yelled for help, saying
"He's biting me hard." Then, as the
bears killed him and began to eat
him the other two boys ran away.
Residents In the neighborhood
heard screams coming from the zoo
and called the police. Significantly
enough, the other two boys, fleeing,
passed a policeman on the street
and said nothing to him.
When the police arrived at the

polar bear enclosure, they opened
uj&gt; with a fusllade. employing every
weapon they had. and killing the
two bears. Their rationale was that
they did not know that Juan Perez,
or wliat was left of him, was the
only boy In the enclosure. And they
say that they did see more than one
set of boys' clothes inside the fence.
C l e a r l y those pol ar bears,
extremely valuable animals, should
have been stunned rather than
slaughtered.
There Is no ease to be made that
the bears-did anything especially
vicious. There exists a primitive
Idea ihul any animal that kills a
human being must Itself be killed.
But really the bears were Just
behaving like bears. If a zoo Is going
lo exhibi' polar bears, you have to
expect them to behave like polar
bears. If Jua n Perez had gone
swimming In the shark tank, we
would not have been surprised If he
hud been bitten.
When a zoo exhibits dangerous
animals, a presumption of responsi­
bility exists toward the animals.
They are in the zoo in the first place
because they ure what they are. You
are not supposed to gel Into the bear
enclosure, or the shark pool, or the
rattlesnake den.
P o l i c e on d u t y In t h e
neighborhood of a zoo also have
responsibilities. Including Ihe ac­
q u i s i t i o n of i he e q u i p m e n t
appropriate to deal with animalrelated crises as they arise. When a
polar bear behaves like a polar bear,
there is no excuse for killing it.
At the funeral of Juan Perez, a
Catholic priest added a bizarre
footnote. Juan Perez had been a
wild kid. he pronounced, and very
likely the bears saved his soul from
Satan by killing him young. This is
theologirally suspect to say the
least. But following this story you
begin to suspect that everyone In
Brooklyn is crazy, except for the
two polar bears.

By Helen Thomas
UPI W hile House Reporter
W ASHIN GTO N (UPI) - President
Reagan Is being labeled a lame duck
even by Republican colleagues, bul
he is determined to prove there Is
still life in his presidency und he
plans to take his case ugainst
Congress to the people.
With some 18 months left In the
White House. Reagan has decided
the federal deflcil. which he helped
create, is ihrcatcning to sabotage
prosperity not only ut home but
abroad with nations that have
followed the U.S. lead.
"W e have now reached the
breakpoint." Reagan said In his
televised report to the nation Mon­
day night.
But. us usual, his solutions un­
political. There is none of Lyndon
Johnson's Isaiah approach: "Come,
let us reason together."
Instead. Reagan has said half
heartcdly that he Is willing to have
summit talks on the budget with ihe
Democratic opposition. On the other
hand, he is not buying ihelr solu­
tion: raise taxes and rut defense
spending.
He would prefer to do what he
does best: take to the stump and
denounce those who want to return
"to the old policies of lax and lax.
spend und spend."
With the deftrit running about
$175 billion and time running out
for his administration. Reagan bus
suddenly awakened to the problem.
His solution would be lo cut
domestic spending, particularly the
sociul programs, and start selling
federal lands and raising fees for
those who use federal lands and
waterways.
His philosophy is still that the
tiest government Is the least gov­
ernment. Interestingly enough, he
has never thought of hlmsell as
running the federal government
with all Its red ink spending. His
point of reference Is always back to
the good old days when he served
two terms as governor of California
and had a "line item veto." in which
he rould strike out spending that he
disapproved of.
" I ’m going lo lake the case to you.
the American people," Reagan suld
in his broadcast.
His aides already have drafted an
ambitious schedule of travel out of
Washington once a week to promote
the cause. "If Congress won't see
the light. I know you can make
them feel the heat." he suld.
Senate Democratic leader Robert
Byrd of West Virginia pleaded with
Reagan In an Oval Office meeting
before the president went on the air
lo be more "helpful" from his
"national pulpit."

JA C K ANDERSON

Nuclear War Was At Hand In 1980
By Jack Anderson
And
Dale Van Atta

t IMP»fMi
"f just had an idea. Why don't we ask the Sul­
tan of Brunei for ten million bucks?"

W ASHINGTON - The suppressed
s t o r y can now be told of a
showdown in the Persian Gulf in the
aulumn of 1980 when the two
u p e r p o w er s m a n e u v c r ed
dangerously near the edge of war.
Now a new military confrontation
is developing in the same place.
Lest the lessons of 1980 be lost,
here is the chilling siory:
After the failed attempt In April
1980 to rescue American hostages
from Iran. then-President Jim m y
Carter began preparations for a
second rescue mission. His national
security adviser. Zbigniew
B r z e z i n s k i . want ed a l arger
punitive military assault.
In the strictest secrecy. Intense
preparations for a rescue raid began
al training camps from Florida to
Californio. Some elements of this
scattered force began training under
the code name "Positive Leap 80."
The same code name bad been

given to a military exercise that had
been conducted a few weeks earlier.
This was intended to mislead the
Soviets Into thinking all references
lo "Positive Leap 80" had lo do with
nothing more than a training
exercise.
The Russians were not at all
fooled. It's now known that tiie KGB
hud laid hands on the Pentagon's
secret codes and were deciphering
Us most sensitive messages.

of Us forces In Afghanistan closer to
the Iranian border.
The Soviet commanders also went
through some menacing exercises.
These were later described by the
Joint Chiefs of Stuff In a top-secret
report: "In August 1980, an unusu­
ally long and complex General
Staff-controlled com mand post
exercise featuring a mock national
Soviet invasion of Iran was held in
the transborder area,"

But the National Security Agency
also has the ability to intercept and
decode secret Soviet intelligence
cables. It was clear from these
intercepted messages that the Sovi­
ets were fully aware of what was
happening. Th e y had advance
warning of President Carter’s highly
secret plans.

A nervous Jim m y Carter asked
the Defense Intelligence Agency to
"study and report on possible Soviet
mi l i t ar y reactions to vari ous
scenarios in which the United Slates
forces have invaded Iran."

to retaliate with a major air an
ground assault.
Then came the day that Cam
backed down. The Soviet threi
convinced him to abandon h
October adventure. He called it ol
the tensions cooled, and the hostai
cs eventually were freed.
Postscript: The evidence cited I
this account, including classifit
documents, backs up the columr
we wrote In August 1980, warnir
that Carter was preparing for a
October action In Iran. "Th e o
tcnsible purpose." we wrote. "Is l
rescue the hostages, but the oper
tlon would also exact military reti
button."

Back came a warning that the
U.S. action would likely lead to a
nuclear confrontation. Somewhere
en route to the president's desk, the
nuclear reference was mysteriously
removed from the DIA's secret
response. But what remained was
sobering enough: Carter was told
that the Soviets could be expected

T h e Whi t e House issued
scathing denial. "Th e allegatlo
made by Jack Anderson is absoluti
ly false." declared the White Hous&lt;
A major book, researched an
written by John Barron, a forme
intelligence specialist, now
Washington editor for Reader
Digest, also confirms our siory.

He went ahead, nevertheless, wiih
the quiet deployment of a strike
force primarily in Egypt and Israe1
The Kremlin reacted by shifting
men and materiel from Europe lo
the edge of Iran and deploying half

£

�Spurs To Make Robinson First Pic
NEW YORK (UPI) - David
Robinson, sci to serve his twoyear hitch in the Navy starting
In July, will first become the San
Antonio Spurs' lop choice when
the NBA draft is held today.
"He's a very bright young
man." Spurs General Manager
Bob Hass said. "He's a terrific
athlete, got speed, quickness,
j u m p i n g a b i l i t y and he' s
7-foot-1. 1 don’t see anything to
hold him back. We definitely are
going to draft him ."
Robinson, who will lie picked
by the Spurs when the draft
begins at 1:05 p.m. E D T in the
Felt Forum, was scheduled to
meet with Vice President George
Bush Monday.
"He has a couple of personal
c o m m it m e n t s ." a Spurs
spokesman said from San A n ­
tonio. "One or them is meeting
with the vice president."

Basketball
Robinson must complete two
years of mjlitary service before
joining the pro*. During that
time if Sail Antonio Inlls to sign
him. the tormcr Naval Academy
star would become a free agent
With Robinson a certainty in
be taken by the Spurs, the
mystery surrounding the 19H7
draft involved who the Phoenix
Suns would lake second. Sunday
night. Phoenix trailed its firstround pick nl last year, center
William Bedford, to Detroit for a
lirst-round pick in 1989
Phoenix, the runucrup in tin*
lottery, must decide between a
power forward or a shooting
guard. Two players the Suns are
considering are guard Dennis
Hopson rd O hio Slate and
fo rw a rd Arium i (iillla m ol

Nevada-Lax Veg.is Both players
have been to Phoenix for second
interviews.
"We've thrown out a lot of
iliflerent scenarios." Phoenix
( oaeii John Wetzel said. "We're
trying to determine what our
most immediate need Is. We
discuss n nearly every day. We
look at various teams — with
Hopson, with Gilliam."
The 1987 (trail lacked a domi­
nant center alter Robinson, but
there were plenty of forwards
and guards to consider. Follow­
ing Hopson and and Gilliam,
some of the top choices In the
draft were Reggie Williams of
Georgetown. Derrick McKcy of
Ala llam a. Horace Grant of
C’lemson. Olden Polynlce. who
played In Italy last year. Steve
Alford of Indiana and Scott
Pippcn of Central Arkansas.
The Los Angeles Clippers.

with the league's worst record
last season, had the fourth. 13th
and Huh pieks. La9i year they
didn't pick until the third round.
Also picking twice in the first
round will be the Spurs 123rd).
Seattle (fifth and ninth) and
Chicago (eighth and 10th).
The New York Knlcks. a team
In dire need, entered the draft
without a , coach or general
manager and did not pick until
IHth. New York was the only
lottery team Hits year not get
one of the first seven selections.
Former New York General
Manager Scotty Stirling traded
the rights to their lottery pick to
Seattle for guard Gerald Hen­
derson. Stirling had Denver's
first-round pick, obtained for
guard Darrell Walker, bill he
traded that to Chicago for
Jawann Oldham

Hopson

•i

G illiam

lirst round The champion Los
Angeles' Lak ers, Detroit.
I {dust nil. Milwaukee and Denver
all traded their III si -round pieks.
The order ol the llrsi mum!
was
I Nan Antonio 2 I'lioeuix. 3.
New Jersey: -I. Los Angeles
Clippers; 5. Seattle (Iroin New
York): B. Sue ran let 11 o: 7. Cleve­
land: M. Chicago Hriim Denver

Sim p so n Putts
To O p e n Title
SAN FR A N C IS C O (UPI) Prior to Sunday. Scott Simpson
had earned more money than
recognition In 10 years of pro­
fessional golf.
were all another stroke back
Consistency has been the
2H3.
3 1-year-old's strength, and
Simpson's virion ruined die
against some of the biggest
dramatic return ol Watson.
names in golf — Torn Watson.
Winless in three years and 56lh
Scve Ballesteros, Bernhard
on tiir money list tills year.
Langer and Ben Crenshaw —
Watson slioi a second-round 65
S i m p s o n ' s steady p u t t i n g
to move into a share ol the lead.
enabled hint lo win die K7th U.S.
Displaying die form that brought
Open at the Olympic Club.
him eight major tournament
"M y No. I reason to play on
titles Watson was alone in Iront
the Tour was lo make a living for
after the dim! round.
my family." Simpson said after
"It fell good being hack in die
firing a 2-under-par OH to edge
luiiit again." Watson said " I felt
Watson by a stroke. "I never
a little lilt nl die old magic
thought something like this
coming buck. I'm disappointed I
would happen."
didn't win. but there's a lot nl
It happened because Simpson
gull left In Tom Watson."
rolled In four consecutive crucial
Watson. 37. had a chance to
putts while his competition
send die Imiruuninii into a
made bogeys and double-bogeys
playoff. Inn narrowly missed a
all around him. lie made a short
45-fool birdie null at tlie , filial
birdie pull at the 14lh bole to tie
hole. Simpson,' playing a* l*ruu'p,
Watson then knocked down, a . in trniiLVwaichcd'W.ilsoiVs coon
30-footer at No. 15 to go up by a from a television monitor.
stroke.
" I admit 1 vv*as hoping d
After Watson responded with a wouldn't go in." Simpson said.
birdie of his own to pul) even.
"I didn't want a playoff. I'm
Simpson sank a 15-footer for relieved it didn't go In "
birdie al the 16th lo take llie
Seven dtllerent players led
lead. At 17. Simpson dropped In
during
tlie Iran lie Huai round.
a 10-foot putt to save par after
Ballesteros mounted a Inlet
blasting out ol a greenside
c h a r g e w l i i n lie p o s l e d
Ininker.
hack-lo-ltack birdies al the Midi
"I Just had one ol those days."
said Simpson, who moved lo the and 1 I ill boles, bill (lie Spaniard
top of the I9H7 money list with fell hack with bogeys on tlu; next
Ills S I 50.000 first-place check. Iwn holes.
"It was one of the best putting
"I feel I had a good chance to
rounds of my life. I was eonwin hut my pulling was mil as
eentratlug on making a smooth
good as II was supposed to be.
stroke, and for some reason the Ballesteros said I guess putting
putts just kept going in."
Is uni my tilin g a n ym ore,
Simpson, a four-lime winner K v e r y lin ie soon iliing good
on die PGA Tour, had failed to would happen, i d make a
make the cut in six of liis seven
bogey."
previous Opens. His victory
means 17 different players have
Kelt It Clearwater, a stroke
won the last 17 major champi­ back ol Watson alter three
rounds, ballooned lo a 79 Jack
onships.
Nleklaus laded to a 77 m Ids
Simpson finished 72 holes al
3-under 277. a stroke ahead of eflorl to wm an unprecedented
Watson, who had an even-par 70 2 1st major cliam|uniixhlp.
D e f e n d i n g c It a in p I o u
in the final round. Ballesteros
Raymond Floyd had a 7(&gt; ami 73
was t h i r d at 2H2. B o b b y
in die last two rounds and
Wadklns. Curtis Strange. Larry
tin (silt'd 13 strokes oil die paee Bun C r e n s h a w had the body' en q lish but not the m ag ic w ith the putter in U .S. O p e n ,
Mize. Crenshaw and Langer

Golf

Becker, G ra f Shoot For W im bledon Titles
WIMBLEDON. England IlMMl
— West German teenagers Boris
Becker and Stelfl Graf, one
attempting in make history and
the other hoping to thwart tt.
will likely play major roles in
determining the singles titles at
Wimbledon.
Becker, the locus of attention
and highly vulnerable to (tic
pressure of being a two-time
champion, can become the first
m a n t o e a p i o r e t h r ee
Wimbledon titles while still a
teenager. Graf, who lias not lost
since November, will uiicmpi to
stop Martina Navratilova from
winning a record sixth consecu­
tive Wimbledon title.
Becker is unquestionably the
w orld's prem ier grass-court
player, but already lias been pul
at a disadvantage since the ruin
of liie last few weeks has soli
cned the courts.
The top seed laced a relatively
testing first-round match today
against Czechoslovakian Karel
Novatek, a quarierlluallst in the
French Open earlier this mouth.
At Paris. Novacek became only
the second man In Grand Slam
history to win a match lit three
love sets, shutting out Eduardo
Bcngocchca of Argent in a.
"I'm a little superstitious, and
this place has brought me a lot
of l u c k , " B e c k e r sai d &lt;&gt;f

Wimbledon, adding lie was &lt;on*
lidcut ol ycl uiriihci victory
Weather conditions could pl.n
a major luclor lin ker thrives on
tlie speed ol Wimbledon's grass
.uni Sunday, head groundsman
dim Thorne warned "the courts
will behave more like slow clay
lor thi* lirst lew clavs
In
addition, more rain is lorccasl
lor the lirsl week.
While Becker was touching oil
the I'cnier Court tesnvilies at 2
p.m. (9 a.in. EDI') weather
jiermlttiug. No 2 seed Ivan
Lend! was scheduled lo play oil
the adjoining No 1 court against
Romanian Davis I'uppet Chris
Man Saeeanu. ranked No 17H in
iIn- world.
Most of (lie women are olt mini
T u e s d a y , w h e n to p s e e d
Navratilova will renew her at­
tack oil the record books Willi
liv e successive W im b led o n
singles lilie s, sin- needs one
more to stand alone m ilint
category, and she also can equal
Helen Wills Mood v s record nl
eigiu Wimbledon championships
overall.
However. Navratilova lias not
won a tournament since beating
Gral in the Virginia S lim *
Championships la : November,
and Gral lias not In i since iliei'.
Graf carries a streak ol 39
consecutive match vit thfics into

Te n n is
Wimbledon, and although grass
is not her lavoritc surface, she
lias shown an ability in heal
.niyaiic anywhere
As lor the pressure on her. the
IH-vear-old West German says,
ll you always will, how can
ihere lx*pressure?"
e lm s Evert said of Ural: "This
girl s lough now. but she's going
m be great She's hungry. She
lungs like she wants lo eat the
ball "
N a v r a t i l o v a s u f I er ed a
psv i tiolngleal letdown Saturday
when she lost to Helena Sukova
m i tie hind at Eastbourne,
marking h e r first grass-court
defeat hi Britain in 7 0 matches.
I ni not done y e t . " the
3 1 vear old left-hander insisted.
I haven't won tins year, but I'm
not done yet. although ii looks
like 11 will take an act ol
&lt; ongress lor me lo will again."
P.iiii Shrlver. Navratilova's
doubles partner, said even before
ihi loss m Sukova "the con­
fidence laetor Is missing right
now m her close friend. "The
next 'wo weeks will be very
inicrcsiliig."
Shrlver added, though "Yon
have to gi vviilt the person who

Mavoite vs ■it-.i11 lleori.iti: No.
I I Pal Cash v s Marcel Freeman;
Almost overlooked ts Evert, Nn. 12 Brad, Cdlhcri vs Stuart
ilie No. 3 seed and a three-time Bale: No 13 Jnakiiu Nv-arom vs
Nn
1*1
Wimbledon champion who also Henr i k Stm dsirm n
was victimized by Sukova at Emilio Sanchez vs Mike Bauer:
and Nn, 15 David Pale vs. Sergio
Eastbourne.
"I guess tlie Intensity Is miss­ C'usai.
In women's action. No. 7
ing from my game." Evert said
"I know what the problem is —• Guhrlcia S.ib.nini was to play
I've Josi played so many mat­ Barbara Gerken. No. 8 Manuel,i
Maleeva took oil Helen Kelesi.
ches in my life.’ *
Other matches today involving Nn. I 1 L o r i Mc Ne i l lai ed
seeded players Included: No. 3 Marie Christine Calleja and No,
12 Catarina LinMqvist had a
Mats Wilandcr against Gary
(lilfieult opener against Kathy
Muller: No. 4 Stefan Edberg vs
Iordan
Stefan Eriksson: No. 10 Tim

lias wo n l i v e
Wimbledon."

straight

al

A lta m o n te Tops O v ie d o
file Altamonte Big League
baseball team noi only moved
closer to clinching the division
i hampionship Sunday hut
also gained a measure ol
revenge m an 8-4 victory over
Oviedo " A " .it tlie University
nl Centra! Florida.
Manager Gene Letterin's
Altaimmic team, which con­
sists mostly ol Lake Mary High
players, improved lo 14*1 with
lour games remaining and also
beat Oviedo ace Scott Bovvers
for tin- first time

"B o w e r s had stmt Lake
Mary High out late in the
season and shut us out 7-0.
the first Week ot the Big
League season. " la in no said
A schedule change gave ns a
chance in face Bovvers again
atld vve were (lelei iiiliit &lt;| lo gel
in him tins urn
in six innings Altamonte
touched Bowers toi six unison
seven Inis. Bower*, gave wav to
Jody Spellman who gave up
two runs m the seventh For
See A LTAM O N TE . Puge 7A

Alford

Grant

via New York): 9. Seattle; 10.
Chi c ago. 1 1. I ndi ana: 12. "
Washington: 13 Los Angeles ‘
Clippers ll'rom Houston): 14.
Golden Stale: 15. Utah: 16.
Philadelphia: 17. Portland: 18. i
New York ll'rom Milwaukee via &gt;
Seattle): 19. Los Angelca Clip- ,
pers (from Detroit): 20. Dallas: |
21. Atlanta: 22. Boston: 23. San
Antonio (from Lakers).

Watson
On The
Rebound ,
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - I f r
g a lle ry senti ments decided *
1
t our nament s. T o m Wat son •
would have captured the 87th
U.S. Open instead of Scott ;
Simpson.
i
Watson, cheered on by most in
the crowd of nearly 30.000 ,
spectators at the Olympic Club. .
shot a even-par 70 Sunday, one !
stroke behind Simpson.
"I have to win to prove that
I’m back." Watson, an eight- ’
time major winner, said after his !
45-foot putt fur birdie and an
18-holc playoff was incites short.
"Th a t’s the name of the game.
FlnLihing second Is no good.
&gt;
"1 felt a Itttie bit of the old ,
magic coming back. I have
nothing to be nslmmcd about. ,
It’s good being back in the hunt ,
again. I fell capable of winning *
the golf tournament."
Watson's Iasi triumph In a I
•major came al the 1963 British »
Open. His game inexplicably
deserted him soon after — he /
lias not won a tournament In ,
nearly three years.
"I was very, very nervous.
t o d a y . " said Watson, who
bogeyed the first two holes lo fall
from die lead. "I was nervous
last night. 1 think It affected my
play somewhat over the first few
holes.
•
"I started off about die same 1
way as I did yesterday (Saturday
when he shot a 71). I missed
some short putts early, ll ifs and t
Imls were candy and nuts..."
!
Watson came back to birdie
No. H with a 15-foot pud and No. ■
9 Willi a 20-footer. IBs birdie on i
No. 14 gave him die lead, hut .
Sinijison strung three together 1
to pass him.
"I was watching the lend*
et heard all day." Watson said. "I
wanted to know my position.
Scotty lilt the shots that lie hud
to make.
" I ’m not surprised. Scott
Simpson Is u very line golfer.
He's proved lie can play with the
lead, lie's come from behind and
lie's won mi tough golf courses."
Watson's birdie chance on No.

18 came after he used a pitching ;
wedge 113 yards from the hole.
"Tile ball sucked back off the
green," Watson said, "ll was
within 45 feel. I Just left it short
of the hole."
HO G AN W A T C H E S OPEN
FO R T W ORTH. Texas (UPI) Golfing greal Ben Hogan. hospi­
talized for three weeks for&lt;
appendicitis and pneumonia,
wateiied a few minutes of the'
U.S. Open on television Sunday
from Ills hospital room.
Hogan, 73, was moved Satur­
day from tlie intensive cure unit
at Harris Methodist Hospital. He
had problems staying awake to
wateli the tournament because
of medication and fell asleep
after a few minutes, a hospital
spokesman said.
Hogan is ilie only golfer to win
consecutive Open titles. This
year's Open is being played at
the Olympic Country Club in
San Francisco, where Hogan
participated in one of the most
storied events in golf history. On
tiie verge of winning the 1955
Open, he was tied on the 72nd
hole bv unknown Jack Fleck
and lost ihc next day In a
playolf.
Hogan, who won all four of
golf's G r a n d Sl am events,
overcame a near-fatal auto ac­
cident In West Texas in 1949 to
capture the Open in 1950-51.
I logan was hospitalized May
31 for uppeudlcltis. He con­
tracted pneumonia In the hospi­
tal.

�0

r

Monday, Juno » , 1917

•A—Sanford HoraM, Sanford, FI.

Reuss Gains
First AL Victory

BASEBALL
STANDINGS
AM ER ICAN L E A G U E

Eaif

W
42
4]
36
35
31
29
35

Toronto
New York
Detroit
Milwaukee
Boston
Baltimore
Cleveland

Pci. GB
.617 —
.609 1
.554 5
.511 6
.456 life
.420 14
.371 17

L
25
37
29
10

37
40
42

Wait
29 .574
11 .530 3
32 .522 IW
33 .515 4
10 15 .462 7W
11 36 .449 iW
24 41 .369 I1W

Minnesota
‘Kansas City
Oakland
Seattle
Texa*
California
Chicago

—

39
35
15
35

Saturday's Results
Boston 9, New York 4
Milwaukee 3. Toronto 2
Cleveland 9. Seattle 2
Texas 7. Oakland 4
Chicago 10. Minnesota 5
Kansas City 0. Cal Ifornla 4
Baltimore 9, Detroit a, susp , curlew
Sunday's Result*
p
Boston 4, New York 2
Baltimore 9, Detroit 5. comp, ol sus.
game
Detroit 9, Baltimore 3
Seattle 5. Cleveland 0
Toronto 7, Milwaukee 6
Minnesota I, Chicago 6
,
Oakland 7, Texas 3.1st game
Texas II, Oakland 3, 2nd game
,
Catifornlal. Kansas City 0
Monday's Game*
Milwaukee I Johnson 0 0) at Boston
JBoydO 01,7:35p.m.
New
York
(Rasmussen
5-4 )
at
Baltimore (BoddlckerS 4), 7 : 35 p m
Toronto (Slieb 5-4) at Detroit ITanene
7:35p.m.
* 3),Seattle
(Moore 21) al Chicago (Nielsen
p -ll.lp .m .
r
Kansas City (Saberhagen 121) at
Oakland (Ontiveros] 1 ),l:l0 p .m .
California (Witt 6 5) at Texas (Harris
;4&gt;.6:3Sp.m

N A TIO N AL LE A O U E
East
W
41
|t. Loult
37
Chicago
16
Montreal
36
New York
30
Pittsburgh
29
Philadelphia
West
36
Cincinnati
37
Houston
35
San Francisco
14
Atlanta
30
Los Angeles
22
San Diego

L
25
31
31
31
36
36

Pet.
.621
.544
.517
.537
.455
.446

31
31
13
34
31
46

.551
.544
.515
.500
.441
.314

Saturday'* Results
Atlanta I, Cincinnati 4
Plltsburght, Chicago]
v Houston 3. Lot Angeles I
"* New York 3, Philadelphia 2
'
Montreal 7, St. Louis S
San Olego 10. San Francisco a
Sunday's Results
New York I, Philadelphia 3
SI. Louis 7,Montreal 3
Cincinnati a. Atlanta 5.10 Innings
'
Chicago 4, Pittsburgh 3
* Houston 4, Los Angeles I
San Francisco II, San Olego2

United Press Internstlonsl
Winning for the first time In 13
months left Jerry Keuss with a
lot to analyze.
"Th e eight runs were a factor,
ihe defense was a factor. (Cat-.fi­
eri Hob Hoonc was a factor. The
crowd was a factor. Maybe the
newness (of the A me r i c a n
League) was a factor." the
38-ycar-old left-hander said after
pitching the California Angels to
un 8-0 victory over the Kansas
City Royals. "You can't put an
rinphasls on one without the
others."
The 19-year veteran had lost
his final six decisions as a
member of the Los •Angeles
Dodgers and was 0-5 with the
Cincinnati Reds this season.
“ Believe me. I wasn't thinking
shutout or nine Innings." Keuss
said. " I was thi nki ng fu n­
damentals — warm up properly,
not hang the curve."

AL Baseball
(regularly scheduled game)
D E T R O IT
B A LTIM O R E
s b rh b i
a b rh b l
Whitaker 2b 4 0 1 0
Gerhart cf
20
10
Evans 1b
5 12 1
Wiggins 2b
40
10
Gibson If
4)22
Ripken
ss
20
0 1
Trammell si 5
1 20
Murray lb 4 0 0 0
Nokes c
5
122
Sheets II3 1 1 1
Sherlden rf 4
12 1
Knight 3b3 0 0 0
Grubo dh
5
0 00
Lacy rf 4 1 1 1
Lemon cf
5
2 23
Young dh3 0 0 0
Brookent 3b 5
1 20
Van Gordr c 2 1 1 0
Kennedy c
2000
el 9 t l » Tatals
19 ) S l
Totals
664 166 a n - 9
Baltimore
M l 600 116— 1
Game-winning RBI — Gibson (2).
DP— Detroit 2. LOB -D etrolt 9, Bal­
timore 6 . 2 B— Whitaker, Brookent. Event,
Sheridan 2. Gibson, Nokes. HR— Gibson
( I ) . Nokes (14). Lemon] if), Lacy (4), Evans
( I I ) , Sheets (13). S B -W Igg ln s 2 (12),
Trammell (7). SF-RIpken.
IP H R ER I B SO
(Sourer Baseball
NSA GRAPHIC
Detroit
Digest)
Petry (W 4-4)
*4
1 I
King (S 5)
1
2 2
Even the small guys seem to be hit­
Baltimore
ting more home runs this season.
Dixon (L 3 7)
3 21
But it's happened before. Some
Habyan
4
greats of the past have shown that a
Arnold
1 1-3
PB— Nokes T - -3:05. A little can go a long way.
Umpires— Home. Phillips; lb, Palermo;
2b, Morrison; 3b, Tschlda.

KANSAS C IT Y
CALIFOR N IA
a b rh b l
a b rb b i
Wilson cl
4 0 0 0 Downing dh 4 10 0
Settlor 3b
4 0 T 0 DWhlta rt
5 13 1
Brett dh
4 0 1 0 Joynor lb
5 12 2
Tertabull rt 4 0 10 Howull It
3 10 0
FWhltu 2b
3 0 2 0 OeCInces 3b 3 I I 0
Pecota 2b
1 0 0 0 Boon* c
3 2 11
BJackson It 4 0 1 0 5cho(leld ss 4 0 2 2
Balbonl lb
2 0 0 0 Pattis cl
4 0 11
Salaiar ss
3 0 0 0 McLemor 2b 4 I 0 0
Owan c
3 0 10
Tatals
13 0 i o Total*
is • io 7
Kansas City
000 066 6 0 6 -0
California
667 616 0#X - 6
Gama winning RBI - O . White (5).
E — DeCIncts, Salaiar, Tartabull. DP—
California
3.
LOB— Kansas
City
6,
California
7.
2 B -D .
White.
Pattis.
Joyner. HR— Joyner (14). Boone (1). SB — D.
White (14).
IP H R ER SB SO
Kansas City
Stoddard (L 0 1)
223
3 7 0 3
1
Farr
3 13 5 1 1 0
7
Shirley
I
1 0 0 0 0
Gleaton
1 1 0 0 0
1
California
Rouss (W 101
9 6 0 0 0 6
H B P -b y Stoddard (DaCIncas). W P Shlrfey. T -2 :2 5 . A-47,797.
Umpires— Home, Bramigan; lb. Roa;
2b, Barnett; 3b, Kosc.

Red Sox................................ 4

Yankees («mMMit4Matt9stit*ttt*iiM6 2
At Boston. Rookie Ellis Burks
hll a two-run home run and
Roger Clemens threw a sevenhitter to lead the Red Sox.
Clemens. 6-6. struck out five in
his seventh complete game of
the season. Bob Tewksbury. 0-2.
recalled from the Yankees' AAA
affiliate Saturday, took the loss.
NEW

YORK
BOSTON
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Randolph lb 4 0 0 0 Burks
cf
4t I2
Ward It
3 10 0
Barrett 2b40 00
Wlnlleld rf
4 0 11
Boggs3b4 13 0
Easier dh
4 0 10 Rice If
4000
Pegllerul 3b 4 0 0 0 Baylor dh
3000
Patque tb
3 10 0
Evenslb 3 12 2
Sales c
4 0 10 Graenwelt rf 3 0 0 0
Cotto cf
3 0 2 0 Romero 1b 0 0 0 0
Meechem ss 2 0 I 0 Owen tt
3000
Washngtn ph 1 0 I I Sullivan c
2000
Tollescn is 0 0 0 0 Benilngr ph 0 1 0 0
Gtdman c
0000
Totals
11 1 1 1 Totals
30 4 4 4
New York
000 IM 1 M - 2
Belton
000 000 22* — 4
Game-winning RBI — Burks (4).
DP— Boston 1. LOB— New York 6 .
Boston 2. 2B— Evans, Wlnlleld, Boggs.
Cotlo. H R -E v a n s (H I, Burks (It ). S B Cotto (I).
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Tewksbury (L 0-2)
7 2-3 4 4
4 1
I
Stoddard
1-3 0 0
0 0
0
Boston
Clemens (W 44)
9
7 2
2 3
5
T — 2:36. A — 13,012.
Umpires— Home, Cooney; lb. Kaiser;
Ib.Welke; lb. Brinkman.

T w in s.................................... 8

•'

Monday's Games
Pittsburgh (Reuschal S3) at Chicago
"(Moyer 7 4), 4:05 p.m.
•* Montreal (Smith 41) at St. Louis
IForsch 53), 6:35p m

White Sox..................................6
A l M i n n e a p o l i s . T o in
iirununsky had three hits and
three KUI to carry the Tw ins In a
game marked by a recordmatching eight solo home runs.
Juan Bcrcnguer. 5-0, pitched 1
2-3 scoreless innings for the
victory and Jell Reardon earned
hts 14th save. Jim Winn. 2-3.
pitched two Innings and took the
loss.

Athletics............................ 7-3
Rangers........... ...................3 -13
At Oakland. Hob Brower hit
two home runs, including the
first inslde-the-park grand slam
in Texas history, to give the
Rangers a double-header spilt
with the Athletics. Edwin Cor­
rea. 2-5. earned the victory. Jeff
Russell notched his first save.
Erie Plunk fell to 1-4. In the
o p e n e r . M i c k e y T e 111e t o n
slammed a home run uml double
lo spark the AN. Dave Slewart.
8-7. has u decision In each of his
15 stuns. Dennis Eckersley
earned Ills second save. Jose
Guzman dropped to 5-6.

CHICAGO

LEADERS
Batting
National League
r h pci.
0 •b
"Gwynn, SD
67 246 49 90 366
Maldonado. SF
66 260 46 16 .336
Daniels. Cln
57 169 46 63 .313
Murphy. All
66 247 56 12 .132
.Galarraga. Mil
61 227 37 74 .326
Leonard, SF
65 262 41 65 .324
Guerrero. LA
66 241 41 78 .324
Clark. SIL
65 226 53 73 .323
Clark. SF
63 215 34 69 .121
Wallach. Mtl
64 250 42 to .320
American League
g ab
r h pci.
Boggs, Bos
67 253 » 95 .375
Trammell. Del
56 227 44 DO .352
Puckett. Min
67 269 44 90 .335
Tertabull. KC
62 233 34 7* .326
Tabler, Cle
67 255 36 62 320
Fernandei. Tor
67 264 41 13 .314
Franco. Cle
67 259 43 It .313
Nokes. Del
55 192 35 60 .313
Randolph, NY
66 253 56 79 .312
Fletcher. Tex
64 254 33 79 .311
Home Runs
National League — Davis, Cln and
Murphy, All 22; Clark. SIL, Dawson, Chi,
Strawberry, NY and Virgil. Ah 20.
American League — Bell. Tor 23;
McGwire, Oak 22; Barlleld, Tor If,
Davit. Oak. O'Brien and Parrish, Tex 17.
Runs Batted In
ilaltonal League — Clark, StL 66;
Dawson. Chi 63, Davis, Cin and Wallach. Mtl
61; McGee. SIL 52
American League — Bell, Tor 63;
Parrish. Tex and Ward. NY 52; Joyner, Cal
and Ripken. Balt 50
•
Stolen Bases
National League — Coleman, StL 45;
Oavis. Cln 29. Halcher. Hou 25; Gwynn, SO
24; Raines. Mil 20
&lt;
American League — Henderson.
NY
T3; P Bradley and Reynolds, Sea 22;
Redut. Chi and Wilson, KC 21.
Pitching
Victories
National League — Fernandei. NY.
Heaton. Mil. Scott. Hou and Sutclifle. Chi 9 3;
Welch. LA 6 3, Garber. All 6 5
American League — Saberhagen, KC
12-1; Morris, Del 10 2; Eight pitchers tied
with 6 victories.
Earned Run Average
&gt; (Based on I Inning x number ol games
each team has played)
National League — Scott, Hou 2.10;
Reuschal. Pitt 2.46; Hershiser. LA. 2.76;
Fernandei. NY 2.12; Ryen, Hou 2 14.
American League — Saberhagen. KC
2.25; Lelbrandt. KC 2.13; Boddlcker. Balt.
2 62; Clancy. T o r2.69, K e y .T o r] 90.
Strikeouts
National League — Scott, Hou 125;
Ryan. Hou 109; Fernandei. NY 9tf
Hershiser. LA 66. Valemuela. L A 61.
American League — Langston. Sea 173;
Clemens. Bos 103; Hlguera. Mil 100;
Swindell. Clev 91; Wilt. Cal 91.
Seves
National League — Smith, Chi 19;
Bedroslan. Phil and Worrell. SIL 16;
Franco. Cin 14; Smith. Hou 13.
f
American League - Plesac. Ml 16;
Wcardon, Min and Righelti, NY
14.
}( o well. Oak 13; Henke, Tor 12.

R A IN E S G A U G E
RAINES GAUGE
Comparison

Reds Fight Past
Braves, Hold Lead

1914

1*67

lames/Played
67 63 67 41
U bats
244
177
tuns
44
47
fits
71
65
luns Balled In
26
29
1WRBI
1
4
Doubles
11
15
rrlples
4
1
tome runs
6
4
itolen Bases
30 33 2022
irrors
2
1
Overage
.120
.367
Tim Raines was 3 lor 9 over the weekend
«ith a double and two RBIt. A year ago.
Raines did not play In one game, and was I
or 5 in the second

M IN N ESOTA
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Redus If
5 3 3 1Gladden it
5 I It
Hill 2b
4 0 1 0 Newman lb 5 0 1 0
Winn p
0 0 0 0 Puckett cf
4 12 1
Clark p
0 0 0 0 Gaeltl dh
4 3 11
Baines ph
l i t ) Hrbek lb
4010
Calderon rt 5 13 2 Brunnsky rf 4 2 3 3
Fisk dh
4 0 0 0 Laudner c
20 00
Walker lb
4 0 0 0 Larkin ph
0000
Hulett 3b
4 0 2 1 Davidson pr 0 10 0
Williams cl 4 0 1 0 Bufara c
0000
Manrique s* 4 1 I I Lom brdu 2b 2 0 0 0
Karkovlca c 2 0 0 0 Smalley lb 2 0 I I
Guillen ss
2 0 1 0 Gagne ss
2 0 11
Totals
29 6 11 6 Total*
14 6 11 6
Chicago
tM 110 101- 6
Minnesota
29110101*-6
Game winning RBI — Brunansky (4).
E — Hulett. DP— Chicago I. Minnesota 1.
LO B — Chicago 6. Minnesota 6 . 2 B—
Calderon 3, Hulett, Brunansky, Gagne.
HR-Puckett (13). Gaattl (14). Gladden
(3). Brunansky (IS), Manrique ( 1), Redus
( 6 ). Baines ( 6 ). SB-Redus ( 21).
IP H R ER BB SO
Chicago
Bannister
5I3 6 5 5 2
1
Winn (L 24)
2 3 3 2 2
1
Clark
22 2 0 0 0 0
Minnesota
Viola
6
9 4 4 0
2
Atherton
1 1 1 )
1 0
0
Berenguer (W 5 01
12 3 0 0 0 0
2
Reardon (S 14)
1 1 1 1 0
0
PB— Karkovlca. T — 2:40. A — 29.240.
Umpires— Home. Johnson; lb, Evans;
2b, Cousins; 3b, Ford

T lge FB, .....a..,.,,,.,

(sacendgame)
TE X A S
ab r h bl O A K LA N ab r h bi
Browne 2b
5 1 2 0 Polonle cf
5000
Fletcher tt 3 1 1 0 Davis rl
4 0 10
Wllkerson ss I 0 I 0 Teltleton c
10 0 0
Sierra rl
5 2 2 3 Laniford 3b 3 2 2 I
O'Brien lb
3 2 2 1Phillips 2b
00 0 0
Porter )b
1 0 0 0 Canseco II
4 0 11
Parrish dh 5 12 1 McGwire lb 3 0 0 0
McDowell cl 3 I I 1Cey dh
3 111
Petralll 3b
2 0 0 0 Slelnbech c 4 0 2 0
Buechele ]b 3 0 0 0 Griflln 2b
3 0 10
Slanley c
3 2 3 0 Javier rf
10 0 0
Slaught c
10 0 0 LeMatter ss 3 0 0 0
Brower II
43 36
Totals
3* 13 17 12 Totals
14 3 6 1
Texas
I7e»2« &lt;131-13
Oakland
ig iiM O O O -i
Game winning RBI — Brower (2).
D P — Oakland 1. LOB— Texas 9. Oakland
6
2B— Laniford. Parrish. IB — Fletcher.
H R — Brower 2 (SI, Lenstord 16). Cey (4 ).
SB— Canseco (I). SF— Sierra.
IP H R ER BB SO
Texas
Correa (W 7 51
4 6 3 3 4 4
Russell (S 1)
2 3 0 0 0 2
Oakland
Plunk (L 1 41
1 21
1 6 4 4 3
Lamp
4 13 9 1 3 2 4
Von Ohlen
1 7 4 4 1 1
W P— Correa. PB— Stelnbach. T — 1:04. A
-26.195.
Umpires— Horn*. Denklnger; 1b. Coble;
7b. Scott; 3b. McCoy.

9-0

Orioles
5*3
Al Hultlmorc. Kirk Gibson and
Mult Nukes hit iwo-run home
runs. Chet Lemon added a pair
ol solo homers and Darrell Evans
a homer to power (lie Tigers.
Earlier. Ken Gerhari hit two
homers and drove in three runs
to give (he Orioles a 9-5 victory
In completing a Saturday-night
game suspended because of
curfew. In the scheduled game.
Dan Retry. 4-4. notched his 12th
career victory over Baltimore.
Keu Dixon. 3-7. suffered tlit.* loss.

Mariners • • s
• e••**•••* a*«4t*4 e#•• * IS'
Indians......................................O
Al Cleveland. Lee Guctterman
threw a thrce-hlitcr In his sec­
ond career complete game and
first major-league shutout to
pace the Mariners. Guctterman.
5-0, struck out two and walked
one. Ken Schrom. 4-6. lasted Just
1 1-3 innings and suffered the
defeat.
SEA TTLE

CLEVELAN D
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Brantley cf 4 1 1 1 Butler cf
40 0 0
PBradley If 5 1 2 0 Franco ss
40 00
SBradley c
4 0 11 Tabler dh
40 00
Phelps dh
4 t I 0 Carter lb
30 20
Presley 3b
3 0 2 1 Snyder II
30 00
Davit 1b
4 0 11 Jacoby 3b
2000
Klngery rf
3 0 0 0 Castillo rl
2 0 10
Quinones ss 4 1 1 0 Noboa ph
10 0 0
Reynolds 2b 4 I I I Parsons rl 0 0 0 0
Bernatrd 2b 3 0 0 0
Dempsey c 2 0 0 0
Thornton ph 10 0 0
Bando c
00 00
Totals
25 5 10 5 Totals
1* 0 3 0
Seattle
116 010 0 00- I
Cleveland
000 000 000- 0
Game-winning RBI — Presley 13).
DP— Seattle I. LOB-Seattle 6. Clove
land 3. 2 B— Quinones, Reynolds. SB—
Presley! (2 ),Carter (14).
IP H R ER BB SO
Seattle
Guetterman(W 50)
* 3
0 0 1 2
Cleveland
Schrom (L 4 6 )
1) 2 7 4 4
) 0
Vande Berg
323 3 1 I
0 2
Armstrong
3 0
0 0 1 2
Yeti
) 0
0 0 I
0
W P— Guetterman. T - 2 ; 16. A - 14,494.
Umpires— Home, McKean; lb, McClel­
land; 2b. Young; lb, Clark.

M ILW A U K EE
TORONTO
ab r h b l
ab r h bl
4 2 10 Fernandt si 3 1 1 0
Mol Ilor 3b
Yount cf
5 1 1 3 Murphy cl
4 12 2
Cooper dh 4 0 10 Barfield rf
4 000
Deer If
1 1 1 2 Bell If
4 0 20
Surhoff c
3 0 11 Whitt c
4 0 00
Robldoux lb 1 0 0 0 Upshaw lb
4 22 1
Felder If
2 0 10 Gruber 3b
4 2 10
Manning rl 2 0 0 0 M cGrlli dh 3 13 2
Paclorek rf 1 0 0 0 Fielder ph 10 0 0
Centner 2b 4 0 10 Lee 2b
200 1
4000
Svaum ss
Totali
31 6 9 6 Totals
11 7 II 4
101 000 030— 4
Milwaukee
210 101 00 X - 7
Toronto
Game winning RBI — Moseby (4).
E — Crlm, Robldoux. O P— Milwaukee 3.
Toronto 2. LOB— Milwaukee 5. Toronto 4.
2B— Upshaw,
Molitor,
Yount.
HR—
Moseby (III. Yount ( 6 ). Upshaw ( 6 ).
McGrlli (5), Deer (16). SB— Fernandei
(16), Moseby (14), Felder (4). Molitor
(14). SF— Lee.
IP H R ER BB SO
Milwaukee
a
Crlm (L IS )
0 0
Aldrich
22 3
Mirabella
23
0
Boslo
Plesac
33
Toronto
Johnson
3
Mutsalman (W
3
Elchhorn
I I
1 I
3 111 2 1
Honko IS 12)
Musielman
Elchhorn pitctu
Boslo pitched to I batter In Ith.
T — 2:50. A — 44,644.
Umpires — Home, Hirtchbeck;
lb.
Garcia; 2b. Merrill; lb. Reed

I 1

their personal bag of weapons.

Mike
Dame
HERALD
SPORTS
W RITER

In ihai game. Steve Frlesner
and Dan Edwards combined on a
four-hitler lo lead Freddie's lo
the victory, as they have done all
season long. Frlesner. who
struck out five in as many
innings of work, ended the
season with a perfect 7-0 record
on the mound, while teammate
Pat Newell sported a 9-2 mark on
Ihe season.

ager Tom Frlesner in ihe 14-hii
•utack.

Salvagio's B.J Calapa gave up
seven runs and nine hits as the
losing pitcher. Kevin Twiggs
came on In relief, however, and
fanned 10 batters while rapping
two singles lo lead Ihe team.
The healthy combination of
sirong hitting and powerful
pitching sparked Freddie's the
entire season, and Frlesner.
Newell and Edwards have suc­
cessfully combined both Into

Frlesner and Edwards also led
the team ai the plate against
Sul ( agio's as each drilled three
hits. Including a double and four
RBIs by Frlesner and a triple and
three RBIs by Edwards. Bobby
Andluo chipped in two for man-

1

C IN C IN N A TI
A TL A N TA
a b r li b i
a b rh b l
Danlali If
3 1 1 0 Jama* cf
402 1
Jones rf
1 1 1 0 Oberkfell 3b 4 0 2 1
Larkin pr
0 0 0 0 Nettle* 3b
000 0
William* p 0 0 0 0 Perry lb
5 0 10
Franco p
0 0 0 0 DMurphy rf 4 0 1 0
Conctpcn ph 0 0 0 0 Griffty If
5000
Landrum p 0 0 0 0 Ram lrtl 1* 4 1 1 0
Davit cf
3 12 3 Virgil c
4233
Ptrkar lb
4 1 1 1 Garber p
0000
Ball 3b
5 1 1 1 Slmmont ph 1 0 0 0
D ial c
3 0 0 0 Hubbard lb 5 12 0
McClendon c 3 1 I 0 Mahler p
2 12 0
Stillwell l* 5 0 11 Acker p
10 0 0
Oeiler lb
3 0 0 0 Aiienmchr p 0 0 0 0
Power p
1 0 0 0 Benedict C
10 0 0
Francona ph 1 0 0 0
RMurphy p 0 0 0 0
O'Neill rf
2000
Total*
15 6 6 4 Total*
40 5 11 5
Cincinnati
200 002 001 1- 4
Atlanta
016 120 000 0- 5
Gama winning RBI — Bell (3).
E — Ramlrei, Hubbard. DP— Cincinnati
7. Atlanta ). LOB-Clnclnnatl 7, Atlanta 10.
I B — P e rry , O berkfell, McClendon. 3B
— Davit.
HR— Davli (22), Parker (17),
Virgil 2 (20), Belt (5). SD-Danlel* 2(16).
S— Benedlc), Oeiler.
IP H R ER BB SO
Cincinnati
Power
5 10 5 5 3 2
RMurphy
2 2 0 0 0 2
William*
13 1 0 0 0 0
Franco] 30001 1
Landrum (W 3 1)
2 0 0 0 0 0
Atlanta
Mahler
S 1-3 4 4 4 3 I
Acker
2 1 0 0 1 0
Asienmacher
11 0 0 0 0 I
Garber (L IS )
3 13 3 7 2 2 3
H B P -b y Acker (Jonei). T-3 :1 0 . A 26.176.
Umpire*— Home, McSherry; 1b, Pulll;
2b. Brocklender; 3b, B. Williams

Cardinals...................................7
Expoa.........................................3
Blue Ja ys.......................
7
At Si. Louis, ruoklc Icfl-hander
Brewers............................... 6 Joe Magrane pitched seven in­
Al Toronto. Home runs by nings to lead ihe Cardinals.
Lloyd Moseby. Willie Upshaw Mugrunc. 5-0. was making his
and Fred McGrlli plus three
first slurt since May 29. He was
Innings of shutout relief by Jeff activated Friday after being on
Mussclmun. 6-1. led ihe Blue lilt- disabled list since May 30
Jays. Chuck Crlm. 3-5. took the wlih a sore elbow. Bob Sebra.
loss. Robin Yount and Bob Deer 3-H. lost for his fourth conseruhit home runs for the Brewers.
ilve slnrl.

Freddie's Dominates Pony Play
Then* Is i»&gt; second-guessing
who ihe champion of the Pony
Division of (he Seminole Pony
League Is this season.
A bunch of 13 and 14 year
olds known as Freddie's Sleak
House dominated the division
wiih an Impressive 18-2 record,
including a season-ending 13-3
victory over Salvagio’s Boys.

United Press Internationa)
Atlanta entered a four-game
scries against Cincinnati trailing
the National League Westleudlng Reds by 3)-a games.
Sunday, the Braves emerged
battered, bruised, and no closer
to first place.
Buddy Bell homcred with one
out In the 10th Inning to lift the
Reds to a 6-5 victory over the
Atlanta Braves In a game marred
for the second straight day by a
benches-clearlng brawl.
" It was a fa irly exciting
series." said Bell, who drilled a
1-0 pllrh from Gene Garber. 8-5.
to left field for his fifth homer.
"Lot of times your adrenalin
seems to flow a illlte more than
normal, and things like that are
going to happen."
The melee erupted In the
eighth Inning after Kal Daniels of
ihe Reds singled and stole sec­
ond. Tracy Jones was hll by a
pitch from J im Acker, and
charged the mound. Both ben­
ches emptied and Jones was
ejected. Saturday. Cincinnati's
B ill Gul l l ckson hll A ndres
Thomas after baek-to-baek home
runs by Dale Murphy and Ken
Griffey.

Newell led the team olfenslvely
will) a .463 bailing average,
while Edwards batted .457 and
Frlesner bailed .432.
"The most valuable player (on
ihe team) Is a hard decision
between Pat. Steve and Dan."
Frlesner said. "Therefore 1select
al) three."
Those three pitchers were not
the only contribulers on the
team, however, lor three others
hit above the .300 mark. Andino
carried n .396 average. Mike
Zucker batted .354. and Aaron
Merrill finished with a .349
mark. As a team. Freddie's hit
the ball extremely well with a
.323 team average, which attests
to the fact that there Is not a bat
on ihe team that can be taken
lightly.
Freddie’s finished with 26
doubles, 4 triples and five
homers as a team.

M O N TR E A L

NL Baseball
Mats...........................................®
Phillies......................................3
At New York. Dave Magadan
drove In three runs and Len
Dyksira had three hits and
scored three times, helping the
Meta extend their domination of
ihe Phillies. Magadan's RBI was
In support of Sid Fernandez. 9-3.
Kevin Gross fell lo 4-7 and
Philadelphia lost lor the slxlh
time io New York this season.
PH ILAD ELP H IA
NEW YORK
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Samutl 2b
5 0 7 0 Dykttra cl 5 3 3 0
Schu 3b
2 0 0 0 M llltr 2b
1 0 10
GGrost lb
2 01 0 M a u llll lb
4 2 23
Schmidt lb
10 0 0
Slrawbrry rl 4 10I
Parrish c
3 10 0
McRynlds II4 1I0
GWIIson rf
4 0 20
McDowell p10 00
4 I t I Johnton •» 5 12 1
Jama* cl
3 1 1 1 Magadan lb 3 0 2 3
Ru**tll II
Thompton cl I 0 0 0 Santana ** 0 0 0 0
Aguayo **
3 0 7 1Lyon* c
2 0 2)
Daullon ph 1 0 0 0 Ftrnandet p 2 0 0 0
Ttkuiva p
0 0 0 0 Ltach p
0 0 00
KGrot* p
2 0 0 0 MWIIton II 1 0 0
0
Schatiadar p 0 0 0 0
Hugh** ph
) 000
Huma p
00 00
Calhoun p
0 0 00
Jackton p
0000
10 0 0
Jalti **
36 6 13 6
35 3 * 1 Total*
Total*
600 101 004- ]
Phlladalphla
006 141 01*— I
Now York
Game-winning RBI — Lyons (1).
E — Tekulve. DP--N e w York 1. LOB
10. 2 B
Philadelphia 1. New York
2, Lyon*.
Dykstra.
Samuel. M aullll
Magadan. HR— James (4). Russell (3). s
-M ille r 2.
IP H R ER BB SO
Philadelphia
KGross (L 4 7 )
471 9 6 A 1 4
Schatiadar
13 1 0 0 1 1
Huma
1-3 1 1 1 1 0
Calhoun
(3 0 0 0 0 0
Jackson
1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1
1 7 1 1 0 1
Tekulve
New York
Fernandoi IW 92) 52 3 4 2 2 7 6
Loach
1-3 4 1 1 0 0
McDowell (S 1)
1 1 0 0 0 2
Leach pitched lo 2 baiter* In 7th.
H B P -b y Fernandei (Schmidt). Balk—
K. Gros*. McDowell. T -l:0 6 . A-44.834.
Umpire*— Home, Tata; lb. Crawford; 7b.
Davidson; lb. Wendelstedt.

C ubs............................................. 6

Pirates.......................................3
Al Chicago. Kcllh Moreland hll
a iwo-run homer and had three
RBI and Sieve Trout collected
Ills lourih victory In Ills Iasi four
shirts lo lead the Cubs. Trout.
4-1. earned the triumph, the'
Cubs' first in live meetings
against the Piralcs. Lee Smith
pitched Ihe ninth for Ills lfllli
save.
CHICAGO
PITTSBURG H
ab r h bl
ab r h bl
Bonds cl
4 0 10 Martlnai cl 4 12 1
Bonilla rf
5 1 2 1 Palmeiro II 5 0 0 0
4 111
Ray 3b
4 0 10 Dawson rl
Dial c
5 0 11 Durham lb 3 10 0
Morrison 3b 4 0 2 0 Moreland 3b 3 2 2 3
Braam lb
4 0 10 J Davis c
2 0 11
WDavIs II
2 3 10 Sundberg c 10 0 0
Raynolds rf 7 0 0 0 Noce 7b
3 0 10
Balllard ss 2 0 10 Brumley ss 1110
Van Slyk* cf I 0 0 0 Trout p
20 00
Drabek p
10 0 0 □IPino s
0000
Taylor p
0 0 0 0 Sanderson p 0 0 0 0
Pedrlque ph 10 0 0 Lynch p
0 0 00
Walk p
0 0 0 0 Mumphry ph I 0 0 0
Cangelosl ph I 0 0 0 Smith p
0 0 00
Jones p
0000

ST. LOUIS
ab r h bl
ab r h bl
Totals
36 2 10 1 Totals
31 6 a 6
Nichols cl
3 0 0 0 Coleman II 4 1 1 2
Pittsburgh
IM 101 000- 3
Candaele cl 10 0 0 OSmllh **
3 111
Chicago
3 M I2 0 M * — 6
Webster rl 4 I I o Herr 2b
4 110
Game winning RBI — Moreland (5).
Raines II
4 1 2 1 Clark lb
4 12 2
E — Noce. Durham. DP— Chicago I. LOB
Wallach 3b 3 12 2 McGee cl
4 110
-Pittsburgh 13. Chicago 8 2B-Bonllla.
Brook* **
4 0 0 0 Pendleton 31) 4 0 0 0
Moreland, W. Davis. HR— Moreland (II).
Galerrag lb 4 0 10
Ford rl 2 0 0 0
SB— Brumley II). S— Trout.
Law 2b
2 0 10
Oquendo rf1 0 21
IP H R ER BB SO
Flligerald c 3 0 0 0
Lake c 1 1 0 0
Pittsburgh
Sebra p
2 0 0 0 Magrane p 2 1 1 0
Drabek |L 1 6 )
3 7 3 6 4 4 3 ]
Engle ph
10 0 0 Landrum ph I 0 0 0
Taylor
1 13 1 2 7 3 0
McClure p
0 0 0 0 Dawley p
0 0 00
Walk
7 0 0 0 0 3
Wnnnghm cl 0 0 0 0
Jones
I I 0 0 I )
Total*
11 1 7 3 Total*
31 7 * 6
Chicago
Montreal
000 001 000- 3
Trout (W 4 1)
5 23 7 3 2 4 3
St. Loult
130 000 03*- 7
DiPino
13 1 0 0 0 0
Game winning RBI — Clark (10).
Sanderson
I 1 0 0 2 1
E — Herr, Galarraga. DP— SI. Louis 3.
Lynch
1 0 0 0 0 1
LOB-Montreal 3. SI. Loul* 3. 2 B - 0
Smith IS 19)
I 1 0 01 2
Smith. Raines. Herr. 3B— Coleman. HR —
H B P -b y Taylor (Noce) W P— Trout,
Wallach (11). S B -O
Smith (17). S—
Taylor. Balk— Drabek. T — 3:34 A — 33.416
Lake.
Umplres-Home. Halllon; lb. Rennert,
IP H R ER BB SO
2b. Weyer; 3b, Montague.
Montreal
Sebra (L 3 6)
6 4 4 4 2 6
McClure
1112
1 1 0
0
Burke
23 0 0 0 0 0
G ia n ts.......................................l ]
SI. Louis
Magrane (W SO)
7 6 1 3 7 1
Padres......................................... a
Dawley (S 2)
2 1 0
0 0 0
Al San Diego. Kelly Down;
T — 2:16 A— 43,052.
pitched seven Innings to g;iin hi;
Umpires— Home, Quick; lb, Froem
mlng; 2t&gt;, Bonin; 3b. Klbler.
sixth victory and Bob Brcnly

Astros....................................... 6
Dodgers................................ i
At Houston. Jim Deshalcs and
Larry Andersen scattered eight
hits lo pace ihe Astros. Deshales.
7-2. limited the Dodgers to one
run. struck out two and walked
one in eight Innings. Dodgers
starter Rick Honeycutt. 2-6,
lasted only four Innings, surren­
dering five runs on five hits.
LOS A N G ELE S
HOUSTON
a b rh b l
a b rh b l
Anderson ss 4 0 10 BHatcher cl 4 1 1 1
Sax 7b
4 0 0 0 Doran 2b
3 12 0
Shalby cf
4 0 2 1 Jackson 3b 3 1 1 0
Guerrero II 4 0 0 0 Davis 1b
4000
MHatcher lb 3 0 3 0 Bass rf
3 10 0
Slubbs lb
10 1 0 Crut II
3 2 11
Garner 3b
4 0 0 0 Thon ss
3 0 10
Scloscla c
3 0 0 0 RReynold* c 4 0 0 0
Williams rl 3 0 0 0 Deshalet p 10 0 0
Honeycutt p 1 1 I 0 Andersen p 0 0 0 0
Hamilton ph 10 0 0
Havens p
0 00 0
Trevino ph
10 0 0
Howell p
0 00 0
Totals
31 I I I Totals
30 6 6 2
Las Angeles
Ml 000 060- I
Houston
400 IM 01*- 6
Game winning RBI — None
E — Honeycutt. Garner. Williams DP—
Houston 3 LOB— Los Angeles 5, Houston 5
2B— Thon H R — Hatcher(7)
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angelas
4 5 5 3 3 5
Honeycutt (L 26)
3 0 0 0 1 4
Havens
1 1 1 1 1 1
Howell
Houston
Deshales (W 7 2)
1 7 1 1 1 2
1 1 0 0 0 1
Andersen
WP— Honeycutt. De shales. T - -2.41 . A
31.079
Umpires— Home, Engel; lb, RIppley;
2b, Runge; 3b. DeMuth

Will Clark and Mall William*
each homcred power the Giants
Downs. 6-3. has beaten tiu
I’ad res three limes ihis season
Erie Show. 2-9. didn't survive
the first inning as the Giant;
scored four runs on four hits.
SAN FRANCISCO
SAN D IEG O
*b r h bi
ab r h bi
Thompsn 2b 5 1 0 0 Jetlerson cl 4 0 0 0
Leonard II
5 t 1 1 Flannery 2b 4 0 0 0
Garrell* p 0 0 0 0 Gwynn rl
4 0 10
Clark lb
4 1 I I Martin*! II 2 0 0 0
Maidonid rl 4 2 2 1 kruk lb
3 110
CDavis cl
5 l 1 1 Jones p
0 &lt;1 S 0
Brown ]b
5 0 11 Salaiar ph
10 0 0
Brenly c
4 3 2 1 Ready 3b
4 12 2
William* ss 5 2 3 2 Santiago c
4 0 10
Downs p
3 0 1 ) Templeln ss 4 0 10
Milner cl
1 0 0 0 Show p
0 0 0 0
Booker p
0 0 0 0
Steels ph
10 0 0
Hayward p 1 0 0 0
Mack cl
10 0 0
Totals
41 1) 12 9 Totals
San Francisco
402 011
San Diego
ooo 200
Game winning RBI — Leonard 14)
E — Templeton 2, Brenly, Martlr
-S a n Diego I LO B -S a n Franclscc
Diego 4. 2B— Leonard. C Davis. HR II), Brenly (5), Clark (13). Willia
SB— Gwynn (24), Brenly 2 (5). Willian
IP H
San Francisco
Downs (W 6 3)
7 4 2 2 2
Gar rails
2 2 0 0 0
San Diego
Show (L 29)
1-3 4 * 3 0
Booker
22 3 3 1
I
Hayward
3 3
Jones
3 7 3 0 )
Pb— Santiago. T - 2 : 42. A— 19.856
Umpire*— Home. Davis; lb. Stello Gregg; 3b. Harvey.

7 2 I

2

�m
Iw U rt H w K , I

V.^

g L g fcg *

Martina Seeks

W IMBLEDON. England (UP!)
— Martina Navratilova begins
her bid Tor a sixth consecutive
W im bledon title facing two
daunting facts:
She has not won a tournament
since November: West German
teenager Steffi Graf Is the pre­
mier women's player at the
moment.
Navratilova came to Britain
last week aiming to reassert her
superiority on her favorite sur­
face. grass. Instead, she ended a
five-year. 69-match unbeaten
streak on British grass courts,
losing to Czechosl ovaki a' s
Helena Sukova In 4he final of a
$200,000 In Eastbourne.
"I blew It." Navratilova said.
All six of her Eastbourne titles
h a v e b e e n f o l l o w e d by
Wimbledon victories. A victory
there would have given an lm-

measurable bogat to her attempt
to match Helen Wills Moody's
eight Wimbledon singles titles
and become the first to win six
in a row.
Victory would also have gone
some way toward diminishing
the loss to Graf In the final of the
clay-court French Open. It was
Grafs first Grand Slam title,
earned eight days before her
18th bi rt hday. Navrati l ova
double-faulted at match point,
one error In a long line of
mistakes once thought Impossi­
ble from the world's No. 1
woman player.
"I've found enough ways to
lose matches this year." she
said. "I hope I've gone through
them all.’*
Graf, ranked No. 2 In the
world, has won her last eight
tournaments, but grass is not

Tennis
her best surface and she has not
played a grass-court tournament
in two years. She missed last
year's Wimbledon with a virus.
"Martina has to be the favorite
w i t h o u t a d o u b t , " said
Navratilova's friend and doubles
partner Pam Shrivcr. "If you win
five times in a row. seven times
in nine years, you have to be the
favorite. Until we sec how Graf
performs on grass we won’t
know how dangerous she Is."
Navratilova says her problem
is not a decline in her game as
much as an extended case of
nerves.
"I believe I have a lot of good
tennis in me." Navratilova said.

"Although lately I've been fall­
ing apart at the drop of a hat.
Simple shots that are there and I
end of up missing them.
"A t this point It's all emo­
tional. The shots are there.
There arc some physical pro­
blems. but not enough to affect
me. There’s not anything wrong
wills me technically.
"I'm 'not brimming with con­
fidence. but I'm still the favorite.
It's still grass, and playing
Center Court at Wimbledon Isn't
like playing Center Court at
Eastbourne.
Chris Evert, the No. 3 seed,
ulso favored her old rival to take
the crown.
"Graf will win on every sur­
face. but whether she wins on
grass this year remains to be
seen." Evert said. " I’d still put
my money on Martina."

WIm S M M A N m M C
■y United Press lirtontaHanal
Today is Mandey. Jur* 72. ISf*. Th*
day of ms Wlmfcl— n CfwnptonMup_______
•nd July J. Th# fop man's n N i play
first round matcho*.
Match at flit Day
Boris Bocktr. It. ot W*st Gar many starts
his campaign for a third straight Wlmbladon
man’s tills. Ha spans play on th# Cantor
Court against hard-hitting Cttcheslovak
Korsl Novocsk. Bockor tntors tha champion
ships (rash from his victory at tha Quotn's
Club grass-court tournamont
Rsguiar shoosrs ora forecast for tha aarfy
part ot the weak. Tournamont raforoa Alan
M ills says that w ill moan a "last of
character" tor players and officials, who will
bo "backward* and forwards bstwaan courts
and lockar rooms."
History Lesson
T h t last men to win threo straight
Wlmbloon singles titles was Bjorn Borg In
l*7S Ha want on to mako It flva In a rex.
Other hat tricks this century ware by Laurie
Oohsrty (1102 0*1. Anthony Wilding (1*1013)
and Fred Parry (1*34 » ) .
q{ f|||
"Lendl Is tha No. 1 but I look at It that ha Is
lust another player who has to bo beaten and

THUMBNAILS
Min's slfiftos

I. M l M u r . W « l Oermeny
Aq* IV. fwlflfit 3-J, M ight 175 pound*. Rewrote tha hlitory booki In
many rotpocti whan ha won Wlmbladon In IN 5. Including bacomlng
tha youngast mala (17 yaan j months) to win a Grand Slam tltta.
Provod It was no lluka by rotalnlng tha tltla last yoar. whan ha alio
won flva othar Grand Prlx tltla* and bacama tha wort'* youngast
™ t.l.l!P"f!r*:
wrvlca and aggrawlon. Idaally lultad
to Wlmbladon, maka him tha ovarwhalmlng favorlto for a third tltla.
which I* why ha and not World No. t Landt It too taod.
J. Ivan Landt. Cxschaslovakla
Aga 27, 3-2, I7S pound*. Tha only mala player *o far to top 110
million In tournament earning*. Land! won hi* third French Open
tlL’L H .* '!!? hl* ,,tth Gf*nd **•"&gt; crowT1 ~ ear liar this month.
Mtafrnlnahon and ambition war* tha key factors In the loan Lendl's
rite to become World No. 1. Sevan time* a runner-up In Grand Slam
tournaments, he was beaten In last year's Wlmbladon final by
Backer, but won tha U.S. Open both In INS and 1M* as well a* the
French In 12t 4, INS and I W , Always vulnerable on grass, needs a
tew easy matches In the opening rounds to gain confidence and
rhythm.

&gt;. Mats Wl lander, 5wedan
Age 22, d-t, 175 pounds. At 17 years, * month* won the i m French
Open title, and is the only player to win four Grand Slam events
(French 1M2 and IfU . and Australian Open 11*3 and 1*04) before his
31st birthday. Lives In Monte Carlo and since his marriage this year
to South African modal Sonia Mulholland. ha's demonstrated a more
easy-going attitude to tannls. A etaycourt specialist, which accounts
tor molt of his 24 Grand Prlx titles, the Swede failed to win his third
French Open tltla earlier this month whan ha was beaten In a four-set
final by Lendl. Has never got beyond tha fourth round at Wlmbladon.
though won tha doubles tltla last year with Joaklm Nystrom.
4. Staten Edberg, Sweden
Aga 21, d-2, I5t pound*. A rarity among tha Swad**. an exciting
sarva-and-volley player, but Edberg has never bean beyond tha
fourth round at Wlmbladon despite living lor most of the year In
London and being thoroughly accustomed to grass court play.
Australian Open champion tor the past two years, ha also reached
tha last (our of the Itta U.S. Open before being stopped by eventual
champion Lendl.
J. Miloslav Mecir. Ciecheslevakla
Age 23, *-3. 110 pounds. A deceptively languid player, Mecir
defeated Wllander and Becker an route to a surprise appearance In
the U.S. Open llnal last year but was than routed by Lendl. Better on
clay than grass. Mecir nonetheless boat Edberg as he reached the
quarterfinals at Wimbledon In ISM. Then he ran up against Becker, a
defeat he avenged later In New York. Nursing a knee ln|ury, the
unpredictable Mecir could lose In the First round, or could be tha
bogeyman of the bottom hair of the Wimbledon draw.
5. Yannick Noah, France
Age 17, 4-4, 110 pounds. French Open champion In 1f*3, Noah has
never got beyond the quarterfinals of any other Grand Slam event.
One at the most exciting and dramatic players to watch on any
surface, Noah Is also fop seeded with compatriot Guy Forget (whom
he couldmeet In the second rouild) In the double*. 7. Jimmy Connors, U.S.
Age 34, 5-10, 153 pounds. Champion In 1F74 and 17*2 and winner of
HU tournament lilies but the last date* back to October if* 4. Now
relishing the role ol "Grand Old Man" of tennis, Connor* Is revered

Wimbledon: Centre court looms ominous as grass court championships begin today.
by th* llkat ot Bocktr at on* ot fh* ell lim* greats — which did not
slop Bockor booting him In the final ol th* pra Wimbledon Queen's
Club tournament In London. They could meet again In th*
quarterfinals (as thay did In th* Frtnch Open earlier this month),
when Connors' gull* and experience might provide tha best tost of
how M il aqulpped Becker It tor a third tills.
I. Andres Gomes, Ecuador
Age 27. 0 -4 , HQ pounds, Primarily a cjaycourt player. Gomes
nonetheless hat reached the quarter!Inal* of Wimbledon and th* U.S.
Open J - berth'll Iftl. But ha lost In th* first rtound at Wlmbladon Iasi
year and this year faces an unpredictable first round opponent In
Austria's Horst Skolt. Left-handed and known tor prolonging the
agony al eventual victory or defeat to the very limit*. Winner of the
Tournament of Champions tltla this year.

Georgia Rips Florida, 27-3
Football
ate any offense all nighl lung.
They were fired up. and we
weren't. That was the biggest
difference"
One reason that Florida was
out maned was I he abscenee of
nine players that ppullcd out of
the game earlier in the week.
"W e didn't have very good
practices,” Madison added.
"And II showed tonight."
The big play of the game came
In (he ihlrd period. Florida took

...A lta m o n te
C o n tin u e d fr o m 5 A

much of l lie game. Bowers and
Aliamonte lefty Sieve Shakar
locked up in a pitcher's duel as
Altamonte clung to a 3-1 lead
uflcr five innings.
The big blow of the game
then came in the top of the
sixtli when Aliatmmic pinch
hitler Eric Birie launched a
Bowers pitch over the fence in
left center for a solo home run
and a 4-1 lead. Altamonte
added (wo more runs in the
inning to pull away.
"It was really a great leant
effort." Letterio said. "Il was
one of the most enjoyable
games of the summer. It was

the kickoff ond drove from their
own 25 to the Georgia 29.
Quarterback Casey Weldon, who
was under constant pressure
from Georgia defenders all game,
rolled (o Ills right and attempted
to hit Terrance Barber. The ball,
however, was intercepted by
cor nc r baek Davi d Hargett.
Marge 11 dashed down the side­
lines fora 75-yard touchdown.
"W e made a lot of mistakes
and they took advantage of
them.” Madison said. "If we
would have scored on that drive.
Il would have been a different
game."
good that we got lo play
Oviedo again because there is
not a whole lot of competition
in our area."
Kelly Hysell led Hu- Alta­
monte offense as he was 3 for
4 with (wo doubles and two
Kills. Mike Schmil also drove
in a pair of runs with two
singles and Billy Jenki ns
added a double, single and one
Kill.
Shakar went the distance on
i lie mound and allowed seven
lilts, struck out four and
walked three.
Gary i’elczar led Oviedo al
tlit- plate as lie had a triple and
single and drove In one run.
Joey Beasley socked a double
and single. Spellman contrib­
ut ed a doubl e.

t. Henri Leconte, Franc*.
Aga 24, t-t, ISO pounds. Probably tha most naturally-glttod playsr
since 111* Nsttase, th* erratic lefthander reached the quartortlnals *1
Wlmbladon In 1W3 and th* samltlnals last year, before falling both
times to Becksr. But Leconte he* little form this year following back
surgery. A return, too early, to tournament ploy saw him ellmlnotod
from th* French Open In th* llrst round last month.
IS. Tim Mayafto. U.S.
Age 24, S 3 , i n pounds. The blgisorf Mg Mayotte last year won ot
Queen's Club, then reached the last tight of Wimbledon before
falling In llvt light salt to Lendl. This year, he lost at Quean's In the
semifinals to Becker. A semi line 11st also at Wimbledon In 1912. the
mild mannered Mayotte Is known as "Gentleman Tim ". The only
American man to win a tournament this year, Mayotte took the title

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— C h ris F is te r

uUucU a uuuoie.
In winning the regular-season
c h a m p i o n s h i p , the Asl r o s
knocked off the defendi ng
champion Dodgers. 12-2. in the
finale. Prom tossed another
three-hitter in (in* game ami
whiffed 12.
Manager Pleicones attributed
the A s t r o s ’ sttrccss to an
excellent pitching staff led by
Prom. Spolskl. Brubaker and
Pleicones. Leading hitters in­
clude Kevin Wainscou, Wlstrom
and Spolskl while Kusty Hurst
came through with a number ol
clutch hits
Other members of the cham­
pionship squad include Mike
Locke Jeff Streeter. Doug Jones
and Kicky Johnson. — Chris
Fister

t. Martina Navratilova, U.S.
Age 30, height S-7 to , M ight 143 pound*. Aiming tor a record sixth
consecutive tltla and to aguol the record ol eight women's titles
overall. Has not won a tournament this year, but at runner-up In the
French Open Navratilova took her career prim money to moro than
•12 million. Going tor throe titles — singles, women's doubles (with
Pam Shrivar) and mixed double* (with Paul McNamoa). Onto five
woman have won alt thro# In tha sam* year. Navratilova takas a
34-match winning streak In sing la* play at th* All-England Club Info
this year's competition.
2. Stofft Graf, West Gorasany
Ago 10.3-0. US pounds. The rising star, perhaps already rtoon since
winning too Frtnch Open Wlmbladon will show how ready tha It to
toko over from Navratilov* os world No. 1. Th* only Gorman to win
too woman's little to data Is Cllly Auttam In 1C31. G ra ft power and
strength have not taken her beyond tha fourth round at Wlmbladon
so tar. but tha It thay koy figure in tha woman's tingles.
3. Chris Evert, U.S.
Aga 32. 3-0, 123 pounds. Displaced at No. 2 by Graf, and llkaty to
fad* further. Three timet Wlmbladon champion and seven times
runnar-up, Evert's divorce from John Lloyd coincides with her
displacement by Grot. A groat competitor, Evert's determination is
llkaly to taka bar to al toast th* quarterfinals at Wlmbladon.
4. Mo m Mandllhava, Ctochattovtkla
Ag* 25, S-g, 132 pounds. Loti year's beaten finalist and ratgnlnQ
Australian Open champion. Mandllkova It tha lost player to defeat
Navratilova at Wlmbladon, beating her In In toe IWI sam III no IY.
Erratic but at her bast an grass, Mandllkova It alto tha only woman
apart from Navratilova and Evert tine* th* 1101 U.S. Open to win A
Grand Slam lltla.
*
3. Helena Sukova, Ctachestovakla
Age 22, 4-2, 130 pounds. Her mother Vara raachad tha Wlmbladon
final In 1H 2 , losing to American Karen Hontia. Tha toll Helena It a
good grass court player, who can trouble all but toe bast and
defeated Evert to reach th* llnal of too U.S. Open last yoar.
0. Pam Shrivar, U.S.
Aga 24, 0-0, 130 pounds. A t usual, top seeded with Navratilova In
th* woman’s doubles. In tingles, raachad th* tamlllnalt el
Wlmbladon In IN I and th* quartortlnals In 1M4.
7. Gabriel* Sabatlnl, Argentina
Ago 17. 3-7VS, IM pounds. With Graf, toa star of to* future. Many
observers concentrate on her sultry good looks rather than her flare*
. topspin and cracking backhand. Samlflnalltl at th* French Open,
and al Wlmbladon last year, th* Is abl* to win her first Grand Slam
(III* on any surfoca.
1. Manual* Melaeve, Bulgaria
Aga 21, S-3,127 pound*. Her sister Kotorln* It alto saadod. Raachad
to* fourth round at Wlmbladon last yoar, but her batollna goma It
limited an grass. Maleeva's mother Y u U was Bulgarian champion
nine lima*. Her boat performance on grass was reaching the
samlllnalsot Eastbourne In IftS.
t. Claudia Kshds Kitsch, West Germany
Ago 23,0 -Vi, 130 pound*.. Desite her set
servo-and-volley gam*, toa toll
and dominating West
Was! German
Gorman ha* inot had much suecos* ot
Wlmbladon, never going beyond too told round, toil she It orw at to*
players who can extend Navratilova, defeating her at toa ISOS
Canadian Open and extending Hi* Wlmbladon champion several
lima* In ifM.
i t . Batting lunge. West Oormany
Ag* 24, S I. 123 pounds. Born In Swllterland. brought up In Peru
and Florida, now living In Mont# Carlo. Bung* nonetheless
represents West Germany In th* Federation Cup. A vivacious player,
she reached th* semifinals ot Wimbledon In l**2 end won four
tournaments In that year and ISS3

scoreboard

Altamonte Astros Rolling
After compiling a 20-1 record
during the regular season, the
Aliamonte Senior Aslros roared
Into Top Team Tournament play
and claimed three consecutive
victories.
Manager Duke I’lelcones' team
opened Top Team play with a
9-0 rout of Eustls in which Curt
Prom tossed a three hit shutout
and struck out seven. Ken
Brubaker. Prom and Chr i s
Pletcones Icll liie offense with
two hits each.
Th e Astros then advanced to a
game against the Oviedo Angels
and rode the strong pitching ol
Andy Spolskt to a 7-2 victory.
Spolskl allowed only four hits
and struck out three and was
backed by a superb defensing
effort as the Astros turned three

Swedish men should foal at home al
Wlmbladon. Tha 14 ot them In the tingle*
account lor more then one-tenth th* Held .
But the draw tow to It that at least three will
go out after ana round by pairing them with
fallow Swedes

at tha U.S. Indoor Championships In In Fabruory at ptiiiadatpnia.

WIMBLKOON THUMBNAILS
0»H*i P m » International

By Scott Sander
Herald Sporta W riter
O R LA N D O — Corning Into
Saturday night's Third Annual
Flohda-Gcorgia All-Star football
game. Georgia came into the
game looking lo avenge a pair of
losses in the two previous
games.
As it turned out. Georgia got
whai it wanted, and them some.
Georgia came out fired up. and
look advantage of seven Florida
turnovers as Georgia clobbered
Florida. 27-3. before a record
crowd of 17.440 al Orlando
Stadium.
"I had a feeling all week that
the kids were ready to play."
Gocrgia coach Kay Lamb said.
"We came out very strong, and
il feels good (o finally gel a win
over them."
Georgia took advantage of the
Florida mlscucs as five of tlu­
st*ven turnovers resulted In
Georgia points. Georgia kicker
John Kasey booled field goals of
46 a n d 26 y a r d s w h i l e
qualerback Kevin Epsy had a
I - y a r d t o u c h d o w n pl unge.
Kunnlngback John Slewart also
added a 3-yard touchdown run.
Florida coach Carl Madison
said that, although il was only
an all-star game, he was still not
very happy with the way that his
squad performed. "W e were
outplayed at the line of scrim­
mage." Madison said. "I knew
coming in that they were bigger
than us. and we couldn't gencr-

I'm going to give W my bast tog*." Christian Iscsanv. an hi* flrtf-rauw match
against Ivan U n d l.
M m t Frtonds
John McFnraa, who hoe hack trouble, la the
most famous absaitea Sweden's Rani
Car Iteen end Martin Jalto at Argentina also
might Neva boon saadod but poised up the
grass-court ovsnt because itwy prater to ptay
on clay.
■ '. - , v "
;
.' ■■
y * : »&lt;’ &lt;
WfMTMag
No British man was ranked high anouglt to
gain automatic entry to W )m tn dan.
Britons oamad wild-card antrlas. No
mad* It through the qualifying tournament.
Wfiuifng Streaks
Boris Becksr ha* won tha past two
Wlmbladon man’s titles and ho* never loot a
completed match In tha tournament. Throe
yoa rs ago ho ra tlra d h u rt. M a rtin a
Navratilova has token tha woman's title tha
past five seasons but Is under throat from
Steffi Graf, who enters the tournament with a
3* match winning streak.

°

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Monday, Juno 23, IM7

Local Intorost

NEW YORK (UPI) Prices
opened higher Monday In active
trading of New York Stock
Exchange issues as the upward
moment um of the previous
sessions car r i ed I nvestor s
further Into uncharted territory.
Th e Dow Jones Industrial
average, which rose 12.72 to a
new high of 2420.85 Friday, was
up 9.27 to 2430.12 shortly after
the market opened.
Advances led declines 629-356
among the" 1.396 issues crossing
the New York Stock Exchange
tape.
Early turnover amounted to
about 16.681.000 shares.
Stocks carved out a modest
gain Friday on the New York
Stock Exchange In heavy but
orderly trading as new rules
designed to dampen the volatili­
ty of the "triple-witching hour"
appeared to work reasonably
well.
1
"We shouldn't hang our hat
on whether It worked well once."
said Chester Pado, director of
technical analysis at Jefferies &amp;
Co. In Los Angeles.
Most analysts and traders said
they expect the market to move

Bid Ask
7% 7%
37% 37%
26% 26%
31%
35%
44%
26%
29%
76%
36%
14
29%
25
70
65%

31%
35%
45
27
29%
76%
37%
14%
29%
25%
70%
66

Dow Jonos
Dow
a.a.
30
20
15
65

Jonoa Averages — 10:00
Indus 2429.18
Trans 1027.59
Utils 205.84
Slock 910.64

up
up
up
up

Continued from page 1A
predictions even from some
members of his own party that
higher through the next two additional taxes — In some fonr.
weeks at least, although some — will Inevitably be part of any
cautioned that there could be a eventual compromise budget.
corrective sessslon Monday.
"I'm keeping that pencil at the
Jack Baker, head of the equity ready in my desk." he said, "and
block tiadlng desk at Shearson believe me. any tax hike bill that
Lehman Brothers Inc., said he makes It Into the Oval Office
expects Institutional Investors, won't make it out alive."
many of whom stayed on the
That was the message Reagan
sidelines last week, to reappear delivered Friday before out-of­
this week as the end of the town reporters and the next day
quarter approaches.
,
in his weekly radio address as he
denied he Is unwilling to work
for a budget compromise while
G old A nd Silver
blaming Democrats for a lack of
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
progress so far.
and domestic gold &amp; sliver prices
Taking aim at the budget plan
quoted in dollars per troy ounce
approved by the conferees
Monday:
Thursday — one calling for
Gold
$19.3 billion In additional taxes
London
next year — Reagan said. "We're
Previous close 449.50 off 1.75
willing to work with those In
Morning fixing 443.60 ofT 5.90
Congress who will work with us
Hong Kong
444.50 off 8.00
in good faith, but this budget is
New York
'
as bad as they come, like a bad
Comex spot
■
sequel to the tax-and-spend
gold open
437.30 ofT 7.70
follies of the 1970s.”
Comex spot
In the Democratic response to
silver open
6.658 ofT 0.50
that broadcast. Rep. Butler Der­
rick. D-S.C.. said Reagan should
( L o n d o n m o r n i n g f i xi ng
stop "playing Dirty Harry with
change Is based on the previous
the American economy" and
day's closing price.)

Stocks Active, Higher

These quotations provided by
m e m b e r s o f the N a t i o n a l
Association of Securities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
prices as of mid-morning today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.
American Pioneer
Barnett Bank
First Union
Florida Power
A Light
Fla. Progress
HCA
Hughes Supply
Morrison’s
NCRCorp
Plessey
Scotty's
Southeast Bank
SunTrust
Walt Disney World
Westlnghousc

...R e a g a n

8.33
0.65
0.29
2.12

AREA DEATHS
MARLIN E. CARROLL
Mr. Marlin E. Carroll. 73. of
115 Zenith Point. Geneva, died
Friday at Winter Park Memorial
Hospital. Bom Oct. 29. 1913 In
Pembroke. Ga., he moved to
Geneva from New York City In
1951. He was a retired citrus
worker and a Baptist.
Survivors Include a daughter.
Margaret Bowers. St. Petersburg:
two grandchildren; two great­
grandchildren.
Wllson-Elchelbcrgcr Mortuary.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

LUCY J. COOK
Mrs. Lucy Jane Cook. 90. 104
N. Crescent Blvd., Sanford, died
Saturday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Born Nov. 30.
1897 In Harrisonburg. Va., she
m o v e d to S u n f o r d f r o m
Waynesboro. Va.. In 1970. She
was a homemaker and attended
First Baptist Church. Sanford.
Survivors Include a daughter.
Virginia Sykes. Sanford: four
sons. Benjamin Franklin. Winter
Park. Charles Sylvester.
Richmond. Va.. Robert E. Lee.
Waynesboro. Va., and Harold
Richard. Harrisonburg.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary. In charge of arrange­
ments.
ROBERTO. DOBBIN

Mr. Robert George Dobbin. 53.
3721 Wimbledon Drive. Luke
Mary, died Sunday at Orlando
Regional Medical Center. Born
Dec. 8. 1933 In L o n d o n .
England, he moved to Seminole
County from Rochester. N.Y.. In
1974. He was a reliability
engineer with the Aerospace
Division of Martin-Marietta Or­
lando.
Survivors Include his wife.
Marjorie: two daughters. Jac­
queline Anderson. Indlalantlc.
and Julia. Lake Mary: sister.
Doris Mason. Elthum. England:
brother. Frederick.
Peterborough. England.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary. In charge of arrange­
ments.
MARIE LOU KUHN

Mrs. Marie Lou Kuhn. 43.
1451 Lancelot Way. Casselberry,
died Friday at her residence.
Born April 6. 1943 in West
V i r g i n i a , s h e m o v e d to
Casselberry from Philadelphia In
1972. She was a commercial
airlines agent and a member of
St. Augustine Catholic Church.
Casselberry. She was a member
of the Sllverllner Club.
S u r v i v o r s i n c l u d e her
husband. Glenn D.: daughter.
Kristin K.. Casselberry: parents.

Frederick P.. Marie Jo Henkels.
both of Winter Springs: brother.
Eric Henkels. St. Louis: two
sisters. Patricia Lawrence.
Virginia Beach, Va.. Bonnie
Henkels, San FRanclsco.
Bal dwi n- Fal r chi l d Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

CO N SU LT

Wadnatday. will b« held I p m. at Zion Hop*
Mlttionary Baptltt Church. *00 Orange Ave .
with Pattor J.L . Brookt officiating. Intar
ment to follow In Rtttlewn
Cemetery.
Calling hourt for Irlends will be held Tuetday
4-7 p.m. at tha chapel Wilton Elchelberger
Mortuary In charge.

INGRAM. LEROY
— Funeral tervicet Leroy Ingram, 13. ol tIO
E. Seventh St., Sanford, who patted away
June 17. will b« held 4 p m. Wednetday at
New Bethel Mlttionary Baptltt Church with
Pattor William Lawlt officiating. Interment
to follow In Rettlawn Cemetery. Calling
hourt tor Irlendt will be held 47 p m
Tuetday at tha chapel. Wilton Elchelberger
Mortuary Incnarg#

A N

E X P E R IE N C E D F U N E R A L D IR E C T O R
CAREFU L CO UNSELING WITH HIM CAN AVO ID
U N W ISE PLANNING WITH A S A L E S PERSO N

TTZ.—

" p m c u il

130 WEST1AIRPORT BOULEVARD
TELEPHONE (303)322-3213
F L ORI DA 32771

•

I gram ko w funeral™ ome
130 W. AIRPORT BLVD.
SANFORD, F L 32771

NAflE ___________________________ _
A D D R E S S _____________________________ __
CITY
_zi

f

8WANIEF. KNAPP

Mrs. Swanie F. Knapp. 64.
1106 Winged Foot Circle. Winter
Springs, died Friday at Winter
Park Memorial Hospital. Bom
PAUL R. MA8SIE
Ju ly 18. 1920- In Durham. N.C.,
Mr. Paul Robert Massle. 77. she moved to Winter Park from
353 Princeton Drive, Oviedo, Washington. D.C.. In 1960. She
died Saturday at his residence. was a retired bank officer and a
Born Oct. 21. 1909 In Barton. member of Community United
Vt., he moved to Oviedo from Methodist Church. Casselberry.
Winter Park In 1985. He was a
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e her
retired shipper for a paper devel­ h u s b a n d . Col . Ge o r g e C. ;
opment company and was a b r o t h e r . D w i g h t F e r r e l l .
member of St. Louie Catholic Durham: two sisters. Faydene
Church, Nashua. N.H. He was a Woods. Durham. Clara Phipps,
member of American Legion Randelman. N.C.
Post 48. the American Legion
Bal dwi n- Fal r chi l d Funeral
Band and the Veterans of Home. Goldcnrod, In charge of
Foreign Wars, both of Nushua. arrangements.
American . Legion. Orlando. He
was a Navy vclcran of World
NORINEC. MARION
War II and the Korean War.
Mrs. Nortnc C. Marion, 86. of
Survivors Include two sons. 1411 Dixie Way. Sanford, died
Norm and. Nashua. Francis. Thursday at Central Florida Re­
Eustls; two daughters. Sylvia gional Hospital. Bom Jan. 22.
Illlck, Oviedo, and Roberta 1901 In Hazard. Ky. she moved
D u mo n t . Ti t us v i l l e : sister. to Sunford In 1953. She was a
Louise Levesque. Nashua: 13 retired schoolteacher and a
g r a n d c h i l d r e n : nine gr eat ­ member of St. Paul Missionary
grandchildren.
.
Baptist Church. Sanford.
Bald wi n- Fai rchi l d Funeral
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e her
Home. Goldcnrod. In charge of husband. Sheldon: a daughter.
arrangements.
Vera Marlon. Sanford: a son.
ALFRED R. W ATKINS JR.
John D. Marlon. Sanford: one
Mr. Alfred Ray Watkins Jr.. grundduuhghter. Theresa Jones.
3 0 . 5 0 5 S e m i n o l e A v c . . Sanford: two grandsons. David
Longwood. died Saturday In Marion. Cincinnati. Ohio, und
Orlando. Born Dec. 4. 1956 In Michael Marion. New York City.
Cleveland. Miss., he moved to N.Y.: three great-grandchildren:
Longwood from Orlando earlier one great-great-grandchild.
this year. He was a concrete
Sunrise Funeral Home. San
finisher and attended Longwood lord. In charge of arrangements.
Baptist Church.
JUANITA ROBINSON
Survivors Include his wife.
Mrs. Juanita Robinson. 52. o
Cindy; two daughters. Ashley 2161 Dixie Ave.. Sanford, died
and Jennifer, both of Longwood: Saturday at Central Florida Re
brother. Bobby. Orlando: sister. glottal Hospital. Born Dec. I I .
Patricia Hall. Hollywood: father. 1934 In Attapulgus. Ga.. she
Alfred Ray Sr.. Orlando: mother. moved to Sanford 51 years ago
Ozlne. Orlando.
from Georgia. She was a house
Woodlawn Funeral Home. Or­ wife und a Baptist.
lando. In charge of arrange­
Survivors Include her two
ments.
daughters. Rulha Brown and
MARGARET T. BARGER
Annie Baker, both of Sanford: a
Mrs. Margaret T. Barger. 67. of sister. Alma Mills. Sanford: two
480 E. Church St., Longwood. br ot her s. E u g e n e Co l l i ns.
died Thursday at her residence. Ju p ite r, and Alfred Collins.
Born March 14. 1920 In New Washington. D.C.: 10 grand
York, she moved to Seminole children.
County from there In 1977. She
Sunrise Funeral Home. San
w as a h o m e m a k e r a n d a ford. In charge of arrangements.
Catholic.
Sur vi vor s Include a son.
William. Wllliston Park. N.Y.;
daughter. Gall Barger-Wllllams. Funeral Notices
Norcross Ga.; two sisters. Ellen
DANIELS, ARTHUR
Schaffer. C o m m a e k . N . Y . . — Funeral services Arthur Denials. 14. Apt.
Florence Levin. East Northport. M. Redding Gardens, who patted away

TO
PRE-PLAN
YOUR FUNERAL

( f a

N.Y.
B a ld w in -F a lrc h ild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangemnts.

-------------------- PHONE

ROBINSON. JU A N ITA
- F u n e r a l ta rvlca t lor M rt Juanita
Robinson. 57. 3141 Oi.le Ave.. Sanlord. who
died Saturday, will be held 10 30 a m
Saturday at Sunrise Funaral Home Chapel
i .! ? ." ! " ? .* 111 *** 4 * p m Fr,&lt;My Burial In the
sniloh Cemetery Sunrise Funeral Home In
charge of arrangements
MARION. NORINE C.
— Funeral tarvlcat tor M rt Norm* C
Marion. 14. ol 1411 Oixia Way. Santord. who
died Thursday, will be held I p m Saturday
at St Paul Missionary Baptist Church with
the Rev Amot C Jones otliciatmg Viewing
will be 49 p m . Friday Burial will be In
Nestlawn Cemetery Sunrise Funeral Home
In charge of arrangements

FUNERAL HOME &amp;
PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER

322-4263

1964

mtf faewW Xw m -CaKwy/*----- r‘, Carnal,

DISCHARGES
Friday
Sanford:
Wilma J. Hamilton
Baby Boy Hamilton
VIctorlaA. King
Carolyn Laonard
Frank L. Newkirk
David J. Rapa
Margarat A. Smith

N O TIC E OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Nolle* It heraby given that I
am engaged In business at 110
D r if tw o o d L n . . S a n fo rd ,
Seminole County, Florida under
th* Fictitious Name ol A to Z
C LEA N IN G SER V ICE, and that
I Intend to register u ld name
with th* Cl*rk of th* Circuit
Court, Semlnol* County, Florida
In accordance with tha Pro
visions of th* Fictitious Nam*
St«tut*s. To-WIt: Section 145.09
Florid* Statu!** 1*57.
f t ! Louis* Reno
Publish Jun* 33. 39 A July 4.
13. 1*47.
O EP 155

Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

IN T H E CIR CU IT COURT
FOR SEM INOLE CO U N TY.
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 17 433-CP
IN RE: E S TA TE OF
R EGINA M AY CONOER,
Deceated
N O TICE OF
ADM IN ISTR A TIO N
The administration of the
e sta te o l R E G I N A M A Y
C O N D E R . d e cea te d, F ile
Number 17 433 CP, it pending In
the Circuit Court lor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo r id a . P ro b a le
Division, the address ol which Is
Post Office Drawer "C ", San
lord. Florida 33771. Tha names
and addresses of tha personal
representative and tha personal
representative’s attorney are
set forth below
All Interested persons a rt
required to tile with this court,
W ITH IN TH R E E M ONTHS OF
TH E FIR ST PU BLIC ATIO N OF
THIS N O TICE: (I) ell claims
against tha astata and 13) any
objection by an Interested
person on whom this notice was
served that challenges the valid
Ity ol tha will, tha qualifications
of the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ol the
court
A LL CLAIMS ANO O B JE C
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FO R EVER BARRED
Publication ol this Notice has
begun on June IS. 1947
Personal Representative
DIANNA LYN N B U TL E R
1530 S.E. 84th St.. Apt. 511
Portland. Oregon 97344
Attorney lor
Personal Representative
R O BERT J. W HEELOCK,
ESQUIRE
Suita 455 — Landmark Canter II
735 East Robinson Street
Orlando. FL 32801 3330
Telephone - (305) 444 5743
Publish: June 15.33. 1947
D EP 110

U n it e d
w a y

In p erh a p s the sh arp est
challenge to Reagan, the pro­
posal w ould allow defense
spending to Increase to $296
billion In 1988 from $289 billion
this year only In the event the
administration agrees to tax
hikes totaling $65 billion In the
next three years.

Sanford:
Jamot F. Kirkland. Jr.
Dolano T. Thompson
Louisa Youngblood
Marian V. Rakow, OoBary
Sunday
Em ily Chostnut

INTHE CIRCUIT
COURTOF THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.i
•4-3740-CA-Of-L

N O TICE It haraby given that
pursuant to tha Final Judgment
ol Foreclosure and Sale entered
In the cause pending In the
Circuit Court ot the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit, In and for
Seminole County. Florida, Civil
Action Number 14-3700 the un­
dersigned Clerk will tell the
p ro p e rty tltu a te d In ta ld
County, datcrlbadat:
LOTS 3t, 33 AND 35. (LESS
T H A T PORTION OF L O T 35.
B E G IN N IN G A T T H E
N O R T H W E S T C O R N E R OF
LOT 33, BLOCK I*. SANLANOO
T H E SUBURB B E A U T IF U L .
SA N FO R D S E C TIO N . P L A T
BOOK 3, PAGE 44. PUBLIC
R E C O R D S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A . R U N
T H E N C E N O R TH 43 57’31"
W E S T »* F E E T T O T H E
W ES TER LY RIGHT OF W AY
LIN E O F PR EB LE A V E N U E .
RUN TH E N C E N O R TH ER LY
ALONG PR EB LE A V E N U E 3
F E E T TO A POINT, TH E N C E
RUN SOUTH 17 4 J '2 r EAST
114.704 F E E T T O A PO INT,
TH E N C E RUN SOUTH 43 I4'19"
EAST 15 F E E T . RUN T H E N C E
SOUTH 0 S4'J0" W EST 41.744
F E E T RUN TH E N C E SOUTH
43 13' 34" W EST 10 F E E T T O A
POINT. TH E N C E RUN NORTH
31 ll'33" W EST 50 F E E T TO
TH E PO IN T OF B E G IN N IN G ).
BLOCK 1*. SANLANDO T H E
SUBURB B E A U T IF U L . SAN
FORD SECTION. ACCORDING
TO T H E P L A T TH E R E O F R E ­
CORDED IN P LA T BOOK 3.
PAGE 44. PUBLIC RECORDS
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA.
al public tala, to the highetl
and betl bidder for cath at 11:00
o'clock a m., on the 17th day ol
July. 19*7. at the Wetl Front
door ol tha Seminole County,
Courthoute, Sanford, Florida
(SEAL)
D A V ID N . BER R IEN
CLER K O FTH E
CIR CU IT COURT
BY: Phylllt Fortylha
Deputy Clerk
Publith: June33. 39. 1917
DEP 149

The budget resolution pending
on Capitol Hill w ould cut
domestic spending by 818
billion, trim the deficit by $37
billion and fall $16 billion short
of the $312 billion the Pentagon
has requested for fiscal 1988.

Central Florida Regional Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Friday

Legal Notice

JE FFE R S O N F E D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,
v*.
O LIVE P. W AGN ER .atal..

pearaned throughout the week.

HOSPITAL NOTES

legal Notice

O AK LAW N
STATE

work with Congress to fashion a
reasonable ana fair fiscal 1988
budget.
"W e cannot afford to keep
fiddling while the fire of the
federal deficit is raging out of
control." Derrick said. "But
Congress cannot put out that fire
by itself."
The House Is scheduled to
begin debate Tuesday on the
budget plan denounced by
Reagan, who Is expected to
continue hammering away at
the Democrats — and brushing
off the significance of the IranContra hearings — In a series of
meetings and White House ap-

N O TICE OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Nolle* It h*r*by given lhat we
ar* engaged In business al P.O.
Box 530*43. Longwood Florida
33753 0443, Seminole County,
Florida under the Fictitious
Nam* of SEARCY E L E C TR IC ,
and that wa Intend to register
Mid name with th* Clerk ol the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
Provisions of the Fictitious
Name Statutes. To Wit: Section
•45.09 Florida Statutes 1957.
/t/ Charles B. Searcy Jr.
/s/ Velma Searcy
Publish June 15. 33. 39 A July
4. 19*7.
O EP 113
N O TICE OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Not'c* It hereby given that we
are engaged In business at 1934
Le* Road. Winter Park, FL
33719. Orange County, Florida
under tha Fictitious Name ol
E M P L O Y M E N T U N L IM ITE D ,
and that wa Intend lo register
M id name with the Clerk ol tha
Circuit Court, Orange County,
Florida In accordance with th*
Provisions ol tha Fictitious
Name Slatutas. TaW It: Saction
•45 09 Florida Slatutas 1957.
/*/ B.W. JONES
/s/C.S. SMITH
Publish June 1 ,15.33.39,1947.
O E P 45
IN T H E C IR C U ITC O U R T
FOR T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT OF
FLOR IDA. IN AND FOR
SEM INOLE CO UN TY
CASE NO. 47-1457
O E N E R A L JU R ISD ICTIO N
DIVISION
PHM FINANCE
CORPORATION.
P L A IN TIF F .
•vs
DOUGLASC.
M A SSEN G ILLA N D .
UNKNOWN SPOUSE.
IF M ARR IED . RICHARD
C LEWIS, SHADOWBAY
CLUB HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION. INC..
D E FE N D A N TS
N O TICE OF ACTION
CO N STR UC TIV E SERVICE
- P R O P ER TY
TO DOUGLASC.
M ASSENGILL.
Residence Unknown, it living,
including any unknown spouse
ol the said Defendants, II either
has remarried and II either or
both ol said Defendants are
dead, their respective unknown
h e irs , devisees, grantees,
assignees, creditors, lienors,
and trustees, and all other
persons claiming by. through,
under or against the named
O e l e n d a n t ( s ) : a n d th e
aforementioned named Oetcnd
a n t ( s ) a n d s u c h ot th e
alorementloned unknown De
le nda nls and such ot the
aforementioned unknown Oe
lendants as may be Infants,
incompetents or otherwise not
sul |uris
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D that an action has
been commenced to foreclose a
mortgage on the following real
property, lying and being and
situated In Seminole County,
Florida, more particularly de
scribed as follows:
L O T 153. S H A D O W B A Y .
U N IT TWO, P L A T BOOK 37.
P A G ES 49 90. P U B L IC RE
C O R D S O F S E M IN O L E
CO U N TY. FLOR ID A
more commonly known as
3734 N IG H T HAWK COURT
LONGWOOD. FLO R ID A 33779
This action has been Hied
against you and you are re
quired to serve a copy ol your
written defense, it any. to It on
SHAPIRO. ROSE A FISHMAN.
Attorneys, whose address is 550
North Reo Street. Suite 303.
Tampa. Florida. 33409 1013. on
or before July 17. 1947. and file
me original with the Clerk ol
this Court either before service
on Plalnllll’s attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter, otherwise a
default will be entered against
you tor the relief demanded In
the Complaint.
W ITNESS my hand and seal
of this Court on the 13th day ol
June. 1947
(C O U R TS E A L )
DavidN Berrien.CLERK
Circuit and County Courts
B Y : Cecelia V Ekern
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June IS. 33. 29. July 4.
1987
D E P 119

William H. Blauth. DaBary
Jut J. Elliott. DaBary
Iris R. Cottrlll. Daltona
Shlrlay A. McMunn. Dal Iona
Tilfany L. Thomas. Ganava
Harry L. Ham 11Ion. Lake Halan
Nancy A. Casanova. Bronx, N .Y.
Saturday
Tommls L. Harring
Hanry Hicks
EvaL.Wynna
Gladys M. Graham
Mary E. Robb. Daltona

Sunday
Mlchaal R. Brown. DaBary
Marian V. Rakow. DaBary
Robin E . Klnnalrd and baby boy, Ganava

BIRTHS
Sunday
Emily S. Chostnut, a baby girl

Legol Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT
COURTOFTHE NINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NUMBER:
17-3420-C A M -K
IN R E : T H E M ARR IAGE OF:
C Y N TH IA 0. THOMAS.
Petitioner,
and
E U G E N E K. THOMAS.
Respondent.

NOTICE OF ACTION
TO : E U G E N E THOMAS
Address Unknown
YOU ARE HE R E B Y
N O TIF IE D lhat a Petition lor
Dissolution ol Marriage has
been Hied against you. and lhat
you are required lo Mrve a copy
o' your response pleadings lo
the Petition upon the Peti­
tioner's Attorney. THOMAS S.
RICE, ESQUIRE, al 3001 Aloma
Ave.. Winter Park. 32793. and
tile the original response or
pleading In ihe office of the
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Court, on or
before Ihe 31st day of July. A.D..
1917. II you fall to do so a default
judgment will be taken against
you (or Ihe rellel demanded In
the Petition.
D A TE D at Orlando. Orange
County, Florida this 12th day ot
June. A D.. 1947.
C LE R K O FTH E
C IR C U ITC O U R T
By: Jane E. Jasewlc
Publish: June 15. 33. 39, July 4.
1947
DEP 120

IN T H E CIR CUIT
COURT. IN AND FOR
SEM INOLE CO U N TY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO.: I4-74M-CA 49-0
F E D E R A L N ATIO N AL
M O R TGA G E ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff.
vs.
JOHN F. PILALLIS
and DANA L. PILALLIS.
his wile, e t a l,
Defendant
.
N O TICE OF SALE
N o tic e Is h e re b y given
pursuant to an Amended Final
Judgment dated June Sth, 1947,
e n t e r e d In C a s e N o .
44 3440 CA 09 G ot the Circuit
Court of Ihe 14th Judicial Circuit
In and lor Seminole County,
Florida, wherein JO H N F
P I L A L L I S and D A N A L
PILALLIS, his wile, are Ihe
Defendants, that I will sell lolhe
highest and best bidder (or cash,
al (he West Front Door, ol the
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sanlord. Florida, al 11.00 am
on the 9th day of July. 1947, Ihe
following described real pro
p a rty as set forth In Ihe
Amended Final Judgment
Lot 404 Forest B-ook Sub
division Section 5. Recorded In
Plat Book 17, Page 24
Dated this IIth day ol June.
1917
(Seal)
D A V ID N BER R IEN
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By Ruth King
As Deputy Clerk
Publish June 15. 22. 1947
DEP 117

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT
COURTOFTHE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLECOUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.:
44-433t-CA-09-L
SHADOW LAWN SAVINGS
A N D LOAN ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,
v».
R O B E R T E .M IL L E R . *tal..
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
N O TIC E Is hereby given that
pursuant to th* Final Judgment
ol Foreclosure and Sal* *nt*red
In th* ecus* pending In the
Circuit Court ol the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit, In and lor
Semlnol* County, Florida. Civil
Action Number 14 0331 the un
derslgned Clerk will sail Ihe
p ro p e rly situated In s «ld
County, described as:
Lot 710, SPRING OAKS U N IT
4. according to lh« plat thereof
as recorded In Plat Book 17.
Pages 95 and 94. ol the Public
Records ol Seminole County,
Florida.
at public sale, lo the highest
and best bidder lor cash al 11:00
o'clock a m., on Ihe 17th day of
July, 1947, at the West front door
ol the Seminole County, Court
house. Sanlord. Florida.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . BERRIEN
CLER KO Fth e
C IR C U ITC O U R T
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June33.29. 19»7
D E P 144
IN TH E CIR CU IT
CO U R TO FTH E
E IG H TE E N TH
JU D ICIA L C IR C U IT
SEM INOLE CO U N TY .
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.:
44 JIJ4 CA 09-L
F E O E R A L NATIONAL
M O RTGAG E ASSOCIATION,
Plaintiff.
vs.
P E T E R W AGNER.etal..
Defendants.
NOTICE OF SALE
N O TICE Is hereby given that
pursuant lo the Final Judgment
ol Foreclosure and Sale entered
In Ihe cause pending in Ihe
Circuit Court ol the Eighteenth
Judicial Circuit. In and lor
Seminole County, Florida, Civil
Action Number 44 3434CA Ihe
undersigned Clerk will sell Ihe
p ro p e rty situated In said
County, described as:
Lot 4, Block E. Camelot. Unit
I. according to the Plat thereof
as recorded in Plat Book 15
pages S3 and 44 ol the Public
Records ol Seminole County,
Florida Together with the lol
lowing Item of property which
are located In and installed as
part ol the Improvements on
said lands Relrigerator.
at public sale, to Ihe highest
and best bidder tor cash at 11:00
o’clock a m . on the 17th day ol
July. 1947, at the West Front
door ol the Seminole County.
Courthouse. Santord. Florida
(S E A L )
C L E R K O F THE
C IR C U ITC O U R T
B Y : Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish; June 22. 39, 1947
O EP 147

IN T H E CIR CU IT COURT
FOR SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Numbar 47 14JCP
IN R E E S T A TE O F
IN TH E CIR CU IT
E L IZ A B E TH H HAMMERER.
C O U R T O F T H E IIT H
Deceased
JUD ICIAL CIR CU IT
NOTICE OF
IN A N O FO R
A D M IN ISTR ATIO N
SEM INOLE CO U N TY,
The administration ol Ihe
FLORIDA
estate ol E L I Z A B E T H H
CASE NO.I4 444J CA 09-G
H A M M E R E R deceased. File
P R IN C IP A LM U TU A L
Number 47 343 CP. is pending In
L IF E INSURANCE
the Circuit Court tor Seminole
COMPANY, t/k/a
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , Probate
BANKERS L IF E COM PANY,
Division, the address ot which Is an Iowa corporation.
P O Drawer C. Sanlord. FL
Plaintiff,
32771 The names and addresses
vs.
ol the personal representative
JA M E S R CR O C KETT
and the p e rs o n a l re p re
and LUCY D CR O C K ETT,
sentative’s attorney are set
Defendants.
forth below.
NOTICE OF
All Interested persons art
FORECLOSURE SALE
required to tile with this court,
Notice is hereby given that,
W ITH IN TH R E E MONTHS OF
pursuan* to lhat Summary Final
TH E FIR ST PU BLICATIO N OF
Judgment ol Foreclosure en­
THIS NOTICE ( I ) all claims
tered In tha above styled action
against the estate and ( 3 ) any
on June 4. 1947. I will sell Ihe
objection by an Interested
properly situated In Seminole
person to whom notice was
County. Florida, described as
mailed that challenges the valid
Lois 1 and 2. Block 12. PLA T
Ity ol the will, ihe qualifications
O F CRYSTAL LAKE W IN TER
ot the personal representative,
H O M E S S U B D IV IS IO N , ac
venue, or jurisdiction ot the
cording lo Ihe Plat thereof, as
court
recorded In Plat Book 3. Pages
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
! I 4, MS. and 114, Public Records
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D WILL
ol Seminole County, Florida
BE FO R EVER BARRED
al public sale, to Ihe highest
Publication ot this Notice has
bidder for cash, at the west front
begun on June 33. 1947
door of the Seminole County
Personal Representative:
Courthouse. In Santord. Florida,
FA Y ANNA JONES
at 11:00 am ., on Ihe 9th day ol
711 East First Street. Apt 2 W
July. 1917.
Santord. Florida 33771
D A TE D : June II, 1947
Attorney tor
(S E A L )
Personal Representative:
David N Berrien.
M A C K N CLEV E LA N D . JR...
C LE R K O FTH E
ESQUIRE
C IR C U ITC O U R T
C LE V E LA N D &amp; BRIDGES
SEM INOLE CO U N TY.
P O Drawer Z
FLOR ID A
Sanlord. Florida33773 0774
By: Phyllis Forsythe
Telephone (X51333 1314
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: June33. 39. 1947
Publish: June 15.22. 1947
D EP 154
O E P 114

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PEOPLE
Santerd HtraM, Sanford, FI.

M o n d a y . Jw na

n. 1 M 7 - I B

Women Are Latest Victims
Of Age-Old Problem: Booze
DEAR READERS: According to
the newsletter " Upda t e on
Human Behavior." published by
the Associated Psychotherapists
of Colorado, there are more than
2 million female alcoholics, and
their numbers are Increasing at
a faster rate than male alcohol­
ics. Alcoholism usually starts
later In life for women, but
progresses much more quickly.
Why? Because women have less
water In their bodies to dilute It.
Women arc more likely to
drink alone, to hide their drink­
ing. and to feel guilty and
ashamed about It. They suffer
more alcohol-related depression,
uud arc more likely to develop
other chemical dependencies —
prescription drugs, for example.
Nine out of 10 wives stay with
alcoholic husbands, but only one
husband In 10 stays with an
alcoholic wife.
Most ulcohollcs know deep
down that something Is wrong,
bul the denial that Is part of the
disease prevents them from
seeing that alcohol Is the root of
their problems.
ARE YOU AN ALCOHOLIC?
If you have experienced three
or more of the following, the
chances arc high that you are an
alcoholic, or arc becoming one:
1. Absence or tardiness at
work due to drinking.
2. Conflict or unhappiness at
home due to drinking.
3. Drinking to overcome shy­
ness or to build self-esteem.
4. R e q u i r i n g I n c r e a s i n g
amounts of alcohol to "relax"

Dear
A bby

and "unw ind.”
5. H a v i n g regrets about
drinking.
6. Suffering financial dif­
ficulties because or drinking.
7. Pushing drinks on others:
feeling uncomfortable when
others don't drink.
8. Lack of concern about your
family's welfare when you're
drinking.
9. Decreased ambition since
the onset of drinking.
10. Difficulty in steeping due
to drinking.
11. Drinking In the morning.
12. Poor Job performance due
to drinking.
13. Drinking alone.
14. Drinking to forget your
troubles.
15. Loss of memory.
16. Resenting those who want
you to stop drinking.
All right, so according to the
results of the above test you are
an ulcohollc. Now what do you
do?
For openers, find Alcoholics
Anonymous In the telephone
directory. Then attent a meeting
at one of the chapters near you.
There ure no dues, and you need
not Identify yourself unless you

wunt to.
If you need treatment, your
local mental health professionals
can help you choose among
available community resources
for expert, professional treat­
ment. Another excellent source
of help is The National Council
on Alcoholism. 733 Third Ave..
New York. N.Y. 10017.
DEAR ABBY: 1 cun relate to
iIn- wife who’s approaching 40
and announced to her husband
i 'Frustrated In Downers Grove"|
that she had lost all interest in
sex. "Frustrated" wants to know
why. Let’s give him a few
reasons:
1 Docs he bat lie n gulurly?
2 Does his breath inrn her oil?
3 I Joes he wear clean clothes?
4 Docs he consider her needs
\\ bi n having sexual icluilnns?
5. Dim s he consider her needs
when NOT having sexual rela­
tions?

6 Does he stimulate her desire
Int sex with "I love you.” ' You
are wonderful." "You are all I
need belore and alter sex?
7 Does he remember special
occasions?
8 Does he prevent her life
Irom becoming a bore?
9 Does he share the problems
that she has with the kids?
10 Does he consider her a
loveniaie." noi p is i a house­
Keeper?

If he will lake a look al himself.
I’m sure he can Hud plenty of
love and sex al home.
SEX AT HOME AT 65

TONIGHT'S TV
MONMT
EVENING

6:00
O 4 * O 7 ONEW S
H (11) QIMME A BREAK
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
® (•) GREATEST AMERICAN
HERO
6:05
II DOWN TO EARTH
6:30
O 4 NBC NEWS
S O CBS NEWS
7 O ABC NEWS Q
U (11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT
6:35
li NEW LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
7:00
0 4 NEWLYWED GAME
O PM MAGAZINE
7 O JEOPARDY! Q
) i (I t ) BARNEY MILLER
(D (10) LEGISLATURE IN REVIEW
® (!) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
DISNEY Da./ Crockett. Indian
Fighter" Working lor Gen Andie*
Jackson, frontiersman Da*y Crock­
ett (Fess Parker| tracks down a sup­
posedly hostile Indian cruel

1

7:05
U SANF0R0 AN0 SON
O
S
7
JS

7:30
4 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
O DATING GAME
O WHEEL OF FORTUNE Q
(11) BENSON

7:35
t2 NBA DRAFT RE-CAP Re-cap ol
the 1987 NBA Drah from Mattson
Square Garden in New York City

8:00
O 4 ALF ALF 0etr«nds a lonely
Blind girl (R| (In Stereoi
s O KATE A ALLIE An.o grad­
uates from college and qugkiy learns
that a degree ft art history doesn t
guarantee employment (R) Q
7 O MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Teams to be Announced (Live)
AS .(11) SCARED STRAIGHT! 10
YEARS LATER Updated profiles ot
prison inmates and ju.eniie delin­
quents rvho were featured ft
Scared Straight’ the Emmy and
Academy Award winning documen­
tary designed to keep youths away
Irom erme Host Whoopi Goldberg
® (10) LIVING WILO The «b ra s
daily battle aga&gt;nst predators is ex­
plored
CD (!) MOVIE Mom the Woltman
and Me" |t9S0| Patty Duke Asm.
David Birney The mother of an illegi­
timate child refuses to marry but Be­
comes involved w.m a teacher who
walks rvolthounds
8:05
17 MOVIE The Bruges al Toko R.
(1954) WJiiam Hoklen. Grace Kelly
The personal wes ot men *no strug­
gle to survive &lt;n the dangerous bat­
tlefields of me Korean War are as
tortuous as me «a' itsen
8:30
O 4 VALERIE Vaiere. on her way
to meet Micnaei is mistaken lor a
purse snatcher at the airport |R| (in
Stereo) Q
S o MY SISTER SAM Sam and
Due meddle n Patti and M&gt;ckey s
reiatonsrtp (R) Q
9:00
0 4 MOVIE La&lt;Ms (1987) Patri­
cia Eitiott. Tai a Balsam When her
manage co-lapses the mother ot an
independent young woman becomes
her daughter s unUe’y roommate
(in Stereo) Q
1 O NEWHART One of Dck s o*t
names snows up at the inn |R) O
CD (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
Se&gt;7e the Day ' Ro&amp;n Wiliams stars
n this adaptation ot Saul Beiiows
modem class* afoul an actor who
becomes a salesman
9:30
S O DESIGNING WOMEN Mary
Jo agrees to chaperone her daugh­
ter S slumber party |R)

10:00

s o CAGNEY ALACEY Peine be­
comes a prime suspect ft the murder
ofamannebefceves«as ’esponsKM
tor ns sister s death |R) Q
JS (11) INN NEWS
(D (I) ALL IN THE FAMILY

C-

10:05
12 MOVIE Father of the Bode
(1950) Spencer Tracy. Ek/abeth
Taylor A lather etpenences an ol
the |0ys and headaches involved with
the preparations tor his daughter s
upcoming wedding (Colon/ed Ver­
sion)
10:30
JS (11) BOB NEWHART
CD (10) NOT ALL PARENTS ARE
STRAIGHT ToW from the child s per­
spective thisdoouineniary eiamnes
the compiea socai and emotional is­
sues lacing cMd'en living with a gay
or lesbian parem Q
CD (8) HOUSE CALLS

11:00
O 4 s a 7 ONEW S
JS (11) LATE SHOW Guest host
Edwin Newman Scheduled Los An­
geles Dodgers Manager Tommy Lasordj (in Stereo)
(D (&gt;) HOME SHOPPING NET­
WORK
11:30
0 4 BEST OF CARSON From May
&lt;986 comic Buddy Hacked actress
Any Sheedy and balancing artist Ed
Kennedy jor&gt; host Johnny Carson
|R| (In Stereo)
O M’ A 'S 'H
7 O NIGHTLINE 0
CD (10) STAR HUSTLER

1

12:00
5 O SIMON A SIMON A J t oppo­
nent in the race for city councilman is
a suspect in their latest murder invesigal on «Rl
7 O NIGHTLIFE Host David Bren­
ner Guest actor Dennis Hopper (R)
(in Stereo)
JS (11) ASK OR RUTH
CD (8) HOME SHOPPING
12:05
17 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
PLORER
12:30
O 4 LATE NIGHT WITH OAVIO
LETTm UA N |R) (in Stereo)
7 O DISCOVER
IS (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

1:00
7 O MOVIE A Warm December
(t973) S&gt;dney Poiter Esther Ander­
son

1:10
s O MOVIE Doctors Private
Lives' (19781 John GJv&gt;n Donna
Mins

JS (11)

1:30
BIZARRE

2:00
JS (11) DUKES OF HAZZARO
2:05
17 MOVIE Nightmare' (19561 Ed­
ward G Robinson Kevin McCarthy
2:30
S ONEW S
3:00
S O N IG H TW A TCH
7 O MOVIE Come 0 « With Me
|t974) George Mahans. Eileen Bren­
nan
M (11) W H A rs HAPPENING
NOW!
3:30
IS (11) CISCO KIO
3:50
17 WORLD AT LARGE
4:00
JS (11) DALLAS
t2 HOGAN'S HEROES
7 O

4:15
MOVIE Shadow of F«ar

4:30
•
12 THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL h gni-gnts ol Maior League action are
shown

TUESCAYl
MORNING
5:00
7 Q OUNS OF WILL SONNETT
(THU)
JS (11) CNN NEWS
17 MARY TYLER MOORE (FRIWEO)
5:10
J2 WORLD AT LARGE (THU)
5:15
O 4 2 S COUNTRY (FRI. TUETHU)

O 4 THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
MUSIC (MON)

12:05
t2 PERRY MASON (FRI, TUE-THU)

5:30
S O LOVE YOUR SKIN (FRI)
S O CAN YOU BE THINNER?
(TUE)
7 O LOVE YOUR SKIN (FRI. THU)
7 O LEARN TO REA0 (TUE)
JS (It ) CNN NEWS
12 BOB NEWHART

12:30
O 4 WORDPLAY
S O YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS
7 O LOVING
JS (11) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

5:45
C l 4 BEFORE HOURS

6:00
0 4 NBC NEWS
1 O SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
7 O DAYBREAK
JS (11) GOOD OAYt
t&gt; CNN NEWS
CD (I) HOME SHOPPING
6:30
O 4 NEWS
S O CBS MORNING NEWS
JS (11) CENTURIONS
12 TOM A JERRY ANO FRIENDS
6:45
CD (10) A M. WEATHER
7:00
O 4 TOOAY
s O CBS MORNING NEWS
7 O OOOO MORNING AMERICA
JS (11) G.I. JOE
CD (10) READING RAINBOW
7:30
S o MORNING PROGRAM
JS (It ) TRANSFORMERS
(D (10) SESAME STREET

8:00
JS (11) OENNISTHE MENACE
8:05
t! I DREAM OF JEANNIE
8:30
JS (It ) FLINTSTONES
(D (10) MISTER ROGERS
8:35
&lt;7 BEWITCHED
9.00
O 4 OIVORCE COURT
S ODONAHUE
7 O OPRAH WINFREY
JS (11) GREEN ACRES
(D (10) SESAME STREET
9:05
17 DOWN TO EARTH
9:30
.
0 4 LOVE CONNECTION
JS (I I ) PETTICOAT JUNCTION
9:35
17 MOVIE (FRI)' '
17 HAZEL (MON-THU)

10:00
0

4 SALE OF THE CENTURY
O HOUR MAGAZINE
7 O TRUE CONFESSIONS
JS (11) FALL GUV
ED (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO

1

10:05
tt MOVIE (MON-THU)
10:30
O « CLASSIC CONCENTRATION
7 O SUPERIOR COURT
ED (10) INNOVATION (FRI)
ED (10) WILO AMERICA (MON)
ED (10) PROFILES OF NATURE
(TUE)
ED (10) PHENOMENAL WORLD
(WEO)
ED (10) NEWTON S APPLE (THU)

11:00
0
S
7
JI

« SCRABBLE
O PRICE IS RIGHT
O WHO S THE BOSS?
(11) CHIPS
ED(10) SURVIVAL SPECIAL (FRI)
ED (10) IN SEARCH OF THE TRO­
JAN WAR (MON)
ED (10) LIVING WILO (TUE)
ED (10) NATURE OF THINGS
(WEO)
ED (10) NOVA (THU)
11:30
O 4 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
7 O WEBSTER
AFTERNOON

12:00

O 4 S o 7 ONEW S
JS (11) BEWITCHED
ED (10) UPSTAIRS. DOWNSTAIRS
(FRI)
ED (10) BERGERAC (MON)
ED (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(TUE)
ED (10) MYSTERY! (WEO;
ED (10) ALL CREATURES QREA1
ANO SMALL II (THU)
12 PERRY MASON (MON)

&lt;» \ v

HeraM Phela By Tammy Vlatent

Royal A rch M a so n s Install O fficers
Lo cal officers of Monroe Chapter #15, Royal
A rch M asons, Installed at the G rand Yo rk
R ite Convention, Orlando, by P ast Most
E x ce lle n t G rand High P riest Woodrow Cash
of Sanford, right, a re : from left, J . Russell

Ham m ond, Most E x c e lle n t G rand High
P rie st; Most Ex cellen t Roy R . W right J r .,
as grand tre a su re r; and E x ce lle n t W illiam
O. W alker, appointed G rand M aster of F irst
Veil.

W oman's Club M em b ers
R a ted ‘O utstan ding'
The Junior W om an's Club of Sanford Inc.
presented the "Outstanding Lead er of the
M onth" aw ard to L isa Robertson, left, and
the "Outstanding M em ber of the Month"
aw ard to Audrey W illiam . M rs. Robertson
w as cited for her work with the recent
K asino K la sslc s when the club joined forces
with the Sanford R otary Club for a joint
fund ra ise r. M rs. W illiam , the club's Home
Life Departm ent ch a irm an , w as honored for
a project she initiated for the Hacienda G irls
R anch, M elbourne, a home for g irls. The
club donated clothing lo the ranch and gave
the g irls a party.

1:00
O 4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 O ALL MY CHILDREN
JS (11) DICK VAN DYKE
ED (10) WE RE.COOKING NOW
12 NBA DRAFT (MON)
1:05
t2 MOVIE (FRI. TUE-THU)
1:30
$ O BOLD ANO THE BEAUTIFUL
JS (11) F-TROOP
ED (10) FLORIDA HOMEGROWN
(FRI)
ED (10) NEW SOUTHERN COOK­
ING (MON)
ED (10) FRENCH CHEF (TUE)
ED (10) JUSTIN WILSON S LOUIS­
IANA COOKIN' • OUTDOORS
(WEO)
'
ED (10) WOODWRIGHT S SHOP
(THU)

2:00
O 4 ANOTHER WORLD
S O AS THE WORLD TURNS
7 O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
JS (11) ANOT GRIFFITH
ED (10) MAGIC OF PAINTING
KEEPSAKES (FRI)
ED (10) ART IS FUN (MON)
ED (10) JOY OF PAINTING (TUE)
ED ((0) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(WEO)
ED (10) MAGIC OF FLORAL PAINT­
ING (THU)
2:30
JS (11) MY LITTLE PONY
FRIENDS
ED (10) SECRET CITY

N

2:35
12 WOMANWATCH (FRI)
3:00
O 4 SANTA BARBARA
S O GUIDING LIGHT
7 O GENERAL HOSPITAL
JS (11) SCOOBY DOO
ED (10) MISTER ROGERS
3:05
17 TOM « JERRY ANO FRIENDS

Entries Wanted For Art Shaw
The 25th Annual Halifax Arl
Festival, sponsored by the
Daytona Beach Museum of Arts
and Sciences, will be held on the
grounds of the Casements, the
historic John I). Rockefeller res­
idence. locuted on Granada
Boulevard in Ormond Beach, on
Ort. 1 and Nov. 1.

Judging the work of the 200
artists represented in the show
will he Budd Bishop, director of
the Samuel P. Horn Museum of
Arl in Gainesville, and Paul
Smith, director of 4he American
Craft Museum in New York City.
S 10.500 in prize money will be
awarded.

I r; Floyd T h eatres 1

1-4 a t S.R. 4 6

4:00
4 MAGNUM. P.l.
O STAR TREK
O JEOPARDY!
(11) THUNDERCATS

• Affordable rates

4:05
tJ FLINTSTONES
4:30
7 O CARD SHARKS (MON. WEOTHU)
JS (11) SILVERHAWKS
ED (10) REAL AOVENTURES
SHERLOCK JONES ANO PROC­
TOR WATSON (FRI)
ED (10) REAL AOVENTURES OF
SHERLOCK JONES ANO PROC­
TOR WATSON (MON-TUE. THU)
ED (103 REAL AOVENTURES OF
SHERLOCK HOLMES ANO PROC­
TOR WATSON (WED)
4:35
t2 FLINTSTONES
5:00
O 4 JUDGE
S o M’ A 'S ’ H
7 O CARO SHARKS (FRI. TUE)
7 O HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(MON. WEO-THU)
JS (11) FACTS OF LIFE
ED (10) REAOING RAINBOW
(D (•) SHE-RA: PRINCESS OF
POWER
5:05
t2 ROCKY ROAD (FRI)
AOOAMS FAMILY (MON-THU)

12

5:30
O 4 PEOPLE S COURT
S O NEWS
7 O HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(FRI. TUE)
7 O NEWS (MON. WEO-THU)
JS ( I I ) JEFFERSONS
ED (10) 3-2-1 CONTACT
CD (8) HE-MAN A MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE
5:35
17 SAFE AT HOME (FRI)
t7 MUNSTERS (MON-THU)

All applicants must submit
three (3) slides representative of
their work for each rategory
entered. All entries must be
original works of arl completed
since 1985.

A r l I s t s i n t e r e s t e d In
participating in the show must
submit their applications by
Aug. 1. Application forms may
be obtained by writing lo I’.O.
Box 504. Ormond Beach. FL
32074.

3:30
JS (11) SMURFS
ED (10) SESAME STREET*
O
S
7
JS

Categories for this year's Art
Festival will be painting (oil or
acrylic), watercolor. graphics
and drawing, creative eralts.
mixed media, sculpture, jewelry,
photography and ceramics.

• Quiet, spacious rooms

BEVERLV HILLSaMU
Vo™
COP 2 4j -nuii
MS |

• AAA-rated cleanliness
• Free Satellite TV • Pool

PLAZA TWIN
SANFORD
Hwy 17*92 S . • 322*7502

• Rooms tor non-smokers
Caretully maintained inside an d out
• MC. Visa. AmEx. Diners Club

EVERY TUESDAY
[SUMMER McMOYIES
R a in
b o w B r ite
y and the O

d

•Ovtk*-BdI • V
AArt

7

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GET YOUR DISCOUNT
COUPONS AT MCDONALD’S

TUESDAY JUNE

4750 S.R. 46 West
Sanford, FL 32771
(305)323-3445

A ll
floor rooms!

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10:00 A.M. &amp; 1:00 P.M.

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logoi Notice

legol Notice

C IT Y OF
LA K E M A R Y , FLOR ID A
N O TIC E O F
PUBLIC H E A R IN G
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by lha City Commission of tho
City ol Lake Mary. Florida, thot
Mid Commission will hold a
Publl-. Hearing on July 7, 19B7,
at 7 -X P M . or a* toon Iheroatler at pottlble, lo contlder
Second Reading and final adop­
tion of an Ordinance, fill# of
which Itatlollowt:
AN ORD IN AN CE OF T H E
C IT Y OF LA K E M A R Y ,
F L O R ID A . R E P E A L IN G
SECTION It 01 O F T H E CODE
OF ORDINANCES R E L A TIN G
TO PURCHASE ORDERS AND
C R EA TIN G A NEW SECTIO N
H O I; PROVIDING FOR A P ­
PR O VAL OF PU R CH ASE
ORDERS BY A D E P A R TM E N T
HEAD . OR T H E C IT Y MAN
A G E R , OR T H E M A Y O R ;
PROVIDING FOR CO NFLICTS.
S E V E R A B IL IT S A N D E F
F E C TIV E D A TE.
The Public Hearing will bo
held al City Halt. 151 N. Country
Club Road. Lake Mary, Florida.
The public It Invited lo attend
and be heard. Copiet of tho
Ordinance in full It available In
Ihe City Clark's Office at City
Hall
PERSONS A R E A D V IS E D
I HAT IT TH EY D EC ID E TO
A P P E A L A N Y D E C IS IO N
M ADE AT TH IS M E E T IN G
TH E Y W ILL N E E D A RECORD
O F TH E PROCEEDINGS AND
FOR SUCH PURPOSE T H E Y
N E E D TO ENSURE T H A T A
V ER B A TIM RECORD OF T H E
E V ID E N C E U P O N W H IC H
T H E A P P E A L IS T O B E
BASED. PER SECTION 285 0105
FLORIDA S TA TU TE S
Carol Edwardt.
City Clerk
Daled: June It. 1907
Publlth: June J7, 1907
DEP 141

IN T H I C IR C U IT
COURT OF T N I
IIO H T IK N T H
JU O IC IA L C IR C U IT,
IN A N O FOR
SEM IN O L R C O U N TY ,
FLO R ID A
CA1R NO. 07-9179-CA -99-0
O LD R E P U B LIC
INSURANCE COMPANY,
a Penntylvanla
corporation.
Plaintiff,

IN TH K C IR C U IT
COURT F O R T H E
K IO H T E IN T H
JU D IC IA L C IR CU IT
O F FLOR IDA,
IN A N D F O R
SEM IN OLE CO UN TY
CASE NO. 97-1J99-CA-99 L
O E N E R A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
M O R TG A G E ANO TR U S T,
INC..
P L A IN TIF F ,

W IL L IA M SANFORD
W ILL A R D a n d M IL D R E D
F. W ILLAR D , hit wife.
Defendants
N O TIC E O F SALE
Nolle# It hereby given that
purtuant to the Final Judgment
of Forecloture and Salt entered
In the ceute pending In the
C ir c u it C o u rt In and Ip r
Seminole County, Florida, being
Civil No. 07 0579 CA 09 G. the
underlined Clerk will tell the
property, tDueled in Seminole
County, Florida, deter Ibed at:
Lot 0. Block A. SAUSALITO
SECTIO N TWO, according to
the plat thereof at recorded In
Plat Book 70, Paget u and 45,
Public Record! ot Seminole
County, Florida.
al the public Mle, to the
hlghetl bidder, for cath at 11:00
a m. on thaOlh day ol July, 1907,
at the Watt door ot the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford,
Florida.
Dated fhlt nth day of Juno.
1907.
(Court Seal)
D A V ID N . BER R IEN
A t Clark of Said Court
B Y : Phyllis Fortylha
At Deputy Clerk
Publlth: June 15,77,1917
D EP lie

S TEP H EN P. ADCOCK ANO,
O IA N E A . A D C O C K , H IS
W IFE ,
J E A N E T T E C. GRISWOLD,
ROSE L .H A R K E Y ,
AN UNKNOWN T E N A N T(S ),
D EFEN D A N TS.
NOTICE OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
- PR OPERTY
TO : J E A N E T T E C. GRISWOLD
8J3I NORTH 7IST DRIVE,
A P T. H 707. PHOENIX,
ARIZONA 95071
If living. Including any un­
known tpoute or Mid Defend
antlil it any have remarried
and It any or all of tald
Defendant It) are deed, their
respective unknown heirs, de­
visees, grantees, assignees,
creditor., Ilenort, and trustees,
end alt othar persons claiming
by, through, under or against
the named Defendant(i); and
the aforementioned named Del
e nde n t(t) end such ol the
aforementioned unknown Da
fendantt end such of the
aforementioned unknown De­
fendants at may be Infants.
Incompetents or otherwise not
tui |urit.
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D that an action hat
been commenced lo foreclose a
mortgage on the following reel
property, lying and being and
situated In Seminole County,
Florida, more particularly de­
scribed at follows:
L O T 101, A LA FA Y A WOODS,
PHASE I. U N IT A, ACCORD
ING TO TH E P LA T TH ER EO F
AS R E C O R D E D IN P L A T
BOOK 31. PAGES 9015 IN
CLUSIVE. PUBLIC RECORDS
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLORIDA.
more commonly known at
1121 S H A F F E R T R A I L ,
OVIEDO. FLORIDA 37745.
This action hat been filed
agalntl you and you are re­
quired lo serve a copy of your
written defenses. II any, to If on
SHAPIRO. ROSE A FISHMAN,
Attorneys, whose address Is 550
North Reo Street. Sulfa 303.
Tampa. Florida 33409-1013. on or
befora July 4. 1997. and file the
original with the Clerk of this
Court either before service on
Plaintiff's attorney or Immedi­
ately thereafter; otherwise a
default will be entered against
you lor the relief demanded in
the Complaint.
W ITNESS my hand and saal
ol this Court on Ihe 79th day ol
May. 1917.
(CO UR T SEAL)
□avid N. Berrien, CLER K
Circuit and County Courts
By: Cecalla V. Ekern
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June 1,1,
IS. 77.1997
DEP 14

vt.

IN T H E CIR CU IT
CO UR T OF T H E 11TH
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
OF FLORIDA
IN A N D F O R
SEM IN OLE CO UN TY,
FLORIDA
C IV IL ACTION NO.:
•7-9UI-CA-99-L
CITICO R P SAVINGSOF
FLO R ID A , e federal tavlngt
and loan attoclalion.
Plaintiff,

v.

KIM M A R IE JACOBS,el al.,
Defendants
N O TIC E O F SALE
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
purtuant to a Final Judgment ol
Forecloture daled JU N E 15.
19*7, and entered In Cata No.
170751 C A 0 9 L of lha Circuit
Court ol the Eighteenth Judicial
Circuit In and (or Semlnola
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , w herein
Clllcorp Savlngt ol Flprlda,
P la in tiff, and K im M a rla
Jacobt. are defendants I will
tell fo the hlghetl and belt
bidder for cath at the Welt
Front Door of the Seminole
County Courthouse. FL. at 11:00
A M . on Ihe 7ltf day of JU L Y .
19(7, the fallowing detcrlbed
properly at tel forlh In Mid
Final Judgment, to wit:
T H E EAST 70 F E E T OF LOT
9 AND T H E EAST 70 F E E T OF
T H E NORTH 75' OF LOT 10.
O R A N G E V IL L A H E IG H TS .
ACCORDING TO T H E PLAT
TH E R E O F AS RECORDED IN
P L A T BOOK 17, P A G E 77,
P U B L IC R E C O R D S OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLOR IDA.
D A T E D this Itth day of
JU N E . 1997.
(SEAL)
D A V ID N BER R IEN
Clerk
Circuit Court
By: PhylH* Fortylha
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: June77.79. 1997
D EP 145

N O TICE OF TAX SALE
N O flC E IS H F H F H Y G IV E N TH A T ON TH E JQTM DAY OF JU N E .
1997. » 00 A M A t fH E CO U N TY SERVICE B U ILD IN G IN SAN
IO R U HOI FAST IIR S T S T R E E T. C O U N TY OF SEM IN OLE.
S f A lE OF FLORIDA. 1A x SALE C E R T IF IC A T E S W ILL BE SOLD
."ON TH E I O l LOWING D ESC R IB ED LAN D T O PAY TH E AM OUN T
•DUE FOR IA X F S H E R E IN S ET O P P O S ITE T H E SAM E.
IO G E THER W ITH ALL COSTS OF SUCH SALE AND A LL ADVER
*,1 IStNG SAl F WILL BE H E L D IN ROOM N 179

•**.......Springo Landing Unit 2
*
............PB 24 rGS 27-29
Barclay Cocll L &amp; Daloraa M
TP 19e Springs Landing Blvd
*

.......
...........
* 2 2 3 7 .1 7

19A5 TAXES

Lot 30
Springs Landing Unit 2
* PB 24 res 27-29
;.**.......Allens 1st Add to
■!.........Washington Haights
:.......... pb 3 re 23
■Wootien Josephine Jordan
12944 Penbrooke Rd
1986 TAXES
•,
i

.......

3161.01

Lota 9 A 10 Blk 4
Allens 1st Add to
Washington Heights
I B 3 re 23

G TROY RAY, JR
TAX CO LLECTOR
SEM IN OLE C O U N TY . FLO R ID A
Publuh. Juru- 1. 9 15. 77. 1997
D EP 18

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R

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Monday, Juno aa, 1087

2B—Sanford Herald, Sanford, PI.

C IT Y OF
LAKE M A R Y, FLORIDA
N O TICE OF
PUBLIC HEAR IN G
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by the City Committlon of the
City ol Lake Mary. Florida, that
tald Committlon will hold a
Public Hearing on July 7. 1907.
at 7:30 P.M., or at toon thereof
ter at pottlble, to contlder
Second Reading and linal adop
lion of an Ordinance, title of
which Itatfollowt:
AN O RDINANCE OF TH E
C IT Y OF L A K E M A R Y ,
F L O R ID A , R E P E A L IN G
SECTION 51.07 OF T H E CODE
OF ORDINANCES D EA LIN G
W ITH W A TER R ATES ANO
FEE S AND C R E A TIN G A NEW
SECTION 51.07; PROVIDING
FOR RATES AND CHARGES;
S EV E R A B IL ITY . C O N FLIC T;
A N D E F F E C T IV E O A T E .
The Public Hearing will be
held at City Hall. 150 N Country
Club Road. Lake Mary, Florida.
The public It Invited to attend
and be heard. Copiet ol the
Ordinance in full it available In
the City Clerk't Office at City
Hall.
PERSONS A R E A D V IS E D
TH A T IF T H E Y D ECID E TO
A P P E A L A N Y D E C IS IO N
M ADE A T TH IS M E E T IN G
THE Y W ILL N E E D A RECORO
OF TH E PROCEEDINGS AND
TOR SUCH PURPOSE T H E Y
N E E D tO ENSURE TH A T A
V ER B A TIM RECORD OF TH E
E V ID E N C E UP O N W H IC H
T H E A P P E A L IS T O BE
BASED. PER SECTION 705 0105
FLORIDA S TA TU TF S
Carol Edwardt,
City Clerk
Dated June 19. 1907
Publlth: June 77. 1907
D EP 107

r * r *

B T T O . *

—

D 8 B P D Q .

P R E V IO U S S O L U T IO N ; "T h e most beautiful m ake-up ol
a w om an Is passion, but cosmetics are easier to buy.” —
Yves Saint Laurent

CLASSIFIED ADS

legol Notice

NOTICE OF
FICTITIO U S NAME
Notice Is hereby given that wa
are engaged in business al 107
Lonesome Pine Dr., Longwood.
F L 37779, Seminole County.
Florida undar lha Fictitious
Mama of N.A.S.A. Tire and
Service, and lhal we intend lo
register Mid name wllh Ihe
Clerk of Ihe Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordanca with tha Provisions
of the Fictitious Name Statutes,
To-WII: Section 145 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/ !/ Ann NlUschke
/!/ Ron J. Nltjschke
Publish June 77. 79 A July 4.
13. 1997.
D EP 154

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
FOR SEM INOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
F lit Number 17-479-CP
IN RE: E S TA TE OF
R O BERT T. W HITE HOUSE,
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADM INISTRATION
The administration ot lha
a s t a le ot R O B E R T T .
W HITEHOUSE. deceased. File
Number 97 470 CP, Is pending In
Ihe Circuit Court lor Seminole
'C o u n ty . F lo rid a . Probate
Division, the address of which Is
Clerk. Circuit Court. Probale
Oivlslon. P O Drawer C, San
lord, Florida 32772 The names
and addresses of the personal
represenlalive and Ihe personal
representative's attorney are
set forth below.
All Interested persons are
required lo file with this court.
W ITH IN TH R E E MONTHS OF
T H E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
TH IS N O TIC E . (I ) all claims
against the estate and 171 any
ob|acflon by an interested
person on whom this notice was
served thal challenges the valid
lly ol the will, the qualifications
ol the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ot Ihe
court.
A LL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FO R EVER BARRED
Publication ol this Notice has
begun on June 15. 1997.
Personal Represenlalive:
RANDY R. ROTHMAN
P.O. Bo* 75a
790 Hart Road
Geneva. Florida 37737
Attorney for
Person si Representative:
J. R O BERT HU N KA PILLER
BALDWIN A BAUM
7100 S. Highway 17 92
Fern Park. Florida 32730
Telephone: (X 5) 934 1474
Publish: June 15. 22. 1997
D EP 109

BLOOM COUNTY

Seminole
322-2611

Orlando - Winter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 tin * ............. .
HOURS 3 cwiMciftivt that*

•:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thra FRIDAY
SATURDAY «

72C a Him
MC a Him
7 CMMCwtiva t in t 5*C a Him
10 camaortht tia n 50C a Him
Centred Rata* Availed*
3 liaai

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
Monday • 9:00 A.M . Saturday
NOTE In Ihe evenl al Ihe publishing gl errors in advertisements ihe
Sanford Herald shall publish the advertisement, alter it has been corrected
al no cost to me advertiser but such Insertions snail number no more than
one III

12— Legal Services

55— Business
Opportunities

SOCIAL S E C U a iT Y Disability
Free Advice.No Charge Unless
We W in! W a rd W hlta A
Associates.............385-371-1319

21— Personals
A L L A L O N E T Call Bringing
People Together. Sanford's
most respected deling service
since 1977. Men over X (45%
discount).............I 900 977 4477
CRISIS PR EGNANCY CTa.
Frte Pregnancy Test, contiden
Hal. Call for app)........371 7495
FANS It you en|oy this soap
send a L .SA .S.E . to "bring
Capitol back" Bo* 4112 March
A FB, CA 97509_______________
I, R O B ER T H. STR IN E. W IL L
not be responsible lor any
debts Incurred by anyone

COttfClCR.

CPlV'
Hen IN
A
FKAtNINO
Bive-couM.
as me
'M0AKM*\ANr SfCAK.
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SQ

71— Help Wanted

BECOME A NOTARY
For Details: I 900 437 4754
Florida Notary Association
CERAM IC T IL E
C LEA R A N C E !
See under &gt;773. Miscellaneous
HAVING A FA M IL Y REUNION
TH IS M ONTH? Call Melinda

_^tJtte£avaller;_;;;;;;;;J7IOW

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care
C H IL D C A R E , lanced yard,
m e a ls p ro v id e d . Please
call............................... 934-9444
C H ILD CARE, Infants up. clean
hot food. Individual all T L C.
Ret,, Idyllwtlde area...327 4447
CH ILD CARE T n M Y Home,
D a y s . e v e s , o v e r n lle s ,
weekends. TLC . Ret....377 1779
GOOO R E F. 3 yrs A up Start 4
am, hot lunch, oil Lk Mary
Blvd 540 Call...............372 0945
I W ILL B A BYSIT your child in
my home, I yr. A up Please
call 371 9179 anytime_________

43— Medical &amp;
Dental
E L E C T R IC H O SPITAL BED
Excellent condition.
Call:
373 5494

le g a l Notice^
N O TIC E OF
F IC TITIO U S NAM E
Notice Is hereby given that we
are engaged In business at 7475
W. S R 434, Longwood, FL
37779, Samlnole County. Florida
under the Fictitious Name ol
Wilson Homes, and that we
intend to register Mid name
with Ihe Clerk ol Ihe Circuit
Court, Semlnola County, Florida
In accordance wllh the Pro
visions ol the Fictitious Name
Statutes, To Wit: Section 845 09
Florida Statutes 1957.
/*/ David Wilson
1*1 Ronald Wilson
Publish June 77. 79 A July 4.
13. 1997
D EP 159
IN T H E C IR C U IT
COURT, OF TH E
E IG H T E E N T H
JU O IC IA L CIR CU IT,
IN A N D F O R
SE/yiNOLE CO UN TY.
FLOR IDA.
CASE NO.: 87 7254 CA 04 L
IN RE: TheMarrlageof
G INAM OSCOSOPPECK.
Wile.
and
W ASILSOPPECK.
Husband
N O TICE OF ACTION
TO W ASILSOPPECK
590 Washington Ave «A 4
Belleville, New Jersey 07109
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIF IE D that a Petition tor
Dissolution ol Marriage has
been tiled against you. and that
you are required lo serve a copy
ol your Response ol Pleading to
Ihe Petition upon Ihe Wife's
attorney, A.A. McClanahan. Jr„
104 South Park Avenue — Suite
B. San lord, Florida 32771. and
Ilia tha original Response or
Pleading in ihe office ot the
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Court, on or
before Ihe 23 day of July, 1997. It
you tall lo do so. a Default
Judgment will be taken against
you for the rellel demanded in
tt&gt;e Petition
D A TE D at Sanlord. Seminole
County, Florida, this 4 day of
June. 1997
D A V ID N BER R IEN
CLER K OF TH E
C IR C U IT COURT
BY: JaneE. Jasawlc
Publish June 9.15.
22.79. 1987
DEP 44

\ne AffecnoN) ofrmstto
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H01WVN6OF(t) HtY.HOr
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(c) fMKf IFPON'TentAKIF,
MM '* AimACCOMPANYING
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SNCKFS .

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W E BUY M ORTOAOES
also
1st A 2nd Mortgages
A Commercial Loans
811-34M

25— Special Notices

p

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63— Mortgages
Bought A Sold

^tJteMharmjjfMl^sot4/l7/l7

by Berke Breathed

m e fu M A n vA
n w e * . a m o o N isrw
POtN6€K. OPUS. HAS
FWCVKtP A UCM JOB •'
€

O P P O R T U N IT Y KNO CKSM o d u la r Hom e B u ild e r/
Dealership now available In
the Sanlord area Call now for
more Information. WAUSAU
HOMES INC.........913-474-9390
PHILLIPS 44 Sarvlc9 Station for
lease. 2543 S. French Ave.
Call:.............................331 1499

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A/C SHOP T R A IN E E - 55 hr.
Great beginner's spot) Learn
all phases air conditioning
field! AAA Employment, 700
W. 25lh Street. Call......373 5174
A C R Y L I C S E A L A NT
TECH N IC IAN 'S. Earn 59 lo
513. per hr., no experience
required. Training available
lor Full/Parl time positions. 9
A.M. -9 P.M .......... 113 144-7151
AOO TO INCOME! 11
S ELL AVON NOW III
377 0459........... or............3)3-4444
ADMISSIONS CLER K- 54 X hr
Any bdgrd. In medical can
land thlsl Nlca key spot
adm itting patienlsl A A A
Employment. 700 W. 25th
Street. Call..................373 5174
A P P O IN TM E N T SETTER S - 54
hr. Musi be experienced lor
home Improvements...240-2773
A P P O IN T M E N T S E T T E R S .
Earn big SSS's working In
Sanlord for Ihe Rich Plan
Food Co High hourly rate
wkly. bonus Call Charles
Berdet. or Jeanette Braswell
377 3443exl.375.......o r ...... 374
ASSEM BLY WORK al home, *■
many olhars Earn qood wages
in spare lime. Inlo 504 441 0091
ext. 1449........... ..O pen 7days
B A K E R - Homeityle desserts
Apply: Holiday House Restau
rant, Hwy 17 93 near Lk. Mary
C A F E T E R IA WORKER- Full
lime. Monday Friday days.
Prep or short order exp.
helplul. Excellent co. benefits.
Call between Sam 7pm. 373
9750 ext 145

Le gal N otice
N O TIC E OF
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Notice ii hereby given lhal I
urn engaged In business al 1541
Heighls Lane. Longwood. FL
37750. Seminole County, Florida
under Ihe Fictitious Name ot
E L E G A N T HEIG H TS HOME
OWNERS ASSOCIATION, and
lhat I Intend to register said
nama with tha Clerk of tha
Circuit Court, Saminole County,
Florida in accordanca with tha
Provisions ol the Fictitious
Name Statutes. To-WIt: Section
945 09 Florida Statutes 1957.
/!/ Carol L. Johnson
Publish June 27. 79 A July 4,
13. 1997.
D EP 157

IN T H E C IR C U IT
COURT, IN A N D F O R
SEM IN OLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
CASE NO. 94-4707-CA Of-L
F E D E R A L N ATIONAL
M O RTGAG E ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,
vs
BEN JA M IN D PAUL.
B E A TR IC E D PAUL,
and any unknown
heirs, devisees,
grantees and other
unknown persons or
unknown spouses
claiming by.
through and under
any ol tha
above named
D e f e n d a n t s ,
Defendants
N O TICE OF
FORECLOSURE
SALE
N O TICE Is hereby given that
the undersigned. D A VID N.
B E R R IEN . Clerk ot the Circuit
Court of Seminole County,
Florida, will on tha 21st day ol
July, 1997, at it a m. al the West
Iron! door ol the Seminole
County Courthouse. Sanlord,
Florida, otter lor Mle and sail at
public outcry to 1h# highest and
bast bidder lor cash, lha follow
Ing described property situate In
Seminole County. Florida
Lot IS. Block " E ” , COUNTRY
CLUB MANOR. U N IT NO I,
according lo Ihe Plat thereof, as
recorded in Plat Book II. Page
15. ot the Public Records of
Seminole County. Florida
pursuant to the Final Judg
ment entered In a casa pending
in Mid Court, the style of which
is Indicated above
W ITNESS my hand and ol
tidal seal ot Mid Court this t7th
dayol June. 1997
(SE A L)
D A V ID N BERR IEN
C LE R K OF THE
C IR C U IT COURT
By: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: June 17. 79. 1917
D EP 144

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71— H«lp Wanted

71—H«lp Wanted

AI R COND. INSTAL. A Service

HAIRSTYLIST-tlaxlbl* hours!
Apply al M A IR itI
7440Hiawatha Dr.
Sanford..........................TT7 7751
H IR IN G ! Government |obs-your
area. ( 15.000 541.000. Call (801)
( X 4445.......................Ext. 13*3

man, experienced, perma­
nent. good pay. benefits, call
904 775 7797 or XS479 7D3

CAR DETAILIRS, Experienced
A Inexperienced. Mr. Hand
Inc........................ X5 311-7409
CARPENTERS, Experienced
with wood siding. Longwood
area. Call............. 904-739 7407
C A S H I E R S - S h IM w o rk
Advancim «nl opportunities
Apply: IIOCS. French Ave.
CHAIR RENTAL available or
ST YLI ST wllh following.
Call;....... .377 9991 ask for Bob
C LER ICA L position In small
Sanford otlice Requires good
phone technique for customer
calls, light typing and general
clerical skills Call: 313 1440
Monday-Friday, 7am 4pm
CNA'S- Full lime Good benelits
Apply lo Hillhaven Healthcare
Center. 950 Mellonvllle Ave .
Sanlord 1X51 377 5544 . EOE
CNA’S, II to 7 shift. Full A
pari lime. Apply lo 700 W.
Airport Blvd.________________
CNA'S, HHA'S,
PSYCH.NURSES
Needed Immediately
New pay rales A benefits
Vacations dally pay, flexible
hours Call:................. 740 5284
M ED ICAL PERSONNEL POOL
EXCHANGE BU ILD IN G
HWY 17 97, M A ITLA N D

Medical
i Personnel
5 iPool.
_
CO LLEG E STUD EN TS
Summer jobs available. No lee

TEMP PERM........ 260 5100
C R T O P E R A TO R - 55 50 hr!
You’ll be happy here! In
Sanlordl Room for advan
cement! Nice boss lun stall I
AAA Employment. 700 W 25th
Street. Call:................313 5174
D A TA E N T R Y B IL L IN G
CLER K Accuracy, speed A
exp'd. for an Electrical Supply
Co. Call Sally al.......... 377 0431
D E N TA L H Y G IEN IS T- Full or
Pari time Seeking highly
motivated individual lor a
prevention oriented practice.
Top Mlary A berellls Includ
ing pension plan. Send re
lume lo 7435 S. Volusia Ave.
40 2. Orange City. F137743
D I E S E L M E C H A N IC S lor
expanding Mac fleet al I.W.S.
555 Hope SI. Longwood 931
1539. Top pay. excellent
benelits. Immediate openings
D IE T A R Y R E L I E F COOK
also. A ID E Ham 7 pm Food
prep. A cleaning. Full time
Apply: Lakevlew Nursing Ctr
919 E. 2nd St................ Sanford
DRIVERS- Part time. Wed -Frl
only A valid Fla drivers lie.
required Applicants must be
II yrs. or older and must know
how to drive standard shill
Apply In person at Sanlord
Auto Auction. 2715 W. 1st St.,
Sanlord.................... See John
D RIVER- Good driving record,
chauffeur's lie Apply Tropic
Taxi. 1917 French Ave._______
ORIVER/W AREHOUSE- 57 hr!
Accelerate your career here!
Make deliveries A help In
warehouse) Hiring today I
AAA Employment, 700 W. 25th
Street. Call ..............3715174

NURSE AIDES needed full lime
for 3pm to II pm A 11pm lo
7am shilt. Must be certified or
experienced and be willing to
take certification test. Contact
DeBary Manor between I A
apm, Mon. Frl. for appoint
ment. 441 4436............■■..... EOE
N UR SER Y W ORKER Wanted.
Exp. desirable but not neces
M ry. Call Mike at........439 39X
N U R S E S A ID E : A ll shifts,
exp'd or certified only. Apply
Lakevlew Nursing Center
959 E. 2nd St................Sanlord
PART T IM E B A B Y S ITTE R
In my house. 5 yr. old.
Call................371 7159 aft-1:X
PA YR O LL CLER K - S 5 » hr.
Train on computer! Wants fo
hire today! Flexible lo help
with statements A ledger loo!
P e r le c l c a r e e r 1 A A A
Employment. 700 W 25th
Street. Call................. 373 5174
555 PERSONS SERIOUS 4 bout
losing weight and making
money call the Weight Loss
Hotline........................331-4179
PLUMBERS. Experienced, all
phases, apply In person Sun
Lake Apts......474 Sun Lake Clr
Q U A L IF IE D D R Y W A LL
HANGERS wantadl Top payl
U n experienced need not
apply.Call 449 8S37QR449 4049
REAL E S TA TE ASSOCIATES
w 6 nted. Liberal commission
w/bonut overrides. Excellent
location.......................311 0577
REHAB. A IO E: Looking tor an
individual highly motivated,
enthusiastic A creative with
Ihe ability to work well under
minimal supervision H.S.
graduate or the equlvelant
with at least I yr. exp In a
geriatric or rehab selling
required Contact DeBary
Manor between 8 A 4pm.
M on.-Frl for appointment.
448 4476
EOE

71—Help Wanted
DISTRIBUTORS WANTED For
Fragranct Co., establishing
new commercial accounts
Good pay........... flexible hours'
Call....:.................. 904 7191199

EXP'D. DREDGE OPERATOR
to run a mudd cat dredge
Call:............................ 3459731

RESIDENT MANAOER- Couple
lo m anage the Flagship
A p a rtm tn t Community |n
Sanlord under Ihe direction ol
one ol the nalions largest
developers. Previous menegement exp. A supervisory
skills are required. Duties
Include renting, bookkeeping.
A Inslde/outslde meinfenenet
Compensation includes salary,
apt., utilities A bonus. To
apply send letter or resume’
with phone number to P O.
Box 747, Casselberry 37707
RN'S- Part lime leading to lull
time. Good benelits. Apply to
Hillhaven Healthcare Center.
950 Mellonvllle Ave , Sanlord
(X 5 I 377 9544................... EOE

America's oldest licensor
ot Ice cream shops
needs qualified families
to opeiate their own

Cotutel.

Ice Cream Factory
Carvel representatives
will be in

ORLANOO. PL
at (he

Tha Holday Inn
7000 8. Orange
Blossom Trail
June 27 A3B

To make an appointment
CALL COLLECT

914-969-7200
OMtVU CORPOfUIlOfl
ttf* Yorti 10701

^BSSSSSBSSSSSSSSSmSSSS^w vw % y y\ &gt; i

FREE ItTYouRQualify
A IN IN G
WORDPROCESSOR-SECRETARIAL
Morning ★

A fternoon ★

Evening

Job Placement Assistance

Central Florida Computer Institute
APPLY IN PERSON
MON. OWED. 9 AM-2 PM
P riva te In d u s t r y C o u n c il
of S e m in o le C o u n ty In c.
212 S. Sanford Ave.

OH CALL
894-6585
Oft T0U FREE
1-800-330-2327

F*d*rslly in»ui*d viud.nl hunt *Y*tlab4a loqu*Mfiad *ppUc*nls
without rtgwd lo p u t ertdit or *mu)o,m«nl history.

Pharmacist

EXCELLENT INCOME

Now Accepting Applications
For A Pharmacist In The
Seminole County Area.
Starting Salary $ 3 9 ,0 0 0 -f
Daily Hours 9-6 PM
42 hr. Work Week
Good Benefits
Send Resume To

Taking shorl phone messages at
home For Inlo call

504-649-7922
______ Ext. 7944A
EXP'D . INSTRUCTOR needed
lor Energy Source Athletic
Club. Call Julie............321 t m

FREE TUITION
TO REAL ESTATE
LICENSE SCHOOL
a A New Career
• A New Beginning
Call Fran or Stu

Winn Dlxin Stores Inc.

323-3200

K.W. CLACK
P.O. BOX 15200
ORLANDO, FLA. 32858

Keijes
nomcix use ftrxirons
K E Y E S II IN T H E S O U T H
O E N E R A L OFC. W ORKERS
needed Good pay. no lee I
A B LEST T E M P ..........371-1944
GOOD WORKERSI II you need
daily pay A steady work call
Bob alter 3 pm.............377 7554
IT 'S T O Y P A R T Y A O A IN I
House ot Lloyd now hiring
ladles to lhow toy gilts Earn
52.000 by Dec I. F R E E kit A
supplies. Call between 12: X
and ! :00 pm................. 311 8421
LABORERS
No experience necessary Work
one day or every day I Paid
dally. In Oviedo.............. Call
Add A Man..................344 1814
LAN D SCAPER S A Grounds
keeping. Exp'd. W OM EN A
men Between! 5........ 311 7934
LPN- To 57 hr. Tired ot those
night hoursT Here's your
chancel Great 8 4 X . M F
hours! Local medical firm will
train (or this otlice spot! AAA
Employment. 700 W 25th
Street. Call.................. 373 5174
LPN OR M EO IC AL RECORD
TECH N IC IA N : Looking for an
Individual to take complete
control ol our Medical records
section wllh other related
duties In a 91 bed skilled
Nursing facility Musi possess
excellent organiiatlonal A
people skills Previous experl
ence highly desirable Call
DeBary Manor between I am
A 4pm, Mon. F rl. tor ap
pointment. 449 4474
. . EOE
M A IN TEN AN CE
SUPERVISOR
Hands on type individual
needed to supervise personnel
In a well est aluminum A
capper fabrication operation
M u tt be p ro ficie n t with
electrical A electro hydraulic
control circuits with some
knowledge ot electronics Abil
ily lo read hydraulic diaqrams
a must Supervisory back
ground desirable. Send Re
sum*, wage requirements,
and phone number to P O Box
1137, Sanlord. FI 37777 7137
M A IN TE N A N C E ' MAN To 57
hr FE E PAID! Top notch
complex needs your handy
hands! Dependability lands
this super spoil Now! AAA
Employment. 700 W 75th
Street Call:........
323 5174
M O R T G A G E BROKER/Loan
Rep FH A 'V A A Conventional
loan exp Would prefer indi
viduai to be licensed out will
sponsor A train motivated
person Contact Steve Lee al
904 589 4199 EOE/M/F/H V
NO PROSPECTING
If you want to make 5500 to 51000
a week selling Lite A AH. Call
X5 487 7741 lor a 60 second
I
recorded message

FULL OR PART-TIME
NEEDED

FAST FOOD COOKS
CASHIERS
GAS ATTENDANTS

ONE STOP CENTERS
Gas Convenience Store Fast Food
-

-

• Top Hourly Wages
• Free Medical A Life Insurance
• Paid Vacations-2 Weeks Per Year
• Profit Sharing 8 Other Benefits'
MAKE APPLICATION IN PERSON AT

202 N. Laurel Ave.,
Sanford
,

Mondoy thru Friday 1:30 A M • 4:30 PM

NO PHONI CAUS PLEASE 1

HELP! HELP! HELP!
Tired of watching reruns!
Turn your hobby into cash!
Florida Polym ers, Lake Mary, is
growing so fast that we need to
expand our sewing operation into
a second shift.
TRANSPORTATION can be provided!
Full or part time available. Will Train.
Good Pay
Health Plan
Modern air-conditioned operation

Call or come see us at 1000 Sand
Pond Road, Lake Mary. 321-5500.
EEO
MHV

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71— Help Wanted

*7— Apartments
Furnished / Rtrtt

105— DuplwcTriplex / Rent

SANFORD- Huge 3 bdrm. apt.
on 1 floors., sioo week 4- 1300
Security. m3349 or.33)4»47

A LTA M O N TE SPRINOS
D U P L E X *435.00
Ralston l A h o c .. 747HX1
C A S S E L B E R R Y - Townhousa
duplex, 1435 mo. Will accept
kldi. 3403723.....or... 33* *414
LA K E M A R Y -1 bdrm., 1 bath,
ce n t, h/a, c a rp e t, near
Khools. 1335 &lt;■ dep......333 10*3
L A K E M A R Y , new cuitom
duplex, 1 bdrm., 1 bath, dou­
ble garage, privacy fenced,
easy accesito I 4and 17 *2.
no petl......................... 333 07*5

KIT tT CARLYLt

Larry Wrifhl

91.

!S3— Acrtaft*
Loti/Sal#

SALES
Doof to door. Earn torn# extra
(pending money over summer
vacation. Age* 14-if. Mutt
have toclal security card.
M o n .-F rl. tome Sat. Call
Kevin at the Sanford Herald
] H M I I , t : ] Q l w to 4:10 pm
SERVICE R E C E P TIO N IS T- To
*5.50 hr. Have fun A earn US I
Answer calls A check orders!
Must Ilk* people I In Sanford.
AAA Employment, TOO W. Mlh
Street. Call................. M l 1)7*
SO M ETH IN G NEW
UNDER T H E S U N I
Reps needed tor Business Ac
counts. Part Tim * ttl.OOO
Potential, Full Tim * 140,000 +
• Potential. Work own Hours ■
T r a in in g p ro v id e d . C a ll
t e n *31001* M F, t oo am

SiOOpm................. (C.5.T.)

STR A IG H T T R U C K DRIVERlit hr I Slop here! Large co.
needs you to make all local
deliveries! Hurryl Benefits!
AAA Employment, 700 W. Jith
Street. Call:................. JJ3 S1T«
TA K IN G A PP LIC ATIO N S for
Manager A Asst. Manager
Trainee. Also, Cashier post
Hons opened lor all shifts. Full
A part lime available. Good
benefit package. Apply at
E C O L .U A SR 44, Senlord
i
T E L L E R T R A IN E E - SIM wfc + t
Wow I Rare opportunity! Earn
while you learnt Train com
p le te ly l T o d a y ! A A A
Employment, 700 W. ISIh
Street. Call:..................H I 5174
EM P LO Y M E N T
O P P O R TU N ITIE S
Full A part lime w/local chair
manufacturer. Woodworking,
upholstery, sawing, assembly.
To apply please call 331-9*90
lordlrectlonstoourlocallori
T IT L E S E C R E TA R Y - To 1215
week! Special spot lor you!
Learn all phases! Dynamite
careerl Benefits tool AAA
Employment, 700 W. ISIh
Street. Call:..................313 5174
TR A IN IN G INSTRUCTOR full
time or on call, to work In
ICF/MR with the mentally
r e t a r d e d , f r i e n d l y at
m otphere, good benefits.
Call............................... 331 7131
U T IL IT Y M A N /Y A R D M ANA p p ly in p e rs o n . G a to r
Culvert, Sanford Airport
W A ITR E S S , F / T . Apply In
person to Gaynelles Country
Kitchen............1I0S. Palmetto
W AREHOUSEM AN- IS . M/F.
Non sm oker, self starter.
Mult be dependable...HI-4833

WORK IMMEDIATELY
N E E D M E N A W 0M EN NOWI

•m i m i

m i m»

DAILY PAY
Work Assignments
a Dally • Weekly a Monthly

3211590
N OFEE

NO FEE

W ALK AND G E T PAID
H e l p u p d a t e th e De
Itona/Orange City. City Dlrect o r y . No s e llin g . No
experience we train. Apply *
to noon; R.L. Polk A Co.. 1*10
S Orlando Or., Son lord. Sun
Bank Bldg llnd floor) S TA R T
NOWI............................E.O .E,
SS00 W E E K L Y , mailing circular
In your spare time. Send SASE
for details to P. O Box 1(91,
Apopka. FL 37704 1*91________

73— Employment
Wanted
DO MOM A DAD
NEEDAHOM ET
Will care lor the elderly. Nice
secure home with kind people.
reasonable rates.........46* 100)
W IL L C A R E F O R e ld e rly
person In my Deltona home.

^ea$onable;_CaU_;;;;;;;__574373S

91— Apartments/
House to Share
PROFESSIONAL N EED S same
to share house 1350. Leave
message It no answer..331 1311

93— Rooms for Rent

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
LAK E JE N N IE APTS.
Peel. lake. Adults only

RENTING NOWI
___________ 311-0741_________ *

APTS TO COME HOME TO
Quiet, ting la story living with
anargy saving features. 1
bedroom apartments with at
tic storage a private patios.
ASK A BO UT F R E E R E N T A
Senior Cl! Ilens Discount
SANFORO COURT APTS.
13*1 S. SANFORD AVE
131-1101 M l. H I________
BAMBOO COVE APTS,
t i l l Moves In
Qualified Applicant!
ONE YEA R LEASE
140 E. Airport Bl......... ...131-44*1
Tues.-Frl.lam 4pm
Mon. 1:30am S:30pm
________ Some Sat 10-4________
CLEAN, new paint, mini bllndi.
on* yr. leas*, city util Incl I
br. duplex. 17I0 mo . 1 br
duplex *350 m o-t tec..333-1717

GREAT LOCATION
Attreetlv* 1 b d rm , 1 balh,
tingle story duplex on bus
line, large pool, water, sewer
A Irash pick up Included.
Separate adull section, re
tiroes welcome. Ask about our
move In SPECIAL.
SHENANDOAH V ILLA G E
A P A R TM E N TS .............. 1311*30

GPQVEVIER VILLAS
M00 Lake Mary Blvd
eeee
* DON'T
eeee
• ••
R EN T
eee
e•
until you've seen
ee
e T H E MOST SPACIOUS e
e e 3 bdrm., 1 bath apts e e
*•#
In Santord
eee
eeee
33ios»4
eeee
ID EA L FOR R E TIR E E S I San
ford 1 br., 1 ba„ liv. rm „ kit.
appts.. a/c. new paint. *375 mo
1st, last, sec. Ret......... 331 073?
M ARINERS V IL LA G E , LAKE
ADA, 1 bdrm. 1300 a Mo A 3
bdrm. 1340 a Mo Call..373 4670

NEW LEASE ON LIFESTYLE
Near 1-4
Located In country selling yet
near conveniences
3 Bdrm., 1bath....3 Bdrm ..3bath
Carport...........................Garages
Call. Canterbury at Lake Mary
3311*11...........................Ext. 103
ONE BDRM., Irg rooms, screen
porch, carport. No pets. 171
wkly, 1300 sec........... 333 4341
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
Ask about our
M O VE IN SPECIAL
O N E Y EA R LEASE
ISM Ridgewood Av*.......n i 4470
Tues.-Frl. Bom 4pm
Mon 1:30am 5:30pm
________ Some Sat. 10 4________
SANFORD- 4 br. apt. Upstairs,
newly renovated. Downtown
area. 1450 mo 1300 sec. Call
331-0534 leave message_______
SANFORD, I bedroom unit. 1st,
last t security deposit,
............................... *04 7754513
SANFORD- 7 br/t b. 1311 A Pine
Av. Adults, no pels, WO wk
1335 mo. f sec. Days 43? 00*5.
_ E yes 444 1417 _ or
349 547f
SPECIALI .
1175 move In through end ot
month to the first 10 new
residence who quality.
Call today!
Geneva Gardens Apts.
___________ m - i o t o _____
v

w

w

w

CLEA N A A TTR A C TIV E
REASONABLE BV THE W EEK
E F F IC I A 1 BDRM APTS
FURNISH A UN FURN ISHED
Call:.............................173-4107
TW O BDRM., large kitchen,
fenced yard. No peti. 1*5
wkly. 1300 sec.........
333 4345
• 1 BDRM., I B A TH ......1141 MO
• Pool A Laundry Facilities
• Just oft 17 93
Near Zayre Plata
FRANKLIN ARMS
1130 Florida Ave.
_ _ _
333 4410
1300 D. SANFORD A V E ., I
bdrm., air/heat. carport, no
pets. Cail
45*3153

101— Houses
Furnished / Rent

BATEMAN REALTY

EN JO Y A FA M ILY S E TTIN G
lor your golden years! We
have rooms lor both men and
women Willow Wood Re
__tlrementCenter_CaH_H3_52^

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
APTS TO COME HOME TO
Quiet, single story living with
e nergy saving features
E F F IC IE N C Y apts with attic
storage A private patios
A S K A B O U TFR E E R E N TA
Senior Cllitens Discount
SAN FO R O C O U R T APTS
3341 S. SANFORO AVE
_______ 333-3301 ext. I l l ________
A TT R A C T IV E 1 br Downtown
area tioo wk. Incl. util Sec
dep 1200 C a ll:............ 331 4*47
C U T E E F F I C IE N C Y . H i 00
wkly., util paid, block Irom
town 331 4943.... or . . 445 4030
SANFORD- Lovely 3 bdrm with
screened porch, complete
privacy 190 w kt 1300 sec
dtp. 333 334*.... or ......3314*47
ONE BORM. APT. 1745 mo 1300 sec dep References re

qulred. Call....... 333 3343att 4
RESPON. M A R R IED Couple or
Single. No children or pets
1110 mo. + 1100 sec
333 311/
SANFORD- Efficiency apart
ment, near town 145 wk
Call:.......................... I l l 5990

157— Mobile
Homes/Sale

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent

USED HOME*
From It ,30*
Oratory Mobile Hama*. J33-53W
13x40 IN PARK
15,991 Easy Terms
Gregory Mobile Ho met..173-130*
12x44. clean I br.. 3 ba. Partially
turn'd. Must Sell Immediate
lyl *4.500. Call:......W4H3 30A4
31 X I, with 34 X * Manufactured
rm. add Ideal tor hunting
camp or storage. 1*50 323 7*41

ONE A TWO BORMS. Furn..
mature adults only, no pets.
Park Av* Mobil* Pk. 333 3*41

t09— Mobile Home
Lots / Rent
R.V. LOTS Now avail. Mature
adult! only, No Petl, Park
Ave Mobile Park...... 333 2141

111— Resort/Vacation
Rentals
NEW SMYRNA BEACH CondoOn the Beach Sleepi 4, 3
pools. lIQOwk ............333 033*

121— Condominium
Rentals
L A K E M A R Y t Must leasel
Hidden Village, 1 bdrm , 1
bath, m ic ro w a ve , tans,
fireplace. NEW I Leas* 1525
Month, Call Ralston A Assoc..
747 8 3 3 3 __________________
PINE RIDGE CLUBI Luxurious
2/7. condo. Pool, tennis,
washer and dryer,

STARTING AT 5400
Landarama Fla., Inc...333 1734

141— Homes for Sale

I vVttwood
^ 7 |Ciroup,

767-0606
BY OWNER- Spacious 2/2, LR.
DR. kit., large front porch A
carport on targe shady lot.
185.000 Call: 313 103)anytime
BY OWNERI Immaculate. 3/2,
Sanford Home, garage, fenced
yard. 123 Reel Ct. ISanora S.)
154.000 ...............904 9*5 49*4

141— Homes for Sale
SA N FO R D 3/3. C/H/A, paddle
fans, eat in kitchen, util., dbl.
carport.153.000...........323 13*3
SANFORD Beautiful Idyllwlld*.
3/3, largo family room with
llreplact. A homo lor grociout
liv in g , tae.300. JO A N N
TO M P K IN S P R O P E R TIE S ,
INC. R E A LTO R ......... 340-1*33
If I * ••***,

STemper
T H R E E BDRM., 1 bath, new
home, concrete block, price
only 153,750
T H R E E BDRM., P i both, con
cret* block home, new paint,
only 154.900
W* Itava rental*
WE HAVE O TH ER S
CALL A N Y T IM E
R E A L TO R ...................313 4991

l : it \

Alt »0ll 1110
io m ix

ik imi (Pin

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader

¥71

11

JU N E PORZIO R E A L T Y , INC
LAKE FR O N T. All brick 3 bdrm.
3 balh home overlooking Lake
Dupont Reduced lor quick
sate Call
C H A R L O TTE ..............174*115
D ELTO N A ES TA TE AREALow clown to assume mtg on
this executive home Only
1139 900 Call
C H A R L O TTE ..............174 9111

322-8678
D ELTO N A Privacy trees. 3
acres, i unusual 2 bdrm ,
145.900 Call................$74 0448

WE LIS T AND SELL
MORE P R O P ER TY THAN
AN YONE IN NORTH
SEM INOLE COUNTY
INVESTORS LOOKI 1 br.. I ba..
on Irg lot, toned GC-7. owner
may hold mtg. with lubilanHal down payment........ 1)8,100
E X C E P T IO N A L L Y N IC E I 3
br.. 2 ba. mobile home, double
root A floor in '*4. paddle Ians,
lots ol storage, dining room,
eal In kitchen..............140.250
EN JO Y L IF E In Ihls 3 bdrm .
t’ j bath home, central h/a.
dining area, garage, located In
Wlnler Springs!.............149.900

R E N T W ITH OPTION 3/3. 2
car garage, convenient loca
lion 1475 month
3444 Santord Ave.

321 0759.............. 321-2257
D ELTO N A . 3/2. Country Club
area, S500 per. mo. d ll
counted, r sec Call... 331 4795
• . • IN D E LTO N A • • •
• e HOMES FOR R E N T * •
_______ e * 174 1414 e .
SANFORO 3 bdrm . 1 bath,
huge yard, remodeled, good
deal to rent or buy Appllca
tlons taken Sat. A Sun. June
30.31 Call eves .
*31 1705
SANFORO-7 bdrm . 3 ba . nice
yard, close to route 17 97
shopping. C a ll.............39* 0*03
S A N FO R D 2 br. possible 3rd . I
bath, dose to Hamilton Sch
1435 mo 1300 sec
333 5138
SAN FOR O 7 bdrm . family
room, workshop. 1435 mo Call
830 4833 or . 339 4711 eves
SANFORD. 3 b/t's b. garage
applt., microwave. 1450 mo
3830 Gale Place
495 4300
5 U N L A N D E S T A T E S , 713
Baywood Clr , 3 bdrm . I's
bath, appliances, a/c. 1440 00
345 5740
eves
TWO* BDRM,, I bath, large
yard, eal In kitchen. 1335 Mo .
Call..... ......................... I l l 5*90
304 S. SUNLAND 3/1, fenced,
new carpeting A paint, no
pels. Lease 1400 mo dls
counted Call -------------- 471 3344
1 BDRM., Ilv. A din rms. eat In
kit., washer hook up. fenced.
1400 m ot 1100 dcu
331 0331

M

S
REALTY INC

D E V O T E O T O E X C E L LE N C E
R E D U C E D I Country estate
very near Heathrow Over 4 4
acres. 300 tl on sparkling
secluded lake T ru e ly a
hide away. 2.300 sq II, home
with twin master suites plus
additional buildlnq lot Is
possible
1199.900

322-9031
International Business Clr
350 International Pkwy
Heathrow, FI. 3174*
FOR SALE BY OWNER- Mult
see to appreciate 2 br . I ba
Drive by 143 Bieder oil S
Santord Av In I30 s
331 0772
G O V ER N M EN T HOMES from
11.00 IU Repair) Also tax de
llnquent A foreclosure pro
perties Avail. Now For list
Ing Call 1 315 733 4047exl G374

HALL REALTY
REALTOR
E X C E L L E N T TER M S A VA IL­
A BLE on Ihls 3 bdrm home!
Lovely real cedar paneling! 5
paddle tans! Fenced yard with
privacy! A 1 condition! New
carpet! Large shade trees!
Low down A low monthly!
Seller will pay closing costs

lor buyer!................... 149,500
GORGEOUS HUGE OAKS sur
round this 4 bdrm home on
large 130x114 lot! C M A!
Sprinkler system! Nothing
down tor VA buyers! 11,500 tor,
FH A ! Seller will pay closing
costs!..
......... 150 000

323-5774
7444 HWY 17 93
ID Y L L W IL D E POOL HOME.
3-7, great 'oom, fireplace,
paddle Ians, must see Mid
190 s. Call:................ , 333 7143

JAMES LEE
u u iu £ L i

321-7823...... Em. 3230809

PINECR EST A R E A I 3 bdrm., 1
bath home, screened porch,
well, central H/A. dining area,
large bedrooms, equipped
kitchen...............
153,500
CHARMING V IL LA I 3 bdrm., 3
balh. living &amp; dining area,
backs up lo green bell area,
private yard, central H/A,
garage............................154.500
FA N TA STIC PR ICEI 3 bdrm , I
bath home wllh loll of nice
features, as well as a I bdrm .
I ba .guesthouse.........154,950
SO U TH ER N C O M FO R T! 5
bdrm.. Its bath, 2 slory home,
den. formal living A dining
rooms, tpl., central H/A,
screened porch..............193.500
ST. JOHNS R IV E R FR O N T! 2
bdrm , I bath home on 17*
acrei. Great room, vaulted
ceilings, dining room w/stone
tpl , barn, shed, dock A much
more!...........................1128.900
V A LU E IN T H E P R O P E R T Y I1
bdrm., I bath home near
hospital, excellent potential
for olfice complex, approx. I
acrei............................1250.000

141— Homes for Sale
M U S T S E L L -1 3 1 .0 0 0 . M03
Bonvlew Av*., living rm..
dining rm ., I bdrm.. P i bath,
k itc h e n , la u n d ry rm . A
icreened porch. Call....323 5703
PIN ECR EST 3 br., 1 ba, Fla
room, util, room, cent. H/A,
carport, corner lot.......44* *19)
R ED U CED I I br. 3 bt. with
family room, screened porch,
p riva cy fence, pool, etc.
Priced to Mil a t ..........1*7.000
A la n B. Ja h n te n .R e /M a x ,
Unlimited 323 4103 or 3*0-1000
SANFORD. Houie, 3/1, good
neighborhood, large lot,
central air A heat, eat-in
kitchen, family room, quick
ill* . PRICE 141,000, i l l *5*1

$10(000 DOWN
Taka over payment* A move
right In. Beautiful 3 br., 2 ba .
2 car garage on quarter acre
In lovely, convenient new area

869-9100
NEW L IF E R E A L T Y INC.
4 BDRM., 2 BATH, family room
w/fpl., formal dining room,
enclosed porch A work thed.
fenced back yard, treed lot,
1*4,500. Call alt. 4pm .333 *377
f ROOM RANCHER, 3 ba. 1 Irg
screen patio, old shad* A
citrus on &lt;&gt; acre
Near
MayfalrC C.M7.500 333 55*7

143-Out of State
Property / Sale
NORTH CAROLINA, sell/trade
for FL property, new, 2 bdrm.,
3 ba on 1.33 acres. 340 deg
view, Maggie Valley, 151.500.
_________ X5-9S14410_________
NORTH CAROLINA
M OUNTAINS
1.5 acre* located In Ihe moun
tains dandy ilream good ac
ceil ready to build on good
garden spot owner needs to
Mil I9,*00 pay 11.100 down
assume loan
House 1 bdrm . I bath. 5 miles
Irom town lovely selling large
deck o v e rlo o k in g m ins
excellent location built In cab
Inels very private all for
I I * , *00 pay 17,000 down
assume loan
3.3 acres short distance Irom
Murphy good garden spot
ready to build on owner said
Mil 112.100 pay 12.100 down
payment aisume Joan
Lake front lots deep water level
and ready to build on paved
road county water under
ground utilities very desirable
lots, 144.000 pay 18 000 down
payment assume loan
These are a lew ol over 2000
listings. We have all types ol
property Irom 1700 per acre
and up. We have small Iracls.
large tracts, cabins, house, old
farms, lake Iron! lots. Etc
Write or call today for a tree
listing brochure You can call
tree by dlallnq I HO 435 7471
Write or call roday Cherokee
Land Co.. Murphy, N.C....31*04

149—Commercial
Property / Sale
APPRAISALSANO SALES
BOB M. BALL, JR . P.A..C.S.M.
R E A L T O R ..................373-411*
Florida...Virginia Maryland
SANFORD- 3.800 sq.lt. meiai
building, corner location
5170.000 with terms
BOBM . BALL, JR. P.A.
R E A LTO R
...............333-4)11

181— Appliances
/ Furniture
BDRM. SET- Queen t in pedes­
tal waterbed w/* drawer*,
heeter, liner, bumpers Mat­
ching night stand. 2 dretMrs A
mirror. Comforter. *400 Call:
331 4*30.........or..........*34*177
CHINA C A B IN E T HUTCH, ta
bie with leaf. * chairs. *250
OBO. Sola, 1500BO .3*5 7077
E X E C U T IV E T E A K DESK with
matching table and III* cab)
net. Emaculat* condition!!
*300 otter. Cell............ 333 1430
Good UsedT.V. *25 and up
M ILLER S
3*19 Orlando Or.............333 0153
LARRY'S M ART. 315 Santord
Avo. New/Used furn. A appl.
Buy/Sell/Trade. 333 4)13.
NICE KINOSIZE Waterbed with
wooden headboard A mirror
(1150) 1 Peacock chairs (110)
Maple * draw dresMr A m ir­
ror (1115) wllh matching desk
A chair (175). Matching colfee
A end tables (130). 1 wicker
TV table* (SiOea ) Call:
33) 1717.. or 333 *115anytime
PIANO FOR SALE
Take over small monthly pay
ment* on spinet console piano
Can be Men locally. Write
Credit Manager, Box *547 Ft..
Myers. FL1390*
TR U N D LE BEDS- Like new.
Price 173 212 Colonial Way,
Santord
T W IN B E D S - Separate or
together. Imitation ratlan A
wicker. Call:...............333 0534

187— Sporting Goods
L IK E NEW- ExcerclM bike.
Power Pack 1000 A Octa gym,
1300 for all3 pieces.
Call alt. *pm............... 333 *577

199—Pets &amp; Supplies
COCKER SPANIELS 4 males. 1
female. AKC registered pup
ptei. Call:.................. 331 *454
FE R R E TS , 1 month old. 130 00
each Healthy, playlul pets
Call alter 5 10...
331 *411

201— Horses
BAY G ELO IN O , 1500
Big and Beaulllul
Call.331 04*7. or .333 7311. eves

203— Livestock and
Poultry
S M OTHER HENS with chicks
lor sale Also, other kinds ol
chickens Call_______327 0154

213—Auctions

IJ F T . M FO , excellent condition
with 50 Johnson, loaded. ttTOO.
Phone 333*147
31 F T . ORLAND O CLIP PER ,
Fiberglass, cuddy cobin, I/O
irg HP Volvo, no trotter. Boot
l« tn water, m o o ......... 333-7571

217—Garage Sales
B IO M O V IN O S A L III t
433 Ridge Dr., oil Lk. Mary
Blvd.. Sot. A alt week
C A R P O R T S A L E - Sot. Tue*.
3311 Hortwell Ave. Steraot,
T V 's , Comoro*, household
Items. Everything must go
HQ USrW AR *S. F U R N ITU R E ,
Antiques. Sot„77th A Sun..
Ttth, 1C*Orange Dr.

219—Wanted to Buy
t t l Aluminum Cons.. Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Metals...........Glass
KOKOMO........................ 333 1100
Running or not. top prices
paid Free pick up. 331 3354

Hi BUY FURNITURE
Try Us.............................331*33*

221— Good Things
to Eat
V IN E R IPE Ruskln Tomatoes.
Kept In o/c houM. 1 lbs lor a
*1, 1113 Randolph Sf... 317 3*57

223— Miscellaneous
BROWN R IV E R ROCK. Potto
Stones, GreoM Traps, Sand
Dry Wells. Ready Mix Con
crote, Miracle Concrete Co.
133-5751............... 109 Elm Ave.
B U Y ...........S E L L ...........TR A D E
MOST A N Y TH IN G
t lt lS . FR EN C H AVE.
H U EY'S CROWN PAWN333 »7*«
CLEA R AN CE SALE, Ceramic
tile. *0,000 It. wall A Hoot tiles.
m«ny colors, many patterns,
save up to 12 00 per It. Limited
a m o u nts. C a ll Noble at
A M T IL E ..................... 333 3504
CLOSING O U T SALE
Shaklee Products
Call:............................ 3217*97
G O LF CARTS
150 to 15SO uied riding carts
Call:....................... 305 373 *79*
PE AVE Y COMBO, 300 bass, 300
watt, 1/15 In. BW woofer,
patch A crossover capable
*350 or otter......... 331 0437 eves

231-Cars

AIRLINE/TRAVEL SCHOOL

Auction every Thursday 7 PM

WE BUY ESTATES!
................... 323 3H)

215—Boats and
Accessories

Train to b«

a

TRAVEL AGENT
BAS* B O A T, '78*. 15 horse
Evlnrude. trailer. 11500 Call
371 0487 or
133 73*1. eves
C ITA TIO N 't r . cuddy cabin. 140
hp Merc Cruiser 17500 Call
_321J)487 .or 373 73*1. eves
GHENOO '14*. with trailer A
swivel Mats Like New. 1500
Call 321 0487 or 323 7381. eve!
H O U S E B O A T '*7, de lu xe
fiberglass cat., 24x8. sleeps 4,
gas ret. stove A w/h. toilet A
shower, 90 hp Yamaha, trailer
117.000 Call................. 149 5405

FORD LTD 7 T , 4 dr„ 7C3VBA,
’

1995. Samlnolt Ford. Hwy.
r r : , Santord..............32114*1
f o r d r-siRD nr, c*ts*a .
*2295. Saminoto Ford, Hwy
I7W . Santord..............» Tati
HONDA I MB DR '*0. 7T430A
lifts. Saminoto Ford, Hwy
17 91, S a n t o rd --.......3311*11
M A N Y V .W . Bugs. Vans A
Campers to choosa from!
E R N I I JA C K S O N j ^ TOS
MAZDA O LC '7*. 7T1«3B, t it ).
Seminole Ford. Hwy. 17-91,
Santord........................ 372 l*«l
M I R C U R Y C O M K T 1971
7C341B. t**S. Seminole Ford.
Hwy. 17 W. Sanford.....333 1481
M E R C U R Y COL PK WON. '71.
7C3taA, lift*. Saminoto Ford.
Hwy. 17 93. Santord.....333 14*I
M ERCURY ZEPHYR
10,
7CII7A. *19*5. Seminole Ford.
Hwy. 17 « . Santord.....333 1411
M O N TE CARLO 79, C4450A
*t0*J. Seminole Ford. Hwy
17 *2. Santord.............. 333 1411
O LD S O M E G A - 75. C449JA.
*995, Stmlnole Ford, Hwy,
17 93. Santord............. 333 14*1
P L Y M O TH FU R Y 71. 7C4I0A.
1*95. Seminole Ford, Hwy.
17 93. Santord........... 133 14*1
P L Y M O U T H V O L A R E '7*.
7T437A. 1*95. Seminole Ford.
Hwy. 17 93, Santord.... 133 1411
P L Y M O U T H R E L IA N T *1.
7C333B, *2895. Seminole Ford,
Hwy 17 93, Santord
373 )4i)
P LY M O U TH Staltofi Wagon 79.
C4450A. *1095. Seminole Ford,
Hwy. 17 93, Santord.... 333 14*1
PONTIAC LEMANS 73. 7C17»a !
*795. Seminole Ford, Hwy.
17 93, Santord............ 333 14*1
VW DASHER 7*. 7T54IZ. *1995.
Seminole Ford. Hwy. 17*1.
Santord........................ 333 14*1
VW RABBIT 79. 7T412A. *1(95
Seminole Ford. Hwy. 17 *3.
Santord........................33114*1
VW SQUARE BACK 71, 7C380C.
1495. Seminole Ford, Hwy.
17 *1, Santord............ 331 14*1

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories
GOOD USEO MOTORS
and Iranimlsilom
Call:................................331 1154

235— Trucks/
Buses / Vans
CH EV Y PICKUP SWB, '8*'. 6
cyt, 3 spd . good dependable
truck 1*00 or trade lor good
van
.............. I l l 4110
CH EV Y BEAUVILLE" VAN- &gt;.
ton 79. dual air, remarkable
condition....................
13.450
Ken Rummel Chevrolet, 1455

AMC S P IR IT -80. 7T449B, 1995
Seminole Ford. Hwy. 17 93,
Santo rd ....................... 333 1481
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
Orlando Dr ................1317100
W E FINANCE
FO RD F1M- '79, 8 cyt. p/s, new
W ALK IN ............... DRIVE O U T
tires, dutch drive, camper
N A TIO N A L A U T O SALES
top. Excellent condition. 81,000
Santord Ave. A 13th SI ..321 4075
miles. Call:................. 373 313*
CAMARO 1979, fully loaded.
FO RD VAN- 1949. I ton, rebuilt
T top, cruiM. tilt wheel, a/c.
Aamco Irar.s., runs excellent.
Must 1*1113500 OBO. 333 4814
1*00OBO Call............574 0*4*
C H E V Y C E L E B R IT Y «3, 4 dr..
7C394A. 13195 Seminole Ford.
Hwy. 17 93, Santord . 333-1411
238— Vehicles
CH E V Y NOVA- '7*. Concourl.
Wanted
auto, cold air, runs excellent.
1750. C a ll:..................... 333 8014
W E PAY TO P 11 lor wrecked
OATSUN 11* SX- II, Like new,
cars/trucks We Sell quaran
5 spd . air, every extra *4,250.
teed used parts AA A UTO
C a ll:.................................. .3311*70
SALVAGE ol DeBary..44* 4003
DODGE C O LT '84, 4 dr., 6C591B.
*3795. Seminole Ford. Hwy.
239—Motorcycles
17 93. San lo rd ............. 323 1481
and Bikes
FORD E L IT E '76. 7T357A, *1295
Seminole Ford, Hwy. 1793.
Santord ....................... 373 1481
HONDA 700. Nlghthawk S. '*4‘.
F~ORD G A L A X Y '44. 2 dr ,
4 000 ml., garaqe kepi. exc.
7C39SA. *1995. Seminole Ford.
cond . 2 helmets. 17700 or best
Hwy. 17 97. Santord.....332 1481
otter Call
173 4844

BRIDGES AND SON
May 44

221—Cars

215—Boats and
Accessories

JUNK A WRECKED CARS-

v

THE VILLAGE

CASSELBER RY- 17*1. Mature
SANFORD- Large 3 br house,
lady prefers same Private
complete privacy. 1110 wk *
bath &amp; entrance, microwave.
1350 sec 323 7349 or 331 4947
re lrlg-fTO w k............. 4*S 7351
FLO R ID A H O TE L
103— Houses
Reasonab le week ly rates
500 Oak Aye.,,,........................ I l l W tl
Unfurnished / Rent
NICE C LEA N ROOM. S40 week,
deposit required, downtown
Santord Call .............172 50*4
R E N T/ L E A S E O PTIO N , 7308
SANFORD Independant room,
Coronado Concourse, 3/1,
private bath, kitchenette, re
carpeted, good neighborhood.
trig.. 1340. Call..................... 3339174
1350 per mo . part applied to
sale price of 131.000 alter 11000
☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
down.................... Take a look1
Call.............. 321 4443/333 7013
TH E VILLAGE
CLEAN A A TTR A C TIV E
REASONABLE RATES
W E E K L Y M A ID S ER V IC E
Call: ..................................... 3234507
Lie. Real Estate Broker

96— Retirement
Homes

OCALA N A TIO N AL F O H IS T Hlgh end dry wooded lot*.
Mobil* home, cabin, camping
O .K .-H u nting and fishing.
*5,450 w/tlSO d n., 1*3.71
monthly......(904) 73*4579 day*
or............ 19041 *33 243* eve*.
O N I ACRE- 5 mile* cast San
ford 18 500 Owner financing
Wallace Crets Realty, Inc.

Meaday* Jem 13,1 9 »— Ift

TOUR GUIDE

AIR RESERVATIONS
Start locally, lull llmetpart time.
Train on live airline computers.
Home study and resident train­
ing. Financial aid available Job
placeman! aaalalanct. Nal'l
Hdqts lighthouse P.T., FL.

A .C .T. Travel School

1-800-432-3004
Accredited member N M.S.C.

BUY HERE
PAY HERE
LOW
DOWN PAYMENT
GOOD CREDIT BAD CREDIT
NO CREDIT
. NO INTEREST

USED CARS
J?1 9 S HWY 17 92
SANFORD 323 2123

LIV E IN LU X U R Y I 4 bdrm, 3's
bath, executive home on 13
acres with lake. pool, rec A
family room. 3 fireplaces A
many exlrasl
1395 000

NON-RESIDENTIAL
NICE BU ILD IN G LOTS) Each
lot Is 94 X 140, located In quiet
area. Ideal for single family
residence............ 19.000each!
Call: Nancy Butler,
Realtor/Associate
BUILD YOUR NEW HO M E) 5
+ acres w/well, septic A
electric 134.000. Call John
Butner. Broker/Salesman

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

W EK IV A RIVER E S TA TE S I 5
acres partlclly cleared, great
location 155,500. Call Rhonda
Gortney Realtor/Associate

B.E. LINK CONST.
Remodeling
305 173 7079
Flnanclnq
Lie •CRC00047I

RARE O P P O R TU N ITY ! 13 +
acres lor possible comm
devmnt. in Lk Mary 1400.000
Call Beth Hathaway. Real
tor/Assoclale

Carpentry

• G EN EV A OSCEOLA RD. *
ZONED FOR M OBILES!
5 Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
10% Down. 10 Y rs .lt I2%l
From H I ,1041

LARGE 7 slur, colonial on
wooded I acre Family room,
game rm 7 tp l, many extras.
1137.000 W M a lin o w s k i
Realtor....... .................322 7**3
CALL ANY TIME
LARGE 3/2. country kitchen, on
3 'i or 5 acres, near all Lake
M a ry schools. 1149.000
Call......................
3335073
L O V E L Y H O M E , Beautiful
Street Assume 9% Low
down, only serious Inquiries
please
_
333 5558
M O O U L A R 'S / M O B IL E S on
acreage. 5 acres, fenced 3/3,
Call toll free 1 800-323-3720
plus 3 stall barn, low 170's
1 ACRES oil Lockwood. 3/t.
2541 PARK A V E .............Sanford
owner financing, low 140's
90) Lk. Mary Blvd
Lk. Mary
&gt;i+ ACRE T R E E D LOT, 3/1,
reduced, make otter, low 130's
Oviedo Realty, Inc.Call 345,4403

322-2420
321-2720

Fence

Landclearing

Nursing Care

F E N C E I N S T A L L E D A ll
types no job loo small or
large Call
305 173 8798

BACK HOE, Dump truck, Bush
hog, Box blading, and Discing
Call . 333 1804 or
377 9113
BUSH HOG Box Blading, bis
clng A Tractor Roto Tilling
Call............................... 133-3597

OUR R A TE S A R E LOWER
Lake view Nursing Center
919 E. Second SI., Santord
133 4707

House Plans
A L L T Y P E S Ol Carpentry.
Remodeling A home repairs.
Call Richard Gross331 5973
RICHARDS CARPENTRY
18 yrs in Central Florida
Call
333 5787

Cleaning Service
NEW BUSINESS seekinq clients
Offices A Retail businesses
preferred A to Z Cleaning
Service
333 1731

Concrete
CO N CR ETE slabs.drives patios
walks. 15 vr. enp Lifelong res
Lie 8. ms
34? 9758 after 5

Electrical
O A S E L E C TR IC ............171 4050
New A Remodeling additions,
fans, security, lights, timers.
&amp; all electric service Quality
Service......Licensed A Bonded

MK

oesiGt-*

Custom blueprints
81JOrlenta Ave
Alt Spqs. 33701
JJ2 9144

Home Improvement
CARPEN TRY BY ED DAVIS
REMODE LING/RE PAIRS
A IN STALLA TIO N SERVICE
Lie Sanlordres..............3210442
COLLIERS
HOME IMPROVE7AENT
No job too small
Call 331 4J72
C OMPL E T E REPAIR
SERVICE bath repair, ceram
1c tile. Mobile home repairs
also. No Job too small.
Call 4 am to 9 pm
371 5457
CO M PLETE HOME REPAIRS.
plumbing electrical, painting,
la n d s ca p in g , c a rp e n try ,
anytime anyplace!
371 4210

Home Repairs
HOM E R E P A I R S * Remodeling

No job loo small!
21 yrs exp
373 9445

Landscaping
BOGUES! Expl Professional!
Lawn A Garden Mainl A chain
saw work Trees and shrubs
planted! Free E si 1
323 8187

SEMINOLE LANDSCAPING
Call............................... 332 8111

Lawn Service
B A R R I E R ' S Landscaping!

Irrig , Lawn Care, Res A
Comm, 311 7844 F R E E EST!
C E N TR A L FL. LAWN MAIN
TE N A N C E . satisfaction guar
anteed. FR EE ESTIM ATES.
Call chuck or Rick.......331 7004
G EO R G E'S LAWN CARE
Fast reliable service Res A
Comm Freeest
333 0901

LAWN SERV ICE
)23 3018
"S U N N Y S" Mow. edge. trim,
planting, n niching SPRING
Spec Freeclt
333 7839

Painting
FRANK BARNHART Painting
Contractor Interior A Exlerl
or painting, pressure cleaning.
Free est, All work Guar an
teed Ret upon request Paint
log ilnce 1970
)7 )n » 2

MARSH PAINTING
Interior Fxlerlor

CaM_&gt;&gt;________^323 *400
Paper Hanging
PAPER HANGING
ING (Interior
Res A comm 15
Free Estimates
Taylor at

A PAIN T
Exterior).
years exp.
Call: Roy
121 402]

Tree Service
ECHOLS T R E E SERVICE
Free estimates! Low Prices!
Lie Ins Slump Grinding. Too!
32] 2229 day or nite
"Let The Professionals do it"

Windows
G LA SSO M ETR YI Comprehert
sive window cleaning service.
Comm A Res
373 4718

1

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V*.

4B— SanFord HtraM, lawferd, FI._______Mtnday, Juw 33, 1M7

8 L0N D IE

BEETLE BAILEY

THE BORN LOSER

ARCH IE

EEK A MEEK

ANJD WCWJ THE
B U S IN E S S A £ U t f ...

BUSIWESS LEADERS ARE
SERIOUSLV (PUCERfJED ABOUT
A DRAMATIC DK3P1W SALES
AMD PBCf ITS
LASTMOWTH...

by Chic Young

No Evidence Linking
Cancer, Broiled Meat

Dr.
Goft

DEAR DR. C O T T - What. If the products are made with
any. are the cancer-causing ef­ "secret" formulas that the man­
fects o! eating charcoal-broiled ufacturers Jealou&amp;iy guard.
meat?
Spirits have no sugar added,
DEAR R E A D E R A except In one Instance: Distillers can be caused by injury, a tumor
carcinogen is a compound that In the Caribbean make their rum
that compresses the nerve, or —
can cause cancer. These sub­ from sugar cane. - and some in most cases — an Idiopathic
stances are present In Infl- sugar is added to flavor the (unknown) Infection.
nltesslmal quantities In many product.
The palsy may affect one side
foods
we cat: most of them are
of the face or (less commonly)
DEAR DR. G O T T — I've had
by Mort Walker
neutralized during digestion. Bell's palsy on one side of my
both: it may be permanent or
Some studies have suggested face. What causes It?
temporary. There Is no cure but.
that there are compounds In
DEAR READER — Bell's palsv
with time, most patients experi­
meat that, when heated, un­ Is paralysis of the facial nerve. It
ence notable Improvement.
dergo chemical changes and
become c a r c i n o g e n i c . For
Wealthier
ACROSS
Answer to Prs nous Puttie
examp l e , fried bacon and
n o n e
q d d
1 S i n s _____non
charcoal-broiled steaks have
Grows in
4 Scores
Brooklyn
been found to contain more
EU CE
8 Footwear
,
6 Deer
carci nogeni c material after
□ c iin o
12 Littls
7 Ages
cooking than before.
□
n
o
n
e
n o n
(luff.)
8 Went by boat
To my knowledge, the evi­
□
d
o
n
o
n
13 Bslisvs_____
9 — and
dence connecti ng charcoalcry
_____not
n o
n o n e
n o
cooked meat to cancer is still too 14 Author Jssn M. 10 Whirlwinds
n
n
n
o
n
n
o n
unsubstantiated to permit a rec­
11 Young
□
n
o
n
n
n
o
n
pig
by Art Santom ommendation against eating this • 15 Comparative
□
n
o
o
n
n
n
o
n n o
suffix
17 East Asian
food. A person is probably more
16
Squeakiest
country
o
n
e
O
D
D
l6HOULP,ve '1 at risk of developing high blood
18 Soul
19 Study
cholesterol from consum ing
cannon
o n n n o
2 0 Short tor
22 Crown
fm ow n
&lt; 1 charcoal-broiled steaks. Howev­
□
n
o
o
o
n
n
n
n o n
Solomon
2 4 Pronounce
vee&amp;EFESTER
er. charcoal-broiling appears to 21 Organ pipe
□
o
n
o
n
n
n
o
o
d d
25 River in France
I n c r e a s e t h e n u m b e r of 2 3 Recycle
HAP ‘X K T m &amp;
2 6 Having auricles
□ n o
n o n o o
n o n
to
2 7 Cuts hair
IHm o WHEM carcinogens. The prudent and 2 7 Something
smoke
health-conscious consumer must
2 8 Poetry foot
37 Mongrel dog
4 9 BrownishWE HWlTEC?
3 0 Refreshing bev­ 2 9 Canadian
take this fact Into account when
3 9 Make precious
purple
erage (2 wds.)
peninsula
4 0 Stylish
U 5 TD W
deciding how often to enjoy a
50
Call out
32 Wander
31 Civil W ar
43 Antique car
J ui cy steak broiled on the
D IN N 6 E
51
Do
farm work
3
3
Space
agency
initials (abbr.)
4 5 Infirmities
barbecue.
(abbr.)
52 Airline informa­
3 3 In no manner
4
7
Impolite
Because of your Interest in this 3 4 Shooting match
3 6 Domestic
tion (abbr.)
4 8 Supreme
topic. I'm sending you a free
(Fr.)
animal
Egyptian deity
53 Wide shoe site
copy of my Henlth Report on 35 Octane
by Bob Montana VIRUSES AND CANCER, which
numbers (abbr.)
tells about the latest discoveries 36 Beverage
3 7 First word on
In cancer research. Ot her
the wall
readers who want a copy should
send S I and their name aqd 3 8 Laboratory tube
4 0 Aged, as meat
uddress to P.O. Box 91428.
41 Play division
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be 4 2 Liquefy
sure to mention the title.
4 4 Of God (Let.)
DEAR DR. G O T T — I have an 4 6 Subordinate
ruler
allergy to cane sugar. How can I
50 Depressing
tell If wine, bourbon, brandy and
54 Baking pit
other alcohol are made with
55 List of persons
cane sugar?
56 Dregs
DEAR READER Simple
57 W hat's up,
sugar, made from cane or beets.
7
Is ubiquitous In our processed- 58 Tenth of a
by Howl# Schneider food culture. It is udded to many
decade
5 9 Enticing
1 foods for flavor. However, most
KSPTTt AfO INCREASE,
alcoholic beverages contain no 6 0 Chemical suffix SO SI SI
cane
sugar. Although some
iw a m w A R G i f o e ,
DOWN
wines are sweeter than others,
ss
FALSE. ADVERTISING,
this Is because of fruit sugar that
1 Jest
SB
RlPOfFS AND remains after fermentation. 2 Rubber
Sweet liqueurs may contain
trees
DECEPTIVE
3 Ethereal
sugar; It's hard to say. because
otis
(C )IB S 7 by NEA. Inc
LABEUWG

□

WIN A T BRIDGE

&gt;c
A-22

w©©

- o&amp; *L

MR. M EN ANO LITTLE M IS S

by Hargreaves &amp; Sellers

pi
(

THF&amp;VGH

a g a in

;

B y Jam es Jacoby
Since South was using stan­
dard bidding, his three-diamond
Jump raise was forcing. The
North hand was best suited for
no-trump, but the spade bolding
of 10-8-4-3 contained an uncer­
tain stopper. So the three-spade
cue-bid by North showed a
partial stop and asked South to
hid the no-trump game with J-x,
Q-x or anything better.
When the Jack of spades was
led. South mentally congratu­
lated himself on his fine bidding
to gel to the right contract. East
played the encouraging six of
spades at trtek one. and declarer
won the queen. He then played
to the heart king to take a
diamond finesse. When West
turned up with the diamond
king and another spade, the

defenders took live tricks*to set
the contract. Of course It was
unlucky that East did not hold
the diamond king, but declarer
did not play with proper caution.
Since there Is only a 50-50
chance that the finesse in
diamonds will be successful.
South should take precautions iu
ease the diamond king Is with
West. He assumes a five-card
sui t for E a s t ' s o ne- spade
overcall. II he allows the Jack or
spades to hold the trick, the
defenders can continue the suit,
but the 10 In dummy will be an
eventual stopper. Declarer can
then play diam onds at Ills
leisure, not earing whether West
holds the king, since West will
not have another spade to lead to
his partner.

NORTH

M l 17

♦ 10 8 4 3

BKf
♦ QJ 7 2
♦AK2
WEST
♦ J7
YJ9862
♦ K8 6
♦ 10 9 8

EAST
♦ A K 965
VtO 7 J
♦ 5

♦ QJ73
SOUTH
♦ Q2

*AQ5
♦ A 10 9 4 3
♦ 854
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
West

North

Pass
Pass

1♦
3♦
Pasa

East
1♦
Pass
Pass

South
3♦
3 NT

Opening lead: ♦ J

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

FRANK AND ERNEST

U. S. DEPT. OF
TAX
SIMPLIFICATION

by Bob Thaves

use
OTHER

NOT

La

AN

t
i

e n t r a n c e

©

GARFIELD

by Jim Davis

t
TUMBLEW EEDS
w e have

no

by T.K. Ryan
c u t t e r s w hat

tv w

* "

Y O U R B IR T H D A Y
J U N E 23. 1987
In the year ahead, you will be
more appreciated than ever In
your present field. Your abilities
will be acknowledged, and you’ll
receive deserved awards.
C A N C E R (June 21-July 22|
Assess situations logically and
realistically today, but also give
credence to your intuition. Your
perceptions can contribute to a
more w ell-rounded picture.
Know where to look for romance
and you'll find It. The AstroGraph Matchmaker set Instantly
reveals which signs arc roman­
tically perfect for you. Mall S2 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
L E O (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22) Be a
good listener today, even with
friends who tend to belabor their
points. Valuable information
could be Imparted and you'll

want to get the whole drill.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) An
This should be a pleasurable day
important personal objective can for you because you'll be in
be achieved today, provided gregarious mood. Olliers will
your approach Is flexible and enjoy being in your presence as
you're able to make alterations much as you'll dote on their
to suit new circumstances.
companionship.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Your
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
curiosity Is your most valuable Resourcefulness Is your prime
asset today. Use It constructively asset today. If necessary, you'll
to gain new knowledge about have the Ingenuity to alter a
things that affect your Im ­ situation that's headed up a
mediate needs.
blind alley.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
A R IES (March 21-April 19) If
Before getting yourself involved you want to talk to someone,
In a new arrangement today, don't wall for him to get In
step back and study tt to see If it touch. Pick up the phone and
fits Into your present schedule.
make the contact yourself.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
2I| You may have to contend T ry to use some of your time
with a critical situation today. today to put your paperwork In
Anal yze It carefully before order. Also, re-evaluate your
making a decision so that you're budget to see If you can get more
fully aware of all Its ramifica­ mileage from your dollars.
tions.
G E M IN I (May 21-June 20)
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan. You'll operate at peak efficiency
19) Tills Is a good day to discuss today If you have several
with co-workers a matter that challenges to keep you busy.
displeases you. Through a meet­ Bouncing from one thing to
ing of the minds a resolution can another shouldn't bother vou a
be found.
hit.

ANNIE
-ANNIE:? CCS IS
WHINING AV?. ^
WAR8UCKS.

MAYBE HE
YrANTS TO
oO OUT..

by Leonard Starr
nn t u mr
r&lt;J~ IJU6T

-0 (IT SANPY ALWAV5 KNOWS
WHEN ANNIE IS ON HEf? f—
WAY HOME. SHE SHOUtP \
ee HEKE any ------------ 1
A1i Nu T E / j

&gt; *
0 S S

9

•

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