<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/items/browse?collection=80&amp;output=omeka-xml&amp;page=24" accessDate="2026-05-20T17:48:20+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>24</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>260</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="22253" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21858">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/43025d3b64f3ed1cbce658c7f3bc2670.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d28cfa9e514f66d1227ffc90ba700fed</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222229">
                    <text>Cited As Model

Drug Task Force
Seeks Sweeping
Im provem ents
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer
Sweeping improvements In
drug abuse prevention efforts in
all the state's schools and com­
munities will be proposed to the
legislature this spring. T h e
proposals and accom panying
funding requests will come from
an 18-member task force the
Cabinet appointed last fall to
lo o k into d r u g a b u s e an d
dropout prevention.
The task force finds coordi­
nated efforts between the com­
munities and their schools must
be undertaken to fight substance
abuse. The committee also says
drug education should begin in
k in d e rg a rte n an d continu e
through 12th grade.
The 18-member task force
In c lu d e s t e a c h e r s , a d ­
ministrators. law enforcement
officials, representatives from
community agencies, an at­
torney and a school board
member. Although the group is
still wrapping up its efforts for a
mid-March presentation to the
state legislature, the Sanford
Herald has obtained a 30 page
report containing its preliminary
findings ana recommendations.
The report, compiled by state
staff. Is based on testimony ihe
task force received at public
hearings and meetings of task
force sub-committees. The De­
partment of Education staffers
were charged by the Cabinet
with assisting the task force
w h e n It w as a p p o in te d in
October.
"D rug abuse prevention must
be a high priority at every level."
the report states. "It must not be
a transient issue brought out
whenever a new and dangerous
drug appears. It must be a high
priority for funding and on
w h ic h h u m a n t a le n t s a r e
focussed."
Society presently hinders ef­
forts to address drug abuse
problems among young people,
the report states. According to
subcom m ittee fin d in gs an d
p u b lic te s t im o n y , th e se
obstacles Include insufficient
funding for necessary programs,
lack of comprehensive preven­
tion programs In most schools,
and "mixed messages" about
alcohol, tobacco and drugs,
given by schools, parents and
the media, the report states.
The task force held Its last
public hearing Thursday In Or­
lando. Among those testifying
was Seminole Schools Drug Re­
source officer Tom Roll.
The public hearings provided
task force members with Input
from their colleagues all over the
state, as well as students and
private citizens, according to
task force member Pat Lowe.
Mrs. Lowe, a media specialist

with the Monroe County School
district, said a "public aware­
ness campaign." coordinated by
the government, media, schools,
community agencies and citi­
zens will be recommended as a
result of task force hearings.
According to the staff report,
these messages "must be con­
sistent and emphasize posltlte
alternatives to the use of drugs
and alcohol.”
An Increase In the number of
community agencies and more
state funding for them Is also
necessary, Mrs. Low e said.
"M any people who need treat­
ment aren't getting in because
the waiting lists are so long. And
by the time they can get in. they
may very well be dead. Another
factor Is personal income, with
many of those who need the help
not seeking it because they can't
afford to."
The legislature or state De­
partment of Health and Re­
habilitative Services should
mandate treatment centers to
demonstrate the provision of
appropriate educational services
to school age clients as a re­
quirement for licenure. the re­
port states.
.......
A lso according to the report,
the legislature shbuld Increase
funding for program s such as

Teachers as Advisers. It should
also initiate other programs that
w ill r e s u lt in In s t r u c t o r s
"knowing students better and
creating a more positive, sup­
portive school climate." the re­
port states. The legislature
sh o u ld provide fun ding for
schools to hire more clerical
stafr. enabling school guidance
counselors "to engage in pre­
vention activities" and mandate
a minimum number of hours of
drug abuse prevention Instruc­
tion. in each of the grade groups.
K-3. 4-8 and 9-12. acccordlng to
the report. Individual school
districts should be given the
latitude in how and when such
Instruction is to be delivered, the
report states.
While all Florida schools are
offering some degree of sub­
stance abuse education, the
amounts vary, according to a
task force survey of 41 Florida
school districts.
The legislature should require
every teacher to receive a
minimum of six hours of drug
a b u s e prevention In-service
training every three years, the
report states. " A number of
persons testifying Indicated
many teachers cannot or do not
identify students who are using
drugs. Contributing factors In­
clude lack of training, unfamlllartty with the normal behaviors
of students and the varying
effects of various drugs."
See DR UO. page 8 A

TODAY
Rrlrinp
.... 6C
Business.......... .... 6A
Calendar.........
Classifieds...... 5B SB
Comics............
Coming Events .....3A
Crossword....... .... 6C
Dear Abby.......
Deaths............ .....BA
Editorial......... .....2D
Florida .
...7A
Horoscope.......

Hospital........... ...... 8A
N ation.............
Opinion............ ...... 3D
People.............. ..1C-3C
Religion.......... ...... SC
School Menus.. ...... 6A
Sports.............. .. 1B-5B
Television....... .......7C
Viewpoint....... .. 1D-4D
Weather ........ ...... 2A
W orld............. .......7A

o Saturday night banquet at the Sanford
C iv ic C en ter c u lm in a te s w eek of
celebrating the memory of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. with theme of "Peace
and Growth through Brotherhood."
o Justice Department reports that more
then half of violent crimes were com­
mitted by someone the victim knew, 8A.
• Road conditions in Seminole County
which may affect driving are cited, 6A.

v H M L
ERC

)H E

N«raM Mm Im by Tammy Vlacant

Manuel St. Victor (center at microphone)/ student at
Rock Lake Middle School, shares winning reading at
Martin Luther King celebration Youth Night as another
winner, Tina Wong, (far left) also a Rock Lake student,
listens. The other winner (not shown) was Leslie Gross

of Jackson Heights Middle School. Others on stage
(from left) are: Doris Thomas, producer/d Irector of
youth program, Whltey Eckstein, city commissioner,
Joe Williams, school board chairman, and Karen
Coleman, school board community relations director.

Y o u th
S in g ,D a n c e
In K in g C e le b r a tio n
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer
N e arly

200 o f S a n fo rd ’s

Luther King for three hours
Friday night at the clty'a civic
center. •

Their program, part of a
city-sponsored tribute to King,
was called "Joyous” and •’In­
spirational'' by many of the
400 local residents who at­
tended. The evening featured
bond awards for local students
and a more than two-hour play
about King's life, written and
directed by Doris Thomas.
Friday’s "Youth T ribu te"
marked the third time this
week Sanford’s black and white
c o m m u n itie s have Joined
together to celebrate King.•

" W e ’re on a roll," Mayor Bettye
Smith said Friday. “Another
outstanding event and a filled
house."
The mayor also says there’ll
be another King tribute nefct

drew about 350.
The city’s quartet of tribute
events wraps-up tonight, with a
banquet recognizing communi­
ty m em bers who live and
promote King's Ideals o f ’’Peace

year. "1 don't know how w e can

and Orowlh
Brotherhood."

r e la t e d s to r y , 4 A
top this, but we can certainly
work toward something Just as
terrific."
C o n s id e r in g a t t e n d a n c e
counts, this year's tribute has
gone over extremely well, of­
ficials say. About 750 citizens
were at the civic center Sun­
day. when the week-long King
celebration began with an in­
terdenom inational religious
observance. A tribute luncheon
with Pearl Bailey Wednesday

Through

T ick ets for the ban qu et
moved quickly, said tribute
planning commltce chairman
Dr. Lurlecn Sweeting. None
would be sold at the door
Saturday night.
Savings bonds for $50 each
were awarded Friday night to
the 14 winners of art. essay
and oritorlcal contests held at
Seminole County schools In
honor of King.
Master of
ceremonies for Friday night’s
program was Sylvester Wynn.
Sanford, a special education
instructor. Individual perfor-

Doris Thomas
manccs by young people "liv­
ing King's dream " of racial
harm ony featured solos by
Diane Bass and Shallna StafSce Y O U TH , page 8 A

Longwood Considers D
Disposal A lternatives
city hall at 175 W. Warren Ave..
following a 6:30 p.m. workshop
Longwood City Commission at which Pam Hastings, from the
will weigh two alternatives of Seminole County staff, will give
providing 600.000 gallons per a presentation on transportation
day sewage treatment capacity impact fees Interlocal agreement
for the city when It meets 7:30 which will be on the regular
agenda.
p.m. Monday.
Waller. In a memo to the
City Administrator Rod Waller
is recommending to the com­ commission, said the advantages
mission that the city connect to to connecting to the Seminole
the Sem inole County sewer County sewer system are that
system In spite of a conclusion the city w ill obtain use of
by consulting engineers to tilt- Candyland Park, the city will not
contrary. Dyer. Riddle. Mills, have the burden of running a
and P re c o u rt have r e c o m ­ small sewage plant, and the city
m e n d e d th e G ra n t S t r e e t will have a better opportunity of
Treatment Plant would be more obtaining more sewage capacity
once the first 600.000 gallons Is
advisable.
The meeting will be held at used.

•

By Jane C asselberry
H erald S ta ff W rite r

The disadvantages of con­ years.
The commission Is scheduled
necting to Seminole County,
according to Waller, are that the to decide between contracting
estimated costs of connecting to w ith S e m in o le C o u n ty for
the county are greater than treatm ent at Its Greenwood
estimated costs of building their Lakes Facility or building Its
own 600.000 gallon per day
own plant.
"Rate Increases are definite If Grant Street Plant ns originally
planned.
&lt;
w e c o n n e c t to S e m in o le
Ronald T. Fcrland. operations
County." Waller said. Waller
urges that the commission raise manager for Dyer. Riddle, re­
rates and fees from time to time commended In his summary
In order to pay debts and t h a t , f r o m a f i n a n c i a l
expenses, hire an engineering perspective, selection o f the
firm to prepare a mister sewer Grant Street Plant Is more "fi­
plan so that they will know nancially prudent and stable
when they can connect custom­ a lt e r n a t iv e b e c a u s e w h ile
ers. and sell all of the 275.000 Seminole County alternative is
gallons of remaining capacity extremely attractive from a qualwithin the next four or five
See D IS P O S A L , page 8 A

M icro su rge ry Restores Hand
By Susan Loden
H erald S ta ff W rite r

A Central Florida man lost more to a robber
than his possessions when the Intruder knocked
him out and left him to remain unconclous for 48
hours In his home.
For those 48-hours he lay on his right arm. By
the time he awoke, because of a lack of blood flow
to his hand, the muscles that flex the wrist,
thumb and fingers, were dead. His right hand was
virtually useless.
For about three months following the incident,
the 32-year old man. who insists on maintaining
his privacy, grappled with the handicap of his
damaged hand. He couldn't work. He couldn't
perform simple functions, such as buttoning his
clothing, which are taken for granted, but. which
require a hand that moves freely and can open
and close.
But an Innovative microsurgery, performed for
the first time in Florida In Orlando Jan. 9. is
apparently successful and he is expected to
regain use of his right hand.
That's according to Andrea Ellscu. spokesman
for the Jewett Orthopaedic Clinic, which has an
office in South Seminole Community Hospital in
Longwood.

Dr. George White of the Jewett Clinic, trained
in the procedure at Johns Hopkins, performed the
surgery at Sand Lake Hospital, a division of
Orlando Regional Medical Center.
The mlcrovascular surgery, which Involves
replacing dead muscles in the hand with heathly
muscle tissue taken from the back, was devel­
oped In Canada over the last few years. It should.
Ms. Ellscu said, give hope to others in this area
who have hands mangled and rendered useless.
The surgery on the robbery victim Is believed to
be the 11th such surgery attempted. It was the
first ever In the state and the first attempted by
White. Without the surgery. Ms. Ellscu said, there
was no hope for the recovery of the use of the
patient's hand. But now, except for a scar. It
appears that he will recover full use of his hand,
she said.
"It's Important for local people who may need
this surgery to know they don't have to be
shipped off to get this special procedure. It's
available here." Ms. Ellscu said. " I f there is an
accident that causes traumatic damage to the
hand there Is hope locally. Dr. White has been
here since July."
See H AND , page 8 A

I
m * ■»

�M M f

FI.

**d **S 4

IN R R E F

Small Plane Apparently
Strayed Into Commuter
|g !

Faulty Light* Bring* Cocaine
In Automobile To Light
Sanford police who stopped a car with a faulty tall light
and turn signal on Airport Boulevard at about 9:30 p.m.
arrested both the driver and the passenger after 91.500
worth o f crack cocaine was reportedly found under the
front floor mat of the car.
The driver. Mack Cotton Jr.. 25. of P.O. Box 171 Lake
Monroe St.. Sanford, was first arrested for violating
restrictions on his driver's license. His car was Impounded
and searched and the cocaine found. That brought the
' additional charge o f possession of cocaine for Cotton as
well as for the passenger. Camlllo Ju' Mesco. 28. of Port A
Prince. Haiti.
Ju* Mesco was being held In lieu of 98.000 bond and
Cotton has been released on 91.000 bond to appear in
court Feb. 2.

Elderly Women Attacked
Hlldred Frances Allen, 75. of 4680 Orange Blvd.,
Sanford, reported to sheriff's deputies that a man who
came to her front door at about 1:35 p.m. Thursday forced
his way Into her home and tried to choke her.
Ms. Allen said the man first asked for her brother when
she saw him on the porch of her home. From behind a
locked screen door she told the man her brother wasn't at
home. He began talking to her and she became nervous. He
asked If he could borrow 910 and when she said no the
man pulled the door open, grabbed Ms. Allen and pushed
her to the floor.
She began screaming and he grabbed her by the throat
and told her to shut up or he would hurt her. She
continued to scream and he choked her and said, 'i 'l l kill
you." Ms. Allen stopped screaming and the man released
her and fled. She went to a nearby business and called the
Seminole County Sheriffs Department. Ms. Allen was
treated at the scene by rescue workers. Deputies have a
description of a suspect.

Driving Under Influence Arrests
The following persons have been arrested In Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
—Wesley Thomas Cooper. 23. of 1015 Magnolia Ave.,
Sanford, was arrested at 6:32 p.m. Thursday after his car
was In an accident on County Road 427, Longwood.
—Raul Jose Quintero, 28, Orlando, at 3:36 a.m. Thursday
after he was seen driving erratically on State Road 436,
Altamonte Springs. His car was clocked traveling over 80
mph In a 45 mph zone. A 9-millimeter automatic pistol was
found under the driver's seat of the car and he was also
charged with carrying a concealed weapon. Bond was set
at 91.000. an Altamonte Springs police report said.

Burglaries And Thefts Reported
Russell Norman Chapin. 76, of 501 Goodrldge Lane, Fem
Park, reported to sheriffs deputies that a $4,500 diamond
ring was stolen from his home between Jan. 12 and
Thursday.
Lovett Lee Thomas, 35, of 2010 Old Lake Mary Road.
Lake Mary, gave sheriffs deputies the name of a suspect
vhd may have stolen his car keys while he was asleep at
“ *— jc Thursday. The thief drove away with Thomas'

Perry Vmri Carrol. 23. o f 200 Fem Park Blvd., *2070.
* Fem Park, reported to sheriff's deputies that a survival
knife, a belt and holster, a night stick, handcuffs, a wallet

and an Indlalantlc voluntcr firefighter’s badge with a
combined value of about 9200 were stolen from his home
after Nov. 25. He reported the loss Thursday.
A $470 go kart and a $200 mini bike were stolen from
the Maitland Flea Market. U.S. Highway 17-92, north of
Maitland, between Oct. 1, 1985, and June 30. 1986. Judy
Ann Smith. 35. of 240 Oxford Road »16F, Fern Park,
reported her loss to Seminole County sheriffs deputies
Thursday. She said she had determined that the go kart
had been sold to Lll 500, a mini race track near the flea
market. Lll 500 officials said they had gotten a bill of sale
for the kart and resold it.
Mario L. Jones, 20, of 326 DePugh St., Altamonte
Springs, reported to sheriffs deputies Thursday that
between Oct. 22 and Thursday $500 worth of tools and
about $600 worth of other items were stolen from his car in
storage at Mike's Fina on Fern Park Boulevard, Fern Park.

Sanford Fire Calls
Sanford firefighters have responded to the following
calls, details based on department reports:
THURSDAY
— 9:13 p.m.. 1308 W. Eighth Street, rescue. A 39-year-old

man received a cut on his cheek and mouth, reportedly in a
fight. He was left In the care of Sanford police after survey.
— 9:54 p.m., 127 Robin Court, rescue. A 41-year-old man
was transported to the hospital by private vehicle for
treatment of a cut over his eye.
— 10:05 p.m.. 403 Willow Ave., rescue. A 62-year-old man
was assisted back Into bed after a fall.
F R ID A Y

—3:01 a.m.. 2734 Orlando Drive, rescue. A 39-year-old
man was left with Sanford police after rescue survey for a
cut on his head and swollen Jaw.
— 6:24 a.m.. 1107 W. 10th. Street, rescue. A Sanford
woman, no age given, reportedly fainted. She declined
hospital transport.

A ccident V ictim 's
Condition Serious
A Lyman High School student
is in serious condition today at
Orlando Regional Medical Center

(USPS 411 n o t

Sunday, January 18, 1987
Vol. 79. No. 126
P ub lish'd D o ily and Sunday, o ico p t
Saturday by Tha Sanford Harold,
Inc. 100 N. F rtn c h A v t., Sanlord.
Fla. 12771.
Second Claes Pottage Paid a t Sanlord,
Florida 12771
Home Delivery: Month, M.75; 1 Months.
114.21; 4 M onths. 127.00; Year,
111.00. By M a il: Month. 14.71; 1
Months. 120.21; 4 Months. 127.00;
Year, Uf.OO.
Phone (1011 122 2411.

i*

following a 7 a.m. Friday bus
stop acciden t at A ltam on te
Springs.
In Intensive care is Timothy A.
Shiver, a sophomore, o f 573
Caliber Crest Parkway, a hospi­
tal spokesman said.
According to school district
spokesm an Karen Colem an.
Shiver was struck by a vehicle
while going to a bus stop near
Center Street at Montgomery
Road.
No charges have been filed
against the driver of the vehicle.
Barbara Malcalm, 34. of 100
Ronnie St., Altamonte Springs,
according to a police report. The
accident, however, is under in­
vestigation.
Further details of the accident
were not available Saturday
from Altamonte Springs Police.

KEARNS. Utah (UP!) - Feder­
al and state Investigators Friday
began trying to learn why a
private plane, apparently un­
tracked by radar, Invaded re­
stricted airspace and crashed
Into a commuter plane, killing
all 10 people aboard the two
aircraft.
D oom ed S k y w e st A irlin es
Flight 1834, carrying six pas­
sengers and two crewmen, col­
lided Thursday with a light
plane flown by a student pilot
aijd his Instructor in the first
fatal U.S. nild-alr crash Involving
a commercial craft since last
Aug. 31.
. Flight 1834 had Just gone Into
a restricted airspace, called the
Radar Service Area, about 1 p.m.
M S T an Its fin a l la n d in g
approach to Salt Lake Interna­
tional Airport, the Federal Avia­
tion Administration said.
T h e single-engine Mooney
private plane was practicing
takeoffs and lan din gs from
Airport No. 2, 10 miles south of
Salt Lake International, and ap­
p a r e n t ly s tr a y e d Into the
airspace restricted to planes
landing at the bigger airport.
Air traffic controllers can grant
special permission for "other
traffic” to fly through the re­
stricted airspace, said FAA
spokesman Tom Doyle.
"T h e Skywest aircraft was on
radar vector. But, at this point In
time, we have no determination
that we had ever talked to the
Mooney." Doyle said.

Bodies and debris rained over
a 40-block area of suburban Salt
L a k e C o u n ty fo llo w in g the
mid-air crash. Nobody on the
ground was killed or injured, but
numerous homes in Kearns, 10
miles southwest of downtown.
Salt Lake City, were damaged.
Airport officials said con­
trollers had no Idea that more
than one plane was In the area
because the Mooney apparently
did not show up on radar In the
safety zone extending from an
elevation of about 1.600 feet to
2.600 feet above the ground.
The last fatal mld-alr collision
In the United States occurred
last _Aug.. 31 wfien an AeromexJco DC-9 collided with a singleen gine p lan e over Cerritos,
Calif., killing 82 people, Includ­
ing 15 on the ground.
National Transportation Safety
Board. F A A and FBI agents
Investigated the Utah accident.
Officials said the "black box’*
flight Information recorder from
the commuter plane and re­
corded conversations between
Skywest and the air traffic con­
trol tower would be used to
determine what led to the col­
lision. "Sometime tonight we’ll
have the review meeting to see
what the team found today."
said Alan Furman of the Na­
tional Transportation Safety
Board. "After everything — the
facts, the Information — has
been gathered, we’ll have a
hearing sometime In the future
Into the probable cause."

Salt Lake County Sheriff's
deputies battled w ind chill
factors of 35 degrees below zero
T h u rsd ay night and Friday
morning patrolling the wreckage
scattered over the working class
neighborhoods where plane and
body ports landed.
"W e ’ll be trying to Identify
each victim." said Sheriff's Lt.
Garth Beckstead. "W e'll try to
piece together them together If
at all possible."
Although Skywest planes had
been Involved In two near mid­
air, collisions during the post
year. Thursday's crash was the
first fatal sm ash u p In the
airline's 15-year history.
The two in-flight incidents,
each Involving a Skywest craft
and a private plane, occurred
last February over Los Angeles.
In both coses, the pilots of the
other planes had their licenses
reviewed, according to federal
officials.
The death toll from the mld-alr
collision could have been worse,
officials said. But at least 11
passengers were turned away
from the Skywest flight at a stop
In Idaho Falls. Idaho, because a
faulty piece of equipment needed
to be fixed.
The plane flew empty, except
for the crewmen, to Pocatello,
Idaho, where the malfunctioning
switch was repaired and six
passengers boarded Flight 1834
for Salt Lake. The repairs put the
commuter two hours behind
schedule.

T ALLAH ASSEE (UPD A
21-year-old West Palm Beach
man w a s being held without
bond Friday on charges he
threatened the life of Gov. Bob
Martinez, state agents said.
Bret Allen Bcdnar was taken
Into custody Jan. 6 . Inaugura­
tion day. after he attracted the
attention of security officers
during swearing-in ceremonies,
said Jack Fenwick, director of
ex e cu tiv e serv ices for the
Florida Department of Law
Enforcement.
Fenwick said Bcdnar was
removed from the Capitol cer­
emonies and committed for
psychiatric observation under
the B ak er Act. C h arges of
threatening a public official
were filed against him W ed­
nesday baaed on statements he
made while under evaulatlon.
Fenwick declined to) divulge
details o f the state's case
against the suspect.
"In essence, he threatened to
kill the governor." Fenwick
said. "It’s hard to know what
his real beef Is."
Bednar was being held in the
Leon County Jail.
It was the first Instance In
which someone was arrested
for t h r e a t e n in g M a rtin e z .
Former Governor Bob Graham
was the subject of several such
cases.

WEATHER
Nation Tem peratures
City s F ortcatt
A lbuqutrqu*in
Anchorage pc
Athavlllacy
Atlanta cy
Billings pc
Birmingham cy
Boston sy
Browmvlll# Ttx.cy
Buffalo pc
Burlington Vf. sy
Charleston S.C. r
Charlotte N.C.cy
Chicago sn
Cincinnati cy
Cleveland pc
Columttus'cy
Dallas r
o*nv«rpc

OmHOHekm
S S X 8 --

eipwom

Hi Le

7t 15
40 21
44 41
52 47
1* 12
54 4f
44 15
41 41
22 I t
23 -7
51 at
57 41
30 25
25 25
X 21
34 21
42 22

For Central Florida

To

.x

A r e a F o re c a st

.93

.10
.03

r- I

.01

13-10

!S
J l . &lt;&gt;„
17 4

*

.’io

39 33
42 13
7t 47
57 S3
32 24
54 4f
44 54
22 21
40 X
45 35
54 34
X 22

X
.19

03

.12

51 22

7t 71
25 I t
14 12
43 37
St 54
.70
X 22
34 23
*W
22 14
.02
52 24
44 31
34 X
X 2
X 23
44 14
47 X ‘ .04
34 X
.03
55 X
53 29

M IA M I (UPI) — Florida 24-hour lamperaturas and ra ln la lla tta m. EDT today:
City:
HI Le Rein
Apalachicola
41 X 1.35
Crestvlew
X X 0.14
Daytona Beach
40 42 0 00
Fort Lauderdale
40 4t 0.00
Fort Myers
43 45 0.00.
Gainesville
71 43 0.15
Jacksonville
44 X O X
Key West
42 71 0.00
Lakelend
41 44 0.00
M lem l
43 70 0 00
Orlando
42 44 0.00
Pensacola
St X 1.24
Sarasota Bradanton
40 41 0.00
Tallahassae
14 X 0.00
Tampa
74 47 0.14
Vero Baach
43 44 OX
West Pelm Beech
43 43 O.X

Moon Phases
Jan. 14

First
Fab. 5

Tees.

.14

F lo rid a T e m p e ra tu re s

Last
Jan. 14

Ptly Cldy

'.oi
.02

pc partly cloudy
r rain
ah showers
im smoke
sn-snow
sy sunny
ts-thunderstorms
w windy

COOES
c clear
clclearlng
cy cloudy
f fair
ty foggy
h i hate
nvnlsstng

Ptly Ctdy

Ptlv Oldv

Friday’s high temperature in
Sanford was 81 degrees and the
low during the past twenty-four
hours was 62 degrees. No rain­
fall recorded.

M

54 I t

Evansville cy
Hertford sy
Honolulu pc
Houston sh
Indianapolis cy
Jackson Miss, cy
Jacksonville cy
Kansas City sn
Las Vegas f
Little Rockcy
Los Angslss sy
Louisville cy
Memphis r
M iam i Beach sy
Milwaukee cy
Mlnneepollscy
Nashville cy
New Orleans r
New York sy
Oklahoma City r
Omaha cy
Philadelphia sy
Phoenix I
Pittsburgh pc
PortlandMe. sy
PorttandOre. sy
Providence sy
Richmond cy
SI. Louis sn
San Francisco sy
Washington pc

Five-Day Forecast

Pep

Loca l R e p o rt

Full
Fab. 11

Beach C o n d itio n s
D aytons Beach: Waves arc

flat, maybe 1 fool. Current is
slightly to the north with a
temperature of 59 degrees. New
Sm yrn a Beach: Waves are 1 to
2 feet and glassy. Current Is
slightly to the north: Water
temperature. 56 degrees. Sun
screen factor: 12.

Canadian Blast
Chills C alifornia
United P re s s International

A record-breaking Canadian
cold front pushed into the West
today, threatening to drop
temperatures below freezing In
Southern California, while a
snowstorm that buried the
Rockies In up to 5 feet of snow
moved into the Plains.
The cold air. carried by a
wayward Canadian Jetstream
t h a t c u r v e d
uncharacteristically southward,
broke low temperature records
In six cities across four Western
states Friday.
Freeze warnings were posted
as far south as San Diego,
where temperatures could drop
Into the 20s In the inland
valleys, the National Weather
Service said. San Diego’s high
Friday was 53 degrees, tying a
99-year-oid record for the col­
dest high temperature for the
date.
In Los Angeles, Mayor Tom
Bradley and the Salvation
Army made a joint plea Friday
for donations of blankets for
the homeless.
B r a d l e y s a id d o n a t e d
blankets will be picked up at
the 104 fire stations across the
city and distributed to the
c i t y ’ s h o m e le s s m en and
women.
Dozens o f Los Angeles home­
less endured a frigid night
T h u r s d a y in m a k e s h i f t
cardboard structures along the
sid ew a lk w h en th ey were
turned away from missions
filled to capacity.
Southern Californians ac­
customed to donning only a
sweater or light jacket for their
winter commute to work dug
Into the backs of their closets
for coats, scarves and gloves,
and leaned Into the whistling
wind that was expected to gust
to 60 mph in the southed.
Sierra Nevada.
California Highway Patrol
Sgt. Mark Lunn said the cold
snap has made cars hard to
start.
"Starting my own car at 4:50,

a.m. (Friday) morning, I heard
noises I’ve never heard In an
automobile before," said Lunn.
who lives In Canyon Country In
northern Los Angeles County.
"It took a minute and a half
for the oil to wake up and
lubricate the engine.”
Snow tapered off across Col­
orado and A rizon a today,
except for the higher eleva­
tions. as the storm moved Into
the Plains.
Snow fell today from the
southern Rockies into Kansas,
Oklahoma. Texas and Missouri,
w ith m ore than 6 Inches
forecast for northern sections of
Oklahoma and up to 8 inches
expected in northwest and
southwest Texas.
Wichita, Kan., was hit with 7
Inches of snow Friday night,
and 2 to 4 inches blanketed
much of the rest of the state.
On Thursday, the storm
buried the tiny town of Rye,
Colo., beneath 5 feet of snow,
and Denver was hit with 17
Inches. Schools In Denver were
closed Friday for the second
straight day.
The storm unleashed 42 in­
ches of snow In Los Alamos,
N.M., where all roads In and
out of the city were cut off for a
time Friday.
Other snowfall totals In­
cluded 26 Inches at Wolf Ca­
nyon, N.M .. 24 Inches at
Westllffe. Colo., 20 inches at
Happy Jack. Ariz.. and 12
Inches at Montlccllo. Utah.
T h e C a n a d ia n c o ld a ir
pushed temperatures below
zero Friday from Montana to
Minnesota, and gusty winds
dropped the wind chill reading
to 70 below zero at Vedauwoo,
Wyo.
Icy roads were blamed for
two traffic deaths in West
Texas Friday night, where the
temperature dipped into the
teens.
Travelers advisories were
posted for slick roads in Texas
and four other states.

Today...variable cloudiness
and warm with a chance of
showers or thunderstorms. High
In the mid 70s lo near 80. Wind
southwest around 10 mph. Rain
chacne 30 percent.
Tonight...partly cloudy with
some locally dense fog likely.
Low In the low to mid mid 60s.
Light south wind increasing tO
10 to 15 mph late tonight.
Sunday...mostly sunny breezy
and warm. High In the low to
mid 80s. Wind south 15 to 20
mph.

A r e a Readings
The temperature at 8 a.m.: 68;
overnight low: 64: Friday’s high:
82; barometric pressure: 30.00;
relative humidity: 93 percent;
winds: South at 10 mph; rain:
None; Today’s sunset: 5:53 p.m.,
Tom orrow’s sunrise: 7:19 a.m.

E x te n d e d Forecast
The extended forecast, Mon­
day through Wednesday, for
Florida, except the northwest. Is
for a warm period except a little
cooler extreme north Tuesday
and Wednesday. Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers central
and north monday and only over
th e n o r t h e r n p a r t o f th e
peninsula Tuesday and W ed­
nesday. Lows in the 50s north
and 60s south but near 70 In the
Keys except 40s extreme north
Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs
averaging In the 70s but around
80 southern peninsula and 60s
extrem e north Tuesday and
Wednesday.

M ONDAY:

D ayto n s

Beach:

highs. 10:34 a.m.. 10:54 p.m.;
lows. 3:56 a.m.. 4:33 p.m.: N ew
S m yrn a Beach: highs. 10:39
a.m.. 10:59 p.m.: lows, 4:01
a.m., 4:38 p.m.; B ayport: highs,
2:55 a.m., 3:51 p.m.; lows. 9:36
a.m.. 9:08 p.m.

B o atim

St Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
T o d a y . . . w i n d s o u th w e s t
around 10 kts. Seas 2 to 3 ft. Baj
and Inland waters a light chop.
few showers north part.
Tonight...wind variable moslt}
southeast to south less than 1(
kts becoming south 10 to 15 kt:
late tonight. Seas 2 ft or les;
building to 2 to 4 ft late tonight
Bay and inland waters smootl
becoming a light to moderate b]
morning.

�COMING EVENTS
satubdat.jan . it
.S a n fo r d Women'* A A . 1201
•W. First St., 2 p.m., closed.
; Narcotics Anonymous, 8 p.m.
;The Grove Counseling Center,
•580 Old Sanford/Oviedo Road
;(offSR 419), Winter S p rin g .
{ World Religion Day program
;by Baha'i* of Seminole County,
;7 p.m., community room at
rPublix, Jamestown Place, State
Road 434. Altamonte Springs.
(Speakers will be Benjamin Levy
:on Judaism; Dr. David Cloason
;on Christianity; Shahla Evans on
‘Islam. Music and refreshments.
:Open to the public.
: Sanford AA. 1201 W . First S t .
noon and 8 p.m., open dlsicusslon.
t Casselberry AA Step, 8 p.m.,
[Ascension Lutheran Church,
(Ascension Drive (off Overbrook).
iCasselberiy.
I Sanford Grace A A 11th Step
((c lo s e d ), 8 p .m ., W e k l v a
•Assembly of God, Longwood.
S U N D A Y , J A N . 18
; 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), comer Howell
IBranch &amp; Dodd Road. Golden*
Irod.
■ REBOS AA, 5:30 (closed) and 8
•p.m. (open). Rebos Club, 130
•Normandy Lane, Casselberry.
• Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m.
•The Grove Counseling Center,
•580 Old Sanford/Oviedo Road
•(off SR 419), Winter Springs.
I Sanford Family Group Alanon
[meeting, 8 p.m., Christ United
(Methodist Church, County Road
i427 and Tucker Rd.. Sanford.
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30
p.m., closed, 8 p.m., step, 130
•Normandy Road, Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos at noon, closed.
Central Florida Jazz Society.
2-5 p.m..Chris’ House of Beef.
John Young Parkway north of
Hwy. 50, Orlando.
M O ND AY, J A N . 19
Cardiovascular screening. 8
a.m. to 5 p.m.. County Health

S e m in o le C h a p te r F lorida
A u d u b o n S o c ie t y . 2 p .m .,
Florida Power A Light Sunshine
Room, Myrtle Avenue, Sanford.

Bernard Yokel, Florida Audubon
p r e s id e n t s w ill ap eak on
’•Wetland* and the Future pf
Florida” .
Lengwood Health Care Center,
1520 G ra n t Street, F a m ily
C o u n cil M eetin g 2 p .m . A
speaker from the Hospice Pro­
gram o f Central Florida will offer
help for families with members
going through the final stages of
life. Further inform ation at
339-9200.
W B D N B S llA T .J A lf.2 S
Agri-Business Committee or­
ganizational supper and plann­
ing session. Greater Sanford
Chamber o f Commerce. 400 E.
First St. Reservations to 3222212 by Jan. 23.

Those on Social Securtty are certified for a
oi o n e jtcju • w i g i k c q proof n u n u i c y u v e
in Seminole County, phis a statement o f their
Income or a copy of a check.
All other* are certified for a period o f three
montha.
Those who receive Food Stamps, must bring a
letter to that effect from Food Stamp officials,
Those who are receiving A.F.D.C.. S.S.I., or
Medicaid must show their valid Medicaid card.
Those who receive none o f the above must
make a statement as to their Income and sign It,
Commodities will still be distributed at the
Salvation Arm y In Sanford. Altamonte Chapel In
Altam onte S p rin gs an d C h u lu o ta H all In
Chuluota.

Involved, It is necessary certification be done in
advance. Salvation Array officials announced.
U.S. Government surplus food is made avail­
able to low income households In cooperation
with the Federal Government, through the State
of Florida.
It Is a requirement o f the Federal Government
that individuals or households receiving com­
modities be certified by income criteria before
receiving surplus food items, the officials said.
U n d er the n ew policy, to be certified or
re-certlfled, an Individual must go to the
Salvation Army. 700 W. 24th St. in Sanford.
Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. until 11 a.m.
This must be done in the month proceeding the

pcnoa

AMERICA’S FAMILY DRUG STORE
C"

REALTY
TRANSFERS
Pin* Crov* Holding Corp to Igor Taplltsky
&amp; WF Lilian, L ti 14 A 103 Greenspolnlt.
U1.500
Richmond A m tr Horn** to Su* E lltn C
Baird a. Harny N Collar &amp; WF Jacqualyn, Lt
22 Blk 2 Tha Reserve At Tha Crossing* Ph 1,
*27,000
Richmond Amer Homes to Mai Salt &amp; WF
Alina. Lt t« Blk A. Balia Mead* Un 2. *147,700
Richmond A m tr Homo* to Rofcart A Delay
&amp; WF Marilou. L t 2 Blk 2 Tha Reserve At The
Crossing*. Ph t, *71.200
Richmond A m tr Homes to Eugene H
Oiclor &amp; WF Mary L. Lt 1 Blk 3, The Reserve
At The Crossings. Ph I. *71.400
Amer Fin to Luann M Niemann, Lt t*4
Weklva Cove Ph 4. *122,400
Robarta J Rend*I Tr to Thomas S Jackson
J r &amp; Lisa C, Lt I t 1st Repl Highland H ill*.
(71.000
Charles Stansel A WF Edith to Daniel D
Haver A WF JoAnn* L, Lt 141 Wyndham
Woods Ph2, *71,000
Richmond Am ar Homes to Annl# R
McDowell, Lt *2 Country Lane, *73,000
Thomas F LeBlanc A WF V Lea to Frank J
Baldwin A WF Dorothy M, Lt 10 Apple Valley
Un 4. *122.000
Frank Baldwin A Dorothy to David M
Vlllemaln A WF Batty J. L t 10 Apple Un 4,

TUSSY
/ 8011 ON “
Wl-PfRSPlRAb

SO LIO

Anti-Perspirant
D eod o ran t

ruumtnrtt

to ssy

(122.000

Frank J Baldwin A WF Dorothy to Thomas
F LeBlanc A WF Nina L. Lt 23 Blk C St Johns
River Ests, *115.000
Rebecca Gutierrez et at to Ary D Bond A
WF Kimberly A. Lt 7 Blk E Fosmoor Un 1,
*74.500
Richard M Flgler A WF Rebecca to
Dermott L Lindo A WF Bridgat T, Lt 31 Blk A
River Run Secl.*S4.000
Patrick M Hogan A WF Wilma to Mlchaal C
Phipps A WF Susan I, Lt 13 B lk C.
Sweetwater Oaks, *120,000
Calton Homes to Raymond M Ambrosa A
WF Patricia, Lt 43 Woodland T arr At Country
Creek. (132.100
Ahmed A Sheriff A WF Regina to Luis
Sergio A WF Concepcion. Lt IS Blk A Oakland
Ests 1st Sec. *74.300
Richmond Amer Homes to Joseph Fuccl A
WF Madeline, Lt 21 Blk 1 The Reserve At The
Crossings P h i. *13.000
Carl D Smlldsln A WF Theresa to Donald R
Mellott. LI 42 Wlndtre* West. *76.300
Howard D Mullen Sr A Dorothy to Douglas
E Maukonen A WF Debra A, Lt 24 Oviedo
Oaks U n i, *80,500
Genaral Homas to M lllord C Bray A WF
Arlana C. Lt 43 Blk A, Lakewood at tha
Crossings UN 2. St It, 100
Greatar Constr to Christophar A Me Ingot A
WF Debra A Lawrenca A WF Linda, LI 177
Mandarin Sac 6. *137,TOO
Kensington Park Ltd to D Thurlow Spurr A
WF Noran L, Un *04 Kensington Park Ph II,
Cond. *77,100
Anden Grp to Farnando Lopez A WF M ary,
LI l6«OrangtGrova ParkUn 4.171,100
Gallimora Homas Inc to Phung D Vu. Un 3
Bldg 11, Douglas Canter Cond. (333.300
Jack A Taylor A WF Em ily to Richard M
J ttt A WF Mary. Lt 10 Forest Creek Ests.
*151.500
Alois Bebler to William Povaromo A WF
Arlene. Lt 29 Sec 2 Weklva Golf Villas. SM.700
John Rais/, frusta* to Edward Melxsall A
WF Jean, land In Sac 27 2d27, *127.700
Polyak Corp to Gloria Vala. Un 3 Bldg H
Goldenrod Villas Cond. *43,200
Leon A Reich A WF Victoria to M ark A
Sllgar A WF Rabtcca, LI 226 Woodcrast Un 1,
*71.300
Darrell Deer to Garry L Carnes A WF
Diane. Lt 74 Sausalito Sec 3, *43.500
L Ray McDonald A WF Marya to Staven E
Kactor A Lori E, Lt 3 Tuikawllla Un 13.
*142.200
.Feather Edge Jt Van to Aldridge A Vaillant
A WF Suad K. Un 5D. Feather Edge Cond Ph
11, *77,700
John Sansbury A Lynn to Community
Presbytarian Church ol Lk M ary Inc, Lt*
17-22 Blk 21 Crystal Laka W inter Homes,
(47,200
Village Marketplace ol Lk M ary Ltd to
Paul H Llljastrand A WF Batty, part of Lts 23
A24 etc Lake Minnie Ests. *1,577.000
Cushman Entr to Georga W Draughon A
WF Dale. Lt 40 Ravensbrook 2nd tddn,
*2(7.700
Winter Spgs Dev to Magnolia Svc Corp,
from Intersec Wlnt Spgs Blvd A Northern Wy,
Winter Spgs Un Four, *2.750,000
M E D Prop Inc to Bill Nuckoll* Cars Inc,
Land In Lt 7 Blk EE. Laka Eller. Addn CB.
( I I I . 100
Barbara Green A HB Robert to Julia A T ilt
A HB Lawrence E Jr, LI 13 Prairie Lk
Heights. *42.200
Centex Homes to Wilbur D Creason A WF
Helen J. Lt 77 Replat Grovevlaw Village,
*45.400
Ryan Homes to Carl W itt A WF Vera Mae,
Lt 24 Harbour Isle, *74.400

REGULAR

c * * tA M D E O O O b a *
n i x ’ *'

roowM*!

lossy cream cx soud 2-oz, roll-on
2&gt;4-Oi. ot stick 2V.-OZ.

Crest 46-oz. regular, gel. mint or
tartar control

5* x r door box picture frame.
Reg. 159

rn . a

1

1

S J

1

*
i

9

FLEX FLEX
JX«?

ISaz. | ISoz.|

Benodryl capsules or tablets
24-pack oi elixir 4-oz.

Poppycock 5-oz. cannlster.

M a s s i audta tape UR 90mtnu»e
2-pock.

I ■ #

#

This year, your tax p re p a ra tio n c a n b e easier w ith h e lp
from your Eckerd Pharm acist. O ur C om p-U -C are’\
c o m p u te riz e d p re scrip tio n re co rd m eans you can:
• G e t a p rin t-o u t o f your pre scrip tio n records (or tax.
M e d ic a re o r Insurance purposes In Just 24 hours.
A n d C o m p-U -C are'- helps you a ll year long. It:
• Assists our Pharm acist In w atching tor drug Interactions
a n d a lle rg ic reactions w hen fillin g your prescriptions.
• M eans you c a n g e t a refill In arty Eckerd D rug Store.
Com p4J-C are'* is available in most Eckerd Stores Rety on
us tor your pharm acy care .a t tax tim e and all year lo n g

each

Photo C alendar with
i ‘ « r

In ta rg o m o n t

Bring In *aur favorite cokx
negatives o* slide*. Wte'B
enlarge them to 5* x 7‘
nt* and mount them
side a 1987 calendar
Coupon good ttxu V77/87

e

Ickerd

Flex shampoo or conditioner
15-02. spray 8-oz or mousse 5-oz.

PKOS.
W
ECKIRO longlife "C" or "D"
2-pack or 9-volt 1-pock.

System 2
Color Ref
Get regut

sized reprints
paper from
your color negatives
Coupon good thru 1/27/87.

To an lekord Mtarmocltl, nothing'* more Important than your hea/th.

We reserve the right to Itmtt quantities. All manufacturers' rebates are limited to one per customer
Not all Hems available In Shoppers Drug Mart stores.

r

eM *

Conalr 1250-watt dryer #065
or 3 In 1 curling Iron #CB500
Reg. 19.99

�Rood Work This Week
Mara era tha protects In Seminole County that may affect the flow of traffic:

■ iM
Cypress Way be­
tween Concord Drive and
Melody Lane. Paving and
drainage work scheduled to
start Monday.
Two-way
traffic on one-lane. Jurisdic­
tion: Casselberry.

State Road 434 and
In te rs ta te 4 Interchange.
Widening of 1-4 exit ramps.
Work affecting traffic flow 24
hours a day. Jurisdiction:
F lo r id a D e p a r tm e n t of
Transportation.

■ ■ ■
In the Sanford Plaza
area. State Street east from
U.S. Highway 17-92 to dead
end and Southgate from State
Street to ^Irport Boulevard.
Resurfacing with one-inch
deep or more asphalt. Sched­
uled to begin Monday, but
may begin earlier or later.
T r a f f ic tie -u p m in im a l.
Jurisdiction: Sanford.

Forest City Road
fro m S tate Road 430 to
M a itla n d Blvd. Widening
two-lane road to four lanes.
N o r m a l t r a f f i c u s u a lly
m ain tain ed . Jurisdiction :
F lo r id a D e p a r tm e n t of
Transportation.

______
In the F a irw a y
Plaza area, Sarita Street
from U.S. Highway 17-92 to
A irport Boulevard; Santa
Barbara Drive from 17-92 to
M a r s h a ll A v e .; F lo rid a
Avenue from 17-92 to Santa
Barbara, Georgia Drive from
Florida to new pavement.
Resurfacing. Traffic tie-up
minimal. Jurisdiction: San­
ford.

In the Country Club
M anor area, Hays D rive
from Bradshaw Drive to 20th
Street and Country Club Cir­
cle from Hays D rive to
Country Club D rive. Re­
su rfacin g . T r a ffic tie-up
minimal. Jurisdiction: San­
ford.

Wymore Road and
Lake Destiny Drive. Turn
lanes, resurfacing and minor
drainage work. Expect minor
slowdowns, but one open lane
in each direction usually
maintained. Occasionally at
off-peak periods only a single
lane open w ith flagm en
directing traffic. Completion
date Jan. 30. Jurisdiction:
Seminole County.

Subdivision streets
in th e f i r s t p h a s e of
G ro v e v ie w V illa g e . R e ­
su rfacin g . T r a ffic tie-up
minimal. Jurisdiction: San­
ford.

Tuskawllla Road
and W i n t e r Springs
Boulevard. Left turn lanes
being added. Normal traffic
flow not usually affected.
Scheduled for completion by ^
early February. J u ris d ic ­
tion: Seminole County.

IN l i t

____In the Ranchlands
area, Satlfish Road from
Shore Road to the dead end
and Sllvercreek Drive be­
tween Holiday Road and
Shore Road. Resurfacing.
to affect traffic
S ills U nlikely
flow. Jurisdiction: Winter
rvm
Springs.

Alderwood Ave.
from South Edgemon Ave. to
Moss Road; Buttonwood Ave.
between 206 and 218 But­
tonwood;
Second Street from
H— I
Edgemon Ave. to Bombay
Ave.; South Fairfax Ave.
from State Road 434 to
Lombardy Road; South De­
von Ave. from SR 434 to
Lombardy Road; and Bitterwood Street from But­
tonwood A v e ., to Souths
Edgemon Ave. Resurfacing.
U nlikely to effect ^traffic
flo w , J u rle d lc tlo n : ■Winter}

Quintuplet Drive
between N. W inter P ark
Drive and Lake Drive. New
paving. Sometimes difficult
to get through. Jurisdiction:
Casselberry.

I-E va n s d ale Road.
I iNevcjiaiiinfl. of-A-lane. road.

SSrtSSm

’ Springs.

K ing H o lid a y Is M o n d a y
A T L A N T A (UPI) — As most of Am erica
prepares to commemorate the Martin Luther King
Jr. federal holiday on Monday, family and
followers of the slain civil rights leader are still
pushing to have it recognized In nine states that
have so far refused, and In Arizona where it was
rescinded this year.
King's widow. Coretta Scott King, said the
action by new Arizona Gov. Evan Mccham was a
painful blow. "But I don't think it's very popular
now to be against the holiday when the majority
of the country is going in a positive direction."
she added.
Mccham fulfilled a campaign pledge by re­
scinding the executive order creating a state King
holiday. It is the only state to have repealed it.
Nine other states have never embraced the King
day as a paid day off for em ploy ecs.
King holiday supporters in those states are
making a push it to be set aside and even
Mccham has said he will ask for a statewide
referendum on whether It should be a paid state
holiday.
At the heart of the campaign are the Kings —
Coretta and her four children — who constantly
Jet around the country lobbying dissenting
legislatures and encouraging grassroots support
to adopt the holiday.
"Som etimes there are complications within
states that make it difficult for states to have the
holiday right aw ay." King snM. "But we arc
actively working on those states.
" I plan to visit some more states. We think It's
going to be harder with the last ones. But If we
can get three or four a year, that will be steady
progress. I think it's Just a matter of time before
all 50 states will be celebrating the holiday."
Still. Lloyd Davis, executive director of the
holiday com m ission, said. "W e have done
remarkably well to get so many states on board
so quickly."
The King holiday was born last year amid

controversy and mixed reactions. Besides a day
off on the third Monday in January — King's
actual birthday is Jan. 15 — for state and federal
workers, there were celebrations in several cities.
However, most attention was focused on Atlanta,
King's hometown, where the annual ecumenical
service honoring King was held as well as a
parade.
There are some new twists to the celebration
this year, including a "Freedom Train" that will
carry students from New York to Atlanta and is
designed to revive the student movement of the
1960s.
Participants range from longtime King support­
ers. such as the Revs. Jesse Jackson and Ralph
David Abernathy, to members of the Reagan
Administration. Education Secretary William
Bennett will Join In a King teach-in program In an
Atlanta elementary school and Secretary of State
George Shultz will speak at the ecumenical
service.
On Monday there will be a symbolic ringing of
the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia and replicas in all
50 states to honor King.
Also on Monday. Philippines President Corazo'n
Aquino will be presented with the 1987 Martin
Luther King Jr. Nonviolent Peace Prize. Aquino
will not be present — her sister-in-law will accept
the award — but she will speak to the gathering
via satellite.
But King said the best is yet to come.
“ This holiday emerges as a newborn, certainly
not full-blown in all of its ramifications and with
its full impact." King said. "T h e national holiday
will evolve into an even more meaningful
occasion In subsequent years. We are literally
creating a new American tradition.
"W e will continue to urge maximum public
involvement. It is not a black holiday; it is an
American holiday. As years pass, this day In
January will be a sustaining memorial and a time
for rededlcatlon — long after we are gone."

Secret Service Hunts $740,100 In Bogus Bills
C O R P U S C H R1STI. T e x a s
(UPI) — Secret Service agents
are hunting for $740,100 In

counterfeit $100 bills they sus­
pect were brought to southeast
Texas last month by a Los

Attorneys Know, Judge Doesn't
ST. PAUL. Minn. (UPI) - A
U.S. district Judge has de­
clined to come up with a legal
definition o f manure.
Judge Robert Renner de­
ferred the request Wednesday
in his St. Paul courtroom
while presiding over a case
Involving competing claims of
companies that deal in ma­
nure.
At one point, the Judge said,
“ I know attorneys know a lot

about manure. ' Later he said
he was "not so foolhardy as to
attempt to write Its defini­
tion.”
One company is trying to
keep two other companies
from using the label "Cow
Manure" on bags of fertilizer
which, it is claimed, contains
more peat than manure. The
matter Is expected to go to
trial later this year.

Angeles man who Is jailed on
conspiracy charges.
The agents say they already
have seized $59,900 in bogus
bills from a safe deposit box
belonging to Henry T. Maloney.
47. of Corpus Chrlsti, who was
c h a r g e d W e d n e s d a y w ith
possession o f counterfeit cur­
rency.
The phony money is believed
to be part o f an $800,000
shipment that was brought to
Corpus Chrlsti from Los Angeles
on Jan. 4 by James Scott, 46.
said special agent Floyd Lee.

H trala Photo by Tommy Vincent

Conventional Service
Barry Barks, executive vice president, and
Gib Edmonds, president, celebrate the
opening of Seminole Moneytree, Inc. at
Driftwood Plaza on Lake M ary Blvd. The

new mortgage loan and Investment firm
handles first and second mortgages on
homes, rental property and commercial real
estate.

M a rtin e z Wants To H a lt Possible S pread From D ade

Panel To Study Emergency Care Crisis
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) — Gov. Bob Martinez says
he will appoint a committee to seek solution of
Dade County's emergency health care crisis to
keep it from spreading to rest of state.
The governor also urged Dade County doctors
to return to work during a Thursday news
conference. He announced a committee will study
the county’s emergency treatment crisis that
forced 16 hospitals to limit service.
What happens In Dade County often spreads to
the rest of Florida. Martinez said, so it Is best to
solve the problem here before It spreads.
Doctors protesting the high price of medical
malpractice insurance premiums have refused to
work in some hospital emergency rooms since the
beginning of the year, forcing administrators to
cut or curtail services.

" I absolutely do believe they (doctors) should
provide full service." Martinez said. "People need
Scott was arrested last Satur­ care, they need treatment. If they (doctors)
wanted to make a point, they made a point."
day and is held without bond,
Martinez spoke one day after Hialeah Hospital
while Maloney was Jailed in lieu
reopened its emergency room on a limited basis
of $50,000 bond set by U.S.
- two weeks after closing it. State officials said last
Magistrate Eduardo de Ases.

week that hospitals were breaking the law by
closing their emergency rooms without approval.
Officials at South Miami Hospital, which did not
close Its emergency room, told doctors Tuesday
that If they are sued us a result of treatment they
administer in the emergency room, the hospital
will hire an attorney and pav any claims that may
result.
Martinez said his senior staff, including chief
aides Mac Stlpanovich and Jim Smith, would be
on the panel, whose members have not been
named. The committee will make recommenda­
tions on emergency treatment and malpractice
Insurance premiums.
"W e want to tlnd out what's going on." he said.
"W e're not leaning In any direction," he said.
Speaking about the slate budget, the governor
said he did not Intend to cut $800 million in
spending, but planned to "redirect" money that
was already In the budget.
As an example, he said his administration was
looking into excess appropriations and the
utilization of vehicles by the state.

�PI.

NATION

m

Secret Iran

INBRIEF

•‘v v

Reagan Said Committed To
Following Iren Developments
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan, "committed to
his pledge to the American people." follows closely all
developments In the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal, says
David Abahire, his special counselor.
Abshlre Issued a statement Friday saying he meets with
Reagan regularly to clear up a perception that the
president has steered clear of ferreting out the facts In the
secret deal with Iran.
Abshlre Joined the White House stalT Jan. 4 to coordinate
requests for Information as three separate Investigations of
the scandal began almost simultaneously. He also will
develop strategy for handling the scandal, which has
consumed White House time and energy,
Reagan and first lady Nancy Reagan were spending a
long weekend at the presidential retreat at Camp David,
Md.. and are scheduled to return to the White House on
Monday, the designated federal holiday to mark the
birthday of Martin Luther King Jr.

Ex-Alde To Be Investigated
W ASHINGTON (UPI) — The Justice Department wants a
special prosecutor to determine If ex-White House aide Lyn
Nofzlger broke conflict-of-interest taws In lobbying for a
New York military contractor and a South Korean rice deal.
Associate Attorney General Arnold Bums, who released
Friday the request for an Independent counsel filed Jan. 6 ,
said the department had received "credible Information
concerning two allegations against Mr. Nofzlger."

A former top political aide to President Reagan until
1982, Nofzlger may have violated the ethics statutes In
lobbying the White House for the contractor, Wedtech
Corp.. and a California rice company. Comet Rice Inc.,
under contract to the South Korean government. Burns
told a special three-judge panel.
The 1978 Ethics in Government Act prohibits top
government officials from lobbying former agencies for a
year after leaving ofllce.

FCC Chairman Resigns
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Mark Fowler, known as "Mr.
Deregulation" during his five-year term as chairman o f the
Federal Communications Commission, submitted his
resignation to President Reagan.
Fowler. 45. did more than any of his predecessors to
reduce federal control of the broadcast industry during his
nearly six years o f service and plans to stay on the Job until
Reagan can find a replacement this spring.
Fowler’s term expired June 30, 1986, and the White
House had been trying to convince him to remain at the
regulatory agency.
Since Joining the FCC in 1981, Fowler tried to make
broadcasting as regulation-free as newspapers and even­
tually wanted the agency to become a mere overseer of
technical standards.

Women Urge ERA, Pay Equity
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Feminist leaders, calling in the
chips to lawmakers they helped elect, are urging Congress
.j o , pass the Equal Rights Amendment and legislation
tfriJAAfewHig pregnancy leave-and pay equity for men and
Women.
Women expect the lOOth Congress to be more
responsible,” said Mary Ray Oaken, president of the
National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s
Clubs Inc.
"A n d we expect the 100th Congress to be more
responsible because In 1986 we gave our time, and Just as
Important, our money, to elect people who will act In our
best interest,” she said Friday.
The women said their shared agenda for the 100th
Congress seeks to stem the recent erosion of civil and
economic rights for women.
Leaders of the 16 groups, loosely formed as the
bipartisan Council of Presidents, met Thursday with
Democratic leaders and other key members of Congress.

AIDS Drug Recommended
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A federal panel has recom­
mended a new AIDS-flghtlng drug be approved for some
patients with the fatal disease, but the chairman says It
may amount to "a genie” let out of the bottle too soon.
The Food and Drug Administration panel voted 10-1
Friday to recommend approval of the drug for limited
prescription sale to AIDS patients who have had a certain
type o f pneumonia and to patients with an advanced
AIDS-like condition.
The recommendation was made after the panel reviewed
the results of limited testing of the drug azldothy tnldlne by
its manufacturer. Burroughs-Wellcome Co.
The recommendation now goes to FDA Commissioner
Frank Young for preliminary approval.

Court: Review Fairness Doctrine
WASHINGTON (UPI) — In a sweeping declaration, a
federal appeals court ordered the Federal Communications
Commission to consider repealing Its mandate that
broadcasters always air opposing viewpoints.
In a 3-0 panel ruling Friday, the U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia found the FCC acted
improperly when It refused to consider claims by a
Syracuse. N.Y.. television station that the fairness doctrine
violates the First Amendment.
The fairness doctrine requires that broadcasting stations
present contrasting viewpoints on controversial Issues of
public importance.
Media law expert Floyd Abrams, who represented
Meredith Corp.. owner of the station found guilty of
violating the doctrine, hailed the decision as "the first step
toward an ultimate ruling that the fairness doctrine Is
unconstitutional."

W ASHINGTON (UPI) - Robert
McFarlane, who made a secret
mission to Iran to win freedom
fo r A m e r i c a n c a p t i v e s In
Lebanon, says President Reagan
did not authorize the sale of
arm s to Iran strictly for a
hostage swap.
McFarlane appeared Friday be­
fore the Senate Foreign Rela­
tions Committee, which is In­
v e s tig a tin g the U .S . policy
toward Iran, and testified about
overtures to the radical Islamic
g o v e r n m e n t o f A y a t o lla h
Ruhqllah Khomeini.
Seated alone at a witness
table, McFarlane told Congress
the administration believed the
overture would lead to better
relations with m oderates In
Tehran. The release of American
hostages in Lebanon was a key
element of the effort.
His appearance came a day
after new detailed descriptions of
M c F a rla n e 's secret May 28
mission to Tehran, where he. Lt.
Col. Oliver North and other U.S.
officials negotiated for five days
in top-floor suites at the Tehran
Hilton to buy the release of the
U.S. hostages.

ABC News obtained detailed
accounts o f the bargaining. In
which a key Iranian official.
Identified as Hadi Najafadabi.
pleaded with McFarlane to ac­
cept the release o f two hostages
that day and two more the next.
The Iranians were displeased
that McFarlane and his party
brought only a partial arms
shipment. McFarlane, ABC News
reported, refused to dicker with
Najafadabi and Insisted the four
Americans be released Immedi­
ately. When the Iranians ref­
used. the Americans left.
McFarlane's lawyer confirmed
Friday he cut o ff his May
negotiations in Iran over the
arms-for-hostages deal because
the Iranians refused to free all
the Am erican captives until
Tehran received more arms.
" T v e heard enough of that
bargain, that baloney."* lawyer
L e o n a r d G a rm e n t said
McFarlane told the Iranians.
" 'I t ’s all or nothing. I have my

TULSA, Okla. (UP!) - Pledges
have been pouring in at the rate
o f $160,000 a day since televi­
sion evangelist Oral Roberts told
listeners his life was threatened
by an insufficient response to his
fund-raising pleas.
Meanwhile, television station
executives In at least four cities
have decided not to air the show
R o b e r t s ’ has p re p a re d fo r
broadcast Sunday because it
a g a in c o n ta in s c la im s the
evangelist was told by God he
would be called "h om e" If an $8
million fund-raising goal is not
met by March.
Roberts said God gave him one
year to meet this goal, which he
said will cost about $8 million,
but by the first of this year
listeners had contributed only
$3.5 million for the protect.
Since appealing to listeners
less than two weeks ago to
extend his life. Roberts and his
son Richard Roberts have re­
ceived $1.6 million In cash and
p led ges, spok esw om an Jan
Dargatz said at a news confer­
ence Thursday.
Television executives in St.
Louis. Dallas, Oklahoma City.
Los Angeles and other cities
have said they found Roberts’
appeal Inappropriate and will
either suspend the program
tem porarily or air substitute
programs that do not contain the
reference to being called "hom e”
by God.

Purchase of Existing
Mortgages.

Residential and
Commercial

549 W. Lake Mary Blvd.
Driftwood Village Suite 202
Lake Mary, Florida 32746

BARRY BARKS
Executive Vice President

3 2 3 -8 9 9 0

&amp; v

-.

Black Babies' Mortality Rate
Twice That Of White Babies
ATLAN TA (UPI) - Black In­
fants are dying at twice the rate
of white babies In what a federal
health official said Thursday "is
still an alarming public health
problem."
Dr. David Allen of the national
Centers for Disease Control said
that despite a 59 percent reduc­
tion in overall Infant mortality
per 1,000 live births over the
past 25 years, a two-fold dis­
parity continues to exist In
infant deaths between black and
white children.
"It is still an alarming public
health problem," said Allen, of
the C D C 's D iv is io n o f R e ­
productive Health. “ We need to
do more to reduce this dis­
parity." He said there has been a
recent sjowlng in the rate of
decline In overall Infant deaths.
The two-fold disparity between
black and white Infant deaths.
18.4 per 1,000 live births for
blacks com pared to 9.4 for
whites, was observed from 1960

through 1984 and continues to
be seen since 1984, Allen said.

division," said Allen. Although 7
percent of all infants bom In the
United States weigh less than 5
V* pounds, deaths in that weight
category represent 60 percent of
overall Infant mortality.

Infant death rates among other
ethnic groups, such as American
Indians and Hlspanlcs, also arc
greater than those for whites but
not as great as for blacks, he
"L ow blrthweight Is the most
said.
Research shows that lack o f important determinant of infant
m o n e y — as r e f le c t e d In survival, and Infants with low
socioeconomic status, maternal blrthwelghts suffer the highest
education, health Insurance cov­ mortality risks."
Allen said that if black Infants
erage and access to prenatal.
bom in 1980 In the United
Infant and other health care
services — is the cause of much States had the same blrthweight
o f the disparity In pregnancy distribution and same mortality
risk as white Infants, "there
outcomes. Allen said.
The CDC said one o f the would have been 5.526 or 51
principal factors contributing to percent fewer single-delivery
greater black Infant mortality black Infant deaths."
He said the CDC is looking Into
was that blacks have a higher
percentage of low blrthweight the causes of low blrthweight in
births than whites. In Its study, black Infants "a s well as looking
the CDC found that black babies at racial differences in obtaining
"had approximately three times prenatal care.'* Other govern­
the risk that white Infants had of mental agencies are Investigat­
being bom weighing less than ing financial provisions to Im­
1.500 grams (5 Vi pounds).”
prove access to health care, he
"T h is is a critical w eight said.

Has Price

1st and 2nd Mortgage
Loans

SEMINOLE
MONEYTREE INC.
Licensed Mortgage Broker

-'-*i

McFarlane said the secret poli­
cy was planned to restore "som e
kind of discourse with sensible
elements in Iran.
"T h ey needed to be people
that could change things. A
measure of that at the outset had
to be. could they in fact effect*
the release of the hostages. If
they couldn't even do that we
c o u ld n 't ex p e c t the la rg e r
aspects of changing Iranian poli­
cy could be taken on."
M c F arla n e left his W h ite
House Job In December 1965 but
remained heavily Involved in the
policy through 1986. The revela­
tion of his May trip to Iran —
leaked in November to h proSyrian publication in Lebanon
by Iranian officials opposed to
the dealings with the United
States — touched off the foreign
policy scandal that has shaken
the administration.

C am p aig n

Fast Professional
and Confidential Service.

GIB EDMONDS
President

he did not recall ever being
notified of the final decision to
ship arms to Iran. ,
"M aybe I’m missing some­
thing but I don't have any note
o f the formal notifying" of the
presidential decision, he said. " I
don't recall being specifically
told that the president had
authorized the Israelis. In effect,
to ship arms (to Iran)."
Shultz said his notes show
that In a meeting that took place
on August 6 , 1985. no decision
had been made and said he
assumes the presidential de­
cision took place much later.
White House chief of staff
Donald Regan has given testi­
mony contradicting McFarlane
that Israel sent the first ship­
ment of arms without Reagan's
approval and the administration
ap proved the restockin g o f
Israel's arsenal.

Roberts'

MONEY SOURCE

LET US HELP SOLVE
YOUR MONEY PROBLEMS.

instructions.
T h e Iranians paid for the
planeload of arm s McFarlane
brought to Tehran and he left
without any hostages, Garment
said.
In his committee testimony
Friday, McFarlane said President
Reagan gave the go-ahead for
the entire o p eratio n In an
August 1985 telephone covena­
tion. granting "specific authority
to another country to do some­
thing." referring to Israel.
"1 said, 'Mr. President, you
know your secretaries of state
and defense have stated their
opposition to this,"* McFarlane
said.
"'Again. 1 understand that,"’
he quoted Reagan as saying.
Secretary o f State George
Shultz, speaking to reporters
late F r id a y , d is p u t e d
McFarlane's testimony, saying

MAKE 1987
YOUR YEAR FOR
A REAL SOURCE
OF ENERGY
AND TO GET
IN SHAPE!
'p e c t f c v i i t u f r . . .

★
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
★

Nautilus, Paramount, Universal
and Camstar
Free Weights
Aerobics 10 Classes Daily
High Energy and Low Impact
Personalized Training Program
Life Cycles
Tanning Beds
Certified instructors
Dry Desert Sauna
Moisture Steam Room
Separate Coed and Ladies
Workout Facilities
Open 6 Days

Athletic C lu b

CALL TODAY
3 2 1 -4 7 2 2
2453 Airport Blvd. &amp; 25th St.
Country Club Square

A t h le t ic C lu b

�O L .M U U L 5
IN BRIEF
Seminole Community College
Charity Night A t Kennel Club
Seminole Community College Charity Night will be held
Tuesday, Jan. 20 at the Sanford-Orlando Kennel Club. The
doors open at 6 p.m. and the first race Is at 7:30 p.m. All
proceeds from the evening will go .to the Seminole
Community College Foundation Scholarship Fund.

Eostbrook Holds Reeding Fest
Eastbrook Elementary Is about to begin Its annual
reading event called B.E.A.R. (Be Excited About Reading).
This month-long program Is designed to encourage
students at Eastbrook to read silently and to read aloud.
B.E.A.R. month activities begin Jan. 23 and last through
Feb. 20. There will be contests, games, and special projects
about the books children read. Students who participate
will receive prizes each week. Each grade will have a large
white mural of a bear In the Student Activity Center. For
each book a child reads, he Is able to place a brown patch
on the mural of his grade. This will set a game of challenge
between the grades, according to media specialist Dorothy
Ann Quest.

T o celebrate, the children will hold an Eastbrook Teddy
Bear Parade on Feb. 13 at 9 a.m. The children are
encouraged to wear a costume to typify their favorite story
character and parade around the school grounds while
holding a teddy bear of their own.

Goldsboro Students Honor King
Goldsboro Elementary School held a special Martin
Luther King assembly Thursday. The Student Councilsponsored program Included musical selections, a skit,
choral readings, and special recognition of MLK poster
contest participants.
The school also honored "Most Improved Students o f the
Month" for December. They were: Avis Ingram, Jermaine
Mackey. Tim othy King. Mark Smith, Jennifer Harrison,
Darrlan Davis, Mildred Davis. William Hosbcln. Trenlce
Bryant and Dawn Houle.

A ll County Band Members
Cynthia Berry, director o f the Lake Brantley High School
Band, announced the following members o f the group have
earned places In the Seminole County All County Band:
Jennifer Downey. Am y Gomey, Heidi Laney, Cheryl
Erlandson, Claire Gross; Meghan Jalbert, Kelli High. Susan
Erlandson. Jackie Rees, Jennifer Slone. Mike Calvino. Dee
Ann Decker. Greg Tynan. Melanie Parks, Shannon
Haddock. Jennifer Peter. Scott Stewart, and Lisa Becker.
All County Band Director Gary Langford, of the
University o f Florida, will conduct the performance
Saturday, Jan. 24, at 7:30 p.m. at Lyman High School. The
public Is welcome to this free concert.
After submitting auditions on tape, three flautists from
the LBHS Band have been selected to participate In this
year's Florida Flute Fair. They arc: Claire Gross, Heidi
Laney. and Bonnie Peyer. And they will participate in the
event in Tam pa Jan. 30.31 and Feb. 1.

Miss Lake M ary High1Sought
- -Thirty-five contestants will compete for $200 first place
M the fifth annual MlmmLMH3 Pageant on Jan.
.. - .
,.U ......
This la the second pageant In which nominations have
been limited to school related dubs, organizations and
teams, and also It's the second competition In which the

Judging w ill equally distribute the votes among the five
categories: activities, beauty, personality, poise and gtadc
point average.
The judges for the event are to be five members of the
community, none of whom are previously related to Lake
Mary High.
Proceeds for the affair will go toward the Booster Club's
fund for a field house to be located behind the stadium.

Chinese women perform traditional dances with the Chinese Golden Dragon Acrobats and Magicians coming to Seminole
Community College Feb. 1.

Chinese Acrobats To Appear A t SCC
Seminole Community College and The
Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce
have Joined together to bring the Chinese
Golden Dragon Acrobats and magicians of
Taipei to Seminole County.
The acrobats and musicians are receiving
outstanding reviews from critics as they
criss-cross the country making perfor­
mances.
The performers are to appear at the
Seminole Community College gymnasium
2:30 p.m. Feb. 1. The public is Invited and

the cost is $5 per person. Tickets are
available at The Greater Sanford Chamber
of Commerce (322-2212). and at the Public
Information Office o f SCC (323-1450) in
Sanford.
The Chinese Golden Dragon Acrobats and
Magicians o f Taipei offer a glimpse into the
fascinating Orient. In addition to acrobatics
and magic tricks, the group offers comedy,
balancing feats, Kung-Fu, and a troupe of
elaborately costumed girls who perform
traditional dances.

It is a family show for one and all,
according to organizers.
The grace and precision o f Chinese
acrobats has been formed by centuries of
tradition. Most o f the acts were created and
performed In China as far back as 200 B.C..
and have always been an Integral pari of the
Chinese culture and the arts. Many of the
acts attempt to demonstrate the achieve­
ment o f perfection through finding harmony
between the mind and body — an ancient
concept in the Orient.
— K ath y T y rlty

UCF-SCC Program O ffers Academ ic Help
For College-Bound M inority Students
Forty minority students In the to participate In the program.
s ix S e m in o le C ou n ty high They arc: Lake Brantley. Lake
schools are participating In a Howell. Lake Mary, Lym an,
weekend academic enrichment Oviedo and Seminole High.
program which started Jon. 10
The program is being made
and ends in May. It is sponsored possible through a cooperative
Jointly ..by the University, of effort by UCF and SCC, both of
Central Florida and Seminole Which are providing hands for
Community College.
the venture.
To be eligible for the program,
The Seminole program Is an
students must be residents of
expansion of one that has been
Seminole County, be In grades
conducted at UCF over the past
9-12 and have the desire to
four years for minority students
attend college.
who express a strong desire to
The program consists of basic
attend college.
academic skills enrichment and
A ll th e h ig h s c h o o ls in development, to Include study
Seminole County were selected skills, test-taking strategies.

Red M &amp; M s Back

communication skills, and time
management. There also will be
sessions on college "survival
skills," plus field trips and cul­
tural enrichment opportunities.

fins** ffiS s S S S S

their own transportation to the
bi-weekly sessions at Seminole
High School.

Parents’ may visit any of the
scheduled activities, said Cecelia
Rivers, director of special pro­
grams at UCF. Velma Williams,
director of special programs at
SCC. is coordinator for the
Seminole enrichment program.

r Compares College Tests To Slave Laws
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) A Florida
State University professor believes the
standardized tests used to predict college
and graduate student achievement arc
the modern equivalent of slavery-era
laws against educating blacks.
The tests are often used to determine
which blacks arc admitted to college,
and academic departments have broad
authority to decide how much weight to
give test scores for graduate level
admissions, said William Jones, a pro­
fessor of religion and head of FSU’s
Black Studies Program.
Janes and other researchers contend
tests like the Scholastic Aptitude Test
and the Graduate Record Examination
discriminate against minorities because
of cultural bios.
"We must begin to understand that
some of the so-called standards of

excellence are not really standards of
excellence at all, but a pari and a
continuation of that orginal slave code to
keep the revolutionary Impact of educa­
tion from the people at the bottom of the
social ladder." Jones said.
" I f the people at the top. If the white
majority sets up a certain set of rules
that maintains Itself at the top with this
surplus of power and privilege, then
blacks arc going to have to stay at the
bottom." he said. "It Is the same way it
was during slavery."
Jones spoke Friday during an FSU
conference commemorating the-birth of
Martin Luther King Jr., who would have
been 58 years old Thursday. Seconding
his complaints was Robert Williams, a
clinical psychologist from Washington
University In St. Louis, w ho has written
extensively on the sub|ect.

| Jackson Heights Pupil
| Wins Speech Contest
"Last night I had a dream." 7th
grader Leslie Gross began In her
winning speech for the Jackson
Heights Middle School Oratorical Contest for Sanford’s Martin Luther King
* Jr. Celebration.
The s tu d en t from Y vo n n e
; LcCoumpte’s English class expanded
; on the assigned topic. "Peace and
I Growth Through Brotherhood." by
I explaining that In her dream her family
i was prevented from buying a house or
; going where they pleased because they
arc Jewish. She continued, "I now
* realize that not until everyone learns
* the true meaning of brotherhood, will
] we really be free."
Leslie represented the school at the
3 county contest In Sanford and won one
* of the top three places for middle
I
schools. District winners will receive
certificates and a savings bond or
£ scholarship.
Also at'Jackson Heights school, the
y students of the month were announced.
{
Chosen from the 6th grad e was
* Elizabeth Matthews, whose family Just
J, moved to Oviedo from Tennessee this
summer. Her extracurricular activities
;
;
;
j

I

Include playing the piano, swimming,
playing softball and doing gymnastics.
Chosen from the 7th grade was Tal
Yu. who came to Jackson Heights
school last year. The W inter Springs
resident excels in math and plans to
pursue a career In that field.
Theresa McCoy, who plans to work
p a r t - t i m e In a v e t e r i n *
arlan’s office as soon as she is old
enough. Is the 8th grade student o f the
month. At her home In Tuscawllla she
has a pet cat and a collection of cat
statues.
The first semester ended Friday, and
students finished taking nine-week
exams. Students do not attend school
Monday, however, teachers will be
computing averages and preparing for
the second semester.
M any o f the s tu d e n ts w ill be
participating In the annual Disney
Hurrah Day. Tickets for school bus
transportation and admission to the
Magic Kingdom were sold for #15.50 at
the school for the last two weeks.
Last year, about 400 Jackson Heights
students attended the day at EPCOT
Center.

Williams said he would never have
been admitted to graduate school based
on his own GRE scores. He said he took
the test as an experiment several years
after he earned his doctorate with
honors.
"The tests don't give us an accurate
prediction of academic performance for
most people. For some people they
might, but for black people they don't."
Williams said.
"I wouldn't go that far." said Chan­
cellor Charlie Reed of Jones's assertions.
Reed said the Florida university system
has adopted alternatives to encourage
black enrollment, including a scale for
weighing grades against teat scores for
undergraduate admissions.
Reed also cited a trust fund Inflated
four years ago with a $10 million grant
from the McKnlght Foundation of Min­

NASHVILLE. Term. (UPI) Paul Hethmon of Knoxville
won’t be listed among histo­
ry 's great crusaders, but
Thursday he felt satisfied with
his victory — leading the fight
to get the red back in M&amp;Ms.
;
Red M&amp;Ms were pulled from ,

nesota and a $5 million state match,
which he said has benefited nearly 100
graduate-level students thus far.
The McKnlght program was expected
to pay off In terms of minority faculty
recruitment as well. The shortage of
blacks with doctoral degrees is the chief
roadblock for universities seeking black
professors. Reed said.
According to Reed. 14.8 percent of
college freshmen admitted last year were
black compared to 11.7 percent in 1981.
For Hlspantcs, the 1986 figure was 6
percent compared to 2.6 percent in
1976. .Reed said both figures buck the
national trend of declining minority
enrollment.
Jones said minority access to higher
education was central to King's vision of
a pluralistic society.

use o f red dye No. 2. consid­
ered a carcinogen. The red
M&amp;Ms did not contain the
questionable dye but the firm
dropped them an yw ay to
avoid confusion.
M&amp;M M a rs a n n o u n c e d
Wednesday that It was re­
storing the red M&amp;Ms that
were a favorite of World War
II GIs. baby boomers and
flower children.
"W e feel as though we’re
bringing back part of people's
memories." Hans Fiuczynskl,
an M&amp;M Mars spokesman,
said in Hackettstown, N.J..
The 23-year-old Hethmon
was Jubilant. He had formed
the Society for the Restoration
and P re s e rv a tio n o f Red
M&amp;Ms In 1982 as a student at
the University of Tennessee.
He in stitu ted a w ritin g
campaign, urging members of
his group and others to write
President Reagan. M&amp;M Mars
and the FDA.
After articles In Seventeen
magazine and the Wall Street
J o u r n a l, H e th m o n w as
swamped with hundreds of
le tte rs. M em b ersh ip now
stands at about 460. includ­
ing red M&amp;M fans "anywhere
from Hong Kong to Florida."

Construction Begins
Lee Russell, center, cuts ribbon to
m ark start of construction on
Seminole Community College's
Adult and Continuing Education
Center. Ms. Russell, chairman of
the school's d istrict Board of
Trustees, is joined by, from left,
H enry Behrendt, president of
Pepper Southern Inc., the con­
tra c to r; Florida Lt, Governor
Bobby Brantley; SCC President
Earl Weldon; architect Cal Peck;
State Senator John Vogt; and SCC
theatre director Paul M. Wegman.
The $6.6 million funding for the
building, fo be built in front of the
Fine Arts building, was the single
largest community college capital
allocation made by the state
legislature In 1906. The building
will replace more than 30 portables
which have housed SCO's adult
education classes since the college
opened In 1966. The 66,000-squarefoot stru ctu re w ill house the
county's only planetarium, along
with 30 general purpose classrooms
and 15 specialized labs. It is
expected the building will be com­
pleted In |ust less than two years.
Herald Photo by Tommy Vincent

�L

n

■■■s ept

19 "

N BRIEF
Ecuadorian Prosldont Ralaatad
A fte r 11-Hour Kidnap Ordaal
QUITO, Ecuador (UPI) — The president o f Ecuador was
released alter 11 hours In the hands of air force troops who
demanded and received the freedom of a renegade general
Jailed for leading a foiled rebellion last March.
President Leon Febres Cordero was freed Friday night
alter the maverick general. Frank Vargas Paxzoe, arrived at
the air base near Guayaquil, Ecuador's main port on the
Paclflc coast.
The president, who signed a document absolving his
abductors of. criminal responsibility for kidnapping him,
was greeted upon his release by cheering crowds In the
streets of Guayaquil.
Febres Cordero was seized during a morning ceremony
at Taura air base. The soldiers also held and released Gen.
Jorge Andrade, the air force chief of stafT. and presidential
adviser Alex Rlpalda. radio reports said.
The president was not hurt when he was taken prisoner,
but his bodyguard, Lula Silva, w as killed and 10 people
were wounded In an exchange of gunflre, radio reports
from the area said. Other unconflrmed radio reports said
four people were killed In the assault.

Photos O f Hostages Published
BEIRUT, Lebanon |UPI) — A Lebanese newspaper
Saturday published photographs of two American hostag­
es, and Church of England envoy Terry Waite welcomed
the development as " a good sign" proving the captives are
alive.
The Independent dally An Nahar published black-andwhite pictures showing Joseph James Clclpplo, 56. and
Edward Austin Tracy, 55 smiling and looking healthy. The
paper said It received the pictures late Friday wrapped In a
white piece of paper with no accompanying statement.
"I think It is a very good sign, a very good sign. They are
alive and I am pleased that there i s this development,"
Waite said on the sixth day of his latest mission to win the
freedom of western hostages held by several groups In
Lebanon. Waite spoke with reporters after meeting with
Lebanese education minister Selim Hoss.
The underground Revolutionary Justice Organization
claims to be holding Clclpplo and Tracy. An Nahar said It
was not clear why the group released the pictures at this
time.

Hijacker Extradition Faces Snag
BONN, West Germany (UPI) — West Germany could
extradite an Arab accused of hijacking a T W A Jetliner last
year "very quickly," but the U.S. must first pledge not to
execute him, officials said.
The U.S. Embassy has filed a preliminary request for
.extradition of Mohammad All Hamadel, a 22-year-old
Lebanese-born Palestinian, with the German government.
Justice Ministry spokesman Juergen Schmid said Friday.
Hamadel Is charged In the June 1985 hijacking of a T W A
flight from Athens to Rome. The hijackers killed U.S. Navy
diver Robert Stethem and held 39 other Americans hostage
for up to 17 days before the ordeal ended.
Schmid told reporters that under German law, before
Hamadel can be extradited, the United States must first
promise he will not face capital punishment If convicted of
‘thecharges.
...................
"...

P h ilip p in e C o m m u n is ts S u rre n d e r
SURIGAO, Philippines (UPI) — President Corazon
Aquino, ignoring security risks, flew to Mindanao Island
Saturday os agreement In principle was reached with
Moslem rebels to end fighting that has killed 52 people this
week.
Aquino was shuttled by helicopter under tight security to
three Mindanao cities despite military warnings the trip
could prove risky.
In Surlgao. her third stop. 27 guerrillas of the communist
New People's Arm y surrendered their firearms In a show of
goodwill toward the president and stood by a stage as she
spoke.
Asked why they had given up on the Insurgency, one of
the rebels, Isabellto Penera. said: "W hat we fought against
then, dictator (Ferdinand) Marcos is gone.

FLORDA
IN BRIEF
L a w R e a d y I f M is s ile P r o t e s t e r s ,
S t r o n g D e f e n s e A d v o c a t e s C la s h
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — Sheriffs deputies braced for
a possible confrontation Saturday between peace activists
protesting development of Trldcnt-2 missiles and counter
demonstrators supporting a strong national defense.
Protesting America’s "suicide course” In the arms race,
pediatrician Benjamin Spock Joined a growing band of
chanting anti-nuclear protesters for a demonstration
Saturday at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station to climax
a week of trespassing and civil disobedience.
Officials said 58 people had been Jailed In the past week,
and more arrests were expected Saturday.
Spock. whose conviction for aiding draft dodgers during
the Vietnam War later was overturned on appeal, said he
would lead the protesters through the gate Into the military
complex and would go to Jail for his beliefs.
"T h e Trldent-2 missile terrifies m e." Spock said at a rally
Friday, "It Is a first-strike weapon. It brings us closer to
making America and Russia trigger happy. It Is In the same
category as the MX (missile) and 'Star Wars.’"
About 200 anti nuclear demonstrators completed a
217-mile protest march earlier In the day.

Story O f A Dream
Aloysius Battle, above left, portrays Martin Luthar Kino Jr.
giving his famous " I Have A Dream " speech duringperformance of "The Story Of A Dream" at Goldsboro
Elementary School Thursday. Above rlghf, as part of the
p ay, students portray an historical Incident — the arrest of a
black person when he refuses to give up his seat on a public
bus to a white person. The play was to be presented for the
public Friday night.

]

i:
3 3 %
■SWe will save you lime and effort and!
* ; cash tool You will save el least 11J *| »
Jion each package shipped with'!
•I
RAC N’ SEND
\
j•
(UPS Pick-Up Dally)
] !
■: 5m £ w Ju,1jJ
3 2 3 * 1 1 3 7 \\
i { ri'fru —ai tmU|U| a atiyfhi 1,

Stocks, Dollar
End W eek Calmly
By United Preaa International
The stock market ended the
week In a little quieter but yet
spirited mood and the dollar
recovered some of Its strength as
Investors began to consider the
Implications of the last several
days of big moves.
Though the losing Issues on
the New York Stock Exchange
outnumbered gainers Friday, a
number of important market
Indexes, Including the Dow
Jones Industrial average, set
more new highs.
The Dow clim bed for the
eleventh consecutive session, up
5.90 to 2076.63, for a total gain
for the week of 70.72 points. The
index has risen a spectacular
180 points since the start of the
year.
“The rush Is over and people
arc starting to focus on what
drove It.” Johnson said. He said
the steep decline In the U.S.
dollar prompted the market’s
rally and huge amounts of avail­
able cash fueled It.
Comparing a rising market
With- a departing train.’ Johnson

said. "The train was leaving the
station and a lot o f money
mnnagers who wanted to pre­
serve their Jobs got on.” he said.
"T h e y were afraid the train
would not back into the station
to pick them up.”
After a few days of frenetic
trading, the dollar closed mixed
Friday as market participants in
the United States failed to follow
the European lead where the
dollar staged a modest rebound
from Its pounding earlier In the
week.
"A fter the tremendous dollar
selling of the past three days,
E u rop e b ou gh t back som e
d o lla rs ." Henry Welland, of
NatWest U.S.A., said.
There were several other dev­
elopments as well. In what was
considered a sign ificant In­
dicator of the Federal Reserve’s
attitude, board member Wayne
Angell said Friday the money
s u p p ly m ig h t h a v e to be
tightened — possibly raising
Interest rates — If the dollar
keeps dropping sharply in value
and Inflation roars bark to life.
In remarks to the University
Club In Chicago. Angell noted
the Fed's role in helping cool
ln(lat&lt;on over the past six years
meant inflation has been quelled
for now, he said. But one factor
that might make it roar back to
life Is the slide in the dollar's
value against other currencies.
"Should the foreign exchange
value o f the d ollar decline
further — and If it Is accom­
panied by a ratcheting-up of
domestic prices — this undoubt­
edly would alter the price land­
scape." Angell said, perhaps
spurring a Fed reaction that
would tend to raise Interest
rates.
On Capitol Hill Friday, a
b ip a rtisa n grou p o f H ouse
Banking Committee members
asked President Reagan Friday
to reappoint Fed Chairman Paul
Volcker when his term expires in
August.

C o m r a d e s S a lu t e F a lle n O f f ic e r s
FORT PIERCE (UPI) — Comrades from other police
agencies Joined family and friends in a farewell for two
officers and long-time friends killed In a failed cocaine sting
operation.
Detectives Grover Cooper III and James Wouters were
buried slde-by-side Friday on a gentle, green slope while
hundreds of officers In uniform stood In reverent silence.
The Joint service for the two Fort Pierce policemen lasted
three hours and drew an estimated 1.500 people, including
Attorney General Bob Butterworth.
Cooper. 31. and Wouters, 33. were killed Monday in a
raid at a mobile home near Fort Pierce. Officer Robert
Spring was seriously wounded and James Daniel Hunt, a
drug suspect, was killed. Ralph Horton. 25. was arrested on
murder and drug charges.
"T h ey made the supreme sacrtfice." police Chaplain
Charles Wharton said of the dead officers. “Our hearts are
broken."

iiP A C
N ’ S E N D
m u m m c a i

BAR BS
Phil P astoret
We’d all be saved a great deal of
trouble if there were some way to
have second thoughts first.
Before buying a set of g ift books,
ask yourself one question: Are they
packaged to be sold or to be read?

Ple-in-the-sky schemes will become
respectable once a space bakery Is
established

&lt;fjh L i t t l e S t u f f
Consignment Shop
fe
END OF YEAR Clearance
p®
SALE!
10% 0RAN0K TAOS
» % BLUI, GRAY, PURPLE TAOS
90% RED, QREIN, PINK TAOt
INFANT TO SIZE 14
MATERNITY Clothaa Available
WE BUY CRIBS
11Hwy. tr-tt Across PramPeel Otflea
■m

i

6 6 8 -8 2 6 5

NEW HOMES
N O DO W N PAYMENT REQUIRED

Two new government reports
Indicated the industrial economy
may be Improving.
The Fed said Friday that the
nation’s manufacturing, mining
and utility companies In De­
cember worked at 79.6 percent
of capacity, marking the third
straight monthly gain.
In addition, the Fed said the
Industrial production index
climbed in December by 0.5
percent, also registering a mon­
thly Increase three times runn­
ing.
Alfred Goldman, stock market
strategist at A.G. Edwards &amp;
Sons In St. Louis called the
m a rk e t’s rally In 1987 " a
hysterical, unprecedented orgy."
Goldman said the market will
suffer a pullback within days but
that the decline would be a
modest one.
"W hen you go up 185 points
so fast, most market participants
are left standing at the gate,"
Goldman sa id .. "N o w all the
wallflowers arc suffering: they
feel they have to throw money at
sto ck s.- T h a t ’ s w h y ev-ery
pullback finds new buyers."

Help build your own home in Oviedo
For Information contact

Seminole Self-Reliant Housing, Inc.
110 South Park Avenue • Sanford, Florida

(305) 323-3268
H o ;il
( )|H

I n s u r a n c e ?
II.I lilt ' s.| \ s It In s| .

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
H

Ph. 322*0285

■
i

2 5 7 5 S. F re a e k A ve., S an fo rd
xA u to-O w n ers insurance
Lire. Home. t ur. Business. One name suss it all.

WE BUY MORTGAGES
W e also m ake 1st and 2nd m o rtg a g e
lo ans on R esid e n tia l o r C om m ercial
Real E s tate up to $100,000.

Hugh Johnson, head of the
Investment policy committee at
First Albany, said both the
market and Its players arc
exhausted.

Personal loans srs svsllsbls Including
Rsvolving Credit Lint.
For Informstlon Call:

PENNY STOCKS

JjL.

An O p p o rtu n ity o f Ihe 60‘s
FOR YOUR FREE REPORT CALL

KEN MacFARLANE
1-800331-5943

Lmicwm,, FI 32750

831-3400

r a f t
Y a J U

&amp;UAkT-JAM€§
Investment Banker*

C&amp;S Family Credit Services, Inc.

Member NASD 5 RPC

EQUIPMENT REBATES
STILL ARE AVAILABLE
W A T T S
h e lp

you

A IR

g et

C O N D IT IO N IN G

w h a t’s

o w e d

to

you

w ill
w ith :

Up to $ 750.00 d isco u n t on the Trane XL1200
4* Up to $ 350.00 FP L reb ate
Up to $ 150.00 From Trane
T o ta l

$1250.00 C ash back to you!

Invest in a high efficiency Trane XL1200 air conditioner
or heat pump before March 1st and you could put
$1250 in your pocket, enjoy the energy savings of a new
with efficiency unit — with a 10 year limited warranty —
* Financing available with no down payment
Call us today.
‘ With Approved Credit

FREE E S T IM A T E S

TOctito
pa#Ik 1
1’ans*.

UJKllUcHm

SERVICE AGREEMENTS
RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL

A ir C o n dition in g &amp; H eating, Inc.

660 JACKSON AVENUE
WINTER PARK, FL 32789

(305)644-5061
To qualified homeowners

CAC 01240

�r-

■r -

FI.

C n t l a i H f r o a p «| « I A
White was assisted In the surgery by Dr. John
Chase, who Is also of the Jewett Clinic and Is
qualified to perform the technique, she said.
Because of microsurgery support teams available
there, such surgeries would be pel formed either
through Orlando Regional Medical Center or
Florida Hospital. Orlando. Initial contact for the
surgery can be made through South Seminole
Community Hospital.
The surgery isn't the answer for all cases, but.
Ms. Ellscu said. In the case of this first local
patient the circumstances and the condition of
his hand were ideal for the surgery.
In the procedure muscle from the patient's
back was transferred to his forearm. In a
microsurgery process aided by the use of fiber
optics the tissue was transferred and nerves and
blood vessels connected.
It was critical for the nerves to be properly
restored. Ms. Ellscu said, because without
properly functioning nerves, signals relayed from
the brain calling for the hand to open or close,
would not be received and the operation would
not be successful In restoring function.
In the eight-hour surgery White removed part
of the latlsslmus dors! flexor muscles from the
patient's back. Ms. Ellscu said an evaluation was
made of the muscle before surgery to determine
how much of the muscle could be taken without
effecting the function of the portion of the muscle
that would remain In the back. It was also

Continued from page 1A
ford and a spirited rendition of
"42nd Street" tapped by five
members of Vacarro's World of
Dance and Performing Arts.
The two hour play about
K ing and the c iv il righ ts
movement had a cast o f nearly
200 local children and young
a d u lts. It was p e rfo rm e d
through song, speech and skit.
King was played by the Rev.
Arthur Graham. St. Matthews
Methodist Church.
In addition to the $50 bonds
awarded Friday, scholarships,
ranging from $350 to $250.
w ill be given other young
people at the Saturday ban­
quet. Awarded will be three
$350 scholarships, provided by
Seminole Community College
and a $250 scholarship pro­
vided by City Commissioner
Whltey Eckstein. Also, two
Sem inole High School stu­
dents. A lon zo G ain ey and
Tonja Simpson, will each, re­
ceive $350 Martin Luther King
Memorial Scholarships funded
by Sanford residents Mr. and
Mrs. Luther McWhorter and
Mrs. Chester Davidson.
Anyproflt
night
f unnd ,d DDrr
the s c h o la rs h ip * fu
•j®
'
J
Z
i
h
Sweeting said. She also said
most of the more than $700

collected through offerings at
the Interdenominational ob­
servance Is being used to fund
the bonds. The city did not
charge for use of the civic
center, where all tribute events
were held.
Dr. Sweeting heads the city's
Human Relations A d visory
board, which was asked by
Sanford com missioners last
year to plan tribute events
coinciding with King's Jan. 15
blrthdate.
.

...Drug
Continued from page 1A

The report also proposes un­
iversities Incorporate drug edu­
cation seminars Into their cur­
ricula for teachers.
Additionally, drug education
should go beyond the clussroom
Into the home, according to the
report. Programs to provide
"parenting skills" for supportive
and positive home environments
are necessary. Mrs. Lowe said.
Almost all of the 41 polled
school districts reported and
endorsed the Involvement of
community agencies and local
governments as part of their
preventative programs.
Participation from city and
county officials, parent-teacher
associations, civic clubs, law
enforcement agencies and local
doctors were cited by the dis­
tricts.
S ch ool p olicies reg a rd in g
drugs should be "clea r and
consistent, but not be so strict
that students' educational career
b eco m es J eo p a rd ized by a
mistake In Judgement." the re­
port states.
P r o p o s e d Is p r o v i d i n g
alternatives to expulsion for
students who use drugs, but
expelling and prosecuting those
who sell drugs on campus.
A drug abuse prevention and

predetermined just how much muscle, nerve and
blood supplying tissue would be needed In the
section to be transplanted.
'
One end of the borrowed muscle w as anchored
to an undamaged point near the elbow. The other
end was connected to the five tendons that flex
the thumb and fingers, all at precisely de­
termined tensions, so the hand would open and
close correctly once fully healed.
Then, with sutures half the size o f a human
hair. White spliced the nerve of the transferred
muscle to the corresponding nerves from the
spine.
The latlsslmus dorsl was chosen for the transfer
because It Is about the right size. Is easily
accessible. It has relatively large blood vessels. It
can be transferred with tendon Insertions Intact
and Its removal from the back results In only
minimal function loos In the back.
To aid In monitoring the transplant following
surgery the section of back muscle w as removed
with an "island" of skin left attached. This skin
was then sutured to the skin of the forearm once
the muscle was In place. By checking this Island
during recovery White was able to gauge the
success of the transfer. Once White w as sure the
new muscle was receiving proper blood flow and
that all was well. Ms. Ellscu said, the Island of
skin was removed.
After about six months' recovery the patient
will be able to flex and extend his thumb and
Angers together to open and close his hand. With
special therapy he should gain enough utilization
of the hand to be able to grasp object and to
generally function normally and return to a
useful, self-sufllcient life. Ms. Ellscu said.

Friday's youth tribute was
planned by the main commit­
tee's education sub-group. This
group's members were Ecks­
tein, who Is a history teacher,
sch o o l's spokesm an Karen
C o le m a n , s c h o o l b o a rd
chairman Joe Williams and
retired school teacher. Mrs.
Thomas. Her husband. Bob. is
Sanford's first black city com­
missioner.

The nearly 200 performers In
Mrs. Thom as' play. "From
M on tgom ery to M em ph is."
have been rehearsing since
November. "T h ey were Just
terrife." said their admittedly
proud director. "T h ey couldn't
have been better."
Audience members agreed,
offering the young people and
Mrs. Thomas a lengthy ovation
after Joining them by candle­
light to sing "Reach Out and
Touch Somebody’s Hand." The
young performers surrounded
the Inside of the civic center for
the finale.
Mrs. Thomas said the even­
ing was "personally, a very
moving experience." and that
she'd be willing to participate
In next year's tribute. Her
husband said the event was
"beautiful." and that he was
"tremendously proud" of his
wife.
T b * young people volun. . s ; to p w M p o t e Friday In
teerrd
respoonnse
se to
to requests
requests Mrs.
Mrs.
resp
Thomas sent to local schools.

c h u rc h e s and c o m m u n ity
groups. Participants were from
Id y liw ild c . G old sb oro and
Hamilton elementary schools.
Greenwood Lake, Lakevlew
and Sanford middle schools.
Lake Mary and Seminole high
schools, and the New Life
C h r i s t i a n S c h o o l . A ls o
participating were Brownie
T ro op *5 8 0 . Junior Troop
*144. Boy Scout Troop *832.
Academy Manor Neighborhood
Youth, and the Midway Ele­
m entary School PTA.

treatm ent coordinator In all
schools and contluned support
for students who have completed
programs are also strongly re­
commended.
Roll told the task force on
T h u r s d a y that e m p l o y e e
assistance programs, such as the
one In Seminole CountySshools.
should be adopted by all school
districts.
He also said each school needs
" a wellness coordinator" to
assist In preventative efforts.
"Chem ical dependency pre­
vention gets lost in the shuffle of
all other mandates teachers and
counselors are faced with," Roll
said.
He proposed K-12 "life man­
agement skills programs" and
said school stafT "must set posi­
tive examples with (their) at­
titudes and actions."
Mrs. Lowe called Roll's com­
ments "o n target. He raised
many of the same points we're
b e en h e a r in g fro m r e p r e ­
sentatives all over the state."
Mrs. Lowe also said the task
force has found no "causal
r e la tio n s h ip " between drug
abuse and dropping out of
school.
"In fact." she said. "There
may be some cases where the
abuse of drugs keeps kids In
school, because that's where
they make their contacts.”

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hospital
Friday
ADMISSIONS
Sanford
George Bishop Jr.
Ann M. Perry
Jacqueline L Richardson
Raymond G. Odien. DeBary
Melody W. Pharls. Osteen
DISCHARGES
Sanford:
George Bishop Jr.
Sanora W. Brown A Baby Boy

L

s * »

B M M K «l! • ^ V »

It, MW

...Hand

...Youth

■»^' T

Andrew L. Mackey
George W. Rankin
Russell A. Weldon
Pearl E. Haught, Deltona
John P. Sumner, Deltona
Louis Pecella. Orange City
Merle J. Harner. Osteen
Rhonda K. M cNeil. Winter Springs
Paula M Walsh A Baby G irl. Winter
Springs
BIRTHS
Oougles A Jacqueline L. Richardson, baby
boy. Sanlord

Participating churches were St.
Matthew Missionary Baptist.
St. John's Missionary Baptist.
St. James African Methodist
Episcopalian, Second Shiloh
Missionary Baptist, the Rescue
Church of God and Morning
G lo r y M is s io n a r y B a p tist
Church.
Assisting Mrs. Thomas In
staging the play were Wynn.
C y n t h ia O liv e r , M a g g ie
Strickland. Andre Johnson,
Craig Cooper, Sonya Thomas
and Elmira Hall.
Savings bond winners Friday
for the poster contest were:
Amanda Alderson. ninth grade.
Lake Brantley High: Monica
D'Amico, sixth grade. Millwee
Middle School. Jake HarmelIng. sixth grade. Mlllwce Middle
School. Ron Bell, fifth grade.
Idyllwldle Elementary School,
April People, fourth grade.
Goldsboro Elementary: Kelsey
Swanson, fifth grade. Lake
M ary E le m e n ta ry : D am on
Slru n o. second grade,
Goldsboro; and Jeremy Grilfis.
third grade. Keeth Elementary.
Essay contest savings bond
winners are Janet Fancher.
eighth grade. Rock Lake Middle
School; and Joey Butters and
Nicole Meyers, both fourth
graders at Pine Crest Elemen­
tary school.
Oratorical contest savings
bor
bonds
w ent to M anuel St.
Victor
Victor and
and Tina
Tina WWona
ong both

eight graders at
Rock Lake
M iddle School, and Leslie
Gross, seventh grade. Jackson
Heights Middle School.
At the Saturday banquet.
Seminole High essay contest
winner Lashalonda Robinson,
twelfth grade, will receive a
$350 scholarship and ninth
grader Andre Johnson will re­
ceive $250. Also Saturday,
orltorlcal contest winners Jill
Singer. 12th grade and Brenda
Arledge. 11th grade, will each
recleve $350 scholarships.
Both are Lyman High students.
A ssistin g In stagin g and
props for Friday’s performance
were the Sem inole F low er
Shop. Sanford Flower Shop.
B ad cock F u rn itu re S to re,
M cTavish Discount Carpets
and McDonald's restaurant.

Victims Know
WASHINGTON (UPI) - More
than h alf of the 20 million
violent crimes In 1962 through
1964 were committed by some­
one the victim knew, a Justice
Department agency said today.
Friends and acquaintances
committed 31 percent of the
violent crimes estimated for the
three-year period, according to a
stu d y by the d epartm en t's
Bureau of Justice Statistics.
A n o th e r 8 p e rc e n t w ere
perpetrated by relatives, and 11
percent by offenders known to
the victim by sight.
Three percent of the rela­
tio n sh ip s w e re not clearly
established.
Robbery was the violent crime
most often committed by a
stranger, homicide the least
likely, the bureau said. Stranger-to-stranger crimes were more
likely to Involve weapons, but
resulted In physical attacks and
Injury leas frequently.
The agency said 46 percent of
the crimes It surveyed — more
than 9 million rapes, robberies
and assaults — were committed
by complete strangers, but noted
that that figure may be high.
"Individuals victimized by rel­
atives may be reluctant to dis­
cuss the event, especially if the
offender is present at the (sur­
vey) Interview, for fear of reprisal
or out of shame or embarrass­

...Disposal
Continued from page 1A
ltatlve perspective the additional
costs should be closely evaluated
with regard to the benefits."
The Grant Street alternative.
Ferland said. In each operating
year, would result In a positive
fund balance and wouldn't re­
quire any rate Increase as long
as the growth rate occurred as
projected. However, even If the
growth Is less the revenue Im­
pact would not be as much as
wi t h the S e m in o le C ou n ty
alternative.
If Seminole County Increases
Its rates, the revenue disparity
would even more favor the Grant
Street alternative, he said.
Form er m ayor. Larry
Goldberg, signed a contract with
the county before going out of
office this month pending being
able to raise financing. The city
had arranged for a loan with Sun
Bank for $3,600.00 to build the
Qrant Street Plant but It was
found that m ore-money would

be needed If the city connected
with the county. Under the
agreement. Longwood would Ini­
tially purchase 325.000 GPA
treatment capacity at the rate of
$5.75 a gallon, or a total of
$1,868,750. and subsequent ca­
pacity at a rate equal to $1 below
the county's current rapacity fee
at the time of the purchase, up to
600.000 GPA total capacity. The
325.000 GPA Is required to meet
Longw ood's current capacity
commitments for which devel­
opment fees have been collected.
In addition. Longwood Is re­
quired 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 lle c t io n system . The
associated transmission pipe line
cost Is Incorporated In the

ment." the report said.
Some victims of domestic vio­
lence do not perceive the acts as
criminal. It found.
Moot violent crimes by strang­
ers. 70 percent, were committed
against males: most crimes by
relatives. 77 percen t, w ere
committed against females, the
study said.
The bureau’s National Crime
Survey, based on Interviews
across the country, found that
75 percent of 1 million robberies
In 1984 were committed by
strangers; 21 percent by friends
and relatives.
For murder, however. FBI fig­
ures. which count only crimes
reported to police, showed that
57 percent o f the m u rders
committed in 1984 were done by
relatives and acquaintances of
the victim. Eighteen percent
were committed by strangers
and the other 26 percent un­
determined.
For the entire period. 71 per­
cent or 2.6 million robberies,
were committed by strangers.
There were also 4.1 million
simple assaults, 2.3 million ag­
gravated assaults and 245.300
rapes done by strangers, the
study said.
•
Crimes committed by rela­
tives. acquaintances and those
known by sight accounted for
another 10.1 million victimiza­
tions.

The study also found:
—In 1.5 million violent crim e*;
riod. a j
during the survey period,
relative was the offender and 77s
percent o f the victims were
women.
tN
— In 1 1 .5 m illio n v io le n t '
crimes, a stranger was the of-*'
fender, and 70 percent of the.
victims were men.
•
—In 6.1 million violent crimes.
In which an acquaintance w a*\
the offender. 54 percent of the
victims were male and 46 per­
cent female.
—Crimes by relatives Involved
an attack and Injury more fire-,,,
quently than did crimes by
either strangers or acqualn-;.
tances.
—The average age of violent,
crime victims between 1982 and {
1984 was 27.
',
—Most violent crimes Involved
victims and offenders of the. j
same race.
The crime survey Interviewed' '
about 123.000 people In about
58.000 households twice each of. j
the three years to estimate the ,
number of crimes nationwide,
including those not reported to
police.
The study found that less than ;
half of all violent crimes were. ,
reported to police. The most',
common reason victims gave for.,,
not calling the police was that, .
"the Incident was not Important,!
enough." It said.

c o u n ty 's c a p a c ity fee. T h e
master lift station would be
lo ca ted at c u rre n t S k y la rk
Treatm en t Plant site which
would be dismantled along with
the Columbus Harbour’s treat­
ment plants and perculatlon
ponds. After a year's - discon­
tinued use. the sites could be
used for other purposes, such as
parks. The agreement with the
county requires Longwood to
pay $1.50 per 1,000 gallons
monthly treatment charges. It
guarantees Longw ood's rates
will stay equivalent to the lowest
wholesale treatment rates the
county charges for the 10-year
term of the contract. This does
not precluded the county from
raising Its rales at any time.
Ferland said even assuming
that there were no rate Increases
by the county, the summary
projects the city would have to
raise Its rates by 13 percent In
1992. 17 percent In 1993. 4

construct or maintain streets nor 1
is there a public need to use '
them. Nagle said vacating the,
streets should encourage re-,'
developcmnt of abutting pro­
perty which would generate In -.
c re a s e d ta x rev e n u es . St.
L a u ren t w an ts the s tre e ts vacated In order to build a large ’
office and warehouse complex.
By closing the right-of-ways he,
w o u ld g a in a p p ro x im a te ly
38.350 square feet of land from
the Charles Avenue vacation and
28.300 square feet from the
Wlldmere Avenue right-of-way. ,
Also on the agenda Is the
preliminary approval of an ordl-.
nance granting an exclusive ,
garbage pickup franchise for.
residential garbage and a non­
exclusive franchise for collection ,
of commercial wastes.

" otn e 'n e m n i in
percent In 1994,.
in m n s
1995.3 percent in

B E tof fmeet
liF
percent in 1997 tinS order
financial and operational obliga­
tions.
.
T h e Gr ant St re e t Plant
alternative would be built at the
current Skylark site with an
additional perculatlon pond and
would be required to provide a
total o f 35,000 GPA effluent
dlposal at the site. The remain­
ing 250.000 GPA effluent would
be disposed of by using treated
effluent for landscape Irrigation.
In other business, a public
hearing and final action vacating
and a b a n d o n in g W lld m e r e
Avenue, west of Sarah Avenue
and Charles Avenue north of
Marvin Avenue as requested by
Georges St. Laurent. Is sched­
uled to be discussed. According
to city planner Chris Nagle the
road right-of-ways have never
been used by the city or the
public and there are no plans to

• A public hearing will be held
on a conditional use request by
Storage U.S.A to develop
self-service storage facility on lot
one and two at Florida Central,

Commerce Park. The p re s e ^ ,
zoning Is 12. Industrial. Proposed
future land use Is commercial.
&lt;
• A public hearing about a.'*
proposed Increase of develop­
ment assistance fees for sewer-,
connections to $5.50 plus the
sewer capacity charge to the city
by the county.
• Up for preliminary approval
and public hearing are changes
In the comprehensive plan from
low density resicntlal to ofllcecommerclal for parcels east and
west of the Day Care Center on
Longwood Hills Road.
Also scheduled during Mon­
day’s meeting is a presentation
by city attorney Ann Colby
about a recent court decision
ordering the city to allow con­
struction of a funeral home on
State Road 434 next to a doctor's
office.

AREA DEATHS
B R IT L E Y C . A N G L E

R O B E R T L. M U R R A Y

Mr. Brttley Clarence Angle. 74.
of 214 Laurel Ave.. Sanford, died
F rid ay at Florida H ospltalOrlando. Bom March 31, 1912 In
Crumpler, W.Va.. he moved to
Sanford from Newark. Ohio In
1965. He was a retired machinist
and attended the Pentecostal
Church.
Survivors Include his wife.
Bertha; sons. C laren ce W ..
Norval G., Fred P.. all o f Sanford.
Everette E.. Hanover. Ohio;
d a u g h t e r . A l i c e PI W a r e .
Lewlsburg. W .Va.: brothers.
Willard. Newark. Ohio. Gamle.
Sanford. Ibra Lee. Richmond.
Ky.. Rev. Bishop Carl. Niles.
Ohio; sisters. Nina Baglln. Made
Sanford. Josephine Allen, all of
Ralnelle. W.Va.. Ruby Rigsby,
P h o e n i x . A r l z . ; 17 g r a n d ­
c h i l d r e n ; 21 g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary. In charge o f arrange­
ments.

Mr. Robert Lee Murray. 56. of
126 Lake Minnie Drive, Sanford,
died Friday. Born Jan. 10. 1931
In Glasgow. Mont., he moved to
Sanford from there in 1967. He
was a manager for an airline
equipment manufacturer and a
Protestant. He was a retired
senior master sergeant.
Survivors Include his wife,
Jean; daughters. Brenda
B o w m a n . F e r d i na n d . Ind..
Cherie M. Hicks. Karen M. Bish­
op. both o f Sanford. Vickie
Gormley, Lake Mary; sons. Gary
L. Lelnenbach. Lake Mary. Rob­
ert A.. Deltona. Larry Leinenbach. Gerald Lelnenbach. both
of Jasper. Ind.. Darrell L.. Or­
lando. Terry J. Lelnenbach.
Michael P.. both of Sanford;
mother. Maggie Wilson Murray.
W lllacoochec. Ga.; brothers.
Olen E.. Wlllacoochee. Fred.
Vldalta. Ga.; sisters, Francis
Moore, Vidalla, Velma Smith.
Fort Pierce. Elolse Nugent.
Moultrie. Ga.. 25 grandchildren.
B ald w in -F alrch lld Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

A D E L A ID E M ORRISSEE

Mrs. Adelaide Morrissee. 77. of
Spring wood Circle. Longwood.
died Thursday at his residence.
Born Dec. 21. 1909. In Queens.
ANGUS W . TRUETT
N.Y.. she moved to Longwood
Mr. Angus Willard Truett. 70.
from Bcllmore. N.Y. In 1985. She
w a s a h o m e m a k e r a n d a of 329 Woods St.. Lake Mary,
member of the Church of the died Wednesday at Florida Hospltal-Altamonte. Born Oct. 7.
Annunciation.
1916. In DcFuniak Springs, he
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e her
husband, George J.; son. John. moved to Lake Mary from Goldenrod In 1972. He was a manu­
Longwood; three grandchildren.
Winter Park Funeral Home. facturer's representative and
Winter Park. In charge of ar­ attended Upsala Presbyterian
Church. Lake Mary. He was a
rangements.

Navy veteran of World War II.
Survivors include daughters.
Betty Jean Ingalls. Woodland
Hills, Calif., Janice M cllvay.
Woodbrldge. Va.. Kathy Harvey.
Ocala. Barbara. Gainesville; son.
Robert. Jacksonville; stepson.
Randall Floyd. Lake Mary; sister.
Daisy Spears. Eustls; 10 grand­
children.
G r a m k o w F u n era l H om e,
Sanford. In charge o f arrange­
ments.
GO R DO N C U S H M A N

Mr. Gordon Cushman. 84. of
208 Aqua Vista, DeBary. died
Friday at Central Florida Re­
gional Hospital. Born Jan. 6.
1903. In Rangcley. Maine, he
moved to DeBary from Farm­
ington. Maine In 1976. He was a
flower shop owner. He was a
veteran of World War II with the
U.S. Marines. He was a member
o f the Methodist Church In
Farmington. Maine. He was a
member of the Masonic Lodge
an d a l s o C o ra T e m p l e o f
Portland. Maine.
He Is survived by one brother.
Claude "B ill” Cushman. Farm­
ington. Maine.
G r a mk o w Fune r al H om e.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

HUNT MONUMENT CO.
DISPLAY YARD
Hwy. 17-92 — F»m Park
Ph. 339-6988
Geno Hunt, Owner
Bt m u b , MarWt A Granite

A D E L A ID E STEPH ENS

Mrs. Adelaide Stephens. 73. of
250 Oxford Road. Fern Park,
died Friday. Born In Little Silver.
N.J., she moved to Fern Park
from Camden. N.J. In 1979. She
was a homemaker.
S u r v i v o r s i ncl ude a son,
Charles Bellingham. Wall. N.J.:
sisters, Jean C a n iverl,
Casselberry. Margaret Truex.
Middletown. N.J.; three grand­
children.
All Faiths Memorial Park.
Casselberry. In charge of ar­
rangements.

Funeral Notices
ANGLE. BRITLEY
»,
—Funaral services lor Brltley Angl*. 74. of
214 Laurel A **.. Sanlord. who died Friday,
w ill be hold 2:30 p m. Monday at O aklaw n'
Funeral Home Chapal with tha Rev. Floyd.
Jankins officiating Visiting hourt for fam ily,
and friends w ill ba held from 2 to i p m
Sunday In Oaklawn Funeral Homt. Oaklawn
Funaral Hama. Laka M ary/S an ford In
charga.
TRUETT. ANGUS
-M e m o ria l funaral services for M r. Angus
W. Trualt, 70. of Lake Mary, who dlad
Wednesday, w ill ba hald 4 p.m. Sunday af
Upsala Presbyterian Church with tha Rev
Darwin Shaa officiating Arrangements by
Gramkow Funaral Home. Sanford.

I DIRECT C REM A TIO N S 3951

OAKLAWN
FUNERAL HOME
Ca« tm free I m t v f

3 2 2 -4 2 0 3
fk« m

lf

a

E a t. 1 0 0 4
C tm H u t

C m u tf

�•

»

m
__

•

•

O ffensive Hoskins,
Defensive Harris
A re Players O f Y e a r

Silver H aw ks Snare
T2 Spots O n H erald
A ll-C ounty 1st Team

By S e a Cook
Herald Sports Editor

B jIn C M k
Dominate Is not a strong enough word to
describe what Lake Howell’s Silver Hawks did to
the 1986 Stuiford Herald All-County Football
Team.
Lake Howell, which posted a school-best
record while marching to the Seminole Athletic
Conference championship, landed 12 players on
the Herald's first team offense and defense.
‘‘It was Just a fantastic year,” Lake Howell
Principal Dick Evans said. "T he coaches and the
players did a tremendous Job."
The team was selected by the six county
foptball coaches and five Herald sports writers.
Players were ranked by position. Ten points were
given for first place, eight for second, etc.
Lake Howell’s greatest dominance came on the
13-member offensive unit where It placed eight
performers. Coach Mike B laceglia’s Hawks took
every linemen position as tight end BUI Wasson,
tackles Mike Schaefer and Steve Vadala along
with guards Ken Joseph and Kevin Hunnewell
arid center Jason Kotar were first-team selections.
Schaefer, Joseph and Kotar are Juniors whUe the
rest are seniors.
This dominance, nevertheless, was not sur­
prising. The Hawks' season-long fortress was
tffelr 240-pound-per-man offensive line which
paved the way for a running attack which gained
nearly 200 yards per game.
Benefiting from the behemoths up front were
All-County halfback Nate Hoskins and All-County
quarterback Mark Walnwiight. Both are seniors.
Hoskins, who was named Herald Offensive
Player of the Year, rushed for 1.005 yards and 10
touchdowns to lead the county In both categories.
He was the top vote-getter among the running
backs with 104 votes.
Walnwright. the only unanimous selection with
110 votes, passed for a county-leading seven
touchdowns and 683 yards. Wasson caught four
of the TD tosses. Walnwiight also ran for 127
yards and two touchdowns.
As for the other side of the football, the Hawks
had four flrst-teamera on the 13-member de­
fensive unit. Herald Defensive Player of the Year
JefT Harris led the way as the top vote-getter at
linebacker with 98 votes. Harris, a senior, had
113 tackles for a consistent 11.3 per game.
Defensive end Craig Wagner, tackle Marty
Golloher and safety Terry Gammons were also
flrst-teamers. All are seniors. Wagner, a 6-2

I

Bee ALL-COUNTY, Paige 4B

Jeff HsttIs is a 6-foot-114 225-pound linebacker.
Nate Hoskins Is a 5 -8 ,161-pound halfback.
When It comes to size, Harris and Hoskins have
little In common. W hen it comes to position,
Harris and Hoskins line up on opposite sides.
When it com es. to winning, dedication and
leadership, though, the Lake HoweU teammates
stand shoulder to shoulder above the rest.
Harris, the nucleus o f Howell's stingy defense,
was voted the Sanford Herald Defensive Player of
the Year. Hoskins, the catalyst o f Howell’s potent
offense, was voted the Herald'a Offensive Player
of the Year.
Harris and Hoskins, both excellent students,
each received seven votes from a panel of the six
county football coaches and five Herald sports
writers.
O ffe n s iv e ly . H o w e ll q u a r t e r b a c k M ark
Walnwright received two votes while Howell
running back Cornel Rigby and Lake Mary
running back John Curry had one apiece.
D efen sively , S e m in o le lin e b a c k e r E arn ie
"Sackm an" Lewis received two votes while
Lyman linebacker Benny Glenn and Lake Mary
linebacker Mike Smith had one vote each.
Coach Mike Blsceglla’s Silver Hawks posted a
best-ever 9-1 record.
Harris, who Is being recruited by Miami. Florida
State. Georgia. Vanderbilt and Memphis State,
was the most consistent player In the county. The
hard-hitting senior, who Is the son of Glenn and
Carolyn Harris of Winter Park (Eastbrook),
averaged 11.3 tackles per game.
Hoskins, who Is leaning toward the Ivy League
or Division I-AA, rushed for 1,005 yards and 10
touchdowns. Both totals led the county. The
ulck-stepplng senior continually came up with
le clutch yardage for the Hawks.
Harris said the thing he will remember most
was a three-game stretch In which the Hawks
routed Lake Mary. 28-0, walloped Winter Park.
31-14, and slipped past Orlando Evans, 14-7. It
was the first-ever victory over tradition-rich
Winter Park.
"The Winter Park game w as the best." Harris
said. "W hen we were 10th graders they beat us
bad. This was our last chance to beat them.”
Hoskins, the son o f Dan and Jane Hoskins of
Maitland, agreed. " W e had never beaten them."
he said. "W e were really motivated for that game.
W e all came together. It was a total team effort.
The best game we played all year.
.
"One that we will all rem em ber,"

a

Lake Howell coach Mike Bisceglia is riding
high. He was voted 1984 Sanford Herald
Football Coach of the Year. Linebacker Jeff

Foster
Upstages
Nehemiah
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - In
world-record span of 7.36 se
onds Friday night. Greg Fost
proved he can beat Renal*
Nehem iah and that he hi
learned from his mistakes.
Foster, running through *
u n detected false star
established ar, indoor mark
the 60-meter hurdles at the 28
annual Sunklst Invitational. T1
time eclipsed the previous l
door record of 7.47 set last ye
by Mark McCoy.
The victory was only Fostei
sixth In 35 career meetings wl
Nehemiah. who Is making
return to track after four scaso
with the NFL’s San Francis
49ere.
" A lot of people put a t
emphasis on this race tonlghl
Foster said. "But I can’t put t
much emphasis on It. It’s a grt
win, a great record — and I
happy with both."
In racing to one of the m*
satisfying victories of his care
F oster fa iled to repeat t
mistake that had cost him a g&lt;
medal in the 1084 Olympics.
That time, he paused for w l
he believed was a false start, a
Roger Kingdom went on to w
the gold In the 1 10-met
hurdles. Friday, Foster k«
running — and won.
"I felt I false-started, but I li
a gold medal the last time
thought I false-started.” Fos
said. " I f the starter doesn’ t c a l...
back. I keep going."
Tonie Campbell was second at
7.54, Nehemiah third In 7.59.
Kingdom fourth In 7.64 and
Milan Stewart last in 7.66.
Nehemiah. the only man to
run the 110-meter hurdles In
under 13 seconds (12.93 In
1979). had left track for pro
football In 1982. After his ama­
teur eligibility was restored last
July, he participated In one
ou tdoor m eet In Ita ly, but
strained an Achilles’ tendon.
In other events. Al Joyner
captured the triple Jump with a
leap of 55 feet. 3 3-4 Inches;
Valerie Brisco-Hooks surged past
LaWanda Cabell at the wire to
win the 440 in 55.02: Doug
Pfdllla won the two-mlle run;
Jackie Joyner captured the long
Ju;np with a meet-record 21-11
3-4; and Doug Nordqulst won
tl^e high Jump at 7-6 1-2.

•

Harris, left, and halfback Nate Hoskins
picked up Herald Defensive and Offensive
Player of the Year honors, respectively.

Baird Bangs Tribe
Past Lyman, 70-55
By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
When Brad Baird enrolled at
Seminole High a year ago. he
was not exactly the aggressive
type. Tall (6-foot-7). thin (190
p ou n d s), e a s y -g o in g , we l l mannered — that was Brad.
Fed a diet of Christian school
basketball during his formative
years, the Inexperienced Baird
was not ready for the physi­
calness of Class 4A prime-time
hoop play.
T w o years, though, have made
quite a difference for Seminole’s
backup center. So have three
inches, 40 more pounds and a
new-found d e te rm in a t io n
around the paint.
’ ’ Br ad T h e B a l m y ” ha s
become "Brad The Banger.”
Friday night, the 6-10. 230pound Baird banged hlo way to
10 points and seven rebounds as
Seminole outmuscled Lyman.

Basketball
70-55, In Seminole Athletic Con­
ference baskeball before 501
fans at Seminole’s Bill Fleming
Memorial Gymnasium.
The victory was the seventh
consecutive for Seminole. The
ninth-ranked Tribe Improved to
13-4 overall and a SAC-leading
2-0. Lyman fell to 5-5 and 1-1.
Seminole now prepares for sev­
enth-ranked Daytona Beach
Mainland Thursday at home.
Mainland Is responsible for two
of Semlnoles's losses. Lyman
treks to Orlando Bishop Moore
Wednesday.
Both Seminole coach Bill Klein
and L y m a n m en to r Tom
Lawrence pointed to Baird's
banging as a big factor Friday.
"Brad Is really improving.”
Klein said. "H e had a great game

W m lnol, A thlatic C onftrtnc*
W L OB
S tm lnol#.......................................
—
Lym a n........................................... | . j |
Laka M a ry....................................
|
Laka Howell.................................
j
Laka Brantlay.............................. j.) |
Oviedo....................................
0-22
F rid a y'* re tu lt,
Saminola 70, Lyman 43
Laka M ary *1, Ovlado JO
Laka Howell 42. Laka Brantlay XI

tonight and as we go on he will
contribute m ore."
Lawrence said Baird Just takes
up too much room. "That Baird
kid did a good Job." he said. "His
size bothered us. The refs let
h im g e t a w a y w i t h s o m e
pushing. But heck. If you can get
away with It. w hy not do It?"
Klein said Baird was thrust
Into a starting role when 6-8
Craig Walker did not arrive at
school on time. Ironically, u
S ee B A IR D . Page SB

C zern iejew ski's 28 Blow A w a y Lions
By Chris Flster
Herald Sports Writer

Basketball

" I ’ve been waiting all season
for Eric to explode." Richardson

said. "H e really made a big
contribution on both ends of the
door tonight. He was the dif­
ference In the fourth quarter."
Lake Mary Improved to 3-9
overall and 1-1 In the SAC while
Oviedo dropped to 8-4 overall
and 0-2 In the conference. Lake
Mary Is currently locked In a
four-way tie for second place in
the SAC. Seminole leads with a
2-0 m ark w h ile the Rams.
Lyman. Lake Howell and Luke
Brantley all stand at 1-1.
Czernlejewskl. a 6-0 senior
forw ard, was averaging 7.8
points per game and his pre­

2-2, TOO BAD

STORMIN’ GORMAN

SUPER SOPH

BENEVOLENCE

Lyman scored It two
early and Lake Brantley
register Its two late. It
was 2-2, too bad for both
schools In girls' soccer.

Don Gorman Sr. was In
the groove last week. He
rolled the highest series
In 12 years a t Bowl
America Sanford.
............................. See 3B

Lake Howell did not
sweep all the football
awards. A -Lake Mary
sophomore made quite a
varsity Impression.

If charity does, Indeed,
begin from the heart
then Sanford-O rlando
Kennel Club owner Jerry
Collins has a big one.

Brad Baird, middle, moves to defend Lyman's Craig Radzak
as Willie Brown looks on.

Raines Resurfaces With Homer
Tim Raines, one of baseball’s most attractive free agents,
resurfaced at Seminole High Friday night to watch the Noles
drop Lyman In Seminole Athletic Conference basketball.
Raines did take some batting practice Friday at Seminole. "H e
hit the farthest ball I’ve seen here." Seminole baseball coach
Mike Ferrell said. "It went over the oak tree In right field."

INSIDE
SPORTS

(CHURN-ee-et-skl).
After Friday night, the above
pronunciation Is definitely nec­
essary. And coach Willie Rich­
ardson and Lake Mary’s Rams
are hoping Seminole County will
hear and see a lot more of Eric
Czcmlejewskl In the 1986-87
season.

vious career-high was 16. He
said Lake Mary played Its best
team basketball of the season
Friday night and that was the
key to his Impressive scoring
spree.
" W e were m oving on the
break pretty well to n ig h t."
Czernlejewskl said. "W e ’re more
effective when we pass Instead of
dribbling through the defense.
We’re not a big team so we need
to m ove the ball around and play
aggressively."
Lake Mary c ame out a g ­
gressively Friday night and built
up an 8-2 lead before Oviedo
came back within three. 11-8. at
the end of the first quarter. Lake

Czcmlejewskl poured in 16 of
his career-high 28 points In the
fourth quarter Friday night to
power the Rams to a 61-50
Seminole Athletic Conference
victory before 601 fans at Lake
Mary High.

See R A M S , Page SB

I

0m*

�F

I . im *n ,

jar. il,

Lak* Mary
Turns Back
Brandon, 2

inr

Lvman, Brantley
O ff Goal*
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S Friday night's battle between
L y m a n ’a Lady O reyhounda.
ranked second In the state In
Class 4A. and Lake Brantley’s
Lady Patriots, the state’s thirdranked team, was a tale of two
Haifa.
Behind senior all-stater Karen
Abemethy and senior scoring
sensation Maye Belle Bryant,
Lyman dominated play In the
first half and built up a 2-0 lead.
But Lake Brantley made some
quick adjustments at halftime
and. ted by senior Michelle
Herbst and Junior Julie DclRusso. seized the momentum In
the second half and rallied for a
2-2 tie In Seminole Athletic
Conference action before 501
fans at Lake Brantley High.
Lake Brantley maintained Its
lead In the SAC as Its conference
record how stands at 5-0-2. The
Lady Patriots. 11-1-2 overall,
pl^y at Winter Park Saturday.
Lyman, the defending league
champion. Is now 3-0-4 In the
SAC and 12-1-4 overall.
“We played really well In the
first half, but a soccer game Is 80
minutes long,” Lyman coach
Laura Dryden said. “You can’t
stop playing until the final whis­
tle Is blown. W e looked tired In
the seco n d h a lf an d L ak e
Brantley was winning most of
the 50-50 balls."
Lyman took a 1-0 lead early In
the first half when Bryant de­
flected a ball Lake Brantley was
trying to clear into the goal.
Lym an continued to be the
o ffensive a g g re s s o r the re­
mainder of the half while de­
fenders Tammy Fulsang, Stacey
Roy and Julia Callarman kept
Brantley from getting anything
going on oiTense.
Lyman stretched the lead to
2-0 with 1:30 left in the half
when Bryant made a nice move
In the penalty area and leftfooted a shot Inside the far post.
It was the 17th goal of the
season for Bryant.
Brantley had two close calls on
shots by Cara Marien and Jen­
nifer Josephs In the last minute
of the half but Lyman goalkeeper

FJ'Ji,

I'

q *

By Chris F lsU r
Herald Sports W riter
For the first 15 minutes i
nine, Brandon was not a
friendly place for coach
McCorkle and his Lake Mary
Rams. The Rams, however, re­
bounded from an e a rly 1)0
deficit to port a 2-1 victory in a
battle between two teams In the
also receiving votes category b f
the Class 4A soccer poll.
Lake Mary ran its record to
12 -2-1 with the win and has
another big nonconference game
Saturday at Clearwater Central
Catholic, the second-ranked 3a
team In the state.
On Friday. Brandon took a ljo
lead on a penalty kick eigjit
minutes Into the game. The

Soccer
Sarah Cobb made both saves.
“ W e made another mental
mistake on that early goal and
that's what cost us the last time
w e p la y e d L y m a n .” L a k e
Brantley coach Wolfgang Halblg
said. “ I told the girls they could
got back out and try to get the
goals back but Just don’t fold
and let them have It. 1 was really
happy with the way they came
back In the second half.”
Lake Brantley pulled within
2-1 with Just over five minutes
gone In the second half. Lyman
w as called for tripping Just
outside the penalty area and
DelRusso chipped a perfect shot
over Cobb's head for her 15th
goal of the season.
Brantley kept pressing until It
came up with the tying goal with
13:37 left to play. Freshman
Beth Schaefer put a nice pass In
front of the goal where Herbst
ran up on it and headed It over
Cobb.
Lyman had a golden opportu­
nity to take the lead with 13:12
remaining when Abemethy had
a clear snot from 20 yards out
and unloaded a rocket of a shot,
but Brantley goalkeeper Wendy
Vickery made a spectacular save
as she leaped Into the air and
tipped the ball over the crossbar.
Both teams had the ball In
scoring position but could not
put In the tiebreaking goal In the
final 10 minutes.
" W e wasted a lot of o p ­
portunities In the first half,"
Lyman assistant Kim Wyant
said. “The girls need to realize
that opportunities don’t come as
easily against teams like Lake
Brantley.”

malty kick came on whgt
was a question­
able call, one of may calls by the
officials that went against Lake
Mary In the early going.

GcCorkle said

“W e had about five calls In, a
row go against u s." McCorkle
said. "1 went out almost to the
middle of the field while the bill
was In play. I w as practically
asking to get a yellow card. I told
the reTcree I was going to take a
video of the game and send It to
Fred Rozelle. Then we started
getting some calls."
Lake Mary tied the score wljh
15 minutes left in the first h^lf
when Jon Brooks scored on 40
assist from Steve Sapp.
“It was an air ball to Sapp In
the penalty area and he head
filcked It on to Jon (Brooks) wljo
one-time It into the goal," Mc­
Corkle said.

Three minutes later. Lake
Mary took the lead on a nicely
worked goal ofT a dead ball play.
Ernie Broennle crossed the ball
HaraM PHt*a by Tammy Vlncafit
to Frank Ramseur who headed;lt
Lake Brantley scrambled back from a 2 0 to Sapp and Sapp headed It to
Lake Brantley's Cara Marten, left, has her
deficit to tie Lyman Friday night, 2-2, In Tony Florentlno who volleyed fit
left foot cocked and ready to unload as
In for what turned out to be the
Seminole Athletic Conference soccer.
Lyman's Kerry Musante moves In to defend.
winning goat.
For the game. Lake Mary took
game.” Lake Howell coach Art Goalkeeper Sherri Raynor made 15 shots on goal compared lo
R 1 U U A N LIFTS HOWELL
Klrstln Reesman converted a Raynor said. “ Both teams played seven saves In recording her B ran d on ’ s six. L a k e Maty
penalty kick with 6:22 left to well at times."
third shutout w h ile O viedo goalkeeper Pete McNally made
Lake Howell, which earlier had keeper Lori Bjackburn made five saves.
Halblg said a few adjustments - p lay F rid ay n igh t as Lake
H ow ell’s Lady Silver Hawks
m issed a penalty kick, got nine saves.
"A lot of the game was la
m a d e at h a l f t i m e h e l p e d
another chance late In the game
Raynor also said sweeperback punting match between the
Brantley make the second-half edged Oviedo's Lady Lions. 1-0,
when Tori Campbell was taken M e l i s s a M c a r n s . s t r i k e r s goalkeepers." McCorkle said.
In SAC action at Lake Howell
comeback.
down Inside the penalty area.
Campbell and Reesman and “ Pete (McNally) did a good Jdb
"W e moved Michelle. (Herbst) High.
"It was a nice through pass midfielders Brann and Dawn and Brandon had a kid wtio
from midfield to center forward
The Lady Hawks Improved to
from Heather Brann to Tori Towle had outstanding games.
punted the ball 85 yards."
and she made thing happen for
7-6-2 overall and 3-3-1 In the
000
(Campbell) and Tori had a one
McCorkle said Lake Maryls
us In the second half." Halblg
SAC while Oviedo fell to 4-8-3
on one with the keeper when she
said. "A n d we m oved ’J.J.’
There was no report from the defense was outstanding In the
overall and 0-5-2 In the confer­
was taken down."
(Josephs) from fullback to mid­
Seminole-P.K. Yongc Tourna­ second half led by Chris Rlske
ence.
Lake Howell took 17 shots on ment game or the Lake Mary-St. who marked out Brandon's top
field and she did an excellent
goal compared to Oviedo’s 15. Martin game.
"It was a give and take kind of
offensive player, Steve Cheshire.
Job."

w JW sM
r *■ '“w

NFL Hits
Hill With
Stiff Fine
E A S T RUTHERFORD. N.J.
(UPI) — Kenny Hill, the only New
York Giant who has played In a
Super Bowl, reportedly was fined
85,000 by th e N F L F riday
because o f an apparent late hit
In a playoff game against San
Francisco, but w ill not face
suspension.
Hill leveled 49ers wide receiver
Jerry Rice after an incomplete
pass In the Giants' 49-3 victory
two weeks ago. The New York
Dally News, In Its Saturday
edition, reported the league
Friday had Issued Hill the fine.
The New York Tim es reported
unnamed sources claimed Hill
had been fined an undisclosed
amount by the league, which
announces suspensions but not
fines.
Bill Walsh, coach of the 49ers.
had protested the hit, for which
Hill was not penalized. Friday
afternoon. Hill said he had been
contacted by NFL Commissioner
Pete Rozclle's office, but de­
clined to comment on the situa­
tion.
“ I'm not going to talk about
the Rozelle Issue," Hill said
Friday, "1 Just don't think it
would be very wise to talk about
it right now. Not until the
appropriate time, when there
has been a resolution.”
" I don’t have any comment on
that." Giants Coach BUI Parcells
said w hen asked about the
charge.
Rozelle this season has been
tough with players delivering
what he considers flagrant hits.
He handed out frequent fines
and suspended Green Bay de­
fensive lineman Charles Martin,
Los Angeles Raiders defensive
en d G r e g T o w n s e n d and
Chicago linebacker Otis Wilson.
Martin slam m ed Bears
quarterback Jim McMahon to
the ground after an Interception
and drew a two-game suspen­
sion. Townsend was suspended
for one game after stepping on
the head of Kansas City guard
Mark Addlckes and Wilson drew
a one-game suspension after
flagrantly delivering a forearm lo
the head o f Pittsburgh wide
receiver Louis Llpps.
Walsh noticed the hit while
reviewing tape of the game. He
said "HU1 committed the most

No Sweat

GEORGE HALAS
TRO PHY:
DEFENSIVE PLAVEO
OP TUB \ b a b

B u tle r Picks Up Easy S ix A s Tribe Nips L a k e la n d

LAWRENCE

TAYL0B.

By C h ris F ilte r
H erald Sports W rite r

NEW VOffkr G IA N T S

flagrant cheap shot I've seen this
year." He accused Hill o f runn­
ing 20 feet and spearing Rice.
The loss of Hill would have
resulted In the Giants facing the
Denver Broncos Jan. 25 In Super
Bowl XXI without their top two
s a fe tie s. F ree sa fe ty T e r r y
Klnard was lost for the season
with a knee injury suffered Dec.
7 against Washington and has
been replaced by Herb Welch.
Hill led Giants defensive backs
with 68 tackles during the
season, with three Interceptions
and a sack. He had two tackles
against San Francisco and four
again st W a sh in gton in the
playoffs.

San Francisco 49ers. 49-3, and
then shutting out Washington.
17-0. to win the NFC title.
"T h eir front seven Is as good
as anybody's In the league, and I
mean Individually," Reeves said.
"T h e y ’re playing with more In­
tensity now than the first time
we played them."
The Giants won the first meet­
ing between the two teams 19-16
on Raul AUegre's last-second
field goal.

RE E VE 8 : G IA N T M O V E?

"These guys first go out and
stop the run. and then they put
pressure on the quarterback."
Haynes said. "V ery few teams
can do that at all. and they do It
consistently."

DENVER (U P I) D en ver
Broncos Coach Dan Reeves says
he has had little success finding
ways to move the ball against
the New York Giants defense.
"Nobody has been able to do
anything against them the last
few games." said Reeves after
watching films of the Giants' two
playoff triumphs. "It's kind of
depressing."
The Broncos were scheduled
to work out under their practice
bubble today — th e ir last
ractice before leaving for Super
owl XXI. More than a foot of
s n o w on t h e g r o u n d and
single-digit temperatures forced
the Broncos indoors this week.
T h e B r o n c o s h e a d to
Pasadena. Calif.. Monday for the
Jan. 25 game against the Giants.
New York’s defense has domi­
nated In the playoffs, routing the

S

E x - G i a n t s A l l - P r o Mar k
Haynes, now with the Broncos,
also had good things to say
about his form er defensive
teammates.

W hile many people believe
New York will win In a rout.
Haynes said the Giants won’t be
overconfident.
"1 remember a few years ago
(the Giants) were the worst team
In the league " he said. "These
guys know what it is all about;
they won't overlook anybody."
Reeves agreed, saying the last
time a team lost the Super Bowl
because of overconfidence was
when the New York Jets beat the
Baltimore Colts following the
1968 season.
The Broncos will have to
e s t a b l i s h a r unni ng g a me
against the Giants, Reeves said.

Without even breaking a sweat. Derrick Butler
was awarded the biggest six points of the day for
Seminole High’s wrestling squad. With Lakeland
High holding a 39-36 lead going Into the
unlimited division, Butler picked up a victory by
forfeit as Seminole claimed a 42-39 victory over
the Dreadnaughts.
Later Friday night. Seminole dropped a 40-29
decision to Winter Park to complete the triangu­
lar meet at Winter Park High. Seminole now has a
6-2 record.
Against Lakeland. Seminole fell behind by a big
margin early as the Dreadnaughts won five of the
first seven matches. Seminole then came back
with four consecutive victories to take the lead.
Sheralton Mays stared the comeback with a
12-5 decision over Fred Stanley at 135 pounds.
Tracy Turner followed with a pin of Wally Post at
158 and Troy Turner stuck Jim Kirk in 1:46 at
170. Keith Denton then picked up six points via
forfeit at 188 pounds. Lakeland won the next two
matches but it wasn’ t enough as Seminole got the
win on Butler’s forfeit victory.
In the Winter Park match, Mays and both
Turners won their second matches of the night
while Denton defeated Sol Strollo. 8-1, and Butler
again won by forfeit. Randy "P ork " Bryant and
Troy Rollins also picked up wins for the Tribe in
the heavier classes but It wasn't enough to
overcome an early 24-0 deficit.
SEMINOLE43, LAK ELAN D ]*
101 — Manning (S) p. Wallar, 3:10: IN — Cabrowskl (L) p. Dyass,
4:11; IIS - Blnnj (L) p. Brlndla, 3:04; 111 - Marino (L) won by
forfait; I l f - Moor* (L) d. L Nathan, M ; 1)3 - Mays (S) d.
Stanlay. 12 3; 141 - Shim (L) d. K. Nathan, 1314; 1 4 * - Rollins (S)
p. Hum phrey.3 :II; 111 — Tracy Turnar (S ip . Post.3:11; 170 — Troy
Turnar (S) p. Kirk. 1:44; 1M - Dan ton IS) won by forfait; 133 —
Shoamakar (L) p. Bannatt, 3:17; H W T - Adams (LI p. Bryant, 1:33;
U N L— Butlar (S) won by torfalt.

Wrestling
seconds to give the 'Hounds the victory.
In Its win over Lyman. Lake Brantley won four
o f the first five weight classes and never looked
back. Dan Roth (101) and Greg W yka (122) came
through with pins In the early matches while
Scott Meredith (115) and Gary Kohler (129) came
through with hard-fought decisions.
St. Cloud earned a spilt In its matches by taking
a 45-30 decision over Lake Brantley. Brantley had
the early lead as It won the first two divisions but
the Bulldogs then won eight of the next 10.
"W e mixed things up a little tonight." Brantley
coach Kevin Carpenger said. "Out o f 24 matches
wrestled, we had 20 different wrestlers. It was an
opportunity to give other kids close to being on
varsity some experience at a varsity match. We
had some tough matches where we lost by one
point and St. Cloud was stronger than what I
expected.”
LYMAN 3*. IT . CLOUD 3)
1*1 — Mangel (L) won by forfeit; 1M - Yammamoto (L ) p. Whlfe.
3:37; I I ) — M. Claut (SC) p. Skrzpak. 4:33; 122 — Mcnutt (SC) d.
Showers. 4-0; 12* - Morrow (L) p. Crawford. 3:31; 113 — H u n ilk tr
(L) p. G o n ia lfl, 3:43; 141 - Cannaday (L) d. Holm#*, 4 4; 144 - R.
Claus (SC) p. Gomai. 2:3*; 134 - From (SC) p. Owant. 1:03; 170 Rlnahart (SC) p. McEIhlnnay, 4:33; 1M - Glllatfe ISC) p. Moor*,
1:30; 333 - Whltakar (L) p. Ballans. 1:13; HWT - Smith (L) p
Z llk t. :33; UNL - Ooubla forfeit.
la i
101 -

n .. . L A * * ” ANTLEY34. L Y M A N ))
Roth (LB) p. Mangtl. 4:32; 1M - M artin (LB ) Had
1
&lt;Lfl&gt; d Skrifpak, ' l l - 12; 121—
US ? " * * * &lt; L B )T M o rro w . IMS;
“
M l “ Bray (LB &gt; P- Cannaday,
Owo’ns
11
fL L f .
- Randolph (LB) p.
S E fc -J V i o f
B* MW (LB| p McEIhlnnay. 1:43; IS* HWT I^ T m n h a
&lt;
U
p Thornton, 3:21;
forfeit.
, U p D* v,n* y' l
~ Atafer (L B ) woo by

WINTER P AR K40,SEMINOLE)*
101 — Lampa IWP) p. Manning, 1:42; 100 — Wallaca (W PI p.
Oyass. 3:1*; 113 - Rowarts (WP) p. Brlndla. 1:00; ID - Marlng
(WP) won by forfait; 11* - Lott (WP) p. Schakay. 3:1*; 133 - Mays
(S) p. Stanlay. 1:47; 141 - Moora (WP) d. K. Nathan. I ] 4; 140 Rollins (S) d. Orla, 12 4; 130 — Tracy Turnar (S) p. Bromflald. :44;
170 — Troy Turnar (S) d. Klrland, 12 3; 1*0 — Danton (S) d. Strollo.
0-1; 223 - Huggins (WP) won by forfait; HWT - Bryant (S) d
Garrison. *-1; UNL — Butlar (S) won by forfait.

m - M C fe i f i T t 1
~ M artin (LB) p. Whlfe. 2:22;
" j 12V i f c r E S lm' J '30’ m ~ Mcnut* ISC&gt; d Tubbs.
1-30 242 - Brav M B) « u ? ’
W ~ Gon,* ' « (SC&gt; P- Horn.,
Hornbcck 3 27 111
£ " l '** ~ H Cl4u» ‘ s c &gt; P
(SC) d C a m n t e T n
R,n&lt;,o|P*'
«» - Rlnahart
Ballans ( l S H ^ ^ L T ,
(SC&gt; p
» “
M * ; UNL —/ ^ f e ^ B ^ b ? 4 r f e T “ ° * V* " * y ,L B ‘ P * * *

L Y M A N C A P T U R E S FIRST VICTORY

L E E ’S PIN LIFTS OVIEDO

In a triangular meet at Lake Brantley High.
Lyman’s Greyhounds came away with their first
victory o f the season. Heavyweights Mike
Whitaker and Jimbo Smith paved the way as the
‘Hounds pinned a 39-33 defeat on St. Cloud’s
Bulldogs.
In other matches Friday. Lake Brantley downed
Lyman. 56-25. and St. Cloud surprised Brantley.
45-30.
Mesa Yammamoto and John Morrow gave
Lyman the early lead as Yammamoto pinned
Chad White In 3:37 at 108 pounds and Morrow
stuck Rick Crawford In 5:58 at 129. Greg
Hunzlker (135) and Robert Cannady (141) kept
the ’ Hounds In the lead with consecutive
victories, but St. Cloud came back to win the next
four matches for a 33-27 lead.
Whitaker then evened the score at 33-33 with a
pin o f Marty Ballans at 223 pounds and
heavyweight Smith pinned Bill Zllke In 33

Mike Lee came through with a pin over Brian
Songer In the last match of the night to give
viedci s Lions a 35-31 victory over DeLand’s
Bulldogs at Oviedo High.
"Mike (Lee) was definitely the hero tonight."
Oviedo coach John Horn said. "H e ’s come real
h ^ . L ^ J 081 [ ew tlmes and tonight he did the
right things and came up with a big pin."
Oviedo built up the early lead behind victories

^ h S ^ aWn. ^ eg°r,a.1 108 P °unds and Kenny
at 115- peLand came back with two
K ^ S r ; X ,edo “ Arthur Miner pinned Benny
Parsons at 148 pounds.
OVIEDO)), DELANO31
7 h *l,,r (0J 7™ £y .tart,M2
- Dejego (0) d. Crlcha. 7 4;
h i5
14_4;
~ Sutlm lllar ( 0 ) won
by forfeit, 13* — Vala 10) t. Rll«y, 4.4; | U _ TrM , | , r m ) p
l0 ) d
* 4 ; &gt;« - M lnar (0)
p. Parsons, 3.01. 13* ■ Edwards (D) p. Hartman, 1 07- 170 —
Dickens (OI t. Naumovltj, 7-7; It* — Sneed won hw M r t . it - r r i —
Polleka(D) Dan., 1:07; H W T - l T l O )

�■ *~ r-

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Raiders To Welcome Sente Fe
For A nother Big MFC Encounter
Seminole Com m unity College's Raiders, who trail
Mid-Florida Conference leader Daytona Beach by one
game, return to action Saturday night at home against
Santa Fe CC. TIpofT Is 7:30 p.m. There Is no charge for
admission.
"Santa Fe has a quick team ," SCC center Vance Law
said. "I don't know UT they are as good as Central Florida,
but we can't take them for granted."
SCC, 20-2 overall and 4-1 In the MFC. handed Centra)
Florida Us first setback Wednesday as the Raiders' front
line of 6-8 Hall, 8-7 Claude Jackson along with backup
forward Barry Dunning tum rd In strong performances.
SCC point guard Darrls Gallagher tossed in 24 points and
11 assists. He Is Joined In the backcourt by Malcolm
Houston. James Morris completes the starting five.
Saturday's battle should be a dandy In the backcourt as
5-7 Gallagher matches up with Santa Fe's 5-10 Steve
Edelson. Both are excellent penetrators, outside shooters
and defenders.

Lymen Frosh Blister Lake M ary
\

!

Ten players hit the scoring column as Lyman blistered
Lake Mary, 78-55, In freshman basketball Thursday night
at Lyman High School.
Coach Rich Batenzentls' Pups Improved to 8-1 with the
victory. They host Orlando Bishop Moore Monday. Lake
Mary fell to 2-4.
Marvin Reed led Lyman with 16 points. Dion Weeks had
13 points and six rebounds. Octavius Holiday tossed in 10
points and grabbed seven boards. Kennif Morse totaled
seven points had a team-leading eight rebounds. Lenon
Anderson had six o f each.
LAKE MARY (IS) — Cavanaugh 4. Davidson I I, Parry 10, Napoli 4, Wallaca I,
Draugun 4, Hillary 3, Stewart 0, Whitman 4, Nawtall I, Cornaliut I, Michael 3,
Totals: 1431 33 SJ.
LYMAN ITS) — Lanon Andarson 4, Dion Weeks IX Octavius Holiday 10, M arvin
Rood 14, Madry 3, Morsa 7, Shadd 0, Bowan I, Coatas 5. Lawless S, Anaja 4,
Totals: 3410-3*71.
Halftlma: Lyman 43, Laka M ary 1*. Fouls — Laka M ary 33. Lyman 34. Fouled
out —Andarson, Parry, H illary. Technical — non#.

M ayfair: Calling A ll Amateurs

I
ij

1

‘

Calling all amateurs, calling all amateurs.
Mayfair Country Club Pro Mark Lcsnlak has put out the
all-call for amateurs to nil Wednesday's Pro-Am portion of
the 27th annual Mayfair Open. Entry fee is $40 for the 1
p.m. shotgun start.
The Pro-Am will follow on Thursday and Friday. Last
year, 180 pros participated and defending champion Joe
Kruczek will be back again. Chuck Thorpe, who won two
years ago, and local Seniors Tour standout Walt Zembrlskl
will also compete. Mayfair touring pro Brian Merena Is
another favorite.
In Thursday’s Scramble tournament action, there was a
three-way tie. The trio o f Merena, Horace Orr and Carl Till Is
along with the threesome of Doug Flynt. Gene Green and
Jim Williams and the group of Lcsnlak, Jeff Williams and
Bill Griffith were all 4-under.
There was no Tuesday Dogfight.

Stars &amp; Stripes Takes 3-1 Lead

I

i

FREMANTLE, Australia (UPI) — Dennis Conner's Stars &amp;
Stripes sped through swelling seas and heavy winds today
to clobber New Zealand by 3 minutes, 38 seconds and take
a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven America’s Cup challenger
final.
Conner won the start and never faltered around the
24.5-mlle Indian Ocean course, leaving the fiberglass KZ7
with the formidable task of winning three straight races.
One more victory advances Conner to the Cup final,
scheduled for Jan. 31, egainst the lop Australian boat.
New Zealand suffered a broken mast backstay. Jammed
mainsail zipper and shredded mainsail during the race,
held in blustery 20- to 28-knot winds. Meanwhile, in the
defender race an Australia IV bowman was hammered on
the head by a loose spinnaker pole.

Spinks Gets Apology, To Fight
MIAMI (UPI) — Leon Spinks seems finally set to light
Jose hiDal'.a Saturday night at the Coconut Grove
Exhibition Center.
The scheduled 10-round bout will cap a bizarre week In
which Spinks left town in a huff over remarks made at a
pre-fight news conference only to return two days later
after three new Judges had been named and a public
apology issued. In between, promoter Willy Martinez of
Ivette Promotions called a news conference to announce
Spinks would be replaced by Jimmy Young. Before that
news was two hours old. Spinks agreed to return to Miami
and Young was told to remain In Philadelphia.

Becker Knocks O ff Zivojinovic

;
i
i

MELBOURNE. Australia (UPI) - Two-time Wimbledon
champion Boris Becker of West Germany defeated
Yugoslavian Slobodan Zivojinovic 6-3, 6-3, 3-6, 6*3
Saturday in a third-round match at the Australian Open.
It was the first career meeting between Becker and
Zivojinovic. friends and doubles partners who had
breakfast together before the match. Both players are
coached by Ion Tlrlac and feature strong power games.
In an earlier match, defending champion Stefan Edbcrg
of Sweden, the fourth seed, moved into the fourth round
with a 6-4. 6-3, 6-’ victory over unseeded Australian John
Frawley.

Longer Goes 3 Up A t Hope
LA QUINTA. Calif. (UPI) — Ray Floyd was both hurt and
helped by Bernhard Langer’s 68 in the blustery third
round of the $900,000 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.
The down side Is Lunger’s 4-under-par round at PGA
West Friday gave the West German a three-stroke lead over
Floyd. The hip side is Floyd learned the desert course,
cursed by many professionals this week, can be tamed.
Langer, the 1985 Masters winner, made few of them
despite 50-degree temperatures and winds gustlng to 25
mph. He moved to 14-under 202 and heads for Bermuda
Dunes today.

r~z~r~

Schlichter Nabbed Gambling
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — Former Indianapolis Colts
quarterback Art Schlichter. once suspended by the
National Football League for gambling, has been arrested
on gambling charges along with six other people.

n

Don Sr. Strings Together Games Of 257;
Don Gorman Sr. has started off the new
ear right by bowling what Is probably the
slgheat series rolled at Bowl Am erica
Sanford In 12 years.
Gorman put together games of 257, 259
and 233 for a beautiful 749 series. Con­
gratulations Don. Your next goal la to put 12
strikes together for that illusive 300 game.
Gorm an w a s bowling on the Willett
Oldsmoblle Cadillac League when he rolled
his 749 series and six other men rolled over
600. There were also over 30. 200 games
rolled.

000

In the Sun Bank Mixed League. Don
Canlglla Just missed his 700 series with a
nice 692. Don had games of 257. 232 and
203.
O u r senior citizens have also been
knocking down a lot of wood as Les
Buddenhagen. 72, pulled a 658 series In the
Drift Inn Mixed League on Monday night.
Les had games of 207, 258 and 190 In his
series. B ob Hosford o f the W a sh d a y
Dropouts had a 601 series with b 242 game.

000
Bowl America already have 21 entries In
the January Star Search so It looks like a
very good turn out. The Star Search Is Red
Pin Singles with a guaranteed $50 first prize
The cost |s only $6 and you get to bowl four
games and get a pass to bowl another one
later for free.
This Is Inexpensive practice time for
league bowlers and a shot at the first- place
money. BAS pays 1 out of 10 places.

000

Here's a look at the high rollers:
YOUTH LEAGUES (5-8 years old):
Josllen Grover 83, Lasie Rash 112, Kathy
Murphy 110, Shane Caccorle 98, Lee TUlls
103; (9-11 years old): Sean Bumgarner 122,
Michelle Jlmmenz 136, Chris Allman 134,
Jason Royal 144, Tommy West 130; (12-14
years old): Ronnie Allman 177; Clint Plnder
164. Chris Rottlnghaus 182, Derek Drake
164, Tommy Royal 144; (15-18 years old):

Roger
Quick
AM BM CA
SANFORD:
3 2 2 -7 5 4 2

Chris Bumgarner 227, Steve Eiland 185.
Steve Halhaway 198. Todd Morgan 179.
Heather Schaffer 177, Rhonda Gorman 179.
SHOOTING STARS - Shelia Kruid 204,
Ellen Westfall 203. GATORS Charlie
Lukens 215. REBELS — Elmer Stufflet 204,
Jack Wurges 206, Don Dear 215. Joe Pier
201. BLAIR AGENCY MIXED John
Mathews 200, Don Hunter 204, George
Hayes 210, Mark Hibbard 200, Gil Benton
209, Valerie Welsmann 211. AMERICAN
W EIGH T LOSS CENTER - Louis Joens
205, Joe Ervin 206, Dave Rlcharde 211,
Ranny Rose 213. AKU TIKI LEAGUE - Ron
Lemond 232, Ron Allman 200 202, Tom
B a rrs 204, Beverly Novak 212, Don
Benevento 202, Curtis Page 200 212.
T.G.I.F. - PeeWee West 210, Chuck Todd
246, Laura Leahy 204, Howie Harrison 202,
Edith Patrick 213, Fred Brown 215. Steve
Robinson 212, Ted Best 203, Bob Rcuff 201,
Ed Sautter 220, Jeannle Echols 213.
PINBUSTERS — Gordon Thompson 202.
S U N B A N K MIXED LE A G U E Pepe
L u y a n d 203. Ed H ouston 210, Don
Benevento 235 209/618, Richard Jett
226/600, Don Canlglla 203 257 232/692,
Donnie Anderson 203, Don Gorman Jr 201
201, Bill Stoudenmlre 201, Tony Dunklnson
203. Tom Gillam 205, Robert Barnes 200,
Mike Decker 225, Mark Crofoot 208, Howard
Crofoot 202, Dan Bigger 200, Bob Bradshaw
212. Don Gorman Sr. 223. Kit Johnson 211,
R oy T em p leto n 223. W A S H D A Y

DROPOUTS - Vic Markoff 204, Bob Hosford
242/001, Marcel Vandebeek 202. FLOOZIES
-M a t t ie McCall 211.
CO UNTRY CORNER LADIES Linda
Ivey 200, Arlene Coalter 214. EDUCATORS
- Casna 212. TUESDAY NTTE MIXED Bob Bemosky 209, Roy T e npleton 225.
Wendy Gorman 222, John Plnder 218.
Bruce McKenncy 226. Dave Hansen 208.
Minerva Walters 201. Gene Poaadnl 203.
CENTRAL FLA. REGIONAL HOSPITAL —
Steve' Rice 201. Sandy Ruaaell 213. Bill
Griffith 222 215. DRIFT INN MIXED - Don
Todrtff 224 204/606. Bob Meyers 207. John
Plnder 208, Timmy Zimmers 221 206, Joe
Gauwltx 205. Dan TUlls 217. David Norman
205. Jim Johnson 217. Buddy Baldree 215.
Victor Cortes 210, Fred Brey 220. Les
Buddenhagen 207 258/655. WED. MATCH
POINT - Audrey Bowen 213. FORESTERS
- Fred " f l " 210.
W ILL E T T CADILLAC OLDSMOB1LE Phil Rubin 207, Ed Smith 215, Zach Hunter
224, Tony Dunklnson 205. Aaron Kaufman
222, Barry Sweat 201, Joe Bybee 214, Jose
Luyanda 221, Ike Moon 221 232/621, BUI
Stoudenmlre 204. Kenny Erickson 209,
Scott Kern 212. Ron Stafford 204, Jerry
Aguiar 223, Gil Ouellette 213, Gil Benton
223 200/602, William Stiles 226, Ron
A llm an 236 203/631, Roy Tem pleton
250/610, Don Gorman Sr. 257 259 233/749.
Joe McGuire 201, Roy Jacobs 216 224/622,
Don Canlglla 221 210 202/633. Ed Ryan
214. SANFORD CITY LEAGUE - Roland
Crevler 200, Jim Morace 203 223, Allen
Cooper 235, John Plnder 212, Vince Cara
212 212, Butch Macateer 236, Roland Dike
244, Aldenman 205. Van Tilley Sr. 203, Van
TUley Jr. 236/600, Bob Meyers 228, Gary
Larson 214, Jimmy Carver 216, Don
Gorman Sr 215. Clarence Jerry 224, Bob
Bates 202. bA LL &amp; CHAIN - Brad Foley
203, Mike Musgrove 201. BOB DANCE
DODGE — Jerry Farella 217, Dan Mulchl
220, Glenn Jones 213, James Hackett 209,
Alex Serraes 224. Daniel Hale 233

Celtics Survive Late-Game Mistake, 133-128
United Preaa International
T h e e x p e r ie n c e d B oston
Celtics survived a late-game
mistake expected of a young
team such as Cleveland to post a
133-128 overtime victory over
the Cavaliers Friday night.
Leading by 2 points with
seven seconds remaining In regu l a t l o n , B o s t o n 's D e n n is
Johnson was called for traveling
while he was trying to run out
the clock. Cleveland rookie Ron
Harper hit a 20-foot Jumper at
the buzzer to send the game Into
overtime.
"W e -

hud

th e

nam e

w an

ut

least five different times.” said
Kevin McHale. who scored a
game-high 38 points for Boston.
"But they Just kept coming
back."
Cleveland, bidding for its first
triumph In Boslon Garden since
November 1978, led 44-31 early
In the second quarter, sparked
by the shooting of Harper and

...Baird
Continued from IB

similiar happenstance occurred
during the Kingdom of the Sun
H oliday Classic when Baird
missed the bus at school and
Klein sat him down.
"W e have one rule that Is
unbending and has a conse­
quence." Klein said. "When you
arrive late, you don't play.”
Baird said he was nervous
about hts start, but after hitting
his first two shots tn the opening
minutes he felt fine. "I felt some
p ressu re," Sem inole’s
Fellowship of Christian Athletes
President said. "But as soon as I
hit that power hook, I knew I
would have a good night."
Along with Baird's output,
Sem inole received continued
all-around efforts from Roderick
Henderson. Jerry “ Stick" Parker
and Andre Whitney. Henderson
had 15 points, six assists, seven
r e b o u n d s and f our s tea ls.
Whitney totaled 14 points, nine
assists, six boards and four
steals. Parker had a game-high
18 points, which included a
brilliant sky tip. along with live
assists, six boards and two
steals.
Lyman stayed close until the
third quarter behind the shoot­
ing and passing of Robert
T h om as and C raig Radzak.
Thomas finished with 16 points
and seven assists. Radzak tossed
in 10 points.
Late In the first quarter. Hen­
derson stole the ball and con­
verted a driving three-point play
for a 14-11 lead but Lyman hung

B a sk e tb a ll
fellow rookies John Williams
and Brad Daugherty.
“ We took them lightly — let's
not try to put It anyway else."
Celtics Coach K.C. Jones said.
"They started out running and
ban ging the boards and we
started out walking. W e woke up
when we were down 10 or 11
points.”
Larry Bird scored 12 of his 35
points In the second quarter and
Q a a io n

p u lle d

w ith in

6 3 -9 0

at

halftime. Harper scored 10 o f bis
team-high 30 points In the third
quarter to help Cleveland hold a
92-91 edge entering the final
period.
R ocketa 112, P isto n s 106

At Pon tiac, M ich., Akeem
Olajuwon scored a game-high 33
points and Houston held off
late-starting Detroit. Houston led

close despite missing four free
throws In the second quarter.
Radzak popped In a Jumper with
two seconds left to close the gap
to 34-31 at halftime.
"W e knew they were hanging
pr e t t y t ough at h a l f t i me , "
Supcrsub Reginald "S p o o k "
Bellamy said. "W e Just came out
and played better defense In the
third quarter."
The 'Nolcs got their runnin
game going in a hurry. With
B aird outl etti ng, the T rib e
blitzed Lyman. 12-3, forcing
Lawrence into time out. Near the
end o f the quarter. Seminole
went Into a spread offense which
Lawrence said hurt his team.
"W e had a defense for the
spread, but a kid was out of
position and they got a couple
layups.” he said. "W e didn't
fight through the picks, which
hurt, too. But I'm happy with the
kids, they played pretty well."
Seminole led by nine after
three quarters before building a
68-52 lead on tw o Wa l t e r
Hopson free throws with 1:40 to
play for its biggest advantage.

by 21 points early In the fourth
quarter but Detroit went on a
17-0 run. The Pistons came no
closer than 3 points down the
stretch.

Mavericks 124, Backs 122
At M ilw a u k e e . J a m e s
Donaldson scored the last 5
Dallas points to lead the Maver­
icks over M ilw a u k e e. M ark
Aguirre led Dallas with 27 points
and Terry Cummings paced the
Bucks with a career-high 39.
Dallas overcame a 101-92 deficit
in the final 2:45 to force the
extra period.

■onloa in s ,
lOO
Xavier M cDaniel scored 30
poi nts and T om C ham bers
added 29 to pace Seattle In Us
roue of Denver. The victory was
Seattle's fifth in Us last six
games. The Sonlcs erupted for
30 points over the final 6:30 of
the second quarter to expand a
46-42 lead into a 72-56 halftime
advantage.
"Mike Whittington and Todd
Patterson had clutch baskets
down the stretch." Lyman coach
Norman Ready said. "And J.J.
Miller hit some big free throws.”
Whittington led Lyman with
10 points and Miller chipped in
nine. Jarvis Watkins added
eight. Danny Hartley led the
Tribe with 13 points while Ralph
Hardy and Scan Roberts each
tossed in 10.
LYMAN JV (41) - Patterson X Whit
ling ton 10. Urihan 2. Watkins I. F lint 5.
M ilter f, Jerry 0, Simpson 4, Totals: IS 13-20
43.
SEMINOLE JV (42) - Hardy 10. Burka 7,
Jonas X Roberts 10. Hartley IX Hagan 0.
Totals: 1410-1143.
Halttime — Seminole 24. Lyman 21. Fouls
- Lyman 15. Seminole 20. Fouled out — none.
Technicals — Lyman coach Norman Raady 2.
Jones.

LYMAN (U ) — Floranc# 7, S la rki J,
Thom## U. Radzak 10, Hattar 4. Lamb X
Moulton 3. Wright 1, Brown 4. Total*: 10 15-25
M.
SEMINOLE 170) - Whitnay U. Parkar II.
Edwards I, Henderson 15. Baird 10. Hopson 2,
Hathaway 4, Gadton 0, Bellamy 4. Totals: 2*
13-101)70.
Halftlm a — Samlnole 14, Lyman 31. Fouls
— Lyman 14, Seminole 14. Fouled out — none.
Technicals — Edwards (v trb a l), Whitney
(grabbed rim ).

DOG
R A C IN G
NOW !
NIGHTLY 7:30 p.m.

(except Sun.)

LYMAN JV ROLLS ON

Matinoes Mon., Wed.
&amp; Sat. 1:00 p.m.

In the Junior varsity game.
Lyman overcame a 14-0 firstquarter deficit to nip hard-luck
Seminole. 43-42. The victory
was Lym an’s seventh in eight
games while the Tribe fell to 1-9.

PLAY THE
EXCITING A HIGH
PAYING ...
“PIC 6 ” A “BIG Q ”

“ Let The Professionals Do It”

THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission lor ladies

E C H O L S T R E E S E R V IC E
LICENSED -

FULLY INSURED -

Visit our two climate-controlled
clubhouses lor your fine dining
and entertainment pleasure!

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

• COMPLETE TREE SERVICE
• FREE ESTIMATES • STUMP GRINDING
• 24 HR. ANSWERING SERVICE
2405 Grandview Avenue
Sanford, FL 32771
Contact Pete or Terry Echols

P llO n ©

323-2229

Warriors 118, Clippsrs 106
At Oakland. Calif., Joe Barry
Carroll scored 33 points and
Larry Smith grabbed 17 re­
bounds to pace Golden State
over the Clippers. Larry Drew
scored 22 points to lead the
Clippers, who lost for the 18th
time In 19 road games this
season.

BUY H ER E
PAY HERE
LO W

DOWN PAYMENT
GOOD CREDIT BAD CREDIT
NO CREDIT
NO INTEREST

USED CARS
3219 S HWY 17 92
323 2123
SANFORD

SPORTS FANS!
I

BET
YOU
DIDN’T

KNOW
Brought to you
By Ksn Rummel
Did you know that the UNDER­
DOG has won the Super Bowl
almost one-third of the lime In Super
Bowl history.. . The underdogs
who've won the Super Bowl are the
Jets over Baltimore In 1 9 6 9 ...
Kansas City over Minnesota In
1970. . . Miami over Washington in
1973 . . . Oakland over Philadelphia
' In 1981 . ,. Washington over Miami
In 1 9 8 3 ...and the Raiders over
Washington in 1984.
•

Bucs Hire M cVay As Director
TAMPA IUPI) — The Tampa Bay Buccaneers, going
through organizational changes as new coach Ray Perkins
assembles his staff, announced Friday the appointment of
Jim McVay as director of administration.
McVay. son o f San Francisco 49ers vice president and
general manager John McVay. replaces Herb Gold.

y r * r r

-v -rr-v

•

e

Why are points In Isnnis called 15,
30, snd 40, Inslssd of 1, 2, end
37. . . In early days of tennis, the
score was kept on a clock, with the
hands moved to 15, 30 and 45
minutes after the hour, so the points
were called IS, 30, and 45 instead ol
1,2, snd 3 . . . Later, players change
the 45 to 40, but the 15 end 30
remain.
•

e

•

Who were the TV announcers on
Ihe very llrst Super Bowl lelecast?
. . . Both CBS and NBC televised the
first Super Bowl, on Jan. 15, 1967,
and Ihe announcers on that historic
lelecast were Ray Scoll and Frank
Gilford on CBS, and Curt Gowdy
and Paul Christman on NBC
• e e

I bet you didn't know...the! Kan
Rummal Chevrolet has s line selec­
tion ol new cere end (rucks and OK
used cars A trucks. Our service
department Is fully stalled with fac­
tory trained technicians and ready
to eorvo you.
No appointmont necessaryf

CLUBHOUSE RESV.: 831-1600

SANFORD-ORLANDO
KENNEL CLUB

8

North ol Orlando. Just oil Hwy. 17-92
301 Oog Track Road, Longwood
Sorry. No One Under 18

HWY. 17-92 SANFORD
3 2 1 -7 8 0 0

f

M
» 4

1

�tr
W.

«

Kf-v-f ■•j*“ &lt; V V V ,l» T

•• i -

IEWdey. Jam. it, 1m

Bisceglia Earns
Coach O f Year
With 9-1 Season

Hartsfield Assumes
L Gains
Sophomore Off Year
By Chris Fitter
Herald Sparta Writer
Although he’a certainly not one to brag. Carlos
Hartsfield knew all along he'd be playing van ity
football as a sophomore at Lake Mary High. W hat
Hartsfield didn't know Is he would be thrust Into
the team leadership role In his first van ity
season.
Hartsfield. a quiet young man oft the field, w as
a vicious hitter on the field and earned a starting
spot In the Rams' defensive backflcld. Midway
through the season, however, he also took on the
starting quarterback Job when senior Shane
Letterlo went out with a fractured collarbone.
It didn't take long for Hartsfield to fit In at a
position he had never played before and he led
Lake Mary to five consecutive victories and a 7-3
regular-season record. For his Impressive allaround play In 1986, Carlos Hartsfield was voted
the San ford Herald’a Sophomore Football Player
of the Year.
Lake Mary coach Harry Nelson said It Is an
award Hartsfield well-deserved.
"H e turned our season around," Nelson said
about the son of William and Carrie Hartsfield of
Sanford. "H e'd never played quarterback before
but he came In an made very few mistakes. He
was a calm, forthright leader.”
In the balloting for Sophomore of the Year.
Hartsfield received six votes compared to four for
Oviedo linebacker Willie Pauldo and one for
Lyman utility man Steve Jerry. The six Seminole
County coaches and five Sanford Herald sports
writers voted for the All-Countv team.
" A s a freshman he looked like a skinny, gangly
kid with big hands and feet." Nelson said of
Hartsfield. "But he had a varsity heart and fine
Instincts for the game.”
When the 1986 season rolled around. Hartsfield
was ready to take on the varsity challenge.
"I thought I could start at safety even though I
was a sophomore." Hartsfield. whose brother Ray
was a three-year starter, said. "It's my favorite
position because you really get a chance to hit
people and I like to hit."
Hartsfield teamed with Juniors Sheldon Rich­
ards and Terry "The Cat" Miller to form one of
the most talented and feared secondaries in
Seminole County. Hartsfield was also one of the
Rams' top special teams playera.
The big surprise of the season for Hartsfield
came In a game against Port Orange Spruce
Creek at Daytona Beach. In that game. Letterlo
was Injured and Hartsfield went In to take his first
snaps at QB. The Rams went on to win the game
In overtime.
"I was nervous at first because I had never
played quarterback before," Hartsfield said. "B u t
coach Nelson had confidence in me and I didn't
want to let him and the team down.
“ I started to get real loose at quarterback about
the Oviedo gam e." Hartsfield continued. "Even
though 1 knew the pressure was coming. I felt
relaxed and had one of my best games. Now I'm
planning on staying at quarterback If that's what
coach Nelson wants."
Nelson said he won't know for sure If Hartsfield

will be a leader for the Rama for two more
seasons.
"A lon g with a lot of talent, he's got great charm
and personality and a great sense of hum or."
Nelson said. "A n d that's something you've got
have if you're going to play for me."

...All-County
Continued from I B
230-pounder, and Golloher. a qulck-for-hls-stze
220-pounder, were blg-play performers on the
line. Gammons snatched seven interceptions.
Lake Mary Junior Sheldon Richards and Oviedo
senior Gordon King made both the offensive and
defensive first-team units.
Richards, the county leader In Interceptions
with eight and second In receptions with 2 1 . was
second In votes at wide receiver (88) and
defensive back (70). He was a second-team pick
last year at DB.
King, who boomed a 52-year field goal this
year, was near-unanimous at kicker and punter.
He received 106 votes at each position.
The 240-pound senior averaged a county-high
42.5 yards per boot on 44 attempts. Several went
over 70 yards. The versatile senior, who was a
second-team Florida Sports Writers Association
Class 4A All-State selection, also Just missed at
first-team center where Kotar had six more votes.
King was the first-team kicker a year ago.
The two other running backs were Lake Mary
Junior John Curry and Oviedo senior Willie
Gainey. Curry, a first-team pick In 1985. rushed
for 929 yards and nine touchdowns for the 7-3
Rams. Gainey, the Lions' meat ticket, rambled for
750 yards and six TDs for coach Jack Blanton's
6-4 Lions.
Completing the first team was Lake Brantley
wide receiver Nigel Hinds. The shifty Junior led
the county In receiving with 29.
Defensively, a pair of rugged Juniors — Oviedo’s
Andy Palmer and Lyman's Mike Whitaker — and
hard-hitting Seminole senior Ed Banks completed
the live-man unit in the trenches. Palmer, a
powerful 270-pounder, was named to the thirdteam FSW A Class 4A All-State squad earlier this
year. Whitaker was one of the catalysts on
Lyman's scrappy 11. He averaged seven tackles
per game. Banks, a fierce pass rusher, averaged
7.8 tackles per game.
Sem inole's Earnle "S ack m an " Lewis and
Lyman's Benny Glenn, two players who com­
peted for the county tackle lead all year,
completed the linebacking corps. Glenn led the
county with 167 tackles and Lewis was next with
162. Glenn, a senior, was the Greyhounds' leader
on defense. Lewis, a first-team FSWA Class 4A
All-State choice. led the county with five fumble
recoveries and was third in quarterback sacks
with four.
In the secondary. Carlos Hartsfield, the Herald's
Sophomore Player of the Year. Joined teammate
Richards. Howell's Gammons and Lyman's Scott
Radcllff.
Radcllff. meanwhile, was "Mr. Versatile" for
Lyman. The talented Junior had five interceptions
while playing u dandy defensive back, logged
some time at quarterback at the end of the year
while handling the punting and place-kicking
chores. He was a first-team punter a year ago and
finished second to King with a 39.1 average this
fall.

H in ds
B ran tley

W a ia w rlg h t
Howell

Hoaaina
Howell

carry
M ary

u a in e y
O viedo

K lO f
Oviedo

1986 Sanford H erald All-County Football Team
F irst T eam Offense

Wide receiver

Sheldon Richards

Lake M ary

Junior

Tackle

Mike Schaefer

Lake Howell

Junior

Guard

Ken Joseph

Lake Howell

Junior

Center

Jason Kotar

Lake Howell

Junior

Guard

Kevin H unnewel 1

Lake Howell

Senior

Tackle

Steve Vadala

Lake Howell

Senior

Tight end

Bill Wasson

Lake Howell

Senior

Wide receiver

Nigel Hinds

Lake Brantley

Junior

Quarterback

M ark Walnwrlght

Lake Howell

Senior

Halfback

John Curry

Lake Mary

Junior

Halfback

Nate Hoskins

Lake Howell

Senior

Halfback

Willie Gainey

Oviedo

Senior

Kicker

Gordon King

Oviedo

Senior

End

Ed Banks

Seminole

Senior

Tackle

M arty Golloher

Lake Howell

Senior

Nose guard

Andy Palmer

Oviedo

Junior

Tackle

Mike Whitaker

Lyman

Junior

U MH A We l r

senior

F irst T eam Defense

End

'

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

Linebacker

Earnle Lewis

Seminole

Junior

Linebacker

Jeff Harris

Lake Howell

Senior

Linebacker

Benny Glenn

Lyman

Senior

Halfback

Carlos Hartsfield

Lake Mary

Sophomore

Halfback

Sheldon Richards

Lake Mary

Junior

Safety

Terry Gammons

Lake Howell

Senior

Safety

Scott Radcllff

Lyman

Junior

Punter

Gordon King

Oviedo

Senior

Banka
Seminole

Golloher
Howell

Palm er
Oviedo

W hitaker
Lym an

W agner
H ow ell

L ew is
Seminole

In sports, a team reflects the personality of Its
co&amp;ch
Last season, the Lake Howell High School
football team posted a 9-1 record and won the
Seminole A th letic Conference title. Howell
finished second in the district behind Apopka, the
only team to which Howell lost.
There isjust one better personality than 9-1.
Lake Howell had everything that makes up a
championship football team: a strong offense and
defense, tough work ethics, and a coach that
believed in his players from day one.
Mike Bisceglia. the man behind the Lake
Howell plan, was voted the 1986 Sanford Herald
Coach of the Year for guiding the Hawks to their
best season ever. Six county football coaches and
five Sanford Herald sports writers were polled.
Bisceglia received eight votes. Oviedo coach Jack
Blanton received the other three.
The Silver Hawks started quickly with convin­
cing victories over Orlando Edgewater and Winter
Garden West Orange. They picked up victory No.
3 when Nate Hoskins, the Sanford Herald
Offensive Player of the Year, broke a late
touchdown run to top Seminole.
Howell’s lone loss came on Oct. 3 against
Apopka. Ironically. Apopka would late best the
Hawks In a tiebreaker for the district champion­
ship.
Following the Apopka game, the Silver Hawks
were unstoppable. They wiped out county rival
Lake Mary. 28-0. and crushed Orange County
nemesis Winter Park. 31-14. Next, they used a
Terry Gammons kickoff return and an ever-tough
defense to knock off previously top-ranked
Orlando Evans. 14-7.
The Hawks closed with a flourish, shutting out
Lyman. 25-0, bombarding Lake Brantley. 32-7,
and hammering Oviedo. 31-0. to capture their
first Five Star Conference championship and earn
Bisceglia SAC Coach o f the Year honors. They
climbed to No. 8 in the Dunkel Index Power
Ranking and No. 9 In the Florida Sports Writers
Association Class 5A State Poll.
Bisceglia was quick to point out that It was a
team effort that made Lake Howell so successful.
"Before I came to Lake H owell." Bisceglia said. "I
coached Hialeah Miami Lakes to a pair of district
championships. There Is something special about
teams that are so successful. They all have
tremendous attitudes. Our team this year was one
of the finest teams that I have ever been a part
of."
Bisceglia said one of the keys to the Hawks'
success was the players' preparation. He said
they did not need much prodding to get them
ready to play.
"This was probably the most self-motivated
group of kids that I have ever seen." Bisceglia
said. "They worked very hard, and I didn't have
to tell them to. Hopefully, the hard working
habits will rub off on next year's team."
Bisceglia was also quick to throw some
bouquets at his coaching staf which helped him
fjlm for hours each
ievisin g the "gam e plan to the
opponent's weak link.
"It took me a few years to get the coaches that I
wanted here,” Bisceglia said. "W e had them this
year and they did an absolutely great Job."
Mike Bouch coached an offensive line that had
more meat on It that cattle car. The offensive line
was Howell's strength. Averaging 240 pounds per
man. it wore down its opponents week in and
week out.
Doug Blackwell handled the receivers corps
which was led by Bill Wasson. Howell didn't have
to throw the ball much, but when the running
game fizzled the receivers played well.
Bob Irvin was Howell's defensive coordinator
whi l e h a n d l i n g the d e f e n s i v e ends and
linebackers. Howell's defense was the stingiest in
the area and Irvin called the signals for the unit
which held opponents to Just six touchdowns for
the season.
Bob Luby took care of the secondary, which
featured hard hitters in Gammons and Junior
Davjd Dees. Buddy Garrison coached the de­
fensive tackles, who were lead by senior Marty
Golloher.
Bisceglia said that preseason training helped
out the Hawks considerably. "W e use a six-week
workout schedule with weights. Each workout Is
based on an athlete's maximum lift." Bisceglia
said. "W e lift weights, have a flexibility program
and have a running program. The training helped
us a lot and we continued It throughout the
season. We got physically stronger as the season
progressed."
Bisceglia is hoping that the great season will be
the start o f many for the Hawks. "I think that last
season put us over the top." Bisceglia added. "If
we keep on working hard, we have the potential
to be a very good team again."
When asked what the highlight of the season
was, Bisceglia said, "Every gam e."
I f U Sanford Herald A ll County Football Team
4 coach**, s tp o rti w rite r*: no vote* unanimous
Ot tense

H arris
H owell

Glenn
Lym an

H artsfield
M ary

ALL-COUNTY PANEL — Coech**: Seminole’* Dev* Mc*ur*.
Lake M ary’* Harry Nelton. Lyman’* B ill Scott. Oviedo’* Jack
Blanton, Lake Howell'* Miko Bltcogllo. Lake Brantley’* Frad
Almon, Sport* Wrltars: Sam Cook. C hrit F itte r. M ark Blytha. Scott
Sander, M ike Andrew
SEC0N0TEAM0FFENSE
Wide receiver — Craig Dering ton, Lake Howell. Junior; Alan
Greene. Oviedo. Junior. Tackle - Andy Palmer. Oviedo. Junior:
John Koib|ornt*n. Lake Mary. Senior. Guard — Shawn Martlnaon.
Lyman. Junior; C hrit Mull. Lake Brantley, Senior. Center — Gordon
King, Oviedo. Senior. Tight end — Henry Helm. Lake Howell. Senior.
Quarterback — Jason Lanham. Lake Brantley. Senior. Running back
— Robert Thomas. Lyman. Senior; Johnnie G rlllin . Lake Brantley.
Junior; Cornel Rigby. Lake Howell, Junior. Kicker — Jett Philip*.
Lake Howell. Senior.
SECONDTEAM DEFENSE
End — Vahan Noutkha|lan. Lyman. Senior; Scott Keller. Lake
M ary. Senior. Tackle — Emery Sneed. Oviedo. Junior; Chrit
Charlton. Lake Howell. Senior. Nete guard — Al Valle. Lake Howell.
Senior Linebacker — Mike Smith. Lake M ary. Senior; Steve Dennis.
Seminole. Junior; W illie Pauldo. Oviedo. Sophomore. Steve Trier,
Lake Howell. Senior. Halfback — Leonard Lucas. Seminole. Junior.
Karl W right. Oviedo. Junior. Solely — Terry M ille r. Lake Mary.
Junior; Oavld Dees. Lake Howell. Junior. Punter — Scott Radctiff.
Lyman, Junior.

Richards
M ary

Gam m ons
H o w ell

R adcllff
Lym an

HONORABLE MENTION
SEMINOLE - Dwyane W illis. Quarterback. Senior; Curtis
Rudolph. Running bock. Junior; Sonny Osborn. Tight end/Punter.
Senior; Wilton Hooks, Guard. Junior; Randy Bryant, Tackle. Junior;
J.J. Part low. Kicker. Junior; Ardlne Daniel*. End. Junior; Keith
Denton. Tackle. Senior: Rick Kelley. Linebacker. Senior; Ron Blake.
Halfback, Junior; Nick Catlello. Halfback, Junior.
LAKE MARY - Shane Letterlo. Quarterback. Tom Kothera.
Running back. Senior; M artin. Tight end. Senior; Larry Stankovlts.
Center. Senior; Sean Flaherty, Guard. Senior; M ike Renuad. Kicker.
Senior; Steve Arthur. Tackle. Senior.
LYMAN — Darren Boyesen. Quarterback. Senior. Ira Melton,
Running back. Junior; Jim Lamb. Wide receiver. Senior; J.C. Hold.
Tight end. Senior; Mike Nelson. Center, 5enior; Robhy Luce, Tackle,
Senior; Scotl Radcllff. Kicker. Junior; Ricky Sheets. End. Senior;
Scott King. Linebacker. Senior; Johnny Luce. Safety, Junior; Chuck
Scheele. Halfback. Senior.
OVIEDO — John Pettit. Quarterback, Junior; Mike McCurdy.
Quarterback. Junior; Steve Hofmann. Running back. Senior;
Rodney Thompson. Running back. Sophomore; Jerrett Klnnalrd.
Wide receiver. Senior; Jene Hartman. Tight end. Senior; Sam
Hughes. Tackle, Sophomore; Jeff Joyce. Linebacker, Senior; Pete
Llngard. Linebacker. Junior; Chad Duncan. Safety. Sophomore.
LAKE HOWELL - Jack Benedict. Tackle. Junior; Todd Shockley.
Tackle. Junior; John Schultt. Linebacker. Junior; Steve Sheppard.
Halfback. Senior; Steve Yamson. Halfback. Senior; E rik Bird.
Punter. Junior.
LAKE BRANTLEY - Greg Ebbert. Quarterback. Junior; Mark
Sepe. Running back. Junior; Cary Thompson. Wide receiver. Senior;
Geoff Cook. Tight end. Senior; Pat Gibson. Tackle, Junior; John
Hornbeck. End. Bucky Chambers. Tackle. Senior; Junior. Grant
Carpenter. Linebacker. Senior; John Young. Linebacker. Junior;
Jeff Stanphlll. Halfback. Junior; Jason Lanham. Punter. Senior.

n?A.!!Tf RBACK ~
Walnwrlght (LH ), 110; Jaton Lanham
w'.
,LM) « • Dwayne W illi* (SI 21. Gr*g
E bbtrt (LB) 26. Sh*n* Letterlo (LM ) 20
u,.nVN^ ,.N 0 * t CK ~ N* u Ho*kln* (LH ) 104. John Curry (LM) *0.
WHile Gainey (01 51. Cornel Rigby (LH) 14. Robert Thoma* ' D 21.
Johnnie G rlftln :LB) U . Curtl* Rudolph (S) 10.
n '£ ,.0 L " 5 CJ ,Vf ? ~ Nlfl#l Hlnd* ILB) ,0°- Sheldon Richard*
ILM ) M. Craig Derlngton (LH ) 54, Alan Green (0 ) 42. Cary
Thompson (LB) 24.
r J ! l 0 n Tn f
7 8111 ^ • Mon ,L H * ,0»- Henry Helm (LH) 44. Geoff
LB,«
Hartman
(O)1 fL
20.Sonnv ° ****■" &lt;s &gt; **• °« v ld AAartln (LM) I t. G*n*
? * r . J* * 0° . KoU r ,L H I w - Gordon King (0) 14. MIL*
r
.* 2 \L* rry S,* nk°vl'» (LM ) 5t. Kevin Straub (S) 10. Jack
Campbell (LB) I.
n u ^ c J ! VE. . Li N.K 7 K#n Jo* * r h «•&gt;') ,0°- Kovlh Hunnewetl
. 'I ?
,L H ) * ’ M lk» SchaeUr (LH) 10. Andy Palm .r
Ko,bl° rn »*n (LM ) 12. C hrit M ull (LM ) 12.
m u T ^ ° f«d0?. o lnfl 101 ,04’ J» " Phll|P* ,L H &gt; u • Mike

R!urid(LBH2

*

R*dcllW (LI **■J J Plr,l°" &lt;LAA»
Oaten**

,LH ) U - Ed B‘ nk» &lt;*&gt;
Vahan
Noutkhaiian (L) 52. Scott Keller (LM ) 44. John Schultz (LH) 70
Ardlne Daniel* (S&gt; .2. Todd Shockley a H l'.O 7 ^ n n T n tJ c k (LB,'
«LH &gt; « • Andy Palmer (0) 54. M lk*
m m
Em* f y 5n««d (O) Ji. Chri*
M « .L r J M
• , h. P r ,°? ***
S»ev. Arthur (LM) II.
L I N I M C K iR
Jett Harris (LH) 9f. Eernle Lewis (S) 64 Bennv
Glenn (L) 42. Mine Smith (LM ) 32. Stay* Warren (Si 10 Willie

Pauldo (OH*. Steve T rier

(LH) II. J.tfJo^w,on,
BACKFIELD — Terry Gammon* (LH) n . Sheldon Richard* ILM I
20. Scott Radcllff (L) 34. Carlo* Hartsfield (LM ) 24. Leonard Luca*
(SI 22. Terry M ille r (L M ) 22. David Dee* (LH) It. Karl Wright (01

i i m N*nEl ^

COr^ !D .Kln?.,.0 , ,04- R a d c l l f f (L) 10. Erik Bird

L ^

S

im

,s’

““

&lt;u»&gt; -•

�K 1-*

■ '» .

r r r v v

j

*

T ry

^ n rrry ^ r w r v r

&gt;m&lt; r r r * r r / ~ r ') » 1

.

#•• •*—» . 1

Robinson Sparks Hawks Past Pats
mm

■jM trk B lytk o

B a sk e tb a ll

C A S S E L B E R R Y — Lake H o w e ll
limited Lake Brantley to just two points
In the third quarter and fought off a
comeback attempt In the fourth period to
capture Its first Seminole Athletic Con­
ference victory of the year with a 42-33
victory at Lake Howell Friday night
before of 381 fans.
The Silver Hawks Improved to 3-6 on
the season and 1-1 In the SAC. Howell
treks to Mount Dora Tuesday. The
Patriots fell to 4-6 and 1-1 In the
conference. Brantley hosts Winter Park
Wednesday.
Lake Howell used the strong Inside
play of Alonzo Robinson who finished
with a game high 18 points and nine
rebounds.
"Alonzo (Robinson) did a real good jo b
for us tonight." Silver Hawk coach Greg
Robinson said. "It's his first year of
organized basketball and he has Im­
proved greatly but he Is still capable of
playing better."
Robinson made his presence felt early,
scoring seven points In the opening
quarter. "T hey were double-teaming me
so when I couldn't get the ball I went to
the boards." Robinson said. "This Is a
big win for us. The last game we beat
ourselves and this will give us some
confidence."
Both teams came out sluggish for the
first three quarters until the action
picked up In the final period.
Neither team could score on Its first
offensive opportunities but Darren Leva
finally broke the Ice with 5:55 with a
bucket inside. Lake Howell came back
and scored twice before Brantley tied It*

up on a Joe Nolff Jumper to tie the game
a 4-4. Two Robinson hoops gave Howell
a 9-6 first-quarter edge.
Howell's Aaron Gammons then opened
the second quarter with a crafty layup to
put the crowd behind the Silver Hawks.
The crowd was quickly silenced though
as Bo Pamplln and Brent Bell connected
on consecutive hoops.
Matt Johnson then hit a free throw for
Lake Howell before Pamplln tied up the
score at 12-12. It was the last time
Brantley would be even with the Silver
Hawks.
Johnson hit a short Jumper and
Robinson a pair of free throws and Lake
Howell tooka 19-15 halftime lead.
The Patriots then hurt themselves by
only scoring two points In the third
quarter. "W e had our chances." Lake
Brantley coach Steve Jucker said. "The
third quarter really hurt us.”

Lake Howell scored Just eight points In
the third quarter as its pressing defense
confused the Patriots. The defensive
effort put forth Impressed Robinson.
"W e played really well on defense
tonight," Robinson said. "W e were hurt
on their trap but our defense made up for
It."
Lake Brantley made up for Its third
quarter drought, getting on track and
scoring 16 points in the fourth period.
Both teams were pressing at the beginlng of the fourth quarter before Lake
Howell got into foul trouble and slowed
down the tempo with a spread offense
with 3:53, leading. 31-26.

then made a steal which resulted in two
free throws and a 44-40 Lake Mary lead.
After Steve Kandall scored for Oviedo.
CzemieJewskl reeled off three more
points for a 47-42 Lake Mary lead with
4:08 remaining.
Behind Czemlejewski. who also had
seven rebounds and four steals, for the
Rams, Terry "The Cat" Miller added
eight points and seven assists, Oscar
Merthle contributed seven points and
eight rebounds and Matt Napoli canned
eight points and Mike Mandevllle con­
tributed six.
"It was as much Terry's (Miller's)
game as m ine." Czemlejewski said. "H e
did an excellent Job running the offense
and dishing off on the break."
For O viedo, Garth Bolton. A llan
Greene and Robb Hughes scored eight
points each, Kandall added six and eight
rebounds and Dana Hill contributed six
points and seven boards.
"W e 'v e got to get some leadership out
o f our seniors." Oviedo coach Dale
Phillips said. "W e were In the position
we wanted to be In but our seniors didn't

...R a m s
Continued from IB
Mary maintained a four-point lead
m idw ay through the second period
when, with the score 21-17. the Lions
seized the momentum. Led by Brian
Wilson's all-around hustle. Oviedo reeled
off 13 unanswered points for a 30-21
lead with 1:33 left In the half. Wilson had
six o f his team-high 10 points during the
run.
A full-court, trapping defense enabled
Lake Mary to bounce back quickly as the
Rams scored seven consecutive points to
pull within 30-28 at halftime.
The two SAC foes traded buckets most
o f the third quarter and the Rams took a
39-38 lead Into the fourth period. Dwight
Everett scored the first two points o f the
quarter off an offensive rebound for a
41-40 Oviedo lead but Czemlejewski
then took over for the Rams.
Czernlejcwskl's three-point play put
Lake Mary in the lead for good and he

The Patriots Anally rallied as Bell hit a
short jumper wtth 3:48 to play and the
press forced a quick steal which resulted
In a pair of free throw* by Nolff,
After another steal, Bell, who finished
with a team high 11 points, who was
fouled. Bell connected on both attempts
cutting the lead to 31-30 with 2:57 left.
Another steal sent Nolff to the line who
missed the front end of a one-and-one.
Lake Howell then pushed the ball down
the floor and Johnson hit a 5-footer to
push the lead to three.
The Silver Hawks reeled off five points
after that to ensure the victory. Gary
Peterson came through big late hitting
three of four attempts from the free
throw line. On Peterson's second pair, he
missed the second attempt and Robinson
grabbed the rebound and put down a
layup for a 37-30 Lake Howell lead.
Brantley was forced to foul late and the
Silver Hawks came through connecting
on 8 of 12 In the final quarter and 16 of
22 for the game.

Lake Howell used a strong fourth
quarter surge to hammer Lake Brantley
61-40 In Junior varsity action.
Paul Rein finished with a game high
18 points as Frank Sanchez added 10 for
the Silver Hawks.
T rey White led the way for the Patriots
with 16 points as Billy Clark added 13
more.
LAKK HOWELL (43) - Clerk 1. Keller 0, Robinson II.
M. John ton 10. Gibson l, J. Johnton 3, Peterson 1.
Common**. Tot*l»: u i t 3143.
LAKE B R A N T ILY (31) - Lawton 1, Noltl f, Shirley
3. Boll 11, Lav* 4. Pamplln 5. Total*: H 91413.
Halftlm o — Lako Howoll If, Lake Brantley 11. F ouli —
Laka Howall I I , Laka Brantlay I t . Fouled out — Ball,
Lava. Clark. Technical — non*. Records — Laka
3-* (1-1), Lako Brantlay 4-* (1-1).

do the Job. And we turned the ball over
in critical situations without Lake Mary
even putting any pressure on us."
OVIEDO (M l - Campbell 0. Wilton 10. Bolton I,
Evaratt 2. Hugh** (. HIM «, G riffith 0, Kandall t . Bower*
3. Greene*. Total*: 23 *-13 50.
LAKE MARY ( i t ) - Prom 0, Clornlojewskl 2i, M ille r
1. Mandevllle «. M itchell 2, Napoli I , Merthle 7. Stewart
2. T otal*: 2315-25*1.
Halftim e — Oviedo 30, Lake M ary 31. Foul* — Oviedo
15. Laka Mary 11. Fouled out - Wilton. Technical -

LAKE MARY JV TRIMS OVIEDO
Calvin Davis and Burnett Washington
combined for 30 points and George
" A i r " Gordon and Carlos Hartsfteld
combined for 20 assists as Lake Mary's
Junior varsity claimed a 76-70 victory
over the Oviedo JV.
Davis had a game-high 17 points to
lead the Rams while Washington tossed
In 13. Gordon added 10 points and 11
assists, Henry Kellom contributed eight
points and Hartsffeld added six points
and nine assists.
Charles E a rn e r led Oviedo with 14
points and Brad Bolton pumped in 12.

SCOREBOARD
KOIEHAkO: Ukt/HIUIOKmen

TV/RADIO
TV/1ADI0: tatwdoy badly U e n f
TELEVISION

Mm**
l*k M
I pm - WCPX 4. Collect, Vlllonovl It
Virgin!* I l l
2:» pm - WESH1 CoINgt. Miami it
KtMMlL)
S pm - WUOOU. Col top. Alabama i l
Miuiulpul tU
4 pm. - WCPX*. Col top. N n o d tln
Vegoi it Oklahoma (U
I I pm. - WON. Coilogi. Soutil florid* i l
OtPail (U
H o r n - ESPN. I t u High Roller*
Toumomwl
1pm. - WFTVt, PM. ACOeko Clouic

(LI

lpm. - SIN. Argaifoa w. Colombia
1 pm - ESPN, Indoor, Bolllmor* Blast*1
Ormlond Foret
I * m. - ESPN. McOorukfi US. Opto
Ownpiomhlpt
Troon
1 p m - ESPN, P ringle** U g h !
PreCoNtrllfClouic

RADIO

ReOllne

I pm - WOFLIS. USA. Collogi. Stow
Bowl(LI

MO pm - WUE2AM (1*00). Houston
Biotiil it Stetson
n o p m. - WKIS AM (INI, Fltrldo Slot* *1
CncirnioK
T*a
» p m. - WKIS AM |7M). SportsTolk tom
Or istepher Russo

AD pm - WESH). Bob Hop* Clonk.
Fourth round IL)

Is*

1130 p m - ESPN. Frink to Btndtil »t Al
Mortina lighhotogMi

CoN

Noctof
M l p m — ESPN, Hackly. NHL.
Washington C h illis ot Hartford Wholors IL)
I pm - ESPN. Stow Gorvt) Coltbrify
Citstk

4 pm - WKIS AM (M l. SportsTolk with
Chrlstopkar Russo

DOGS
DO* RACISM: Al SoaNrdftloodt

YtddMg

Frtdoy Mtfhri Irsatts
1st —i/lk, ■: 30.H
7 Hr*Victory
H * 11 00 4)0
1 Easy Scott
040 IN
1 Min Snowbird
4®
0111) a n ; P[M l fl.H; T(M il USA M

II p m - ESPN. Amorico's Cap *17:
Challengin' Fmol, Roc* Four (U

5 Alton sOro

I orn - ESPN. Iron Mm World Champion
ship
4 » pm - WFTV t, Widt World Of Sports,
tronmon Trlomkn World Chompmhip

* 50p m - WFTV ». Widl Work) ot Sports

Stodl)
loskrttUI
1 pm - WESH J. Co top*. North Cortona
SUN It North Corolinoll)
l p m - WFTV I. Cal logo. Louisian* SUN
*1 Ktotutky II)
4 pm - WFTV f. CoHogo. Loutsrlll* it
PurdueIL)

M-VLCXO)

WN E« 4M

0 GWlyJO
II A*
1 Slotted
4®
0 (H I KM; P (H I 140Mi T (1*1)
OHM; DO (M l 4n.Ni Str*lck*d: I Start's i
•*y

jr*-vw, M:an

IN
« PtrtyMib!
IN
410 120
2 tuclikin Prdt
221
2 Mr Geiroi
G (HI 11.N; t (411 11N; T (57 2) UN;
k r i t c M ll M N w y

Figaro Ikotwg
1 pm - WESH2. Sportsoorid. World
Chompdnshipt
II p m - ESPN. Amorico's Cup 17.
Challengers’ Final (LI
4 N Am. -

ESPN. Michelob Jumping

))»

14 00 IN
I Bom*nBra«k
100 IN
1 Whine Glen
**
0(7 0)44.1*; P II411)1.N. TI75IIM5N
71* —VIA A: N.7)
0 Wright FmtSM
I I 00 AN IN
1 UnrulyMichotl
)N 140

1 KUrgMEmily
1420 • » t u
no
1 MOMlMStf
too
l tatan ilN K
0 (I)) «.«. t (31) 71 M; T 1314) HIM.
Ow. DM HMD HIM
U t-V IL C : 11.M
1 Sm Om i S-jI t
10» SN IN

BASKETBALL
M EN : 7 :X p .m . — Sante FeCC al Seminole CC
WOMEN: 5 p . m . - Seminole CC at Valencia CC
Ol RLS: Sp.m. — Orlando Boone a l Lake Brantley

1*

0114111.40; P 15)140.40, T (414) 1STJ*
4Ml —1/H.C: 1141
4 LightnmDiana
24N U N 4B
} Hoy Jilts
IN 140
5 Ailfufltf
179

0 (54) 44.40; P141) 111Mi T(451) 11144

Solar**)
ditto* lukatkaii
1. M * 01. - WMMA AM (M). Twvwum *1
Florid*
I N pm - WFRK FM III Jl. Tompo *1

Saturday's Prep/JuCo Schedule

41*—1/LI: HJ4

1 OotttoKoltog

0 ISiTerttoo
Mom - NVL RodW (Also 1p m. II p m.)
t pm. - NVL. Amorlcon Sports Covolcodc
(ohomdvghtl

SATURDAY'S SCHEDULE

S SomanBJlss
* * IN
1 HuttorRot*
I®
O ll t ia M i P IH I MM; T11-511 ION

It* -l/M . 0:41.71
] Wild Dunes E
AN )N IN
1 MH American*
i l l 100
0 T*nn*rWydn»r
IN
g iH ia w r P ( 5 i) a « iT ( &gt; H ) a N
141* —VIA A: N.7I
1 ESBtoiomm
IN IN IN
S AtModCayota
1)00 1180
1 SJZtol
IN
0(11) 17.00; P (I II U A r T I I 51) l it N
III* -M A D : UN
I KentuckyRe,l
ION )N to.
i MonototCharity
IN IN
7 Full Scan
IN
0 (541 a N ; P 151) U N ; T 15571 SUN;
Pk S i 1754514). 4t l I patd Saioatrt 41N.
Carryaatr: u m M
I29k-VAC: a N
] Boh)Slipper
ION «00 2N
4 GoldenAngtl
IN 2N
I Wild Luck
IN
0 (511 19.40; P (H ) a N ; T ( H I) 91H;
Qam ON (5554) 191 40
IN k -V A A :a U
I ToughCtoan
100 IN 4N
7 DtsartOmar
UN IN
1 Bird* Man
IN
Q 157) U N ; P (571 U N ; T (5711 410.M;
SU15M 1) I.JU24
A —A749; M—54475U

BASKETBALL

14 n

171 I)

Bullato

—
4
*'1

14 11 449 11 l) SO iv*

Houston

II 10 SCO I s

Denver
Sacramento
San Anionla
,
Pactftc Omsta*

I t 2) 4K 9
10 N 171 114
9 11 20 11

LA Lakari
Parhand
Goidto Si**e
Seattle
Phoenli
LA Clippers

20 I
21 IS
21 17
» II
IS n
JD

.771 IIS S4
JU 74
554 I
NS 1)4
ID 714

Seattle DA Denver 100
Gakton Stale HA LA Clippers 104
laturdiy's Games
D*. tot at Indiana. I p m
Detratat New Jersey. 7 Npm
New Tvk i t Cleveland, lp m
PtuladNphiaalChicago.I Npm.
UtihalSanAntonto.1 Npm
LA Clippers at Photoi A 9: N p m
Seattle al Sacramento. IO N pm
Sunday's Games
Houston at Boston
LA Lakers at Washington
Atlanta at Mi Iwaukie
Goidto Stale at Portland, night

Wal es C t o l t r t o c t
Patrick DnttMa
W L T Ph.
50 II J 65
Philadelphia
NY lilondert
2) 10 4 cl
NY Rangari
II 20 7 51
PittiSurgn
12 II 1 43
II 21 1 41
Nan Jtrwy
WattlingIon
10 21 7 19
Uaxn On won
Montreal
72 II 7 51
horttord
11 17 4 M
BaPon
20 It 1 4)
Qurtac
17 It 7 41

Minnesota
Toronto
Chicago
Detroit
SI Louis

II 20
10 11
17 II
II 20
14 N

JO
S 41
4N
I N
7»

171 147
IS) IU
1)9 III
IM IU
IM 170

2 40
4 S)
1 il
4 4*
S )l

101 l«
111 111
IN I7S
117 117
149 IN

ImytkeDmsin

Edmonton
Winnipeg
Calgary
Los Angeles
Vancouver

19 I)
!4 17
25 11
10 11
D 17

Friday's limits
Winnipeg l Ne* Jersey I

LosAngeles LSI Laos)
Vancouver 9, Calgary i
laturdiy's Gomes
Pittsburghat Boston. I llpm
Philadelphiaot NT Islanders 1 OSp m
Washington*1Hartford. 7 B p m
Quebecat Dotroit. 7 Upm
Butfaloet Montrial. I OSp m
Edmontonat loronto. I 0)p m
Vancouver al Calgary. I 05p m
Chicagoat Mirmo'A I 55pm
Los Angeles *1 SI Louis, 115 pm
Sunday’sGemes
Washingtonal NewJersey
NT Islanders*i Philadelphia, night
Edmontonit Buttato, n^ht
DelraI at Pittiburgh. night
.
MinnesotaIt Winnipeg, ni^it
Quebecat Chicago, mgnt

Friday's Results

BostonItt Cleveland IN (OTI
Houston111. Detroit Ml
Dallas 124. Milwaukee 121(OT)

SOCCER

OF GA
IH
142
ID
IM
151
11)

I lf
130
III
IM
201
&gt;4*

IM
144
IU
I lf

147
141
*N
■&lt;1

C harity Night: A Collins' D ecree
S pecial to the Herald
LONG WOOD — Way back In the late 1940s and
early ’ 50s. Sanford-Orlando Kennel Cl ub
chairman of the board Jerry Collins not only was
Involved in the pari-mutuel business, but was
also a member of the Florida Legislature as a
representative from Sarasota.
Collins remembers well those days In the
legislative halls of Tallahassee. And although the
man recognized as the "father of modern day
greyhound racing," received numerous awards
and plaudits for his accomplishments as a
four-term legislator, there’s one program which to
this day remains as the most cherished.
That’s the bill which Collins introduced and
made certain passed to allow pari-mutuel wager­
ing facilities - dog racing, horses, jai alai - to
conduct performances where proceeds are
directed Into the coffers of scholarship programs
and charitable organizations.
in fact, the program for scholarships and
charities has been adopted on a nationwide level.

144 145

NomiDhrisiM
W L T Pis. OF GA

W L Pet. «S
Dallas
Utah

HOCKEY: NHL STANDINGS

61
Vi
J*t
14
14

I1 1 IIX

Campkell Cwtermc*

Western Cantorenet
Mtdwast OtviutH

HOCKEY

lA S K IT IA ll; NIA STANDINGS
la s lt r t C it lir t ic t
krUnnc OniUM
WL M
Bolton
)t 10 72)
Philadelphia
21 It SM
Wilhingtcn
If II JI4
h r* Yak
12 24 552
It 24 270
Nee Jeruy
CMtrslOhtUM
Atlanta
2J 10 714
Datroil
1) II 471
Mi Im U m
25 10 MS
Chicago
II 10 J21
Indiana
11 11 NO

Cleveland

Pari-mutuels
And at the Sanford-Orlando Kennel Club, since
1971 alone, $1,718,183.53 has been raised for
these projects, all at no extra charge to SOKC
customers.
Each winter here at the Sanford-Orlando
Kennel Club. Collins sets aside five Tuesday
evening performances for such workings, in­
cluding this coming Tuesday. Jan. 20 when all
proceeds will go towards Seminole Community
College scholarships.
Seminole Community College, which lias re­
ceived $328,311.17 from these benefit programs
since 1971. will be receiving Tuesday night’s
proceeds, all at no extra cost to customers who
come to the racetrack that evening. Post time is
7:30.

SOCCER M ill
Friday'! Rnult!
Bal'iittort 7,74t« T v k !
Clavttondl OaltoiJ
Chicago A Tacoma)
Wichita 1 San D*go 1
Mitmota 1. Kamai City 4
lo t Angtki A SI lOuit I
Satwday'iCaiM
Wichita at Daitol I B p a
Suuday'l Gamut
Lai Aogtln *1 Mrnnowl*
Chicago at kanut City
Tacoma aUttaTgrk
Ban mor i at CIv.VaM. night
St Louii a* San Dtogo. night

Legal Notice
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT

BID4U/S7-U
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Ihef the City al Sanford. Florida,
w ill receive waled bid* up to
1:M p m on Wednesday, Febru­
ary 11, 19*7 (or the following
wrvlce:
AMBULANCE/RESCUE UNIT
The * * a l* d b id * w ill be
publicly opened later that *ame
day at 7 00 p m. In the City
Com m illio n Chambers, Room
117, Sanford City Hall
Specifications and the proper
Bid Form* are available, al no
cost, in the Purchasing Olllce.
500 N Park Avenue, Sanford,
Florida (50J15N 31*1, eat. N A
The City ot Sanford reserves
the right to accc;&gt; or reject any
or all bids, with or without
cause, to waive technicalities, or
to accept the bid which In its
judgment best serve* the Inter
estol the City.
CITY OF SANFORD
Walter Shearln
Purchasing
Publish January IS. I9B7
DEK93

N D T lC C T O T M l F tttU C
M k N is Ranfey •*&lt;■»
n( ANIuetriwnt *f MwCRy
•d tattdwrW wtH RaW • rwfMar
meettwf eft January A tS ? M
the City Had wt i t : » A.M. in
to c s m M * • P M M t f t r •
in few
OnRae it pertain* 9* rear yard
tutremant* In ■ MR-1
district on:
Lot 1*2. l emlnoto Park. P i I,
PG«3
Ro m e more nnclflcaily Netcrlbod a * located: NE comer of
MeHonvIlleB**
Plonnod uoe of ttw p r^orfy It
to erect o single-family reelAOVICE TO THE PUBLIC: If
• person decide* to appeal o
dkcltlon mod* with respect to
any matter considered at the
o verbatim record of
the proceeding* including ttw
testimony and ovldmco, which
record Is not provld*d by ttw
CltyofSotitord. (FS2M.01QS)
B.L. Parkins. Chairman
Board of Ad|usttrwnf
Publish: January*. 11.1907
DEK-31

LEOAL ADVERTISEMENT
•ID f0 t/t7 -1 4
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that ttw City ot Sanford. Florida,
will receive sealed bid* up to
1:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Febru­
ary tl, 1907 for ttw following
service:
SEWER CLEANING MACHINE
The sealed bids w ill be
publicly opened later that seme
day at 3:00 p.m. in ttw City
Commission Chambers, Roam
117, Sanford City Hell.
SpecificsMan* and ttw proper
Bid Forms are available, at no
cost, In ttw Purchasing Office,
300 N. Park Avenue, Sanford.
Florida (305) 333-31*1, *Nt. 394.
The City ol Sanford reserves
the right to accept or re|ect any
or .all bids, with or without
causa, to waive technicalities, or
to accept the bid which In Its
judgement best serves the Inter­
est of ttw City.
CITY OF SANFORD
Walter Shearln
Purchasing
Publish January II. 1907
DEK-M

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE EIOHTEENTH
JU D IC IAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NUMBER)
MAlSJ-CA-et-O
PINETREE VILLAGE AT
DEER RUN HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION, INC.,
Plaintiff.
v*.
ATHAJOSANDERSAND
.MERISTELL MCLAUGHLIN,
Defendant.
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: MERISTELL
MCLAUGHLIN
c/o Shackelford
2*03 Ft. Fam t worth Road
Alexandria, Virginia 22303
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O TIFIED that an action lo
foreclose a mortgage an ttw
following ctoacribod property In
Seminole County. NerMo;
L O T t. C L U S T E R " B " ,
STERLING PARK, UNIT 24,
according to tha Plat thareof as
recorded In Plat Book 30, Pago
*7, ot ttw Public Records ol
Seminole County, Florida.,
has been filed a g a lrll you and
ATHA JO SANDERS, and you
are required to serve a copy ol
your w ritten defenses. II any. lo
It on THOMAS R. PEPPLER.
P la in tiff 's a tto rn e y , whose
address Is Post O fllc* Box 1590.
Winter Perk. Florida 33590. on
or before Feb. 19, 1997, end tile
the original with the Clerk of
this Court either before service
on P la ln fllt's attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter, otherwise a
default w ill be entered against
you (or ttw relief demanded In
the complaint or petition.
DATED Jan. 15,19*7.
D AVIDN . BERRIEN
CLERKO FTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
BY: Jean Brlllant
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: January I*. 25. A
February 1,1,19*7
DEK-9*

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Land Management Olllce
Is In receipt ol an application lo
construct a retaining wall ol the
following property:
That portion ot the Norlhw tsl
'* of the Northeast Vk ot tha
Northeast W of Section 1*.
Township 31 South. Range 39
East. Seminole County, Florida,
described a* follows:
Commsnc* a t tha Northeast
corner ot the Northwest '-a ot the
Northeast V* ol the Northeast U&gt;
ot said Section I I; thence South
00»57'0t” West along the East
line ol said Northwest W ot the
Northeast 'A ot the Northeast ’,*
for 47.17 feet to tha southerly
Right of Way line ot State Road
No. 53* (Samoran Boulevard),
thence North »9*59'44" West
a lo n g said s o u th e rly
Right of Way line lor 131 45 teat
to the POINT OF BEGINNING;
thence continue North 19*59'55"
West along said sou therly
Right ot Way line for 15* 79 feet
to a point ol Intersection with a
circu lar curve concave to the
S o u th e a s t; lh * * c * fro m a
ta n g e n t b e a rin g o f South
00* l ( ’25" West southerly along
the ere of said curve having a
radius of 100.00 feet and a
central angle ot 3 3 * s n i" for
39.(9 teat to a point ol reverse
curvature with e circular curve
concave to the West; ehenc*
southerly along the ere ol said
curve having a radius of 75.00
teat and a central angle ot
22*53'35" for 39 97 I eel to the
pont ot tangency: thence South
00*30*5*" West for 211.93 leaf;
thence South *9*39'12" East lor
155.00 le a l; the nce N o rth
00*30'5B" East for 310 17 leet to
the Point o l Beginning.
Containing 51,155 square leet,
10 945 acres), more or less.
Bearings based on D O T.
Right ol Way plan lo r Slate
Road No. 535 (Section 77080
3509)
W ritten comments may be
tiled with the Land Management
O f f i c e , S e m in o le Co u n t y
Services B u ild in g . Sanford.
Florida 33771. Comments should
be received within 15 days ol the
publication of this notice.
Herb Hardin, Director
Land Management
Seminole County, Florida
Publish: January 1*. I9B7
DEK 79

W TH !C IR C U IT

IWWTiaNTN

JUDICIAL
B tC U L CIRCUIT
IN A M FOR
JU O M t C .V IR N O N M M .
JR.

NOTICE OP FORFEITURE

IN R I: FO R FE ITU R E S A
19*2 HON DA FOUR DOOR
AUTOMOBILE. VEHICLE
IDENTIFICATION
NUMBER MSZ5499CCI39ST7

TO: Richard M. Melts
455SoiTthNorth Lake Drive
Altamonte Springs, FL 327M
and *11 ottwr* who claim an
Interest In fhe following proa.) On* 19B3 Honda Four-Door
Automobile. Vehicle IdMdlflcaIkm Number MSZ542SCCI39517
GREG MANNING, Chief of
P allet, Long weed, Seminole
County, Florida through his duly
sworn Officers, salted ttw de­
scribed property on ttw Tbits day
of November, 19M, at or near
4*5 South North Laka Drive,
Altamonte Springs,. Seminole
County. Florida.
On ttw 22nd day of December.
190*. the Longwood Police De­
partment filed o Petition tor
Rule to Show Cause and tor
Final OrdK of Forfeiture with
tha Clark of Circuit Court,
Seminole County Courthouae.
300 North Park Avenue. San­
ford. Florida.
A five ( |) minute hearing hat
been scheduled before HONOR­
ABLE C. VERNON MIZE. JR.,
a Judge of ttw Circuit Court,
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit, on
ttw 12th day of March, 1917, at
1:30 a.m„ In room 334N, tor ttw
purpeta of filing a Rule to Show
Causa why tha dstcrlbed pro­
perty should not be forfeited to
the us* of or sold by the Chief
upon producing duo proof that
soma was used In violation of
Florida laws dealing with con­
traband and ottwr criminal of­
tenset. all pursuant to Sections
933,70l*704, Florida Statutes
HIES).
A copy of said Petition It on
file In the Clerk's office and It
available for examination dur­
ing regular business hours.
D A TE D this 13th day of
January, 1917.
NORMAN R.WOLFINGER
STATE ATTORNEY
BY: /s / Anna E. Richards
Rutberg
ANNE E. RICHARDS
RUTBERG
ASSISTANT STATE AT­
TORNEY
Ofllc* of the Stato Attorney
100 East First Street
Sanford, Florida 33771
(305) 332-7534
Publish: January I I, 25.1907
DEK-97
__________

IN THE CIRCUIT
COURT OF THE
BIOHTBSNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NO. &gt;7-a091-CA-ia-O
JUDOEi C. VERNON M IZE,
JR.
N O TIC IO F
FORFEITURE PROCEEDING
IN RE: FORFEITURE OF
15,047.00 UN ITED STATES
CURRENCY
TO: PerreJeen
S I* N o rth M « i S tre e t

Ft, P ie rc e . P L XUSO

Ellsmond Deslne
519 North 25th Street
Ft. Pierce. FL 33450
end all others who claim an
Interest in the following pro­
perty:
a.) 55,047.00 United Steles
Currency
JOHN E. POLK, 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 3rd day ol July,
1984, at or near McAlister Motel,
2103 Southwest Road. Sanford.
Seminole County. Florida.
On the 9th day ot January,
19*7, the Sem inole County
Sheriff's Department (lied a
Pell lion tor Rula to Show Causa
and to r F i n a l O r d e r ol
Forfeiture with the Clerk ol
Circuit Court, Seminole County
Courthouse. 300 North Perk
Avenue, Sanford, Florida.
A five (5) minute hearing has
been scheduled before HONOR­
ABLE C. VERNON MIZE. JR.,
a Judge ol the Circuit Court,
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit, on
the lifts day of March. 1997, at
1:30 a m., In room 324N. for tha
purposa ol filing a Rula to Shew
Causa why tha described pro­
perty should not ba forfeited to
the usa ot or sold by the Sherltt
ol Seminole County, Florida,
upon producing due proof that
same was used In violation ol
Florida laws dealing with con­
traband and other crim inal of­
fenses, all pursuant lo Sections
933.701-704. F lo rid a Stalules
(19*5).
A copy o l said Petition Is on
file In the Clerk's olllce and Is
available lo r examination dur­
ing regular business hours
D A T E D th is 14th day o l
January, 1987.
NORMAN R.WOLFINGER
STATE ATTORNEY
BY: / * / Anne E. Richards
Rutberg
ANNE E. RICHARDS
RUTBERG
ASSISTANT STATE AT
TORNEY
Olllce ol the Slate Attorney
100 East First Street
Sanford. Florida 33771
(305)333 7534
Publish: January 11,35. 1987
DEK 98

COUNTY CORMIIS KMI
T N I COUNTY OF
SEMINOLE
IbM btor FC-79
S T R U T W ID E N IN G AND
PAVING PROJECTi M il ba
ric tlv B B I t ha Of f ice of
unfit f.o T P.M ., weal H as,

WPPPMff r M f l WJ Up ITOF.
BM* will bo pwMlefy epemiwW
rood aloud In ttw Office of
Purchasing. IW t E. First Street,
Room WBL Sanford. FL at ttw
The Officer whoso duly It It to
open bids wilt decide when ttw
specified lime ha* arrived and
k ljto
M win
Jv
k ar im
I II
in rtciiY ta HraU rv
win
M D
bo contldwod. Lots bids will bo
returned lb ttw Sander un­
it mailing Md, mall lot Office
of Purchasing, P.O. Baa 1119,
Santerd. FL 32773-2119.
II dsltv r tog RM to partem
deliver tot County Sorvicot
Building, net E. First Slraot.
Purchasing Reception Room
WJU. Sanford, FL.

SCOPE OF WORK)
Markham Woods Road: Pro­
vide all labor, aqulpmant and
motor 1*1* necessary tor wldsnlng and overlaying approxi­
mately *.5 grew miles of an
existing County maintained
roadway and reconstruct ap­
proximately 3,730 lineal feet of
the soma roadway consisting of
th t following In a variable width
I9T minimum) right-of-way:
Widen 20* to 24' asphalt pave­
ment and wldwi and overlay
crass s tre e t Intersections
(width* vary).
to" friction course, 2" wear­
ing course
7" asphaltic bate court#
Upgrade cross drain and
treatment
Reconstruct tour curves
34* wide asphalt pavement —
to" friction course, 2" wearing
course
r * llmereck bate course
10" stabilised tubbos* to min.
LBR40
A bid bond In an amount of not
lass than five percent (s%) of
the total bid amount shall ac­
company each bidder's pro­
posal. Bid security may bo In
the form of cashier's etwek
made payable to ttw Board of
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e r s ,
Seminole County) «* • bid bond
with Surely satisfactory to the
County. A combination ol any ol
the former I* not acceptable, bid
guaranty shall bo In a single,
acceptable Instrument. The
County will accept only such
surety company or companies
as are authorlied to write bonds
of such character and amount
under ttw laws ot ttw State ot
Florida, and as are acceptable
to ttw County.
Upon award, ttw successful
bidder w ill bo required to
furnish payment and perfor­
mance bonds, each in the
amount ot 100 percent ol ttw
total bid amount. Bond terms
will be furnished by ttw County
and only the** term* will be
used. Proof of Insurance In
amounts squat to or exceeding
ttw specified amounts will also
be required. A ll Insurance
policies shall bo with Insurers
w ith an acceptable rating;
licensed and registered to da
butlnass In tha State of Florida'.
Spaciricaffoni w ill bm avail
aOto January I I. If*7. and may
be obtained et tha office ot tha
consulting engineer — Conklin,
Porter and Holmes, Inc., 500 W.
Fulton Street, P.O. Box 197*.
Sanford. FL 33772 1974. (305)
333 5*51. Payment ot Seventy
five dollars (575 00) w ill be
required (or each sat; no ro­
tunds w ill be mad*. Contract
Documents/Pians are available
tor review only In the Office ol
Purchasing.
NOTE: ALL PROSPECTIVE
B ID D E R S A R E H E R E B Y
CAUTIONED NOT TO CON­
TACT ANY MEMBER OF THE
SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD
OF COUNTY COMMISSION­
ERS REGARDING ANY OF
ABOVE BIDS. ALL CONTACTS
M U S T BE C H A N N E L E D
THROUGH THE OFFICE OF
PURCHASING.
CONTACT PERSON: Iren*
Peino, Contracts Analyst. (305)
331-1130, E&gt;t. 313
The County reserves the right
to accept or re|*ct any or all
bids, with or without causa, to
waive technicalities, or to ac
cept the bid which In Its best
judgment best serves the Inter­
est ot the County. Cost ot
submittal of this bid Is consid­
ered an operational cost ol the
bidder and shall not be passed
on lo or born* by the County.
JoAnn C Blackmon, CPM
Purchasing Director
O ttlc* ol Purchasing
HOI E. First Street
Sanford, F L 33771
Publish: January 15,1917
DEK 5
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 1303
O r t e g a St . , C a s s e l b e r r y ,
Seminole County. Florida under
the Fictitious Nam* ot J&amp;L
ENTERPRISES, and that I In
tend to register said name with
the Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with tha Provisions
ot tha Fictitious Nama Statutes.
To W it: Section 555 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
/%/J. Douglas Hadley
Publish January 4. II. II. 25.
1987.
DEK 24

SEMINOLE COUNTY BOAR DOF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
FEBRUARY 24. 1987
7:00 P .M
The Board of County Commissioners ot Seminole County, Florida
w ill hold* public hearing lo consider Ih* following:
1 HENRY OYKEMAN - BA84 11 IIJTE - A I Agriculture Zone
— Appeal against the Board ol Adjustment In denying e Special
Exception to place a mobile home on Lot 4. Phil Orr, Section 14 3b33,
located on the southwest corner ot Osceola Road and Old Geneva
Road (OIST5)
2. BERNARD SOMMERS — BA44 I3 I35TE - A I Agriculture
Zone — Appeal against the Board ol Adjustment In denying e Special
Exception tu place two mobile homes with kitchens removed and
attached as a single structure on Tex Parcel 24H. Section 421 29.
located on the east side ot Pin* Hollow Point. 8U0 It south ot SR 554
and Old Forest City Palm Springs Road Intersection. (DIST 3)
This public hearing w ill be held In Room WI30 ol the Seminole
County Services Building. 1101 E. First Street, Sanford, Florida on
February34, 1987 at7 0 0 p m or as soon therealter as possible
Written comments filed with the Land Management Oirector w ill
be considered Persons appearing at the public hearing w ill be
heard Further detail) are available by calling 331-1130, ext 555
Persons are advised lhal It they decide lo appeal any decision
made al this hearing, they w ill need a record ot Ihe proceedings, and
lor tuch purpose, they may need to insure that a verbatim record ot
Ihe proceedings Is made, which record includes the testimony and
evidence upon which Ihe appeal Is to be based, per Section 384 0105,
Florida Statutes.
BOARDOF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
BY ROBERT STURM. CHAIRAAAN
.
ATTEST DAVI DN BERRIEN,CLERK
Publish: January 18. 1987
DEK 92

)

�v -Y -V T r» *V

CLASSIFIED A D S
S^vninoto
322-2611

O rlando « W inter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
HOURS

RATES

•ItM P J L

IV ttn fM V
MTWMY • •

NOTE: Intha wantoffh*publishing elerror*In advertisements. th# San
. ter* Herat* Shell publish the advertisement, after 11Km been corrected at
/ na reel te Ih* e*v*cHsec but men Ineertlens shell number no more ihm one
MO.

’f e

12— Legal Services

21-Peraonals
?Th*ra It an all new alar* |uat tor
• you In Datantf. "Teacher's
\ AW **". Wa hav* everything
} tor the teachers. Gtv* us a try.
Taachar'a AM**
MfVaarMaAvt.
O a M a tf.W M M tn M M i

OtlSISPHMMCYCCHTEI
ABORTION COUNI I LINO
R R I Pregnancy Test*. Con* t lt f s n t la l, In d iv id u a l
t aaalatanca. Call tar appt- Eva.
K H r* Aval labia........... J21749S,

i

£

HASTERCMD/VISA!

credit chock. Alio,
cradlt card. No
. For Info, call ..

21— Ptrsonals
ALL ALONE? Call Bringing
People Together. Sanford's
moot respected dating service
since 1177. Man over SO US%
ditceunt)....... MO*-*33-4477
TO OUR FRIENDS and all who
•hared in our sorrow at th*
lots of my husband, a sincere
thank you.
M r*. Bernard J . Machnlk

25—Special Notices
ATTENTION SINGERSI
W rit* N r fra* catalog. Over TOO
tongs. Sing with your vary
own bond.
NosRvltlo Sound Flat You
1X1 DtvtstaM
M**hvMI*,TN37S*S
K C O H i A NOTARY
For Dtlalls: 1*00-432 4234

^^torldoNotorjfAMoelolloi^

27—Nursery ft
Child Cart

&gt; 1 -iis -fm a u a«t. M -i7i

UHfCtlWTCAKM
I; No on* rafuaatf. V ila .
*7 Maitarcard. Call: 1-419-MS: • U22*xf.CIMFL.14hrt.
To my Oaoraat and bait Friend

HAPPYBIRTHDAY

CHILDCARE. M y homo, all
a g o t. CPR c e r tifie d .
..............333-44*7
RESPONSIBLE MOM. T.L.C.,
hot moots, flexible hr*, re#
sowoblareta*, Rets......33)3*3*

55—Business
Opportunities

Dom e
: Love..

..Carol*

Legal Notice
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
FOR S IM IN O L I COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATK DIVISION
File Namier M NI-CF
IN R E : ESTATE OF
GEORGE RAYMOND
JOHNSTON.
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
Tho administration of th*
1 estate of G aare* Raymond
^•Johnston, deceased, F llo
- l h * Circuit Court N r Semi—
v C e u n ly , F lo rid a , Frafeata
-Division, the addrma of ndikh fa
T.P.O. Drawer C. Senfard. Florida
; 3277]. Tho namoa and address**
.o f Ih* portonal ropraaontatlvo
• e n d t h * p o r io n a l ra p ro . ten tative'* altornay ara tot
• forth below.
All Intarettad partont a r*
! required to (IN with Ihlt court.
• W ITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
; THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
-THIS NOTICE: (1) all clalmi
again*! tho ottato and (1) any
• objection by an Intorottad
1 porton on whom thli notice wa*
• torvod that challenge* Ih* valld‘ Ity of th* will, th* qualification*
of th* portonal r*pr*t*nlatlv*.
v*nu*. or lurltdlctlon of th*
•court.
: ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILED W ILL
: BE FOREVER BARRED
- Publication of thli Nolle* hat
b*gun on January 11, 19*7.
Par tonal Representative
GORHAMRUTTER.JR.
- XX N. Magnolia Av., 10
I; Orlando. FL 13(01
Altornay lor
Personal Raproaantatlvo:
J. GORDON BLAU. P.A.
I X N. Magnolia Av., Suite D
Orlando. F I. 33*0!
• Telephone XS/I4I-7M7
Publlth: January 11, II, IN7
. DEK-40
LEGAL A D V IR TIS C M IN T
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the City of Sanford. Florida.
• will recalve sealed bid* up to
1:X p.m. on Tuesday. February
-1 0 , 1917 lor the following
MfVlCA.
TWO (3) HANOBALL COURTS
B io m /1 7 -n
PICNIC SHELTER
5 a
BIOMt/1714
•: PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT
B ID N t/17-X
CHAIN LINK FENCING
BIDfM/f7-77
! The tooled bids w ill bo
‘ publicly opened later that tamo
day at l.-OO p.m. In tho City
'Commission Chambers, Room
:ilT, Sanford City Hall.
S; Specifications and th* proper
• Bid Form* ar* available, at no
coat. In the Purchasing Off lea,
300 N. Park Avenue. Sanford,
Florida (105) 333 3141, ext. 294
Th* City of Sanford rotary**
. th* right to accept or ro|oct any
; or oil bid*, with or without
ceua*. to we've technicalities, or
to accept tho bid which In It*
^ judgement bait tervot tho Inter*
• * * l of th# City.
I CITY OF SANFORD
] Walter Sheer In
Purchasing
' Publlth January I I, I f i t
DEK *5

B LO O M

APTIRNO O N PAPER ROUTE
tar tale. Longwood area.
Call...................................33X0313
INTERNATIONAL Matal Build
Ing Manufacturer selecting
builder/dealer In tom* open
area*. High potential profit In
our growth Industry. (M l)
73*3300 Ext.3403___________
TURN KEY BUSINESS
Handling Nabisco. Koobltr,
Frltoloy and sim ilar food
products. No tolling Involved.
Service commercial accounts
set up by parent company.
National census figures show
i r o n earnlr
w ill need 013.000 cash lor
equipment. Expansion financ­
ing It automatic for those
qualified. Call Natllonal Toll
Fro* 1-400 313 4000 ask lor
Data Gram ID fF lU t . Phono
staffed 24 hrs. a day.
Sunday calls accepted

41—Money to Lend
CantMantlal A Personal Service
Slaw Cradlt OK....2nd Mortgages
BOB M . BALL JR.. Ucansad
Mortgage Broker, X * Country
Club Rd., Lake Mary...313-4111

63—Mortgages
Bough! &amp; Sold
W E B U Y l e t a n d In d
MORTGAGES Nation wide.
Call: Ray Logg Lie. Mtg
Broker, 940 Douglas Ave..
Altamonte....................774-7732

71—Help Wanted
APPLICATIONS being accepted
for Production Workers with
local manufacturing plant.
Excellent co. benefits, must
b* willing to work all shifts.
Call:...........323-3300 Personnel.
A IIE M B L Y /W A R IH O U S E
LABORER
Positions av ailab le. 14-is
hour. Never a feel

TEMP PEKM------- 260-5100
C A R P E N T E R 3 /H E L P E R S F u ll/o ve r lim e, l-vii-7043.
t -933-70*7......or.........1733 70*1
BOOKKEEPER
THE SANFORD HERALD Is
currently accepting resume’s
tor an experienced bookkeep­
er to assist Office Manager.
Requirements Include:
eTyplng Skills
a Calculator by Touch
a Pleasant Personality
Wo Offer:
a Insurance Plan
* Paid Vacation
* Friendly Atmosphere
* Job Security
It you meet Ih* above .equiramants and would like to b* a
part of the Sanford Harold,
send resume’ to:
SANFORDHERLAD
P.O. BOX 1417
SANFORD, FL. 31771-1437
AHw: Office Manager

C O U N T Y

71—Hofp Wanted

ASSISTANT R I C i m O N I S T O N week. Elite comp an ) I
G uaranteed to ta k a you
ptacttl Pleasant i - - 111 Wilt train an
ceaeor, tool AAA E
ment, 71* W. 33th St,

N U R S I AIDCt All shift*,
rloncotf or cart I tied only.
A p p ly L akavlaw Hurting
Cantar. 919 «.3wd St., Sanford

SEMI-DRIVER TRAINER- 04
hour. Don't pots this upl All
focal del Ivaries! Super A-l
campanil I AAA Emptoymant,
T M W M R i Street........ 323-1174
S H O P /R IIN N IR TRAINI In Sanford I Great
future with easy going boat!
Learn entire business! All
Banatlts Including dentall
AAA Employment. 70S W. 13th
Street-------- ...----------- .j o -sito
TAX P R IP A R E R Needed until
4/1

CEMENT FINISHERS' Start
today. im 7 M l..o r..1 -m 7 E I7
a r.......................1933-7*»1
COMPANY HEEOS YOU NR
Inexperienced A willing to
travel Individual ter rawardInp i*4es caraar. Call 747P93

HAPPY NEW YEAR. We need
vacation. Free CELT'S Deity
pay. Staff Aprivate duty.
MEDICAL PERSONNEL POOL

caRiMtnat

Earn I f to Its par hr. Must
enjoy working outdoors. No
exp. net. For full or port timo
positions in Somlnota Co. call
fOm totpm........... I l S I M T m
CUSTOMER SERVICE R IP Loading finance company In
Sanford It tacking tor part
lima hoip. Hours will bo Mon.
A Frl. t : X till 4 wim possibili­
ty to liad Into full tlmd
position. Typing skills a must,
figure*. Coll tar
........m -x to . EOE
CUSTOMER RELATIONS- To
S300 wk. Fully tralnl First
clast company took* first
cl i n employ** I Light clerical
duties I Mutt want career!
AAA Employment, 700 W. 33th
Street..........................J33-517*
* * * * * * * * * *
DAILY N O M /M IL Y PAY
NEEDMENA WOMEN NOW I

U*“»■■«_
N A &lt; 4&gt; m
amt
i NO ^TEE!
Report ready for work at 4 AM407 W. 1st. St............... Sen tord

321-1H0
* * * * * * * * * *
DATA ENTRY TRAINEE- S4.30
hour. Rare spoil Earn white
you loom I No school or expe­
rience needed I Local! AAA
Employment. 700 W. 13th
Street.......................... 333-3174
DRIVERS WANTED, Domino1!
Pine, Inc. Wages, tips, A
commission. S3 h r guaran­
tied. Must have own car with
liability Insurance.
Apply: 1*10 French Ava. or
call 331-3000 sHar Item
DRIVERS- Local/Ovor road.
1*1170*1.......or....... 1-933-7047
or..............................1-933-7041
E L E C T R IC IA N S /H IL P E R S Full time, 1 *33-7041, 1-933.7047
or..............................1933-70*1
E X E C U T IV E M E D IC A L
SICRY.- No medical bkgd.
neededi Exciting ca ra arl
You'll love keeping th* boss
organ1ted I Will hire today!
lull benefits! AAA Employman!. 700 W. 13th St.....333-3174
EXP. DONUT Makar A Finish­
er. Mr. Donut, 17S3 Hwy. 17-93.
.NO PHONE CALLS.
EXPERIENCED FLOOR MAN,
II no experience In latest floor
methods OO NOT C A LLI
Night work, 331-47)3
FIOURE CLERK TR A IN EETo 14 hr. Torrlllcl Like num­
bers? Then you'll en|oy thlsl
Loom greet accounting skills!
Call now! AAA Employment,
700 W. 23th St...............333-3174
F U L L T IM E F L O O R M A N /
Lawn maintenance. Good
benefits. Contact Hlllhavan
‘'H e a lth Cara Cantar, 930
.. M ellon vlll* Av., Sanford
shier, (or afternoons/mldnlght
shills A week-ends. Apply In
parson to ECOL, I -4 A W. 44
GROWER OR ASST GROWER,
lo supervise growing opera­
tion lo r sm all D ra c a n a
Nursery, Call IVt-TOT* or write
703 Terrace Blvd., Orlando,
FI. 32103__________________
HEAVY EQUIP. OPERATORSExp. only. I *33-7043
1 933-70*7.......or....... 1 933 7041
HOUSEKEEPER. Llve-ln or
llvaout. Child car*. 4 days.
Rstersncet......... Call:333-3329
IM M E D IA TE O PENING lor
oxp. Medical Assistant/ Re­
ceptionist. Physician's ofc.
Good telephone skills, A In­
surance knowledge required.
Musi b* able to function effi­
ciently in highly busy ole.
Mall resume to Box 341, c/o
Sanford Herald, P.O. Box
1437, Sanlocd.FI.U77l.
INSURANCE AGENCY In San
lord needs e x p e rie n c e d
personal lines Custom er
Service Account Rep. Good
typing skills. Paid holidays,
h ospllalliallon A d en ia l.
Call....................... 301323-3743
INSURANCE RATER OFFICE
GAL- To $275 wk. Can't beat
III Will train w/any Insurance
background! Super boss needs
someone she can count on
white she's awayl Dynamite
opportunity! AAA Employmanl, 700 W. 13th SI.....323-3)74
LIGHT DELIVERY- Noat A
dependable, economy car a
must............................331-4447
MEAT PRODUCTION
MANAGER- 3130 week -I- top
pay lor your knowledge I First
class company treats you
right I AAA Employ ment, 700
W. 23lh St.................... 331-5174
M EAT WRAPER- 14.75 hr.
TRAIN! Guy or gel final
Large co.l Quick raltesl Ter­
rific hours M /F. 7/41 Full
benefits! AAA Employment,
700 W. 23th SI- .......... 323-3174
MICROWAVE TECH Tralnoo34.30 hr. No schooling or oxp.
necessary. Call now I Start
nowl Permanent career I AAA
Employment, 700 W. 35th
Street........... ...............123-3174

NOWHIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
Operators wanted on all
operations. We oiler paid holi­
days, paid vacation, health
cere plan, end modern air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rales. Will train qualified
a p p l i c a n t s . San- De l
Manufacturing, 2140 Old Lako
Mary Rd . Sanford......311X10

« j£ P * r * o n n t i
PAINTERS- Cemm. Ares. Exp
only. I •9337011.19X3-7047
ar..........„ ...................1-933-70*1
P A R T T IM E , a lta r schaal
teachers. Chauffeur's llcansi
reautretf. Call Rlten.... JPA4M
P A R T -T IM E A T T E N D A N T /
S A L IS P IR S O N , Alert Intelllgent Individual needed to
m Sanford Plata, nlfhts A
waakend i. IS to X hrs. per
wook. SITS par hr. Must b*
mature, neat In R s n m n e A
bontfabta. For appt.... 31) 4903
P A N T T IM E L P N , Good
banatlts. Contact Hlllhavan
H e a lth Cara Cantar, 930
M allo n vllla A v., Sanford,
311-4344.........................E.O.E.
PA R T-TIM E SIW INO
M A C H IN E M E C H A N IC
WANTS Ol must bo oxporlencad, on all type* of Industri­
al aawlng machines. Apply In
pereen only to: San-Dot
Manufacturing. 1240 Old Lake
Mary R d , Sanford..... 311-3*10
PARTS R U N N IR - 14 hour.
TR A IN I Needs today! Guy or
gal final Local dal Ivaries In
company pick upl Great
hours. M /F , 1/5. Torrlfk op­
portunity! Promote! from
within 1 AAA Employment, TOO
W .M thSt.................... 3M-3I7I
PERSON FOR CLEANING A
light malntalnanca, mint b*
mature and dependable, ref­
erences A experlsnc* re ­
quired. S4.00 hr to start with
fast ralsa tor right parson.
Cell 323-4430 tor an Interview
F H O N I RECEPTIONIST- S4
hour. T R A IN I G reat (or
begInner I Must like people to
answer phones I Super fun
itl AAA Employment, 700
H lh S t................... .323-3174
P L U M A E R /H E L P E R S - Call
today. 1 933 7043, 1 933-7047
or............................... 1433-7001
PR O G R A M ASSISTANT to
work In direct cera/trelnlng
position with menially re­
tarded. Call: 131-7231.

r

MHBKWMMrSfMS-

anoi

MY-MYHEAPf&amp; G

321-2123
TELEMARKETERS- Catling to
4a. only. No residential calls.
Advance sales tor local benefit
work. 9 :X am to S pm. M -F.
Mi-1147
________________
TELEPHONE SALES- IS par
hr. + bonus. Pull or port tlmo.
ALSO LIGHT DELIVERY: 9
a m t o 3 p m o r J p m t o S pm.
No exp, necessary......4C-4394
TEXAS O IL COMPANY naatfe
mature parson for short trip*
surrounding Sanford. Contact
customers. W * train. W rit*
H.T. Dickerson, Pres., South­
w estern P e tro le u m , Box
*41003. Ft. Worth. Tx. 71101
W E L D E R S - C e r tifie d / uneorltlfed, 1-933-7043,
1-933-70S?..... .or.........1-933-7041

MARKETING DEPARTMENT
Of Ih* Rich Plan of Florida
needs help In our Instd*
advertising efforts. Exciting
pert-lim* work with opportu­
nity to corn full-time Income,
Pleasant work atmosphere,
flexible hours, 13.00 par hour
+ T R E M E N D O U S bonus
structure.
Call today tor the details.
333-3443, oxt. 402 or oxt. I l l ,
ask tor Charles Bartfet or
Jeanette Hall

WORKERS NEEDEDI If you
need steady work-paid dally.
Call Sam after 1 pm
322-733*

73—Employ m«nt
Wanted
CERTIFIED Nursing assistant
w is h e s l n - h o u s * d a y
employment. Will do house­
work. shopping, meal plannIng A transportation... J22-7449
I W ILL CLEAN Your house tar
a reasonable rat*. Exp. A ref.
Call:............................. 431-1793

71—Apartments/
House to Share

REALESTATEASSOCIATES
WE ARE LOOKING FOR 3
VERY SPECIAL ASSOCIATES
TO JOIN OUR LAKE MARY
TEAM OF PROFESSIONALS
WE OFFER:
a Continuous Training
O Non Competing Managers
a Competitive Commissions
o Free Listing A Salts Tools
* Fro* Signs And Postage
* Toll FreaLD Calls
o Newspaper A TV Advertising
* Relocation Service
* New Homo Salas
a Professional Facilities
.BETH HATHAWAY
Lake Mery Brandi Manager
For A Confidential
Interview Today

EMSTENSTR0M
REALTY, INC REALTORS
321-2720
322-9551 Em.
R O O F IN O /E S T IM A T O R /
SALESMAN Large single ply
rooting contractor soaking ex­
perienced sales Estimator lor
Florida office. Sand Resume A
Salary requirement to: CFE,
Inc. ISIS Thornhill Rd. Box 10,
Auburndale, FI. 33413_______
SALES INSPECTOR: Newly
Opened Lake Mary Branch.
As leader In our Industry,
Orkln needs th* bast sales
parson w * can llnd to share A
Insure our continued success.
Wa offer:
1. Excellent earning*
3. Great bandits
3. Car allowance
4. Co. paid retirement plan
5. Complete training
4. Guaranteed Income
during training
7. No overnight travel
4. Strong advertising
support
9. Advancement into
management
10. A solid, lucrative future
In a recession proof
Industry

FEMALE ROOMMATE-1 br„ 2
be. completely turn, house.
1230 mo. Ind. util. M14243 or
321-4440ash tor Ranee_______
L A K E M A R Y , R e em m ate
w an ted . Young business
woman would Ilka to share
new, furnished lakalro nt
condo w ith other lady. 2
bdrm.. 2 bath, fireplace A
foundry. Northlaka Village
across from Wal-Mart Plata
on 17-92. 1230 mo, no deposit,
lin t A lest......... Call 471-2347,
321-9131 or
1-904 73A1114

ROOMMATE to share horn*.
3300 month plus utilities. Call
after 4pm....... ............. 333-9379
SANFORD: Will share 1 bdrm..
2 bath tow nhouse. Rant
negotiable, + utilities A 3200
dap. Rtspantlbl* parsan(s)

Joljhj«jjj~J2T0a20jjisMo^!ll

I t you a ra c o m m ltta d lo
excellence and hav* th* desire
and ability to succeed and
grow with a fortune 300 com­
pany. we would like to meet
you. Call between io*m A 3pm
for an appointment......133-9371
Equal Opportunity Employer
SECURITY OFFICER
TRAININO tree II you quality.
Full-time employment while
you trai l Musi be I I years or
older. No felon convictions. It
you ara on public aid, low
Income, or unemployed, we
otlar 240 hrs. ol security
training. After completion
you'll receive state license A
all certification tree to you,
194-3741, Thurs. thru Sat, 9 am
to 5, suit* 313

b y B e rk e

B re a th e d

* REASONABLE RATES
• MAID SERVICE
a PRIVATE ENTRANCE
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Els* When You Can Live In

cilir llillatu'
323-4507
ROOM FORRENTI
$40.00 weekly
______ 701 Brlarcllfl St.______
ROOM TO RENT: Private home
across from Heathrow, work­
ing female preferred. Call:
331 4992, A ft.*: 322 4434

me

"

00f/

ST. JONH'S RIVEN a*
•lu ff. I

■«nm.-f itftt

■wlwate
RaaEBi iAAuhjfo|. mflm,
I V a n o w n . r m w lf M i r

kitchen
h e r*** avail, an preparty.
Call;............ ........ ■■■■.Ja-1440
liiii

77— Apartments
Furnished/Bent

__________

| bepImom. IV* — to.»*wy

1bdrm.. 1 he^h.............. ,1333 mo
Ibtfrm *. 1Vs bath............1300 w o

l l t f S. Myrtle. 8473 Me. avail+ 1 9 /tC s ll 33T3843 ext. 223

a Control Hoat A Air
• # Pool A Laundry
FRANKLIN ARMS
I t ) * Ptartda Av*.

155—Duplex*
Triplex/Rent

t BDRM., t Bath, kitchen appllaaaqaaaa* * * * * * * *

tt.Naaafe........... Call 322*974
i l l Palmetto Av*.
J. Cowan. Ha Phene Celle
NEAR
I A 1 bdrm., 073
A MS weak. StSO deposit.
Call:
O NE NORM. APT.- Living
room, kitchen A both, no pots.
Elderly lady. Pay electric.
30-7414........a r ........ JO-3349
Short term leases, furnished
afflclanclae, single story,
private, near conveniences,
SANFORD COURT APT.
_______ 333-3X1 ax. 44)_______
SANFORD: Large t br„ up­
stairs. vary private. Ill* bath,
aat-ln kitchen. Everything
furnished. MID........... JO-1917
t BDRM., Coupte w /l child.
Private porch, drapes. 1299
mo. + SIM dm. 2 refs. J31-0031

77—Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent
O K F F IC 1 B 1 BDRM. APTS.
* FURN. AUNFURN.
a FAY WEEKLY
Why Considw Living Anywhore
Else Whin You Can Llvo In

&lt;j l u % I I 1 1la n r

323-4507
MARINERS VILLAGE
1 A lbdrm s..................from 1123
Call................................ .323-0470
ONE BDRM. APT. MM par ™&gt;.
Ind. util. + 1300 toe. Singles
only, 322 7004.....or..... 307030
RIDOIWOOO ARMS.
2300 Ridgewood Avt.
12S44X
BAMBOO COVE,
XO E. Airport Blvd,
322-4401
SPECIAL on any available sin
apts. S30 off Iho 1st 1 months
ofalm onth tease.__________
SANFORD: 3 bdrm., 3 bath,
washar/dryar, carpet, central
air, mini blinds. 1173 dis­
counted. British Amarlcan
............... ......429-1173
SANFORD: 2 bdrm., 1 both,
adults only, no pots. MO wk. or
1330 mo. + Sec. dtp. 429-0003
days.327 1047 or 327-2929 nights
SANFORD: I A 2 bdrm. units In
Historic District. Recently
renovated. Both have charm'
Ing tun porches. Convenient
location. 1130 A 1343.... *44-4300
S A N F O R D , Tow nhouio, 3
bdrm., 1 be., control air A
heal, lull kitchen appllancet,
w/d hook ups, wall to wall
carpets, storage shod, new
point, real clean. U tl. 240-1131
SANFORD: 3 bdrm., 3 bath,
can. heat A air, Ig living room,
•et-ln kit. with dishwasher,
washer/dryer. Adults or small
child. 445-1414 or 194-1441

SHENANDOAH VILLAOE

★ * $199 ★ ★
Ask about move In special I
Call................................. 323-2930

AIRLINE/TRAVEL SCHOOL

rack,_ lasadry A 1

la w nsenr.wsvldad TI1-BIH
DELUXE DUPLEX: 3/1 can.
heat A air, garage, many
axtraa. S IX mo Includes yard
care. 1yr. laaee................Call

MOVE IN SPECIAL
a New 9 bdrm. villa* a
Blind* a Hookups
PARKSIDE PLACE APTS.
Just W. of 17-92 off 2Sfh St. Turn
t o f f on Hartwell. We're on the
.....J33-4474

Rad or Linda Morgan at
m 3420.... or.....333-31M svas.
DUPLEX: 1 bdrm., carport!
clean, extra*. WAS mo. plu*
security. Call..............JH-1442
EXCELLENT location on Park
Av*. can. H A A . tin t A test

101—Houses
Furnished/Rent
G E N E V A , 2 bdrm .. I bath
house, torn, or untorn., big
yard. MOO Sec. DepMo ,
days221-4491, eva«22H9H
M A SR 44W A R IA : 1 bdrm.,
comp late ty torts Avail, t/13.
No children, no pats. 323-4090
SUNLAND- Fully fu rn lih td
homo, 3 bdrm.. Fla. rm.. w/w
carpets, appliances A micro.,
storago area, tit, last, A sac

NICE, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, wail to
wall carpet, central heat A
air, dishwasher, w /d hook up,
1st Month + aocurlty. No
.312-14*9

^^^32^0J^oygji#lntm*n^

NICE, 2 bdrm.. 1 bo., a n tra l
hoot/alr, no pats. 13*3 Mo.,
*330 dkp. I M2 W. 3rd St. Coll
Sharon at 44J 3000, Latter
Kilmenton, Assoc.
1
________

103—Houses
Unfurnished/Rent

107-Mobile
Homes/Rent

DBRARV, large, neat 2 bdrm., 3
bath homo, central heat A air.
foncad yard, garage, laundry
room, 3 min. to Sanford,
available about 1/13. U23 +
SOC..I04-734-7403___________
a a * IN D E L T O N A * * *
a a HOMES FOR RENT a a
_______a a 174-1434 a a______
LOO HOME, Hwy. 413.1 bdrm..
3 be., central H /A , water
cand., 1330. Mo., *12 21AM1I,
MI-1413 after 4, dap, required
RAVRNA FK: 4 bdrm.. 2 bath,
gam* rm., can. h A a, foncad
yard, all apple. Exc. cond.
1300 mo + sac, dap.... .331-3114
SANFORD- Large houta, 4
bdrm., 2W bathe, front porch,
plus 4 additional bedrooms/
itudy/offlcasi 1423 per mo. +
t«C. 322-4410......or..... .322-4779
SANFORD.- 3 bdrm., \Vi bath,
front rm.. Fla. rm .. screened
porch. 075 mo. Call....J21-IX0
SPACIOUS- 3/2, family room,
fenced, c/h/o, no pets. 3473 1st
A last................ 323-27*1 atterS
ST. JOHN'S R IVERFRO NTLarge 1 bdrm., 2 bath. can.
h/a plus turn, guest house.
Harold Hall Realty
1-429-1811 ar 1-447-739* aval.

ELDER BFRINOB M O B ILE
HOME PARK, 2/1, *43 Wk.,
t2C0d*OO»lt. Celt 774-1344
RENT OR SALE1 t bdrm .
trailer. Idoal tor couple or
single Person. *333 + dop.
Contact office a t K alla's
Landing...........Rt. 44, Sanford
2 BDRM. Mobile homo In re­
tirement park at Lako Ashby.
NOPOtS. Call:..............323 9009

115—Industrial
Rentals
104* SO- FT. Warehouse specs
w/otflc*. By Sanford Airport.
Rsnt or tease.............. .331-04*9

121-Condominium
Rentals
SANDLIWOOD VILLAS- 2/2,
kit. appl., washar/dryer, pool.
3190 mo. + tec. 321 0940,
322-4447.....Of.....1 *00-432-333*
SANFORD: 1 bdrm., 1 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
wosher/drytr. sec. 3430 Mo.
Land*ram* Fla.. Inc. 322-1734

Outstanding Opportunity For Experitncod

C A S H IE R S
GAS A TTE N D A N TS
Presently Employed In Tho Industry

ONE STOP CENTERS
• A uto / Truck Rofuoling
• Full Lina Convenience Store
• Fast Food
Fried Chicken, Sub*. Donuts

• Top Salaries
Train To B i A
Trawl A|int • Tour Guido
Airline Rm m tionist
Start locally, lull tlma/perl
time. Train an Ihr* airline com­
puters. Homo study and resi­
dent training. Financial eld
available. Job placement
assistance. National head­
quarter*. L.H.P..FL.

A.C.T. Travel School

1-800-432-3004

• Free Life 8 Hospltalixatlon
• Paid Vacations Each Year
1 Wk. Every 6 Mos.
• P rofit Sharing Plan
• O th er Benefits
M A K t AFFl I CATION IN PINSON
AT 202 N . Laurel A v *.. Sonlerd
Tkn, fiMay SiM AM . 4JS PI*
NO PWOM CAUS fllASI I

Accredited member NH.S.C.
I

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
HUBERT PEARCE
Exp. I nee me Tax Service
m &lt;004 tor »pp1.

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B.E. LINK CONST.
Remodeling..............303^322 7029

RnancInj^^^U^CRCOOOJTI

Blinds &amp; Drapes
CUSTOM DRAPERY, balloon
c u rta in s , m ln l-b lln d s A
verticals. Fra* atf. In home
service. Madeline....... 323 4301
DRAPES/TOP TREATMENTS
DUST R U F F L E S /P IL L O W
SHAMS BY DIANE..... 335*3*4

House Plans
INTO

private ham*. Located
-THIS A Elm Am .
SANFORD- Cfoon

93—Rooms for Rent

Wo Require:
1. Direct sales exp. ora
desire lo learn
3. A desire to succeed
3. Strong personality
a. Positive attitude
S- Neat appearance, good
driving record.
4. Good verbal skills
7. A das Ire to ha Ip people

I Meet?A &amp;i&lt;xe*VL

O M -A L L N H M € a w r ..iM

71— Http Wanted

•A s tte d k a l m

DEADLINES
Noon Tho D ay Before Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
Monday - 9:00 A .M . Saturday

SOCIAL SECURITY
SrMAtfvka.No Chars* I
? w a Win I W artf W hits 4
iu w

71— Help Wanted

CUSTOM BLUEPRINTS
Fest Service I Good quality I
KKDESIONS........ .........7*7-3*34

Carpentry
ALL TYPES Ol Carpentry.
Remodeling A home repairs.
Call Richard Gross 321-3971.

Carpet/Floor
Coverings
WES'S CARPET SALES
Remnants, Rastretches
Licensed..... Insured.......343-7714

Cleaning Service

Landscaping

Nursing Care

SPARKLINO CLEAN tor e dust
free home or office. I time,
w««kly A mthly rites.321-3454

BOOUESI Expl Professional!
Lawn A Garden Melnt A chain
saw work! Lake Mary Resi­
dent. FREE ESTI 313 *3*7
PAULS LANDSCAPING.
Speclallilng In rose garden
Insulation, pro-'.nslonal lawn
A garden malnt.. I l l 0*23.
SEMINOLE LANDSCAPING

OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakevlew Nursing Center
919 E. Second St., Sanford
321-47*7

Home Improvement
CARPENTRY BY ED DAVIS
REMODELINO/REHOVATtON
Large And Small Jobs Walcema
Sanford Ras. I I yrs. 331-0443
REMODELING A ADDITIONS,
Masonry A Concrete work.
Local number. *4033*3 EVES.
W OM AN'S W ORKI Q uality
work with Ih* woman's touch.
Palntlng/paparhcnglng. tilt
In s ta lla tio n , p la ste r repalr/drywall taping.
Candace Orevar, 331-344*

Home Repairs
ALL PHAS E 3 ol housthold
repair A Improvement.
• FREE ESTIMATES* 133-1411
R E M O D E L IN O . Carpentry.
Painting, Small alectrlcal
repairs A Installation, plumb­
ing A Installation. Hauling A
lawn sarvlca. Call:
Ed or Allan..................... H I 4110

Landclearing
BACK HOE, Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing.
C aihm -noa..... or......i n f i l l
TH O R N E LANOCLEARING
Loader and truck work/septlc
tank sand. Freeast. 322 3413

3224133
Lawn Service
CARRIER'S Landscaplngl
Irrlg ., Lawn Care, Res A
Comm,321-7*4*. FREE ESTI
Bogues Landscaping- Planting
new trees A shrubs. Also,
pruning A cleaning......323 *3*7
"SUNNYS". Mow. edge. trim,
planting, mulching. SPRING
Spec. Free est. 322-7*29

Painting
PAINTINO: Complete Interior
1293/Exterior 1130 Satisfaction
guaranteed. Call......... 43A23I4
PROFESSIONAL QUALITY
Fainting by Dave
Interior, Exterior, Rasldontlal,
C o m m e r c ia l. P r a s s u r *
Washing. Drywall Repair A
Popcorn Callings.
Lie.... Bonded..... Ins..... 323-4074

Secretarial Service
Custom Typing- BookkeepingNotary Public. Call: D.J. En­
terprises. (3*1)333-7*91.

Sewer/Septic Tank
Masonry
CO NC RETE O rlves/paC os/
walks/slabs. LIc.A Ins. 23 yrs.
•xp. lifelong res.......... 349 975*

Nursing Care
HILLHAVEN HEALTH CARE
CENTER, 930 Mellonvlll* Av.,
327 *544..................... E O E

HOWARD'S SEPTIC SERVICE
Repair Lines A Clean Tank*

Tree Service
ALL T R E E S E R V I C E +
Firewood Woodsplltter lor
hire Call After 4 P M 323 90M
ECHOLSTREESERVICE
Free Estlmatesl Law Pricesi
Uc... Ins...Slump Crlndlng.Toal
121-1129 day or nlta
"Let the Professionals da it".

�t r c a w .n ««»,U w y W h M
»

.

*

Jm*W T f. t Iu (rIAHCD
tw ia
a

* t

*o

toa t

lie ib M b
C e n tu m

C o rn home to a vacatio n ... Sailpointe, the
newest adult community in old historic
anford, offers a lifestyle you've been dreaming
ab o u t... It's designed for people who love
sailing, skiing and swimming. Who prefer to
spend tneir free time laughing with friends at a
poolside barbeque or strolling along a moonlit
dock. If you're this person, Sailpointe at Lake

SUNLAND- Ttrrlflc buy larga 3
bdrm., cen. h/a, family room,
fireplace. Tha works I..133,000.
N ID O IN L A K I VILLA- 1/3.
doubla garaga. spacious floor
plan. Prlca to sail........ u u o o .

SAILPO IN TE

tit* X30T LOT ZONED HEAVY
COMMERCIAL.............U0.00C

401 West Seminole Boulevard
Sanford. Florida 32771 e 322-1051

C O M M IR C IA L /M U L T IP L E
USE. Prlma proparty fronts
on hoavlly travalad sfroot, lof
tlza 111 X 131. zonad CC 3.
M7.000. Call Bath Hathaway.
Raaltor/Assoclata

DOW NTOW N S A N F O R D Charming A fatfafully rastorad - architect's 3 story
homo. 4/3, ovor 3.000 sq.ft., for

SANFORD- Just raducad to
S4L000. 3 bdrm., claan as pin.
cuto as a button. Abovo
ground pool.

■ -

OROVKVISW- 4/3. I yr. old.
Almost 1300 sq.ft, living araa.
FHA assumabls. Low down.

1 . -w

l « tlAHj

BEDROOM. 3 b a, In country,
flrtp la c a , garago, trass,
ownar financing, consldar
trada, S74.SOO.34S 3717

ANFORD: Ownar financing.
Radacoratad Inslda A out.
Now carpal A vinyl, 4 bdrms.
on largo shadad lot. Raasonabla down. Ownar will hold 1st
mortgage 30 years......143.000
■A WILLIAMSON......323-4743
DOLLHOUSE ON LAROE LOT:
•’/ Move In condition, 3 bdrm.
S carpet, c/h/a. Won’t last long
I at 143.500
REA WILLIAMSON.......313-4741

M A T 2 STORY HOME: Near
• shopping A big laka. Ready
■for restoration In Sanlord't
: Historical District. &gt;44.300
H A WILLIAMSON.......m-474J
DELTONA: Walk to shopping A
banks. Super pretty home In
first area. 2/3. garage A

CONVENIENT to Lake Mary.
Sanford. A Longwood. Spotloss 3/2 In great araa. New
paint, new heel pump, reedy
to move In......................157.500
REA WILLIAMSON....... 133-4742
NEAR SEMINOLE HIGH: Neat
; 3 bdrm.. coHege on double lot
with pool. 4 car garage. A
.313-4743
O E B A R Y , LOO HOME ON
WOODED I ACRE. Custom
built features. Italian tile In
foyer A fireplace. Solid wood
doors, built In microwave.
pool. A much more.......199,000
BEA WILLIAMSON.......11*4742
LAKE MARY: Country home on
nearly 3 acres with horse stall
A paddock. Foatures great
room, stono flrtplaca. large
k i t c h e n w i t h b u i l t In
microwave, office, screened
room 2 car garage A new roof.
Groat buy at 1113.000
■ EA WILLIAMSON.......22*4741
LAKEFRONT ESTATE HOME1 acre w/boat ramp, large
porch A wood docking Call for
showing
CHARLOTTE
CROSLYN................... 13*4071

Tha Skappas Of Laka Mary
13S E. Laka Mary Slvd. Sta l i t

Cell toll free 1-100-323-3720

3224471

Professionally Managed By U.S. Shelter Corp,

LOW MORTOAOE RATESI I
b d r m . , 1 bat h condo,
washar/dryar, walk In closat.
all appllancas, pool, clubhousa
Am oral......................... 123.300
AOOED TOUCHES! 2 bdrm.. I
bath hom a, c a d a r trim ,
vaulted callings, aat-ln kitch­
en. assume 1st mtg. A ownar
will hold 2nd w/30% down.

...........................133.000
COUNTRY AT IT'S BESTI 2
bdrm., 1 bath. Ilka now Mobile
Homa on 3 acres, overlooking
stocked pond, new storage
shad A many m ore fine
features..........................S37.S0O

SAN LANTAI 3 bdrm.. 1W bath
homa. larga fenced yard, lots
of closot A storage space,
•at-ln kitchen, heat A air.
....................................... &gt;40,300

B E S T T IM E

T O B U Y !!!

O REAT P O T E N T IA L ... for
outdoor antertalnment A tor
adding on a porch or family
room, 3 bdrm., 2 bath, central
H/A and morel............. 159,700
ASSUME AND MOVE INI Very
new 3 br„ 2 ba. home. IlvIn g /d ln ln g room combo,
central H/A. equipped kit.,
poss. lease purchase.....140.000
CASSELBERRY! 3 bdrm.. 1
bath home with a country
feeling, but close to every­
thing, heat A air, fenced yard,
lovely family starter.....142.900
HIDDEN VILLAOEI Beautiful 3
bdrm., 3 bath condo, central
H/A. fireplace, pool, Lako
Mery location A many more
ST. JOHNS RIVERFRONTI 2
bdrm., I bath homa on 1.74
acres. Great room overlooking
river A wood dock, vaulted
ceilings, dining room w/stono
fp l. barn, shed, dock A much

oOENEVA OSCEOLA RD. a
ZONED FOR MOBILESI
3 Aero Country tracts.
Well treed an paved Rd.
10% Down. 10 Yrs. at I3%l
From 111.5001

F H A /V A 3 0 y rs .

Call toll frn 1-800-323-3720

N o C lo sin g C o s t s

3224678

1/4 A cre Lot Inc.

• . . * a ll

»

( . e « t l wea

11 O ther H o m e Plans
Broker C o -O p 4 %
V e ts N o Dow n Paym ent

NO DOWN PAYMENT
Through The Farmers Home
Administration, You Can Move Into A
New Home At Amazingly Low Terms.
Payments Are Based On Your Family Size
And Adjusted Family Income.
See Us Today!
Let Us Explain This Sensational Plan.

C rovevlew
V illa g e
T jr

2

Lake M ary Blvd.

-4

434

B n..— 1
,

710 WEST NEW YORK AVE

f

3

CALL
COLLECT
CRC018208

DELAND

N—
*
t^

Annual Percentage Rate

8

�r t r rr , r (x^ r i r * r r r ,T ^

141—Hemes Fer Sale
141—Hemes For Sale
CONOO: Narthlabo V illa**. I

bdrm., 2 bath, fireplace, cathadral callings. Law SO's
322-&gt;470attarI :NPm
01LTONA- MOOBemrtewAm. 3

ID Y L L W IL D E I Reduced by
&gt;10,0001 Stately 3 itory, 4
bdrm., 3 bath, brick home
with ever 2300 tq. ft. nettled
among Oekt on 1/3 t- acre,
within walking distance of
Elementary school. Available
Im m e d ia te ly . C a ll M a rti
S e m a k o v l c 323-3200.

t&amp;qes

*^ n i^ T

B i-C________
a rt

141-Hemes Far Sale
w e u te

yo u l ir e t# see
VOUN NOME adverttaadhere
at no caet to YewT Aek about
eur4%N daylistingat
FIRSTREALTY INC.

.Fay Mart

323-5774
S T e m p e r

mm

* «a m ^

COLD UJCll.
OAHKCH

®v®l ......................... ..222-T2M7

notho* me.A*a li o * t

i v i ^ rf ^t i h y »

767-0606

K E Y E S I1 IN T H E SOUTH

Adult community.

SANFORD- 3 bdrm., 2 bath. CB
home In good condition.

CMIV. CITATION *0r, 7C174A.
47*S. Seminole Ford, 3700
Hwy. 17-W.------ ---------323-1401

3*17123___ Em. 32X101

n&gt;iqi3-7am

LONOWOOD- Reduced-won t
last I Freshly painted 4 bdrm..
■pllt with big kitchen, porch. A
fenced yard.................. $30,000
FIRST REALTY INC..... 33*4001

HD Realty.

37*4Hwy. 17-W.........333-1401

YOUR K E Y T O .........
Country Living With City Convenience

by terlout buyer. 323-0430 eves

370SHwy, 17-W,

153—Acrtag*Lots/Sak

__________________ . a i t m
S P IC IA L II J IM LASH R EN TA
CAR, FROM $*.** a day and
UP..................................321-0741
TOYOTA COROLLA *74'.
7T214A. $395. Semlnata Ford.
3744 Hwy. 17-W............ JM-1441
TOYOTA CORONA t * 7 4 .
7 0 1 1A. 44*5. Samtwata Ford.
1744 Hwy. 17-W............JM-1441
T R 7 i7 4 ....................... Buy Her*

Pay Hare............ I netant Credit

...

yj|

1704 Hwy. 17-W,

111—Appliances
/ Furniture
ALTERNATIVE T.V. 4 APPL.
3934 Hwy. 17-91

_______ 331-3444_______
2, 3 &amp; 4 Bedroom Hom e with 2 Baths, G.E. Kitchens,
Cathedral Ceilings, Fireplaces, Double Car G arages.

PRICED FROM LO W $70’s to $90,s
OPEN 1 P.M. TIL 5 P.M. DAILY
For Information Call

322-3103

hoem aker

K « Y H H IN T M U O U T H
JOHN SAULS. SR.
Reg. Real Iite te Broker
S acre tracts. Osteen/Maytown
Rd.. paved road, treat. From
430.000 to tJtJOO. X X down.
Financing avallab la.
332-7174......or
.323-1fOS eves
LAKE MARY 14.4 ACRES
INVESTMENT
OFFORTUNITY
Lake Mary school district. Ideal
for potential dtvtlopmenl,
partially woodod. owner will
s p i l t and hol d p a r t of
m o rtg ag e. C a ll N a rla n a
Reichert, 333-3300. eves 321­
3333

201- H o r s e s

SINCE 1958
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
2701 W. 25th ST.

COUCH, chair, and tables,
lamps. T.V. center, double
bod. nothing over 373.. Cell
after 3:30...................... 323-934*
DININO ROOM FURNITURE.
Duncan Phyfa, solid mahoga­
ny. table and six matching
chairs. 1143.44. 3 spaed, 24
Inch. Ilka new men’s BIKE.
sw.se. call 323-44*4_________
D R YER - Sears, heavy duly,
good working condition. 143.
Call:............................. 333-73*1
LARRY'S MART. 213 Sanford
Ave. New/Usad turn. 4 appl.
Buy/Sall/Trada. 333 4133.
RE F RI OE RAT OR. W aitinghouse. 17' frostfrea. wood
tong, like now 3)93....... 333-7*44

nomoA MC.aiatroqa

SANFORD

K E Y E S fl IN THE SOUTH

LAROE PASTURE FOR RENTSanford arte. $30 month. Call:
323-3430

211— Antiques /
—

XT

•

I

,r

__________

I
SANFORDANIA
S ACRES AT "ASTOR FARMS”
WEST OF 1-4 ONLY S13.000.
TERMS

Happiness 1

CA N A LFR O N T TO " L A K E
MARKHAM” 123.000. TERMS

at M a y fa ir M e a d o w s .

C A NALFRO NT TO "L A K E
JESSUP “*13.000. TERMS
3 ACRES ON SMALL LAKE IN
GENEVA S33.000. TERMS

BLANKET CHEST. Humpback
trunk. 4 oak kitchen chairs,
oak piano bench, drying rack,
appointment only, 323 4773
LIQUIDATING Stock of uphol­
stery 4 decorator furniture.
Peddlers Cart, 333 N. Ad*lie
Ave., Oeland............... 734-1399
WOOOBURNINO Cook stovo
with bun warmers, lift top
school desk. 3"&gt;*3 ft. solid oak
desk. 321 Q«*9.....or..... 323 3442

PINE AVE. 02 X 117 ACCESS
TO "BEAR LAKE” 323.000
DELTONA AREA
4 A C R E S W O O D E D . (2
H O M E S I T E S I 33 3. 000.
TERMS
10 ACRES NEAR
BETHEL" 330.000

‘ L AKE

I V) A C R E S N E A R E N ­
TERPRISE ROAD (ACCESS
TO "LAKE BETHEL" 314.300.
TERMS
UT ACRES NEAR "STONE
ISLAND" &gt;12.300. TERMS
P O I N C I A N A LANE
W A T E R F R O N T . 313.S00.
TERMS
DELTONA ESTATES
LAKE FRONT. 331000

With 8}%* Fixed Rate Interest.

NORMANDY
TERMS

Choose from beautiful two and three
bedroom, two bath single family homes,
o r two bedroom, two bath single story
townhomes located on Lake Reflection.
Either way, you know you'll be happy with
a Babcock home at Mayfair Meadows.

SEIGLER
R EALTY
m. m i m m

BROKER CO-OP INVITED
All Sales Offices Hours:
Mon. thru SaL
10-6
Sundays
1-6

m ui

LHND

Because Babcock takes the extra step on
every detail o f every home they build. To
make sure it lives up to the Babcock
exclusive "Quality Certain" warranties- •
including a ten year warranty on major
structural defects. And to make sure you
get the best value for your money.

Call: 321-4760

BLVD. 327.300.

32l°Qb40
7 . 7 % APR
CONSTRUCTION FINANCING
FOR UP TO 2 YEARS
SAVE ON HIOH LABOR COSTS
and build It yourself. No down
payment. Quality pre-cut ma­
terials. Step by step Instruc­
tions. Call for details or attend
a seminar............. 303-02 1941

A n o th e r
B ibcock
Q u a lity
Certain
Home

155—Condominiums
Co-Op / Sale
♦9.02% APR futed rite interest.
Available on most units anti locations.

OIVE AWAY PRICEI
Sondlewood Villas condo. 2 br , 2
ba. new paint 4 mini blinds.
all appl. Only................339.900
The Realty Store..___ 471-1934

311-2133
OATSUN. J140X, t r . 7 C191A.
&gt;14*3. Sam In*la Ford. 1744
Hwy. 17*3,.................. 323-144)
OATSUN 4 wheel drive pick up
'10, $1100 or boat o lfo r.
Cell:...........331-0917 after 3 pm
DO DOE DART !*7S. 333 slant
six engine, 43.000 actual mlias.
&gt;300 00 Call...................323-1113
FORD ORANAOA 74'. 4T941C.
$193. Samlnele Ford, 37$4
Hwy. 17-W....................322-1441

FORD ORANAOA:74 Buy Her*
Pay Hera........... Instant Credit

USED CARS
'»»»«»»»»»«»»•••******* 311-1113
FORD LTD: 74. power steering,
power brakes, auto. air. Good
carl $1000.................... 349 3341
FORD LTD II, 77'. 7C143C.
1179). Seminole Ford. 3744
Hwy. 17 *1....................321-1441
FORD LTD 1979, 7C494A, 11993.
Sentinel* Ford. 3744 Hwy.
1791.............................. 311-1441
FORD MUSTANO 7 * ', C4377A.
193,
FORD MAVERICK 7S*. C4S41B.
4395, Seminole Ford, 3744
Hwy. 17 91............:„....3 1 T 1 « r~
FORD MUSTANO:71.Buy Here
Pay Hare..............Instant Credit

BRIDGES AND SON
Auction every Thursday 7 PM.

WE BUY ESTATES!
Hwy 44........................ 323 2401

217—Garage Sales
MOVINO SALE: 1440 Longwood
Lake Mary Rd. across from
Circle K. Furn., appl.. clothes,
baby Items 4 much more.
Thurs. Frl. 4 Sat. 4am 3:30pm

219—Wanted to Buy
US Aluminum Cans..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Metals..........Glass
KOKOMO...................... 311-I I SO
JUNK 4 WRECKED CARSRunning or not, top prices
paid. Free pick up. 311 2134

223—Miscellaneous
HONDA Oenerater- EM2200.
Like now. M75/OBO. Kstle's
Cove 1110.414-1447 meavap*
HOT WATER Solar System,
new. Being transferred, must
sell. &lt;1000.................... 140-1434
MECHANICAL 4 ROOFINO
TOOLS, ladders, lawn malnt.
equip., etc. 331-4131. eves.
SEPTIC Tank Rock Polio Stones
Greaia Traps Sand Dry Wells
Ready Mix Concrete
Miracle Concrete Co.
311-3731...... ............ 109 Elm Ave.
Swimming Pool Solar Sye.. now,
In box. Balng transferred,
must sail. &lt;3300............140-1434
TOOL BOX for truck. F 4 B
storybook dolls, tur coat,
handmade quilt........... 373 3300

USED CARS
_______ ...... 331*3133
VW RABBIT DIESEL L- 42.
Baby blue w/belg* cloth Ini.
A/C. 5 sp., 53.000 ml., 40 mpg
city. SS mpg hwy., 3 mo.
Plrolll tires. Like new cond.
Must Salll &gt;1.300 n«q 374 3790

OOOO U S E D M O T O R S A
transmissions. Installation
available.............Call: 32 1 3234

235—Trucks /
Buses/Vans
CHEVROLET VANSi on* 19*4
Box A on* 197*. Irrigation A
plumbing bins. Call Bob after
»pm at 303 322 4073

WE PAY TOP U tor wrecked
cars/trucks. We Sell guaran­
teed used parts. AA AUTO
SALVAOEot OeSary..440-44*2

USED CARS

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

Sanford...........................31)2123
FORD MUSTANO 73'
Buy Here......................Pay Here

USED CARS
t o r s USED FURNITURE.
WE TAKE CONSIGNMENTS,
BUY OR SELL............... 223-2150

p

.............. ™

233—Auto Parti
/ Accessories

213—Auctions

ALTAMONTE SPRINOS AREA
W OODED 73 X 140 NEAR
"R O L L IN G H ILLS GOLF
COURSE $22,000. TERMS

USEDCARS
________________saeaeaeeaeaaeaaeeeagaaa

___________________ ..331-3133
VOLKSWAOIN, 74*. 4400. Call
M r*. Lanier, Mon thru Frl.,
betwoon*to4et 331-3314
VOLKSWAOEN BUQ: ‘AS. Sun
roof, motor needs work. &gt;400
or beet otter. Cell........ 323-43*4
VW BUO: 71............... Buy Her*
Pay Hare............. Inslant Credit

Sanford...........................311-1113
FORD PINTO WAGON 7 3 ',
4T494B. 1993, Seminole Ford.
37&gt;4 Hwy. 17 91............311 1441
FORD PINTO:79........Buy Here
Pay Here..............Instant Credit

mm

USED CARS

Santord............................ 311-1113
HONDA CIVICt'10......Buy Here
P a \^ l* re ^ ^ jj™ ln s ta n ^ re d lt

USED CARS
Santord............................ 311-1113
IMPALA'49'
Buy Here......................Pay Here
Inslanl Credit

USED CARS

HI-LO Travel Trailer: ‘42. 21 ft.
*7.700 Exc. cond. Bob Owen
Travel Trailer* 311 N. Adell*
Ave., Deland................730-3034
M A Y F L O W E R : ' *0. Pa r k
Model, 33‘X r Tip outs. Neat A
clean $7,100 Bob Owen Travel
Trailers 333 N. Adell* Ave..
Poland..........................TBMBBj
QUINSTAR: Camping. Cargo.
U t i l i t y . Ti l t i ng Tr ai t or .
Unique.
Bob Owen Travel
Trailers 333 N. Adell* Ay*.,
Poland..........................734-3434
SEE THE NEW HI LO TRAV­
EL TRAILERS at Bob Owen
Travel Trailers 333 N. Adell*
Ave., Oeland............... 730 3030
T R A V E L C R A F T RV Motor
home. ‘42, Perfect cond. Plush
*30,000 negotiable........321 0*74
32' SKYLARK Travel trailer.
‘12. Util. shed. Insulated alum,
root, ready to move Into.
Compl. turn. So* at 12 Oaks
Campground, sit* 231...... $7300

Santord............................ 311-1113
MERCURY MONARCH ‘SO*.
7TI80A. S1493. Seminole Ford,
37*4 Hwy. 17 91.............311 1441
MERCURY MONARCH 7 7 ',
7T029B. $99$, S*minol# Ford,
17*4 Hwy. 1/ 91............. 322-1441

BUY HERE
PAY HERE

RENTAL

LOW
DOWN PAYMEN1

DAY - W EEK
„ MONTH
LOW DEPO SIT
LOW RA TES

GOOD CREDIT BAD CREDIT

. NO CREDIT
NO INTEREST

n n U F tT B S Y
USED CARS
3219 S Hwy I 7 92
Santord
323 2123

USED CARS
3219 S HWY 17 92
SANFORD 323 212J-

COMPLETE DETAIL SERVICE

sesj ^ $7995

Don't

” ' P« s

Up

rh‘s 0ffer!

A SK FOR LUDY OIL CHANGES • TUNE-UPS • SAFETY INSPECTION
SPEED Y SERVICE! LOW COST!

157—Mobile
Homes / Sale
AARON MOBILE HOME. 2
bdrm.. set up In nice family
park, will finance part, phone
331 4444 eves III*.

t

32 19 S. Hwy. 17-92
Sanford

USED CARS

PH. 323-2123
t

�•

■

'

.

.

■

•

•

•
• * !7 ? r

\:-vv. ■-*•..■'

' --V

The Pledge Of Allegiance*
*

•

1

'''• i

/ i

( V Jt#

Professional Organist Fires fla m e
O f Patriotism With Musical Score
■ •raid Staff Writer
It wasn't exactly the same
war-tom setting that inspired
Francis Scott Key to pen the
Star Spangled Banner when
Joyce Rickard Glrardet took
a break from her lunch­
making task in her southeast
Seminole County home and
wrote a tune to accompany
the words to The Pledge o f

Allegiance.
But. she, like Key. fired the
flame of patriotism with a
musical score. And as word
of her work spreads, demand
for the use of her tune to the
"Pledge." written by Francis
Bellamy in the 1920s. grows.

On a Saturday in 1983.
Mrs. Glrardet. a professional
organist, was called from her
lunch-making chore by her
uncle Bob Bums, who asked
her to read a patriotic Fourth
o f July message in a Masons’
bulletin.
S e v e n t y - y e a r - o l d Mrs.
G lrardet, a native of
M ld d le b u rg h . N .Y .. w h o
moved to the outskirts of
Maitland In 1953, said she
had never discussed patrio­
tism with her uncle, but he
thought she might enjoy the
message, which was followed
In the text by The Pledge o f
Allegiance.
" I ’ m not any more patrotic
than anyone else. I never was
into pageants and waving the
flag." she said. But. by that
M a s o n i c m e s s a g e . Mrs.
Glrardet was "fired up."
" I said. 'I wonder If any­
body has ever set The Pledge
o f Allegiance to music? I'll
have to think about it.'
Normally I wouldn't have
even read that message. 1 put
it down and as soon as I got
lun ch f i xe d 1 took that
message and 1 metered the
Pledge," Mrs. Glrardet said.

N e w Y o rk D a n c e r To
P erfo rm W ith B allet
New York feature dancer Da­
mien Stevens will Join "Ballet
Guild and Friends." the annual
production of Ballet Guild of
Sanford-Scminolc, on March 21
and 22 In the auditorium of Lake
Mary High School. Lake Mary.
Critics proclaim Stevens as
"an exceptionally skilled and
forceful actor-dancer. He trained
In dance, acting and music and
has been a soloist and company
member with numerous compa­
nies tnlcluding Pearl Long and
Dance Company. Mark Anthony
Dance Theatre. Ron Forella’s
Second Century Dancers nad
Fusion Dance Company.

Stevens has taught in New
York City and across the United
States at yniversltles. national
dance organizations and pro­
fessional schools Including Nat
Horne Musical Theatre. Mark
Anthony School. Alvin Alley
School and Act 48.In the Ballet
Guild Production.”

The following Monday she

was ofT to the printer to have
copies of her work made and
to send for a copyright for her
tune.
Her tune has since been
scored for full orchestra and
chorus by Gene Lawton of
the Ocala Festival Orchestra
and the work she said is their

Hi

Htr»M PftslM by W wn Udtw

Joyce Rickard Girardat was a church organist at ago 10.
gift to America. "It's avail­
able to anybody in America
who wants it," she said. She
hopes the tune will become
part o f patriotic programs,
perhaps as a prelude to the
National Anthem.
If it is published, she said,
the royalties will go to a
children's charity and she
wants the tune to be a "livin g
m em orial"

to C h r i s t a

McAullffe.
M rs.

O lra rd e t

h as

the bicentennial o f the U.S.

copies to the White House: to
the Concord. N.H., school of
fallen Challenger astronautteacher Christa McAullfTe; to
Florida and New York state
officials as well as to about
500 persons In 17 states who
have heard about her tune
and requested copies.

Constitution.
Mrs. Glrardet wants her
tune to play a part In that
celebration to be a dish upon
which a message of patrio­
tism can be served, she said.
"It's almost like it was
meant to be. The way thing
are falling Into place." she
said. "I don’ t want any en­
d orsem ents or anythi ng.
Sure It's nice and I'm happy.
But the whole Intent and
purpose Is. children love to
sing. It's an easy song to
remember and It stays within
one octave. Just to get the
"Pledge” heard. And It is
being heard. It's being used.
It does deliver a message. It's
interesting to see what music
does to people."
And music has been Mrs.
Glrardet's life. During her
29-year marriage she and her
husband sold and Installed
organs. Once the instruments
were Installed it was her task
to transform pianists into
organists. She continues to
teach organ.
It's an instrum ent she
taught herself to play. A l­
though her father was an
orgalnist. he was too critical

The show schedule will be
announced at a later date.

Parenting Matters

Good friends can be good
medicine. Making meaningful
contacts with others can nourish
the mind and the spirit. New
research suggests that good
health depends as much on
friendships as it docs on a strong
and well-functioning body. Re­
searchers from Vale found that
people with positive social sup­
port systems were two to five
times more likely to outlive
people with fewer social in­
volvements.
Children need m eaningful
companionship, too. A report In
the "Journal of Youth and Ado­
lescence" showed significantly
greater rates of illnesses of all
kinds in children lacking close
contact with others. Whether
child or adult. It is friends who
provide a reference outside the
family against which to mirror
and Judge ourselves: who help
us during .phases that require
our separation and individua­
tion. Friends offer the en ­
couragement for the develop­
ment of self which is often
Inaccessible in the family con­
text.

It has been performed by
M a son ic g ro u p s; In th e
Maitland Centennial In 1984
and for the Albany. N.Y..
300th birthday celebration in
1986, as well as in other
programs and pageants, she
said.
Her main target now Is
former Chief Julstlce of the
U.S. Suprem Court Warren
E. B u r g e r , wh o is
spearheading celebration of

sent

Stevens will do excerpts from
his one-man show, Things a
Dragon Knows. Also featured in
this production will be the
J a m e s Dance C o m p a n y o f
Kissimmee.

Children Need
Friendship For
Development

*

Royalties from "The Pledge of Allegiance" will go to a
chl'dren's charity when It Is published. Joyce Rickard
Glrardet shows a framed original copper etching of her

of her to teach her. Mrs.
G lrard et as a child was
m astering the piano and
playing that Instrument In
Sunday school when her
Dutch Reform Church found
itself without an organist.
At about 10 years of age
she began playing piano in
church, but felt the music
d id n 't sound like church
music.
So. on her own. she slipped
Into church and practiced
pl a y i ng the organ, even
though her feet couldn't
reach the pedals. Her mother
thought she was practicing
the piano until one day
Instead of taking her place at
the piano for church services.
Mrs. Glrardet seated herself
at the organ and played for
that day's service.
In church no mention was
made of this transformation.
But when Mrs. Glrardet got
home and was awaiting criti­
cism from her father, the
church minister and treasur­
er stopped by. They praised
her playing and said In that
D e p r e s s i o n Era she. a
10-year-old, was their best
hope as an organist.
Mrs. Glrardet pursued her
love of the organ through her
studi es in the 1930s at
Syracuse University.
She was a scholarship
student and to earn her
board she worked for a family
whose home was a mile's
walk from the school. They
had five children Including a
6-week-old baby and Mrs.
Glrardet did the laundry us-

■

;

See P led ge, 2C

Earns $50,000
Scholarship

Well-liked children
e xh ib it three broad charac­
teristics according to Dr. Asher,
a r e s e a r c h e r and wr iter:
•'T h e y 're "re s p o n s iv e " — if
s o m e o n e n eeds somet hi ng,
they're aware o f it and react
helpfully; they're "relevant" —
they go with the flow, fitting in,
rather than disrupting activities:
and they're "resou rcefu l" —
they have good Ideas, are good
problem solvers and can deal
with conflicts."
Early peer rejection is linked
to later problems ranging from
em otional setbacks to delin­
quency. It has been estimated
t h a t f u l l y 10 p e r c e n t o f
schoolagc children are rejected.
Parents who are too competitive.

Marine Capt. Robert Pelon,
left, and Oviedo High School
P rin c ip a l Charles Webb,
right, present Oviedo High
School student Max McCoy of
Winter Springs with a 4-year,
$50,000 Naval ROTC Scholar­
ship. McCoy will graduate
from OHS in the spring and
plans to attend Virginia M ili­
tary Institute where he will
m a j o r in m e c h a n i c a l
engineering. McCoy intends
to follow in the footsteps of
his father, a retired U.S.
Marine Corps captain. His
goal is to become a naval
aviator in the Marines.
Photo by Sft. Honri R. Brjdtord. USMC

See M IZE. 2C

m

�1C ia U r i HwaM# laoMrd, FI.

In And Around Loke Mory-Longwood

faaday, Jaa. H. H$l

FILMETER

Siskind Nominated For

What’s new In
movies and video

'Memoirs'
Muted, Poky
DT M O V B T H E A T K II
BRIGHTON'S REACH MEM­
OIRS (FO-19) This first In Nell
S im o n 's trilogy of sem i- •
au to bio graph ical p la y s (the
others are "Biloxi Blues" and
"Broadway Bound") makes for
an o d d m o v ie — a m i a b l y
nostalgic, talky. a bit muted and
poky. It gives little evidence of
why everyone raved about the
p lay, b u t It's a ls o not an
evisceration of the play.
Set Just prior to World W ar II
In the Brighton Beach section of
Brooklyn, the comedy-drama Is a
portrait of one Jewish family,
framed by the wry commentary
o f the adolescent son — a
budding writer (one day to
become Neil Simon?) named
Eugene Morris Jerome.
Obsessed by sex and baseball,
Eugene seems to spend most of
his time running to the comer
store on errands for his mother
(Blythe Danner). The rest of the
time his wide eyes are taking In
the details of the family's latest
domestic crisis.
A s played by the Im pish
Jonathan Silverman. Eugene
makes a genial enough guide
through prewar urban family
life, though his performance
seems overly modeled on that of
Matthew Broderick, who played
the role on Broadway. Some of
the casting Is curious: waspy
Blythe Danner and Southern
Judith Ivey as the J e w ish
mothers and sister. Gene Saks,
director of Simon's trilogy on
Broadway, handled the same
duties here. He understands the
material, though he hasn't been
able to make a very vivid or
lively movie. G R A D E : 2 Vi
stars Mi.

PLATOON (R) Writer-director
Oliver Stone was a decorated
soldier during the Vietnam War.
This Is his attempt to capture
the Vietnam experience on film.
The movie focuses on a young
"gru nt" (Charlie Sheen, son of
"Apocalypse N ow" star Martin)
and his Initiation Into war.
Stone and cameraman Robert
.Richardson Immerse us in battle
• and In the profane, day-to-day
'desperation of an Infantry pla-“
.toon's 30 men. There are horri­
fying bloodbaths and agoniz­
ingly moving moments. War.
here, is an arena for primal
emotions — fear, terror,
pleasure, shame.
T h e narration (recited by
Sheen) tends toward the pre­
cious, and the plot relies on the
old war-movie conflict between
two mulish ofTIcers. here rival
sergeants (Tom Berenger and
Willem Dafoe). Though It has a
.. special Immediacy, the movie
doesn't cover much ground that
a war picture like Sam Fuller’s
;'"The Big Red O ne" didn't (or
vthat the somewhat bombastic
"Apocalypse N ow " didn't, ei­
ther). St one's little-seen
; ."Salvador” Is a richer, more
. original film. But "P latoon " Is
memorable — If you can stom­
ach It. GRADE: 3Mi stars.

NEW HOME VIDEOS
JUST BETWEEN FRIENDS
(PG-13) HBO/Cannon cassette.
$79.95. The film Is an Im­
p r o b a b l y p l o t t e d sitcom-cum-tear-Jerker — sort of a
."Term s of Endearment" without
a magne t i c c ar i cat ur e like
Shi r l e y Ma c L a l n e ' s Aur or a
Qreenway at Its center. Written
and directed by Allan Burns (of
"M a ry T y l e r M oore S h o w "
fame), "Just Between Friends"
. stars Mary herself as the wife of
: seismologist Ted Danson, who's
having an afTalr with newscaster
Christine Lahti, who unwittingly
becomes Mary’s friend. Danson
dies, and the women must cope.
Christine Lahti almost rescues
the movie. GRADE: 2 stars
A T C L O S E R A N G E (R )
. Vestron cassette, $79.95. This Is
:*a dark and surly based-on-fact
! tale about the enmity that develops between a father
v(Chiistopher Walken) and son
JSean Penn). The movie has a
■curiously rich, nightmarish look
considering Its rural cornfields
and white trash setting, but the
narrative Is fuzzy. Sean Penn
has strong moments, though
he's grown studied as an actor.
Walken turns In a bravura Job of
overacting. GRADE: 2 stars.
(Film grading: 4 s ta rs —
excellent. 3 s ta rs — good. 2
stars — fair, I sta r — poor).

FROM
HU

flM M TIlf

^

Ca l l t o l l f r e e

Bisigni-Mohr
Mrs. Annette Blslgnl ,o f
Sanford, and John Blslgnl of
Winter Springs, announce
the engagem ent o f their
d a u g h t e r . S u z e t t e An n
Blslgnl. to Kurt Peter Mohr,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Mohr of Sanford.
Bom In Brooklyn. N.Y., the
bride-elect Is a 1984 graduate
o f Seminole High School.
Sanford, w here she was
Homecoming Queen. Senior
Class president. Prom Queen
and a member o f Tribe, FCA.
Keyettes ind Thespians. Miss
Blslgnl received an AA de­
gree from Seminole Commu­

nity C ollege. Sanford, In
1986. and attends the Uni­
versity o f Central Florida.
Orlando, where she Is work­
ing on a BA degree. She Is
employed as a receptionist by
T elex Computer Products.
Longwood.
Her fiance, bom In Jersey
City. N.J.. Is a 1978 graduate
of Seminole High School. He
Is employed as a marine
technician by King's Boat
Store, Klssfpimee.
The wedding will be an
event o f March 15. at 4 p.m..
at Sanford Christian Church,
Sanford.

Johnson-Mahnken
Mr. and Mrs. D.R. Johnson
Sr. of DeLand, announce the
engagement of their daugh­
ter, Sara L. Johnson, to
Wesley S. Mahnken, son of
Mr. and Mrs. M.E. Mehnken
of Lake Monroe.
Born In Kentucky, the
bride-elect Is the maternal
granddaughter of Mrs. Mary
D. Mattingly. Liberty. Ky..
and the paternal g r and ­
daughter of R.B. Johnson,
also of Liberty. She is a Ju n e..
197b graduate o f DeLand

...Mize
Continued From 1C
who put great emphasis on
winning, leading, or being the
best set the worst example. Not
everyone Is or wants to be a
leader. Measuring your child's
social success In terms of popu­
larity can be harmful. Striving
for popularity can undermine
Individual values, ideals and
commitments.
An important aspect of early
learning centers Is teaching
sociability. Just as the young
must learn Intellectually, they
must acquire social skills. It Is
literally what the child absorbs
from teachers and parents that
constitutes the most Important
Influence In the acquisition of
skills required for functioning
well as a society member. An
early childhood program with
friendship as Its core curriculum
can have a powerful effect on the

...Pledge
Continued From 1C
Ing a scrub board and lye soap.
There was a piano In the home
and she was supposed to have
an hour's practice a day after her
work was done. However, she
said. 11:30 at night was no time
to start practice on the piano.
Instead she would go to her
unheated room above the garage
and fall In bed bundled In her
two sweaters, her coat and a
single blanket.
One day in class her professor
stopped her playing. He told her
she sounded like she was play­
ing on broken glass. He then
looked at her hands and saw
bleeding cuts and callouses, the

High School.
Her fiance, bom in Texas,
is the grandson of Albert
Mahnken. Fulton. Mo., and
Mrs. Bessie Nix of Carbon
Hill.. A la. He Is a 1975
graduate o f Seminole High
S c h o o l. Sanf or d, and is
employed by Gen. Felt Inc..
Sanford.
The wedding will be an
event of Jan. 24, at 1 p.m., at
Fipri Baptist Church. Banford.

development of a coherent sense
of self.
Early childhood educators and
parents are the unacknowledged
legislators o f the world. By
befriending young ones, they
teach how to be friends and be
deeply Involved in the welfare of
others. Caring Is the glue which
holds society together. Schools
and ho me shoul d wor k in
tandem for the fostering of
friendships. Far-reaching con­
sequences for humanity and
society could be claimed.
Friendship Is another word for
love. Every human is bom with
a profound capacity to love and
be loved. From birth onward, we
are seeking people to assist In
our own development. We con­
tinually respond to our need for
connection with others. Aristotle
described friendship as " A single
soul dwelling in two bodies."
and believed that "W ith ou t
friends no one would choose .to
live, though he had all other
goods."

results of her labor.
That was to be the end of her
studies, but the dean of women
stepped in and found Mrs.
Glrardet another position with a
wealthy family who treated her
like one of the family and helped
her find a Job after graduation.
Tears flooded Mrs. Girardet's
brown eyes when she remem­
bered that kindness.
In her career as a concert
o rg a n is t, w h o tra veled the
country for the Wurlitzre Organ
Co., and as organist for 12 years
for John Wanamaker's store in
New York. Mrs. Glrardet basked
in applause and recoglntlon.
But no accolades from the past
have exceded the thrill from
praise inspired by her work with
the "P led ge."

Jeff Siskind, a guidance counselor at Lyman
High School, has been nominated for the
country's most outstanding high school counsel­
or. His name was submitted by the Seminole
County school district and the Florida School
Counselor Association last month to the Ameri­
can School Counselor Association.
Last fall the Florida organization chose Siskind
as Secondary Guidance Counselor of the Year. He
was praised for his dynamic and creative
programs established at Lyman.
Although he has taught several university
courses at Seminole Community College. Florida
State University and Rollins College. Siskind
prefers working with teen-agers. He has worked
at Lyman since 1984 and prior to that, three
years at Lake Brantley High School.
Siskind holds a psychology and education
degree from Florida State University, masters
degree in education and counseling from Rollins
College, specialist's degree in counseling and a
doctorate from the University of Florida.
He is presently president-elect of the Florida
Association for Counseling and Development, a
2,000 m em ber professional organization of
counseling groups.

Intergovernmental relations.
T h e m eeting w ill be held at the Capri
Restaurant in Springs Plaza. State Road 434,
Longwood. Coat of the meal Is $13.95 and oflers a
choice of entrees.
Auditions for the Seminole County All /County
Band were held on Dec. 8 for band students from
county high schools. Of the 88 top band students
selected for the All-County Band. 37 were from
Lake Mary High School. Those selected were
Man da Bessner. Lisa Meinecke. Michelle Treat.
Laura Thomas, Julie Horan. Julie Orseck. Amy
Bchnk. Pam Young. Scott Medlin. Amy Cooper.
David Fencik. Kevin McKeel. Jenny Lee. Madeline
Maher, Danny Cox. Matt Barron, Clndl Porter,
Sara Witt. Wendy Jensen. Matt Langston. David
Purkerson, David Nicholson, Eric Adzima. W ar­
ren Fernandez. William Thompson, Greg Valden,
Brian Casper. Dire Klein, James Chamberlain.
Chris Halle. Tom Kurtz. Houston Chapman. Art
Hal pern. Diane Suris. Vonda Lynch, Brad Hudson
and Greg Fluet.

Kenneth Wagner of Longwood was one of the
700 graduates who received degrees during fall
commencement ceremonies recently held at
Southwest Missouri State University.
Students at Greenwood Lakes Middle School
recen tly p a rticip a ted In the W orld Book
Read-A-Thon. This program Is designed to help
schools encourage and develop a greater Interest
in reading.
Students who took part In the Read-A-Thon
agreed to read a minimum of seven books In a
seven week period. Pledges for each book read
were collected from family members and friends.
This money was used towards the purchase of the
World Book Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia o f
Science, atlases, and dictionaries for the
classrooms. World Book matched the money
raised by the children with a generous contribu­
tion to help purchase these materials.
Under direction o f Nancy Hale, school librarian,
Greenwood Lakes now has two additional sets of
World Book Encyclopedia, one dictionary set.
three atlases, and five sets of the Encyclopedia of
Science.
Participants were awarded gold and silver
medals along with certificates.
Lake Mary Travel Club will hold Its first
meeting on Saturday. Jan. 31 at 2:30 p.m. It will
be held In the Lake Mary Community building.
260 N. Country Club Road.
All interested parties are invited to attend, meet
fellow travelers, and enjoy movies. For more
information call Daphne Baumbach at 323-5037.
Jay Caputo, a senior at Lake Mary High School,
recently won a place on the United States Junior
National Gymnastic Team. He earned this honor
at a meet held In Colorado the week after
Christmas.
This meet consisted of three days of rigorous
testing and competition. After the team was
selected, they took part In a meet against
Australia.
County Commissioner Bill Klrchoff will be the
guest speaker at the Seminole County League of
Women Voters dinner meeting at 6:00 p.m. on
Jan. 22. His topic will be charter government and

The All-County Band can be seen in concert on
Jan. 24 at 7:30 p.m. at Lyman High School
Auditorium. This will be an excellent opportunity
to hear some o f the best musicians In Central
Florida.
Thirty six young ladles will compete for the title
o f Miss Lake Mary on Jan. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in Lake
Mary High School Auditorium. The girls will be
Judged on personality, poise, and beauty. Con­
testants' grades and degree of school Involvement
are also evaluated.
Present Miss Lake Mary, Laura Larson, will
crown her successor who receives a $200
scholarship and other prizes.
Judges Include two teachers, a business
woman, Seminole County commissioner. Bob
Sturm, and Milton Smith. This sixth annual
pageant is sponsored by the Lake Mary Boosters'
Club.
Tickets will be sold during lunch and at the
school a week before the event. Tickets are $2.50
and $3.50.
Members of the South Seminole Garden Club
will answer roll call by naming their New Year's
resolution. This meeting will be held on Jan. 19
at 1:00 p.m. In the Longwood Woman's Club
Building. 150 W. Church Ave.. Longwood.
T h e program will be "Garden Care and
Flowers” by a representative of Contemporary
Gardens.
Hostesses are Elda Nichols, chairman. Elda
Green, and H azel Mason. 'T h e public and
prospective members are welcome to attend.
Lake Mary Woman's Club will have a luncheon
on Jan. 22. at 10:00 a.m.. the Lake Mary High
School Food Productions Room with the meal
being prepared by the Food Productions students.
Odyssey, the Lake Mary High School show chorus
will provide the entertainment.
Hostesses are Barbara Curtin. Cindy Dale,
Barbara Graham. Lenora Green. Laura Jackson.
DeLores Lash and Elots Ledlngham.

SALE STARTS SUNDAY

ENTIRE
STOCK
REDUCED
NOTHING WITHHELD
NOTHING HELD BACK!'

The Sanford Herald welcomes suggestions for cooks of
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.
Novice cooks and ethnic cooks, as well os experienced
cooks and master chefs, add a different dimension to
dining. Who Is your choice? Maybe Its your mother, father,
brother, sister or friend.
Submit your suggestions to Sanford Herald PEOPLE
editor. 322-2611.

65 %, &lt;

. „ _

EVERY ITEM IN TH E STORE IS REDUCED!
NOTHING WITHHELD
EVERY BOLT OF FABRIC
EVERY FABRIC ITEM.
ALL TRIMMINGS.

9 )^ 1
^

b a n o o u n o

[WpES.

FF
PE* Yard
• SUPER SUEDE
QO
‘ z4S" SPORTSWE........
spo^
r 98C
: *

ALL NOTIONS.
ALL CRAFTS.
ALL TOWELS, ALL LINING
ALL INTERFACING.

/r o i s c o '

■ ■ ■ _ ■ ■

Town N ’ C
onn**..
Country
t w eed s..

u e l c h T E B T W ...........

01100^ PD p l A IO S

.79° iM all VINYL, ALL DRAPERY/ *
iP A R R ir

A B B CfTED ^

1

" 9 8 C W.
2M

Ch,NESE HABUTAE

1&lt; •

1 to 3 url 1- ___

YES EVERYTHING'S
REDUCEDI

i 4 ’,S U E ° .p ^ O L S T E ?

r^ n c h W

MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO LIST!

HURRY FOR BEST SELECTION

1/2 OFF

No Rain Checks

Per Yard

Now

Who's Cooking?

up to

now

• VELVET CHIFFON..........................7 5 c yd.
FLEECE SOLIDS............................79« yd.

• SWEATER KNITS.............................. 1 « yd.

WOOL BLENDS............................. 1$$

• SWISS SUEDE.................

LUCERN VELOUR......................... 2 4» yd.

14» yd.

yd.

• SWEATSHIRT FLEECE..................... 14» yd.

DRESS VELVETS...........................1®»

• FLEECE PRINTS.........

YOUR CHOICE FABRICS.............5 0 c yd.

................ 9 9 ° yd.

• 60" COTTON PLAIDS.....................14* yd.
• CHALLIS PRINTS..............................1” yd.

ORLANDO

ORLANDO

Westgats Square 949 N. Scmoran
Bhrd.
12657 Hiawasses ltd.

yd.

CHRISTMAS FABRICS.............. Va OFF
yd.

CORDUROY SOLIDS.................... 1 «

SANFORD

FERN PARK

APOPKA

3832-34 Orlando Or.
Hwy. 17-92 Lsha Mary Blvd.

131 S.R. 436
Fern Park

2303 E. Scmoran
(Piedmont Plaza At Wakiva

*

�^ r J-VfcTV.T g &gt;r,■ 1 yi iiijMi

«-* r« r . ^ r 1**4*
T

.V i

.

1

* • #m M W

V * ':

-

.

•-■^V' i- -’V

M te .

in And Around Sanford

Launch A Balloon to Sprea
You’ll have to hand It to
memtfcra of the Garden Club o f
Sanford for their, efforts to pro*
mote a unique forthcoming pro*
Ject to beautify America. But
Cardinal Industries Is making
the event possible for the club.
On Feb. 19. at noon, the
"Balloon Launch of Wlldflowcrs
Across America." will take place
at the Sanford Civic Center. Fran
Morton said, "Anyone willing to
be a part of planting wlldflowera
Is welcome to grab a balloon and
release It at noon on the civic
center grounds." The balloon
launch la open to the public.
Fran pointed out that "In
keeping with their policy of
making their housing develop*
ments beautiful. Cardinal In*
duatrles donated the balloons
and wlldflower seeds." Squares
of the see&lt;|s will be taped to
2,000 helium-filled balloons and
released over Sanford, In the
hopes that the seeds will reach
their way back to earth and
produce beautiful plants.
The regular garden club meet­
ing. scheduled Feb. 19, will
begin at 10.45 a.m. that date at
the civic center instead of the
c lu b h o u s e s . F o llo w in g the
balloon launch, members and
their guests will continue the
meeting with lunch served at
about 1 p.m. Jacaranda Circle
members are hostesses for the
luncheon.
Mildred M. Caskey, curator of
the Henry S. Sanford LibraryM useum . Is excited about

"something new” added to the
m usew n's activities and exhib­
its. ~
Ms. Caskey says. "In keeping
with Henry S. Sanford’s decision
to endow the city of Sanford,
which he founded, with his
collection of some 5,000 books,
manuscripts, historical docu­
ments. art and artifacts, and the
remark he mice made to his
daughter. Carola Sanford Dow,
that he hoped his gift would be
‘enjoyed and appreciated by the
people o f Sanford, their children
and their children's children to
their educational advantages.'
the museum and associates and
city of Sanford have made their
own contribution la selecting
various historical and educa­
tional exh ibits, open t the
public."
And the rest Is history. Several
exhibits are held annually at the
quaint facility.
In addition to the regularly
scheduled exhibits, this season
the library-museum will offer a
scries of art classes under the
direction of Sanford artist Helen
Hickey whose work as an artist
and teacher are well-known In
Central Florida. She has been a
resident of Florida for 30 years.
She received a B.S In art
education from New York State
University College, Buffalo, and
the Albright Art School. Beat
k n o w n for her portraits In
pastels, Mrs. Hickey works In
several mediums. She has won
numerous outstanding awards
Including best of show, and her

Thursday and Friday, Jan. 21.
22 and 23. Tar information, call
the library-museum. 321-0710.

Doris
Dlotrlch

Congratulations to Dr. Marltsa
Pastls. She Is the first woman in
the history o f Central Florida
Regional Hospttal (as well as the
former Seminole Memorial Hos­
pital) to be elected a s a staff
officer.

E ditor

works are currently on display
throughout the county.
Class registration for begin­
ners is Wednesday. Advanced
classes will be held Wednesday.

Elected secretary-treasurer by
the staff. Dr. Pastls Joins Dr.

Gary Snell, chief o f staff, and 6 r. .... ^ - r r T n w r u a i i n n n T
John SshalTer. vice chief o f staff.
Members of Bemtnole
■ ■
ntunttv Coocfft AnodftUoo
Have a Heart an d Sw ing fnto
reminded that the second l- . . .
Spring, a luncheon and fssehlon
cert of the 1086-67 series will b d
show. wlU b e presented b y
held Jan. 29, at 8 p.m.. at Lake
Central Florida Regional Hoept- M ary High School auditorium,
ta) and the Sanford Campaign
beginning at 8 p.m.
__________
F eatu red w ill be R lch a td
Committee o f* stlmaSfemmdiamnH
the A m erican
Heart Association on Feb. 13. M orris, organist, a n d Scott
from noon to 1.30 p.m.. at the T h o rn b u r,g. tru m p eteer,
Sanford Civic Center.
Toccatas* Flourishes.
Highlight of the benefit will be
Barbara Hartsock. daughter o f
a drawing for a flight for two to
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hartsock.
New York, courtesy o f Eastern
received a master of arts in
Airlines.
Andres Coudrlet. news anchor teaching degree during the (all
woman on W ESH . Channel 2, commemcemcnt exercises for
will be the mistress of ceremo­ Memphis State University held
at the Mid-South Coliseum in
nies.
The committee for the gala
Memphis.
Includes: Jean Clonts. Robbie
A 1970 graduate of Seminole
Robertson. Bob Douglas. Bud H i g h S c h o o l . B a r b a r a I s
Layer, Kay Bartholomew. Robert employed with the Memphis City
l i
k
n if a
C n ltA A l a i t a l a m
a n a r t I» a i&gt; h * r
School system as an
art teacher.
M c In 1to s h
. TD\ a
v e fFf aa rs sr aa nnidl
S h e received a bachelor o f
Jeannie Twaddell.
Reservations a re 815 per science degree from Florida
person and donations for the State University In 1974.
New York flight drawing are 85
each through any committee
S an fo rd artist J u d ith
member. Fashions will be by Abemethy has been showing her
Lois' Place, The Store For Him exhibit, ’im pact." The Band Aid
and Eastern Airlines Stewardess Series. In the Architecture and
Alumni who will model attire • Art building at the University o f
stewardesses have worn through Cincinnati in Ohio. The exhibit
the years.
ends today.

A rtist Helen Hickey, with a portrait she painted of her
daughter, w ill teach art classes sponsored by the Henry S.
Sanford Library-Museum.

m

Don't Let Mom Put Foot In Door
D E A R A B B Y : I Just read your
answ er to "G ettin g U lc e rs "
whose mother-in-law had moved
In with one of her daughters for
“just a few months" and stayed
for eight years. And now she
wants to visit her son for " a few
months." You said to let her
come in for a specified length of
time, but It should be clearly
understood by the mother-in-law
that her stay will not be Indefi­
nite.
Abby. please hurry to your
telephone and call "Getting Ul­
cers” long distance A T MY
EXPENSE and advise her to tell
her mother-in-law that since
they have no guest room, they
will be glad to rent her a room In
a nearby motel, but under no
circumstances should she let her
move Into their home for even

one night!
S u r e l y , an a b l e - b o d i e d
65-year-old woman with no
money problems can find some
way to fill her time without
m o v i n g in on her mar r i ed
children. Introduce her to a
church group, urge her to do
some kind of volunteer work, or
join a senior citizens club. Invite
her for dinner and take her out
occasionally, but move In with
you — never!
It’s a whole lot easier to refuse
to let someone put his foot in
your door than to get him out
once he’s In.
N O ULCERS IN G E O R G IA
D E A R NO ULCERS: My mall
Is running 100-to-l against my
suggestion that mothcr-ln-law
come to visit only If It’s made
clear in advance how long her
stay would be. So. your "n o foot
In the door" advice was better
than iny foot-ln-the-mouth sug­
gestion.

Dear
Abby

D E A R A B B Y : I have to agree
with you on one point regarding

"r e c y c le d g ift s ." It IS the
thought that counts. However,
the gift-giver may be thinking.
"H ow can I get by cheaply, and
get rid of something I don’t
want?" (Such "thoughta" I don’t
nced-V' - ‘ ;
A bby , you said. "D o n ’t look a

gift horse In the mouth." I beg to
differ with you there. One would
be wise to look a gift horse in the
mouht. An old horse costs a lot
more to feed and care for, and
may not be worth keeping.
J A N E T IN DU LUTH
D E A R JA N E T : Maybe so. But
it’s a lot easier to get rid of a
white elephant than an old
horse.

So me t hi ng
happened In our town recently,
and I will not be able to sleep
until I write this letter.
Abby, please warn all women
never to get Into their cars at
night without first walking all
the way around the car and
looking through the windows to
be sure nobody is hiding Inside.
A wom an had Just left a
restaurant alone and got Into her
car to drive home. One man had
been hiding on the floor of her
car In the back seat, and another
man was hiding on the floor In
DEAR

ABBY:

the front seat on the passenger
side. They forced her to get Into
the back seat, then drove her to
a secluded area where they both
raped her. Then they emptied
her purse of all her cash, threw
her out and drove away. (Her car
was later found abandoned.)
If a woman should suspect
that someone Is hiding In her
car, she should get to the nearest
phone and call the police. Rob­
bery Is bad enough, but rape Is a
horror no woman should ever
experience.
S T IL L TR E M B LING

D R A R S T IL L : Thank you for
caring enough to write. Men
should take this advice, too.
Also, It need not be nighttime —
such Incidents hnve occurred In

broad daylight. Locking one’s
car does not always ensure
safety. Experienced thieves can
get Into locked cars easily —
even In a parking lot or an
Indoor multilevel parking facili­
ty. Also, carry a flashlight and
look underneath your car. Crim­
inals have been known to hide
there. Readers, take heed, and
have a safer 1987!
C O N F ID E N T IA L T O D.L. IN
IO W A C IT Y : You speak so much

'‘ Suhioct To W k y lim ito t

tM luatiw i Includes:
A iiklp n , F in tio fl Test. Shari
L*t !« t, Short Aim T ut Anil Talk With Doctor.

A sh a b o u t o u r “ M a k in g C h iro p ra c tic A lfo rd a b lo ” P ro g ra m

* t u t p a t ie n t a n o a n y o t h e r p e r s o n r e s p o n s i b l e f o r p a y m e n t h a s a r ig h t to r e f u s e to
p a , c a n c e l p a y m e n t o r b e r e im b u r s e d f o r p a y m e n t f o r a n t o t h e r s e r v ic e e a a m in a
TtON C R TREATMENT M h i f h IS P E R F O R M E D A S A RESULT O F ANO WITHIN I I HOURS OF RESPON
DING TO THE ADVERTISEMENT FOR THE FREE SERVICE EXAMINATION O R TREATMENT

LAKE M A R Y BLVD.
C H IR O P R A C T IC C L IN IC , IN C .

901

E Lake

M ary

Ol v d

3 2 2 -9 3 0 0

Suite

IO t'

U a y h c a d C en ter

T H O M A S F. Y A N D E L L , JR . D .C .

FELIX A. NAVARRO, JR. M.D.
SPECIALIST IN DIGESTIVE DISEASES

Office and Hospital Fiberoptic Endoscopic Procedures.

HOURS BY APPOINTMENT
1403 Medical P lu a Drive
70 Fox Ridge Court
Central Florida Medical Aria Bldg.
DeBary, Florida 32713
Suita 206 Sanlord. FL 32771
(305) 603-8453
(305)322 9530 ____________________________

&amp;

g

f

‘&lt; 0 /o 0 "
/ v

■

0N/ef!

g r e ^ e r f 0061

* ,E P i

man.”

' * S T A IN ID C L A S S

f

'

...........

C LASSES S T A R T S O O N

• WE DO CUSTOM WINDOWS
• PANELS FOR DOORS
AND MANY OTHER STAINED GLASS
ITEMS AVAILABLE. CALL TODAY’

*

FKE EitJsutn, Pries* ts FH Asyssss M gtL
ItMUmtbl • Cimu rtUI
Driftwood Village

________

M \S *

*

* * *

o f * 0 *4

St of » Hour*

Suits1203
2 0 9 A1 Q 7
1DSPMM-F
Uk* M a y Shid.____ jA fc ‘ w l J f _____ 10-1PMSAT.

DO YOG
NEED A
PAL?
When someone you know needs help, we have the answer.
H o w ell Place presents PAL, “ Personalized Assistance With
Living’*, your answer to meeting the needs of the people you love.
At H o w e ll Place our residents have their own private apartments, delicious meals, housekeep­
ing, transportation and many other services provided to them for a monthly service fee — Rent,
pure and simple, NO EN D O W M E N TS .
PAL is a special service which includes assistance by Certified Nurses Aides, or Nurses who are
available 2 4 hours a day to take care of personal needs. H o w e ll P lace provides proper care in
the right environment. Consider the alternatives, come in and see us today.

Visit Howell Place Today And See For Yourself...It’s Great
NO ENDOWMENT OR ENTRY FEES! • NO ASSIGNMENTS OF ASSETS

Diplomats certified In the specialty of Internal Medicine
and the subspecialty of Gastroenterology by the
American Board of Internal Medicine.
(DJegnosla and treatment of Esophageal, Stomach, Pancraatlc, Liver, Gallbladder, Small Intestine, Colon and
Nutritional Disorders.)

f

■hot. but not necessarily a good

WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES

INSURANCE ASSIGNMENTS
ACCEPTED’

j

of being "g o o d ." Please define
goodness. As G.K. Chesterton
said: "T h e w ord ’ good* has
many meanings. For example, If
a m a n w e r e to s h o o t his
grandmother at a range of 500
yards. 1 should call him a good

FREE S P IN
A L E V A L U A T IO N
\ s t s l \l THIS IS t Kt t
F re q u e n t H e a d a c h e s
L o w B ack o r H ip Pain
D iz z in e s s o r Loss of S leep
N u m b n e s s of H a n d s or Feet
N e rv o u s n e s s
N e c k Pain o r S tiffn e s s
A rm and S h o u ld e r Pain

A

&lt;C©

Jh

HOWELL PLACE
SCMOH AUUUCAM COkUAJMTIU

SANFORD
200 W. AIRPORT BLVD.
Sanford FL 32771

3 0 5 -3 2 3 -7 3 0 6

TAVARES
1111 CAROLINE ST.
Tavares, FL 32778

9 0 4 -3 4 3 -6 4 6 4

I
I

SEND FOR FREE BROCHURE
or CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-551-7368

I NAME

I
| ADDRESS

I
| CITY
! PHO NE

ZIP

�A§tm bty Of God

Wifan «i&gt; Fm * | RgN

M

M&gt;-

B aptist
CtNTIAl baptist CHURCH
1311 M An., W W

m is t *

Nazarene

Catholic
I U SOULS CATMMJC Cl

1234333
i. Dm Iter**
May Sch, , l

fo u r
M

u .

&gt;nM»

IM S *.m.

M&lt;H

1:00p.m.

4 "*May

7:00pm.

Presbyterian
n ts i m s im u i omen

M A m I M Strut
C f h it m

Christian Science

T. R. Glover reminds us that "Whatever thine hand findest to do. do with all thy might," but
then added, "someone will think differently!"
Don’t they? There's not much in this life that you can do but that someone will think you
should not be doing it. W e live in a world where ^'second guessing" and "Monday morning
quarterbacking" is a way of life, a way that often discourages even the most hearty among us.
Every great achievement in life has opponents lying in its wake, people who thought it
shouldn't have worked: even workod against It.
But there’s nothing wrong with someone differing with you. Differences of opinion and belief
have been the greatest stimuli to progress.

moosmpmm
IUTMRRN CHURCH
2317 OrimA* Or. 17-32
lUtherae Church la Aieerka)
rhssa 122-7112
h » . Dm Cay
fo u r
*m tar Sctaal
M S S.M.
WanMp
10 00 a.m.
KM* I M y W AneUay
7:30 y a
■M* I M y ThsrMay
11:00 am .
Chair Fractka
M S am

Differences can divide or multiply, add or subtract. It all depends on your own beliefs and
your attitude about what you believe and your attitude toward those who don't believe like you.

Congregational

_________ _
v
\

^

.

Paul encourages us both in our tendency to criticism of others
and when wo are criticized by them: "Who are you to pass judgement on the servant of another? It is before his own master that he
stands or fata. And he wilt ba upheld, for the Master is able to make

him stand.” (Romans 74:4)

Scriptures Selected by The American Bib»e Society

Sunday

Monday

'Luke

Luke
21:29-38

18:1-14

Tuesday
Acts
1:12-26

Wednesday
Acts

Thursday
Acts

4:23-37

10:1-21

Christian

Saturday
Acts
12:1-19

M ethodist

Church 01 God

UMCC (IN ITIO
W TM 40IST CHURCH

Nsw Heeling MyHwiWp (kmeetiry
S. l i i u i lahnaaa
Sun*ay Church Sthaal
Mamins Warship
I
Prayar A lih ia S M y
Nursery A tu lah li

CO Caaai
Dtug Oka
SaaHay Sthaal
WanMp Sank#
[vaning Sarrka

S th **L V IM ta Rea*

MamMg WanMp
Erangalittk Sanka
Family [nrkhmanl
San ka We**et*ay

Rat. Stare* L Gilmer
SanAay Sthaal
Nam ing WanMp
IraagaHatk Sarrka
WaOaaaOay Yaath Sank#

WillUai J. la y tr
f o la r
Parlor
S iM a i Sthaal
S:4S a.ia.
M S Am. WaraUp Sank#
10:45a.ai.
11:00 Am. Yaath FaHawahip
S:30p.ai.
7:00 p.m.
TueMey lih ia S M y
1000 ■
7:30 p.m.
Hauary praaMaO tar At u n k n .

JOINTHESE SPONSORS
AND HUP KEEP
THIS DNKCT0NY
AVAILABLE
$4.50 PER WEEK
CALL 322-2611

The Following Sponsors M ake This Church i Notice And Directory Page Possible
F IR S T U N IO N
San fo rd , Fla.
Howard H. Hodges and Staff

C O L O N IA L R O O M
RESTAU RAN T
Downtown Sanford
115 East First St.
Bill &amp; Dot Painter

SU N B A N K a n d Staff
200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Or.

K N IG H T ’S S H O E S T O R E
Downtown Sanford
Don Knight and Staff

TH E M o K IB B IN A G E N C Y
Insurance

P U B L IX M A R K E T S
and Employees
S T E N S T R O M RE A LT Y
Herb Stenstrom and Staff
S M IT T Y ’S M O W E R S
Behind Shell Station 25th &amp; Park
Family Owned Business

G REG O R Y LUM BER
TRUE V ALU E H ARDW ARE
500 Maple Ave., Sanford

P U B L IX M A R K E T S
and Employees

M E L ’S
G ULF S E R V IC E
Mel Dekle and Employees

HARRELL A BEVERLY
T R A N S M IS S IO N
David Beverly and Staff

L.D. PLA N T E, IN C .
Oviedo, Florida

O S B O R N ’S B O O K
A N D B IB L E S T O R E
2599 Sanford Ave.

W IL S O N -E IC H E L B E R Q E R
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Staff
W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E CO.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson
W IN N -D IX IE S T O R E S
and Employees

■SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY!
ASM WRIT or GOO
lllr h # Art.ratty #1 M . 1114 W 5th I t . I n iv t
'Hew lit# Aiwmhly 104 R##a«i I u 4
»BAPTIST
C rtrrry Baptist Church, C ryiU I Uh« A I t * . LA * M*ry
Carr.marry Baptist Chwth, 770 t w h il i M r*
C m tu i Baptist Chwth, 1211 0#h A t*
Chahwta f o t Baptist
Ckeraetec Hh lle n ry 0 *p tk t Chock. I m h m *4.
Ceuatrysi** te p lh t Church. CMalry C M l u i . L A . Mary
VkUry O cpti.t Chunk 0U Ortuu** 0*. A Hu*l*r A t*,
f o l Baptist Church. SIS Fart A t*.
t in t la p tlit Church *1 Altameeti Sprwgs. Rt. 414. AHaawet* Sprhrgt
r . «l Baptist Church A F trn , M r
t in t O m lln Church A ( n m
fu r l Baptist Church. Harthaw I M
L ih .ru u Baptist Church
T in t Baptist Church A L A . Nuuma
f o l lip t k l Church A league#*. 0SI Cart SO 434
f o l O uptkt Church A O ru *.
f o l OaptHt Church A l u 'u i r Sprisgi
fu r l As*t i l t Church A W lulct I f t h o 230 Aahaw* R*.
f o l SM M Wistieaery Ic p lltl Church, t i l l W. I llh Si
lu n l BtpUul Church A O il***
r*u u iM Ah * P eptttl Chunk, O tu *.
Jordan H ttilM ir t S sotitt C tiitrttf. 920 tfp i i l l U ,
h .rthil* . 3 *p tk l Church, ChuMA*
M l ik u .ry le p tk l Church, tta rtt I * , U trrp c k *
H *n *iu i» M tiik a 0*pU tl fo r th , 0 A NM R *. O ctrn
Marahig Cton t* p th l Church, ( m il Huy.
M *riA fo u rth * le p tk l. t i l l leeust A n .. Sealer*
- M . 0 4 n Whin . t ry i* * th t Chwth. I .u liu * . Sprtsgt I* .. L*ugw**4
; wt. ShMi Whcheery BaptHI Church. 1000 k rry A n .
&lt;HL Ziuu Whcheery B **lrct. SJp*c A n.
' Kru 0*thA Whcheery Church, tlh SI. 3 Nkhwy A n .
. h« rpn*»u c* I*p 4 h l M tt*. Cnh Lmga* « * ,.. Im fr n i
■»•** Oeptici Chunk Ferm i C h| Cwuuwurty C *A *r, f*r» rt City
J lte * Wl. Cat.ary Wictheary A tp IkL 1100 W. 12th U.
. t in M r * fo u rth * Baytret Chwth. ISOS W. 12th SL
‘ th e T tcljm eA Bapthl Church. Ouatly la*. Merth league**
Me* Wt. 2 M la p tu t C hw th 1720 f o r A n .
t* u IMP FrfawcMp. 4001 I. L A , Orh*. CeeSevern 71 12700
W rct.hu la p u tl Chwth, 4100 Fa*k &gt; *A I4AAI
Fm *W s lap t ilt Chapal. 1201 W f o l S trn l. Seelet*
Fleeciest la p tn t Chwtk. l i t , t . Avpert lt*4 .
T ru th L A * SaptrcL IM g t 14 . Fare hath
- F r ip iii Wtccheery BapUcI Chwth, W4u*y
' Vk **4 Shake Win He ary tap tael Chart* W n l SeAur*
. luyrca Aeptht Chwth, 2SO O .rrhruA Of . C*ct*4h*rry
* Suetea* ia p lrrt Church. 2424 Feheetle
K laewc Wrcuaeery le p tk l Chwth. Si. A4 411 O clnu

SI. L A r Wkskaary Saplilt Chwth A Cuu*r*e City, tec.
SL F A le ftis t Church, 111 H r* A n .
SI. Metthees lap tret Church, Caeaae Nglc.
Spriegfhl* Wictheary hapticL I llh A C*4ar
SI. M a i Wictheary la p tn t Church. 020 Cypress SL
T. uu h Oapthl Chwth. T u b spyrage 0*. A hruaal* Sprtsgt
Wihiaw Chapel Mr.cheery 0 * ,itc l Chwth, Warh A N llm SL Attache!# Spriegc
2he H*p. laptrct Chwth. 712 Omeg* A n.
CATHOLIC
Church A the H etktty. UA* Wary
A* M l CalhAk Chwth. 7)0 Oah A n ., Saalur*
Out LaAy O w n al hr act CalhAk Chapel 121 S. WaguAia A n ., la a fw *
SL Aaa r CalhAk Chwth, D*ge**A Trek Oatary
S i. Aaguctie* CalhAk Chwth, SwnA Or., w ar tuttae 04.. Ceneher ry
SL Wiry WagA lh e t CathAk Chun*. Wartla»* A n .. AHaeamt* Sprugt
Ow A y A Ik* Lakat Cathahc Chwth. 1110 WariwiAaa. Drttaea
CHRISTUM
f o l Chrtclta* Chunk. IS07 1 Saaluri A n.
SaAw* ChrHtiaa Chwth, 112 W. Aapart Rte*.
NerthsrAe ChrHtiaa Chwth. FkrMa H am Or . WartlaeU
la h trk * ChrHtiaa Chwth. Raw Lake ■*.. al la u in u
CHRISTIAN SCKHCt
f o l Church A C hriil SckAicL ITS W arthiia W a*4t *4 . le a f* * * * . 7kri*a
CHURCH 04 CHRIST
Chwth A ChrHL IS 12 S. Oath A n .
Chwth i l C hriil i t lake I A n. U.S. 17-12. H. Catea Harry
Saulh Saaueala Chwth A ChrHL S4I0 lake Hauall 04
Chwth A ChrHL 400 Pah* S p tk fr Or.. AHaaaaelr S ,gt
Chwth A ChrHL G«**ra
Church A ChrHL laagua**
Chwth A ChrHL W. 17th St.
H w thtka Church A ChrHL F it H am Or., Waittair*
CHURCH Of COO
Chwth t l Ga*. SOI Hkhary
Chwth A 6*4. M l W. 22a4 Sl.
Chwth A Ga*. 0 rk 4 *
Chwth A Ga* H A tum . la h * Waern
Chwth A Ga* Whmu *. b ttrp rn a
Chan* A Ga*. 1402 * l i t * IL
Chwth A Ga* hr ChrHL OtieM
Church A Ga* A fophucy. 2S0S S. (h * Arp.
Chwth A Ga* A fophacy, 1704 V F titu a e w i Ayr
Ru m *4 Chwth A G*4. 1700 W I llh SI.. Saalur*
Trua Chart# A Ga*. 2700 R A g tu tt* A n .. SaAw*
IAST1RH ORTHODOX
le s lrrn OrthAss Church. SI Ceergs. *51 S htrveA Cl.. A H aem lt Ipn agi
la ita rn OrthaUai Church. SL Steeee's A O C A.. SIS Suutk I I . Fun Park

f a tta r* O rth***, Chwth. St. M t C hrym luw Chapal. M S. Hey I M 2 . Fern Hark
CQN4RIAATHMAl
CaugrrgatiaaA ChrHtiaa Chwth, 2441 1 Fart A rt . S aaltt*
(FtSCOFAl
IpHcppA Chwth A l* t Ma t C arnaat. ITS Tatha.iHa OeA. Whiter Springs
Ih * Chun* A tha Sua* Shuphar*. H a iti***, I l l la h * A rt.
A l SaHth IpHcapA Chwth. I. Oatary A n . [a t* r,m *
ChrHt IpHaapA Chun*. Laagem*
HAy C m i EAwapal. Part A rt.. M 41* SL, Saalur*
St. R khanri Chwth. S ill la h * * * * * * R* . WHtar Fart
SI. f o n t [p u p a l m A M f at la h * Wary Iln m la ry SAwA. la * * Wan

FltSATTIRtAM
OAlpea Fiatpytariaa Chwth. MAbe* OH*. A A n ile A n ., OAlaa*
laha H an U artA Fyaahytarla* Chwth
f o l Fm hytartau fo r th OaA Are A V * Sl
f o l Frm hytark* fo r th A OaAary, g. Mghiaa*
SL AAn u i FrmhytMtau fo r th . M i l A m Laha 0*
SL W art, F rartytaria* fo r th . 1021 FAw SprHg, 04 .
TntaeiMa Frm hytark* fo r th , M 04 W att State 04. 424. 0rle*e, Fie.
Uptala Cuwawwty Ftm hylurka Chwth, Uputa R4.
W ntm untar Fyachyta r la* fo r th , I A lu g 04 , Ca

■WISH
■ A * Am SyaagagM u n tie g at ta tm U t* Wal. AHaanetu SprHgt

SIVtHTM OAT AAVUTIST
FweA lake S em th Day A *reethl Chwth. Huy. 4M . Faract City
Seaeuth Bey A *m tH t fo r th . Waltlaea Are.. Attameeta Spgc
SaAer* S em th Bay AAraatHt fo r th . 7th A (ha
W ater Sprtugi S em th Bey A *m tH t fo r th . SO V H m t R*.
Wen HR S em th Bey A O nrrtkt fo r th , |0 t L 2 A SL. SaAw*

LUTHCRAM
AM W tka latheraa Chwth. O n rtrn h Dr.. CatuW wry
Gaa* Shep.Hr* U utA lather an. 2317 S. OrUe*a Dr
la th a m Chwth A F t*ri4 **c t. Daltae*
Lulhama Chunk A tha l , * n mar. 101 W. 25th Flat*
Wetrieh Luther•* Chwth, G*t**e O ryt Or. A Hey 17 32. C atuW nry
SL IH n tuik*raa Chunk, I t 424. Maria
SL Stop*** Lutherie Church. 411 jm t O n : A M . Laegeea*
HAy C rtti Lathcraa Chwth A la h * Wary

0THCR CMURCMS

WITM00IST
Aaraatt UartA WauariA Ctwrch, I. -OaAary A n ., (a tn p riu
Hear Lakt IM IH W«th**HI Chwth
id lif l ^ Bj.fi, CHwcS* Cohair M jti.
CatMWafry Ciu u w tty IM A WuthaOHt Ctwrch. Hey. 17 32.. FHty OtUgl X *. Catukarry
ChrHt UwtA Watha*HI Chwth. Tucker O r, Sualae* (tta ta i
DuOary Ciuuw ulty Methe*H I Chun*. W. Highhauhr 0 *.. Daiery
f o t UaHa* Wat*a*H1 Ctwrth. A lt Fart A n .
f o t WethaPHt Chunk A O rk*«
r m HuthaAit Chwth, 500 W. 41* SL
f o l UartA MAhuAht Chwth A Gam a. Cana,a
Grata UartA HathaAl t Ctwrch. Airpert OH*.
IA WX. Cha l k Bait A
A tttu * I
Faaia Weikyaa WathAHt. 5450 Wayu*a D .i.t Saalur* f t *
Sl. iaaum A IM . Yth at C y p m
SL laha W.A fo r th A Ciw iru u City, hat., te a r*** AT S R. 44 t .
SL W ary', A H I . fo r th . SL 0L 41V Octaan
SL FauF, W alhAnt Chwth. Octaau R* . (aturpm e
Startar* WeareriA fo r th . V Oelery
t ael tear U w lA MatheWat Church. SR 414 aa4 44, LtagveA
O ile n UwtA H athA kt Church. Car el Cerpeutar 4 fo r a y SL. Orltee

NAZARlNt
F»»l Chwrh at th* Hararaee. 2SA1 Sealer* A n .
G ann Chunk A tha N auruu*. 1R. 4A, G a n n
LaAp Wary Church A Ik * Mauruua. 171 I . C ry.tal lah* A rt., la k t Wary
Wartham W ***t Chun* A Ih * Maiarua*. SR-44.1', K im W. A L4 A th* Wahl,a I
U egupA Chunk A th * Haaaraee, W ay*** A k tw p A n .. lu g n A

U rm * ’ •* CermUy Chrt 0m * ae* WUbw A n ., laha I
Shee r A.W.I. fo r th . 0 4 n A 12th
A l Faith Chapel. Can* ScrWeala. W ehn. Fart 0*.
■*M*aR Area** NAiem t Chapel. le a r*A A n.
Cfeiriiittfli CMnnumitf f lm rth
Chunk A k m ChrHt A U tte r Bay SehrH. 2115 Fart Are
lah* H eart* fo p A . Or tag* O k*., Lake Wear**
^
** irte e e h 't Wrtrretv, Laha H earn Uurt, 1542 W. Thir* Street
f o l Bern Chunk A th* Uekg CA. H I* ..,
F ln l fo r th A ChrHL SAuutHL th a w 0k * . * A ) w
SL, OAtaa*

h * &lt;VhuA

****

A n .. 0« 25th eppeulr SewHAu

F h it Featetm lA fo r th A LaegeeA
F ln t Fuetnm tA Chunk A SaAer*
FA Geepel fo r th A M U ChrHt. 1424 h n y A n
TabaraeA*. 1724 Ceuatn CM
fo r th . 0 A MM I* .. O ilH *
1441 S. Fart A n .
. SaAeA CaegregatkeA A khu.ah t W ttn tve . 1104 W. 4th SL
Thu SAntiue Am y. 704 Y». 24th SL
OtWug HMh Wwaeiaa fo r th . SO 414, U ugevA
H i* ?
C*‘‘ —
“ 'W L A tta w n l. SprHg,
IM y TrHrty fo r th A GA H ChrHL 1114 MaagumtHe A n
The f A Ceteei Chwch el Ow U r* k m ChrHL W .tru agin SL, C u m . City

&gt; . urtrta*-

JHAtr SptHgACAWmrt) t-*A » ke iA « rH *ta « P U '-‘f ' S *« *\ UfTOlrtl

�1

Sf'-"'*’"

■\#

L S -S "

t*

.1

gagiif

■»1•
• rt*. " . tjJ vi r
■J*.-*'j*■
*£ —
*■*•.- j.. j
t^ t r’
•*4-*;/. ? - »

Briefly

Holy Music Seminar Set

'Mary's Boy* To Ba Performed
At 1st United Methodist Church
The one-woman drama "M ary’s B oy" is scheduled to be
presented at First United Methodist Church. 419 Park Ave.,
Sanford, today during the 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. worship
services.
"M ary’s Boy." by actress Margaret Andersen, is the story of
Jesus as told through the eyes of his mother. In the sensitive
portrayal of Mary, the warmth and gentleness as well as the
struggles of being the mother o f Jesus Is shared, a church
spokesman said.
Margaret Andersen Is a professional actress living In New
York City. She has traveled extensively throughout the United
States since 1976, performing one-woman shows for all kinds
of groups, large and small, and for all ages. She also conducts
workshops, teaches and directs Christian theater. She Is a
committed Christian, and will excitedly share her adventures
in faith, the spokesman said.
The public is Invited to the join the members of the church as
they experience the drama which begins with the astonish­
ment or the young girl as she learns that God has chosen her to
be the mother of the Messiah and ends with the Upper Room.

All-Day Grief Seminar Scheduled
The Bereaved Family Resource Network Is sponsoring a
seminar on grief Feb. 6 at the Hotel Royal Plaza at Walt Disney
World Village.
The all-day seminar will cover the effects of grief on adults
and children.
Dr. Terese A. Rando, author of several books on grief, will be
the keynote speaker. Workshops will be offered on the loss of a
spouse, how children handle grief, care of the dying and
forming support groups. The cost of the seminar Is $42 which
Includes lunch.

The seminar Is approved for 6 contact hours for nurses,
social workers, counselors and school psychologists. For
further Information call the Parent Resource Center at
425-3663.

Abortion Ruling Program To Air
A "current issue" television program concerning abortion Is
set to be aired Monday and Includes a panel dlcussslon with a
local pastor partlclatlng.
Pastor Greg Freeman, associate pastor of the Calvary
Assembly o f God In Winter Park and President o f the Christian
Pro-Life Network, will be seen on “ Roe Vs. Wade: 20 Million
Lives in Review." scheduled to be aired at 8 p.m. on Channel
52.
The program, highlighting the repercussions of the 1973
Supreme Court decision of the same same, which legalized
abortion, features besides the panel discussion film excerpts
from "Conceived In Liberty." An open phone line is hoped to
encourage listener participation.
Freeman will discuss the Christian perspeclve on the role of
the law and the church. Lynn Kennedy, Director of first Life
Ministry which operates the Center for Pregnancy In Orlando,
will discuss Christian involvement In the abortion Issue. Dana
Harden Hankins, a central Florida attorney, will give a legal
and legislative update about abortion.
Keith Curtis, production director o f Channel 52, will host the
program.
.
..
,,

Dr. G o ff To Sing A t Church
Dr. Jerry GolT and The Singing G o ffs are coming to the
Church of God of Prophecy, 2509 Elm Ave., Sanford. Jan. 29.
at 7:30 p.m.
Goff has received the coveted Dove Award, the top award In
Christian Music, the People's Choice Award for Christian
Music, a Gold Record Award and was chosen number one male
vocalist by Gospel Music News.
The concert is free. For more information call 322-4015.

Annual Congregational Meeting
The Annual Congregational Meeting of the Sanford Con­
gregational Christian Church has been scheduled.
The meeting is set for noon today.
Charles Valerius will preside as moderator. Composlt records
will be distributed. According to the reports, the church has
experienced a growth in the Church. Sunday School, finances
and spiritual witness.

Book Of James Bible Study
Dr. James Hammock, pastor o f the First Baptist Church.
Longwood. will be leading the study of the Book of James
during the January Bible Study at Pinecrest Baptist Church,
today through Wednesday.
The services will begin at 7 p.m. each night. The public is
invited to attend. Nursery services will be provided.

Choir Workshop Planned
The Orlando Components of the Florida Mass Choir will hold
a musical workshop Feb. 21.
Moring activities will Include classes In voice, choir etiquette,
chords and progressions, and choir administration. Evening
activities includes a musical.
Guest director will be V. Michael McKay of Houston.

New LDS Missionaries Arrive
The Casselberry area recently received two new missionaries
for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Benjamin S. Ratliff. 19, and J. Michael Perry. 21, will spend
approximately 70 hours per week helping people learn more
about the gospel.
Like all missionaries for the LDS church, Ratliff and Perry
receive no pay for their labors. They are instead supported
entirely by savings previously accumulated and money
donated by their families.
They will serve about 24 months on the mission receiving
transfers to different cities every few months by mission
headquarters in tarnpa.
liatllff is from Plucervllle, Calif., and Perry is from Provo.
Utah.

Stetson University and the
Church Music Department of the
Florida Baptists Convention will
s p o n s o r a C h u r c h Music
W o rk s h o p M o n d ay through
Wednesday at Stetson Universi­
ty’s School o f Music.
The 3-day program will In­
clude workshops and lectures by
well-known educators In church
m u s i c . M a rg u e r ite B ro o k s,
director of choral conducting at
the Yale Institute of Sacred
Music, will be the choral clini­
c i a n . B ro o k s w i l l c o nd u ct
workshops in choral conducting
techniques, dlctiolK and vocal
color.
Bruce Leafbald, associate pro­
fessor of church music and
worship at Southwestern Baptist
Theological Seminary, will lead
a w ork sh op In a definition,
ph ilosophy and theology of
worship. Leafbald Is an author,
lecturer, worship leader, music

conductor, composer and ar­
ranger, teach er an d form er
pastor. He is nationally know for
nts lectures on music, worship
and the church.
Albert Travis, associate pro­
fessor of music and organ at
Southwestern, will lead an open
discussion, "Organists. An En­
dangered Species" and present a
free organ recital Wednesday at
8 p.m. Travis, who holds degrees
from Oklahoma Baptist Universi­
ty. Syracuse University and the
University o f M ichigan, has
p e rfo r m e d In r e c it a ls a n d
workshops throughout the south
and southwest.
Brian W ren , m inister and
hym nologist. w ill present a
workshop on hymns and their
uses. His hymn texts have been
published In many denomina­
tional hymnals in Brltian, the
United S tates, C a n a d a an d
Australia. He earned a master's

degree and a doctor o f divinity
degree from Oxford University.
In addition to the guest clini­
cians, Dr. Ann Small, associate
professor or music education
and director o f the Children's
Choir at Stetson, will present a
w o rk sh o p on w o rs h ip w ith
childrens voices. Mollle Rich,
assistant professor o f voice and
music education, will give a
presentation on vocal techniques
for choral directors. The Stetson
University School of Music facul­
ty w i l l p a r t i c i p a t e in the
workshop and be available to
answer Individual questions.
The $60 registration fee In­
cludes a banquet, music and
materials. Participants are re­
sponsible for their own accom­
modations. For more informa­
tion call Stetson University
School of Music, at 904-07344121. ext. 514.

Knowledge Doesn't Stop
Pregnancy A m ong Teens
A New York Tim es writer
began her story by relating a
personal experience.
" I was sitting at a table." she
wr ot e, " w i t h h a l f a dozen
16-year-old girls, listening with
s o m e a m a z e m e n t as t hey
showed off their knowledge of
human sexuality.
"T h e y knew how long sperm
lived Inside the body, how many
women out o f 100 using a
diaphragm were statistically
likely to get pregnant.... One girl
recited the steps of the ovulation
cycle from day one to 28....
"There was Just one problem
with this performance: Every
one o f the girls was pregnant."
This would be a good story to
keep In mind as we get closer to
making a decision on whether
more (and earlier) sex education
In the schools and giving con­
traceptives to teenagers is the
answer to our teen problem.
Right now It might easily
appear that we traditionalists are
In the minority or at least losing

ground. Only two out of 70 city
officials at a recent meeting of
the National League of Cities in
San Ant oni o. T e x a s , voted
against a resolution that would
consider giving contraceptives to
teens.
One of the two objectors.
Mayor Dana Rinehart of Col­
umbus. Ohio, called the resolu­
tion "stu pid." He said. "I think it
will encourage promiscuity."
But that’s not bothering those
pushing for more (and earlier)
sex education In the schools and
the free distribution of birth-

Saints And
Sinners
George Plagenz

control devices to young people.
Their major concern is to avert
teen pregnancies among those
who are now euphemistically
described as being "sexually
active" — not to reduce the level
of their sexual actlvltiy.
One listens in vain for any of
them to advocate "Just say no."
Oh. they would say, they are not
averse to telling young people to
abstain from sex.
In reality, though, they are like
parents who would tell their
children it’s best not to cheat,
but then go on to say, " If you
have to cheat, however, let me
tell you how to keep from getting
caught."

No responsible parent would
say that to a child. But this Is the
approach we are taking with
teenage sex.
We have fallen for what one
columnist calls " t h e new
wisdom." W e have been intimi­
dated by t hos e wh o call
themselves "experts." As the
writer goes on to say. "W e have
abandoned many old-fashioned
practices that work In favor of
high-sounding innovations that
have led to disaster."
Attitudes toward sex have
changed, we old fogies are

patronizingly Instructed by the
"experts.” as If that Is wisdom
etched In stone. T h e only
wisdom etched In stone Is the
Ten Commandments.
What people forget about the
Ten Com mandments Is that
they were not handed down by
an arbitrary deity. They were
wrought out of human experi­
ence. Before they were written
on Stnal, experience had taught
mankind that stealing, adultery
and unflllal conduct were the
cause of personal unhappiness
and social disorder.
To say that you don’t believe
In the Ten C om m an dm en ts
would be to profess ignorance
about how society and the indi­
viduals who make up society are
held together.
Bui having said that, suppose
it turns out that the times have
passed us by and that no one is
listening. Shall we give up and
admit defeat?
Elie Wlesei, the Nobel Prize

winner, tells the story o f a man
who came lo Sodom to protest
the evil there to save the people.
No one would listen, but the
m an ke pt g o i n g on w h i l e
everyone laughed. One day a
small boy came to him and
asked. "Sir, why do you do this?
Can you not see that no one is
listening? Can you not see that
no one Is being changed?"
"Yes. my young friend." the
man replied, "I can see that no
one Is being changed. But I will
go on protesting forever because
I certainly do not want them to
change m e."

Stations Dislike Pleas

Patriarch
James W. Haynes Sr., of
Deltona, has been named
Patriarch of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints In central Florida.
Ha w ill s e rv e w it h
Freeman Baggett of San­
ford. Together they serve
as patriarchs for the De­
land Florida Stake which
comprises the areas of
S a n fo rd , C a s s e lb e rry ,
Longwood, Deland, Eustls,
Leesburg, New Sm yrna
Beach, Daytona Beach,
Clearmont, and Bunnell.

Student Film
G ood For A ll
The First Baptist Ch ur ch
Markham Woods, 5400
Markham Woods Road. Lake
Mary, will be showing the film
"Real Love" for all youths In the
area at 6 p.m. today.
Rich Wllkerson, the speaker In
the Him. has been working with
troubled yourths for 14 years. He
tours the county presenting
school assemblies challenging
the students to go beyond the
existential society around them.
The public school assembely Is
unedited. For details, call 323*
0238

Levitation Suit
Nets $138,000
W ASHINGTON

(UPI| — The

Maharishi Mnhcsh Yogi, who
guided the Beatles to a higher
stale of consciousness In the
1960s, mus t p a y n e a r l y
$138,000 to a man who said he
wanted to learn how to levitate
but never got off the ground.
A U.S. District Court awarded
$137,890 Tuesday to Robert
Kroplnsky. who said he spent 11
years studying transcendental
meditation but never gained any
o f its advertised benefits.
"During the Sldhis course."
K r u p i n s k y ’ s l a ws u i t sul d,
"plaintiff was Instructed in a
technique which defendants rep­
resented would allow him to
levitate or fly. 'Flying' In fact
constituted hopping with the
legs folded in the lotus position."

Evangelist's Show M a y Not Be A ire d
TU LSA . Okla. (UPI) - An
increasing number o f television
station officials across the nation
say they will not air Oral Rob­
erts’ weekly show if it includes
pleas for donations to prolong
the evangelist’s life past March.
Lon Lee, program director at
KCNC in Denver, said such pleas
will not be aired on that station
in the future.
"W e have decided that’s really
not an appropriate approach to
take and we are telling them
that." he said.
R o g e r R o e b u c k , pr o gr am
d i r e c t o r o f W A V E - T V in
Louisville, Ky.. which has car­
ried the Oral Roberts show for 10
years, said Tuesday he was
"really appalled by (Roberts’)
fund-raising techniques."
"I intend to screen the pro­
gram before it goes on for the
next three or four episodes, and
we will cancel the program If the
technique does not change."
Roebuck said.
Officials o f T V stations in
Oklahoma City and Dallas said

Beth Am Inducts Soviet A s M em ber
after serving three years for crimes he says lie
did not commit.
Congregation Beth Am. Seminole County's
largest synagogue, chose the Tarnopolsky
family as its 100th member to underscore and
call attention to the plight of Jews In the Soviet
Union. Congregational members have underwrlten the costs of sending a constant (low of
mail to the family in Kharkov. Response letters
from Yuri Tarnopolsky have been read to the
congregation from the pulpit and tell of the

Congregation Beth Am's 100th member.
Inducted during May into the rolls of the
Congregation in absentia, has been granted
permission to emigrate from the Soviet Union
after a decade-long struggle in search of
religious freedom, according to the congrega­
tion.
Dr. Tarnopolsky. a chemist, resides in
Karkov. U.S.S.R.. and. along with his wife Olga
and daughter Irina, have been held "prisoner's
of conscience," and Soviet authorities denied
’
his emigration visa to Israel in 1979, according • .Tarnopolsky s'hfe.
The
congregation,
according
to
Rabbi
Merrill
to Beth A m ’s release.
Shapiro, looks forward to a response from Dr.
Dr. Tarnopolsky, also known as a poet
Tarnopolsky to an invitation issued by con­
writing for the cause of religious freedom and
g
r e g a t i o n pr e s i de nt S t e v e Gor don, of
human rights In Russia, was released in March
Longwood, to visit the congregation.
from Chita, a prison camp in Eastern Siberia

Monday they would cancel the
show or refuse to air segments of
the program that include what
they consi der i nappropri ate
pleas for money.
Sandra Butler, director of
broadcast operations for WUSA
in the Washington area, said her
station did not air last Sunday's
broadcast because of the nature
of the appeal for money.
But Joh n Dixon, program
director o f WOW T in Omaha.
Neb. said his station will con­
tinue airing the show. "1 can't
see where he's changed at all. I
think somebody is Just paying
attention. He's been saying that
for years."
On Sunday and Jan. 4, Rob­
erts requested an additional $4.5
million In donations by March to
reach his $8 million goal to
support a medical missionary
program, for which he already
had raised $3.5 million since
March 1986.
Roberts said God told him in
March. If he did not reach the
goal. " I ’m going to call you

home In one year."
"I want to be able to stand on
this television program In April
alive and tell you I have all I
need, then be able to tell you
God is going to meet your
needs.” Roberts told his viewers
Sunday.
Officials from other television
s t at i ons like W D A F - T V in
Kansas City and KHJ-TV In Los
Angeles said they are closely
monitoring the program, but
have not decided on any definite
acti on.
Sti l l o t he r s , l i k e
W W L - T V in N e w O r l e a n s ,
K GS W- T V in A l b u q u e r q u e ,
WIBW-TV In Topeka and KOTV
In Tulsa — Roberts' base city —
said the broadcasts had not
created any special problems.
Roberts spokeswom an Jan
Dargatz said complaints from
station managers will not affect
the content of the evangelist's
weekly television show.
"Oral Roberts has consistently
done on his television program
what he feels he must do."
Dargatz said.

Fem inist im agery For G od
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (UP!) - A by masculine language,” Wren
United Methodist minister says said.
new hymns such as "Strong
Wren has been the guest of a
Mother G od " will help feminist United Methodist hymnal subterms and Im agery for God committee meeting In Nashville
become more accepted among this week.
church goers.
"It's not going to undo any­
The Rev. Brian Wren said
body’s faith." he said. "In 15
Tuesday the 25-member United
years it would be seen to be a
Methodist hymnal committee
m istake" to leave out such
should Include such hymns or
hymns.
their book will quickly be out­
Wren presented the committee
dated.
"Irrespective o f whether they with 10 new works, including
use my work or not. the in­ "Strong Mother G od." The songs
clusion of four or five hymns will be considered along with
that use overtly feminine imag­ dozens of other contemporary
ery would tie an important signal hymns subm itted. T h e new
to a minority who feel excluded hymnal is due out in 1989.

Revivalist
Evangelist Yuldine
Roundtree, of Roanoke, Va.(
is participating in a 3-day
revival ending today at the
Sanford Elm Avenue Church
of God of Prophecy, 2509 S.
Elm Ave. Miss Roundtree Is
both preaching and singing
at the revival.
BE SURE TO C O M E A N D SEE

DON HUTCHINS &amp;
THE SWORDSMAN SINGERS

Sunday, Jan. 16
10:45 a.m .

PAOLA WESLEYAN
CHURCH
5450 W a ysid e D rive, S a n fo rd
PASTOR L.D. FETZER

Welcomes Everyone

f
**»

�8 € - h M w i N w W , lanfori, FI.

k w i» y , Jan. tl« 1X7

By CMe Yb« i§

ACROSS

HOROSCOPE

OASWOOO
MB A
KNOWS HOW 1 NAPOLAON
TOHANOUB
TEM PW

%
# IP W U M'-IU *-I

Whot The Day
Will Bring v .

By Mott Wafer

THE BORN LOSER

By Art Swtaom

ARCHIE

By BoB Montana

by Howl# Schnaldar
E .P L O T Z

ESTATE. X

1/

,

^

7HEV HAVEDT
LOST OWE. VET

CGfJDOS

I

G EM INI (May 21 -June 20)
Guard against overreacting to­
day if someone you love doesn’ t
show proper gratitude for some­
thing you've gone out o f your
way to do.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Try to appreciate your mate
today Instead of finding fault
with the little things he or she
does that displease you. Use
compliments, not complaints.

You have good possibilities for
success In the year ahead, pro­
vided you stay in your area of
expertise. Don't waste time and
effort going off on tangents.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Don't try to impose your
biased opinions or dislikes upon

s u e

others today. You're not apt to

by Hargraavaa A Sailors

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS
WHAT ARE
D O IN S ,
M R .^ M A U L P

by Wamar Brothers

BUGS BliftNY
1 frlAr£ S O M E
S A T E L L IT E
D I^ M .

FRANK AND ERNEST

101

I
4

11

7

12 And MOWS (2
writ.)

4 Give.

14 Embries
14 Roof &lt;
10 Printer'!

4 Church porta
13 Pence da____
In the year ah ea d , y o u 'll
18 Medical suffix
establish several m ajor o b ­
17 Cempoee point
10
Curved
boot
jectives for y o u rse lf. W h a t
20 Oebaer'a note
makes this year so unusual Is 21 Dawn goddess 22 Yeung beys
22 Northern
the fact that your goals are all
23 Yawn |sL)
eenateiUtien
likely to be attained.
24 Conaumo
24 Part of the
2B Slippery
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
27 Brusque
19) You'll resent doing some­ 2S AngtoGtisn
24 Read
thing for someone else today
30 Kiln
because you believe he could do 24 Motoring
32 SUn medication
elation
(ibbr.)
it for himself, but you'll bite the
33 Large knife
27 inrhen pony
bullet and do it anyway. Major
24 Type of eanoo 34 Conceit!
c h a n g e s a r e a h e a d f o r 31 hear
Capricorns in the coming year. 34 Impale
34 Bo in debt to
Send for your Astro-Graph pre­ 34 Adage
1
I
dictions today. M a l l $1 to 37 Robbed
’
Astro-Graph, c/o of this newspa­ 40 Recent (prof.)
10
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland. 41 Golf elub face
m
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state 44 Mental acumen 14
44 Sweetaop
your zodiac sign.
44 Entertainer
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 -Feb. 19)
____Sumac
Business and pleasure don't mix 47 Poetic
a n
well today, especially romantic
is
intrigue. If you get Involved, 48 “A Christmas
CsroT
your secret won't go undetected.
tt
character
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
44
Explode
Agreem ents into w hich you
ii
81 Leek of water
enter today should be thought
8 8 ___________
through in every aspect. If you
the ground
impulsively say yes to be a nice
floor
guy, you may get the short end.
86 Always (poet)
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) 87 Wool fiber
Temporarily shelve Jobs today 88 Mrs* in Madrid
(abbr.)
that you don't enjoy doing.
89 By birth
You'll be far more proficient
80 River In
performing the same tasks when
Scotland
you’re in a better frame of mind.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
DOW N
Stay on familiar turf or you
1 25th letter
might get yourself Involved in
something you know little about.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A t­
That could cost you financially
tempting to appease someone
and emotionally.

Y O U R B IR T H D A Y
J A N U A R Y 19. 1987.

mu 7mtAsr

4 to

7 Finish first

TOUR BIRTHDAY
JANUARY 18.1087

REAL

)

4

BEETLE BAILEY

2 Baeholora-

win over their minds, just their
resentment. Major changes are
ahead for Capricorns In the
coming year. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions today.
Mail $1 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428,
Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
No one Is about to offer you
something for nothing today. Be
careful that you don't make an
arrangement that has too many
hidden strings attached to It.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
An ambitious objective won’t be
achieved today If you team up
with someone who knows as
little as you do about how It
should be done.
AR IE S (March 21-Aprll 19) An
assignment that’s distasteful to
you is equally as unpleasant to
one you might try to palm it off
onto today, yet you’ ll demand
perfection.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Impulsive behavior could create

you’ve made angry recently with
a gift or material peace offering
won’ t work as well as a sincere
apology.
VIRG O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ir
you’re overly protective o f those
in y o ur charge today, the
measures you’ll use might not
be understood or appreciated.
Loosen the reins.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Peo­
ple who like you will go out of
their way to make life easier for

unnecessary problems for you
today. Don't jump into things
without first considering all o f
their possible consequences.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Be
realistic regarding the demands
you place upon your mate today.
If your orders are unreasonable,
you’ll get problems Instead of
production..

□non nan nnnn
nnnci nnn nnnn
nnne nnn nnnn
nnnnnnn nnnnn
nnn nnn
□on nnnnnnnnn
nnnnn nr: nnnn
nnnn on nnnnn
nnnnnnnnn nnn
nnn non
nnnnn nnnnnnn
anon cnc nnnn
□nnn non nnnn
□non non onon
44 Oty of

34 Tree
41 Ceusde

80 For (If )

42 Bibfleal king
43 Wood deitioo
48 Own (foot)
47 Alcohol lamp

82 Arikare
S3 Caspian-----

84 Secret agant

(CJ1BI7 by NEA. Inc

you today, but don’t take their
good deeds for granted. Try to
reciprocate.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be
prudent regarding the types of
activities In which you involve
yourself today. Don’t get in over
your purse.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Today, if you’re in the
company of a person who hasn’t
been as fortunate as you've been
recently, don’t flaunt your suc­
cesses and make him or her feel
inferior.

Don’ t be wishy-washy in matters
where you should take a firm
position today. Fence-sitting will
contribute additional complica­
tions.
L IB R A (Sept.
ative thinking
arc your worst
Instead of being

23-Oct. 23) Neg­
and self-doubts
enemies today.
fearful of failure,

at least step out and try.

CANCER (June 21-July
you say unkind things
others today, there's a
chance that something
more unkind may be said
you at a later date.

22) If
about
good
even
about

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be
doubly cautious today In all of
your financial affairs. If you get
careless, errors you make will be
difficult to rectify.
V IR G O

(Aug. 23-Sept.

22)

S C O R P IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
It’s best
not to take financial
gam bles today on situations
where the events arc controlled
by others. You might back the
wrong horse.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Be mindful o f your behavior
careerwlse today so that you
don't alienate allies. Their needs
must be treated equal to your
own.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

C tto b n ly Cipnw c r y p lo q iim i V I c n a l v l lio m quotations by fam ous poopla, p u l and p itw n t
Each fatlai m lha Ciphaf H a n d ] for another TodMy t ckm E equals U

by CONNIE WIENER

IBDIJ

AQMIR

FGRDFU

NU

DS S

SQTR

SBEZDGOO
DSS

OBCU."

QU

DSQTR.
—

LDQG.

JR

JR

FGRDFU

JRMGV

NU

PBGODM.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Revue is the moat dilficult art lorm In the
theater. 'King Lear' Is easy by comparison." — Roderick Cook.

by Bob Thavas

W E LC O M E T o

pfil

SOGGY APAZ\A!

W IN AT BRIDGE
By Jam es J a co by

F i nal l y , h e r e ’ s a s i mp l e
approach to playing the 4-3 fit.
Most South players would open
the bidding with one diamond,
feeling that the gilt-edged values
(A. A-K, A-Q) would fully Justify
a second-round reverse bid of
two hearts. Since today’s South
was oid-fashloncd and a bit o f a
Itand hog. he started with one
heart. North raised hearts and
then Jumped to four hearts over
three diamonds, lit would have
been better to raise diamonds.)
Although five diamonds is a
safe game contract (whatever the
lead, draw trumps and pitch a
spade from d u mmy on the
fourth heart), declarer found
himself in four hearts, and the

club Jack was led. If the opposing
trumps are 4-2. declarer cannot
allow his trumps to be shortened
if he wants to draw trumps and
nin the diamond suit. Instead of
ruffing the second trick, he
should throw a spade loser. He
would then throw another spade
if the defenders continued to
play clubs. Now. If a fourth club
is led. dummy can ruff. With
normal breaks (no 5-1 or 6-0
heart division). South will take
the last 10 tricks.
Remember this Is Just another
way to play the hand when your
trump length Is short. Discard
losers that you can comfortably
afford until such time as the
dummy can ruff, preserving
your own trump length.

ANNIE

WEST
4 Q 10 3
49 74 2
♦ 9
4 J 10 9 8 7

I-I7-ST

EAST
4 K J86
486
4 J 10 7
4 A Q54
SOUTH
4A 72
4 A K 10 3
4 A Q 865
46

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Weil

North

East

Pan

24
44

Pass
Pass

P;iss
Pass

South
14
3♦
Pass

Opening lead: 4 J

by Leonard Starr

SHOULD WE TAKE

A Np G E T

M05.WN&lt;3 BACH

iNVOLVep?

TO THE
HACIENDA?

NORTH
49 5 4
4QJ5
♦ K4 32
4 K 32

NO!

BUT-WHAT IF
SHE'S STILL

AUVET

AMP WHAT IF

SHE IS N 'T ?
HOW DO WE

EXPLAIN 7~

�---------------------- U

' * :
* • —+'&gt;*!

r

i ' •-

w .n

. .e

■

* * . .

TONIGHT'S TV

•7

i

3-»=V •
• '-.t v CiT . 3k;
l*VK

v r iv w s r r s :
■-M

f.

H0 T-

MS AMD T M
••’ 4»

1)FVTT100ATJUNCTION

-t

S

*

B (B
T W V .2 V }

'

•

a iU N R L U G V

M u NUT

OtfTNNMMMOON
IT H O tu S m

1046

AT A

10:30
— ,v— w w w q
3-8-1 CONTACT g

H M N O N COURT
M -1 CONTACT g

m roM im iL .

1140
IM B L OF FORTUM

M Ni FORTUM A AOrL iArM. Mwi w
- —- -w e w e . l v

M M in ip H o N I
a ( B aS scan cahar itud
■ jl« f THE SRAM (WED)
■ (W j NOVA (THU)
B IB
IVSS ON THS FN2E:
AMEISCAS CIVIL IWHTS YEARS,
1008(FW)

hcwcoowiMlidtQ
B I B DOCTOR WHO

(MNmofrwWttfwTar

S ( l8 l0 A U IIT 1 « r ( f f t Q

• 40
B (11) OSNMS T M M INAC t

21

1140

|11) MAUDS

646

•

«

10:30
4:30

| Sacralary d a rt Ctflord dlacuaaaa
f y.s. foreign policy tinoi World W v
i" .g

4:36

JO SALTWATtR ANOL1R
640
_ (10) WAS! PHOTON WEEK W
REVIEW g
(•) MAMA'S FAMILY Mama
[ cruaadaa againtl pornography.

O

646
FWHMQ WITH NOLANO MAK-

6:30
tB W A LL STREET WEEK
m rra A U V M Q

S

6:36

0 FWSN* WITH OKLANOO WIL­
SON
EVENING

w

(11) SMALL WONDER Tad
la k tt stapa lo mah* Jamlo proud of
him.
• (10) FRUGAL GOURMET Varioua lamb dishes Including ihoth*c*. chop* and oMv* pa*M, and a
roaal with balsamic vinegar.
8
(•) CHARLES IN CHARGE
Charta* atlampli to halp l ha Powaii
children with their problem*.

645
Q WRESTLING

6:30
hew s

S css

news

ABCNEWSg
1(11) NEW GtOGCT Galt and Danni form an aJt-glrt band.
3 (10) HOMETIME Tip* on applying window casings, baaaboarda
and celling coves, g
— (I) ONE SKI FAMILY Brian
j atari* dating Don * lormar girlairland.

1140

!

(foiMWTOfrtAmj

®®a®r

(11) UAUOC
(8) SAAQAMS TOMQHT

8V

O

(W)QOURMfT&lt;

MONT TRACKS: CHARTBUS-

1140

B ® NAACR MAGI AWARDS

B®

B (11) M O W "A Case Of Rape"
(1974) Elizabeth Montgomery, Ronny Cox. A rape victim Is humWatad
and mad* to seam responsible
whon
ih i pet
o re m
fu ra it Vaoiintt
ewv
e a ene c
-pv-»rg|j^^w
M vrrei

B

(10)'BUTTERFLIES Ban sus­
pects the wont whan ha seat Ri*
and Leonard together.
8 (8) MKMMY BARGARM

12:30

B ® m htthsfriss
® O SISKEL t EBERT A THE
MOVIES Scheduled reviews:
"Wanted Dead or ADva" (Rutger
Hauer, Gan* Simmons); ''Tha Slaplather" (Sheley Hack* "Oust tor
One" (JuD* Andrews, Alan Bates).
8 (10) HIGH WIRE A portrait of
tightrope walker Phiuppe Petn aa
he prepares tor a 1983 wall at tha
Cathedral ol St. John th* Otvlna In
New York City. (R)

140

1240

B ® COLLEGE BASKETBALL
North Carolina State at North Caro­
lina ILhro)
® B HEROES: MADE M THE
U.8JL
a (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Goodbye Mr. Chips" Chips I*
dught bchaan toyslttas to No now
wife and hi* longtime housekeeper.
Mrs. Wtcketl. (Part 3 ol 3 )g

S (•) NIGHT OWL FUN

1246
O NIGHT TRACKS Included: Kate
Buah ("Experiment IV ); Correy
Hart ( "Can’t Help Falling in Love
With You "k Bob Geidot ("This la
The World Casing” * Van HMen
("Best Of Both Worlds"). In alarao.

12:30

1:15

® Q M O W "Tha Sound Barrier"
(1933) Ralph Richardson, Ann
Todd.
®
MTV TOP 20 VIDEO
COUNTDOWN

B
M O W "Thra* Oodlather*’’
(1949) John Wayne, Ward Bond. A
trio ol bandit* put Iholr lives on Ih*
line when they attempt to deliver an
orphan they found In lha desari lo
th* near**! town.

145

1:30

1:00
B

8:05
0 M O W "The Man From Laram­
ie" (1935) Jama* Stewart. Wallace
Ford. A me. soaks revenge on the
gunrunner* responsible lor hi*
brother's death

6:30
O ® 227 Latter reconsider* a
contacting bid when he learn* that
Ihe construction company ha* in­
vestment j in South Africa. In ster­
eo.
f f l O SLEDGE HAMMER) Sledge
loses hi* salt-confidence when
lhugs steal his prized Magnum In
alarao. g
B (10) ARTHUR C. CLARKE’S
WORLD OF STRANGE POWERS
Topic: dowsing for melttt, oil and

0:00
S ® GOLDEN GIRLS The room­
mate* swoon over a handsome TV
•clor. appearing at their community
Iheeler. In stereo, g
(D O m o vie "‘Staler Margaret
And The Saturday Night Ladles”
(Premiere) Bonnie Franklin,
Rosemary Clooney. A determined
nun overcomes a series ol obsta­
cle* lo establish a ha/Tway nous* lor
Nvneie parole**, g
f f l O OHARA (Premier*) Crime
drama Saierari police U. Oner*

2:00

1:30

(U O WEEKEND WITH THE
STARS TELETHON A fund-raiser
benetillng victims ol carabral palsy
Maturing national coverage horn
New York and loa Angeles with
hosts Nancy Dusseult, Florence
Henderson, Dennis James, Wayne
Newton, John Rlttar, Nancy Morgan
Ritlar and Hanry Wlnklar.
® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Louisiana State at Kentucky (Live)
B (11) M O W "Th* People Va.
Jean Harris" (1981) Elian Burtlyn,
Martin Balaam Baaed on tran­
script* ol Ih* trial ol the private
school headmistress convicted ol
murdering her lover. "Seersdaie
Diet" author Herman Tarnower.
B (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
"Dane# In America; In Memory Of...
A Belial By Jarome Robbins With
th* New York City Ballet" Suzanne
Farrell. Adam Ludera and Alexan­
dre Prola lead the ensemble In a
production set to Alban Berg's Vio­
lin Concerto. In ilereo.

B (11) M O W "No Tima For Com­
edy" (1040) James Slewart. Rosal­
ind Russell.

2:00
B ® a ROCKS TONIGHT

2:05

’

3:00
0 ® SPORTSWORLD Scheduled
World Professional Figure Skating
Championships. Irom Capital Cen­
tra In Landover, Md (Taped)
0 (10) WIND AT ONES FINGER­
TIPS Organ builder Gen* Bedlent Is
seen working on a tracker organ for
a church in Grand Rapid*, Mich In
stareo
0 (8) MID-DAY BARGAINS

5:00
0) O
WEEKEND WITH THE
3TARS TELETHON A fund-raiser
benefiting victims of ctreoral pslsy
featuring national coverage from
New York end Los Angeles with
hosts Nancy Dusseult, Florence
Henderson, Dennis Jem**, Wsyn*
Newton. John Ritter, Nancy Morgan
Ritlar and Henry Winkler
® Q BRANDED
0 (1 1 ) CNN NEWS

B

4:00
® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Louisville at Purdue ILhra)
0 (10) ALL CREATURES GREAT
ANO SMALL II
0 (8) AMERICAS BIGGEST BAR­
GAINS

5:05
5:30

4:30

O AGRICULTURE U S A
(11) CNN NEWS

0
® PGA GOLF Bob Hope
Chrysler Classic, final round. (Live)

6:00

5:00

CD (11) IMPACT
(H) CNN NEWS
O) (8) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
SAVINGS

&amp;
O WEEKEND WITH THE
STARS TELETHON CONTINUES
0 ( 1 1 ) HAWAII FIVE-0
0(1O)FIR!Na UNE
0 ( d ) WILD KINGDOM

® o VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

6:30

7:00
s ® 2*3 COMPANY
® 0 COVER STORY
f f l (11) BUGS BUNNY ANO PORKY
PIG
(B IT IS WRITTEN

10:30
B (IDINN NEWS
JERRY FALWELL
(8) NIGHT GALLERY

0 ® VOICE OF VICTORY
f f l O WEEKEND WITH THE
STARS TELETHON CONTINUES
0 ( I I) WOODY WOOOPCCKEB
0 (10) SESAME STREET (R) g

11:00
B ® ® B ® O n e ws
0 ( 1 1 ) MAUDE
0 (10) ADAM SMITH'S MONEY
WORLD
0 (8) BARGAINS TONIGHT

11:30
0
®
ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK Marietta Hartley discusses
her new job as co-host ol “ The
Morning Program" on CBS.
® Q WKRP IN CINCINNATI
(11) HAWAII FIVE-0
JOHN ANKERBERQ

8

11:40
® 0 SUNDAY EXTRA

1240
® B CHECK IT OUn Marlene
agrees to escort Murray to hta
school dance. (R)
® o SOUQ GOLD Scheduled;
Chicago. El DeBargt, Eddie Rab­
bit!. Cameo. Robert Palmer (Inter­
view). the Crazy World of Arthur
Brown |"Flro"). In alarao.
0 JIMMY SWAGGART
0 ( 8 ) NIGHT OWL FUN

12:30
O ® EBONY / JET SHOWCASE
Interviews actress Apollonia Kotero. the Plalters. filmmaker Fred
Williamson, Mother's Band (a
Washington, DC -based musical
group), (fl)
® Q UNTOUCHABLES
0 ( 1 1 ) DREAM GIRL U .3A

1:00

I ® AT THE MOVIES
) O YOU WRITE THE SONGS
) WORLD TOMORROW

1:30
) OFF THE WALL
___ I MUSIC CITY U S A
® 0 MOVIE "Cry Panic" (1974)
John Forsythe. Anna Francis.
0 LARRY JONES

240
( D O NEWS
B CHRISTIAN CHILDREN'S FUND

2:30
CD a NIGHTWATCH
0 BOB NEWHART

2:50
® O MOVIE "Hit Lady" (1974)
Yvelte Mimieu*. Deck Rembo

3:00
) LUCY SHOW
) (#) NIGHT OWL FUN

EVENING

3:30

3:10

BGETSMART

4:00
B AGRICULTURE US A.

4:30
B r r s YOun

6:30

8:00

9:00

1040
B (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Goodbye Mr. Chip*" Despite win­
ning his quarrel with th* new head­
master, Chips' tranquil life at
BraeklMd School la menaced by
the rumblings of a coming war.
(Part 3 o f 3 )g
B SPORTS PAGE
f f l (8) TALES FROM THE DARKSIDE A pawnshop mannequin
cornea lo Nle and wreak* havoc on
I hose around her.

® O MOVIE "The Small Vote*"
(1951) Howard Keel. Valerie Hob­
son

( D O NEWS
f f l (I t) SILVER SPOONS
f f l (10) TEN WHO OARED
f f l (8) STAR SEARCH

a ® HARMONY AND GRACE
f f l O JIMMY SWAGGART
(B(II)POPEYE
B TOM I JERRY ANO FRIENDS

(IWUt I U h b tk

640
B ® M O W "Blood Vowk Tha
Story Of A Malta WHO" (Premiers)
Metis* * Gilbert, Jo* Penny. A fash­
ion designer's marriage lake* an
unusual turn when she discovers
that her lawyer husband la also a
member of an underworld lamily. In
alarao. g
® B M O W "Warm Heart* . Cold
Feat" | Premiers) Margaret Conn.
Tkn Mathason. A young married
couple who writs lor rival Lo* Ange­
la* newspapers share tha wtte'a
pregnancy with their readers, g
8 (16) MYSTERY) "Agatha Chris­
tie's Miss Marpi*: A Murder Is An­
nounced" Mia* Marple teams of a
major Inheritance while trying to
stop tha murderer Irom killing
aaWi. (Part 3 of 3 )g
B (8) GLOW: GORGEOUS LADIES
OF WRESTLING

B BONANZA
0 18) WHAT A COUNTRY! Taylor
has a run-in with a new school offi­
cial (Don Knolls).

6:00

7:30

f|

6:30
8 ® V A L t N t David gets harass­
ed by hr* tutor's *a-boytrt*nd. In
alarao. g

5:30

O ® FLORIDA'S WATCHING
® 0 ESSENCE
(S (tl)W .V . GRANT
0 WORLD TOMORROW

8:30

ca'* population growth and tha
need tor more tood have adversely
affected tha African ataphant'a nat­
ural habitat In stareo. g
B NATIONAL Q K X M A M C EX­
PLORER Modal alrpiano anthustaats, a alx-merrber team's loutney
to the North Pols; ■ trip down Thatland's rivers; tha archasotogy of
Kenya's Rm VaBey.

3:30

M O W "Rad Rlvar" (1948) John
Wayne Montgomery Clift. A young
man and hia stepfather quarrel over
ih* route ol their cattle drive.

Q) NIGHT TRACKS

0 ® SUNDAY MASS
( D O ORAL ROBERTS
0 (1 1 ) JEM

B (W» NATURIA took at how Afri­

® O HANK PARKER FISHING

0 NIGHT TRACKS

7:30

6:00

1240

UM VBSffY ATHUT1C ASSOCMTKM; FLOMOA BASKET-

From the Wtttem Theatre In Lo* An­
gel**: tli* 19th annual award* pro­
gram lo honor Individuals and cor­
poration*. who have mad* positive
contributions to tha image* ol black
people, Matures appearsnea* by
Sammy Davis Jr., Slav!* Wonder,
Malcolm-Jamal Warner, Louia Go*,
salt Jr., Paul Simon and Ban
Varaan; Mao, a tribute to apace
shuttle Challenger astronaut
Ronald McNair.
GD B
WEEKEND WITH THE
STARS TELETHON A fund-raiser
benefiting victims ol cerebral petty
featuring national coverage from
New York and Lo* Angela* with
host* Nancy Duaaautt, Florence
Handaraon, Dennis Jamee, Wayne
Newton, John Rlttar, Nancy Morgan
Ritlar and Hanry Wlnklar.
f f l B LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH
ANO FAMOUS Schadulad: Rita
Moreno; Roy Orbison; actor Ed­
ward Albert; singer Michael Para.
B (11) M O W "1941"(1979) John
Beluahi. Toshiro Mifune

a

B ® FACTS OF LIFE Blair and Jo
maka resolutions for the new year.
In stereo g
® B OUTLAWS The Outlaw*
Journey to Now Orlean* m search of
a treasure lhat Ic* McAdams burled
there In the 19th century
f f l B SIDEKICKS Ernie trie* lo
convince Jake lhat ho witnessed a
kidnapping, g
B (11) MOVIE "Mamie" (1904)
Tippt Hedran. Sean Connary A man
struggle* lo break the I Waving hab­
it* ol hi* kleptomaniac wife and re­
store harmony to their marriage.
B (10) PROFILES OF NATURE
B I O STREET HAWK

11:30

TMS WEEK WITH OAVB
JY g

1146

(Q NIGHT TRACKS
740
) ® THROB Sandy'* guffl-ttricli2:30
I an whan ah* racaiti inaaklng out on
®
O
WEEKEND WITH THE
J a high-achool dal* yaara ago. (R)
STARS TELETHON CONTINUES
CD O HEE HAW Co-host: Gian
® Q MOVIE "I Can Gal It For You
: Campbell. Quasi*. Johnny Ca*h,
Wholesale" 11951) Susan Hayward,
June Carter Cash. Kalth Whitley,
Dan Dailay
&gt;the Carter Family.
; GD B LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH
3:00
A NO FAMOUS
0 ) (8) NIGHT OWL FUN
I (11) TED KNIGHT SHOW Hanry
345
rantea behind two rock musician*
0 NIGHT TRACKS
banned horn tha county'* music
festival (R)
3:15
B (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
(11) M O W "Separate Table*
Emmy award-winning producer*
(1958) Deborah Karr, Rile Hay­
David and Carol Hughe* tallow a
worth.
pride ol Hon* during their noclural
4:05
hunt for food In South Africa'*
© N IO H T TRACKS
Kruger National Park. Richard KUey
la tha narrator. In alarao. g
4:30
B (•) DEMPSEY A MAKEPEACE
f f l O GUNS OF WILL SONNETT
Altar all other method* (all,
Makepeace comas up with an Idea
that the hope* will free hostage*
E r r a i
taken In an aiiempiad bank rob­
MORNING
bery.
8 ® FLORIDA'S WATCHING
f f l O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
B ( 11)OTOa

(11)FLJNT8TONSS
(10) M NTIR ROGERS (R)

• 46

(ll)W HNCW S

6:00

* 0 ® 0 Ntws

M

• 40

446
O MU), WHO WOULD OF AMJ ®
PGA GOLF Bob Hop*
I Ctwyatar Cl***lc. third round (Lhe)
® B B O t WORLD OF 8FORTB
I Scheduled: ironman Trlethlon
World ChomptoniNp, Irani Kona,
Hawaii. (Tapad)
3
(10) MOOCIJN MATURITY
Scheduled: wort art and Induatry
[(Part 1 ol 3) examinee technotogy'*
I Impact, Madlvtn, an ta-hom* medl[cal traalmanl program; lormar

(11) MY U m i PONY IT
dI
COY
B1BSI

B lO N U M O F J IA N M i

[ author of on tncriminitlM
1101W
M COOKJMQ
| iv j t t C
i m
w w n m i

.

0 ® NBC NEWS
® O ABC NEWSg
f f l (11) WHAT'S HAPPENING
NOWII R *| has me mistaken im­
pression mat Nadine is having an
affair
B NEW LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
OBver Ccaver tries to cover up Ih#
loss ol his new. sapenslv* shoes
that were a reward tor hit proven
responsibility

7:00
0 ® OUR HOUSE Kris, sacited
about baby-sitting lor her laecher.
is stunned lo learn that me couple's

business

MONDAY
MORNING

5:00
0

®

THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
ru o m
Q ® J'S COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
f f l (11) CNN NEWS
0 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
m u s ic

5:30
0 ® TOOAY'S BUSINESS
CD O CAN YOU BE THINNER?
(TUE)

• 40
ITM iJUO Q I
DONAHUE
lOPRAHWWFREY
I I STREET (R )g
IT-HOMEANOSA'iVS

) P6OPLSS0OURT

® ® b ® b i

I

(11)— ywtched I
(W ) BERGERAC (MON)
IjW f MASTSRPMCS THEAT
OffUS)
B I(BMVSTIRYMW
ion
tD)
B I( B A U CREATURES ORSAT
AND SMALL I (THU)

IS IS S R w
1246
OPCRRV MASON

•45

BOOWNTOIARTH

240
® B CAPITOL
ca

12:30
B ® WOROPLAY

nSM SSSs

lO d A M U illiQ M
lU IC M T M D M il

340
SANTA BARBARA

2

a ( b S5S !8 i p r s b — r
■ (B M O N S Y P U m ifTH U )
B ( B ART OP B M M HUMAN

HOSPITAL
( 1DSOOOSYOOO
(B M M TIR R O SBSIR)
m .w n nay i i m i s n

B ROCKY ROAD (TUI)
B B I0R SA M 0PJSA N M S

346
O TOM S JSRRV ANO F R B ttS

340

BniXMURPT AOVBTTURSS

Political Humorist

Miller Just Keeps Laughing
By Prank Sanello
HOLLYWOOD (NEA) — It has
been a good 12 months for
Dennis Miller, cast member of
"Saturday Night L ive” and
a n c h o r ma n f or " W e e k e n d
U p d a t e , " " S N L ’ s " sati ri c
sendup o f n e t w o r k news
shows.
T h e 3 3-year-old standup
comic from Pittsburgh survived
last season — one of, the
weakest In the show’s 12-year
history — and was one of the
few cast members rehlred for
the 1986-87 season.
As a political humorist. Miller
is benedltlng from the new
political climate In the country
as a result of Iranscam. Faithful
viewers of "S N L " have noticed
more political humor in the
show this season.
"There Is a perceptible dif­
ference between the way politi­
cal humor Is received this year
and last year." says Miller. "A
couple of times last year I did
Jokes about President Reagan,
and I could tell the audience
was a little miffed. They were
Indignant that I would take ribs
at the president. That shocked
me.
"But this year, he's dropped
the ball a couple of times, and
there seems to be a willingness
to let me be more political. Now
with Iran scam . e v e r y b o d y
wants us to go with the Reagan
Jokes."
Despite his potshots at the
president. I ncl udi ng one
"W eekend Update" segment
that implied the chief executive
was engaging in unnatural acts
wi t h the W h i t e H o u s e ’ s
Thanksgiving turkey. Miller
recently attended a party at the
White House. The White House
press corps, not the Reagans.
Invited him.
"T h e president and Nancy
Just sat there with that smile
pasted on their face, thinking.
*1 Just want to go bed.’” says

"N o w w ith Iran s ca m ,
everybody wants us to go
with the Reagan jokes."
Dennis M iller

Miller. "They were incredibly
nice, though. I used to think
they must put a lot of makeup
on him, but up close he looks
incredibly young."
And for all his Jabs. Miller
remains a little awed by the
Institution he regularly skew­
ers. "These guys represent real
power. There Is m ovie-star
power, but only three dozen of
these cats.’’
For his weekly segment on
"S N L ," Miller, who has a col­
lege degree in Journalism,
reads five or six newspapers a
day and "all the major maga­
z in e s " (probably Including
"M ad" and the "National En­
quirer") and stays glued to
Cable News Network.
"I feel like Robert Redford In
’Three Days o f the Condor.'"
Miller says. "H e was a govern­
ment reader the CIA tried to
kill. For me. instead of the CIA.
It’s usually critics kicking In
the door armed with Uzis.”
Last season the critics were
merciless in their attacks on
"S N L ." Several of the cast
members were teenagers (An­
thony Michael Hall. Robert
Downey) with no standup com ­

edy or lmprovlsatlonal experi­
ence. Their lack o f experience
showed In one leaden sketch
after another.
Miller defends the old cast,
many o f whom became his
close friends. "They were tal­
ented people in their own
ri ght, " he says. "A n th o n y
Michael Halt is a movie star. I
don't know If they felt comfort­
able. Comedy is predicated on
having some sort of a history
behind you. and they were very
young boys. Maybe It Just
wasn’ t for them ."
As he reads his cockeyed
view of the news every week,
one wonders if he thinks about
h is p r e d e c e s s o r s In t he
"W eek en d U p d ate" anchor
chair, like Chevy Chase and
Dan Aykroyd, who went on to
become major movie stars.
“ It would be folly for me to
start salivating over m ovie
stardom. I feel like I'm at the
base of a summit right now.
And it’s a nice, warm base
camp. I’ m going to stay here
until 1 figure out my plans.
Right now. I Just think about
writing the news, getting It on
the air and being funny."

'A Story A m erican s D on't Like'
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Amer­
icans are paying scant attention
lo news coverage of the IranContra aid controversy but the
scandal has lowered public opi­
nion of F’resident Reagan. Con­
gress and the press, a poll
released Thursday said.
The Times Mirror poll, con­
ducted by the Gallup Organiza­
tion. showed 42 percent o f
Americans doubt Reagan's abili­
ty to run the country. 4ti percent
say he is "not believable" and 38
percent feel he is withholding
Information to protect himself.
Slightly more than half of the
1.500 people surveyed belw^cn
Dec. 27 and Jan. 4 still believe in
Reagan's leadership and credi­
bility. but Just 28 percent said he
Is doing all he can to "get to the
bottom" of the controversy.
Although other polls have
shown a drop in Reagan's popu­
larity due to the foreign policy
affair, the new poll proves "his
critics are more critical than his
supporters are supportive." said
Andrew Kohut. president of the
Gallup Organization.
The study found "an amazing
lack of public attentiveness" to
news reports of the scandal.
Onl y 20 p e r c e n t o f th o se
participating in the poll said

they were closely following the
story, with most of them strong
Reagan supporters or critics.
By comparison. 80 percent
closely followed reports on the
Challenger disaster and 46 per­
cent closely followed coverage of
the Chernobyl nuclear accident.
Kohut said.
Of those fallowing the Iran
arms story, only one in five rated
the news coverage "excellent."
Fifty-seven percent gave that
rating to the Challenger cover­
age.
"T h e re 's a fair amount of
'shoot the messenger’ In this
finding," Kohut said. " I t ’s a
story Americans don't like. It’s a
story they feel is being overreported. It's a complicated story
— not nearly as simple a melo­
drama as a hostage-taking or the
Challenger exploding."
The poll found 46 percent
believed press coverage of the
story Is "bad for the country und
damaging to America's image in
the world." Forty-four percent
said there has been too much
coverage overall.
Hall said r epo r t e r s h a v e
overem phasized rumors and
unconfirmed reports Ih reporting
the story.
Although support for televi­

sion news and the print media
has dropped. 47 percent of those
polled said Journalists had done
the most to "get to the bottom"
o f the controversy.

IO Floyd Theatres I
U l ■"&gt;&lt;)/

FLAM IWIN l

f in * A Riveting Film..

f STAND
f lf l
y y c

ZjP-A-DEE-DOO-DAHl
,-g v

M uyM S B f
S -t-W 2 JO

San&amp;&amp;
*
MONDAY SCHOOL HOLIDAY
MATINEE 2:20
MOYIELANDO'I

3?!;1716

America’s BiggesT]
Hero is back.. I

K IN G K O N G
LNOIV
ES
^
PASSES
TRICK OR TREAT

�i^*'r

» *

FI.

»«adey, JM. II. I9C7
&gt;&gt;

•

«•

• •

First Runner
For Seafood

Oglethorpe Offers Summer
ScholarshipsTo Teachers
Oglethorpe University In Atlanta has received a grant from
the Lyndhurat Foundation to provide 50 Advanced Placement
Program Scholarships for secondary school teachers from
throughout the Southeast to attend Oglethorpe's Advanced
Placement Institute this summer.
The scholarships will be available for the two week graduate
courses' In studio art. English, computer science, calculus.
; government and politics, and history, beginning June 15 and
continuing through July 31.
To qualify for a scholarship a teacher must plan to teach In
the 1987-88 academic year In either an inner-city or rural
school. The teacher should be planning to teach an Advanced
Placement course which is not being offered during the current
academic year.
Teachers must submit a completed application, recommen­
dation form and official college transcript by May 1.
For further information, contact Dean John Thamas.
Division of Continuing Education, Oglethorpe University, 4484
Peachtree Road NE. Atlanta. Ga. 30319. or call (404) 233-6662.

Clwl Keith Keogh, who grew
up In Sanford and Lake
M ary, won sacond placa In

F lo rid *'* Third Annuo! Gov­
e rn o r's Cup fo r Soofood
Excellence In compaction
M onday a t tha Am arlcan
Culinary Federation National
H a a d q u a r t a r s In S t.
Augustine. Keogh, executive
chat of W alt Disney World's
Epcot Canter, retained tha
title Soofood Chof of the Year
for tha past two years. This
year, ha was eased out by
one-third of a point to Scott
H ah son o f th e D ay to n a
H ilton, according to Tom
Thomas of tha Department of
Natural Resources, Bureau
of Seafood M a r k e t i n g ,
Tallahassee. As winner of the
Governor'* Cup this year,
Hansen w ill represent
Florida against 30 chefs in
th e A m e r i c a n Seaf ood
C hallen ge to be held in
Charleston, S.C. in March.

Alxhalm ar Support Group Starts
A new support group for families o f Alzheimer disease
victims as well as those suffering from memory Impairing
disorders Is planned in Orlando.
The Alzheimer Care Center, a day program for the memory
Impaired. Is sponsoring the support group which will meet on
the second and fourth Tuesday each month beginning Jan. 27.
The support offers family members an opportunity to share
concerns and learn caring and coping techniques.
An aide will be provided so the family Is welcomed to bring
the memory-impaired person to the session which will be from
6:30-8:00 p.m.
Lynn Esko, MA, a rehabilitation counselor with Nancy Sapp
&amp; Associates will serve as facilitator. Lots Tannenbaum,
executive director of the Alzheimer Care Center Is group
coordinator.
All sessions will be held at the Center at 1121 East
Ridgewood (at Mills). For more information call 843-3085.

Bonsai Classes To Begin
Harry P. Leu Botanical Gardens will
offer a workshop,
‘introduction to Bonsai” beginning Thursday. Jan. 22 and
continuing for five consecutive Thursday evenings from 7:00 to
9:30 p.m. In the Garden Cottage.
:
In this course students gain experience In the specialized art
of pruning, wiring and cultural techniques for their bonsai,
under the supervision of the Central Florida Bonsai Club.
Tuition Includes a tree, bonsai container, wire, soli and booklet.
Tuition Is 850 for Leu Gardens members and 858 for
non-members. Registration Is required. For additional In­
formation on class registration please call 849-2620.

Adm. Fowler Addresses DAR
On St. Johns 'River In Distress'

Sllmnastlcs Classes Resume

The Sallle Harrison Chapter. National Society
of the Daughters of the American Revolution,
held the January meeting at Howell Place In
Sanford. Twenty-one members were present.
Hostesses Mrs. John Haase and Mrs. H. Wright
served refreshments to 2 1 members attending
and guests.

The Seminole YMCA announces classes In sllmnastlcs for
; women will resume following the holidays at Teague Middle
School. Monday. Jan. 19 at 6:00 p.m. In the school gym. Under
the direction of Sandy Dunlap, emphasis will be on muscle
toning and stretching exercises, all choreographed to music.
Classes are on-going, monthly. Fee Is 816 for members and
818 for non-members of the YMCA. Call the office for
information, 321 -8944.

Guest speaker Richard Fowler (Rear Adm.
USN. ret.) was Introduced by Miss Beatrice
Buck. Conservation Chairman. Adm. Fowler's
subject was “ River in Distress."

I Wish I M ay, I Wish I M ight
The Children's Wish Foundation grants wishes to children
with life threatening Illnesses. If you know of a child who may
have a wish, or If you would like to make a donation, call the
Children's Wish Foundation of Florida at (305) 629-6621 or
write to 5500-5800 Diplomat Circle. Suite 105. Orlando. 32810.

Student Makes Dean's List
Mark Whittington. 125 La Destiny Trail. Altamonte Springs,
has earned recognition on the Dean's List of Murray State
University. Murray. KY., for the 1986 fall semester, according
to records from the data processing office.

Adm. Richard Fowler

According to Barbara Ruprecht. as he showed
slides of the beautiful St. Johns River he told
how decades of mostly uncontrolled and un­
planned development are posing a serious threat
to the river. Adm. Fowler reported the lakes of
the river are rapidly filling with slit, lake levels
are falling drastically and pollution is destroying
fish and water fowl. He stressed that public
awareness and opinions about the St. Johns can

bring about the action necessary to save the
river.
Adm. Fowler says he will be happy to bring
his slides and message to any club or
organization In the area which would like to
learn more about the perilous condition of this
great river and the vital need of the river to us
all.
The Regent. Mrs. Mills Boyd, presided during
the business session. The meeting was opened
with those present repeating together the
American's Creed and the Preamble to the
Constitution. Miss Buck accompanied the sing­
ing pf "A m eriq i." The National Defense report
w a s given b y Mrs. W . C . Spttzer. w ho
challenged. "W h a t are you doing to support our
constitutional remibllc?”
"
In other business. Mrs. Paul Kelly was elected
as a delegate to the Continental Congress to be
held In Washington D.C. In March.

AUTO
SERVICE
AND'
SALES
PARTS

SALES

frien d ly service - q u a lity parta

E R N IE J A C K S O N
A U T O S A L E S . IN C .

INSURANCE
ALL CARS
ALL DRIVERS

(305) 323-7283

A AUTO

IN SU RA N CE
WORLD
PIP

SR-22
DWI
NO PROBLEM

2546 S. French Ave.

All

.VOW*

Seminole
Paint &amp; Body

2 5 4 0 S. Myrtle Avenue
SANFO RD. FL 32771
Ph. Sanford - 3 2 3 -5 1 6 3
W inter Park - 8 3 4 -0 0 7 7

PARTS
OPEN SIX DAYS

S

ANFORD AUTO
ALVAOE

EARLY &amp; LATE MODEL PARTS

SANFORD 321-3371
1-800-334-2841

101 ALBRIGHT RD.
SANFORD, FL 32771

Tire &amp; Muffler

B IG J A N U A R Y S A L E

#
S ^ ^ A U T O PARTS
SH E R R Y &amp; LE S A R M S
Owners

Sanford, FL 32771

P A IN T &amp; BO DY W O R K

TIRES

50 Fed Pick-Up
(3 Lincoln• 4 Dr.
64 Cadillac Cpt. DeVille
66 Mostioi

S4 Chrysler 5th Aw. • 4 Dr.
64 Ditun 300ZX
12 Olds Firtiui • 4 Dr.
I I T-Biid
OVER 50 C L A S S IC S 6t L A T E M ODELS

T O CH O O SE FROM
A L L P R IC E D T O S E L L
508 8 . FR ENCH A V E .
321-2388

A PO PK A
1344 E. SEMORAN BOULEVARD
(ONE MILE EAST OF HWY. 441)
APOPKA, FLORIDA 32703
PHONE 886-8700

LAKE M A R Y
120-101 E. LAKE MARY BLVO.
(THE SHOPPES AT LAKE MARY)
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA 32748
PHONE 322-5831

ORANGE CITY 904 775 7971
OAVTONA BEACH 904 352 1500

TOM R. TAYLOR SR.
PRESIDENT

T R A N S M IS S IO N

K E Y ST O N E C A R S
*80 PONTIAC S U N B IR D .........M 4 9 5
7 2 DODGE CORNET MAKE OFFER
7 9 FORD L T D .............................‘ 5 9 5
7 9 C H R Y S LE R ................* 4 5 0 DOWN

LO NQ W O O D

1501 French Ave., Sanford

973 WEST S.R. 434
(434 CENTER)
LONQWOOD, FLORIDA 32750
PHONE 830-0105

322-0420
SEAL BIDS ACCEPTED
MAKE US AN OFFER

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
CARS • VANS • TRUCKS • MOTOR HOMES • 4X4 *
• O N E D AY SE R V IC E
O N M O ST C A R S
• F R E E TOVtlNd
W ITH O VERH A U L

* O V E R 30 VRS.
E X R E R IE N C E
• FO R E IO N 4
D O M EST IC

• FR O N T W H E E L
4 4 W H E E L D RIVE
• A L S O ST A N D A R D
T R A N S M IS S IO N S

"ASK ABOUT OUR 6 MONTH OR 6000 MILE GUARANTEE"
F R E E E ST IM A T E S

690-0775

1055 NURSENY 80.
WINTER SPRINGS 32708

SERVICE

SALES

EAST 46
AUTO SALES

SANTORO 305 321 0920
DTI ANO 904 736 8000

3710 E. Highway 46

2 4 HOUR TOW ING

Sanford, FI. 32771

a IM IR Q E N C V ROAD I IR V IC I
ojuuoim i totnoorirosrt cm j rosin*uAUtftcuirt

322-3100

LOCAL A LONG 0I8TANCK T0W1HQ

C0MPISTS MRAMIIRVICI
AUTOAM. MAKEtmVICE•MONTENO• TUM-URt *

FOR HOME DELIVERY

CALL

* ENOIN1 MMM.OINO •

USED CAR SALES &amp; SERVICE
COMPLETE AUTO REPAIR
DIGITAL OSCILLOSCOPE

OVSSHTSAMSNNMNCI

F or quick repair o l y o u r cars
engine p ro b lem s

322-7397
I13SCSUHTAY.

322-2611
S 3 BUTCH’S
Q CHEVRON

S a n fo rd H e ra ld

�Dollars

Compile! Near Perfect Average

I

(No«i)Cofifs

Student Excels After Dropping Out
"T h ere was not much pressure. It
was fun being only 16 and on a
construction crew ."
But there was another significant
event that affected Klein tw o years
earlier — his father died.
"H e (Perry) came to a point where
he asked. 'Is there a God?*" his
mother said. "H e started going to
different churches — Catholic. Pro­
testant."
Meanwhile. Klein quit the con­
struction Job and began working at
the White Marlin, a seafood restau­
rant In Longwood. "It was the only
thing 1 could do without experi­
ence." Klein said. "I learned to cook
by watching. I learned a lot o f
seafood preparation."
Klein went on to Peoples Restau­
rant &amp; Lounge on International Drive
In Orlando and eventually helped
open a restaurant/movle house In
Altamonte Springs, now known as
the bijou. " I had my name on the
menu because the recipes were
Klein said. "It was the first
and restaurant In the

By Geoffrey Giordano
Special to the Herald
During a morning argument with
his room m a te. Pe r r y Kl ei n o f
Longwood made a decision he had
pondered for some time: "I'm mov­
ing. I'm either going to Join the
military or go to school."
Klein, at 16. dropped out of high
school though he had been a good
student. He left wondering If there
were something else he should do.
But. within a few years, the Intellec­
tual challenge returned and Klein,
unlike many dropouts, eased into
learning again — this time In college
— and with brilliant results. The
wandering path back, however, had
many stops and could have taken a
down turn.
Working for a construction crew at
16 wasn't fulfilling to him. Neither
was the Orlando commune he de­
cided to try for a break in the
monotony. Nor was cooking at sev­
eral local restaurants or learning to
be a locksmith. Now. the routine of
Just living In an apartment with a
friend had become tiresome.
"I was tired of partying until late
at night, then waking up to go to
work." Klein said.
Soon after the argument. Klein
went to Seminole Community Col­
lege. "I want a Ph.D..” he told a
registrar.
Klein Is now a 22-year-old senior at
the University of Central Florida. He
has compiled a 3.9 grade point
average while pursuing a clinical
psychology major. But don't be
surprised.
Bom May 4. 1964 in Brooklyn.
N.Y.. to Phillip and Estelle Klein.
Perry Klein Is no stranger to good
grades In school. At 4. he was
reading lengthy passages from the
Bible. During his elementary school
years In Brooklyn, he was a member
o f the Intellectually Gifted Children
program.
" I used i o read him stories and
stories and stories." Klein’s mother
said. "W e couldn't afford toys, so I
bought books. If I missed a page or a

Klein also began to read philoso­
phy books. " I was Interested In
Hinduism and Buddhism." he said.
"I wanted to find myself." And U
was off to a commune.
The commune, situated ofT 17-92
in Orlando, dictated Klein’s lifestyle
for three years. Commune members
WWwmmi M i* wj lummy
practice celibacy and meditation,
take no drugs and are vegetarians.
Longwood's Perry Klein, heading for psychology doctorate.
Klein said.
,
psychologist, be a psychiatrist."
" I knew a couple o f people (at the
paragraph, he knew."
Perry was well on his way to a commune) and they said. 'W e could
Klein’s father, a former Air Force
great future. A fter 10 years In use an extra hand,' so I w ent." Klein
sergeant, was a grammar teacher at
Brooklyn, he and his family moved explained. But he gradually had a
a religious institution. Estelle Klein,
to Longwood because of his father’s change of heart: "After a while, there
bom In London. England, always
heart condition. He finished 5th was no reason to be there. The
stressed education and achievement.
grade and progressed to Lyman High purpose of the commune was to
"T h e more you have, the more Is
School. But at 16. Klein was side­ make you feel higher spiritually. But
required," Mrs. Klein said. " I f you
I realized it was Just another materl-.
tracked.
have a bachelor’s degree, they want
Klein dropped out of school and allstlc thing with lots of trips."
a master's. If you have a master’s,
worked on a construction crew for
they want a doctorate." She told
Members were looked down upon
about four months Installing shelv­ If they didn’t meditbte or If "you
Perry to "reach for the stars." which
ing in houses. "Getting a Job as a were spacey. or you went to the gas
is also UCF’s motto. " I f you want to
construction worker was Just the
be a teacher, be a professor." she
See K LE IN , Page 4 D
thing to do at 16." Klein said.
told Perry. " I f you want to be a

Science Update

New Approaches Changing Pain Research
By Jan Z ieg ler
U P I Science W r it e r
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Nearly 50
years ago. In the dark days before
World War II. German chemists
Identified a substance their col­
leagues thought was related to low
blood pressure.
What they were working on. how­
ever. was later discovered to be a
link In the body’s factory for pro­
duction of the most painful chemical
known.
1
That substance, a chain of amino
acids known as bradykinln. Is pro­
duced wh e n tissue Is injured.
Amounts of bradykinln as small as a
few mlcrograins — less than a
millionth of an ounce — applied to
blistered skin of volunteers Is
enough to prompt an angry "ouch."
N o w. u s i n g r e s e a r c h Into
bradykinln. along with another
group of substances called
leukotrienes and the brain and
nervous system, scientists are trying
to develop new drugs that a* tack
pain more efficiently and on a more
basic level than ever before.
Armed with new knowledge about
pain signals and their pathways to
the brain, doctors are using drugs
that would otherwise seem unlikely
— such as antidepressants — to treat
some forms of pain.
Using electronics, scientists have
developed ways to treat chronic pain

that falls to respond to anything else.
To bridge any remaining gaps,
they are adapting older methods
known In the Far East and newer
techniques like biofeedback to come
up with ways to help people control
their pain by using their minds
alone.
In some cases, they have found
placebos — dummy drugs — are as
effective as "real" pain-killers.
It's all part of a revolution that
began a mere 20 years or so ago.
about the time the fields of neurolo­
gy and neurochemistry exploded
with new knowledge and technology.
The results could be good news for
millions of pain sufferers.
"T h e advances made In the last
two decades have provided us with
more knowledge about pain and Its
mechanisms and possible therapies
than the preceding recorded histo­
ry." says Dr. John J. Bonica. "But
we still have a long way to go.”
B o n i c a Is o n e o f t h o s e I n ­
strumental In generating more Inter­
est In treatment of pain as a separate
entity. Twenty-five years ago. with
the memory o f w orking as ai.
anesthesiologist during World War II
still fresh, he founded the pace­
setting University o f Washington
Medical Center' s Clinical Pain
Service.
He speculates that pain by Itself
had been largely Ignored by re­

Q u ir k s

Relief seekers have been stuck
with two or so classes of drugs. One
Is simple analgesics like aspirin. In
use In ancient Greece In the form of
extract of willow bark, ubiquitous
aspirin Is still one of the most
effective drugs for minor aches and
pains. In larger, carefully monitored
doses. It can work against more
severe pain such as that experienced
by arthritis victims.
Narcotics like morphine are the
heavy artillery. Dispensed under
medical control only, they can be
especially valuable for pain following
surgery and during final stages of
terminal cancer. Codeine Is effective
for milder pain.
These drugs, though Invaluable,
are still Imperfect. Morphine and
codeine are addictive. If used over
long periods, morphine must be

given In Increasing doses because
the body builds up a tolerance to It.
Opiates and aspirin don't even
touch certain kinds of pain, such as
s o m e c a u s e d by d i a b e t i c or
trauma-inflicted damage to nerves.
Lately, scientists have discovered
unlikely compounds such as calcium
channel blockers, developed for
heart disease, and antidepressants
useful for certain kinds of pain.
In the meantime, they have come
to understand the body's pain
system, thought to be a simple track
from afflicted tissue to brain and
back. Is extremely complex.
"It's so complicated. It boggles the
mind,” Bonica said.
When tissue Is injured, damaged
cells leak and activate the enzyme
k a l l l k r e l n. the s ubs t anc e the
German chemists were studying In
1938. Kalllkreln. which can lower
blood pressure, snips bradykinln
from its home molecule.
Bradykinln attaches to capillary
walls, allowing Infection-fighting
white
blood cells to leak out.
Bradyki nl n also binds to pain
nerves, triggering them to fire off a
message that travels with the help of
several neurotransmitters along the
dorsal horn o f the spinal cord to the
thalamus, a sensory center In the
brain, and on to the cortex, the
brain's outer layer.
See P A IN . Page 4D

the sheriff's office night to
report the distress call and
gi ve direction s to the
stranded hikers in Second
W ater Canyon. In the
mountains west of Price.
A search team spent
hours l ooki ng for the
youths, aged 15 and 16.
before they found them
huddl ed inside t hei r
four-wheel drive vehicle.
The vehicle had become
stuck In snow drifts some
200 feet o ff the road.
Bryncr said.
Steven Proctor, director
of telecominmunlcations
for the Utah Public Safety
De p a r t me nt , said the
long-distance "skip" of the
CB radio signal is not
unique.

A S IM U O P
MTMMUtT.

WASHINGTON - The minimum wage has '
been fixed at $3.35 an hour since January 1.
1981. Other wages have been rising, so the
relative value of the minimum has fallen.
It was once about half the average o f other
hourly wages. It Is now only 38 percent. As a
result, the legal minimum has become less and
less effective in blocking the employment of
unskilled workers.
A new congressional study has found a record
number of these workers have found Jobs at or
near the minimum.
Anti-Jobs liberals in Congress arc alarmed at
this development and are seeking boosts In the
minimum to at least $4.85 an hour.
I talked to James Flshey. the director o f the
n e w l y form ed Coalition Against Job O p ­
portunities for the Poor — CAJOP — about the
campaign.
"W e see this as one of the biggest domestic
challenges this year," he said. “ A person working
for the minimum wage Is a person who is poor.
It’s criminal that In a society as rich as ours we let
people work for such wages."
I agreed with Mr. Flshey that life under a
minimum wage would be difficult. But I pointed
out that raising the legal minimum might mean
no Job at all for many people.
"S tu ff and nonsense. That's Just a lot of
flim-flam that you economists ore always bring­
ing up. A higher minimum forces employers to
quit exploiting workers and to give them a decent
living.
I reminded him that study after study by
economists has shown that minimum wages
significantly reduce employment opportunities
for the unskilled.
"S o you take the good with the bad. What’s a
little unemployment when you're talking about a
decent wage for working Americans?"
It appears that more than a little unemploy­
ment Is at stake. In a study focusing specifically
on those directly affected by the minimum wage,
Peter Llnneman o f the University of Pennsylvania
has found that increases In the legal minimum
have actually lowered the total Income received
by the unskilled.
.
The negative efTect on earnings of those losing
their Jobs Is stronger than the positive effect of
higher wages for those lucky enough to keep their
Jobs.
Llnneman found that the group most strongly
affected In the round of Increases In the legal
minimum In 1974 and 1975 was adult women.
"Y ou 're talking some Ivory-tower theory here."
Mr. Flshey snapped. "I'm talking a living wage.
So a few people are out of work for a while.
They'll be glad there was a higher minimum
when they do find work."
I reminded Mr. Flshey that the Impact on those
who lose their Jobs Is greater than Just the lost
wages. The fact they have been out of work will
make It more difficult to find It again. They will
lose the opportunity to gain valuable on-the-Job
experience.
"S o what's a little experience? Who needs
experience In these Jobs anyway?"
Mr. Flshey has a bit of a point there. Jacob
Mincer of Columbia University reports In a recent
study that another effect o f Increases in the
minimum wage Is that employers cut back on Job
training programs for the workers they do hire.
Minimum wage Jobs thus become more of a dead
end than before.
In fact, given the overwhelming evidence o f the
disastrous consequences on the unskilled. It has
always amazed me that there are people who
argue that a higher minimum Is desirable.
Higher minimum wages hurt employers. They
hurt consumers. And. most Important, they hurt
the people they arc alleged to protect.
"Look. Buster, the skilled workers who pay
CAJOP to push for a higher minimum are
concerned about those poor unfortunates at the
other end of the wage scale. We've got to do
something to bring them up.”
At last I understood.
There Is, after all. one group of workers whose
welfare Is Improved by the minimum wage —
highly paid skilled workers.
I left Mr. Flshey to his campaign. With friends
like Mr. Flshey. unskilled workers could use a few
enemies.

(Timothy Trcgarthcn welcomes the opportunity
to correspond with readers. Write him at the
Sanford Herald.)

by Berke Breathed

BLOOM C O U N T Y

Utah SOS Reaches
California Capital
PRICE. Utah (UPI) Three teenagers stranded
for several bone-chilling
hours In the mountains of
central Utah were rescued
after their distress signal
hit an "atmospheric skip"
and reached a California
ham radio operator.
Carbon County Sheriff
Barry Bryncr said Tuesday
the distress signal sent by
citizens' band radio was
picked up In California's
capital.
"T h ey sent out a dis­
tress signal that hit an
a t mo s p h e r i c ski p and
went all the way to Sac­
ramento. he said.
Ham radio operators In
Sal t L a k e C i t y and
Richfield. Utah, also called

searchers because "people thought
pain was a natural phenomenon. I
don't think the scientific community
realized how large a problem It
was.”
Health authorities have estimated
chronic pain suffered by 40 million
recurrent headache sufferers. 30
mi l li on arthrltlcs. fi ve mi l l i on
partially disabled by back pain and
others costs $50 billion a year In
direct medical expenses, lost Income
and productivity, com pensation
payments and legal charges.

Higher Minimum Wage
Hurts Unskilled Labor

i knowthatnor
V€ FARTHESTREACHES,

TOCOSMOSflU£P
m i mrmxies m m ,

KTOHP BLUt SUNS

OTKHJtH KACH63...

. FLOATPmWTWOKlPS
WITH 60SSM A SCIMfS,

AMMb n m e aow s

MQHJCHSWUM W K6!i

)€f, au . These
MKAfT 0€,
w rs n u i
jifm se

. MIGHT TUFFS K UCKPTF5
.
MCFC WONPFOU6 THAN TH0S€ 1 1

• -• £
r'-

JOANRJ\€KS
SUCVONEPAGAIN.

t

'

• W

i

#

�Sanford Herald
IUINNIM )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
A m Co0e 300*322-2011 or 031-0903
Sunday, Jan. If, 1917 — 2D

WayM D. Darla. PatlliHar

Home Delivery: Month. §4.75; 3 Months. 014.25:6 Months.
027.00; Year. 051.00. By Mall: Month. 06.75: 3 Months.
020.25; 6 Months. 037.00; Year. 069.00.

RUSTY BROWN

Tish Sommers: She Helped Many Fly
She carried an orange business card with a
picture of a witch on it. "M e reUred?" it read,
' i ’ve Just begun to fly.” The card Identified her
as Tish Sommers, "free-lance agitator." She
died Oct. 18.1988.
1 remember sitting In a classroom 10 years
ago with a group of women who had not met
before, but who were sharing painful life stories
with each other.
“ I quit school at 16 to get married.” said one.
"That was 19 years ago. Now I'm divorced. My
only Job w as six months as a telephone
solicitor."
Another said: "Nobody wants a 57-year-old
widow. Even the men executives who interview
me are younger."
The stories were different, yet alike. Each
woman desperately wanted a Job. Each lacked
skills and feared for the future.
They were all over 35, divorced or widowed.
They were women who some time before had
been wiping noses, making pot roast and
running the PTA. But life had wrenched them
from the world they knew.
Now they were in this college classroom to

Words
O f Wisdom
From Pearl Bailey
Ju at " B e ” .
N o th in g co m p lic ated , it w o u ld ap p ear,
except the Intent o f the sp ea k e r ad visin g her
S an fo rd audience to do s o carries consld*
e ra b ly m ore m ea n in g than one can im agine
u n less it's thought o u t com pletely.
T h a t particular " p e a r l o f w isd o m ” cam e
from none other than P earl B ailey d u rin g a
noon luncheon speech at the S an fo rd Civic
C enter W edn esd ay, o n e o f several scheduled
events com m em oratin g the birth day o f slain
civil rights leader. M artin L u th e r K in g Jr.
S im p ly put. M iss B ailey w a s ask in g her
racially m ixed au dien ce to stop thinking an d
talking about w h at they w an t to "b e c o m e "
and. rather, concentrate on " b e in g ." O n
b ein g concerned citizens interested in dealing
on a day to d a y basis w ith fellow citizens o f
v a r y in g ethnic, racial an d religio u s
persuasions w ithout thou gh t ... a s a natural
ord er of things ... a s sim p ly " b e in g ” one w h o
doesn't see such distinctions a s calling for
a n y special behavior, n egative or positive.
A n d . m ore Im portantly. M iss Bailey urged
m em bers o f the au d ien ce to carry their
display o f unity — b la ck s an d w h ites " d o in g ”
together — w ith them after they left the civic
c e n t e r ... into their everyday lives.
A n d that's alread y beg in n in g to take shape
in Sanford. M ore an d m ore, bla ck s and w hites
interested in d evelo pin g a cam arad erie with
m utual goals, each to the benefit o f the whole,
are engaging in dialogue trying to find w a y s
to achieve those goals.
Consider the w eek -lon g series o f events In
San ford put together b y the steering com ­
mittee, a com m ittee m ad e u p o f black and
w hite citizens w o rk in g h arm on iou sly to a
com m on end: a respectful dem onstration
h o n o r in g D r. K in g a n d e n d e a v o r in g to
perpetuate h is g o a l o f bro th e rh o o d an d
equality for all m en a n d w o m en , regardless o f
color, race, creed or national origin.
Yes, the San ford City C om m ission , the
H um an Relations A d v iso ry B oard an d the
steering com m ittee a re to be coipm en ded for
their efforts. A n d those citizens w h o Jammed
the civic center to dem on strate their w illin g­
ness to stand u p an d b e counted a m o n g their
brothen»,and slqters In a unified front are also
to be congratulated.
W e w ould all do w e ll to follow Pearly M ae's
advice and take that spirit w ith u s throughout
the years. No need to w ait for next year's
activity in honor o f M artin Lu th er K ing Jr.

Godzilla A t Napa?
T h e Japanese have go n e too far this time.
It's one thing to exp ort m illions o f radios,
televisions and cars Into the U nited States.
But now, a J a p an ese pharm aceutical firm
has p u rch ased R id g e V in e y a rd s , one o f
California's finest sm a ll wineries.
Is nothing sacred?
U n der term s o f the sale. J a p a n ’s O tsuka
P h arm aceu tical C o. Ltd. h a s pledged to
operate the w in ery as its form er o w n ers did.
A n d it has retained w in e m ak er P au l D raper
and the w in e ry 's top m an agem en t.
But w h a t’s next? P lu m w ine, instead o f
Cabernet Sauvignon? A J a p an ese version o f
"F alco n Crest?Y’ Or, w o rse yet. "G o d z illa
attacks N ap a? "

PLEASE WRITE

Letters to the editor are welcome for
publication. All letters must he signed and
Include a mailing address and, If possible, a
telephone number. The Sanford Herald re­
serves the right to edit letters to avoid libel
and to accommodate space.

BERRY'S WORLD

participate in Ohio’s first pilot program of
education, training and counseling for people
called "displaced homemakers."
Until that day. I had not heard the term. Nor
had 1 heard about the remarkable woman who
coined the phrase to describe herself — reeling
from a divorce and 30 years out of the Job
market.
A person o f great Inner strength. Tish
Sommers rallied with the credo: "Don't agonize
— organize." and, with activist Laurie Shields,
co-founded the displaced homemakers’ move­
ment.
They lobbied Congress and state legislatures
until classes, centers and programs, such as the
one I visited, spread nationwide.
On Oct. 18, 1985, at age 71, the patron saint
of displaced homemakers died In the big
Victorian house in Oakland. Calif., a residence
she shared with Shields, a varying number or
cats and homeless women.
I last talked to her In the spring of 1983. We
sat at a picnic table In a downtown park In
Albuquerque. N.M., a thin April sun warming
our backs. Her curly hair w as peppered with

gray: her energy not as vibrant.
She told me of the cancer she struggled
against. But she talked more about the Older
Women’s League, which she helped found In
1980 to give visibility to the needs and concerns
of older women. Before her death, there would
90 chapters and 13.000 members. O W L
monitors cases of age discrimination and the
inequities in Social Security, pensions and
medical benefits often faced by women, divorced
or widowed.
It worried her that women retire on leas than
half o f what men do and that two-thirds of all
widows live alone. "M any are Isolated and very
lonely.” she said, "almost as If they are under
‘house arrest.' Between their meager finances
and the crime In the streets, they stay at home
with only a T V for company."
She longed to see more shared housing for
older women as a way to lower expenses and
provide companionship.
Tish Sommers climbed many hills in her
lifetime and reached many summits. What will
endure is that she showed countless other
women how to do the same.

CHUCKSTONE

D O N GRAFF

Pattern
To The
Killings
Jan. 17 is a date o f national
significance that you won't find
indicated on your calendar, and it's
Just as well, because it is not one in
which Americans can take pride.
It Is the 10th anniversary of the
execution by firing squad at the
Utah State Penitentiary of Gary
Mark Gilmore. His death ended a
10-year moratorium on executions
in this country while the constitu­
tionality o f state laws on capital
punishment was argued out before
the Supreme Court.
The arguing goes on. And since
Gilmore's death there have been an
additional 67 executions through
the end of 1986.
There is a pattern to the killings
suggesting that Justice is neither
blind nor uniformly meted out in
the various states. Consider:
All but five of the 68 executions
during the past 10 years have been
In the Deep South or Texas.
T w o states are far and away in the
lead, sharing more than half the
total between them — Texas with
20 (10 in 1986 alone) and Florida
with 16 (three in 1986).
The numbers o f executions per
year since I97r*"haV6" not been
large. There were 18 during 1986,
the same as for the previous year.
The record to date was 1984. with
21. In 1983 it was only five, and the
previous figures back to Gilmore in
1977 were similarly low.
The actual numbers are insignifi­
cant compared to the potential —
the population of death row. which,
as o f Dec. 20. 1986, was 1,838.
according to the American Civil
Liberties Union. It has been rising at
an annual rate of more than 200.
Some have predicted a coming
b l o o d b a t h , but H e n r y
Schwarzschlld, director of the Capi­
tal Punishment Project of the ACLU.
one of several organizations seeking
th e a b o l i s h m e n t o f c a p i t a l
punishment, says all could change
radically depending on the outcome
of Georgia's McCleskey case, now
on appeal to the Supreme Court.
If the court accepts the argument
for a reversal, it could invalidate
other convictions and pending sen­
tences.
McCleskey Involves a cop killing
and a black offender, whose convic­
tion is being challenged on grounds
of racial discrimination in violation
of the 14th Amendment's guarantee
of equal protection.
" I f the laws o f Georgia provided
that somebody who kills a white
victim gets sentenced to death, but
somebody who kills a non-white
victim gets something less than
death, like life im prisonm ent,
everybody would realize on the face
of it that that’s constitutionally
intolerable." says Schwarzschlld.

e p u t o u r o f f e r in g b e t w e e n t h e

FUND*O'FAITH GROWTH AND INCOME NETWORK.
AND THE CATHEDRAL O F RECIPROCITY-THAW
** *&gt; 5€E P 5
W T H MULTIPLY,
NOUR GOUT WILL 9 E CURED AND W E’LL
STILL G ET TH E CRUISE AND MERCEDES

Ruhr v o im t

-t

DICK WEST

Getting High 2 Ways
WASHINGTON (UPI) - An airline
food publication reports that some
carriers are saving money by servIng iruti juiM stn m i
"It provides tremendous savings
with unbroken cartons and is very
convenient." says an ad in a recent
issue. "Throwing away leftover or­
ange Juice at the end of a flight is
like throwing away money."
Disposable cartons may work fine
for orange, apple and tomato Juice
but the last time 1 flew the flight
attendants were still serving the
hard stuff the old-fashioned way —
in dlposable bottles.
I doubt the millennium will arrive
until cocktails arc dispensed in
cartons, too. And that may involve
plastic measurements.
One company was reported de­
si gni ng disposable pitchers to
enhance concentrates. Perhaps It
would design a few disposable
pitchers to enhance cocktails as
well.
"Traditionally." the publication
says, “ airlines have handled Juices
In a variety of w ays — from
squeezing orange Juice Into chilled
dispensing containers to using
plastic cups with peel-off covers."
It may be all right to squeeze moo
Juice and soft drinks Into aseptic
cartons. But will passengers who
order cocktails and other forms of
liquor accept their beverages that
way?
Traditionally, these beverages
have been dispensed in "miniature"
bottles, and I'm betting that most
ai r l i ne p a s s e n g e r s arc t r a d i ­
tionalists.
Although flight attendants may

serve such non-alcoholic drinks as
coffee, tea and milk free from the
cart In the center aisle, they usually
cn|
Will such imbibers continue to
shell out If offered whiskey or wine
concentrates? Is there any such
thing as a wine -or booze conentrate?
If not. I'm sure tradition-bound
airlines will soon invent one.
Already. I'm told, some wine Is
available at retail outlets In aseptic
cartons, which supposedly are free
of germs. I don't suppose weight
means very much on a retail shelf,
but it could be crucial on an airliner.
One catering service manager,
who apparently caters primarily to
Canadians, estimates that every
pound reduction saves an airliner
25 to 40 Canadian dollars annually.
I cannot break that down into U.S.
dollars, not havi ng the latest
exchange rate in front of me, but
the savings even In Yankee money
must be considerable.
Reformed drunks, flight atten­
dants. caterers, kids and other
.abstainers may be able to down
airline food on a sober stomach, but
that probably has never been tried
by confirmed cocktail guzzlers.
However, you can imagine the
weight that could be saved If an
airline passenger who orders a
"double" martini before dinner Is
served a concentrate Instead of two
miniatures.
Not only would the airline save
money but passengers should reach
their destinations a good deal
lighter.

Honoring
A Unique
Document

Happy 200th birthday, U.S. Con­
stitution!
After the emotionally draining
Statue o f Liberty blowout. I wonder
whether “ we. the people” can trot
out another national wlngdlng. this
time for the U.S. Constitution's
durability.
A m e ric a n s m ay not be pre­
disposed to work up a patriotic
lather over a document that even
lawyers and courts can’t agree
about.
And I question anything headed
by a former chief Justice who spent
a mediocre 17-year stewardship
attenuating the rights o f minorities
and women.
Further, two of the most Impor­
tant figures In the Constitution's
festivities. President Reagan and
Mayor Wilson Goode o f Philadelphia
(the city where freedom got its
start), denude the pageantry of its
grandeur.
On the one hand, we're governed
in this historic year by one of the
dumbest presidents In American
history.
On the other hand, the progress
suggested by a black mayor of the
n a t i o n 's fift h - la r g e s t c i t y Is n e g a te ^

by

his

unconscionable

order to

bomb h t » own city, w hich resulted
In the death o f 11 people. Including
five children.
Maybe that's the Constitution's
ultimate guarantee — the right of
equal-opportunity asininlty.
1 think, however, we best honor
this noble document by celebrating
Its historical uniqueness.
O therwise, w e'll on ly be de­
pressed by the persistence of de­
mographic Inequities — from the
Cons t i t ut i on’ s w h ite-m ale-on ly
group o f 39 signers to a University
o f Delaware bicentennial confer­
ence's list of seven white-male-only
speakers.
As Christopher and James Lin­
coln Collier write in their brilliant
"D ecision In Philadelphia," the
framers fell short. They left out a
bill of rights. Ignored the question of
Judicial review and "m ost tragically,
they could not see... that blacks
were as human as they were."
But the Colliers extol the Con­
stitution for being "drawn out o f the
American spirit... (by men) who got
human nature right... (with) a
government that Is strong enough
to get done what has to be done,"
We still must acclaim the Con­
stitution's regulatory wisdom; the
document Is capable of absorbing
revolutionary changes never in­
tended by its framers. Certainly
amendments guaranteeing blacks
and wo me n pol i ti cal equal i t y
enabled our ship of state to sail
Jefferson’s "boisterous sea o f liber­
ty " without crashing on balkanlzed
shoals.

JACKANDERSON

Pretoria Sanctions Are Defied
By Jack Anderson
And
Joseph Spear
W ASH IN G TO N - T h e whiteminority government in Pretoria
can still export uranium to the
United States despite explicit sanc­
tions against South African urani­
um imports that Congress imposed
over President Reagan's veto.
The reason Is twofold: a sloppily
written law and the Reagan admlnlstratlon'a apparent willingness
to exploit the loopholes Congress
Inadvertently put in the legislation.

"If you want to know what happened to the
cookies, you'll have to grant us immunity or
pardon us. ”

Uranium exports are an Impor­
tant source of Income for South
Africa, particularly since the de­
pression in the gold market In
recent years. Much of South Africa's
uranium com es from Namibia,
which the Pretoria regim e has
oc c upi e d in de f i a nc e o f U.N.
directives since 1970.
Under the Reagan administration,
South Africa’s uranium exports

have Increased significantly, even
though U.S. producers have been
hurt by the competition from im­
ported uranium mined by low-paid
African workers. It was precisely
because of uranium's value to the
Pretoria government that Congress
sought to forbid the Imports. The
Intent was to punish South Africa
economically until It moderated Its
apartheid policy.
Rep. William Richardson, D-N.M.,
an advocate o f the sanction, told our
a s s o c i a t e V i c k i W a r r e n that
transcripts of the House floor debate
on the bill make it clear that the
Intent was to ban all uranium of
South African origin.
But it Is equally clear, according
to Treasury and Nuclear Regulatory
C om m ission officials, that the
wording of the law allows imports of
uranium hexafluoride, a gaseous
form made from concentrated ura­
nium ore. This Is the form the
Energy Department uses to make
enriched uranium, which it then

sells to foreign governments.
The administration's intent to use
the hexafluoride loophole first
became known on Capitol Hill
during a congressional briefing by
Treasury officials last October. The
officials were told bluntly that there
would be trouble If they flouted
Congress' desire to ban all South
African uranium Imports.
A p p a r e n t l y because of that
warning. Treasury made no men­
tion o f uranium when It issued
proposed regulations for most im­
ports in Nov e mbe r . Then, in
guidelines sent to the Customs
Service to take effect Jan. 1. the
Treasury listed uranium ore and
oxide from South Africa as pro­
hibited — but did not mention
uranium hexafluoride. And even the
ore and oxide "shall be allowed
temporarily under bond for pro­
cessing and re-exportation." ac­
cording to the guidelines.
Meanwhi l e, on Dec. 18. the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission

voted to require special licenses for
all uranium Imports of South Afri­
can origin. Importers were ordered
to flic separate applications for ore.
oxide and hexafluoride. A com­
mission spokesman told us. “ Our
lawyers are not regarding hex­
afluoride as part of the congressio­
nal ban."
The commission spokesman said
the lawyers regard uranium ore and
oxide as prohibited Imports, and
said that If Treasury doesn't, the
two agencies would "butt heads."
The commission Is dismayed that
Treasury has not stated Its position
publicly because "this Is not a
matter o f national security." the
spokesman added.
Seven members ot Congress regis­
tered a protest. In a strongly worded
letter to the president, they said
Treasury's evident Intent to use the
hexafluoride loophole "would re­
nder the uranium sanction totally
ineffective and meaningless.”

�1 7 / W ir f r t

r e r r r * r t f * * r s■

f r *

r f r f f f +

■•+ f w

■ ^ n * f r r

’r r * « -

OPNON

frrrrrrrr

vjt ,&amp;t, i i t wtJttpSzi'

,1^ j » t

U lt o o H Hi WfcW

SiHBR4-'9|T!f

l«

i -T--- #1 - -*

In Iran-Arms Controversy

What President Reagan Ought To Do
j Editor’s note: Much or the con&lt; troversy over the secret dealings with
A limb, be §ald may ba
&lt;Iran and the Nicaraguan contras has
. dealt with the legality of the transacwisely sacrificed to i p v #
j tlons. Most observers contend the
a llfm, but a Ufa Ib
j Reagan Administration violated either
; statutes or the Constitution. Nationally
navar wlBaly sacrificed
; known author and scholar Harry JalTa
to save a limb.
files a provocative dissent to this
standard view. He argues that Presi­
dent Reagan should take full responsi­
bility for the diversion of funds to the now. Imagine: the entire government
Nicaraguan contras, and he should engaged In accusations and recrimina­
defend the diversion as both proper and tions against those alleged to be guilty
necessary to fulfill his duties under the ( of aid in g the w ar against Soviet
’ expansion an d subversion in the
United States Constitution.
western hemisphere! The 99th Con­
gress appropriated 100 million dollars
Harry V. Jaffa
for the Nicaraguan fighters — those
” The executive power shall be
canying on a civil war against the
vested In a President of the
Soviet sponsored Sandinlsta regime.
United States o f America ... he
For two years before this appropriation
shall take care that the laws be
the C o n g r e s s not o n l y did not
faithfully executed ..." Constitu­
appropriate such funds, but forbade the
tion o f the United States. Article
application of federal funds to such use.
II. Sections 1.3.
Yet by appropriating the 100 million
now. our Congressmen and Senators
".. are all the laws but one to
have conceded that their former policy
go unexecuted, and the govern­
was mistaken. Once again, we are
ment Itself go to pieces, lest that
reminded of the debt we must owe to
one be violated ? ” President
the those who "hold the fort alone, till
Abraham Lincoln. July 4.1861,
those who are half blind are half
ready."
President Reagan ought to end the
Certainly the President of the United
present crisis — especially as It relates
States w as entltlted to make the
to the diversion of funds to the
Judgment that during this two year
Nicaraguan freedom fighters — by
period the security o f the United States
assuming full responsibility for what
absolutely required the application of
, was done. Whether or not a breakdown
discretionary funds within his control
of communication In the White House
to the assistance of these freedom
chain of command actually occurred,
fighters. If such was his Judgment, then
; the President should say that those
It was his constitutional prerogative to
,who acted In his name were In fact
act upon it.
carrying out his policy. He ought
Let us consider past examples.
. moreover to claim that such an action
After the firing on Fort Sumter.
was authorized by the doctrine of
executive prerogative — Implied in the President Lincoln summoned 75.000
troops Into federal service, he ordered
constitutional concept "executive
, power” — and In accordance with the blockade of Southern ports, and he
, precedents established by Presidents suspended the writ of habeas corpus. In
the latter case, he refused to accept a
J o h n A dam s, A n d re w Jackson.
Abraham Lincoln, Woodrow Wilson, writ Issued by the Chief Justice of the
and Franklin D. Roosevelt (among United States. He was, he said, bound
In the discharge of his duty by his view
, others).
There Is something o f the theater of of the Constitution, not the Chief
, the absurd In the spectacle presented Justice’s. He did these things when
by the American political scene Just Congress was out of session, so he

,

summoned them Into special session,
and asked them to pass laws authoris­
ing what he had already done. Lincoln
denied violating any law. but even If he
had. he said, his paramount duty was
to preserve the government and the
union. If the choice for him lay between
allowing all the laws to fall, or one only,
it was clearly his duty to prefer "a ll” to
"one." A limb, he said, may be wisely
sacrificed to save a life, but a life is
never wisely sacrificed to save a limb.
Or consider yet another example.
During the year between the fall of
France. In June 1940. and the Invasion
or Russia by Hitler In June 1941.
Churchill’s Britain fought alone. Had
Britain failed then, the British fleet
would have fallen Into Hitler’s hands.
With Russia still in alliance with
Hitler's Germany, the aggregate of
British, German. French. Italian and
Japanese naval (and air) power would
have overwhelmed that of the United
States. With no land power challenging
Hitler anywhere, the defense of the
United States would have been Im­
possible. Hitler could have landed an
army on our east coast, and the
Japanese could have landed one on our
west coast. Or, as Is more likely, they
would together have first conquered
Mexico and Canada, and used them as
bases from which to attack us. Yet the
Congress of the United States, like so
many ostriches, shrank from any
action that might threaten our "n eu ­
trality."
In this setting. President Roosevelt,
by executive order, traded 50 "over
age" destroyers for British bases In
Newfoundland a n d the Bahamas.
Without these destroyers the British
could not have kept the life lines open
to their Island home, and could not
have carried on the fight. Without these
destroyers In British hands, the United
States would soon have become in­
defensible. President Roosevelt, like
Lincoln before him, knew that he could
not keep his oath to office, "to preserve,
protect, and defend the Constitution of
the United States," unless he took
action. Of course, he knew that he
risked Impeachment. But If Hitler won
the war. what would that matter? So
Lincoln also knew that he would be

Impeached. If the cause of the Union
failed. But what would he care for that.
If "government of the people, by the
le. for the people." had perished
the earth?
President Reagan should take heart
from his great predecessors. He should
tell the American people that the safety
of the United States cannot be assured.
If another Soviet base Is established In
this hemisphere, on the very shoulders
of the Panama Canal. He should tell
them that the purpose of these Soviet
bases Is to Immobilize the military
power of the United States In the
western hemisphere, whenever the
U SSR decides to attack Western
Europe or the Middle East, or both
together. For If the Soviet Union can
conquer these tw o vital regio n s
overseas — or perhaps either one of
them — It would make the defense of
the United States as Impossible as it
would have been had Hitler won the
war In Europe in 1940 or 1941. It is the
responsibility of the President to avert
and avoid such catastrophes. It Is his
task to see such dangers from afar, and
to prevent them If possible before they
have grown great. He should boldly
accept responsibility for what was done
In his name, and declare It to have been
within the purview of the executive
power vested In him by the Constitu­
tion.
Let him 'nvtte those who disagree to
move or have him Impeached. I am
confident thut the American people
would rise In their wrath against his
detractors. Certainly, in re-electing him
with the votes of 49 States out o f 50,
they authorized his Judgment above all
others as to what was Indispensably
necessary, to "preserve, protect, and
defend" them from "rebellion or In­
vasion."
,

n

Dr. Harry V. JalTa Is Henry Salvator!
Research Professor o f Political Philoso­
phy at Claremont McKenna College and
C la re m on t G r a d u a t e S c h o o l In
California. He Is also the author o f
several distinguished books. Including
Crisis of the House Divided: An In­
terpretation of the Llncoln-Douglas
Debates and How to Think About the
American Revolution.

OUR READERS WRITE
Atheist Should Be Proud Of Minister Son
I went to hear Madalyn Murray
O'H alr’s son when he spoke at a local
church. Despite the fact that his
mother was and still is a self pro­
claimed practicing Atheist and Com­
munist, It seems that young William
has turned out rather beautifully. He
has become a minister of the Lord
Jesus Christ! I learned some things I
didn't know.

If you will recall It was In the early
sixty’s that she used the boy In a
court case to get prayer taken out of
school and tried at the same time to
have the Pledge of Allegiance to the
Flag stopped In schools. I guess,
learning all of this when he grew up is
what broke the boy and caused his
conversion.
Interestingly. Just before her famous
court case, she had taken William and
his younger brother to Russia to live
and work for world Communism. She
returned to the U.S. shortly thereafter,
no doubt, having been told that she

could do more good for the party by
staying right here In America.

She opened a Communist book
store In Baltim ore Md. (which I
understand Is still standing) enrolled
her two boys in school and then
brought the Bible and flag case
against the State. If anyone wonders
about all these lawsuits against re­
ligion (500 in the last 15 yrs.) this is
where It all started, and we don't need
a map to see what country it's all
coming from. So far the Church has
been on the run.
I would like to sec the "tables
turned" — let Christ triumph and
Satan walk away like a whipped dog
fora change. All In all. I can't-help but
believe there must be a faint spark of
pride in thut mother's heart when she
thinks of her son growing up to be in
service to the great King, the Lord
Jesus Christ.
Rosemary Lister
Fairmont. W. Va.

MTEU k QUICK, AIEHT LIMITED EXAMINATION TO DETERMINE
« T AN ELEPHANT IS,TREBUND RUSSIAN IMMIGRANT DECIDES
TO ESCAPE BACK TO M S C o W M T (WTHECLAND.

Cc*Ctr,i&lt;&gt;&gt;Arr.,, e

Atheists Backed King

Hamilton Pupils Kept Out In The Cold
Where is our humanity?
On Monday morning, with the
temperature o f 32°. on my way to
work. I took 10 of my neighbors'
e l e m e n t a r y s c hoo l c hi l d r e n to
Hamilton Elementary.
Their shivering bodies welcomed a
warm vehicle to transport them to a
warm school.
But. as I assisted them out of my
vehicle at the school, a substitute
teacher told me they could not cmie
in but had to wait outside (in the cold)

until the proper time.
Because I had to go to work. I put
them back in my vehicle and took
them to a nearby store where they
could wait In the warmth.
Why was this action taken?
We (some of us) have lost our
humanity.
My children are grown and have
moved away and. today. I'm glad they
are not students In the class of that
teacher!!
A Concerned Citizen
Sanford

There is an old saying, "T o seek the
truth is noble. T o publish It Is an
obligation."
In January of 1986 1 asked If
someone would answer questions
about this month's honoree. Martin
Luther King. I am again questioning
whether he deserves to be honored
because he is an alias. His remark that
sin and salvation, the divinity of
Christ, his virgin birth, his bodily
resurrection are of minor importance
was one of many, many he made
about religion. After intensive In­

vestigation ol his activities his record
was Impounded for fifty years.
He was either a member or affiliated
with over one-hundred Communistfront organizations and to think some
members of the Seminole County
Ministerial Association would Join the
celebration Is unbelleveable since
Christianity Is not tolerated by Com ­
munists and King drew support from
that Atheist group.
Bonner L. Carter
Sanford

Drugs-By-Mail
O ffer
Savi,
But Be W ary
Can you save money on medications
If you shop by mall? Readers tell me
you can.
One Houston woman said she w as
quoted savings of from 920 to 949 for
500 tablets of a medication to treat
Parkinson's disease. Another Houston
reader wrote that she uses three
different m edicines. At her local
pharmacy, three-month supplies or
these drugs cost 9116.75. By mall she
pays only 945.04. A Cleveland woman
saved 956 by purchasing a glucometer
by mall.
But not everyone likes mail-order
shopping. A Cleveland woman wrote:
"Most pharmacy centers are out of the
state, prices vary, and they charge for
shipping and handling.... And snags do
arise In filling the order and sometimes
in the delivery. There Is nothing like a
one-on-one o v e r - th e - c o u n t e r
pharmacy."
To find out what you should look for
w h e n m a i l - o r d e r s h o p p i n g Tor
medications. Sandy Welnrauch and
Donna Tomky of the Diabetes Health
Center In Salt Lake City. Utah, con­
ducted an experiment, with their
mothers' help.
They live In rural Western communi­
ties. where the isolation, long driving
distances and limited availability of
many diabetes supplies make the
advantages and di sadv ant ag es o f
mail-order shopping more evident.
Their mothers placed orders to a dozen
different mail-order diabetes supply
houses. Their recommendations may
help you no matter what your medical
needs.
• Shop around. Almost all suppliers
have toll-free numbers. Since prices
can change any time, call a few
suppliers, including local pharmacies,
before each order to find the best price.
• Plan ahead (W A Y ahead for some
companies).
• Ask about shipping and handling
charges when comparing prices. To
save on shipping fees, you may want to
consider ordering In larger quantities. If
appropriate.
• Check the expiration date on all
supplies. The larger the quantities you
buy at one time, the more Important It
Is.

• Do not mall cash, as there is no
way of proving the company actually
received your payment.
• Consum ers’ rights regardi ng
product substitutions may be clearer in
some states than In others. Contact
your state consumer protection office
about your rights and the mail order
company's responsibilities. Find out
before ordering what the company's
policy Is: Can It substitute without first
asking your permission? What Is the
return policy In the case of a substitu­
tion? Who pays for returning the item?
• Honest mistakes are possible, of
course, and you can help prevent them.
If you want to buy something not listed
In a company's advertisem ents or
catalog, call first to check availability.
And describe the product by its proper
name and by manufacturer.
• Different companies have different
refund policies. Ask whether there is a
money-back guarantee. Politely re­
minding a company of your rights
should be enough; If not, contact your
state's department o f consumer pro­
tection.
Your experiences will be your own
best guide.
How do you l oc at e ma i l - o r d e r
pharmacies? Catalogs In your local
library list some. T h e A me r i c a n
Association of Retired Persons and the
Arthritis Foundation have pharmacy
services for their members. Diabetes
Forecast magazine carries ads from
many companies that sell medications
and supplies — not necessarily only
diabetes related — by mall.

What Newspapers Across The Nation Are Saying

Oral Roberts' Donate-Or-Die Plea G oes Too Far
By U n ited P ress International
T h e H artfo rd (Conn.) Courant
Even for a T V evangelist, Oral Roberts has gone
too far In raising money. If he doesn't receive
about $4.5 million in contribuitions by the end of
March, he has told his electronic congregation, he
will die.
"I'm asking you to help me extend my life," he
pleaded. "W e're at the point where God could call
Oral Roberts home." Send $100 now, he urged,
and pledge more to be given in February and
March.
What ' s the money to be used for? An
operation? Costly medical treatment? Nope —
scholarships for students at Oral Roberts Univer­
sity. he said.
We don't know whether Roberts is ill. but even
if he is. he's off-base in making such a pitch. At
least some o f his followers arc credulous people,
and no doubt many of them struggle to make
ends meet. To ask them to give $100. especially

right after Christmas, and to suggest that not
doing so will condemn him to death, is unfair and
unfeeling. In fact, it's downright un-Christian.
D a lla s Tim es H erald

Dallas County Judge Lee Jackson's determina­
tion to help raise the funds needed for an exhibit
about the assassination of President John F.
Kennedy is an encouraging sign that Dallas is
ready to give the traumatic event its place In
history. We hope the museum can be completed
by the 25th anniversary of President Kennedy's
death in Dallas.
Since it purchased the old Texas School Book
Depository In 1981, Dallas County has been
developing plans to convert the sixth floor Into a
m useum....
Many Dallas citizens would like to forget the
tragedy of Nov. 22. 1963. but it is a momentous
part of our past. As Judge Jackson observed,
people from all over the world come to lu&lt; k at the

building.
Dallas County owns the historic site, but the
Kennedy assassination exhibit will be financed
with private gifts. No doubt Judge Jackson's
leadership will give the campaign some needed
momentum.
P oteau (Okla.) Ne ws &amp; Sun

What ever happened to the knights of the road?
You remember — they were the truck drivers...
the guys who gave measure to the words safety
and courtesy, at least along the highway.
... The highways of today are a dog-eat-dog
world — and we don't mean Just for the sedans
challenging the family station wagons.
Maybe it's dispatchers and unrealistic sched­
ules. Maybe it's shippers who make increasingly
oppressive demands on drivers. Or. maybe it's
Just the competitiveness of the trucker.
Whatever the reason, God had best be your
co-pilot if you want to drive In the fast lane, much
less live there.

The N e w York Times

Mikhail Gorbachev continues to make remark­
able changes In the Sovi et Uni on. Boris
Pasternak's long-banned "D octor Zhivago" will
be published within the year. The KGB has
expelled one of Its own top officials for harassing
a reporter seeking to expose corruption. Yet In
contrast to these positive changes inside the
Soviet Union comes a seeming clampdown on
emigration. Gorbachev probably can have It both
ways in Moscow, but not in the West. If
Westerners are to take his internal policy of
"glasnost" seriously, he would do well to extend
the openness to Soviet borders.
Gorbachev put u new emigration law into effect
Jan. 1 . Setting out the rules explicitly for
the first time makes them less arbitrary in some
respects. ... Yet In most respects the new rules
could make emigration more difficult. ... Now.
only the closest relatives abroad count for family
reunification.

�’ ?2E££'-♦’ ’I?*1

PI

f«r r r r o

.( « « o f

-r

v &gt; f»i t

i

1

1

1

■%-*

WWf

U m ta y , J n . I I , m t

m a t's New In Health

Study: Exercise Now To Save
B jB J &gt; ,M n

•*

NBA Writer
Do ex ercise and llfestyleImprovement programs make
you Teel better? Do they help you
work better? Do they Improve
your mental state? Do they
Improve your health? Do they
extend your life?
The answers to the first three
questions are totally subjective,
ir you believe exercising and
living “ better” make you feel
better, they do. If you believe
they make you work better, they
do. If you believe they Improve
your mental state, they do.
On the other hand. If I believe
they make me feel worse, work
more poorly and think less
clearly than I do without these

...Pain
Continued Prom Page ID
Nerve centers In the spinal
cord or brain direct the nerve
ending to release “ substance P."
so n a m e d b e c a u s e It was
thought five years ago to be the
only m ajor neurotransmitter
Involved In translating pain
signals. Along with bradyklnln.
substance P attaches to a type of
cell called a mast cell, which
directs production of histamine,
bringing more white blood cells
and bradyklnln onto the scene.
Other body chemicals called
prostaglandins, triggered by
bradyklnln and the same sub­
stances blocked by aspirin, also
bind to the nerve cells at the site,
intensifying pain and promoting
swelling.
The brain signals the dorsal
horn to direct release of natural
opi at es like e ndor phi ns to
diminish the pain.
Scientists theorized If they
could come up with a substance
that blocks bradyklnln, they

programs, then they do all of
those things — to me. This is a
case of "w hat you perceive Is
what you get.”
The two questions regarding
health and longevity, however,
demand objective, rather than
subjective, answers. Unfortu­
nately. there have been few
attempts to answer the ques­
tions objectively. Until now.
A recent issue of the Journal of
the American Medical Associa­
tion carries the results of a study
designed to measure the Impact
o f a regular-exercise healthenhancement program on the
medical-care expenses of two
groups of company employees.
While this study, an “ Evalua­
tion of Johnson &amp; Johnson's

Live for Life Program.” doesn't
answer the questions about
exercise. It does hint at answers
and points up the need for
further studies.
The researchers — at the
Leonard D a v i s Institute o f
H ealth E conom ics a n d the
Wharton School — compared the
health-care utilization rate and
medical e x p e n s e s o f three
groups of Johnson &amp; Johnson
workers: 5,192 of whom worked
in one facility with a so-called
“ Live for Life” program. 3.259
in another Live for Life facility
and 2,955 who worked in a
company facility that did not
have such a program.
According to the report In
JAMA, the principal goals of the

L F L p r o g r a m are to h e l p
Johnson ft Johnson employees
“ become the healthiest In the
w orld" and to control the cor­
poration's increasing Illness and
accident costs.
The LFL Program Is a com­
prehensive health-promotion
effort aimed at helping Individu­
a ls d e v e l o p and m a i n t a i n
healthy lifestyles. Highly stan­
dardized com ponents are a
health screen, a lifestyle seminar
that Introduces employees to
L F L an d s e ve ra l lifestyleimprovement programs (smok­
ing cessation, weight control,
stress management, nutrition
education, fitness and bloodpressure Intervention).
Previous studies have shown

would have a revolutionary way
of stopping pain at its source
without the addictive qualities of
morphine.
Some 200 such compounds,
called bradyklnln antagonists,
were developed by John Stewart
of the University of Colorado and
further investigated at Johns
Hopkins University In Baltimore
by Solomon Snyder.
“ In animals, bradyklnln an­
tagonists will block pain,''
Snyder said.
Bradyklnln antagonists do not
survive the digestive tract, and
so cannot be given In pill form.
Instead. Nova Pharmaceutical
Corp.. a Baltimore company
formed with the help of promi­
nent neuroscientists, hopes to
begin tests In humans this fall of
ointments or lotions that would
be applied to the skin over the
site of pain.
“These antagonists would be
used topically, for bum pain for
example, (for) everything from
sunburn to severe bum s," said
S.J. Enna. a pharmacologist and
Nova's senior vice president and

scientific director.
The company also is working
on developing bradyklnln an­
tagonists in different chemical
forms that could be taken orally.
Bradyklnln antagonists,
especially those pursued by
Nova, have been ballyhooed of
late, but voices of doubt have
whispered about whether the
substances will measure up to
their advance billing. Some sci­
entists have wondered whether
bradykinlns, besides causing
pain, might not have some other
less evil-seeming role in the body
— one that also be negated when
the antagonists were called into
play.
In what they admit Is a more
speculative approach, chemists
at Merck Frost Laboratory out­
side Montreal are working on
compounds that could be used to
neutralize leukotrlenes. su b ­
stances Involved in Inflamma­
tion.
Leukotrlenes are present in
the body in extremely minute
amounts and remained u n ­
discovered until about seven

years ago. when chemist Joshua
Rokach. executive director of
research at Merck Frost, and a
Swedish group identified them.
“When you clear up inflam­
m a ti o n by one process or
another, you also Improve the
pain.” Rokach said. “When you
don't have the swelling, you
don't have the pain."
An inhibitor lowers production
o f a s ub s t a n c e such as
leukotrlenes. In contrast to an
antagonist, which blocks the
substance's receptor or “landing
pad” on a nerve cell.
“Some of these compounds
(leukotriene inhibitors) do. in
anim al models, reduce pain
dramatically." he said, caution­
ing. however. "W e don’t know
that we have anything, meaning
that It's highly speculative."
Whether these experimental
drugs will be useful for long­
term. severe pain, If they work at
all. is questionable. For many of
these patients, the pain system
has gone haywire In ways that
remain a mystery.

My only books, were woman's looks,
and folly's all they've taught me.
—Thomas Moore. 1780-1852

■k m i i &lt;~r i.w p w w p w i" n m

i. •

-----

Ride's Space Book M akes Children W onder
By Denise Wilms
American Library Assn.
TO SPACE AND BACK, by Sally Ride
with Susan Okie. Lothrop. $14.95. 96
pages.
Astronaut Sally Ride, the first American
woman to fly In space, has written a book
for children. "T o Space and Back."
written In collaboration with writer Susan
Okie. Is a description of n shuttle mission.
“ I wrote this book because I wanted to
answer some of the questions that young
people ask of astronauts." Ride writes, but
she has done more than that. In describ­
ing the mission, she has managed to
create a sense of wonder.
Throughout the lavishly Illustrated
book. Ride and Okie keep tuned to detail
and personal reactions that make re­
w a r d i n g r e a d i n g for mi dd l e - g r ad e
children.
The launch starts things off. "Our heads
arc rattling around inside our helmets. We
can barely hear the voices from Mission
Control In our headsets ubove the thunder
o f the rockets and engines.” And six

Best Sellers
By United Press International
Fiction
1. Red Storm Rising — Tom Clancy (No. 1
last week — 3,271copies ordered)
2. It — Stephen King (2 — 2.318)
3. The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life
In the Universe — Jane Wagner
(4 —
1.251)
4. Whirlwind — James CK.cU (8 — f»13)
5. A Taste for Death - P.D. u«unes (723)
6. Night o f the Fox — Jack Higgins (5 —

686)
7. R igh t o f the Intruder — Stephen
Coonts(10 — 646)
8. Wanderlust — Danielle Steel (496)
9. Last of the Breed — Louis L'Amour
(441)
10. Dandlts — Elmore Leonard (6 — 433)

Non-Fiction
1. Fatherhood - Bill Cosby (1 - 7.276)
2. Season on the Brink — John Felnsteln
(2-5.817)
3. A Day In the Life of America — Rick
Smolan and David Cohen (3 — 5.530)
4. McMahon — Jim McMahon (4 — 2.909)
5. Word For Word — Andrew Rooney (7
- 2.209)
6 . The Morning After — George Will (5 —
1.848)
7. The Frugal Gourmet Cooks with Wine
- J e f f Smith ( 6 - 1.682)
8 . One Knee Equals Two Feet — John
Maddeq (10— 1.668)
9. The Secret House — David Bodanls
(1.569)
10. E l s e n h o w e r at W a r — D a v id
Elsenhower (8 — 1.463)

Bally
Ride

minutes Into the launch, "we're uncom­
fortable. straining to hold our books on
our laps and craning our necks against
the force to read the Instruments. I was
wishing we'd hurry up and get into orbit."
Life on the shuttle is lived In weight-

M u i Paperbacks
1. Lie Down With Lions — Ken Follett (1
-6 .0 9 1 )
2. Women Who Love Too Much — Robin
Norwood (7 -4 .2 7 4 )
3. The Hunt for Red October — Tom
Clancy (5 — 4.146)
4. Lake Wobegon Days — Garrison
Keillor (2.622)
5. Cyclops — Clive Cussler (2.588)
6. The Mammoth Hunters — Jean Auel
(2.474))
7. The Price Waterhouse Guide to The
New Tax Law (9 — 2.435)
8. Secrets — Danielle Steel (2.341)
9. Dream Lover — Lawrence Sanders (3
- 1 .8 9 3 )
«
10. Angels of September — Andrew
Greelrv (2 — 1.823)

Trade Paperbacks
1. The Far Side Gallery Two — Gary
Larson (1 — 3.963)
2. Far Side Gallery — Gary Larson (2 —
3.185)
3. Anastasia - Peter Kurth (3 - 2.609)
4. The World Almanac and Book of Facts
(6 - 2 .1 4 0 )
5. West With the Night — Beryl Markham
(4 - 2 .0 6 1 )
6. D ia n etics -L . Ron Hubbard (1.811)
'
7. It Came From the Far Side — Gary
Larson (5 — 1.683)
8. The Man Who Mistook His Wife For a
Hal — Oliver Sacks (9 - 1.625)
9. White Trash Cooking — Ernest Mikler
( 7 - 1.482)
10. Bloom County Babylon City — Berke
Breathed (8 — 1.279)

Rankings Dased on orders to Ingram
Book Company from more than 7.000
bookstores nationwide.

lessness, which “ feels wonderful," but
takes getting used to. Moving around is
tricky at first, and It takes Ride a day or
two to move confidently. Eating can be
complicated. Sleeping becomes a novel
experience. Instead of beds, there arc
sleeping bags, which astronauts place
where they wish.
Ride also describes the work done
aboard a shuttle mission. She explains
how complicated a satellite launch is and
how hard it can be to rendezvous with an
orbiting satellite. Space walking Is another
fascinating topic made more dramatic by
the riveting photographs o f space walkers
at work.
Ride wrote her book before the January
1986 tragedy that claimed the lives of
seven of her colleagues, but elected to let
her text stand. The book is dedicated to
them.
PEEPING IN THE SHELL, by Faith
McNally. Harper &amp; Row. 910.95.59 pages.
“ Peeping In the Shell” Is the fascinating
story, for the middle-grade readers, of the
hatching o f a whooping crane chick. Not
Just any chick, but one that came to
because of the extraordinary efforts of
dedicated ornithologist George Archibald.
As odd as the pairing of man and bird
may sound. Archibald's partnership with
T e x the w h o o p i n g c r a n r was a
crazy-like-a-fox scheme that had a strange
scientific validity to it. Tex was “ Im­
printed" at birth with human rather than
bird recognition. Tex preferred human
company to her own species, and when
she grew to adulthood, she refused to
mate with a male crane.
Because scientists have been fighting to
keep these extremely rare birds from
becoming extinct. Archibald felt that
every effort should be made to get Tex to
produce a fertile egg. Knowing of Tex’s
preference for humans. Archibald brought
her to his Baraboo. Wls.. crane center and
literally moved In with her.
He slept on a cot in her shed, carried on
"con versations" with her by making
crane-llke noises, and In the mating
season performed courtship dances with
her. The strategy worked. Tex began to
show physical evidence of being ready to
mate. At the proper time, she was
artificially inseminated, and several weeks
later laid an egg.
The long-awaited egg was precious
because of the efTorts behind Its creation.
Its hatching was. for Archibald, a major
event. He invited his friend Faith McNulty
to attend the birth. Her book re-creates the
experience in unexpectedly exciting de­
tail.
The hatching of a whooping-crane egg is
an arduous process for the chick, which
must make Its exit within a certain
amount of time or die. Tex's chick
encountered difficulty, and. had It been In
the wild, would huve died. But with
Archibald on hand, this true story has a
happy ending.

that the LFL program Is ef­
fective: Participants have had
“ significant reductions In smok­
ing. weight and stress levels and
Improvement In fitness and
exercise levels.”
But does that translate Into an
Improvement In overall health
and a reduction in medical
costs? Yes, say the authors of
this new study.
B et wee n 1979 and 1983*
“ mean annual Inpatient cost
increases were $43 and $42 for
two Live for Life groups vs. $76
for the non-Llve for Life groups.
Live for Life groups also had
lower rates of Increase In hospi­
tal days and admissions. No
significant differences were
found for outpatient or other

health-care costs."
Before you say. “Aha! Costs do
Increase for the workers In the
LFL program ." .keep In mind
that em ployees in all three
groups w ere progressing
through their mid- and late 30s
during the study, and thus
would be expected to need more
medical care no matter how well
they took care of themselves.
The point Is that — while a
dollar spent on prevention may
not necessarily be two dollars
saved on treatment — at least
some reduction In health-care
costs can be expected by Indi­
viduals. employers or a federal
government that takes steps to
reduce the Individual's need for
health care.

Travelin ' About

The Rare N ig h tm a re
O f Long-Lost Luggage
gers make a list o f all Items In
WASHINGTON (UP1) - A man their luggage and place this In
flew from the United States to the carry-on bag.
Once a suitcase Is declared
Ghana last year, but his airline
lost,
a passenger must file a
misplaced his baggage and was
claim
with the airline. Federal
unable to get It to him until Just
law requires large carriers to pay
before his return flight home.
On his trip back to America, up to $1,250 per passenger.
the airline again lost his luggage There Is no such requirement for
small planes (those that carry
— this time permanently.
Dozens o f such stories have less than 60 passengers).
There Is also no time limit for
been filed with the U.S. De­
large
carriers to make good on a
partm en t o f Transportation,
claim,
but they generally pay
which helps frustrated travelers
put pressure on airlines to find within a few months.
DOT and the Ralph Naderbaggage or pay compensation.
founded
Aviation Consumer Ac­
Lost or misplaced luggage Is
one o f the most frequent traveler tion Project In Washington. D.C..
c o m p l a i n t s about ai rl i nes. recommends that travelers with
Nearly all the baggage is found lost baggage he persistent and. If
within a day. But In rare in­ need be. contact them for help.
In certai n cases, the two
stances It Is gone forever.
agencies
w ill Intervene by writ­
There are no definitive figures,
ing
letters
to the airlines. How­
but authorities estimate that less
than 1 percent of the luggage ever, once a case goes to court
checked in at airports Is lost or (normally small claims court),
misplaced. Often it Is sent to the the consumer must take sole
responsibility for carrying on the
wrong airport and even the
fight.
wrong country.
“ It Is fair to say that baggage
"You should keep after them ."
p r o b l e ms occur very Infre­ urged Chris Wltkowski. A C A P ’s
quently." said a spokesman for executive director. "A n d keep a
DOT’s consumer affairs office.
record of your expenses Ui get­
“ But when It does happen It can
ting reim bursed, like phone
'uusc some bhloroblems ”

By Thomas Ferraro

the airlines offer s e vera ltlp a to
reduce the chances of losing
luggage. The cardinal rule is to
make sure your name and
address Is-securely placed on all
baggage.
As a precautionary measure,
travel experts also suggest that
passengers carry on any essen­
tial Items, such as eye glasses,
medication and keys. In addi­
tion. they recommend passen­

...Klein
Continued From Page ID
station and bought a soda,
because we weren't supposed to
eat sugar.” Klein said.
Another significant event ef­
fected Klein's split from the
commune. " I had a friend who
sold a lot of drugs," he said.
"S he got arrested and I sold my
car to help. I was in charge of
collecting money and balling her
out. They (the commune mem­
bers) didn't want me to be
associated anymore.”
Which suited his mother Just
fine. "I didn't approve of him
joining." she said. "An y mother
would be heartbroken."
"M y mom freaked out when I
joined.” Klein recalled. "She still
pretends that It never hap­
pened."
Klein Is still considered u
devotee of the commune, but
said: "I never went back. I did all
th a t." Instead, he did more
cooking and dishwashing and
became a certified locksmith at
A. Aaron Locksmith and Securi­
ty Systems Inc. in Altamonte
Springs.
He also shared a
one-room apartment with th**
friend with whom he eventually
had the argument that steered
him back to school.
At SCC. Klein started with the
fundam entals. " I took basic
math and fundamental writing."
he said. "I needed to be reedu­
cated. I had no high school
grades." He paid the tuition with
h is f a t h e r ' s V e t e r a n s A d ­
ministration benefits. "With no
community colleges. I couldn't
have done It," Klein said.
Af ter graduati ng with his
associate o f arts degree. Klein
headed to UCF to major In
psychology.
"M y m om had me see a
psychologist In my teen years.”
Klein said. " I admired what he
did and the way he lived."
Settled on a career goal. Klein
started classes at UCF In the fall
o f 1985. Completing 20 hours
per semester, he has readied

jja y M o M te m ^ v e !

_

o v e r , l i k e t o i l e t r i e s and
clothing." he said.
Wltkowski said airlines arc not
r e q u i r e d t o p a y f or s uc h
expenses, but many of them
"w ill do so. provided you are
insistent."
DOT said the number of lug­
gage-related complaints It has
received has remained steady
over the past year.

himself for graduation In the
summer 1987 term.
Klein has worked hard toward
his goal. Wi t h 15 hours a
semest er c ons i de r e d a full
classload. Klein has amassed a
3.9 (on a 4.0 scale) grade point
average dur i ng his 20-hour
semesters.
"Perry doesn't like to accept a
*B’." his m other said. "H e'll take
the class over, whi ch costs
money. I say accept the 'B '!"
Offering Insight Into her son's
habits. Mrs. Klein said: "H e was
always a loner, a chip off the old
block. He doesn't have many
friends. Just a select few. He puts
an emphasis on what he wants
to do. He Isa leader.
"H e's Into his books all hours
of the day and night. He studies
until 3 a.m. sometimes. When he
takes the dog for a walk, he'll
also take a book to read."
"I like to watch TV and relax."
Klein said. "Also. I found a
certain method of meditation (of
East Indian origin) that’s an
enlightenment.” He Is a studlcr
o f MaharaJ-JI ( p r o n o u n c e d
"Ma-ha-ra-gee"), who. fittingly,
stresses knowledge. "There are
no rituals — it's not a religion.”
Klein explained. " I meditate
only when I'm stressed out."
Klein n o w lives wi th his
mother and two brothers (Kevin,
19 and Bryan. 13) In Longwood.
His mother still owns Mayfair
Limited, a secretarial and an­
swering service In Winter Park
that she has operated for 15
years.
Klein hopes to Join his mother
In Winter Park with a private
practice, after he attends gradu­
ate school to obtain his doctor­
ate. He now washes dishes on
weekends at J.B. Wlnberle in
Longwood. Klein plans to use
the restaurant as a source of
income for graduate school.
Nova, in Fort Lauderdale, is the
school he prefers.
"I would Just like to sit back
and enjoy m y clients — five on
Tuesday and five on Wednes­
day." Klein said. " I want to earn
enough m oney to move through
my environment with as much
case as possible."

I

t

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222170">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, January 18, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222172">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222173">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on January 18, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222174">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222175">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, January 18, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222176">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222177">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222178">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222179">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22252" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21856">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/efc74f270e0a4d6c0064bd0762c0a5d4.pdf</src>
        <authentication>84827881e64fc6fdb50ac6367d13ddca</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222200">
                    <text>I

O v ie d o

W o m an

By Saitn Loden
Herald Staff Writer
A 36-year-old Oviedo woman charged with first
degree murder In the stabbing death of her
husband at their home at about 8:25 p.m.
Monday was being held today without bond In the
Seminole County Jail.
Brenda Williams. 430 Franklin St. Oviedo, was
arrested at her home at about 8:35 p.m. Monday

H e ld

by Oviedo police. When police were called to the
home to Investigate a reported stabbing they
found George Williams Jr. lying In the frontyard
of the Williams' home.
Williams, whose age is estimated by police at
about 50. was on his back. There was blood on
his shirt and a hole In the shirt above the left side
of his chest, near his heart. Oviedo police officer
F. J. Baker reported.

In

Three policemen had arrived at the scene.
Police CpI. Steve Benson checked Williams and
found no sign of a pulse. He had a single wound
In his chest.
Tw o Oviedo Fire Department rescue workers
arrived and determined that Williams was dead.
That was confirmed by Seminole County Medical
Examiner Dr. O.V. Garay. Baker reported.
A neighbor told police that Mrs. Williams came

Boil Water,
County Tells
Utility's
Custom ers

About 40 commercial customers of
Lake Monroe Utilities may be able to
start drlnkng the water again by Friday
If the Department of Environmental
Regulation okays it. said Bill Bostwlck.
Assistant Director o f the DER’s Orlando
ofllce.
Seminole County tested the water In
the system Friday after receiving a
complaint that It had gone bad.

Bostwlck said the DEK winds the
utility to repair or replace aeration
screens and to clean an aeration unit
before It will cancel the boll-water
order. Bostwlck said the maintenance
chores will take about three days.
"It was a pretty gross situation," said
Bostwlck. He said the utility may also
have to flush the system.
Bostwlck said the tests Identified a
type o f organism In the system's water
that Indicates conditions were favorable
for the growth o f disease-causing
bacteria. Although the organism was
Identified, it does not guarantee there
were any harmful bacteria in the water,
just that It was possible, he said.
Normally the chlorine count In the
treated water Is one-fifth of a part per
million. Miller said. He said the water
system had no chlorine In It Friday.
Monday, after the chlorine machine
had been fixed, the water system
showed 1.5 to 2 parts per million. Miller
said. He said the utility was told by the
DER to get the level of chlorine up to at
least 1.5 parts per million for two days
to disinfect the system.
Miller said It Is Impossible to tell by
the bacterial level when the chlorine
level dropped. He said if there were a
source of contamination handy, the
system could have been flooded with
bacteria within minutes.
«
The utility pumps about 100.000
gallons a day. Its capacity Is 1.2 million
gallons per day. according to DER
records.

Army's Woe
Furniture and other items
a re s c a tte re d about the
parking lot behind the Salva­
tion A rm y building in San­
ford Monday after weekend
donors failed to heed the
request on the drop box. Lt.
Sam Flanigan, corps com­
mander, asks that donors put
items in the box when the
office is closed or call 322­
2642 for pickup of large
items. He said furniture left
out overnight is often ruined
by rain or dampness and has
to be hauled to the dump.
Herald Photo by Tom m y Vincanl

See STABBING, page 8 A

By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer

Customers of a private water system
west o f Sanford will have to boll their
water for at least three more days
because of a bacterial contamination
and maintenance problems at the
facility.

The county's test showed a bacterial
number "too high to count." Miller
said. The problem was caused by a
broken line on a machine that puts
chlorine Into the water system, he said.

to his home to use the telephone after the
stabbing. She allegedly said she had Just killed
her husband.
Oviedo police reported that at about 8:15 p.m.
Saturday a police officer was called to the
Williams' home to take a report on Williams*
allegation that his wife had threatened to kill him.
When police arrived at the Williams* home

Sanford Officials
Glimpse Future

By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer

The DER has estimated that the
utility serves between 1.000 and 1,500
people at commercial establishments in
the area of State Road 46 and Interstate
4. Am ong the business hooked up to
the system arc the Holiday Inn. Day's
Inn. Stuckey's Restaurant. McDonald's,
the Waffle House and the General
Store. The businesses were ordered to
boil their water, said Russell Miller.
S em in ole C o u n ty 's environm ental
health director.

F a ta l S ta b b in g

H«raM Phat* by Tammy Vlncant

City officials leave tour bus at Sanford Water Plant stop, State Road 46A
and Country Club Road, Monday. From left, Fire Chief Tom Hickson,
City M anager Frank Faison, City Commissioner Bob Thomas and
Engineering and Planning Director Bill Simmons.

A c o s t a A p p e a ls
3 5 -Y e a r S e n te n c e

Osvaldo Lorenzo Acosta. 50.
of 226 Berkshire Circle, was
sentenced Jan. 16 by Circuit
Judge Robert B. McGregor.
McGregor had the option of
sentencing Acosta from 27
years to 40 years. As Is.
Acosta will serve about 17W
years for the murder of Rolddy
Aragon. 7. according to pro­
secutors.

comment and a statement of
issued to be reviewed by the
higher court were not yet In
the appeal flic. However, un­
der Florida law. Acosta can
only appeal his sentence not
his conviction because he
pleaded no contest in the case.
At his sentencing hearing
Acosta asked McGregor to
sentence him closer to 27
years rather than closer to 40.
The boy was killed Dec. 11
and Ills mother. Margarita
M on tero. 33. an d s is te r.
Lourdes Aragon. 14. were In­
jured. Acosta also pleaded no
contest to wounding them and
to shooting Inside a home.
Acosta and Miss Montero's

Neither attorneys on the
case could be reached for

See A P P E A L , page 8 A

A Longwood man sentenced
three weeks ago to 35 years
Im prisonm ent for seconddegree murder In the shooting
death o f a child has appealed
his case to the 5th District
Court o f Appeals In Daytona
Beach.

Sanford's future was glimpsed by a
receptive city commission Monday as
the five elected officials toured the city
by bus with the heads of Sanford's
eight municipal departments.
The two-hour tour took almost 20
city representatives through annexed
parcels, planned park lands, a new fire
station site and the police station where
the canine division literally sunk Its
teeth Into a demonstrated fight against
crime.
Three layers of leather were worn by
the officer who portrayed a fleeing felon
for the canine unit demonstration. In
addition to drug detection and chasing
down suspects, the department's two
german shepards arc going to be
instrumental in tracking lost children
and for crowd control, said police Chief
Steve Harriett.
Commissioners approved the canine
unit's formation In this year's budget.
It's part of the police department's
"tactical patrol division" which In­
cludes a mounted patrol.

The representatives' bus trip began
and ended at Sanford city hall, on
Fulton Avenue. The tour was planned
by City Manager Frank Faison to
combine "the visual with the verbal"
regarding projects and plans commis­
sioners regularly discuss In meetings
and work sessions. The five commis­
sioners made frequent Inquiries to stafT
about specifics o f various projects.
The city’s Poplar Avenue sewage
treatment plant, and several annexed
parcels In western Sanford, off State
Road 46. ofTered visions o f the city's
future growth. Sanford Is engaged In a
$36.5. million effort to develop a new
wastewater disposal system In ac­
cordance with a state order to cease
effluent disposal In Lake Monroe. San­
ford's effluent re-use system will dis­
pose treated wastewater at city owned
parks, the Mayfair golf course and
Sanford Airport.
Also visited Monday was the city's
water plant at the Mayfair golf course,
off County Road 46A. and the new
effluent disposal system was pointed to

See FUTURE, page 8A

Rats Out-Fox Lake M ary Officials
By Genie Llndberg
Herald Staff Writer
"Burning the midnight o il" at meetings In
Lake Mary City Hall has become somewhat
routine. But there has been more going on In the
wee small hours than anyone had Imagined.
Hearing the news that city commissioners
chose a site for a new city hall, "unusual
homesteaders" wasted no time creeping In at
night to take over old building. But city
employees, knowing it will be a long while
before they leave the premises, say they have
been fighting off the "die-hard " Intruders.
The Intruders are rats, and members of a
committee holding a meeting at city hall last
Monday say they discovered "th ey were not
alone" after spying one of the "homesteaders"
sneaking across the commissioners' hall floor.
When asked ‘ to describe the Intruder, a
committee member said. "H e was a very
healthy-looklng brown rat, and as he rounded
the corner. 1swear he winked at m e."
City hall employees summoned Myers Pest

Control of Winter Park to evict the rats, and say
they were Impressed with the "n e w and
improved, modem trap" put out to "stop a rat
dead In his tracks."
However, the trap, a small flnt tray containing
glue, that looked like mustard, didn't work.
Employees said they found only an empty trap
and a trail o f mustard-colored footprints running
across the stage in city hall.
After Its center stage debut, the rat apparently
made his exit-stage left-through a suspicious
hole that cannot be seen from inside city hall, an
employee said.
Poisonous brownies have not worked either.
The brownies, or at least something that looks
like brownies, were placed In strategic areas on
the stage: but were later found In a back office
where they had been "dragged and half-eaten."
employees said.
And despite the usual Monday morning "rat
race." city hall employees were managing to
keep a sense of humor about their mysterious
tenants. One employee said, with .a raised
eyebrow. "T h ey must be bigger than we think."

Lake M a ry Set To V o te On S ew age Rate H ike
Lake Mary city commissioners agreed
Monday that ordinances to Increase the
city's water and sewer rates be put to a
vote at their regular session beginning
7:30 p.m. Thursday.
If the ordinances are approved as
e x p e c t e d , u s e r s o f th e c i t y 's
waterworks system will pay an addi­
tional 15 cents per their first 3.000
gallons used and users of the city’s
wastewater system will pay an addi­
tional nlne-ccnt flow charge per 100
gallons used.
A feasibility study done In 1984 for
the city o f Lake Mary by Its consulting

engineers. Camp. Dresser and McKee.
Inc., concerning the city's water rate
structure recommended higher water
rntes to meet the Increase In costs of
operation, according to City Treasurer
Madeline Minns.
The proposed ordinance establishing
the new rates states that any user of the
services o f the waterworks system,
located within the municipal limits,
shall pay for water used.
The rate per 1.000 gallons shall apply
to each Increment of 1.000 gallons or
any additional part of It. For example. If
3.500 gallons of water are used, the

monthly charge will be the same as If
4.000 gallons were used. Monthly
charges or rate', v.l'l now be $5.94
(minimum billing) for the first 3.000
gallons and $1.98 (per 1.000 gallons)
over 3.000 gallons, according to the
proposed ordinance.
The Increase In rates for monthly
sewer usage In Lake Mary Is a result of
the Increase In expenditures caused by
s w itc h in g o v e r to s e r v ic e from
Seminole County from the sewer plant
In T h e Forrest o f Lake Mary, a
manufactured homes subdivision, city
treasurer. Madeline Minns said.

T e e n P r o b le m s
T o p ic O f F o ru m
T h e S e m in o le C h e m ic a l
Awareness Network (SCAN) will
host a countywide community
forum concerning teen problems
such as chemical dependency,
unwanted pregnancies, teen
suicide and dropping out of
school on Tuesday from 7 p.m.
to 9 p.m. at the Sanford Civic
Center.
Teens who have experienced
some of the above problems will
be on hand to tell their stories.
J a c k H e i s lc r . S e m in o le
County's director of secondary
education, will discuss what the
schools are are doing to help
troubled teens and Sanford
Mayor. Bcttyc Smith, chairman
of the network, will discuss
community efforts.

i

The proposed ordinance establishing
new rates for monthly sewer usage
states that the minimum monthly
charge to single-family users shall be
$1.75 which shall be a base rate
whether the sewer system Is In use or
not. In addition, each user shall pay a
llow charge of 39 cents per IOO gallons,
up to a maximum sewage llow of 4.000
gallons-per-month.
The minimum monthly charge will
not change under the proposed ordi­
nance but the 39 cents per 100 gallons
llow charge represents a nlne-ccnt
Increase.
—G enie L ln d b erg

TO DAY
Bridge............. .... 6B
Classifieds...... 4B.5B
Comics............ .... 6B

Financial.... ........8A
Horoscope.... ........6B
Hospital...... ....... 8A

Coming Events .... 3A
Crossword...... .... 6B

Nation.......... ....... 8A
People.................. IB

Dear Abby...... .... IB
Deaths............ .... 8A

P o lic e .......... ....... 2A
Sports..............5A 7A

Dr. Gott........... .... 6B
Editorial........ .... 4A

Television.... ........IB
Weather...... ........ 2A

School Menu
• Wednesday: Chicken fried steak
w /g rav y , whipped potatoes, garden
peas, favorite fruit, roll and lowfat
milk.

i

�r

r
l A - l i n M HtraM, la n M , FI.

T w d a r, F tb .», m ?

Big C ats In V a n Sp all T rou b la

Flea World Exhibitor Cited For
Improper Transport Of Animals

POLICE
IN BRIEF
5/oiv Driving Spurs Suspicion;
Police Arrest Man With Cocaine
A Seminole County shertfTs deputy who Investigated a
report o f a suspicious vehicle traveling slowly on side
streets around Weklva Springs Road. Longwood. con­
fronted the driver when he stopped at a convenience store
on Fox Valley Drive.
A police computer check showed that the driver is
wanted In Ft. Lauderdale for violation of parole. The
deputy reported seeing what appeared to be a vial of
cocaine In the car and finding two cans made into smoking
devices In the car along with other Items o f drug
paraphernalia.
Christopher Thomas Hermann. 29. of 824 Rlverbcnd
Blvd.. Longwood. has been charged with possession of
cocaine and drug paraphernalia. He was being hetd In lieu
o f $1,000 bond.

2 M en Charged In Auto Theft
Altamonte Springs police reported charging two men.
who allegedly had possession of a car stolen In Orange
County at the Altamonte Mall. State Road 436. Altamonte
Springs, In auto theft.
Arrested at about 3 p.m. Sunday were: James Young. 60.
o f Orlando, and Richard Lawrence Vachon, 31. of Mt.
Prospect. III. Young was being held In lieu of $1,000 bond
and Vachon was being held in lieu of $3,500 bond.

A man who displays and photographs
wild animals at Flea World south o f Sanford
faces a possible $1,000 fine and a year In Jail
after Sunday receiving a second citation this
year for Improperly transporting his big
cats.
Lt. John Moran, wildlife inspector for the
Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Com­
mission, assigned to Orlando, said Monday
that for the past couple of months as he has
had time he has watched Bobby Franklin
Steel as Steet transported his wild cats to
and from the Flea Market where the animals
are available to be photographed with
shoppers.
Moran followed Steel as he left the market
In a Mustang convertable with a 280-pound
lion riding with him at about 5:30 p.m.
Sunday. Traveling with the Mustang was
Steel's van which contained a Jaguar, a tiger
and two cougars restrained In plastic and
wooden cages. Moran said.
As the vehicles traveled north on U.S.
Highway 17-92 toward Sanford Moran said
he was waiting far an appropriate site and a
chance to order the vehicles to stop when
the Steel vehicles stopped at a Cumberland
Farms store.
There Moran said he was told that a
photographer began taking photos of Steel
and the lion In the convertible.

The In

Moran said he Issued a citation to Steel for
Improperly transporting the animals. As a
state gamewarden Moran has the same
arrest powers as any police officer in the
state.
Steel's van was inspected and Moran said
the plastic and wooden cages Inside the van,
which held the four other cats, violated state
requirements that such wile amlmals be
caged in steel or re-enforced aluminum
cages for transport.
The metal cage requirements. Moran said,
are to prevent the large animals from
breaking out of the cages and to also make
sure they are contained If the transport
vehicle Is In an accident.

T h e following persons have been
arrested In Seminole County on a
d u n e o f driving under the Influence:
'- J o h n WUUam Carr. 71. o f 654
Sherwood Court. Altamonte Springs at
2:53 u n . Saturday after he was ob­
served driving erratically on State Road
436 , Altamonte Springs, at 55 m ph In a
40 mph zone.
—W illy Joe Carlisle, 27. of Louisville,
Ky.. at 12:44 a.m. Saturday on State
Road 436 . Altamonte Springs, after his
weaving car was clocked traveling 30
mph In a 40 mph zone.
—Donald William Schlamann. 40. of
17 Tumball St., Altamonte Springs, at
3:18 a.m. Saturday after he stopped hls
car two car lengths past the stop line on
the roadway at the Intersection o f Palm
Springs Drive and State Road 436.
Altiunontc Sortnitoi
—Carl Wayne Bryant. 34. of Orlando,
at 2:35 a.m,. Monday after hls car failed
to maintain a single lane on U.S.
Highway 17-92. Sanford.
—Robert F. Walker. 58. of DeBary. at
2 a.m. Monday after a Seminole County
sheriff's deputy had to take evasive
action to avoid a collision with Walker's
truck on U.S. Highway 17-92 at the
Volusia County line.
—M ark E d w a rd F o lg e r . 2 1 . o f
Titusville, at 11:21 p.m. Sunday after
hla weaving truck was clocked traveling
70 mph In a 40 mph zone on State Road
434. He was also charged with-driving
with a suspended license.________________

Before Steel was allowed to leave the area
with the cats he had to rent an enclosed
metal trailer to transport them to his home
near Eustls.
Steel could not be reached to comment on
the citation.
Moran said since this is Steel's second
citation for the same ofTense. with Moran
issuing both citations, the charge has been
upgraded from a second degree misde­
meanor to a first degree misdemeanor,
which carries double the potential penalty of
the second degree charge.
—Susan Loden

Gun Found In Stop, Search

Martinez Signs Two D ea th Warrants

A Seminole County sheriffs deputy who stopped a man
who was running down outside stairs from the second floor
o f the McAllister Motel on Southwest Road In Sanford, as a
second,sheriffs deputy was entering the second floor area,
searched the fleeing man and found he was wearing in a
holster a loaded .32-caliber revolver.
W illie Lee Perry. 24. of the McAllister Motel. 2102
Southwest Road. Sanford, was charged with carrying a
concealed firearm at 11:11 p.m. Saturday. He was being
held in lieu of $ 1.000 bond.

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — In the first two
death warrants of his administration. Gov.
Bob Martinez has authorized the execution
o f condem ned m urderers L e v is Leon
Aldridge and William Melvin "Snlvelhead"
White.
Martinez signed the warrants Monday and
prison officials set the executions for 7 a.m.
March 18 In the electric chair at the Florida
State Prison near Starke. The warrants

expire at noon. March 19.
The warrant was the third for Aldridge,
48. sentenced for the murder o f Fort Pierce
restaurant manager Robert C. Ward during
a 1974 robbery. Former Gov. Bob Graham
ordered Aldridge's execution in 1981 and
1983. but Aldridge won stays from the
Florida Supreme Court and a federal district
court.

Screams, Crash Preceed Arrest
Sanford police who arrived at a reported domestic
dispute at about 8:50 p.m. Sunday reported hearing a
woman scream and glass breaking.
The woman, who had a bloody face was leaning against u
broken glass front door when police approached the home
at 1020 Elm Ave.. Sanford.
A man was confronted und charged with aggravated
battery. John Harold Marrldtt, 31. of the above address,
was being held In lieu of $5,000 bond.

Woman Hit in Back, Man Jailed
A 25-year-old Sanford man who allegedly during a
dispute at 70 Lake Monroe Terrace. Sanford, on Saturday
allcgcdy hit a woman In the back several times, has been
charged with assault.
Sanford police reported arresting Ferdinand D. Ross, of
1505 W. 14th St., Sanford, at about 7:30 p.m. after Felicia
Thompson accused him of hitting her. He has been
released on $100 bond to appear in court Feb. 11.
V k 0
A g e n t s T ip p e d J q
Sanford police''vice agents who were tipped to a possible
sale o f marijuana set to occur at a convicnce store on the
corner o f U.S. Highway 17-92 and First Street In Sanford,
reported watching the alleged sale at about 5:25 p.m.
Saturday,
Following the alleged sale to another man Glenn Eugen
Dunn. 23. o f 3205 S. Orlando Drive. Sanford, was charged
with sale and delivery of marijuana and possession of
marijuana and drug paraphernalia, He has been released
on $1,000 bond to appear In court Feb. 16.

Burglaries And Thefts Reported
David W. Stroud. 25. of 373 Ccdarbrook Lane. Altamonte
Springs, reported to sheriffs deputies that his 1986 Nissan
valued at $20,000 was stolen from the parking lot of
Hooters, 2699 Cassel Creek Blvd.. Casselberry, Thusday or
Friday.
The 1970 Dodge pickup truck of Deborah Gail Courtney.
33, of 2855 Midway Drive, Sanford, was stolen while she
was In C.J.'s Grocery. County Road 427, Sanford.
Thursday. She told sheriffs deputies she left the keys In
the $800 truck.
Kala Lou Simonson. 29. of 395 Wymorc Road
Altamonte Springs, reported to sheriffs deputies
camera, a chess set. a gold bracelet and other Items
combined value o f $440 were stolen from her
Thursday or Friday.

*106,
that a
with a
home

Three firearms with a combined value o f $950 were
stolen along with some old silver coins from the home of
Dona and Dale Rabbit of 2611 Stone St.. Oviedo. Thursday,
deputies reported.
T w o stereo speakers and tools with a combined value of
abut $160 were stolen from the home of Steven Robertson
and Steven Wood, of 913 Suburban Way. Lake Mary,
Thursday, a sheriffs report said.
Elizabeth Robison. 74. of 1407 E. 1st St.. Sanford,
reported to police that Jewelry and silver valued at $1,075
was taken from her home Thursday at 10:20 a.m.

FIRE CALLS
Sanford firefighters have re­
sponded to the following calls,
details based on fire department
reports:
SU N D AY
— 12:58 a.m., 417 Bay Ave.,

IU S P S 481 180)

Tuesday, February 3, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 140
P u b lish e d D a ily an d Sunday, e ic e p l
S a tu rd a y by T h e S an ford H erald .
Inc 104 N. F re n c h A v e .. S an lord,
F la . 12711.
S econ d C la s t P o s ta g e P a id a t S an lord.
F lo r id a 37771
H o m e D e liv e ry : M onth M./S; 3 M onths,
SM .7S; 4 M o n th s . $27.00; Y e a r .
SSI 00 By M a il: M onth. $4.71/ i
M on th s, $20.75; 4 M onths, 417.00;
Y e a r , 441 00.
Ph on e (101) 171 7411

rescue. A 55-year-old man ac­
cidently shot himself in the left
fool. The wound, reportedly
minor, was bandaged and the
man transported to the hospital
by private vehicle.
—2:52 a.m.. *24 Shenandoah
Village, sme!
alert. Possible
smoke damage in kitchen re­
ported from pot left on heated
stove burner.
— 10:06 a.m,. 913 Hickory Ave..
gas odor. Firemen advised owner
to call gas company to repair a
gas leak In the home.
-1 0 :5 8 a.m.. 1609 W. 14th
Street, rescue. A 42-year-old
man suffered a cy* on his head
from an apparent fall. He uecllncd hospital transport after
the injury was bandaged.
-12:24 p.m,. 1115 W. 12th
Street, rescue. A 29-year-old
woman reported a severe head­
ache. She was transported to the
hospital.

WEATHER
N a t io n T e m p e r a t u r e s
City k F o rtc a il
Albuquerque pc
Anchorag« cy
Asheville »y
Atlanta sy
Billings cy
Birmingham sy
Bolton cy
Brow nsvIlleTex.cy
Buffalo tn
Burlington Vt. tn
Charlaston S.C. pc
CharlottaN.C. sy
Chicago pc
Cincinnati pc
Cleveland cy
Columbus pc
Dallas sy
D en vercy

HI
58
33
39
43
40
43
44
70
37
35
49
41
37
44
4)
44
,47
S3

La Pep
13 ....
23
28 .30
40 .09
24
34 ,07
29
44
24 .04
25 .01
41 .34
37 .30
23
34
33
24
43
33

Oatrolt cy
Duluth cy
El Paso sy
E vansvlllapc
Hartford cy
Honolulu sy
Houston cy
Indianapolis pc
Jackson Miss, pc
Jackson villa sy
Kansas City sy
Las Vagas cy
Llttla Rock sy
Los A n galts th
Loulsvlllapc
M tm p h lts y
M iam i Baach pc
Milwaukee pc
Minneapolis pc
N ath vlllapc
N tw Orleans cy
New York pc
Oklahoma City I
Omaha pc
Philadelphia ay
Phoenix pc
Pittsburgh ah
Portland M a m
Portland Ora. pc
Providanca cy
Richmond sy
St. Louis sy
San Francisco pc
Washington sy

40
33
71
43
44
00
73
41
47
74
53
43
44
44
40
41
79
39
31
57
71
40
43
43
40
73
41
34
33
44
41
53
43
55

71

10
30
39
34
30
53
34
40
47
30
43
30
47
37
34
43
31
15
30
S3
33
37
34
39
S3
35
33
37
34
31
30
47
33

Suny

Ptly Cldy

P tly Cldy

fu g

Ptly Cldy

Egg

Sunny

0 0 ,

01
•9

Moon Phases

3 0 ©
L4»

F rl.

Sat.

*«"•

M ild W eather
W arm s N ation

M IA M I (U P I) — Florida 34 hour tempera
lures andralnlall at I a.m. EDT today :
City;
HI 1.4 Rain
71 42 0.17
Apalachicola
71 39 0.21
Crestvlew
Daytona Baach
78 49 0.07
Fort Lauderdale
■77 41 o o o
Fort M y «r*
71 ts 0.00
Gainesville
72 47 0.15
71 47 000
Jacksonville
78 U&gt; 000
Kay Wast
77 32 000
Lakeland
79 64 000
M iam i
Orlando
79 32 000
71 31 O.tr
Pensacola
SarasotaBradenton
74 34 0 00
71 39 0.34
Tallahassee
74 it 0.00
Tampa
79 59 a oo
Vero Beach
79 44 0 00
West P alm Baach

F e b .It

Thurs.

Source: National W eather S ervice

.n

Fab.17

Beach Conditions
D aytons Beach: Waves are
about 1 foot and glassy. Current
is slightly to the south with a
temperature of 57 degrees. New
Sm yrna Beach: Waves are Mi to
1 foot and glassy. Current Is
slightly to the south: Water
temperature. 57 degrees. Sun
screen factor: 12.

Monday’s high temperature In
Sanford was 78 degrees and the
low during the past twenty-four
hours was 50 degrees as re­
ported by the University of
Florida Agricultural and Educa­
tion Center. No rainfall recorded.

Area Forecast

Wad.

pc partly cloudy
rra ln
th showers
sm- smoke
in m o w
sy-sunny
Is thunderstorms
w w ln dy

Full
Fab. 12

For Central Florida

09

Florida Temperatures

First
Fab. 5

Five-Day Forecast

43 »

DasMoJnMpc

COOES
c d ear
cl clearing
cy cloudy
H a ir
fy foggy
hi hate
m missing

Local Report

By U nited Press
In ternational
Fierce winds that buffeted
Nevada, tipping over tractortrailers, snapping utility poles
and closing schools, subsided
and relatively mild weather
dominated the nation today
despite predictions that spring
Is six weeks away.
"You can’t ask for much
better in February." said Pete
R e y n o ld s o f the N ational
Weather Service. "AH the high
wind w arnings have been
dropped and all the winter
storm warnings have been re­
duced to travelers' advisories."
Winter weather persisted In
some places. Snow fell early
today from northern Minnesota
across the Great Lakes, the
upper Ohio Valley and upstate
New York, the weather service
said.
Fog stretched from the lower
Ohio Valley across the Ten­
nessee and lower Mississippi
valleys to the Carollnas and
Virginia. A travelers' advisory
for dense fog was issued early
to d a y o v e r s o u th w e s te rn
Louisiana.
A cold front that moved
through the Lake Tahoe area
M onday w h ip p ed w estern
Nevada with winds (hut gusted
to 70 mph.
The Nevada Highway Patrol
said the winds toppled trailers
of two rigs on U.S. 395 between
Reno and Carson City. No one
was injured, but a section of
the highway was closed for
more than three hours.
The winds also tripped bur­
glar alarms and snapped utility
poles, leaving about 6.600 cus­
to m e rs w ith o u t p o w er in
C a rso n C ity and S p ark s.
Schools In Storey County and
Dayton were closed by black­
outs. officials said.
An operations manager at
the Reno-Cannon International
Airport said. "T h e little guys
got tossed around a bit but the
big planes did not have any

problems."
T h e s a m e s to r m fr o n t
brought rain and mountain
snow to northern and central
California and western Nevada
Monday. More than 13 Inches
of snow fell In 12 hours at Blue
Canyon. Calif. Rain soaked the
northern and central Pacific
Coast, and heavy snow made
t r a v e l h a z a r d o u s in th e
Cascade and Siskiyou moun­
tains of western Oregon.
Mudslides In Oregon Monday
blocked one lane on both
Highway 42 near Myrtle Creek
and on Highway 20 on Cascade
Mountain, officials said.
An Oregon man was missing
and presumed drowned after
trying to retrieve a capsized
canoe Sunday from the flooded
north fork of the Yamhill River
in Oregon.
While Punxsutawney Phil,
th e w e u t h e r - p r e d i c t i n g
groundhog at Gobbler's Knob
In Pennsylvania saw his shad­
ow Monday, foretelling six
more weeks o f winter, much of
the Midwest was treated to a
second day o f s p rin g tim e
warmth that broke at least 10
hlgh-temperaturc records in Il­
linois. Iowa. Minnesota and
Wisconsin.
Ahead of the Western cold
front, the eastern half of the
nation also enjoyed clear skies
and unseasonably warm tem­
peratures.
Warm air from the Gulf of
Mexico was the reason for
unseasonably warm tempera­
tures Monday In the Midwest
and Northern Plains.
In C hicago, the m ercury
soared to 50 degrees, toppling
the previous high for the dale
set In 1920. Other records In
Illinois included 58 degrees at
Moline and 48 at Rockford. In
Wisconsin the tem perature
r o s e to a r e c o r d 4 6 at
Milwaukee and 48 at LaCrosse.
Burlington. Iowa, had a record
high of 59 and Minncapolis-St.
Paul reached 47 degrees.

Today...partly cloudy. High 72
to 77. Wind northwest around
10 mph.
Tonight...partly cloudy. Low
50 to 55. Light wind.
Wednesday...partly cloudy.
High In the low to mid 70s. Wind
northeast near 10 mph.

A rea

R e a d in g s

The temperature at 8 a.m.: 52;
overnight low: 52: Monday's
high: 79; barometric pressure;
30.00; relative humidity: 10C
percent; winds: SW at 7 mph;
rain: None: Today's sunset: 6:06
p.m., Wednesday's sunrise: 7:12
a.m.

E x te n d e d

F orecast

T h e e x te n d e d fo r e c a s t.
Thursday through Saturday, for
Florida except northwest —
mostly cloudy Thursday and
Friday with a chance of showers
ending from the north on Friday.
Gradual clearing and turning
colder statewide on Saturday.
Lows averaging from the upper
30s and mid 40s north to the
mid 60s south Thursday and
Friday..dropping to near freezing
north and the 50s south Satur­
day. Highs in the 60s north and
near 80 south Thursday cooling
Into the 50s north and 60s south
Saturday.

Area Tides

W E D N E S D A Y : D a y to n a
Beach: highs. 12:19 a.m.. 12:40
p.m.; lows. 6:29 a.m.. 6:38 p.m.;
N ew S m yrn a Beach: highs.
12:24 a.m., 12:45 p.m.; lows.
6:34 a.m,, 6:43 p.m.: B ayp ort:
highs. 5:13 a.m., 4:20 p.m.: low.
10:28 a.m.

Boating

St. A u gu stin e to J u p ite r
In le t— Today...wind northwest
10 to 15 kts. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Bay
and inland waters a light to
moderate chop.
T o n ig h t . .. w in d n o rth to
northeast around 10 kts. Seas
less than 3 ft. Bay and Inland
waters a light chop.
Wednesday...wind northeast
around 10 kts. Seas less than 3
ft. Bay and inland waters a light
chop. A few showers.

�Man Jailed In Attack On Babysitter
Winter Springs police reported charging a
28-year-old Winter Springs man with armed
burglary, aggravated battery and raise imprison­
ment after he allegedly dragged a babysitter away
from a home at knifepoint.
The babysitter told police the suspect showed
up at the South Cortez Avenue. Winter Springs
home where she was working at about 11:10 p.m.
Friday. He used the telephone and left to return
and attack her when she answered the door the
second time.
The babysitter said the suspect shoved her
against a wall, grabbed her and put a knife with a
4-lnch blade to her throat. She screamed and he
told her to shut up. He dragged her out the back

IN THE
SERVICE

o f the home to the side o f the backyard, where
she pushed the knife away. She screamed and the
suspect grabbed her legs as she tied to run. She
kicked him In the stomach and he fled.
The victim gave police the name o f a suspect
and police went to that man's home and his wife
reportedly said he might be at the Sanford
apartment o f a friend.
W in ter Springs and Sanford p olice and
Seminole County sheriff's deputies went to that
home at Grovevlew Apratmenta, Lake Mary
Boulevard and arrested Kenneth Wayne Culp, o f
210 S. Cortez Ave., at 8:46 p.m. Sunday. He was
being held without bond.

TUESDAY, FEB. 3

WEDNESDAY, FEB. 4
STANDING MEETINGS
Casselberry Rotary breakfast,
7:30 a.m., Casselberry Senior
Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive.
S a n fo rd R o ta ry -B re a k fa s t
Club. 7 a.m.. Skyport Restau­
rant. Sanford Airport.
Sanford Optimist Club. 11:45
a.m.. Western Sizzlln Restau­
rant. Sanford.
Sanford Klwants Club, noon,
Sanford Civic Center.
REBOS AA. noon and 5:30 and
8 p.m.(closed). Rcbos Club, 130
Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
Sanford Screnaders Dance for
seniors, 2:30-4:30 p.m., Sanford
Civic Center. Free live band.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Seminole County Branch, 1302
E. Second St.. Sanford, 9 a.m.-5
p.m ., and Florida HospttalAltamonte, State Road 436. 11
a.m.-7 p.m.; Longwood Branch.
South Sem inole Com m unity
Hospital. Suite 103-A. 521 W.
State Road 434.
T O P S Club (w eigh t loss),
5:30-7 p.m,, Salvation Army,
700 W. 24th St.. Sanford. Open
to the public.
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 fami­
lies 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/Ovledo Road
(off SR 419). Winter Springs.
Altamonte Springs AA, 8 p.m.,
(closed), Altamonte Community
Chapel. 825 State Road 436.
C a s s e lb e r r y A A . 8 p .m .,
(closed). Ascension Lutheran
C h u r c h . A s c e n s io n D r iv e ,
Casselberry.

THURSDAY, FEB. S
Short course on Plant Pro­
pagation for commercial woody
ornamental growers sponsored
by F lo r id a C o o p e r a tiv e
Extension Service, 8 a.m. to
noon, Seminole County Agricul­
tural Center Auditorium, 250 W.
County Home Road, Sanford. $1
registration fee.
A v ia tio n S afety-E d u cation
Seminar sponsored by South
Seminole Flying Club, 7:30 p.m.,
S a n ford A irp o rt R estaurant
Banquet Room. Audio visuals on
b asic p ilo t In stru ction and
weather.
Free Income tax help for re­
tirees, 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.
Through April 15.
The W eaver's of Orlando, a
m em bership guild. 10 a.m..
C a s se lb e rry W o m a n 's Club,
Overbrook Drive (from Highway
17-92 take Plncy Ridge Road).
Workshop on Japanese Braid by
Esme Lee. Call 777-4424 for
materials needed.
STANDING MEETINGS
Sanford Toastmasters. 7:15
a.m., Christo's Restaurant. 107
W. First St.. Sanford.
N o n -d c n o m ln a tlo n a l Bible
study and prayer, noon, Cavalier
Inn Restaurant. Highway 17-92.
Sanford.
REBOS AA. noon. 5:30 and 8
p.m. (closed). Rcbos Club. 130
Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
Families Together Teen Sup­
port Group, 6:30 p.m., 900 Fox
V a l l e y D r iv e , S w e e t w a t e r
Square, Suite 206. For further
Information call 774-3844.
In te rn a tio n a l T ra in in g in
C o m m u n ic a tio n G r e a te r
Seminole Club. 7:30 p.m.. Alta­
monte Chapel Education Build­
ing on State Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.
Maitland Bridge Club. 7:30
p.m., Maitland Civic Center.
B-Sllm Diet Club for behavior
m o d ific a tio n and im p roved
self-image. 7 p.m.. Howell Place,
Airport Blvd.. Sanford. Phone or
668-6783.
Freedom House AA (women
on ly), 8 p.m. (closed). Lake

ECHOLS TREE SERVICE
LICENSED - FULLY INSURED - SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

KIRBY L. GRANT

• COMPLETE TREE SERVICE
• FREE ESTIMATES • STUMP GRINDING
• 24
240ft Grandview Avtnus
Sanford, FL 32771

Minnie Road, Sanford.
Sweet Adelines. 7:30 p.m..
Casselberry Senior Center. 200
N. L a k e T r i p l e t D r i v e ,
Casselberry.
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.

3232229

_

Contact Pete or Tarry Echols P H O n ©

His wife, Janice. Is the daugh­
ter of Cletls and Mary Yon of
2008 Airport Blvd.. also o f San­
ford.

C O M IN G EVENTS
Countywide Forum on teen
problems and what the schools
an d c o m m u n ity are d o in g
sponsored by Seminole Chemi­
cal Awareness Network, 7-9
p.m., Sanford Civic Center.
STANDING MEETINGS
TOPS Chapter 79. 6:15-8:15
p.m., Howell Place, 200 W.
Airport Boulevard, Sanford.
Sanford AA. 5:30 p.m. open
discussion. 8 p.m., Living Sober
closed. 1201 W. First St., San­
ford.
T oa stm a ster In tern ation al
C l u b
In t h e L a k e
Mary/Longwood area at 7:15
p.m. at the Seminole Communi­
ty College. For additional In­
formation call Rosclla and Tom
Bonham, 323-8284.
24-Hour AA group beginners
open discussion, 8 p.m.. 317 S.
Oak Ave., Sanford.
17-92 Group AA, 8 p.m..
c lo s e d , M e ss ia h L u th e ra n
Church, 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road,
Overeaters Anonymous, open,
7:30 p.m.. Florida Power &amp;
Light, 301 S. Myrtle Ave., San­
ford.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m.
(closed). West Lake Hospital,
State Road 434. Longwood.

“Let The Professionals D o It*,**'

Marine CpI. Kirby L. Grant,
son of Earnest L. and Delorls
Grant of 2029 Airport Blvd.,
Sanford.
recently reported
for duty with 3rd Force Service
Support Group on Okinawa.

isanLoden

Tmdir, Fafe. t, i w - M

, FI.

JOHN C. DAVIS
Marine Pfc. John C. Davis, son
o f Charles V. and Pamela S.
Davis of 505 Oakland Terrace,
Lake M ary, has been
meritoriously promoted to his
present rank upon graduation
from recruit training at Marine
Corps Recruit Depot P arris
Island S.C.

rs x
UUKS ~
ACCIPTU*
"Softfocl To Foley UwHoo

F re q u e n t H e a d a c h e s
L o w B a c k o r H ip P a in
D iz z in e s s o r L o s s of S le e p
N u m b n e s s of H a n d s o r Feet
N e rvo u sn e ss
N e c k P a in o r S t if f n e s s
A rm a n d S h o u ld e r P a in
[wteitite luttata: roster* Artifpn, Fitrtmt T«t. Start
Ltf Tost, Start Arm Tost M Tift Vhttt Doctor,

if "Makinfl Chlrseractlc Attardobio" Pr*«ram

• Tm( pa t ie n t a n d a n t o t h e r p e r s o n HESPONSIOIC FOR PAYMENT MAS A PtGMT TO PEEUSE TO
PAT CANCEL PAYMENT 0 * 0 E PEIMBUR3 E0 FO « PAYMENT PON ANY 0 * * 8 " SERVICE 8 AAMINA
HON OR TREATMENT Wh ic h IS PERFORMED AS A RESULT OP AND WITHIN 73 MOORS OP RESPON
DINO TO Th e AOVERTiSEMENT p o p the PREE SERVICE EAAMtNATtON OR TREATMENT___________

Davis received the early pro­
motion for his superior perfor­
mance during all phases o f the
11-week training cycle, which
emphasized physical condition­
in g . s e lf - d is c ip lin e an d
teamwork.

LAKE M A R Y

BLVD.

C H I R O P R A C T I C CLINIC, INC
90 7 1 l tali r
M a ry

3 2 2 *9 3 0 0

(ft I v rtf

THOM AS

r

T A M D IL L

JR

Su&lt;t&lt;

...

O C

NOTICE OF CHANGE OF LAND USE
PUBLIC HEARING TO BE HELD
FEBRUARY 10 AND 11, 1987
THE SEM INO LE COUNTY BOARD OF COUNTY COMMSSIONERS (BCC) WILL CONDUCT A PUBLIC HEAR­
ING ON REQUESTED AMENDMENTS TO TH E SEM INO LE COUNTY COMPREHENSIVE PLAN (SHORT
RANGE DEVELOPMENT PLAN) AND O FFIC IA L LAND USE MAP. THE PURPOSE O F T H E HEARING IS
TO RECEIVE PUBLIC INPUT AND CONSIDER RECO M M ENDATIONS OF THE LOCAL PLA N N IN G AGENCY/PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION REGARDING THE SUBJECT AMENDMENTS AN D CONTINUED
APPROPRIATENESS OF LAND USE DESIG NATIONS W ITH IN CERTAIN PORTIONS O F TH E MAP C O N ­
TAINED W ITH IN TH E ADVERTISEMENT. TH O SE AM ENDM ENTS THE BOARD OF COUNTY CO M M IS­
SIONERS INTENDS TO ADOPT WILL BE TRANSMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF CO M M UNITY AFFAIRS
FOR REVIEW AND COM M ENT PRIOR TO FINAL ACTION BY THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMM ISSIONERS.

SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA

REALTY TRANSFERS
Richard 0 Webb &amp; Lena L to James L
W illiam s &amp; Lynn Sylvester, Lt 3 fllk C,
Columbus Harbor, *85.000
South Country Corp to Pulte Home Corp.
Lts I 30 A lataya Woods. P h X II B, *3,332,700
W illiam J Heenan &amp;W F Mildred lo James
E Quinn 8. WF Joan M. Lts I 2 45 Blk 5 &amp; W
136.34’ of Blk A Second Sec M arvanla,

si sj.ooo
Pulte Home Corp to Richard G Kushner, Lt
9 A la fj/ a Woods PI. X II A. fri,4 M
JSI D ev to Kathleen A Salmlerl. L I 208
Wedge wood Tennis Villas, 179.000
Deecalexlne Conslr lo Brian J Mock A W F
Cynthia. L t tl Sweetwater Island, S749,900
J a m e s H S a n d e rs A W F Susan to
Christopher V P arry A W F Susan E, Lt 29 Blk
H. Sunland Ests Amended Plat, sao.000
Catalina Homes to Elizabeth M Hesslon. Lt
116 Deer Run Un MB, *72.500
Heathrow Land A D ev to Keith T Denton A
W F Susan J, L I4 Regency Green, *66.700
W ingfield Dev to HAH Energy Builders
Etc, Lt 32 W ingfield R eserve Ph 3. *73,000
Sun Banks Inc lo James W Simpson A WF
Georgia. Lt II Springs Landing. U n 2 .1219.000
Sun Banks lo Frank R Carroll, Lt 41 Hidden
Ests Un 3. *71).000
Ronald K Hay A W F Loretta lo Kenneth B
Rose ? WF M ary E. L ’ 21 Blk D, Lake
Kathryn Woods, t i l . 900
Douglas H Johnson to Child Care Investors.
L P. Ltd . Lts I A 3 Blk A. lowana. *580.000
Douglas Johnson to Child Care Inv. L P Ltd.
Land In Sec 6 21 30, *370,000
Harris Am er Homes to Clarence R Ber
ryhill Jr A WF Kim A, Lt 32 Hyde Park.
*171.900
Hilda B Thompson to Lloyd A Morris A W F
Theresa L. Lt 33 Hyde Park. *171.900
Elizabeth Klllaeky to Mari|a Dlmlc A HB
Slevan. LI 9 Blk B R iver Run SC 7. *87.500
John R Gleason A W F Donna to Stanley A
Nor Ion A W F Virginia M, LI 30 Sabal Trait At
Sabal Point, *174.900
R ichm ond A m er Hom es to Lu cille E
Johnson A Oennis E. Lt 129 Country Lane.
*78,500
Robert H Hasman A WF M argaret to
M arvin O Brugone, Jr 6 WF Lillian, Lt 34 Blk
16 W eathersfleld 2nd addn, *67.500
Ronald S Rubin A WF Cynthia to Allan L
King &amp; W F Claudia A. Lt I I Blk N, Camelof
Un 2. *64 000
Ryan Homes to Robert J Petersen A W F
Betty J. Lt 36 Garden G rove. *87.900
Joseph A Settannl to Andrew H Dyndul A
Sharon M Kallmann. LI 28 Blk A Coach Light
Ests. *120.400
Donald J Karatta A W F M ary to Robert J
Slmonet A W F W Dorothy, Lt 38 Blk B, Lake
Kalhryn Woods. *58.000
John Foley A O lle G to Leonard E Peters A
W F Edith, Lt 3 Blk F, Carriage Hill Un 4,
*67.000

Georglanna E Cook to Paul G Voigt A WF
Claudia. LI 11 Blk 5 W eathers! ield, *56.500
D «l Prop lo W illiam J Daly A WF Gladys,
Un 24 Bldg 3 Hunters Chase Cond, 163.000
Del Prop to Cheryl E Wilkes A W illiams
W ilkes A W F Ellen, Un 66 Bldg 3C. Hidden
V illa g e Cond. *57,900
G ary L Buffington A W F Kathleen to Carl A
Biddle A W F Freda O. Lt 63 Sutters M ill Un 1,
*86 600
Steven P ersam plerl A WF Myrna to Arnold
A d ga r A W F Devoline. Lt 76 Tuscawllla. Un
7, *173.000
Elaine R ogers to P J King A WF Hilda, LI
46 Bel A ire H ills Un 1. *77.300
M /l Scholtensteln Homes lo Thomas A
Callln A W F Laura A, Lt 20 Alataya Woods
Ph I UnB. *54,900
Donald Suwlnskl A W F Linda to Patricia C
Sydovv. Lt 72 W eklva Hunt Club Fox Hunt Sec
I, *76.900
M ichael D Conner A Louis R G arret to
M ichael O Conner A W F Laurie A Louis R
G arrett A W F Pam ela, LI 14 Oak Mount,
*59.300
W illiam G Edler A W F Carol to Gregory A
R acetle A W F Elizabeth, Lt 42 Blk C.
Sweetwater Oaks Sec IS, *159.000
Jack W Reynolds A W F JoAnn to Edward P
P elc za r A W F M arilyn . Lt 16 Tuscawllla Un
L3. *170.000
John R Downey A W F Florence lo Richard
F Irving A W F Bertha H. Lt 1 The Highlands
Sec 6. *100.000
Nancy A Gumula Sapp A HB Walton J to
T am ala L Barrier, Lt 13 A N 1i ol 14 Blk C.
Seminole T err Repl, *75.000
Monroe Venture II Inc lo Virginia Sinkus.
L t 76 G reenbrlar i d Ph 1, *94.500
Rosamond R Chapman to Robert K Wyatt
A W F Donna Rae. Lt 4 less N60’ Aall ol 5.
Loch Arbor Isle Of Pines Sec 2. *100.000
Joseph W eis e n fe ld . trustee, to Callon
Homes Of Florida, Lt 59 Woodland T err At
Country Creek, *115.600
Governors Point Ltd to Lee Chapman A WF
Karen, Lt 1 G overnors Point, Ph 3 Sec 1,

*81000

Gallon Hom es to Robert R Post A W F
M ildred. L t 5 Woodland Terr At Country
Creek, *103,900
Ann P Smith to Frank H Albers A WF
Diane. Lt 48 Cardinal Oaks, *93.400
Donald c D’Orto A WF Carol to Wayne G
P ies* A W F Judith, Lt 43 Carolyn Esls,

*00.000

Centex Homes E nlr to Charles Hester A
W F Lisa. Lt 40 Alataya Woods P h i 11.166.800
M ichael D Welsh A P atricia Robinson to
M ark S G arvin A W F Carol, Un 2 F The
V illage Cond, 154.500
Johnsons M gm Co to Florene F Dees A
John C Petlosle. E SO’ ol Lt 22 Aall ol 23 Blk A
Seminole Hts. *56.500

1Q7

lln y h ro ri ( c n t r '

APPLICANTS TO BE CONSIDERED ON JANUARY 14, 1987
S ITE
NUMBER

A P P L IC A N T

1

BCC
DISTRICT
N U M B ER

Jeck Zimmer

2

F R O M -T O
LDR COMM

LO C ATIO N

S IZE
10 85 ACRES
376 ACRES

North side ol Florida A v e . 400 leel oast o ! U S 17 92
East side ot Longwood Like Mary Road. 172 mile north o l C R 427

2

Edward s/Young

2

LIU/PRES COMM

3

Jeremy Cooper

4

LDR LIC/OFF

16 LOTS

North and south ot 0 Brian Road, 900 leet west o l U S t7 92

4

Alex Greenspoon

4

HDR/PRE5 COMM

11 24 ACRES

West side o l Oxford Road. 173 mile south ol Fernwood Boulevard

5

Ken McIntosh

2

LIU - COMM

3 50 ACRES

East side ol Tuskawllla Road, 300 leel south ol S R 434

6

Keewin Compeny

1

GR/PRESPUD

25 00 ACRES

South side ot Red Bug Lake Road adjacent to Ihe west side ol Keewin PUD

7

Jim Hucknba

1

GR MDR

22 50 ACRES

South side ot S R 426, adiacenl to Ihe west side o l Aloma Bend PUD

8

Jell Garner

t

GR/PRESPUD

92 00 ACRES

East side o l S R 426 ad|acent to north side ot Alom a Bend PUD

9

Duda Lands. Inc

2

GR/PRES-LDR

294 00 ACRES

North side ot Red Bug Lake Road. 2/3 mile west o l S R 426

APPLICANTS TO BE C0NSIDERE
Northwest corner ot S R 46 and 1-4

10

ZOM Company

5

GR COMM

tl

Jon Martin

1

GR/PRESPUD

138 00 ACRES

On McCulloch Road. 2,200 leel west o l Lockwood Road

12

Paul Vines

1

GR'PRES-LOH

129 00 ACRES

W est aide of Lockwood Road, 1/2 mile north ot McCulloch Road

13

James M oore

1

GR/PRES-LDR

111 81 ACRES

W est side o l Lockwood Road. 3/4 mile north o l McCulloch Road

14

ZOM Company

1

GR/PRES-LDR

217 56 ACHES

W est side ot Lockwood Road, t mile north ot McCulloch Road

15

Robert Cantu

t

GR/PRESMDR

86 40 ACRES

71 60 ACRES

East o f Palm Valley Mobile Park. 3/4 mile west o t Lockwood Road

LEGEND:
GR LIU —
LDR LIC/OFF PUD -

General Rural
Low Intensity Urban
Low Density Residential
Low Intensity Commerclat/OMIce
Planned Unit Development

PRES —
MDR —
HDR —
COMM —
IND -

Preservation
Medium Den*
High Density
Commercial
Industrial

IN O R D ER TO PRO VIDE ALL INTERESTED PER SO N S AN OPPORTUNITY TO BE H EA R D REG ARDING
T H E R EQ UESTED LAND USE D E S IG N A TIO N S S H O W N IN THE MAP ABOVE, THE BCC W ILL HOLD A
PUBLIC HEAR IN G THAT W ILL OCCUR ON TW O SEPARATE EVENINGS: FEBRUARY 10 A ND 11,1987 W ITH
ITE M S T H A T H AVE N O T BEEN SUBJECT TO PUBLIC C O M M E N T BEING C O N T IN U E D FR O M E V EN IN G
TO E V E N IN G . THE PUBLIC HEARING W ILL BEGIN AT 6:00 P.M. EACH EVENING, OR AS SOON
THEREAFTER AS POSSIBLE, IN ROOM W120 OF THE SEMINOLE COUNTY SERVICES BUILDING LOCATED
AT 1101 EAST FIRST STREET IN S A N F O R D . ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE URGED TO ATTEND.
Persons are advised that if they decide to appeal any decision made at this meeting, they will need a record of proceedings and, lor such pur­
pose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which includes Ihe 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. 32t-1130, extension 371.

�Sanford Herald
(USPS 4S1-2M)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305 322-2611 or 831-9993

DICK WEST

The Eyes For Eyes Seem To Have It

Tuesday, February 3, 1967—4A
Wayne 0. Doyle, Publisher
Themes Oterdane, Maneflnf filt e r
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Month. 64.75; 3 Months. $14.25; 6 Months.
$27.00; Year. $51.00. By Mail: Month. $6.75: 3 Months.
$20.25: 6 Months. $37.00: Year. $69.00.

Lessons That
We Should Learn
O ne o f m od em h isto ry's Ironies is h o w
Japan has rebounded from Its resou nding
defeat In W orld W a r II to rank am on g the
w o rld 's pre-em inent econ o m ic pow ers. M any
' o f the qualities th at h ave transform ed the
Japanese into th e tough international c o m ­
petitors th ey are today are learned and
cultivated In th eir excellen t public-school
system .
T h e m ost recent evid en ce o f that e x cellen ce
is contained In a 1 1 1-page stu d y com p iled by
th e U.S. D epartm ent o f E ducation. "J a p a n ese
E d u cation T o d a y " p o r tr a y s an e ffic ie n t,
d yn am ic school system w h ere students are
prodded to be the best that th ey can be.
T h e stu dy stem s from a 1983 con versation
b e t w e e n P r e s id e n t R e a g a n a n d P r im e
M inister Y asu h iro Nakasone. T h is happen ed
to be the sam e y e a r th at th e United States
began a n ation w ide reform m ovem en t to
rev iv e its lethargic public schools. It w as
assum ed that the Japan ese m od el could be
especially Instructive to A m erica n educators
in that cam paign.
A n d indeed It Is — to a point.
Japanese students g en era lly excel because,
b egin n in g in the p rim ary grades, they are
provided w ith a w ell-balan ced education that
is enhanced by paren tal support. From the
tim e Japanese you n gsters en ter school, th ey
are constantly rem in d ed that k n o w led ge is
the k ey to success. T h e ir sch ool day and y ea r
are lon ger than those o f their A m erican
counterparts. T h e y also spend about onethird m ore tim e lea rn in g d u rin g each class
period than do A m erica n students.
No w onder nearly 92 percent o f Japanese
students graduate from high school com pared
w ith 76 percent o f A m erican students. Or that
the Japanese dropout rate Is 7 percent, w h ile
th e c o rre s p o n d in g A m e r ic a n rate is an
a la rm in g 27 p e rc e n t. O r th at J a p a n ese
students con sisten tly rank first in math and
science test scores a m o n g th e w o rld ’s Indus­
trial nations and that A m erican students arc
gen erally near the bottom . Or that illiteracy Is
alm ost nonexistent a m o n g the Japanese.
Japan en joys the classroom edge. In part,
because o f its h om ogen ou s population. But It
is w ron g to conclude, as m a n y have, that the
U nited States la perm anently disadvantaged
because o f Its cultural diversity. T o the
contrary. U.S. public ed u cation used to be the
e n v y o f the w orld because it w as able to
assim ilate a p oly glo t population. Not su r­
prisingly, Japan p attern ed its public schools
after our ow n.
A s Is so often the case, how ever, the
Japanese have taken a good idea and m ade it
even better. T h e ir public schools em ph asize
basics and self-discipline In equal m easure.
M any students atten d after-school classes
th at p ro v id e r e m e d ia l in s tru c tio n , e x tra
lessons and exam preparation. T each in g is a
h igh ly respected and w ell-paid profession that
attracts an avera ge o f five h igh ly qualified
a p p lic a n ts for e v e r y c la s s ro o m op en in g.
Part-tim e Jobs are frow n ed upon for Japanese
students because they cut into study tim e.
Num erous high schools prohibit students
from w orking. S o m e schools even set curfew s
for students, none o f w h om can obtain a
d river’s license until a g e 18.
T h e dow nside o f the J ap an ese m od el is that
it tends to foster a rigid u n iform ity that stifles
the students' c re a tiv e instin cts. A n o th er
cou n terprodu ctive side effect is the pressure
to get into prestigious high schools that
prepare students for the best universities.
M oreover, even the finest Jap an ese colleges
and universities cann ot com p ete w ith A m e ri­
can Institutes o f h igh er learning.
T h ese deficiencies! have p rom p ted a reform
m ovem en t in Jap an to encou rage analytical
thinking and elim in ate "th e evils o f uniform
ed u cation ."
W h atever the case, the United States would
d o w ell to em u late the Japan ese successes in
early training and m otivation for students. In
addition, U.S. schools need greater parental
involvem ent, m ore rem edial instruction, bet­
ter use o f class tim e, and enhanced status for
teachers. T h ese virtues used to be c o m ­
m o n p la c e a m o n g m ost A m e ric a n public
schools. T h e y can — and m ust — be once
again.

BERRY'S WORLD

«M&gt;,

WASHINGTON 1UPIJ - Judges elsewhere In
the world still have 11 months in which to
compete, but the title of the year's most
injudicious magistrate thus far in 1987 clearly
belongs in Zimbabwe.
In the city o f Harare. It has been reported, a
Judge sentenced a nurse to four years In prison.
And all she did was set another nurse afire.
The Judge said the nurse reacted "out of all
proportion" to having her ear bitten off.
Needless to say, I don't agree.
If you lose an ear during an altercation. It
seems to me the only sensible recourse is to set
your assailant on fire.
Most nurses, as you may know from bitter
experience, don't bum very well. Dousing her
with gasoline may have been necessary to get
the fire started.
For a Judge to decide that Is a prison offense
strikes me as the height of Irresponsibility,
particularly when the other nurse also un­
derwent treatment for depression.
Biting off a colleague's ear is no cause for

depression. That proves one's teeth and gums
are in good shape, which Is reason to set your
spirits soaring.
I would say Nurse B had nothing to be
depressed about.' At least, nothing that could be
blamed on the defendant.
The Bible teaches us to retaliate In kind. By
that token, maybe the defendant should have
gone for her opponent's ear rather than for
matches. But all in all. I would say. Nurse B got
offllghtly.
After all. she didn't have her external
appearance marred, did she? Once the burns
healed, she could report to a hospital or any
other prospective employer as good as new.
But a nurse with one ear is far from being In
mint condition. A prospective employer would
the fully Justlfed in concluding that something
was missing. High prices, for example.
Tired of paying high prices for coffee? Maybe
you would like to pay high prices of a cup of
gasoline instead.
Although I haven't figured out what a cup of

gasoline would cost at current rates. 1 do know
that administration officials cited falling prices
of gasoline by the gallon as chiefly responsible
for last year"s drop In the U.S. Inflation rate. So
perhaps gasoline by the cup Is so inexpensive
that even a nurse In Zimbabwe can afford It.
At any rate. It probably Is cheaper than
beefsteak.
According, to the latest edition of Foreign
Agriculture, there are "excellent opportunities"
for American exports o f beer and dairy cattle In
Mexico.
It wasn't so long ago that the Mexican
economy was geared to gasoline prices. That our
neighbor south o f the border may be switching
to beer and milk cows is good news lindeed.
A dash o f cream in a cup o f colfee already Is a
requisite for many coffee-driners. If Mexican
beef becomes plentiful. It may replace ears as
the standard fare with Zimbabwean nurses.
I certainly hope so. Prison terms aside, beef
may cost more but It also is more nutritious.

SCIENCE WORLD

W ASH IN G TO N WORLD

Budget
Reform
Unlikely

Beating
Depression
Difficult
By Jan Ziegler
UPI Science Writer
W ASHINGTON (UPI) "H e 's
going through a stage."
"Snap out of it. Quit feeling sorry
for yourself."
These arc on Dr. David Kupfer's
list of despised phrases.
Kupfer, chairman and professor of
psychiatry at the University of
Pittsburgh School of Medicine,
hears them all the time In the
course of treating depression.
Fam ily m em bers, spouses or
friends may tell a depressed person.
"Oh. you've got nothing so why
even get it evaluated." Kupfer says,
"then when It's evaluated. *Oh. it's
only depression."
Refusing to recognize what de­
pression means may make the
patient's condition worse. Kupfer
says.
An example is young people In
the first or second years o f college
who arc depressed, but whose
family think they just don't like
school and " i f they would only try
harder they would overcome every­
thing." he says.
"Kids really get a guilt trip put on
theig fa r terms 3pf, dealing with It
when In-fact what they need is an
appropriate assessment," he says.
‘ ‘ F am ily m em bers need to be
counseled to be supportive, but to
lay off."
"B y pushing people real hard, you
may be breaking their last tie with
the environment. It may make them
decide this world is not a good place
to live in any more."
For people with depression, he
says, "it Isn't a question of trying
harder to return to their bestfunctioning state.
Depression is a disease or dis­
order. he says, much like diabetes
or emphysema. Like these other
afflictions. It can be fatal: a small
percentage o f the depressed commit
suicide. Most cases, however, have
few physical consequences.
An estimated 10 percent to 15
percent of the population will suffer
depression sometime In their lives.
But while science has increased
understanding of other, physical
diseases and removed the stigma
once attached to having them,
d e p r e s s io n Is p s y c h o lo g ic a l.
Therefore, some people still consid­
er it not quite real or even a sign of
malingering — sort of the patient's
fault. Kupfer says. T h t stigma Itself
can be depressing.
"M y point Is that we've got a long
way to go." Kupfer says.

By Robert Shepard

ROBERT W A G M A N

Who's Got The Money?
W A SH IN G TO N (N E A ) Did
middlemen and perhaps even some
Iranian government officials siphon
off millions of dollars In excess
profits from U.S. arms shipments to
Tehran?
Senate Select C om m ittee in ­
vestigators have spent considerable
time and effort trying to trace what
happened to the roughly $30 mil­
lion that Iran Is believed to have
paid for U.S. arms.
They can now accurately account
for about $12 million — leaving the
whereabouts of the remaining $18
million largely a mystery.
The money paid for the U.S. arms
passed through a warren of in­
terconnecting Swiss bank accounts
set up In the names of dummy
corporations. Investigators were
able to trace the funds only so far,
until they were stymied by the
complexity of the transactions.
However, it appears obvious to
Senate Intelligence Committee in­
vestigators that some of the "lo st"
Iranian payments ended up In the
pockets of middlemen in the arms
deals. They also believe that mil­
lions may have been diverted for
"commissions" to Iranian officials.
In fact, CIA concerns over missing
U.S. money may have led to the
story of the Iran arms deals being
mude public In the first place.
At a certain point, the CIA became
concerned about its inability to
account for several million dollars
Involved in some of the early arms
transactions. These deals had been
arranged by Manucher Ghorbanlfar,
an exiled Iranian arms merchant
now living In Paris.
Ghorbanifar was brought to CIA
headquarters in Langley. Va.. and
given several polygraph examina­
tions. Reportedly, when he failed
the exams, he was cut out o f future
deals.
A n g e r e d at h is tr e a tm e n t.

Ghorbanlfar reportedly called sev­
eral aides close to Khdmelnl and
opposed to the "moderate" faction
of the Iranian government, which is
led by Hashemi Rafsanjanl. speaker
of the Iranian Parliament. It was
with Rafsanjanl that the arms deals
were being made.
Ghorbanlfar told Khomeini's aides
of the deals. In an attempt to
embarrass Rafsanjanl. the aides
leaked the story to a Beirut newspa­
per .with ties both to the Hezbollah
Party and Its offshoot, the Revolu­
tionary Justice Organization. Both
are radical Shiite Moslem organiza­
tions who call the Ayatollah Kho­
meini their spiritual leader.
In this way. It 'Is believed, the
story became public.
Meanwhile, one source for other
Irangate information has been Paul
Cutter, who Is now serving time in a
federal prison in Arizona fur illegal
arms sales to Iran.
Cutter Is reported to have told
investigators of a case In which
certain Iranians knew their side was
being w ildly overcharged for a
particular shipment of M-48 tanks
and Bell helicopters. In fact, says
Cutter, a purchase price for the
military hardware was agreed upon
— and then doubled. The excess
was then split between the Iranians
and the middlemen arranging the
shipment.
Investigators say they have no
reason to disbelieve Cutter's story,
but could not prove any of what he
told them.
Baffled by the complexity of the
financial transactions. Chairman
Daniel Inouye, D-Hawall, and Vice
Chairman Warren Rudman. R-N.H.,
asked Arthur Liman. 54. one of New
York's top white-collar criminaldefense lawyers, to be counsel for
what Is expected to be a year-long
investigation of the arm* deals.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - There arc
plenty of good arguments for re­
forming the way Congress deals
with the annual budget and how it
passes the various appropriations
bills, but prospects are poor for any
significant changes being made this
year.
President Reagan, in his State of
th e Union address, called the
budget process "a sorry spectacle,"
and there are many in Congress
who would agree.
"T h e missing of deadlines and the
nightmare of monstrous continuing
resolutions packing hundreds of
billions o f dollars of spending Into
one bill must be stopped." Reagan
said.
The president’s Idea of budget
reform rests h eavily his long­
standing proposals for a constitu­
tional am endm ent requiring a
balanced federal budget and for
Congress to give him the power of
"line-item veto" — the ability to
eliminate individual Items in an
appropriations bill rather than
having to accept or veto the bill.
Reagan said such authority would
enable him to "c a rv e out the
boondoggles and port that would
never survive on their own." but
members of Congress, particularly
the Democratic leadership, are not
about to grant the president's re­
quests
House Democratic leader Jim
Wright of Texas was particularly
critica l o f R eagan's call for a
balanced budget amendment, say­
ing the president's own spending
plans are the main reason the
government Is so deeply submerged
in red Ink.
The day after the president's
sp eech , when reporters asked
Wright about the proposals, the
speaker was blunt In voicing his
opposition. Wright called It "Ironic
in the extrem e"..."a cop-out" and a
"diversionary" tactic.
"You don't reduce the deficit by
m on k eyin g with the process.”
Wright said.
In W right's view, facing hard
choices means the president should
scale back his defense -budget or
consider some form of tax Increase
to pay for the spending. No doubt
Reagan feels the hard choices for
the Democrats should involve less
spending for domestic programs,
such a3 the clean water bill he
vetoed or various other programs
the administration wants to elimi­
nate.

JA C K ANDERSON

Ted Stevens M asterm inded Pay Hike
By Jack Anderson
And Joseph Spear
WASHINGTON - No wonder the
members of Congress were grinning
broadly last week as they applauded
President Reagan's State of the
Union call for a balanced budget.
They knew they were going to get
theirs, no matter how much the
budgets for the nation’s defense and
social services are cut.
Barring a last-minute miracle of
self-denial, every member o f Con­
gress will gel a 15 percent pay raise
this week — without even having to
vote on It. The only way this
automatic raid on the Treasury can
be prevented Is for both houses to
vote against It. and this Is the kind
of miracle that is demonstrably
beyond the courage o f the 100th
Congress.
How did this come to pass? It was
no accident. Congressional pay
hikes used to require approval by
both Senate and House majorities
before they took effect. The roll-call
vote discouraged pay hikes because
it identified those who voted for

i

their own pay raises.
This embarrassing situation was
remedied by Sen. Ted Stevens,
R-Alaska. He quietly inserted a new
pay-raise mechanism into the 1985
continuing budget resolution. The
Stevens amendment made a presi­
dential pay recommendation for
Congress automatic unless twothirds of both houses rejected it
within 30 days.

S t e v e n s a ls o del e n d e d th e
automatic pay raise "because Con­
gress is so functionally destabilized
when it comes to what is a proper
salary."

Stevens told our associate Stewart
Harris that his little-noticed change
was In response to a 1982 Supreme
Court decision. The court ruled fin
Immigration and Naturalization
Service vs. Chadhu) that an execu­
tive branch decision may not be
overruled by one chamber of Con­
gress; both must agree to make a
law to change It.

The Founding Fathers spoke
plainer than that when they decided
to let Congress regulate its own
salaries. At the Constitutional Con­
vention in Philadelphia, they de­
cided after lengthy debate that the
voters could be counted on to
punish lawmakers who voted to line
their own pockets.
James Madison, the principal
author of the Constitution, put it
this way: "T h e power vested in
Congress to set its members' pay is
a power that cannot be abused
without arousing universal atten­
tion and indignation."

From 1977 to 1985. a presidential
pay-raise recommendation could
take effect only with the approval of
both House and Senate. Therefore.
Stevens argued, this allowed one
chamber to veto the president's
decision — In violation of the 1982
Supreme Court ruling.

Madison and the other framers
didn't reckon on the legislative skill
of their 20th century successors,
who have managed to line their
pockets in such a devious way that
attention and indignation are far
from universal.
There has been some indignation.

ot course, and some action. Bill A.
Strauss, a founder of the Marbury
Foundation (a small group de­
dicated to fiscal restraint), is one of
the attorneys who has filed suit In
federal court to block the backdoor
pay-hike mechanism on constitu­
tional grounds. The plaintiffs are
Sen. Gordon Humphrey. R-N.H..
Rep. Bob Smith. R-N.H., and the
National Taxpayers Union.
Strauss says Stevens Is confusing
a presidential recommendation with
an executive decision. And he adds
that proponents of the automatic
pay hike may have gone further
than they meant to in their legal
argument.
"T h e y are saying that If the
president proposes a bill, then both
houses have to veto it " or It
becomes law. Strauss said. But this
means that the president has virtu­
ally tree rein to raise congressional
salaries — or lower them.
The Founding Fathers explicitly
set out to avoid this, because, in the
words or Alexander Hamilton, "the
power over a man’s subsistence is a
power over his will."

�^ / *r—

I—#-

ii 1}»f'-.
■jM
. ..j, fTH
Al-'i;.■
r
*
■
f
*
’3
*
j«MMf£
'■■-fM*i. -'/n .■■.€ *uKT'.'‘-iaSVi

\ IO
SMfcri HaraM, Saiifartf, FI.

+i K

•r!H*

TMttfay, Fai. S. 1M7-9A

Dawson, M u llholland
Stretch Lady Rams'
Streak To 20 Victories
By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports Writer

M e rth ie : 6-1
But P layin g
M u ch Taller

Sometimes the starting five Is
so dominant it la easy to forget
Lake Mary’s Lady Rams, ranked
third In the state In Class 4A.
also have plenty o f help sitting
on the bench. Monday night,
that depth was put to the test as
starting center Teri Whyte and
forward Sharon Bonaventurc
were forced to the pine with
early foul trouble.
Senior center Dina Mulholland
and Junior forward-center Gina
Dawson came o ff the bench and
passed the test with flying colors
as they helped the Lady Rams to
their 20th consecutive victory.
67-42, over arch-rival Seminole
before 251 fans at Bill Fleming
Memorial Gymnasium.
Lake Mary ran Us record to
22-1 overall and 6-0 in the
Seminole Athletic Conference.
The Lady Rams are at Lake
Brantley Thursday night. The
L ad y T rib e dropped to 9-9
overall and 3-3 In the league
with their second loss In a row.
Sem inole has another tough
SAC game Thursday at Lake
Howell.
Mulholland and Dawson com­
bined for 12 points in a span
from late In the first quarter to
halftime when Lake Mary turned
a 10-9 deficit Into a 36-21
halftime lead.
"1 was proud of the way Dina
(Mulholland) and Gina (Dawson)
cam e In when we had two
starters in foul trouble." Lake
Mary coach Bill Moore said.
"T h e y really held their own
against Seminole’s big kids."
For the gam e, Mulholland
scored six paints, grabbed six
rebounds, came up with two
steals and blocked one shot
while Dawson contributed eight
paints and five boards and some
ferocious defensive play.
Senior guard Tonya Lawson
also had a solid game for the
Lady Rams with 15 points, six
rebounds and six steals. Senior

Basketball
point guard Gabby Olden added
11 points and seven assists,
senior forw ard Cynthia Pat­
terson and senior guard Ashley
Thomas added eight points each
and Bonaventure pulled down a
team-high eight rebounds.
For S e m in o le , sop h o m o re
guard Adrian Hlllsman poured
In a game-high 18 points and
added five rebounds and four
steals. Junior guard LaShon
Cash added nine points and
freshman cener Sheri Reddick
had a game-high 14 rebounds.
Sophomore forward Liz Long,
w h o w e n t In to th e g a m e
averaging over 10 points, was
held to two points.
"L iz (Long) only shot the ball
s ix t im e s in th e g a m e , "
Seminole coach Charles Steele
said. "W e'v e got to get her the
ball more times than that."
Seminole took advantage of
some early sloppiness on Lake
Mary's part and six free throws
for an early 10-8 lead. Lake
Mary, though, came back with
seven straight points, the last
four by Dawson, for a 15*10 lead
after one quarter.
Lake Mary had a 19-12 lead
early In the scond period when
Mulholland took charge for the
Lady Rams. Mulholland grabbed
an offensive rebound and put In
the followup for a 21-12 lead,
then got on the defensive glass,
snared a rebound and was
fouled. Mulholland made both
free throws as the Lady Rams
took a 23-12 lead with 5:15 left
in the first half.
Sem inole stayed within 11
points until Thomas popped in a
pair of Jumpers to give Lake
Mary a 36-21 halftime lead.
"W e were right In the game
with Lake Mary for the first one
and a half quarters.” Steele said.

If Lake Mary's Oscar Merthie Is
I not the best 6-foot-1 center to
Sever play In Seminole County,
he will undoubtedly do until that
unlikely phenom comes along.
First o f all, 6-1 players are not
groomed for the pivot. They are
u s u a lly not accu stom ed to
playing much forward either.
But Lake Mary coach Willie
Richardson has one big problem
— he can look most of his
players In the eyes. And Rich­
ardson was not sized to play
center or forward cither.
So when It came time to find a
player for the paint. Merthie was
the obvious choice. After all, the
Sanford senior had played In the
paint most of hts career. Battling
» ----■-»
m t.k .ia i
players five, six and seven in­
ches taller got to be a way of life.
That life among the skyscrap­ Lake Mary's supersub, Gina Dawson, reaches for rebound against Seminole.
ers continues tonight. Seminole,
with five players who measure
64 or better, invades Lake Mary
High School for a Seminole
Athletic Conference basketball
game. Tlpoff Is 8 p.m.
DURHAM, N.C. (UPI) — Despite Its worst
points and a game-high 11 rebounds, but he
Seminole, 17-5, leads the SAC
offense performance of the season — including
committed a game-high 8 turnovers. Guard
with a 4-0 mark. Lake Mary.
a season-high 29 turnovers — No. 15 Duke
Kevin Strickland added 11 for Duke, Including
two free throws with three seconds remaining.
710, Is in third with a 2-2 mark. managed to beat Stetson 62-59 Monday.
Duke Improved to 17*4. Stetson, a member
Center Jim m y Kuhl led Stetson with 18
Lyman. 3-1, Journeys to Lake
of the Trans America Athletic Conference,
Howell. 1-3. Oviedo. 1-3. treks to
points, and forward Anderson added 15.
dropped to 9-9.
Lake Brantley. 1-3.
The Blue Devils victory was largely helped
The Blue Devils, who led 31-27 at halftime,
D e s p ite the s k y s c ra p e rs ,
by their 42-27 rebounding advantage.
scored only 10 points in the first 10 minutes of
Merthie can see the horizon. He
Ferry's short Jumper, Duke’s lasf basket of
the second half and scored only five points —
Is playing at peak performance.
the game, gave Duke 57-50 lead with 6:36
all on free throws — In last 6:35.
Coincidentally, the Rams, once
remaining.
The Hatters climbed ahead In the second
Hatter Terry Johnson hit a three-pointer
saddled with a 2-9 record, put
half, with their biggest lead of the second half
with 4:35 remaining to cut Duke's lead to
together live consecutive victo­
at 46-39 with 10:27 remaining, when Randy
ries before dropping a heart59-57. But Ferry made one of two frecthrows
Anderson sank one of two free throw. But Duke
breaker to Lyman Friday.
with 3:07 for 60-57 lead.
scored nine points In less than 90 seconds to
Merthie has been the man
Stetson's last two points of the game came
come back 48-46 with 8:59 remaining.
with 2:46 remaining when Charles Stevenson
behind the turnaround. Just two
weeks ago. he was an also-ran in
Forward Danny Ferry paced Duke with 16
sank two free throws.
See D EPTH, P a g e 7 A
the county scoring and reboun­
ding races. He was averaging
*
*-«e) t •••« *•£«# * t ■» m Y «* **•
Ir.Ji « i ■ ! ‘ '
»
13.0 points and 8.8 rebounds —
good stats — but not great stats.
In the Rams' six-game re­
surgence. however. Merthie has
scored 203 points and snatched
no stone unturned” philosophy and
United States.
FREMANTLE, Australia (UPI) - Police
57 rebounds. The point produc­
practiced
on the Indian Ocean course
The
call
came
to
the
Melbourne
studio
tightened security around the Stars &amp;
tion moved him to third In the
while the beleagured Australians tried to
of Channel 10 at 2:40 a.m. with the
Stripes compound Tuesday after a death
county with 15.2 ppg while the
regroup In the face of almost insur­
caller saying he was heading to Freman­
threat against skipper Dennis Conner.
rebounding effort zoomed him to
mountable odds.
tle.
The
station
Immediately
alerted
America's
Cup
for
the
United
States
with
“ I'm taking It seriously." said Conner,
the top o f the list with 9.6 rbg.
police. Melbourne Is 1500 miles away
a vlclory Wednesday.
Inside the grilled front gate. "M y life Is
On Sept. 26. 1983, Liberty skipper
Merthie credits a few stern
from Fremantle.
Conner, the San Diego drapery manu­
very Important to m e."
Conner was beaten hy Australia 11 at
words from Richardson with
Conner declared a lay day Tuesday,
facturer poised to avenge ills 1983 loss of
It was the second time In two days
Newport, R.l. — after leading by 3-1 — to
shaking him from early-season
fearing
the light 14-knot breeze would
the
trophy,
tested
light-air
sails
while
threats marred the world’s most pre­
become the first American skipper to
doldrums. “ Coach got down on
b e tte r su it r iv a l K o o k a b u rra III
more guards beefed up the already
stigious sailing regatta. An anonymous
lose the Cup since the competition began
me bad.” Merthie said Monday
helmsman Iain Murray, although Stars &amp;
security-tight camp.
telephone caller claimed a bomb would
In 1851.
night. "H e said: 'You're a senior.
Stripes has proven Its superiority in all
Inspector Neville Thorpe, with the
explode aboard Kookaburra III during
Conner, still stinging from the defeat,
W e need you to be the leader.’"
weather conditions.
America’s Cup division of the Fremantle
the third race o f the best-of-seven series
refused
to start celebrating until the final
T h e y o u n g e r b r o th e r o f
With
the
fourth
and
possibly
last
police force, said Conner was advised an
Monday.
victory.
"Then we'll start counting our
D ayton a Beach C om m unity
match
o
f
the
26th
A
m
erica's
Cup
unidentified man threatened to kill him
Stars &amp; Stripes leads the best-of-seven
chickens."
College star Darryl has taken the series 3-0, and Conner can reclaim the
Wednesday. Conner stuck to his "leave
to prevent the loss o f the trophy to the
message to heart. Early In the
season. Merthie could not get
involved in the offense. He said
he has found a solution to that
problem over the past six games.
"W h e n w e're not getting It R A N K IN G S
L IN E U P S
LEAD ER S
Inside to me, 1 come out to the
Seminole Semlnoles (17 5)
Florida Sports W riters Prop Poll
Seminole County Boys Basketball Leaders
Joe N oilf ( L B ) ............
1.1 F o rw a rd .......Roderick
Henderson. 4 4. Senior
free-throw line." he said.
29
Garth Bolton ( 0 ) ........
ard .................J erry Parker. 4 1. Senior
Although mosL look upon a 6-1 BOYS
K E Y : Seminole (S ). Lake M a ry (L M I,
J e rry Parker (S )........
7.5 CForw
en ter.................... C raig Walker. 4 8. Junior
4A
Lyman (L ), Oviedo (O ). Lake H ow ell IL H ).
M att Napoli I L M ).......
2.5
center as a liability. Merthie said Class
G uard................M ichael Edwards. 5 7, S.nior
1. M iam i Hl(jh.......................................... (23 I)
Lake Brantley (L B ).
2
.0
M ik e M andeville (L M )
he turns the thinking around.
Andre Whitney, 3 11. Junior
2. Hialeah M iam i Lak es.......................... (20 2)
By Sam Cook
C. Gibson ( L h ) ...........
20 G uard...........
Bench: Brad Baird. 4 10, Senior, Reginald
3. Jacksonville R lb a u lt........................... ( I l l )
Scoring
G
PT A V G
“ People don't think that 1 will do
M a lt Johnson (L H I.
2.0 B ellam
H
erald
S p orts E d ito r
y,
4
2,
Sophomore:
Steve
Hathaway.
4.
M iam i Edison.........................(2 M )
Brent Bell (L B )......................... 14 244
17 4
well (because of my size}." he
4 5, Senior; M ike Franklin, 4 0. Senior,
Brent Bell, Lake Brantley's
3. Jacksonville R ain es............................ 112 2)
Roderick Henderson I S )..........22 354
IA I
W alter Hopson. 4-4. Junior; Earnie Lewis,
said. "T h e way 1 see it. I've got
Steals
G ST
A. M iam i Carol C ity ................................. (18 2)
AV G
Oscar Merthie (L M ).................17
258
15.2
6-foot-1 swlngman. went on a
4 2. Junior; Leonard Lucas. 4 0. Junior.
7. Lakeland K ath leen............................. (17-4)
Andre Whitney ( S ).................. 22
77
35
Jerry Parker (S )...................... 22
331
15 0
nothing to lose."
two-game rampage last week
Freddie Gadson. 4 0, Junior. Clay Walton.
8 C learw ater Countryside..................... (18 4)
Brian Wilson (0 1 ...................... 14
44
28
Craig
R
a
tia
k
(
L
)
......
14
193
13
8
While Merthie may be the key
4 1. Junior
which carried film to the top of
9. Jacksonville F o rre s t........................... (18 2)
Roderick Henderson (S )......... 22
SI
2.3
Robert Thomas ( L ) .................. 14
180
12.9
cog In Lake Mary’s resurgence, to. Daytona Beach M ainland................... (IS -I)
M ichael Edwards (S ).............. 22
50
23
Eric Ciernle|ewskl ( L M ) .........17
19a
11.3
the county in scoring and lilted
Lakt M ir y Rams (7-10)
Also receivin g v a le s (in alphabetical o r­
T arry M iller ( L M ).......... ........17
39
2.3
Vince Florence ( L ) ................... I ]
145
11.2
he said the development of the
him to second place in freeF o r w a r d .................... M att Napoli, 4 0. Senior
1.9
Joe Noltt ( L B ) ...........................12
23
d e r): Brandon. Cooper City, Fort Lauderdale
Alonzo Robinson ( L H ). . ...........14
15A
ti t
younger players has been Just as 1Dillard. J ack son ville Wolfson, Lake Clry
throw percentage.
Robb Hughes 101
14
29
IS F o r w a r d ....... Eric O ern leiew sk l, 4 1. Senior
T erry M iller I L M ).................... 17
187
10.7
important. "O ur guys up from Columbia, Lauderdale Lakes Boyd Anderson,
18 C e n te r .................. O scar Merthie. 4 2. Senior
Garth Bolton (0 1 ...................... 14
29
Andre Whitney (S ) ................... 22 230
10.5
Bell scored 53 points lo push
Guard ...............M ike M andev'lle. 4-1, Junior
M att Napoli (L M ) ..................... 17
28
1.4
Robb Hughes ( 0 ) .................. IA
149
to 5
the JV were nervous early in the M iam i Southrldge. Orlando Evans. P alm
Ills
season total to 242. an
G
u
a
rd
.........................
T
erry
M
iller,
S
9.
Junior
Beach Gardens, P ort Orange Spruce Creek.
Robert
Thomas
(
L
)
..................14
21
15
Doug Lawson (L B )................... 14
134
9.5
year." Merthie said. "Once we Sanlord Seminole, Sarasota. South M iam i.
Bench: Cory Prom . 5-10. Junior; Bernard
average of 17.4 per outing. He
Steve Johnson (L H ) .................. II
14
1.5
Darren Leva ( L B ) .................... 14
131
9.3
M itchell. 4 2. Sophomore; Brad Compton. 5 9.
got them some game experience, West P alm Beach T w in Lakes
E ric Czernlojewskl (L M ) .........14
19
1.4
Brian Wilson (O )...................... IA
141
8.8
surpassed Seminole’s Roderick
O scar M erthie (L M ) .................17
21
1.2 Junior; Jim Stewart. 4-1, Senior; Jim Aelker,
M att Johnson (L H )................. 8
A8
85
we were all right.
Henderson who is next at 16.1.
G IR LS
S-9,
Junior
Phil Clark ( L H ) ........................14
17
1.2
Garth Bolton ( 0 ) .................. IA
177
7.9
"(Ju n ior guard) Mike Man- Class 4A
Lake M a ry's O scar M erthie
Chris Grlltlth (O ) ..................... IA
121
76
t. Pensacola W ashington....................... (2101
Lyman Greyhounds (9 3)
deville Is taking better (outside)
Steve Johnson (L H )...................It
83
7.3
(15.2). Seminole's Jerry "S tick"
2. C le a rw a te r................ ........................ (22 0)
G
Blocked
Shots
AV
G
F
o
rw
a
rd
..................
C
raig
Radrak.
4
2.
Junior
Matt Napoli (L M ) ................
17
125
7.3
shots. That has opened up the
Parker (15.0) and Lyman's Craig
J. Lake M a ry 121-1)..........................................
2
1
C
ra
ig
Walkor
(S
)
.....
35
F
o
r
w
a
r
d
..............
D
arryl
Starkes.
4
1,
Junior
J o o N o llfIL B )........................... 14
94
AS
inside. We have more balance
4. M iam i Southrldge................................(2 M )
.22
Roderick Henderson IS
1.3
C en ter..................... Shawn Hester, 4 4, Senior
Radzak (13.8) complete the top
Dana Hill 1 0 )............................ IA
107
4.7
5. Setlner A rm w o o d ................................(18 I)
.... 14
Robb Hughes (O ) ......
1.3
G u ard .................... Vince Florence. 4 1, Senior
nowon offense."
Craig W alker (S I...................... 21
138
4.4
five.
A. Coral Springs T a ra v e lla ..................... (14 1)
.... 14
Shawn Hester ( L ) ........
l.t
Guard
R
obert
Thomas.
5
10.
Senior
Shawn Hester ( L ) ..................... 14
93
44
Along with Mandeville and
7. Jacksonville R iba u lt........................... 119-1)
Bell also moved just behind
09
IA
Dana Hill ( 0 )
Bench: Rick Moulton. 5-11. Senior; Malt
M ike M andeville ( L M ) ............ 17
107
42
8. W inter P ark .................... .................... 0 7 3)
Merthie. Sanford's Terry “ The
...8
09
M att Johnson (L H I ....
Lam b. 4 1. Junior; J,J M iller, 4 1, Sopho
L
y
m a n ’ s Robert T h om as In
Phil
Clark
(L
H
).......................1
4
’
74
5
4
9 Fort W alton B each .............................. 0 7 4)
.... 14
S iev e Kandell ( O ) ........
08 m o re; David K en drick.4 2. Junior
Cat" Miller. Matt Napoli, Eric
Aaron Gammons (L H )..............10
54
54
foul-line accuracy. Bed con ­
10. W inter H aven.......................................OS-2)
.... 14
0
8
Alonzo
Robinson
(L
H
).
Michael Edwards I S ) ...........22
112
5.1
*'CZ" Czernlejewski and sopho­
Also receiving v o le s (In alphabetlclal I t ) :
verted 29 of 33 free throws lo
.... 18
04
S iev e Hathaway IS)
Lake Howell Silver Hawks (470)
Bernard M itchell (L M ) ...
15
74
49
more Bernard Mitchell have Bradenton M anatee, M erritt Island, M iam i
0.5
E ric Oern1e|ewski (L M ... 17
F o rw a rd ....................... Phil Clark, 4 0. Junior
give him 74 o f 97 for the year, a
Central, M iam i Edison. M iam i Norland.
.... 17
04
M a tt Napoli ( L M ) ........
F o rw a rd ................... Randy Keller, 4 4. Senior
played key roles.
Rebounding
G
RB
AVG
76.2 percentage. Thomas still
O a k la n d P a r * N o r t h e a s t , O r la n d o
C en ter................Alonzo Robinson. 4 4, Junior
9.4
“ I know how Merthie and Edgewater, Orlando Oak Ridge. P alm Beach Oscar M erthie (L M ) .................17 143
leads with a 77.6 percentage.
G u ard ............. Steve Johnson. 4 3. Sophomore
Craig W alker IS )...................... 2)
198
94
Free-Throw Shooting
0
M -A
PCT
Gardens. Pinellas Park . Plant City. Sarasota,
M i l l e r will play against
G
uard.............................
C.
Gibson,
5
8.
Junior
Bell hit att amazing 20 of 21
Alon io Robinson (L H ) ............ .14
118
84
15 o r m oroottom pts
Bench: Aaron Gammons. "4 0. Junior. Matt
S em in o le." Richardson said. Sarasola R lverview , West P alm Beach Twin Shawn Hester ( L ) ..................... 14 112
BO
Robert Thomas ( L ) .......
14 59 74
77 4
FTs
In the Pats' upset o f New
Lakes
Johnson, 4 4. Junior; Steve Johnson. 4 3.
Brent Bell ( L B ) ....................... 14
104
7.5
Bront Bell ( L B ) .................... 14 74 97
74.2
"T h ey 'll be Bred up. It's the
Smryna
Beach and came back
S
oph
om
ore;
G
ary
W
eeden
.
4
2.
Junior
Roderick Henderson (S I ......... 22
143
7.4
J erry P arker ( S ) ........
22 S3 70
75.7
other guys we need to play well, S T A N D IN G S
Low ell Bufllngton. 4 0, Junior. David Yapo.
with 9 o f 12 in a loss to
Craig Radrak ( L ) ..................... M
99
7 1
Joe Noltt (L B 1 .......................14 34 51
745
5 8, Junior; J.J. Banks. 3 0. Senior; Shane
too."
Robb Hughes 1 0 )..................... 14
104
4.4
An dre W hllney (S ) ............... 22 547 4
77 9
Seminole A th letic Conference
Seminole. Bell had a career-high
Johnson. 4 2, Senior
Darren Leva ( L B ) ...................t4
89
43
Darren L e va (L B ) ................&gt;4 37 SI
77.3
Merthie said the Rams are a
34 points against NSB and 19
E ric Czernie|ewskl (L M ). . ...17
70 7
104
E ric Czernlejewskl (L M ) ..17
S8 82
67
BOYS
much better team than the one
Oviedo Lions ( I t 5)
against the 'Notes.
M att Johnson (LM,
48
48 2
W L GB All
60
C ra ig Radzak ( L ) ............. 14 43 63
T u rn
Forw ard
Robb Hughes. A 4. Senior
which lost earlier this year at
.. 17
M att Napoli (L M )
.14
45 6a
66 3
4 0
17-5
too
3.9
Merthie also assumed a lop
Forw ard .................ChrlsGrittlth. 4 3. Senior
Barrl Shirley (L B )............. . .14
440
3 1
1
95
72
16 33 SO
5 1
Brian Wilson (O )
Seminole. The Rams also re­ Lyman
position
by upping his rebound
C
en
ter.....................
Steve
Kandell.
4
5.
Junior
2
57 88
44 7
Andre Whitney (S I.............
2 7
7 10
27
111
Roderick Henderson (SI
72
SO
M ary
member last year’s game at Lake
G uard.................
Brian Wilson, S It. Junior
a v e r a g e to 9.6 p er g a m e .
.14
44 1
59
Oana Hill (O l
T erry M iller I L M )............ 14 41 64
1 3
3
73
Lake Brantley
46
Guard.
Garth Bolton, 4 0. Junior
Lake Mary where they blew an Oviedo
Darryl Starkes ( L ) ............. .12
23 37
42 1
1 3 3
11 5
S3
44
Garth Bolton IOI ,..........
Seminole's Craig Walker is next
Bench; Terry Campbell. 5 10. Senior; Oana
W
aller
Hopson
(S
I
...........
77
33
54
61.1
1
3
470
22
Lake
Howell
4.3
M
ichael
Edwards
(S
)
........
3
e ig h t- p o in t lead w ith two
at 9.4. Walker maintained ills
H ill, 4 4. Senior; Roby Bowers. 4 0, Sopho
91
Jerry Parker ( S )................
Tonight's g j m t *
4 1
minutes to play and lost.
m ore. Dwight E verett. 40, Junior. Alan
lead in blocked shots with 3.5
Bernard Mitchell IL M )
IS
54
37
Less than 35 attempts
Seminole at Lake M a ry
Greene. 4 2, Junior; Juan D ial, 59. Senloi
"Last time we got beat by the Lyman at Lake H ow ell
Vince Florence I D ...........
12
42
II
25 27
92 5
3.5
Steve Johnson (L H )
per outing.
18
Steve Hathaway (S!
61
14 24 29
34
82 7
Doug Lawson (L B )
press." Merthie said. "W e're Oviedo at Lake B rantley
S em in o le’ s Andre W hitney
Lake Brantley Patriots (5 9)
16
Steve Kandell (O )..............
54
34
18 24
75 0
Alan Greene ( O l ..........
.14
worked on a new press break GIRLS
F
o
rw
a
rd
........................Brent
Bell,
4
1.
Senior
maintained
his lead In assists
16
1276
75
0
Steve Kandell (O )
Forw ard
Darren Leva, 4 I. Junior
and I think we will play them Team
w L GB All
Assists
G
AS
19 27
AVG
70 3
Vince Florence ( L ) ......... . .12
(6.4)
and
steals
(3.5).
C en ter............
Barrl Shirley, 4 2. Senior
6 0
Andre Whitney (S )............
22 1
22
140
Lake M ary
64
23 33
49 6
M ik e M an deville (L M )____ .17
tough. A lot of people have
Lake
Howell's
Steve Johnson
Guard
Joe
Noltt.
4
0.
Junior
4
Robert
Thomas
(L
)
2
2
16
3
70
68
7
Howell
50
Randy K eller (L M )_____
.14
77 32
supported us since we started Lake
Guard .
Doug Lawson, 5 10. Junior
4 2
leads the under-35-attempt fretMichael Edwards (S )
2 10 7
22
104
48
.14
16 74
64 7
Lake Branlley
T erry Campbell tO)
Bench: Bo Pamplln, 4 4, Sophomore; Sieve
winning. Thev will be there Seminole
Roderick Henderson (S ).
89
99
22
40
3 3
3
throw shooters with a sparkling
M orse, 5 10. Senior. Bob M ethven, 6 4
.17
Terry M ilter (L M )
1 S
S 1-IS
55
Lyman
3.2
SOURCE: County Coaches
25 o f 27 for 92.3 percent.
Junior.
Darren
Hlnshaw,
6
0.
Junior
Brian Wilson (O )...............
.16
0 6
6 574
49
Oviedo
3.1
Compiled by Sam Cook
See COOK. Page 7A

D uke Survives 29 Turnovers, Stetson

C o n n e r, P olice Take D e a th T h re a t S e rio u s ly
S ailing

PREP ROUNDUP

BASKETBALL

Brent Rings
Scoring Bell
For Top Spot

�4A—Slitferd HeraM, Santord, FI.

T»nAyi Fit. &gt;. 1tS7

—------------ DISTRICT OPENERS-------------- -

i

Promise Turns Sour For Lady Seminoles — Lake Mary, Oviedo, Lake Howell Win
Tw riflU rt O fetrkt 4 P etrtegs
7 p.m.
I p.m.
7 p.m.
7pm .

— W inter Pnrfc at Lym an
— O viedo al Laka M ary
— Laka Hawaii a t Laka Bran Hay
— Orlando Bishop M oor# i t Melbourne

M en d er's ra w lte
W inter Park 1. Samlnote 0
Laka M ary 7, Rockledge 0
Ovlado 3, Da Land 0
Laka Howall 4. Titusville 3
M elbourne 5, Trinity Prop 0
Bishop M oora 10, Eau Gallia 0

By Chris Pieter
Herald Sports Writer
A season that looked so promising
just two weeks ago ended on a
disappointing note Monday night as
Seminole High dropped a 2-0 decision
to Winter Park In the opening round
o f the D istrict 4 G irls S o c ce r
Tournament at Ward Park.
Going into last week's action,
Seminole had a record of 9-7-3 overall
and a five-game unbeaten streak.
Including the championship of the
Gainesville P.K. Yonge Tournament.
Seminole also pulled off a near upset
o f then second-ranked Lyman.
The Lady 'Notes, though, then lost
two starters to academic Ineligibility
and two more to Injury In the final
week o f the regular season and lost
three games In a row. Seminole was
down to Just 13 players for the
dfstrlct tournament.
"I hate to see the season end so
a b ru p tly," Seminole coach Suzy
Reno said. "W e were doing so well
there for a while but the we just got
hit with so much bad luck. But this Is
a young team and I expect some new

C a r/
Carlson
HERALD
BOATING
WRITER

Coast Guard's
14-Point Exam
Having your boat examined by
the Coast Guard Auxiliary could
save your life. Having the neces­
sary equipment aboard your
Imat in time of need Improves
your chance of survival.
U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary
volunteers have been trained to
examine recreational boats for
safety, to determine if your boat
m eets federal and state re­
quirements, and to check for
additional equipm ent recom ­
mended bv the Auxiliary.
When you pass the Courtesy
Marine Examination, the Coast
Guard A u x ilia r y 's "S e a l o f
Safety" decal Is affixed to the
port side of your boat. This decal
signifies that your boat exceeds
m inim um federal and state
safety requirements and meets
the safety requirements of the
Coast Guard Auxiliary.
If the craft falls the examina­
tion. the boat owner is advised of
any deficiencies, and a recom­
mendation Is made to correct the
problem or procure the equip­
ment that is lacking. No report Is
made to any law enforcement
agency — only a statistical count
of the number of examinations
and the types of failures Is made
to the Coast Guard.
You should know, however,
even If you have a current safety
decal, that your boat Is still
subject to boarding by the Coast
Guard, state, or local authorities.
The 14- point Courtesy Marine
Examination consists of:
• Numbering
• Personal Flotation Devices
• Fire Extinguishers
• Ventilation
• Backfire Flame Arrester
• Sound Producing Devices
• Navigation Lights
• Visual Distress Signals
• Fuel Systems
• Anchor and Anchor Line
• Alternate Propulsion
• Dewatering Device
• General Condition
• State Requirements
For additional Information
about having your boat checked
by the Auxiliary or for a copy of
the booklet "Federal Require­
ments for Recreational Boats" or
the booklet ’ ’Courtesy Marine
Examination. Requirements for
Recreational Craft'' contact: Carl
Carlson. USCGAUX. 323-9416.
MU tt
BOATING T IP — Visual Dis­
tress Signals — All Recreational
c ra ft o p e r a tin g on c oa sta l
waters. Great Lakes, or the high
seas, are required to carry Coast
Guard approved visual distress
signals. Vessels operating on
inland waters only, such as Lake
Monroe and the St. Johns river,
should have some means of
making a suitable day and night
distress signal. Recommended
night signals could Include a
flashlight, lantern, or strobe
light. Recommended day signals
could include a red flag, orange
llag. or a signal mirror.

blood to come In next year and make
us better."
W in te r P ark g o e s on to .the
quarterfinals against Lyman, the
top-ranked team In the state. The
game will be played tonight at 7 at
Lyman High.
S em in o le, which finished the
season at 9-11-3. had ample offensive
opportunity Monday night with 25
shots on goal but most of them were
off frame while the others were hit
right at Winter Park keeper Kathy
Rlzza. The Lady 'Notes also had five
com er kicks to Winter Park's none
but could not capitalize on any of
them.
Winter Park took a 1-0 lead wth
3:37 left In the first half on a goal by
Kerry Rlzza and built the lead to 2-0
with 27 minutes left to play on a goal
by Julie Peters. Seminole then picked
up the pace on offensle In the last 10
minutes but couldn’t not squeeze one
between the pipes.
"In one three minute span In the
last 10 minutes, we had six shots on
goal," Reno said. "But the girls were
pan ick in g and not taking good
shots.”
Seminole goalkeeper Kim Walsh
kept It close with 17 saves and Reno
a ls o s a id C in d y B en ge. V ic k y
“ Spuffy” Pakovlc. Carol Lykens and
Marie Vezlna turned In outstanding
defensive efforts. Offensively, Tracey
Farrelly. Sherri Rumler, Heather
Brown and Julia Robert played well
In putting the pressure on Winter
Park although they could not pro­
duce a goal.

Soccer
BOHR GBTS HAT THICK
Donna Rohr scored a first-half hat
trick Monday night as Lake Mary
built up a commanding 5-0 halftime
lead and rolled to a 7-0 victory over
Rockledge's Lady Raiders at Lake
Mary High.
The Lady Rams, 17-4-4 and ranked
eighth In the state, advance to the
quarterfinal round tonight at 8 at
home against Oviedo.
"M ain thing we need to do Is get up
for the gam e." Lake Mazy coach BUI
Elssele said of tonight's game. “ We
can't take them for granted."
Rohr’s first goal came one minute
into the game on an assist by Kelley
Broen. Broen then scored nine
m inutes later on an assist from
Michelle Mattingly and Rohr made It
3-0 with Mattingly getting another
assist. Mattingly then put In a goal on
an assist from Broen and Lesll Hobek
assisted Rohr's third goal as the Lady
Rams built a 5-0 halftime cushion.
Lake Mary then pulled all but three
o f its starters In the second half and
tacked on two more goals. Five
minutes Into the second half, Lake
Mary took a 6-0 lead when freshman
Jamie Dombcheck scord her first
varsity goal on an assist from Hobek.
Hobek then concluded the scoring as
she boomed In a shot from 30 yards
out.
Lake Mary took 31 shots on goal

compared to five for the Lady Raiders
who dropped to 5-6 for the year.
T a m m y S cott had one save as
goalkeeper for the Rams In the first
half and Kris Bottlcello had two saves
In the second half. Joanne Ashton
recorded 20 saves for Rockledge.

LADT LIONS DOMINATE, 3-0
Oviedo's Lady Lions dominated
from start to finish Monday night en
route to a 3-0 victory over DeLand In
first-round play at DeLand's Spec
Martin Stadium.
Oviedo, 5-11-4, looks for an upset
at Lake Mary tonight. The Lady Lions
have played Lake Mary close twice
this season.
"W e played pretty tough against
Lake Mary last week even though we
didn't have any subs," Oviedo coach
Gene Lescallelte said. "W e need a
little more Intensity to make It a good
game this tim e."
Oviedo, which outshot DeLand.
28-8, took a 1-0 halftime lead as Doris
Arcomone drilled In a free kick from
21 yards out. The Lady Lions made It
2- 0 In the second half on Cathy
Bergman's penalty kick and made it
3- 0 when Lynley Yost scored on an
assist from Kelly Price.
Defensively, Lescallette said Ingrid
Lyn and Laurel McFall led the way
while Jennifer W hitaker had an
Impressive game at midfield.

LADT HAWKS CRUISE, 4-2
Lake Howell scored the first four
goals of the game Monday night en
route to a 4*2 victory over Titusville
In first-round district action at Lake
Howell High.

The Lady Hawks. 9-9-3 overall,
advance to the second round tonight
at 7 at second-ranked Lake Brantley.
"W e can pray that they (Lake
Brantley) have an Infestation o f
measles or mumps to devastate the
team.” Joked Lake Howell coach Art
Raynor. "Actually, we would have to
play a perfect game. They really have
a great desire to get to the finals and
beat Lyman. We have to play a very
tight defensive game and not give
(Julie) DelRusso and (Cara) Marien
too much room ."
Titusville held the Lady Hawks
scoreless until 17 minutes left in the
first h a lf w h en Dan-El B lan ey
knocked In a penalty kick. Lake
Howell took a 2-0 lead with 12
minutes left In the half when Klrstln
Reesman scored on an assist from
TifTany Asturrizaga.
In the second half. Chris Frankenberger scored off a com er kick with
Reesman getting the assist and
Reesman's second goal of the game,
on an assist from Kristy Blaney.
made It 4-0.

MELBOURNE, MOORE WIN
In other first-round action Monday
night. Melbourne, the fourth-ranked
team In the state, ran its record to
17-1 with a 5-0 rout of Trinity Prep at
Melbourne High.
The Lady Bulldogs will host Or­
lando Bishop Moore in second round
action tonight at 7. Bishop Moore,
which tied eighth-ranked Lake Mary
on Saturday, trounced Eau Gallic
Monday night, 10-0. at Orlando.

SOKC Lends
Help To UCF
With Benefit

Lyman's 30-Point Improvement
Impresses CocSrey And Carlson
PATRIOTS POP OVIEDO

By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor

Basketball

Lake Brantley r eceived
d o u b le -fig u re s c o rin g from
Lake H ow ell’ s Lady Silver
Janice Abaray, T ra cy
Hawks whipped Lyman’s Lady
Greyhounds. 57-47. In Seminole
Lake Howell. 4-2 In the SAC, Brandenburg and Laurie Rivers
Athletic Conference basketball. received Its usual consistent w h ile c o a s tin g to a 48-35
While the outcome was predict­ efforts from Erin Hankins. De­ Seminole Athletic Conference
able. the 10-point margin was nise Arriola. Tam m y Lewis and victory over Oviedo Mqnday
not. Lake Howell. 16-3. routed Kelley Grider. Hankins, a 5-2 night before 151 fans at Oviedo
Lyman. 1-14. by 40 points in senior dynamo, had 17 points High School.
Brantley. 10-7 overall and 4-2
their first SAC meeting.
and 10 assists. Arriola pulled
"L y m a n Is g o in g to beat down 13 boards and tossed In 12 In the SAC, Jumped to a 17-4
somebody," Lake Howell coach points. Lewis collected eight first-quarter lead and expanded
Dennis Codrey said. "(Anita) steals and 12 points. Grider It to 28-11 at halftime. The Lady
Carlson is doing a good job.”
yanked off nine boards and Patriots led, 42-19, after three
"W e had a real good game." udded 13 points. Brooke Bums quarters.
"O ur offense worked better
Carlson M i d . "Hopefully, we'll came up with a career-high
have another one Thursday (at seven steals.
tonight. Abaray shot welt from
home) against Oviedo."
Lake H owell, w hich hosts the outside." Brantley coach
Lyman received stellar efforts Sem inole Thursday, built a Cindy Frank said.
from three perform ers. Kim 35-21 halftime lead but could
Oviedo, 5-15 and 0-6. was
Boyle, a 5-8 senior, tossed In a never completely pull away from Ice-cold from the field In the first
c a r e e r -h ig h 22 p oin ts and
the Lady Greyhounds. "M y kids half. "W e had the shots, we Just
yanked down 13 rebounds; all played w ell." Codrey said. couldn't put It In the hoop."
Shari Slegrlst, a 5-4 Junior, "Lym an Just kept pushing the Oviedo coach John Thomas said.
"Our defense was pretty good,
chipped In nine points and five ball up and didn’ t give up."
but we couldn't get anything
steals: Chandra Roberts, a 5-6
M A N (57) - B rook* 7. R ob ert* 7. Bouley
senior, had seven rebounds and It,L YBoyle
from ourofTense."
77. Harden 4, Clerk 3, Slegrlst 9,
three steals.
All seven of Oviedo's second
Totels: 3311-3357.
L A K E H O W E L L (4 7 ) A r r io la 13,
quarter points came from the
"Those three did the Job for
Hankins 17, K telon 7, G rider 13, Burn* 4.
us.” Carlson said. "Slegrlst had M
foul line.
enuel3. Lewi* 13, T o te )* : 31 I M S 47.
Abaray led the Pats with 12
missed three games with mono.
HeltHme — Leke Howell 33, Lym en 31.
She came back real strong to­ Foul* — Lyman 15. L e k e H ow ell 14. Fouled p o in ts an d s e v e n b o a r d s .
out — none. Technical — none
Brandenburg had 10 points
night."

Roberts

Codrey

along with three steals and three
assists. Rivers tossed In 10
points and grabbed lOboards.
O vied o sophom ore Kristin
Harrel had 10 points and five
boards. Suzanne Hughes, a 6-1
sophomore, pulled down nine
rebounds to go with eight points.
L A K E B R A N T L E Y (41) - Brandenburg
10, R lv «r * 10, Blllm yar 7, Abaray 13, Tutford
4. Atplan 0, Mull 3. U d k # 0, Hamtett 3, Peter*
4. T ota l* 314-15 41.
O V IE D O (IS ) - M ale how I. Thaeni 0.
Phllpot 0, Herbert 0, Hughe* I, Colon 0.
S w ltie r 4, K elley 3, K rlilin Harrell 10.
Jenerette 0. Bunli 4. T o ta l*: 14 7- I I 35.
H alltlm a — Laka Brantley 34. Oviedo II.
Foul* — Lake Brantley 19. Oviedo 15 Fouled
out — none. Technical — non# A — 131.

BRANTLEY JV: 10-1
In Junior varsity action. Lake
Brantley dropped Oviedo. 38-27,
to Im prove to 10-1.
Sarah Keth led the Pals with
17 points and Christa Kranzc
added eight.
Brigette Szobar tossed In I I
points, grabbed 12 rebounds and
collected eight steals for 10-6
Oviedo-

Greyhounds' Excellent First H alf Derails Lions
Lyman's Greyhounds played
one of their best 40 minutes of
soccer of the season In the first
half Monday night en route to a
2-0 Seminole Athletic Confer­
ence victory over Ovledo'8 Lions
at Lyman High.
Lyman Improved to 10-5-4
overall and 4-3-2 in the SAC.
Oviedo, ranked ninth In the state
In Class 3A. now stands at
10-5-3 overall and 3-4-2 In the

Soccer
league. Lyman conlcudes the
regular scason'Thursday at Lake
Brantley while Oviedo is at
s e v e n t h - r a n k e d ( 4 A ) Lak e
Howell.
“ The guys played an excellent
first l.alf," Lyman coach Ray

Sandidge said. "Oviedo didn't
have a shot on goal In the half."
While Oviedo was shotless.
Lyman capitalized on two of Us
chances as G erard M itchell
scored the first goal on Chris
G ra h a m ’ s assist and T o d d
Luke's unassisted goal made It
2-0.
Lyman’s defense continued to

dominated the second half as It
held Oviedo to five shots, three
of which were off free kicks.
Sandidge said Shaller Bowers.
K e v i n S m ith and Ant hony
Godhino led the defense. It was
Godhlno's first varsity game
after being m oved up from
ju n ior varsity. Keeper Kelly
Walden had three saves to re­
cord the shutout.
— C h ris F ilt e r

Jerry Collins, the 79-year-old
chairman of the board o f the
Sanford-Orlando Kennel Club,
has always maintained: “ When
you become greedy, you soon
become needy."
Collins has not experienced
either lately, but he continues to
provide funds for those In need.
While Florida's "Grandfather
o f G reyh ou n d R a c in g " has
ushered many Innovations Into
the parimutuel business, he
rem ains most proud of one
a c c o m p l i s h m e n t — chari ty
nights.
Collins introductcd Into the
Florida Legislature and made
certain a bill passed which
m a k e s It p e r m i s s i v e f o r
parimutuel wagering facilities to
conduct performances where the
proceeds, at no extra charge to
the patrons, benefit colleges or
charitable organizations.
Tonight at SOKC, the Univer­
sity of Central Florida will be the
beneficiary. Posl time Is 7:30
p.m. "W hen I flrsl Introduced
the bill to (he legislature, that’s
the Idea I had In m ind." Collins
said. "T h e people have been
v e r y g o o d t o us and the
parimutuel industry should give
something back to the commu­
nity."
Collins has five such nights for
area colleges and community
colleges. Tonight's benefit Is his
third of the year. Once again this
year. Orlando s WKIS-AM (740)
w ill broadcast live from the
Finish Line Clubhouse.
"T h is event has really turned
into something qullc'speclal for
us here at the university.” UCF
fund-raising coordinator Charlie
Geslno said. "W e really look
forward to this special evening
each year."

Rogers Tunes Up For Series W ith W in
NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Getting ready
for the opening night of the 21st Annual
World Series o f Asphalt Stock Car Racing
this coming Friday. David Rogers won the
50-lap End o f the Month Late Model
Championship on Saturday night at New
Smyrna Speedway. Ed Merldlth was second,
followed by Lee Faulk. Joe Middleton and
Donnie Strickland.
Making an Impressive return to the New
Smyrna high banks, veteran Pete Orr took
over first place from early leader Pete Starr
at half way. and went on to score a popular
win. in Roy Clanton's PeterBuIlt Camaro.
Hard charging young New Yorker Ron Thiel
was close second. He was followed by Starr.
John Cochran and Bill Klnley.
Wayne Marshall won the roadrunner
main, with Dave McCabe scoring another
street stock win.
The four-cylinder finale went to Gene Van
Alstlne. Jeff Blehr took the Florida Modified
finale.
Bill Gross won the 100-lap Enduro.
in
LA T E M O O E LS

Fastest Qualifier D avid Rogers,Orlando, 14.157 sec.
End ot tha Month Championship (50 lap *) — I. David
R oger*. Orlando; I. Ed Marldlth. lo n gw o o d ; 3. Lea Faulk,
O rla n d o ; 4. Jo# M id d leto n . So. D ayton a; 5. Oonnia
Strickland. Vero Baach; 4. David Rut te ll, Apopka; 7. G reg
Froem m ing. Orlando; 4. G eorge Jone*. Panam a City; 9.
W illie Siner. H o m o i***a . 10 Phil Oormen. Lake M ary
T H U N D E R CARS
H eat (H a p * ) — I. John Cochran. Oak Hill.
End ot tha Month Chemplonshlp (30 lap *) — I. P et* Orr, M t
V erde; 3. Ron Thiel, Stony Brook, N .Y .; 3. P e l* Starr.
Rockladga; 4. John Cochran, Oak Hill; 5. Bill Klnley, Otteon;
4. J e m ** C erter, Long wood, 7. D arrell Cote, Daytona Beach;
I. Buddy Whltford, Daytona Baach; 9. Jerry Smith. Orlando;
10 Glenn P alm er, Hypoluxo

l

A u t o R a c in g
Lap Leaders: Pete Starr: M l . P ete Orr: 13 30
I .M X . A./TY PE F LO R ID A M O D IF IE D *
End ot the Month Championship (10 lap*) — 1. Jett Blehr,
Deltona; 3. S teve P rater. Edgaw ater; 3. Gary Salvator*.
Daytona Baach; 4. Tom m y P atterion . Scottsmoor.
R O AO R U N N E R S
Heat (4 lap s) — I. W ayne M arshall. Malabar.
End ot the Month Championship (15 laps) — 1. Wayne
M arshall. M alab ar; 3. J e ll Rinehart. Holly Hill; 3. Mika
Kubanek, Long wood: 4. Jim T aylo r, Sanford; 3. Ron
Carpanter, Ocoee, 4. Chuck Ru*h. Port Orange; 7. Bill
Downs. Eustis; I. D ave Tem pero, Keysvlll*.
FOU R C Y L IN D E R S
Haat (4 laps) — 1. Gen* Van Alstlne, Rockledge.
End ot the Month Championship (15 laps) — t. Gena Van

Alstlna, R ockledge; 3. Billy Hooven, Orlando; 3 Bill Martin,
Sanford; 4, M ika Fitch. Semsule; 3. Bobby Sear*. Otteen; 4.
Jarry Symons, N ew Smyrna Baach; 7. Chuck " R Iff I t " Shank,
Orlando; I. T rip Carpenter, Ocoee.
S T R E E T STOCKS
H e el (4 lap s) — t. Jim Taylor, Sanford.
End ot tha Month Championship (IS lap* ) — I. Dave
M cCabe, Cocoa; 3. Joey W arm ack. Sanlord; 3. David
Snodgrass, M albourna; 4. Robert Hopping. M errill Itland; 5.
M a rc Klnley. Otteen; 4. Randy Lokey, Orlando; 7. Benny
Gibson, O coee; I. Bobby Ledford, M erritt Island; 9. Mark
Tate. M arrltt Island; 10. Jim Taylor, Sanford.
END UR O
Faature (100 laps) — (Showing driver, hometown, laps
com rtetec!) — 1. Bill Gross. Cassalber , too; 3 Don H atch*'.
O rijn d o. 100; Z. Charlas R ussail. Sant -d. 97; 4. Jerry R'xme,
Melbourne. 94; 5. D avid Rutsall. Laka M ary. 93; 4 Butch
P lerca. Orlando. 94; 7. Alan W alker. Edgewater. 93; I Terry
Straley. DeLand. 9t; 9; Jack Teagla. Orlando. 49; 10. David
Sawlckl, So. Daytona, 41

Daytona 24: Only 30 O f 69 Finish
DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) - Those cars
still running at the end of the 24 Hours
at Daytona had something In common —
improvisation, perservercnce and luck.
Of the 69 International Motor Sports
Association cars that started the en­
durance race over Daytona International
Speedway's 3.56-mlle road course Sat­
urday afternoon, only 30 were running
when the checkered flag fell Sunday.
One of the most bizarre incidents
occurred Sunday morning when Scott
Pruett, driving a Mustang in the GTO
division after his Ford GTP car retired,
had the hood of his car pop oil in the
front straightaway.

"T h e No. 1 Porsche (owned by A.J.
Foyt) pulled in front of me and blew the
front right off the car." Pruett said. "It
must have been the turbulence from him
coming across — It was the strangest
darn thing I ever saw."
Several other cars lost parts of their
bodywork. Another Ford Mustang, driv­
en by Bill Elliott, lost the right side of the
front end Saturday night. That section
was replaced, but the Chevrolet Camaro
driven by Walt Bohren finished without
covering on the front end.
Even the overall winners. Al Holbcrt.
Derek Bell. Al Unser Jr. and Chip
Robinson, had to change plans late.

DOG
RACING
NOW!

NIQHTLY 7:30 p.m.

Except Sunday, thru May 2nd
Matinees Monday, Wednesday,
&amp; Saturday 1:00 p.m.

Play the exciting A high
paying “Plc-8” - *
jackpot $5,000. Also two
“Double Qulnialas" and the
“Superfect!".
THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission for ladies
Visit our two climate-controlled
clubhouses (or your fine dining
and entertainment pleasure!

CLUBHOUSE RESV.: 831-1600

SANFORD-ORLANDO
KENNEL CLUB
North ol Orlando, Just off Hwy. 17-02
301 Ocg Track Road, longwood
Sorry. No Ona Under f|

�v

«

• • • 'r~ • t m 0- § 0

»"* t ^ r*

r**

0

*

&gt; • '• r * - r * r -

r~

tr* 0 - 0 m

PI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

TV /IA M Q -.TM ftriU M *
f /

TORONTO (UPI) — The Toronto Maple Leafs picked the
right night to play the Philadelphia Flyers.
The Flyers, who have the best record in the NHL, entered
Monday night's game without forwards Brian Propp, Ron
Sutter and llkka Slnasalo and defensemen Mark Howe.
Daryl Stanley and Ed Hospodar.
The Maple Leafs were missing some key players too, but
Toronto took advantage of Philadelphia's injuries to score
an 8-4 victory and snap a six-game losing streak.
"M aybe playing the best team in the league did give us a
little extra incentive, I don't know," Toronto Coach John
Brophy said. "W hatever It was I don’t care, it brought us
out o f our slump. It's been a tough run but we'll take this
one.”
The Flyers refused to use the injuries as an excuse.
"It's always tough to win with injuries but we simply
didn't play that well tonight." Philadelphia Coach Mike
Keenan said. “ There are no excuses for the way we played
that was our worst game of the year."

Robinson: Tried To Follow Rules
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) — Jailed former Tennessee
quarterback Tony Robinson told a Judge he tried to follow
the rules of a work release program and would be surprised
to learn he violated any rules.
Robinson, who Is serving time on cocaine charges, gave
testimony in Knox County Criminal Court Monday on
prosecutors' allegations that he abused the program.
The district attorney's office asked Judge Ray Lee
Jenkins to deny Robinson probation as punishment for
returning late to the Knox County Penal Farm on work
days.
Robinson and former Tennessee fullback Kenneth "B .B ."
Cooper, who were convicted together on drug charges, also
are accused of spending at least part of Sunday, Jan. 4, at
their Knoxville apartment when they were supposed to
have been doing their landscaplngjobs.

Friars 18th, UNLV Beck To Top
NEW YORK (UPI) — Providence College, a school with a
rich basketball past, finally has a present.
The Friars arc ranked 18th in this week’s United Press
International Board of Coaches poll, the first time since
Feb. 22. 1978 that Providence has appeared In the UPI
listings. The rankings were released Monday.
Providence, which has had a losing record six of the last
eight seasons, made the elite group after beating Big East
foes Georgetown and St. John’s last week.
Nevada-Las Vegas regained the No. 1 ranking after
beating three teams by an average of 26 points last week.
The Runnln' Rebels, who fell from the top spot two weeks
ago after losing at Oklahoma, received 32 first-place votes
and 618 points.

KC's Leonard Throws In Towel
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) — Dennis Leonard, who made a
dramatic comeback from a series of knee operations to
pitch for the Kansas City Royals last season, Monday
annouccd his retirement from baseball.
Leonard said he and Royals General Manager John
Schucrholz came to a mutual agreement last week during
contract negotiations that he should retire, ending a
12-year major-league career.
The return was Immediately successful. Leonard started
off 4-3 with a league-best 1.73 ERA. The Royals scored
only four runs In his three losses. Leonard, however, had
problems after that and finished the year 8-13 with a 4.44
ERA.

Parrish Rejects Phillies' O ffer
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Free-agent catcher Lance
Parrish has rejected the Philadelphia Phillies' offer of a
guaranteed one-year contract worth about Si million, team
president Bill Giles said Monday.
Giles said Parrish’s agent. Tom Reich, turned down the
deal late Sunday night during a telephone conversation.
Although financial terms were not disclosed, Reich called
the offer "pathetically Inadequate."
"H e said he would now talk to other teams but that he
would stay In touch with us," Giles said. "W e will make no
more offers. We have made them an offer we think is fair.
It's up to them now to change their minds and accept our
offer."

Braves Acquire Toronto's Garcia
A T L A N T A (UPI) — The Atlanta Braves Monday acquired
former All-Star second baseman Damaso Garcia and
pitcher Luis Leal from the Toronto Blue Jays iti a trade for
pitcher Craig McMurtry.
"Garcia will give us much needed offensive help and
additional speed." said Braves General Manager Bobby
Cox, who managed Toronto from 1982 through 1985.
McMurtry. 27. was 1-6 with a 4.74 ERA last year and had
a 23-35 career mark with a 4.06 ERA with Atlanta. As a
rookie in 1983 he was 15-9 with a 3.08 ERA.

C ontinued from 5 A
"But then we started turning the
ball over too much and you pay
for (hose mistakes agatnsi a
good team like Lake Mary."
LA K E M A R Y (47) - P alterio n I. Law ion
15, Thom a* B, Frqy 0. W hyte 6. Roldan 0.
O ldqn | ), B o n a v e n tu rq 5, D a w io n B.
MulhollandA. Total*; JB II 2767
S E M IN O L E (41) Scott J. C aih 9.
H lllim a n IB, S tric k la n d 7. T o o m b i 0,
Stephen* 0, Long J, Reddick 4, G llch rlil S
Total*: 141414 43

...C o o k
C ontinued from 5A
tonight."
And so will the Scmlnoles.
who fell from eighth to the also
receiving votes category In the
Class 4A State Poll. Coach Bill
Klein said he is exp ectin g
another tough game.
"T h ey're going to be out there
trying." Klein said. "I k n o w they
Will trv »o s l o w i t d o w n b u t w e

SCOREBOARD UPI/HEMIO UNICES

TV/RADIO

M aple Leafi Pick Right Night,
Snap Skid Against Philadelphia

. . . D e p th

S C O R E B O A R D

Halltime — Lake M ary 34. Seminole 21.
Fouls — Lake Mary 17. Seminole 1R Fouled
out — none Technical — none. A — 251

LAK E M AR Y J V R O LLS
Tara Jackson pumped In a
game-high 17 polnls Monday
night as Lake Mary’s Junior
varsity Lady Rams rolled lo a
41-25 victory over the JV Lady
Scmtnolcs.
Lori Wlnnall and Laura Hall
c o n t r i b u t e d six polnls each as
Lake Mary improved to 10-2.
Seminole. 3-3. was led by Cindy
Lyons w i t h seven points and
Shawna Cohen and P atrice
Brown with six each.
play pretty good defense. We
just want to play our man and
move it down the court."
Klein said Brantley used two
p l a y e r s back to c u r t a i l
Seminole’s running attack Fri­
day In tiie Tribe's 63-55 victory.
"W e need to rebound to run.” lie
said. "Even if we aren’ t reboun­
ding we should be able to gel it
down the court.
"1 think we're getting into the
shooting area bul then we’re
becoming too passive. If somcthint! does not pop right at us we

mnrtww
1 pm - [ M L CFkft. PravldNici d
BoatoxCaitopIll IttH ) ■ • « )
I p.m. - I I I * . C l l l t l l. A llB im aBirmingham tf Wait V&lt;r|Mt IU
I f ) p m -NBA. b w C i W a i i i l W i
H m rttlU
tp m - ESPN Collafi. Spacuwit talon

4 p m - ESPN. N t k i ' i Ci*. find, rtet

finfi&lt;gu*in

II p m. - ESPN. Amohca'I 0 * . find, rpet

Inf (U
MOM
I pm - WWBFAM IIIW . WUEZAM
IW .N A S U IU n

DOGS
000 M C tM :« tPdmfOrlMfi

Id - V ll, I: III)
4 FlfthMtASMN
lift Id Id
I TpmiOf.J
tit lit
4 filn rttp n
&gt;4f
Q fP im 44. P1411 D « , T 14)41 )41d
ftd - l/lD ftft
] C lM KM di*
»d l i f t )■
I MKQuMCT
Id lit
t Mfep tOtUM
Id
0 t i l l I f d i P (H&gt; ru t) T t i l t) 14144;

mip)int.)i

Nd —1/14* M: d .d
1 MaritooGhmt
t)N l i d I d
I Biockhato
Id Id
I MHCtpttnNamo
Id
0 I I I ] d d t t [M l INN; T ( M il I f f
4ft-1/14.0:11.11
4 AiwodCwtor
id Id id
I Curion Strap!
Id Id
) Ruhob’tComtt
Id
0 (H I l i d ; P1411 n.d : T (4111 M.M;
Qdn DM (1)14) 14444
M -V U .M : n o
1 SJJohnny
4d I d Id
4 ANiAfinoru
id Id
1 MLRocklngh
Id
0144) 1S.44; P144) B d ; T (4411 D id
4 W opyBftr
K48 N X 538
440 sot
) Sartor Braan
148
1 Yuma Whitt
004)84 )8; F&lt;4»ri4«i T (4)111,1)444
t l* -1/14. P i n t
) Doug tPircy Out
)M 148 IN
1)8 ) »
) CoUtnYrut
IN
1 Till IKluad You
0 ())&gt; 1744; F ())) DJI; T D M ) K U I
m - V L 0:74 4)
1 Bwkinn Billy
1 » 148 IN
] MiilmumChorgi
1» 4N
4N
) KOUO
Q (M l l t d ; P 111) l i d ; T ( M il d i d
4ft - 1/14. I : HU
1 UWin S/whtr Sua
lt d 4d I d
) PfiatoPltiNP)
I d 4d
) ML Ondna Cifir
400
g ( M ld d ; P (M in id ;T (IM l« M d
l i f t -1/14,1: lt.11
I Burk'S Funon
10d 14d ) d
T SeicCrtHi
l t d 400
4 Xpert
M#
g (I II N d ; P (M l lU d ; T D M ) Ml 44
lif t —1/14. A: d t l
I SassiaMiiar
Id Id )d
4 SallriMGplaocfi
Id Id
I Rockin Rock
Id
g I II) I t f t ; P (4411141; T (4411 IB d.
Pk SU (441-1-411; I 04 4 pod I ortaam
U) d . Carytyyr: 4UAI4d
li f t - VIA C: 1144
I Mont too Willy
&lt;140 410 110
4 SfinN Ttll
I d 100
I BB lOn* Ton
CIO
g (H I U4I; P (H I I d d i T II4 II MOP,
Oum DM 11411) tll.d j S trilcM : I HT'l
WtotolPI
1141- VI, C: B44
1 Salliia*Vpgu#
(HO. 1440 WN
I Busy Boot
t d AM
I Marge's IA
.
MO
g (111 I4)d; P III) IS d i T 14441
'. d id ; IF &lt;44411 Id l-M
A -1414: H-U4.441

PR EPS
IASKETIALL: Ttortoilporti Writers Pell
ROTS
C L A S I I A
t Hallandale l i t II
1 Tempt Bay Vo Tick (IM I
I S&gt; PeteriOurg Boca Ciega (111)
4 Pompano Beicfi Ely (to ll
I M l 11 on ( H U
I Naples Lely ID U
1 O cila Forell (D i)
I Helnei City I I I SI
t Tampa J ilu ll ( I I I I
10. (lltlNortfi Fori M ylfll 11)1
TtHoIvswi Lincoln li t ! )
AIM receitrlng rotet
Brooklrilto
Hernando. Cocoa. Daytona Beach Sea
breen. Cameiyill* E ittiidt. CUdet
Central. Nollyaood Hills. Jtcksonnlle
Biifiop Kenny, Jacksonville Eng’eaood Ncm
Smyrna Beacfi. Ocala Vanguard. S*uart
Merlin County. T a lltfiltse e Godby,
TiMafiauee R cHrds. Wist Pllm Beacfi Norm
S h o r e
C L A SS I A
1 Cleonuater Central Celtdtic 19411
1. R.viera Beacfi Suncoasl H ill
I. Crest C'ty Du e County 1144)
4 e m p lo y (14 I I
). M arathon I I I II
4 Tempo Catholic [ it II
1 DunnollOfi 111 II
I C restyle n ( I I 41
I Jasper Hamilton County (144)
IS Lest PiectdI!))l
Also rKtttmg votes Arcadie DeSots
County. Blountstoan. Boca Raton SI
Andrews. Cocoa Beacfi. Crescent City.
Jacksonville Belies. Marianna. Miami
Curley. Naples. Puma Corda Charlotte.
Ransom Ever;'odes Sarasota Cardnol
Mooney. Tallahassee Florida High.
Waucfiul* Hardee County
C L A 1 S I A
1 H a*lhorno ( I I II
1 Fori tauderdaie Wrstm nsfer ( If 11
) Tampa Boy-short Christian (181)
4 Miami Bvrkshlra H I 4)
i G reet v i l l i 111 41
t ( lit) Cottcndito 111))
Grand R idgt [14 II
I Plantation Broward Christian (1441

T O N IG H T ’S SC H E D U L E

t . B r ir u t n i i f - o
M Miami Palm* | l) ) |

T t d if M 'R M rs#

Ita rty Coiatty. Con4wy, OftWpAnftnw.

Niiii4riLdamriiicyi4ii4n.Mpim.Mtrp

Lafayotto. Mitml LaPrograu/vt. Mipml
Frhrato, Milton CMfd. Nfptoi tl. John
Nnmpnn, Oonga Part Sf.Joftt’i Cm * ?
Opt- Ortanda Lola Highland Prop. P u
ton. it. Pttorfturg i m M ChrWan.
Soraaota OvKtlon. V irt Booth tl. E P M fft

Clippers

BOYS: S p .m . — W m ln o te a t L b fc t (M a ry ; • p .m . — L y m a n
a t La ka H a w a ii; I p .m . — O v M a a t L a k a B ra n May
W R IS T L IN O
■ p .m . — S am lno ia a t O rla n d e E vans

situ
C L k t I I A
I I t P ttorttarf C m (1411
I . N P lItfiftlP ( I 4 I |
1 Quincy Shankl M i l l
4 Ptmppnt Botch Elp IIS-II
I Step Rpton Pfy* Mm Pp«4 (D f)
I. OcpIp Vanguard (D |)
T Srtfpntpn Sauthoait 114)1
I Fan PlPrtP Cpntril (111)
I Glhonton E itl lay HP 4)
i f FpnM ypnll4ll
AJm rtcpMnf d n
Crytlpl Rlv*.
Englaaood Lpmpn Spy, F trl Piprct
W ith m i Fart Myan Rhrordalo, Gaino)
fllto. Utdat Control, Cult Brao».
Jttktomnllt Bishop Ktmy, JtcUonvilla
Ppm . laatburg. Mitml LourdH Npn
Smrynp Batch. Ortpnfp Jana*. Pan
SumUp Plppf. Tllldipupp Rickard*.
Tihn»l«p Astronaut, W«t Palm laaefi
C a rd in a l N o a m tn
C L A S S 1 A
I Kayitont H llf t ill ( I I I )
1. M a rltn n p (11-41
I . P akpka* (M i l
4 ArtPdP OaSttt County (111)
) P act (1 )4 )
4. Jtipar Hamilton County (1M)
T. W lllltty n ( 1 M I
I. C ic t t Botch 114-4]
t C to m d ir Cpntril Ctifidic ( » ll
I t Ctormenlltlo)
Alw rtenting aotof: fact Rttgn SI.
Aadrtn'l. E uilli. Miami Wotlmtmtar.
Ho»4a*. Pyrry Taytor County. Poraon
Taylor, Noobatry. Wauchult Hard*
Cl 4 4 I |
C L A S S I A
I Laurel H ill ( I t I]
1 Fort Laudvdalo Wntminitor (14)1
) Miami N eitM til Chritlian (1)1)
4 S». Pttonburg Shoracmt (UP)
I Ormg* Park SI John's Country Oty (1)1)
I Orlando Lutfiir ( I I I I
7 H illia r d (1 1 1 )
1 G rind B ld g i ( 1 1 ))
4 T tllih a itrt FAMU M ill
16 Cainntl Hr Oak Hal 11114)
Aim
wowing mtoi
BalhNham.
Challahooichta, H a lty a o a d Chritlian,
Homntoad Daft Ctanllon. Laka Worth Chrli
lion. Kapln St Jeta Ntumann Orlando
Laka Highland Prog. Panel f t Loan, SI
Pftonburg Katarlck Chritlian
SOCCER: Florida AlhtatlcCoochat Fall
leysOasidA
...........1)6&gt;1
l Miami Killian.................... ...........I M I
IS t Pftffibufg ...... .
...........t)»2
4 Tarpon Spring*.............. . ...........IS- M
........... 11 I f
1 Oraogt Part__ _
6 Miami Amortcan.............. . ........ _ .tM l
f f j i u i y m 1i l i Hawaii
1HJ
...... U 4 0
1 Claarwtitr.,...
4 Hiaitoh Miami La h ti____ _____ 1118
I! LthttarM.......................... ....... 1)88
Alia rtcetviag votes - Brondon. Coconut
Creek, Cooper City. Coral Springs. Dunedin.
Jacksonville Fletcher. Lake Mary. Merritt
Island. Miami Senior. MJeml Sunset. M.romer.
North Miami Beech. Settner Armwood. Tampa
Gaither. Winter Haven. Winter Park
Beys Oats 1A
IToMehetseeLean--- ------11)8
1 Tampa Jesuit......... .— ..... ........... M i l
1 Clearwater Central Catholic.............. 1811
A Fort Loudrrdo A St Thomas Aquinas. M i l
1 Naples Collier............................... I f 1-1
4 Miami Accfitiishpo Curley________ I t ) l
1 Satellite Beech ......
.1)88
L Orliede ttilto f Haere--------- -------- 1144
(.Oetof^----------------------------------1441
» Cocoa leach .
1441
AJte rrv ti, i n f votes - Bradenton tayshare.
Oarteea (tech leeireeto. Fort Myers Bishop
Verol. Gainesville. Jacksonville Hefap Kenny.
Jacksonville Ntast. Naples. N lctvlllt.
Pensacola Escambia. Sarasota Cardinal
Mooney Tallahassee Lincoln
Guts Class 1A 4A
I. Langwood Lima*.___________ _ I4 M
1. Altamonte Iprntfs Lake frantlty. - B i t
1118
) Tampa Ltto...........................
4 Melboiene ____ __ _______ 1418
1)11
! Largo_____ _________ _
184
4 Miami Killian _____ ______
14)1
) Covll Springs Taravf lla— .........
„.I444
LU kaM ary.
1 St Petavsburg Samlnoia ............tl 11
18 Sttfnar Armwood
1180
Alta radioing vales - Coconut Creek. Coral
Springs. Coral Gables, Ountdln. Fori
Lauderdale SI Thomas Aquinas. Fort Walton
Beach Choclawhaichee. Hialeah Miami Lakes
Miami American, Miami Springs Orange
Park. South Plantation
WRESTLING: Florida Athlahc Coochts Fell
Class4A
............. 120
] Miami Souihndgo...........
1)8
1 C ltirw tttr Country*idt
_______ 1)8
i OrUNfts A lsekl ,
............. I l l
............ 11 l
1J1
l PifultM Paris....................
ro-i
1 Jachionvilto Wofiion
100
• North Miami Stach......... ............. 11 2
........IB 2
18 Tampa Lito
Also radioing voles - Bradenton Manatee
Sarasota Laka Mary. Miami Southwest.
Miami Beacfi. Cleoraottv
Class 1A
I HollywoodMcArtfiur
»0
l Orlande fevfiof Maori......... ........... 11 1 I
1 Fort Myers Riverdalt
..................I l l
4Pelaika___ ______
81
! Naples
HI
4 A u t u r n d a l e —14
I Brandwton Bayshore
111
I Fort Myers
1811
4 Fort Lauderdale Novi
111
18 LiveCakSuwanee ____ ____ __ Il l l
Alta receiving r t lt s - Spring Hill
Sprmqsteed. Tallahassee Lincoln, Tempo Je
suit. New Smyrna Beacfi, Deertie'd Beacfi.
Fort Laudardate SI Thomas Aquinas Lemon
Bay

United Press Intenutlonel
The D enver Nuggets were
embarrasBed twice this season
by the Los Angeles Clippers.
And make no mistake, that's the
word to use. When you lose
twice to a team as bad as the
Clippers, you're embarrassed.

SOCCIR
BOYS: 7 p .m . — S am lno ia a t L a k a H a w a ii; a p .m . — La ka
B ra n tla y a t L a k a M a ry
O IR L S t • p .m . — O v la d a a t L a k a M a r y ; T p .m . — W in te r
P a rk a t L y m a n ; 7 p .m . — L a ka H aw ai i a t L a k a B ra n tla y ; 7
p .m .— O rla n d o B lth o p M o o n a t M e lb o u rn e

you. IV B U I: b f t M t o n a t o
Nktor'iCa-UBLaagM
» L 0 l
Ti m
1M —
Dirty Work
9)
)
MpMiw
1)1 7
igrbayiTtoGang
*4
P rtttm l K 44l l o w
5
Goa* IhoghorK Lulhoron Owrch
44
5
lo ll Mat* Lb)
44 i
44
Gator*
5
84 7
Fart Art Fvl*
&gt;8 •
Buttorfingwi
Church o(Go&lt;04 Frcgfacy
&gt;11 t!
Ito ftfliw k
t o t Shophord I t loll Motor I
C ootS fiopw tllS pittrll
Good Shophord t l Praphtcy 11
GpodShophord It, (Mphlmf
Dolphin* 11 Dirty fitort D

OotohintllBoflMokrl

Odphnoil P intcm lll
Dirty Work I I Pinocml II
Dirty Work IS, Prophecy I
Dirty Work IV Spikay It
Spikay IS. Bail M e * 11
Spikay IS. PHacml U
toll Motor 11 Propfipcy)
Pinocml &gt;1 Proptocy I

JUCO
BASKETBALL: Flortdi JoCa Catchot PM
Wl
Ft.
T ttft
1. Florida I I ) ...........................113
II!
1. Daytona Batch.......
11) «
). Imlnati .
.....
»1 4)
»4
4 Brrvird.........).......
N
). Chipola............... .. ............ IIS
71
M
i Ptntocolj........................... 114
SI
7 South Florida..... ...... ..... .... ..1)4
47
1 Miami Daft South----- .......... I l l
II
f CullCookl................ ............1)8
i 1 C
i o 1 r a IF 1 l r 1 d
Alsa rtcalving votes: Indian Riser.
Miami Daft North. SI. Fatonfeurg
R
l T
U Ai f ui VI VV L T1 RD A
A L
L
BASKETBALL: TooAy'lCaflofi Rotodl
fill
B ftnftii f t Suffolk 44
Clffiol ic Un1v«fUty 14, NYU71
Cheney H. Lkncobi II
Cortland SI R. Utica Tech 14
Droifil IA Hofstra )1.
Framingham tl, Ptymouth SI I*
Hawthorne I ) Green Mountain IVt I II
Juniata Tl.Gettysburg )8
Kings (PA) W.Mer Marine Academy U
Kulitown 41. Randolph Macon 11
Lehigh nLoloyettoH
Merisi )J,St Francis (Pa ) Q
Misericordia Ft. Baptist Bible I)
Moravian U UninISM
NewPaltiUVassarl)
Now Jersey Tich 48. E Stroudsburg f t
Pace NL Mercy 41
Philo. Tectlle n. Bloomsburg 44
PhHedrtpfito Pharmacy 41 Aivtmia ta
Pitt-Johnston I t ShippsOg It
Rutgers 4L Xavier (erne) i t
SI joievh'l 4A SI IqnivnfureO)
$1Michael! n Assumption M
SI Joseph tIVM H. Lyndon SIR
SI John s41. Georgetown 4) loll
Temple n. Massachusetts SI
U Southern Maine4 t Bates 11
WllliAfflift Springfield 18
York Coll D. Shenandoah 48
tooth
Bryan 184. Carson Newman II
Charleston to. Shepherd Tl
Christopher Newport f t AvtroH O
Citadel H.W Carolinall
Coiitqt Ot Charleston 18a Morns 10
Delta St H Tennessee Martin It
Dike tl SWson !t
E Tenn SM4 SCAiken 44
Evansv He77.Morthead 4)
Fairmont ) l Salem44
Florida St )). Cincinnati IS
FrencilMerionia,NC Central SI
Furmanll.Appalachian IS
George Mason 18 William 1 Mary 44
Lander 14 Newberry St
Liberty If. Davis 4 Elkins II
Longwood tfiL Benedict R
Loulivil'e 48. South Carolina 41
Martrial I IA Davidsontl
Md Baltimore Cocrnty I I U'ico 14
Middle Temetine I IA Tennessee Tech 45
Mississippi II. Tennessee 18
NCWitm-ngtonOA Americans!
Navy IAE Carolina to
NewOrleans 41. McNees* St 10
S Aiabanalt, Va Commonwealth))
SC SI 4A Delaware St SI
Southern Mill fa. Memphis St 71
Tennessee St 41 Kentucky SI II
WVi WtsieyknU. Indiana I Pa ISP
W Va Tacfi ft. Aiderson Broaddui &gt;8
Wake Forest 44, Mary land Si
Akrx H. Dttrpit 14
Aqumat'04 St Mary's 14
CtntvelSl IGO.Cal torn-aiPi 14)
OsytonDButlefll
OePtui IA Norm Carolina St 4)
Grand Valley 10. Northwood If
Illinois f t Ohio St 4)
Illinois Ceil 10). Principle 18
Illinois Si 44 I-- -p.» Chicago IS
Loytia .lO r -‘ 'ot»rts)8
Northerniowill Afts'irnlii S4
Purdue Calumtl TX Taylor 70
Row Hulman IA MacMurriy 41
Sog new Valley )LTrl St 44
SI Louis IS. Youngstown St It
Valparaiso* E linno&lt;$ll

Monday night the Nuggets
hosted the Clippers and averted
a similar Ignominy &gt;- riding a
third-quarter surge to score a
140-112 rout.

Vtoam aW . Rond LUd ( fill) )
Weil Mich O. Laid Sugar lor ) l
Wit t o n Bay U. Clevttond SI R
WriftriSl niUPUWanoptyisD

VO LLEYBALL

PtofigeC. Central (Ohio) Slate4)
SamHouston SI TfPrairltVn AAMI4
FuHertonStllSan JeeoSIM
So Uloh Si II. Cal a Notre Dame «
Southern Oregon i l l WatiMk 41
BASKETBALL: UPI CaHegi Catches Pei
1
i.
L
4
l

MtvtdaLai Vtgao (321 U H I
Indiana 14) (ITI)
North Carolina 0 ) H ill
loot (14))
Trhfta ( » »
6 Purduo (1411
7. DoPtuI (111) &gt;
E OHofioma (t) |)7»
f Alabama (D I)
f t Gtcrgttown ( 1) ] )
tl SrncvM (17)1
I t T o n Chritlian (111)
11 Ctomaan 1181)
14 llllnoil 11)11
11 Duka ( 1 4 4 )
16 Pilhburgh |174)
1) Kama* (1)1)
16 Provkftnct (14)1
I f dial Auburn III 41
18. (No] Florida (1 )1 1
loaroaM

III
544
116
451
m
S44
ID

)
1
I
1
i
J
1
1)1 8
2)4 16
m u
IN 1
14)1!
133 M
1)81]
11611
8)16
4d»
18 1
141)
D ll

BASKETBALL: NBA STAN0IN0S
E n tire Ceilertoce
Ahortic Ovtuea
W L Pel. 01
79 Boston
n
PhilpditpMa
Vt I s
14
Washington
t) SR 18
New York
1) 184 M l
11 344 f l ' l
Central Dkrtsiea
Outran
I f IS 418
Altonti
N 14 4M 1
MrlMukoa
21 N JO 1
Chicago
)1 B 4N 7'*
S II 455 6
Indian)
Clovobnd
i i )7 a II1*
W ittii i CMitfffict
MiftaM Dhrhlaa
W L Pci. C l
78 II 444 —
Obitbi
Utah
M 11 »1 7 i
HouiNn
a i i m S' 7
Dtnvtr
i i a in I i
San Antonio
11 18 154 11
14 » 111 14 ;
Sacrtmanto
Pacific Dtriuan
LA Likan
34 II 7M —
18 16 SN 7
Portland
25 » 554 6
Saaltli
25 22 533 N
Goidm Slat*
Photnii
16 V 111 l l ' i
7 9 154 7)
LA Cbppar*
Mondavi RtSulTl
Wnhingtois 18A New York f t
Denver 148, LA Clippers III
Dallas UX LA Lakers 44
Seattle S8L Now Jersey m
Tuesday's Carnes
Boiton ef Atianfa, Ip m
PNIadiipniajt Indiana,) J8pm
Washington at Chicago. I SOp m
Now York at Milwaukee. 1 10pm
Denver el Houston 4 X p m
Go’dfnSiateitSenAntcno.4 SOpm
Sacramento tl Utah, 4 SOpm
Pfioeniv at Portland. 18 30 p m

The Clippers, at 7-38 the worst
team in the NBA. had cut a
20-polnt second-quarter deficit
to 9 at the half, but then opened
the third quarter by going more
than five minutes without a field
goal.
Meanwhile. Lafayette Lever
was scoring 16 of hts 23 points,
and Alex English 14 of hts 28.
Denver’s 47 points In the third
quarter tied an NBA season high
for scoring in a single quarter,
m a t c h i n g the L o s A n g e le s
Lakers' output against Phoenix
Jan. 2.
Denver. 21-25. connected on
18 of 25 field goals In the the
third period, while the Clippers
made only 5 o f 16 shots from the
Held. After three quarters Denver
led 111-77
"Sure, we knew they beat us
twice out there." Denver Coach
Doug Moc said. "But the best
thing was their beating Utah in
Salt Lake over the weekend.
When they did that, we knew we
had to be ready to play."
Clippers guard Darnell Valen­
tine agreed the Nuggets had a
special motivation to win Mon­
day night."

B u lle ts 104. K n lck s 68
At Landovcr. Md., Jay Vincent
came off the bench to score 6 of
his team-high 19 points In the
fourth quart er to send the
Knlcks to ihclr seventh straight
loss. Vincent combined with
three other substitutes to score
21 of Washington’s 30 fourthquarter points. The Bullets got 8
points from Darwin Cook. 5 from
Michael Adams, and 2 from
Manutc Boi in the fourth period.
M a verick s 103, L a k e rs 9 0
At Inglewood. Calif., Mark
Aguirre scored 27 paints, and
James Donaldson contributed 5
of his 9 points in the final 3:17,
enabling Dallas lo snap the
Lakers' 13-gamc winning streak
at the Forum.
H O CK EY
SuperSoolcs 108, N e t* lOO
At Seattle, Xavier McDaniel
HOCKEY: NHL STANDINGS
scored
35 points and grabbed 14
W illi C in lir in c t
rebounds to power the Sonlcs.
PifrKk Dtvtswn
W l T Ft*. GF Cl
The Nets have lust six straight
14 11 4 n n 154
Phdodtlphit
NY blander*
11 11 1 54 114 1)4 a n d 12 o f t h e i r l a s t 13
Wash ngton
1) 14 I i) 1)5 14) games. Rookie guard Dwayne
NY llangtf*
II 11 1 so 18) 205
Nt» Javiay
11 17 S 47 142 ]&lt;] Washington scored 21 points for
14 14 1 44 140 111 New Jersey, which lost In four
Pltlrturgh
Adam! Dmuaa
0 1)4 1)1 overtimes lo Golden State Sun­
17 28 * 1
Marthrd
Montrial
11 11 1 f t 114 in day night.
24 11 J 0 It) H7
28 » J 17 1)8 117
II 18 ft n 1)1 181
Campbell Centtrt^t
Norris Dvvisiow
W L T Fit. GF GA
» It 1 5) If) IS
Minn, lota
Oolrolt
11 2) 1 58 III I?)
It 73 % 47 1)4 Iti
SI Itud
14 11 | 44 180 ) I
Chicago
Toronto
20 71 ft 41 112 14)
Smyttai Di r (lion
EdmcfUqn
14 11 4 n 741 111
Minrupe^
28 28 ft 41 144 ID
Calgor,
71 12 2 54 Z» 28]
Los Angeto*
21 14 ft 58 217 211
Vtnctuvar
11 12 ft 14 1/5 21
Manday's Rrwlt
Twxto A Philadelphia 4
Tuesday's Games
Montreal at Quebec) 30p m
ElmontonatS' LOun.l SSpm
Vancouver at Cigary. s 1) p m
Wednesday tGamei
Bvttaloat Hartford- n.ght
Quebec at Montreal, night
NT Is'endetsal Vancouver night
Washington at NT Rangers, n&lt;gh&lt;
Philadelphia at Winnipeg, night
Los Angeiet el Toronto. n.ght
Dttrott it Chicago, mgfit
Elmonton at Minnesota, n-gfit

Boiton
Guofcc
Built 0

HURRY &amp; JOIN OUR MODERN
TRAINING CENTER

B A SE B A LL
W ORLD
Just In Time For
The Upcoming Season
• L«rg« 8.000 5q PI. Indoor Facility
• Slulu o l IH« Art B alling Cagaa
• Comptolu Batting La M on Piogvam
Available Fiom Professional
Inalnjclovt
• Low Annual Membership

SIO 00 Covort 7ho U horu Fdtrutf
Including A Outriaily fit# * staffer
And Moral

BASEBALL W O RLD
PH. 3 3 9 -2 6 9 0
183 A T L A N T I C D R ., M A I T L A N O

lAcrost From Gt&gt; Cart Tree* Olt Hrry 7? 92)

C H A M P IO N S H IP
G R E YH O U N D
R A C IN G
IS BACK

Lake Mary held a 10-4 lead
after one quarter but Seminole
came back within four. 17-13. by
halftime. Seminole stayed within
eight early In the third quarter
when the Lady Rams went on a
10-2 surge for a commanding
33-17 lead after three quarters.

JK

L A K E M A R Y JV (41) - Hall a. M itchell 0.
Roundtree 2, Jack ion 17. Sheperd 7. Kuvach
2, Wlnnall 4. Arnold 7. Hartafield 4. T otal*; 17
7 13 41.
SE M IN O LE JV (U &gt; - Baker 2. Cohen 6.
Brown A, liaac 4. Lyon* 7. Totals: II 3 1R25.
H alftim e — Lake M ary 17, Seminole 13.
Fouls — Lake M ary 11, Samlnoia 13 Fouled
out — none Technical — none

don’t get aggressive enough."
Roderick Henderson. Jerry
" S t i c k " Parker and A n d r e
Whitney have been the catalysts
as Seminole have won 11 of its
last 12 outings. Henderson
(16.1). Parker (15.0) and
Whitney (10.5) are scoring in
doubl e figu res. Whi t ne y , a
5-11&gt;"i guard, leads the county
in steals 13.5) and assists {6.4).
Craig Walker, a 6 H Junior, leads
in blocked shots (3.5). Michael
"Spud" Edwards, a 5-7 guard, is
third in assists.

M IK K T IA L L

CHARITY
NIGHT FOR
UNIVERSITY
$ 1, 7 1 8 , 1 8 3 . 5 3
OF CENTRAL
Has been raised
over the past 15 FLORIDA
years at S.O.K.C.

(no extra charge to SOKC customers)
Visit our two climate-controlled clubhouses for your fine dining
and entertainment pleasurel

C L U B H O U S E R E S E R V A T IO N S - 831-1600

RAIN
OR
SH IN E

SANFORD-ORLANDOKENNELCLUB
NIGHTLY
North of Orlando, Just off Highway 17-92
7:30 P.M.
301 Dog Track Road, Longwood
EXCEPT SUNDAYS
Sorry, No One Under 18

M A TIN EE S
M O N * W E D * SAT
1:00 P.M .

5%
,*

*

�- * * ; —w &lt; * y *

•A— Sanford HtraW, Sanfard^FI.

Bulls Drive Market
NEW YORK (UPI) — Prices opened higher today
in active trading of New York Stock Exchange
Issues.
The Dow Jones industrial average, which
climbed 21.38 points to another record high
Monday, was up 12.38 to 2191.79 shortly after
the market opened.
Advances led declines 637-259 among the
1,316 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 14,588.800
shares.
The stock market scored a robust advance In
active trading Monday as a sliding dollar and a
brightened view of the economy helped boost the
Dow Jones Industrial average and other market

Local Interest
These quotations provided by
m e m b e r s of the N a t i o n a l
Association otSecurities Dealers
arc representative Inter-dealer
prices as ot mid-morning today.
In te r-d e ale r m arkets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail m arkup or
markdown.
Bid Aak
7% 8
American Pioneer
34
33%
Barnett Bank
25 25%
First Union
Florida Power
34%. 34%
&amp; Light
42%. 42%
Fla. Progress
33
32%
HCA
25 25%
Hughes Supply
25%.
25%
Morrison’s
59%.
59%
NCRCorp
32
31%
Plcsscy
13%.
13%
Scotty’s
43%
42%
Southeast Bank
22%
22%
SunTrust
57
56%
Wall Disney World
63%. 63%
Westlnghousc

Gold And Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold A silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold
London
Previous close 407.00 up 2.625
Morning fixing 402.00 off 5.00
Hong Kong
403.75 up 3.00
New York
Comex spot
404.10 up 3.00
gold open
Comex spot
silver open
5.517 up 0.03
(London morning fixing
change is based on the previous
day’s closing price.)

Dow Jones
Dow Jones Averages —
30 Indus
2185,74
20 Trans
887.77
15 Utils
226.45
65 Slock
832.54

10 a.m.
up 6.33
up 5.81
up 0.46
up 3.16

gauges to record highs.
.
Technology, chemical, gold and other stocks
sensitive to the economy and the value of the
dollar led the way higher.
Michael Metz, a market strategist at Oppenhelmer &amp; Co., attributed the market’s surge
Monday to the view that "w e will get an
acceleration In the economy rather than the
slump we once expected."
Metz said the more optimistic reading of the
economy’s prospects comes at a time when there
are still "an enormous number of people" who
have not yet bought stocks. These people "figure
that the Dow Is going to 4.000 without them, and
so they think they better hurry up and buy
stocks." Metz said.

Dollar And Gold
Both Take Fall
By U nited Press International
The U.S. dollar opened lower
on major world money markets
today. The price of gold also
moved lower.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, the dol l ar weakened
marginally against the Japanese
yen closing at 152.28. down
0.87 from Monday's close of
153.15.
In European trading, the dollar
opened at 1.794 German marks
In Frankfurt, down from Mon­
day’s close of 1.8165.
In Zurich, the dollar opened at
1.508 Swiss francs, down from
1.53. and 2.018 Dutch guilders
In Amsterdam, down from 2.047
on Monday.
The dollar opened at 5.995
French francs In Paris, down
from 6.0575. at 37.65 Belgian
francs in Brussels, down from
38.12 and was 1.280.50 lire In
Milan, down from 1.294.70.
The pound also strengthened
against the dollar in London,
opening at S I.52875 to the
British pound, .against $1.5185

on Monday.
In early New York trading, the
d o l l a r wa s s l i g ht l y hi gher
against major foreign currencies
in light trading;
Gold dropped $3.50 In Zurich
to $403.50 an ounce and lost
$3.25 In London to $403.75 an
ounce.
The morning fixing In London
was $402. off $5 from Monday's
close.
Silver fell 5 cents In Zurich to
$5.50 an ounce and slipped 3.5
cents In London to.$5.505.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, gold closed at $403.75 an
ounce on the Hong Kong Bullion
Exchange, off $1.50 from Mon­
day'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
$404.10 an ounce, up $3 from
M o n d a y ' s c l o s e . A
5.000-troy-ounce silver futures
contract for delivery In February
opened at $5,517. up 3 cents an
ounce.

Economic In d icators Rise
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
government's Index of economic
Indicators soared 2.1 percent In
December, the biggest Jump In
nearly four years, thanks largely
lo increases In building permits
and a (lurry of borrowing, the
Commerce Department said to­
day.
December's index concluded a
year in which the indicators rose
nine of the 12 months, falling
only In January. June und
August. The Index rose 7.2
percent from December 1985 lo

December 1986. compared lo a
5.8 percent Increase In the
preceding 12 months.
" A s a bellwether for future
economic activity, today's good
news fits comfortably with the
s to ck ma r k e t ’ s New Year's
picture of very strong Invest­
ment in American business.”
White House spokesman Marlin
Kltzwaler said.
Increases in seven of the
index's 12 oilier categories also
contributed to the Jump.

Buchanan Resigns

NATION
IN BRIEF
P re sid e n t W illin g To P ro vid e
Congress W ith Excerp ts O f N otes
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The White House and Congress,
each taking a conciliatory route, appear for now to have
avoided a showdown over access to President Reagan’s
private notes that deal with the Iran arms-Contra aid
scandal.
The president's spokesman said Monday Reagan Is
willing to give Congress "excerpts" from his notes that
bear on the affair, and members of special congressional
panels set up to investigate the scandal applauded the
move.
The apparent compromise was struck ai. ' memories of
the constitutional crisis that sprang from tne fight for
Richard Nixon’s Watergate tapes. Reagan aides at first said
his notes should not be released but later changed their
tunc.
Lawmakers hope the handwritten notes, described as
"personal, diary-like impressions" Reagan occasionally
jotted down to help In the writing of his memoirs, can erase
some confusion over his decisions and Intentions in selling
U.S. arms to Iran and their links to the plight of U.S.
hostages in Lebanon.

Reagan N a m e s N e w C IA Chief
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A fight with cancer has ended
William Casey's stormy tenure as CIA director, confronting
a 20-ycar veteran of the spy ugeney with the challenge of
repairing Its image and relations with Congress.
The White House announced Monday that Casey,
hospitalized since Dec. 15 and struggling to recover from
brain-cancer surgery, had resigned and that Ills veteran
deputy. Robert Gates, would be nominated to succeed him.
On Capitol Hill, lawmakers praised the way Casey
strengthened the CIA with big budgets and assertive
leadership, faulted him for a lack of regard for Congress
and predicted better relations and sounder Judgment under
Gates.
Sen. David Durenberger. R-Minn.. past chairman of the
Senate Intelligence Committee, called Gates "a pro­
fessional with respect for the oversight process." Rep. Dave
McCurdy. D-Okla.. a member of the House Intelligence
Committee, said Gates “ will be a breath of fresh air" at the
CIA.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hospital
Monday
ADM ISSIONS
San lord;
M ary E. Jackson
Marian E Tito
Angela D Sonne, Deltona

DISCHARGES
Sanford
Edward L D avit
Carole A L u ll
Easter E. Smith
lohn Eilat. Lake Monroe

The fire complex won’t take
up more than one of the parcel’s
almost five acres and Parks and
Recreation Department Director
C o n tin u ad from p a f« I A
Jim Jemlgan has his eye on the
enabling groundwater conserva­ remaining land for "natural rec­
tion. Ef f l uent , ra th e r than
reation uses." such as picnic
groundwater will be used to
areas and pathways.
irrigate the city owned parcels as
The city representatives vis­
well as many new residential ited two other planned parks
and commercial developments,
Monday - one at the relatively
said Engineering and Planning new Hidden Lake subdivision In
Director Bill Simmons.
southern Sanford and the other
Once the re-use system is In the established Woodmere
on-line In upcoming years. San­ neighborhood In the city's east­
ford will Join Cocoa Beach and ern area, off Sanford Avenue.
St. Petersburg "In the forefront
The Hidden Lake park site Is
o f reso u rce c o n s e r v a t i o n . ”
named for former Sanford Mayor
Simmons said.
Lee P. Moore. The park will be
In addition to Installing spray
located on 12 acres and cost
Irrigation systems, the city Is $187,350 to develop. Jemlgan
also u p g r a d i n g Its s e wa g e
said. The cost Is covered by
treatment plant and will rehabil- $150,000 In grants the parks
Mat e t h e l i n e s t h a t p i p e
department secured from the
wastewater to It. The $36.5 state last year. The "activity
million program will be olTset oriented" park will hopefully be
with an estimated $8.25 million
f i ni shed by next J a n ua r y .
In state and federal grants.
Jemlgan said.
Annexations extending almost
Its 12 acres will will Include
to Intcrstate-4 were discussed as tennis, handbal l and shufthe bus travelled along State
fel board courts, an uthlctlc field,
Road 46. A scries of these
a picnic shelter and a 3.000-foot
annexed parcels comprise the winding Jogging trail, featuring
approximately 115 acre Sanford exercise stations.
Industrial Park, which lies just
The Woodmere Park Is being
ofT Upsala Road and includes the developed on a 169-foot by
developing Codisco commcr112-foot lot that serves as a
clal/lndustrial subdivision. Tax
sewer lift station. The city has
base increases are cited by city
budgeted almost $17,000 to de­
representatives when Sanford
velop a basketball court and
expands Its borders through
playground at the lot this year.
annexation o f unincorporated
Jemlgan said.
Seminole County land.
This Includes covering over a
Nearly-adjacent to the Codlsco drainage ditch with piping.
site Is a 4.6 acre parcel that Is Concrete for the basketball court
expected to be annexed this year will be poured Friday, he said.
and then developed as the city's
Jcrnlgan on Monday also
third fire station. Commissioners compared Sanford's parks and
authorized a $100,000 payment
recreation departments to those
for the site last fall. The new fire
In Altamonte Springs' and said
facility may Include a police bused on the cities’ populations
sub-station and will cost about
and service areas Sanford "Is
$300,000 to build, said Sanford
behind in our manpower re­
Fire Chief Tom Hickson. Con­ quirements. We don’ t have near
struction will hopefully finish six
the manpower, but we have the
months after its projected start
same papulation base to serve.”
date next October. Hickson said.
Both cities have approximately

...Future

Tuesday, Fab. h 1H7

W A S H IN G T O N (UPI) Patrick Buchanan, the hard-line
conservative director of While
House communications, has re­
signed. effective March l. to
"better influence the Issues” in
the 1988 election from putslde
the Reagan administration, a
spokesman announced today.
Marlin Fitzwatcr. deputy press
secretary, said that no successor
has been selected and the search
is continuing.
He quoted President Reagan as
saying "P a t’s communications
skills and his commitment to
conservati ve political beliefs
have played an Important part in
my administration in the last
two years."

...S ta b b in g
C ontinued from page 1A
shortly after the reported stubbing and found
Williams' body. Mrs. Williams was inside their
home. Benson called for her to come out and she
came out the frontdoor.
Police searched the suspect for weapons. She
was not armed. Benson, after Informing her ol her
rights, asked Mrs. Williams what happened. She
allegedly said she had been out and her husband
asked her to come home. She came home and

29,000 residents, and Sanford •
parks and recreation department
has 22 full-tim e em ployees,
while Altamonte Springs has 40.
according to Jemlgan.
The city’s Georgetown com ­
munity. also off Sanford Avenue,
was visited Monday 0 ° “ P*®*
cussed in terms of the $650,000
housing rehabilitation grant be­
ing applied In the area. The city
would like to next move its
housing rehabilitation efforts
Into the Goldsboro community
In western Sanford and may ask
the county to supply somerehabilitation funds for the ef­
fort. Simmons said. The county
has received a state grant to
rehabilitate a number of sub­
standard areas and Goldsboro
qualifies In terms of need and Us
lying In both Sanford and unin­
corporated Seminole County.
Simmons said.
New residential projects o(T
burgeoning Airport Boulevard
w ere com m ented on. These
projects Include the Plnewoods
Trails, slated for 256 mostly one
and two bedroom units, and the
Pl aci d . Lake s d e v e l o p me n t .
planned for about 160 homes.
Before returning to city hall
the tour stopped at p olice
headquarters on French Aveune.
for the canine unit demonstra­
tion and an overview of police
department efforts. Harriett told
commissioners about 75 percent
of the city's crime Is related to
crack cocaine, whether through
use. sale or the robberies and
thefts it generates.
From last October to the end of
Ja n ua r y , the d e p a r t me n t ' s
four-man vice squad made 153
felony and misdemeanor arrests,
confiscated $82,500 worth of
crack. $30,356 In cash and $750
in stolen property, according to
Lt. Doug Bishop.
The $175 bus rental for the
tour was paid with commission­
ers travel fund. The 25 passen­
ger bus was rented from tin*
Zafflan Company of Orlando.

went to tied, the report said.
While she was In bed she said Williams
approached the bed. She allegedly said he was
armed with a knffe and was threatening her with
the knife. She told him to leave her alone.
Benson asked her If she shot her husband and
Mrs. Williams allegedly said. "No. I stabbed him ."
She reportedly said the knife was Inside the home
where the stubbing reportedly occurred.
Police were not available to comment further on
the killing early Tuesday.
An autopsy was scheduled for Williams today
at Central Florida Regional Hospital in Sanford.

Liberace Near Death
PALM SPRINGS. Calif. (UPI) Liberace. the flamboyant
showman who parlayed a white
piano and a candelabra into a
show business legend, was near
death Monday with family and
friends gathering at Ills desert
home, his publicist said.
Collier described Liberace as
in a semi-conscious state suffer­
ing from pernicious anemia,
complicated by advanced em­

physema und heart disease.
A crowd of about 100 fans and
television crewmembers kept a
vigil in a parking lol across the
street from the entertainer's
Spanish-style home.
I n s i d e t It e h o u s e w e r e
Seymour Hel l er. Ll hc r ae e ' s
longtime personal manager, and
Ills wife: Llbcracc's sister. Angle;
liis l o ng t i me h o u s e k e e p e r .
Dorothy, and Jamie Wyatt, de-

K id n a p p e rs W arn A g a in s t
In te rv e n tio n B y U . S . Forces
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — With U.S. Navy and Marine
forces within striking distance of Lebanon. Moslem
extremists said they had moved their American hostages
from Beirut and would kill the captives If the United States
intervened militarily.
Tw o threats against the hostages were issued Monday,
first by the pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad, or Holy War. and
later by the Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of Palestine, a
previously unknown group that claims responsibility for
abducting four professors, three of them Americans, on
Jan. 24.

scribed as Llberuce's compa­
nion.
The Las Vegas Sun. quoting
informed sources, reported on
Jan. 24 that Liberace was ter­
minally ill with AIDS ami had
less than a year to live. Heller
d e n i e d the r e po r t , s a y i n g
Liberace was suffering from
anemia caused by two months
on a weight-loss watermelon
diet, and demanded a retraction.
Anemia Is a condition caused
by a reduction in the number of
red blood cells or the total
amount of hemoglobin in the
bloodstream, or both. Symptoms
a re p a l e n e s s , g e n e r a l i z e d
weakness and a lack of vlgdr.

...A p p e a l
Continued from page 1A
infant son was uninjured In the
attack.
The attack was prompted by
Acosta's deteriorating financial
affairs and Miss Montero's refus­
al to sell the home, according to
the court record.
—Deane Jordan

AREA DEATHS
Council 15.
L O R E T T A M. BECKER
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e her
Mrs. Loretta M. Becker. 67. of
375 Palm Springs Drive. Alta­ husband. Willie M.: two daugh­
monte Springs, died Friday at ters. Helen T. Laster. Sanford.
Barbara Denny. New York City:
Fl or i da Hospi tal -Al t amonte.
Born Jan. 6. 1920 in Adrian. two sisters. Mae Etta Toby and
Mich., she moved to Altamonte Janie Nalls, both of Tampa:
Springs from Morristown. Tenn.. three grandchildren: six great­
in 1977. She was a homemaker grandchildren.
Wllson-Elchelberger Mortuary.
und a Catholic.
Sanford.
In charge of arrange­
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e he r
ments.
husband. Fred C.; daughter,
Mary Bockstlegel. Milwaukee;
AGNES M. McFADD
four sons. Gregory. Temple Hills.
Mrs. Agnes M. McFadd. 79.
M d.. Jam es. Belleville. III..
449 Howard Avc., Longwood.
Thom as. Altamonte Springs,
died Sunday at her residence.
and Michael. Cincinnati; nine
Born Feb. 7. 1907 In Everett.
grandchildren.
Mass., she moved to Longwood
Bal dwi n- Fal rchl l d Funeral
from there in 1983. She was a
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
retired oil company workder and
charge of arrangements.
a member o f Church of the
Annuclatlon.
E V E LYN JONES
S u r v iv o r s includ e two
Mrs. Evelyn Jones. 66. of 3032
Truman Blvd.. Sanford, died brothers. Dr. George E. Sullivan.
Sunday at Hill Haven Health Farmington. Maine, and
Care Center. Sanford. Born Dec. L a w r e n c e W . S u l l i v a n .
20. 1920 in Welaka. she moved Longwood.
Bal dwI n- Fai r c hi l d Funeral
to Sanford from there in 1930.
Home.
Goldenrod. in charge of
She was a homemaker and a
member of New Mount Calvary arrangements.
A L B E R T C. PH E LPS
Mi ssi onar y Baptist Church.
Mr. Albert C. Phelps. 84. of
Sanford, where she served on
the Deaconess Board. Trustee •106 Beth Drive. Sanford, died
Board. Home Mission Society Wednesday at Central Florida
and Usher Board No. 2. She was Regional Hospital. Born Jan. 3.
a member of Lily While Lodge 1903 In Sumter. S.C.. he moved
66; Rose of Sharon 134. Order of here in 1954 from Marietta. S.C.
Eastern Star: Deborah Court No. He was a retired owner of Phelps
22. Heroines of Jericho; Mcdfna Restaurant in Sanford.
Survivors Include a son. Albert
Court 16. Daughters of Sphinx,
and Ladies of Knights Esther C. Jr.. Eau Claire. VVls.; stepson.

Clarence Iscman. Sanford; step­
daughter. El l en H c mp l l n g .
Windemcre.
Brlsson Guar di an Funeral
Home. Sanford. In charge of
arrangements.
W IL L IA M R. TEDESCO
Mr. William Robert Tedcsco.
72. or 372 Hacienda Village.
Winter Springs, died Sunday at
Florida Hospital. Orlando. Born
July 26. 1914 in Buffalo. N.Y..
he moved to Winter Springs
from there In 1980. He was a
retired salesman and a member
of Community United Methodist
Church. Casselberry. He was a
member of the Sertoma Club
and was an At my veteran.
Survivors Include his wife. Fay
E.: two daughters. Barbara
Palermo. Atlanta. Deborah Fay
Waterman. Buffalo. N.Y.: four
grandchildren.
Bal dwI n•Fal rchl i d Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangements._________

Funeral Notices
PH ELPS. A L B E R T C .
— Memorial services tor Alb ert C Phelps. 84.
of Sanlord. who died Wednesday, will be held
1 JO p m Thursday at Brlsson Funeral Home
*ith the Rev Leo King officiatin g Brlsson

I CREMATION specialists |
O A K L A W N
FUNERAL HOM E &amp;
PRE A RRA N G EM EN T C EN T ER
3 2 2 *4 2 0 3

a# M/p

Harm

E ll. 1 9 5 4

Sttn.noi* Comiff_

Funeral Home, a Guardian Chapel. In charge
ot arrangements
JONES. E V E L Y N
— Funeral services tor Mrs Evelyn Jones.
M. ol 3032 Truman Boulevard. Sanlord. who
died Sunday, will be held at I 30 p m
Saturday at New M l C alvary M issionary
Baptist Church. H09 W I2lh SI.. Sanlord.
with Pastor George W W arren olllciatin g
Interment lo lollow in Restlawn Cem etery
Calling hours for Iriends will be held J 8 p m.
Friday at Ihe chapel. Fraternal organi/a
(tons' rituals will be held at the chapel F rid ay
following calling hours Wilson Elchelberger
M ortuary In charge

BELTONE
Hearing Aid
Center
2200 So. French Ave.
Sanford, Fla.

Free Hearing Test
Free Repairs-Service
Free Home Visits

323-1400
UMW, UAW,
Medicaid Welcome

« l*

�r

r*r tt

1

•r r r»~r

•r~ r~ r-

S I

H t r a M , S a n fo r d , F I.

T u esd a y, F a t. 9 , 1H 7— tB

B rie fly
A rt Show Open
To Public

DoBary VFW A nd A uxiliary
Hosts Card Party, Dlnnor-Dance
The Auxiliary to VFW. DeBary Post 8093 Is spondorlng a card
party Wednesday. Feb. 4 . at 7 p.m. at the post home. 351 S.
U.S. 17-92. DeBary. Participants are asked to bring their own
cards. The event Includes free coffee and cupcakes with over
40 door prizes to be awarded.
The auxiliary will hold a Valentine Dinner Dance on Feb. 13,
beginning at 6 p.m., at the Post Home. Music will be provided
by "W e Three." A sweetheart king and queen will be selected
and boxes of heart-shaped boxes of candy will be given as door
prizes.

Bettye Reagan, left, and
M arie Richter show their
paintings which will be on
display Sunday at the San­
ford Civic Center when Sanford-Semlnole Art Associa­
tion presents its Annual
Member Show. Hours are 2-5
p.m. with a tea scheduled
from 2:30 to 4:30. The event
Is open to the public at no
charge. Joyce Mikkola Is the
overall chairman.

_

GED Tosts O ffered

The GED tests leading to a Florida High School Diploma will
be offered at Seminole Community College on Feb. 23. 24 and
25. Eligibility for taking the tests must be completed by Feb.
13.
GED Test Orientation will be held on Feb. 19 at 4:00 and 5:00
p.m. Students qualified to take the test are encouraged to
attend this class on "H ow to Take and Pass the GED Exams.”
For more Information on GED's free study program, call
Seminole Community College and ask for the GED Office.

H i n M Photo by Do o m Jordon

Woman Missed Love In Life;
Hopes To Find It After Death

Parenting Course Set
Seminole County Parent Resource Center is conducting a
6-week parenting course at the Sanford Early Childhood
Center. 801 East 25th Street. Sanford. The course, entitled
"Effective Parenting o f Preschoolers." will begin on Wednes­
day. February 4 and continue each Wednesday through March
11. Class time Is from 7:30 to 9:30 pm. Free child care will be
provided. The public Is invited, and there Is no charge for the
course.

DEAR ABBT: Something has
been nagging at me. and I will
have no peace o f mind until
someone helps me figure It out.
Five years ago, after 45 years of
marriage, my husband died. It
wasn't much o f a marriage
because shortly after we were
married he told me he loved
another and would always love
her. but she was unattainable.

VFW Hosts Spaghetti Dinner
Sanford VFW Post and Auxiliary are sponsoring a complete
spaghetti dinner, on Saturday. Feb. 7. at the Post Home,
Seminole Boulevard. Sanford, from 6-9 p.m. Donation Is $3 per
person. Proceeds will go to the building fund.

TONIGHT'S TV
®

TUESDAY
EVENING

6:00

6 :0 5
IQ BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6 :3 0
o 3 ) NBC NEWS
ID O CBS NEWS
(7) Q ABC NEWS Q
ID (11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT When Mildred Ratkin comet
beck teaching lor her mother t
brooch. Jackie tuggeets hiring a
medium for help

6 :3 5
(D A N 0 Y GRIFFITH

7 :0 0
O S ) NEWLYWED GAME
( f i O PM MAGAZINE Hollywood »
aspwing performer*, shopping in
Hong Kong
f f l O JtOPAROY
f f l (11) BARNEY MILLER
8 ) (10) PLANET EARTH Climatolo­
gists study current weather pat­
terns In an effort to determine
whether the earth I* entering a new
ice age or becoming a superheated
greenhouse that will eventually
cause eilensrve flooding (R ig
CD (8) MOVIE "Jungle Cat" |19«0)
Narrated by Winston Hibfer The life
cycle and behavior of one ol the
most successful predators in the
Amazon ram forest, the |aguar A
Wonderful World ol Oisney" pres­
entation.

7 :0 5
D SANFORD AN0 SON

7 :3 0

3 ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Jerry Lewis discusses his TV movie
"A Fight for Ufa "
(DO DATING GAME
( D O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
f f l (11) BENSON

O 3 ) REMINGTON STEELE (Sea­
son Premiere) Crime drama starring
Pierce Brosnan and Stephanie Zimbaits) Tonight: upon returning from
their Mexican honeymoon. Reming­
ton and Laura encounter a mysteri­
ous woman from Remington's past.
(Pari 1 o l 2) In stereo
CDO JACK a n d MIKE Jackie be­
gins receiving flowers and phone
calls from a secret admirer, a
( S (11) INN NEWS
Q9 (10) IN THE FACE OF TERROR­
ISM This discussion focuses on
events following the resolution of a
fictitious airline hi|acking Panelists
include former Secretary of De­
fense James R. Schtesinger (7 3-'
75). CIA Director William J. Casey
and FBI Director William H. Web­
ster. (Pari 2 of 4)

10:20
12 MOVIE "Alvarez Kelly " (1986)
William Holden. Richard Widmark.
An adventurer bringing a herd cf
2500 cattle to the Union Army Is ab­
ducted by Confederate guerrillas

1 0 :3 0
0 ( 1 1 ) BOB NEWHART
GD (8) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

11:00
0 3 ) ( D O ( S O NEWS
® (11) LATE 8 HOW Host Joan
R ivers.
S ch e d u led :
Roddy
McDowell. Susan Anton, pro bas­
ketball player Earvin (Magic) John­
son. In stereo.
f f l (10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
CD (8) BARGAINS TONIGHT

O

3)

1 1 :3 0
TONIGHT SHOW Host

Johnny Carson. Scheduled comic
actor Paul Reiser, actress Susan
Sullivan, singer-actress Lonette
McKee In stereo
(3) O M 'A 'S 'H

( S O NIGHTLINEQ

7 :3 5

12:00

IIHONEYMOONERS

6:00

O

3 ) MATLOCK Matlock defends
a nurse accused o ' murdering an
eitremefy wealthy patient In ster­
eo.
(D O WIZARD A 12-year-old girl
imagines that she's being stalked

3&gt; O WHO'S THE BOSS? Angela

tries to convince Ray Charles to
record a (ingle lor an important ac­
count g
(B (11) HART TO HART
(D (10) NOVA A look at why human
error among airline pSots is increas­
ing and possible ways of reducing
fatal mistakes Q
(B (8) MOVIE Breathless'' (1983)
FLchard Gere. Valerie Kaptmsky. A
tree-spirited auto thief unintention­
ally kills a patrolman and later de­
velops an obsessive attraction to a
woman
MAX OUT OF AFRICA
• Oecar-WIming mm
With Meryl Streep and
Robert Radford
,
Cl*.i MAX

J. HOOKER (R)
3 ) O T.J.
NIGHTLIFE Host David
ffl O
n
Brenner. Scheduled the Spinners
In stereo
CD (11) ASK DR. RUTH Topic mar­
riage on TV Guests "Hotel" co­
stars Heidi Bohay and Michael
Spound g
f f l (8) NIGHT OWL FUN

1 2 :3 0
3 ) LATE NIGHT WITH DAVIO
LETTERMAN From October 1985
actor Michael J F o i ("Family
Ties"). Princess Gloria von Thurn
Und Tans and comedian Joe Bol­
ster make appearances In stereo
® Q MOVIE Calling Nortnside
777" (1948) Jama, Stewart. Helen
Walker
( S (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

1:10

8 :3 0
GROWING PAINS Maggie s
announces plans to sell the
house and buy a motor
Q

9 :0 0
O ® HILL STREET BLUES When
Goidblume blames new departmen­
tal regulations for allowing a mur­
derer to go free and kill again, he's
branded a subversive by the press
(D O MOVIE "Guilty Of Inno­
cence The Leneil Deter S tory"
(Premiere) Dorian Harewood. Dab­
ney Coleman The tact-based story
of a black engineer whose Impris­
onment for a crime he did not cornm il led to an all-out effort by friends
and colleagues to win him a new tria i.g
ffl O MOONLIGHTING Maddie
announces plans lor a lusty night on
the town, g

«

»

5 :3 0

O

TODAY'S BUSINESS
LOOK AT ME NOW (WED)
CAN YOU BE THINNER?

(THU)
( S ( 11) CNN NEWS
92 ANDY GRIFFITH

6:00
0 ® NBC NEWS
( 1 ) 0 1SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
f f l O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
CD (If)Q O O O DAYl
92 CNNNEWS
O ) (I) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
SAVINGS

6 :3 0
0 ® NEWS
(5) O CBS MORNING NEWS
( B i l l ) CENTURIONS
f f l (10) FARM DAY
92 TOM 8 JERRY AND FRIENDS

6 :4 5

®
O MOVIE Spasms" (1983)
Oliver Reed. Paler Fonda
(D (11) BIZARRE Sketches Queen
Elizabeth s intruder: McCheech and
McChong. a cheating wife

2:00
(D (1 1) DUKES OF HAZZARD

7 :0 0
O 0TO O AY
f f l O GOOO MORNINQ AMERICA
(B (11)0.1. JOE
S (10) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

Q
7 :3 0

® O MORNING PROGRAM
(B(H)TRANSFO RM ERS
S (10) SESAME STREET (R) g

8 :0 5
92ID R E A M O FJEA N N IE

8 :3 0
(B (tl)F U N TS TO N E S
S ( 10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8 :3 5
92 BEWITCHED
9 :0 0

O ® THE JU0GE
( 1 ) 0 DONAHUE
® O OPRAH WINFREY
® (t1 )0 R E E N ACRES
60 (10) SESAME STREET (R) g
S (8) SHOP-AT-HOME ANO SAVE

9 :0 5
9 :3 0
® LOVE CONNECTION
(11) PETTICOAT JUNCTION

9 :3 5
9 2 1LOVE LUCY

*

10:00
0 ® P H E OF THE CENTURY
0 O HOUR MAGAZINE
f f l O TRUE CONFESSIONS
(B (II)F A L L GUY
S (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (R)

1 0 :05

92

MOVIE "Adventure In Balti­
m o re' ( 1949) Robert Young. Shirley
Temple

® O NIGHTWATCH
ffl|11)B J/LO BO
Q ) (8) NIGHT OWL FUN

0 ® BLOCKBUSTERS
® f &gt; SUPERIOR COURT
S (10) WILD AMERICA (MON. FRI)
S (10) PROFILES OF NATURE
(TUE)
S
(10) PHENOMENAL WORLO
(WED)
S (10) NEWTON'S APPLE (THU)

11:00

1 1 :30

( S (11) DALLAS

® O

4 :1 0

MOVIE "In Tandem (1974)
Claude Akins. Frank Converse

4 :3 5
92 WORLO AT LARGE

1:00
O ® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
® ® ALL MY CHILDREN
0 ( 1 1 ) DICK VAN DYKE
f f l (10) WE RE COOKING NOW

1 :3 0
® O AS THE WORLO TURNS
ffl(11)F-TR O O P
f f l (10) NEW SOUTHERN COOK­
ING (MON)
(10) FRENCH CHEF (TUE)
(tO) MICROWAVES ARE FOR
COOKING (WED)
f f l (10) WOOOWRtOHrS SHOP

S
ST

(10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN
(FRI)

2:00
O ® ANOTHER WORLD
( 7 ) Q ONE UFE TO LIVE
f f l (ll)A N O Y GRIFFITH
f f l (10) WONOERFUL WORLO OF
ACRYLICS (MON)
f f l (10) JOY OF PAINTING (TUE)
f f l (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(WED)
f f l (10) PAINTING SOUTHERN
LANDSCAPES (THU)
f f l (10) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

2 :3 0
® O CAPITOL
0
(11) MY LITTLE PONY
FRIENDS
f f l (10) SECRET CITY

AFTERNOON

1 2 :0 0

® ® O ® O NEWS
11II BEWITCHED

N'

3 :0 0
0 ® SANTA BARBARA
Si O GUIDING LIGHT
1 7) Q GENERAL HOSPITAL
0 (11) SCOOBY DOO
f f l (10) MISTER ROGERS |R)
f f l (8) MID-DAY BARGAINS

3 :0 5
92 TOM 4 JERRY ANO FRIENDS
3 :3 0
(11) SMURFS' ADVENTURES
(10) SESAME STREET (R )g

4 :0 0

O ® MAONUM. P I.
(J )O T A X l
f f l o JEOPAROY
0 ( 1 1 ) THUNOERCATS g
(I) (8) AMERICA'S BIGGEST BAR­
GAINS
4 :0 5
92 SCOOBY DOO
4 :3 0
(T ) a THREE S COMPANY
® o &lt; CARO SHARKS
(11) SH.VEP lAWKS
(10) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

4 :3 5
92 FLINTSTONES
5 :0 0
0 ®

DIVORCE COURT
M 'A 'l i i
HOLLYWOOO SQUARES
0 ( 1 1 ) FACTS OF UFE
f f l (10) OCEAN US (MON)
f f l (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
f f l 110) BUSINESS FILE (R) (WED)
f f l (10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
f f l (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
(D (S)RAM B O

M

5 :0 5
92 GiLUQAN'S ISLAND
5 :3 0

O ® PEOPLE'S COURT
• I) O f f l O NEWS
0 ( 1 1 ) JEFFERS0N3
f f l (10) OCEANUS (MON)
f f l (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
f f l ( 10) BUSINESS FILE (R) (WE0)
f f l (10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
f f l (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
(D (8) I DREAM OF JEANNlE
5 :3 5
92 ROCKY ROAD (MON-THU)

Dear
A bby
Now in my declining years I am
thinking about what will happen
when I die. This may sound silly
to you. Abby, but people say
when you go to heaven, you will
be reunited with your first true
love.

woman, and a woman
"Pants for a man. what do you
have?
"A pair of pants!"

ST. PETERSBURG READER

FAITHFUL ABBY FAN
DEAR ABBY: T hat man.
"A l." who hated to see women In
pants must not have been
ar ound w h e n w o m e n first
started to wear them. About that
time, this little poem came out:
"Pants are made for men —
not women
“ Women arc made for men —
not for pants
"When a man pants for a

CONFIDENTIAL TO YOU:
Please notice that I have a new
post ofTIce box number. Send
your problems to Dear Abby.
P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles.
Calif. 90069. And for a personal,
unpublished reply, please send a
s e I f • a d d re ss c d s t a m p e d
envelope.

Now I'm wondering If I will be
reunited with my husband or If
there Is a chance I will be
reunited with my first true love
whom I loved all through my
high school years. We fell In love
but not Into bed. If you get my
drift. Hut I really did love him.
He died eight years ago. but
before he died he found me to
tell me that he had loved me all
his life.
z\bby. I want my old high
school sweetheart to be waiting
for me In heaven, not my
husband. Is this blasphemy? Or
must I be reunited with my
worthless husband?

1 :0 5
92 CENTENNIAL

1 0 :30

4 :0 0

2 :5 0

( I ) O YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS
® 0 LOVING
0 ( 1 1 ) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

9 2 MOVIE

0 f f i SCRABBLE
f f l O WEBSTER (R)
(B (H ) MAUDE

S

1 2 :3 0

O ® WORDPLAY

92 DOWN TO EARTH

3 :0 0

O new s
O MOVIE Fury At Furnace
Creek " (1948) Victor Mature.
Coieen Gray

1 2 :0 5
9 2 PERRY MASON

8:00

(B (11) DENNIS THE MENACE

® WHEEL O f FORTUNE
O PRICE IS RIOHT
O FAME FORTUNE 4 RO­
MANCE
S ( t l ) ALICE
S
(10) TERRY FOX I HAO A
DREAM (MON)
S (10) AMERICAN CAESAR (TUE)
S (10) THE BRAIN (WED)
f f l (10) NOVA (THU)
f f l (10) EYES ON THE PRIZE
AMERICA'S CIVIL RIGHTS YEARS.
1954-1988 (FRI)

2 :3 0

8 ) (10) BERGERAC (MON)
( D (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
g(T U E )
u &gt; ((10) MYSTERYI (WED)
f f l (10) HENSON'S PLACE (THU)
f f l (10) ANNA KARENINA (FRI)
f f l (8) MIO-DAY BARGAINS

S | 10) AM . WEATHER

1 2 :3 5
Dead Ringer ' (1984)
Bette Davis. Karl Malden

AA

5 :0 0
O ® THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
MUSIC (MON)
0 0 2 - 3 COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
9 ( I I ) CNN NEWS
92 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

(R )

92 MOVIE

8 :0 5
92 NBA BASKETBALL Boston
Celtics at Atlanta Hawks (Live)
(Subiect to blackout)

( D ( 11) TRAPPER JOHN. M 0

MORNING

O

1 :3 0

(Z) O
lather
farrafy
home

WEDNESDAY

10:00

S 3 ) ( D O C E O NEWS
f f l (tl)G IM M E ABREAKI
f f l (10) UACNEIl / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
(D ( I ) KNIGHT RIDER

O

(10) SOLDIERS: A HISTORY OF

MEN IN BATTLE The responsibili­
ties o f Infantrymen. Narrator: Fred­
erick Forsyth.

oslty was the friend who made a
contribution to m y favorite char­
ity as her gift tome.
•

LOOKING HEAVENWARD
DEAR

LOOKING:

happens when (or If)
the gales of heaven If
guess. Thi nk your
thoughts, dear lady,
may hear you words
them true!

What
we reach
anybody's
happiest
and God
and make

DEAR ABBY: Every year I'm
sure you receive many letters
from people who 3ay they do not
appreciate mimeographed
newsl etters tucked In wi th
Christmas cards. Well. I am one
person who loves them. It adds
to my jo y to learn of the
triumphs, adventures and trav­
els of my friends and their
offspring. We may not have seen
each other for many years, but
through these yearly newsletters
I can share an Important part of
their lives and continue to feel
close to them.
In addition. I have reached the
stage wher** I am shedding
possessions and di finitely do not
need more cologne, guest towels,
scarves or perfumed soaps. And
If someone wants to honor me by
contributing to some worthy
cause In my name. I feel doubly
gifted. Such donors reflect the
true spirit of the holiday season,
and show true generosity In
assisting others rather than
giving to people who already
have more than they know what
to do with.

Junior Miss And Runners-Up
Jennifer O'Neill, center, Lake Brantley High School, won the
Seminole County Junior Miss title at the Fifth Annual Junior
Miss Scholarship Program held at Lyman High School which
was sponsored by Altmonte South Seminole Jaycees. Miss
O'Neill was awarded a cash college scholarship for $800 and
a Barbrizon Modeling School scholarship. Melissa Meyer,
right, Lake Brantley, was first runner-up and received a $450
cash scholarship. Lauren Wolf, left, Lyman High School, was
the recipient of a $250 cash scholarship as second runner-up.
Not pictured Is Samantha Hendren, Lake Howell High
School, who won the Physical Fitness award.

W E D N E S D A Y S P E C IA L
3 P ie c e D in n e r !

$2

3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and two fresh, hot biscuits.

NAMELESS IN TENNESSEE

r

DEAR NAMELESS: Well said.

i
i
i

Read on for another view on
making a donation Instead of
sending a gift:

DEAR ABBY: It's very nice of
people to Inform me that a
contribution to their favorite
charity has been sent In my
name. But the ultimate In gener-

79

COUPON

FEED 4 FOR
*

7

. .

Look at what you get: 8 pcs. of golden brown
Famous Recipe Fried Chicken, 1 pint mashed
potatoes, Viz pint gravy and 4 biscuits. An entire
family dinner for only $7.99.
Good Thurs., Frt., Sat., Sun

COUPON

I fJ Floyd T h e a tre s I
PLATA TWIN

IQ

3777507

A Taste of the Country
SANFORD
1905 FRENCH AVE.
HWY. 17-92

CASSELBERRY
41 N. HWY. 17-92

92 SAFE AT HOME (FRI)

G4k

�r
IB —Senferd Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesday, Fob. 3 .1W7

Logoi Notice

C&amp;B AUTO
PARTS
Complsl* Line Of Aufo

NOTICK OF CHANGE OF LAND USE

Parle And Accessories

P v M k H M rln t

February l l i n i t l , 14ET
T H E S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y BO ARD O F C O U N TY COMMISSION
E RS W IL L C O N D U C T A P U B L IC H E A R IN G O N FEBRUARY 14
AMD &gt;1, H IT T O R E C C IV E P U B L IC IN P U T AN D CONSIDER
R E C O M M E N D A T IO N S OF T H E L O C A L P L A N N IN G
A G E N C Y / P L A N N IN G A Z O N IN G C O M M ISSIO N O N REQUESTED
A M E N D M E N T S T O T H E C O U N T Y C O M PR E H E N S IV E P L A N
(S H O R T R A N G E D E V E L O P M E N T P L A N ) A N D A N Y
ASSO C IA TE D R E Z O N IN G S AS C O N T A IN E D IN THIS A D V E R ­
T IS E M E N T . THE P U B L IC H E A R IN G W IL L B E G IN A T l i M P.M.,
OR AS SOON T H E R E A F T E R AS P O SSIB LE, ON BOTH F E B R U ­
A R Y 10 and II, H IT IN RO OM W I3 0 O F T H E SEM INO LE COU NTY
SER V ICE S B U IL D IN G . 1101 E AST F IR S T S T R E E T . SANFORD.
FL.. THOSE A M E N D M E N T S NOT B E IN G H E A R D ON F E B R U ­
A R Y 10. I9E7 W IL L BE C O N T IN U E D T O F E B R U A R Y II. 19*7.
THOSE A M E N D M E N T S T H E B O A R D OF C O U N TY COMMIS­
SIO NERS IN T E N D S TO A D O P T W IL L BE T R A N S M IT T E D TO
TH E D E P A R T M E N T O F C O M M U N IT Y A F F A IR S FOR R E V IE W
A N D C O M M E N TS P R IO R T O F IN A L A C T IO N B Y THE BOARD OF
C O U N TY C O M M ISSIO NE R S.

IT E M A - REOUESTED LAND USE AMENDMENTS TO BE
HEARDON FEBRUARY 10.1M7 INCLUDE:
Jock Zim m er — located on the north tid e o f Florida Avenue,
approxim ately 400 fool aaal o f U.S. &gt;7 *3. Amendment from Low
Eternity Residential. fa C o m m trlcla l on praparty described a*
follow *:
Lot 1), E n ilm ln g er Fa rm * Addition No. 3 l « * t th# North JOS teat of
ttw E a tf 73S foot and all of Lot to. and tha ooutharly 10 teal o f Lot 13,
Plat Book * . Papa 37. of tha Public R acordt o f Samlnola County,
Florida, containing to * 5 acra * mora or le i*. (BCC District 1)
Ranald Edward*/Sid nay Young — located on tha aast (Ida of
Long wood Laka M a ry Road. W m lla north o f Iha Interjection of
Longwood-Laka M a ry Road and County Road 437. Amendment from
Low Intentlfy Urban/Preservation to C om m ercial; Reione from A -l
(Agricultural toC-3 (C om m ercial) on property described a* follows:
Beginning at tha Southwest corner o l Northeast la of Southeast W
of Section 30. township 10 South. R an ge 30 East, run North 430 teat.
East M0 teat, Southwesterly S07 feat. West to Point ol Beginning;
excepting th erefrom right o f w ay o f public roads and public service
lines a * now established. A lso described is : The South 430 feet of the
Northeast to of the Southeast te ol Sectlo 10. Township X South,
R a n ge 10 E a s t, S em in o le C ou n ty, F lo r id a , tying East o t
Long wood Lake M a ry Road and West of the Seaboard Coastline
Railroad, containing 1.7A acres m ore o r less. (BCC District 1)
A lex OrM nspeon — located east ot U.S. 1791, south of the Fern
Park K-Mart, on the west side of O xford Rood. Amendment from
High Density R eslden llal/ P reservallon lo Com m ercial; Reione from
R 1 1Multi-Family D w ellin g D istrict) to C-l IR etall Com m ercial) on
proparty described as follow s:
The North 173.M teat ot the Northwest Vi o l the Northwest te of
Section X . Tow nship 31 South, R an ge X East. Seminole County.
Florida. The ab o ve description containing e portion ot Lot 4,
Fernwood P la te , as recorded In P la l Book 13, Page 95, Public
Records o l Sem inole County, Florida, containing 11.4 acres more or
less. IBCC D istrict 4 )
Jerem y Cooper — sixteen properties located approximately 900
feet west o f U.S. 17 91 on O 'B rien Road. Amendment from Low
Density Residential to L ow Intensity Com m erclal/Olllce on a total ol
3 .X acras m ora o r less; R eton e (J e rem y Cooper's property only —
0.47 acres m ore o r less) from R-t (S in gle Fam ily Dwelling District)
to R P (Residential P rofesslon aD on prop ertyd escrlbed aslollow s:
(J e rem y C ooper) Lot 7 Block " G " , Fern Terrace, Plat Book 14
P age 70 containing 0.47 acres m ore or less. (J.W. Hickman) Lot 7.
Block " D " Fern T errace, P la t Book 11. P age X containing 0.11 acres
m ore o r lets. (Joseph E. G entesse) Lot 4, Block " E " Fern Terrace.
Plat Book I I , P a g e 71. containing O .X acres more or less. (Claude H.
W olfe, Jr I Lot 13. Block " C " Fern Terrace. P la l Book II, Page 70
containing 0.17 a c re s m ore or less. (P h ilip C. M arlin ) Lot 13. Block
" C " Fern T errace, P lat Book II, P a g e 10 containing 0.17 acres m ore
or less. (Vincente M a rtin e t) Lot 10 Block " A " , Fern Terrace, P iet
Book It, P a ge X , containing 0.17 acres more or less. (Vincente
M artin et) Lot 19. Block “ C " , Fern T errace. P lal Book II, Page X .
containing 0.17 a cre s more or less. (Vincente M artinet) Lot X . Block
“ C” Fern T erra c e, P lat Book II, P a g e 70 containing 0.11 acres more
or lets. (Joseph M . G m erek ) Lol 10, Block " C " Fern Terrace, Plat
Book I I P a ge X containing 0.17 acres m ore or less. (|oteph M.
G m erek) Lot 17, Block " C ” Fern Terrace, Plat Book II. Page X ,
containing 0.17 a c re s m ore or less. (F o s te r J. Schuren and Charles P .
M oran) Lot I Block " D " Fern T errace. P la l Book It, Page X
conteinlg 0.31 acre s more o r less. (O liv er and J eanelle Kennedy) Lot
5. Block " E " Fern T errace, P ie t Book t l, P a ge X containing 0.11
acres m ore or less. IM e ry J. Shearer, Trustee) Lot 4, Block " E "
Fern Terrace, P ie t Book It, P a g e X containing 0.11 acres more or
less. (B arbara A W illiam W ilkins) L o l I Block " E " Fern Terrace.
P ie t Book 11, P e g e X . containing 0.31 acres m ore or lest. (James S.
and Lone E. H a llto rd ) Lot 3 Block " E " Fern Terrace. P iet Book II,
P a ge X containing O i l acres m ore or lets. I E va A. Schmitt) Lot 4.
Block " D " Fern T errace, P la l Book II, Page 21. containing 0.31
acres m ore o r lets. ( I C C D istrict 4)
Ken McIntosh — located on the east side ol Tuskewilla Road
approxim ately 300 south ot S.R. 434. Am endment from Low Intensity
Urban to C om m ercial on property described as follows:
Lots 1 and 1 and that part ot Lots 3 and 4 East ol Goldatwod Road.
Tutkawllla. as p er Plat thareol recorded In P la l Book 1, Page S.
Public Records o f Seminole County, Florida, containing 3.30 acres
m ore o r less. (B C C D tsfrlct I I
Keewin Company — located on the south side of Red Bug Laka
Rood, adjacent to the w est side o f the existing Keewin PUD.
Am endment fro m G eneral R ural/Preservation lo Planned Unit
Developm ent; R eio n e from A t (A g ricu ltu re) to PUD (Planned Unit
D evelopm ent) on property described as follow s:
The Northwest va of the Northeast Vi ot the Southeast Vi ol Section
21, Township 71 South, R an ge I I East, Seminole County Florida,
A N O tha Southwest V4 ot the Northeast te ol the Southeast Ik ol said
Section 71, A N p the Norlh i t o l Iha Northwest 14 ot the Southeast Ik
ol the Southeast U ol said Section 71. LESS the North 13.00 le t) ot
said Northwest V. o l Ihe Northeast Ik of the Southeast Ik ot said
Sections), for East Red Bug Lake Road, containing 15 acres more or
less. (BCC District t )
Jim Huckeba
located on the south side ot S.R 414, adjacent to
the west side nf the A lo m a Bend PU D . Amendment from General
Rural to M edium Density Residential un property described as
follows:
Beginning at the Northeast corner ot the Northwest
ol Ihe
Southeast ’4 o l Section 31. Township 11 South. Ranqe 11 East;
Seminole County, Florida. Itvence run W est along East and West U
Section line 474.7 feet, thence South O -IO 'X " East 937.1 teat, thence
East 440 0 teat, thence South 0 -1 0 'X " East 3*4 42 Net. thence Norlh
14* 19'30" East 233.44 feet, to a point 11.7 feet South ot Southeast
corner ol said Northwest &lt;4 o l Southeast v*. thence southerly along
East line o f the Southwest V4 o f Ihe Southeasl '4 73 leal, thence South
44* 19'30" W est 235 « feet, thence South 0 -1 0 'X " East 104 31 leet,
I hence West 440.0 feet. Ihence South 0 -1 0 'X " Easl 700 leaf, thence
East 900 00 teat, thence N orlh 11*44 04" Easl 347.73 feel, thence West
300.0 leet, to the Northwest corner ol Ihe Southeast U ot Ihe
Southeast *4 Ihence N ortherly along East line ot the Northwest ol Ihe
Southeast 1314.0 le et to a P o in t ot Beginning, (subject to
rights o l w ay and easem ents described In Deed recorded In Deed
Book 114. page 333. ol the public Records ol Seminole County.
Florida, containing 32.50 acres m ore or less. (BCC District 1)
J e ll Garner — located on Ihe east side ol S.R. 414. adjacent to the
north tid e o l A lo m a Bend P U O
Amendment from General
R ural/Preservation lo Planned Unit Development; Retone trom A I
(A gricu ltu re) and C-l (R e ta il C om m ercial) to PUD (Planned Unit
D evelopm ent) on property described as follows;
Ten acres o il Ihe West side ol the Northwest U at Ihe Northeast '■*
ol Section 31. Township 11 South. R a n g ] 31 Easl; and Ihe Northeast
*k ot the N orthw est ’ &lt; o f Section 31. Township 11 South, Range 31
East; and Ihe South h o i Ihe Northwest V* of Ihe Northwest U, less
the following p a rc el: Beginning at the Southwest corner of the North
' l o l the Northwest tk o f the Northwest 14, run South along the
section line 417.4 leet. Ihence East parallel to the South boundary o f
said North h o t Northw est Vi, 104.70 leel, thence North parallel to Ihe
Section line 417.4 (eel. Ihence W est 301 70 feet to Ihe Point of
Beginning, ol Section 31, Township 11 South. Range 31 Easl. and the
South I X teel of the East to of Ihe North V* of the Northeast '4 of
Section 31. Township I t South, Range 31 East. Seminole County,
Florida lying E ast of the E asterly right o f w ay lln eo l Slate Road 414,
ISO' righ t-of-w ay), and the North *-j ol Ihe Northwest
of Ihe
Northwest Ik and West 10* leet ol North 417 leet ol South Vy ot
Northwest U o f Northwest Ik; le st road right ol-way for S.R 414.
being sub|ect to any rights of w ay and easements of record.
, containing 91 acre s more or less I BCC District 1)
Duda Lends, Inc. — located approxim ately l &gt; ol a mite west ot
S R. 414 between Red Bug Lake Road and the City Ol Winter Springs.
Am endment fro m General Rural/Preservation to Low Density
. Residential on property d r- crlbed as follow s:
Section 17, Township 11 South. R ange 31 East, The West 1331 leel ot
Government Lot 4. and that part ol Lot 9. Phillip R. Yonge Grant;
P lat Book 1, P a g e X . Public Records of Seminole County, lying south
ol the South line o f Tuskawllla Unit 7, Plat Book 11. Pages 44 and 47.
Public Records o f Seminole County, and Section 14. Township It
South. Range 31 East. G overnm ent Lot I. LESS the West to thereof.
That part ol Lots S. 4. 7 and I. P hillip R. Yonge Grant. Plat Book 1.
P a g e M. Public Records ot Seminole County, lying East ot the East
line o l W inter Springs Unit 1, P lat Book 17, Pages 19 and 90. Public
Records o l Sem inole County, and lying South ot the South boundary
o l Tuskawllla Unit 7. P lat Book 71, Pages 44 and 47. Public Records
of Seminole County. And Section X , Township I I South. Range 31
Easl. Lot 43, the E a s t 's o l Lot 44, and that part ot the W e s t' j ol Lot
44 lying west ot B ear Gully Canal, Lois 59 through 44, Slavla Colony
Company Subdivision. P la t Book 1, P age 71, Public Records ol
Seminole County. LESS that part of Lots 44 and 66 lying within titty
(M l feet o l the center line ol Stale Road 416 A (Red Bug Road),
containing 194 acres, m ore or less. IBCC D is tric t!)

(Continued on Page 3BJ

GO* 4*1

rOMMiruuirwni---------------------------------smesTAtooncsa
ATT.#
arr
IfATt
V

THic/w- S u fifttif

210 S. French Ave.
Sanford
321-7169

| HOURS: M-F, 4 7
Sal.. S I

S a n fo r d H e r a ld
•

H e r a ld A d v e r t is e r

ADVERTISING

r^ W w s o m r

II
ll
ll
ll
II

'Fist FraltssiOMl

lit and 2nd Moitfift

and Confidential Strike.

loans

Purchase of Eiisting
Motftifts.

Residential and
Commercial

LET US HELP SOLVE YOUR MONEY PROBLEMS.

323-8990

IISEMIN0 LE M0 NEYTREE, INC.
{
51

549 W. Lake Mary Sled. Suite 202
Drlfteeed Viltat* - take Mary, n
licensed M rrtfifi Broker

DON'T
THROW
THAT SOFA
AWAY!
WE CAN MAKE IT NEW AGAIN!
FURNITURE • BOATS • CARS
Quality Materials * Workmanship • Free Estimates

D A V I'S

U P H O L S T IR Y

490 N. 17-92

Longwood

695-6900

S U N R IS E R A D IA T O R
S E R V IC E
Radiators. Heaters, Gas Tanks
COMPLETE COOLING SYSTEM SERVICE

“CHECK OUR PRICES**
SAME DAY SERVICE
M o n .- F r i. 0 -5
S a t.
8 -1 2

LOCATED
a r j

a

r jn

A A

3 tL \ -tL O d .£

W . 6 th &amp; I 7 * 9 2
S a n fo r d , F L

a
A

M

^
B l

We Welcome...
CHRISTY CASTO To Our Staff
get acquainted special

l

SAVE *15

CURLY
PERMS

$ 9 f|0 0
ZU

( IIHISTY O.VU

Christy Casto

J 17

HAIR NOW

1 M S I A IIAII* S T Y L IN G

w. 25th st. PH. 322-8711

Sanford

MADAME KATHERINE
VOTED BEST PSYCHIC
In Central Florida 1984
Tells you the past, present,
and future, reunites the
separated, asks no questions,
helps you find the right
employment.

HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL PROBLEMS

Treasure Island Jewelry managers Don McAllister/ left/ and Ben Blackmon
display some of their quality jewelry.

Quality At A Fair Price
At Treasure Island Jewelry
The ability to give you a quality piece o f Jewelry
ut a fair price seems to have eluded some Jewelry
stores today. Just look In the newspaper and
count the ads for 50 percent olT and think to your
self. "H ow can they do It?"
If gold and silver are on a worldwide standard
and the rent comes due once u month, how do
they pay the light company and the telephone
company plus salaries, bonuses and the stock
Itself, out of 50 percent?
It stands (o reason that the only way is by the
regular price being too high in Ihe first place.
Wc see a lol of Inferior Jewelry sold at Inflated
prices.
Yes. workmanship atid quality aren't what they
used to be at most places.
We here at Treasure Island Jewelry try to still
uphold the good name of Jewelers.
It doesn't take three weeks to size a ring or
repair a chain. It doesn't take months In build a
custom piece of Jewelry. If you don't believe this
— give us a try.
We will give you a piece of Jewelry that will last.
T R Y U S ....Y O U W I L L L O V E U S

LONGW OOD

HAjR

B e t w e e n S R 4 3 4 G D o g T ra c k R d . o n H w y , 1 7 -9 2

I WOULD PERSONALLY LIKE TO
TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO
THANK EVERYONE FOR YOUR
PATRONAOE. ANO INVITE YOU TO
VISIT OUR NEW ULTRA MODERN
SALON
2479 Alrf«f1 4 M .
CwMtry C M S q „„.

THE NEW

RENT AMERICA
2701 B S. O R LA N D O DR. • SA N FO R D
(P ln e cresl Shopping C e n te r-2 7 th &amp; 17-92)
Ph. 321-4760

VIDEO CLUB
FREE MEMBERSHIP PLUS
12 FREE MOVIES

iaaferd, f U

10 6

We do lost wax casting and also handmade
pieces. Every piece we build Is hand finished to
assure quality at a fair price. We stock all sortss of
rings, chains, charms, earrings and anything else
In the Jewelry line. If we don't have a piece we can
get It In a couple of days.
We will always clean you jewelry FREE and
make minor adjustments also at no charge.
Treasure Island Jewelry has a complete work
and repair shop, where you can rest assured that
any piece of your Jewelry Is worked on by a
professional.
We are capable of building Jewelry from your
business logo for special presentations or working
with you lo design Jewelry for yourself or your
loved ones. Wc can use your gold that Is broken
or that you are just tired of nr just your Ideas and
our gold.
We also buy gold, silver, diamonds and coins at
a fair price.
We stock a complete line of precious and
semi-precious stones and have thousands of wax
jewelry models from which to choose.
Treasure Island Jewelry Is located at 2107 S.
French Ave. next lo the Golden Lamb Restaurant
The phone number Is 322-0528. So next time you
see "50% OlT' Ihlnk of Treasure Island Jewelry
and know that you get fair prices and quality
workmanship all the time. Not just ut sale time.

Meet) To S*Y *

s i£ b h
3 2 1 -2 7 3 0

THE RUNCIBLE SPOON
TEA ROOM
A l B r o w t e r 'i Bern
In L o n g w o o d ’ i H iito r ic D iif r lc !
n e w j.tiu o A v tm i*
t Block 6th,o&lt;f P ott O i l x t
Lunch S erved I I A . M .. 1 :3 0 p m .
T u tid a y . Saturday
Hemamade taw *, la la d . la n d w ic h a i
Specialty O o u . r t t

Monkey
Business

Cards • Balloons
Gifts • Novelties./-^
%
Plush Animals V f f
Candy

Seminole Centre (Wall-Mart pfaia) Sanford

VOLKSHOP

Specializing In Service &amp; Parts For
V.W.'s, Toyota and Datsun

D E L IC IO U S L Y D IF F E R E N T

(Corner Ind A Palmetto)

rmiii inininhi inmn t m mmmmmi f
JAY’S IIAIKSTYLING DEM

Monkey Business
Valentines Day

Hi

W E C A R E A N D W E ’L L P R O V E I T .

FIRST WEEK

Q Q C
W

321-6114

SAT MON TUES 9 6
WED TMURS FRI 9G S IIH

RENT • TO OW N
TV’S -V C R 'S
FURNITURE &amp;
APPLIANCES

FORM1

ICONOUICAL FAMIlf HAIR CARt

8 9 5 -7 0 0 5
8 am - 9 pm
8 5 . 0 0 O H Palmist Reading Htf. $10) W/lkis M

C a ll f o r a p p t.

214 S. Palmetto Ave.
SANFORD
PHONE

ALL SMALL CAR PARTS
WANT RIAL IMPORTED CAR PARTS/

WC CARRY THE REAL THING —
IMPORTED PARTE MADE OVE RSE A*
WHERE THE CARE ARE MADE.
THE RIGHT CUALIT7 AND THE RIGHT
FIT TO KEEP TOUR CAR PERFORMING
•AT ITS BEST. A T THE RIGHT PRICE
314* ORLANOO DR — (17-42)
AT THE ENTRANCE TO K-MART P LA Z A

Phone
3 2 3 *5 2 2 7

SALE
FROSTING
$

2250

321-0120

3 2 3 -7 2 0 0

—

c a llu s

PERM
WAVES
s1 7 so

FREE SPINAL EVALUATION*
AS USUAL THIS IS FREE

WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES

CARE FREE CURLS

t

$35°°
R ELA X ER ............ $1750
Long Hair Slightly Higher

2927 S. HWY. 17-92 (Across From Burger King)
IN THE CENTER MALL SANFORD 323-5227
HOURS: MON.-WED. 9-5; THURS.-SAT. 9-7
Exp. 278/87

SAN FO RD

Prepared by Advertising Dept, ol

C
ote322-2611 ffeutf
• p u r y o u * lusm iss o n m n o n
ADVERTISING

BY APPOINTMENT OR WALK-INS WELCOME

323-5815
320 E. C O M M E R C IA L ST.

•If Wc Don't Have It. We'll Get It."

HAIR C O L O R ....... $1250

S T A B IIO B O S S
H ttH U Q H T O

SPECIAL ORDERS
OVERNIGHT AVAILABILITY

B u s in e s s
iR e v ie w l

F requ en t H o ad ach u s
. L o w B a ch o r H ip P a in
□ la z in e s s o r L o s s o r S l e e p
N u m b n e s s a t H a n d s nr F e e t
N ervou en a s J
N o c k P a in o r b t lt f n e - js
A r m a n d S h o u ld e r P a in

Ey i Iim I km Includes: Fattute Atulvsa, Fii
All IMUKMCI ASSICMKBTI
ition Tnt, Shari L*i Toil Short Arm Tnt
ic a m o '
And Talk With Dot lor.
V*Ajeci f* fgiK) Units
• Ash ibo *jl out ' Making Chiropractic Alford«6i«“ Program

14*7 S. Hwy 17 93
Longwood
495-0991
9)7 W. 54 434
Altamonte Spring)
443 5449

Come in and see our new
1987 line of merchandise!
SCUBA
CLASS

*1995

Includes C U ltro o n
Indoor Healed Poo
E qulpm .nl, Wat Su

C la s s e s B e g in F e b , 16 an d F e b . 2-

G*

K-

|V

J v '.i.W S V .i,"

• Tn | P A T i f A N D ANT O T * C * P « &lt; k S O » * * 4 » P « X 3 i» . | F O U M r V lt e T PiAS A ftefrer TO
tl
P AT c a n c e l • H tw c m t o n a « « « 4 M U i* s iD ram P A r v f torn a n * q t n | 8 i| p*v&gt;t,( l * A * t « i i f t O t t
ON T G lA fM tte T
r® P fW O A M IB A f A NCSULf O# An O NlTNte.
O# *iPOteOM Na TQ
f w « A 0 V | «T l* C te | *r E C * Ttef M C I U N ' C I I4 A M NAT&gt;CM ON 1 * f A W N t

L A K E M A R Y BLVD .
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC, INC.
902 E. Lake
M a r y Blvd.

•

3 2 2 *9 3 0 0

Suite 107,
B a y h c a d C on tcr

EAR PIERCING SPECIAL

$5.00
BOB or WANDA
113 W . 27th St.. Sanford

3 22 -8 9 91

�-v r~

t * f

* • t • -

r * - t r r r / f / r/

/ &gt;

r 0 fT

B u s in e s » ~
R e v ie w

•
1

1
1
t

•

•

1
1

1

a

i
a

•

■

■

•

b y A d v e r tis in g

D e p t, e l

SrarfbrdHerald
Herald Advertiser
A D V E R T IS IN G

•

P U T

o ( t

r o u t

3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

fU S J N fS S

O N

H

a w

!

TH S A O V t •

j

Complete;Selection Of

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

'-,V. i f ; .

This Week’s Specials
AND 4 CHAWS

*139.98£.
WTTH COUPON

WE BUY USED FURNITURE
1219 S. French Ave.
Sanford. Fla

321-5808

(Across From The Bam)

’ WSJ
r
"

S2-; U—

Yuri Herviska, left, master diving instructor at Scuba World I I I , shows
Terry Butler some off the 20 specialties he is certified to teach.

Scuba World
Offers
Open Water Diving Class
Yuri Hcrvlska, master diving Instructor, has
Joined the stafT at Scuba World III In the Land and
Water Sports Center at 1667 S. U.S. Highway
17*92. Longwood. Yuri has been teaching for 18
years and Is certified to teach In 20 different
specialties.
New specialty classes being offered Include
underwater hunter, night diver, and caveran
diver.
Scuba World III Is a PADI (Professional
Association of Diving Instructors) training facility.
They will begin classes Feb. 16 and 24 for open
water diver certification in the heated Indoor 50
meter pool at Sharldan Aquatic Club.-Longwood.
The scuba course costs $19.95. February classes
arc filling up fast so enroll as soon as possible.
Kevin Gonzalez, now sole owner of Scuba
World III, and his wife, Anna, recently returned
from Las Vegas where they attended the DEMA
(Diving Equipment Manufacturers Association)
trade show Jan. 22-25. "It was very successful
with many new Ideas," Kevin said. "Diving in
1987 should see great Improvements because of
new developments and new technologies."
A 26*year Sanford resident, Kevin is an open
water diving Instructor and has been diving for
13 years. Scuba World III has been serving
Longwood. Casselberry. Winter Springs. Lake
Mary and other parts of Seminole County for the

past tw o years. T h ere have been lots of
Improvements and Kevin is looking forward to
many more good years of diving.
SCUBA World III has doubled in size expanding
its classroom and showroom space from 1.200 to
2,400 square feet and renovations are almost
complete. They have all the new lines and new
Ideas In equipment for 1987 and carry all the
major brands. Seaquest. Mares. Dacor, Tckna.
Henderson, Seatcc and other major lines.
They also offer professional repair service on ull
makes and models o f scuba equipment. They rent
diving equipment such as air tank, regulator,
buoyancy compensator and wetsuit.
Scuba World III will be offering trips regularly
to West Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale and the
Florida Keys. An exciting new diving area will
also be Biscayne National Park In Homestead, the
nation's largest marine park.
The shop is open Monday through Friday. 10
a.m. to 7 p.m.: Saturday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and
* Sunday. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Phone 695-0991.

• C ustom Relinlshing
And Repairs

M acTA V ISH
D ISCO U N T C A R P E T
203 M A G N O L I A A V E
PH

SANFORD

AUTO CLASS TINTING
* SN O W A i m SPECIAL *
FO R 2 a 4 DR. C A R S

Plua Extra 10% Oft With This Ad

"MOTORHOME SPECIALIST"
Add* Privacy. Haal/Fada Reduction
(P rlcai Exclude Specially C a n L ilte d A l Stove)

P ro fessio n al
C ar Care
c™

• DIVING CLASSES P U N STARTING
P IB M J A R Y 1 0 -1 1 -1 9 *1 7 -1 9 -1 9

• ADVANCED OPEN WATER FEBRUARY 20
• FIRST AID,* C.P.R. FEBRUARY 23-MARCH 2
• RESCUE DIVER FEBRUARY 27
• DIVE MASTER MARCH 6
OHD

652

,

c i l C C. own 2S0

321-0741
830-6688
HWY. 17-92
SANFORD

• In H o m e Touch-Ups

TRUCKS
SERVICE: ?mT‘"

• Insurance And
M oving Claim s

★

RENTALS:

112.00 A DAY
A UP

(305)322-7496
5 0 6 W . 13th S t.

Sanford

322-4694

OUT OF THE HIGH RENT
AREAS

*6 0

A FULL LIN E SCUBA S H O P

it S A L E S : CABS 1 TRUCKS

• Furniture Stripping

. SAVE AT..

MONROE HARBOUR DIVE &amp; SKI

Lash’s
Blue Book Cars

“Wo Treat Your Fumituro With Tindor Lortlsnd’t Coro"

.1M, 11J.M

BLAIR AGENCY

BAYHEAD PET HOSPITAL 8i
HEALTH CENTER

SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22's FILED

H.P. K O R N IC K D .V .M .

BIRDS and UNUSUAL PETS

F RE E C H E C K - U P F O R
A N Y N E W L Y ACQUIRED P E T

ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES

900 Lake Mary Blvd
Sanlord, Fla.

Serving San lord lor 27 Years
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 9-5

CAREFREE C U R lt o TOUCH - UP . . O O
RELAXER
tO A
RETOUCH...... 7 U

323-7710 or 323-3066

3 2 3 -7 2 7 2

7 / you can B e a t o u r P ric e Sc Q u a lity
[Y ou G o t a g oo d D c a V 'f

322-8803

SPECIAL

“CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE”
2510A 0A K AVE. SANFORD

W IT H C O U P O N
LYNN PURNELL

Com er ol S. Park Ave. A Oak

CARRIE HARTSF1ELD Watk ins W elcom e

Ownor-Sfytlri

SlyN*!

Mouft
Mon Thurs 9 6
Fn .Sot 9 0

C A L L 3 2 2 -2 1 1 0

D IS C O V ER ...

I AHOY MARINE'

SO U TH W EST R O A D
C u rls - P e rm s

-

C u ts

2410 SOUTHWEST RD.

-

SALON

C o lo r

SA N FO RD

NAME BRAND FURNITURE FOR LESS
UP TO

A “UNIQUE” Mobile
Home Community
— D IS S A T IS F IE D w ith yo u r p res en t location?
— W A N T a chanca to ow n y o u r own hom e
instaad o f ra n tin g an a p a rtm e n t? ? ? ?
• • D IS C O V E R * * C a ra lra a L iv in g a t C A R R IA G E
C O V E lo c a ta d o ft S .R . 0 7 (S a n fo rd ) iu a t lV j m ilts
east ol 1 7 -0 . O u r M o b il* H o rn * C o m m u n ity has:
• A D U L T and F A M I L Y Sections
• Clubhousa, S w im m in g Pool, a L a u n d ry
F a c llitia s .
• A lis tin g ol re sa le s and new h om e sales
a v a ila b le .
’
C A L L 313-E1M o r 131-3703 lo r lu r th e r
in fo rm a tio n

m o A o io j;

2 0 % Off

L A R R Y S A M P S O N ’S
1401 S. H W Y . 17-92
(305) 322-4652 - S A N F O R D
UP TO 36 MOS. FIN A N C IN G
MON.-SAT. 10 a.m .-6 p.m.
SUN. NOON - 6 p.m.

rr^

SAVE $10

S -J iil O U T B O A R D S
Beltsr in the Long Runl

i PERM
$
SPECIAL

Q U IC K S !L V = ft A C C E S S O R IE S

Ret)- *40

AUTHORIZED SE R V I C E

30

Includes Haircut C Style

Hairhiz

S T E V E MEADORS

AHOY MARINE
323-8373

T w i n , Nfc. j 1 W ? - f

I T I M • - T I X T A M E N D M E N T T O SNOOT H A N O I D C V IL O P M I NT P L A N TAB L I I t
The Seminole County Planning Departm ent la requesting an
am endm ent to Ordinance I77-2S Section 3 (3 ) ( e ) , em ending T ab le
110 entitled Lend Use Categories Defined In T e rm * e l Zoning
Districts found on P e g * S3 o f the Seminole County Com prehensive •
P lan , Shert R an g* Developm ent P lan . The purpose a t th is '
am endment Is to create an O FFIC E tend us* c a te go ry; d elete the
Low Intensity Com m ercial tend us* category e n d m ore c lea rly
define which toning d isfrlct(s) Is » Ilow ed within future lend use
classifica tion !*).
•*»•#«#•
H I M C - REQ U ESTED LA N D USE A M E N D M E N T S T O ■ ■
H E A R D O N F E B R U A R Y t l, 1X7 IN C LU D E :
ZOM Company — located at the northwest corn e r o l S.R. a* and
1-4. Am endm ent from General Rural to C om m ercial; A sian s fro m
A -l (A gricu ltu re) and RM-J (T rs v o l T ra lls r Park and C am psites) t o ’
C l (C om m ercial) on property described as follows:
A ll o f the South H o f the East Vi of Section 10. Township I f South.
R on ge X East; and ttw North t* o f the Northeast U o f Section 2*.
Township t f South. Range X East; lyin g and b ein g In Sem inole
County. Florida, lying w esterly of Interstate 4 (S .R . 400). LE SS A N D
E X C E P T the South 3SI.4f feet thereof; and LESS A N D E X C E P T a
parcel ol land sometimes referred to os "S o r r o w P it No. 1 ". lying In
the South to o f the East to o l aforesaid Section X . and described a s '
follow s: Commence at a point on tho East lino o f Section X .
Township I f South, Range X East, 7f4f.03 teat N ortheasterly fro m
ttw Southeast corner of said Section X ; said point being on o curve
having a radius o f 572145 teat and being con cave Southeasterly:
thence from a tangent bearing of North Jt‘ 00'23" East, run 241.57
toot along said curve through * central angle o f 92-74'57" to ttw end
o l said cu rve; thence North 4l*2$’ tS " East 14f.U fe e l; thence South
f f * l« '7 3 " W est 207.31 feet to ttw Point o l Beginning; ttwnce run South
41*25’ IS " W est !4.0f feel to ttw beginning o f a c u rv e having a radius
of 547145 (eat, and being concave Southeasterly; ttwnce run
Southwesterly 3J.2f feet along said curve, through o central angle ot
OO‘ l f ’21"; ttwnce run South l f * l l '7 3 " W est JfS.Ol tout to e point on a
c u rv e h avin g a radius o l 417f.4S teat, and balng con cave
Southeasterly; thence from a tangent bearing o t South 30*3f't2"
West I304.M feet along said curve through e central angle o t
irO J 'O l"; ttwnce run South » * - U '23" W est 1747.14 fe e t; ttwnce N orth
24-4T57" East 1243.47 N e t; thence run North I f * 14*13" East ltn .7 0
feet to ttw Point ot Beginning; and LE SS A N D E X C E P T all that
portion thereof which lies within ttw South to o f ttw Southwest to o f
ttw Northeast to ol aforesaid Section X . w esterly o f ttw lands
described hereinabove as "B orro w P it No. 2 " containing 14.4 acres,
m ore or less. ( BCC District 5)
Jon M artin — located on McCulloch Road, approxim ately 1,200 fee t
w e s t o l L o c k w o o d R o a d . A m e n d m e n t fro m G e n e r a l
R ural/Preservation to Planned Unit D evelopm ent; R e r o w from UC
(U n iversity Community D istrict) and R-3 (M u lti-F am ily D w ellin g
D istrict) to P U D (Planned Unit D evelopm ent) on p roperty described
as follow s:
Ttw w esterly 300 00 feet ol the Southerly 1300 fe e t o l the East to o t
ttw W est to o f ttw Southwest to ol Section X . Township I I South,'
R an g* 31 East, Seminole County, Florida; less road rlght ol-w a y
over the southerly portion thereof: And the East to o f ttw W est to o f
the Southwest to ol Section X . Township 21 South, Range I I East,Seminole County, Florida, less ttw W esterly 300 00 le et of ttw
Southerly fX.OO feet thereat and also lass road right-of-way o ver the
Southerly portion thereof: and the W esterly 420 00 feet ot the
Southeast to o l the Southwest to ot Section X . Township I t South.
Range I t East. Seminole County, Florida; lass road rlght o f w a y
o ver ttw southerly portion thereof: end tha Southeast to o l the
Southwest to ol Section X . Township 2t South, Range 31 East.
Seminole County. Florida, less ttw W esterly 420 00 feet thereof and
also less road right of way over Ihe Southerly portion thereof.
Together with the W esterly 300.00 leet ot the Southwest to o f ttw
Southeast to of Section X . Township 11 South. Range 31 East.
Semlnola County. Florida: lass road right o f w a y o v e r ttw southerly
portion thereof: and the West to o f the Northwest to ot the Southeast
to ot Section X , Township 71 South, Range I t East Seminole County,
Florida; and the Easterly 700.00 leet ot ttw W esterly 1000.00 leet o l
ttw Southwest to ol the Southeast to o l Section X . Township 21 South,
R ange 31 East. Semlnola County, Florida, less road rlght o f way o ve r
the Southerly portion thereof: end the Southwest to o f ttw Southeast
to o l Section 35. Township 2) South. Range It East, Seminole County,
Florida, less W esterly 1000 00 leet thereof, and also less the Southerly
portion thereof lor road right ol-way. Together with ttw W esterly
400.00 leet o f Ihe Southeast to of the Southeast to o f Section X ,
Township 21 South, Range 3t East, Semlnola County, Florida, lass
the Southerly portion thereof for road right o(-w ay, all containing I X
acres more o r less. ( BCC Otstrlct I )
Paul Vinas — located on Ihe west side o l Lockwood Road,
approxim ately Vi ol a m ile north ol McCulloch Road. Am endment
from General Rural/Preservatlon to Low Density Residential on
property described as follows:
Section 15, Township 21 South, Range 31 East; South &gt;1 of ttw
Northeast to and that part ol North to ot Southeast to o f the
Northwest to lying East of Ihe centerline ol a creek near tha westarn
boundary thereof And, Ihe North to o l the Southwest to of the
Northwest to ol Section 34, Township 21 South, Range 31 East,
T O G E T H E R W IT H all righ t* partalnlng thereto. Including without
lim itation any improvements, situated thereon, e asem ents servin g
the P ro p e rty , righ ts tn and to *d|ecent streets, a lle y s « r
rights o f way, and all existing and future tim ber, shrubbery, fruit
and other crop* and vegetation, containing 139 acres m ore or less
(BCC D istrict l)
Jam es M oor* — located on the west side o f Lockwood Road
approxim ately to o l a m ile north of McCulloch Road. Am endm ent
trom General Rural/Preservallon to Low Density Residential on
properly described as tollows.
North to of Section 35. Township 71 South. Range 31 East. Seminole
County, Florida. LESS the West to and LESS the East 1/1* thereof,
containing 111 81 acres. TO G ETH ER W ITH an easem ent described
as tollows Begin at Ihe Southwest corner ot the East to o l the
Northeast to ol the Northeast to ol Section 35. Township 21 South.
Range 31 East, Seminole County. Florida; thence run East 1450 teet
m ore or less to the West right ot way line ot Lockwood Road, thence
run South along Ihe West right-of-way line o l Lockwood Road, a
distance of 40 leet. Ihence run West 1450 leet m ore or less to a point
which Is 40 leet due South ol the point ol beginning. Ihence run W est
an additional 40 leet. thence run North 40 feet, Ihence run East to the
Point of Beginning, all lying and being situated In Seminole County,
Florida. TO G E T H E R W ITH all right* pertaining thereto, including
without limitation any Improvements situated Ihereon. easem ents
serving Ihe Property, rights in and lo adjacent streets, alleys or
rights ol w ay, and all existing and future lim ber, shrubbery, trull
and other crops and vegetation, containing 111.11 acres m ore or less.
(BCC D ts tr k t l)
ZOM Company — located on Ihe west side of Lockwood Road,
approxim ately one m ile north ol McCulloch Road Am endment Irom
General Rural/Preservatlon lo Low Density Residential on property
described as followsT ract I — The North to ot the Southwest to of the Southwest to of
Section 25, and the East to of ol the South to ol Section 24. Township
21 South. Range 31 East, less that portion thereof lying North and
West of the centerline ol the Little Econlockhalchee R iver traversing
the property, all In Seminote County, Florida containing 144 44 acres
m ore or less, less road right ol way. T ract 2 — The Northwest to ot
the Southwest to ol Section 25. Township 21 South. Range 31 East;
also the East to ol the Northeast to ol the Southeast to and the east Vi
ol Ihe west to ol the Northeast to ot the Southeast to In Section 34.
Township 21 South, Range 31 East; all In Seminole County. Florida,
containing /0 8a acres m ore or less, less road rigid ul way. Both
Iracls containing a total ol 717.54 acres m ore or less (BCC District I )
Robert Cantu — located on the east side o l P a lm Valley M obile
Home Park, approxim ately to ot a m ile w - il o l Lockwood Road
Am endment trom General Rural/Preservatlon to M edium Density
Residential on property described as tollows
The Northeast to ol Ihe Southwest to, and the South to of the
Southeast to ot the Northwest to; and the South Vi ol Ihe East to ut
the Southwest to ol the Northwest to LESS Ihe South 453.34 leet to
the East to o l the West toot the said Southwest to o l the Northwest to
all In Section 35. Township 71 South, Range 31 East, Seminole
County, Florida, containing 71 40 acres m ore or less (BCC District
II
The public Is encouraged lo attend this hearing. Those in
attendance will be heard and written com m ents m ay be Hied with
the Board ot County Commissioners Hearings m ay be continued
trom tim e to tim e as found necessary. Further information
pertaining to Ihe proposed amendments may b e obtained Irom Ihe
O ffice of Planning. Room N34I. Seminole County Services Building,
M01 East First Street. Sanlord. Florida 33771, (305) 321 1130.
extension 371
Persons are advised that It they decide to appeal any decision
m ade at these meetings, they wilt need a record o l the proceedings,
and for such purpose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim
record ot Ihe proceedings Is made, which reco rd Includes the
testimony and evidence upon which the appeal Is lo he made, Florida
Statutes. Section 7S4 0I05 BOARD OF C O U N TY COM M ISSIO NE R S.
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
BY: AN TH O N Y VAN
D E R W O R P. P L A N N IN G D IRECTOR
Publish: January 70&amp; February 3 .19S7
D E K 114

!

Tfour

0p ta tu iC H ^

LEISURE CURLS
SPECIALISTS

!

G M 3AW 7UAH7

S l l EAST 25th ST. SANFORD, FLA,

"I

THE “ N E W ” GREENS
HOUSE OF BEAUTY

FREE LAY-A-WAY

F AC TORY

f r-r

DISCOUNT FURNITURE WAREHOUSE

Today’s boats are the best value ever...
• Drifter • Traveler • Lucky Strike
• Arkansas Boat Co.

SEMINOLE COUNTY'S
ONLY MARINER DEALERSHIP
NOW OFFERS 1 to 200 HP
MARINER ENGINES IN STOCK

r 'r v

(Continued from P ago S B )

*

2197 s. r a n c ii AVL
SANFORD, FU . 32771
322*0928117*92)

Custom Jtwelrj and Rtpair
C

r

Legal Notice

Treanrt I sIim I Jewrlry

STOK HOiltt » . I MO. • MT.

.

r * f 'r

PI.

f
i

■

i

a
i

i
•

P rep a red

* '

,, j

4 it

F A M IL Y H A I R C A R E

jj

iJflUf

BONN A FITZG ERALD
OWflER

i

Pti. 322-2252
26 40 Hiawatha Awe
(17-92) Sanford

" I k * Ultimate Lees lo Curts”
ALSO AVAILABLE

Leisure Curis
$65
Also Available
Carefree Curls
$45
Elasta Curls
$45
RELAXERS A
CONDITIONERS $22.50

SHAMPOO A
CONDITIONERS $ 1 5

CaH For
Phyliss Thornton, Ethel Green, Joyce Bright
937 Msry. 17-92

695-6699

LONGWOOD

»

v
»

�| _ t_

40 —SaMerN HtflM, SaMerN, FI. TaeiOay, FtB. 3, 1W7

Soviets Return Border
Violator To Alaska
NOME. Alaska (UPI)
— An adventurer who
d a s h e d a c r o s s t he
frozen Bering Strait
from Alaska to Siberia
In an impromptu (ling
“ to s e e w h a t was
there” was returned by
the Soviets and put in a
hospital for psychiatric
observation.
Lazaro Castro, who
on J a n . 22 dar t ed
across the 2.5 miles
separating the United
States from the Soviet
Union, was flown back
to Alaska Monday by a
Soviet helicopter.
” He said he was look*
ing to sec what was
there. It was more or
less a fling. He did it for
the adventure.” state
Trooper A.J. Charlton
said.
Castro. 26. who gave
Pacific Palisades. Calif.,
as his m ost recent
address.
s a i d he
looked forward to re*
turning to Southern
California. He is a Mex­
ican citizen who en­
tered the United States
i l l e g a l l y in 1980.
Charlton said.
Castro is believed to
be the second person in
about four decades to
cross the icy border
from the Alaska Island
o f Little Diomede to the
Soviet Island o f Big
Diomede. Last April,
John Weymouth. 33. of
San Francisco, also
made the trek and was
returned by the Soviets
after two weeks.
C astro arri ved on
Little Diomede, where
a b o u t 150 A l a s k a
Eskimos live, nn Jan.
20. T w o days later,
while crab fishing on
the Ice with Eskimos.

he Jumped up. shouted
that his companions
c o ul d h a v e all his
belongings and went
running tow ard Big
Diomede.
The Soviets maintain
a military installation
on Big Diomede, where
Eskim os once lived,
and there has been no
link between the two
Islands since before
World W ar II when
Eskimos used to travel
back and forth.
“ The Russians
treated him well. They
were very courteous.”
Charlton said, noting
t h e y e v e n ho no r e d
Castro’s requests for
vegetarian meals dur­
ing his 11-day custody.
Charles Lontor. FBI
a g e n t - l n - c h a r g c for
Alaska, said his agency
was interested In In­
t er vi ewi ng the man
and planned to send an
a g e n t to N o m e .
Wh e t he r C astro re­
turns to California may
be up to federal immi­
gr at i on aut hori ti es.
Charlton said.

Legal Notice
N O T IC E OF
F IC TIT IO U S N AM E
Notlca I* haraby given that I
am engaged In butln ati at 134
L lv a Oaka Can tar, Casselberry,
Samlnola County, Florida undar
tha F ictitiou s Nam a of T O ­
D A Y 'S W IND O W D E SIG N , and
that I Inland to raglstar said
nam a with tha Clark of tha
Circuit Court. Samlnola County.
Florida In accordance with tha
P ro v is io n s o f tha F ic titio u s
Nam a Statutas. To-W it: Sactlon
443.09 Florida Statutas 1937.
E L IT E IN T E R IO R S INC.
/s/ M ing Yan, Prasldant
Publish January 20. 27 A Febru
a ry 3.10.1947.
DEK-113

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
FOR S E M IN O LE CO U NTY,
F L O R ID A
P R O R A T E D IVISIO N
F ile Number 47-42-CP
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
JO SEPH K .C R E A M O N S .
Deceased
N O T IC E OF
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
T h e a d m in istra tio n o l tho
estate o l Joseph K. Craamont,
d a c a a ta d . F lla N u m bar
a i . e J C P , I t pen d in g In I ha
C irc u it C ourt lo r S em in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , P ro b a ta
Division, lha addrats o f which Is
P o tt O fflca Drawar C San lord.
Florida 23773 0639. Tha namaa
and addraasas o l tha parson* I
r a p r a s a n t a t l v a s a n d th a
parsonal raprasan tatlvas' attom ay ara sat forth balow.
A ll Intarastad parsons ara
required to Ilia with this court.
W IT H IN T H R E E M O NTH S OF
TH E F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
TH IS N O T IC E : (IJ all claims
against tha astata and 12) any
o b | a ctlo n b y an In ta rasta d
parson on whom this notlra was
served that challangaa tha valid
Ity ot tha w ill, tha qualifications
o l tha parsonal raprasantatlvas,
vanua, or jurisdiction o l tha
court.
A L L C L A IM S A N D OBJEC
T IO N S NO T SO F IL E D W IL L
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Publication ot this Notlca has
bagun on January 27, 1947.
Parsonal Raprasanlallvas:
Irana E. Crtamons
Post O f Ilea Box JAM
Long wood. Florlda2277V
Lana Craamons Sadlar
Post O f Ilea Box 234
Tangarlna, Florida 32777
M ary Craamons Rua
2403 V ia Oanova
Apopka. Florlda327l2
Attornay for
Parsonal Raprasantatlvas:
L A U R E N Y .D E T Z E L
D E A N . M E A D . E G ER TO N .
BLO O O W O RTH , C A PO U AN O
A B O ZARTH . P A
Post O ftlca Box 2344
Orlando. Florida 32402 2344
Telephone (303) 441 1200
Publish: January 27 A Fabruary
3. 1947
D E K 143

N O T IC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notlca Is haraby glvan that wa
ara angagad In butlnass at 113
O varb rook D r., C assalbarry.
Samlnola County, Florida 32707
undar tha Fictitious Nam a of
A A A A L L S T A R L A M IN A ­
TIO NS, and that wo Inland to
raglstar said nama with tha
C la rk o l lh a C irc u it Court,
Samlnola County, F lo rid a In
accordanca with tha Provisions
o l tha Fictitious Nam a Statutas.
To-W II: Sactlon 443.09 Florida
Statutas 1937.
/*/ Timothy A . By baa
/*/ Troy A. By baa
Publish January 20. 27 A Fabru­
ary 3, 10.1947.
DEK-113
N O TIC E
N O TICE Is haraby glvan that
tha Board o f County Commlsslonars o f S am lnola County,
Florida, Inlands to hold a public
haarlng to consider tha enact
ment of an ordinance entitled:
A N O R D IN A N C E A M E N D ­
IN G O R D IN A N C E NO. 43 22
P E R T A IN IN G T O T H E IM ­
P O S IT IO N O F A FO U R (4)
C E N T LO C A L O P T IO N GAS
T A X UPON E V E R Y G A L L O N
OF M O TO R FU E L AND
S P E C I A L F U E L S O L D IN
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y A N D
T A X E D U N D E R TH E P R O
VISIO NS OF C H A P T E R 204.
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S . P R O ­
V ID IN G F O R T H E D IS ­
T R IB U T IO N OF PRO CE E D S:
P R O V ID IN G FOR INCLUSION
IN S E M IN O LE C O U N TY CODE
A N D P R O V ID I N G A N E F ­
F E C T IV E D ATE ,
at 7:00 p.m., o r as soon th ereaf­
te r as possible, at Its regular
m eetin g on tha 24th day ol
Fabruary. ;947. at tha Samlnola
County S ervices Building. HOI
East First Street, Room W 120.
Sanford, Florida. Parsons ara
advised that. It they decide to
appeal any decision made at this
haarlng, they w ill need a record
of tha proceedings, and. for such
purpose, th ey m a y n eed to
insure that a verbatim record ol
tha proceedings Is made, which
record Includes tha testimony
and evidence upon which tha
appeal is to be based.
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk to tha Board ol
County Com missioners of
Samlnola County, Florida
Publish Fabruary 3,1947
DEL-1

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present
Each letter In the cipher stands lor
another today a cturn U square C

“ KLWLND
UVED

NLTQK'I

PEVKI.

XLZZDCLLN
KLWLND
CQIX

XT ’ Q

V

YLKHYTKI,

CVKIQ

IXVI.”

ZQRT

—

IL

VKN

IVYMTE

CVEETK

;

Legal Notice
N O T IC I O F A P P L IC A T IO N
FOR T A X O K E D
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , that G.C. K irk tha
holder of tha following certifi­
cates hat filed said certificates
ter a tax dead to be lasued
thereon. Tha certificate num­
bers and years ot Issuance, tha
description ot tha preparty, and
tha nam es In which It was
assessed ara aa follows:
C E R T IF IC A T E NO. 744.
Y E A R O P ISSUANCE: 1979.
D E S C R IP T IO N O P P R O ­
P E R T Y : SEC 14 T W P 20$ RGE
2 2 E N 123 F T OF S 130 F T OF W
101 F T OF E 1S2 F T O F SW &lt;4
B E IN G LOT 24 U N R E C D P L A N
LA K E H A R N E Y RANCH
E STATE S 2RO SECT.
Nam a In which assessed R.
Kent M oeller.
A ll o f said property being In
tha County of Samlnola. State ot
Florida.
Unless such certificate or c er­
tificates shall ba redeemad ac­
cording to law tha property
described In such certificate or
cartiflcates will ba sold to tha
highest bidder at tha court house
door on the 2nd day ot March,
19*7 at 11:00 a.m.
A pproxim ately 1125.00 cash
tor foes Is raquirad to ba paid by
successful bidder at tha salt.
Full paym ent o l an amount
equal to tha highest bid plus
applicable documentary stamp
taxes and recording leas Is dua
w it h in 24 h o u rs a t t a r tha
advertised tim e of tha sale. A ll
payments shall ba cash or guar­
anteed Instrument, made pay­
able to tha Clark ol Circuit
Court.
Dated this 7th day o f January,
1907.
(S E A L )
David N. Berrien
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: M Ich allaL. Silva
Deputy Clerk
P u b lish : Jan u ary 20. 27, A
F e b ru a ry], 10.1947
D E K 74

C IT Y OF
L A K E M A R Y . F L O R ID A
NOTICE O F
PU B LIC H E A R IN O
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by tha City Commission ot tha
City ol Laka M ary, Florida, that
said Commission will hold a
Public Hearing at 7:20 P.M . on
February 19, 1947, to consider
the first reading o l an Ordinance
entitled:
A N O R D IN A N C E OF THE
C IT Y OF L A K E M A R Y .
F L O R ID A , R E Z O N IN G C E R ­
T A IN LAN D S W IT H IN THE
C IT Y OF L A K E M A R Y ,
F L O R ID A , AS H E R E IN D E ­
F IN E D FROM THE P R E S E N T
ZO N IN G C LA SS IF IC A T IO N OF
A -l A G R IC U L T U R E TO C-l
G E N E R A L C O M M E R C IA L
A N D PO P R O F E S S IO N A L
O F F IC E P U R S U A N T TO THE
T E R M S O F T H E F L O R IO A
S TA TU TE S ; P R O V ID IN G FOR
TH E A M E N D M E N T TO THE
O F F IC IA L Z O N IN G M A P ;
P R O V ID IN G C O N F L IC T S ;
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AN D E F ­
F E C T IV E D ATE
changing lha toning on tha
follo w in g dascrlbad proparty
sltuata In lha lha City ol Laka
M ary, Florida:
Tha North Ona Half of lha
Was! One Hall ol tha East On
• Halt ol tha Northeast Quarter
at the Northeast Quarter In
S a c tlo n S a v a n ta a n (1 7 ),
Township Twenty 120) South,
Range Thirty (20) East, being
five acres, m ore or lass, known
on tha plat as part o f No. IS tha
South F a rm s, C ry sta l Laka
Groves.
Tha South F ive 15) Acres ol
that portion ot tha N.W. U ol tha
N .E . W o t the N E. (4 of Sactlon
17 In Township 20 South. Rang#
30 E a s t, S a m ln o la C ou n ty
Florida, lying vast ol tha Laka
M ary and Orlando Hoad (O.H.B.
391. Pag# 310)
Containing 9.744 acres, more
or lass.

T O G E TH E R W ITH :
Tha North 40 teat ot tha West
2/3 ol tha East 3/4 o l tha South
1/2 ol tha North 1/2 of tha
Northeast 1/4 ol Sactlon 17,
Township 20 South, Range 30
East. Samlnola County, Florida.
Containing 0 0409 acres, more
or lass.
(lo c a ta d at tha southeast
corner of Longwood Laka M ary
R oad and L ak a M ary
Boulavard)
Tha Public Haarlng will ba
held at the City Hall. City ot
Laka M ary, Florida, on tha 19th
day ot February 1947. at 7:30
P.M ., or as soon thareatter as
possibla at which tlma Intarast­
ad parties for and against tha
requ est w ill be heard. Said
haarlng may ba continued from
tlma lo tlma until (Inal action Is
taken by tha City Commission ol
tha City of Laka M ary, Florida.
Tha City Commission will dis­
cuss this Ham at a Workshop to
ba held on Fabruary 14. 1947, at
7 :X P.M . or as soon thareatter
as possibla.
This notlca shall ba posted In
three public places within tha
City o l Laka M ary. Florida, and
p u b lis h e d In th a E v e n in g
Herald, a newspaper of general
circulation In tha City prior to
tha aforesaid haarlng. In addl
lion, notlca shall ba posted In tha
area to bo considered at laast
fifteen days prior to tha date of
tha Public Haarlng
A taped record ol this meeting
Is mada by tha City tor Its
convenience. This record may
not constitute an adequate re­
cord lor tha purposes of appeal
from a decision m ade by tha
City Commission with respect to
th e lo r e g o in g m a tte r . A n y
parson wishing to ensure that an
adequate record ol the proceed
Ings Is maintained for appellate
purposes Is advised to m ake tha
necessary arrangements at his
or her own expense.

C IT Y OF

XLPT.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I ... p la y e d th e so u &amp; a p h o n e In
c o l l e r - — th a t's w h e r e I le a rn e d to to o t m y o w n h o r n ."
— O .v illa R e d e n b a c h e r .

L A K E M A R Y . F L O R ID A
Carol A. Edwards
City Clerk
Publish: February 3,13.1917
DEL-3

BLOOM COUNTY
HI. RMCMfifR HCW

WSAfVWV
H iu o
SOMA
FUA1

y v

m

LMTOMer-

-m i.

. *T T
I

f

1

1*^1

Ltgal Notlca

Legal NoUca
N O T IC I OP APPLICATION
FOR TAX D I I D
N O TIC E
IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , that County o f Samlnola
tha holder o f the follow ing c ertif­
icates has filed said certificates
tor a tea dead to ba Issued
thereon. The certificate num­
bers and y e a n o f Issuance, tha
description o f tha property, and
tha nam es In w hich It was
assessed ara a t tot Iowa:
C E R T IF IC A T E NO. 1114.
Y E A R O P ISSU ANCE : 190.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O ­
P E R T Y : L E G SEC IS T W P 2IS
RO E 22E E 11.44 F T O F LOTS 4
A 7 UNRECORDED PLAT
C H U LA V IS T A SEC I .
Nama In which assessed East
Samlnola Co.
A ll of la id property being In
lha County o f Samlnola. Stale of
Florida.
Unless such certificate o r c e r­
tificates shall ba re deem ad a c ­
cordin g to law th# property
dascrlbad In such certificate or
cartiflcates w ill ba sold to tha
highest bidder at tha court house
door on tha 2nd day o f March.
1107 at 11:00a.m .
A p p ro xim a te ly 4I2S.OO cash
for foot It raquirad to ba paid by
successful bidder at tha tala.
Full paym ent o f an amount
equal to tha highest bid plus
applicable docum entary stamp
taxes and recording teas It dua
w it h in 24 h o u rs a l t a r th a
advertised tlm a ot tha tala. A ll
payments shall ba cash o r guar­
anteed Instrument, mada pay­
able to tha Clark o f Circuit
Court.
Dated this 7th d ay ot January,
1907.
(S E A L )
David N. Barr ten
Clark o l Circuit Court
Seminole County. Florida
By: M Ich allaL. Silva
Deputy Clark
P u b lish : Jan u ary 20, 27, A
Fabruary 2,10,1907
DEK-77

NOTICE OF A P P L IC A T IO N
FOR T A X D E E D
N O TIC E
IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , that Jarry M abla tha
holder of tha follow ing c e rtifi­
cates has filed said certific a te!
for a tax dead to ba Issued
thereon. The certificate num­
bers and years of Issuance, tha
description o l the property, and
tha namas In w h ich It was
assessed are as lot low s:
C E R T IF IC A T E N O .714.
Y E A R OF ISSU ANCE : 1944.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O ­
P E R T Y : L E G SEC 31 T W P 20S
RGE ME BEG 150.19 FT W OF
NW COR LO T 139 LONGW OOD
R U N W 49.41 F T S 100 F T E
24.22 FT N 73.2 F T N E L Y ON
CU RVE 39 04 F T TO BEG.
N a m e In w h ic h a s s es se d
Celbert Construction.
A ll of said property being In
the County o l Seminole. State of
Florida.
Unless such certificate or c e r­
tificates shall ba redeem ed ac­
cording to law the property
described In such certificate or
certificates w ill be sold to the
highest bidder at tha court housa
door on the 2nd day o f March.
1947 a t t t :00 a.m .
A p p ro xim ately 4123.00 cash
for tees It required to be paid by
successful bidder at tha salt.
Full paym ent o l an amount
equal to tha highest bid plus
applicable documentary stamp
taxes and recording lees Is due
w it h in 34 h o u rs a l t e r th e
advertised lim e o l the tale. A ll
payments shall ba cash o r gu ar­
anteed Instrument, m ade p ay­
able to the Clerk o l Circuit
Court.
Dated this 7th day o t January,
1947.
(S E A L )
David N. Berrien
Clerk o l Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: M ich elle L. Silva
Deputy Clerk
P u b lish : Jan u ary 20. 27. &amp;
February ). 10.1947
D E K 74

NOTICE OF A P P L IC A T IO N
FOR T A X D EED
N O TIC E
IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , that Samlnola County
the holder o l the follow ing c e rtif­
icates has Iliad said cartiflcates
for a tax deed to be Issued
thereon. The certificate num­
bers and years ot Issuance, lha
description o l the property, and
tha names In which It was
assessed are as fol low s:
C E R T IF IC A T E NO 43.
Y E A R OF ISSU ANCE : 1940
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O ­
P E R T Y : S 32 F T OF L O T I 4- N
4 F T OF LOT 4 B LK 9 TR 2
TOW N OF S A N F O R D PB I PG
59.
N a m a In w h ic h a s s es se d
J a m e s M e lv in . D r e n n e P .
Melvin.
A ll of said property being In
the County ot Seminole, Slate ol
Florida.
Unless such certificate or c e r­
tificates shall ba redeem ed ac­
cording to law tha property
described In such certificate or
certificates w ill be sold lo the
highest bidder al tha court housa
door on tha 2nd day ol March,
1947 at 11:00 a.m .
A p p roxim ately 1125 00 cash
lor fees Is required to be paid by
successful bidder at the sale.
Full paym ent o f an amount
equal lo the highest bid plus
applicable docum entary stamp
taxes and recording fees Is due
w it h in 24 h o u rs a l t e r th e
advertised tim e o l the sale. All
payments shall ba cash o r guar
an lead Instrument, m ade p ay­
able to the Clerk o f Circuit
Court.
Dated this 7th day o f January.
1947.

NOTICE O F
F IC TIT IO U S N A M E
Notlca It hereby given that w e
a re engaged In business e t 2923
Kentucky St., Sanford. Samlnola
County, Florida 32771 under the
F ic t it io u s N a m e o l L E A K
BUSTERS, and that we Intend
to register M id nam e with tha
C le rk o l the C irc u it Court,
Sem inole County, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
o f tho Fictitious N a m e Statutes,
To-W II: Sactlon 443 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/»/ Thom as B. H e rfjo g. Jr.
/*/ W endell Howard
Publish January 12, 20. 27 A
Fabruary 2, 1947.
DEK-49
NO TICE O F
FIC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
a m angagad In business a l 214
A g u a V i l l a S I., O a B a ry ,
Samlnola County, Florida undar
tha Fictitious Nam a of R E D ­
O IN G A SON P L A S T E R IN G ,
and that I Intend to register M id
nam e with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordanca with tha
P r o v is io n s o l tho F ictitiou s
Nam a Statutes. To-W It: Section
445.09 Florida Statutes 1957.
/t/M ichael Redding
Publish January 12. 20. 27 A
February 2. 1947.
D E K 50

NOTICE OF
FIC TIT IO U S N AM E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 1410
Boyer St.. Longwood. Seminole
County. Florida 22730 under tha
F i c t i t i o u s N a m a ot M r .
Hook-Up. and that I Intend to
register M id nama with the
C le rk o f the C irc u it Court,
Samlnola County, Florida In
accordance with lha Provisions
o f lha Fictitious Nam a Statutas,
To-WIt: Section 44309 Florida
Statutes 1937.
/*/ Robin L. Osborn
Publish January 13. 20. 27 A
F e b ru a ry ], 1947.
D E K 31
NOTICE O F
FIC TIT IO U S NAM E
Notice Is hereby given that I
a m engaged In business at 303
E. Altam onte Dr., Suite 331.
A ltam o n te Spring*. Sem inole
County. Florida 12701 under the
F ic titio u s N am e o f A S T A R
IN O V A TIO N S , and that I Intend
to register M id nem e with the
C le rk o l the C irc u it Court.
Sem inole County, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
o l the Fictitious N a m e Statutes,
T o Wit: Section 463.09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/*/ Betty J. Gossett
Publish January 13. 20, 27 A
February 3, 1947.
D E K al

NOTICE OF A P P L IC A T IO N
FOR T AX D E ED
N O TIC E
IS H E R E B Y
G IV E N , that Seminole County
the holder o l the following certil
Icates has tiled M id certificates
fo r a tax daed to ba Issuad
thereon. The certificate num­
bers and years ol Issuance, the
description o l the property, end
the nam es In w hich It w as
assessed are as follows:
C E R T IF IC A T E NO. 1203.
Y E A R OF ISSUANCE: 1940
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O ­
P E R T Y : B E G O N S L IN E
H A Y M A N ST 30 FT E L Y OF NE
COR LOT I RUN S E L Y ON ST
54.2 FT S L Y ON W L IN E LOT 4
145.23 F T N W L Y ON E L Y
E X T E N S IO N OF S LIN E O F
LO T 3 107.1 FT N E L Y TO BEG
B LK B H A Y M A N S ADO TO
ALTAM O N TE PB1PC39.
N a m * In w h ich a s s es se d
E m m a Thomas.
A ll ol M id property being In
the County of Seminole, State ol
Florida.
Unless such certificate or c e r­
tificates shall ba redeem ed a c ­
cording to law lha property
described In such certificate or
certificates will t * sold lo the
highest bidder at the court house
door on the 2nd day of March,
1947 at 11:00 a.m.
A pproxim ately 4125 00 cash
tor lees Is required to be paid by
successful bidder at tha M ia.
Full paym ent of an amount
aqual to tha hlghast bid plus
appllcabla documentary stamp
taxes and recording lees is due
w i t h i n 34 h o u rs a l t e r th e
advertised tim e ot the M l* . A ll
payments shall ba cash or gu ar­
anteed Instrument, m ad* p ay­
able to the Clerk ol Circuit
Court.
Dated this 7th day o f January,
1947.

(SEAL)
David N. Berrien
Clerk o f Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: M IchallaL. Silva
Deputy Clerk
P u b lish : January 20. 27,
February 3.10.1947
DEK-74

t

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

PULL

O rlando - Winter Park
831-9993

RATES
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
A M ate • • • • • • . . . .
H O U RS
3 c i R i i r e t h s 1J a m
-9 £ 0 M L

MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY

M C i

7 t i e i i i e W e i 1t o e e

I rr

S O C r Or r

1J a m S O C r Nm
C— t r a c t N e t• s A v a N a M e

1 0 ............ ..

3 Ur n

1

NOTE In the event of the publishing of errors in advertisements, the Sen
ford Herald shall publish the advertisement, after It has been corrected at
no cost to the advertiser but such Insertion* shall number no more then on*
It)

SOCIAL S E C U R IT Y Disability
Frae Ad vice.No Charge Unless
W * W ln l W a r d W h lta A
Associates............. 24S-321-1119

21— Personals
A L L A L O N E ? C a ll B ringing
Paopla T o g eth e r. Sanford's
most respacted dating service
since 1977. M en o ver 30 (43%
discount).............1 400-923 4477

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
A B O R T IO N C O U N S E LIN G
F R E E Pregnancy Tests. Con
1 1 d * n 11a I , I n d i v i d u a l
assistance. Call tor appt. Eve.
Hrs A vaila b le.............321 7493.

71- H t l p Wanted
AS SISTAN T P L A N T M AN A G ­
E R wanted for rapidly gro w ­
ing Boys Sportswear Shop
Must ba exp erien ce In all
phases of garm ent construc­
tio n an d p r ic in g . S a la r y
comansurate with experience
Apply In parson only: San-Del
Manufacturing. 2240 Old Lake
M ary Rd.. Sanford......221-2410

APPOINTMENT SETTERS
P le a M n t w o rk in g conditions
with 40 yr. old local company.
N ew department seeks expe­
rienced appointment M ttors
only. S3 hr. plus tremendous
bonus structure. Call 3221443
ext. 134,............Charles Bordet

EMPIRE DIAL-A-SERYICE

CARPENTER HELPER
TRAINEE

for all your BUSINESS needs.
(P le a M list with us), personal,
h ouM hold A fa m ily needs
•Iso, For Information please
call, M3-240-4433

23—Lost A Found
LO ST; Fem ale Doberm an, 3
yrs. old. black A tan. C arriage
Cove area R ew ard.... 231 4044

25—Special Notices
BECOME A NOTARY
For Details: I 400432 4254
Florida Notary Association

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
LO V IN O M O TH E R , will babysit
In m y homo. Day or night.
part/tull tim e, all ages221 0974
.M O TH ER ot 2 y r old will care
for your child with TLC In my
hom e w eekday*.......... 321-2942
W A N T E O i 3 S P E C IA L Toddlers
to p ley A te e m 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
•xp. N/ald* f C P R . exc. rets.
131 1347 days/321 4047 aft 4pm

31— Private
Instructions
A R E YO U W I L L I N O TO
S PE N D money on M il Im
provement 7 C a ll: ........ 122 1495

Entry level, permanent posi­
tion. E xperience with power
tools helpful. San ford/ D * land
area. N ever a teal

TEMP PERM

.210-5100

C A SH IE R : Convenience Store,
top M lary, hospitalization. I
week vacation each 4 months,
other benefits. Apply 202 N.
Laurel A v « . 4:30am 4:30pm
Monday through Friday.______
C E R T IF IE D NURSES A ID E tor
3-11 shift tor senior retirement
community. P le iM apply lo
200 W. Airport Blvd.
C H E F ’ S ASSISTANT- Serving
breakfast, lunch A banquet
Airport Restaurant. Apply In
person. C a ll:................321 1303
C N A : Im m ediate lull time posi­
tion*. 7 3 o r 3-11 shills. Good
benefits A atmosphere. Apply
Debery Manor, 40 N. Hwy.
17 92, DeBary 444 4434.... EOE
COLLECTOR- P art tlma for the
Rich Food Plan. Work phona
collections only (no outside).
Monday through Thursday, 2
lo 4 pm. M u it have collection
exp. Apply 401 W. 12th St. or
call Mrs. Jam o* at 322-3443

E X T R A TO F U L L Income Irom
your home operated business,
training provided. 331 4194

63—Mortgages
Bought &amp; Sold
W E B U Y 1 st an d 2nd
M O R T O A O E S Nation wide
C a ll: R ay L a g g Lie. M lg
B roker. 940 D ouglas A v e ..
Altam onte....................774 7752

71—Help Wanted
ACCOUNTS R E C E IV A B L E
B O O K K E E PE R
THE SAN FO RO H E R A L D Is
currently accepting resume's
lor an experienced A/R Book
keeper. Duties Include prlc
Ing. posting A billing on a
manual system
Requirements Include:
• Typing Skills
• Calculator by Touch
• Pleasant Personality
• Computer Exp. * Plus
W e O ffe r:
• Insurance Plan
• Paid Vacation
• Friendly Atmosphere
• Job Security
It you meet the above require­
ments and would Ilk* to be e
part ot tha Sanford Herald,
send resume' to:
SAN FO RO H ERLAD
P.O. BOX 1437
SANFO RO . F L . 33772-1457
Attn: OfHce M anager
AD D TO YO U R INCOME
Sell Avon Nowl
322 0439.........o r ..........221 4444
A D M IN IS T R A T IV E
A S S IS TA N T
30 W P M
+ typing. Expert
•n eed, p rofession al Im age
Permanent position. No F ee!

A

NOTICE OF IN T E N T IO N
TO R E G IS T E R
FIC TIT IO U S N AM E
In com pliance with Section
443 09 Florida Statutas 1947, the
undersigned will register with
the Clerk o l the Circuit Court, In
a n d lo r S a m ln o la C o u n ty ,
Florida, upon receipt ol proot ol
publication ot this name, to wit:
BASS Best Action Sure Slayer
U N D E R W H I C H we a r e
e n g a g e d In business at 590
Rinehart Road. Laka M ary. FL
32744 and that tha undersigned
a re the owners ol M id business.
P R O O U C T O LU R E
C O M P A N Y . INC.
B Y : C R A IG B A YH I
P R E S ID E N T
Publish February 3, 10. 17, 24.
1947
D E L 24

TEMP PERM........ 260-5100
A L A R M
I N S T A L L E R
T R A IN E E 44 30 hour G reet
lor beglnnerl No way you can
Icsal Elite com pany Likes
your clean appearance Learn
lo Install security system s!
A A A Employm ent. 700 W. 25th
Street........................... 323 3176

C P A 'S R E C E P TIO N IS T- 1230
1st class c a re er! Will train on
word p ro cessor! Learn all
phases o f accou nting tool
Needs today! A A A Employ
ment, 700 W. 23th St.... 323 3174

323 2123

AS S E M B LY W O R K at home,
plus many others. Earn good
w ages In s p a r* lim e. For
Information 304 4410091 ext.
1449 7days.......... C A LL NOWI

Apply In parson: L o w * * t russ
Plant. 2901 Aileron Clr. San
ford Airport Industrial Park

N A IR O R IS S E R i

A p p ly a t
Halrtoli. 2440 Hiawatha A ve.
C a ll............................... 322 2232

HIRINO I Federal G ov. |ob*. In
your area A overseas. Many

M A IL IN S IR T E R O P E R A T O R
T R A IN E R . JCPenney Credit
Processing Center currently
has part tim e and lull tim e
position* In our M all S ervice*
D e p a r tm e n t fo r M a ll In ­
terfere. Position* w ill entail
o p e ra tin g a P itn e y B ow a t
CO M System A an Insartamax
Inserter. Previous experience
helpful. A lifting required.
T h e q u a lifie d c a n d id a te
should b e production oriented
and w illin g to work a Monday
thru Saturday work schedule
with flexib le hours according
to mall volume.
Wa o ffe r a good training
p r o g r a m , o p p o rtu n ity lo r
advancem ent and an axcallant
benellts package which In­
clu d e* a discount plan In
JCPennay store*.
Please apply In parson b e­
tween 4 am 3:20pm. M on.-Frl.
JCPennay
Credit Processing Center
141 W eklva Springs Rd.
Longwood, FI. 22779

744-4144
Eqoat O p'ty E m ployer. M/F

MANUFACTURER’S REP
Nationwide wholesale lew elry
firm seeks rep. N o jew elry
exp . necessary. Sales exp.
h elp fu l. N o d ire c t sellin g
(W h olesale on ly). Earn 140K
( + ) In com mission annually.
Serious applicants only. Call
fo r c o n fid e n tia l In te r v ie w
7)2 974 3000.____________________
M E A T C U TT E R . 4123 00 Exp.
w ln sl G re a t c lie n te le with
local business! Needs
urgently I A A A Em ploym ent,
700 W. 23th St......Cel 1:373 3176
M E D IC A L R E C E P T IO N IS T , S6
hr. Set appointments A file !
Plush o lflc e l Busy phones
you'll en|oy handling! A A A
E m p lo y m e n t. 700 W
2Slh
St.........................C all: J23 3I76
NO W A C C E P T IN G A P P L IC A ­
TIO N S, R eedy M ix concrete
truck d rivers. Apply In person
at 2375 Old Lk. M ary R d ,
Sanford Exp, preferred
N O W H IR IN O I Im m . need for
c o n tra c t P T , R N . C N A 'S .
L I V E - I N S A H om em ak ers,
new pay scale
M ed! cere/
private,. 774 1153. Mon /Frl. 10
III 7. C A R E A T H O M E. E O E .

NOTICE

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

*

KNIGHTS
OF

*

DAILY W0 RK/DAILY PAY
N E E O M E N A W OM EN NOW I

gun rt»

m ix h

! NO ^ F E E !
Report reedy for work at 4 A M
407 W. 1st. SI................Sanford

321-1590

**********
D IS H W A S H E R w a n ted, lull
lime. Responsible person only.
G alleria Restaurant .. 331 7247
D O C T O R 'S A S S IS T A N T
T R A IN E E - 44.30 hour. Wowl
No experience needed I Went*
today! Friendly smile to greet
p a tie n ts a n d a s s is t w ith
exam s I Dynam ite opportunl
fyI A A A Employment. 700 W.
23th St..........................323 3174
D R IV E R S W A N T E D . Domino's
P itta . Inc. Wages, tip*. A
commission. S3 hr. guaran
teed Must have own car with
liability Insurance.
A pply: 1910 French A ve. or
call 321 3000 alter Mam
___
D R IV E R T R A IN E E 13 30 hr
Locall Co. truck provided I Tip
to p C o m p a n y !
AAA
E m p lo y m en t. 700 W . 25th
St......................... C*H:323 3174
E X P . B U ILO E R /LA M IN A TO R
lor store display A fixtures.
M u st h a v e k n o w le d g e ol
com m ercial tools. E. Sanford
location, benellts. 323 4494
E X P . SAU TE* Brollar A
b rea k fa s t cook, lull tim e.
Apply In person. Deltona Inn
Tues.-Sat. 7 p m to Sp m
P A R T T IM E E X P . O F F IC E
PERSON lor last paced office.
Must have typing A calculator
experience. Non smoker only.
A p p ly In p erso n : San Del
Manufacturing. 2240 Old Lake
M ary R d , Sanford..... 321 3410
FAST FOOD P R E P A R A T IO N :
Top salary, hospitalisation. I
week vacation each 4 months,
other benefits. Apply 202 N.
Laurel A v e . 4:30am 4 30pm
Monday through Friday.______
FORK L IF T O P E R A T O R - Day
shltll In San lord I Quick raises
put you at tha topi Don't miss
ill A A A Employment. 700 W.
23th St..........................323 3174

AIRtlNE/TI|Ay EL4CH 00L

AU TO M O TIV E SA LE S PE R SO N
N E E D E D . A C R experien ce
preferred. C a ll:..... -Phil Battls

B A K E R 34 hour. Any expert
•n ee! Hiring todayl T errlllc
b e n a flls l N o w eeken ds or
nightsl A A A Employm ent. 700
W. 23th St.....................323 3176

Shop. Must bo exp erien ce on
Industrial ta w in g machine.
Apply In parson on ly: San Del
M anufacturing. 2340 Old Laka
M a ry R d „ Sanford...... 321 3410

CONTRACT LABORERS
Earn 19 to 413 per hr. Must
•n|oy working outdoors. No
exp. nec. For lull or part H r i
positions In Seminole C
-all
fa m t o t p m ........... 413444 , f

*

55— Business
Opportunities

A L T E R A T IO N S

im m adiate openings, without
w a ttin g lists or last*.
415444.000. Phona call refun
...403-424-4(43 ext. 1244

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
• Monday - 9:00 A .M . Saturday

12— L e g a l S e r v ic e s

T IM E

PERSON tor Boys Sportswear

GENERAL OPPICR CLERK72C a t e e

L A B O R F O R C E

David N. Berrien
Clerk o l Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: M Ich allaL. Silva
Deputy Clerk
P u b lish : Jan u ary 20. 27,
February 2 , 10.1947
D E K 75

*« "* * i* $

7 1 - H o l p W a n te d

FIC T IT IO U S N A M I
Notlca It hereby given that w e
a r e engaged In business al 1401
A ir p o r t B o u le v a rd . Sanford.
Florida 12771, Seminole County,
Florida, the fictitious name of
P M P A R T N E R S H IP , a Florida
General Partnership, and that
w e Intend to register M id nama
with tha Clerk ot the Circuit
C o u rt, S e m ln o lt C o u n ty .
Florida, In accordance with tha
p re v is io n s o l tho F ic titio u s
Nam a Statutes, to-wit: Section
443 09 Florida Statutes 1937.
R O B E R T E. M cK E E OF
S E M IN O LE . INC.,
a Florida corporation
By: R obert E. M cK ee
Its President
DICK P R O C TO R CUSTOM
HOMES, INC.,
a Florida corporation
By: Richard E. Proctor, Jr.
Its President
Publish Fabruary 1, to. 17, 24.
1947
OEL-27

(SEAL)

by Berke Breathed

IFTNtSHEPANM
FUMING- m CAUJNG
tT ‘SUM SONATA N
POX: TAKt A LOOK/

- * f~ f

m

Train To Be A
Travel Agent • Tour Guide
Airline Resenrationist
S tart lo c a lly , lu ll llm e /p a rt
tim e. Train o n live airline co m ­
p u te r*. Hom e s lq d y and re s i­
de nt tra ining Financial aid
a v a ila b le . J o b p la c e m e n t
assista n ce . N a tio n a l h e a d ­
quarters L.H .P ..F L

A.C.T. Travel School
1-800-432-3004
Accredited member N M SC.

COLUMBUS
JACKPOT’250
BIG N ’250
BIG X ’250
GAMES
S35-S4C-S50
Thurs. A Sun. 7 p.m.
2504 OAK AVE.,
SANFORD

TEMPLE SHALOM

V
m
Saturday 6:45 P.M.
Wednesday 6:45 P.M.

All Regular Gaines
$50.00
1785 Elkcam Blvd.
(Career Provident* Blvd )

Deltona, FL

BINGO

KIWANIS CLUB
OF CASSELBERRY
rtlD AV NIGHT 7 P.M.
S2S-SSO-S100
12) $250 JACKPOTS
Senior Citlitns Centir
Secret Lakv Park.
CassaBarry
6 959421

Did you know that
yeur club ar organiza­
tion can appear in this
Kiting each week for on­
ly 53.50 por weok? This
it an ideal way to inform
tho public ol your club
activities.
If your dub or organization
would liko to be included in
this lilting call:

Sanford Herald
C L A S S IF IE D
DEPARTM ENT
322 2411

�r h r

r * r

ROWHIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
O p e ra to r* w a n te d on a ll
operation*. W * offer paid holi­
day*. paid vacation, health
care plan, and modem a ir
conditioned plant. Piece w o rt
ra le *. W ill tra in qualified
a p p lic a n t*. S en -D el
Manufacturing. » 4 0 Otd Lake
M ary R d - Santord...... MI-3410

A W

*1— Apartments/
Ho u m to Share

NURSE'S A ID E S - a ll th lf tt ,
part A full lime. Batter Living
Canter. W PJBP3..EOE/M /P/H

• REASONABLE RATES
• M A ID S E R V IC E
P PR IV A TE ENTRANCE
Why Consider Living Anywhere
E Ite When You Can Live In

Medical
t

Personnel
•P o o l.

3234507

O F F IC E CASHIER, US Fun
ip o tl W ill t r a ln l A n sw er
phone* A tak a paym ents.
Learn office I In Sen ford I AAA
Em ploym ent, 700 W . U th
St...........................Call:333-S17&gt;
O F F I C E / M A N A O E R
T R A IN E E - *300 week. No
false promises her*I Learn
entire business top to bottom.
Light clerical duties. Bright
career! Professional company
hiring today! AAA Employ
ment, 700 W. U th St.....TO-SI7I
M E C H A N IC needed, e x p e ri­
enced with dlesl A ga* with
own tools. Call :M1 5231
O P P O R T U N IT IE S open fo r full
A part time teachers in *
trend setting pre-school/chlld
care corp. Love ot children a
must. Exp. A education a plus,
but we will provide training
and education..............373 t e n

P A R T -T IM E S E W IN O
M AC H IN E M E C H A N IC
W ANTED, must be e x p e ri­
enced, on all types ot Industri­
al sewing machines. A p p ly In
p e rs o n o n l y t o : S a n - O e l
Manufacturing. 1340 Old Lake
M ery R d „ Santord......331-3110

PART-TIM E Auditors helper for
In v e n to ry c r e w . I I h r * ,
m in im u m . Above a v e ra g e
wage. Apply at 301 E. U th St.,
Sanlord. Call 333 *2*7 for Into.
PHONE PERSON- Needed for
Domino's P lu a , Inc. Apply:
I f 10 French Ave. or phone
M l WOO alter 11am_____________
PHONE O P E R A T O R S needed 5
afternoons A evenings a week.
*4 hr. + bonus. C ell M l 4307
PHONE SOLICITORS- P ositive
attitude A p lea sa n t phone
vole* ls all you need) Exp.
helpful but not n ecessary.
3M M l I be tween 1:30 A 5:30
P R O O R A M A S S I S T A N T to
work In direct care/trelnlng
position with m e n ta lly re
terded. Call: 331 7731.__________
RECORDS C O M M U N IC A ­
TIONS S P E C IA L IS T for part
time shllt work. Must demon
strata proficien cy In o ffic e

skills............................ Contact:
Ms. Liberator*, Lake M ary
Police Dept.............. 323-1153

REPS NEEDED
F o r Business accounts. Full
tim e
*40,000 *40.000. P a rt
tim e Il7.000tis.000 N o sell­
ing, repeal business. Set your
own hours. Training provided
1 *17 93* *170 M F, I am 5 pm
(Central Standard T im e)
R E S P I R A T O R Y T H E R A P IS T Full time. C R TT . Fla. lie. II
pm -7 am. Apply: W. Volusia
M em orial Hospital. 701 W.
Plymouth A ve., Poland, FI.
R E T IR E D OR S E M I-R E T IR E D
PERSON to handle g o lf certs
and other misc. duties Hours
flex. Apply on person M F.
M aytalr Country Club_________
R N OR L P N needed. Full time,
3 to II Shift. E xperience as
Charge Nurse and geriatrics
halpful. Apply D tB ary Manor,
*0 N Hwy 17 97. * ** 4*76 EOE
SALES PERSO N Wanted, earn
high commission on sales, also
bonus commissions paid for
big producers Training pro
vlded. Apply In person to A A
B Wafer treatment at 7597 S.
Sanlord Ave. P alm P la ta , or
ca ll.............................. M l *707
SALE S PE R SO N S
. ..are mad* not born! H ave fun
while training Advancem ent
...ilartn o w l C a ll:.
240 5873
S A L E S S E C R E T A R Y - Boat
manufacturer has opening lor
Sales S ecreta ry. Com puter
exp. helpful. See Sharon At
chley. Cobid Boat Co.. 500
S live r Lake Rd , S anlord.
M on .-F rl.9 *m -*p m . D ally
S H IP P IN O / R E C E IV IN G
No experience r e c r i w i y . Per
manenl poll I Ion N ever a (eel

TEMP PERM........ 260-5100
T A X P R E P A R E R Needed until
4/15/17. Call Phil B elli*

TTff,
323-2123
T E X A S R E F I N E R Y CO R P.
needs mature person now In
Sanford area R egardless ol
training, w rite H.T. Hopkins.
Box 711, Ft Worth, T x . 74101
W A N T E D : M anager Train ee lor
nations largest am usem ent
chain. Must be dependable A
bendable. E lec tro n ic back
ground preferred S5 per hr.
A p p l y at B a l l y ’ s G r e a t
Escape, Sanford P la ta .
Mon.-Thuri 10am 3pm_________

SANFORD- Unfurnished room,
privileges. *40 week. Call:
373 4117.......... or.......... 747 1745

*7—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
SANFORO, Hug* 7 bdrm. apt.
Clot* to downtown. *90 wfc. +
STOP sec, dtp. Call......373-7249
COZY- I bdrm. apt. furnished,
fireplace. S270 mo. plus sec.
Cell:..............................MI-3190
Furrs Apts, tor Senior Clfltens
310 Palmetto Ave.
J. Cowan. No Phone Cells
SANFORD, Lovely I bdrm. apt.
Complete privacy. SS5 wk. +
*300
sec. Include* utilities
Cell............ ....................373 77*9
NEAR TOWN, 1 A 3 bdrm*., 145
to *15 wkly. *150 sec ALSO
Ettlclency. M3 *794, evenings
ONE BR, adults, no pets, quiet
residential, all *l*c . *775 plus
dap. C e ll:.
........... 373 1019
OSTEEN: I bdrm. apt. fully
furntshad, adults only, no
children or pets. *350 mo -f
*700sec Cell................ 373 4343

RELOCATING
Short term leases, 3 bdrm.
unfurnished, tin g le tlo r y ,
private, near conveniences.
SANFORO COURT APT.
________373-33*1 « x .** t________
SANFORD. Large 7 bdrm.. with
screened porch. Complata
privacy. *90 wk. + *700 sac.
dtp. Call........................373-77*9

W—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
ATTR A C TIVE - 2 bdrm.. yard,
carport. *10 week. sec. dep
*700. C a ll:.................... M l *947
• E F F IC . I A 3 BDRM. APTS.
• FU R N . A U N FU R N .

• PAYWEEKLY
W hy Consider Living Anywhere
E ls* When You Can Live In

HORIZONTAL Panel Saw. lOhp,
100" cutting capacity X J '»
depth w/»corlng unit. M H t l

to

GENEVA,
acre*. can b t sold
a* J five K f f parcels One on
hard road, one with access
behind 1st parcel, near fish
camp and Lake Harney. Hunt
and fish hart In your extra
tim e . *41,000. C all L in d e
Morgen. Reellor/AsMclete

SANFORD- Large 2 bdrm.. I
bath, heat pump, no pet*. 2
children m ax.. *450 mo. F
dep. C a ll:.........
322-4991
SPACIOUS 1 bdrm .. t bath,
t n c lo t t d porch, hardwood
(loan, full attic, garaga with
workshop. *500 mo...... 331-1231

2 BDRM ., 1 BATH, fenced back
yard, *475 rant + sac. dep. No
pets. C all........................ 323-44*1
3 BEDROOM. IV* Bath. 3 story
home with screened porch.
1310 S. M yrtle. *475 Mo. avail
abla 2/1. Call 322 3443 ext. 723

105—DuplexTriplex / Rent
* e e * * * * e e * e e e * e e
Deluxe Duplex Comm. Screen
perch, laundry A storage rm „
Kwnserv. provided.....M l * 3 U

1 BR, furnished. M ature adults
only. Perk Avenue M obile
Perk. C e ll:....................3M 2*41

111—Resort/Ve cation
Rentals
NEW S M Y R N A BEACH- 3
b d r m . l u x u r y oce a n f r on t
condo. Tennis court, garage.
*400 per week or *2.000 mo.
M2 2733.......... o r...........447 3700

113—Storage Rentals
LARG E STO RAO ERO O M
*40 month
C a ll: ............................. M t 4947

117—Commercial
Rentals

321-7823...... Em. 323-0109
L A K E M A R Y - Huge corner
shaded lot, 1 bdrm. 2 bath
screen porch, many extra*.
W allaca Cress R ealty, Inc.
_____________ nt-4577____________
LOO A -F ram t, V complete on 1
acres 2.500 sq.tt.4-, *45.000.,
Term s. Owner/Broker!?!- 2440

SPACIOU S HOME, 7/2. living
room, dining room, kitchen,
porch A carport on large
shady lot Call 373 1031.3 7-

&lt; Z 7

All 101) NEED
TO KNOW
N RIAL ESTAII

,N

STENSTROM

SAN FO RD . 1st St.; 2 o ffice*
Secretarial s ervice available.
*175 mo. each, utilities In­
ducted................. Call 321 3797

WE L I S T A N D S E L L
M O RE P R O P E R T Y THAN
AN YO N E IN NORTH
SEM INOLE COUNTY

★ $199 ★ -k

R ID O E W O O O ARMS A
BAMBOO COVE S PE C IA L!
Rent any site apartment by
Feb 1st and receive March
rent F R E E !

767-0606

21W Ridgewood A v e ...... M3 *470

BATEMAN REALTY

300 E. A irport Bl............ 323 *411

Lie. Real Estate Broker
7444 Sanford Ave.

321 0759________ 321 2257
A lter hours 122-7441
Ib d rm .tb a th
*335 mo
7 bdrm . 1 'ib a lh .......... *360mo
a Central Heat A Air
a Pool A Laundry
FRANKLINARMS
1170 Florida Ave.
_____________333 6*50____________
1311 -A P I NE . 2 br., 1 ba. adults
only, no pets. *40 wk. or IMS
mo. -F dep Days *79 00*5.
Eves *44 1417or 349 5*7*
2 BORM. 3 F U L L BATH. Urge
(1.000 iq.ft.1 apl Furn. kitch­
en. w/w carpet, c/h/e, clothes
washer/dryer. *3*0 mo One
year lease, no pets Large
pool M3 9040.....o r.....M3 9543

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

BY O W N E R . Lake M a ry : 4
bdrm , t*y bath, great room,
screened porch. 34’ X14' pool
approx. 1700 sq ft. living area,
treed lot *42.500 377 M17 after
4pm wkdays/anytlm e wkends
I O Y L L W I L D E I Enchanting. 2
story. 4 bdrm .. 1 balh brick
h o m e in s o u g h t a f t e r
neighborhood, boasts 7.2*7 sq
ft ot luxurious living area
Reduced now to tIQS.0001 Call
M arti S ensakovfc. 173 3700,
o r................ .........177 77*7 eves

Keyes
rt o a io a me r t a ir o n s

KEYESII INTHESOUTH
• • • IN D E LTO N A * a •
a a H O M E S FO R R E N T a a
a a 574 1434 a a________
L A K E M A R Y AREA- 3 bdrm . 2
bath, ga ra ge . *500 month/
discount C a ll:........... *30 0097

M E L L O N V IL L E AR E A. 3 bdrm
1 bath *450 mo F sec. Avail.
2/1/47......... M3 *353 alter 5:30

W ORKERS N E E O E O I It you
need steady work paid dally.
Call Sam alter 3 pm.. 377-7554

P I N E C R E S T - 3 bedroom , 2
bath, fenced, carport.
Call: ......................... M l 3454

LONGWOOD/SANFORD
3
bdrm., carpeted, heat A air,
*450 F security. 339 3444

C H A R M IN G W E L L K E P T 2
bdrm .. t balh home In Country
Club M anor L a rg e corner lot
with 7 util bldgs A fenced
backyard ..............
*44.000
Energy R ea lly inc......121-2919
Julia Boyd Realtor/Assoc.
349-5107 eves. A weekends
FOR 5 A L E / L E A S E O P T I O N j
bdrm , 7 bath, brick, air A
heat on I acre Lois of Irees,
corner lot___
___121 0154

HALL REALTY
REALTOR

WE BLOW FLAT ROOFS!
Insulate safely for CwtaMtodB
year-round comfort &amp;
lifetim e economy!

FOR FREE ESTIMATE
CALL

ENERGY SAVINGS SYSTEMS

830-4035

W E N E E D LIS TIN G S
N O T H IN G DOWN FOR VA
B U Y E R S I N ice 4 bdrm, home
In Sunland Estates w/large
screened porch! Large fenced
yard! Only *344 per mo prln
clple A interest! Walk to park!
Only .......................... *47,900
HW Y. 44 F R O N T A G E I 2 bdrm
home with fam ily room. Close
to 1-4! G reat starter home or
Investment Incom e!
O nly............................ *34,900

323-5774
2444 H W Y. 17 97

L IQ U ID A T IN G Stock of uphol­
stery A decorator furniture.
Peddlers Cert, 133 N. Adslie
Ave., Detente............... 774-U99

211— Antiques/
Collectibles

REALTY, INC.

O W NER F IN A N C IN G ! Need a
really good start? This seller
Is w illing! Only *4000 down A
assume VA loan, seller holds
the rest. Total monthly pay
ment w ill still be under *400. 4
bdrm.. Its balh, screen porch,
fe n c in g ....................... *39,500.

CORNER LOTI 1 acre + . toned
C l, H w y 50 E , 3 blks from
E ast W est E xp w y ., varied
uses. J. Strong. 100 % Real
Estate Inc. *43J 2 M o r 299 1100

CALL BART
R E A L ESTATE
REALTOR____________ 377-7494

4 0 E N E V A OSCEOLA R D .e
ZONED FOR M O IIL E S I
5 Acre Country tract*.
Wall head an paved Rd.
70% Down. 14 V r*. at 17% I
Frem *14,5441

to rs

USED F U R N IT U R E .
W E TAKE CONSIGNM ENTS.
B U Y OR SE LL............. .Jtt-2154

F A M I L Y O R I EN T E OI 4 bdrm .
2 balh home, pool. Ipl,. fenced
rear yard, extra large Master
br.. central H/A, large eat In
kitchen!....................... 174.000
G R E A T FOR E N T E R T A I N ­
IN G ! New 1 bdrm , 7 bath
home on double lot. red brick,
w/lols ol extras, central H/A,
patio, utility room, f amily
room and m ore.............*43.900
LI VE IN L U X U R Y ! 4 bdrm, 3 '?
balh. executive home on I I
acres with lake. pool, rec A
family room face pool A lake.
3 fireplaces A many extras!
...............................
*795.000

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720
Call toll free 1 800-323-3720
7545 P A R K A V E ............ Sanlord
901 Lk. M ary Blvd
Lk. M ary

*
f. *

OMC STEP VA N : 7 1 , good
cond., new paint, *1(00/otter
Call:M I3555or M I7149

231— V t h l d t s

Wanted
WE PAY TOP I * tor wrecked
cars/trucks. W * Sail guaran­
teed used p ert*. AA A U T O
SALVAGE at DoB*ry..A4*~**&gt;7

215— B oats a n d
Accessories

322-2420
321-2720

I * F t. OLASTRON Bowrlder. 15
Johnson, wi t h g al v a n l t a d
tra ile r. Many extras, must
selll «3.49S............444 *735 aft. 4

Call toll (rat 1800-323-3720

217—Garage Sales

1545 PARK AVE............. Santord

I I H P SNAPPER riding mowar.
mlsc. tools. Everything must
go. C all:............... Ml-4153 eves.

157-Mobile
Homes/Sale

219—Wanted to Buy

A BEAUTY- Skyline. 14X57. 7
bdrm., 1 bath, Fla. rm PLUS

* U Aluminum Cans..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Metals............Otass
KOKOMO..........................333-1104
J U N K A W R E C K E D CARSRunning or not, top prices
paid. Fra* pick up. 311-M54

screened area, aet In kitchen.
Priced to s e lll............. 373 0104
C arriage Cove M obile Hom a
Park. Coma see us! 11
Oregory Mobiles Homes.MJ5744

LATE M ODEL, on goll course,

223—Miscellaneous

a/c. Adults only. Super clean
and ready. *500 down, low
monthly, ownar financing. No
pets 2404713..... o r...... 333 0575

Brown R ive r Rock P a tio Stones
G rease Traps Sand D ry W ell*
Ready M ix Concrete
M iracle Concrete Co.
333-5751...................109 Elm Ave.

S PR IN G HAMMOCK PK- Hwy.
1/ 97/419. Resales from *5.000
Adult community........M3 0441
.1 BR, nlcaly turn., a/c. awning.
13x50. Adults. Lot *14. P ark
A ve M obil* Park........3M 7*41

B U Y ........... S E L L ............ TRADE
Most Anything
H uey's Crewn Pawn....... 172 1744
D IA M O N D S are fo rev er but love
Is n ’ t, Set. A 7ct. f l awless
diamond*. Ha ha Jonathan, t
told you I'd sell them . 3A5-314A .

163—Waterfront
Property / Sale

181— A p p lia n c e s

7 .7 % APR
CONSTRUCTION FINANCING
FOR UP TO 2 YEARS
SAVE O N HI GH LAB O R COSTS
and build It yoursall. No down
paym ent Quality pro cut ma
terlals Step by step Instruc
tions. Call lor d etails or attend
a sem in a r.......... . 305-451-1941

F O R S A L E : 4x7 storage shed.
*75. Upright refrigerator, *50.
Call alter 4pm ..............M3 147*

AN XIO U S OW NER- * F acres
with homa and collage on Ihe
Waklva River.
Energy Realty Inc......113-1959
Julie Boyd Realtor/Assoc.
349-5107 eves. A weokends

7Vs A C R E S . 145 It. paved road
Irontage by 440 ft. deep (7
oran ge g ro ves) *7.000 down.
*135 m o 373 9040 or . M3 9543

F O R SALE- 9x10 m etal shed,
also HONDA G E N E R A T O R .
904 735 07*1, Sorrento. FI.
H A L F P R I C E I Flashing arrow
signs *2*91 Lighted, non arrow
*2791 Unlighted 1739! Free
letters! See locally. Call to
d a y l F a cto ry : 1(00 473 0143
a n ytim e _______________________

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
HONDA Awtematlc 45*: '41, new
cond. 1500 org. m l. 41100
Call :311-3555 or MI-7349
YAMAHA 1ECA *54: '43. axe.
c on d. 5 . 0 00 m l . B I L L Y
CASTER goll club*. M t 3744

241— R e c re a tio n a l
Vehicles / C a m p e rs
H I LO Travel Traitor: '43. 31 tt.
*7.700 Exc. cond. Bek Owen
Travel T railer* *33 H . Adotle
Ave., Daland............
M A Y F L O W E R : '1 0 . P a r k
Modal. 1 5 'X r Tlp-out*. Neal A
clean *7.100 Bek Owen Travel
Trailers 333 N. Adell* Ave.,
Poland.......................... 734-505*
QUINSTAR: Camping. Cargo,
Utility, Tilling T r a ile r.
Unique.
Bob Owen Travel
Trailers 333 N. Adell* Ave.,
Poland.......................... 73A545Q
SEE THE N E W HI LO T R A V ­
EL T R A IL E R S « t Bob Owen
Travel Trailers 333 N . A d e ll*
A v * „ Deland.............. 73* 50JO

BUY HERE
PAY HERE
LOW
DOWN PAYM ENI
GOOD CREDIT BAD CREDIT

NO CREDIT
NO INTEREST

STO N E M O R T A R M I X E R (50
Dbl. batch, axcallent cond.
Used little UOO M l 4770

/ F u rn it u re
L A R R Y ' S M AR T. 315 Sanford
A ve New/Usad turn. A oppi.
Buy/Sell/Trade. 3M 41M.

231—Cars

M A Y T A G gas dryer *115 Light
fixtures, reason able.
C e ll.......................... ...377 7741

VW

RABBI T DI ES EL L-

17.

USEu CARS

Baby blue w/belge cloth Int.
A/C, 5 sp . 53.000 m l.. 40 mpg
c ity . 55 m pg hwy., 3 mo
Michalln liras. Like new cond.
Must Sell I *3,300 neg 574 3790

S O L ID R O C K M A P IE HUTCH
P r i c e : ................... ............*350
C a ll:........................ 323 4704

5?19 S HWY 1 / 0 ?
SANTORD ] ? J ? 1?1

CONSULT OUR

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

P R I C E D TO SELL! 3 bdrm . I
bath home, central H/A, din
Ing a r e a , l a r g e s creen ed
porch, fenced yard. A 1 year
homa w a rra n ty ..........*49,700

N E W LOG HOME I 3 bdrm. 2
balh home In Osteen, front
porch, rear deck, water con
dltloner. vaulted ceilings, split
plan, aluminum soffits. *74.900

333— Trucks/
B u m / Vans

H IK E S M D SON

CALL ANY TIME

SANFORD: Lakefronl lot in the
city limits. Sower A w ater,
ready lo build on. Fish, ski,
swim. Call Now ). .......M t 3797

IT W O N 'T L A S T L O N C I 1
bdrm , It? balh home, garage
con verted to family room,
breakfast bar, paddle fans,
and I year w a rra n ty!.. *42.500

S P E N C E R HEICHTSI 3 bdrm .
7 balh home. 3rd br could be
p o s s ib le in -L a w suite,
w a s h e r / d r y e r . wo r k s ho p ,
water conditioner A m ore!
.................................... *42.000

quad A transmission. Approx.
40.440 mites. Doesn't smoke,
see It run. 314 W. tom St.
333-1771 ask tor Gory

Auction o v a r y Thursday 7 PM.

Hw y 44.........................333-1*01

153—AcreageLots/Sale

C O M F O R T A B L E HOME! 4
bdrm., II? bath, lanced yard,
spill br plan, fam ily oriented
neighborhood, priced righ t!
.................................... *40.000

C OR NE R L A K E V I E W LOTI 1
bdrm , I bath home, complete
ly refurbished, mirrored wall
in living room, storage shed,
laundry room A m ore! 153,900

1t 77 OLDS STRONO He

213— Auctions

R E A L T O R ....-............ -m-9991

Sanford’s Sales Leader

★

CASSELBERRY: 1 acre toned
PR-1, sas.000. W. M allciow tkl
Realtor......................... 777 79*3

STEMPER

127—Office Rentals

Ask about m ove In special!
C all................................ M3 7970

W ATERFRONTI 5+ - acre*,
toned lor mobile home and
horses on Lake Little, owner
financing, too. *15.000. Call
Tarry Llvle, Reellor/Assoclate

Sorrel, good pleasure horse,
M U S T S E LL ! *350-.....M3 9047

FA M ILY SPACES AVA ILABLE

15.000 sq.ft., also adfacent bldg
Needs to sell to settle estate.
XX) tt. on P ark A ve. 170 ft. on
Hwy. 44. High traffic area.
P len ty o l parking Owner fi­
nancing...................... *495.000.

SAN F O R O D U P L E X : 2 bdrm ,
p rive t* yard, laundry room.
*375 t dep. M3 5711 or *34 5333

H I —Homes For Sale

1 BEDROOM , 1 car garage, 1700
ft. house on 7 lots, enormous
possibilities. In superior con
dltlon, upper tip 's ........349-5545

OLD PARK A SHOP BLOO.

CALL A N Y TIM E

QUARTER HORSE MARE,

94^kJWig^llydLjj™U^tary

A ( * l 1O * \

REALTORS

SH EN AND O AH VI L L A GE

2559 Park Drive
(305)321-0140

APPRAISALS A N D SALES
8 0 B M . BALL. JR. P.A..C.S.M.
R E A L T O R ...................... M1-4U4

SAN F O R D : 3 bdrm.. 1 bath.
1117 Douglas, owner financing
or FHA. *15.900........... 345 7112

140 ACRES-OSTEEN. Divided In
S acre p arcel*, toned
agriculture. Owner financing
w/20% down. 10% lor 10 years,
or other term*. Price range.
*77.500 • (39.500. Call Red
Morgen, Broker/Saleimen

231— Auto Part*
/ Accessories

HE BUY ESTATES!
Y O U R HOME
FO R O N E O F OURS
Y O U R P L A N OR O URS
O U R L A N D OR YO U RS
C A L L BOB S AN D E R NOW
TO SEE IF YO U Q U A L IF Y

SANFO RD - 3 bdrm., 2 balh.
screen porch, t«nced yard,
*44.000. F H A a t s u m a b l a .
*2.000 down, total payments
under *475.377 *07* eves

SAN F O R O : 7 bdrm . 7 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer, sac. *425 Mo
Landaram a Fla.. Inc. 377 1734

S AN F O R O : 117 French Ave..
large t bdrm. apt. *790 mo. *100dep. *2* 7907 or *7* 4*52

LETS TRADE!

149—Commercial
Property / Sale

S A N F O R O : 2 bdrm , 2 bath,
cen. heat A air, Ig living room,
eat In kit. with dishwasher,
washer/dryer. Adult* or smell
child. *45 2*14.... or..... 199 M il

S AN F O R O : 7 bdrm.. 2 bath,
water paid, *400 mo. &gt;- *300
sec. A d u lt*, no pels. Call
Kathy fo ra p p t........... M l 0795

W I K I V A ESTATES- ReducedI
Rambling executive 4 bdrm.
s p lit. Big pool, screened
porch, flreplece.........*149,500.
F IR S T R IA L T Y INC ..... 179-44*3

S A N F O R D : New 3 bdrm.. 2 bath
homes. Block, FH A, low down
*54,900........ 4*9 7100 or 447 1472

SANFORD- 1.000 sq. It retail or
o f f i c e sp a ce . *400 month.
C a ll:............................. 371 5990

121—Condominium
Rentals

______ 322*8125______

J A M E S LEE

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
GENEVA- 3 bdrm .. IW bath,
u n f u r n is h e d . Its a c re .
C all:............................... 349 5409

H O M C S E IK E R S REA LTY
"S E R V IN G ARE A B U Y E R * "

.....................*57,500....................

REAL ESTATE
REALTOR
777 749*

O FFIC E S 700 A 1000 sq It. In
grow ing 4 Towns/Debary area
on Hwy. 17 97.44*-4915eves.

SAND LEW O O D V ILLA S- 1 br. I
b*. washer/dryer, downstairs.
*325 » sec. Alt. 7, 473 3734

A TTR A C TIVE , CLEAN A IN
EXC ELLE N T CONDITION! 1
bdrm., J bath, cen. heat A air,
also 5 celling Ian*. Convenient
to schools A shopping. Ready
to move In. 7414 Marshall Ave.

SANFORD: 1 bdrm., haat A air,
large rooms, suitable tor
couple. *1*0 mo. F- *200 sec.
Call............... 327 94*2 after 4pm

3234507

O NE YR . OLD. 2 bdrm , 7 bath,
washer/dryer, screen porch.
air. *395 F d e p ........... 4*4 3*91

ACCEPT OUR *% . 90 day ll*llng
contract A iae your home
advertised at no cost to You.
F IR S T REALTY INC.....319-4IB

CALL BART

1-4 IN D U S T R IA L P A R K : 3500 to
10,000 sq. I t . , . 1st month’s rant
tree C a ll...................... M l 7445

N IC E , newly remodeled, new
carpet, t bdrm. apt. 13*5 ms.
-I- dep. C*H:373 1093___________

141—Homes For Sale

D U P L E X : 2 b drm .. carport,
clean, extras. *3*5 mo. plus
security. Call................ 323 3447

ahr tlillnac

WOOD PRODUCTS M F C . CO.
He* openings lor people who
d e s i r e o p p o r t u n i t i e s lo r
advancement. Saw m ill exp.
helpful Company otters com
p etltlve w a ges A benefits,
apply Monday thru F rid ay ■
to 4 at Trusso M tg . Inc,,
Sanlord Airport________________

( 305 )

1W— Machinery /Tool*

1UNLAND: 101 Oakland. V I ,
new paint, celling fans, lanced
yard. Kid* A pats OK. *450. 1st
mo 1*300 sec 33) 4912 aft 4pm

c a lh r * * - » M

f

SANFORD- 3 B R ., IV* BTH.,
Garage. C /H /A , *410 mo. 1*45
Gall PI. C a ll:................ 331 7351
SANFORD- Rant, leata with
option to buy. 3/3. H /A , appl.,
dbi. garage, lance. S47J mo.
1st, last, *100 sec. Call: M l -4444
SANFORD- 3 bedroom. 1 bath.
1475 m o nth p tu * d ap oslt.
C all:................................*31 9445
SANFORD, Rant a r Sate. 3 /1 V*.
central H /A , garage. *445 +
dep. (*44,400)..7.............49*2004

rlenced or c e rtllle d only.
A p p ly L a k e v la w N u rs in g
Canter, PIP E. Jnd St.. Sanford

HAPPY NEW Y E A R . We need
you now. New benefits In­
cluding group Insurance and
vacation. Free CEU'S. Dally
pay. Staff A private duty.
M ED IC A L PERSONNEL POOL

VbU F I N I S H E D

W IT H T H E -H E W S .P A P 6 R

H IN T O P T IO N : t i l l S. Elliott
St.. &gt; bdrm ., 1 bath. *4,000
down, *400 m o...........1 4 2 * MAS

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
HUB ER T PEARCE
Exp. Income Tax Service
313 0009 tor aopt.

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B.E. L I N K CONST.
R em odeling
305 311 7079
Fin an cin g......... Lie »CRC00047I

Blinds &amp; Drapes
CU STOM D R A P E R Y , balloon
curtain s, m in i-blinds A
vertica ls. F ree est In home
service M adeline
373 43QI
DRAPES/TOP T RE AT ME NT S
OUST R U F F L E S / P IL L O W
SHAM S BY D I A N E .... 771 4744
ONE C A L L GETS BEST RE
P A I R S OF A L L . Any kitchen
&amp; laundry appl 90 day guar
antee on repairs .
784 0795

Building Contractors
N E W HOM ES F R O M 129.900.
Lie xCBCOIfSSO Com m erical
rem odeling specialist, main
tenance, additions
133*8)7

House Plans
CUSTOM B L U E P R I N T S
Fast S ervice! Good quality!
K K DE S I GNS ... ............. 767 5*34

General Services

Landclearing

F R ED’ S ERRANOS
24 hr. service Reasonable
Call ............................... M l 0795

THORNE LANDCLEARING
Loader and truck work/septlc
tank sand F ree est 337 3433

Handy Man
HOUSEWIVES, Tired ol w alling
for your husband to do those
small repairs? I specialize In
smal l bothersom e re p a irs
F ree estim ate Satisfaction
guaranteed No |ob lo sm all or
la r g e .Call...................M l 49*3
R O O FING , P A I N T I N G ,
C A R P E N T R Y W ORK. Lie. A
insured. C a ll:............. 321 4252

Landscaping
B A H I A A St. A U G U S T I N E SOD.
W ax M y r t l a s a l l s i t e s .
Call............................... 349 9775
BOGUESI Expl Professional!
Lawn A Garden M alnt A chain
saw w ork! Lake M ary Retl
dent F R E E ESTI 323 8317
S E M I N O L E L A N D S C A P IN G

Health &amp; Beauty
ABSOLUTELYMASSAGE
Massage al home or workplace
GHt certificates 345 8549

Home Improvement
C A R P E N T R Y BY E D D A V I S
REM ODE LING/RE NOV A T ION
Large And Small Jobs W elcom e
Sanford Res. 18 yrs. 331 0441
COM P L E T E HOME R E P A I R
Door
window
cabinets
Call Russell at 774 6584

Home Repairs
R E M O D E L I N G , Carpentry.
Pai nti ng. Smal l e l e c t r i c a l
repairs A installation, plumb
Ing A installation. Hauling A
lawn service Call
E d o r A l l a n ..................... M l 4310

Carpentry

Landclearing

A L L T Y P E S Ot Ca r pe n t r y
R em odeling &amp; home repairs.
Call R ichard Gross 33 1 5977 __

BACK HOE, Dump truck, Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing
Call 333 1104___ or
373 9313

R IC H A R D S C A R P E N T R Y
18 y r i In Central Florida
Call
M3 5787

BUSH HOG Box Blading. O il
clng &amp; Tractor Roto Tilling
Call
M33597

3228133
Lawn Service
B A R R I E R ' S Landscaping!
Irrig , L a wn Care, Res A
Comm, M l 7844. F R E E ESTI
GE ORGE ' S L A W N CARE
Reasonable prices
Call now lo reserve service
F re e est.......................... 323 7543
"S U N N Y S " Mow. edge, trim,
planting, mulching SPRI NG
Spec F ree est 327 7829

Masonry
Concrete Walks, slabs, patios,
dri ves 25 yr e x p
lllelon g
resident Llc/lns 349 9758 alt 5

Nursing Care
M E O I C A L RECOROS /S UP PLY
CLERK
par t t i me , good
benef i t s
Hl l l hav e n Health
care center 950 M ellonvllle
A y . 333 8544
EOE
OUR R A T E S A R E LOWER
Lak eview Nursing Center
919 E. Second St., Sanlord
377 4707

Painting
ALA N 'S P A I N T I N G A Paper
Hanging. Interior A e x te rio r
No |ob too sm all Lie M l 3033
PRO FE SSIO N AL. Q U A L I T Y
Painting by Dave
Interior. E xterior. R esidential.
Com m ercial. P ressu re
Washing. O ryw all R ep air A
Popcorn Ceilings.
Lie.. Bonded
Ins.....M3 4074

Roofing
RE-ROOF your horn* now In
lim e lor spring rains, 10%
discount on all ty p e i o f roofs
during month ol F»*&gt; State
Lie. ICOCC Q337I0CC. M l 3555

Secretarial Service
Custom Typing- BookkeepingNotery Public. Call: D.J. Entorprisas. (145)377 7491.

Sewer/Septic Tank
HOW ARD’ S S EP T I C S E R V I C E
Repair Lines A Clean Tanks
F ree E stim ates......... 372 0759

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
AUTHOR 12 E D E L E C T R O L U X
Sates A Services. Vacuum s A
s hampooe rs
S e r v i c i n g all
makes Ken Echols
M3 7073

Tree Service
ALL T REE S ER VI CE
F
Fi r e wo o d W o o d s p litte r tor
Hire CJ It A lter 4 P M M3 9084
ECHOLS T R E E S E R V I C E
Free Estimates! Low P rice s !
Lie...Ins...Stump G rin d in g .T o ol'
123 1M9 day o r n it*
"L e t the P ro fe ssional* da It” .
S TU M P G R I N D I N G
Insured
F re e E stim ates
Call
.......................
774 7501

,

�\

s s -vt-v s «
--« « «

«'V I'' ^^ s &gt; « «

\

Twoaday. Fob. 3.

4ft—Sanford HoraM, Sanford. PI.

BLONOIE

in

?

by Ohio Young

AMC? TH S R 8 5 T OP H*A
LOOKS LI KB A PM ADB

l REALLY P O N Y FBE lT Y
MV AO B A T A L.L. , _ Z S

p lo k t

by Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

IT*S A WOMANS
OWN FAULT IF SHEfe
NOT TREATEP
LIKE A

poMT y?u have a n y
RE5P6CT FORA LADY?
COVER VOUR(»*IMI»//
MOUTH/f

p ip you j u s t

LET OUT
THAT
LOUP
BURP?

&lt;9 v m + * ' i

lady

THE BORN LOSER

by Art San tom
^ M P T H A T *

u c x e 'm s
iO F O ia m

ARCHIE

by Bob Montana

BETTY ANP VERONICA
ARE BOTH IN THE
SCHOOL B E A U T Y ) fflG M T /
P A G E A N T?

EEK A MEEK

by Howla Schnoldor
s o m e

. f &amp;

c m

E

R

FOft u m x w io s AU (AXXRCO/ER (D^R -OPe^ THE

j o s r

tUOUTHt MOXAS CLOSET
SfflOP AUJARD...

a jo e R S K K T P R t

'm

W H A T ^ TH E
P R O B L E M .

M R .V V O R R T P

I ^O LP THE FILM RIGHTS
TO M Y BOOK .THE TV
RIGHTS To M Y 0 o c &gt;
k
ANP STAGE RIGHTS
TO A\Y B o o k

S O WHAT A R E

W O R R Y IN G

ABOUT ?/

^NOBODY WANTS
TO BUY THE B O O K
R IG H T 'S - T&lt;?MY
B O O K

/

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

W

Consult Specialist For
Thyroid Hormones
DEAR DR. GOTT - I take 3
grains of thyroid hormone every
day. If I become pregnant, what
effect will the drug have?
DEAR READER T hr e e
grains o f thyroid hormone (or Its
equivalent In other medicine
such as Synthrold) Is the usual
replacement dose for people who
have undcractive thyroid glands.
If you become pregnant, you will
need to continue thyroid medi­
cine In order to maintain good
health. Ask your obstetrician for
specific advice when the time
comes.
DEAR DR. GOTT - Because of
a spastic colon I take Llbrax
dally and Metamucll four times a
day. The pain has subsided but
not totally. I worry a lot and am
wondering what else I could do?
DEAR READER — Spastic
colon (or Irr lta blc -b o wel
syndrome) Is a common ailment
that causes periodic loose stools
and excessive gas. No disease Is
present In the bowel: rather, the
intestine seems to go through
periods of increased activity.
This may be related to stress,
anxiety and worry. Other than
treatment of symptoms (with
b ul k - p r o du c i n g ag e nt s like
Me t a muc l l or anti -di arrhea
drugs), there Is no specific ther­
apy available.
Mild tranquilizers, such as
L l br a x . may help control
symptoms when psychological
factors appear to play a critical
role In causing irritable bowel. In
addition, you may be helped by
avoiding certain foods — such as
milk products and spices — that
make your symptoms worse.
Also. If you can find ways to
reduce worry, you and your
colon will feel more comfortable.
To give you more Information.
I’m sending you a free copy of
my Health Report on IRRITA­
BLE BOWEL. Olliers who want
this information should send $1
and your name and address to
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428. Be sure to mention
the title.
DEAR DR. GOTT - Recently
my husband had to have bladder
surgery. The anesthesiologist
tried three times to Inject a

spinal anesthetic and finally had
to use another type o f anesthe­
sia. Why didn’t the spinal work?
DEAR READER — In order for
spinal anesthesia to be effective,
the anesthesia must be Injected
into the spinal canal so that It
can deaden the nerves to the
lower body. Older patients some­
times have calcium deposits
ACROSS
1 Frozen water
column
7 Mythical
aviator

13 — security
14 Not at all
15 Glacial apoch
(2 wda.)
18 Wood ad
17 Gloomy
18 Compete
20 Small lizard
21 Parson with
vary loud volco
25 Purring
28 Spur
32 Capital of
Morocco
33 Colorful lizard
34 Inactivs
35 Birthmark
38 Racaivar of
monay
37 Wandar from
aubjact
39 Female
gar menu
41 Basketball
laagua (abbr.)
44 Mountains
(abbr.)
45 Pratanaa
48 Turn to ions
51 Loan shark
54 1970 Oscar
movia
55 Manor
56 Rubbad out
57 Gazaa

DOWN
1 Osiris’ wile
2 Actress
Imogens ____ _
3 Cooled
4 Spy group
(abbr.)
5 Loiter

Answer to Previous Puzzle

6 Football team
7 Illustration
placad within
another
8 Shy
9 Hole-making
tool
10 Tear
11 Air defense
group (abbr.)
12 Transmitted
19 Participle and- .
ing
21 Trapped
22 Giggle
23 Florida product
2 4 W il l _____
25 Trickle
26 Genus of frogs
27 Follow orders
29 W hitecap
30 Australian birds
31 Lad’s aiatar
37 Summer time
(abbr.)
1

2

3

4

around the spinal bones. This Is
a result of arthritis and can
make the Injection of anesthesia
very difficult. In these Instances,
patients are better served by
having anesthesia administered
in another manner.

n n c i E C

n

o

n

e

□□□□□□
DEGDEO
nncnnn
e d d d d e
□□□
EDD D EED
EnDDEDD
nEED E DDE D EE
DEDEDE DEEDED
d e e d e d
d e e
nn

g e e d e e

n c in in n n
EDEEDEE
□ D O E OOD
EEE
e e d e
noon
DEED onon
□no
ODD

38 Magazine
editions

47 Very (Fr.)

40 Rsviaa

50 Actress____

41
42
43
45
46

52 Fast aircraft
(abbr.)

B

4 9 That thing’s

Dry dishes
Mala swine
Door column
Sandarac tree
Whale
B

Caldwell

53 Actress Hagan

j

13
IB
17

is

is

21
ZS

ZS

zt

27

1Z

M

21

33

IS
IS

1*
41
48

42

40
44

43
49

50

M
SB

(C) 1087 by NEA. Inc

W IN AT BRIDGE

by Hargreaves A Sailers
to p

« * • • * * * € - »*—
»-.

a u ra ? -

COVER. ACTMTIE5

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

5?|

i

CITATION/

B y Jam es Jacoby
It Is certainly right to draw
Inferences from the opening
lead. The next step Is to draw
Inferences from what Is not the
opening lead.
The bidding was simple — one
no-trump, which was raised to
three no-trump. Since the de­
fenders were playing standard
leads, the four of hearts lead
indicated only four cards In the
suit, since declarer was looking
at the two and three in dummy.
East took the ace and returned
the suit. D eclarer won and
played a club to dummy’s Jack.
East won the king and returned
his last heart. Declarer now
played a second club, on which
West discarded a spade. That left
declarer with only eight tricks,
unless the Jack of diamonds
happened to fall. But perhaps
there were other possibilities.
It Is a sound principle of

defense against no-trump to lead
your longest suit when you are
leading blindly. Thus it was
apparent that West did not have
a longer suit than hearts unless
he was embarking upon a flight
of defender’s fancy with his
opening lead. Furthermore, he
had shown up with only one
club. Should it not then be
obvious that West had started
with four-card holdings In both
spades and diamonds? The right
play for declarer thus becomes
equally obvious. He should play
the king and queen of diamonds.
When the Jack docs not show up.
he should play West for that
card by leading to dummy's
A -10 and finessing. The reason?
If West hel d o n l y t hr ee
diamonds, he would have held
five cards In spades originally
and would surely have selected
that suit for his opening lead.

NORTH
♦ 754
♦ 9 3 2
♦ A 10 7 2
♦ AQ J

2217

E A ST
♦ K 109
♦ A 6 5
♦ 63
♦ K 10 8 7 6

W EST
♦ Q 832
V 10 8 7 4
♦ J 9 8 4
♦ 2

SO UTH
♦ A J6
♦ KQJ
♦ KQ 5
♦ 9 5 4 3

V u ln e ra b le : Both
D e a le r: South
W est

N o rth

F ast

P ass
P ass

3 NT

P ass

S o u th
1 NT
P ass

O pening lead: V 4

HOROSCOPE
W hat The Day
W ill Bring...
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thavas

r

L e v s zee
i o o

—

A P P Z - ^ r

h

e&amp;e's

p o p

m

e

,

Afv/P p iF T V “ N *N E

App/.p.sr pop you.
• A -w . I .

T wavcs 2-3
• « ' « ! « • «•

GARFIELD

by Jim Davis

YO U R B IR T H D A Y
F E B R U A R Y 4. 1987
A secret desire that you have
long nurtured has excellent
chances of being fulfilled In the
year ahead. It's a dream on
which you’ve almost given up.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Divisive Issues could disrupt
harmony In your household to­
day. Instigating topics that cause
family members to choose sides
Is a no-no. Get a Jump on life by
understanding the Influences
that are governing you in the
year ahead. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions today.
Mall $1 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428,
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Iksure to state your zodiac sign.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If
your emotions rule your head
today you could be Jockeyed Into
a awkward position: you may
have to defend a premise In
which you don't truly believe.

AR IES (March 21-April 19)
Take time today to carefully
eval uate your f i nanci al In­
volvements. If there arc situa­
tions where you’ re getting in
over your head, start bucking
nut.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You may be too protective of
your own self-interests today.
Objectively anal yz e your
motives. Let your better In­
stincts prevail If you're biased.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Don’t get drawn Into an ar­
r ang e me nt t o da y that lias
hidden strings attached. What
you’ll derive will be dispropor­
tionate to what you'll have to
give back.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22)
Gentle tactics will achieve goals
for you today that flexing your
muscles won’t. Where possible,
try to praise Instead of push.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don’t
kid yourself today Into believing
that the end Justifies the means.
If your behavior Is not In accord
with your high standards, you'll
regret It later.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
might have a bit of a chip on
your shoulder today. This could
cause you to display dlsplcasurc
at the remarks of companions
where no til will was Intended.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oet. 23) If
you deal with the wrong types of
people today, you’ ll be at a
disadvantage. What you'll give
as opposed to what you'll get will
be poles apart.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Valued relationships will require
delicate handling today. You
might experience opposition
from people who arc usually
staunchly In your corner.
SA G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Give credence to your In­
stincts today In your monetary
affairs. If your Intuition warns
you against a certain deal. It’s
best to look for a new one.
C A PR IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Steer clear of social situa­
tions today where you could
encounter an arrogant acquain­
tance with whom you’ve re­
cently had cross words. The
wounds haven't healed yet.

by Leonard Starr

&gt;

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222161">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, February 03, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222162">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222163">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on February 03, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222165">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222166">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, February 03, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222167">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222168">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222169">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222171">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22251" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21855">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/6cca0b598feaed8544d98d47b42675d7.pdf</src>
        <authentication>941cd77c6fdb5df3abee73451d2885fd</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222181">
                    <text>San ford H erald
79th Y e a r, No. 183

P rice

Sanford, Flo rid a — W ednesday, M a rc h 25, 1987

25

Cents

S e m in o le E n d o rse s M a s s Transit C on ce p t
The Seminole County Commission Tuesday
endorsed a mass-transit concept that. It approved
by the state Legislature, would add another 10
cents per gallon to the price of gasoline at the
pumps, as well as impose other fee Increases.
The package of added fees, being Introduced by
the Alliance for a Better Central Florida, would
pay for an Improved transportation system that
will Include tri-county mass transit, possibly
rapid-rail transit, according to two of the Alliance
founders. Dan Bushrul of the Seminole League of
Homeowners Associatoh. and Cheryl Lynch,
g o v e r n m e n t a l a ffa ir s d ir e c t o r fo r the

Homebuilders Association of Mid-Florida.
After presentations from the two. the com­
mission prepared and passed 4-0 at its evening
meeting a resolution to give to the Alliance in
support of their efTorts. Bob Sturm was absent,
recuperating from surgery.
Bushrul said at a work session there Is a
“ transportation crisis" In Central Florida and If It
Is not met soon. “ It will take over an hour to get
from Longwood to Orlando."
"The tri-counties require $2.3 billion in addi­
tional revenue for Improvements and systems not
Including right-of-way costs over the next 20

years to just maintain current levels of transpor­
tation service." Bushrl said. "The magnitude of
the funding shortfall means an unprecedented
solution is required." ,
Over the next five years, he said, $1.2 billion is
needed to address tri-county road systems and
mass transit.
A total of $30 billion Is needed statewide, he
said, to fund transportation needs for the next 20
years. And the deficiency situation in Central
Florida is growing every year, he added.
He wants the Regional Planning Council and
Metropolitan Planning Organization to work

toward a comprehensive study and recommenda­
tions for a rapid mass transit system — either a
bus system or rapid-rail system.
"It (mass-transit) has to be part of the solution."
Bushrui said. "Otherwise, we arc only going to go
futhcr into the deficiency mode.”
Here are the revenue proposals the Alliance
envisions: t
• One percent sales tax — to be returned
totally to the county of origin dedicated solely to
Infrastructure needs, that Is. transportation
See TRANSIT, page 12A

Suit Threatened

County OKs
Impact
Ordinance
HtrsM PtetM feyTammy Vines*

P aram edics prepare to boost Randall Scott Henson, 23, of Sanford, Into
an am bulance after he jum ped o r fell Tu e sd a y from a second-story
w indow at the F lo rid a Hotel, 500 OaK A ve ., Sanford, left. T h e 2:30 p .m .
Incident o ccu rre d apparently d u rin g a fa m ily squabble. Sanford police
said It is unclear w hether he lum ped o r fell. Henson told police he
doesn't re m e m b e r w hat happened. Henson reportedly landed on his
feet but fell to the ground when he trie d to w a lk. A fte r the fall, Henson
com plained of lower back pain and a cut tongue. H e w as treated at
C entral F lo rid a Regional Hospital In Sanford then released.

McClonohon Disapproves

$60,000 Goldsboro Study Approved
By Keren T a lley
Herald S ta ff W riter
. Sanford Commissioners voted 4-1
Monday tq pay a newly-formed univer­
sity group $60,000 for a study on
r e h a b i l i t a t i n g th e O o ld s b o r o
neighborhood.
Commissioner A.A. McClanahan.
who voted against the Study, said:
“ It won’t show us anything except
we can’t afford the program.*'
McClanahan. a builder-developer of
low Income housing, said he was not
opposed to the proposal In theory, but
wasn’t optimistic Sanford could or
should bear the brunt of Implementa­
tion costs.
McClanahan said he feels state,
federal and private enterprise funds
won’t be forthcoming and Sanford will

Sanford ‘It the turn total
of all Its neighborhoods
and OB Iona a$ they're one
that'B not tint class we
all Buffer/
-Mayor Batty# Smith
be left holding the bag for the pro­
gram's massive costs.
“ I don’t think the city is prepared to
commit the resources after the (univer­
sity group) study is complete." Mc­
Clanahan said. "I think we’re talking
about millions of dollars of city funds
we can't afford to spend."
A $3,000 check to support the

program was presented to commission­
ers by Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce Executive Director Dave
Farr. The monies are a voluntary'
return of funds that Sanford commis­
sioners budgeted for the city-owned
chamber building this year for restora­
tions.
Four city commissioners and the
university group representatives say
the Goldsboro study will hopefully map
out a viable way the city, private
enterprise and residents can work to
transform a deteriorated downtown
neighborhood into a com m unity
showpiece, complete with new homes,
roads, parkis and a much lower crime
rate.
See STUDY, pags 13 A

Longwood Cleans
Fuel, Fluid Spills

'Hot' Jew elry
Spurs A rrest
A t Rest Stop
He reportedly offered a deal,
two gold rings for $100 each, but
several tim es asked If the
would-be-buyer was a cop. He
also allegedly said the rings,
which were marked 14-karat
gold and hpd white diamond-like
stones, were “ hot," having been
stolen in Alabama.
The would be buyer was a cop.
Seminole County sheriff's depu­
ty Robert O'Connor, who along
with deputy Eric Bryant arrived
at the eastbound rest area of
Interstate 4 near Longwood at
about 3:30 p.m. to Investigate a
report of a man selling diamonds
at the rest stop. The area is
posted “ no soliciting.*' a sheriff’ s
report said.
After the plain clothes depu­
ties arrived in an unmarked car.
O’Connor got out and raised the
hood o f the car and watched for
the reputed salesman. O'Connor
was apprrached by the suspect,
who allegedly showed two rings
and returned to his car for a
third.
Ultimately. O’Connor agreed
to byy two of the rings for a total
Baa HOT, page 12 A

By K ath y T y r ity
. to meet with each city's approval on an
Herald i t a f f W riter
annual basis. These are techniques the
More than four years of effort culmi­ county hopes will help each city accept
nated Tuesday night in the passage of the plan without too much further
Seminole County's road impact fee
controversy. The county is also ap­
ordinance that will impose mandatory
pointing representatives from each city
fees of $445-$529 per new home or
to a Technical Advisory Committee
equivalent commercial space built in which will make recommendations
concerning annual updates.
the county.
Mrs. Christensen stated her objec­
Commissioner Barbara Christensen
tions were due to the fact that the cities
voted against the ordinance which
passed 3-1. Commissioner Bob Sturm
had not yet come to total agreement.
was still absent due to recent surgery.
"W c'rc so close." she said. "W e need to
The ordinance was approved with
postpone this until we get 100 percent
more than half the county opposed Jo .of the cities’ agreement” _
Commissioner Trencher made men­
It. as represented by the cities of
tion of the fact the county had made
Altamonte Springs. Winter Springs.
several concessions to the south county
Sanford, and Casselberry. A last
minute plea to hold more meetings
in lowering the fees several times and
with the cities was unsuccessful, and at
moving up completion dates of several
the 11th hour there were promises of a
roads. He said they were "encouraging
lawsuit.
signs" but. not enough.
"W e both know there is the possibili­
In the last-week rush to get a revised
ty we might go into court," said Phil
plan before the county commission
Kulbes. Winter Springs city commis­ Tuesday night, several new con­
sioner. "And with more than half the cessions were made. The last plan
before the new one this week showed
county opposed. It stands to reason we
south county developments paying
need to meet some more and iron
$529-$7B8 per home, with the highest
things out. We're almost there, but let's
charges being levied In Winter Springs
have another meeting."
His concerns were echoed by Ills and Casselberry. Bui the fresh plan
which appeared Tuesday afternoon in a
fellow Winter Springs Commissioner
work session showed all the southern
Marty Trencher, who complained that
districts paying only $529.
the plan, which charges the south
D eputy C ou nty A d m in is tra to r
county $529 and the north county
$445 per house, was "Inequitable, with
Montye Beamer said the fees are
more than half the money for roadwork
projected to raise almost $5 million per
being spent In the north district."
year — $90 million over twenty years.
Planned road Improvements, half to be
The city of Winter Springs has passed
funded by the local option gas taxes,
a 90-day moratorium against the
are expected to cost $189 million. She
county's road Impact fee ordinance,
said the fees and the taxes won't cover
while Sanford and Casselberry have
the whole cost of the road Improve­
passed six-month moratoriums.
The new impact fee ordinance is ments. so If additional fees are needed,
scheduled to take effect after 10 days In the charges can be added at the time of
the unincorporated areas and after 90 annual review.
days in the municipalities. This is
As far as handling the objections of
the cities. Ms. Beamer said negotiations
intended to allow time to Iron out the
would continue to try to prevent a court
differences with the cities. Also, an
battle. However, the county feels Its
Interlocal agreement, which the county
will consider April 14. is to be designed
Bee FEE, page 13 A

MarsM Mmto feyT mum , VImcm«

Left turns into across-the-street parking spaces are banned
on F irs t Street, downtown Sanford. Police posted w arn in gs
Tuesd ay. D riv e rs ' frequent dashes for parking spaces on the
other side of the street a re a safety hazard, said Police Chief
Steve H a rrie tt. W a rn in g s w ill be g ive n at first, but
eventually tickets for a m o ving violation, w hich c a rry a $52
fine.

By Jaae Casselberry
Herald a ta ri W riter
A 5 a.m. spill Involving be­
tween 80 and 112 gallons of
d ie s e l fu e l to d a y a t th e
Longwood Industrial Park was
the second problem involving
Industrial Waste Services trucks
In’ two days, accordin g to
Longwood Assistant Fire Chief
Allan Brown.
Brown said at least two minor
accidents resulted Tuesday
when a hydraulic hose on a
In d u s tria l W aste S e rv ic e s
garbage truck broke, spilling
about 20 gallons of hydraulic
fluid at the intersection of State
Road 434 and County Road 427.
It took crews from the Longwood
Fire Department, the state De­
partment of Transportation and
Seminole County Public Works
using 10 to 15 cubic yards of
sand and 300 lbs. of Oil-Dry to
clea n up th at on e. w h ile
Longwood Police directed traffic.
Traffic was confined to one
lane eastbound and one lane
westbound on S.R. 434 and the
southbound lane on C.R. 427

was shut down for about 20
minutes, Police Sgt. Tommy
Jackson said. He said a young
man on a motorcycle who slid
due to the spill received minor
injuries. In the other case, a
vehicle turning slid (onto a car
waiting at the stop light.
Industrial Waste Services Is
lo c a te d at 555 H ope S t..
Longwood.
The diesel fuel spill occurred
when one of the saddle tanks on
a flatbed truck belonging to the
firm cither was knocked off or
fell off. according to Longwood
Fire Lt. John Rougcaux. When
the first tank was emptied gravi­
ty began to force fuel out of the
second tank.
B ro w n sa id It took the
Longwood Fire Department and
Public Works Department three
hours to contain the spill. It
began in the company's transfer
yard and continued onto two city
streets — Hlghline and Hope —
then back In the yard. Traffic
was not affected. The Public
Works Department brought In
See SPILLS, page 12A

TODAY
Bridge........................... 4B
Classifieds................ 6B.7B
Comics...........................4B
Coming Events...............3A
Crossword...................... 4B
Dear Abby..................... 5B
Deaths..........................12A
Dr. Gott......................... 4B
Editorial........................ 4A
Financial...................... 12A
Horoscope...................... 4B
Hospital.................... 12A
Nation............................7A
People.................. 1B-3B.5B
Police............................ 2A
Sports................... ...9A-11A
Television...................... 5A
Weather......................... 2A
World.............................7A

Inside
a R e a g a n to v e t o
highw ay bill, 7A
a Cross can stay on St.
Cloud w ater tow er, 2A
a Raiders unleash heavy
a rtille ry In 18-11 triu m p h
o ver Lake C ity , 9A
e A nderson: To o m a n y
law yers spoil pot, 4A

�r&gt;

)

2A— Sanford Harakt, Sanford, FI.

Wodnoaday, March U , 1H7

Bank Robber Gets 6 Months In Jail

M o n Pleads G u ilty
T o Back S tabbing

P O L IC E
IN BRIEF
Burglar Fondles Self In
Pretense O f Babysitter, Children
Doryann E. Vamcll. 28, of 3214 Chadwick Road,
Apopka, reported to Semihole County sheriffs deputies
that at about 3:30 p.m. Monday a neighbor entered her
home and fondled himself In the presence of two of her
three children and a babysitter.
The 16-year-old babysitter told Ms. Vamell the man
frightened her and she ran to the kitchen and got a knife.
The man continued to advance toward the babysitter until
she reached for a phone and told him she was calling the
police. The man. who was identified as a neighbor, whose
name Is not known by the victims, fled. Within five
minutes Ms. Vamell arrived home and reported the
Incident.
She said her 8-year-old son and a 2-year-old daughter
saw the man's actions. A 2-year-old son slept through the
Incident, a sheriffs report said. Ms. Vamell told deputies
the man did not have permission to be In her home and the
case was under Investigation Tuesday.

Fingerprint Match Brings Arrest
A man whose fingerprint reportedly matched one on a
pawn ticket has been arrested on a dealing In stolen
property charge In connection with the sale of a video
recorder that was pawned at a Sanford pawn shop the day
Itwasstolcn. Nov. 17.
The $700 video recorder stolen from the home of Richard
Cray, of 126 Krlder Road. Sanford, was pawned at Hughy's
Crown Pawn Shop for $60, a sheriffs report said.
Christopher Edward Deering, 18, of Columbia, N.C., was ■
arrested In the case at the Seminole County Jail at 2:06
p.m. Monday, lie was being held without bond. .

Driving Under Influence Arrests
The following persons have been arrested In Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
—Jo Ann Skipper, 25. of 705 E. 14th St„ Sanford, was
arrested at 7:07 p.m. Monday after a Sanford policeman
saw her stop her car for traffic tight with car over the white
line In the intersection of Airport Boulevard and Sanford
Avenue.
—Michael James Mann. 28, of 64 S. Devon Ave., Winter
Springs, was Jailed at 2:38 a.m. Tuesday after his car was
seen "traveling at a high rate of speed" on State Road 434,
Ovldeo. Oviedo police also charged him with having
Improper vehicle equipment.

Stolen Cycle Spurs Roundup
Longwood police who nabbed a boy with a stolen
all-terrain motorcycle brought the roundup by Seminole
County sheriffs deputies of seven more of the vehicles that
had been moved out of a fenced compound at Cycles of
Longwood Monday or Tuesday.
Sheriffs deputy Greg Futch reported that he was alerted
by Longwood police of the possible burglary to the cycle
shop at 1580 S. U.S. Highway 17*92. Futch said that a
fence at the dealership had been cut and seven cycles, in
addition to the one the boy arrested had, had been pulled
o u t }! * - W e fenced 'coitlpouhd,' ^ ilt riot started. -The'
Investigation Into the burglary continued Tuesday.

BurglerimsAnd

A Sanford man accused of stabbing an
Orlando man In the back has pleaded guilty
to battery.
Larry L. Haynes. 34, of 1017 Mangoatine
Ave.. Sanford, had been charged with
aggravated battery.
Circuit Judge O.H., Eaton Jr. set sentenc­
ing for April 24.

The teller said she saw a gun inside the
bank bag the robber placed on the counter.

Haynes was arrested In March 18 , 1985,
soon after a dispute with Herman Waldon
Wesley, 36. Wesley was stabbed twice In
the back with a 6-Inch knife during a
confrontation at 916 S. Orange Ave. in
Sanford. The stabbing occurred around
10:30 p.m.

The gun was pointed at-her and she gave
the bandit $320. Witnesses saw the robber
flee In a white van. Two bank maintenance
men followed the van to an apartment
complex on Lake Howell Branch Road and
called the s h e riff's departm ent. In ­
vestigators checked the van’s registration
and learned the owner's name.

A $470 video recorder was stolen from the home of David
Millar, 31. of 1391 Laura St.. Casselberry, between March 5
and 7, according to a report filed Monday with sheriffs
deputies.
Johnnie Miller Madison, 46, of 2181 Granby St., Sanford,
reported to sheriffs deputies that a $500 lawnmower was
stolen from his home between March 14 and Monday.
Lighting fixtures and equipment with a total value of
$13,250 was stolen from a trailer of Sentry Electric of
Orlando at an Albertson's construction site on Lake Mary
Boulevard at Lake Emma Road, Lake Mary, between
Friday an Monday, a sheriffs report said. Stolen were 60
lighted exits signs, one Interior three phase electric panel
and five 2-by-4-foot lights.
Gary T. Ascota, 23. of Bldg. 325 Spanish Trace
Apartments *100, Altamonte Springs, reported to sheriffs
dei
leputles that $560 worth of toolsi.were stolen from the bed
o:fhls truck Sunday or Monday.
Tools with a combined value of about $1,500 were stolen
between Friday and Mpnday from a constuction site at lot 3
Sweetwater Club Boulevard, Longwood. A sheriffs report
said the items belong to Deluxe Trim Carpentry Inc., of
Apopka.
Charles A. Gullck. 38. of 203 S. Weklva Road. Apopka,
reported to sheriffs deputies that about $240 worth o f tools
were stolen from his vehicle at 100 Lake Howell Road,
Casselberry. Monday.

Nation Temperatures
City * F*r*c*it
Albuquarqu* pc
Amarillo pc
Anchorog* pc
Atlanta *h
Baltlmorapc
Billing* pc
Birmingham pc
Blimarcfccy
BoKaf
Bo*ton *y
Srownavlllcpc
Buffalopc
Burlington Vt. *y
Chari**ton S.C, cv
Char loft* N.C. *n
Chicago r
cinctnnaMcr Clavolandcy
Columbutcy
Dal la*pc

Qonvtrcy

OatMolnatr
Datroltah
Duluth in
El Paw pc
Evanivlltaih
Hartford ty
Halonapc
Honolulu pc
Houttonpc
Indlanapoll* *h
Jackton Ml**, ty
Jacfcwnvltlacy
Kama* City r
LaiVagatty
LIHiaRocfcpc
Lo*Angat**l
Loultvlllaih
Miami Baachcy

Milwaukeer

Minnaapolltin
Nathvlllopc
NowOrlaantpc
Haw York pc
Oklahoma City pc
Omaha r
Orlando cy
Philadelphia pc
Phoonlxpc
Pltttburghih
Portland Ma. ty
Portland Ora. pc
Richmond pc

tOOEk

a
4*
4}
u
47
3*
44
3*
57
54
7t
71
*4
42
45
4*

71 42
4f 44
41 40
40 23
5) 4* •a
4* 2* •***
51 2a .01
42 41
41 SI .25
44 31 Ml(
47 23
B4 44 .00
70 47
45 50 .10
72 at .74
70 57 ....
4f 44 .71
45 3* ....
41 44 .01
4* 41 .01
41 51 .0*
42 54 .43
72 4f .2*
57 40 ....
43 44 .01
43 S3 .It
77 a* 1.52
71 41
45 3t .02
50 40 .40
77 44 ....
70 25 ****
70 52 ****
4t 41 *••»
42 ia ***#
57 41
41 34 ....
pc-parliy cloudy
r-raln

c-ctoar

cy-claudy
ay-aunny
H thundar*'
w-wlndy

tu-haw
m-mltalng

Hondo

Tt'mpuioiuios

Daytona Soach
Port Laudardata
K
jhS Agaa^vw
r w l Ir lflt l

Sanford fire fighters and re*
scue workers have responded to
the following calls. Hetslls based
on flte department reports:
•w .l|.
—f i t # p-at-. vacant field at
south end o f Matthew Drive, fire.
Call determined to be felse alarm
alter area w u checked.

f

.y.

I

CUSW WI NS)

Wednesday, March a , 1W7
. v$i. if* Ms. in
SsfideySv rS tS S m *

tec, ass N. French Ave.. laalcid.

Pto.
PtsfMeam
‘ t .VI ’ ‘ ‘

•- * -

i Mate*, 14.7*; &gt; Mtstei.
• U .» i 4 Meets*. U7.M; Veer.
Mias. Sr MeUi Meets, H .W a
. Meets*. UB.M; 4 Meets*. *27.44/
Veer, ness.

mss. (M4| an m ii .

— 2 i i « p.ua. 2701 Orlando
Drive, fire. Fire o f undetermined
origin In dumpster was extin­
guished by firemen. No damage
reported to nearby structures.
— I i i 7 p a t , vacant lot east of
Washington Oaks subdivision,
fire. Brush fire on about one acre
of vacant lot. No property dam­
a g e : ca u se o f fir e Is undertermined.
T tfttD A T
—1 :1 4 a.m .. 1200 French
Avenue. Sanford police de­
partment headquarters, rescue.
A 54-year-old. possibly intox­
icated woman was checked by
rescue workers, then left with
Sanford police.
- T ib s M L , 1321 CUioti Ave.,
rescue. A 74-year-old woman
suffered a cut on her forehead In
a fall. She was transported to the
„ 500 Oak Ave., The
F lo r id a H o t e l, r e s c u e . A
24-year-old man reportedly
Jumped from a second story
window. He was transported to
the hospital for check o f possible
lower bock injury.

An envelope found In the van was
addressed to Karen Perez of 636 Semoran.
Mrs. Perez told Investigators that her
husband, Jose, called her at about 1:30 the
day of the robbery and told her his truck
broke down near Lake Howell and Howell
Branch roads and he needed to be picked up
at the Winn-Dixie.
FBI agents Interviewed Perez. He said his
van was stolen near Aloma Avenue In
Winter Park by a Hispanic man who
generally matched his own description.
On April 30, Investigators with a warrant,
searched Perez' van, which had been
impounded. A sample of Perez' handwriting
reportedly matched that of the robber's note
and a pad of paper with Indentations from
the note was also found In the vehicle.
Sheriff Investigators Informed Perez that
he could pick up his van at the Sheriff's
Department and when he showed up to get
it, they arrested him.

■- v*1

Oalnaovlllo
Jackaanwllla
Kay Wait

Panaacola
Sarasota-Bradanton

VarsSaach
Wwt PalmSoach

F iv e -D a y Forecast

HI

MIAMI (UPI) - PlorIda USaur tompara
turrc and rainfall at •s jo . ID T today:
Cityi
HI La

FIRE CALLS

issues he |
.... t Judge G.
J a temporary in.
the American Civil
j have the cross Immc*
judge/’ said Kxthi
i community’s save
Citizens for Maloi
ling Arm, and
,.fflnSv
-j•i*.been a landmark In St.
. 20 years. In an effort to
ACLU lawsuit, the town
out the water tower top
sst Industries o f Maitland,
_ to leave the cross alone.
I not immediately set another
hht was expected to review
epoeiUona from both sides
a final decision.
that when the judge
on paper he will
______ V and If not we will appeal
ItH U A Court of Appeals (In
‘ even on to the Supreme
- CTtecnl Ron R o » ot the
icnapter.
eople from the Oeceola
unity who- traveled to
t#e hearing embraced.
Id "Praise the Lord"
the ACLU to
JInjunction.
[. but we realize the
_ J y take this to the
/• said Wolf.
--- ;y.
* V ••

.

WEATHER

ThsReported

David B. Johnson. 30, of 225 Graham Road. Fern Park,
reported to sheriffs deputies that a $300 radar detector
and 10 cassette tapes with a total value of $120 were stolen
from his car between Saturday and Monday.

the battle .
Id end up

robber entered the bank at about 12:50 p.m.
and presented a handwritten note to a teller.
The note said, "This Ib a holdupl Remain
calm or I will shoot! Give only $100, $20
bills — Walt until I'm gone to alarm anyone
— Be quick with the money."

After Wesley left to get help police arrived
to arrest Haynes. Wesley was treated at
Central Florida Regional Hospital in San­
ford.
In a second case, an Orlando man was
found not guilty by Jury In connection with
an Oct. 14 burglary.
Not guilty Is Hollis Dwayne Ramsey. 27.
He was accused of entered the home of
Violet Anderson o f 2652 Lake Howell Lane
In south %emlnole County, and taking 12
antique Indian carvings and a porcelain doll.
The items were valued at $450. He was also
accused of breaking a window and causing
$300 worth of damage.
In a third case, a Winter Park man was
sentenced to six months In Jail and 5 years
probation for robbing a bank of $320.
Jose Perez of 636 Semoran Blvd.. was
sentenced by Circuit Judge S. Joseph Davis
Jr.
Perez, 37. was sentenced for a bank
robbery on April 25, 1986. In that hlest. the

r side" to
____ from the

71
71
7)
74
n
7f
7*
71
n
74
77

M
dJ
a* •as
71 0.15
a* 0.07
aa 0.00
71 O.tr
71 0.00
aa O.tr
73
M
to at
71 71 0.10
77 44 Q.tO
N 70 • tr
74 M O.tr
73 73 OM

Waves are
about 2Vi to 3 feet and choppy.
Current la slightly to the north
with a temperature o f 63 de­
grees. Maw Sm yrna Baaeht
Waves are 2 to 3 feet and
semi-glossy. Current la slightly
to the north: Water temperature.
63 degrees. Sim screen factor:
12.

For Central Florida
PltyCMy

PflyCJdy

Od»

PttyCMy

EB EE EE HE

Lo ca l R o p o r t
Tuesday's high temperature In
Sanford was 78 degrees and the
low during the past twenty-four
hours was 64 degrees as re­
ported by the University of
Florida Agricultural and Educa­
tion Center. No rainfall recorded.

Aioa Forecast
Today...mostly clolidy with a
chance of showers and ' thunO C I BLIFI llW f

Thur*

southeast 10 to 15 mph. Rain
chance 40 percent.
Tonight...mostly cloudy with a
chance o f showers or thun­
•i ka4insaI
vqeweftet UlaatMa
ihiphvM
Soi&amp;aulu
■ervpto derstorms. Low In the low to mid
60s.. Light southeast wind. Rain
chance 30 percent.
Thursday...partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thun­
derstorms. High In the low 80s.

Violent Storm
Pounds Plains
By United Press
International
A violent, blustery storm
pounded the Plalps with heavy
snow and rain for a third day
today, piling drifts up to 8 feet
in Kansas and Nebraska,
stranding motorists and closing
hundreds of m lies of highways.
The storm spread snow,
blown by 20- to 40-mph winds,
from Kansas to the Dakotas
today and prompted blizzard
warnings for parts of South
Dakota and Nebraska. Up to 15
inches o f snow was expected In
central South Dakota and up to
8 Inches waa forecast in central
and western Nebraska.
"The combination of snow,
cold temperatures and winds
gustlng to near 50 mph. (Is)
producing Impossible driving
conditions and sub-zero wind
chills." the National Weather
Service said.
The storm, blamed for two
traffic deaths In Oklahoma
Monday, was expected to move
Into the western Great Lakes
by tonight, weather service
forecaster BUI Barlow said,
Snowfall totals Tuesday In­
cluded 14 Inches at Murdo.
S.D.. and 12 Inches at Ken­
nebec and Ideal, S.D.
Poor visibility and slippery
roads forced the South Dakota
Highway Patrol to close a
200-mile stretch o f Interstate
90 from Ellsworth Air Force
Base, near Rapid City, east to
Chamberlain. Highway 73 from
Philip to 1-90 and Highway 63
from Midland to 1-90 also were
closed.
In Loup County In northc e n t r a l N e b r a s k a , s ta te
snowplow crews were pulled off
the roads at-about 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday because of the blow­
ing snow. Officials said crews
would start clearing roads
again In the morning.
"A ll we did waa go round and
round today, and ane Just filled
righ t back In ." said Don

Bowley, assistant supervisor
with the state department of
roads.
"It got so bad you couldn’t
see," Bowley said Tuesday
night. "It’s been blowing real
hard since we quit! We've got
6- to 8-foot drifts at times."
Snow blown by 60-tnph
winds reduced visibilities to
zero at Lexington in south­
central Nebraska, and powerful
winds damaged roofs In North
Platte.
In western Kansas, snow
drifts reached 6 feet with winds
near 60 mph. closing all major
roads. Including more than 160
miles o f Interstate 70 into
Colorado. Up to 13 Inches of
snow buried Hill City, Kan,,
and Garden City was hit with
11 inches.
"Basically, this entire part of.
the state la closed down." said
Robert Hahn, a deputy with the
Finney County sheriff's office
In Garden City.
National Guard troops were
p a trollin g western Kansas
highways looking for stranded
motorists. Armories at Norton.
Dodge City and Russell were
opened to provide shelter for
about 100 stranded travelers.
National Guard spokeswoman
Joyce Cole said In Topeka.
The storm prompted Kansas
Gov. Mike Hayden to declare
disasters In 46 counties In the
western part o f the statq.
Schools, government offices
and businesses were closed
Tuesday throughout western
K ansas and north-central
Nebraska.
The storm also spread rain
from eastern South Dakota to
the Great Lakes. A flood warn­
ing was posted along the upper
James River In South Dakota,
and rivers and streams tn
eastern Nebraska, eastern
Kansas and western Iowa were
overflowing their banka, the
weather service said.

A

m

•&lt;i R «*a&lt;l h u ) 1

The temperature at 8 a.m.: 71:
overnight low: 68: Tuesday's
high: 77; barometric pressure:
2B.96; relative humidity: 87
percent; winds: SE at 12 mph:
rain; None: Today's sunset: 6:39
p.m.. Thursday sunrise: 6:23
a.m.
E x t e n d e d

L o ii-ia s t

The extended forecast. Friday
through Sunday, for Florida
except northwest — A chance of
sh ow ers or th u n d erstorm s
mainly extreme south Friday
an d n o rth h a lf S u n d a y .
Otherwise variable cloudiness
with mostly mUd temperatures.
Low s averagin g around 50
extreme north to 60s extreme
south except low 70s In the
Keys. Highs from 70s north to
low and mid 80s south.
A i w a

T id o i

Jfi

Sag:

THURSDAY: Dayton
■•aefet highs. 5:33 a.m., 5:5
p.m.: low, 11:31 a.m.; Mai
Sm yrn a Baaeht highs, 5:3
a.m., 5:59 p.m.; low, 11:36 a.m.
■ayyartt high, 11:38 a.m.; lowi
5:22a.m.. 5:34 p.m. •*
But) t in y

St. Augustine to Jupiter I
— Small craft should exei
caution.
Today...wind southeast II
20 kta. Seas 4 to 6 ft. Bay
Inland waters choppy. Scat!
s h o w e rs and a fe w th
derstorms.
Tonight...wind southeast
kts. Seas 3 to 5 ft. Bay
Inland waters a moderate cl
Scattered showers and tl
derstorms.

�Roberts To
South Seminole Optimists
To Meet In Casselberry

'You Think You're Holier Than Thou'
____

Optimist Club or Semoran will meet at 6 p.m.,
Wednesday at Quincy's Stcakhousc. Live Oaks Center.
Highway 17-92. Casselberry.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPI) Oral Roberts fired his first salvo
In the religious civil war among
TV evangelists Tuesday, accus­
ing flre-and-brlmstone preacher
Jimmy Swaggart of Joining In an
"unholy alliance*' to bring down
PTL leader Jim Bakkcr over a
single sexual Indiscretion seven
years ago.
Roberts urged his followers to
use their checkbooks to make a
“ wall of protection" around
Bakkcr and his wife Tammy,
who resigned from both the PTL
and the Assemblies af God
denomination Thursday night.
The couple put in no new
v id e o ta p e d a p p e a ra n c e in
Tuesday's "Jim and Tam m y"
show on the PTL network, and
at the end of the show, host
Richard Dortch rushed off the
stage, saying "W e understand
Tammy is having a problem."
The unidentified messenger
who brought Dortch the news
told the audience "W e un­
derstand Tammy's having some
kind of major attack." She has
been undergoing treatment in
California for addiction to pre­
scription pills.
Fred Gross, a psychologist and
prominent member of the PTL
"fam ily," revealed on the show
that Bakker had released him
from his vows of secrecy to tell of
how he confessed his dalliance
with a church secretary in

Support For M ental Patients
DBUcms Z r u / £ ° up, for ram,,,c8 of mcntaI health

S S S ££37
Crancs R° A A Groups Set Meetings

Area Alcoholics Anonymous groups meet Wednesday as
follows:
AAl noon and 5:30 P-m. °P en discussion.
1201 W. First St.
• REBOS AA. noon and 5:30 and 8 p.m.(closed). Rcbos
Club. 130 Normandy Lane, Casselberry.
• Sanford Bom 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
Narcotics Anonymous, 8 p.m. Wednesday at The Grove
Counseling Center. 580 Old Sanford/Oviedo Road (off SR
419), Winter Springs.
Narcotics Anonymous will meet at 8 p.m., Thursday at
317 Oak Ave., Sanford.

Take O ff Pounds
TOPS Chapter FL-491 (weight loss) will meet from 6:30
to 8 p.m.. Wednesday, at the Salvation Army, 700 W. 24th
St., Sanford. Open to the public.

■• • ■

___

:

dragged through the mud." In
any scandal but officials told
him they needed concrete proof
first.
Swaggart said when he heard
The Observer was about to brenk
the story of Bakker's tryst with
the secretary and then paying
her and her representative
8115,000 in 1985. he thought o f
getting a group o f evangelists
together to approach Bakkcr in
person.
The purpose, he said, was “ If It;
was true, to do anything wc
could to help him to serve In a
rehabilitation process."

Florida in 1980.
creating an atmosphere for a
"H e was sobbing." Gross re­ hostile takeover of PTL and our
called. "H e was shaking so brother and sister Jim and
violently I had to hold him. In 10 Tammy Bakker."
minutes, we were on the floor.
Swaggart. he said, is "sowing
His face was burled in the discord among the brethren,
carpet. He was sobbing and because somehow you think
kicking and screaming ... if there you're holler than thou. Some­
has ever been a release, that was how Satan has put something in
a release."
your heart that you're better
Jessica Hahn, the woman with than anybody else."
whom Bakkcr transgressed In a
He urged Swaggart to "repent
Florida hotel, told New York’s a n d a s k G o d to c le a n s e
‘Newsday that she received "only you...desist. Move back, and
a few dollars" of the 8115,000 treat Jim Bakker like what he Is.
check from PTL that Bakker an anointed man. a prophet of
called blackmail.
God."
"I didn't come forward In the
He predicted "the hand of the
first place." she sard. "There Lord will fall upon" The Ob­
were other people who used the server. and urged his followers
information. But I didn't want to to "go to your checkbook" and
hurt anybody.
make a "w a ll o f protection
"I didn't want to hurt Jim ," around Jim and Tammy."
*
she said.
Both S w a g g a r t and th e
She said she was a devoted Bakkers are in seclusion in Palm
churchwoman who began her Springs. Calif., taking no calls
career cleaning church toilets and reluming none.
without being asked.
The Observer said Swaggart
Roberts, speaking from his called Its reporter Monday night
Tulsa. Okla., prayer tower on his to reveal that it indeed was him
son's television show, never who instigated the church In­
mentioned Swaggart by name, vestigation Into Bakker's sexual
but it was clear he was referring im proprlties. Both men are
to the muscular blond preacher members of ihe Assemblies of
who stalks uround his pulpit like God.
a hungry Hon.
Swaggart, whose ministry Is
Roberts said Swaggart, the based In Baton Rouge. La., said
Assemblies of God headquarters he urged the executive pre­
and The Charlotte Observer had sbytery to distance itself from
"formed an unholy alliance ... the PTL so It would not "be

Zayre
W

i l l

M R R T

IN OUR "F A M O U S BRAND
SA LE” C IRCULAR ON PAGE
21, W E A D V ER TISE T H E 20”
PINK T A F F Y B IC Y C LE FO R
$59.99. D UE T O A M A N U ­
F A C TU R E R L A T E D E L IV ­
ERY, TH IS ITEM M AY N O T
B E A V A IL A B L E . R A IN C H E C K S A R E AVA ILAB LE.
W E A PO LO G IZE FO R A N Y
INCO N VEN IEN CE TH IS MAY
C A U S E OUR C U STO M ER S .

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 CUy 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.

"FREE CHECKING”
• N O S E R V IC E C H A R G E
• N O P ER C H E C K C H A R G E
• N O M IN IM U M B A L A N C E

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.

Today &lt;a 87

OUR CUSTO M ER

PAY T O TH E
ORDER O F _

Bible Study Held

•u m
2881

$ F R K

BRING THIS AD IN AND RECEIVE YOUR FIRST ORDER OF CHECKS FREE

A non-dcnomlnational Bible study and prayer is held at
noon Thursdays at the Cavalier Inn Restaurant, Highway
17-92, Sanford.

DOLLARS

N e w M eeting Place
SANFORD, FLORIDA

The Greater Seminole Club of the International Training
Jn Communications, which formerly, met a^ Altamonte
Community Churchy n o w , a t 7:30 p.m. on Thursday
at W ataon'a Realty. 1405 State Road 434, Longwood.
Meetings are held on thc .aepond and fourth Thursday of
each month.
•*■■*' ’
i . . .

PHONE:

322-1242
1060000

NEWLOWPRICE!
1

00°o

S t a in m

a s t e r

It s here. A
revolutionary
breakthrough with
stain resistance never
before available. New
Du Pont certified
S TA IN M A S TE R Carpet.
O n sate
sale now. You
Y o u ’ll
II find
the right color, style, and
price. Don't miss itl

Du Pont N y lo n S a x o n y
28 d e c o r a t o r c o l o r s
10 year w e a r w a r r a n t y
In s ta l la t io n FREE

^

H e a v y Duty Pad
FREE
1 W e e k o n ly

★ LARGEST SELECTION OF STAINMASTER IN THE AREA! ★ §
Buy now - will install in 5 days INSTALLED VINYL SPECIALS
90 Days Same As Cash
or no Payments Until June
OUTDOOR CARPET SPECIALS
H U )",,

S IJ N

TURF

C .n |H* 1 O n ly

w

Snl

- •

C .11 p e l O n ly

11

V I N Y l

N O

s {

1

V I N Y L

81 0 "

m
Y

W A X

j ’
■.

1

‘
t

I N S T Al

1J

L i U

SEMINOLE CENTER

H ou rs

•M

$ * 7 4 9

I M A

A R M S T R O N G

M A N N I N G
N O

.

W A X

T O N

A R M S

V I N Y l

NT

Vt

S| 99
1

Y

*1&gt;

1J

R

1

1

»

8

T R O N C .
R

W A X

16"

1*

jj

1 1

11I

FLORIDA CARPET &amp; VINYL
M

s c J 4 9
r

[ S I

_UM

C O N G O l l

M O M [

321-8969

1 t•
•

I

A I

VVi »*.' 11 Hi .i ,i)
S.IMIpIl
I 'll 1l III ' ,i ■11&gt;( I.. 111
( .ill

TURF
* t«

C .11 |H*I O n 1y

I H!

R IV IE R A

O L E F IN

$449

S H O P

I

'i

M

lJ

t&gt;

(Wc'ilmnrt Phi/n)

SANFORD ^

321-8939

SAVE • SAVE • F L O R ID A C A R P E T A N D VINYL • SAVE • SAVE

1

1

�r

r
Sanford Hei

BEN

(USPS 411*210)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305*322*2611 or 831*9093
Wednesday, March 25, 1987—4A
Wayne D. Deyte, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Melvin Adkins, Advertising Director
Home Delivery: Month. 84.75:3 Months. 814.25:6 Months,.
827.00; Year. 851.00. By Mail: Month. 86.75: 3 Months.
820.25; 6 Months. 837.00; Year. 860.00.

1-4 Interchange
A Worthy Project
Can you im agine how the Orange County
critics o f a proposed Interstate-4 interchange
In Sem inole County would have reacted if It
w ere going up in Orange County insteadl?
If you said they'd have hailed it as a
beneficial m ove that deserves a whole lot o f
praise, you're probably right.
A s it is, some o f those critics in Orange
County last week decried the news about the
road construction bill Congress approved —
which includes the proposed interchange at
State Road 46A and the interstate — as a
project "th a t w ould benefit a group o f
developers." No kidding!
Since when have developers not directly or
indirectly benefited from a m ajor highway
im provem ent? And since when has a m ajor
highw ay Im provem ent not brought about
com m ercial, Industrial and residential devel­
opm ent in its proxim ity?
But w ouldn't it be shortsighted not to
recognize that w hile those w ho want to risk
their capital to develop those areas to turn a
profit (thus, benefit) that the tenants in any o f
those developm ents stand to gain as well?
A fter all, It’s the motorists who use those
highw ays to get to and from those develop­
ments w ho benefit most.
W h y Is that everytim e someone proposes
som e m ajor expansion project for Orlando the
Orange County powerhouses give it a quick
stam p o f approval and point out all the
"b en efits" the "co m m u n ity" will derive from
such expansion: but when a sim ilar project is
proposed for a neighboring county they com e
up with all the reasons,it shouldn't be done.
And a lot o f innuendo that som ething isn't
right. Surely they know as well as Seminole
Countlans that the "co m m u n ity " that stands
to benefit from such program s will Include
developers, financial Institutions, laborers,
and, more Importantly in the case o f highway
improvements, motorists.
It wasn’t that long ago that some powerful
people In Orange County were begging voters
to approve a road improvement plan devised
by the in fam ou s M etropolitan T ran sit
Authority to ease motorists' woes in hightraffic areas. Those powerhouses pointed out
at the tithe that the improvetnerits were
needed broauae developers for years had put
up their major projects without sufficient
pre-planning to head off what has now
become a motorist’s nightmare in some areas
o f Orange and Seminole counties. They were
right on that score, except additional highway
Improvements then would certainly have led
to additional development as well, and would
have resulted In the same thing they say
would happen in Seminole County with the
State Road 46A interchange: developers
would have benefited.
One of the Seminole County developers
they’re referring to, o f course, is Jeno
Pauluccl. W hat Mr. Pauluccl is attempting to
do, In his efforts to get that interchange
.^constructed soon, Is what Orange County
developers should have done before they put
' up their projects: plan ahead of time to
accommodate anticipated additional traffic
flow in the development areas b o we don't
have more traffic nightmares in the future.
. Mr. Pauluccl should be congratulated for
y. those efforts, not criticized.
'} W e’re sorry, but we simply can't agree with
our Orange County neighbors critical of the
efforts to get that interchange at State Road
46A and M . W e think U’s time to put one
there. If anyone can prove a developer or
group o f develQpers used illegal methods to
bring It about, they should get in touch with
the state attorney's office. If they're upset Just
because people who will Invest money to
develop the area will make a p ro fit... hey. so .
what!
W hat Congress approved recently was the
partial funding o f an $88 billion nationwide
road construction bill that Includes .the
proposed Seminole County interchange. Pres­
ident Reagan says he’ll veto the package, and
that veto could come as early as today. Some
on Capitol Hill say the president may not be
able to m uster epough Republican support to
prevent that veto from being overridden.
If be does veto it, It should be overridden. .

'

' .
- v ‘. ■ ■ ’•
.

1

i

•

-Wi f ••• ' \

rtV

Hopefully, There'll Be An End Run By Nunn
The sound of swooshing hats Is heard across
the land. The Democratic Party presidential
primary race has begun. In Its early configura­
tion It's shaping up as a contest keyed to both
recognition and Ideological position.
One well-recognized big name — from the
Ideologically liberal wing of the party — flipped
his fedora r ut of the ring recently: Gov, Mario
Cuomo.
There have been two formal announcements
of hats very much In the ring, both from the
neo-llberal wing: Gov. Bruce Babbitt and Rep.
Richard Gephardt. Still expected Is. another
neo-llberal Sen. Joseph Blden. and Gov. Michael
Dukakis — who are either liberals or neoliberals. AH four are able. All four are unknown
nationally.
Extremely well-known Is a candidate from the
very liberal wing, Jesse Jackson. He surely will
run. He has a recognition problem: Voters know
too much about him and don't like him.
The front-runner la retired Sen. Gary Hart. He
is well-known. But what kind of head Is beneath
the haf 1A the ring? Is he a very-liberal: a 95
percent liberal rating from the Americans for

tv

Democratic Action, and former campaign man­
ager for George McGovern? Is he a neo-llberal?
He is not against a strong military. Is he a
liberal? He stresses that we shouldn't flex our
power. In Washington, political people still ask:
Who is Gary Hart? His former congressional
colleagues do not hold him in high regard. He
carries a huge financial debt from his 1984
campaign.
So what have we? A plastic front-runner. A
maxi-vocal, near-radical super-star. And a taxi
squad of unknowns. All of them will spend the
next months shaking hands, issuing position
papers, inventing hokey photo opportunles.
This traveling road show could be an embar­
rassment.
What's missing? A candidate from the right
wing of the left-wing party — an Ideological spot
called "moderate." And second, a candidate
who makes news, rather than begs for It.
Am I Inching up toward another column about
the prospedts of Sen. Sam Nunn? I am. There
have been some news stories indicating that

Nunn has

ta k en

himself out of the race. He

H The media door is open. As chairman or the
Arm,&gt;ri services Committee, he Is Mr. Democrat

(.nd „ e » .w o r » ,y)
S S S a m . control ncgo.r.uon..'f that . no. the
most newsworthy story, then the Iran-contra
«-flnrial la Nunn la a member of the Senate
Special Committee Investigating the affair. He's
X , chairman or "PS !" the Permanent Sub­
committee on Investigations. That s a plum
committee with a broad range. It draws the kind
of headlines that Joe McCarthy got investigating
communists and John and Robert Kennedy got
investigating Jimmy Hoffa. What do you think
Nunn will investigate? Why. the Wall Street
"insider trading" scandal, a subject ranked
about a perfect 10 for television political sex
appeal.
,
In short, he's busy. In a speech In Atlanta he
spoke out about his dilemma. He said. "...I know
that if I tried to take on a presidential race In the
next six months and also to perform my duties
in the Senate - I would wind up doing neither
well."

VIEWPOINT

A N TH O N Y HARRIGAN

3rd World
Bailouts
Cost Jobs

Adversity
Brings
Retreat
WASHINGTON - A very In­
sightful article by John Kotrn In
The Wall Street Journal points out
that a once tightly-knit middle class
finds Itself divided and uncertain
today.
In the 1950s. the halycon days of
the American middle class, there
was extrordinary unity In the
lifestyle of those who comprised the
great middle in American life. This
was the era o f the suburban
explosion. Americans dreamed of a
detached home and a neat, wellkept lawn. It was a time of generally
low prices and simple entertaining.
It was a time or rising church
attendance. Young adults In sub­
urbia had been shaped by the
austerity of their chUdhood years In
the Depression and by the uniting
force of a war for national survival.
It was a great and good time In
America, and those who lived
through It are sentimental about the
period.
By atave Gerstal
That happy, unified way of life,
however, has been eroding for many
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Is Sen.
years. The Wall Street Journal
Sam Nunn o f Georgia the E.F.
writer says that the consensus "has
Huttoq of the Senate? Most cer­
given way to an m c f« « | l5fl|)r &lt; tainly^ if the,issue 4s arms control
nifi r ti fG rtni uia
iim
if r t iilf f pif ^ n *■*#.
• •B r* * *
i
t i i c is i i n m r y •
fragmented array of life styles aha
values." He says that "there Is a
That does not mean the Senate
vanishing sense of community:
stops and gives rapt and undivided
among families, parents find fewer
attention to Nunn when he speaks.
agreed -on guldeposta for raising
No senator Is accorded that distinc­
tion.
their children." He notes a rise In
"antl-comformlst values" and con­
Mostly, the Georgia Democrat
cludes that "in short, there Is no
delivers his monologue to an empty
longer one set of values that broadly
chamber In a native drawl that
fits the bulk of the middle class." He
could serve well as a remedy for
adds that "the social epoxy has
lesser forms of Insomnia.
come, apart" and that middle class
But in a Senate largely populated
values wUl splinter even further. In
with eager talkers and virtually
his view, the new affluence undoes
devoid of listeners, Nunn Is heard.
the national cohesiveness.
And he manages without the high
Many of the reasons Mr. Koten
powered media blitzes favored by
many of his colleagues.
offers for the decline of the old,
unified middle class make sense.
Although senators may disagree
Options exist in lifestyles today
with him, and some do. when Nunn
which didn't exist a generation ago.
reaches a conclusion, It Is accepted
Many social commentators and
by many of his colleagues as
many ordinary citizens may say
rallying point on an issue.
that's a good thing. Large numbers
Takes this example:
of Americans see no need for the
Last week. Nunn delivered the
first of three speeches In which he
kind o f unity which existed in the
1950s.
determined that the ABM treaty
The American middle class of presented to and ratified by the
yesteryear can 't be put back
Senate would preclude the type of
together simply by willing a re­ advanced research on the "Star
constitution of it. New social condl- Wars" defense system on which
lions have emerged. It should be
President Reagan wants to embark.
clear, however, that the diversity of
On that same day, Indeed hours
lifestyles in the middle class stems before Nunn spoke. Sen. Claiborne
In large measure from the affluence,
Pell, D R.I.. chairman of the pre­
or illusion of affluence, which has stigious Foreign Relations Com­
existed for some years.
mittee, and Sen. Joseph Blden. D
If unity Is regained, it will be Del., chairman of the Judiciary
because of economic pressure of an Committee, pronounced slmlllar
u n w e lc o m e k in d .
Judgments.
&lt;
■
,' ■*"#
4* . • '

W ASHINGTON WORLD

Senate's E.F. Hutton
sp

88

m i

Yet. Nunn's verdict carried a great
deal more weight In the White
House, which disputes the finding,
with his colleagues and In the
media.
__ __
_________
W h y? Mainly- because 'N unn
reached his conclusion after a labo­
rious. In depth study of the treaty
and the testimony that supported it.
On the other hand, the impression
left by Pell and Blden was that they
reached the same point mainly
because it conveniently fit their
opposition to "Star Wars."
Nor Is Nunn's acknowledged
expertise limited to arms control
agreements. It goes deep Into mili­
tary affairs, befitting but not always
true of Armed Services Committee
chairmen.
Nunn operates in an era of Instant
experts. But unlike many of the
Instant experts, Nunn weighs his
words before he speaks, preferring
not to shoot from the Up like some of
the others.
At 48, Nunn Is moving into full
political maturity, underscored by
the Interest In him as a potential
presidential candidate, a siren he
has only partly silenced. He has not
renounced a race for 1988 nomina­
tion. only said he would make a
decision later In the year.
But with the renewed possibility
of an agreement between the United
States and the Soviet Union on
nuclear missiles in Europe, and
perhaps more, Nunn may find that
hts place In the next two years has
to be In the Senate — not in Iowa or
New Hampshire or even in the
Southern states.

The latest argument being used
against reducing the trade deficit is
that American markets must be
kept open to help the Third World.
The argument is as follows: Lessdeveloped countries (LDCs) of the
Third World are heavily In debt to
banks and International agencies.
To earn the money to make pay­
ments of Interest and principal, the
debtors must run trade surpluses.
This means that their trading
partners must run trade deficits.
Since the U.S. has the largest
market In the world, It Is claimed
that the solution to the LDC debt
crisis Is In continuing the U.S.
deficit crisis.
We already see how the LDCs
have expanded exports. "Virtually
all the Increase from exports from
Latin America between 1983 and
1985 went to the United States."
writes Christine Bogdaniwlcz, a
former International Monetary Fund
economist now on Wall Street. "The
record American appetite for Im­
ports helped absorb expanded
exports from debtor nations," she
says, in 1984, the debtor nations
shifted from a trade deficit of 865.1
billion with the United gums* %d *
surplus of $15.2 billion: in other
words, the U.S. has moved from a
surplus with the Third World to a
•50 billion deficit.
The LDCs are also cutting imports
under austerity programs designed
by the IMF. Between 1981 and
1983, U.S. machinery exports to
Latin America dropped by 38 per­
cent: steel and motor vehicles
exported by 50 percent: construc­
tion and agricultural equipment
exports by 80 percent. These de­
clines in exports cost the U.S.
economy 200,000 manufacturing
Jobs.
What progress has come from
A m erican business and labor
sacrificing foreign and domestic
markets to ease the Third World
debt problem? Nearly half of LDC
trade revenues are going to debt
payments, but the debt is still
Increasing.
Treasury Secretary James Baker
urges banks to loan more money to
the LDCs — another $15 billion over
the next three years. The IMF and
World Bank are also making more
loans. Helping the LDCs "grow out
of their debts" sounds line, except
that this growth depends on larger
trade surpluses with the United
States, and new Investments In new
production to be sold In U.S.
markets — In competition with
American firms.

JACK ANDERSON

1* V
WASHINGTON - America
become overpopulated with law­
yers, who endlessly complicate their
procedures and increase their fees
while juatipe languishes.
, In a real sense, the legal pro­
fession has transformed the Ameri­
can system into a government of the
lawyers, by the lawyers and for the
lawyers. They now control the
Judicial branch, dominate the
branch a1*1* Intimidate
executive branch.
It America needs Is another
revolution to free the people from
the tyranny of the lawyers. They
‘ like Ulllputlahs who have
] the American giant in red
and legal snares until he can’t
without consulting an atr_ •' - !• *'
■
ia led to an explosion of
'iititfation. which has burdened the
with billions in legal
are paid by all the
form of higher costa,
people in the fa
higher prices and low er productivity.

i

CMM."

WATTENB

Spoil The Pot
Meanwhile. the courts are hope­
lessly clogged with cases: the
v e r d ic ts are e rra tic and un­
predictable: insurance la unavaila­
ble or unaffordable. Entrepreneurs
have been driven out of business,
doctors have abandoned their
practices. Journalists have stopped
exposing wrongdoing, manufactur­
ers have shut down plants, local
governments have cut off services
— all because they can no longer
afford the high cost of defending
lawsuits.
But Paul Revere rides again.
Dashing Into this legal nightmare
on his charger is James K. Coyne, a
modern Revere In pinstripes, who
heads the American Tort Reform
Association. Though not a lawyer,
he has. in various public forums,
out-argued, out-shouted and outmaneuvered some of the nation's
best trial lawyers.
During one debate, a prominent
trial lawyer lost his decorum and
slugged Coyne in the face. Coyne
resisted the temptation to sue; he
believes the legal profession already

has so many Americans suing one
another that the whole civil liability
system has gone berserk.
Recently, the American Bar
Association puUed back a bit from
their no-compromise position and
endorsed some legal reforms. The
attorneys refused, though, to limit
pain-and-Buffertng awards, which
would reduce their own contingency
fees. The few reforms that were
adopted, snorted Coyne, left "loop­
holes big enough to drive a trial
lawyer's Mercedes through."
In Coyne's revolution to win the
country away from the lawyers and
give it back to the people, the new
Bunker HU1 will be Capitol Hill.
Coyne is preparing for the battle,
but he needs the support of some
modem revolutionaries. If you are
in favor of reforming the legal
system, you can obtain information
from the American Tort Reform
Association. Seventh Floor. 1250
C o n n e c t ic u t A v e . N .W .,
Washington. D.C.. 20036.
Under other governments, those
who sue, If they should lose, are
required to pay all the legal

1

expenses of the winners. But under
the American system, anyone can
sue you without risk. AU he needs Is
an attorney who is willing to accept
his case for a contingency fee. And
the country ia crawling with lawyers
who are drumming up contingency
If you should get hit by one o
these lawsuits, It doesn't cost th&lt;
plaintiff a dime. He doesn't have ti
pay his attorney unless he wins
The attorney invests only his time
plus Incidental expenses. Some
times he can generate publicity tha
repays him in free advertising. Thi
only one who will lose is you, th&lt;
hapless defendant. If the verdic
comes up tails against you, you low
heavily, If the verdict comes uj
heads in your favor, you still lose
For the case will cost you time. lega
expenses and lawyers' fees.
Of course, some provision must b
made for the poor, who are entitle:
to recourse to the courts If they an
Injured. But the real victim li
America has become the defendan
who loses even when he wins.

�In te re s t
dlUfclJfcfl

F re e

ILHCt ll)

fiUnil i g l u ) 'Mil. 11

f ,f(fVS 1o ll-ilt'tli

•!&lt;&gt;

m

S2Sa tm irn
•Excludes
Dlsmond Earrings

Layaways also Invited
on these sale
prlcesl

BRIDAL SETS

DIAMOND

EARRINGS
J

Reg.

E n tire S to c k

1/10 C T

TW

*119

Reg. *150 • *2500

1/5 C T

TW

*249

NOW

1/4 C T

TW

*350

•9 9 -*1 6 7 5

SALE

$5 9 95
*129
*179

Other sizes sale priced!

DIAMOND PENDANTS
GOLD
CHA,N

Reg.

SALE

1/10 C T

*149

*

1/5 C T

*350

kI 1/4
CT
k
■ Ik

W

illia m

H o w a r d ’s

Sem inole Centre - Sanford
All Major
Credit Cards
Layaway

321 -31 4 0

Hours:
M -F 10-9
Sat. 1 0 -5 :3 0

'

*475

99

*199
*275y

Other Sizes Sale Priced!

�r

m
♦A— Sanford Harakl. Sanford, FI.

Wtdnttday, March as, m /

F o u n d a t io n A n n o u n c e s G r a n t s
CHICAGO (UPl) — Grants totaling $9.3 million
will go to people or organizations concerned with
international peace and security, the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation announced
Tuesday.
The foundation aaid the grants for research,
public Information programs, writing, fellowships
and planning and development o f special Initia­
tives would go to people and Institutions in 21
American cities and 12 cities abroad.
Fourteen grants worth more than $3.75 million
were announced for peace initiatives In research
and training institutions in North America,
•western Europe and Australia.
"Most of these MacArthur grants will provide
Institutions outside the United Slates with the
support they need to stimulate scholarly study of
n broader spectrum of peace and security Issues
— extending analysis from regional concerns to a
more global context." John E. Corbally. president
of the foundation, said In a news release.
The 14 grants, for one to three years, Include:
—T h e A u stralian N ation al U n iversity .
$300,000; the Canadian Centre Tor Arms Control
and Disarmament. $150,000: the International
Institute for Strategic Studies. London. $360,000;
University or London. King's College, $375,000;
Cambridge University. King's College, $150,000;
Royal Institute of International AHalra. London.
8300.000; Tampere Peace Research Institute,
Finland. $150,000; Inslltut Francals des Rela­
tions Internationales, $270,000; Free University
or Derlln's. Institute for International Politics,
$300,000; Peace Research Institute of Frankfort,
$525,000; International Peace Research Institute,
Stockholm. $375,000; Uppsala Universltet,
Sweden. $32,000; Department of Biochemistry
and Molecular Biology, Harvard University,
$50,000; and National Academy of Sciences’
Nntlonal Research C ouncil, W ashington,
$425,000.

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice I* hereby given thet we
ere engaged In butlnett el P.O.
Boa *01, Geneva. Seminole
County, Florida 377)2 under the
Flctlllou* Name ol Captain
Louli E. Pohlman, and that we
Intend to regular Mid name
with the Clerk of the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with the Provlilont of the Flctltiou* Nam*
Statutes. To Wit: Section MS.Ot
Florida Statute* If 17.
/*/ Louis E. Pohlman
/*/ Tina F. Pohlman
Publish March 4, tl, II, JJ,
11*7.
OEMS!
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
I
OF THR EIOHTRKNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. M-4S1T-CA-1S0
JUDOli
C. VERNON MIZE, JR.
NOTICE OF
FORFEITURE PROCEEDING
IN RE: FORFEITURE OF
1*74 LINCOLN FOUR DOOR
UTOMOBILE, VEHICLE
IDENTIFICATION NUMBER
4YUAS8717S
'
m

*

,o
.* i^ s » s s r
Post Ottlce Box ns

irii

Apopka, FL WTO
or
... —
4)0 Walsh Road
Apopka, FL 3770)
and all other* who claim an
interest In the following pro
perty:
a: I One 1*74 Lincoln Four
Door Automobile, Vahid* Iden­
tification Number 4YB3AM7I7I
THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT
eel ted the described property on
the 2nd day of August, ISO*, at or
near the parking lot ol the Hot
Lin* Lounge, Slate Road 41*.
Altamonte Spring*. Seminole
County, Florida.
On 4th day ol December. IN*,
the Seminole County Shorllf*
Deportment tiled a Petition lor
Rule to Show Causa and tor
Final Order of Forfeiture with
the Clerk ol Circuit Court,
/Seminole County Courthouse,
300 North Park Avenue, San
lord, Florida. A copy ol aald
Petition Is on III* In the Clerk’s
ollke and Is available tor exam
lnation during regular business
hours.
WHEREAS a prime tael*
showing ha* been mad* by the
Petitioner that there Is a proba­
ble causa lor the Issuance ol a
Rule to Show Cause
YOU, th# above-indicated
potential claimants, Thomas
ARE.HEREBY
COMMANDED to appear
the HONORABLE CVKHNON
M IZ E , JR. In Chamber*.
Seminal* County Courthouse.
Seminal* County. Sanlord,
Florida, an th* 1st day M May,
IM7. at 1:30 A M . lor Pre-Trial
to .show causa why th# above
described property should net be
forfeited by Nil* Court at Con­
traband. pursuant la Sectlane
t i l . 701-704, Flerlda Slatwtt*
(INS), to the Semin*!* County
Sheriff's Department, at the
agency which aaliad said pro­
perty an ind day *f Auguaf, in*.
In tern Inala County. Florida,
based upon alleged felony vio­
lations which occurred In
SamInala County. Florida.
WHEREAS a prime facia caw
ha* boon shewn, It Is tharolara
tbs Order of this Court that all

potential Respandants

Interest In We *
i r a n if* $n$n ,wim$n
... . II0&gt; day* tram service
tie later than savan (T) days
r# the data sat abase, shew
cawa by filing In Rd* Court

a

SSSTSaSTSi'lS.’S

Uflal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,
IN ANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO.: SS-3171 CA M O
SUN BANK, N A..
Plaint If I.
vs.
SALVADORE RAMOS.
Defendants.
NOTICE OF SALE
N O T IC E Is g iv e n that
pursuant to a Final Judgment
dated March ID, 1SS2 In Casa No.
M-387) CA 0* G, ol lha Circuit
Court of th* Judicial Circuit, In
and for Seminole County,
Florida. In which SUN BANK,
N.A. It th* P la in tiff and
SALVADORE RAMOS, It the
Defendant, I will Mil to Iht
highest and bast bidder for cash
at th* west front door ol th*
Seminole County Courthouse In
Sanlord. Semlnol# County,
Florida, at 11:00 o’clock A.M. on
April 30lh, 1*07, th* following
described real property Ml forth
In tha Order of Final Judgment:
Lot til, OAKLAND HILLS,
according to th* plat thereof as
recorded In Plot Book l), Pages
*3 and *4. public Records ol
Seminole County, Florida
AJEO;,March If, l
d a v id n . b e r r ie n

Clerk ol the Circuit Court
B Y ; Phyllis Forsyth*

IN THE CIRCUIT
COURT FOR THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA,
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASE NO. **-! WS-CA-M
OENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
ALLIANCE MORTGAGE
COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF,
-vsSAMUEL A. WILLIAMSON as
trustee
under the provisions of a Irusl
agreement dated October I).
It*), known at trust«100 LINDA
R. WILLIAMSON his wile as
trust** under th* provision*
of a Irusl agreement dated
October 1). t*03. known as
trus, HARCAR ALUMINUM
PROOUCTS CO. EDWIN J.
SZCZEPANIKand, JOANNE M.
SZCZEPANIK his wile,
CO EQUITY GROUP. INC..
------------UNKNOWN TEN
ANTISI.
DEFENDANTS.
NOTICE OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICEPROPERTY
TO: CO-EQUITY. INC.
PETER 0. WAGNER, R A
A DISSOLVED FLORIDA
CORPORATION
YO U A R E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that an action hat
eijasnuwewel tfw
4——
_n
j—
-—
m
iwpri a
uNnrn$nt»o
o rvrvC
lM
r&gt;
0
mortgage on th* following real
preparty, lylnp and being and
situated In Seminole County,
Florida, more particularly da
scrRwgaafoiiawt: -l o t -ftid/
Let I. THE SPRINGS. SHADOWOOO VILLAGE, according
la Ifw plat thereof a* recorded In
Plat Beak I*, al Paget *4 and 41.
o f the Public Records of
Saminala County, Florida:
together with an undivided
1/MMi Inter##! in the graanbait
an saw Plat and In
Rial

I*. *71 In Official
•M. a* Page It. at the Public
Racer As at Saminala Caunty.
Florida,
more commonly known a* Ml
Starling, Longwood. Florida
, S7SS.
This action ha* bean Iliad

ilM ! 323 7534

Publish: March 31. April!. B. 11.
|M7

‘ ■ wDwlis as

CLfRK
ClrtuH and County Courts
■Vi PkyUts Forsythe
Deputy Clack
Publish: March 4, II,
it. 31. IM7
OEM 47

Legol Notice

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME

Notice 1s hereby given fhal I
em engaged In business at Lake
Howell Pleia. Winter Park,
Seminole County, Florida 377*3
under the Flctlllou* Name ol
Began Shoes, end that I intend
to register Mid name with the
Clark ol the Circuit Court.
Seminole County. Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes,
To W li: Section 8*5 0* Florida
Statutes 1*57.
/*/ JohnR. Began
Publish March It, tl. 75 &amp;
April 1.1M7
D EM 100

Nollce Is hereby given thet we
are engaged In business el 3*5
Eagle C irc le . Casselberry.
Seminole County, Florida 32707
under the Fictitious Name ol
Classic Design Landscaping,
and that w* Intend to register
said name with Ihe Clerk ol Ihe
Circuit Court, Seminole County.
Florida In accordance wllh the
Provisions ol the Fictitious
Name Statute*. To W II: Section
145 0* Florida Statutes 1*57.
/*/ Richard G. Clark
/*/Sherry L. Clark
Publish March II. IS. 15 A
April 1 .1*17.
D EM 101

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that. I
am engaged In business el 755
W Hwy, 43*. Wlnler Springs.
Seminole County, Florida 3270*
under *:-* Fictitious Name ot
Nature's Image, and that I
intend lo register Mid name
with Ihe Clerk ol the Circuit
Court. Seminole County. Florida
In accordance wllh Ihe Pro
visions ot Ihe Fictitious Name
Statutes, To Wit: Section 1*5 0*
Florida Statutes 1*57.
/*/ Vernon Smilh
Publish March II. IS. 75 A
April l. I*S7.

j u m t i - CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 17-lta CP
Division Probata
IN RE: E S T A T E O F

n o t i c e "o f

FICTITIOUS NAME
Nollce Is hereby given thet we
are engaged In business al 4**
S R. 43*N. Altamonte Springs,
Semmole County, Florida 33701
under the Fictitious Nam* ol
Boston Bartenders School ol
America, and that we Intend lo
register said name with the
Clerk ol Ihe Clrciiil Court.
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance wllh Ihe Provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes,
ToW II Section 0*5 0* Florida
Statutes 1*57.
/*/ William F. Rescued
/»/ LuAnn P. Schoonneker
Publish March II, II. 25 A
A p ril). 19*7
DEM **

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO UR T
FOR SEM IN OLE CO U N TY,
FLO R ID A
PR O BA TE DIVISION
B E T T Y W DAVIS,
File Number U -H 5 -C P
Deceased
IN R E : E S TA TE OF
NOTICE OF
G EO R G E F. A LTM A N .
ADMINISTRATION
Deceased
The administration ol Ihe
N O TIC E OF
estele ol B E T T Y W. OAVIS.
A D M IN ISTR A TIO N
d e c e a s e d . F ile N u m b e r
The administration ol Ihe
17 IM CP, It pending In Ihe
estate ol George F. Altman,
C ircuit Court lor Seminole
d e c e a s e d . F ile N u m b e r
C o u n ty . F lo r id a , P ro b a ta
S* 1*5 CP, is pending In the
Division, lha address ol which is
Circuit Court lor Seminole
North Park Avenue, Sanlord.
C o u n ty . F lo r id o , P roba te
F L . Th* names and addresses ol
Division, Ihe address ol which It
the personal representative and
Post Ottlce Drawer C, Sanford,
the personal representative's
F L 33777 0*5*. Th* names and
attorney are Ml forth below
addresses.ol Ihe personal repre­
A ll Interested persons are
sentative and th* personal rep­
required to Ilia wllh this court,
resentative's attorney era sal
W ITH IN TH R E E M ONTHS O F
forth below.
T H E FIR S T P U B LIC A TIO N OF
atLi, jJy L Jfllr retted persons arc
clalrdU1
rr
{*"111* with this court.
- - VSRYHIN T H R E E M ONTHS O F :
- ___ ________
'T H E F IR S T P U B LIC A TIO N OF
person on whom this notice was
THIS N O TIC E - (1) all claims
served that challenges Ihe valid
against Ihe estate and (7) any
lly of Ihe will, the qualifications
objection by an Interested
ol th* personal representative,
person on whom this notice was
venue, or jurisdiction ol Ihe
served that challenges the validcourt,
’ lly ol the will, th* qualifications
ALL CLAIMS Atfc) O B JE C
ol Ihe personal representative,
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
venue, or jurisdiction of the
BE FOREVER BARRED
court,
Publication ol this Nolle* was
A LL CLAIMS AND O B JE C
begun on March IS. 1N 7.
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
Personal Representative:
BE FO R EVER BARRED
SYLVAN J. DAVIS, JR.
Publication ol this Notice hat
12* W. Woodland Drive
. begun on March 15, 1*87.
Sanlord, FL 17771
Personal Representative:
Attorney lor
H A Z E L E .R O B B
Personal Representative:
Route 4. Bo* 57B
DOUGLAS STENSTROM,
Cushing, Oklahoma 74073
ESQUIRE
Attorney tor
STENSTROM, MclNTOSH.
Personal Representative
9
JULIAN. COLBERT
DAVID W ROQUEM ORE, JR .
A WHIGHAM. P.A.
ESQ.
P.O. Box 1130
G U R N E Y A H A N D LE Y , P A
Sanford. FL 32773 1330
Post Ottlce Box 1773
Telephone: 305/377 2171
Orlando, Florida 32807
Publish: March tl. 25.1*87
Telephone: (305) 843 *500
D EM I**
Publish: March 25 A April I,
1*87
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
D EM 210

OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA,
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASE NO. M-MTt-CA-Of-0
OENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CITY FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
a/k/aCITY FEDERAL
SAVINGS BANK.

P L A IN T IF F .

vs
SAMUEL A. WILLIAMSON
and, LINDA WILLIAMSON, his
wile, VICTOR HOCHMAN.
OLGA HOCHMAN, HARCAR
ALUMINUM PROOUCTS CO..
CO EQUITY GROUP, INC..

D EFE N D A N TS .

NOTICE OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE
- PROPERTY
TO: CO EQUITY GROUP.
INC. A DISSOLVED
FLORIDA CORPORATION
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that an actlen has
keen commenced to foreclose o
mortgage on th* following reel
property, lying and being sltuat
od In Semlnol* County, Florida,
mere particularly described as
follow*:
LOT 17. ENGLISH WOODS
FIRST ADDITION, ACCORD
ING TO THE PLAT THEREOF
AS RECORDED IN PLA T
BOOK 17. AT PAGE 45, OF THE
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 V .
FLORIDA.
mors commonly known at 114
Yarmouth Rood, Forn Park,
Florida 33730.
This action hat baan Iliad
agelnsl you end you or* re
Wired to serve o copy o! your
written delens*. It any. to It on
SHAPIRO. ROSE A FISHMAN,
Attorneys, whoso address it 550
North Roe Street. Suite 30).
Tempo.i. Flerlda 33*0* 1013, on or
April lltti. I*f7, end tile
the original with the Clark el
Hilt Court either before tarvice
on Plaintiff* attorney or imme
dlately thereafter; otherwise e
default will be entered again*!
y#u tor the relief demanded In
toe Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and teal
al thl* Court on the 33rd day of
March. IM7.
(COURT SEAL)
David N. Berrien. Clerk
Circuit end County Court*
BY; Ruth King
OnDutu1Clark
PwbiTth: March 31. April I. 8. tl. .
1*87
DEM II*

__ _

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT.
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 87 0*4* CA 0* O
SUN BANK. N.A.,
Plaintiff,
v».
J.E. PICKREN,---------PICKREN, unknown tpout*
ot J.E PICKREN. If married,
UNITED STATESOF
AMERICA and MERLE
PICKREN. and any unknown
nalrt. devlteet. grant*** and
any other unknown perconi or
unknown tpoutat claiming by,
through and under any ol th*
abova-namad Defendant*.
Defendant*.
NOTICE OF SUIT
TO . J. E. P I C K R E N .
---------- PICKREN. unknown
tpout* ol J.E. PICKREN. II
m a r r i e d and M E R L E
PICKREN. and any unknown
hair*, davliaat, grant*** and
any other unknown portent or
unknown tpoutat claiming by,
through and under J .E .
P I C K R E N and M E R L E
PICKREN. II decaatad.
Retldanc# Unknown
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that an action to
loroclot* mortgage covering th*
following real and partonal
property In Saminol* County,
Florid*, to wit: .
The Eott 3 toet of Lot I*, all ol
Lot l l and th* well t* toet ol Lot
It. Block t. BEL-AIR, according
to the plat tharaol at recorded In
Plat Book ). Page 7*. ot the
Public Record* ol Saminol*
County. Florid*.
tie* been tiled again*! you and
you era required to »*rv* a copy
ol your written paten***, II any.
lo II oq C VICTOR BUTLER.
JR.. ESQ.. 111! Eaat Robinton
Street, Orlando. Florida liaoi,
and III* th* original wllh th*
Clerk ot the above tty led Court
on or before th* 77th day ot
April. 1*87, otfaerwl**. o Judg
ment may ba'antarad again*!
you lor th* rat 1*1 demanded in
th* Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and teal
ot »ald Court on th* 33rd day ol
March. 18*7.
(SEAL)
DAVIDN.BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By. CacallaE. Ekern
Deputy Clerk
Publlth: March 35. April 1. 8. It.
1*17
OEM 717

________ild r e d u c e the

targets In the
the Pershing 2s.
fpeafed to be u--------short-range
.^&gt;1Id-fuel, $2.5 million mlRRiles
*
s
. .
carried dummy warheRds.
____ Ike Its predecessor, ihe
."As far as I know evervthintf
Perching 1. the Pershing
MMR 2.
looked fine," said Dave
3buUt by Martin-Marietta Co„
a spJkesma n for the A
currently has a maximum
Redstone Arsenal. "Trooj
range of about 1.200 miles and
formance was flawless. It Wi
Is capable of hitUng Soviet soil
textbook exercise."
front German territory within
The launchings came am
minute*.
negotiations in Oeneva b
tween the United States arid
Some 100 members of o1e
the Soviet Union on a proposal
56th Field Artillery Command
to eliminate Intermediate-range
In West Geniiany were flown to
nuclear m issiles, such as
Florida for the firings; the first
Pershing 2s. now based in
such launchings since June
Europe.
1986.
" W e d id n 't com e here
To make the tests as realistic
because of what's going on in
as possible, the crews were not
Geneva," Harris said. "The
told when the missiles would
schedule for these tests was set
be launched until minutes be­
last summer."
fore liftoff.
A new Reagan Adminlstra-

.'Kn*fh.m

" I rt I ( . o o d A g a i n "

DOC OR CAT

G R O O M IN G
Phil Pastoret
An escalator has been devised that
can operate on a curve, rather than
on a straight line. But you still get off
at the wrong floor.

LAKE MARY BLVD.
C HI ROPRA C T I C
CLINIC

$ s 00
z
D F N A 'S P E T S k
* . \
3 2 1 -2 9 5 7
fc J tX A i

tilt

I Ul i MA S I

H A M U 11

() (

I Ini n|M .H fit 1 *«mi I v Mirilth l

IB&amp;G
Shoes
ISIS S. Franck A .

Supercaation: patting the dog oa
the roof so be can scare away Santa's
reindeer lest their hooves damage the
shingles.

'H)J I

ys

S.infill &lt;1 II

•
•
•
•

Ready For Spring
LADIES
LEATHER
HEELS

S

WTT1 TWt M

MURS T# US

I C
1 V

“Let The

1211J

ACUPUNCTURE
I’l RSONAl INJURY
PAIN CONTROL
WORK! R S COMP

PH. 322-9300

Perking In Rner
Tim s .T-SiSO

ONI STOP
■AIT A TACKLE

Lsikr M.iiy Hlvil

Ssi*t• I 0 / (i.itht'.iil ( fiitff

Sanford, Fla.

Kids who can't draw a straight line
might flunk art. but they have great
potential to succeed in the economics
chart industry.

P r o f e s s io n a ls D o It ”

ECHOLS TR EE SERVICE
LICENSED - FULLY INSURED - SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

• COMPLETE TREE SERVICE
• FREE ESTIMATES • STUMP GRINDING
• 24 HR. ANSWERING SERVICE

DR

JOHN J H A M M F R I I
O PT O M E TR IS T
VISION I raws (ONIAI I 11NS| S
III -.11.hi N I KAMI S

2405 Orandviaw Avanua
Sanford. FL 32771
Contact Pate or Terry Echols

PH . (3051 3 2 1 - 7 4 9 7
vi‘i w i am mami hi vii
SHIM ill i OHtl IVVIIOO VII I Al.l
I AMI MAMl || t/;o,
SI NIOR DIM (MINI

.-

I I ill

II.I Ills

.in

\ i_m ■111 /
,1 lu S| .

'

T TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
n

r

P h . 322*0285

J - 2575 S. French Ave., Sanford

1SH Oiacaaet
With Thle M

695-7174
^ * 74.

11» i

I niIt j &gt; c m I r n l

Gold •Silver •Bran
Polishing
Plating
Restoration

&gt;02 Laura St

323-2229

Phone
IF NO ANSWER 32I-7IM

I u n k in g

SHEFFIELD

rj*K.SE

gulrad to serve a
* vaur
written
f any, fa It an
SHAPIRO,
ROSE * FISHMAN,
*
-^
WliWiwwS* I
It M l
North nm
MU, an or
AFRIL A 11*7, and fits
Clark at
this Court ottber
on Plaintiff* attorney or immedlaialy thereafter; atharwlw a
default will
th* relief
Complaint.
WITNESI
flTNESS my band and teal
e Court
OfI M
this
Cow an the 37th day of
FIRRUAR
-------- TV, MET.
(COURTS!
Office of the Slats 1
ISOEast First I
laniard. FNrtdaJ

legol Notice

*wm

Deputy Clark
Publish: March IS, April i . m r
DEM 730

often of

Seventeen American organizations and institu­
tions will receive more than $3.75 million In
grants to encourage public, awareness and
participation in securing world peace.
Fellowship grants were awarded to the Nleman
Foundation. Harvard, $150,000. and to the
Overseas Development Council, Washington.
$200,000.
Individual research and writing grants totaling
$1 million went to 34 people representing 20
institutions in the United States. Australia. Brazil
and Mexico.
The foundation has awarded more than $445
million to support programs in mass com­
munications and individual creativity, education,
mental health, peace and security, tropical
medicine, conservation and other areas.

CAPE CANAVERAL tUPI) Amid nuclear arms negotia­
tions in Geneva, the Army
lau n ch ed s ix P e rs h in g 2
missiles Tuesday In a "tex­
tbook exercise" to test bat­
tlefield readiness of launch
crews normally stationed In
West Germany.
The last missile launched at
11:17 a./n. EST marked the
44th Pershing 2 test firing in
the program, officials said, and
the 26th since 108 of the
intermediate-range nucleararmed missiles were deployed
among NATO forces in West
Germany beginning In De­
cember 1983 to counter Soviet
SS-20 rockets.
All six flights — the most
conducted in a single day —
from the Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station to classified

A u t o - O w n e r s In s u r a n c e
l.ifr. Home. 1'ur. Business. One m imr saw it all.

CatiaDany
tV *

&lt;&gt;&lt;7 ^

: 1;

k

'S'fes.

PICKING,
PRUNING A N D
POW ER LIN ES
CANBEA
DEADLY M IX.

Ordinarily, power lines are
quite harmless. But when you’re
picking fruit or pruning trees, keep
clear of them. It you or a branch or the
pruning tool you are using should
touch a power line, the combination
could be deadly.
And under certain conditions, such
as wet weather, if a branch makes con­
tact with a power line, you could get a
shock just from touching the tree trun1
Always look up. Whether you’re
climbing
trees,
:—
» * « i iflying
i / n i | kites,
rvuca, installing
m o u r n in g
antennas or doing any activity that puts
you in possible contact with overhead
lines. Don’t be a victim of your own
carelessness.

FLOniOA POWER « LIGHT COMPANY

�'V

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Kidnappers Renew Death Threat
A gainst French Hostage
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — The pro-Iranian kidnappers
holding the French hostage Jean-Louls Normandln said he
has not been given a reprieve and vowed to carry out their
death threat unless France meets their demands.
"W e announce that the execution of the spy Normandln
was not delayed, nor canceled, and could be carried out at
any time, until we get assurances of the intentions and
guarantees (made by France)," the Revolutionary Justice
Organization said In a statement delivered Tuesday to the
An-Nahar newspaper.
The group said It was studying a list of "apologies,
guarantees. Justifications, and promises newly made by the
French government." The statement did not elaborate on
what promises were made.
The group wants France to stop selling arms to Iraq —
Iran’s enemy in the Persian Gulf war.

Israel To Limit Pollard Data
JERUSALEM (UPI) — 'Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir
said "there are limitations" to what Israel will disclose
about its Investigation into the Jonathan Pollard spy
scandal, even though it has pledged to cooperate fully with
Washington.
Shamir told Israel's state radio Tuesday that the
government is under no obligation to send the United
States copies of everything It compiles from the Investiga­
tions.
"W e told them there are limitations to our cooperation
with them." the radio quoted Shamir as saying.
Shamir's remarks came as one of two Israeli committees
investigating the Pollard espionage affair took testimony in
secret from Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin.

Iran Flouts U.S. Warning
ATHENS. Greece (UPI) — Iran flouted a U.S. warning
against using missiles to close the Strait of Hormuz, the
world's gateway to Middle East oil fields, and warned that
any attack on Iran will lead to "insecurity for Americans
around the world."
"Th e Americans once tried to come to Tabas (in eastern
Iran) but were stopped by a storm in the Iranian desert."
Iranian Parliament Speaker Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjant
said Tuesday, referring to a failed 1980 hostage-rescue
mission to Iran that left eight Americans dead.
On Monday, a White House spokesman said Washington
warned Iran, through Swiss diplomats, that It Intends to
keep the Persian Gulf shipping lanes open. Earlier U.S.
reports said Iran has Installed Chinese-made Silkworm
missiles in the Strait of Hormuz, the mouth to the Persian
Gulf.

South African Strike Continues

FI.

Cost O f A ID S
W o rrie s Koop

March u, 1M7-7A

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Surjeon General C. Everett Koop, a
eadlng voice in promoting AIDS
education, now promises to use
his influence to focus attention
cn how society can handle the
"astronomical" cost of the dis­
ease.
Speaking Tuesday at the Na­
tional Press Club, the nation's
top doctor signaled a shift in
where and how he will approach
the AIDS issue after spending
much of the last year working
primarily to publicize the public
health risk.
"The costs of this disease to
our society are already high and
t h e y ar e g o i n g to g e t
astronomical," he warned.

t

'Not A Bill / Can Sign

Reagan T o V e to H ig h w a y Bi
By Helen Thornes
U K White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate
GOP leader Robert Dole called on
Republican lawmakers today to
"belly up to the bar" and back
President Reagan on his veto of
an $88 billion highway bill to
help his stature in the wake of
the Iran arms scandal.
Reagan reiterated today at a
meeting of Senate GOP leaders
he planned to veto the bill.
W h ite H ouse spokesm an
Marlin Fitzwater said Reagan
said the measure "is simply a
bad bill that needs redrafting"
and "Is not a bill I can sign into
law"
Fitzwater signaled Reagan's
stance, which appeared to con­
tradict White House reports of a
new conciliatory attitude on the
president's part when he told
reporters: "There’ll be a lot of
vetoes."
He added that "every veto has
some risk to it but the president
is willing to take that risk."
Fitzwater said Reagan told the
GOP leaders, "I strongly favor an
adequate and fiscally responsi-

Sm

E d ito ria l, 4A

ble federal highway and transit
program, but this bill is not it."
Following the meeting, Dole
told reporters that sustaining
Reagan's veto "is very important
for the president. Notwithstan­
ding the merit on his side, it's
important fot' his leadership."
On Capitol Hill, House Speaker
Jim Wright of Texas said that if
Reagan vetos the bill, "he's
putting his own petty personal
wishes to show macho charac­
teristics above the Interests of
the country."
"Thent's a big gap between his
rhetoric and his reality again."
Wright said of Reagan. "There
isn't any foundation in fact t6
the objections to this b ill."
Wright argued that the highway
bill does not contribute to the
deficit because most o f the
money comes from a trust fund
collected from a 9-cent-pergallon federal gasoline tax.
The highway bill, which would
complete construction of the
interstate system and permit the

states to Increase the speed limit
on rural interstates to 65 mph,
was due to arrive at the White
House today and be vetoed as
early as Wednesday afternoon.
Reagan faces an uphill light to
sustain his veto, although he
picked up a vote today from Sen.
Robert. Stafford, R-Vt., .and
hoped to gain additional support
with his promise to back a
scaled-back bill — containing the
65 mph speed limit — if upheld
In the Senate.
Dole and Stafford said the bill,
which passed both houses of
Congress by overw h elm in g
margins, should be killed not
only Tor its pork barrel pro­
visions, but as a show of symbol­
ic support for a president strug­
gling along a comeback trail.
" I m ade the p oin t that
particularly those of us In the
Senate had a special responsibil­
ity to belly up to the bar and vote
with the president on this, even
though it's going to hurt a bit,"
Dole said.
Should Reagan lose. Stafford
said, "I think it will damage his
re-emergence."

Reagan has been trying to
establish a take-charge image in
the afterm ath o f the Iran
arms-Contra aid scandal and is
leaving town for the first time
this year Thursday to drum up
support for his legislative pro­
gram.
Dole told reporters Mondny
that Reagan "needs to demon­
strate that he's In charge and
he's effective."
Some lawmakers have sug­
gested a veto would be in­
consistent with the "fresh start"
Reagan hoped to make when lie
named Baker as his new chief of
staff to forge belter relations
with Congress.
■

Baker said Sunday he tried to
advise Reagan of the risks in­
volved In a veto, but found the
president "far more determined
on the substance and merits of
that bill than on the political
im plications." Fitzwater ac­
knowledged cooperation with
Congress is an important ele­
ment of the drive by Reagan to
turn the comer on (he Iran amts

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPI) - The first strike
by black South African transport workers continued for a
13th day today with employers still refusing to meet with
the trade union nominated by most of up to 14,000 men
Involved in the work stoppage.
The strikers face dismissal following the publication
Monday o f a special law allowing transport authorities to
fire anyone who refuses to work.
Transport services spokesman Tlenle. Van den Berg said
. . UtwttWia.000 and U.000 men had stopped work at cargo
• depots, railway stations and the Jan Smuts international
airport.
j
■
Pi lip ,wm *f tire * J v*'
l

NATION
IN BRIEF
Police Free Chained INeman
In Rowhouse Basement
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — Police raided a rowhouac today
and Treed three malnourished women who had been
shackled in the basement for at least a month and
discovered severed human arms and legs.
A 43-year-old man who lives In the house was arrested
and a police spokesman said he would be arraigned on rape
and kidnapping charges.
"I've been 20 years In the police business and I've heard
a lot of things, but I would probably have to put this at the
top of the list." said Officer Joseph Scott of the Sex Crimes
Unit.
Police were tipped off when a fourth woman who was in a
car with the suspect escaped from the vehicle and flagged
down a patrol car. Police Capt. Clifford Barcllff said the
suspect was apprehended shortly afterward when the
woman told them where he could be found.
CpI. Eugene Withers of the Sex Crimes Unit said the
suspect could face additional charges besides the rape and
kidnapping accusations. Police declined to release the
suspect's name until he was formally charged.
Authorities also discovered several human arms and
legs, Withers said. The city medical examiner's office was
called to the scene to investigate.

Report: Casey Was M asterm ind
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Evidence shows ex-CIA Director
William Casey masterminded supplying arms to the
Nicaraguan rebels. The Sew York Times reported today,
citing unidentified members of Congress investigating the
Iran-Contra scandal.
"Casey's fingerprints are everywhere." one lawmaker
told the newspaper.
Another said Lt. Col. Oliver North, the White House aide
fired for his role In the scandal, "surely needed the
expertise and help of the CIA to do all the things he did In
Central America."
The lawmakers, two senators and one representative on
the special committees Investigating the scandal, did not
describe any evidence for their claims, but other legislators
and committee staffers said their probes are focusing on
Casey as a prime force behind supplying arms to the
Contras.

l i ^

l I W

c o m p e titor’s ad. If
ig in any c u rre n t o &lt; »
isn ’t low er or
an identical item, ou
P
l l e

p r ic e

D O E S N ’T

A L R

S

?

Soviet Emigration Reform
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The State Department. Congress
and American Jewish organizations are stepping up
pressure on the Soviet Union to permit more Jews to
emigrate and have contact with the outside world.
Secretary of State George Shultz said Tuesday the
Soviets have allowed more Jews to emigrate in the last
three months, but Soviet emigration restrictions still block
progress in superpower relations. He promised to press the
issue when he vlsitB Moscow next month.
In preparation for the meeting April 13-16 between
Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze,
mid-level Soviet and American experts met Tuesday at the
State Department to discuss a series of issues, including
human rights and minority emigration from the Soviet
Union.

b E A T , T . . . W E ’ LL M E E T IT

I T!

Each

Ladles’
Ribbed
Tank Tops
Assorted colors.

38 Oz. Rlnso Or
65 Oz. Arm &amp;
Hammsr
Powder laundry
detergent. Lim it 2.

FAMILY! DD LIAR
S A I Ib l A C I l O N

(j U A H A N I l I U

Disposable Quaker State
BIc Razors Super
»uper Blend
b
Or Lighters
10W30 Oil
Tw in Deck lighters,
10 or 12 pack razors.

Limit 5 qts.

r ^ rte s ^ a o d A U U ^ a M it^ o lis ^ to ra # 2

&gt;4SI
It topm
top* 1 IIM
M . *1
At Nwt ZSU,
ZSth SL.
Si . Sm Iim *
On I m m IInina. Ha Enina T a Danin**
l w eemm iw w
i - ________ Sun. 1 4

I® Through This Wooksnd. Ousntitioa llmtlod

i

�r
I

1A— Sanford Harold, Sanford, FI.

WtdntxUy, March 31, 1W7

V icio u s W a r Brings M o z a m b iq u e T o Standstill
By Philip W illiam s
QUELIMANE. Mozambique
(01*11 — Margarltn Nyaga sat‘bolt
upright on her fcrubhy hospital
tied and winced over the reiiUilnr. of her left leg. It was taken
off 4 inches above her knee after
she stepped on a land mine.
An overworked Italian surgeon
ripped off' dressing and gauze
and fingered the neat folds of
flesh around the painful stump
with professional pride.
"Her left leg was destroyed so I
took it off. It got Infected. We
opened It up to drain and now
she is nearly ready to have It all
sewn together again." he said.
The wards of hospitals across
northern Mozambique all have

a m p u t a t i o n c a s e s . At
Quelimane. the provincial capi­
tal of Zambcsla. 600 miles
northeast of the capital or
Maputo, there were five.
The surgeon said land mines
were the commonest cause of
the Injuries he saw.
"During the rebel offensive
last fall, we had 15 to 20
amputations a week. Now It's
down to two or three." he said.
Margarita, a 25 year old with
comrow hair, fled her home near
Namacura. 30 miles to the
north, when marauding rebels
came to bum It.
When she returned after the
raid, she stepped on a mine left
In her vegetable patch.

PARIS (UP!) France and Walt Disney
Productions agreed Tuesday to build a Dta
ncyland theme park near Farts and turn a placid
farming community into a Magic Kingdom with
Mickey Mouse, thousands of Jobs and millions of
visitors.
If all goes according to plan, ground will be
broken in 1988 on a 4,800-acre site for the Euro
Disneyland &amp;'d the park will open In 1092 for
an expected 10 million visitors a year, half of
them from abroad, French and Disney officials
said.
Prime Minister Jacques Chirac and Disney
Chairman Michael D. Eisner signed the agreemen! In a ceremony with government and
company officials at Chirac's headquarters.
Hotel Matlgnon.
The park will be built In Mame-la-Vallee, a
farm town 28 miles east of Paris that will be
paved and developed. Farmers who live there
say It will be the end of some of France’s richest
farmland.
'
During two years of difficult negotiations, the
French extracted promises from Walt Disney
officials to emphasise French and European
culture and the French language at the park in
exchange for low-interest government loan
guarantees and Improved transportation.
Construction Of the Initial phase of the project
— the Magic Kingdom theme park itself — Is
estimated to cost $1.6 bUUon.

Interest, officials said. A "pivot company" with
Disney as the leading partner will raise $600
million while bank loans will provide the
remainder, they said.
France will allow up to 40 percent American
participation, representing one of the largest
foreign Investments ever in France.
Eisner said Disney may have to dig deep Into
Us own pockets if tt cannot raise enough private
financing. "W e will begin now to look at ways to
raise the financing and If all ‘
wr will
resort to the magic of Disney hnu .ope the
dream comes true." he said,
The project Is to create 20.000 construction
Jobs In France, suffering from 11 percent
unemployment. When the park opens 30,000
people will be required to operate It. not to
mention those needed for the periphery bustnesses.
Paris was chosen over 200 other European
sites considered because of Us central location In
Europe. Eisner said he expected good altendance year-round despite cold winters,
Eisner said French and European culture will
be emphasised but that Euro Disneyland will be
similar lo other Disney parks In Anaheim. Calif.,
Orlando, Fla., and Tokyo.
"Walt Disney borrowed from the Europeans
and brought It to America. We're simply going
to return it," he said.

activities on the pnrit’s periphery over 60 years
will rake the cost to About $6.6 ballon.

percent from 18 percent.Tickets are expected to
be about $20 and annual revenues about $1
ila)s to extend
K tb epm rkB t*

.economic boon the park will bring t«
■'

■■ ■ : •

i'

as 10 and the use of captives for
slave labor.
E q u a lly , w itn e s s e s w ill
w hisper p riva tely that the
Freelimo forces of President,
Joachim Chlssano arc no angels.
They say they masquerade as
rebels, looting civilian villages in
the remoter country war zones
and In some famine areas cream
off 15 percent and more of food
aid delivered by foreign agen­
cies.
"When a Freltmo commander
wants conscripts, he sends men
into the villages to take them on
the spot — as young as 15." one
in depen den t w itn ess said.
v*Therc is no choice. The soldiers
say 'You. you and you.' Young
people hide in the fields or leave
the country to avoid being pre­
ssed."
Evidence abounds that the
ragged Freelimo army is in bad
shape. Morale is low. there are
frequent desertions and dis­
cipline is poor. "Basically, the officers do not
know how to give orders or
where to start." said one mili­
tary source. "T h ey couldn't
knock the skin off a rice pud­
ding. They have no warrior
tradition."
A Freelimo infantryman earns
600 meticals ($3) a month,
which Is often not paid on time
and uniforms and boots are in
short supply,
Nor arc the men fed properly.
In Nlassa, soldiers at the main
Lichlnga barracks were regu­
larly given overnight leave
passes in the town because there
was no dinner to give them.
They sponged food off friends.
y the 'conduct of the war.
which costs a conservatively
estimated $270 million a year.
"There Is very serious concern
over (he structure of the army
command," said one. "Senior
officers often show they don’t
know how many men they
command and where they arc. I
think the president knows how
bad it all is."
East bloc — especially Soviet
— advisers compensate for the
ta c tic a l Ig n o ra n c e o f the
Mozambican officers but little
Information was available on
how effective and influential the
foreigners are.
Travelers have successfully
pinpointed major government
offensives weeks in advance of
attacks by simply monitoring
build-ups of Soviet officers In
local hotels.
Maputo rumors Insisted the
Russians arc' heavily engaged In
gem smuggling In the northern

$ 8 5 ,0 0 0 A w a r d e d In C r e m a t io n M i s t a k e
FORT LAUDERDALE. (UPl) - A widow
said she is disappointed In an $85,000 court
award she received for her stress when her
husband died and a funeral home gave her
an empty um Instead of his ashes.
"My husband was worth a whole lot more
than that. My husband was worth lota and
lots of money." Martha Noble said after the
verdict Monday.
The 82-year-old widow said when she
discovered the urn was empty. Kraecr
Funeral Homes gave her another one, but
she could not be sure whether the ashes
were (hose of her husband.
"I've Just got to accept that um. even
though I don't know if It's my husband or
someone else," Noble tearfully told the Jury.
"I’ll never feel right about that."

She said, however, she still talks to. cries
over and prays for the ashes In the um.
Her attorney. Gloria Pomerantz, said
although the award was only about one-fifth
of what she had asked, it would serve to
show other funeral homes they should use a
system to assure remains are kept In order.
Raymond Noble. 49. one of the couple’s
three children, had Joined his mother in the
civil suit, but received nothing.
Ralph Noble died April 14 at the age of 78.
He had suffered several strokes and spent
the last years of his life in and out of nursing
homes.
Four days after he died, his body was
disposed of at Kraeer's crematoriun In
Pompano Beach. The remains were then
taken to a Kraecr chapel a few miles away.

"Somehow an overly helpful employee
gave them the wrong um ," Krcer attorney
Jonathon Sabhlr told the Jury. "H e made
the extrem ely unfortunate' mistake o f
assuming this um contained the remains of
Ralph Noble. It turned out to be empty.
Kraecr then replaced the empty um with
one filled with ashes. Mrs. Noble said,
however, she couldn’t be sure they were the
right ashes.

war zones on the side.
Almost all of Mozambique's
standing 12.000-strong army (75
percent conscript) is engaged tn
the war. bolstered by regulars
from Zimbabwe and recently
Tanzania.
A fall offensive last year by
Rcnam o from bases inside
Malawi into central Mozambique
brought a scries of frightening
reverses for the government and
the loss of several Important
towns.
Zimbabwean troops, usually
restricted to policing the vital
150-mile Belra road-and-rall
“ c o r r id o r " to Z im b a b w e ,
stepped up assistance and the
towns were retaken. Experts say
between 10,000 and 15.000
Zimbabwe troops arc deployed
In Mozambique at any time.
T h e ir ca su a lties are not
thought to be high. But the cost
of the intervention (calculated
unofficially at $3 million a week)
must make senior officers in
Harare wonder about the feasi­
bility of long-term com m itt­
ments to their neighbor.
Recently Tanzania also threw
its weight behind the flagging
government war effort in re­
s p o n s e * '^ a p p e a ls fr o m
Chlssano. Witnesses say about
1.100 troops were initially lifted

Ia IIb IIcI

from Dar cs S alaam In to
northern areas. Many are sta­
tioned on the key approaches to
Qucllmanea' Nlrr*cdaln.
The lightly armed rebels, who
enjoy support from South Afri­
can and among business Inter­
ests In the former colonial power
Portugal, have pul perhaps 50
percent of Mozambique ofT limits
to the government.
But there Is little reliable
evidence they have more than
nominal control In those areas
and It Is difficult to make out
Renam o's political program
beyond a demand for free elec­
tions.
Diplomats tn Maputo say the
level of support for Rcnamo from
Pretoria, which has a vested
Interest In a weak Mozambique,
r e m a in s a c o n s t a n t , u n ­
spectacular trickle:
“ T h e r e b e ls h a ve g re a t
nuisance value and that's what
the S ou th A fr ic a n s w a n t,
nuisance. They have no Interest
In a Rcnamo government and
admit privately they do not
believe Rcnamo can win.” said
one envoy close to the govern­
ment.
But all observers agree that,
barring some dramatic devel­
opment. the war will continue a
festering stalemate of attrition.

LIQUOR 6

PRICES G O O D MARCH J?5 thru 31

SANFORD

CASSELBERRY

Hwy. 17-92 8 . C K y Limits

Hw y. 17-92 @ 436

LO N Q W O O D

A LTA M O N TE

Hwy. 17-92 N$ar 436

Hw y. 17-921 Block
E a s t of 1-4

H A P P Y H O U R D A ILY 4 T O 6

s a ys u p r g m o o

UMtT 4 REBATES PER HOUSEHOLD

Juror Terry Cooney of Davie said pity for
the woman did not have a major impact on
the decision.
"The Nobles trusted the business lo take
care of the remains and that was not done.”
Cooney said. "W e felt it was a family
wronged."

m™*

N
1149 AIM
3 iSuAM
11'Tn
9.49

fffiAVWHIUI0 679
11.99

rLvU.
r « | 4r1
1•
i J l J l 1 .1
■
FintUuiom fietiom l Bank of Florida
Bmack Offices Sttkwide
Member FDJC

tiiiiin wi iii MAH
GIIBIY'S
VODKA

£ 9 9
J&gt; ui i k

(.11111) SA1 MAH ,'h ,
BACARDI
RUM

A
49
U /Su Ml

GORDON'S
GIN

"

W

W

W---

l.ltlll) Mil S MAH n
J&amp; B
SCOTCH

|0 9 9
1O /SO Mlj

�Raines C o n s id e rs M o v e T o A m e r ic a n L e a g u e
By 8*m Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Tim Raines said this morning he will
to Sarasota for a "summit meeting"
th agents Tom Reich and Bill
ndman today in an attempt to
plore his major-league options for
c fast-approaching 1987 baseball
ison.
talnes said a new option under
isideratlon is a move to the Amcrli League.
‘We are going to go over our options
d see If we can decide where we're
ng from here." Raines said. "I'm
xlous to play ball."
talnes. a free-agent after six all-star

campaigns with the Montreal Expos,
said several American League teams
have expressed an Interest In his
services and he is considering a move
from the National League if he cannot
agree to terms with an N.L. club.
"I prefer to stay in the National
L e a g u e ," Raines said from his
Heathrow mansion today. "But I'm
considering baseball, period. I want to
be in somebody's lineup on Opening
Day."
Last week* Reich met twice with
Houston Astros’ general manager Dick
Wagner, but nothing was agreed upon.
Raines said the Astros are overloaded
with outfielders and they would have

Baseball
to unload Jose Cruz or Terry Pulil to
make way for Raines.
Reich has also had conversations
with the Atlanta Braves. San Diego
Padres and Los Angeles Dodgers.
Raines turned down, a two-year. $2.2
million offer from the Padres.
Seattle Mariners owner George
Argyros called Raines twice last week
and wants him to play in the
Kingdome. Raines, though, said that Is
unlikely unless Argyros "comes up
with some big bucks."

"For me to go to the a last-place
team in the American League, he
would have to come up with some big
bucks," Raines said. " I f these guys
think I'm going to sign a contract for
less than last year, then they don't
know me."
Raines made $1.5 million while
winning the National League batting
title with a .334 batting average last
year. “ I want to have the opportunity
to make at least that much or more
this year," Raines said. "Really,
though. I've never even thought about
Seattle.
"I would rather stay in the National
League unless it was something I

Stevens Keys
Lyman By Pats

'eplay: Rams
lank Oviedo
By Scott Bander
Herald Sports Writer
LONGWOOD — After the Lake Mary Rams
lipped the Oviedo Lions last Friday, 4-0, in
kninole Athletic Conference baseball action,
)edo skipper Howard Mable said that things
fcild be different the next time the two teams
■kred.
B u t Tuesday night's rematch, in second-round
Blon of the Lyman Greater Greyhound Spring
Bitatlonal Baseball Tournament, was a replay of
■ first encounter as Lake Maty stopped Oviedo,
HD, before 225 fans at Lyman High.

By Scott Sander
Herald Sports W riter
LONGWOOD — After Lyman pitcher Sandy;
Hovis broke both wrists while playing basketball;
last week. Lyman baseball coach Bob Mc-j
Cullough. who did not have a wealth of pitching:
in the first place, sounded the call for new arms.
"W e arc going to have to experiment,":
McCullough said after the incident. "W e’ll have to:
try some kids that haven’ t pitched that much."
McCullough did Just that on Tuesday night as!
senior rlghty Dale Stevens, who has been used:
sparingly In relief appcarenccs, got his first start!
or the year. Stevens responded by pitching a!
three-hitter over five innings while helping the!
Greyhounds to a 5-4 eight-inning victory over;
Lake Brantley, in second-round action of the!
Lyman Greater Greyhound Invitational Baseball
Tournament.
The victory advances Lyman into Friday
night’s championship game. Lyman will take on
Lake Mary, a 4-0 winner over Oviedo, on
Tuesday. First pitch is scheduled for 7:30. Lake
Howell and Lake Brantley will meet in a losers’
bracket game on Thursday at 5. Lake Highland
Prep and Oviedo will play the other losers'
bracket game at 7:30 on Thursday.
Lyman pitcher Ross Urshan (4-1) relieved
Stevens in the sixth and was credited with the
victory. McCullough said that he was very
Impressed with the way Stevens pitched. "H e will ,
be a starter for us for the rest of the season.” !
McCullough said. "He did one heck of a Job for
this being his first start."
The victory improves Lyman to 9-7. The loss
drops Lake Branlley to 4-12.
Lake Brantley pitcher Greg Ebbert (2-1) went

ft h e victory advances Lake Mary Into the
Kttmament's championship game that will be
“ yed on Friday night at 7:30. The Rams will
e on Lyman, a 5-4 winner over Lake Brantley,
Tuesday. Oviedo will play Lake Highland Prep
Thursday at 7:30 in a losers' bracket contest.
Howell and Lake Brantley will play the
br losers' bracket game at 5 on Thursday,
me victory ups the seventh-ranked (4A) Rams
13-2. The loss drops the seventh-ranked-(3A)
feis to 9-4.
-akc Mary pitcher Anthony Laszalc, who
isrd a five-hitter Against Oviedo last Friday,
fc&gt;t the Lions In check once again as the senior
(hty pitched a four-hitter. Laszalc, 5-0. struck
t 10 while walking only two. Laszalc only
’ id
ded a bunt single to Oviedo's 1-2-3 punch of
r lk Merchant, Tony Belflower, and Glenn
hie.
cH
Thlis is becoming an Intense rivalry," Laszalc
a ." We always seem to play really good when
fan#1 them.
face
Heap'}, tell you how good it f^els to beat them. I
y-^fet-pum'ped up when we play Oviedo, t
tea pretty good today, and I had good
rol."
ledo pitcher Scott Bowers (3-3) took the losa
the second time in four days against the
Bis. "I pitched better today than I did last
le,"* Bowers said, "They are a tough team."
tshman lefty Chris Crockett pitched the final
o Innings for Oviedo.

S C C 's J i m m y M e r r i c k ,
above, extends fu lly as he
d r i l l s a t w o -r u n d o u b le
against Lake C ity C o m m u n i­
ty C ollege Tu e s d a y a fte r­
noon. A t left, M e rric k barely
b e a ts th e ta g b y S o u th
F lo r id a c a tc h e r H a rle y
Bofshever for another run.
M e rric k drove In four runs as
the R a id e rs pounded the
Tlm b e rw o lve s, 18-11.

Lake Mary coach Allen Tuttle said he was
■pleased with the way his team hit the ball, but
Based with Laszalc's effort. "W e didn't hit the
111 as well as we did yesterday (an 8-3 win over
^ke Howell)," Tuttle said. "But the kids did a
»d Job. Anthony did a heck of Job out there."
The Rams had only six hits, but took full
■vantage of some Oviedo mistakes to score the
“ie ’s first two runs,
[The Rams scored an unearned run in the top of
le first. Shortstop Shane Letterio. who will sign
] grant-in-aid with the University of Miami on
&gt;ril 8, led off with the first of his two hits: a solid
lgle to left. Letterio advanced to second on Wes
'eger’s groundout. The speedy senior then stole
ilrd. Letterio scored when Bowers unleashed a
lid pitch.

f

Letterio said the victory was especially satising. "It's always nice to beat Mark (Merchant),"
stterio, who la a close friend with Merchant,
id. "W e arc playing good baeball and I sure
&gt;pe we can keep It up."
The Rams scored another run in the top of the
&gt;urth frame. Designated hitter Eric Blrle. who
las emerged as one of the Rams best hitters,
lapped a single to right. Mike Smith came in to
un for Blrle. Smith stole second and took third
(n a groundout. He scored when Bowers
incorked another wild pitch.
"Those wild pitches really hurt," Mable said.
'We can’t afford to give them anything."
Oviedo's best chance to score came in the
bottom of the fourth. Merchant led off with a
walk. Merchant then stole second. Belflower laid
■own a perfect bunt single that advanced
Merchant to third. Belflower then stole second.
Laszalc. however, struck out the side to end the
threat.
Mary lengthened its lead In the fifth with a pair
if runs. Weger started things off with a single to
enter. Weger then swiped second. Ryan Lisle
allowed with a single, moving Weger to third.
Veger scored when Laszalc helped himself with a
acrifice fly to center. Blrle then reached on an
rror, Lisle advanced to third on the play. Lisle
cored whe Steve Shakar ripped a single to right.

couldn't refuse."
Along with Seattle. Raines said the
Kansas City Royals and California
Angels have been in touch. "Those a re .
the kind of teams I would like." Raines
said. "They are contenders every year
and I would enjoy playing for them... If
I decided to leave the National
League."
With Opening Day Just 12 days
away, Raines said he would be
pushing It to get ready on time when
— and if — he finally signs with a
team. "1 think It might take Just a
week to get In the groove, but thatwould be pushing it." Raines -said.
"But I'm In good shape and ready ."

HtraM Photo* by Tommy Vlncont

Raiders Unleash Heavy Artillery,
In 18-11 Triumph O ver Lake City
By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports Writer
Already with one loss to lowly
Lake City this year. Seminole
Community College's Raiders
found themselves down 8-3 go­
ing into the bottom of the fourth
Inning Tuesday. That’s when
the Raiders unleashed the heavy
artillery as they went on to
pound out 20 hits In the game en
route to an 18-11 victory over
the Tlmberwolves In Mid-Florida
Conference baseball at SCC.
SCC improved its overall re­
cord to 12-18 with its third win
in its last four games. The
Raiders now stand at 6-8 In the
conference and have a noncon­
ference game today at 3 against
Indian River at Fort Pierce. Brian
McGinnis will pitch for the
Raiders. Lake City is now 2-11 in
the league.

Baseball
After two scoreless frames
Tuesday. Lake City erupted for
four runs In the top of the third
off SCC starter David Riddle.
The Raiders bounced back for
three runs in the bottom of the
third but the 'Wolves rocked
R id d le and r e lie v e r D ave
Westgate for four more runs in
the fourth for an 8-3 lead.
.SCC came back with another
counterattack in the bottom of
the fourth as they rallied for five
runs to tie it at 8-8. then
exploded for three runs in the
sixth and six in the seventh to
pull away. Meanwhile. Matt
Lawton came on in relief of
Westgate in the fifth as held the
Tlmberwolves in check while the

Raiders pulled away. Lawton got
credited with the victory and his
record now stands at 2-0.
Chris Gage and Jeff Fortune
led the 20&gt;hll offensive barrage
with four hits each with Fortune
collected a double and three
runs batted in and Gage a
double and one RBI. Chad Sims
was 3 for 5 for the day with two
doubles, a triple and three RBIs
while Danny Moore also had
three hits, Including a double,
and three ribbles.
Lake Mary High graduate
Kevin Hill and Jimmy Merrick
had two hits each and both
drove in four runs. Hill's two hits
were a double and home run
while Merrick had a double.
Chad Hart, one of six Lake
City pitchers, took the loss for
the Tlmberwolves.

Mouw retired the final two Lyman batters.
Lyman and Brantley combined for 20 hits with
Lym an holding an 11-9 edge in the hit
department.
Coach Mike Smith's youthful Patriots were
once again plagued by mental mlscues. "W e were
down by a run. with a guy on first and nobody
out In the bottom of the eighth," Smith said. "I
gave our hitter the bunt sign, but he swung right
threw It and grounded out. Our next guy up
ripped a single. If my player would have bunted,
we could have tied the game. It's mental mistakes
like that that have cost us."
Seven out of the nine Greyhounds hit safely in
the game. Shortstop Darren Boyesen led way for
Lyman as the senior clubbed three base hits.
Catcher Marty -Martin also had a solid game with
a pair of hits. Chris Brock chipped In as the
second baseman registered two hits.
Freshman third baseman Jerrey Thureton
turned in a spectacular hitting display for the
Patriots with a pair of solo home runs. Brian
Bellaw had a pair of hits.
Lyman started out quickly as the 'Hounds
scored three runs in the top of the first. Chris
Radcllff led off with a walk. Brock then singled,
advancing Radcllff to third. Brock proceeded to
steal second. Kenny Jackson followed with a
double, scoring Radcllff and moving Brock to
third. Third baseman John Burton then rapped a
single to left, scoring Brock and advancing
JacKson to third. Stevens hit a pop-up that the
Brantley Infield couldn't handle, scoring Jackson.
Lyman extended its lead to four, with a run in
the fifth. Radcllff singled and stole second. Brock
followed with a walk. Radcllff and Brock took
second and third on a sacrifice bunt by Jackson.;
Burton then grounded out, scoring Radcllff.
"W e played pretty good today," Burton said. " I
hope that we play well on Friday."
The Patriots narrowed the gap to one. scoring
three runs In the bottom of the sixth. Thurston
led off with deep homer to left. " I didn't think it
was gone at first," Thurston said. "But I knew the
second one was gone."
Ted Schieffelln then walked. Jim Morse also
walked. Freshman Mark Gabrovlc came in to run;
for Morse. Greg Thomas singled to load the bases.;
Ebbert followed with a single, scoring Schieffelln,:
and keeping the bases full. Bellaw Joined the!
hitting parade as he singled, scoring Gabrovlc.
The Patriots tied the game up in the bottom o f
the seventh. Thurston led off with a towering
homer to left. "He can really hit," Smith said.:
"Imagine how he'll be hitting when he's a Junior
ora senior."

French Quarter Souvenir Shops Gear Up For Final 4
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - The Final
aur and all the attention and profit it
rings to a community begins its
Escent on New Orleans today with the
■rival of three of the participants.
French Quarter souvenir Bhops
ere loaded with Final Four pennants
id sweatshirts Tuesday and basketill fans began filling the hotels that
it one of the nation's leading tourist
inters.
T h e No. 1 N evada-Las Vegas
unnln' Rebels will lead the parade
ito New Orlenns todny with an

afternoon arrival. The Syracuse Or­
angemen and Providence Fryars will
hit town tonight.
The Indiana Hoosiers. however, will
not arrive in New Orleans until Just
before their scheduled Friday after­
noon workout at the Louisiana
Superdome, where this weekend a
record college basketball crowd is
expected to gather for the climax of the
NCAA tournament.
Providence will face Syracuse in
Saturday's opening semifinal contest,
the tipoff set for 2:42 p.m. CST. Thirty

Basketball
minutes after the first game Is over.
Indiana will tangle with Nevada-Las
Vegas.
The national championship game
will begin at 7:12 p.m. CST Monday.
Since the NCAA has decreed the
Final Four will be conducted only In
arenas that scat at least 30.000 fans.
New Orleans has become one of the
few spots In the country that can

successfully bid on the event.
"There appears there will be a
rotation for the Final Four among five
or six cities." said Superdome market­
ing director Bill Curl. "Seattle (the
Kingdome). Indianapolis
(H ooslerd om e) and M inneapolis
(Metrodome) all have Final Fours
scheduled. The next available one is
1993 and we plan to go after that one
very hard.”
Just as with the Super Bowl, city
officials now look upon the Final Four
as a major coup for their town. Last

year the local organizing committee In
Dallas had a budget well in excess of
$1 million to see that the teams and
officials were properly entertained.
New Orleans hopes to do exactly the
same thing without spending a dime —
using all volunteer help to escort the
teams around town and to see that
their off-the-court stay is as hasBle-free
as possible.
"The bidding process for the Final
Four has become a very Involved
process." said Final Four tournament
director Tom Jernstedt.

�*iw»i..w»«fcaHildas*»)"*&gt;'■ir.iH

4.

10A— Sanfsrd Htratd, Ssnford, FI.

Wsdrwrdsy, March 25, i f 7

U.S. D avis Cuppers Victim s O f P aragu ay N ightm are

1

It was more like a bull fight than It
was a tennis match. On *very point
the huge crowd would yell, shout
obscenities, throw coins and general­
ly try to disrupt the Americans as
much as the could.
They taunted and threatened the
Americans, they beat on drums and
danced when their player scored a
point. It was a bad dream , a
nightmare for the U.S. Davis Cup
team and for all of us watching on
ESPN.
Davis Cup competition Is special to
all of us who love tennis. It’s the
ultimate In team tennis competition.
It not only stirs our emotions because
of the great tennis but it also fans
patriotic fires within us.
Our boys are playing for our

country. It means a lot In the world of
tennis. Indeed It might mean a lot In
thv.WywW f- rfod.
There was no way we could win In
Paraguay. To begin with we did not
send John McEnroe and Jimmy
Connors down there to play, we sent
Aaron Krlcksteln and Jimmy Arias.
True. It was on slow clay and
Krlcksteln and Arias are supposed to
be great claycourt players, and true
Connors and Mac probably turned
down the chance to play, but the fact
remains that we lost to this tiny and
lennts-poor country.
I'm not really sure that we could
have won even If we had sent our
best team but I sure would have felt a
lot better If we had. Of course. Jlmbo
and Mac would have been so emo-

crowd. They even yelled ns our guys
were about to serve. They beat drums
and .♦nng. They threw things at our
pluyers as they were about to hit
overheads. How could anyone play
under such circumstances?

L a rry
Castle

tlonal about the conditions that they
would have faced down there that
they would have probably walked out
of the competition or worse.
It Is a tragic situation when you
think about It. The match was taken
from us. There was no controlling the

We could play Paraguay 500 limes
nnd win 499. Who can bleat anyone,
though, under the circumstances
that we had to piny? The players
were even fearing for their lives and
the lives of their families. It’s pretty
hard to concentrate on hitting a
tennis ball when people arc telling
you that you arc going to die.
'
Linesmen were making horrible
calls against us. even cheering for
Paraguny. Ball boys would not sweep
off our end of the coivi during

changeovers. They called footfaults
on us at very crucial times and called
balls out against us that were way in.
There was simply no way we could
win.
I'm sad about this and I'm
ashamed of the Davis Cup olTlcials for
letting It happen and not doing
anything about It. Tennis has always
been the one sport that is above all
cheating and poor officiating that
permeates other sports. Tennis has
stayed clean and above board — until
now.
What happened In Paraguay was
not right, not fair and could set Davis
Cup and. Indeed, tennis Itself back for
a long time. Something has to be
done...

t

R o o k i6

Propels
Yankees
United Press International
FORT LAUDERDALE - Rook­
ie Keith Hughes's RBI single
Ignited a three-run seventh Inn­
ing Tuesday night that lifted the
New York Yankees to a 7-3
Grapefruit League victory over
the Boston Red Sox.
Hughes's single tied the score
2-2 and, after a walk to Wayne
Tolleson loaded the bases, both
Rickey Henderson and Lenn
Sakata had run-scoring singles
to put the Yankees ahead for
good.
Mike Pagliarulo hit a three-run
homer In the eighth against Red
Sox reliever Wes G ardner.
Right-hander Bob Tewksbury
limited the Red Sox to five hits
and one run over the first six
Innings, the longest outing by a
New York pitcher this spring.
In a separate development.
New York right-hander Rick
Rhoden reported continued
soreness In his back and will not
be ready to pitch for the Yankees
in their first series of the regular
season against the Tigers In
Detroit
Rhoden, acquired from the
Pirates during the offseason. Is
not expected to appear In a game
until next Tuesday. He Is sched­
uled to pitch again Sunday April
5 In Fort Lauderdale against
Yankee minor leaguers. If all
goes well, he could join the team
In Kansas City by April 10.
###

w in , lo s e &amp;

P
ttfiM
V
J
e
H
lP
N
p
r
,
.
&lt;&amp;triNsSfeUS j -iu- ;
SeftaLI TfliNk

TtfefbUHpfcSOUJmil ;

extended his hitting streak to 12
games with a single and a home
run to lead the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a 6*1 victory over the
St. Louis Cardinals.
Bream, who Is hitting .367
through 17 games, hit his sec­
ond homer In as many days, a
two-run shot in the sixth Inning.
Jim Morrison broke a 1-1 tie
with a two-run homer In the
fifth. He scored R.J. Reynolds,
who led off the Inning with a
triple.
Brian Fisher, Bob Kipper and
Barry Jones held the Cardinals
to five hits. Kipper. 2-0, gave up
three hits In five Innings and
earned the victory.

C L E A R W A T E R - M ik e
Easter's sacrifice fly scored Von
Hayes In the fourth Inning
Tuesday and Don Carman and
KISSIMMEE - Paul House­
two relievers combined on a holder sparked a four-run eighth
t h r e e - h i t t e r to l i f t t h e
Inning with a two-run, basesPhiladelphia Phillies to a 1-0 loaded single and Gerald Young
Grapefruit League triumph over drove in the winning run to lut
the Cincinnati Reds.
the Houston Astros to a 6-5
Carman started and gave up triumph over the Detroit Tigers.
two hits In five Innings, his
Rafael Montalvo pitched the
longest outing of the spring. eighth inning to cam the victory
Mike Maddux allowed one single •and Charlie Kerfeld retired all
In three Innings and Steve three batters In the ninth for the
Bedroslan faced three hitters In save.
the ninth.
Cy Young winner Mike Scott
Phillies third baseman Mike started for Houston and gave up
Schmidt did not play because of six hits In five Innings. Including
a p u lled le ft c a lf m u scle. home runs by Chet Lemon and
Schmidt suffered the Injury In Alan Trammell. Glenn Davis
Monday's game against the New homered o ff Detroit starter
York Mets at St. Petersburg.
Frank Tanana In the fourth.
BRADENTON -

Sid Bream

TEMPE. Arlz. -

Phil Bradley

Martin Runs 48.7 440
— Osborn Vaults 13-0
* ,r f &gt;*' •

t

Seminole High saw and conuered the beat 4A teams the
4e
feat coast has to offer Tuesday
night, but the Tribe couldn't
overcome 3A power Lake Wales Osborn's best in the vault this
at the Clearwater Sup and Fun year bad been 11-6.
Meet at Clearwater High.
Arthur Hersey took a third
By virtue of victories in both
‘ ice for the 'Noles In the 120
the 440 and mile relay. Lake
_ hurdles with a time of 14.5
Wales came away with the team and he was also third in the 330
title with 46 points compared to Intermediate hurdles at 40.0.
43 for coach Ken Brauman'a Alan Seward took fourth In the
Semlnoles.
120 highs at 14.5. Steve Warren
Seminole and the rest of also had a good meet for
Seminole. County's teams will Seminole as he finished fourth In
travel to Gainesville Saturday for the 220 at 22.7 and fifth In the
the Fkxlda Relays.
100 meters at 11.1. Lewis Butler
The Tribe had some im ­ was sixth In the triple Jump at
pressive Individual perfor­ 43-10V4.
mances Tuesday led by Earle
It waa In the relay races where
Martin's first place In the 440 the meet outcome was decided.
dash with a season’s best time of Lake Wales picked up 20 of Its
48.7 and Sonny Osborn's second 43 points by winning both relays
place In the pole vault with a while Seminole scored 14 points
personal record 13-0. Martin’s with a second in the mile relay
previous best In the open quarter (3:25) and third in the 440 relay
------------- ------- a 49i6 whUe
(43.5).

a

La Salle, Southern Miss
Advance To NIT's Finale

D R E W

Track

Field

W ila n d e r Fights O ff Masso
BRUSSELS. March 24 (UPI) - Defending champion Mats
Wilander of Sweden fought off a first-set attack from Argentine
Eduardo Masso Tuesday to advance to the second round of the
•315.000Belgian Indoor Championships.
Masso broke the Swede's service In the seventh game of the
first set. then won the next two games before Wilander
recovered to take the set 7*5.
However. Masso loot his momentum In the second set. when
Wilander. conceded Just two games to win 6-2.

stroked a two-run single to
highlight a three-run third Inn­
ing. helping the Seattle Mariners
snap a nine-game losing streak
with a 4-3 decision over the
Milwaukee Brewers.
YUMA, Arlz. — Jeff Leonard
doubled In the tie-breaking run
In the 10th Inning and Joel
Youngblood followed with a sac­
rifice fly to lift the San FranclBco
Giants to a 5-4 triumph over the
San Diego Padres.
The Padres closed to 5-4 In the
bottom or the 10th and had the
bases loaded, but reliever Keith
Comatock struck out pinchhitter Carmelo Martinez to end
the game.
ST. PETERSBURG - Bob
Welch allowed three hits In 4 2-3
Innings In his spring debut and
Mariano Duncan singled In two
flfth-lnnlng runs to help the Los
Angeles Dodgers defeat the New
York Mets. 2-1.
Welch allowed no runs, no
walks and struck out six. The
right-hander Is recovering from a
bone spur In his pitching elbow
and made only two previous
appearances in B-squad games.
New York starter Bobby Ojeda
gave up seven hits over six
Innings. The Mets* run came In
the eighth on a home run by Lee
M a z z l l l l o f f r o o k ie G r e g
Mayberry. It was the third home
run this spring for Mazzllll, who

leads the Mets In homers. RBI
(10) and batting (.441 in 34
at-bats).
E a r lie r T u e s d a y . D a rry l
Strawberry handed Manager
Davey Johnson a check for
•1.500 for two fines for missing
two workouts last weekend.
PALM SPRINGS. Calif. Andre Dawson drove In two
runs, one with h|s fourth homer
of the spring, and Steve Trout
blanked California for seven InnlngB to lift the Chicago Cuba to
a 5-0 victory over the Angels.
Dawson handed the Cubs a 1-0
lead with a first-inning sacrifice
fly off loser John Candelaria and
added a solo homer In the third.
Shawon Dunston's single scored
G a ry M a tth e w s , w h o had
doubted, with a second-inning
run for Chicago.
Trout lowered his ERA to 0.75
In recording his third victory this
spring.
TUCSON. Arlz. (UPI) - Tony
Phillips collected four hits and
two RBI to key a 19-hit attack,
carrying the Oakland A's to a
16-12 victory over the Cleveland
Indians.
Mark McGwire added three
hits and two RBI for the A's.
Cleveland committed four errors
— three by third baseman Cory
Sndyer — that led to four
unearned runs.

NEW YORK (UPI) - The La
Salle Explorers finished the reg­
ular Bcason with a 16-12 record
and little expectation or quali­
fying for postseason competi­
tion. Thursday night, they'll be
playing for their Aral National
Invitation Tournament champi­
onship in 35 years.
La Salle advanced to the final
Tuesday night with a 92-73 rout
c f A rk a n sa s-L ittle Rock In
Madison Square Garden. The
E x p lo r e r s fa c e S o u th e r n
Mississippi, which rallied behind
a 15-2 run late in the game to
defeat Nebraska 82-75 In the
other semifinal.
"W e were all but dead three
weeks ago," said La Salle Junior
Tim Legler. who scored 26
points against the Trojans. "W e
had no place to go and I thought
we would be going our separate
ways for spring break. That was
one of the low points of my
career; now I'm at a high point."
Instead, the N IT selection
committee took Into account the
Explorers' schedule, easily the
toughest of the NIT participants.
La Salle lost close games to
North Carolina, DePaul. Notre
Dame and Temple, and played
in the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Conference.
LaSalle Jumped to leads of 9-0.
12-2 and 15-6, hitting Its first 4
shots and 5 of Its first 7. all
3-polntera. The Trojans zone
d efen se c o lla p s e d to d en y
fresh m en s en sa tio n L io n e l
Simmons Inside, but allowed
uncontested Jump shots from
the perimeter. Simmons played
with a broken nose suffered in a
second-round gam e against
Niagara and finished with 21
points and B rebounds.
The Golden Eagles, on the
other hand, started by shooting
2 for 15 from the field. The
Comhuskers led by as many as
13 points In the first half and
were ahead with 6 minutes left
In the game before Southern
Mississippi rallied. Randolph
Keys and John White finished
with 24 and 19 points respec­
tively and accounted for all the
points In the game-cllnchlng
burst.
Southern Mississippi coach
M.K. Turk Is worried about La
Salle's 3-point prowess, but said
the game will be decided closer
to the basket.
“ Three-pointers are Important,
but you very, very rarely win
games with 3-polnters," he said.
"You win games In the paint. In

Basketball
the nitty-gritty crunch time, you
win them In the paint."
Southern Mississippi, 22-11,
was winless In Its two other NIT
appearances. T h ey w ill be
fighting history In that La Salic's
only other victories In the NIT
prior to this year, came In 1952
when 6-6 freshman Tom Gola
took the Explorers to the title.
They had not won an NIT game
since.

UPI Picks
Thompson
WASHINGTON (UPI) - John
Thompson, college basketball's
high priest of defense, has been
named United Press Interna­
tional’s Coach of the Year after
guiding Georgetown to 29 victo­
ries and the Big East title In
what was expected to be a down
year for the Hoyas.
Thom pson, the burly exBoston Celtic, transformed a
poor-shooting team with one
bona fide star — first team
All-America Reggie Williams.—
and a collection of scrappy role
players into one of the most
tenacious defensive teams tn the
nation.
Despite lacking team size, and
a true center, the Hoyas used a
c o m b i n a t i o n of a wel l camouflaged match-up zone,
man-to-man and full court pre­
ssure to befuddle opposing
teams and coaches.
"Most people like to strut
around and throw the ball at the
basket," Thompson said. "W e
look for people who appreciate
the music of defense. That way
the court has two ends — twice
the challenge, twice the fun and
twice the playing time. A sub for
us In 15 minutes can feel like he
put In 30 minutes of effort and
contribution."
Thompson was selected by a
panel of 50 sportswrlters and
broadcasters from across the
country for the award, which
was announced Tuesday.
"I'm hot sure we alt un­
derstand what Thompson is do­
ing down there." Bald Seton Hall
Coach P.J. Carleslmo, whose
team handed the Hoyas two of
their losses.

�*1
t, Msre* U, 1H7-I1A

Sartfard HaraM, Saitfsrtf, FI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

SC O R E B O A R D
KORIIOARD: UPI/NIRAIO HRYICIl

TV/RADIO
TY/RADIC brigM'lUang

JKUwwiittt. AJtrsnt
Florida) Hartford4
I FtataiTahOI

BASEBALL
3p.m. — Samlnol# CC *f India- a i m

* FtontaatMtahWhH

TILtVI!*CH

2 Weeks A n d Counting, A ll
21 NHL Teams Still In Hunt
United Press International
With a little less two weeks to go In the NHL season, all
21 teams still have a mathematical chance to make the
playoffs.
The Toronto Maple Leafs In the Norris Division and
Buffalo Sabres in the Adams are each fighting for the final
playoff spot In their respective divisions, and their
desperation showed Tuesday night at Buffalo.
Rick Valve scored 17 seconds Into the game to Ignite a
four-goal first period outburst and .the Maple Leafs held on
for a 6-5 victory over the Sabres.
"It was the most intense game we played all year long,
from start to finish." Toronto Coach John Brophy said.
The Maple Leafs took a 5-2 lead into the third period.
Buffalo's Dave Andreychuk scored his second goal of the
game at 7:42 to make It 5-3, but Peter Ihnachak restored
Toronto's a three-goal advantage at 9:32. Buffalo re­
sponded with power-play goals from Phil Houslcy and
Mark Napier, but that's how It ended.
The NHL allows 16 of Its 21 teams In the playoffs and
seven have already clinched spots. The New Jersey Devils
can become the first team to be eliminated tonight when
they play the New York Rangers in a Patrick Division
game.
Meanwhile, the race for second place In the Patrick
Division Intensified Tuesday night.
At Unlondale, N.Y., Mike Ridley. Craig Laughlin and
Bobby Gould scored goals to pace Washington to a 3-1
victory over the New York Islanders, pulling the Capitals
within one point of the second-place Islanders.
j ‘ Jther games. Montreal edged Quebec 4-3 and
P l .-jLurgh tied Philadelphia 3-3.

Paterno Begins To Rebuild
UNIVERSITY PARK. Pa. (UPI) - Penn State coach Joe
Paterno has begun to rebuild his team as the Nlttany Lions
prepare to open spring practice minus 15 starters from last
year's national championship squad.
"This spring practice is going to be ope of the more
Important we’ve had," Paterno said Tuesday. “ We have a
tremendous amount of work to get done. We have to
literally rebuild our defense, our offense and our whole
kicking game. It will require a very, very productive spring
practice for us to have any chance to be a decent football
tekm starting next year."
Penn State, which defeated Miami in tfic Fiesta Bowl on
Jan. 2 to win its second national championship. Is losing
15 starters from that 12-0 squad, plus kicker Massimo
Manca and punter John Bruno.
The start of spring training was postponed from Tuesday
to Saturday because of injuries.
Among those players for whom Paterno will have to find
replacements are linebacker Shane Conlan, running back
D.J. Dozier, left tackle Chris Conllm defensive tackle Tim
Johnson and quarterback John Shaffer.

W yom ing Fields Calls For Coach
LARAMIE, Wyo. (UPI) — Wyoming's athletic department
Is receiving calls from basketball coaches who want the Job
vacated by Jim Brandenburg, Athletic Director Paul Roach
said Tuesday.
Brandenburg, who took Wyoming to the Final 16 or the
NCAA Tournament, announced Tuesday he Is leaving after
nine seasons to become head coach at Western Athletic
Conference rival San Diego State.
At a press conference in Laramie, Roach said his athletic
department Is receiving inquiries and recommendations for
the head coaching position of the Cowboys.
"It Is our priority to hire a veteran coach and an
outstanding coach," Roach said. "And because of our
program and our national recognition. I think we can
achieve that."
"He (Brandenburg) built the program to the point where
It la now a premier program," said Roach. "W e thank him
for his efforts and his accomplishments and we wish him
the best in the future."

Bruno Revives Hopes With TKO
LONDON (UPI) — Frank Bruno revived his hopes of
challenging for the world heavyweight boxing title
Tuesday when he slopped James "Quick" Tlllls after 1
minute. 50 seconds of the fifth round of a scheduled
10-rounder at Wembley Arena.
Bruno, 25. caught Tlllls with two heavy rights a minute
into the round, sending blood spurting from the Ameri­
can’s nose. Tlllls, 29, of Tulsa, Okla., backed up against the
ropes and attempted to cover up. but was unable to keep
the Briton at bay and signalled tp referee John Coyle that
he had had enough.
#

N ogler Fights Title Stripping
BOSTON (UPI) — A lawyer for Marvin Hagler Is expected
to seek a temporary restraining order Friday to block a
World Boxing Association decision to strip him of his
middleweight title, The Boston Globe reported In its
Wednesday editions.
Hagler’s lawyer, Morris Goldings, has a hearing sched­
uled in the federal Appeals Court before Judge Robert
Keeton and is expected to ask for a preliminary Injunction.

I am - ESPN. UH O Worn*". NCAA
DivHWi H Taumamtat Ctampomhi* 9***

ill

4 9 m - ESPN. U|M«ti|M. Frink!*
Randanuv StationUkitacIL)
1 pm -

ESPN. NHL WnMnpNn Cagitail
UN f.Iihndort

HMMRjtfcg

Ip fit ~ ESPN, MutullUringi lift Spring
CtamptoVtatU

K*nN

Sp m ~ESPN.NAKCltertyCHUN

J i m — ESPN. C*N«t: NCAA OtrUon II
RADIO
ApNRk Ui
t pm - WMMAAM (IN). Miltar tt.
Mariintirillt (V l) SpoaOnay
ti ll p.m - WUCF FM Hill. Sport,
Ferum

DOGS

Al DoUta
OMSUNlS' Xa.hr III.1
S' Xl«Nr.lll.1t0mnM!«*r|Hrl
Sutton 14,Ota IMriaruty I
jM*kr Ci IIh i
VlNncU T, Contril Florid*CC1
Seminal*ILL***CityII
MfkSdwt
OkooU M'ttap Start I
EtafflHr AAntal 1
Baptiit TtmpN f. Otrtom Christian I
IhrWII
Falt*. Lap*) A Sprue, Crtta)
Gahmayl Ekdftl
Lymai Sprit h, Potanol
LabaMaryLOriOtal
Lymta I IM* ImtNj 4
lASIIAlli SamhahAtari* Caatatan
L OR Al
LakiMary
4 * — ■I)
UtaHMPH
4 l " ! 114
t t 1 41
Outdo
) I'l 44
LakeRrtatU,
I
I 411
a 4 41
Lyman
lASEIAll: (XMIIITIM STANDING!

DOOIACIND: AllaatardOrianta
National Leagw
Turttar'lrtwm
lot —VIA I: FIJI
I CiWRmrt
I S IM ) »
] TonyJamal
i e IN
4 Tutl Block,
4«
ett h u m . p iiiio a n i T II h i w n
)»d-H.D:*.F4
J CJEmyltaki
IN 4N IN
4 TomtMk
IN IN
J MonyOnTtaSita
FM
0 (HI OH. P (HI UMi T (H i) HNj
DO(t t) DM
M-I/IAM:)IJ4
I MlFOtky
t)N IN IJt
i BionicHork
IN FN
5 RapidOtiluary
IM
DIM) Hit; PIF!)MM, TIBM) 14AM
4»-l/U.D:ll.FF
I Fmcy'iFlon
14M FN 4M
I SotaN'l Rta Bo
IN JK&gt;
4 Hoodfli«tr Edd*
IN
a till IF.Ni P m il IFFMl T (SMI 4»N&lt;
QMl DM(NN) 41444. Stritrtod: FtU* Mta
l*-|/M,CilUF
I Wootal Roger
UM UN SN
I KUClHtap
4N IN
OIHI UM! Fltll FAFt; T ItSFI NI.N1"
Wk-l/lt, D: SIN
I tauiparW*dy
IN 4N IN
4 WrigMCtayta
UN IN
5 HoodRhiwBath
IN
Q(HI F7N. P(Ml IFMi T 1141} llip
FN-VIA A: Jl.lt
i EiuTtaPiin
UN IM IN
I WillingSpNH
UN SN
I Short Clrtvtl
)M
Q(Ml IN N. P(HI lMNi T (H U MIN
MR- IFH. D. !IX
I talghlEvhn*
UN UN IM
I Atoood truck
IN IN
I Hutktf CoUon
IN
0 (HI HAN P(HI MM, T (1441 INN
HP-VU.C.HJ4
I Kiy'iRltaetlon
HR IN AM
4 HutUrCwi
IN 4M
I SoloSol
SM
atl-UURi P(U|FIM;T(Ht)MFJI
im -i/ iC iR *
I Mhgs'iDauh
IH )R 1R
a IdppChatit
IM AN
I CRlAngHElea
4M
Q(HI MN&lt; P(H) SAN. T (144) MM
lllfe— )/M,Ci UN
« UCDiitanfCamaM
IFN AN SM
S QuiNACvy
IN IN
F tatter BrokeIN
Q (H ) FIN. P 14)1 INN&gt; T IA4F&gt;
14FIN. Pic I (141 ( H I I taaan 4 M Sr
PM UN; JackpMCarryrrar U4NN
UN-S/U. AillJI
1 Ponny'lImage
UN 4N 4N
F MitayilY
IN 4M
I MagnumRola
SN
0 II FI N.Ni P (1-1) MNi T (IFF) IFIN;
QtatNUMRDUSFMIIAtRFHFlM , .

UN-imliNJI

SailitaaVaguo
UN IN FN
5 WMDumiE
AN AN
I CJ HaulIk
IN
Q IH) MM; P (AS) NIM; T (AH I iliMr
logarNctl IAH-f) ASIAN
A-S4FA H— UK4U.

4

BASEBALL
IASIIAU: TandaykrtMlh
Florida ll. It CtahAl Florida4
Rotl.noF. FITS

Tennis
ing her one year at Stanford.
"I've been working more on
court speed and conditioning."
Shriver. the No. 5 player in the
world, used a picturesque drop
volley to capture the first point
o f the third set tiebreaker.
Werdel won points off Shrlver's

Wl

SI. LauH
Sta Fftadtco
Sta Dun

Pet.
.Fas
FJF

411
SM
SH

Nr* York
Cincinnati
Pittiburgh
Chicago
Philadelphia

Ml

SN

-Si
IFI
44F
Ml
NO

AtUnU
Amtrtf'll L&gt;fn
N** Yak
Baton

MO
4FI

Mi
at

7 m

Kanut City
I r &lt;Ft
OokUnd
I I 4Ft
Mllwarta*
I It AH
Chicago
I It 4M
Taut
I i«
California
I It SI
OmUnd
F II Ml
StattU
F It NO
Dotroit
4 IF in
ToMtaykRaMltt
HowttonlNlAOrtrpitS
LooAngoWtt NYktattl
PilttSurghA St Ltaltl
SHtntAhU**ukaaJ
Oakland IAClruUnd II
StaFrtaclta I SanOtagol
PhiladrtphUI. Cincinnati I
ChicagoIN UI CaliforniaI
Chicago WhHg Sta « . Tout ppd rain

FUi

Torontott Kantat City. ppd. rau
AtUnU y|. Rattlmarg(til. ppd. ran
BaltimoreIn) n Montroal. ppd run
NY Yankee, F. Bofon )
Witaitaiy't Camel
Kanut City n DttroH at Lakeland,
NY Matt tt. Mmnttott at OrUndo. FU

PhiiatatgWa t t Oitaga taut, So, Us)
at laratota. Fla
Toronto «t. St. Lowit at St. Potortturg
FU.
CNcago White Sot (it) tt Houitoniul
atKIulmmae. FU.
Haulton (it) n. Pittiburgh at
Rradtaton-FU.
AtUnU tt Montreal at Weil Palm
BaediFU'
Lot AngeMtt Cndmali al Tempi FU
SaafUtt Oaklandat Phoeruc Aria
Cleveland vt M.taaukee al Chandler.
Aria.
Sta FrancUce n California al Palm
Spring, Cai.l
OtcagaCutart SanDUgaat Yuma. Aril
lammoro tt Taut at Pori CtarUHo. FU.

OH

lotion oA NY YinUot at Ft.
laodardala. Fla. 1*1
TSwnCay‘1 Cameo
laflmoro vt Kantai City al FI.
MyartFU.
SI.UudvATarontael Dwedki FU.
Montreal vt. Taut at Pvt Charlotte. FU
HoutUn vt CMcagt Wh.it Sci tt
Saratria FU
iMtenvi lot Angelei atVore loach. FU
Dotroit n Atlanta (tt) at Wnl Palm

SIZEUPi ST. LOUIS CARDINALS

e*Ki. fu
NY M*N •• S'
PittS**!
PtViburg Ftl
PMitataU it OncMus it TimpA FU
IMIU &lt;1 Cl'ifpmU It Pttm Spriflft

CM

Sin Frontnet pi
■ CNtiUta
ScottaiN. Aril
Oakland « O«l*o Cwbt It Mai*.
Arki ’
A'Untl (ill *t NY Ymlttt it Ft
LaudorSah.Flatnl.
Mitaaukta n Sin 0&lt;ago *t Yuma
Aril. InI
utpMmta

SOFTBALL
(Of TULL; Hannah Alkhta Caataratal
Taan
Ouhta
Lakatranlhy
LataMary
Lim Hotai
Samtah
Lyfttta

«
I

l
t

1

1
1
1

I
I
1

4

Mntar'tmott

B» AR

•— HI
— la
— II

I
a

14
14
II)

1
2
1

Vtatartiimt-FUritaSUNtt
Artntn utu Port }i Strptan F. Avt'in

it

PnttatfNn m Into S'lN u
MtatRtF
USata 14. Niagarall
tMrtaAa Ft, ArttaM FI
SsvttarnMiurtiippmSt LarikFI
CWNntU U. Otgon StiN U

IM ita
Ntorrttl

SouthernMiUNtippI It Vtatarb.lt N
. NtSntAi 11. epkhmgton Ft
USilNF*. IIHnoitStlNM
Arttatlt LittU Bock R. CllifomU FI
At Urn York
ToaoSay’i Rowtll
USota II. ArktatM LIHI*RackFJ
SouthernMotittlppi O NttanU FI
AJ Hr* York
Ttartdor, MorckFt
US*IU n SouthernMriliuippl. Fp m

HOCKEY
HOOKY) NMLSTANOINCS
Wain Caalaraa
Patrick DhrtkUo

0*««I.St CUwdl

WIT

SOFTBALL: Tortda^iryton,
Laka Highland Prop IS1. ill I OrprtUnd
(144 III
Trinrty Prtp I I I III II taunt Dora BMt

11A141II

BASKETBALL
RAIRtTIAU: NIASTANDINDt

Milaaukn IU. Na* York44
Chicago41 PtiiladripNa41
StaAntanh Iri. Hautton IC1
Denver IN LAClIppartlU
Pheenii UA LA Laker&gt;n
Sacramento tit PortUnd IU
WodoottaykCornel
Milwaukeeit ladune. F.Npm.
UtthatLAClipptrt. W Hp m
Detroit al Coldtn SUN. U N pm.
IASRETIALL) Womarii NIT
Ouerierifuti
Uteri' Inckel
Marc*SI
Arktata, 1II CaiMorMlarkeUy N
ThirdPSao
Creighton41. ProvtanceN
Filth PUco
SttptanF.AiatmFI MontanaM

iPh.U
44 II i
n it ti
NY Itlindon
Walkington
U H 4
NY Rangar,
X U I
Pittiburgh
II 15 II
» 41 a
No* JtrtOY
AtamtOtrinta
a Harford
N IF F
•B-J
J4 N II

ll

Cailtro Clkltrikco
AlUalK OhrUita
» L Pci. Cl
SI II .FN PhiUtaiphu
M H lit U
Wathmgion
MJ) ill IS',
Mr* York
It M 344 X
Nr* Jtriay
x e ni H
Cntlral DrritUn
&gt;A'lanta
Ml i Dotroit
4FI I
■MiuauAoo
M I
Chicago
»F II
41) U'l
CUvtUnd
SI H'y
WattoroMonaco
Madnatl Onnian
L Pet. Cl
tOlllAt
a MF Utah
n sh r ,
54 SM ll'y
N IN U'J
San Antonio
U IFF »
SacramonU
N » K
Paata Dmu«
i LA Uktrt
.ns &gt;Portland
Ml 11
SeattN
SN tl't
Ooltan SUN
SN ll1,
Ptaonli
SM » ' )
LA Cllpptrt,
mi a
iclactad pttyott taflk
Tooiday'iRototh
Daila, III, Ne* Jtrwy IOF
BoHonlll.CleefUndM

Ua F

HA
IM
Ml
IFt

MS
til
in
IN
It?

14S
IS
isa
ISA
FU

Mi at

SOCCER
SOCCER, MISL STANDINGS
Eattero Drm-ka

U
MIt M4
UI 1
1'1
I
F'l

W l Pet.
14 14
F4 ll
F) II

Chvaland
DaDat
Mimeion

OOceo*

|N*« York
WttSn DMtNa
Tacoma
an Kantat City
in
San Oitga *
SSI S'i
WicNta
41) 41*
U IF 441 II',
St Lowit
Lot Angtta
4 14 IFF I)
llMiatatMCt
Twttay't Routt
Minnow, I. Dallet 4
W iSttlftf’l O intl

Marc* It

'

utinoitsuun. cuvtundsuun

Atlanta
United Frees International .
Two of the NBA's most dy-‘
namlc players suffered firstquarter Injuries Tuesday night.,
and their ability to recover:
meant the difference to their!
respective teams.
Dominique Wilkins left with!
blood streaming down his face. !
but returned to key the Atlanta’
Hawks* 96-87 victory over the
W ashington B ullets. M agic!
Johnson needed the support of
his teammates to leave the
court, and without the support of
the NBA's premier point guard,
the Lakers lost 108-93 to the
Suns.
At Landover. Md.. Wilkins
collected 31 points and 11 re­
bounds, playing the last 2 Vs
quarters with six stitches above
his left eye. Jay Vlnceilt In­
advertently elbowed Wilkins
with 5:33 left In the first period.
W ilkins returned with 3:22
elapsed in the second with a
bandage to protect the cut.
"It Just made me want to play
harder." Wilkins said. " I was
guarding the guv and I got
swiped across the torehead with
an elbow. This is the third time
this year I've had to leave a
game to get stitches, so I'm
getting used to It.''
Wilkins' injury highlighted —
or lowlightcd — a game (Uled
with bruising and sloppy play.
At Phoenix. Arlz.. the Lakers'
Johnson suffered a bruised teft
calf in a collision with Phoenix's
Jay Humphries with 7:38 left In
the firs t p e rio d . Joh n son
emerged holding his left knee
and soon fell. After several
minutes, he was helped off by
teammates and did not return.
Celtics 111,C a va liers81
At Hartford. Conn.. Larry Bird
made 13 o ( 16 field-goat at­
tempts en route to 32 points to
help the Celtics win their 23rd
straight home game against
Cleveland.
M avericks 119, Neta 107
At East Rutherford. N.J.. Mark
Aqulrrc, two games after being
criticized by Dallas Coach Dick
Motta. scored a season-high 43

... M E W H E '* ' “

TENNIS
TINNIfi VlrgWa SHottat WatUaglH

March11
Arktata, U. ArtUtaMSUNM(0T1
Calilomia I t FutNrtonSlate«C(OT)
NiagaraFa SttonHail AS
OregonStalets. No*Mi.icon
SI LouitFASt Pttor'iM
SouttarnMluktippi 41Miuktippi FS

Al RatMoglta. P.C
Molona Sukovl. CmtatSraki* tat i t
Dmt*. England. I I tt; tin, Carrltan.
Moulton. Tot tat. AnnoMMttr. Auttrliia. i 1.
54. Lori McNoil. Moulton. Til. tat. EIlM
Burg* Baltimort. Md. tF IFI). t A F):
Wtndr Turnbull, Auitrallo tat. JoAnn*
Ruliril. KIngimilL Va.41.IF: Etna Rnnact).
South AlrKa tat Stacy Mari* Largo. Md.
4 I. 4 ). Tory Ptalpt- iJrchmonl. N Y. dri
PatricioHy, HongKong. 04.F!

Better G o lf w ith JA CK N IC K L A U S

WON'T
•CtSSfMMLV
,OVE VOUrt.
wSL vou

U S » T O C O N TFL O L
NiNU
TH E SW
I N G ., T H E

uu

•war*
ftCTtoN
IT

Bucks 135, New York 9B
At Milwaukee. Craig Hodges
scored 27 points. Ricky Pierce
a d d ed 24 and f iv e o th e r
Milwaukee players scored in
double figures as the Bucks
routed New York.
Bulls B3, Philadelphia 91
At Chicago. Michael Jordan
scored 16 of hts 56 points In the
fourth quarter to lead the Bulls.
Spurs 103, Rockets 97
At San Antonio. Texas. Artis
Gilmore scored 24 points and
Johnny Moore contributed 17.
including a critical 3-polnter late
In the game, to help the Spurs
break a five-game losing skid
against Houston.
Nuggets 128, Clippers 119
At D enver, A lex English
scored 34 points to lead the
Nuggets. Denver's starting guard
tandem of Lafayette Lever and
Darrell Walker added 28 and 19
points, respectively.
Kings 128, Blasers 1 16
At Sacramento, Calif., Eddie
Johnson scored 26 points, in­
cluding 12 in the fourth quarter,
to enable the Kings to snap a
four-game losing streak.

TH U

o p *8»SK? s

Y it e

NEW FACES — Megrane It a tall, overpowering left hander who
could give Cardinals three southpaws In starting rotation; Infleldar
Jim LIndaman, tha club's No. I pick In tha 'as draft. It challenging
Pendleton for third bate job; LaPoint, a bust In San Francisco and
Detroit, won 33 games for Cardinals before leaving St. Louis two

„
_ W IT H

yilfl #go,

C U * t&gt;RCK
A FULU

oSim'

OUTLOOK — Asking McGee. Clark and Harr to return to I ) form
represents great expectations. Tha Mats can pitch with the Cardinals
and Naw York bats averaged more than a run par game batter than
St. Louis. With breaks, Cards could move up to second.

WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Supreme Court will be the final
arbiter in a dispute between the U.S. Olympic Committee and a
San Francisco group over the legality of a sports festival billing
Itself as the Gay Olympic Games.
In an hour of arguments Tuesday, the Justices heard a gay
tights lawyer and an attorney for the U.S. Olympic Committee
clash over whether the word Olympic can be used legally lo
describe other similar athletic events.
"The word Is ancient. It was first used In 776 B.C. and it was
used to describe a quadrennial athletic competition." said Mary
Dunlap, representing San Francisco Arts &amp; Athletics, which
sponsors a sports competition for people of all sexual
orientations every four years.

IU
Ml
MF
IN

IF IF N
F
»
£ltnjAtfi Mfftnct
NarritOOritUa
W L T FU. 6 F OA
u a m Ft in ai
Oltroif
St LOuH
M It ll FI D4 IFI
Chicago
M 14 U M Ml Ml
N M I IF IFI FIA
MinntMta
Tnronn
N N A 14 MF Nt
Saiflta Di.tuaa
t Edmonton
MS IM
41 FI
i Ca'gnry
44 n
Ml MS
&gt; Winnipeg
si it
SU III
Lot AngoUt
Ml SSI
M IF
IS! N4
Vancovrtr
I) 41
■ctMckodpUrtf hank
TwUir '1RitriH
TorontoA BufaUS
PtuudotpOiULPittiburgh1Hal
Montroal A Outbocl
Waihington I NY ItUndm I
Wotantay't Carnet
Ne* JertayalNY RtagervF.Mpm
Edmontonat Hartlorll Hpm
MtarwUatToronlAFapm
Lot Angektal Ootrait. F B p m
SI Laultat ChkugAI U pm.
Calgary at Wempag. I N pm
Ouitac
lutlalo

STRCNOTHS — Rookie ol tha Year Todd Worrell lad tha NL with .
34 oavat; itrong darting rotation ol John Tudor, Cox, Greg Mathew*
and Bob Forach, »upplamented by Dave LaPoint and rookI* Joe
Magranai tha neer peerle*a dafante of ahorttlop Ozila Smith and
■econd bataman Tommy Harr; oufdandlng team speed.
WEAKNESSBt — Third baseman Tarry Pendleton I* ragratsing
as a hitter; little protection tor Clark In batting order, although
Hariog plant to try McGaa In tha tilth spot; no consistency at
catcher; Lahti and Dayley both coming off surgery.

C o u rt To D e c id e G a y G a m e s Is s u e

H ft ni

IASXITIAU i NtaU

"I ruthed my*alI last year and I hurt myMlf further," McGaa
My*. 'T vagot to makeaura I’m100percent thl*timearound."

next two serves en route to a 4*1
lead to take control of the match.
Werdel won the tiebreaker 7-3.
the final point a blistering
forehand that passed Shriver
while she was standing on the
baseline.
Shriver. a finalist in last
week's $250,000 Virginia Slims
of Dallas, said she isn't sure if
Werdel has any strategy behind
her shotB.
&lt;

PH. DF OA

MimtaUMOtascblNpm
loltunoro ol Sta D*go. N il pm.

DoPaul N AppaUrtUn State0

ST. P E TE R S B U R G (U P I) -&gt; St. Lout* Manogar Whltay Hgriog
concoddd ttw Natlondl Ltagiw E « l pennant to the Mato altar only AO
gam «» tail taaton.
Ha provad a bailor prophet than manager. Tha 19RJ NL champlont
tuffard ln|url*o and ahocKIng tack of offanta In flnlthlng Jl Lk garnet
bahlnd Naw York with a Ft 13 mark.
Datplta tha trada ol Joaquin Andujar, Hariog'a pitching »!a!f hald
up admirably and Cardinal flaldar* mad# (ha (await error* In (ha
league, bul St. Louli hll |uit SI home runt and acorad a league low
401 runt.
"If wa tlay healthy, we've got a pretty good club," iay» Hariog,
who m w pitcher* Danny Cox, Jeff Lahti and Kan Dayley join the
team’* moot dangarou* two hitter* — Jack Clark and I N ) MVP
Wlllla McGee — on tha tldellnes. Clark tort llgamant* In hi* right
hand and McGaa I* *1111 recuperating from arthro*coplc *urgery on
hlilafl knee.

Werdel Stuns Shriver At Slims
FAIRFAX. Va. (UPI) - In only
Blxth months on the women's
tennis tour. Marianne Werdel
haa made her presence acutely
felt.
The 19-year-old Californian
ranked 36th In the world.
Masted her groundstrokes from
the baseline with uncanny pre­
cision Tuesday to stun secondseeded Pam Shriver 7-6. 3-6. 7-6
In th e fir s t round o f the
•150,000 Virginia Slims o f
Washington.
"She Just hits the ball so hard
and you don't sec it that often,"
lam ented Sh river after the
match. "From what I gather, she
misses quite a bit in a lot of
matches, but she was hitting
them pretty good tonight."
Wcnlcl constantly left Shriver
standing at the net. unable to
even Uft her racquet to attempt a
volley.
"It's hard for me: if my power
isn't going well, I don't have that
much to fail back on." said
Werdel, a Bakersfield native who
earned all-America honors dur-

- W E D N E S D A Y 'S S C H E D U L E

na^draE0 .

I f f KmgFmUM lyndCAM he NoSt ngNS—

PARTS A SERVICE
OPEN 7:30-5, M F
No appointment nocoasaryt

r* OPENING ★
APRIL 1ST
BOB’S TIRE A
AUTOMOTIVECENTER
"Complete Car Care
A t The Lowest Price"
2M0 8. OrtaaAs Or. lasfsri

DOG
RACING
NOW!

M O N T L Y T iM p u m .
Excspt Sunday, thru May 2nd

323-0583
Hwy. 17S2

321-7100
’

IN COM E T A X E S
FIGURED FREE
Bring Us Y ou r In e o m s T ax R atu m s
W a ’ ll Flgu ra Tham P R H t l
Uss Your Rafund As Your
Down Paymant — Driva Horn* Today
Why Walt! Wa’va Got Your Daall
Limited otter - Expire* April IS, IBS?

'hrjfewgBlij
tettyr
THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission tor ladtaa

Visit our two ctimatp-controlad
Oubhousat lot your Ena dWng
end entertaimrwK pleasuml

CLU8H0USC KSV.: •S1-1M8

• A N T O B IM M U A N D O
USED CARS

Ja’ IS b HWY
bANtOHD 3232173

bANIOHU
OHLANUO 4^b SUBB

NsrtSs( Ortaatfs. Jsat sIHvf. 17-M
M1 Osi Track Hasi. U ssIm C

Serry.NsOecUaasr l l

!I

�»' yn%«*»■

I

I

U A — Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

March 2J, 1H7

...Transit

Continued from page 1A

Bears Pum m el M arket
NEW YORK (UPIJ — Prkua ojiencd lower today
In active trading of New York Stock Exchange
issues as the rally that has boosted the market by
a quarter since Jan. 1 showed signs of faltering.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose
3.40 to a record on Tuesday, was off 5.40 to
2363.78 shortly after the market opened.
Declines led advances 571*420 among the
1.439 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 16.064.000
shares.
Stocks traded in a narrow range throughout the
day. and analysts said the market was muddled.

Prices were mixed at the close despite the Duv
average's advance to Its sixth consecutive record
level.
Newton Zlnder. a market analyst with E.F.
Hutton &amp; Co. said traders were cautious In light of
the lack of breadth In this week’s advance, which
has been concentrated In blue chip Industrials.
Harry Vlllec, of Sutro &amp; Co., said the market Is
overextended from both fundamental and
technical viewpoints and is vulnerable to a
correction of about 10 percent that would drop
the Dow to about 2200. But he added that prices
would find sturdy support at around the 2200
level.

Dollar And Gold
Both M ove Higher

Local Interest

These quotations provided by
m em b ers o f the N ational
Association o f Securities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
prices as o f mid-morning today.
Inter-dealer markets change
By United Press International
thmughout the day. Prices do
The U.S. dollar opened higher
not Include retail markup or
on major world money markets
markdown.
Bid Ask . today after two days of losses.
The price of gold scored solid
American Pioneer
8 8%
gains.
Barnett Bank
38 38%
In earlier trading In the Far
First Union
27% 28 V*
East, the dollar closed slightly
Florida Power
higher against the Japanese yen
&amp; Light
321* 32%
as the Bank of Japan Intervened
Fla. Progress
38% 39
for the second straight day.
35V* 35%
HCA
C e n tr a l B ank G o v e r n o r
Hughes Supply
26% 27%
Satoshl Sumita told a news
Morrison's
28V* 28%
conference the bank will step In.
68% 69
NCRCorp
w h e n e v e r n e c e s s a r y , in
Plesscy
40 41
Scotty's
14% 15 coordination with other major
Western nations.
Southeast Bank
31V* 31%
The dollar closed at 149.35
SunTrust
25% 25%
yen. up 0.55 in moderate trading
Walt Disney World 63 V* 63%
Wcstlnghousc
65% 65 V* from Tuesday's post-war low of
148.80.
Dealers In Japan said the
Central Bank Intervened when
the dollar hit the day's trading
low and showed signs of further
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
declines. The exact amount of
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
the Central Bank's selling was
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
not known, but dealers said It
today:
purchased between $300 million
Gold
to $500 million.
London
In European trading, the dollar
Previous close 408.75 up 0.50
opened higher In Frankfurt at
Morning fixing 415.00 up 6.25
1.8265 German marks, up from
Hong Kong
412.50 up 2.00
Tuesday’s close of 1.8116.
Now York
Comcx spot
414.50 up 1.00
gold open
Comex spot
silver open
5.95 up 0.046
ROCHESTER. N.Y. (UPI) (L o n d o n m o rn in g fix in g
Eastman
Kodak Co. said it will
change Is based on the previous
stop making a polyester yarn
day's closing price.)
called POY and cut back pro­
duction of another polyester
fiber In a move that will cut 575
Jobs at two Southern plants.
Dow Jones Averages — 10 a.m.
Kodak blamed the restructur­
30 Indus
2365.63 off 3.55
ing of Its polyester fibers busi­
20 Trans
955.67 up 1.94
ness on increased competition
15 Utils
221.27 ofT 0.06
from abroad.
65 Stock
886.87 off 0.31
"W e’ve been losing money for

Gold And Silver

The dollar opened In Zurich at
1.5248 Swiss francs, up from
1.5177 and In Paris at 6.0825
French francs, up from 6.062 on
Tuesday.
The dollar gained In Brussels,
opening at 38 Belgian francs, up
from Tuesday's close o f37.90.
In Amsterdam, the dollar
opened at 2.061 Dutch guilders,
up from 2.0535 and In Milan at
1.299.75 lire, up from 1,290.30.
But In London, the pound
sterling strengthened, starting
the day at $1.6125. up slightly
from Tuesday’s close of 81.6115.
In early New York trading, the
dollar drifted lower against key
foreign currencies In moderate
trading.
Gold opened $3 an ounce
higher In Zurich at $412.50 per
troy ounce and was $4.25 an
higher In London at $413 an
ounce.
The morning fixing In London
was $415. up $6.25 from Tues­
day's close.
S ilv e r gain ed sh arply In
Zurich, opening at $5.90 per
troy ounce, up from Tuesday’s
close of $5.70. and in London at
$5.8875 per troy ounce, up from
$5.71.

Kodak Cuts To Cost 575 Jobs

Dow Jones

FOO

n o n

Continued from page 1A
right supercedes the interests of
the cities in the matter of Impact
fees, even though It is not a
charter county.
There were no citizens or
builders speaking In opposition
to the impact fees.
Speaking in favor were Cheryl
Lynch o f the Homebuilders
Association of Mid-Florida and
Bill Stoller o f the National

AREA DEATHS
ELLEN D. MARTIN
Mrs. Ellen Davis Martin. 74. of
818 E. 10th St.. Sanford, died
Tuesday at Florida HospitalAltamonte, Bom Oct. 7. 1912 In
Inverness, she moved to Sanford
from DeLand In 1926. She was a
homemaker and a member of
New Bethel Missionary Baptist
Church. Sanford.
S u r v i v o r s I n c l u d e her
husband. John L.; two sons,
John L. Jr. and Willie Lee, both
of Middletown. N.Y.; six daugh­
ters. Beatrice Lawton. Belle
Glade, Doris M. Ware, Orlando.
Beulah Collins. Rochester, N.Y.,
Phyllis. Delores and Patricia
Parrish, all of Sanford; brother,
Emmltt Chandler. Jacksonville;
58 grandchildren; several
great-grandchildren.
Wilaon-Eichelberger Mortuary.
Sanford, in charge of arrange­
ments.

several years, and we couldn't
project any prospects for a re­
turn to profltlblllty In this pro­
duct line," spokesman Henry
Kaska said Tuesday of the de­
cision to stop making POY.
Hardest hit will be Kodak's
Carolina Eastman Co. in Col­
umbia. S.C., where the company
plans to stop making POY —
polyester partially oriented fila­
ment yarn — and Idle 100

Association of Industrial Office ■loner Sandra Glenn. With Mrs.
Parks.
Christensen's noted objection,
When it came time for a the motion passed.
motion, the commission was
KlrchhofT told the audience
silent.
that he owns no property that
Finally. Commissioner Bill would be enhanced by the Im­
KlrchhofT reminded them they p ro v e m e n ts to Lake Mary
had long studied the proposal Boulevard, and he pointed out
and he asked the county ad­ on a map exactly where his
ministrator for his recommenda­ holdings lie.
tion.
All the advisory groups and
"Without a doubt, I recom­ consultants, particularly Randy
mend It." Administrator Ken Young, Bob Nabors and Roger
Hooper said.
Nelswender, were thanked heart­
"So moved." said KlrchhofT. ily for their months of con­
with a quick second by Commls- centration. and after the vote,
which ended the day-long meet­
ing, the group adjourned to meet
later at an impromptu celebratlon for the ordinance's passing.
WILLIAM E. WICKLIYFE JR.
Mr. William Edward WlcklUTe
Jr.. 68, of 456 Fort Smith Blvd,
Deltona, died Monday at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. He
was bom Sept. 22. 1918 in
Anderson County. S.C. and was
a winter resident of Deltona
since November 1986 coming
from Greenville. S.C. He was an
Army veteran of World War II. a
service station owner, and a
member of Augusta Road Bap­
tist Church. Greenville.
Survivors Include his wife,
Ella; two daughters. Eleanore
He nderson. Deltona, and
Carolyn Brooker, Moline, Mich.:
one son. W i l l i a m E. III.
Greenville; sister. Vivian
Childers. Greenville; 10 grand­
children; one great-grandson.
Oramkow Funeral Home.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.

...H o t

1

_
of $150. The seller was then
arrested on charges of soliciting
in a rest area and dealing in
stolen property. Four gold rings
with stones that appear to be
diamonds were recovered from
the suspect, the report said.
John Lamac Phillips. 22. of
Union Springs. Alabama, has
been charged In the case and
was being held In lieu of $3,500
bond.
—Susan Loden

systems Including mass/rapld transit, bridges,
sewer, water, solid waste and drainage systems,
utilities. Jails and prisons, schools, libraries,
parks, health . are. cultural and recreational
facilities.
• 10-ccnt increase In gas tax — with 7V* cents
returned to the county of origin.
• $10 Increase In auto/truck tag fee — with
$7.50 returned to the county of origin:
• $10 Increase in drivers license fee — with
$7.50 returned to the county of origin;
• Ten percent Increase In auto/truck rental
surcharge — with 75 percent going back to the
county of origin.
All except the sales tax would go toward
transportation needs alone In accordance with
the findings and recommendations of the Re­
gional Planning Agency and plans of the
Metropolitan Planning Organizations, and in
coherence with the plans of the Florida Depart­
ment of Transportation.
\ So far. the plan has been endorsed by the
Orange County Commission, the Orlando City
Commission, and now Seminole County commis­
sioners. The other county Involved Is Osceola,
and the Seminole commissioners asked Alliance
people to see If Volusia County could be Included
as well. This, the alliance representatives said
they wllltry to do.
Bushrul said two of the legislators to write to
about this proposal are Sen. Tony Jennings and
Rep. Tom Drage, both of Central Florida.

...S tu d y
Continued from page 1A
Surveys this summer are to
firm up the zone's parameters,
develop financial proposals to
fund the work and begin struc­
tural and land acquisition plan­
ning. These Ingredients will be
presented to commissioners for a
determination about Implemen­
ting the program.
A hoped for funding equation
Includes as little city Involve­
ment as possible, through efforts
to secure state and federal grants
and p r i v a t e e n t e r p r i s e
assistance, according' to dis­
cussion during the two-hour city
commission work session. A
representative of the university
group said whatever Investment
the city made would be returned
in term s o f the program ’ s
benefits for Sanfprd's tax base as
well as the community In total.
Despite McClanahan's views,
the city’s other commissioners
arc optimistic about the prbgram
and one also views It philosoph­
ically.
"You can’t put a premium on
the quality of life." according to
City Commissioner Bob Thomas.
He said he believes the city
would be spending more than
the Initial $60,000 study fee "on
crime In the area If we don’t
approve this."
Commissioner Whltey Ecks­
tein cited low interest rates as
part of the "positive economic
climate that makes the ftlme
right to move on this."
Commissioner John Mercer
expressed reservations about
Implementation costs for the
program, but went with the
m ajority in supporting the
study.
Mayor Bettyc Smith said San­
ford "Is the sum total of all Its
neighborhoods and as long as
they're one that's not first class
we all sufTer."
The study and resultant plan
will Incorporate Input from
Goldsboro residents and factor
In land acquisition costs for
vacant parcels and deteriorated
homes, and funding for drainage
and paving. All costs are hoped
to be ofTset with state, federal
and p r i v a t e e n t e r p r i s e
assistance, accrodlng to the uni­
versity group's director David
Crane.
Crane and two other members
of the Florida Center for Design
and Research met with commis­
sioners hi work session Monday
afternoon before commissioners
formally approved the study in
regular session that night.
The Florida Center is a newly
formed consortium of Florida
u n iversities. Its "W e s ts ld e
Neighborhood S tra tegy" for
Sanford is tentatively mappedout as a 10 block Goldsboro area

Brisson GUARDIAN Funeral Home

HOMf

G j G G ra m k o w -G a in e s
S
f ir
Funeral
Hom
e
'
* *•
L
*O
a
o cally

w ned

o per ated

1M 000 TRACK RO. •LONOWOOO

t

&lt;i *•

••.Spills
Continued from page 1A
20-25 cubic yards of sand to
spread on the fuel, and the firm
spread on about 500 lbs. of
Oil-Dry. The firm's employees
were In the process of cleaning
up the oil-soaked sand this
morning. Brown said.
City Engineer Charles Hasslcr
said the Public Works Depart­
ment will bill the company for
overtime, sand and equipment.
Rougeux said, "It's hard to say
yet how much damage was
caused, but oil usually tends to
soak into the asphalt and causes
the road to disintegrate."

and a representative of the
modular housing manufacturer
said his company is interested in
participating, but waits the
program's further development
before making a commitment.
Assistance will be sought from
other city residents, organiza­
tions and bunks.
The Florida Center for Design
and Research began In January^
as a non-profit, cooperative
public service Institute of the
University of South Florida In
association with Florida A&amp;M
University, the University of
Florida and Florida State Uni­
versity. Crane Is a professor of
architecture at the University of
South Florida. The Florida
Center Is headquartered In
Tampa.
..
The lion's share of the Sanford'
study would be handled b)N
facility, graduate students and'
clerical stafT from the Center’s
participatlong schools. Their
salaries would predominantly
be covered by the city's $60,000
expenditure. The faculty and
students all have areas of
e x p e rtis e or study In the
a p p lic a b le areas, such as
engineering and architecture.
The expenditure will come
from Interest on treasury bills
the city bought last year to pay
off outstanding wutcr and sewer
bo n d u r ^

The Westslde Neighborhood
Strategy "w o n 't Just build
houses, It will build a communi­
ty," according to City Manager
Frank Faison.
- •
"It's a total approach and a
fantastic Ideal time for the city
and the group to do this."

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hotpllol
Tuesday
ADMISSIONS
Sanford:
Randall 0. Oavli
Catherine M. Polgar
John W. Thome*, Cretan! City
Gerald 0. Crocker. DeBary
Nadine Irwin, Deltona

DISCHARGES
Sanford:
Vida L. Thomas
Gerald D. Crocker, DeBary
Minnie E.Mattalr.O*teen

.

BIRTHS
Catherine M. POIger. a baby girl
Nadine Irwin, a baby boy, Deltona

W HAT A B O 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 Director. Careful
counseling with him can avoid un­
wise planning with ■ 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 some of the plans major
features:

FU N E R A L HOME
130 WEST AIRPORT BOULEVARD
SANFORD. FLORIDA

TELEPH O N E (303) 322-3213

NHO OF KVHV FAMILY

M405SO

bounded by 12th Street and
Maple, Poplar and Avocado
avenues.
Sanford's desire to grow and
benefit from a broadened tax
base will be hampered If It
doesn 't act to im prove Its
downtown residential zones,
according Crane.
Conversely, residents in the
deteriorated target area can't
afford new housing that's going
up in other parts of Sanford, so
the city assist these citizens by
rehabilitating its downtown zone
to provide them with affordable,
upgraded livin g •conditions.
Crane said.
The group’s efforts will be
assisted by city stafT and In­
formation available at city hall.
Sanford commissioners say a
successful plan would have
direct benefits for the target
zone's residents, overall benefits
for the city In terms of upgrading
Its image and assist efforts to
attract new residents and busi­
nesses. according to discussion
Monday.
According to Crane. "T h e
city’s chances of capturing the
economic base and tax revenues
of .growth associated with the
Interstate-4 corridor will be
aversely affected by the current
negative perceptions of the gen­
eral public concerning the
livability and/or. safely of .San­
f o r d ' s d o w n t o w n
neighborhoods."
Cardinal Industries has been
In on Initial planning discussions

GRAMKOW

4

SbSSU

,

The Lake Mary City Commission will hold a
special meeting Thursday at 7:30 pirn, at city hall
so that citizens can receive an update of the
proposed East-West Expressway routes from
representatives of the Expressway Authority.
Representatives who are scheduled to speak at
the meeting are Jerry Brcnton and Tim Jackson.

IF YOU WISH TO CANCEL. 100% OF THE
MONEY PAID WILL BE REFUNDED

PMt A R H A N G L M E N T C E N T E R

• Out Of Mat. Tramtef
• Local Burk*

Lake M ary Hosts Meeting
On Expressway Proposals

WILLIAM L ORAMKOW
L.F.D.

• You Make Th e Decisions Today About
Your Funeral Arrangem ents And Costs
• Convenient Installm ents If Needed
W ithout Finance Chargea
• Th a Plan la N ot Inaurance

KitOSaiKHK
i1
AK LAW N
FUNERAL

A number ol organizations have participated
eluding the
with the Alliance's proposal Incl
Seminole League of Homeowners Associations,
the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce, the
Seminole County Board of Realtors and the
American Association of Retired People. Other
organizations in the Orlando-Osceola area have
also participated, according to the report.
^
The Alliance was bom out 6f the defeat of thp
"M TA Referendum" In the tri-counties of metroK
politan Orlando In 1986. It was the Alliance'^
hope that the transportation problem not bf
neglected with this defeat, but begin anew. In
their coming together, the Alliance was formed
by the Orange County Homeowners Association
and the Home Builders Association ofMid-Florldd
— one of the few times the homeowners an&lt;]
home builders are on the same side of the fence;
Ms. Lynch surmised.
Commission Chairman Fred Strectman wal
first to endorse the concept as a good way id
handle transportation problems at the local level;
- Kathy T yritj
* ‘■ 1
&lt;4

Locally Owned A n d Operated Since 1956

MOUOU SEM IN S OIW COMMUNITY FOR OVER 100 TERRS.
MS U U K l AVENUE

322-2131
The GUARDIAN PLAN®
Prearranged Funeral Program

m n

V

JAMES E. SCHUITEMAN
LF.D .

ORAMKOW FUNERAL HOME
ISO W. AIRPORT BLVD.
BANPOBD. FL 32771

I would Hkd to loom mom about your ftmoro! arrengomont plan. Pltooo »«nd booklet.
I uodonlond thorn to no obligation.

NAME __
ADDRESS
C I T Y _____
ZIP ______

S TA TE
PHONE

�W eek
M e xica n School Te a c h e r, U .S . M a rin e H a ve
H a p p ily 'G o n e To Th e D ogs' For 34 Years
scratch.’* she says, "and wc both
worked to have what we have
now."
Traveling Is something Plln
and Lawrence Hughes love to do
together, and sometimes quite
spontaneously. "A s u matter of
fact." says Mrs. Hughes, "two
weeks ago we flew to Dallas tor
the weekend with another cou­
ple who are friends of ours, and
wc had so much fun. We went to
see the Galleria Mall there. The
m ain d ep artm en t store is
Mncy's. which I wus dying to
see. They have restaurants,
movie theaters, hotels — every­
thing is right there. You can
spend a whole week there and
not even get out of that mall. We
had a nice weekend of shopping
and having a good time — Just
getting away from everything."
Mr. Hughes Is ulso a licensed
private pilot, so sneaking away
for a spur-of-the-moment vaca­
tion isn’t hard to do. One of Mrs.
H u g h e s ' s i s t e r s l i v e s In
California, but the rest of her
family still lives In Mcxlrn. so
frequent trips to her homeland
to visit relatives is high on her
list of travel stops. Last yeur. she
flew to California to visit her
sister and was Joined by two
other sisters from Mexico, so it
was a happy reunion for all.
As quickly as she embraced
her new homeland utmost 34.
yeurs ago. our cook of the week
also became actively involved
with people and her community.
"I guess." says Mrs. Hughes,
"like everybody else. I’m glad to
be an Amcricun citizen. Coming
from another country. It was a
little bit hard when I first got
married. I took English when I
went to college, but when you
try to speak It here. It's different.
You need the practice. Of course,
my husband helped me and the
government sent me a lot of
lKx&gt;ks to learn the things I had to
know ." With a laugh. Mrs.

HsrsM Pints by Tummy Vincwrt

f

Outstanding Volunteer O f The M onth
' M a y o r Bettye Sm ith, rig h t, president of the W o m an 's C lub
of Sanford Inc., presents M ax in e M arsh a certificate nam ing
her as the recipient of the club's Outstanding Volunteer of
the M onth a w a rd . M rs . M a rsh was cited for her 37 years'
w o rk w ith the G irl Scouts of A m e ric a . She has also been a
volunteer w ith D ividends, Retired Senior Volunteer P ro ­
g ra m , G re a te r Sanford C h a m b e r of C o m m e rce and United
W a y , am ong others, and is a lifetim e P T A m em b er.

Concert Association

Community Concert
presented the Gregg
mts, the final conceit
n March 16 at Lake
School Auditorium.
■s. a mixed voice
r 16. "delighted an
louse, "according to
ring, president o f
Wing added that the
1 Singers have been
audiences around
r 25 years. They are
corded group In the
have received three
yards, the Industry's
ir, she said.
Isslon a short bust*
ng was conducted.

A s h to n A lm o n d . P a u lin e
Steavene; * Clifton-aueunrsorr.
John Wlckes. Mary Tlllls. Betty
Halback. Trlsh Colbert and
Harold Hartsock.
The president thanked the
o u tg o in g board m em b ers:
Lourlne Messenger. Virginia
Burney and Nellie and Boyd
Coleman.
Mrs. Wing presented the out*
going members of the executive
board plaques of appreciation
with their names Inscribed. Out*
going vice president, the Rev.
Leo King, presented Mrs. Wing a
plaque In appreciation. The out*
going president presented Rubye
King with a plaque In apprecla*

*®l|or by trade, meant a day at
M»o park or. «*, v4aU..tor ike
matinee. "My mother would
stay home and rest, she laughs.
^ ®kll,,cd taM?r* ^rs.
father at one Ime had about 20
people working at his shop
making suits and uniforms for
men.
Schooling is quite different In
Mexico. Mrs. Hughes comments,
"Elementary school was up to
the sixth grade, and then you
had a secondary school for four
years, which Is Just like high
school here." she explains. " If
you wanted to be a professional.
than you would go on to a
university for another six or

accent. I will never lose It."
Now serving her third term ns
president of the Luke Mary
Woman's.Club, she has seen the
organ ization grow to be a
spirited group »r women with
p r o g r a m s g e a r e d to w a rd
benefiting the future of Lake
Mary. Mrs. Hughes was eleeted
president of the club from 1974
to '76 und again for the ’76-'7H
season This year the club was
honored by having five members
win awards at the Distried VII
Arts and Crafts Festival held on
Feb. 19. Thirty-two women's
clubs participated In the com­
petition. The Lake Mury winners
will go on to the Stale Arts and
Crafts Festival In April, with all
Florida Federation of Women's
Clubs participating in the event.
In the past. Mrs. Hughes has
been active In school organlzuSee COOK, 2B

S a le Starts Thursday
Prices G o o d Thru S a tu rd a y

R I A L 'S
COUPON

SOLID ft PRINTED

CHINESE SILK
HABUTAE
Fir*st Classical Fabric*
at a Ctaaranca Price

SOLIDS

PRINTS

1*98 yd.

2.98 yd

45* Potyt*t#r ft Rayon in
Pastel Solid*

SA LE
P RICE

TOWELING

4 A A
1

Fresh ft Breezy Pastel Shade*
For Casual Wear • 45' Wide
Polyester
Cotton
i a n

GRAPHIC ft JAM
PRINTS

ON BOLTS! 100% Cotton
in White. U. Blue. Royal. Pink.
Yellow ft Beige

WHITE

45” • 100% Cotton ft Polyester
Bright ft Colorful Prints

BPECIAL GROUPING

Because O f The Tremendous Response

Includes All Simplicity
Patterns

CLEARANCE SALE HELD OVER
THUn.-rtl.~UT. MUCH Tt-27-21

OFF
OFF
SPIMMSHOES.... u r n 26% OFF
U N O EM E........... u r n 33% OFF

A LTW Eff

FALL FASHIONS. ..ur to 70%
FALL SHOES....... u r n 70%

J EYELET EMBROIDERY
Feminine ft Romantic 45*
Polyester-Cotton • All on bolts!

WHITE

M

' COLORS

1” * 2” * ! »

PH. 323-4132
116 W. First 8t.
Historic Downtown
Sanford
L O U D T C U B - Owner

COLORS

It’s Smart To Be Thrifty

�r

r
2B— Senford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Wodnaiday, March M, 1117

•••Cook
Continued From IB
tions. Boy Scouts, the Seminole
County Mutur Concert Assoc!.:
(Ion. and Tor 'he past 10 yeurs
she has volu, !cred her lime at
the voting precincts In Lake
Mary. Longwood and Altamonte
Springs during election time.
Our busy wife, mother, home­
maker and business partner
with the charming Spanish ac­
cent has also served as a pink
lady, bringing much needed
cheer to patients at Central
Florida Regional Hospital. "I
enjoy doing volunteer work,"
she says. "I guess because when
I was growing up. and we were
so many girls and we had so
many friends that our house was
so full of people all the time —
my father was such a friendly
man and he had so many people
who Just loved him — I like to be
the same way. I Just love people
und to he friendly and help more
than unythlng else, and to see
the results." Right now. Mrs.
Hughes' efTorts arc concentrated
on fund- raising projects to aid
the Lake Mary Municipal Com­
plex. The recent third annual
Dodge City Night event was a
successful example of the club's
community-oriented activities.
The flavor of Mexico is evident
In the Hughes' beautiful ranchstyle home where the decor Is
truly homespun and comfort­
able. Family paintings. Mexican
artifacts, house plants and a
stately grandfather clock more
than 100 years old. all give a
wa r m. I nv i t i ng fe e lin g . A
h a n d s o m e c o l l e c t i o n of
greyhound figurines that Mrs.
Hughes has gathered over the
years adds a nice touch, al­
though they arc* very hard to
come by. she says. "Everywhere
we go. we visit antique shops or
any kind of shops, and we ask
for greyhound dogs, but they arc
very hard to find." she adds.
"For some reason, they will
mold any other kind of dog but
not greyhounds. They arc very
pretty, very Intelligent and they
love people. They are very lov­
able animals."
Working together' means that
P I la s e c s h e r h u s b a n d
throughout the day und they
share three meals a day. "W e cal
out quite often, too." she says.
"A t home, l*m not a complicated
or a gourmet cook, but I do like
good casserole dishes and some­
thing simple and quick." Some­
times she prepares her favorites
ahead o f time to .store In the
freeser (or b ^ y d a y *^
Following Is a list or Mrs.'
Hughes*j favorites tor you to
enjoy. Olet

Food
fo r

Thought

bread. Serves 6 to 8.

MACARONI AND CHEESE
MEXICAN STYLE
1 box (8 ounces) macaroni,
elbows or shells
1 can (14 ounces) peeled whole
tomatoes
Vi pint whipping cream
1 medium onion, chopped
1 package Monterey Jack
cheese
4 to 6 slices yellow American
cheese
garlic and black pepper to
taste
Cook macaroni, following di­
rections on package: rinse with
hot water and set aside.
In large pan, using some oil,
saute onions, garlic and black
pepper. Run tomatoes through
blender and add to onions. Also
add whipping cream and half of
sliced Monterey Jack cheese.
Cook gently and when sauce
thickens, set some aside. In
baking dish, put half of cooked
macaroni, half of cheese and half
of sauce. Repeat In same order
with rest of ingredients. Bake In
oven at 325° for 25 minutes.
Serves 4 to 0.
JALAPENO STUFFED
CORNBREAD
Cornbrcad mixture:
1cup yellow corn meal
2 eggs
1cup buttermilk
Vi cup bacon drippings
1 teaspoon salt
44 teaspoon baking soda
Flavor m ixture:
1 pound ground beef, with
excess fat drained off
1 onion, chopped
1 cup creamed coni
1 can (7Vi o u n c e s ) h ot
Jalapeno relish
1 small can chopped green
chiles
Pour half the cornbrcad mix­
ture Into greased casserole and
cover with flavor mixture and
enough grated Cheddar cheese
to cover. Top with remaining
com bread mixture. Bake at
400° about 40 minutes, or until
corn bread Is brown on top,
Serve with salad and green
vegetables If desired.
CHICKEN AND YELLOW RICE
4 or 5 pounds chicken, cut up
V* cup flour
1Vi teaspoon salt
V4 teaspoon black pepper
V4cup margarine or oil
Rico ingredients:
2 cups uncooked rice
2 tablespoons tomato paste
1 cup chopped onions
1 cup chopped green bell
peppers
Vi cup pimentos, chopped
1 bay leaf
1 clove garlic
4 cube* chicken bouillon
■Ateaspoon chill powder
salt and black pepper to taste
Salt and pepper the chicken
pieces and roll In flour. Brown In
margarine or oil. Remove from
pan and set aside. In same pan,
saute onions, garlic and green
pepper until onions are brown.
Add pimento, salt, pepper, chill
powder, tomato- paste, bay leaf,
rice and enough water to dis­
solve bouillon cubes. In baking
pan, arrange rice mixture ana
put chicken on top. Cover and
bake for lVi hours at 350°.
Serve with a green salad and hot

...Concert
oostsd sites of cheeee baked sod
servsd oo drssssd arsons —
h ico m u ■ dtltoloui inidvrleti on
crusty French breed.

•••

It a microwave-baked cake la underdona In the center, you probably us­
ed the wrong uteri set. Next time,
use a ring mold or create one by
putting a email glass 6f water In the
center ot the baking dish.

6• •

fcfivr adMl W M UaM M a |As |&gt;b
ym MMb

i i mb. notoovoMn w i

•••

Meaty swordfish takas well to a
marinade ot salad oil, soy sauce,
lemon |uloa, crushed garlic, end dlmustard. Delicious — and atstive — with sliced avocados.

®

•••

.

Cootixxod From IB
army-navy cloth and offered a
variety o f finger foods. The
(lower arrangement centering
(he fable consisted of white and
green mums interspersed with
appropriate greenery in a tall
silver candelabrum with four
lighted candles. Punch was
served from four crystal punch
bowla centering round tables

OUACAMOLE
2 ripe avocados (large), peeled
and coarsely mashed
1 medium tomato, peeled and
diced
1 tablespoon finely chopped
onion
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
salt to taste
Mix Ingredients lightly in
blender. Use Jalapeno pepper If
desired. Serve as a dip with your
favorite chips or In Nachos
below.

Hospitality Reigns Supreme
During Passover Festival
Passover or Pcsach. is known
as the "festival of festivals." one
of the most Joyful holidays on
the Jewish calendar. Passover
lusts for eight days and food has
a prominent place in the celebra­
tion.

BRAISED SHOULDER
NACHOS
OF LAMB
Vi pound lean ground beef
3 tablespoons potato starch
Vi pound chorlzo (Mexican
1 teaspoon salt
sausage)
Vi teaspoon pepper
1 large onion, chopped
1 shoulder of lamb. 7 to 7Vi
Vi teaspoon hot pepper sauce
pounds, boned tied (boned
salt to taste
' weight, 4 pounds)
2 cans (1 pound each) refried
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
beans
1 large onion, chopped (1 cup)
1 can (4 ounces) green chiles,
2 large stalks celery, chopped
rinsed, seeded and chopped
(1 cup)
1 cup sour cream
Vft teaspoon ground turmeric
6 ounces M onterey Jack
1&lt;4 cups Florida orange Juice
cheese, shredded
Mi cup water
6 ounces sharp Cheddar
V4 cup tomato paste
cheese, shredded
3 pounds sweet potatoes or
44 cup mild green Taco sauce
butternut squash, pared, cut In
44 cup mild red Taco sauce
chunks
Vi cup scallions, chopped
Mi cup dried currants
2 cups Guacamole
2 tablespoons chopped fresh
44 cup pitted ripe olives, sliced
mint, or 2 teaspoons dried
Tortilla chips
garden mint
In a large pan. crumble and
Vi cup chopped parsley
bown the ground beef and
Combine potato starch, salt
chorlzo. Add onion and cook and pepper. Coal lamb with
until meat Is lightly browned
starch mixture: reserve excess
and onion softened, about 5 coating. In large Dutch oven or
minutes. Pour off fat and season
heavy kettle heat oil; brown
with hot pepper sauce and salt.
meat on all sides: remove. In
Bet aside. In a large (4 quart) same pot saute orilon and celery
shullow ovenproof dish, spread
until tender. Stir In 1 tablespoon
refried beans on bottom. Spread
reserved starch mixture und
cooked meal evenly over beans.
turmeric. Gradually stir In orSprinkle chopped chiles over ange Juirc. water and tomato
meat. Toss together Monterey
paste. Return meat. Cover.
Jack and Cheddar cheese and Simmer 1 hour; stir occasionally
arrange on top. Drizzle the two
to prevent sticking. Add sweet
Taco sauces over all. (The recipe
potatoes and currants; cover.
may be made ahead to this point
Simmer 30 minutes longer. Stir
and refrigerated for up to 24
In mint and parsley. Simmer 15
hours. Let it return to room
minutes.
temperature before baking.)
Yield: 6 to 8 servings.
Preheat oven to 350°. Bake tor
HOLIDAY CHICKEN
20 or 30 minutes or until hot
WITH FARPEL STUFFING
and bubbly. Remove from, oven
4 cups matzoh farfel
and s p r in k le on ch op p ed
1Vi cups Florida orange Juice,
scallions and sliced olives.
divided
Mound the Guacamole In the
V* cup margarine
center and top with sour cream.
1 medium onion, chopped (Vi
Garnish with Coriander sprigs.
cup)
Serve with a basket of Tortilla
1 large celery rib. chopped (Vi
chips. Serves 12 to 20.
cup)
1 egg. lightly beaten
2 Florida oranges, peeled,
KAHLUA MOUSSE
cubed
Cream whips best when the
Vi cup golden raisins
bowl, beaters and the cream
44 teaspoon salt
Itself are ice cold.
Vi teaspoon poultry seasoning
1 cup whipping cream
Vi teaspoon pepper
Vi teaspoon instant coffee
1\ roast Itig chicken (5 to 6
powder ^ ^
p b u n d ir ;
"
*
Vi cup Kahlua
Salt
and
pepper
to
taste
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons honey
1 egg white
In large black bowl soak farfel
2 teaspoons sugar
In 1 cup orange Juice until all
chocolate sprinkles
Juice fo absorbed. In small
Combine whipping cream and
saucepan melt margarine; saute
coffee powder in a medium bowl.
Whip until stiff. Add Kahlua and onion and celery until tender.
Add egg, sauteed vegetables,
2 tablespoons sugar. Beat until
oranges,
raisins, salt, poultry
very stiff. In a small bowl, beat
egg white to soft peaks. Add 2
teaspoons sugar. Beat until stiff,
Fold egg white Into whipped
cream mixture. Cover and chill.
To serve, mound In dessert
glasses and decorate with choco­
late sprinkles. Makes 6 servings.
•adjacent to the food tabic by
board members.
Reception chalrrnan Rubye
King presented the dower ar­
rangement to Mrs. Wing follow-,
inglhe reception.
O utgoing execu tive board
members: Annetc Wing, presi­
dent: Leo King, vice president
and m em bership chairman:
Marla Fudge, vice president and
pu b licity chairman: Patricia
Footer, secretary: and Marian
RethwiU, treasurer.

E la ln e 'a
H a llm a r k
Shop

Braised lam b a dish to ram am bar

R HYTH M
ft NEWS

11“
/ o
p

Wedding
Invitations

I

Avail*We At

Unique and trendy
gift Items.

S:r*322-5JS7

L\ %
—tmU Cm+%I m Nt4 U UHT

SCU BA
Include, C Ullroom.
lm r o o m .
Indoor H c it t d

A

CLOCK

u

? WcISuit

SAtfS A SERVICE

1 .

We carry all leading
manufacturer'* dock*1

ZVOMM t M XKtM C U ISU ITMTSM

M M (CALL FOt MTAJU)

m sm ti
i

I Sale* A. Service
430 Sane* CL laaiweed 331-3560

HwCl74

MOST INJURIES T R E A T E D WITH
L I T T L E OR NO C O S T T O Y O U !
OPEN
6 0AY8

Itat at

a preheated 350° F. oven 1 hour.
Combine remaining Vi cup or­
ange juice nnd honey: brush on
chicken. Continue roasting 1 to
1V4 hours longer, basting often
with orange Juice mixture, until
chicken Is done (Juices run clear
und leg bone moves easily).
Serve with pan gravy. If desired.
Yield: 6 to 8 servings.

seasoning and pepper to farfel
mixture. Wash and dry chicken:
season Inside and out with salt
and pepper. L o o sely st uf f
chicken with farfel mixture;
secure opening. (Extra stuffing
may be baked In a casserole
during last 45 minutes of roast­
ing time). Place chicken on rack
in shallow roasting pan. Roast In

M .-F. 9-6
S A T . 9-12

322-4762

W O O D A L L C H IR O P R A C TIC CENTER

the largest end beat Hellmarb
Stage la Me SeeMeetl
112-4112

W lO O

IA N F 0 S 0 PLAZA Nut Out Tt N u n

S

PARK

A V I

SANFORD

rL

MEAT PRODUCERS OUTLET

M.P.O. MEATS

Tax Reform Court* Sat
Seminole Community College Leisure Time Program will
offer an informative course on the "Tax Reform Act of 1986"
on Wednesdays, from 7 to 9 p.m„ from March 25 through April
1. Register In the administration building Monday through
Thursday, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., Friday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The charge for the course to 810.

PHONE 321-2398
2397 9. FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD, FLA.
1—

1
|

"

m a t t O M WEB., MARCH 25
T M U TOES., MARCH 31

f
■

tPEM 7 RAYS
R A J L - t P JL

\
|

_____ __________
*

N iW y w tVTMjrwMV
•M

Choose the beat: Join family and
Irtenda for dinner at

ROOM RESTAURANT

Announcing,I I I

Sanford
Dental Centre

la m in o * Contra
(Mart To PuWW
M 07 Oriorxto Dr.
Mwy. 17-82
Sanford, R 32771

HXM TAM THI MU OUT Of DINTAt COSTSI

NEW HOURS
AM- lijd
b

V’

11i \

a - ir '

i&amp;
• v .M L
.,

f

"tm
C A L L N O W F O R A N A FP O N fTM CN T

v,

121-3120

111
Florida
ISO AM • reo m ctosed Sun
Enter Thfw ToucNon x O w , Sto&lt;»
A lfa R

YOUNG-TENDER

BEEF
SPARE
RIBS
*1 “ LIVER
______ _ m . » M u a ; f c l t a m »
________ B M N ilC fcM RMtOOm

M u g

FRESH
JUMBO
SHRIM P * 8 “

COUNTRY STYLE

'

Warn

FRESH
LARGE
SHRIM P

r r r

M

COLCIflAL^KOOM

l M

i

_______

SanfordGeneral
D ental
Centre
D e n tla ln ’
Foiof D. Wottbruch. 0 .D J., F.A.
Jom ot D. W T a w c n , DJULO.

COOKIN’ 0000

BUY 1 AT
REGULAR
PRICE

CHICKEN
LIVERS or
GIZZARDS ? REE
4

NECKS

99
19
t

LB.

t

LB .

�ri

i *

■'■j1 t■4 r-d

'lm
m
*mmrmf1mmu?■ f v t

Microwave Magic

Use Asparagus In Variety O f
Dishes From Soups To Salads
A Is for asparagus, an early
irlng vegetable available March
'rough June. Most asparagus
&gt;ld In our markets Is green.
hlle In Europe It I s ’•hilled" as
It Is grown to bleach It white.
Asparagus of any size can be
tender but when purchasing it Is
best to select uniform sized
slocks so they will mlcrowvae
easily. Avoid open, seedy lips
and stalks which appear woody.
When p r e p a r in g for
microwaving, hold the stalk near
the butt end and gently bend
until ihc tough end snaps off.
Wash asparagus In cold water.
To microwave: place 1 pound
asparagus spears In shallow
12x8 Inch glass dish with the
buds toward the center and Vi
cup water. Cover with plastic
wrap. M icrow ave on 100%
power for 6-9 minutes. Rear­
range the spears after half the
cooking lim e. Let stand 3
minutes before serving.
Cooked asparagus can be used
in a variety of recipes from soup
to salads as well as a main
vcgctabllRlIsh for luncheon.

'

. . . .
M lu Q 0

.
■

M V C o ff
» w
Home Economist
Seminole
Community College

me seeds.
To serve chilled asparagus as a
salad or an appetizer prepare the
spears as directed in the column
preface. Chill. Serve with this
sauce.
SAUCE FOR ASPARAGUS
1 cup sour cream
2 tablespoons chopped fresh
parsley
1 tablespoon Chervil
2 teaspoons minced green on­
ion tops
Light Cream
Mix sour cream , parsley,
chervil and onion together in
small bowl. T h in with cream
until mixture Is of pouring
consistency. Best if made a day
before serving.

A marinated salad Is a good
way to start on Italian meal. Try
It Instead of an antipasto.
ITALIAN ASPARAGUS
SALAD
1 pound fresh asparagus
2 sweet onions sliced In rings
Vi pound fresh mushroom,
sliced
Marinade:
Vi cup elder vlnegor
1 tablespoon sugar
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
1teaspoon garlic salt
Vi teaspoon dry mustard
Vi teaspoon oregano •
Vi teaspoon basil
1 cup oil
Fresh ground black pepper
P l a c e v i n e g a r In 2 - c up
measure and microwave for 30
seconds. Add sugar, lemon Juice
and herbs and stir. Add oil and
blend well. Prepare asparagus as
directed In preface. Drain and
c h i l l . Add o n i o n s and
mushrooms to asparagus. Pour
m arin ade o v e r v e g e ta b le s .
Garnish the serving platter with
tomato wedges and black olives.

M a rie C ro ckett, left, a resident of C a n ­
te rb u ry at T h e C ro ssin gs, L a k e M a r y ,
receives plants fro m Loretta M o tt, resident
m an ag er of C a n te rb u ry . C a rd in a l Industries

ASPARAGUS PUFF
1 pound fresh asparagus, cut
Into 1 Inch pieces
t
Vi cup chopped green onion
,
2 tablespoons butter or marga, rlne
2 tab'espoans flour
Vi teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon pepper
1Vi cup sour cream
3 eggs, separated
Vi teaspoon cream of tartar
.
Prepare asparagus cuts by
microwaving on 100% power 5-7
minutes with Vi cup water.
Drain and set aside. In a 2-quart
casserole, microwave onion and
butter on 100% power 1-2
minutes or until lender. Stir in
- flour, salt and pepper: add sour
cream and slightly beaten egg
yolks. In medium bowl beat egg
; whites and cream of tartar until
I stllT but not dry. Fold whites Into
ji yolk mixture. Arrange half of
i asparagus In bottom of ring
! mold. Top with half of egg
’ mixture. Repeal layers. Reduce
j power to 50%. Microwave 8-15
i minutes or until mixture apj pears set, rotating dish If the
microwave docs not have a
carousel. Invert onto serving
plate
. . . to. serve
. jj'i'

!

,

I
t*

5
£
j
i
*,
I}
p
'S

Htrald Photoby Tommy Vincent

Planting Party A t Canterbury

Inc. hosted a planting p a rty Saturday at
C a n te rb u ry w hen 5,000 plants w ere given to
the residents to w a rd beautification of th e ir
homes.

S K M IN O L I
CENTRE!
V'-’■
■- **
**

rfai

EAST CREAM OF
A8PARAOUSSOUP
1 pound fresh asparagus, cut
Into 1 Inch pieces
Vi cup chopped celery
Vi cup chopped onion
1 tablespoon butter or margarlne
2 cups milk
I can cream of celery soup
Vi teaspoon Instant chicken
bouillon granules
Vi teaspoon salt
Dash of white pepper
Vi teaspoon chervil
P r e p a r e a s p a r a g u s by
microwave cooking 5-7 minutes
on 100% power with Vi cup
water. Drain. Set U B ld e . In a
2-quart casserole combine celcry . o n io n , b u tter: co ver,
Microwave on 100% power 2-4
minutes or until tender. Stir in
remaining Ingredients, cover.
Microwave on 100% power 5-6
minutes or until heated. Stir
several times during the cook­
ing.
A hollandaise sauce Is a flavor
and color complement to aspar­
agus or try this recipe for texture
and flavor contrasts.

ASPARAGUS, MUSHROOM
AND LEMON BUTTER
1 pound fresh asparagus
spears
3 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons sesame seeds
- 4 ounces fresh mushrooms,
sliced
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
Vi teaspoon grated lemon peel
Prepare spears as directed In
column preface. Place 1 tables­
poon butter In custard cup.
M icrowave on 100% power
30-60 seconds or until melted.
Stir In sesame seeds. Microwave
on 100% power 3-5 minutes or
until brown: stirring once. Set
aside.
Sprinkle mushrooms over as­
paragus: cover. Microwave on
100% power 1 minute. Set aside.
Melt remaining butter In Bmall
dish: 30-i50 seconds. Stir In
lemon Juice and peel. Drain
vegetables. Remove to serving
platter. Drizzle lemon butter
over top and sprinkle with sesa-

Frkdauut’i Regular Ticketed Retail Prices!

■J l j f l a .

I4Kt.

s Up u r Earrings!
Q°id

@ €
a
a f® *

T h ir d P riz e !

Second
Prize!

• N e d N o,

Jg

**&gt;£»
W"
April 4
i&lt;,S7

JEWELffl
To The First
500 Custom ers
1 H ll O M A N 'S IN V I I I S Y O l

I &lt;) O P h N Y O l H O W N

I4KI. Gold W ?
16 Inch DiamondCut Rope Chain
Valued
With HKt.
At
Nugget
Charm!
/ -

f’ f.K S O N A l

Your Choice
o f a Lady's
Valued
or Man's Gold
At

W .

s219

( . I I A H C h A t . t . O l 'N 1

SEMINOLE
CENTRE
nwifiipli, lol.,|fd T - Mwo Itaiall
All IXomowd W,I|M. A n Ayyraolmalt
Q v u illk , Um lKd^uoaili, Niffco K&lt;*«r&gt;«d

Valued

�W tdim day, March 33,1917

THIS HUMIDITY/
X CAN'T DO A
THING WITH X T
MV HAIR/ [iH\

EITHER

ada for electronic exercise
machines that stimulate skeletal
muscles via electrical impulses
sent through pads strapped to
'the body. These machines are
available "by prescription dnly,
but the advertisers appear to
have a doctor available to write
one. Are these machines haz­
ardous?
.
'.
DEAR READER — Electronic

DEAR DR. GOTT - I get
anxiety attacks, am dizzy and
hot most of the time, and my
vision Is blurry. I take Centrax.
Synthrold and Procardia and
wear Nltrodlsc patches. What
m i g h t be c a u s i n g m y
symptoms?
DEAR READER — Centrax
(prazepan) Is a tranquilizer that
can produce fatigue, dizziness
and blurred vision. Procardia
(nifedipine) Is a calcium-channel
blocker used to treat angina and
high blood pressure; It can cause
dizziness, flushing, nervousness
pnd blurred vision. Synthrold
(synthetic thyroid hormone)
causes no symptoms when given
In appropriate doses; however,
In high doses, It can produce
fatigue, sensations that resemble
hot flashes, dizziness and vision
problems. Nltrodlsc (nitroglycer­
ine delivered by a patch on the
skin) can cause dizziness and

YOU'RE MOT
KIDDlN©

ARB YOU
KIPPING ME?

ME

Don't Let Pills
Make You Sicker

1 Optning
4 Witch
7 Head covering
10 Bluspcncll
12 Em u ’s country
14 Ear (comb,
form)
IB Back and
IB Air (comb,
form)
17 Racont (praf.)
18 Envalop
20 Rafralns
22 Privata
antranca
24 Frankfurtar
26 Narvoul
30 Actor March
31 Symbol lor
tellurium
32 Yoko-------33 Aircraftsman
34 Habraw latter
36 Flower
37 BaMballar No-

by Art 8ansom flushing.
YXJVmODffGE?...... I St
'T D O H t J O W M T G O t t B ?

BUT. POP/ I M

A

LET

MB

E X P E R IM E N T IN G # .* J

LOOKING FOR
/MUSICAL DIRECTION

WOWS

HELP,

TDM BfiCKWAJ BEAT
CAW RATHER S i- A

IM OWE OF T H E M OST
DRMAA7K ODWfRXJTKTICWS
L i-------- B / E R K X JS K T

As you can sec. each of your
medicines could cause your
symptoms. To complicate mat­
ters, anxiety Itself can produce
dizziness and flushing.
Your problem is common. As
doctors use more and more
medicines, there Is an Increas­
ingly greater risk of side effects.
One of today's most fascinating
challenges Is to separate drug
efTects from disease symptoms.
As in your case, this may not be
easy.
Review with your doctor all of
the medicines yon are taking
and why. You need to know
whether you are getting the right
doses. You may need to have
certain medicines changed or
reduced. Check with your doctor
and request that he or she
address the problems that are
bothering you.
For further Information on
medicines, I'm sending you a
free copy of my Health Report.
CONSUMER TIPS ON MEDI­
CINES. Other readers who want
a copy should send $1 and your
name and address to P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 441013428. Be sure to mention the
title.
DEAR DR. GOTT - I've seen

R3R1HETHIRD
\ TIME THIS
L MOUTH .

OW)

l
I

8 Sweetaop
g Likewise
11 Metaphor
13 Boggy
wasteland
19-------- Chaney ^
21 Compau point
23 Frightened
24 On edge
26 Actrau Cha»
27 Rounded roof
28 Antelopes
2 9 --------- Klppur
30 Female pronoun
35 Come forth
3B TV network
1 il
1
i

40 In ths p«t
41 Bm u --------43 Odd (Scot)
44 Futtm
45 Announce*

46 Ht Iovm (1st.)
46 Jskyira
opposite

SILICONS

l»

Y O U B B IR T H D A Y
M A R C H 16, 1987

CINCH POft MS—
I ’M

u s e &gt;

T »

1 (SOINS NOWHEfff
ij
A *

pa s t.
• .*

*

Jhaw zj

W/HAW/HAW/

OW FVrflW W iGOM lAl

OlYBIWM r -----'7

1

14

11

10

■

17

It
It

14

It

M

t h

10

17

11

M

•1

41

114 1

17

.

•1

11

11

■1

H

14

■ M

tc) 1087 by NEA Inc

diamond ace, played a spade
back to his 10 and then a club to
dummy's .Jack. H e cashed a
second spade kin dummy, and
then played king of clubs and a
club back to hts ace. East could
not ruff, and declarer rufled his
remaining small club In dummy.
Because of West's double, de­
clarer knew that West had the
heart king and suspected he also
had the Jack. So he ruffed a
diamond with his spade queen
and cashed the spade ace, pick­
ing up the last trump from West.
At this point, West had nothing
left but hearts In his hand.
Declarer placed the heart queen
on the table. West had to take
the king and lead back Into
declarer's A-10, and the contract
was made. Now I ask you, would
It ever have happened without
West doubling five hearts?

EAST

♦ 95
♦ 985

♦ K J94S1
♦ 10 5

SOUTH
♦ A Q 1076
♦ A Q 10

♦5
♦ A 642

Vulnerable; North-South
D ealer South

&gt;t

North

Eut

So

Opening lead: ♦ 8

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring.,.

. TH A T WAZ A

50 Put on solid
food
51 British Ntvy
abbreviation
53 It la (coni)

WIN A T BRIDGE
By James Jacoby
T od a y's m eandering slam
auction features a bid you may
not have seed before — a double
with no purpose except to help
the opponents. When East
doubled five diamonds, South
was unsure about slam. He
decided to put partner into the
decision-making process. Hence
the five-heart bid. When West's
double was passed around to
South, the redouble guaranteed
the heart ace and asked North
for additional help in deciding
whether to bid slam. Because
North liked his black kings, he
bid six spades. What a lousy
contract, especially when the
bidding announced that both red
kings were well-placed for the
defenders! .But watch how
West's no-purpose double led
declarer to the winning play.
D e c la r e r w on d u m m y 's

k B IT
AW AY

W HAT
AM 5M L

C H lC K fS B r tW

(abbr.)
59 Compau point
60 Long time

mnn n n n n none
h o b
n n n n
n n n n
n n n b i i d b nnnn
a n n n n n n n nnn
nnnn
nnnnn
a n n n n nionn
□n o n n n n nnnn
n n n n n n n n nnn
n n n n nnnnn
□nnnn
nnnn
mnn n n n n inner
n n n n n n n n nan
a n n n n n n n nan
□nnn n a n n dee

— v siB cw e i,5 raw is

Ilull,,, \ TOfWaow...

E STEER

3* Picture!
42 Hievery
45 Ptlvlc parts
47 Non-attending
pereon (comp,
wd.)
51 Meat
52 Actrau Gam
54 City of
Phoenicia,
55 Clam gonua
56 Landed
57 Novelist Farfaar
55 Fast aircraft

stimulation to replace exercise la
a brand of quackery. It's tru*
that certain forms of e!ecl/J«}
muscle stimulation are useful in
the rehabilitation of people with
Injuries and nerve disorders, but
these should be used under the
guidance of specially trained
physiotherapists.

In the year ahead you will be
extremely lucky In advancing
situations which are of great
Importance to you personally.
Many objectives which you've
failed to achieve In the past will
be attained.
A H I B B (March 21-Aprll 19)
Even though you may be a trifle
lavish In what you do for others
today. It could still represent a
sound Investment because o f the
good will you'll be building.
Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Matchmaker set
can help you understand what It
might take to make the rela­
tion sh ip work. Mall $2 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland.
OH 440101-3428.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20)
Try to get directly Involved
today with people who have
clout and can help you where
your career la concerned. These

-a u o o w s A tt
WWET'RBAP

OOJ9CTTQ

COMIC BOOKS

T H A I; ANNIE?

UKCPERMOt
AUM SLATY*

WOULD you

associations should work out
well for you.
GEHnifl (May 21-June 20)
Good things can develop for you
from exchanging thoughts with
oiltlve thinkers today. You
ave a gift for sorting out their
best Ideas and using them
advantageously.
C A N C B R (June 21-July 22)
Profit could come to you today In
two different guises. You may
gain materially and. at the same
time, learn something of value
for future use.
!*SO (July 23-Aug, 22) People
with whom you deal on a
one-to-one basts today, either
socially or commercially, are apt
to treat you In a more generous
fashion than they have pre­
viously.
V I R O O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A
secondary venture from which
you hope to derive extra Income
la looking better all . the time.
Give this enterprise as much
attention as possible.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If at
all possible, try to conduct im­
portant business hi —
ui a
convivial environment today.
F a v o r a b le re s u lts can be

E

achieved over a friendly lunch or
dinner.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Of
all of the sun signs, your finan­
cial aspects look the most pro­
mising now. Be sure you're not
overlooking a big opportunity.
_ S A G I T T A R I U S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Competitive situations will
stimulate your strengths today.
Look at challenging develop­
ments aa manageable paper
dragons.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2 2 -Jan.
19) Think big today, especially
In your financial dealings. Even
If you don’t satisfy your inten­
tions, you'll still be out In front
of restricted expectations.
A Q U A R I U S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Something for which you’ve
been hoping looks like It's going
to happen the way you've
envlslonlned It. However, it's
best not to dlacuM It with
too many people.
PISCRS (Feb. 20-March 20)
This could be a red-letter day for
you where your career is con­
cerned. If there Is something
important you've been waiting
to tackle, this la the time to do it.

�W il l I

, ,

r t .

r

t'

,*

} .‘ ,c

1^- v*

i*

f f f t t -rt z f r Tr~.* r*•il* i y ? ' t r

1
taafsrd HtraM, iggjgfj; FI.

W itiiiiiy , March M. Ift7—» »

8th Annual Asian American Heritage Festival Set
Orlando's Lake Eola Parit will come alive with
sights and sounds o f Asia when the eighth
Aslan-Amerlcan Heritage Festival takes place
from 11 a .m . to 6 p.m . on A p r il 12
Free and open to the public, the festival In the
park will feature performing arts, exhibits,
ethnic food and arts and crafts that represent
heritage of China, India, Japan. Korea. Philip­
pines and Thailand.
There will be enough of a variety of foods to
satisfy tastebuds o f most festival goers: Indian
tandoorl chick en , Japanese terlyakl and

yakotori. sushi, wokful of noodles, plenty of egg
rolls, sweet and sour pork, Korean bulgokl.
klm chl. Indian samosa. nan bread, Thai
sausage, authentic curry dishes, Filipino spring
rolls and much more,
Other activities Include Chinese and Japanese
callgraphy. orgami,' paper folding, demonstra­
tion on how to wear Indian sari and Japanese
kimono and martial arts demonstrations such as
Korean Tae Kwon Do and Thai boxing, fashion
show s r e fle c tin g life s ty le s o f em p erors.

Cetera To Sing
On Oscars' Night
Peter Cetera w ill sing his
Oscar-nominated song, "Glory of
Love," on the Academy Awards
presentation, which airs Mon­
day. March 30 on ABC. Usually,
the Oscar show books someone
mellower than the original artist
to sing a nominated number —
but in this case, they couldn't
find one. Even more surpris­
in g ly , the Four T o p s ' Lcvl
Stubbs him self will Bing his
nominated tunc from "L ittle
Shop o f H orrors" — "M ean
G re e n M o th e r fro m O u te r
Space.” No word on how the
decidedly R-rated lyrics will be
tidied up for TV.

was Bob Dylan, who (s a fan of
the talking-blues combo, and his
guest for the evening, George
Harrison. John Fogerty had
c o m e b y to sec th e c lu b
headliner, Taj Mahal, and stayed
to Jam as well. By 2 a.m.. they
w ere all on stage — Dylan,
Fogerty, Harrison, Taj and the
Graffltls — playing "Tw ist and
Shout" and having a high old
time.

W r f# o

Boat
Ethllc
Ann Vare

platinum and triple platinum
simultaneously.

heritages and to share them with their fellow
Americans and to give recognition to the
contributions Aslan Americans have made to
the development o f this country, according to
Prakash Khatri. Presidents o f the United States
since 1979 annually proclaimed the first week o f
May as Aslan -Pacific American Heritage Week
calling the nation to observe it with proper
activities and ceremonies.
Orlando was one o f the first cities to undertake
Aslan festival drawing more than 10,000 people
annually to Lake Eola Park.

empresses and court women fro pi various Aslan
countries.
Some o f more lively and colorful performances
Include Japanese drum dance. Korean fan
dance, Thai classical dance, Chinese wine cup
dance, Indian folk dance to name a few. In
addition to arts and crafts exhibits, festival goers
will be able to purchase a variety of unusual
souvenir Items that are normally not found in
department stores.
The purpose o f the festival Is to reaffirm
Asian-Americans deep pride in their cultural

Love Was In The Cards
For Military Pen Pals

I was a freshman at Tulane
(BU) Bands are famous — University, I read In your col­
umn (The Tlmes-Picayunc) that
sometimes Infamous — for their
the Marines at Guantanamo Bay.
"contract rider" clauses, which
Cuba,
were "lo n e ly " and wanted
require concert promoters to
mail, so I wrote a friendly letter
provide them backstage with
to a Marine (any Marine) telling
a n yth in g from sushi (David
him all about myself. Much tq
Bowie) to prophylactics (Beastle
my surprise. I received a won­
Boys). Van Halen were known
for insisting on the removal of. derfu l five-p age letter from
(BU) Album sales continue to brown M&amp;Ms from the candy
Lance Cpl. Mark Dennis — a
go through the roof. Last month, dish.
native New Yorker. 1 answered
the R1AA Issued multi-platinum
Immediately and enclosed my
c e r tific a tio n s fo r "W h it n e y
Now, Wang Chung has In­ picture. He wrote again and sent
Houston" (8 million units). Bon stituted a contract rider to pro­ m e his p ictu re. (H e 's v e ry
Jovl's "Slippery When W et" (6 tect them from caterers' gastro­ handsome!) Soon we were often
million), Boston's "T h lid Stage" nomic Jokes. The guys arc Brit­ exchanging letters and there
(BU) The local Los Angeles
(4 million), Madonna's "T ru e ish, o f course, but their name were hour-long long-distance
audience for John Trudell, Jesse
Blue" (4 million), as well as the has caused food platters from telephone calls!
Ed Davis and the Graffiti Band
got more than they bargained for Bangles' "Different Light" and Pretoria to Peoria to be filled
Mark was promoted to cor­
In February when a few news­ Cinderella's "N ight Songs" (2 with won ton and dim sum. "N o poral and transferred to a base In
million each). Bruce Springs­ Chinese food allowed" Is the new Florida. The best news is that we
w orth y friends o f the band
turned up onstage at the Palo­ teen's "L iv e ' 1975-85" was de­ decree. Give us pizza, or give us have fallen In love through the
clared gold, platinum, double death!
mino In North Hollywood. There
mail. Mark flew to New Orleans
and we met for the first time
when 1 picked him up at the
airport on a rainy Thursday
night In December. Our weekend
was like a fairy talcl
W e e x c h a n g e le tte rs and
MUSIC(MON)
a QD THE TORTELUS Ntck'a In
• (W) ANNA KARCMNA (FRt)
phone
calls almost dally now.
® &gt;*SCOUNTRY(TDE-PRI)
hot watar whan tha woman ha hired
B (S) MIO-OAY BARGAINS
Q BRANDED(WED)
From pen pals w e becam e
a* hit aocratary turn* out to ba an
12*5
(ll)CNNNEWl
EVENINQ
axpart on labor law*. In atarao.
sweethearts dream ing o f the
©PERRY MASON
BEVERLYI
10*0
future.
12:30
6:30
a ® BRONX ZOO Bara oonvlneat
0:00
How can 1 thank you. Dear
•
®
WOROPLAY
TOOAY-SI
Danzig to allow laan-aga motnare
l (B O NEWS
CAN YOU BE THINNER? ® • YOUNG ANO THE REST­ Abby, for giving fate a hand by
to bring thalr Iolanta to dare. In
IE A BNEAKJ
LESS
tTHU)
stareo.
publishing that address In your
IACMDL / LEHRER
BLOVING
BRANDED(MON, FRt)
CD a HOUSTON KMGHTB LaFL
column
IbbI April?
(11)
BEVERLY
HULSHLICS
CAN YOU BE THINNERT

Dear
Abby
congratulated the bride, then
asked her what she wanted for a
wedding present. Then Bonnie
said, “ How much did you want
to spend?"
6
I nearly fainted! The friend
was obviously taken aback, but
she hemmed and hawed and
never did give Bonnie a direct
answer. 1 got Into It, and saved
the situation by telling the friend
that Bonnie was registered at
such and such a store
downtown.
Later I got Into an argument
w ith B o n n ie 's m oth er. She
thought Bonnie's response was
p erfectly OK.

TONIGHT'S TV

I

E

O (&gt;) kmght noer

6.-05
© BEVERLY HUiatUJES

) NSC NEWS
CSS NEWS
I ABC NEWS Q

6:30

(111 TOO CLOSE FOR COWIT wiwn a tanaMcal tan mm •
Cotmtc Cow puppat, Honry toll out
toracorer It.

6*5

© AN0YQRifFTTH

7*0

■ (3) NEWLYWEDGAME
( S a w MAGAZINE Mary Tytar
Moor*, Identical twin*.
(7) ©JEOPARDY
■ (11) BARNEYMILLER
• (10) W0N0SRW0RK8 "Hockay
Night" A 14-yaw-oldgirt aparhaoppoaitlonInhar imaNtownwhanaha
dona a hockay uniformand folna a
boya*championahipMam. g
a (•&gt; W0N0ERFUL WORLD OF
MMEY “Tha Swamp Foa"R*voiuttonary war laadar Gan. Franda
Marion (tha Swamp Pot) aaareha*
tor hta naphaw'a kWar. Btara Laaka
NMaan. (From1M0)

amma'a Ikoptical of a haroic cop'*
aipMta.
CD a THE COLBYS Jaaon and
Phillip hare a twilight; Franoaaca
di*appa*re.g
(11) INN NEWS
(10) BEAUX ARTS TRIO: AN EN­
DURING BOUND Tha mambar* of
tha Baaux Ana Trio diaeuta thalr
30-yMr carear1and pattern Sehubart'a Trio In E-Sat Major pp. 100
and ttw final moremant of Htydn'i
Trio No. 43 m C Major. Tapad at
Indiana Untreretty** Mualcal Aria
Cantar (Bloomington) and tha Tartgltwood Mutic Fatllval (Lanox,
Mata), in atarao.
■ (I) MARY TYLER MOORE

«

10*5

© MOVIE "Tha Saa Hawk" (1B40)
Errol Flynn. Brenda Martha* Eng­
land* Ouaan Elizabath l ancouraga* on* ot har captain*, a
daahtng awordtman, to undartak*
acta of piracy againit tha Spanlah
on tha high

10:30

M1DB0GNSWHART
(I) CAROL BURNETT ANO

7*5

11*0

© SANFORDAN0 SON

a gd ( D a c c a news

7*0

0 (3) ENTERTAINMENTTONIGHT
Dotty Parton, Emmytou Hard* and
Linda Ronatadt diacuaa thaw naw
album, "Trio."
{fiaDAUNGOAME
® 0 WHEELOFFORTUNE
■ (It) BENSON

7*6

OH0NEYM00NERS

. 0*0
a
(X
)
down ano out with
DONALD DUCK Anlmalad. Dairy

Duckghrea boyfrland Donald onul­
timatum - aithar curb N* voiatna
' or tarminata thawrelation-

•n •sriar

dtts.Hni

QD • NEW MIKE HAMMER A
homicidal woman-hatar makaa a
n n ! ■ re- reitaj^rere. &gt; a l t A m

in r v v is r M n g

re

1- - -i

p n o c s i C lm IO R m f r i *

• (11) LATE SHOW B
Hoat:
ot! Joan
Hirers. Inatarao.
• (10) MONTYFYTHON'SFLYING
CIRCUS
• (I) BARGAINSTONIGHT

11:30

• CD TONtGHT SNOW Host:
Johnny Carton Schadulad: actor
Johnlarroquatlo. comicJohnMandoxa. Inatarao.
M*A*B*H

«

NtOHTUNEg

8

H1DCNNNEW8
) ANOYGRIFFITH

6:00

I ® NSCNEWS
JD SALLYJESSYRAPHAEL
) O EYEWITNESSDAYBREAK
PC N N N E W ®

I (!) SUNRISE BHOPPMQ AT A
AVWGS

IS

NEWS
CBSMORNINGNEWS
|(11)CENTURtONt
1110) FARMDAY
) TOMS JERRYANOFRICN0G

(D • AOOERLY Addarty a saaignad to protad a human right*
activtat who haads an amnatty
group. (R)
(L • NtOHTUFt Host: David
Brarmsr. Schadulad. tha Smith(musicgroup). Inatarao
DA.
RUTH'
• (tt) AIK (M
LR
UTHTopic: IWaroaaxual manwho draat tea wornre.g

(

8*0

THURSDAY
MORNING

5*0

QD THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY

©MOVIE

7*0
TODAY
_ 0000 M0RNIN0AMERICA
(11)0.1. JOE
• ( 1(10)
0 SQUAREONETELEVISION

21

7:30
® a MORNtNO PROGRAM
• (11) TRANSFORMERS
• ( 10) SESAME STREET (R]g

8*0

■ (11) DENNIS THE MENACE

5*5

© I DREAM OF JEANN*

8'30

1*0

i

1
(THU)

•

(10)
(10 FLORIOA HOME GROWN
(FRI)

2*0

) ANOTHER WORLD
I AS THEWORLD TURNS
iONCUFCTOUVI
MIUANOYGIMFFITH
) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
I (MON)
(10) JOY OF FAINTING (TUE)
(10) MAOiC OF OIL PAINTING

IB

_ (10) MAOIC OF FLORAL FAINTMO (THU)
• (10) FAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

2:30

•
(11) MY LITTLE PONY 'N'
FRIENDS
• (10) SECRET CITY
© WOMANWATCH (FRI)

3*0

(It) FUNTSTONEB
(10) MUTER ROGERS (R)

I

I ® SANTA BARBARA
) A OUlDtNG LIGHT
• OENERAL HOSPITAL
Mil) SCOOBYDOO
(10) MMTER ROGERS (R)
Ml) MIO-OAY BARGAINS

6:35

©BEWITCHED

0*0

THE JUOQE
DONAHUE
OPRAH WINFREY
I (11) GREEN ACRES
(10) SESAME STREET (R)0
j (•) SHOP-AT-HOME ANO SAVE

8

6*5
©DOWN TO EARTH

3*5

© TOM4 JERRY AND FRIBiDB

3:30
(11) SMURFS'ADVENTURES
BEBAMI STREET (R)g
l(10)
r -----------------

I

MO
(CLOVE CONNECTION
(11) PETTICOAT JUNCTION

«

0*6

© I LOVE LUCY

10*0

a ® sals of the century
IX flj HOUR MAQAZME
® • TRUE CONFESSIONS
■ (111 FALL OUY
• (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (R)
©M OV*

10*5
10*0

BLOCKBUSTERS
• SUPERIOR COURT
(10 WILD AMERICA (MON. FM)
(10)
(10) PROFILES OF NATURE
(»
(TUE)
•
(10) PNCNOMCNAL WORLD
(WED)
• ( 10) NEWTON'S APPLE (THU)

ft!
tiia
a s

11*0

PWCCtSreOHT
PAMS FORTUNE A RO-

i

4*0

MAGNUM, P.L
TAXI
JEOPAROY
11) THUHOERCATS
A T lg
AMERICAS SIOOE8T

11*0

• ® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
® • WEBSTER (R)
• ill ) MAU0E
AFTERNOON

12*0
® ® a® aN cw s

(11) BEWITCHED
(10) BERGERAC (MON)

(10) LAST WALTZ ON A
TIGHTROPE (THE)
• (10) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE
(WEO)
• (10) THIS * NOEL COWARO
(THU)

vanebsa

McMi l l a n

D E A R V A N E S B A t D on’ t
thank me, and don't (hank fate.
You reached out (o cheer up a
lonely Marine, and In so doing,
you caught the gold ring. Con­
gratulations and all the best to
both of you!

DEAR ABBYt Some young
relatives o f mine arc getting
married. Bonnie is 19 and Chuck
Is 20. The other evening a friend
(not a relative) was over and the
kids were here. This friend

4:05

©SCOOBYDOO

4:30
THRETB COMPANY
CARO SHARKS
(11) SKVERHAWKS g
(10) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

iI
„

4*5

0FUNT6TONE8

6*0
I ® DIVORCE COURT

S

• m HE-MAN ANO MASTERS OF
TWUWVERBCIMON.WEO.FRI)
•
(•) SHE-RA: PfUNCUS OF
POWER (TUI, THU)

DEAR IN: Bonnie's response
was frank and forthright —
although som ewhat startling.
The answer you provided In the
Interest of "saving the situation"
was the one Bonnie should have
used.
DEAR ABBY: A very bright,
single and absolutely beautiful
young woman recently came to
work In our office, and I would
like to ask her for a date. There's
only one problem. She wears a
very strong perfume, and too
much o f It.
I w o u ld lik e to te ll tt_
o th e r w is e appealin g y o u n g
woman to either change brands
of perfume or use less o f It, but I
don't want to olTend her. I'm not
the only one In the o(Tlcc who
can't get too c Io b c to her.
How do you feel about anony­
mous office memos?
OVERPOWERED

The Ninth Annual Florida Audubon Society
Canoc-a-thon Is scheduled for May 2 down
Central Florida's Wekiva River. "T h is Is a perfect
opportunity to enjoy a fun-fllled day of paddling
while benefiting Florida Audubon's endangered
species programs," Hans Kalrlcs said. Beginners
to advanced canoeists from throughout Florida
arc encouraged to participate.
This year's grand prize, a 16-foot Old Town
"K ata h d ln " canoe, will be awarded to the
canoeists collecting the highest amount of
sponsored pledges. The boat Is donated courtesy
of Old Town Canoes and Travel County Outdoors

TUXEDO
RENTAL
FASHION
CLEANERS,

Samlrtola Contra
(Naxt to Laundromat)

D E LTO N A
C IN E M A

i A h ' a^ ' h

DO HOOVWOOO SQUARES
I (11) FACTS OF UF1
1(10) OCEANUI (MON)
1(10) UNOERSTANOINQ HUMAN
iHAVIOAfTUE)
(10) BUSINESS FILE(R) (WED)
(10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)

IN THE MIDDLE

.
:
:
j
&gt;
:
;

D E A R AB B Yt In the fall o f
1985 we loaned our daughter
$10,000 to replace a car she
totaled. She agreed to make
monthly payments to us over
the next five yean. She made
three payments, then we re­
ceived a letter from her saying
she didn’t want to ever see or
h e a r f r o m us a g a l n l
Furthermore, we were not to
write or phone our two
grandsons, ages 8 and 12. In the
past, these grandchildren have
visited us every summer and
during the Christmas holidays.
(W e live In different states.) Our
daughter is divorced, and we
now have absolutely no com ­
munication with her. Our gifts
have been returned, and our
letters go unanswered. W e miss
our grandchildren very much.
Do we. as grandparents, have
any rights to tee them? We want
to put our family back In order.
Although we are disappointed
that our daughter has stopped
her loan payments, we would be
willing to forgive the loan if we
could see our grandchildren.

HEARTBROKEN
G R A N D PA R E N T S
Something Is drastically wrong
h ere. C on su lt y o u r law yer.
Perhaps you can get to your
daughter through her attorney
or your elergyperson. Don't give
up. You don't say where you or
your daughter live, but in some
states grandparents have a legal
right to sec their grandchildren.

Audubon Society Seeks
Canoeists For Benefit

available at

(10) ART OF BEINQ HUMAN

_ (10) WIST OF HESTER STREET
(MON)
■ (10) NORTHERN EDGE(TUE)
■ (10) NATURE OF THINGS (WEO)
■ (10) NOVA (THU)
■ (10) HOUVWOOOS FAVORITE
HEAVY: BUSMESEMEN ON PRIME
TRIE TV (FRO

i

1*5

I BOLD ANO TWICAUTPUL
(U)P-TROOP
_ (10) NEW SOUTHERN COOKSKI (MON)
(10) FRENCH CHEF (TUE)
(10) MAOELES* COOKS (WED)
(10) WOOOWRtOHTt SHOP

6:45

S

( IMS! laird Cregar. Unda Darn*#
© GET SMART

i

I (10) AJAWEATHER

,

12*0

HoncaAJnahow.
QD • FERFECT ETRANOERB
Thraata ot bodky harm cpnvlrioa • (I) NIGHT OWL FUN
Larry that ha ahouldn'l taatify
12:30
Mainat arackataar. (R) g
QD LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
• (11) MOVIE "Loulalana" (IBM) •LETTE
MAH Schadulad: Bob Vita
(Fart 9 of 3) Margot Klddar, tan ot PBSRs
"This Old Houao"; rock
Chartaaon. Th
ro
tour dacvoughout
gar Eric Bordon. psychic Joan*
ot aodai uphoom and potrtt- sin
DUon inatarao.
cal turnon, a
tanadoualy (D
• MOVIE "Tha Vrew From
ckngatot
i har Louisianaf
Pompay a Hoad" (1955) Richard
W)INPERFORMANCEATTHE Egan,
Wyntar.
I HOUSEThl* tributeto Rich­ • (11)Dana
R m n!
HAWAII FIVE-0
ard Rodgare and Loren* Man tea12:50
luraa mualcal parlormancaa by Vic
Qantona. * utnrm. BobbyShort O MOV* -A Star la Bom" (IBM)
and ccmpoaar-parlormar Marvin Judy Garland, Jama* Mason. ,
Hamiach. inatarao.
1:10
• A MOW! "Harold AndMauda" (D • MOV*
(1B73)
(1ST1) Ruth Gordon, Bud Cort A RoddyMcDowal. S"Arnold"
tan
*
B
taren
s.
TS roar old woman maata a 201:30
yaarreMman obaaaaad with daath.
an
d proooad* to loach himtha art • (11) BIZARRE Skatchas: lunch
redRTS Rp wtHJ K r r t i l g .
counter romanca: catabrltia* via lor
nawacaatar poartton; Supsr Dare
6*6
musicvidao. g
• MOVa "Standing Tad" (1BTI)
2*0
Robart Foratar, Chuck Connor* A
eatttaranchor la aub)actad to ■ tar­ • OnoUKCSOFHAZZARO
tar rampaign whan ho raAiiaa to
2:20
margo Ms aproad with that ot a (D a MOV* "No Down Payment"
pmaartul andruthtaa*man.
(1957) Joanns Woodward. Tony
Randan
•*0
QD• HARRY Harry aat* uprat
2:30
i to rates(nonoyto buyavidao (D a N E W S
motor thahospitai.g
3*0
_
t*0
(EtawaHTWATCH
) (D MONTCOURTHarrytriaato B odbj /lobo
mmwor tnooathor cnaanampio • m WOHTOWLFUN
i Lobatoraahaghroat
3:50
, PL Magnum'i
I
O WORLDATLARGE
4*0
Forrad go awry whan h*
(11)OALLAI
gate ambreRad In a macabre care
LUCY SHOW
(PaatponaOhornanaarkardata )
® • DYNASTYBuck Faamontm4:30
QDa MOV* -Hangover Square"

Bam Ctay: Domlniquo noticas that
Ore i* attracted to Sarah. □
• INI HOLLYWOOD’S FAVORITE
■ A W : BUSStESSMEN ON PRIMi
m m tv! A
i look at how tatavtston'a
Scuonre portrayal ot bualnaaaman
aNacta tha visaing public’s
porctavod knag* ot big buatnare

6:30

1*0

® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
O AIL MYCHILDREN
(11) DICK VANDYKE
(10) WFRE COOKINO NOW

DEAR OVERPOWERED: I'm
not crazy about anonym ous
'm em os — even those that are
w e ll- in t e n t io n e d a n d c o n structlve. Why not be up-front
with the woman and tell her you
would like to ask her out. but
you can't handle perfume In
anything but minimal doses?

DEAR ABBTi Last year when

o f Altamonte Springs.
Four first place prizes will be awarded in each
o f the following categories: Individual, corporate,
public service organization, and local Audubon
chapter. The prizes are hand-made canoes from
Wekiva Canoe Co.
A special prize will be awarded to the canoeists
who finish with the most trash collected from the
river along the route of the Canoe-a-lhon.
Florida Audubon's goal is to raise 920,000 from
the event this year. All pledges lo the Canoc-athon are tax-deductible. A minimum o f 675 per
canoe in pledges Is required to participate.

WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
3 P ie c e D in n e r!

$

2 79

3 pieces of golden brown Fam ous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
cream y cole slaw and two fresh, hot biscuits.
COUPON

FEED 4 FOR
■is. Soma guys
hava all
77,, *ha luck!
a*T.
——
n .a
[HD
liitemlute Pliutt 5 7 4 - 9 0 0 0

e a

I
Look at what you get: 8 pee. of golden brown
Fam ous Recipe Fried Chicken, 1 pint mashed
potatoes, Vz pint gravy and 4 biscuits. A n entire
family dinner for only $7.99.
Good Thurs.. Fri., Sat., Sun.

COUPON

5*5

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

© OILMAN'S ISLAND (MONTHU)
©ROCKY ROAD(FRf)

• ® f5*0

Is.

COURT
I(PEOPLE'S
d ) • NEWS
) JEFFERSONS
■ dO)OCEANUS(MON)
• (10) UNOERSTANOINQ HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
(10) BUSH**4S FILE(R) (WEO)
(10) MONEY ’TZLEfTHU)

S

A Taste off the Country

(MR ART a
.NO HUMAN
1(S( IOREAM OF JCANWC

5*5
© LEAVE IT TO BEAVER (MONTHU)
©SAFE AT HOME (FRI)

CYCLONE-----® — ®
DIRTY WAR

SANFORD
1905 FRENCH AVE.
HWY. 17-92

CASSEUERRV
41 N. HWY. 17-92

4

�fr

- +-f

'r r

f r

SS— Sanford Horskt, Sonford, F I.

Wodnowtoy, M arch 2 5 ,1W7

legal Notlca I legal Notice j legol Notice |
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SKMINOLKCOUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number I7-I4ICP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
WARREN LESLIE MEWES.
Deceeted
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The admlnltlrallon ol Ihe
etlele of WARREN LESLIE
M EW ES, d o co a to d , F lit
Number 17-lil-CP, It pending In
the Circuit Court lor Seminole
County, Florid a. Probate
Dlvitlon, the eddrett ol which It
Seminole County Courthoute,
Sanlord, FL 32771. The name
and addratt ot tha partonal
rapraiantatlva and ol lha
partonal representative's at­
torney are tel forth below.
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
All Inlorotted pertont are
required to file with Ihe court,
WITHIN THREE MONTHS
FROM THE DATE OF THE
FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (I) ell claim*
egalntl the eitate and 12) any
ob|acllon by an Inftratled
per ton lo whom notlco wat
mailed that challenge* Ihe valid­
ity ol lha will, lha qualification*
ol the pertonal repretenlallve,
venue or |urltdlcllon ot Ihe
court.
Dele ol Ihe lint publication ol
thlt nolle* of admlnltlrallon:
March I*. 1*7.
Partonal Rapretentative:
/*/ Alice Margaret AWwet
Attorney lor
Partonal Repretenlallve:
JOHN IE A. MCLEOD
P.O. Drawer »J0
Apopka, Florida 32703
Telephone: 30S/M4 3300
Publlth: March II,2S. 1*7
DEM-14S

IN THK CIRCUIT
COURT OF THE
1ITH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CASE NO. 14-1174 CA M IL )
COLLECTIVE FEDERAL
SAVINGS A LOAN
ASSOCIATION, n/k/a
COLLECTIVE FEDERAL
SAVINGS BANK.
Plaintiff.
vt

FELIX C. ZWINGE end
GAIL E. ZWINGE, hi*
wife, el el..
Defender It.
NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 41
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to an Order or Final
Judgment of forecloture dated
March 3, IM7 and Order dated
March II, IW and entered In
Cate No. 14- 1074 CA 0* (LI of the
Circuit Court of the llth Judicial
Circuit In and for Seminole
County, Florida wherein COL­
LECTIVE FEDERAL SAVINGS
BANK. Plaintiff and FELlX C.
Z W I N G E a nd G A I L E.
Z W IN G E , h it w ife , and
B A R N E T T B A N K OF
CENTRAL FLORIDA. N.A., De­
fendant!. I will tell to the
hlghetl and bett bidder for cath
at the welt front door ot the
Seminole County Courthoute In
Sanford, Seminole County,
Florida at U:00 A.M. on the 3tit
day of April, 1*17, the following
detcrlbed property at tet forth
In tald Order or Final Judg­
ment, to-wit:
Lot 4. Bloch D. STERLING
PA R K , UNIT FOUR. AC­
CORDING TO THE PLAT
.THEREOF AS RECORDED IN
PLAT BOOK 31. PAGES 4 A 7.
OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA.
Dated at Sanlord, Seminole
County. Florida thlt Ifth day of
March. 1*17.
(SEAL)
DAVID N. BERRIEN
At Clerh, Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: Phylllt Foriytho
At Deputy Clerh
Publlth: March 25.
April I, IM7
DEM 211
IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE IIO M TIINTH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT,
IN ANDFOR
tIMINOLR COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASK NO. 44-4442-CA-tt-P
CASK NO. M-M11-CA-H-P
CA1I NO. S4-334J-CA-43-P
A A B HEAT A AIR, INC.,
Plaint lift.

NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Nolle* It hereby given that I
am ct-gaged In butlnett al 755
W. Hwy. 434. Winter Spring*.
Seminole County, Florida 3270*
under Ihe Flcllllout Name ol
KLM Wholetale, and that I
Intend to regltter tald name
with the Clerk of Ihe Clrcull
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with ttw Pro
vltloni of the Flcllllout Nam*
Statute*. To Wit: Section 043.0*
Florid* Statute* 1M7.
/*/ Vernon Smith
Publlth March It, II, 33 A
April 1,1*7.
DEM-f7
NOTICE
The St. Johnt River Water
Management Ditlrlc! hat re­
ceived an application lo* Con
tumpllve Water Utelrom:
C IT Y OF A LTA M O N T E
S P R I N G S ,
333
NEWBURYPORT AVENUE.
A L T A M O N T E SPGS. ,
MAITL/'ND, FL 33701. Appllca
lion f l I17-0IKANM, on 1/14/47.
Tho applicant propotot lo
w ith d r a w 7.11 M G D o l
GROUNDWATER FROM THE
FLORIDAN AQUIFER VIA 10
EXISTING WELLS A I PRO
POSED WELL FOR PUBLIC
SUPPLY to torve *307 acre* In
Seminole County located In Sec­
tion ll, 13. 10-11 A 34, Townthlp
II South. Rang* 3* A 30 Eatl.
S EMI NOL E C OUN T Y
SCH O O L B O A R D . W 1 I
MCLLONVtLLE AVENUE.
SANFORD. FL 31771. Applica­
tion 4I-1I7-0I31AUNMG, on
3/13/17. Tho applicant propotot
to withdraw .Oil MGD ol
GROUNDWATER FROM THE
FLORIDAN AQUIFER VIA 1
E X I S T I N G WE L L F OR
PUBLIC SUPPLY to tarvo il.o
acrot In Somlnol* County
located in Section 31, Townthlp
» South, Range 31 Eotl.
The Governing Board ol ttw
Dlatrlct will toko action lo grant
or deny ttw application!*) no
toonor than 10 day* from ttw
date of thlt notlca. Should you bo
Inter**ted In any ot the lilted
application*, you thould contact
tho St. Johnt River Water Man­
agement District at P.O. Boi
142*. Palatka. Florida 3307a
143*. or In porton at Itt office on
Slate Highway loo Weal.
Palatka. Florida. *04/12*1321.
W ritten objection lo lha
application may bo mad*, but
thould be received no later than
14 day* from the dal* ol
publication. Written objection*
thould Identity ttw objector by
name and addrett, and fully
deter lb* ttw objection to the
application. Filing a written
objection doe* not entitle you lo
• Chapter IN, Florida Statute*.
Admlnltlrallv* Hearing. Only
thote portent whote tubtlonllai
Inter**t* are affected by the
application and who Ilia o peti­
tion mooting tho requirement!
at Sect ten 3* 3.101, F.A.C., may
obtain an Admlnlttrotlvo Hear­
ing. All timely tiled written
objectIon* will be preeonted to
tho Board lor Itt consideration
In It* dsllberotlon on the
application prior to tho Board
taking ad Ionan ttw application.
Dawnlao T. Kemp. Director
Dlvitlon ot Record*
St. John* River Water
Management District
Publlth March 30.1*7

SOUTHWI NO A ASSOCIATES.
INC.,
el at.,
Defendant!.
THE FIRST. F.A.,
t
Plaintiff.
ROBERT CHARLES
ARMSTRONG, el si..
Defendant*.
BASIC ASPHALT A
CONSTRUCTION CORPORA
TION,
Plaintiff.
SOUTHWIND A ASSOCIATES.
INC , a Florida corporation.
TICS OF SALE

of Forecloture and tale entered
In the caute pending In the
Circuit Court In and for
Seminole County, Florida, being
centolldated Civil Action Numb a r * I4 -0 I4 2 -C A -O f -P ,
I4 I 0 I l - C A - a f - P , a n d
• S4-33UXA-S3*. ttwundsrslgnad
Clerk will tall the property
•lluated In Seminole County.
; Florida, detcrlbed at:
- Lot t, PICCADILLY CAFE­
TERIA CASSELBERRY, ac­
cording to Plat thereof at re
cordtd In Plat Book 2A Page *4.
Public Record* ol Seminole
County, Florida.
Together with all ol the fixlure*, furnlthlngt, carpelt,
draperlet, appliance*, equipmenl and flituret located within
ttw Improvement! to be con
ttructed upon tald real pro­
perly, AND. together with all
office furniture and furnlthlngt.
flituret and machine* now uted
or normally kept or to be placed
or kept on any or all ol the above
real property, together with all
addition! thereto or replace
m tn lt, or t u b ifIt u t lo n t
Iiterator*, and all lleeniet.
leatet, tranchltet, and trade
name* that may oiltl or be uted
In connection with, all In referante to the tbevt detcrlbed real
; property and any renewal* or
replacemenft qf tald llcenaot,
leatet and/or franchliet.,
at public lata, to ttw hlghetl
end bett btddtr ter caah at n M
a.m. on Ihe Uth day of April.
HP, at the Watt Front Deer of
the Seminole County Courthoueo
DATED this Uth dey of
March. Her
ISEAL!
DAVID N. BERRIEN
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
ly t Cecelle V. Ekorn
Deputy Clerk
PiMlah: March IA3J. 1*7
OEM-1*

DM All*

C tL U ftfTY CIPHER

" O il

r V .1k

V 4 -t » J

IN M D Z A I
,i

•i

B N V TO H O D M ZO
PM DB
C «L
HBOC

TZ A I
C

L IC L

,*

ZB
/

*M*T
BZD

.I

'

C

, ,

,

F Z A- Ct Q

ItZ T T A IN

N t Z O I."

—

O C H M ID O .

PACVIOUt SOLUTION: "Boing • good coach doeorrt
Awe
-- ■***■■
J ---- -1------ — tt
ill
hp oo Wriii v w v n g or Kwng.
— Bwu

Ba h §

i

y

IN T H E C IR C U IT CO UR T

OF THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO. I7-#0*I-CA-II-Q
JUDOC:
C. VERNON MIZE, JR.
NOTICE OF
FORFEITURE PROCEEDING
INRE: FORFEITURE OF
*3.0*7 00 UN ITEO
STATES CURRENCY
SECOND PUBLICATION
TO: Pierre Jean
34*0 Ridgewood Avenue
Sanlord. FL 32771
Elltmond Detine
203North lllh Street
Ft. Pierce. FL 13430
and all otfwrt who claim an
Interest In the following pro
party:
a.) *3,0*7 00 United Stale*
Currency
THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT
tailed Ihe detcrlbed property on
the 3rd day ol July. IN*, al or
near the McAlister Motel. 2101
Soulhwotl Road. Sdnford,
Seminole County, Florida 32771.
On fth day ol January. 1M7.
the Seminole County Sheriffs
Department filed a Petition lor
Rule to Show Ceuta and lor
Final Order of Forfeiture with
Ihe Clerk of Clrcull Court.
Seminole County Courthoute,
300 North Park Avenue, San
lord, Florida. A copy ol tald
Petition It on file In lha Clerk’s
ofllce and It available lor examInallon during regular butlnett
hour*.
WHEREAS a prlma fade
showing hat been mad* by Ihe
Petitioner that there It a proba­
ble caute lor the Ittuenc* ol a
Rule to Show Caute.
YOU, Ihe above-indicated
potential claimants Pierre Jean
and Elltmond Detlna, ARE
HEREBY COMMANDED to
appear before Ihe HONOR­
ABLE C. VERNON MIZE. JR.
In Chambers, Seminole County
Courthoute, Seminole County,
Sanlord, Florida, on ihe lit day
ol May, 1*7, al 1:30 A M., lor
Pre-Trial lo thow caute why the
above detcrlbed property thould
not be forfeited by thlt Court at
Contraband, pursuant to Sec­
tions *12.701-70*. Florida Stat­
utes I trail, to the Seminole
County Sherlll't Department, at
the agency which laired said
property on 3rd dey of July,
t*S4, In Seminole County,
Florida, bated upon alleged
felony violations which occurred
In Seminole County, Florida.
WHEREAS a prlma facto cata
hat been shown. It It therefor*
Ihe Order ol thlt Court that all
potential Respondent* who
claim an Interest In the abovedescribed properly, shall within
twenty (30) days from torvlc*
bul no later than taven (7) days
before the date tel above, thow
caute by tiling In Ihlt Court,
responsive pleading* at to why
thlt Court thould not enter lit
Order forfeiting the tald pro­
perty lo the use of, or tale by,
lha SheriII ol Seminole County,.
Florida.
YOU A R E F U R T H E R
COMMANDED to tarvo a true
and correct copy of tuch plead­
ing* within said lime period
upon ANNE E. RICHARDSRUTBERG. Assistant Stele At­
torney. Office ol tho Slate At­
torney. 100 Eatl First Street.
Senior^ Florida 33771. Failure
to file aiid terv* tuch pltadlngi
within tald time period shall
result In Ihe entry ol a Default
and a Final Order of Forfeiture.
DATED Ihlt ltlh day of
March. IN7.
NORMAN R. WOLFINGER
STATE ATTORNEY
BY: ANNE E.
RICHARDS RUTBERG
ASSISTANT
STATE ATTORNEY
Of Ilea ol the State Attorney
100Eatl First Street
Sanlord, Florlda3777l
(303) 333-731*
Publlth: March 13. April 1.1. IS.
IW7
DEM 722

INTHE CIRCUITCOURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
Fite Number 14 404-CP
Division Probate
INRE: ESTATE OF
Emma K. Bauchle,
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The admlnltlrallon ol Ihe
estate ol Emma K. Bauchle,
d i c t a t e d . Fi l e N u m ber
*4 404-CP. It pending In Ihe
Circuit Court lor Somlnolo
County, Florid a. Probate
Dlvitlon, ttw addrett of which It
P-O. Drawer C, Sanlord, Florida
32772-043*. Tho namoi and
addrotiot ol ttw partonal repretontatlvo and the personal rep
/■•tentative1* attorney ere eel
forth below
All Intoroitod pertont or*
required to III* with Ihlt court,
WITHIN THREE MONTH5 OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: III all claim*
agalntl ttw eitate and (1) any
oblocllon by an Inlorotted
perton on whom Ihlt notlca wot
served that challenge* ttw&gt;a IId
Ity ol tho will, tho qualifications
of the personal repretenlallve.
venue, or jurisdiction ol ttw
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILEO WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication ol thlt Notlco hat
begun on March 23,1*7.
Pertonal Representative:
/*/ Albert Theodor* Bauchle
1102Huron Court
Winter Springs. FL 3270*
Attorney for
Perianal Rapretentative:
/*/ William B.Metmer
230 N. Orange Avenue, Sto 1300
Orlando, FL 37*01
Telephone: (303)1** 0330
Publlth: March 23 * April I,
1*7
DEM-2II

CLASSIFIED A D S

Seminole
322-2611

Orlando - Winter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
ur\||DC

BI

7%^9

't L - i w i i a v

MONDAY th n FRIDAY
SATURDAY t

RATES

1 Hr* ............. .. 72C ■ Him

4*

*1 RLrara,

a

7 CBBM CEthM URMt S0C B

ia ni - &gt;&gt;rMt|ie
c***"*™

soC i

w*

IIm

nm

S l fern
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 lic a 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 TE: In the event el the publishing ol errors In advertllementt, the San
ford Herald shall publlth ttw advertisement, after It hat been corrected at
no cm I to the advertiser but tuch Insertions shall number no mere then one

111.

12— Legal Services
SOCIAL SECURITY Usability
Free Advlce.No Charge Unleu
We Wlnl Ward White A
Attaclate*.......... 203-211-1I lf

21— Personals
A LOVER'S KNOT
WEDDINGS RY DOT
Notary Public
113-1145
ALL ALONE! Call Bringing
Poopla Together. Sanford's
most respected dating service
tine* 1177. Men over SO (43%
discount).......... 1*00-072 4*77
CRISIS PREONANCYCTR.
Fr** Pregnancy Test, con11den
Hal. Call lerappt........331-74*5

NEW CREDIT CARDI
No ono r e lu t e d . C o ll:
1-41*545 I522* x1.C;02FL.
.............. 34 hours................
IREWARDS For Info ot to
whereabouts ot dark groan
van In recent accident on Dog
Track Rood. Damage to
driver* tide............. .332-112*

23— Lost ft Found
REWARD- 130 for roturn ol
black A Ian 7V* wk. tomato
Oobarman Plnchar pup.
Stoton from yard 1/22/17 on W.
llth SI. Sanlord. No questions
atkod. Or SIN REWARD for
Information loading to tho
arrest and conviction of the
porton or portont retpon. for
tho thoff of our pot. Call:
323 7*12........or........323-rat*

25— Special Notices

BECOME A NOTARY
For Detail*: 1-•00-431-4254
Florida Notary Association
HEADACHE A MUSCLE PAIN
RELIEF through mattago
therapy, by oppl........343-434*

legol NoticeINTHE CIRCUIT
COURTFOR THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIOA,
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASENO.04-!S11-CA-4f
ALLIANCE MORTGAGE
COMPANY,
PLAINTIFF,
vsSAMUEL A. WILLIAMSON
and.
LINDA R. WILLIAMSON, hit
wile.
FLORIDA NATIONAL BANK.
CARLOS A. GARCIA, ANA
MARIA GARCIA, CO-EQUITY
GROUP, INC . HARCAR
ALUMINUM PRODUCTS CO..
--------UNKNOWN TENANTIS).
DEFENDANTS.
NOTICE OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICEPROPERTY
TO: CO EQUITY, INC.
A DISSOLVED FLORIDA
CORPORATION
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that an action hat
been commenced lo foreclose a
mortgage on llw following root
property, lying and being and
situated In Seminole County.
Florida, more particularly dotcrlbedat follows:
L O T S. B L O C K F.
S W E E T W A T E R OAKS.
SECTION*. ACCORDING TO
THE PLAT THEREOF AS RE­
CORDED IN PLAT BOOK 1*,
AT PAGES » THROUGH It.
INCLUSIVE, OF THE PUBLIC
RECORDS OF SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA.
more commonly known at 103
Brandywine Lana, Longwood,
Florida 3im .
Thlt action hat boon (Had
against you and you ora re­
quired to serve a copy of your
written detent**, if any, to It on
SHAPIRO. ROSE t FISHMAN,
Attorney*, whote addrett It 330
North Roo Street, Suite 301.
Tampa. Florida 3340*1013. on or
boforo APRIL 4, 1*7, and flte
ttw original with the Clark of
thlt Court either boforo service
on Plaintiff's attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter; otherwise a
■utt will be entered agalntl
you lor ttw relief demanded In
"w Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and teal
of thlt Court on tho 17th day of
FEBRUARY. 1*7.
(COURTSEAL!
David N. Berrien.
CLERK
Circuit and County Courts
BY: Phylllt Forty the

Deputy Clark
Publish: Marche, 11, •
11.33.1*7
DEM41

27— N u rs try A
Child Care
I WILL BABYSIT pre-schoolers
In my homo Mondey-Frlday.
Breakfast A lunch II desired.
Reasonable rate*. 333-44*4
LOVING MOTHER will babytll
In my horn*. Day or night,
port/tull lima, oil ogotMl-0*74
MY HOME I Meals A tnackt.
Fenced yard, *30 a wk., 1307
M ontaium a A va. o il ot
Mollonvllte Ava., 1 blk before
Celery Av*.............. .321-3471

43— Mortgage
B o u g h t A Sold
W E B U Y 1st a n d In d
MORTOAOES Nation wide.
Call: Ray Lego Lie. Mlg
Broker. f*0 Douglas Av*.,
Altamonte................774-7732

71— Help Wanted
DELIVERY Holp Wanted. Mutt
bo IS yrt.'old and have FI.
Driver's Lie. Apply In person
to: Badcock t urnlture, 3304 S.
French Av*.________________
DENTAL HYQIENIST, Part
time position, top salary. Sand
return*' to 1413 S. Volusia
Av*. Suite D-l. Oreng* City,
PL 33743___________________
DENTAL ASSISTANT, experi­
ence required for quality or­
iented practice. Top salary A
benefit*. Send return*' to 3433
S. Volutla Avo. Suite D-2,
Orange City. FL 33743_______
CABINET MAKERS- Challenge
for right porton, oxp'd. In
custom laminated casework o
mutt, alto design A drawing
helpful, excellent salary,
boneflti, A future with a
growing A established co.
33l -S3*4otk tor Lou or Jim
CANVASSERS oam S3 S7 hr.
plus bonuses going door to
door making appointment*.
Will
................
train...
T S if•11:240-3*42
CASHIER: Convenience Store,
lop salary, hospitalisation, 1
week vacation each 4 months,
ottwr benefits. Apply 303 N.
Laurel Avo." l:30am-4:10pm
Monday through Friday.
CASHIERS- All thills. Full A
Part time. Above minimum
wag* storting pay. Good
bonolll pkgo. Apply In porton
ECOL. SR 44A 1-4. Sanford
txp.,
oncot. S3.fi tlorl, Call 33111*2
between |qa 13..........any day
CLERK/TYPIST lo typo medi­
cal records 10 hr*, a week.
Mutt be accurate, type el
least 45 WPM. Medical knowl­
edge required.................Call
&lt;31-2411 lor appointment.
CNAi Immediate full lima posi­
tions. 7-3 or 3-11 shifts. Good
benefits A almotphera. Apply
Dobary Manor, 40 N. Hwy.
17-93, DeBary 44**434....EOE
COM PANION/LIVE-IN, To
car* for ladlot. Mutt bo depondable.CoM........... 131-4734
DRIVER A Warehouseman,
Musi have valid chautlaur
license. Call.............. 331-1003
R E T I R E D E LE C T R O N IC
Engineers- Part lime. Designs
A development ol electronic
ly item i for a high tech.
manutactureer. Cal l.„.333-7750
ELECTRONIC TECH, required
by a manufacturer on Laser
Modulating Systems. Commu­
nity callage degree A 2-5 yrt
experience. Call:.......323 7730

to

71— Help Wanted

71— Help Wanted

ADD TO YOUR INCOME
Sell Avon Now!
322 043*....... or........ 331-0
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
JOBS! JOBSI JOBSI
International company expan­
ding lo this area. tl200/mo.
beginning pay. Various posi­
tions Rapid advancement,
company training, no exportenc* necessary, excellent
benefits. Call today lor In­
terview. 747-13*3.
College Student* Accepted
APPOINTM ENT SETTERSGuaranfeed S3 hr. Longwood
area. Call Mike:........ *11-4440
ASSEMBLY WORK al homa.
plus many others. Earn good
wages In spar* lime. Info
304-441 00*1 ext. 144*. 7 dayt
BAKER'S HELPER
Call;l******e***ee**ee**4****a*rt321-3381

GA R D E N SH O PI H ig h ly
motivated people perien, love
of plants, lo servo our retell
customers. Hourly + Incontlvesl................ ......311-3535
• * •HAIRSTYLIST* * •
to work Tuesdays Saturdays.
Up In 40% commItt Ion...323-1*91

CONSTRUCTION DELIVERY17+ hr! Keep tract of matorlalt. make deliveries! AAA
Employment, 700 W. 35th St.,
Sanlord................... 133 5174
COOK- Some experience helpful.
Apply al DeBary Manor, 40 N.
Hwy 17 *3.................... EOE

FREE TUITION
TO REAL ESTATE
LICENSE SCHOOL
• A New Career
• A New Beginning
Call FranerStu

323-3200

f i* M
K E Y E lft IN THE SOUTH
HIRINOI Federal Gov. |obt. In
your araa A oversea*. Many
Immediate opening* without
w a llin g l i t i s or l e t l t .
SI5148,000. Phone call refun
dabl*..... 403 11* IMS ext. 120
HIRINOI Federal government
|obt In your area A overseas.
Many Imm. openings without
walling lit! or lest. &gt;15 44,000.
Phone call refundable. (403)
.............. Exl. 1243.

HOSPITAL STAFFING
NURSES NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
Now benefits, free CELTS,
Vacation, dally pay, flexible
hours.
Call: 740-5344

MEDICAL PERSONNEL POOL

Medical

m Personnel
•Fool*

HOUSEKEEPER WANTED
2 days a week.
•_______ Call 333-3*7*
0IKTARY AID- Pari time. No
experience necessary. Apply
at DeBary AAanor, 40 N. Hwy
1**3............................ EOE
DISTRIBUTORS NEEDED
ALL NEW "MAILMALL • * " .
333-4075 for recorded mettaoe.
FAST FOOD PREPARATION;
Top salary, hospitalization, 1
weak vacation each 4 months.
Other benefits. Apply 303 N.
Laurel Av*. S:3Oahv4:30pm
Monday through Friday.
FRAM INO CARPENTERS.
Experienced In elevations.
Cal 1333-4H* even Inos________
EXP. CARPENTERS A HELP­
ERS. tools A transportation,
good pay, vacation A benefits
........... 305-321 3555
EXP. ROOF INO Sales person
needed on expense and commltslon batlt...... 305-331-3555
EXPERI ENCED LAND­
SCAPERS pay aqual lo axpertenet. Fulltime.3331113

M RUNE/TM VEl SCHOOL

LIGHT INDUSTRIAL
WORXERSI We have im­
mediate openings lor persons
with strong backs A u stronger
desire lo work. Phono A car a
must. On# lime Interview In
Orlando, all |obt located In
S a n f o r d / L a k * Ma r y /
Longwood area. Call Ablest
Temporary Services, Good
pay. No lee............... 311 3*40
LOOKING lor hard working,
energetic, people for lha Do
lend/Sanford area. No exp.
required. Auto Insurance
World, 2344 S. French Av*.
Apply In Person
LPN Needed for busy Dr's oil.
P-T, * to 3 Thurt A * lo 1 Frl.
Musi be able lo draw blood,
start I.V. A type. Starting sal.
U.50 hr. Call Mrs. Thomas
Tuos or Wed 323 3330
LPN; 3 11 thill A 11-7 shill, good
working environment, tuition
reimbursement program I
Longwood Healthcare Center

31*-*2M

MAINTENANCE
SUPERVISOR
Hands on type Individual needed
to supervise personnel In a
well established aluminum A
copper fabrlcellon operation.
Mutt be proficient with
e le c tr ic a l and e le c tr o
hydraulic controlled circuits
with tome knowledge ol
electronics. Ability lo read
hydrallc diagrams a mutt.
Resume' end wage require
menlt to Box 330. c/o Sanlord
Herald. PO Box I4S7. Sanlord,
FL 32772-1437
MAINTENANCE MECHANIC,
Electrical/Hydraulic control
s y s te m s M a in te n a n c e
Mechanic wllh al least 5 years
experience needed lor well
established Aluminum A
Copper fabrication operation
wllh experience, trouble
shooting electrical A large
hydraulic systems. Electronic
background helplul. Wag* his­
tory, resume A wage re­
quirements to box P.O. Box
2137. Sanford. FI. 31773 3137
MANUFACTURER ol High
Technology Later Devises has
an optnlng lor lachlnlcal jobs.
Community college degree
preferred. Training provided.
Call:....................... 333-7730
MATURE, Stable Individual
with strong management
background needed to manage
real estate holdings lor non­
resident developer In Sanford
area. Send resume' lo Box 253
e/o The Sanlord Herald. P.O.
Box 1437, Sanford 33771

NOW HIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
Operators wanted on all
operations. W* oiler paid holi
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, 3340 Old Lak*
Mary Rd.. Sanlord....■■321-38I0
NOW HIRINO; Manufacturer ol
wood components serving the
modular homa Industry hat
lull time positions available.
Experience with carpentry,
sawing, painting, A material
handling helplul. Company
benefits. Apply In person 7am
to 3:30pm, Trutto Mlg., 1143
E.lOlhSI.. Sanlord Airport.
NURSES AIDE: All thills,
exp'd. or certified only. Apply
Lakevlew Nursing Center
(1* E. 2nd St............. Sanlord

7.1— Help Wanted
HOUSEKEEPERS
HOUSEMEN
C om petitive salary, good
benefits, excellent working
conditiont. 40 hr. work week.
VILLAOE ON THE OREEN
SOOVILLAOE PLACE
Lnngweod...... ............ *3-0330.
IRRIGATION INSTALLER ot
Helper. Exp. required. Full
tlmiK Call:................ 321-1133
LAWN MAINTENANCE- Expe­
rience required. Full lime.
C a ll:..............................m U M

LICENSED IN A A H» Interest­
ed In managing your own
team? Exp- A rasuma re­
quired. Contort Barry Dunn
4*1-11*4............. 1Oam to 3pm
RECPTIONIST, *4.50 hr. Your
pleasant phone skills hold the
key I AAA Employment, 700
W. lllh SI., Sanlord....333-5174

REPS NEEDED
For Business accounts. Full
time. S40.000-Sl0.000. Pert
time, S12.000-Stl.000. No tell­
ing. repeal business. $*! your
own hours. Training provided.
1 412 *34 4*70, M/F, lam to
5pm (Central StandardTIma)
RN’S, LPN'S, CNA'S
IALL PART-TIME)
Contact: Hlllhaven Health Cara Center
esoMellonvIll* Av*.
Sanlord......... 333 &gt;544 E.O.E.

SALESMAN WANTED
lor fast growing carpet store.
Sales exp. helpful. Musi be
from Sanlord area. Apply In
person, Florida Carpel A
Vinyl, 3497 S. Orlando Dr.,
Wal-Mart Plaza, Sanlord
P A RT T IM E Educational
Director (or Child Car* Cntrs.
Exp. A BS Degree In early
childhood a must........323 &gt;435
PHONE SOLICITORS
Monday through Friday,
5:30pm to 1:30pm. Positive
altitude A pleasant phone
voice Is all you need! Experi­
ence helplul, bul not neces­
sary. Call 322 2411 between
«:10am A 5:30pm____________
PLANT WORKERS
Plant workers lor entry level
potl lions required lor Sanford
manufacturing facility. Good
work record required. Call
331-1300................. Personnel
PLANT MANAOER
Wood products Manufacturer In
S an lord. su pplying lha
modular home Industry hat
opening. Individual must have
Industrial management expe­
rience with good organiza­
tional, communication A
planning skills. Position re­
sponsible lor all plan! func­
tions, PAL, A customer rela­
tions. Send resume' to:
Box 151, c/o Sanford Herald
P.O. Bax 1457
Sanlord, FL. 33771-1457
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Auto parts rebuilding. Located
on Sanlord AIrporl.....323-4*31
PUBLIC RELATIONS
PERSON NEEDED
__________C A L L : 311 144S

QUALITY CONTROL
INSPECTOR- Minimum 3 yrs.
•xp. wllh clrcull board, must
know color cod*. Permanent
position. Never a feel

TEMP PERM*

.280-5100

FOR ALL YOUR
TA X N E E D S ...

TAXSMITH

834-1040
1 ■5 P.M.

CONSTRUCTION OPPORTUNITIES
• H E A V Y E Q U IP M E N T O P E R A T O R S
• C A R P E TE R S &amp; HELPER S
• W ELDERS
• P A IN T E R S &amp; H E L P E R S
• PLUM BERS &amp; H ELPER S

I.. H. fi

11.i.i-l Mi'r'lt • Itillr lililOiA.&gt;1111« Hi-si-/,.iliiHiist
time. Train an lira airline com­
puter*. Heme study and realdeni treininf. Financial aid
available. Job plaeemont
aaoletenca. National head­
quarters. LH.P„FL

• E L E C T R IC IA N S &amp; H E L P E R S
• D R IV E R S
A L S O S O M E W IL L T R A I N
P O S IT IO N S A V IA L A B L E

PPC EMPLOYMENT

322-4474

logoi Notlco
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF TNR RIONTRRMTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
INANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIOA
CIVIL ACTION NO.
•7-im-CA-Of-O
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
OF SEMINOLE COUNTY,
a corporation organised and
existing under the Laws of The
United Slotetol America,
Plaintiff,
-vtRONALD M. LYND end wife.
SHERRY A. LYND,at al.
Defendants.
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: entrant Bank ot Mobrldg#
Kenneth R. Zendsire. President
330Main Street
Mobrldg*. South Dakota 37401
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that on action to
toreclooo o mortgage on tho
following property In Somlnolo
County, Florida:
Lota 11 A 13, Block A,
SANLANDO SPRINGS TRACT
NO. Jf. according to tho plat
thereof at recorded In Plat Book
4. Pago 17, of the Public Record*
of Somlnolo County, Florida.
ha* boon filed against you and
you are required to terv* a copy
ot your written detente*. II any,
to II on HARRY O. REID. III. ot
MONCRISF AND REID. At­
torneys ter Plaintiff. Port Office
•ox 327*. Sanford, Florida
33773-1370, and III# tho original
with ttw Clark of tho above
Court on or boforo April 34.1*7;
otherwise a Judgment may be
entered agalntl you tor tho
relief demanded In the Com­
plaint.
WITNESS my hand and tho
Official teal ot thlt Court, on
•h it* day of March, 1*7.
(SEAL)
DAVID N. BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE '
CIRCUITCOURT
By: Jano C. Jatewlc
Deputy Cterk
Publlth- March 35, April 1. A 13.
1*7
OEM-Ill

TMAXMMC
TOR A

Pharmacist

O fS K A TO R

N o w A c c e p tin g A p p lic a tio n s
F o r A P h a rm a c is t In T h e
S e m in o le C o u n ty A re a .
S ta rtin g S a la ry $ 3 9 ,0 0 0 +
Dally Hours 9 -6 PM
4 2 hr. W ork Week
Good Benefits

SSt. 645-3001

Send Resume To

ococtnroNDtNcs/
RtSIDBWT TRAMDta
* LOCAL A NATIONAL JOB
ruetkOMT ASStSTAMCX
eRNANCUL AID AVAIL
•AcexxorreoM u an
N IJ C

M ils I t f f H tec.
K.W. C U C K

P.0. BOX 15200
OSLAMOO. FLA. 32S50

*50,000 PLUS YEARLY N E T . . .
IN 8ANFORD •LAKE MARY AREA •RECORDS AVAILABLE,
IF YOU ARE WILLING T O WORK * HOURS DAILY, AN D
HAVE ABILITY T O RUN ESTABLISHED BUSINESS W ITH
E1QHT EMPLOYEES, AND HAVE EXCELLENT CHARACTER
S CREDIT REFERENCES, YOU MAY O U ALIFY T O BE T H E
OW NER O F A LOW PROFILE, HIGH PROFIT BUSINESS,
PRESENTLY GROSSING *1 SO,000 4 N ETTIN G SSO.000,
INCREASING WEEKLY.

FIRST TIME OFFERED
NO SELLING

305 260-2049 "

�71— Help Wanted
lE C R E T A R Y / B K K P *1000 mol
Lovely boss, handle phones A
computer! Will tralnt AAA
Em ploym ent, 700 W . ISth
, St.,San lord..................331517a
S E C R E TA R IA L ! Excellent sec
" ratary needed for ma|or Sani tord/Laka M ary Company,
j Word processing helpful. One
time Interview In Orlendo,
C a ll A b le s t T e m p o r a r y
! Services. Good pay, no fee,
.................................131-3*40
(E W IN G M A C H IN E O PER A
1 TORS Wanted, will train qual­
ified applicants, paid vaca­
tio n s A Holidays, Clark ApIparel, 347 Power C t , 1-4 In
Idustrlal Park, 133-33** »
ELE M A R K E T IN O i Are You:
I C L E A R , C O N C IS E , C O N ­
V E R S A TIO N A L A C O N V IN ­
C I N G . Then I want to talk to
you about part time work at
full lima wages. NO S E L L ­
I N G . Hourly wage plus bonus.
[W ill Tra in .......................... Call:
IM rs. McDermott at 574 9110
SUCK D R IV ER S needed, 31
|yrs. or older, at least 3 yrs.
(experience. D .O .T. require'
Intents................... Call:MM331
|A ITRESS Wanted E X P E R I­
ENCE required. Apply to:
SA N FO R D ’S N E W E S T
S U P P E R C LU B
TH E B A N K ................. 431-*222
[E L D E R - S i l l + hrl Any
experience Will hire todayl
AAA Employment, 700 W. 3Jth
51., Sanlord................. 3311176

WORK IMMEDIATELY
IE E D M E N A W O M EN NOWI

SANFORD- I bdrm. apartment
with fenced yard. I l l wk 4
1700 sec................Call:131-774t
S TU D IO A 1 BR., Adults, no
pets, quiet res. modern. K 31
A up per mo. -t- Dep.....373 aflie
U P S T A IR S , very private. 1
bdrm . tile bath, utilities In­
cluded. SIM + dep.......171-1917

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
APTS TO GOME HOME TO
Quiet, single story living with
energy saving features. I A 3
bedroom apartments with at­
tic storage A private patios.
SANFORD C O U R T APTS.
I N I S. S A N FOR D A V E
131-INI ext. I l l ________

NO F E E
IN K E R S N E E D E D ! If you
,!rteed steady work paid dally,
&gt;tCal I Sam alter 1 pm
333 7116
JRSES A ID E S . 3 to II shift,
^ f u l l - t i m e , f r i e n d l y a tphere. B e tte r L iv in g
Center, 699 1003, E O E M FV H
.JR S E S : CNA, Physical Ther­
a p is t s , A Live-Ins urgently
needed. Call: Care At-Home
T74 t i l l .................
E .O .E .
O P P O R TU N ITIE S open for full
lb part time teachers In a
1-wttlng, Preschool- Child
are Corp. Love ot children a
jkust. Exp. A education a plus,
we will provide training
I education.............. 131*411
)E R F IL L E R , No axp. neetsary, ■ to S, Mon. thru
hurs. Altamonte........ *3)1111
P A IN T S E A L A N T
TE C H N IC IA N
IR N UP T O Stl.M HR. No
experience necessary. For full
i r p a r t p o s itio n s c a ll .........M i l **6-7111...............

91— Apartments/
House to Share
F O R T A B L E home to share
very nice neighborhood,
lichen and laundry privi■MI-041*.....or..... 174-941*
L E Need* roommate to
re I bd. 1 bath apt. *60 wk
someutlljChrlitj^

i— Rooms for Rent
FL O R ID A H O TE L
Raatonabla weekly rates
Oak Ave.................... 131-**0*
R O E ROOM In private home.
Bath, maals. laundry, cablt,
telephone, shopping, taken to
Doctor It needed. Senior cltlleh preferred. Lovely home
for right person........... 133-7*67
I* R EA SO N A B LE B A TE S
(• M A ID S ER V ICE
U P R IV A T E E N TR A N C E
[Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

323-4507
[R O O M M A T E , room with prlv.
ent., super clean. *300 mo.,
share util, axp. 133-MAi_______
ROOM FO R R E N T $40 wk
701 Brlarclitl St.
Sanford

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
Jk-1 C L E A N Sanlord, I bdrm.
1 apt. Complatt privacy, closa
to downtown tfo week + *300
sec. Include* ulll........ .1317347
E X T R A C L E A N - &gt; bdrm. apt.,
turn., o/c. w/w carpet. *119
wk. comp. Rel. + sec..l3llt*0
Ferns Apts, lor Senior Cltlient
111 Palmetto Ave.
J . Cowan. No Phone Cells
SAN FOR D - Lovely 3 bdrm. with
screened porch, complete
p riv a c y , 1*0. wk -t- 1300

105— Duplex*
Trip le x / Rent

323-4507
F U R N IS H E D E F F . I bdrm. A
Unlurn. t bdrm. watar Inc. No
pots,atter4pm,377-146»
Attractive 7 bdrm ., 1 bath,
single story duplex or bus
line, large pool, water, sewer
A trash pick up Included.
Separate adult section, re­
tirees welcome. Ask about our
move In SP ECIA L.
SHEN AN D O AH V IL L A O E
A P A R T M E N T S .............. 111-7930

GR0VEVIEW VILLAS
3*00 Lake Mery Blvd.
D O N 'T REN T...Until you see
Sanford's most spacious 7
bdrm,, 3 bath apts....... 131 05*4
M A R IN ER S V IL L A O E
Special 1bdrm.......................*391
3 bdrms........................ from t i l l
Call................................... 131*470
SAN FOR D : 3 bdrm., 1 bath,
carpet, central air, appli­
ances. *310 mo. Discounted
British American
Realty . ....................
*19-1171
S A N F O R D A R E A ! S tu d io
a p a rtm e nt w ith separate
kitchen. Furnlshed-1175 or
Unfurnished *331. Utllllle* In­
cluded, no children.
Call 7M-113I attar tpm_______
S A N F O R D : I bdrm . garage
apt., quiet neighborhood. *131
Call.................. 133-1911
UNFURN. OARAOE AFT. *150
dag. *371 mo. 1 bdrm., 1 bath.
C a ll:..................331-4S0*eHer 5

month.

R ID O EW O O D ARMS A F T * .
BAM BOO C O V E A F T* .
M O V E IN S P E C IA L
On 1 year lease, you gal I
month ot your choice (reel
ISM Ridgewood Ave...... 1114470
W* E. Airport Bl............ 32544*1

1bdrm., I bath................S ill mo
3 bdrm., itobath.............SIM mo
• Central Heal A A ir
• Pool A Laundry
F R A N K L IN ARMS
ItM FIertdeA ve.
____________131-6*1*___________
1 B D R M. I u p s t a i r * , I
downstair*. 611 Park Ave. No
pel*. 332 4616.....or..... 79* 4311
*1*9 M O V E IN S P EC IA L
A D U L TS , POOL, L A K E
L A K E JE N N IE AFTS....3IM743

D E B A R Y - V e r y nice 2/1,
C/H/A, washer, dryer, refrig.,
new carpel, verticals. 133-1431
or *41-4461. Adults *410_______
* * e IN D E L T O N A e • e
e e HOMES FOR R E N T e e
________e e 174-1414 e a________
O V IE D O - 3 b d rm ., 1 bath,
carpet, heat A air, kitchen
equipped. 1461.............. 349-170*
SA N FO R D i 1901 W. llth St.
Clean 1 bdrm., Us bath S ltl
mo. + dep Call............43I 33M
SA N FO R D i 3 bdrm., screened
porch, a/c, appliances, no
pats, S ltl mo. Ownar/broker
Call: 133-1167...... or...... 1110495
SAN FOR D , Rani or Salt. 1/Us,
central H/A, garage, *445 +
deg. (*49,900)...............491 300*
SU N LAN D . 734 Cherokee O r .
3/1, children ok, no pels. *431
discounted, + tec........ 131-4461
T H R E E BDRM ., Ito ba., fenced
ya rd , appliances, laundry
hook-up. *431 Mo. + lit, lent
i * ) M sac. 113 Hayes Dr,
1 BDRM . near downtown San
lord. First, Iasi, + security.
References. Ca11:. .904■77S-4S1i
3 BDRM., 3 ba, family room,
fireplace, garage, storage
shed, exc. neighborhood near
Seminole H.S. *131 Mo, tec.

221— Good Things
to E at

LjVefclUMS

D U P L E X - Large J br.. 1 ba.
C'h/a, wa*her/dryer hook up.
WOC mo. + d tp .............J73-r»90

_

WMN6R?

.
231— Cars
1 5 9 -R m I Estate
Wanted

security
L A K E M A R Y -3 bdrm.. I bath,
carpal, cantral air A haat,
appl. fenced yard........*31-67*1
R IDO EW O O D ACRES- Deluxe
Duplexes 3 bdrm. Families
walcoma. Call Taml....33t-*2U
SANFORD, 1 Unit* avallabla. 3
bdrm., 3 bath, appl*. blind*,
can..air A heal, carpal. *371
mo. Call M3 W O weekday*
3 BDRM , 3 ba. w/w, cant. H/A,
w/d hook-up, all kllchan appl.
attar4pm.nopet».322 l449
1 BDRM., 2to ba., *471 + dep. A

REALTY, INC.

SANFORD-Lease. 1000 sq. It,on
b u sy h w y . In d u s tr ia l,
warehouse, commercial, or
ofc. Will remodel to suit te­
nant. From S937.10 per mo.
Contact Mika at 904-734-1*96

1 JAMES LEE

H

u1

U I t IH

L A R O E 3 Story colonial cn
wooded 1 acre. Family room,
game rm, 7 Ipl., many extra*.
*117,000. W . M a llc io w tk l
Realtor........................133-7*»1

O F F IC E S ! 700 A 1000 sq.tl. In
growing 4-Townt/Debary area
on Hwy. 17 97....... 6666911 eves
O F F IC E SPACE FOR L EA S E,*
sep. office* avail, or lease ell.
Walling room A recpt. off.
a v a i l , lo c d ta d on bu sy
highw ay, SI3S per olllco,
utilities Inc. 323 3*42_________
SHOP SP ACE FO R L E A S E ,
1000 sq. ft., 1150 per mo.,
utilities Inc., 123-1*67

121— Condominium
Rentals

STEMPER
(TALKINGHOUSE)
-

SANFORDs 2 bdrm., 3 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer, tec. t421 Mo.
Landarama Fla., Inc. 333-1716

127— Office Rentals
L A K E M A R Y i Lease 3*0 sq. ft.
Downtown, 2 rooms, Includes
all utilities *363 mo
*3* *430
O F F IC E FO R R E N T 17 93 A 437
Intersection, Longwood, *110
mo................. ..... Cell:32l-46S!

141— Homes F o r Sale

LNEBGY REALTY
311N. C O U N TR Y C LU B RD.
___________ 133-1959___________
A C C E P T OUR F IV E % listing
conlracl A see your home
advertised at no cost to You.
F IR S T R E A L T Y IN C .....739-46*1

.vAttuood

2117 OSCEOLA DR
Tune your AM radio to 1010
and hear the deiall* of this 3
br, 2 ba. homa. Price Stl.OOO
SANFORD- 2 bdrm.. 3 bath CB
home, central heal A air.
Only............................... (44,900
3 B E D R O O M , U i bath, cb
home, Dreamwold section,
FHA or VA. Only.......... *54,900
3 BDRM -. I B A TH FR A M E .
Owner financing............*21.900
ZO N E D MR-1- Extra large 1
bdrm., t's bath. Adult care,
daycare or duplex use...(*1.000
, L A R G E 3 bdrm., 3 bath CB.
Good area, largo Fla. room.

..........................*12,100

LOOK I IT'S R E D U C E D I
The owners want to help you get
Into this lovely 3 bdrm. pool
home because they know you
will en|oy life to Its fullest tor
only *77,600. Barbara will be
glad to show you this treasure
today............Barbara Machnl k
Realtor/Assoclate___________
O S TE E N , 1 bdrm., 2 ba . cha,
garage, fenced back yard,
*•000 down. M O VE INI 327
439*_________________________
R E T I R E E OR S T A R T E R
HO M E, 3 br.. block, hardwood
Doors, nice neighborhood!
........................................*31.900
C O U N TY , HANDYM ANS PA R ­
A D IS E , 7/1 frame, *30,900.
Owner financing

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Real Estate Broker
764* Sanlord Ave.

321-0759.................321-2257
Attar heure 337-7*41

BRICK H O M E . l/l&gt;3, many
extras) Call for details, 1413
Elm Ave., S41.000 (neg). 177
*411.373 4100 eves____________
O R O V E V IE W V IL L A O E i 3/2
home. Assume mortgage.
Ready for occupancy. Call
Judy Schflf 747*474 Re-Max
Unlimited Inc.............. 360-2*08
G O V E R N M E N T HOM E*
From I I (U repair) Delin­
quent lex property. Cell:
16191*1 1*17 ext. H107FL lor
current repo list._____________
G O V E R N M E N T HOME*
From *1 (U Repair). Also tax
delinquent and foreclosure
properties. For listing please
cell......................(Refundable)
1 111 733 40*3............EXTG376

O O R G EO U S H U O E OAKS
surround this 4 bdrm. home on
large 170x114 loti C/H/AI
Sprinkler system I Nothing
down lor VA buyers! St. 100 tor
FH A I Seller will pay closing
costs I.............................*10.000

323-5774

ISM HW Y. 17-91
H EATH R O W A R E A
4 bdrm..
3.1 b a ! 7,000 sq. It. t .under
air I Champagne ot homes for
a beer price *104,900 Minutes
to I 4 Good llnanclng, obtain
able Unlied Sales Associalts.
Inc.,. ................
371 3*33

R E A L E S T A TE
R E A LTO R _____________ 332-749*
4 HOUSES on 4 adjoining tots.
New garage/workshop 24 X 36
A 1 storage bldg. 13 X 70,
323 1710 or *03 *71 1779..collet 1

H ID D E N L A K E - Old section
Large 3 bdrm., 2 bath double
garage............................ S49.900

APPRAISALS A N D SALES
BOB M. BA LL, JR . P.A..C.S.M.
R E A L T O R ....... ...............313-411*
Florida...Virginia.-Maryland
S A LE OR L E A S E : 160x101’
Corner Properly, c/h/a. 116
sq II. bldg. West First SI.
Sanlord........................ 323 7919

B U IL D IN G LOTS ...From S4.000
I.SA CR E IN O E N E V A

.137,000

W E H A V E R E N T A L HOUSING
C A L L A N Y T IM E
R E A L T O R ...................... 717-4991

7

in

m i i srait

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford’s Salas Laadar
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
SEM IN O LE CO U N TY
A RAR E FIN O I 2 bdrm.. 1 bath
home, den could be 3rd bdrm.,
utility room, fenced rear yard
a n d 1 y e a r h o me w a r ­
ranty...... ........................*36.100
A NEW B E G IN N IN G ! 1 bdrm.,
1 bath home, wood stained
celling, living room, family
room, utility room w/allached
workshop and commercial
zoning........................... *39,900

157-M obile
Homes / Sale
CA R R IA O E CO VE, 1/1, 11X53,
good cond., part, turn., Adult
section. 17100 neg. 3^13610
F A M IL Y SPACES A V A IL A B L E
Carriage Cove Mobile Homa
Park, Come see us! II
Oregory Mobile H»me»..333-5380
M A N A T E E : SI. 14x16. 2 bdrm..
I's bath. Sel up in trailer
park. Ready to move In. Cell:
323 *190 between (am A 1pm
M A N A T E E - ’79, 2 bdrm. In
family park with pool. No
money down. Assume
mtq............................... 371 1*41

153— AcreageLots/Sale
O W N E R F I N A N C I N G 10.91
wooded acres, *76 II. on
highway 46
Wallace Crass Raalty, Inc.
311-0177___________
SAN FOR D : Bring your horses A
build your dream home on Ihlt
7*3 acre mini eslale Close to
boallng A llshlng.
416.900
JoAnn Tompkins Properties
Inc. R E A L T O R ........... 160-1111

B U ILO IN O LO TI 100 X 100.
level and treed, prestigious
area. S31.000. Cell Frank or
Lisa W i c k e r s , Real
lor-Associate*

e O E N E V A OSCEOLA RD.O
ZO N ED FOR M O BILESI
S Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on pa vedRd.
10% Down. IB Yrs. at 12% I
From 1114401

[ 99— Pels A Supplies

322-2420
321-2720

F R E E la good horn*I Mixed
bread female puppies. 349 9967
...............................alter 4p.m

Call toll ftM 1-800-323-3720

BOB’S A U C TIO N
E V E R Y M O N D AY N IO H T
7PM. REAR O F B O B S U IE D
F U R N IT U R E ............... 341417-91
W E BU Y HOUSEHOLDS
313-115*•SitSSHlIrM
'tMIIHSIS.311-70*7

LAND

SHADOW L A K E WOODSt 4
bdrm., 3 bath home Brick fpl..
Skylight, breakfast bar, pool,
dressing room, and the list
goes on I .......................1127.500

CAU ANY TIME

Call toll ftM MOO 323 3720
2141 PARK A V E ............. Sanlord
961 Lk. Mary Blvd........ Lk. Mary

BUY HERE

217— Garage Sales

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
*340.000 OR W I L L S U B ­
D I V I D E 10 A C R E S O R
M O R E ......... G R E A T TERM S.
3 (Is) A C R E T R A C T S
P A S T U R E L A N D OR
W OODED TR A CTS IN OR
A N G E C IT Y A R E A FROM
(to.lOO.............. W ITH TER M S

C A S S E L B E R R Y Community
Methodist, 17 92 between 434 A
436. Saturday March llth. I to
3, rain.:.......... or.............shine
P A TIO A Y A R D SA LE, Thurs.
Sun. * 5. 2120 Elm SI. furniture
Alois ot everything 1__________
Y A R D SALE I Sat. 3/7d, 9 3.
Sofa, port a crib, etc., 706
Dogwood D r................ 372 4610

PAY

HERE
LOW

DOWN PAYMEN1
IKMW 1Wl ’11 H* ' RH’ ■’

NO INI ! HI SI

O N E A C R E W ITH POND ON
L A K E M A R Y BLVD. *10.000.
SELLER WILL HOLD
M O R TG A G E .

Nan-Ferrews Metals...........(Mass
KOKOM O........................ 313-1100
q I BUYOLD •
Quill*........ Crocks........ Linens
A .......Teddy Brers....... 377 4)03
J U N K A W R E C K E D CARSRunning or not, lop prices
paid. Free pick up. 3711114

1 A CRES ON P A V E D ROAD
W I T H S M A L L L A K E IN
G E N E V A ...................... *31000
S A CRES, G E N E V A A R E A O F F
O S C E O L A R O A D *21.000
TE R M S A V A IL A B L E .

5EIGLER

I N C O M E

T A X E S

F I G U R E D

T Y

e im e

F R E E

Bring Us Yo u r Income Ta x Ratum e
W e'll Figure The m P f t U I !
Use Y o u r Refund Ae Your
Down Payment — Drive Hom e Today
W hy W all I W e ’v t G ot Your Deal!

LAND
3ZI-Db4D

Limited oiler •Expire* April IS, 1M7

c r n u / = {T E S

OCALA N A TIO N A L FO R EST
High and dry wooded tots.
Mobile home, cabin, camping
O K. Hunting and llshlng.
*1,450 w/ *110 dn„ *43.71
monthly......(904) 236 4179 days
or............... 1904) 433 343* eve*.

Y

USED CAMS
I . ' I M* .

1 I WV

I /*!»’

S A M OHO l . ' i . l . 1)

SANIOMl)

OMI A N D O 4.'S ‘ ,«8M

To List Your BusinessDial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Accounting &amp;
Ta x Service
HUBERT PEARCE
Exp. Income Tea Service

Additions A
Remodeling
B E. LINK CONST.
Remodeling..............305 337 7079
Financing.......... LIC.rCRC00067»

Building Contractors
A D D ITIO N S , Doors, cabinets,
decks, houses, stores, repairs,
solarium*. 10 yrs. In area.
' Honest, lest U c * CBC031016
C a ll:............................. 377 1026

C a rp e n try
ALL TYPES O t Carpentry.

322-2420
321-2720

11 F T . T R A V E L T R A IL E R ,
sleep* *, root air, plus extra*.
Call............................... 377 7317

IN I 16 ft. R U N A B O U T. 19M HP
Johnson motor. Vinyl lop A
curtains. Spare prop. Galv.
trailer, spare tire end wheel.
Asking S971/otler........ 323 1*43

376' FR O N TIN G ON 2nd ST. A T
RAILROAD/OVERPASS O F F
A IR P O R T BLVD. SANFORD
A R E A ZO N ED C 3........ (75.000

*11. m s l i n n

241— Recreational
Vahicles / Campers

215— Boats and
Accessorial

AND LET AN EXPERT DO TH E JO B

ASSUME AND M O V E INI Very
new 3 br , 2 ba. home. IlvI ng/di nl ng room combo,
central H/A. equipped kit.,
post, lease purchase.... *60.000

bath homa screened porch,
breakfast bar, privacy fenc­
ing, Cedar aalls A trim ,
cantral h/a..................... *71.000

WE BUY ESTATES!
Hwy 4*......................... 373 7*0)

M s» c n

D E L TO N A LAK ESI 3 bdrm, I
bath home, sunken living
room, family room A dining
room combo, eat In kitchen,
do your own decorating)
....................................... 160.000

ASSUME VA MTOI 3 bdrm., 2

BRIDGES AND SON

LAR O E CORNER L O T A T 19TH
A N D PARK A V E . ZO N ED
FOR UP TO (U N IT S . (41.000

L

235— Vehicles
Wanted

Auction every. Thursday 7 PM.

O R E A T SANFORD LOCATION
ON EA ST llth ST. lOO’xlSO'
ZO N ED L IG H T IN D USTR I­
AL. *10.000 W ITH TERM S.
B U I L D T O S U I T , OR
POSSIBLE TR A D E .

A

235— Trucks /
Buses / Vans

213— Auctions

1141 PARK A V E ............. Sanlord
901 Lk. Mary Blvd........ U . Mary

E

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories

1 9 3 -L a w n A Garden

CALL ANY TIME

R

FO R D O RAN AD A 1*77, 3 dr..
auto., ac., am'frrt. Clean, run*
• good. S1500. Call 131-1 U l eves.
M U S T A N O -1979
Price:.................................**00
Call............................... 377 1199

CONSULT OUR

C A S S E L B E R R Y ! 3 bdrm., I
bath home with a country
lealing. but close to every
thing, heat A air. lanced yard,
lovely family starter.....(19.100

P E R F E C T FOR YO U I 7 bdrm.,
1 bath condo, llraplaca In
living room, equipped kitchen,
central h/a. pool A other
community activities ..461.000

BED , D A V E N P O R T, OretMr.
other Item*. I l f W. ltl St
131 3045
F R E E Z E R , Upright, 10 cu. ft.,
Rheam* Fraaiamatler vary
good cond. S ill Call 131 0*94
LA R R Y 'S M A R T. 31S Sanford
Ave. New/U*e&lt;Hurn. A appl.
Buy/Sall/Trade. 117 4113.

V A L U E IN LA N D A LO CA ­
T IO N ! 4 10 acre*, toned In
dustrlal. 1310.000. Call Beth
Hathaway, Realtor/Associal*

W H A T A V A L U E ) 3 bdrm., 3
bath home, large screened
porch, heat end elr, eat ln
kllchen, split plan, submit all
ot tarsi..........................*46.900

SHADY LOCATIO N I 3 bdrm., 1
bath homa wi th pr i v acy
lancad back yard, split plan,
family room, enclosed porch
with In-ground spa, breakfast
bar. vaulted callings.... S69.900
E X C E L L E N T TE R M S A V A IL ­
A B L E on fhi* 3 bdrm. home I
Lovely real cedar paneling I 1
paddle lansl Fenced yard with
privecyl A 1 condition) New
carpel I Large shade (reel
Low down A tow monthly I
Seller will pay closing costs
lor buyer I ..................... *49,100

CALL BART

149— Com m ercial
Property / Sale

XII (DU XI III
ID ix o n

Prasflgoui Lake M a ry' The
Forrest. Wooded seclusion, no
maintenance. Million dollar
clubhouse.............. only *19.900
Frank Kaiser............... Realtor

S A N FO R D . 7 bdrm ., I ba .
newly remodeled w/detached
garage /work shop, on 4/tO
acre Appraisal S47.000. asking
146,000 A Include* talelllle
disc A 13 HP Riding mower.
1311710or &gt;0] 131 173*..collect
SAN FOR D/LAKE M A R Y , Must
sell, 3 bdrm., 3 ba.. mutl see
toapp., *13,900.333 1943
S A N FO R O , 3/2, fam. room,
screened porch, pool, fenced
yard, *7.000 cash to mtg. no
qua!........................ ..... 332 1915
SANFORD: New FH A homes. 3
bdrm., 2 bath, concrete block.
Low down. •% mtg .......153,900
Call............. ...................*99 2100
SO UTH SANFORD- Older 6 rm.
home. Aluminum siding, 3
large lot*. *27,100........377 5310
LOG-A-Frame, *4 complete on 7
acres 2.100 s q .ll.t, 5*1,000.
Terms. Owner/Brker. 373 3640
M A R K H A M W O O D S RD.
Q U I C K S A L E ) Below
assessment, large executive
home. 4/3'y, oil Ice. 7 dining
rooms. Owner/Asso.. 321 7631
2414 M ARSH ALL A VE.
Owner anxlousl Ready to move
• In 3 bdrm., 7 bath, e/h/a,
large caport, eatln kllchen,
I ns i de u t i l i t y A l l t hi s
lor...................................*17,900

PAOLA- Lake Markham Rd. 3
bdrm., 2 bath. Owner will help
with new financing....... 116,900

Ciroup,

767-0606

A IR C O N D ITIO N ER , Ravarta
cycle. G E , utad let* than *
month*. Originally M70. Sail
lor M1J 332-749*. eve* 349 5717

HORSES A M O B ILES W E L ­
CO M E) l.*97 acre* In Geneva.
*79,100. Nancy Butler, Real
tor/Assoclate

321-7123____Eves. 3234809

117— Commercial
Rentals

111— Appliances
/ Furniture

O R LA N D O ) 70* X 461 tot for
residential or moblla use.
&gt;20,000. Rad M o r g a n .
Broker/Salesman

141— Homes F o r Sate

BadCredll?
NoCredIt?
W E FIN A N C E
W ALK IN ................ D R IV E O U T
' N A TIO N A L A U TO SALES
Sanford Ave A llth SI M l *on
C O L Ti '13, 4 cyl . aulo. air.
8 *tra Clean I Can arrange
llnanclng...........Call,-33IU70.
CUTLASS Brougham Supreme
'77. Rebuilt engine A tram, by
Ron Jon. Warranty still on
Iran*. T ilt, cold a ir. new
battery, new brake*, good
lira*. Owned and driven by
adult. SIMP 574 4713*113
DODOE CH A R O ER IMS. fully
•quipped. 17.000.
_
,1331310
Call
anytime

AN IN V ESTO R Wanlt to buy
Income property. W'll look at
' all, any cond. Cell 333 *644

IU IT 0 M
Sinfofd’s Sites Uadtr

141— Homes For Sale

RETIRE IN LUXURYI

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

W*&lt;hm &lt;by. March IS, 1W7—7E

153— AcreageLots/Salt

vei\mta&amp;T*£

L A K E M A R Y , Condo, 3
bedroom, 3 bath, S175 Mo +
sac., avallabla April 1, 7670311, Ralston A Assoc_________
• B F F IC .1 A1 BDRM . APTS.
• F U R N .A U N F U R N .
• FAY W EEKLY
Why Consldar Living Anywhere
Elsa Whan You Can Llva In

GREAT LOCATION

K,&lt;£&gt;'2!S*

Sanford HraM. SprIts I, FI.

K IT *N' C A R L Y L E =by Larry W right

97— Apartments
Furnished/R ent

Remodeling A home repairs.
Cell Richard Gross 331 1973

RICHARDS CARPENTRY
I* yrs In Central Florida
Call................................... 323 17*7

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

Landclaaring

A F F O R D A B L E A thorough
home cleaning lor *40.00. Reterences available. 699-1770
J J Q U A L IT Y C L E A N IN G ,
M a in)., Janitorial A Maid
Service. 67*11011360 *613
SPRING C LEA N IN O
Res - Comm. - New Const.
For that special touch.
F R E E E S T ...................373 7767

T H O R N E L A N O C L E A R IN O
Loader and truck work/septlc
tank sand. Freeest. 371-3413

Home Improvement
C O M P L E TE HOM E R fP A IR
Door....... window........cabinet*
Call Russell at 774 *M*_________
CUSTO M POOL/SUN DECKS.
P R IV AC Y F E N C E , SCREEN
PO R CHES..................1741173
P L U M B IN O . E le c t r ic a l,
carpentry. Free estimates.
Cell Bo........................ 233 11*7

Landclearing
BACK HO E, Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing.
Call:327 1106......o r .....377-9313
BUSH HOO, Box Blading. D ll
cln, A Tractor Roto Tilling
Call ........................... 322 2197

Nursing Cara

Landscaping

Papar Hanging

BOOUESI Exp I Professional!
Lawn A Garden Main! A chain
saw work, m ulch. Spring
clean upl Free E *11373 *3*7

PA P ER H A N O IN O A P A IN T
IN O (Interior - Exterior).
Re*. A comm. 35 years axp
Free Estimates. Call: Roy
Taylor a l.......................331-4033

Lawn Service
BA R R IER 'S Landscaping I
Irrlg.. Lawn Care. Ras A
Comm, 371 7*46, F R E E ESTI
O E O R O E'S LAWN CARE
Reasonable prices
Call now to rasorve service
Frees*!...........................3370901
Q U A L IT Y LAW N S E R V IC E !
Time to Thatch, Fertilise A
Cleanup. Free Est...... 3310714
"S U N N Y S ". Mow, edge, trim, '
planting, mulching. SPRING

^gec^reoa*L^jj^jj^^^*29
M oving &amp; Hauling

M AN W IT H TR U C K will haul,
deliver, dean garage, cut A
care tor lawn. Wo trim trees.
Low rates. 24hr. ser. 774 413&lt;

Sawer/Septic Ta n k
HOWARD'S S E P TIC S ER V IC E
Repair Linos A Clean Tanks
Free Estimate*.......... 333 0359

Sewing
SEA M STR ESS: Wedding, Oc
caslon. A Accessories. Cell:
Donna Canada at 3230707

T r e e S e rv ic e
E C H O L S T R E E SER V ICE
Free Estimates! Lew Frlcetl
Uc...Ins...Stump Grinding,Tool
333 2779 day or nite
"LotWso Pretosilotialydon” .
STUM P G R IN D IN G
Insured.............. Free Estimates
Call...................................774 7101

�i , r

r

r-

IB—Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

r r r

.&gt; .T IT

:r. r'/'

*&gt;“7"f »•• i *
*V^V►

Wednesday, March 35,1W7

' •

■uMiwiaa

i

Anvil Pruner

'XtixSei
^rV
**««***J
•*T'J . ■ ' M i

Teflon-coated steel
blades. Moulded plas­
tic grips. 425909

A

iB

ip cWprpnc*.
•M

Plastic
Sprinkler Spike

side atrip.

R O z itlM .

550688

Constructed of heavy-duty plas­
tic. Covers up to 60* in diameter.
550841

Rif. 169

Features lightweight, yet
strong, corrosion-resistant
polyethylene tank and pol­
yolefin pump. 1/2 gallon.
415181

Manual advance. 2.0 amp motor.
Pistol grip handle. 3 lbs. 10*
cutting swath. 427333

Lawn and
Barden Sprayer
C orrosion resistant
tank. Poly plastic exten­
sion rod, shut-off and
adjustable
nozzle.
Heavy duty air pump. 1gallon. 415338

—
Stackable
Grid Chair
Steel frame. White vinyl
finish. 673547
m ■

PVC Garden Chair
673534

A

oleum

Spray Enamel

Green

Synthetic Turf Carpet
6' and 12* widths. 804881

Choose from seven different patterns and colors
Protected by no-wax, marresistant w earlayer. 12'
width. 802406

White and colors.
12 oz. net weight.
735605

SngeJE.322223

tog. 1.99

&lt; JS 4 Jf

Lock Sate

Lock Seta

Passaoe Knob
Brightbrass finish. 362476

Empire style knobs. Antique brass finish.

309300.. b f - W . ft

K tt-S .9 9
’
Antique brass finish
362444 ...........
Privacy.
Antique brass finish.
362437

309502

Entrance
309705..

Light Bulba

6' Extension Cord

Soft white in 60, 75 and 100
w att 2 7345 f

Vinyl, molded on 3-outlet con­
nector, 18AWQ, 2 wire. In
white or brown. 478001

A * 149

Four wood blades with cane inserts, antique
brass housing. 3-speed, reversible motor. Light
adaptable. 150256
Five wood blades with bright brass housing.
3-speed motor, with reversing switch. PuH
chela Light adaptable. 151461
* * * * *

OPEN

0RAN6E CITY

ALTAMONTE 8PRIN88

2323 S. Volusia Ave. 1029 E. Altamonte Or.
Highway 17 and 92 (Highway 436)
Phone 775-7268
Phone 339-8311

ALTAMONTE 8PRIN68
875 West Highway 436
Phone 862-7254

)

OPEN
IANF0R0
700 French Avenue
Phone 323-4700

#

�P u b lix p r e s e n ts

Royal Astoria
2 4 % full lead crystal.
Now you can add all the beauty and elegance of
Kill lead crystal stemware to your table, at just a
fraction o f "department store" prices. Choose
this week's featured piece for just 99£
with each $10 purchase, or other selections at
$1.99 each.

{J. k.

Water/winegoWet

Regular Price:
$1.99(No additional purchase required)

W h e r e s h o p p in g is a p le a s u re

i

�lC -ld rte rd Herald - Wednesday, March U , 1W7

Herald Advertiser - Thursday, March at, Itt?

S«ntortl. FI

When it comes to baking bread and rolls, the old fashioned ways are often
the best.That's why, at Publix Danish Bakery, we do a lot of our baking
the same way they've been doing it in Europe for several generations.
We use the same authentic recipes, and the same time-tested
technique: open, revolving hearths, live steam, and crisp,
Sjgf
virgin parchment. Frankly, we see no reason
fcwg
to change. Not when tradition tastes this good.
/.

Filled with Delicious Flavor

I Filled with Tangy Lemon

Raisin
Pum pernickel
Bread........... 2

Jusl UKe r

(Lemon
Hot C
Meringue Pie Buns

Delicious with Milk or Coffee

B ro w n ie s ............. 1
For Breakfast or Snacks
Glazed Donuts.... 1!
(Item* above available at Publix stores with In-store Bakeries only.)

(Items above available at all Publix stores and Danish Bakeries.)

In Water or Oil,
Star-K Itt Chunk

Assorted Reg. or
Diet Flavors, Publix

Light Tu n a .... 2

_

Publix datura’s Grain

Broad.................2

M

W elch’s 100 % Pure Reg
White, or Red

Duncan Hines Creamy Vanilla,
Milk C hoc., or Dark Dutch
Fudge Ready T o Serve

Assorted

Brawny
Towels

Frosting....... M 49
Assorted Varieties of
Duncan Hines Deluxe

Cake MUss ..

large roll

Photo
80'

Vanity Fair All Occasion
p «p «r

-w .

Grape Juice..........

Greeting

28-oz. hot.

Welch’s 100% Pure
Reg., White, or Red

Grape

f

A

Deka Plastic Childrens 10-Oz.
Mugs, 11-Oz. Tum blers
or 20-O z.
B o w i e ...................Vorh

Ubbv’e Peaches
Whit# House Reg. or Natural Plus

Apple S au ce ....... *1s
Rice Cakes........ . 4AV‘ 90

Check Publix Photo Center for details

Tomato
Ketchup

Halves or Slices

Assorted Varieties of Quaker
j l

OoodTfwu A#r. 1, t*ar

Heinz Squeezable

24-ot.
bol.

BonusiPJrinS

0 9 °

Norma Lee Sheer Style # 1 2 0 ,
Assorted Colors

Assorted 3-Pk. or 4-Pk.
Cup-A-Soup, 4-Pk. Chicken
Noodle, 8-Pk. Chicken Broth, or
2-Pk. Lota-A-Noodles

Upton
Soup Mixes....
Viatic Kosher Baby

Dill Pickles....

le-oz,

l«

TH IS AD E F F E C TIV E :
THUR ., MAR. 26 TH R U
W ED., APR. 1, 1087 . .

Panty Hoae.....V« 87*
Norma Lee Assorted Colore,
Style # 4 4 9 or # 4 9 5 Knee Hi’s
or Style # 5 1 5

Ankle M ’s ..... 87*
Wise Puffed or Crunchy

Cheez Doodles....

Peek Of The Seeeon,
Florida Tasty Fresh

W la s L M itly Salted or
Natural Rag. or Ridgia

Strawberries

Potato Chipe........

each pint

NUIa W afers....
6 P a ckP kg ., Thom as Er

PRODUCE
Troplcana Brand 1 0 0 % Pure
“ All Florida’’, Premium
Peck Chilled

Orange Ju ic e ..... 51! 1
Serve With HoNendeiee Sauce
Tender Fresh

Asparagus........... W &lt;
Greet For Snacks, Red Flame
orThom peon Whtts
p#r
Salad Perfect, Florida’
Medium Size Te sty

Tom atoes........... K.r

FLORAL
ColortulFroahCut

Hybrid UHes.

Fresh, Crisp

Iceberg
Lettuce
large head
For Str

f

i

1

�&gt;*nford HereMl — Wedmrtgy, Merck M, Iff?

' ---------------------------- ------\

Frozen, Assorted
Varieties of
Pepperidge Farm

Crnm
IIia nalm
n*nl
rrom ms
vairy uopi.
Pepperoni

Merio’s
Pizza

•

2-pk. pkg.

$399

Layer
Cakes
17-oz. pkg.

ICE CREAM

Assorted Flavors
Publix Premium

Ice
Cream

Fr»»h H om ogenized
_

FROZEN FO O D

half gallon ctn.

Apple Juiee.... .
Strawberries...... *149
Assortsd Varieties of Rag.

Banquet
Dinners...............

Kraft Individually-Wrapped
Cheese Food

Vegetable Juice...
Quarters, Blue Bonnet Reg.

Margarine ........................ 2

ctr

Quarters, Land O Lakes Reg.

Margarine......... 2

Velveeta Slices... 1&amp;°g' *2”

ctnt.

Pillsbury Buttermilk
or Country Style

Biscuits..............4 cimi
Dairi-Fresh

Whipping Cream... Jfn!

a

s . .

Breakfast Club
Grade A Florida White

Broccoli
Spears...............

Magglo Whole Milk
or Part Skim Milk

each
dozen

Birds Eye Little Ears

Cob C o rn ............

Breakstone’s Lowfat, California
Style, or Smooth &amp; Cream y

Cottage Cheese...

s m

CWJ —&gt;•** wy

PictSw sst

Ricotta Cheese....

V -8 Chilled

i a

pkg.

Apple Pie...........

Kraft Individually-Wrapped

Whitney’s
Y o g u rt..................**2p

m
11*0*.

Mra. Smith’s
Dutch Appls Crumb or

SRced American... $i\ *2“

Assorted Varieties of Natural

i

(2 N Low Fat, 1% Low Fat dr Skim, OaNon
S4zo AvaMafci* with Ona SSH Stamp Price
Savor Cartlflcata)
J

Big Vallay Whole

k____________________

DAIRY

69*

__

mififfitf

size

Frozen Concentrate, Tra a T o p

*1 9 9

— i.'a&amp;i

Birds Eye Mixed Vegetables or

Green P eas........ 1f.y* 89*

9179

SeaPak Skinless

Merkts Sharp Cheddar or
Swiss Almond Cold Pack

Flounder Fillets...

Chaos* Spread.... 1?3^••2T•

Mrs. Paul’s Crunchy Light Batter

Kraft Mozzarella, Cream Havarti,
Muenster, Monterey Jack,
or Jalapeno Pepper

Casino Brand
Cheese................. Hi: M 41

Fish Fillets......... 8349
FROZEN SEAFOOD

Our Steaks and Roasts,
Pork and Lamb are

Smoked Chubs, Sable, or

Trimmed to not over:

Kingfish............... '

1/4-Inch
Average!

Publix B e e f)
G ov’t.-lnspected

Frozen, Gulf Maid

Squid..................... \

Look for K U n tlPACTS” brochures and
displays In your Publix
Meat Department.

Fresh Frozen

Red Snapper
Fillet....................

]

U pton Family Size

Publix Beef, G o v’t.-lnspected Boneless

Shoulder Roast..........
Publix Beef. G o v’t.-lnspected

Publix Bee!, Gov’t.lnspected (Boneless)
j

Chuck Roast
iter lb.

»'****»

Sandwich Favorites: Fresh U vsrw u rst
Sm oked Braunschwelger, or

Boiled Ham..............
Honey or
Popper Loaf........... .
The Dali Lata You
Eat Out A t H om a.....
Hot From Th e Dell!
Beef S to w ...............
With 2 V m h t l H A A Roll,
Beef Stow
Deli Dinner..............
Hot From Th e Dell!
Broccoli A
Choose Sauce.........
Hot From Th e Dekl
Choose Potato Soup
Delicious
Potato Salad...........
With Cream C hssss,
Smoked Salm on.....
Deli-Baked Dutch Apple or
Apple Pie.................
Great Tasting
Barbecue Buns.......
Mozzarella, Provolone, or Square
Muenster Chaaaa....
Lykes Delicious
Meat or Bast

Jumbo
Franks
1-lb. pkg.

/(Produce Dept.) For
Strawberry Shortcake, Publix

Dessert Shell

19*

Clorox 2
&amp;“ •M 89
Lykes Palm Rlvar

SHcsd Bacon....... Hi: 9149
Lamb Shoulder
Blade C h o p s....... ST 91 "
(Either End or W hole), Fresh

Pork Loin..............

Alka-Seltzer.....
(Tu b s), With Fluoride,
Reg. or Mint Flavor

9399

Aim Toothpaste...

Young n’ Tender, G o v ’t.Inspectsd, Shipped DAD, Fresh
Not Frozen, Premium Grade
Boneless A Skinless

Chicksn Breast....

Original or Flavored, Effervescent
Antacid A Pain Reliever

91 "

(4 Pack), Fraah Pan-Raised

Plantation Quail. ..

HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY

24*cl,

phg.

*1«*

Rag. Strength T a b le t.

T y ls n o l................. 1SKt*83 "
Reg. or Extra Body, V O -5

93 "

Not Oil
Treatm ent............ Hi: 91 "

THIS AO GOOD AT THESC LOCATIONS ONLY

SEMINOLE
CENTRE
3609 ORLANDO
DRIVE
SANFORD
where shopping iso pleasure,

LONGWOOD
VILLAGE
CENTER,
LONGWOOD
Um m m w liN
w um M Mhr atrmax. r •

Assorted Northern

Bathroom
Tissue

�I

1

EXAM PLE O F
R E D E M P T IO N VALUES

ECONOMY
PORK CHOPS

CHianca
miri

FRYER
LEGQUARTERS

Ugquartors .

47«

THRIFTY MAID
VEGETABLES

Pen up bfenn Sup* Booul C*lrfc«t«t
m out chtchoui court**

PRESTIGE
BREAD

GREEN GIANT
VEGETABLES

nsrcosu

CHEESE

STUFFED
C LA M S

PRESTIGE
BA CO N

. $139

�'
t

w »rjld I AdVarlHsar, Thursday, March U
AAonaySavar, Thursday, March as, 1 * 7

* •* *

7

ilW-TVAr*

�W B n/f

Home Owner,
Buyer, Builder and Developer!

i

D esigner T ree P ackages
When You Bring Us The Floor Plan To Your Home We Can Guide
You In Selection And Placement Of Our Proven Landscape Tree
Package A s Displayed Below.

Rectangle

Teardrop

Kidney

While Each Package Consists O f A Specific Number O f Trees,
Shrubs, Ground Cover And Mulch Installed For One Price, You
Have The Flexibility To Select The Trees And Material Sizes To
Create A Design Uniquely Yours And Affordable To Your Budget.

Come

By And See Oar Display Center Today

F in a n c in g A n d T a x Deductions P ossible
See (Is Before You Close On Your New
Home O r Refinance Your Existing Home.

FAR M S

J&amp; W

6 2 8 -4 4 3 4
fj,

*

:.

.X

‘ t-l

i •••

1600 W. Fairbanks (Between 1-4 and 17-92)
Winter Park, Florida

mm
Bill
W
M
M
llW

JT

�N O M O R E RENT!!!
Is 15 minutes worth $15,000?

★

★ Your home is ready when your lease
expires
in YO UR NEW HOME!
★ A down payment savings plan
177 c.f. R e frige ra to r
Hurry...this offer ends
★
Vaacre lot
Aprils
L L lZ M idnight★ Broker Co-op 3 %
THIS COUPON MUST BE PRESENTED AT CONTRACT
★ Veterans no down payment

&gt;.»

T H E J U L IE II - 2 b e d r o o m ,
1 bath, 1 ca r g a r a g e
$4 3 ,9 0 0 (I N C L U D E S L O T )

I HE. U A ^ W U U U

11

3 b e d r o o m , 2 bath, 2 c a r g a r a g e
$4
(IN C L U D E S L O T )

i

i,

I
jt

}

3
(

C all Today!

574-4285
or
Exit 53

422-6902
TOLL FREE FROM
ORLANDO

j

�Harald Advtrllttr. Money Sivtr - Thursday, Mirch M, W 7 ____ Sanford. JM.

Here’s What You Need To Build A Fence
B y POPULAR

MECHANICS
Distributed by UPI
From the first settlers
who fenced In their live­
stock and fenced other
anim als out o f th eir
gardens and orchards.
Americans have always
been enthusiastic fence
builders.
Today fences are used
us borders to frame a lot
and even as wind breaks
and sun screens. And. us
p r o p e r tie s b e c o m e
smaller and houses arc
built closer together.

Tcnccs provide privacy
and muffle the sound of
traffic.
W hen you select a
fence design, consider
the purpose It will serve..
Choose a style thut will
c o m p 1cm e n t t h e
a rch itectu re o f your
house and others nearby.
Before beginning work,
call your local zoning
department to learn the
current ordinances on
fence building. Make
certain you know your
property lines because If
your fence falls on a

neighbor's lot you may
be forced to remove It.
After selecting a fence
d esign , m easure the
proposed perimeter to
see how many sections
you'll need. Most fences
arc built in 6- or 8-ft.
sections. Prepare a mate­
rials list for one section
and multiply this by the
number o f sections.
Posts arc commonly
4x4s, although 6x6s and
8x8s arc sometimes re­
quired for comers and
gale posts. Ralls, the hor­
izontal bars, arc 2x4s,

P r o p e r E d g in g C a n M a k e
B y POPULAR
MECHANICS
Distributed by UPI
A wcll-municurcd yard
Is a pleasure to look at.
but takes a lot o f work, so
most of us opt for a
simple landscape that wc
can k e e p in s ha pe
without dally care.
One easy way to give a
crisp look to lawn and
planting beds Is to make
a clear separation be­
tween them with edging.
Ed g i n g hel ps keep

creeping plants In place
and defin es planting
areas even when plants
arc dormant. Sunk so its
top surface Is nearly '
(lush with the ground. It
serves as a lawnmower
base. You can wheel your
mower over it and elimi­
nate hand trimming.
There arc many dif­
ferent types of edging
made o f wood or mason­
ry. Although it cannot be
used as a lawnmower
base, strip -ed gin g o f
metal or plastic com­

and fence pickets or ssure-treated wood can
vertical boards may be last 30 years or more.
Cedar, r e d w o o d ,
lx4sor 1x6s.
Estimate the amount of cypress and locust resist
gravel you'll need for decay n atu rally and
drainage. If you get the m ake good fe n c in g .
posts In concrete below Hcartwood — the darkthe frost line, figure that colored core of the tree —
a 90-pound bag of pre­ Is recom m en d ed fo r
mixed concrete occupies posts, and for rails within
about two thirds of a 6 In. of the ground.
Fencing tools include a
cubic foot.
Use wood that has hammer, saw, 50-ft. tape
been pressure treated measure, mason's twine,
with a preservative to plumb line, clamshell
resist rot and insects or post hole digger (or handwood that resists decay or power auger), 2x4 soil
naturally. Properly pre­ tamper, spirit- and line

levels.
B egin laying out the
fen c e by locating the
c o m e r posts and driving
in s ta k e s . T h e n run
m ason's twine tautly be­
tw een tw o com er stakes.
M a rk th e correct oncen ter position of each
interm ediate fence post
on the twine with chalk.
A plum b line against the
m ark centers each post
on the ground. Drive a
stake here.
I f the ground slopes,
you can follow the land

Bee PENCE, page 6

Y o u r L a w n L o o k M a n ic u r e d

bined with a bed of tree
bark or stone aggregate
also looks neat and re­
quires minimal mainte­
nance. In selecting an
edging material, weigh
appearance, cost and
case of Installation.
Wood edging is also a
very easy material to
Install. Redwood is the
most readily available
wood that Is naturally
decay-resistant. When
the wood is in contact
with the ground, use
all-heart redwood

(solid-colored with no
light-colored streaks of
s a p wo o d in i t). An
8-fl.-long 2x4 can cost
from $5 to S6. All-heart
cedar Is also naturally
decay resistant, although
it may be a little more
difficult to find in lumber
yards.
. To Install 2x4 edging,
first drive stakes into the
ground at each end of
your run. Then, stretch a
string taut between the
stakes for use as a guide
in excavating. Use a

straight spade to cut a 5
■A-ln.-dccp. clean-sided
trench. Shovel in a 2-in.
bed of sand: this helps
level the edging and
realign it after winter
when the ground heaves
due to fr e e z in g and
thawing. Install the 2x4s.
top edge flush with the
ground, and secure them
with lx2x 18-in. stakes
positioned every 4 ft. Nall
to the edging with hotdipped, galvanized nails.
Softwood timbers that
have been pressure-

treated with preservative
make excellent edging.
Be sure to get stock
designated for groundcontact use as not all
treated wood-serves this
purpose. Also, know the
species of wood you are
purchasing. Some, such
as southern yellow pine,
most Douglas llr. pondcrosa pine and hemlock,
take treatment better
than others such as
aspen and Englcmann
spruce. Another safe-.
Bee EDGING, page 6

SALE
ON ALL

DISHWASHERS
IN STOCK

i
5 CYCLi

BUI I I IN

DISHWASHER
Energy Savar drying option.
2-ltvol m ih action, 3-way
sound control, Full 10-Yoar
warranty on Pormatut'
Tub and door llnar,
(aak tor dotalla)

|

A4
AT OUR

PRE CONSTRUCTION
SPECIALS!
322-9104 or
323-1237

• FINANCING AVAILABLE •

nv. J £

A

Unmistakably

Klmmlne

\ &amp; rwnti B/jwciaur! w

boo W Airport Olvd
Sun CoriL FL^

j

�■•-

Wgdimdgy, March 25,1W7

B r a id A d v r l l t r , Monty S a v r — Thursday, March 7 1 , 1W 7

Clearly, The Brightest Source
SunLine Equity from Sun Bank unleashes
your financial resources to give you total control
over your borrowing power and at the same time
take full advantage of the new tax laws. How?
With a revolving line of credit you can access at
a preferred rate any time you choose. For any
reason.
Even though tax deductions have been
limited on most loans, the interest you pay on
SunLine Equity may still be tax deductible. So you
can take full advantage of the new tax laws and
take control of your cash flow.
SunLine Equity is available to any
credit-worthy homeowner with sufficient income
and home equity. And you need not be a Sun Bank
customer to apply.

Act N ow and Sun Bank
W ill Pay All Closing Costs!
Apply for this "do-it-yourself" loan from
Sun Bank before April 15, and w ell pay all closing
costs involved in setting up your SunLine Equity
account. That’s a savings to you oI several
hundred dollars.
If you want the financial freedom to write
your own loans at a preferred ratcand take full
advantage of the new lax laws, come directly lo
the source of the brightest ideas in banking.

Special Offeravailable in Orange, Seminole, Volusia, Lake,
Brevard, Osceola, and Flagler Counties.
Minimum credit line $ 10.000. Annual perccnlsgv rale may vary,
will be lied tu Sun Bank &gt; average prime rale ealabliihed al each
month *end. and will be equal to the average prime rate plat 2%
(currently 9 tV ») A minimum of 8% Annual Percentage Rale
_____
applies. $ I SO annual non-ucagc fee applicable. Special offer end*
______ . . . ___ i S D )
4/15/17 a n d a p p lie s only l o S u n L i n e E q u it y a c c o u n t* u p to 15 0 ,0 0 0 .

j£t

The bright way to bank.
A SunTrust Bank
Mvmhvr H)ltV*.|V»7 Sun Hank*. Inc.

�♦ — laniard Herald — Wtdn—day, March as, 1W7

...F e n c e
Continued from page 4
or step each oectlon. To
determine the drop Tor
each stepped section,
nrst And the slope-height
by setting stakes at the
beginning and end o f the
slope. Attach mason's
twine to the uphill slake
at ground^level. Make
sure the downhill stake Is
tall enough to be level
with the bottom of the
uphill stake.
Tie the twine taully to
the d o w n h ill s ta k e .
Measure the distance be­

HeraM Advartisar, Monty h w — Thursday, March U, 1W7
rain water away from the
post.
In concrete, make the
hole 6 In. deeper for
gravel, set the post on the
Travel and All around It
with concrete. Slope the
top for drainage.
Trim posts after setting
If rails will be nailed In
place. When the Arst
corner post Is at the
correct height, tack a nail
Into the center top and
run mason's twine to the
next post. Draw the
twine taut and hang a
line level on It to de­
termine the exact height
o f the second post.
Plumb and set the post.

Set Intermediate posts
guided by mason’s twine
and three nailing blocks.
Tack one block on the
outside surface of each
comer post about a foot
above the ground. Align
the Intermediate post on
the twine and tack on the
third block to guide set­
ting and plumbing.
If posts are set In con­
crete, let them stand sev­
eral days while it sets.
Otherwise, add the rails
Immediately. Ralls made
o f 2 x 4 s ar e s t u r d y
enough to hold most
vertical fence boards.
Fence boards are gen­
erally 1-In. stock 3 In. or

Gate posts are larger
and deeper-set than the
rest o f the fence to
w ith stan d the added
stress. If the gate Is to
sw in g properly, they
must be perfectly plumb.
Allow the hinge and latch
c l e a r a n c e when
measuring. A diagonal
brace between the rails
strengthens the gate sec­
tion.

thick brush and apply when embedded In time,
logs split when they are
several coats.
$ 12.
Sink large wood tim­ alternately wet and dry
If you have softwood bers directly Into the or are exposed to direct
tim ber on hand, you ground or on 2-In. bed of sunlight. Larger rounds
should protect It for sand. Sand Is sold by can serve as a raised
edging use. Softwood weight. For small pro­ border.
l i m b e r s d i p p e d o r jects such as edging, you
Masonry edging such
b r u s h e d w i t h p r e ­ can purchase It In bags. as brick, tile, stone or
servative can Iasi for Avc A 60-lb. bag costs less concrete does not rot like
years or more. One such than $3. Multiply length wood hnd can be In­
preservative is Cuprlnol by width by depth In feti stalled In much the same
No. 10 Green Wood Pre­ or fractions of a foot to way or cast In place. If
servative. The active tn- work out cubic footage. you plan on curved lines,
g r e d l e n t . c o p p e r Sand weights 100 to 110 lay them out with a
naphthenate, Is not toxic lb. per cubic foot.
garden hose to see how
to plants. In applying this
Log rounds, cut 3 or they will look before
preservative to edging, more Inches thick and 4 digging the Installation
the more applied the In. In diameter, make a trench. Masonry edging
b a t t e r . I f y o u a r e rustic edging that can be should also be Installed
brushing It on. use a used as a mower base on a bed of gravel. Gravel

Is sold by the cubic yard,
so Agure cubic-foot vol­
ume and then divide by
27 to get cubic yards.
One cubic yard costs
about $13 but there may
be a minimum charge for
delivery.
B rick Is the m ost
commonly used masonry
edging. Use bricks rated
SW (severe weather) and
Install them Aat on a
2-In. bed of sand over 2
in. of gravel. Make the
trench 6 V4 in. deep so
the top of the bricks will
be (lbsh with grade level.
A layer of polyethylene
over the sand base Inhib­
its weed growth while

allowing the bricks to
move with frost heaving.
Figure 15 bricks per 10
ft. o f edging If brick
length parallels the edg­
ing run.
Stone makes durable
edging. You can use dif­
ferent cuts of natural
stone or lay tfneut field
stones with their flattest
sides up at ground level.
Pieces at least 1 Vi In.
thick work best. Any­
thing from pink marble
to locally-quarried stone
Is available. Many dealers
have do-lt-yourself areas
where you can pick edg­
ing stones sorting by
l M EDGING, page 14

tween the twine and
ground level on the lower
stake. Finally, divide this
distance by the number
or fence sections to de­
termine the drop Tor each
section. The top edges of
adjacent rails must step
up or down by this figure.
Set posts in gravel or
concrete. In loose, sandy
soil, concrete Is best, but
only In frost-free areas or
where the concrete will
be below the frost line.
Generally, set one-third
o f the post In the ground.
Start with comer posts.
Dig the hole 4 to 6 In.

deeper than the post
bottom for drainage ma­
terial. Flare the hole at
the bottom for good
support. Then stand the
post in the hole on the
drainage material.
T o set the post in
earth, All In with 6 In. of
gravel and tamp It solidly
before replacing and
tamping the excavated
soli. Fill several Inches at
a time and tamp each
layer. Lay a level
vertically on two sides of
the post to make sure It's
plumb. Add a last layer
of rocks at ground level
and cap with a tarnped-earth cone to drain

y e a r s . C o s t Tor an
B-A.-long 6x6 Is about

...Edgin g
C ontlM td from p a f a 4
guard Is to check for
quality-control label such
as the clovcrlcar of the
A m erican W ood P re­
servers Bureau.
The active preservative
Ingredient In most pre­
ssure-treated wood Is
chromate copper
arsenate (CAA), which Is
n o n t o x i c to pl ant s .
Wolmanlzcd wood, one
brand of pressure-treated
wood. Is guaranteed to
resist rot. decay and
termite attack for 30

Sanford. FI.

___ __ _____ _ — ,U m e gap-

width and Insert It as a
guide when nailing on
face boards.

HOME IMPROVEMENT TIME

h e a t in g

* C O O L IN G

A. P R O D U C TS

KEN'S AIR, INC.

321-5515
P M 1 ESTIMATES ON
N IW INSTALLATIONS

" T H E C O O L IT M A N "

321-6515

• Utility Rooms
• Carports
• Patio Covers
• Screen Enclosures
• Gutters a n d Downspouts

• Siding a n d Soffit
• Vinyl Rooms
• Glass Rooms
• Burns Roof-Over

322-0208

INSTANT CREDIT

Whirlpool
RA00S2IM

Change Your Existing
Heating G Cooling
8ystem for A High
Efficiency Whirlpool
Using Existing Copper
G Electric Hook-Up

KEN’SAIR, INC
" T H E C O O L IT M A N "

102 COMMERCE WAY

« T O N HEAT PUMP

•1375

« H TON HEAT PUMP

BURNS &amp; SONS
ALUMINUM
Compltt# Aluminum Service

321-6515
322-0208

Financing Available

744 Industry Road, Longwood, R 32750
it 531-5122

To !

ft—: V500-432-1574
-escotm t

�Sanford Htrald — Wodnatday, March 33,19C7

Harald Advrlltar. Money Saver — Thursday, March U , 1»I7

Country Living With C ity Conveniences
S .R . 4 6 A O regon A v e . - Sanford

—

■ ra c ira n n a a

wmmwmm

r -

2, 3 &amp; 4 Bedroom Homes With 2 Baths, G.E. Kitchens
Cathedral Ceilings, Fireplaces, Double Car Garages.

Priced From The ‘ 60s
To The ‘ 90s

3 Villa Plans and
5 Additional House Plans
To Choose From

Open 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. Daily - For Infomation Call 322-3103

hoem aker
SINCE 1956

—

l a tXz
z
J jB l

2701 W. 25th Street
P .O . Box 1875
Sanford, F L 32771

Sanford, FI. - 7

�Herald Advtrtltar, Mo nay Saver — Thurtday, March U, 1&gt;W

I — Sanford Herald — W «dn «w U y, March 25, 1H7

Sanford, FI.

Wood Veneering Simple And Inexpensive
B jP O P U L A R
MECHANICS
Distributed by UPI
The fine art of wood
veneering is n simple,
Inexpensive way to use
beautiful, exotic and rare
w o o d s In y o u r
w oodw orking projects
without going broke In
the process. In fact, most
of the world’s most pre­
cious and rare woods arc
available only in veneer
form.
Wood veneer la gener­
ally sliced 1/28 in. thick,
although It's available in

1/I6-. 1/40- and 1/64-ln. Parsons table with Its
t h i c k n e s s e s , t o n . square legs and sharp
Veneering requires no c o rn e rs is id ea l for
s p e c i a l s k i l l s o r learning the craft. Start
exp en sive equipm ent by culling the veneer for
and only a few basic the Inside leg surfaces —
hand tools arc needed. w h e r e y o u r e a r l y
These arc: a veneer saw. mistakes will show the
utility knife. 2-ln.-widc least — using a veneer
veneer roller, glue brush. saw and a steel rule
4-ln. short-nap paint straightedge. Always cut
roller, glue, thinner, veneer slightly oversized
veneer tape, push pins, so you can position It
combination square and exactly and finish trim It
u steel rule straightedge.
fora perfect fit.
Any flat surface takes
Next, apply veneer glue
veneer easily, which Is or contact cement to the
why u project like a veneer and to the Inside

leg surface with a 2
16-In.-wide brush or a
short-nap paint roller.
Allow the glue to dry
thoroughly, then apply a
second light glue coat to
both surfaces to ensure
100 percent coverage.
Walt for the second
coat to dry. Now. cover
the leg's glued surface
with a strip of waxed
paper. The paper pre­
vents the glued surfaces
from bonding and allows
you to shift the veneer
accurately into position.
Place the paper so that

■6 in. of the glued surface
Now. you can trim the
Is exposed at the top of overhanging veneer (lush
the leg. Butt one end of with the leg using a
the veneer strip against s h a r p ut i l i t y kn ife.
the apron between the Clamp a backup board
table's legs, center It over on the veneered surface
the leg and press down and cut against this
along the exposed area. board from the under
Before removing the wax side o f the veneer. Trim
paper, be certain that the the other Inside leg sur­
veneer overlaps the leg’s faces the same way.
sides and bottom edge.
Assemble and tape all
Finally, remove the the three sections for the
wax paper and press the two legs and apron on
veneer down firmly with one side o f the table
a 2-lnch-widc veneer before applying the glue
roller to ensure total to the veneer and the
contact and a good bond.
Bee WOOD, page 9

Troubleshooting Your Hot-Water Heater
heat source.
Piping systems cause
some problems that arc
blamed on the water
heater. High operating
costs may be traced to a
dripping faucet or leak­
ing pipe. A faucet that
drips only one drop per
confusing signals.
Because trou b le can second wastes nearly 800
strike any part ;,f y» ur gallons of water In a year.
hot-w utcr system . It Thus a simple faucet
helps to think in terms of repair will pay for itself
its three basic elements: many limes over. Long,
p ip e s , in c lu d in g a ll uninsulated pipe-runs
faucets and hot-waler uls&lt;* waste hot water.
appliances: tank: and When you draw water
By Popular Mechanics
Distributed By U PI
W ater healers have
relatively few com po­
nents and arc fairly easy
to service. When pro­
blems do arise, a water
heater can send out

from a faucet at the end
of such a run. hat water
must displace water that
cooled In the pipe. To get
a quart of hot water, you
mu s t d r a w s e v e r a l
gallons from the tank.
Keep the heat from dis­
sipating so quickly by
Insulating all hot water
pipes.
Hot water storage tank
problems call for a sim­
ple parts replacement or
a whole new tank. An
aging water system may
carry sediment into the

tank, or sediment may
collect as flakes of calci­
um and lime. In electric
mo d e l s , s e d i me n t covered heating elements
will bum out quickly. In
gas heaters, sediment
accumulates In the bot­
tom of the tank and
forms a barrier between
the heat source and the
water. Steam bubbles
percolate through the
sediment and cause a
continuous rum bling
sound.
To remove sediment.

first drain as much water
as possible from the
tank. Next, with the
dralncock still open, turn
the water on full pressure
to flush the tank. Then,
reduce the pressure by
half and, finally, shut ofT
the water and allow the
tank to drain completely.
Late-mode! water hrnt*
era have a magnesium
rod tb coat voldB in the
porcelain tank lining. An
anode rod prevents mat
and prolongs the tank's
life. These rods seldom

cause problems but when
they do. It’s often a
c h e m ic a l reaction to
acids and minerals that
gives the water a gassy
odor or taste. To correct
this, unscrew the magne­
sium rod and replace It
with an aluminum rod.
Most retail plumbing
outlets stock them.
A relief valve keeps the
heater from exploding If
the thermostat sticks.
When pressure builds
and the water gets too
Bee WATER, page 9

m m

W

T

W e 'r e

AL PORZIG
PLUMBING

V
Your Entire
Country Decorating
Emporium
We Have Beautiful...
Things Growing For You...

Since 1970

70S S. French Ave.
Sanford

For A ll Your
Plumbing Needs
AFRICAN
VIOLETS

When you visit the Country Corner you'll
Mnd a wonderful collection of all things
traditional: Furnishings for every room
and hundreds of special accessories for
your country style!

GERANIUMS”2 a*
• HANGING BASKETS
• FERTILIZERS

• ROSE FOOD
• INSECTICIDES

Country Corner
n

H

2516 Sanford Avenue •

,

Sanford • 323-5306
P
"i

layaw ays

SB&amp;w

a v a il a b u ;

; J E A N NORRIS
0 rU W IlD O TIC n A N TI

»
s d X f il

^ 4 S z W tk

ss

m

&lt;

r a . 322-3S76
W lC s k f y Av«.f Sanford

322-3170

�....
••••• IX- • W !.•'
«

Sanford HeraM - Wtdneaday, March 2 5 ,1W7

-W - A *

HeraM A d w r t U r , Money Savor -

Thursday, March U . 1W7

Sanford, FI. -

»

timesaving alternative,
you could use flexible
paper-backed veneers
which are com m only
available in 24- and
36-inch-wlde sheets.
If you edge-glue veneer
sheets to widen them,
ensure a tlghtfltting, in­
conspicuous Joint by
planing the abutting
veneer edges straight
with a simple Joining Jig
that y o u can m a k e
y o u r s e l f u si ng two
straight hardwood
boards and two machine
bolts with wing nuts.
Clam p both ven eer

pieces In the Jig and trim
the edges simultaneously
with a block plane. Then
tape the veneer pieces
together to form a wider
sheet. Leave the tape In
place until the veneer is
applied and has dried.
T o remove the tape
without damage to the
veneered surface, work
with a cabinet scraper.
Moisten the tape lightly
with a water-dampened
sponge. Then, scrape the
tape from the veneer
while holding the cabinet
scraper at about a 75degree angle.

Next, finish-sand the and remove the backing
sheet and apply Just as
veneered surface with an
you would contact paper.
orbital sander starting
W h e n f i t t e d and
with 120-grit and pro­
gressing to 180- and, aligned to your satisfac­
tion, a hot iron bonds the
finally. 220-grit. Round
thermal adhesive much
over the sharp comers
the way you might iron a
with sanding block to
patch on a pair of Jeans.
prevent splintering.
Place a sheet of paper
If you don't want to
mess with gluing your, between the iron and the
v e n e e r to p r e v e n t
veneer yourself, you can
work with iron-on or scorching and d iscol­
oring the wood.
p c c l - a n d - s t i c k
A box o f 50 veneer
adhesive-backed veneers,
which arc available In samples will give you an
id ea o f the w ood
24-ln.-wide sheets. You
cut and fit these just as g ra ln ln g s and c o lo rs
available to' you. Some
you would plain veneers.

lumber yards specializ­
ing in cabinet woods offer
veneers and tools, or you
can order supplied by
mall, including veneer
samples, veneers, tools
and books with complete
In s tru c tio n s r a n g i n g
from applyin g sim ple
veneers to making com­
plex patterns using a
variety of exotic woods.
C o n s t a n t i n e ’ s, 2050
Eastchester Rd.. Bronx.
N.Y. 10461 is one source.
Other mall order craft
and tool houses also offer
veneering supplies and
tools.

burner is firing. The
smoke should be drawn
up the Hue. If it Isn't,
C o n t in u e d f ro m page 8
turn off the burner, dis­
hot, the re lie f waive assemble and Inspect the
opens. H ow ever, the vent pipes. Clean each
valve spring can weaken section.
and release water un­
If the pilot light won't
necessarily. To correct stay lit, rep lace the
this, simply remove the thermocouple or have it
old valve and screw In a replaced. Leaking gas
new one.
pipes can blow up your
A c l o g g e d f l u e Is home. If you smell a
caused by rust, soot or strong gas odor, evacuate
debris that blocks tight the house and call the
bends. This Is a health gas com pany from a
hazard, as a clogged 7.ue neighbor's.
can force carbon monox­
If your electric water
ide and other gases into heater fails, first check
living quarters. An easy for burned out fuses or
test is to hold a lit match tripped circuit breakers
near the flue while the at the main electrical

p a n e l . If no ne are
tripped, press the reset
button on each thermo­
stat and listen for a
licking noise as the ele­
ments heat up. If this
d o e s n 't pr oduce hot
water, the problem may
be wiring, thermostats or
elements. Check visually
to make sure no wire has
come off Its terminal. If
you find one, turn off the
electrical power to the
water heater before refastening the wire.
To check a heating
element, thermostat or
hlgh-limit protector, test
each part with a voltage
ohmmeter (VOM). If you
don't have a VOM, you

can still tell where the
trouble is. If you get
plenty of warm but no
hot water, the top ele­
ment or thermostat is
bad. A few gallons o f hot
water folowed by cool
water Indicates the bot­
tom element or thermo­
stat needs replacing.
Since the elements fail
m ore often than the
thermostats, assume you
have a faulty clement.
To replace a defective
clem ent, shut off the
power and water. Open
all hot water taps and
drain the tank below the
bad element. Remove the
wires and the element.
Pull it straight out o f the

tank. Clean the gasket
surface, apply sealer to a
new gasket, screw in and
connect the new element.
It’s important to refill
the tank and bleed all
trapped air out through
the taps before turning
on the power — energiz­
ing a dry elemrnt will
bum it out In seconds.
Replace the insulation,
therm ostat protection
plates and access panel.
Turn on the power. If
after 45 minutes you
don’t have sufficient hot
water, replace the ther­
m ostat. Shut o ff the
power, disconnect the
wires and pry out the old
one. Snap in and recon­

nect the new. replace the
insulation and turn the
power back on. Reset the
temperature after both
elements complete their
heating cycles. Test the
water at the faucets with
a meat thermometer. It
should be between 130
and 140 degrees F.

...W o o d
Con tinned from page 8
table. Let It dry and then
l o c a t e the v e n e e r
assembly precisely over
the wax paper before
bonding It to the table
and trimming as you did
w i t h the I nsi de l eg
veneer. Do the other
three sides of the table.
When veneering an
area as wide as a table
top, you'll have to Join
two or more sheets by
edge-gluing. Or, as a

...W a te r

Th re e Rosas N om ad
A s A ll-A m o ric o Ricks
The 1987 winners of
the All-America designa­
tion include two roses
from overseas and one
from the United States.
They are Bonica, origi­
nated by the House of
S e e R O S E S , p a g e 12

!*
I*

SEM IN O LE SH O P PIN G C E N TR E -S A N FO R D
3653 Orlando Drive •Sanford, FL
Store Hours: 9 AM •8 PM, Mon.-Sat. — Sunday, 10 AM •6 PM
SALE PRICES GOOD TH R U MARCH 29

Assortment
LAN D SCAPE
SHRUBS

• 1 gallon size
• Choose from azaleas,
Red Tips, Llgustruma,
Boxwoods &amp; more.

Murray® 20 Inch Mower

A

For

8 inch Hanging Baskets
Large Assortm ent
Reg. 3.97

• Push m ower • 3 H.P. Briggs &amp; S tratton
engine • 7 inch radial tire s
• No. 7-20211x92 • Reg. $118.00
22” STEP-UP MOWER
by Murray
| 4 A |
• Reg. 148.00 * 1 2 1

Wal Mart Sells loi Less

• Wal Mart S(

O R TH O
Diazlnon
Solid Turf
Insect
Control
• Covers up to
5000 sq. II.
•Reg. 11.24

■f

�The Liberty
Priced from $39,900

H um m ingbird St.

The C reekw ood
b d rm

Priced from $60,900

.w

^

matr
b d rm

Caribbean 81.
Va m l to models
Dirk sen Dr.

mnaistt

The Saddleivood

g a ra g e

Priced from $53,600

You won’t find a better buy for your money on a singlefamily
hom e in Central Florida than at M A R O N D A H O M E S IN
D E L T O N A . W e have 18 different 2, 3, and 4-bedroom floor
plans to choose from. Additionally, M A R O N D A P A Y S A L L
C L O S IN G C O S T S . (Unlike many builders, we have N O H ID ­
D E N C O S T S .) Stop in fora free, no-obligation prequalification
analysis and see why you can afford the home you’ve always
dream ed ofl

No wonder Maronda is
Deltona’s largest builder!
(f M aronda Hom es I
C R C 024222

10 .Decorated Models

From Intaratata 4 i i m Deltona w i t to main
entrance. Follow Deltona Bivd., M m il* to
M aronda H o m e , m o d a l, on rig h t. Call
6 2 6 -2 1 6 2 from O rla n d o o r 9 7 4 -6 6 3 4
from Deltona.

Call 628-2162
from Orlando
574-6634
from Deltona

�r9

m

U — Ssntord H trsM — Wsdwn dsy, March 25, 1 W

S A IL IN G

H r aM Adv*rtl*«r, Money S s w r — Thursday, March U , 1W7

S TR O L L IN G

W IN D S U R F IN G

Come home to a vacation. . .

ft
H■

Sailpointe, the newest adult community in old
historic Sanford, offers a lifestyle you’ve been
dreaming a b o u t. . . It's designed for people
who love sailing, skiing and 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 Sailpointe
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 Sail­
pointe is the desired
place to live. Located
on Seminole Boule­
vard at Lake Monroe
in Sanford.
ABOUT

p vo

r

v

SAILPOINTE

fl

E

H

I 1

B

401 West Seminole Boulevard
Sanford, Florida 32771
Vi
.*« 1

322-1051
.Broker

3

H

m- tn,. • i

Sinford, FI.

H ere's Easy G u id e
To Build S h e lvin g
ByPOPULAR
MECHANICS
Distributed by UPI
Nearly all homeowners
share a common problem
— lack of storage space.
Regardless of the size of
the house, it seems there
Is never enough room to
store everything. This Is
especially true for con*
dominium owners and
a p a r t m e n t d we l l e r s .
Somehow, the longer you
live In the same place,
the. worse the problem
gets.. F o r t u n a t e l y ,
easy-to-bulld shelving
system s o ffe r an e f­
fective. Inexpensive re­
m e d y f o r the do-ityourselfer.
Shelving materials are
available at lumber yards
and h o m e c e n t e r s .
Shelves are most com­
m on ly m ade from
particleboard, plywood or
solid lumber and are ei­
ther k or 1Vi Inches
thick. Edge treatments
are often a p p lied to
shelves for appearance.
T h e y can c o n c e a l
exposed plywood edges,
add rigidity and Increase
the shelfs load capacity
or simply create a deco­
rative detail to dress up
the room. The exact shelf
design you choose Is de­
termined by the weight
or the Items being stored
and the look you desire. •
The maximum span
for each shelf between
supports varies with the
load and the material. As
a general rule. 44-lnch
particleboard 10 inches
wide can handle a load of
30 pounds per linear foot
with supports 24 Inches
apart. You can stretch
this span to 32 Inches for
44-inch plywood or solid
lumber and to as much
as 60 Inches for 1Vi
lumber or glued-up dou­
ble 44-lnch plywood. If
the shelf is reinforced
with a 44 x 2-lnch-wlde
stiffener along the front
edge and a 44 x 2 x
6-Inch long support cleat
under the rear of the
. shelf at the middle, you
can increase these spans
by 50 percent.
When appearance Is
not the controlling factor
— utility shelves in the
garage, or workshop,
for example —
-No.
2 common
pine is
quite suitable. This grade
pine has knots of varying
sices, so be sure to hand
pick the boards carefully
to avoid loose or overtlced knots that could
weaken the shelves. Note
tbat If the pine is to be

ilnted, first seal each
pal
mot with schcllac to
km
keep It from showing
through.
Particleboard is the
most economical shelv­
ing material and is often
used under a plastic lam­
inate. The disadvantage
of particleboard is that
It's heavy and tends to
sag if it isn't supported
properly.
When the look of fine
hardwood shelves Is dcs i r e d , c h o o s e
hardwood-veneer
plywood. This cabinetgrade plywood is less
expensive and lighter
than solid hardwood and
it's warp-free. Also, the
extra-wide plywood
shelves are made easily
without having to edgejoin several boards
together. Conceal the
plywood's exposed edge
with veneer tape, trim, or
a molding. '
Sh elves can be in ­
stalled as permanent fix­
tures in a cabinet or as
separate com pon en ts
that can be adjusted or
removed. Large cabinets
or cabinets without
backs often have several
adjustable shelves and
one fixed shelf. The fixed
shelf adds rigidity and
strength to the assembly.
Fixed shelves for small,
lightweight cabinets can
be attached with simple
butt Joints using glue and
screws. However, for a
much stronger assembly,
you should use dado
Joints — slots in the end
supports — to install
permanent shelves.
The two most popular
ways to support adjust­
able shelves arc with
shelf pegs set in holes
bored in the cabinet sides
or with metal standards.
S h elf pegs are In e x ­
pensive. easy to install
and suitable for nearly all
cabinets. Metal standards
are more costly and come*
In two styles: one holds
flat metal clips for use In
cabinets, the second ac­
cepts brackets to mount
shelves on a wall without

a cabinet.
A modest sized painted
w ooden bookcase re ­
quires slightly more than
3 square feet of floor
space, yet It provides
nearly 9 square feet of
book storage or almost
12 square feet If you can
use the top surface. You
can b u i l d one f r o m
b irch -ven eer p lyw ood
and face the shelf edges
with a 44-lnch‘thick solid
birch. T w o adjustable
shelves rest on shelf pegs
set In hales bored 2
inches on centers In the
end pieces. The shelf can
be a simple open-faced
box with a 1‘/4-Inch birch
plywood back or you can
dress It up -with trim
moldings and n base to
raise it o ff the floor.
Sim ilar bookcases are
commercially available at
relatively low prices, so
you might want to check
these out before invest­
ing in m aterials and
construction time.
A short span between
two walls Is perfect for a
wa l l - t o - wa l l s h e l f or
shelves. Since walls dq
not come standard dis­
tances apart, you will
almost certainly have to
build these yourself. A
wide shelf at desk height
with or without addi­
tional shelves over and/or
under It can turn a
space-wasting nook Into
a writing desk that can
double as a buffet area
for parties.
The design that makes
this work without sag­
ging is a 44-Inch plywood
frame 3 inches thick with
a finished top and plain
bottom panel glued and
nailed to It. Cut the top
and b o t t o m s u r f a c e
panels to fit the distance
between the walls, then
build the frame narrower
to allow room for 44 x
3-Inch hardwood moun­
t i ng c l e a t s t hat arc
fastened to the walls with
long screws. Slide the
drsktop/shelf over the
cleats and then secure It
with screws through the
bottom Into the cleats.

...Roses

s w e e p i n g t he A A R S
awards with three win­
ners in 1980.
Bonlca, according to
A A R S , is an e v e r blooming hybrid with a
height of 3-5 feet. Its
color is pastel pink with a
flower size o f 2Vi-3 in­
ches, and its fragrance is
described as "occasional,
light, sweet." AARS rates
Its disease resistance as
"e x c e lle n t."

Continued from page 0
Mellland o f A n tib es.
France: New Year,
h y b r i d i z e d by S a m
McGredy IV of Auckland,
New Zealand: and Sheer
B liss, hy br i di z e d by
William A. Warriner of
Tustin. Calif.
Warriner won fame in
th e r q s e w o r l d b y

�i
♦
i
i

AND THE SUMMER HEAT
Ilf IS NOT FAR BEHIND...
It Comes In A Hurry! That’s When
Air Conditioning Becomes More Than
A Passing Thought To
Your Family. Get Ready
SUPER
Ahead Of Time...Call Us!
We Can Show You How
HIGH EFFICIENCY
Rheem Can Help You | Central Air Conditioning.
Make Your Nest
There is the High Efficiency
Comfortable.
Heat Pump and Now There

YOUR
ENERGY COSTS

V

Rheem M akes A Line O f
A ir Conditioning Units S o
Efficient That You Can Afford
One Without Straining Your
Budget • Pays For Itself
The Energy It 8aves,
Throughout

Is The Super High Efficiency
Heat Pum p
.Which W ill Save
You M oney..

O'Years
_________ !

£ CALLS
A Call and We
__ 10 Out, Evaluate
Your Needs And Qhre
Yen An Estimate FREE
CALL

SALES .MSERVICE
M akes T h e
C o s t O f C o o lin g
M o re C o m fo rta ble
T o o ...

J

1 CALL

J

us A

\

l

A Com plete Line O f
Heatlng/Cooling For | '»
Residential • Commercial
And Industrial
Buildings

I
j

!

t

i

HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING

i

S I N C E 1965
S A L E S A N D S E R V IC E
2609 S. SANFORD AVE.

SA N FO R D

v /j

�14

— Sanford Herald — Wodnotday, March 25, 1W7

Horald Advtrflsor, Monoy Savor — Thursday, March 2&gt;, 1M7

Sanford, FI

N e w Window Can Raise
The Value
O f You

Don M y e rs
3 1 » S. FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD, FL

M

1

Al l

hours .

*°nfri g:0C

By Popular Mechanics
Distributed by United
Press International
R e p l a c i n g an ol d
window with a new one
or adding a new window
where there wasn't one
before are two of the
most popular home re­
modeling Jobs. Both can
raise the value of your
house and will probably
in crease en ergy ef f i ­
ciency as well. But few
Improvements can do
m ore to transform a
poorly-lit top floor room
than putting a window In
your roof. And while
most homeowners may
think of this as a con­
tractor Job. It Is well
within the capabilities of
a dedicated home Im­
prover.
To start with, a roof
window is not what is
c o m m o n ly called a
" s k y l i g h t . " Although
both are installed in simi­
lar places and both let In
a great deal of extra light,
the roof window has an
operable sash instead of
f i xe d g l a z i n g like a
skylight. Thus it can be
an e ffe c tiv e sum m er
v e n tila to r, esp ecia lly
when installed in an attic
room.
Begin by determining
w h ere you want the
w indow to be. Some
manufacturers suggest
that it be placed low
enough to afford a good
view when seated. But
other positions are just as
viable depending on the
structure of your house
and p r i v a c y c o n s i d ­
erations.
The best way to pick a
position is to cut out a
section of cardboard to
match the window you
want to buy and hold it
against the ceiling In
various places until you
are satisfied. Then, trace
the cardboard shape on
the celling and remove
the drywall or plaster to
expose the rafter cavities.
Once a few rafters are
exposed, you may want
to alter the position of the
window slightly to save
cutting a rafter or two
depending on the width
of your window.
Next, determine how
you want to trim the
window after it's In­
stalled, because this will
dictate where you must
place the window header
and rough sill. We chose
what the maker called a
"horizontal soffit lining
with a vertical sill lin­
ing." This puts the top of
the opening parallel with
the floor and the bottom
parallel with the wall
which yield the' most

light. The Jambs can also
be trimmed perpendicu­
lar to the sash on all
sides.
Next, locate the centerpoint of the rough
opening and bore a hole
through the roof at this
point. Push a dowel or
piece of scrap wood into
this hole as a reference
point so you can find and
measure the opening
outside.
Get up on the roof and
install safety brackets
and a plank to stand on
about two s h i n g l e
courses below the bottom
of the opening. These
b r a c k e t s and a r e ­
ciprocating saw used for
cutting the rafters are
common rental items.
For two days, both the
brackets and the saw
cost us less than $30.
Nall the top of these
brackets directly to the
roof underneath a
shingle tab to avoid a
futqrc leak. When the
brackets are removed,
it's a good idea to fill the
nail holes with dabs of
plastic roof cement and
press the shingle tabs
back down into them.
Once the brackets and
the plank are Installed,
lay out the rough window
opening on the roof.
Measure from the dowel
ccntcrpoint and draw the
rectangle using a framing
square and chalkline so
the outline shows up well
on the roofing. Also,
measure from the eaves
and ridge to make sure
the top and bottom of the
opening will be parallel
to the ridge and eaves. It
Is extremely Important
that the open in g be
square and to the exact
size given in the manu­
facturer's complete In­
stallation instructions.
N e x t , r e m o v e t he
shingles from the interior
of the outline and put
them aside for filling in
later. Then, make the
cuts, first vertically on
both sides of the opening,
then horizontally. Use a
handheld circular saw
with a carbide blade set
to a depth that Just cuts
through the roofing and

• • • h U M I I I U
Continued from page 6
shape and color to suit
your needs.
Strip edging made of
plastic, aluminum or
steel separates a lawn
from a garden bed or
area covered by stone

sheathing. Kemovc the
boards or plywood from
the cut and Immediately
extract all the nails In
both the sheathing and
rafters as a safety pre­
caution.
Now, go inside and
frame a temporary brac­
ing wall using 2x4 stock
to brace the roof when
cutting out the rafters.
We drove this wall into
place under the ceiling
Just above the planned
opening. If this wall fits
snugly, you won't have
to nail It into either the
floor or celling.
Begin mar ki ng the
rafters to be cut by
establishing a plumb line
on rafters that form the
comers of the opening.
Then, establish sill and
header positions, relative
to these lines. Follow the
specific manufacturer's
Instructions. Make the
cuts starting at the sill
end f ol l owed by the
header end. Install the
double 2x6 header and
sill using 16d common
nails.
Complete the rough
opening by Installing the
short rafter — or rafters
— between the header
and sill so they align with
the cut sheathing above.
Check that they are pre­
ci sel y squ are b efo re
nailing in place.
Next, remove the sash
from the window frame
following the maker's
in stru ction s. Tay
particular attention to
how the sash is removed
because reinstalling it
later can be tricky.
Then, mount the frame
into the o p e n in g .
Because this roof had two
layers o f shingles In
place, we removed the
new ones about 18 in.
around the opening and
Installed the brackets on
top of the old shingles so
the flashing would fit
right. Cover the sides of
the frame with roofing
felt and flash according
to the Instructions. With
the frame In place. Install
the sash from below and
trim the interior to com­
plete the Job.

chips. It comes In green
or black with a rounded
top edge to protect bare
feel. Install it by making
a cut in the ground with
the blade of a spade and
pressing It in with your
feet. Make the garden

�Hof^fie &amp;

Specialists

(305) 322-7667

MICHAEL IT O L L

M S M

n o o n

S

CUSTOMFITTED #4 M p
BOATCOVERS mo*14 5

D S S I9 N S

Export Installation ot
all Typos of Flooring.
1006 W. 3rd 81
|l flf0fd,FL 32771

fttc t

CANVAS W ORKS
LIN D A STOLL

1959 Csrperat* So.
Lsagwssd, Fla.

260-5733

FREEMAN/RUCKER PLUMBING
HEATING A A IR CONDITIONING
REPAIRS * REMODELING •ALTERATIONS
24 HOUR DEPENDABLE SERVICE
S e r v in g A ll O f Centred

Flo rid a

(*M
)323-8600
2418 S. Frowdi Aw.

Sanford

‘
B ack H oe
D u m p T ru ck

Bush H o g
M o w in g

(306) 322-1606

Other Tra cto r Work
Sanford, FI

(305)

(305) 322-9313

B o x B la d in g

D is c in g

•
r&gt;.

SANFORD

A l l CONDITIONING
■mcaisas
WCARMVICE ALL HANES
u n -w m e i
H M TUU TM R

'I

KAREN'S INTERIOR'S

B.E. LINK CONSTRUCTION

D A V ID ’S H O E
And

R E M O D E LIN G
BY

322-7029

ROOMS - CARPORTS - BATHS - KITCHENS
WE HANDLE THE WHOLE BALL OF WAX
INSURANCE ESTIMATES
ST. IIC. "CRC000671

T U B &amp; T IL E
R E N O V A T IO N
-

BY AUTHORIZED SPR

DON’T REPLACE
- REGLAZE
A LL WORK WITH A W RITTEN W ARRANTY

A T NIX UPHOLSTERY
C R E A T IV E C O N T E M P O R A R Y
C U S T O M D E S IG N S
• COMPLETE WINDOW TREATMENTS
• ALL TYPE* BUNDS • UPHOLSTERY
• WALLPAPER* FABRIC • SLIPCOVERS
• COMPLETE DEMON SERVICE

3 2 2 *2 1 1 7
709 CELERY AVE.
ALL TYPES O F

CARPENTRY,
REMODELING
A HOME REPAIR

•INOM 1BSS
IN Q R I A T I R ORLANDO A R I A O ALL
I AVI

•Mnmi

3 2 2 -6 3 9 0

• RESIDENTIAL

. . .

• COMMERCIAL

7 6 7 “0 9 0 4

643 Highway 17-92
DeBary, Florida 32713

SUNNILAND C0RP.

30 Yearn Experience
• DRAPERIES • S U P COVERS
• FOAM CUT T O ORDER
• BUNDS • UNCLAIMED
FURNITURE FOR SALE

ForH lIxo r, B u ild in g M a te ria ls
an d C h em icals
S a n fo rd , FI.

ALL CUSTOM WORK

j 322-2117
jlO A T T O P S

• C O V E R S • A W NING S • TARPS

322-2421

70S CELERY AVE. (SWY. 41B EAST]

F S Sprint m ipnnt aa4 wa an a tcM aPast am
|rwf tahctka, u com an 4mm ;

M IV K W A Y 6 ,
M T IO S ,

R IA C H IS

C O N C R IT I

LIM ER O C K , SHELL, FILL
D R A IN FIELD ROCK

“ mi BM.
fit.

PEGGY DeLAURA
President/Owner

Clean Your Carpets
For Spring

TA Y L O R R E N TA L
CEN TER
C O M P LET E R E N T A L EQ U IPM EN T
321S M m *9 Drtvt, U.S. 17-92
Sarfaitf, FL

3 2 3 *0 0 1 0

RESIDENTIAL
0 tta U tM

•41-4440

321*1222

321-5972

• ttS S S S f0

SStURIO

BEDDING &amp;
UPHOLSTERY

Phone 305/668-5142

CANVAS AND AWNING

- A &lt; l.

MCNAIID MOSS

Z

S

t

k

Q

l m

2400 WEST 25th STREET
SANFORD, FL • 321-2525

tim es"

Hour*: Uon.-Sat. 9-5:30 Sun. Noon-5 PM

CONCRETE SLA B S,
DRIVES, W A LK S &amp; PA T IO S
25 Yoars Expo rlo n co
Llfolong Rosldont
Liconsod 6 Insurod
HAROLD WEST

,

349-9758 AFTER S PM.

M

e l

O n e.

b

L A W N &amp; G A R D E N C EN TER
"grow ing with the

COMMERCIAL

Quality Custom Cabinets, Wall Units,
Bars, Counter Tops, Furniture

Richard Murphy

1-4 Mestrtal Part
•10 W duM s Dr.
•safari, n s . 32771

CLOSET

maid*

&lt;105)323-0220
ADVANTAGE
GLASS &amp;
. SUPPLY

Custom Mirrored Walls
Bath Accessories
Vanity Mirrors
Shower Doors
Closet Shelving

240 Power C t IM t 124
Sssfsri, FI 32771
J im Nielsen

2 9 9 0 4 0 7
(305) 3 £ 3 " U f f O /

�CAN HELP WITH
YOUR STORAGE
NEEDS
From 4x4 to 24x50
Beautiful Greenhouses and
Gazebos also available

O u r buildings:
• Meet South Florida Building Coda
• Delivered to your alia inatallod,
anchored and ready to use.
• Shinglad root

• Custom stalnod to match your homo.

FREE Delivery
FREE Set-Up

We arrange
FINANCING

375 H W Y . 17 92
LONGW OOD
699*9340

Preserving Produce
Relatively Easy Task
By John DeMers
UPI Food Editor
One of the nicest things
about watchi ng your
garden sprout produce In
th e s u m m e r Is the
knowledge that, using
age-old methods of pre­
serving. you can enjoy
nature's bounty long
after it's out of season.
Fruits and vegetables
can be preserved with
sugar, sugar and alcohol
or sugar and virtually
any liqueur; with oil.
wine vinegar or salt: or
by the very trendy sun­
drying.
For Ingredients given
to spoilage.- sterilization
might prove the ticket to
w h o l e s o m e , nat ural
produce all year long.
"Once started." said
cookbook author
Slmonctta Lupi. "you
will find (preserving)
needs no special talent,
nor even a great deal of
time or trouble — Just a
little patience, care and
perhaps n dash of imagi­
nation."
In the book she wrote
with Angelo Sorzlo. "The
Illustrated Book of Pre­

have to be lightly cooked
s e r v e s " ( Doubl cday.
$16.95). Lupl offers pre­ or preferably only blan­
serving advice for a range ched Just before pro­
cessing. Salt should be
o f delicacies — from
traditional favorites like kept to a minimum at
this stage to prevent the
strawberry Jams, pickles,
vegetables from getting
chutncys, canned
tough.
tomatoes and dried fruit
Lupl and Sorzlo admit
to exotic items like rasp­
that preserving fruits and
berry vinegar, candled
violets and tru(Hcs pre­ vegetables might strike
some as unbearabl yserved In wine.
old-fashioned. And even
A c c o r d i n g to t h e
authors, the best time to though It takes less time
than most people think,
pick fruit for preserving
preserving does not fit
Is In the early morning,
as soon as the dew has easily Into a fast-lane
world fueled by takeout
been dried by the sun.
C h i n e s e fo o d and
Choose the best fruit,
microwave popcorn.
ripe but not overripe —
with stems removed for
On the other hand,
Jams. Jellies and thick.
putting up produce In
Intense conserves but left
Jars Is a means not only
of enjoying kitchen time
on to preserve whole fruit
in syrup or alcohol.
but of controlling food
quality.
Vegetables should be
"The answer depends
gathered as soon as they
are mature, unless a
on your lifestyle," Lupl
specific recipe states
said. "But one of the
otherwise. Only the best
reasons for making your
vegetables should be
own preserves Is that we
know exactly what's In
preserved — succulent,
with no signs of discolor­
them — carefully pre­
ation. cracks or blem­
pared. unadul terated
ishes.
Ingredients."
Unlike many fruits,
Here are two recipes
nearly all vegetables
See PRESERVING, pg 17

�1
Senford Htrsld — WmntxUy, March as, lf»7

......... .. A d v t r f lw , Monty Saver — T h u n d iy , March U , lt»7

Container Gardening
By Ken Franckllng
UPI Feature W riter
BOSTON (UPI) If
you're blessed w ith a
green thumb but have
little space for a garden
In these days o f c o n ­
dominiums and shrink­
ing lots, co n sid er the
dilemma a challenge —
and think containers.

l

"Container gardening
|i here to stay." says Bob
Thomson, host of "The
Victory G arden ." the
popular PBS series. "It's
a way to do controlled
gardening, as big or as
small as you like.
r

"People can grow In
. containers even if they
have nothing more than
a flower pot on a win­
dowsill." he adds. "It Is
as simple as a pot of fresh
chives or parsley, or as
complicated as an out­
door deck with an infinite
range of containers."
Practically anything
' can sprout in a container,
I says Thomson, provided
the container Is the right
size and sits in a proper
location. "You can grow
vegetables, flowers, trees
and shrubs in containers.
You can hang them from
a post or a wall, or hang
a s k e t s f r o m an
way."
Wh i l e c o n t a i n e r
ling is done on a
Her scale than tradlana) gardens. It is no
\easier. In most eases. It
! requires far more care
per plant.
"It takes quite a bit of
[dedication." Thomson
"Unlike regular
Jens, It is difficult to
your contai ner
plants unattended for
a day or two. If
|Conditions arc right, you
' ‘ Vt leave them for more
24 hours. On a hot
, the soil can dry up
the plants can go
Into a seri ous wi l t ,
'atering the same day

...P reservin g

can bring It back.
" I f you are going to be
serious about containers,
you should be sure there
is sufficient size and soil
so It will retain moisture,
o r else arran ge for a
neighbor to water while
y o u ’ re a w a y so th e y
don ’t exp ire," he said.
"P lan ts arc living organ­
isms. Just like us. If we
dehydrate, w e’ ll expire.
T h e same with them ."
O u t d o o r c o n t a in e r
gardening is the most
s u c c e s s fu l. T h o m s o n
says. Indoor gardening is
made more difficult by
low-light and heat condi­
tions In the winter.
From W GBH-TV.
which has hosted "T h e
V ictory G arden" for 12
seasons now. Thomson
offered a variety o f con­
tainer gardening tips:
— Make sure each con­
t a i n e r has a d e q u a t e
drainage. Otherwise
excess water may swamp
the soil and upset the
oxygen exchange system
between the plant and its
root system.
— Pay attention to the
light needs or different
varieties. Som e flowering
plan ts, like im patien s
and lobllla, need shade
for at least half o f the
day.
—Som e plants actually
do better In containers
than in the ground. Eg­
gplant Is a prime exam ­
ple: under natural condi­
tions, It can plrk up a
soil-borne disease that
causes it to wilt. If you
grow eggplants, use a
container that is at least
two gallons in size. Pul In
a man-made, disease-free
soil. T h e result will be
v e r y clean, healthy
foliage and fruit on very
vigorous plants.
—Containerized plants
must be fed regularly to
reach their full potential.
Use a good sail mix with

Rinse the whole figs
b riefly but thoroughly

under col d runni ng
■tiaacd from page i e water, spread out on a
Illu stra te d

cloth and dry In the sun

IJiiJng Stuffed Figs in

h alf, le a v in g the tw o
h a lv e s a t ta c h e d and
"h in g e d ."
Press a walnut half into
the center o f each side of
th e fig . c o n v e x sid e
downward and close the
fru it h a lv e s togeth er.
Pack the figs neatly and
fairly tightly into the Jars
in layers. .

^B0In

*^hc

»J*&gt;ok of Preserves." Hell for about 1 hour. Slice
*PPcr Jam and an In- each fig lengthwise in
Brandy.
•TUFPED PIGS
IN BRANDT

pounds ripe, flrm11Vicups sugar
V cups whole walnuts,
“ “"rl and halved
end grated peel
12lemons

iy as required j &lt;»| v/ *&lt;apcln kle-^chr.tlayerw

Sanford, FI. — 17

SNAPPER

s lo w -r e le a s in g s u p e r ­
phosphate fertilizer. Feed
an outdoor plant with a
20-20-20 mixture liquid
fertilizer, at a dosage of
xh teaspoon per gallon o f
water, ever)’ time It is
watered. For indoor con­
tainers. use X
A teaspoon
per gallon. For vegeta­
bles. use a 15-30-15 m ix­
ture. watering over the
leaves so that It drips Into
the soil and Is gradually
absorbed by the roots.
"W e ’ ve grown carrots,
beets, broccoli, cabbage,
rutabagas, even d w arf
fruit trees In containers
in Hie Victory Garden,"
Thomson says. "T h ere
arc v e r y few th in g s ,
p e rh a p s corn and
raspberries, with their
u n d ergrou n d runners,
that don’ t w ork."

CmSBWHJffWf'KEMAMOf.Quotity. number one choice in rear engine riders.
Durability. Dependability. That'* what
goes Into every piece of SNAPPBt Lawn
Care Equipment. We have over thirty-five
year* experience to prove it. In fact,
SNAPPER quality ha* mode us America's

We’re proud of the SNAPPER line of qual­
ity lawn care product*. And now's the
perfect time 1o experience them your­
self. Visit ACTON MOWER WANT
during SNAPPER Open House.

Thomson reports that
container gardening has
lo n g been popular in
parts o f Europe where
space is limited. "S om e
o f the most Interesting
containers I’ve seen were
in England. They plant
huge boxes 5 feet square,
filled with the best soil.
The leeks were three feet
long, parsnips, and car­
rots with edible portions
e x c e e d i n g 18 i n c h e s
long."
For those who value
qual i ty o ve r quantity,
container gardening o f­
fers one other advantage.
*1* H'-VAC*
SELF-PROPELLED

"Y ou can work more
comfortably, with far less
stooping than in a tradi­
tional backyard garden."
Thomson said. " I t ’ s also
a way to allow the handi­
capped to garden, with
raised bed access.

* ’ 1n H o l l a n d ,

in

WALK MOWERS

G e r m a n y , t her e are
ga rden plots wi t h
ramped access, so handie a p p e d p c o p Ie c a n
p articip ate. T h e y can
reach out with a hoc to
cultivate, to pick, or just
to enjoy tin1fragrance."

you allow a sufficient and
even quantity for each
layer and Jar), a few
drops o f lemon Juice and
a piece o f peel. Add 2-3
tablespoons o f brandy.
When the Jar is filled to
within V» inch o f Its neck
(but no more), add a few
ta b lesp o o n s o f b oiled
water to make sure there
Is plenty o f syrup when
the figs are ready to eat.
Seal the Jars and steril­
ize for 45 minutes, using
either a steam pressure
gauge sterilizer or. at
least, a large pressure

ir. StQCC.ila*a djp-k.

Kl-V*C+

LAWN TRACTOR

JO IN THE M ILLIONS OF SA T ISFIH ) SNAPPER USERS.

f
ic
t
io
n
Mower
Mart
**The Beat Little Mower Houae In Sanford,
Where You 8ave Mower Money1

VISA

2599 Elm Ave., Sanford

,32.1*5208

uiomsc

ul

�I I — Sanford Herald — Wtdnotday, March 7 5 ,1tl7

Herald A d v rtlta r, Monty Saver — Thursday. March U , m 7

G a rd e n in g Seen As Therapy Tool

0 /v &amp; f J / w / r

W ALL FASHIONS
UNLIMITED

j
5

Y O U R F U L L S E R V IC E H O M E O E C O R C E N T E R

ALL IN STOCK WALL PAPIR $7.99 D/R
• W all Covering
• Custom D rip s ry

• Custom Blinds
• Custom Bodsprtada

ELLEN SCHIRMER
DRIFTWOOD VILLAGE - SUITE C
S49 W. LAKE MARY BLVD.
0 0 0 C 7 A O
LAKE MARY, FLA. 32746
w f c L " 0 / * T fc

ORLANDO 273«018S
■

SPRING INTO SPRING WITH

CENTRAL
ALUMINUM

By Bill Lohmann
United Press
International
It is no secret that a
few hours spent scrat­
ching in a flow er bed can
be soothing for the most
well-adjusted people, but
therapists arc becoming
convinced that gardening
also Is a serious healing
tool.
S en io r citizen s, con ­
v ic t e d fe lo n s and
p sy c hi at r ic patients,
am ong others, arc head­
ing to greenhouses for
recreation, rehabilitation

and self-respect. Thera­
pists say a little dirt
u n d er th e fin g e rn a ils
seems to go a long way.
"W e have very good
r e s u l t s . " said Ron
D urham , a re g is te red
horticultural therapist at
Friends Hospital, a
psychiatric hospital in
Philadelphia where pa­
tients have been Involved
in gardening chores for
more than a century.
" I t ’s not Just to provide
the p atien ts w ith the
opportunity to look at a
lot o f pretty things but to

AHOY MARINE
UP r e

20 % Off

W E S P E C IA L IZ E IN ;
• PO O L EN CLO SU R ES
• S C R E E N P A TIO S
• A W N IN Q S
• V IN Y L W IN D O W S • C A R P O R TS

Tftilers B f

M l CORNWALL
D uilm u Hr*
Mon.-Frl.

323-6010

323-1373

Short Land'r
Ram-LIn

DISCOUNT CARPET Dick Joyce
CLEANING
Well Drilling &amp;
SWUNG SPECIAL

provide them with some
real specific goals to help
them with their lives,'*
Durham said.
Gardening as a healing
art is not particularly
new — history shows
that physicians in an­
cient Egypt prescribed
garden w alks for d is­
turbed patients — but its
status as a therapeutic
science Is fairly recent.
Is o la te d th e ra p e u tic
garden s have been
around for years but they
did not capture the at­
tention o f the general
public until the 1940s
when the federal g o v ­
ernment established new
veteran s h osp itals for
w ounded soldiers and
began using horticulture
as a form o f occupational
therapy.

S i n c e

EAGER TO SERVE YOU IN ALL
YOUR HOME IMPROVEMENT NEEDS.

800 -4 JO

Sanford, FI.

t h e n ,

horticulture therapy has
become a scientific study
— several universities.
Including Kansas State
and Virginia Tech, offer
degrees In the field —
and thousands o f trou­
bled people have discov­
ered that w orking the
land is good for the mind
and soul.
The National Council
fo r T h e r a p y and Re*

habllltatlon through
Horticulture was formed
In 1973 and now has a
me m b e r s h i p o f more
than 600 therapists, who
s e r v e an e s t i m a t e d
26,000 people dally, said
Stephen Galllson. a
sp o k esm a n at cou n cil
h e ad q u a r t e r s in
Gaithersburg, Md.
G a l l l s o n s a id the
c o u n c il’ s m e m b e rs h ip
m ight account for only
o n e -fifth o f th e tot al
number o f people runn­
in g s i m i l a r p ro g ra m s
across the nat i on
because "th e re nre lots o f
p eop le out th ere w h o
don’ t even realize they're
involved in horticultural
th erapy."
No m atter w ho is in­
v o l v e d in th e s e p r o ­
gra m s , th e ra p is ts say
gardening w orks for the
same basic reason.
"H orticu lture Is life in
m in ia t u re . ’ * Galllson
said. " A plant has needs
fo r w a t e r , l i g h t and
n u tr itio n . It p a r a lle ls
human life. It helps peo­
ple understand the needs
o f a livin g organism and
r e l a t e
b a c k
to
th em selves."
H orticu ltu ral th erapy

See THERAPY, page 10

CHATTAHOOCHEE
STONE
PATIOS
POOL DECKS
• DRIVEWAYS

Irrigation
Can help you cut the high
coat of city water billa and
the drudgery of moving
garden hoses around the
yard. Let ue Install a wall
and irrigation system for
you and give you some
much needed time off I For
all your water needs, call

Serving Central
Florida For 10 Yrs

• Liesnssd • Bonded • Insured
• Ssrving Csntrel Florida
Sines 1969

D o n 't U nderestim ate
Y o u rs e lf.
You may not have m uch ceeh on hand, but you
do have plenty of equity In your home. S o this
might be an excellent tim e to refinance. The
amount you've paid on your existing mortgege,
plus the increased value of your home m ay give
you more borrowing power than you realized. So
a second mortgage Is a fairly quick and easy way
to raise money.

Credit
Longwood

�N U f m a s wmmm

—
a r i.f i 75,1W7
n
Sanlord Hersjd—
Wednesday, m
March

Herald Advarllsar, Money Saver — Thursday, March U , IW7

Sanford, FI. — If

New All-American Selections
Ready For Garden This Year
■
« fCharles
'h a r l u a A
n v ln r
By
B.. TTaylor

(..Therapy
a ----- sued from page 18
fcr all ages is blossoming
•H over America — a
‘ “tojpam for Inner-city
Kiths la sprouting In the
a wiUCrete o f New York
Cttyi physically handi­
capped patients care for a
model garden at the
Chicago Botanic Garden;
«n y of the residents of
lie R ob ison J e w i s h
tm»c In Portland, Ore..
S.#re past 80 an d in
, Wheelchairs but still toll
h&gt; the garden from dawn
ndusk.
jAt Friends Hospital,
the residents range from

.gjwfl drug addicts to
patients suffering
torn Alzheimer's disease
om I d d l e - a g e
Chizophrenics.
f
And horticulture
“flu very well with the
ung people because It
ches them a large
F-mponsttoillty.”
^ oderiy

*‘its
*lt» improved value ______
as an
ornamental plant and
herb." The basil plant
has nearly black, glossy,
serrated leaves that have
a sheen in the full sun.

The creeping zinnia
"Mandarin Orange" has
miniature golden orange
sunflower-shaped blooms
on a green spreading
carpet of foliage. AAS
describes it as a rugged

ilant that thrives under
and humid or dry
conditions. It can be
planted in rock gardens
or on slopes or banks
where a cascading effect
is desirable. Plant height
Is 6-10 Inches and width
is 12 to 15 Inches. Flower
size is one Inch and
garden spacing is 16 In­
ches.
AAS said its flower
judges had never before
encountered the "Purple
Pirouette" petunia, de­
scribing It as a fully
double petunia with
white edges. It should be
planted In fertile soil and
supplemented with a
balanced fertilizer or or­
ganic material during the
summer.
According to AAS. the
plant performs best in
full sun but also docs
well In container gardens
with a half day of sun.
Plant height and width Is
18 inches and spacing is
one foot. Flower size Is
three inches.
The snapdragon
"Princess White with
Purple Eye" has dens'*
spikes that shoot upward
with a trail of white and
purple florets, said AAS
officials. It blooms early
nnd continues to flower
all season.
Snapdragons pcrfrmi
well In full sun at 50
degrees Fahrenheit. But
the new plant also adapts
well to warm climates
such as that found In an
AAS trial garden In Or­
lando. Plant height is
14-16 inches and width
is 12-14 Inches. Garden
spacing is one foot.

Dur ha m said. ‘ ‘ The
geriatrics arc usually
depressed and there's a
lot of confusion ... so
something non­
threatening like a living
plant can help ease the
agitation and frustration.
" M o s t of the
schizophrenics have a
long history of hospital­
ization. They've probably
made every craft In the
book, so It Just doesn't
mean anything to them
anymore. We've had very
good success involving
them in the horticulture
process."
At the Union Correc­
tional Institution in
Raiford. Fla., convicted
f e l o n s have been
n u r t u r i n g begoni as,
orchids and other plants
for nearly three decades
in the nation's oldest
prison horticultural ther­
apy program.
Six greenhouses within
the prison walls give
inmates an opportunity

to care for' ornamental
plants, whi l e " l o w custody" Inmates arc
allowed to work in a
landscape nursery adja­
cent to the prison.
The program offers
fringe benefits: many
prisoners find Jobs after
their release as a result of
a working agreement
wi t h t he F l o r i d a
Nurserymen Association
and state offices arc
well-stocked with plant
and floral displays.
But the real value of
gardening in a prison
setting is Its impact on
the psyche, said Jimmy
Miller, educational pro­
gram manager at the
Union prison.
"Horticulture has a
very positive, very
calming effect on peo­
ple," Miller said. "When
a plant is dependent on
an Individual Inmate, it
gives that Inmate a sense
of responsibility, a feeling
pr.wrtb-v,* v.-.
,1

United Press
International
When gardeners return
to their plots this spring
they will have the oppor­
tunity to try out five
brand new prize-winning
flowers, herbs and vege­
tables — the 1987 AllAmerica Selections.
This year's winners.
Include three flowers,
one vegetable and, for
the first time In 25 years,
an herb.
The winning plants
were chosen through a
yearly trial program run
by All-America Selec­
tions, a non-profit orga­
nization With head
qiuarters at Downer s
Qrove, III.
Each year the organi­
zation evaluates new
r seed-grown flowers and
vegetables from around
die world at trial sites
located a c r o s s the
- country.
]
Gardeners can spot the
1 detections by looking for
the AAS emblem on seed
packets, seed catalogs
[;*■ and bedding plants at
* nurseri es a n d s e e d
i stores,
it*,' '
/The 1987 winners arc
the basil "Purple Ruf■ fies," an herb; "Autumn
; Go l d . ’ ’ a h y b r i d
pumpkin; Sanv t t al i a
"Mandarin orange," a
type of creeping zinnia:
"purple pirou ette." a
hybrid petunia; and a
hybrid s n a p d r a g o n ,
"Princess W hite with
£ Purple Eye."
i AAS said "Purple Ruf­
fles" won the award for

Basil, which originates
In the tropics, grows rap­
idly in warm soil. Plant
height, width and spac­
ing for the new plant Is
two feet. Flowering oc­
curs late in the growing
season. The herb can be
used fresh as a garnish or
to provide color In salads
or herb vinegar, and it
also can be dried for
cooking.
The "Autumn Gold"
pumpkin is early to color
and early to harvest, acc o r d i n g to A A S .
"G arden ers need not
w a d e t h r o u g h t he
pumpkin patch ... while
searching for their Im­
mature pumpkins. The
bright yellow immature
pumpki ns stand out
a m i d s t t he g r e e n
foliage." say the contest
Judges.
All pumpkins are an
e x c e l l e n t s o ur c e of
vitamin A. The plant Is
2-3 feet In height and
plant width is 12-20 feet.
Rows should be 6-8 feet
apart and plants three
feel. Pumpkins weigh
7-10 pounds each and
there arc between three
and five on each- vine.
Days to harvest: 90.

Elot

Complete House
Price

PER T H O U S A N D S Q . F T .
Original Colonial-Eaves Not Included
Insulation Available

Certified Remodelers of Fla
Sanford, Fla . 3 2 7 7 1
305*321-2445
W « » « InUrc stt4 In karnlftfl m att a t * *
ym * apart* o ffe M * you art b v y i n « * m
y m * hmtm, y*u art «U flM c.) Wa « * In-

'

Itrail** In lh* llama tintclti at tight.
NAME

VIN YL SIDING
DELUXE STORM WINDOWS
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

SOFFIT? G FACIA (Cm t)

PMOm

STREET

CITY

•TATE.

UP

�5 PIECE
DINETTE
TABU A
4 CHAIRS

BUY O IK

SWIVEL ROCKER
Tharo’t a lot to Iova about thla
•wlval rockar. Th a alaganca of
valvat upholstary., w ith Ita axtra
daap pila.

N you 000*1 Wood 2 Of Thooo
Comtortabie RocRnero...Bring

A Friood And Shoro Tho
Saving*I

*149

NOW ONLY
S f ON

•18 9
Buy TMa Siy*o And
ntc«iv« Matctfng
NacNnar FAEEI

Cholca Of Color
Rich Velvet Fabric
Reversible Soot
Rag. *249

SAVE

*78
Rtf. *199

SWIVEL
BAR STOOL

l
;

SELECT QUEEN ANNE cocktail table,
round table or drawer end table in
cherry or oak. Partial aaembty.

TABLE A 4 CHAIRS
30 ”*4 B”

TABLE A 6 CHAIRS

0R

QUEEN ANNE
CHAIR
Bast
Value
Around
Cholca Of
Colon

Compart At *399

*167
DOOR BUSTER

LOVESEAT!

s-SssSs *499
N M liN ilu d N ln M iiiiN a iii

R e f-S tM

Limit 2 Ploaso

BEDDING SPECIALS
DOOR BUSH K
1imii St*t
S 79
lull bit
S99
&lt;r

10 PC. PIT GROUP

Qurrit Srt

$ 1 IB

Kun; Srt

SI 89

1r» Vi

W.in.nitv

1win Srt
I till Sft
O i mti i Sri
Hill*; Srt

SI 19
S 18‘J
S219
S299

H47&gt;

LARRY SAMPSON’S

HEAVY DUTY
CAPTAIN'S QUARTOS

D IS C O U N T F U R N IT U R E W A R E H O U S E

Cn p M o W/Bodi *Cheat
W

fi “

1401 S. French Avc. (Hwy. 17-92)
Sanford

'

CianaAFeet9
aa

^^^aAaaB^o

In Horcuioa Fabric
$ O C Q
KMUTWTLAST ....
t

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222151">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 25, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222152">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222153">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 25, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222154">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222155">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, March 25, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222156">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222157">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222158">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222159">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22250" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21854">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/526d461b37f38edb5f400d68c3341605.pdf</src>
        <authentication>f735953b7b7eae9c05a2537072c30cf8</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222180">
                    <text>Lambert
Nabbed

S e v e n th G ra d e S e n d -O ff
Lakeview Middle School sev­
enth graders wave as they
depart for Jacksonville by
chartered motor coach at 7
a.m. today to see the Ramses
II exhibit at the Prime Os­
borne Convention Center.
The students are to stop at
the Jacksonville Zoo on the
way. The exhibit consists of
72 ancient artifacts from the

Fugitive rapist Keith Lambert awoke
Thursday to find his freedom had come
to an end.
He was caught by a California
sheriffs deputy while snoozing In the
Cadillac ho apparently stole from
nearby the Lake County Correctional
Institute after his escape Feb. 16.
Lambert. 34. was arrested at about 9
a.m. on U.S. Highway 95 outside of
Beatty. Nev., near the California state
line. Just east of Death Valley.
L a m b ert had b e en s p o tte d In
California Monday and tried to take one
o f his two daughters out of a Long
Beach school. When he showed up at
his former wife’s home In the same
area, she called police, but he had fled.
According to reports, a deputy
s p o tted a b ro w n 1983 C a d illa c
Fleetwood parked next to the highway
In Nye County. A computer check show
the car’s license plate had been stolen.

See LAMBERT, page 16A

R eag an D iscu ssin g
Regan's R e p la c e m e n t
WASHINGTON (UPI) President
Reagan Is discussing a replacement for
his chief of stafT Donald Regan who has
told Reagan that he Intends to quit the
powerful White House Job. sources said
today.
Sources said that Regan told Reagan
sometime ago that he would be leaving,
but the president left the timing o f his
departure up to the embattled chief of
staff.
D eputy press s e c r e ta r y M arlin
Fitzwater said that Reagan Is discuss­
ing Regan's replacement with Re­
publican leaders and a host of other
advisers today and throughout the
weekend. He said he will talk to Regan
about his Job In the White House nest
week.
-----------

t o m b of t h e E g y p t i a n
Pharaoh Ramses II, who
reigned about 3,500 years
ago. The trip was organized
by teachers Jane Courlas and
Vera DeLoach. About 140
students participated in class
sessions last w eek that
briefed them about the exhib­
it, which will be open until
March 15.

MaraMMata byTammyVlncant

Board Con Raise Money For Repairs, Renovation

Zoo Won't Be Moved . . . i
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer

The Central Florida Zoological Park
near Sanford will not be moved If...
—If the zoo board can raise $500,000
to complete necessary repairs and other
work needed to bring the present
facility up to standard:
—If In addition to the $500,000 the
board can raise an additional amount of
money, not yet determined, to renovate
the existing park to make It more
attractive to visitors, and to provide Its
animal Inventory with the best possible
living conditions. It would become a
"Florida zoo" with native animals In a
natural habitat, gradually phasing out
exotic animals over a two-year period.
And whether those goals are met or
not, the zoo board’s site selection
committee will continue to examine
other possible sites In Seminole and
area counties to leave open the option
o f b u ild in g a f u ll- s c a le e x o t ic
zoolologlcal park elsewhere, while re­
taining the existing facility. Failing to
raise the necessary money to complete
the renovation at the Sanford to o ,
'however, the board probably would still

the fund raising effort. They attempted
to get a commitment from the zoo
board members that the zoo would not
be moved from Sanford If the necessary
funds were raised. Mayor Smith and
the others told the zoo board members
they would actively support the fund­
raising effort If th ey got a firm,
commitment.
The zoo board members said they
were confident the entire board would
give such a commitment contignent on
the monies being raised, but the new
zoo board president. Susan Morris, of
South Seminole County, emphasized
that right now the planning is In the
early stages. She said a "lot more than
$500,000" will be needed to renovate
the zoo. but could give no figure.
Mrs. Morris said an effort will be
made to find homes at other zoos for
non-native exotic animals not fitting
Into the new Florida format or suited to
the habitat, such as the hoof stock. The
board is proposing to get rid o f the
Zoo Board members, Bill MacLauchlln, left, John Smith
’ many small exhibits and replace them
M orris discuss zoo plans with Mayor Bettye Smith, second
with three or four Florida animal
consider moving It.
attended a m eetin g today at the exhibits and possibly an aviary. How­
•unlgh^not
Supporters roff ’ lkeeping the zoo in
Holiday Inn in Sanford at which three ever, she sal
See
Sanford. Including Mayor Bettye Smith,
zoo baord t f * " '* * ™
niana « r

Alternatives

No Reprieve For O viedo Clinic
Talk of a reprieve on the April
1 closing of the Oviedo satellite
clinic has apparently proved a
false hope for users of the clinic.
The Central Florida Community
Clinic of Sanford, which operates
the Oviedo facility three days a
week, docs not have the right to
appeal the federal phase-out
order, according to Wayne Cutchens. Department of Health and
Hum an S e rv ice s o ffic ia l In
Atlanta.
Susan Moore. CFCC executive
director, contacted Cutchens on
the Instruction of the clinic
board. The board voted Monday
night to find out if the clinic has
the right to an appeal os stated
at the meeting by a Central
Florida Legal Services lawyer.
There were more than a dozen
people from Oviedo at the meet­
ing to ask the boad tor reconsid­
er the closing.
She said Cutchens confirmed
what she had been told before —
that once the grant funds ure
accepted and dispersed, the re­
cipient is not permitted to ap­
peal.
"Mr. Cutchens Is pretty con-

'We on the clinic
board, the clinic and
HHS are absolutely not
Insensitive to the
people of Oviedo
-P a t Southward
sclentlous about following grant
regulations to the letter." Mrs.
Moore said. ’.’A few people have
complained about losing their
medical care, but no one has
come foreward offering to help
provide a solution. They Just
want us to keep It open. Now we
must m ove to the point o f
determining how we can best
provide transportation (to the
Sanford clinic), but that may not
be the only solution."
She said the clinic’s attorney.
Bill Colbert, who Is also the city
attorney for Oviedo. Is looking
Into the regulation to see if It Is
applicable In this case and anti­
cipates It will be a week or 10
days before he finds out any­
thing.

Mrs. Moore suggested the fol­
lowing as potential options for
providing a solution in Oviedo:
• In terms of transportation It
m ig h t be p o s s ib le for the
Seminole County Commission
and the City of Oviedo to donate
funds to CFCC or another group
to provide a van and driver for
dally transportion for patients.
(CFCC has only one van and
driver for the whole county.)
• Sem inole County Com ­
mission might feel the Health
Department needs to open a
facility In Oviedo.
• Physicians In Oviedo might
be willing to take part of the
patient load for treatment In
their office possibly on a rotating
basis. (Last year the Oviedo
clinic saw 1.000 patients).
• Cr possibly a combination
of the above.
"There are many areas that
don’t have health care for the
poor," Mrs. Moore said. "W e
need to say we really have to
take care of them or say we
really d on’ t care about the
poor."
As a provision of the $884,706

federal grant, the CFCC’s only
source of funding, the board was
told the three-day a week fullservice Oviedo clinic must be
phased out by April 1 and staff
raises had to be kept at 5 percent
rather than the 6 percent pro­
posed Increase.
Central Florida Legal Services
lawyer Bruce Allen Scott In­
formed the clinic board Monday
night that there is a process by
which they can appeal this HHS
order. He cited a section of the
regulations that states If a pro­
vision to a grant Is going to do
"s o m e th in g ad verse to the
com munity" HHS has to specify
In writing the reason and he said
no reason was and the officials
failed to inform the board that
(hey have the right to appeal.
Scott said. "T h e clinic is
needed out there and the num­
bers served show It. Apparently
the board was not aware until
Monday night that there Is an
appeals process. We have been
researching this, but at this
point 1 am not representing a
particular clien t." The CFLS
See CLINIC, page 16A

mm

a 0

m

m

V ehicle O vertu rn ed

M»r»M Pltoto by Louis Ralmondo

A truck lies upside down after a three vehicle accident late
Thursday in Longwood. The 11:17 p.m. accide''* occurred at
U.S. Highway 17-92 and Laura Street. Cecil Cowart, 73,
address unreported, who was reportedly in the truck,
received a deep cut to the head and was hospitalized. He was
in good condition today at South Seminole Community
Hospital In Longwood. A second person reported to be In the
overturned truck, Tim Gordon, age and address unreported,
was treated and released. Further details were not available.

O n $1,000 Bond

Man Released After Booby Trap Charge
&lt;

■

1

1

y

.7
r m-%

m

?
------- -

I

A
______ _

K
\
\

H

O

p

p

i

I.. i

/

Bum per Cars
A Sanford police vehicle blocks a car
Thursday in the Sanford Police Department
parking lot after a confrontation between a
man, trying to repossess the vehicle, and the
acting police chief. Acting Chief Charles
Fagan said he was not going to let John
Warrington, a licensed repossessor from
Orlando, take the car until Warrington

demonstrated authority to do so. Warrington
said it was a voluntary repossession and the
police had no authority to stop him. Fagan
said the vehicle may be released today.
Warrington said he plans on filing a
complaint when Chief Steve Harriett re­
turns. Harriett has been away from his work
following the death of his father.

By Susan Loden
H erald S ta ff W rite r
A 35-year-old Altamonte Springs man Jailed
Thursday In connection with allegedly having
rigged a booby trap that discharged and wounded
two Oviedo boys has been released on SI.(XX)
bond. He Is scheduled to appear In court March
16.
Mark Jeffrey Crowell, of 314 Cherokee Court,
was arrested outside his home at about 9 a.m.
Thursday by Seminole County sheriffs In­
vestigator Billy Lee. He has been charged with
two counts of aggravated battery and aggravated
assault.
The booby trap was found at a shed In a
wooded section In Oviedo Nov. 9. Lee reported a
fingerprint comparison by sheriffs Lt. Marty
LaBrusclano allegedly linked Crowell to a rat trap
portion of the booby trap, which had been set on
property belonging to Crowell’s mother.
Two Oviedo residents, who live near the woods
where the device discharged and Injured Hans
Beck. 12. and Glen Kilgore. 15. told sherifTs
Investigators they (the witnesses) had been
warned not to go Into the woods. The suspect
allegedly told them he had set traps to deter
thefts from the shed.

A fter the wounding o f the two b oys—
accompanied by a third boy. Trinity Ford who
was not Injured — Lee checked the scene and
See TRAP, page 16A
i

TODAY

.% ’V

•

Classifieds... .13A-16A
Cnm lr*....... ...... i?A
Coming Events.... 6A
Dear Abby.......... 11A
Deaths........
Editorial.... ........ 4A
. ..16A
Financial
Cl nrlHs

Hospital.. ............16A
Nation...... ............. 5A
People.... ............11A
P o lic e ..... ............. 2A
...... 7A-10A
Television.LEISURE
Weather.. ............. 2A
World..... ............. 6A

• Tower report: some answers, more
questions, 13A
• Coming Events, 6A

�r
t t h j j g g j HwiWi Iw tflri, H.

Friday, Fe$. 27, }W

POLICE
IN BRIEF
Sheriff's Dog Tracks
S u sp ected Crack P o ssesso r
Seminole County sheriffs deputy Bill Shaffer reported
tracking with aherlfTa department dog Cajun a man who
ran after aeelng aherlfTa Lt. Donald Eatlnger In the North
Street area outalde Altamonte Springs at about 3 a.m.
Thursday.
Eallnger described the suspect to Shaffer and Shaffer and
Cajun followed a trail to the rear o f a home at 147 North
Street. There a man was seen near a backdoor. Shaffer
Identified himself as a deputy and ordered the man to
"freeze."
The man reportedly threw a box from his shirt pocket
onto a garbage bag beside the home. Eallnger found the
box and Shaffer reported It contained two pieces of crack
cocaine.
Milton Lee Wilson. 24. of 117 Leonard St.. Altamonte
Springs, has been charged with possession of cocaine. He
was being held In lieu o f $1,000 bond.

Struggle S e e n , A rre st M ade
Seminole County sheriff's deputies called to a home at
1017 Manchester Circle. Winter Park, at about 1:40 a.m.
Thursday reported seeing a man and woman shoving each
other. The couple was in the garage o f the home.
The woman, Angela Poster, had a bump and bruise on
her forehead and reportedly told police her husband had
hit her in the head. The man reportedly agreed to leave the
home for the night, but allegedly said he would come back
and damage the car belonging to him and his wife.
The man left and deputies said he did return and
allegedly hit the car In many places with a concrete block
causing about $2,000 damage.
Sheriff's deputies returned and found the suspect about
one block from his home.
James Joseph Foster, 28. of the above address was
arrested at 2:26 a.m. Thursday on Princess Gate, Winter
Park. He has been charged with battery-spouse abuse and
was being held In lieu o f $500 bond.

Suspects Arrested In Two Child Sex Coses
B jIu u lo d M
Herald Staff W riter
In separate cases Wednesday Altamonte
Springs and Long wood police reported
arresting suspects in connection with the
alleged commission of lewd. lascivious and
Indecent acts In the presence o f a child.
Both suspects rem ained Jailed e a rly
Thursday.
Altamonte Springs police report that at
about 8 p.m. Tuesday at Soccer Kick In the
Jamestown Mall, 995 State Road 434,
Altamonte Springs, a four-year-old girl, who
had been playing on the door of that shop
white her mother shopped for shoes with the
girl's brother, left the store and went to her
lather outside and told him o f alleged
actions of a man Inside the store.
The girl described the man as having
apparently performed a sex act In front of
her Inside the store.
The father went Inside the store with his

daughter and she reportedly pointed out a
clerk In the store as a possible suspect. The
father talked to the second clerk, who had
been selling shoes to his wife and son during
the Incident. The father told that man of his
allegations and said he was going to report
the Incident to police.
Police went to the store Wednesday and
were reportedly told by the second clerk
that other than his customers, the victim’s
family, the other clerk was the only person
In the store with him at the time of the
Incident.
Police had questioned the girl and because
of her statements tested the carpet of the
store and reported possibly finding seaman
stains on the carpet. The stains were
revealed under ultra violet light, a police
report said. Sections of the carpet were
confiscated for further testing In a police lab.
Derrick Allan Nienaber. 34. o f Orlando,
was arrested In that case at his workplace at

Bob M artinez Picketed By
Death Penalty Protesters
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - Gov.
Bob Martinez bas rejected pleas
by picketing capital punishment
o p p o n e n ts , w h o c o m p a re d
execution to torture and urged
the governor to "be a hero —
eliminate the death penalty."
The placard-bearing protesters
lay In wait for Martinez Thurs­
day. as he arrived at a confer­
ence of penal experts on the
Florida State University campus.
"D on't miss your opportunity
to be a hero — eliminate the
death penalty," one of the pro­
te s te r s u rged as M a rtin e z
stepped from his car and plain­
clothes security officers stood
by.
“ It's under your control." the
protester said. "You sign the

death warrants — you can atop
It."
Martinez replied: " I appreciate
your position on it. I happen to
differ on lt and I will not be doing
that In m y administration.”
The governor then swept Into
the conference building, trailing
security men and reporters.
The protest was sponsored by
Amnesty International.. which
monitors human rights abuses
around the world. The organiza­
tion has long counted the death
p en alty am ong torture and
form s o f repression usually
associated with dictatorships.
A n m esty International re­
cently began a new campaign
against tapltal punishment In
the United States.

4:11 p.m. Wednesday. He was being held In
lieu of $2,000 bond.
In the Longwood case, police said that on
Feb. 19 two girls, one 9 and the other 12
years old. told police that at about 5:20 p.m.
that day as they walked on Jessup Avenue
In Longwood a man drove very close to
them. The girls allege the man looked
directly at them and lifted himself off the car
seat to expose his nude lower body to them.
The girls screamed and ran from the man
and reported the Incident to police. On
Monday both girls reportedly picked a
suspect out of a police photo lineup.
That man was questioned at the police
station and at about 10 a.m. Wednesday at
the police station," Richard M. Meils. 22, of
445 S.- North Lake D rive. Altamonte
Springs, was charged with two counts of
committing a lewd act In the presence of a
child. He was being held In lieu of $10,000
bond.

Man Pleads Guilty In
2nd Degree Murder
A Sanford man has pleaded
guilty to second-degree murder
In connection with the stabbing
of a Sanford woman in October.
Bryce Glenn. 54, of \119 W.
12th St., entered the plea
before Circuit Judge S. Joseph
Davis Jr. who set March 17 for
sentencing.
According to police. Glenn
and Iona Smith-Brown. 39.
were living together at the time
she was murdered on Oct. 7.
She waa stabbed In the chest
and arm with a pocket knife.
Witness' statements led to
Glenn's arrest.
According to the prosecutor
on the case, Assistant State

Attorney Jeff Deem Glenn has
never told anyone why the
couple were arguing. However,
according to witnesses, the
couple had been drinklftg and
f i g h t i n g a n d w h e n M s.
Smith-BroWn said something to
the effect of "go ahead and kill
me." Glenn did.
Ms. Smith-Brown* bled to
death In an unusual manner
when the knife penetrated her
heart. Her blood filled the heart
sac causing her heart to stop.
Deen said.
The recommended sentence
for Glenn, a farm worker. Is 12
to 17 years.

—Dsane Jordan

Burglaries A n d Thefts Reported
Kenneth Wofford, o f 9410 Bear Lake Road, Apopka,
reported to sheriff's deputies the $2,500 motor was stolen
from his boat Wednesday,
A video camera, a battery' pack and cable, plus a gold
chain were stolen from the home o f William Horsley, 48. of
7347 Fleldcrest Road, Winter Park. A sheriffs report said
the Items have a combined value of about $2,000.
A bench, a microwave oven, a tape recorder and other
items with a combined value of about $820 were stolen
from Accent Drapery &amp; Interiors, 172 Oxford Road. Fern
Park. Wednesday, according to a report owner Judy Kay
Carney, 33, o f Maitland, filed with sheriffs deputies.
Donald Lee Palmer, 39. o f Oviedo, reported to sheriffs
deputies that the three vehicles In a fenced compound at
Florida Power Corp.. State Road 426, Oviedo, were
burglarized Tuesday or Wednesday and tools, stereo gear
and other items with a total value o f at least $3,500 were
stolen.
d e t e c t o r v a l u e d a t 4 i O O w M ta J w n fr o m a . J l
C h j y y d l i c k in d i e c A i crg&amp;ncy moth p

Florida Regional Hospital on Tuesday between 8 p.m. and
9 p.m. the truck's owner, David Crider. 36. 401 W.
Seminole Blvd., Sanford, told police.
A $50 radio and two bank bags containing a total of
$1,000 were taken along yvith credit cards and a check
book in the name of Libby's Lace in Lake Mary from the
car of Jane Canterbury. 47. 126 E. Plantation Blvd., Lake
Mary, while the car was parked, but unlocked, at 2629 B El
Captain Drive, Sanford, on Tuesday between 7 p.m. and
7:30 p.m.

G eneva Man Arrested
For Attempted Murder
By Susan Loden
Herald Staff Writer
A 19-year-old Geneva man has
b e en a r r e s te d by B re v a r d
County sheriffs deputies on an
charge o f attempted murder.
Brevard sheriffs deputies allege
Paul Eugene Lewis of State Road
426, Geneva, slashed the throat
of u Mims man in Brevard
County curly Monday morning.
Acting on a tip from Brevard
C ounty a S em in ole C ounty
sheriffs deputy reported finding
the victim’s pickup truck on
North Jungle Road in Geneva at
about 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Lewis was arrested after he
returned to Brevard County and
wus found by sheriffs deputies
In Titusville Wednesday after­
noon.
B reva rd C ou n ty s h e r iff's
spokesman Joan Heller said
Thursday that Lewis allegedly
took the victim ’s 1984 Nissan
pickup truck to Geneva after he
allegedly ussuulted that man
during some type of dispute at
the Black Point Wildlife Refuge,
w h ic h Is a b o u t 10 m ile s
northeast of Titusville.
Mrs. H eller said that the
victim . Barry Hall. 42 had

apparently picked up the sus­
pect In Titusville late Sunday.
They reportedly went to Lewis'
home In Geneva and picked up
some clothing and then returned
to Brevard County.
The pair went to the wildlife
refuge and while there, Mrs.
Heller said the pair got Into a
dispute and Lewis allegedly
slashed Hall's throat and left
him there. Lewis Is believed to
have driven Hall's truck back to
Geneva, where It was found
abandoned. ‘
Hall. Mrs. Heller, said, walked
10 miles from the wildlife refuge
to a c o n v e n ie n c e store In
Titusville. The walk took three
hours, she said. But when Hall
went into .the store he didn't ask
for help. He bought a pack of
c ig a re tte s . T h e store clerk
noticed his Injuries and called
the Brevard County sh eriffs
office. Mrs. Heller said.
Hall, she said, apparently did
not intend to report the at­
tempted murder.
Lewis was being held without
bond Thursday In the Brevard
County Jail on a charge of
attempted murder. Mrs. Heller
said.

FIRE CALLS
(USPS 4I1JI0)

Friday, February 27, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 141
Published Daily and Sunday, except
Saturday by The Sonford Herald,
Inc. 300 N. French A v e „ Senford,
Fla. 37771.
Serond Clan Pottage Paid el Sonford.
Florida 32771
Home Delivery; Month, 54.75; 3 Months.
SU.2S; * Months. S27.00; Veer,
SSI.00. By M oll; Month. M.75; 3
Months, 330.15; * Months, 337.00;

Yea/ 'fif on

W o n t (305) 312*1411.

Sanford firefighters and rescue
workers have responded to the
following calls, details based on
fire department reports:
THURSDAY
—6:49 a.m.. 410 Scotte Ave.,
rescue. An 81-year-old woman
suffered a possible stroke. She
was transported to the hospital.

WEATHER
N a tio n T e m p e ra tu re s
City ft Fortci it
Albuquorqu* pc
Anchorage ty
Aihovlllo r
Atlanta r
Billings pc
Birmingham r
Boston sy
Brownsville Ttx.pc
Buffalo pc
BurlingtonVI •y
Charleston S.C. r
Charlotte N.C. r
Chicago cy
Cincinnati r
Cleveland cy
Columbus r
Deltas ts
Denvercy
■s Moines r

'ey
Evansville r
Hertford sy
Honolulu pc
Houston ts
Indlanepollsr
Jackson Miss, ts
Jacksonville sy
KensesCItyr
Les Vegas sy
Little Rock ts
Los Angeles sy
Louisville r
Memphis r
Miami Beach pc
Milwaukee pc
Minneapolis pc
Nashville r
New Orleans ts
New York pc
Oklahoma City r
Omaha r
Philadelphia cy
Phoenix I
Pittsburgh cy
Portland Me. sy
Portland Ore. r
Providence sy
Richmond cy
St. Louis r
SanFranelscol
Washington cy

Hi Lo
45 »
15 to
44 41
45 41
» 13
55 54
40 14
10 S3
40 31
34 15
51 49
44 40
4t 35
47 43
40 34
45 40
54 43
31 11
44 M

m55
50
40
79
44
41
44
44
44
54
55
44
49
54
43
43
43
53
73
44
51
45
43
43
44
40
50
39
44
49
43
47

Five-Day Forecast
For Control Florida

.13

1.12
ui

Ptty CMy

Ptty CMy

Ptty CMy

CMy

(£E [IE [IE

Lo ca l R e p o rt
Thursday’s high temperature
In Sanford was 78 degrees and
the low during the past twen­
ty-four hours was 58 degrees as
reported by the University of
Florida Agricultural and Educa­
tion Center. No rainfall recorded.

Highs

A r e a F o re c a s t
.IS

0
Lows

2

z
»
45 .31
n
61
44
4]
59
44
37 .10
33
47 .72
44
44 .4*
31 1.54
73
30
30
49
45 .02
31
34 !l0
34 .07
33
40 .04
34
10
41
14
34
41 .27
44
35

Sat.

Sun.

Snowstorm
Pushes East

United Preaa
International
A storm that slowed road and
air traffic and shuttered schools
with up to 5 feet of snow In the
West crept eastward over the
Rockies and into the Plains
today, forcing travelers to take
refuge from howling blizzard
conditions.
The storm, which has been
blamed for at least five deaths
pc partly cloudy
COOES
this week, blanketed Colorado
r rain
c clear
with more than 2 feet of snow
sh showers
ctxlaarlng
sm smoke
cy c lo u d *
Thursday. At least 8 Inches fell
sn snow
f lair
In Wyoming, where only neces­
sysunny
fy loggy
sary travel was advised In the
ts thunderstorms
hi hat*
w-wlndy
m missing
Cheyenne area.
Highways In Wyoming re­
mained open, but visibility was
F lo rid a T e m p e ra tu re s
cut to about a half mile, and
hotels filled up with stranded
travelers and truckers.
MIAMI (UPII — Florida 24 hour tempera'
"It looks like a blizzard," said
lures and ralnra It at I a.m. E DT today:
City;
Hi Lo Rain a clerk at Holding's Little
Apalachicola
45 54 O.tr America motel. "There's snow
Creitvlaw
53 50 0.00
Daytona Beach
71 55 0.00 b lo w in g e v e r y w h e r e , and
Fort Lauderdale
71 72 0 00 they're Just getting tired of
Fort Myers
d4 45 0 00 fighting It. With It getting dark.
Gelnesvllle
70 54 0.00
It’s getting hard to see. and
Jacksonville
57 51 O.tr
Key West
79 75 0 00 they say the roads are really
Lakeland
It 51 0.00 slippery."
Miami
79 72 0 00
T h e storm s, which have
Orlando
12 40 0 00
Pensacola
59 54 0 05 dumped between 2 and 5 feet
Sarasota Bradenton
44 43 0 00 of snow In the mountains of
Tallahassee
37 S3 0.03
Tempa
13 44 0 00 central Arizona since Monday,
Vero Beach
77 43 0.00 s h o w e re d n o rth w e s t M in ­
West Palm Baach
79 70 O.tr
nesota. the Dakotas. Nebraska,
northeast Colorado and the
Moon Phases
mountains of New Mexico to­
day.
Blizzard conditions Thursday
howled around Pikes Peak.
Colo., while near-bllzzard con­
ditions and wind-chill tempera­
First
Full
Last
* b JMar.7
Mar. 13
Mar. 23
tures of 20 below were reported
near Colorado Springs. Winds
of 20 to 30 mph blew up to a
foot of snow Into even higher
B e a c h C o n d itio n s
drifts In the Nebraska panhan­
dle.
Daytona Beach: Waves are
Numerous fender benders
about 2 to 3 feet and choppy. were reported, and blizzard
Current Is slightly to the north conditions forced the Colorado
with a temperature of 57 de­ State Patrol to close parts of
grees. New Sm yrna Beach: Interstate-25 and 1-70. Roads
Waves are 4 feet and semi­ throughout New Mexico were
glassy. Current is slightly to the snowpacked and icy. officials
south; Water temperature, 58
degrees. Sun screen factor: 12.

said.
In South Dakota, where up to
30 Inches were on the ground,
an 80-mlle stretch of Interstate
90 was closed, and snow forced
flight cancellations Thursday
at the Rapid City Airport.
Delays o f up to 90 minutes
were .reported at D enver's
Stapleton International Airport.
In C lovis. N.M., Oble. a
12-year-old giraffe who was one
of the newest residents at the
H lllc r e s t Z o o . d ie d from
exposure to the cold tempera­
tures In the teens, said Chuck
Longo, the zoo director.
Heavy snow blanketed most
of southwestern and central
Colorado Thursday, dumping
up to 30 Inches of new powder
In the southwestern moun­
tains. Ten inches fell at Los
Alamos. N.M.. which has re­
ceived 131 Inches of snow this
year, eclipsing the old record of
123.6 Inches set In 1957-1958.
Schools In rural Colorado
along the Front Range closed
early Thursday, and evening
classes were canceled at some
colleges.
Winter storm warnings were
posted today In southern New
Mexico, east-central Wyoming
and the Nebraska panhandle.
Travelers advisories were up
fo r m u ch o l C o lo r a d o ,
n o rth w e s t M inn esota, the
Dakotas, west-central Nebraska
and parts of Wyoming. New
Mexico and eastern Arizona.
The storm prompted Arizona
Gov. Evan Mecham to declare a
state of emergency Wednesday
In the central part of the state,
activating the National Guard.
In Flagstaff. Arlz., the storm
was blamed for the death of an
8 9 -y e a r-o ld w om an found
buried under 25 Inches of snow
In her backyard Wednesday
night.
A plane crash during the
storm Monday killed four peo­
ple in Anza. Calif.

Today...Increasing cloudiness
with a chance o f showers or
thunderstorms. High In the mid
70s to lower,80s. Wind southeast
10 to 10 mph. Rain chance 40
percent.
Tonight...variable cloudiness
warm and becoming breezy with
a slight chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Low In the mid
60s to near 70. Wind south 15 to
20 mph. Rain chance 20 per­
cent.

A r e a R ead in g s
The temperature at 9 a.m.: 69;
overnight low: 60; Thursday's
high: 82; barometric pressure:
30.15; relative humidity: 90
percent: winds; SE at 7 mph:
rain: None: Today's sunset: 6:24
p.m., Saturday sunrise: 6:52
a.m.

E x te n d e d F o re c a st
The extended forecast. Sunday
through Tuesday, for Florida
except northwest — Sunday
cloudy with a chance of showers
or thunderstorm s becom ing
p a rtly c lo u d y M onday and
Tuesday. Turning colder during
the period with lows Sunday
morning In the 50s north...60s
central to lower 70s extreme
south lowering to the mid 30s to
near 40 north to the lower 50s
extreme south Tuesday.

A r e a T id o s

S A T U R D A Y : D ay
Beach: highs. 8:22 a.m.
p.m.: lows. 1:45 a.m.. 2:13
N ew Smyrna Beach: I
8:27 a.m., 8:45 p.m.: lows
a.m.. 2:18 p.m.; Bayport:
1:00 a.m., 1:42 p.m.; lows
a.m., 7:52 p.m.

B o a tin g

St. Augustine to Jupiter
— Today...wind southeast 1
15 kts. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Bay
Inland waters a moderate c
Widely scattered showers.
Tonight...wind southeas
south wind 15 to 20 kts. Se
to 6 ft. Bay and inland w:
choppy. Widely scattered si
crs.
Saturday...wind southeas
south 20 to 25 kts. Seas 5 to

�....ms mm

To Keep Eye On Developm ent

Lake Mary Committees Formed
By Ctonle Lind berg
Herald Staff Writer
T w o new committees, one called Public AfTalra
and the other Cultural Development, have been
formed in the Community Improvement Associa­
tion (CIA) of Lake Mary at the request of the
association's president. Lake Mary Police Chief
Charles Lauderdale.
The purpose of the two groups is to formulate
ideas and make recommendations on develop­
ment In the city. Lauderdale said.
Lauderdale was installed as CIA president,
along with other officers and directors, Monday
night by Mayor Dick Fess at the association's
building on Country Club Blvd. at 7:30 p.m.
The Lake Mary CIA should take a leadership
role in building a community "that people will be
proud to call home." Lauderdale said. He

appointed Francis Pratt to chair the Public Affairs
Committee, which w ill focus on development
issues within the community and will be alert to
assisting the government, honeowner’s associa­
tions. developers. Individuals and others In
initiating programs that will be beneficial in
rostering healthy and harm onious growth,
Lauderdale said.
Dino Lorenzo has been appointed to head the
Cultural Development Committee. His commit­
tee. Lauderdale said, "w ill be charged with the
task of leading Lake Mary toward its rightful
place at the forefront o f cultural development In
Seminole County and Central Florida." He said
he would like all Lake Mary citizens who are
interested in playing a role in the development of
their community to consider Joining the city's
CIA.

Group Trains
Parents Of
Handicapped
The Parent Education Network
of Florida Inc. (PEN), a federally
funded program to provide
training programs and informa­
tion to parents of children in
special education in Florida
schools, has scheduled a Master
Training conference in Tampa
from March 5 to 7.
Parents who attend the con­
ference w ill become Master
Trainers who can then train
Local Parent Facilitators to
reach out to parents in the
com m unity and present the
tr a in in g sessio n s to sm all
groups, said Mary Jetton, PEN
coordinator of Information and
resources.
A training video and informa­
tion packets are being developed
and will be made accessible for
parents through the Florida
county libraries and the Florida
Diagnostic and Learning Re­
s o u r c e S y s t e m (F D L R S )
associate centers that are part o f
the school systems of Florida,
Ms. Jetton said. "PEN is de­
termined to reach those parents
who are usually missed in educatlonal-typc programs.”
Similar programs have been
developed in other states and are
considered important in helping
parents to participate In their
child's education plans os re­
quired by Public Law 94-142:
every child is guaranteed a free
appropriate public education,
Ms. Jetton said. She said that
parents who have learned to
communicate the needs of their
child in a positive and Informed
* manner become more effective
toward the development of more
accurate goal plans, whether
a c a d e m ic , reh a b ilita tive or
vocational, that arc being de­
signed for their child.
It Is PEN'S philosophy that
paren ts are a handicapped
child’s first and best advocates.
The positive involvement o f
t r a in e d p a r e n ts w h o c a n
participate as partners with
professionals on behalf of their
handicapped children will Im­
prove the special education
p r o c e s s , s e r v ic e d e liv e r y
systems. Identify community
r e s o u r c e a lt e r n a t iv e s and
strengthen parent advocacy or­
ganizations. Ms. Jetton said.
—Genie Llndberg .

MS

l

)

12 BIG HOURS OF
-7 -7 Super Savings...
VALUES GOOD
Today Only!

APPLIANCE
SUPERCENTERS

SA TU fcO ^

America's Largest
Chain o f Nam e Brand
Electronlcs/Appliance
Stores

GS F IS H E R
3 W a y Audlo/Vldeo S p e a k e rs

• M a g n e t ic s ll/ » ( ii« ld 8 d f o r s id a o
a p p lic a tio n s
•8 0 w a tt m a a lm u m R M S p o w e r h a n d lin g
• H iq h e ffic ie n c y b a ss r e tie * d e s ig n
• tO w o o fe r g iv e s g re a t b a ss re s p o n s e
•S T V 8 1 8

S a n fo r d H e r a ld
Your Local Newspaper

c o m p a rt

3 Piece Portable Stereo
•A M /F M i t . r t o c a n o n , recorder
•A u to Mut&lt;c Senior finds the n e it to n g o n the tape
•3 bend tq u a h /e r
•Detachable fu ll range ite re o
•p e a le n

•CFBWOO

SansnJL
With Aufo Reverie Cassette Player
•Quart* tyn ttw ier
i t AM press's
• Autoreverw CMMtia w ifwfai
tap* caps'*iity
A
0 A A A

d'9t:

a plo

s H ffi£ * *

322-2611

■8 n P iV,r

•Auto loudneee conrs^savon
rW r H
a
•flutlHrt iCO doc*
™
I Jr
•RX2000
I M
V

oper*

!

sasa« S B *

Digital Car Stereo

Und'ng

•*N T t7«vjjy

r-

$ J t

a

QFISHER*
50 w a tt Per Channal
A u d io C o m p o n e n t S y s t e m
•Owwl oeeteitePeel

' S
s r
*0uiit*m 5 bane1*qyai'#*f
• spectrum a n ilfit*

•3 way speaker*

L ( t A i■»!

•Programmable furor A toity auto
lunnUbM*
•(pcHired with ophonai multi-play

• Digital tuner
•M atching cabinet

•HfOO

compacl due pi*r*r|

•IUOO

MAGNAVCX

SHARP'
VHS Stereo HO Camcorder

AUtOfOCUS

VHS HO Cam corder

W it h "C C D " Im a g e S e n s o r

*1288 *995
• Auto tutu* 6* Zoom l*n
w in macro

•Cortvanieflt

tijilingfunction

• 7 Lu* tow light
t«fili1rMi|y

•9Mpy*erloot" km*

&gt;r»

• l/ j" Nww.fcon pick­

up fub*

•HO system for *upurt5

picture goattty

•V R U 92

•VCCJQUA

^ ^ 1 9 " * cable Ready
color TV
W ith Wireless Rem ote
lu n c ticn n m o N con.ro.
J,e’
.
electronic lu n e i »r&gt;0

SHARP'

MTS Stereo VHS HQ VCR

HO VCR
With wireless Remote

With wireless Remote
•B u ilt in MTS stereo
tu n e r
• a e v e n t'14 oay

• 110 channel cable ready tuner
• 14 d a y 4 even t

pfogfummab'e
•HOvideoenhancement
• A u to p o w e r O M OF F
iysiem *5200

*348

timer

*227

•v e s a s u

4 Head MTS Stereo HlFl VCR
With Wireless Remote

25”* Cable Ready
color TV
W it h W ir e le s s

Remote

•39 function remote control with random accevs
•R em ote on-screen

i9*' 100% Solid S ta te
portable color TV
•C nrom eS nerp b«C» «"»&lt;'•■
•.SAuuto
tuning
p e r.me
,Kjeo
ranije lener .

•C.9'00

program m ing

MAGNAVCX

' uM

31 T M I

*699

•D uilt-in M TS stereo
decoder
•VR9560

m

i

com pact cube Des
:^onr^^de*Kflu*«

H u t p i(i t i l

\

Heavy Duty
Automatic Washer

N o rB i'-rp r
N orye

,

y *••••§•«*•*■

&amp; Q I R | g |r )

, $259

•Z w aib and nns« temperature*
• P a reel am enamel finish b&lt;j a tub
• H e a .y duly Iransmisaton

•W l WW Q vvh

30"R.mge
Energy-saving
Cas Or Electric

Side-By-Side
Food Center

$249

$999

Withspiff-citetxmgCooktop
*G *I Hang*

**}|J }5 72 cub,c

•Ciwcfnc Rang*

•«cu i watvf thrudoor

♦CSX220W H

1n IC)M I g Ie ]

Jumbo 20 lb. Capacity
Deluxe washer r
With e Pushbutton Cycles

•••tu rw s s r n t

$366

• M h P 3 tp**rj mcrtOf

*

ttcltoacMiatm

* f urea Powrf agrtaiew
•IWFBIZO

ALL T V SCRIKN SIM S M IASURIO DIAGONALLY

SHOP A McDUFF NEAR YOUI3 SUPERCENTERS TO SERVE YOU1
2227 N. CITRUS BLVD.
3705 ORLANDO DR.
381 CYPRESS GARDEN BLVD.
Leesburg Sq., Leesburg........326-5122

Hwy. 17-92 Seminole Ctr., Sanford ... 321-6993

Winter Haven Village. Winter Haven ..293-0022

SHOP OUR 2 McDUFF ELECTRONICS MALL LOCATIONS!
ALTAMONTE MALL, Altamonte Springs........ Phone: 834-3400
MELBOURNE SQUARE, Melbourne ...Phone: 725-8200
SHOP SUNDAYS UNTIL 7 PM, SHOP MON.-SAT. UNTIL 9 PM

To Start
Call

E AC H

SONY.

Committee To
Review School
Food Report
The Seminole County School
Board approved a district food
services committee Wednesday
to review the recommendations
of a study presented to the board
last month by the consulting
firm of Peat, Marwick. Mitchell &amp;
Co. of Miami concerning the
district's Food Service Program.
The board last year requested
that a study be done to de­
termine whether the district
should hire a com pany to
manage food operations or keep
the food service under district t
su p ervision by making im ­
provements where needed.
The food service committee,
made up of school principals,
food service managers, a school
board member, a high school
student, parents and repre­
sentatives from food service in­
dustries In the private sector
among others, will present their
evaluation of the consultant's
report and make their own
recommendations to the board
on March 16.
The board is scheduled to then
consider the recommendations
of the committee and authorize
that approved recommendations
be implemented by the School
Food Service Department by
April 1.
—Genie Llndberg

tary; Varn Feddersen, 1st vica president;
Bob Voss, 2nd vice p resid en t; Alice
Moughton, treasurer; and Lake M ary Police
Chief Charles Lauderdale, president.

Lake M ary Mayor Dick Fess, right, con­
ducts installation of officers for the city's
C om m unity Im provem ent Association
{CIA). From left, Linda Beckham, secre-

U iM B U
APPLI ANCE

S U ffltC tN tE IS

TRIPLE- T U F F u

* G U A R A N T E E D 2 4 - liO U R D E L IV E R Y

CUSTOMER G U A R A N T E E GIVES Y O U

G V G U A R A N TE E D SERVICE

i J g u a r a n t e f .d l o w e s t p r i c e

I

�»r

SanfbrdHenikl

DICK WEST

(U in w -M )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

Friday, February 27,1H7—4A
Wayne D. Deyle, PeMIsfcer

Home Delivery: Month. $4.75:3 Months. $14.25:6 Months.
$27.00: Year. $51.00. By Mali: Month. $6.75: 3 Months.,
$20.25: 6 Months. $37.00: Year. $69.00.

Let Workers'
Victory Stand
Settling an argument that has gone on for
15 years, a federal appeals court ruled in
W ashington recently that farmworkers de­
serve sanitary conditions In the fields —
conditions that every other worker in this
country takes for granted. The court ruled
that the L a b o r Departm ent m ust issue
g u id e lin e s re q u irin g farm ers to p rovid e
toilets, drinking water and other sanitation
Tacilltles for flcldworkers. .
S aying that it wanted to bring an end to
|‘this disgraceful chapter of legal neglect.” the
&gt;three-Judgc panel ruled that the department
;had acted Improperly by falling to issue
fe d e ra l stan dard s to protect m ore than
jialf-a-m illlon farmworkers from hazards of
com m unicable diseases and heat stress.
&gt; T he court gave officials from O S H A —
Occupational Safety and Health Adm inistra­
tion, a division of the Department of Labo r —
HO days to set field sanitation standards.
. It’s curious how our romantic notions o f the
rural life have allowed us to Justify degrading
work conditions for farmworkers. The men.
wom en and children who put fruits and
vegetables on our tables — many o f them
fllspanic. a large percentage of them illegal
im m igrants — are expected to work long
Jiours in the field, usually under a hot sun.
'Without easy access to drinking water, toilet
facilities or a place to wash their hands. The
work they do and the hardships they endure
are supposed to build character, apparently,
though it’s work that few Americans deign to
‘do. And few o f us would tolerate for a minute
flie work conditions.
W hile some O SH A officials as well as some
growers and farm owners, argue that the link
betw een field sanitation and disease is
unproved, a panel of public-health experts
.commissioned by the Labor Departm ent
argued otherwise. In a report published two
years ago, the panel said that more than
500,000 American farmworkers suffer rates
of infection comparable to those of ThirdW orld peasants. The panel attributed their
condition to the refusal of employers to
provide them with drinking water, toilets or a
place to wash their hands.
- C h ief J u d g e Patricia W ald w rote in the
-majority opinion that the record "d e m o n id -tUMtui&amp;'thm.McM o f.*
______________ __
nTTipi
contagion, bladder disease and heat prostra­
tion am on g farmworkers. Yet resistance to
issuing the standard, a counterpart o f which
Is already in place for every other O SH A covered type o f em ploym ent, has been
Intractable.”
T h e c on tro versy dates back to 1972, w h en
El C on greso. an organization rep resen tin g
H isp an ic citizen s, in clu d in g farm w o rk ers,
petitioned O S H A for the sanitation rules.
L a w y e r s fo r th e g o v e r n m e n t a n d th e
farm w ork ers even tu ally reached an out-ofcourt settlem en t, but In 1985, R ob ert A.
R ow la n d , then the head o f O SH A. ch an ged
h is m ind. R ow land decided that the d e p a rt­
m ent w ou ld not require farm ers to p ro vid e
sanitation for fleldw orkers.
T h e ad m in istration changed Its m ind again
w h en B ill Brock becam e labor secretary.
B r o c k , g e n e r a l l y s y m p a t h e t ic t o th e
lo n g s t a n d in g p r o te s ts o f m ig r a n t
fa rm w o rk ers, partially overturned R o w la n d ’s
decision and called on the states to adopt
th e ir o w n field sanitation standards. T h e
co u rt’ s ru lin g m eans that the Labor D ep art­
m ent cann ot w ait for the states to adopt their
o w n standards.
* Florida and 18 other states have th eir ow n
field sanitation standards, but these rules
could be preem pted by new federal reg u la ­
tion s If th e federal rules are m ore effective.
; Lab or Is exp ected to appeal the court ru lin g
because it underm ines the ad m in istration ’s
notion o f federalism : that state regu lation
sh ou ld gen e ra lly supersede federal regulation,
j t ’s a n o tion w e find ad m irab le in the
ab stract, though farm w orkers in the m id d le
o f a tom ato field, w ith no sanitary facilities
nearby, are not d ealing with the abstract. F or
[their sake, w e hope the ruling stands.
K

r

*^ —
9

i *'*. . • •/

*

J . .’ *

1

BERRY'S WORLD

t t$$r$v*|A m
e
“ O H Y E A H I W ell M Y K ID is so sm art h e un­
d e r s to o d T H E F IR S T W-4 FO R M . ’ ’

High Tech Senators And Goat Aw areness
WASHINGTON (UP1) - The magazine High
Technology reports a 50 percent drop during the
past two years In the number of college
freshmen "intending to study engineering or
computer science."
The periodical takes this to mean "fewer
young people are pursuing high technology
careers." but I doubt such a conclusion is valid.
There must be other high-tech skills leading to
careers other than engineering and computer
science, identifying and defending phagocytes,
for example. Or milking goats.
Probably half the freshman class could opt for
such careers If courses in these high-tech
studies were available at college level. However,
the only institution, or person. I know offering
phagocyte Information "for pupil participation"
IsRell Francis of Springvllle. Utah.
According to another magazine, phagocytes
produced In bone marrow cleanse human
tissues of airborne particles that might
otherwise cause diseases. But these friendly
organisms are being destroyed "faster than they

can be replenished" by cigarette smoke and
other impurities.
In a screed titled "Man’s Inhumanity to
Phagocytes." Francis asks, poetically. "What
gives you rig h ts to slay your helpful
phagocytes." I would quote more but Francis
apparently forgot to get his poetic license
renewed. At any rate, he also asks. "Who are the
phagocytes In our society?"
Not Sen. Jesse Helms of North .Carolina,
certainly. His name doesn’t even rhyme.
The fo rm e r ch a irm a n o f the Senate
Agriculture Commlttiee who Is now the ranking
Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee
may be more interested In protecting dairy
goats.
To Helms went the honor of Introducing one
of the first Joint resolutions In the 100th
Congress. This legislation would designate the
third tkeek In June each year as "National Dairy
Goat Awareness Week."
(The quotation marks. I might add parentheti­
cally. are his. However. I’m sure Helms would

be willing to share them, if
I am told the senator first was made aware of
the lacteal possibilities by a herd of dairy goats
S«d&gt;mrgn
who may have been a better poet even than
Francis*
As Helms told the Senate. "For more than
5,000 years, dairy goats have supplied mankind
with food and shelter."
He said that while goat milk Ice cream and
vogurt "are sold in various parts" of the United
States, the best known product Is "goat cheese."
Although Helms was quite rhapsodic about
the nutritional value of goat cheese. I noted in
the Congressional Record that he made only
passing reference to the shelter roleL for one. believe that after 5.000 years. It’s
time to repay them a bit. If. therefore, you care
to register your awareness by taking along a
dairy goat tent on your next camping trip, be
. my guest.
And. for all I care, you don t have to wait for
National Dairy Goat Awareness Week to do It. .

JS S S l1Worth

SCIENCE WORLD

WASHINGTON WORLD

Risk Of
Strokes
Undetered

Getting
High On
Power

By Larry Doyle
UPI Science W riter

By Helen Thomas
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - T w o ma­
jo r scandals In 12 years leave a
strong Impression that working at
th e’ White House exacts a heavy
price.
White House power is Intoxicating
and many ranking aides lose their
way in the heady atmosphere.
The staffers come In as presi­
dential loyalists who paid their
political dues and are named to
serve the highest ofUce in the land.
Some view their Jobs as political
payoffs, their Just rewards for the
long struggle to get to the White
House. Their allegiance Is to the
president and their energies are
directed to achieving his goals.
T h e arrogance of power that
accom panies those top Jobs is
manifest. Few remain immune to
the exhilarating sense of self Im­
portance, the bowing and scraping.
Air Force One. instant helicopters,
speeding motorcades that stop all
traffic.
"Y ou can always tell the arro­
gance of an official when they
demand to have a security escort,
whether they need It or not." one
.aide:

JEFFREY HART

le Imperial trappings,
the adulation and It rubs o ff on
them.
In those top Jobs they receive
commissions and they swear to
uphold the Constitution o f the
United States. They are supposed to
be automatic public servants. But
many differentiate between serving
the public and serving the presi­
dent.
Form er deputy ch ief o f staff
Michael Deaver. who left the Reagan
administration after the first term,
said that In view of the Iran arms
scandal, he wonders how many
people want to serve In the White
House.
Although a special pro­
secutor Is now looking Into his
business dealings after he left the
White House for a possible conflict
of Interest, he said he would still do
It all over again because he wanted
to serve Reagan.
During the Watergate scandal,
Gordon Strahan. a young Nixon
aide, was asked during a hearing
what he would tell someone who
aspired to serve In the top echelons
o f government. " I ’d tell him to stay
away.” said Strahan In a reply that
stunned the Investigators.
Many of the top aides who served
President Richard Nixon went to
Jail.
Others saw their careers
shattered. Families broke up and
nothing was ever the same.

Jut. at any rale, we have one. and
Mr. Bennett has used his post to
articulate enduring truths that re­
cently have been widely forgotten,
both In the schools and colleges and
In the general culture.
Most recently, under the auspices
of the Ethics and Public Policy
Center, he has addressed himself to
the question of teaching Interna­
tional politics In the high schools. It
is odd that It takes courage to do so.
but In an era of "peace studies" and
pervasive relativism It does take
courage to advocate — hold your
breath — teaching the facts.
Do students understand. Mr.
Bennett asked, "that the United
States represents something more
than the interests of a big power in
global competition? That our In­
ternational posture embodies our
founding principles? That we stand
as a free self-governing society In
d efen se o f those Ideas w h ich
together make for freedom and
self-government? ... In the present
International arrangement, there
exists another Idea. It Is an Idea
b a c k ed by In c r e d ib le a r m e d
strength. It Is an aggressive Idea
that does not shrink from the use of
that strength. And It Is an Idea of
nearly illimitable darkness. In the
terrotorles to which It has spread
not a single Idea that Americans
believe universal and good and

Reagan's Legacy
The Reagan legacy may well turn
out to have been SDI. tax cuts, and
William Bennett, who continues to
rise In prominence and even na­
tional political speculation. In one
sense the secretary o f education
may have been too effective. He
tempts one to the thought that we
need a secretary of education — ’
lth o u tfh a t one J line the ad-

beyond dispute still shines. Except,
o f course. In the hearts o f Its bravest
victim s...
"A re we teaching young Am eri­
cans to understand the Berlin Wall
— Its history and its significance?
Are there course units on It in
America? Please tell me about
them. When a communist dictator
like Erich Honecker calls the wall an
‘s n iM u b M protective rampart.’ are
s t u d e n t s a b l e to h e a r h is
doublespeak for what It Is? Do they
know . w h a t ’ dictatorship o f the
proletariat means?’ Can they grasp
the significance of a totalitarian
state, which recognizes no Inviola­
ble Individual rights? Are they
familiar with calculated liquida­
tions? With terror as an Instrument
of state policy? With the NKVD and
KGB? With planned famine, purges,
show trials, a pact with Hitler, a
gulag? Do Americans recall the fate
o f Cambodia? Are they aware of
current developments In Ethiopia?
And can they therefore see wliy free
m en a n d w o m e n r e s is t th e
expansion of communism around
the world?"
What Is communicated to stu­
dents from the first grade through
college Is enormously Important.
Plato knew that. The left wing It
acting on It. It Is one of our most
Important national resources and
Mr. Bennett knows It. too.

PLEASE WRITE
Letters to the editor are w el­
come for publication. A ll letters
must * be signed and Include a
mailing address and, if possible, a
telephone number. The Sanford
Herald reserves the right to edit
le tt e rs to avoid lib e l and to
accommodate space.

CHICAGO (UPI) — Doctors often
caution diabetic patients that If they
want to avoid becoming the victim
o f a stroke, they should control their
b lo o d p r e s s u r e , l o w e r th e ir
cholesterol levels and lose weight.
But a recent government study
suggests these Interventions, while
Intelligent, will not help the nation’s
10 to 11 million diabetics escape the
Increased stroke risk they face
simply by having diabetes.
Furthermore, there Is a sugges­
tion that elevated levels of sugar In
the blood and urine, whether In a
diabetic or not. Increase the chances
that a blood clot will form and lodge
In the brain.
"T h is Is rather new and w e’re not
sure what It means." said Robert
Abbott, an epidemiologist with the
National Heart. Lung and Blood
Institute outside Washington. "But
there Is something going on.
"W e ’ve shown that the traditional
risk factors don’t explain the In­
creased risk that diabetics have,"
Abbott said. “ The message Is (hat
as a result, the routine management
o f (stroke) risk factors will not be
enough to completely reduce thediabetic's chance of stroke."
Stroke, deprivation o f oxygen and
other nutrients to the brain caused
by either a blood clot or burst
artery, occurs relatively frequently
In the United States, striking
500.000 every year and killing
155.000. T y p ic a l v ic tim s are
middle-aged or older men. who may
suffer long-term or permanent pa­
ralysis and mental Impairment If
they survive.
It has long been known that
diabetics are about twice as likely as
normal to suffer a clot-related
stroke, which are about three limes
more common than strokes caused
by cerebral hemorrhage.
But It was generally thought dial
since diabetics are more likely to
exhibit other risk factors for stroke
— high blood pressure, elevated
cholesterol and obesity — this was
responsible for increased dangers
they faced.
"That turns out to not completely
be the case." Abbott said.
Abbott and his colleagues re­
ported In the Journal of the Ameri­
can Medical Association recently
that a 12-year study of 7,600 men
aged 45 to 69 found that even when
differences In all other risk factors
were taken Into account, diabetics
still were nearly twice as likely to
suffer a stroke caused by clot as
non-diabetic men.

JACKANDERSON

Jordan Says U.S. Has No Middle East Clout
By Jack Anderson
And Dale Van Atta
WASHINGTON - King Hussein of
Jordan, the most reasonable Arabic
national leader In the Middle East,
has serious doubts about the United
States' ability to have much effect
one way or another on a peaceful
settlement In the region.
This Is a disturbing view to be
held by the ruler who has been
recognized as crucial to Middle East
peace hopes by seven American
presidents and 10 secretaries of
state. All of them shared the
egocentric opinion that U.S. policy
would be decisive In achieving a
permanent solution to the region's
problems.
In a recent Interview In Amman,
we asked the king bluntly: Will
Americans have had anything to do
with winning peace In the Middle
East, assuming It ever comes?
" I f and when they choose to. I
suppose they can do a lot." Hussein
responded tactfully. "B u t that
hasn’ t been the case as yet. They
have hurt It. unfortunately, over the
last year."
The king's Judgment may have

been affected somewhat by his
Irritation over the lies told to him by
Reagan administration officials re­
garding their public efforts to stop
the flow of arms to Iran — while
secretly sending weapons to the
Ayatollah Khomeini In return for
help In freeing American hostages.
Hussein Is a staunch supporter of
Iraq in Its 6-year-old war with Iran.
But It Is still a devastating putdown. Most Middle East leaders,
whatever their politics, tend to
agree with Washington In their
assessment of U.S. importance. In
fact, the conventional wisdom, that
the United States can work miracles
if It only has the will, underlies the
abduction of American hostages In
Lebanon. The kidnappers errantly
believe that the United States could
win the release of Shiite prisoners In
Kuwait simply by asking.
Hussein's opinion o f the United
States bordered on disdain when we
suggested that American Influence
over Israel might be the main U.S.
contribution to peace In the Middle
East.
"This Is always the short-term
approach." the king replied. "T h e

long-term approach, in the Interest
of generations to come. Is a solution
that is based on Justice and the
recognition of the rights of all. On
the other hand. I d on 't know
whether It’s your Influence over
Israel, or Israel’s Influence over
you."
A settlement of the Palestinian
question Is Hussein's chief concern,
and this is understandable, since
roughly one-half the population of
Jordan Is Palestinian. Indeed,
Israelis often express the view,
which Hussein resists, that Jordan
Is In fact the Palestinian homeland.
O ver the last decade, as U.S.
negotiators have tried to be the
honest brokers In Israell-Jordanlan
peace efforts. Hussein has been
generally flexible. But the sticking
point has always been the king's
insistence on Involvement of the
Palestine Liberation Organization.
Yet lately, accord in g to our
sources. Hussein Is moving toward
cutting the PLO out of any settle­
ment with Israel. This may be
traced to PLO leader Yaslr Arafat's
break-off of talks with the king a
year ago — and Hussein’s subse­

quent discovery that the PLO wr
planning a hijacking to win coi
cessions from him.
So the king quietly began I
develop a secret alliance with Isra
that undercuts the PLO In Gaza an
the West Bank, where 1.4 mllllc
Palestinians live. Hussein has ah
tried for a rapprochement wit
Syria, as part of a pan-Arab pea:
process that would not be dictate
by the PLO.
One thing Hussein will nevi
agree to give up. however. Is
Jordanian claim to Jerusalem, t)
city sacred to Moslems as well &gt;
Jews and Christians. "Jerusalei
must become the essence of peace
he said, "the symbol of peace, tl
meaning of peace (for all) religion
In that context. It cannot be total
Israeli."
He apparently believes he has it
a charmed life — avoiding certa
death on many occasions, which v
have previously reported — becau:
of his desire for peace In the rcglo
" I f one can change matters in th
direction, then that would be tl
biggest reward of all," he co
eluded.

�mw m

n,

Ft.

New Satellite Safely In Orbit

NATION

CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - A perfect
launch marking NASA's first success o f the
year thrust a 855 million weather satellite.
Identical to one destroyed last year In a
rocket failure, toward Its orbit 22,300 miles
above the equator for hurricane duty.
"T h is feels te r rific !" Bud Litton, a
spokesman for the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, said Thurs­
day, moments after the satellite's $40
million Delta rocket roared away from Its
pad. "Everybody Is going to cheer across the
country."
The 116-foot Delta thundered aloft at 6:05
p.m. EST. two days behind schedule
because o f mechanical problems and bad
weather, and 26 minutes later Its GOES-7
weather satellite payload slipped into Its
preliminary orbit.
"It’s something to keep everybody Jump­
ing for Joy from Hawaii to Maine," said
Jamison Hawkins, a NOAA meteorologist.
If all goes well, the satellite will be
checked out and operational by the end of

IN BRIEF
Cotes Nom ination Continuos
Draw ing Capitol Hill Flro
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Robert Gates, the president's
nominee to head the CIA. maintains he did nothing to
cover up the facts on the arms sales to Iran after the deal
became public In November, but several senators want the
appointment delayed.
Gates, now acting CIA director, told the Senate
Intelligence Committee Thursday that his role’ in midNovember was to make sure those preparing testimony for
former CIA Director William Casey to give the panel Nov.
21. 1986, laid out "all the facts regarding CIA's operational
support role" In the arms sale.
The testimony has become a key element In Gates's
nomination to succeed the ailing Casey, who resigned Feb.
2 following brain-cancer surgery. At two hearings on
Gates's confirmation last week. Sen. Arlen Specter. R-Pa.,
questioned him harshly about his role.

April, Joining a similar spacecraft already In
orbit to provide the television views of
weather patterns so familiar from daily
newscasts.
The crew o f the next shuttle flight —
commander Frederick Hauck. co-pilot Rich­
ard Covey. David Hilmers. George Nelson
and John "M ik e" Lounge — was on hand
for the launch along with hundreds of
spectators.
The astronauts planned to talk with
shuttle engineers today who are readying
their spaceship. Discovery, for blastoff next
year.
" I t 's a long year from now to the
scheduled launch date, but I think It's
Important to get out and chat with the folks
here so It’s good to get back." Haucksald.
GOES-7 Is to be put In a circular orbit
22,300 miles above the equator on Saturday
with the firing of Its on-board booster. After
testing, it should be ready for work by the
time hurricane season begins June 1.
Forecasters were especially eager for the

launch of GOES-7 because it will greatly
enhance their ability to monitor the devel­
opment of major storms In the hurricanespawning grounds of the eastern Atlantic
Ocean near Africa.
Only one such Geostationary Operational
Environmental Satellite. GOES-6. Is fully
operational In orbit.
GOES-5 broke down In orbit In 1984. and
a replacement was destroyed May 3. 1986,
when its Delta booster malfunctioned dur­
ing launch. As a result. GOES-6 has been
doing double duty with a corresponding
decrease In coverage.
GOES-7 Is the last such satellite In
NASA's inventory until a new generation of
weather spacecraft becomes operational
starting In 1989.
But the GOES system was designed for
two such satellites, and the launch of
GOES-7 was especially crucial because
GOES-6 might not survive until the end of
the decade.

Panel Votes Im m unity Fo r 3

'Black W idow'
Murderer Dies
Lonely Death

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Congressional panels probing the
Iran-Contra scandal are seeking limited Immunity for three
minor characters in the affair', but one wants bank records
from a man who may have played a big role In the
dealings.
The chairmen o f the select House and Senate committees
said the panels voted separately Thursday to ask a federal
Judge to grant immunity to former Air Force Col. Robert
Dutton, a former aide to Richard Secord: Edward deGaray,
who owns a private air cargo firm In Pennsylvania; and
Fawn Hall, former secretary to Lt. Col. Oliver North.
Hall already has received Immunity from Lawrence
Walsh, the Independent counsel probing the operations
that have caused the worst crisis o f the Reagan
administration.
Dutton, who refused to testify before the Senate
Intelligence Committee late last year, could provide crucial
Information about Secord’s role In both the secret sale o f
weapons to Iran and the Contra operations.

A N N IS T O N . A la . (U P I) Audrey Marie Hilley. the "Black
W id o w " who poison ed one
husband and bewitched another,
died a cold and lonely death as
strange as the life she lived.
Her celebrated failure to return
to prison after a three-da
furlough Sunday — a furlougi
that enraged her Judge and
prosecutor — sent pursuers look­
ing for her all over the nation.
But they found her Thursday
dying In the cold rain on a
stranger's back porch a few
miles from the spot where she
disappeared Sunday after leav­
ing her husband a note that she
was fleeing to Canada.
Pending the results of an
autopsy, the cause of death was
lis te d as h y p o th e rm ia and
exposure.

CHICAGO (UPI) — Eye doctors fighting proposed
Medicare cuts for cataract surgery say they are supported
by a new study showing the operation Improves not only
the vision, but the quality of life for most elderly who
undergo the procedure.
The study published In today's Journal of the American
Medical Association found the benefits of cataract removal,
an operation peformed a million times a year in the United
States, go far beyond clearing up cloudy vision.
The study supports widespread anecdotal reports that
cataract surgery Increased patients’ ability to cope with the
physical demands of life and Improved their mental
awareness.
Health officials cited the study as a strong argument
against proposals by the Reagan administration to curb
Medicare reimbursements for cataract surgery.

"It's the end to a truly long
and a fascinating story. ' said
prosecutor Joe Hubbard, the
m an w h o fir s t c a lle d th e
54-ycar-oId Hilley the "Black
Widow."
"It's still fascinating. If In fact
she was here In these several
days since her escape, then that
adds a little more mystery to the
story of Marie Hilley.
"Som e reason exists for her
being here that we don't know
yet. I feel almost like I did when
the trial was over. Mrs. Hilley did

FLORIDA

n o t ta k e th e s ta n d tn

Trident P ro tester A cquitted
By Ju ry O f Trespassing
TITUSVILLE (UPI) — A Jury cleared peace activist Jim
Welch of trespassing Thursday during a demonstration last
month against the Trident II missile.
The St. Petersburg man was the first of the 186 peace
activists arrested during the week-long protest to face a
Jury trial. The demonstrators Infiltrated Cape Canaveral
Air Force Station and the Kennedy Space Center between
Jan. 9 and Jan 17 In an unsuccessful attempt to stop
testing of the missile.
Welch was stopped by Kennedy Space Center guards In
the brush 50 feet from Gate No. 5. on the space center's
northern border.
In cross-examination by Welch, who defended himself,
security guards Don Ford and Ed Runyon admitted it was
"conceivable" that a person could enter the secured area
through the woods without seeing any posted signs
warning of the security zone.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We carry all leading
manufacturer's clocks!

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI) — Damage assessments
began early today following a shipping accident that saw
thousands of gallons of fuel oil spilled Into the ocean,
authorities said.
Up to 2 2 0 .0 0 0 gallons of fuel oil might have been spilled
near the mouth of the St. Johns River near Jacksonville.
Fla., said Coast Guard Lt. John Wiggert. but darkness
overnight prevented a more accurate estimate.

•Libraries

|Medicine:
Health Care Providers
Keep Up With Growth
i f Rtikf tpriif

Beta*

. , |i.*v*

1 *t I r- FF-ii L

w

K«&gt; Ik-nkr—r

**!**% erA * Ip**

+ ,CJ»

IF

*l

h•*HdWkW

, MvdvtM
h tire » « * W

I-,

--- f

ftSSit

wvi

■ u*kl Atrkttvr

i

___ a s n s s s
~ FL-J? -------- -- '7~ »Z Z Z
H*y •

«

*"

in. ■■ 1 Irih "'w

o- • « * - • * ..."

»***“•' *'**■

v •
*-**’■«

... .-

^A

---- -------------------- - L i b r a r i e s
R e p la c e m e n t Libraries

S7

B ra n c h e s

M illion Bond Issu e From

O n

F

T h e W a y
T o F„ , w t a

9

meiek4

An Excellent Gift Idea

-C L IP

Cml.— $L C a m « v*a,
II Sain
&amp; Service

^

A N D

M A IL --

I

Sanford Herald
P.O. Box 1657
Sanford. FL 32772-1657

MAIL COUPON
TO THE:

Clockworks

331-5560

430 S h a f t CL U n p ra o d

E V A L U A T I O N

A S L 'S t lA t

T H IS IS K R K F .

WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES
Frequont Headaches
Low Back or Hip Pain
Dizziness or Loss of Sleep
Numbness of Hands or Feet
Nervousness
Neck Pain or Stiffness
Arm and Shoulder Pain

I
I

NAME

I

ADDRESS

I
I
I
I

CITY

APT. NUMBER

ZIP CODE

STATE

Enclote 11 60 tor e ach Progreu Edition and we will moll anyw here In Ihe U S A and C a n a d a O ftei ex-

j ^pliex^M 5^87 ^

Evaluation In c lu d e . P m lt iit A n ilp tt, F iu tio n l e t , Shod
L t f l e t , Short Arm l e t And t i l l W ith Doctor

__________ _______________________ __ _

J

C a ll 3 2 2 -2 6 1 1 to start yo u r s u b sc rip tio n today!

A i k a b o u t o u r " M a k i n g C h ir o p r o c t ic A l l o r d a b l e " P r o g r a m

• THE PATIENT AND ANY O T H ER PERSO N R ES PO N SIB LE FO R PAYMENT MAS A RIGHT t o R EFU SE TO
PAY CANCEL PAYMENT OH B E R EIM B U R SED FO R PAYMENT FO R A N . O TH ER S ER V IC E E « » M i NA
TION OH TREATMENT WHICH rS PER FO R M ED AS A R ES U LT OF ANO WITHIN U HOURS OF RESFN5N
DING TO THE AD VERTISEM EN T FO R THE F R E E SER V IC E EXAMINATION O R TREATMENT

L A K E M A R Y BLVD .
C H IR O P R A C T IC C L IN IC , IN C .
« 0 2 «. L a k e
M a r y O lv d

Health

•Lifestyles

fChristensen^

S P I N A L

S em in ole County l9S6-‘87

P r o g r e s s

This section provides you with a comprehensive look at Sem inole County. You II read
about lifestyles, health, libraries, education, government, leisure, sports and the growth
in Sem inole County. This is an excellent gift idea to send your friends and relatives.
Let everyone know what a great community you live in, send them a copy of this year s
Progress Edition.

CLOCK

O il Spill C a lled 'M ajor'

'S u b jt c t To P olicy L im i t t i

O n

SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Civil
libertarians said a Judge re­
m oved " a major th reat" to
women's rights by dismissing
crim in a l charges against a
woman accused of contributing
to her 'baby’s death by dis­
obeying doctor's orders during
pregnancy.
Municipal Judge E. Mac Amos
Jr., ruling on a pretrial motion
T h u rsd ay, said p rosecu tors
acted incorrectly in using a 1925
amendment to a child-support
law to prosecute Pamela Rae
Stewart. 28. who was charged
with taking drugs and engaging
in oth er b eh avior that e n ­
dangered her unborn son.

TALLAH A SSE E (UPI) — Florida's prisons remain
critically overcrowded despite the early release Thursday
of 61 inmates, but officials said a higher than average
end-of-month discharge today should ease the situation.
The release was accomplished when officials awarded 20
days administrative gain time to the approximately 16,000
inmates already earning time off for good behavior. The 61
former prisoners were all within 20 days of the end of their
sentences.
The officials awarded 10 days administrative gain time
Feb. 16 to release 29 inmates. The awards total 30 days, so
many inmates who did not qualify for the extraordinary
discharges would be freed today, during a routine
end-of-month discharge, said prisons spokesman Vernon
Bradford.

AU INSURANCE ASSIGNMENT!
ACCEPTED*

S p o tlig h t

fro n t o f th e

P re n a ta l
C a re C ase
D is m is s e d

Inm ates G ra n ted Early R elea se

RIC H ARD M. KOCH
Airman Richard M. Koch, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Koch
o f 3 0 0 P a lm L a k e C o u r t.
Longwood. has graduated from
Air Force basic training ai
Lackland Air Force. Texas.
During the six weeks of train­
ing the airman studied the Air
Force mission, organization and
customs and received special
training In human relations.
In addition, airmen who com­
plete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree.

A Special Edition

Jury. I was hoping she would, so
we could possibly find out more
of her exploits.
"In her death, she has pre­
vented us from knowing the
things she did since her escape.
No one knows except h er."
Hubbard said.

IN BRIEF

F R E E

PROGRESS ‘ 8 7

i

Study C ites Surg ery Benefits

IN THE
SERVICE

The Sanford Herald is being read by more and more
people everyday. Here’s just one of the many
reasons —

S u ite

3

2

2

- 9

3

0

0

• T H O M A S r . Y A N O K L L , J R . D .C .

....

S a n fo rd H e ra ld
"Your Ideal newspaper since 1908"

10T

300 [North Prench A ve.

Sanford, Flo rida

�»A-fcmtortf HmW, SMtsrtf, PI.

Friday* Ft&gt;. V , IW7

WORLD
IN BRIEF
Syria Secu re* Beirut, Rule*
O u t H ostage R e*cue O peration
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — Syrian army commanders
ordered some 7,000 troops today to complete their
deployment to secure Moslem west Beirut and ruled out
any rescue operation to gain freedom Tor more than 20
Western hostages.
" A settlement of the hostage issue should be tackled
politically and not through a military option.” Brig. Gen.
Ghazi Kcnaan said Thursday, denying an NBC News report
that three Americans and an Indian U.S. resident
kidnapped Jan. 24 were In Syrian custody.
More than 20 Westerners, including eight Americans, are
missing and feared kidnapped In Lebanon. Among the
missing Is hostage negotiator Terry Waite, the envoy to the
archbishop of Canterbury who vanished Jan. 20.
But Kcnaan said the Syrian occupation forces would not
enter Beirut's southern suburbs, a pro-Iranian Moslem
fundamentalist hotbed where some of the hostages are
believed held.

M ubarak, Pore* End Talk*
CAIRO. Egypt (UPI) — Foreign Minister Shimon Peres of
Israel, winding up a two-day visit to Cairo, said he and
President Hosnl Mubarak discussed a formula for Including
Palestinians In an International conference on Middle East
' peace.
Peres, holding his second meeting with the Egyptian
lender In six months, said, "Palestinian representation
should be a representation that will be accepted by all the
parties concerned."
Peres said after his meeting with Mubarak Thursday that
they might hold a second meeting today before he returns
to Israel. It Is rare for Mubarak to meet foreign visitors on
the Moslem Sabbath.
The Issue of Palestinian representation was one of the
three obstacles confronting an agreement reached by
Mubarak and Peres last September on the need for an
International conference to lay the foundations for a
comprehensive Arab-Israell peace settlement.

A rgentina A rrests 15 O fficers
BUENOS AIRES. Argentina (UPI) — Fifteen naval and
coast guard officers. Including bIx retired admirals, were
held under arrest today on a ship anchored off the capital
during an investigation of their suspected Involvement in
human rights crimes.
A federal court Thursday ordered the arrest of the
suspects because of their refusal to testify about the alleged
torture of prisoners at the notorious Naval Mechanics
School during military rule In the 1970s.
Senior military commanders reluctantly backed civilian
court prbsccutors In enforcing the arrest orders. But
military sources said junior navy officers were furious at
the arrests and held private protest meetings with
superiors to protest the moves.
The 15 suspects were assigned to the school, known by
the Spanish acronym ESMA. in various administrative
capacities or led operations units that allegedly captured
political prisoners who later disappeared.

A re a A A G roups Plan
Friday Night M eetin g s
The following Alcoholics Anonymous groups meet each
Friday night:
• Wekiva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m. at Wekiva Presbyterian
Church. SR 434. at Wekiva Springs Road. Members only.
• 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. noon, open discussion: Step. 5:30 p.m..
r lo v d diMrussion. and 8 p m step study. 1201 W. First St..
• ZU taux AA-

p m . topen ^ivuvsw nj. 317 S Oak Ave..

M onte Carlo Night Set
Wi-.r1.* r .Wlo

&lt;£hi will Le- f e-l-J SaLttfdS)’ at 7 p in, at the

■r.c t y! .‘ i* N ttjii'y .
County Koad ;27. Lake Mary.
&gt;.uuuut wit Le£ifj at JJ p xu Krj duaatjrju provides
MttiowiKa) aud V i f j f J j y lay motley

Teen Support G roup
f (itnUi' t 2 vgfdCbtT Toea.1 Support Group meet* Saturday.
J 1 . u tv J p i:i a&lt; Suite
Sweet water Square. 900
For. '*
Drive loll W*-kjva Road). Longwood Call
77C-3844 *or uilurmation

A A M eetings Schedu led
The following A A groups meet on Sat urdays
• Sanford Women's AA. 1201 W. First St.. 2 pin.,
member* only,
• Narcotic* Anonymous. 8 p.m. The Grove Counseling
Center. 580 Old Sanford/Oviedo Road (off SR 4191. Winter
Spring*
• Sanford AA. 1201 W, First St., noon and 8 p.m.. open
discussion.
• Casselberry A A Step. 8 p.m.. Ascension Lutheran
Church. Ascension Drive (olTOvcrbrook). Casselberry.

Take A Heart-y H ike

Police Raid Winnie Mandela's Home
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (UPI) Police today raided the Soweto home of
antl-apartheld activist Winnie Mandela, fir­
ing shots and detaining nine people Includ­
ing Mandela's adult daughter, township
sources said.
Sources reached by telephone said police
called at Mandela's small township home
about 8 a.m. Friday. They searched the
house and detained eight men and Man­
dela's daughter. Zlndzi.
Shots were fired, but It was not Immedi­
ately clear whether anyone was hurt, they
said.
The sources said Mandela, wife of Jailed
African National Congress leader Nelson

But on Feb. 10. 1965. she appeared before
thousands of blacks In Soweto's Jabula*
amphitheatre to read her father s response
to a government offer of freedom If he would
tfive up political violence.
Mandela rejected the offer, saying he
would accept only an unconditional release
from his 1964 life sentence Tor sabotage.
The raid was the second In a month. On
Jan. 25 police arrived In trucks and a
helicopter to search the Mandela home and
take Winnie Mandela, along with a filing
cabinet of personal documents, to the
nearby police station^
Mandela and Zlndzi were held for about
six hours. They were released without being
charged after their lawyer Intervened.

Bomb Scare
Evacuation
Injures Six
LOS ANGELES (UPI) A
bomb threat forced a British
Airways Jet with 384 people
aboard to abruptly return to
International Airport Thursday
night. No bomb was found but
six people were hurt during
evacuation, officials said.
A bomb team searched the
Boeing 747 and luggage and
more than 50 firefighters stood
by with their equipment as a
precaution, police Sgt. Paul
Jensen said.
The pilot of Flight 282 was
contacted by the airport tower
after taking off on a flight, which
originated in San Francisco and
was en route to London, Jensen
said. He was directed to return to
Los Angeles.
"T h e caller said there was a
time bomb on board and some­
thing like, ‘You better help those
people,” ’ Jensen said.
T h e Jetliner landed safely
about 9:30 p.m. and taxied to an
Isolated pad, where 367 passen­
gers and Its crew of 17 were
evacu ated by slid in g down
emergency air chutes.
The most seriously injured In
the evacuation was an uniden­
tified elderly woman who re­
ceived hospital treatment for a
broken ankle.

O p en in g Celebration
Diane and Gary Mincer flank State Rep. Art
Grlndle as the offlcal clips the ribbon during
the ribbon-cutting celebration at Mincer
Motors In Sanford. The event, sponsored by

a

ttorald Photoby Tommy VIikooi

the Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce,
Included m em bers of the chamber's
Welcoming Committee and employees of the
motor company.

Conspiracy Silences Outspoken Kahane
making bombs.
He emigrated in 1971 to Israel
w h ere he form ed the Kach
(Hebrew for "T h u s") Party and
advocated the annexation of the

JERUSALEM (UPI) - When
Meir Kahane rises to speak in the
Israeli parliament, other Knesset
members waik out and reporters
turn away. Israel's political

declining popularity partially to
the Israeli media, which he said
has agreed "n ot to cover him.
not to cover anything he says,
only to cover events that he

rabbi elected in 1984 on a
promise to expel all Arabs from
Istael and the West Bank was
moving up in public opinion
polls only 18 months ago.
But now the self-described
Zionist, who once tried to make
it Illegal for a Jew to marry a
non-Jew. has nose-dived in the
polls and all but disappeared
from public view.
Political analysts attribute his
fall to an Informal agreements by
Knesset members to shun him
and the Israeli media to limit his
coverage — separate but deliber­
ate moves that have worked to
make him an invisible man to
most Israelis.
"Since his election there has
been an almost complete par­
liamentary consensus to keep
hirn as an outcast." said Alouph
Hareven of Jerusalem's Van
Leer Institute, which sponsors
educational programs to pro­
mote tolerance.
Knesset spokeswoman Sara
Itzhaki confirmed that most
parties in parliament, especially
the tw o largest. Labor and
Likud, made "sort of an informal
dei i*loi." to snub Kahane.
From our point o f view. Mr.
Kahane does not exist." said
L a b o r P a rty sp ok esw om an
BehIra Bardugo. "W h a t he
wants is against ail our beliefs."
"W hen the rabbi comes out on
the floor, the others run off
through the doors like little
children. It's really funny." said
Eugene Sockut, Kahane's press
spokesman.
Hareven attributed Kahane's

show him — they'll report It since the 1967 war — and the
(news relating to Kahane) but expulsion of the 2 million Arabs
never show him on T V ." said livin g there, leaving an allBaruch Knei-Paz, a professor of Jewlsh state.
After three unsuccessful elec­
political science at Jerusalem's
tion tries. Kahane received the
Hebrew University.
necessary 1 percent of the vote
Jerusalem Post Editor Arl
in 1984 to win a seat in the
Rath said It Is simply an attempt
120-member Knesset.
to regain control from someone
The victory did not quiet him.
who has used the media by
He publicly praised members
staging news events and gim­
micks repeatedly to espouse his of the Israeli security police
beliefs.
when it was learned they had
killed two Palestinian bus hi­
"There Is certainly no official
boycott." Rath said. "But there ja c k e r s w h o w ere in their
Is a tacit understanding (among custody. He also spoke out In
editors) that the press is not favor of a new Jewish under­
going to be a propaganda vehicle ground. a sort of vigilante group,
for him. Anything that he does to deal with Arabs and crimi­
nals.
that is newsworthy Is reported."
Kahane's popularity rose from
"W e will cover him only when
the 1 percent of the vote he got
he makes news, but we will not
Initiate interviews with him."
In 1984 to a peak of 8 percent In
said Yalr Stern, head of the news A u gu st 1985, accord in g to
division of state-owned Israel pollster Rafl Smith. "H e went up
in that period basically because
T V . " W e did not ban him
it was a time when two teachers
completely, but we are careful
not to let him spread his views were murdered by Arabs. It was
over Israel TV and Radio."
a hot (violent) summer. Also, the
Kahane recently hosted a econ om ic situation was de­
cocktail party for foreign corre­ teriorating."
spondents but. an hour Into the
Smith said Kahane polled 2
percent In January, with most of
parly, none had shown up.
h is s u p p o r t fr o m p o o r
Israeli President Chaim Herzog
neighborhoods and development
refused to meet Kahane. calling
towns where there Is high un­
him a racist. Demonstrators
showed up at his public appear­ employment and resentment of
ances to shout. "N a zi."
Arabs holding Jobs.
" I couldn't care less what
"H e is stable at 2 percent. If
the election were held today, he
people call m e." Kahane said.
would get two seats In the
"I'v e heard it ail before."
Kahane. 54. founded the mili­ Knesset." Smith said. "In Israel
tant Jewish Defense League In where the votes are close, he
New York and spent a year in could play a pivotal role. His
federal prison on a conviction of potential is still there. But he

West Bonk and Gaza Strip —
Arab land occupied by Israel

could play it wrong" and lose his
scat.
Another pollster, who asked
not to be Identified, said Arab
violence against Jews Just before
the next election would shupty
Increase support for Kahane.
And Kahane agrees.
"Every attack upon a Jew.
every bomb, every stabbing,
gives me votes.” he says. "I'm
not happy about it. 1 think it's
tragic that there Is a people who
has to suffer every week in order
to begin to understand."
Although Kahane privately
professes to respect Arabs and
their desire for a homeland —
which Is why he wants to expel
them front Israel — he publicly
scorns them as "despicable peo­
ple." He dismisses criticism by
parliament members as unim­
portant. but calls Israel TVRadio's policy "outrageous."
"It shows the corruption of the
system here. This Is not a
democracy.”
He maintains the campaign of
silence has actually helped, forc­
ing him to walk neighborhoods
to meet people and present
himself as a sympathetic un­
derdog.
Political analysts scoff at his
prediction he will get 7 to 8
percent of the vote but Hareven
acknowledged Kahane's "views
on Arab-Jewish relations have
gained certain legitimacy among
some right-wing camps."
Kahane is “ seen as so illegiti­
m ate. so u n p lea sa n t." said
Knei-Paz. that many people who
might be drawn to his views Join
"m ore respectable" right-wing
parties. "H is support comes
from crazy, religious Americans
who come over here. The real
threat is what he stands for. the
views now held by these other
right-wing parties."

Inflation Jum ps 0.7 Percent In January

A A , Alanon M eetin g s Set

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Infla­
tion in January look the biggest
monthly Jump In nearly five
years as sharply higher gasoline
prices pushed up the Consumer
Price Index 0.7 percent, the
L a b or D epartm ent reported
Friday.

The folowing Alcoholics Anonymous and Alanon groups
meet on Sunday:
• Sanford Big Boo': AA. 7 p.m,. open discussion, Floilda
Power ft Light building. 3 0 1 N. Myrtle Ave.. Sanford.
• Under New Management AA. 6:30 p.m. (open to the
public), corner Howell Branch and Dodd Road. Goldcnrod.
• REBOS AA. 5:30 (members only) and 8 p.m. (open to the
public), Rebos Club. 130 Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
• Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m.. The Grove Counseling
Center. 580 Old Sanford/Oviedo Road (off SR 419). Winter
Springs.
• Sanford Family Group Alanon meeting. 8 p.m., Christ
United Methodist Church, County Road 427 and Tucker
Road. Sanford.
• Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30 p.m., members only. 8
p.m.. step, 130 Normandy Road. Casselberry. Clean Air
Rebos at noon, members only.

P a tr ic k J a c k m a n o f th e
Bureau of Labor Statistics said
the CPI had not gone up so
much in a month since the 1.1
percent hike In June 1982. The
CPI rose only 0.2 percent in
December and for the entire year
of 1986. inflation, as measured
by the CPI. went up a mere 1.1
percent.
Part of the Increase was due to
a change In the "market basket"
o f consum er goods used to
calculate the CPI. That new
market basket, used for the first
time in last month's measure,
gives greater weight to energy

Florida Hospital Cardiac Rehabilitation 5K Heart-y Hike.
1 p in . Sunday, at the Jewish Community Center.
Maitland Avenue at Maitland Boulevard. It Is open to all
ages. A day long Health Fair will also be held at the center.
Registration at the center. $6 in advance. $8 day of walk.

Mandela, followed police to the nearby
Protea Police Station. A spokeswoman in
the office of Mandela's attorneys said Ismael
Ayob. a lawyer, rushed to the police station
to Investigate.
One source said police on the scene
claimed they found a firearm In the Mandela
home, but this could not Immediately be
confirmed.
Zlndzi. 26. Is the younger of Mandela’s
two daughters. She la divorced and spends
most of her time at her mother’s home In
the Orlando West section of Soweto, about
10 miles southwest of Johannesburg.
She usually has not taken a prominent
role in the political life of black South
Africa's (list family.

costs than did the previous
market basket, used since 1978.
The sharp rise in the CPI was
spurred by a 6 percent hike in
gasoline costs, a 9.6 percent gain
in home heating costs, and an
overall 3 percent rise In energy
costs. That one factor accounted
for about one-third of the entire
CPI Increase. Without energy
costs factored in. the CPI would
have risen about 0.5 percent last
month, the department said.
Despite the steep increase in
gasoline prices in January, they
were still 26 percent lower than
a year ago and 35 percent lower
than their peak price In March
1981, the department said.
The 9.8 percent Increase in
home heating costs was the
biggest monthly increase since
the 1 1.9 percent Increase in
January 1974 during the Arab
oil embargo. But home heating
fuel prices were still 26,8 percent

below a year ago and 36 percent
below their peak cost .n April
1981.
Transportation costs rose 1.5
percent, housing expenses in­
creased 0.5 percent, clothing
costs went up 0.4 percent and
the price of medical care rose 0.4
percent last month, the de­
partment said.
Food costs rose 0.5 percent,
with fruit and vegetables, sodas,
sugar and frozen food climbing.
Prices for pork, poultry, fish and
eggs fell 0.2 percent while beef
prices remained unchanged after
seasonal adjustment.
Jackman said he found the
Increase in food prices "somewhat surprising.”
For the month, the index rose
to 333.1, meaning that it took
$333.10 In January to buy wiial
$100 purchased in 1967.
Under the new market hnskrt.

energy costs account lor
percent of the total index co
pared to 7.7 percent under t
old system. Housing costs a;
gained In Importance has)
while food and apparel costs k
some influence.
The government tracks cc
sumer prices by taking a vark
of goods and services that c&lt;
$100 in 1967 and seeing wi
they are worth today.
The old market basket w
based on household spend!
patterns In 1972 and 197
while ihe new one stems fron:
similar examination in 19'
through 1984.
The changes reflect son
basic shifts In American spen
ing patterns, from a decach
long decline In the importance
food costs in the budget to mo
recent In purchases of eat
television and vldro recorders.

�-t -

1
m
■

us
FHS

•&gt;*
.

sanfard HtraM

ft

Friday

2? W 7

7A

i.": i

D e fe n se

D r ie s

U d

In d ia n

Raiders Advance To Semis
Tonight Against Gulf Coast
Basketball

Tontor* tdwdute

Saturday'! tckadula
1:30p.m. — North South All Star Gam*
3:30 p.m. — Championship
Thunday'i m u lti
Chipola U . Miami Oadt South 74
Gulf Cout tU, South Florida m
Brevard 97, Florida 9S
SamlnoloM, Indian Rlvor It

By Sam Cook
Herald Sports Editor
ORLANDO — Even when the
shots do not Tall and the re­
bounds bounce the other way, a
team can play defense.
Seminole Community College
relied on that constant Thursday
night until the rest of Its game
fell Into place to post a hardearned 89-81 victory over Fort
Pierce Indian River before 801
fans In the opening round of the
Junior College State Basketball
Tournament at the University of
Central Florida.
Seminole, 30-4, moves into
tonight's 7 o ’clock semifinal
game against Panama City Gulf
Coast, which outlasted Avon
Park South Florida, 114-112.
Tonight’s other semifinal at 9
matches Cocoa Brevard and
M ariann a C h ip ola. B revard
stunned J a c k s o n v ille 's topranked Florida, 97-95. Chipola
turned back Miami Dade South.
85-74.
Tonight's winners will decide
the 27th state title Saturday
afternoon at 3:30. The NorthSouth All-Star game will be
played Saturday at 1:30 p.m.
S an ford 's Darryl Merthle. a
sophomore standout for Daytona
Beach, will suit up for the North.
As has been the case most of
the season, the Raiders received
solid efforts from all Involved.
Darrls Gallagher, 6-8 Vance Hall
and Holly Keller carried the
offensive load in the first half.
Barry Dunning, a 6-7 freshman
forward, hit clutch basket after
clutch basket down the stretch
while Claude Jackson and Efrem
Brooks handled Indian River’s
p re s s in g d e fe n s e . M alcolm
Houston, SCC's 3-polnt bomber.

Herald Photo by Loul* Belmondo

SCC's C lau d e Ja c k so n , le ft, beats Pio n eer N athan Boyd to the g la ss for layu p .

I

j

Ultim ate D ream :
County Matmen
C h ase State Title
S«minolo County Stilo Wrettling Champions
1977: Mark Schuster, Lyman, 134pounds
1961: Richard Farmer, Lake Brantley, 134 pounds
1993: Jack Likens, Lake Mary, 109pounds
1994: Jack Likens. Lake Mary, Impounds

By Sam Cook
H erald Sports E ditor
Eighteen Seminole County wrestlers parade
Into competition today. Eighteen young men
attempt to fulfill a dream. For most, it is the
Impossible dream. A dream so far beyond their
reach It would not succumb to the strongest
cradle.
Less than a handful o f Seminole County
grapplers has realized the championship dream.
Wrestling, although some may beg to differ,
spells team 1-N D-I-V-I-D-U-A-L. And there is
nothing wrong there. The sport thrives on
Individuality. It would not suffer If no team points
were kept. And. there Is no sport which brings an
individual into the spectator's focus more than
wrestling.
How can one match the exhilaration of
one-to-one combat for the state wrestling cham­
pionship? A basket at the buzzer for a state
basketball title maybe. A homer to win the
baseball crown. A touchdown pass to do the same
In football.
All. of course, are tremendous thrills. All.
though, are In need of the support of teammates.
A wrestler gets the support of no one as he
marches painstakingly through first, second,
semifinal and final rounds. As victory arrives
with each step, the dream becomes more In focus.
Finally, there you arc. staring across the mat at
your adversary during the lineup. Ihree twominute sessions follow to determine the champi­
on. Sometimes, an overtime Is necessary. I here
are Just 14 weight classes — only 14 kings ol this
sport. Kings large and kings small. Wrestling Is
the fairest determination of a champion. No
weight advantage Is possible.
The pressure must be Intense. I here Is no place
to hide from defeat or victory. All eyes arc glued
on you and your opponent. As the spotlight burns
Into the mat. the huge throng scrutinizes your

Coach Buster Harvey's Stars,
top-ranked In Florida and 18th
nationally, were stunned by a
fired up Cocoa Brevard club,
97-95. in the opening round of
th e J u n io r C o l l e g e S t a t e
Basketball Tournament at UCF.
The victory eliminated a team
which twice tarnished the 30-4
mark o f the Seminole Communi­
ty College Raiders.
SCC coach BUI Payne was
surprised a t ' the outcome but
Raider forward Claude Jackson
was nol. "T h ey didn’ t come out
ready to play." Jackson said.
"Once you get here anybody can
beat you."
FCC-J fell behind early but
caught the Titans after standout
Lemon Berry fouled out with 16
minutes to play as Alvin Hcggs
tallied eight points to pull the
Stars ahead. 70-66.
Arlc Sinclair and Juwana Only
followed m inutes later with
hoops to stretch the advantage
to 75-68 with 10 minutes left.
Brevard, which nipped SCC In
overtim e In late D ecem ber,
marched back Into the game
behind the shooting of Mike
Peterson (26 points). Lee Osborn
(19) and Klrt Hankton (16) down
the stretch.
Peterson put the Titans on top.
95-93. with 54 seconds left and
when the Stars sent everyone to
the boards. Hankton was all
alone for a dunk for a 97-93 lead
with 34 seconds to go.
Larry Ross pulled FCC-J to
within two with 10 seconds left
and when Hankton missed a free
throw with eight ticks to go. the
Stars had a last gasp.
H a r v e y I n s e r t e d 3 -p o ln t
specialist Phillip Stitt. The Stars
set him up in the far right comer
but with four seconds left he
collid ed
w ith
referee
B ill
Goebels. S titt’s rushed effort
with two ticks to go did not
reach the rim.
— Sam Cook

1

Ueberroth Calls
For A Report
On Negotiations

Class 4 A S tate W restlin g Tournam ent
a t Longw ood Lym an High School
T o d a y ’s schedule
2 p.m. — first round
7 p.m. — second round
S a tu rd a y’s schedule
10 a.m. — semifinal round
Noon — wrestlebacks
6 p.m. — consolation round
8 p.m. — championship round

R iv e r

ORLANDO — Those falling
stars heard around the Universi­
ty o f Central Florida gymanslum
T h u rsd ay n ight were
Jacksonville's Florida Commu­
nity College.

was In early foul trouble and
watched most of the evening.
His string of 33 games with a
3-polnter came to an end as he
was 0 for 2 and finished with six
paints.
Hall, the Mid-Florida Confer­
ence Player of the Year, did not
shoot the ball until the 10:53
mark o f the first half. The
sophomore center still finished
with 11 of 14 from the field and
2 of 3 free throws for a gamehigh 24 points. Gallagher, an
All-MFC guard, tossed In 22
p o in ts and handed out 12
assists. Dunning converted 8 of
13 and two free throws for 18
poin ts. K e lle r and Jackson
chipped In eight apiece.
SCC coach Bill Payne pointed
to his team’s defense as the
difference. "W e swatted a few
away, didn't we?" he said.
Hall said the Raiders played
"Shadow Ball" until the offense
came around. "W e Just tried to
deny them the ball." he said. "It
worked pretty well because we
forced a lot of turnovers (17)
when they tried to set up
offense.”
Hall blocked live shots while
Jackson rejected two. Dunning
on e and G a lla g h e r o n e .
Gallagher came up with four
steals and Jackson had two.
Indian River, 19-13. received
23 points from bull-llkc Nathan
Boyd. 17 from David Williams
and 12 from point guard Donnie
Y a r b o r o u g h . A s tin g y ,
overplaying SCC defense, how­
ever, checked the rest below
double figures.
"W e knew Seminole had the
superior team ," Indian River
coach Mike Leatherwood said.
"W c still had a chance to win
after we came back both times
but that last spurt beat us."
Tw o Raiders spurts had the
Pioneers on the ropes but the
scrappy Fort Pierce club would
not fold. "T h a i Just play so darn
hard It’s hard to pull away from
them ," Payne said. “ Turnovers
See SCC, Page 9A

Jar&amp;VJ

Stars Fall
To Brevard

Junto C «ll«f« State Buikutbalt Tournamml
•t Unlvurtlty ol Cffttral Florida
7p .m .- Somlrtola v». Cull Cm i I
* p.m. — Brevard v». Chipola

\St. i*r--.

Htrild Photo by Louis Rjlmondo

Lake M ary’s Rob R ichards, top, puts the squeeze on Sem in o le ’s Kevin N athan.
every move. It applauds a lightning takedown. It
bemoaning a mistake leading to a reversal. The
crowd lives and dies with the grapplcr on center
stage.
Three Seminole County grapplers have sur­
vived that Inferno to wear that state crown. One
young man. whose accomplishments must be
placed among the county's finest, survived to
capture back-to-back state titles.
Lake Mary's Jack Likens, who used saavy as
well as technique, accomplished something
which no one may do again. Likens won the
109-pound title In 1983 when Lake Mary was a
Class 3A participant. A year later, he came back
to take the 116-pound crown when the Rains
were a Class 4A competitor.
Seminole County's first state crown came in
1977 when Lyman's Mark Schuster look the
136-pound title. It was not until six years later,
again at 136 pounds, that Lake Brantley’s
Richard Farmer captured another championship.
Four titles Ir. county wrestling history. That is a
very select group. Lyman began Its program In
1971, six years after the first state championship
was held with approximately 30 schools. The
other county schools followed suit shortly
thereafter. Former Lyman mat coach and present
athletic director Skip Pletzer was the captain of
Miami Norland's 1965 stale champions. Pletzer
finished fourth at 159 pounds.
"I know there haven’ t been too many In
Seminole County, but there have been a lot ol
guys who have come clo s e ." Pletzer said
Thursday afternoon. "It Is a tremendous ac­
complishment."
Eighteen want that accomplishment, but only a
handful have a realistic chance.

u hu
Here is a rundown of the county hopefuls:
BEST BETS: Seminole's Troy Turner. Lake
Mary's Bill Richards and Lake Mary's Troy
Jackson.
• Turner, a 171-pound senior, has the best
credentials. The hard-nosed Seminole has been
runner-up the past two years. He lost by nine
points as a sophomore. Last year, he suffered an
Injury In the semifinals and could not wrestle
Merritt Island's Solomon Flcckman In the finals.
Turner had beaten Fleckman earlier In the year.
8-6.
Turner has posted a 111-5 mark for hts career.
He Is 28-0 this year. He was 29-0 until the Injury
cost him a chance In the finale last year. Turner
wrestled at 171 this year after competing at 159
the first three years.
"I feci good at 171." Turner, who weighs 164.
said Thursday. "I like to wrestle guys bigger than
me because they are usually taller. I think that
gives me an advantage because I can get
underneath them ."
Turner, as one might expect. Is chomping at
the hit. "A ll summer I thought about missing out
on that final match." he said. "I tried to put It off
this season, but it was still there.
"I am more confident this year. It is my last
year and 1 really want it. I have the experience
and 1 know not to gel upset just because ft Is the
slate tournament. I will treat It Just like any other
tournament," he added.
Turner's toughest competition will come front
Orlando Colonial's Mike Sousa (29-1). In the
s e m ifin a l m atch an d e ith e r C le a rw a te r
See U LT IM A TE . Page 8A

DALLAS (UPI) — Baseball Commissioner Peter
Ueberroth, responding to union allegations of
collusion. Thursday asked major-league owners
for a report on frcc-agcnt negotiations.
"I want the players to play." Ueberroth said
following an owners' meeting of the 26 clubs. "I
wanted to know If negotiations were ongoing with
some of these free agents and they seem to he.
"Som e of the free agents may have priced
themselves out of the market. Some of them have
generated no Interest at any price. But I'm
hopeful that these negotiations are successful."
Ueberroth did not discuss any specific players
and none of the owners would comment about
particular negotiations following the meeting.
Eight veteran free agents remain unsigned after
being unable to reach agreements with their
former dubs or any others.
Grievances have been filed from the last two
offseasons charging collusion among majorleague owners In regard to signing free agents.
Such behavior is in violation of antitrust laws.
The owners contend, however, lhat salaries
being asked by many free agents are simply too
high.
"II there are good players out there, they will be
signed." said Texas Rangers owner Eddie Chiles,
one of the few who would talk about any subject
following the two-day meeting. " I t ’s like any
business. If you overprice what you are selling,
the market goes away from you."
When asked what he thought about charges of
collusion. Chiles said: "That's garbage. But the
union has to fuss about something."
Other owners either Ignored questions or said
they were forbidden to talk,
"I can't tell you anything," said Ncv York
Yankees owner George Stelnbrenncr. "Talk to the
commissioner. He won't let me say anything."
The commissioner also said nine teams either
broke even or made money during fiscal year
1985, an Increase of four teams from the previous
fiscal year. He said financial stability should be a
goal of all of baseball, something he said would be
difficult because of decreasing television reve­
nues.
“ Wc warned the clubs that television payments
will come down," the commissioner said. " I f we
do not exert responsibility, the Institution of
major league baseball will be in financial trouble."
NO SPE C IAL K FOR DR. K
NEW YORK (UPI) - Kellogg Co., canceled plans
Thursday for Mets pitcher Dwight Gooden to
promote its corn flakes, a decision the company
says has nothing to do with the player's recent
legal problems.
Gooden has pleaded no-contest to charges of
scuffling with a Tampa policeman. Ills agent, Jim
Neader, told Manhattan. Inc. magazine the
conviction hasn't cut into Gooden's six-figure
promotion contracts with various companies.

f

�r
HmM, Saitfori, FI.

Friday, Fab. 37,1W7

Rams Face Tough Task With 'Notes
Harold Sparta Wrltar

Richmond Gains
In Rocovory Act
From Pneumonia
NASCAR Winston Cup driver
Tim Richmond has gained about
14 pounds and could return to
driving as early as the middle of
M a r c h , a s p o k e s m a n for
Hendrick Motorsports said.
"H e's doing fantastic." said
Jimmy Johnson, vice president
a n d g e n e r a l m an a ger of
Hendrick Motorsports. He got
his doctor's permission to leave
Ashland, Ohio and move to Ft.
Lauderdale. Richmond plans to
stay In Florida until he starts
racing again.”
Johnson said "H e's really
talking like he is ready to go
back racing. He misses It so
much. I talked with him about a
week ago and there Is no rattle
sound In his chest. He has really
cleared up."
Richmond suffered a lifethreatening bout with pneumo­
nia during the off-season and
spent approxim ately three
weeks In the Cleveland Clinic.
During his Illness, he lost about
18 to 20 pounds and was unable
to rejoin his team when the
Winston Cup season began.
Benny Parsons Is driving the
Rick Hendrick owned Folgers
Coffee sponsored car until
Richmond returns.

Coach Wlflle Richardson and his Lake
Mary Rams didn't look all that happy
after Thursday night's 71-61 victory
over Lyman In first round action of the
district basketball tournament.
The reason that Richardson was not
Jumping for Joy was because Lake Mary
will be going up against Seminole, a
71-44 winner over Lake Howell on
Wednesday. In semifinal action tonight
at 8:30 at Seminole High.
In other action on Thursday, 14thranked Mainland cruised past DeLand,
58-38. Mainland will take on 16thranked Port Orange Spruce Creek, a
61-54 winner over Lake Brantley on
Wednesday.
Coach Bill Klien's Semlnoles. ranked
20th, arc on a roll as the Tribe has won
19 out of its last 20 games and nine
consecutive. Seminole now stands at
25-5.
"They (The Semlnoles) are probably
the best team in the district." Rich­
ardson said after his Rams dominated
Lyman. "W e aren’t going to change
anything In our game. It's kind of late for
that."
Richardson got an impressive perfor­
mance from his big men on Thursday
night as sophomore Bernard Mitchell hit
for a career-high 22 points. Center Oscar
Merhtle also had a sound outing as the
senior hit for 19. Lake Mary totally
dominated the boards In the game.
"I doubt if we will be that dominating

Basketball
a g a in s t S e m in o le ," R ic h a r d s o n
chuckled. "They come at you from
everywhere."
Klein said that his club will have to
play well In order to beat the Rams.
“They are playing good basketball right
now," Klein said of the Rams. "They
look like they are peaking and we are
going to have play very well In order to
beat them."
Seminole has defeated Mary In two
Seminole Athletic Conference games
earlier In the season, but neither game
was a blow out.
' The game will have some Interesting
matchups In It as Seminole guards
Andre "Smooth" Whitney and Jeny
"Stick" Parker will be facing Lake
Mary’s Terry "The Cat” Miller and
sharpshooter Mike Mandevllle.
In the middle. Seminole's Walter
"Tlpm an" Hopson or Craig Walker will
have to play well In order to contain
Mfrthle. Roderick Henderson will also
have to be at his best In order to contain
Mitchell.
Mitchell, nevertheless, said that he is
looking forward to taking on Seminole.
"I want Seminole." Mitchell said. "W e
have never had much luck against them
and It's time for that to change."
Richardson said that the victory over
Lyman will help the team's confidence.
"Its good to get a win under our belts,"

For the third consecutive year, the
Spruce Creek Hawks and the Mainland
Buccaneers, two Volusia County rivals,
find themselves pitted against each other
In an all Important district showdown as
these two schools meet tonight at 7 p.m.
In the semi-finals of the District 4A-9
Basketball Tournament at Seminole
High’s Bill Fleming Memorial Gym.
Mainland, 23-5 and the No. 3 seed In
the toumey, earned the right to meet the
second-seeded Hawks with a 58-38
victory over sixth-seeded Deland
Thursday. The Hawks, who are 22-5.
had earlier advanced to the semi-final
round with their win over seventhseeded Lake Brantley on Wednesday.
61-54.
In the second semi-final game tonight,
top-seeded Seminole, who blew by
eighth-seeded Lake Howell Wednesday.
71-44, will take on fifth-seeded Lake

DHtrkl 4A-* SaUttfcall T*unum#n»
at tominok High SchMi
TwUsM'i tclwdul*
7p.m. — Sprue* Cr**k v». Mainland
■ :30p.m. — Lak* Mary vt. 5*mlr»ol*
TfwnOar'i r**u It*

Mainland 51. D*Land3*

Lak* Mary 71, Lyman 41
Wtdnatday't r**ult»
Sprue* Cr**k 41, Lak* Brand*/ 54
Samlnol* 71, Lak* How*ll 44

By Scott Sander
Herald Sports Writer

Attending the news conference
were Terry Labonte, A.J. Foyt,
Greg Sacks. Cale Yarborough,
N e ll B o n n c tt and M ich a el
A n d r e t t i. K n ow n as T eam
Valvollne. other drivers Included
In the anti-drug campaign are
Bobby Rahal. Geoff Brabham
and Joe Amatc.

Lake Mary sophomore forward
Bernard Mitchell scored a ca­
reer-high 22 points on Thursday
night to lead the Lake Mary
Rams to a 71-61 victory over
Lyman In first round action of
the District 4A-9 Basketball
Tournam ent at Bill Fleming
M em orial Gymnasium before
188 fans.

During the sc&lt;
m e m b e r o f th e ' l
e v e n t Valvolln e w ill donate
$1,000 to the National Federa­
tion o f Parents for Drug-Free
Youth. "Normally. I don't do
things like this, but I think It Is
time to step up and say not to
drugs," Foyt said.

round action on

000

The Championship Cup Series
actually kicks olT Cycle Week on
Saturday, Feb. 28. when racers
from around the nation run two
days of road racing at Daytona.
When the action on the track at
Daytona ends each day, the
r a c in g d o e s n ’ t s to p . T h e
W lseco-Spectro Daytona Dirt
Track Series will run Wednesday
through Saturday nights at Me­
m orial Stadium In Daytona
Beach.

CUKK-BUC8: ONE MOKE TIME

Mary, who stopped Lyman Thursday.
the tourney’s 4th seed, 71*61.
In the previous two seasons, Mainland
and Spruce Creek had met In the final or
the 4A-9 toumey. with the Hawk*
winning last year and the Bucs in 1985
In 1985. forward George McCloud and a
sophomore center named Mike Polite led
the Bucs to victory while last year the
Hawks came out the district champ
behind the play of center Jon Fedor and
then Junior point-guard Levon Darthard.
McCloud and Fedor are now team­
mates at Florida State University while
Polite and Darthard. who are both
seniors this season, will try to lead their
respective schools to another district
championship.
Polite, who will Join McCloud and
Fedor at FSU next year, having already
signed a letter or Intent with the
Semlnoles earlier this season. Is consid­
ered by many as being one of the top
prep players in the nation. In a poll
conducted by The Sporting News, he
was listed among the top 30 players in
the country.
Although Mainland, currently ranked
14th In the Class 4A state poll, won both
Its regular season meetings this season
against the Creek, currently ranked
16th. Buc head coach Dick Toth doesn't
see this as being any advantage tonight.
"No. Spruce Creek is a good team and
we’re going to have to work real hard to
win." he said.
— Tim Horn

Mitchell's 22 Power
Lake Mary By Lyman

0 00
S c l c t e d N A S C A R and
CART-PrG Indy Car drivers said
It was time for the motor-sports
community to speak out against
drug abuse. The drivers, who are
cither sponsored by or have as
an associate sponsor Valvollne
Oil Co., made their statements
during a news conference
cently.

The purse for the 46th annual
Daytona 200, the nation’s most
prestigious motorcycle race, will
be the richest In the history of
the event which began on the
sands of "T h e World's Most
Famous Beach" In 1937. A total
of over $330,000 In awards for
America’s premier two wheeled
athletes has been posted as
"C ycle Week ’87" gets set to
soar here beginning Sunday,
March 1, with the DaytonaBusch H alf Mile at Volusia
County Speedway and culmi­
nates at Daytona International
Speedway with the Daytona 200
AMA Camel Pro Scries Motorcy­
cle Classic.

Richardson said. "The confidence will
put us on an emotional high, and we'll
need all the energy we can get In order to
beat them."
Richardson went on to say that he
wants hla club to control the tempo of
the game. "That doesn’t mean that It
has to be slow," Richardson said. "If we
can control the tempo, we should be In
good shape. They are fast and we are
going to have to play excellent defense In
order to stop them.”
When asked about the tempo or the
game. Klein said. "W e only have one
tempo, and that's fast."

Htrild Photo by Sonnla Wtaboldt

Eric Czerniejewski, top, goes to the hoops as Lyman's Craig
Radzak falls for a charging foul. Rams won, 71-61.

Bucs '
By Scott Bander
Herald Sporta W riter
Mainland center Mike Polite
scored a game-high 20 points In
only three quarters of action on
Thursday night to lead the
14th-ranked Buccaneers to a
58*38 first-round District 4A-9
Tournament basketball victory
over DeLand before 99 fans at
Bill Fleming Memorial Gymna­
sium.
The victory advances
Mainland into semifinal action
against Port Orange Spruce
Creek, a 61-54 winner over Lake
B r a n t l e y on W e d n e s d a y .
Mainland and Creek will meet at
7 tonight at Seminole High. In

...U lt im a t e
Continued from 7A
Countryside's Dennis Nelson (27-2) or North
Miami's Chris Simpson (25-4) In the finals.
• Richards, a hard-working 149-pound senior,
has turned in an Incredible season thus far. He
wrestled at 159 he whipped Seminole's Tracy
Turner twice. His 29 0 record Is one o f the best In
the tournam ent. He has collected Lym an
Christmas. Seminole Athletic Conference, district
and regional titles.
"Bill got the best draw of anybody," Lake Mary
coach Doug Peters said. "Everybody Is tough at
state, o f course. But everybody In top bracket has
three or four losses.”
Peters said determination Is a Richards*
attribute and it should carry him through the
weaker upper bracket. "I Just don't think Bill will
let anybody get In the way on his trip to the
finals." he said. "H e's taking match at tim e."
In the lower bracket are two studs. Defending
142-pound champ Bret Gustafson of Brandon Is
22-0. North Miami's Angel Soto to 29-0. Richards
will have to be at his best to beat either, yet less
tough qualifying matches should help the Lake
Mary co-captaln.

night, Daytona Beach
Mainland) cruised past DeLand.
58-38. to advance to the semifi­
nal round.
Mainland will take on Spruce
Creek, a 61-54 winner over Lake
Brantley on Wednesday, at 7
tonight at Seminole High School.
Seminole, 71-44 winner over
Lake Howell on Wednesday, will
entertain Lake Mary at 8:30.
" I wasn’ t entirely pleased with
the way we played." Lake Mary
coach W illie Richardson said
after the game. "W e rebounded
well, but made a heck of a lot of
mistakes."
"W e didn't play very well at

B a sk e tb a ll
all." devistated Lyman coach
Tom Law rence said. "T h e y
totally outrebounded us."
The Rams controlled the glass
from the outset. Lake Mary got
two. and sometimes three op­
portunities to shoot the ball.
" W e played solid d efen se,"
Mitchell said. "A n d we made
some nice plays on offense."
L a k e M ary c e n te r O scar
Merthlc had a big game as the
senior hit for 19 points with
most of them coming In the
paint. Merthlc got off to a good
start as he score 12 of his points
in the first half.
Guard Terry "T h e Cat" Miller
ployed well at the point as the
senior netted 13 points while
dishing off several times on the
fast break.
Lyman guard Robert Thomas
had his usual outing as the
flashy senior scored 19 while
dum ping o ff for his typical
assists. Scnloe Vince Florence
hit for 14 points before fouling
out early In the fourth quarter.
At one point In the game.
Florence hit for 10 points In a
row.
Senior center Shawn Hester
played well hitting for 13 points.
Forward Craig Radzak was held
to only nine points.
"W e were absolutely killed on

the boards," Radzak said after
the game. "I was surprised that
they dominated us so much."
The first quarter of the game
was even as Lake Mary held a
14*10 lead after one period. Mary
lengthened Its lead to 10 at
24-14 midway through the sec­
ond quarter. Lym an fought
back, however, and cut the lead
to 30-28 Just before Intermission.
The Rams came out In the
third stanza and Immediately
took control of the game. Mary
outscored Lyman 11-4 to start
the quarter and take a 41-32
lead with 4:09 left to play In the
period. The Rams maintained
that lead for the rest of the
period and held a 48-39 lead
after three quarters.
On several occasions In the
final quarter. Lyman cuVtheVeaA
to six points, but Mary always
got Its nine-10 point lead back.
The Rams controled the rest of
the game and made eight of 11
free throws In the final period.
"I was very happy with the
Bernard played today.” Rich­
ardson said of Mitchell'S play. "I
don't give a lot of credit some­
times. but today he deserves It."
LAKE MARY (711- Merthi* If. Millar 13.
Napoli 7, Ciernisjewikl II, Mltchtll II.
Mandavill* 4. Prom 0. Stewart 0. Compton0.
AelkerO, Pierce 0 Totals: 29132071.
LYMAN (41)— Thomas 19. Florence 14,
Rad/ak f. Hester II. Lamb 0, Moulton 0.
Miller 4, Watkins 0. Simpson 0, Kendrick.
Totals: 21 19-23 41.
Halftime — Lake Mary 30, Lyman 21. Fouls
— Lake Mary 17, Lyman 14. Fouled out —
Florence. Technical — Miller

Politely' Excuse DeLand; Creek Is Next
B a sk e tb a ll
other action on Thursday night.
Lake Mary defeated Lyman.
7 1 -6 1 . M a ry w ill take on
Seminole at 8:30.
The winners of tonight's game
will meet on Saturday at 8 in the
district championship game.
"W e played a pretty good
game tonight." Mainland coach
Dick Toth said. "They tried to
slow things down on us. but we
responded w ell."
Prior to the start of the game.
DeLand coach John Zeoli said
that In order for the game to be

• Jackson, the Ram s' other co-captaln.
finished fifth last year. "P m not going to let
anything get in my way this year." he said last
week. "I won't settle for anything less than a
state championship.”
The 400-pound Jackson. 25-0, will get his
toughest bracket test from 320-pound Moses
Rivers. The Hialeah Miami Lakes senior. 16-0,
pinned Jackson last year.
"But Troy has improved a lot." Peters said.
“ And. he Is super confident. I don’t see any
weaknesses. He can even get oft his back, which
most unlimiteds can't do."
The lower bracket may be even tougher with
defending champion Mike Blaslngane of Miami
Killian, who is 19-2. Tampa Leto 300-pounder
Michael Heldt Is 21-0 while Winter Garden West
Orange's Robert Kcnon. 18-8, could also be a
factor.
000
DARKHOR8ES: Although It Is a rarity when
an underclassmen wins a state title, there are a
few count la ns who hope to pull the upset.
• Lake Mary junior Scott Flores. 22-0. has a
chance at 109 pounds. He must beat Merritt
Island’s Richard Jones. 22-0, in hts bracket and
then handle Clearwater’s Todd Kuhn, 28-1. or
Miami Southridge’s Cortez Jones. 28-2. In the
lower bracket. This class has 14 of the 16
grapplers with 20 or more wins.

close, the Bulldogs had to keep
things very slow. "T h ey beat us
three times already." Zeoli said.
" I f we can slow up things and
stay with eight tn the final
quarter, anything can happen."
The 'Dogs did slow Mainland
down, but the Bucs fed the ball
to Polite and the 6-7 senior
bound for Florida State scored at
will. "W e worked pretty hard out
there tonight." Polite said after
the game. "W e moved the ball
around quite a bit and I hap­
pened to get It a lot."
Mainland used a balanced
scoring attack other that Polite’s
20. Phillip King came off of the
bench and scored 10 points

while Derrick Henry. Woodrow
Cooper, and Kenny Mackeroy
each netted six points.
DeLand center Mike Brulcn
had a fine game for the Bulldogs
as he scored 19 points. Robbie
Wilkes and Ed Miller each netted
six points in a losing cause.
After Mainland scored the first
basket of the game. DeLand
came out and worked the ball
around without a shot for over
three minutes. DeLand finally
shot and with the score tied at
fou r a few m in u te s la te r.
Mainland scored 10 unanswered
points.
Polite grabbed one of his many
rebounds in the spurt and

" I don't know how good Flores Is." Peters said.
"H e wrestled real well In Georgia and that was
some good competition. I'm anxious to see how
he does. If he beats Jones that would be very
Important for us team wise, too."
• Seminole senior Sheralton Mays placed
second a year ago at 116 pounds, but he has not
been as effective this year. Coach Glenn Malolinl,
though, said Mays. 20-5. should be fine-tuned
now after dropping from 130 two weeks ago.
Manny Blanco, who attended Mllwee Middle
School before moving to Clearwater, has a 30-0
mark for Countryside. In Lhe upper bracket Is
30-0 Andy Anderson of Miami Norland and Lake
Mary Junior upstart Wayne Clayton at 16-1.
Winter Park's Jim m y Lott, 23-5, Is also In Mays’
bracket.
• Rob Richards, Bill’s younger brother,
probably has the best chance of the darkhorses.
Resembling an octopus with his long, angular
frame and swarming hands and arms, the skilled
junior has carved out a 25-1 record at 136
pounds. He needs to handle Miami American's
Jonathan Gaines. 17-3, tn the upper bracket
before taking on J.D. Boardwlne, 20-6. of
Bradenton Manatee or Chris McDonald, 21-4. of
Cooper City tn the lower bracket.
• Lake Brantley senior Dan Roth, 25-3, could
be a factor In the 102-pound class. Like 109,
though. It Is loaded with 13 grapplers with 20 or

slammed It home much to ll
delight of the sparse crow
Mainland held a 14-4 lead aft
the first quarter.
W ith the Bucs up 2 5 -I1
Mainland ran off eight points
DeLand's two taking a 33-1
lead Into the locker room.
" I think that that was tl
difference In the game.” Zei
sa|d about the Mainland run.
MAINLAND 1J*)- Henry 4. Cooper
Morrl* 2, Power* 0, M.Pollte 20, Mclntyr*
E. Poll)* 4, MacKelroy 4. William*
William*0. King 10. Total*: 254 II 54
DELAND ( M l - Smith 1, Wilke* 4. Lana
Miller 4. Bruten 19. Bletcher 0. Sutton
Ruegger 0, Curry 0, Blihop 0, Bu*chatl
Total*: 142 4 34.
Halttlme — Mainland 33. DeLand
Fouled out — none. Technical* — none

more victories. Roth needs to survive Mlar
Southridge's Julio Polo. 29-2. in his brack
before meeting the likes of Saverlo Cerra. 22-3.
Choctawhatchee and Mike Mandecl. 23-1.
Merritt Island In the other bracket.

000
The team title should be a competitive batt
among Southrtdge (7 entered). Killian (5). Merrl
Island (6). Sarasota (7). Brandon (8), Lake Mai
(8) and North Miami (7).
Southridge Is favored." Peters said. "But
expect us to be a factor.

Tracy Will Wrestle
Seminole s Tracy Turner, despite Injured
ligaments In his left wrist, will compete in
the C la ^ 4A State Tournament today, his
r 5* C.nc Tur,ncr 831(1 this morning.
The doctor said It was up to Tracy,” Mrs.
Turner said. "And that ts all he had to
near.
burner, a sturdy 159-pound Junior with a
22-3 record, finished fifih in lhe state
tournament a year ago. He further injured
his wrist in the regional championship last
Saturday and had *o default. - Sam Cook

�^1
FL

Randy
M in k o ff
TV/RADIO
UP1 WRITER

Ley's M ental
Screen Door
Provides Filter
CHICAGO (UPI) - Bob Ley.
possibly more than any o f his
television sports counterparts,
must do his homework. Daily.
No recess. No time off. Study,
study, study.
The reason Is simple: Ley is
E S P N 's host for Its college
b a s k e t b a l l r e p o r t and
scoreboard. His knowledge or
c o lle g e basketball must be
expansive, for the sport’s fans
are unrelenting.
*T ve learned a lot about doing
m y homework." Ley said. "W c
slip up with one fact about
Washington and someone in
Seattle Is going to know about it.
If I miss about Providence. I’ll
hear about It. You have to be an
expert about every team. You
have to have a mental screen
door and keep out what you
don't need."
Because college basketball has
more than 270 Division I teams,
it Is probably more difficult to
keep up with it during the
season than any other college or
professional sport. Ley said.
"T h a t’s our bread and butter,
the sport that put ESPN on the
m ap." Ley said. 'T v e been here
since November 1979, and we
used to guess people were wat­
ching. The first year wc did the
tourney in 1980 exploded things
here. So. you better know your
subject or you will hear about
it."
E SPN ’s broad coverage o f
basketball and the upcoming
NCAA tourney has been the key
to its success. With Ley. teaming
up with Dick Vitale to host
■‘ to u rn a m en t c e n t r a l" and
serving as host between Its
numerous regular season tele­
casts. he has been an integral
part of ESPN's success.
"S o much of ESPN is our
success with college basketball.
We do boxing and other things
but college basketball, that's the
key, our identity," said Ley, who
also does play-by-play on ESPN's
CBA game of the week.
There are those who associate
college basketball's rapid growth
with ESPN, pegging the national
exposure the sport received on
the cable eight years ago as a
launching point. While the point
can be argued. Ley insisted it
wasn't coincidence.
" I feel totally certain It had a
lot to do with it," Ley said, "I
mean I'm talking about re­
g io n a l in years past people
renting hotel room s Just to
watch our coverage." Ley said.
With success comes imitation.
ESPN doesn't have a strangle­
hold on college basketball tele­
casts. All three major commer­
cial networks now have a game
of the week leading to questions
ofoverexposure.
"You look at what we’ re doing
and we're increasing our live
coverage to 99 percent this
year." lie said. "But the quality
of the games is the key and we
believe wc have Increased our
quality. Without a doubt the Big
East has helped us. getting us
Into the big eastern markets. But
I'm not worried about overex­
posure."
Probably ESPN's best moment
in the past year cam e the
w eek en d b e fo re the N C A A
tourney began. Relying d i i satel­
lite technology. ESPN televised
several conference tourney finals
live, broke in to existing cover­
age with either live ... tsped
cut-ins and kept the country
Informed on what teams were
q u a l i f y i n g fo r th e N C A A
tournament.
"T h e one Saturday we did
som ething that hadn't been
done in television." Ley said. "I
think the plans are do continue
to do that In oilier sports. We're
doing it in hockey. It's what the
future of television Is about."
It was so successful that other
conferences came to ESPN and
asked them to televise all or part
of their conference final games.
"People from the leagues were
calling us up. saying they’d give
it to us it was that successful."
Ley said. "W e're hoping to make
it better this year. We won't lie
to you. If it's taped, we'll tell
.you. But we won’t yank you out
of a game that is close Just to
fulfil a commitment."
Because ESPN does not have
the rights to the Final Four, it
must sit back and watch rival
CBS have the "fu n " of the finals.
" I t ’s a little frustrating but we
do stuff from the site and we'll
do it this year." Ley said. "W c
had Just as large a presence as
CBS. ... W e’re in the big leagues
now."

Lake

Tests K illian

McCorkle: Season
N ot O ver Just Yet

M ia m i
4 A S ta te C ro w n
By Chris Motor
H a n k i Soorto Writer

Tetfer-ilcNeW e
1 p.m. — Tempi Lafo v*. Orangt Park
• p m - Lake Mary v». Miami Killian

By Chris Motor
Herald Sparta Writer
Lake Mary's Rams capped off their
most successful season ever with a berth
in their first Class 4A State Tournament.
Coach Larry McCorkle. though, doesn't
want the Rams to think the season is
over Just yet.
Although they play one of the most
powerful teams in state history. Miami
Killian's Cougars, McCorkle believes the
Rams can be competitive and possibly
pull off the upset.
Lake Mary. 21-3-4. and Killian. 21-2-1.
collide tonight at 8 in the second
semifinal game at Lake Mary High
School.
"The guys are tickled to death to be
here (state).*’ McCorkle said. "I hope
they don’t Just think the season’s over
and will go out and play really loose and
have their best match of year."
The Rams have played their best
soccer of the season In the playoffs
where they have outscored the opposi­
tion. 10-1. Included are district victories
over DeLand (2-0). Lake Brantley (1-0).
Lyman (2-0): a regional win over Winter
Park (2-1 in overtime) and last week's
sectional triumph over Melbourne (3-0).
Offensively. Lake Mary is led by Junior
Ernie Broennle with 26 goals, senior
Rick Broennle with 12 and sophomore,
Jon Brooks with 11. Junior Lee Alex­
ander. and seniors Tony Flarentlno.
Steve Sapp and Scott Betsinger also
contribute to the offensive attack.
"We've got a lot of different people
who can score if given the opportunity,"
McCorkle said. "Two guys who could
make a difference are Jon (Brooks) who
came out of his slump with two goals
against Melbourne and Tony (Florentino)
who has been playing really well lately.
To upset Killian. I think we have to score
some early goals."
Solid defense has been Lake Mary's
trademark this season as the Rams have
allowed more than one goal in a game
only three times. The defensive leaders
arc seniors Pete Kinsley. Chris Rlske.
Rick Morales and Ralph Padilla, Junior
Scott Schmitt and goalkeeper Pete
McNally who has 11 shutouts.
"If our defense plays well and we hang
in the first half, wc can play with them."
McCorkle said. "W e can’t get behind

...s e e

H*r»M Ptet* fey Tammy VkKMf

Lake Mary's Ernie Broennle, right, scores against Melbourne.
early because when Killian gets on top,
they don’t look back, they Just keep
corning after you."
Lake Mary and Killian have not met
before but both played and got to sec
each other play In the Pizza Hut
Tournament. Lake Mary lost Its first
round game to Clearwater Central
Catholic. 4-1. while Killian later beat
CCC. 2 0.
"The loss to CCC was one of our poorer
performances of the season." McCorkle
said. "W c tied them the next time we
played them. The Pizza Hut was the only
time I got to see Killian so I really didn’t
have a chance to come up with much of
a game plan."
STATE SOCCER TEAM STATISTICS
T#am, rtcord
Tamp* Lata 1)9 0-1)......
Oranga Park (34-1)........
Miami Killian (21-2-1)....
Laka Mary (21-3 4)........
KEY: CO Avtrag#

GO

AVO

GA
4.3
4.0
3.0
2.1

4
9
10
30

AVO
030
0.33
0.4)
0.71

Goals: GA — Goal* Against; AVG —

Slata Tournamtn) Ei par lane*
Miami Killian — Fifth Slata Tournament, champions
In \m, 1ft], if*4
Tampa Lato — Third Slata Tournament, champion*

IMS

Orange Park — Second State Tournament
Lake Mary — Flr»t State Tournament

TONIGHT'S STATE SOCCER LINEUPS
Lake Mary Rami (3IJ-4)
Forward........................ Ernie Broennle. Junior (no. 21)
Forward............................. Jon Brook*, Sophomoro (4)
Forward........Leo Alexander. Junior (I)
Midfield................................ Rick Broennle. Senior (7)
Midfield.............................. Scott Bettlnger. Senior (14)
Midfield......................................Steve Sapp. Senior (5)
Detender............................... Pete Klneley, Senior (10)
Defender............................... Chrl* Rlike, Senior (17)
Detender.......... .......................Rick Morale*. Senior (1)
Defender.........&gt;..................... Scott Schmitt. Junior (])
Goalkeeper................ ................. Pete McNally. Junior
Bench: Tony Florentino. Senior, Forward.-' Frank
Ramtaur, Junior.Midfield; Ralph Padilla, Senior.
Defender; Jon Yurlck, Junior. Midfield; Jame* Nobile,
Sophomore, Defender; Pole Ca*alla. Sophomore,
DEF F; John Affelbach, Junior. Defender; Mike
Kryger, Senior, Midfield; Manny Roldan, Sophomore,
Midfield; Brian Nemeroff, Senior, Midfield; Frank
Baranowtkl. Junior. Midfield; Jim Splcher, Sophomore.
De lender
Miami Killian Ceogar* (31M )
Forward......................................T.J. Blum. Junior M)
Forward..................................... Phil Grow, Senior (3)
Forward................................ Darren Gelte. Junior (IS)
Midfield................................... Alex Sanchet. Junior (*)
Midfield.............................. David Sandrow. Senior (10)
Midfield................................. Darren Stone, Junior (14)
Defender.......................... Alberto Gamarra, Senior (14)
Defender.................................Robert Taylor. Senior (41
Defender.................................... Keith Ewell, Senior (1)
Defender.......................... Orlen Stokeland. Senior (it )
Goalkeeper..*................................Brian Robert*. Senior
Bench: Jame* Wright, Junior, Go* Ikeeper; Mika
Baxter, Junior, Goalkeeper; Noble Hendrick*. Junior,
0 *fender; Chrl* Wode. Junior, Midfield; Nick Gllbertl,
Junior, Forward; Scoff Blgham, Junior, Forward; Brad
Hertkowltt, Junior, Oetender; Jaime Martinet. Sopho­
more, Forward; Mark Mayhew, Sophomore, Mldflekl;
Don Rubin, Junior, Defender

Purdue Tops Hoosiers,
Tightens Big Ten Race

a spin move for a 04-49 edge.

Dunning, a freshman from
Mobile. Ala., carried the Raiders
through most of the second half.
A fte r 3 -p oin tcrs by Shaun
Continued from 7A
Fitzmorris and Rich Wallman
(21) really haunted us when w,; pulled Indian R iv e r w ith in
60-59, the lead changed hands
got a big lead."
The first spurt came with eight eight times before Dunning gave
minutes left In the first half. the Raiders breathing room at
Gallagher, who popped in 16 72-67 with 6:42 to play.
"Their big forward (Dunning)
first-half points, wore out the
bottom of the net with 4 of 5 shot the midrange Jumper real
3-polnters as the Raiders bolted well." Leatherwood said.
Dunning said a little soul
to an eight-point lead.
searching
at halftime paid off. “ I
" I guess they didn't expect me
didn't shoot well in the first half,
to ta k e th e o p e n s h o t , "
Gallagher said. "T h ey were giv­ so I made up my mind to
ing it to me so I took it to open concentrate better the second
half." he said. "Claude (Jackson)
up the middle."
A fter netting a 3-pointer, kept passing me the ball after I
Gallagher fed Hall who slammed hit a couple."
Jackson said that was the
home a 27-19 advantage at the
7:50 m ark. T w o tu rn o v ers plan. "W e don't care who scores
follo w ed , though, as Boyd. liow many points as long as
Williams and Yarborough each someone does." the big sopho­
scored to bring Indian River more said. "Once he (Dunning)
got hot, we got him the ball."
back.
Dunning gave SCC a 73-67
With six minutes left SCC
(6:21)
and 75-71 (3:30) leads but
went to its spread offense. Keller,
who scored on a tip midway Williams and Anthony White
through the half, came up with a pulled the Pioneers back Into the
rebound and stuck it home to game. 77-73. Hall, though, ap­
push the lead up to 29-25. "I was peared to put the game out of
a little bit nervous when I went reach. 80-73. with a three-point
In." the Orlando Colonial High play with 2:02 left.
W illia m s, h ow ever, led a
freshman product said. "But
when that tip went in 1 calmed charge as the Pioneers ran off a
5-1 stretch lo draw within 81-78
down.”
Three minutes later, Keller with 1:22 left. Indian River then
snatched another rebound and was forced to foul and it picked
was fouled. He converted both the wrong Raider — Gallagher.
The left-handed sophomore
tosses for a 37-31 bulge with
drilled
four consecutive free
2:09 left. The Pioneers, though,
throws
to
push the lead back to
outscored SCC. 7-4, to pull
within 41-38 at halftime. Hall 85-78 with Just 39 seconds left.
tip p e d h o m e a h o o p an d The River still was not finished,
G allagher notched tw o free though, as Wallman banked
home a 3-pointer for an 85-81
throws for the three-point edge.
Gallagher’s 16 led the Raiders count with 29 seconds left.
Leatherwood quickly called
halfway home. Hal) had eight
time
out and set up its hustling
while Keller, a 6-4 forward,
pulled down six rebounds. Boyd full-court press. This time, how­
topped the Pioneers with 13 and ever, SCC solved ft. Jackson
inbounded to Brooks who rifled
W illia m s , a 6-5 a ll- s t a t e
the ball back to Jackson. He
freshm an from Miami
found Gallagher flashing Into the
Southridge, added 10.
The Raiders started quickly in m iddle. When the Pioneers
Ihe second half as Hall dropped a converged on Gallagher, he
14-footcr before Dunning scored lofted the ball ahead to Hall who
the next five points, the last trio dunked home the victory with
on a three-point play for a 48-38 22 seconds left.
"That play broke their backs."
bulge in Just over a minute.
Boyd, though, hit a short Jackson said.
"Il was about it worked." a
Jumper then stole the ball for a
relieved
Payne said. "W e tried to
breakaway dunk. The husky
forward came back with a re­ run the thing the whole game.”
Brooks, a Lake Howell High
bound bucket before Yarborough
product,
said the play was ele­
followed with a 12-footer to pull
liu* Pioneers within 48-46 and mentary. "The main objective of
a press is to trap in the corner."
force SCC into a time out.
The Raiders regrouped quickly he said. "W e got the ball in the
as Houston found Hall with a m id d le and th e re w as no
nifty pass in the paint for a Jam. weakslde help on Darris."
With the first hurdle cleared.
On the next two trips. Dunning
Payne said SCC will need to
till again and Houston scored on

i«a %

Miami Killian's Cougars may be a little
rood weary, but they are still rolling
right along toward their goal — a fourth
CIoeo 4A State Soccer Championship.
The Cougars, 21-2-1. are making their
fifth appearance In the Final Four and
look to take home another championship
trophy to put along the ones earned in
1977. '83 and ’84. Killian opens play in
the tournament Friday night at 8 against
Lake Mary's Rams at Lake Mary High.
"The kids are a little tired of the road,
but they're looking forward to it." Killian
coach Dennis Hackett said. "To get
where we are. we've had to play the last
four teams at their home Held. The kids
have a lot of confidence no matter where
they play."
Compared with the three teams that
won state crowns for the Cougars,
Hackett said this year's side may be the
-best Killian has had. The Cougars had a
17-4-2 record last season, but were
disqualified from the playoffs due to an
Ineligible player.
"Skill wise, we’re better than the
teams I've had In the past." Hackett
said. " I f there Is a weakness it's
experience. We're a pretty young team
with only five senior starters and none of
the kids this year have ever been to state
before."
In compiling Its 21-2-1 record. Killian
has scored 73 goals, given up only 10
and Its goalkeepers have combined for
15 shutouts. Offensively, T.J. Blum
leads the way with 31 goals, Phil Gross
has pumped In 29 and Alex Sanchez has
15.
Defensively, Hackett said Albcrio
Gamarra. Keith Ewell and Robert Taylor
lead the way while midfield strength
comes from David Sandrow and Darren
Stone. The three goalkeepers arc Brian
Roberts. Jimmy Wright and Mike Bax­
ter.
"All three goalkeepers arc pretty even
In talent," Hackett said. "They've all
done a good Job this year. Right now.
Roberts Is the one we're going with since
he has come through with excellent
performances the last four playoff
games."
Strength of schedule has also been a
big plus for Killian this season as It took
on some of the top teams in the state.
The Cougars' only two losses arc to
top-ranked Tampa Lcto (Pizza Hut finals)
and Htaleah-Mlaml Lakes.
“The strength of our schedule Is an
advantage." Hackett said.

H * r * l d P h o to b y L o u t* R a lm o n d o

Vance Hall slams home two
of his game-high 24 points.
control two players — Tony
Dawson and Tony Holly — to
beat Gulf Coast. Dawson, the
state’s leading scorer, pumped in
a tournament-high 37 points in
the victory over South Florida.
Holley added 23.
"G u lf Coast made a tremen­
dous comeback." Payne said
erasing a nine-point halftime
deficit. "They were dead, out of
it, and those two guys shot them
back into it."
S E M IN O L E ( IT ) — G a lla g h e r I I I a a 22,
B ro o k * &lt;73 1-2 t . H o u s to n 3 7 0 0 4. H a c k w o r th
1 2 0 0 2. M o r r is 0 0 0 0 0. K e lle r 2 3 4 S 8.
J a c k s o n 4 1 0 0 1. D u n n in g 8 13 2 3 18. H a ll
I M 4 2-3 24, W illia m s 0 1 0 0 0 T o ta ls I S 42
15 19 89
IN D I A N R IV E R (8 1 ) - Y a r b o r o u g h 4 8 0 2
12. M o r r is 2 7 0 0 5, W a llm a n 3 3 0 0 9,
W illia m s 7 14 3 5 t7 . W h ite 2 7 4 4 8. P re s to n
0 2 1 2 I. D e lh i 2 4 2 2 4, W e b b 0 0 0 0 0. B o y d
10 153 5 23. T o ta ls : 32 43 1370 8 1.
M a lttlm e — S e m in o le 41, In d ia n R iv e r 89
F o u ls — S e m in o le 14. In d ia n R iv e r 19 F o u le d
o u t — n o n e T e c h n ic a l — n o n e T h re e p o in t
g o a ls 4 7 (G a lla g h e r 4 5, H o u s to n 0 2 ), In d ia n
R iv e r — 4 7 ( W a llm a n 3 3. M o r r is 1 3 .
Y a r b o r o u g h 0-11. R e b o u n d s — S e m in o le 35
( K e lle r 4. D u n n in g 4. H a ll 4 ), In d ia n R iv e r 30
( W illia m s 9. B o y d 8) A s s is ts - S e m in o le 20
( G a lla g h e r 12). In d ia n R iv e r 14 ( W illia m s 4.
W h ile 4 ) S te a ls — S e m in o le 8 ( G a lla g h e r 4 ),
In d ia n R iv e r 4 I W h ile 2. B o y d 21 T u rn o v e rs
— S e m in o le 21 (G a lla g h e r 8. J a c k s o n 41.
In d ia n R iv e r 17 (Y a rb o r o u g h )

United Press International
Purdue tightened the Big Ten
race and clouded the alreadyscrambled NCAA Tournamnet
pictu re Th u rsd ay night by
throttling Indiana.
"W e 'r e still climbing that
ladder." Coach Gene Kcady said
after his No. 6 Boilermakers
scored a 75-64 victory over the
No. 2 Hoosiers. "This is another
rung we’ve made."
The Boilermakers snapped In­
d ia n a 's nine-gam e w in n in g
streak and avenged an 88-77
loss to the Hoosiers earlier this
season. Purdue, 22-3 overall and
13-2 in the Big Ten. pulled
w ith in a h alf-gam e o f the
league-leading Hoosiers, 23-3
and 14-2.
Three of the nation's top five
teams have been beaten this
week: No. 4 Temple was upset
by West Virginia and No. 5
DePaul lost to Notre Dame. The
winners enhanced their appeal
to the NCAA Tournament Selec­
tion Committee, but gave that
group a tougher time deciding
regional seeds.
A sellout crowd of 14,123 In
Mackey Arena created such a
din Purdue coaches were forced
to use hand signals to communi­
cate with players. The roar
obviously inspired the B oil­
ermakers. led by Troy Lewis
with 18 points and Todd Mitchell
with 17. including 7 In the final
4:19, after Indiana had pulled
within 6-1-62.
" W e had som e good o p ­
portunities. ! was pleased our
kids got back in it,” Indiana
Coach Bob Knight said. His team
trailed by 12 points early in the
second half, but rallied within
51 -50 with 8:52 remaining.
Evcrette Stephens held Indi­
ana scoring leader Steve Alford
to 15 points. Alford had scored
31 In the Hoosiers' early-season
v l c l r o y o v e r P u r d u e at
Bloomington, hid.
"I was looking away f o r 'a
second when Alford had the ball,
a n d iie w o u ld be g o n e . ’ ’
Stephens said of their first meet­
ing. ” 1 wasn't concentrating
hard enough, but Ricky Hall (u
former Purdue player) told me I
needed to watch Alford and
concentrate more."
Alford pulled Indiana to 6-1-62
with 4:56 to play. His shot was
ihe last Indiana field goal. Daryl
Thomas led Indiana with 18
points.
In other games involving Top
20 teams. No. 1 Nevada-Las

B ask etball
Vegas crushed Pacific 82-55. No.
3 North Carolina dumped No. 19
Duke 77-71. No. 8 Iowa ripped
Michigan Sate 93-64. Vanderbilt
downed No. 17 Florida 84-76.
No. 18 Texas-El Paso lopped Air
Force 67-50 and No. 20 UCLA
stopped Southern Cal 82-76.
At Las Vegas. Nev., Gary
Graham , normally the third
guard and one of five seniors
starting in the Rebels' final
home game of (he season, scored
20 poin ts to power UNLV.
At Chapel Hill. N.C.. Kenny
Smith scored 22 points, and
North Carolina built a 26-point
lead in the second half.
At Iowa City. Iowa. Roy Marble
scored 18 p oin ts and B.J.
Armstrong added 15 to lead
Iowa to a school-record 24lb
victory. Marble and Armstrong
keyed a first-half spurt in which
Iowa outscored the Spartans
22-2. Iowa. 24-4 overall, eclipsed
the 1980-81 Hawkeyes Final
Four team that finished 23-10.

Murphy's 20
Lift Dolphins
BOWLING GREEN. Ky. (UPI)
— Tellis Frank collected 16
points and 6 rebounds Thursday
night to propel Western Ken­
tucky to a 60-58 victory over Old
Dominion in the first round of
th e S u n B e lt C o n fe r e n c e
Tournament.
In other first-round games,
James Ponder scored 22 points
to help Alubama-Birmlnghum to
a 77-64 victory over South
Alabama; Michael Milling scored
20 points as Nortii Carolina
Charlotte beat Virginia Com ­
monwealth 88-73; and Ronnie
Murphy seored 20 points to lead
Jacksonville to a 68-63 victory
over Sou Hi Florida.
Western Kentucky, host and
top seed, advanced (o Friday’s
s e m i f i n a l s against UNC
Charlotte, while Jacksonville
will bat t l e A l a b a ma Birmingham.
In the first game. Murphy had
just 4 first-half points on 2 of 9
shooting hut shot 7 for 11 In the
second half. He was supported
by Troy Mundlne with 18 points
and Danny Pearson with 13.

�r

fr
I, FI.

FrMey. F d . J7, i w

• M pm. — WUEZ AM M l . M H ct 4At

K t t l M A M : UPI/HIIAIOURYICII

SPORTS
INBREF

KEY BISCAYNE (UP!) — The pain of getting his wisdom
teeth pulled faded quickly for John McEnroe, who used his
famous mouth Thursday to berate a chair umpire at the
Llpton International Players Championships and draw a
$1,000 fine.
Playing a doubles match with Matt Mitchell against ivan
Lendl and Bill Scanlon, McEnroe erupted during the third
set over a non-call by chair umpire Rich Kaufman.
McEnroe Insisted a Lendl serve had ticked the net and
should be ruled a let. but Kaufman disagreed and refused
to change his call.
In second-round play Thursday, top women seeds
Martina Navratilova. Chris Evert Lloyd and Steffi Graf all
earned straight-set victories, while No. 2 men's seed Stefan
Edberg and No. 4 Yannick Noah also advanced.
Navratilova, the No. 1 seed, defeated Anne Mlnter 6-3.
6- 1; No. 2 Evert Lloyd, last year's champion, topped Aklko
KlJImuta 6-1, 6-2: Graf, the third seed, beat Ellse Burgin
6-3. 6-4; Edberg got by Scott Davis 6-3. 7-5. 6-4: and Noah
struggled before ousting Javier Sanchez 6-7 (5-7). 4-6. 6-3.
6-4, 7-5. Also advancing was fifth-seeded Mats Wllander. a
6-4, 6-4, 3-6.6-3 winner over Greg Holmes.

Sta rs Pound Lum ps O n Raiders
Seminole Community College pitching was seeing stars
Thursday afternoon as Florida Community CollegeJacksonville's Stars pounded out 18 hits off five SCC
pitcher en route to at 15-2 victory In Mid-Florida
Conference action at SCC.
The Raiders fell to 4-13 overall and 2-5 In the MFC while
the powerful Stars ran their record to 9-0 overall and 6-0 In
the league. SCC returns to action Saturday afternoon at 2
against Central Florida Community College at Ocala.
FCC-J took a 2-0 lead after one inning, then erupted for
six runs In the second to pull away.
Seminole had eight hits in the game with Kevin Hill and
Jeff Watson getting two apiece. Ron Lim and Bill Layflcld
had three hits each for the Stars. Wayne Farrell and Mike
Gower had two-aaeh m n d lU U y &lt; W t y i r u 1 for 4 with a
home run.
.v
&gt;• ■&gt; ■ *

W atson O verta k es B a llesteros
MIAMI (UPI) — Two o f g o lfs most dynamic players
Incurred opposite fates Thursday on a hole considered by
many one of the game's toughest.
Tom Watson blrdied the par-4 18th hole at the Doral
Blue Monster Course and Seve Ballesteros double bogeyed
the final hole at the $1 million Doral Open. That allowed
Watson to surge to a 2-under-par 70 while Ballesteros fell
to a 7 1 after the first round.
They both were in contention as Bernhard Langer took
the first-round lead with a 65.

G errin g Has Lea d O n G e d d e s
PRINCEVILLE. Hawaii (UPI) — Cathy Gerring and Jane
Geddes credited each other for first-round success at the
$300,000 Women's Kemper Open.
Gerring shot a 6-under-par 66 Thursday to take a
one-stroke lead over Geddes and late starter Mlssie
Berteottl on the Island of Kauai.

Lions Drop O ut O f Tourney
O viedo's Lions dropped out of the District 3A-6
Basketball Tournament Thursday night by losing to St.
Cloud at St. Cloud High School.
No results were reported.

By Chris Filter
Herald Sports Writer
Seminole High banged out 11
hits and played solid defense as
U opened what It hopes will be a
promising season with a 7-5
victory over Daytona Beach
Seabreeze Thursday afternoon
at Daytona Beach.
The Lady Seminoles return to
a ctio n T u e s d a y at O rlando
Boone and have their home and
Seminole Athletic Conference
opener Thursday at 4:15 against
Lake Howell at Fort Mellon Field.
Bobble Osborne led the Lady
Seminoles with three hits while
Jackie Suggs. Showanda Walker
and Kim Walsh had two apiece.
D efen s ive ly , Sem inole co m ­
mitted Just two errors.
"Once we got the Jitters out.
we did all right." second-year
Seminole coach Lance Abney
said. “ The outfield 1 thought
would be the weak point since
we have no experienced players
but they did an excellent Job. We
hit pretty well and the defense In
the Infield did a good Job."
Seminole scored two runs In
the first Inning and added three
In the fifth and two In the sixth.
In the first. Osborne led off with
a single and went to third on
Tatnmy Bailey's base bit. Os­
borne scored on a sacrifice fly by
Shelly Sanders while Bailey
scored on a Seabreeze error.

V.

T V / R A D IO
TV/UOtt
1:4 pm - MMAAAM (MU. CMNfi
FtottKAldtamt
M l pm - WRIVAM (M l. CtiKft

Tiimuos

Pan* m vm h m i m M r s p in *

&gt;-ElfXcm
w
-toN
TTaw
x»

I I pm - WUfZ-AMII8B7. CMNpr
ArtMMiMiNKiMMOT
TM
Apm- WKIMM(Ml. IpwHT* «Hb
OmpNrfc*

CnMMiU

M cEn ro e's Pain Fa d es Q uickly

Lady

S A S K IT B A LL

7:S pm - 7WCM8 MMI.

U n ited P ress In tern a tio n a l
One day after learning they would not be arrested for
ig games,
fighting during
games. the Boston Bruins returned to the
Ice
:e — and fought.
The Bruins defeated Adams Division-rival Quebec 6-2
Thursday night In a game that featured a bench-clearing
brawl, 231 penalty minutes and nine player ejections.
The melee came one day after the Boston City Council
killed a proposed ordinance that would have enabled police
to arrest players for fighting during sporting events.
Boston was leading 4-0 when the brawl started at 9:05 of
the middle period. A fight between Nevln Markwart of
Boston and Randy Moller caused a pllcup on the Ice. Bruins
rookie Bob Sweeney was the first to leave the bench and
others soon followed.
Elsewhere, Buffalo clipped St. Louis 4-3. Detroit edged
Vancouver 5-4. the New York Islanders nipped Pittsburgh
5-4. Calgary shaded Philadelphia 4-3 and Winnipeg
trimmed Los Angeles 4-3.

T O N I G H T 'S S C H E D U L E

Tavnamanr-Samfoa*a*. 18* Mary

t pm. - t l f t i C M * : Out* R N r t i

Battling Bruin$ Fight Patf
Dlvltlon-Rlval Quabac, 6-2

Jordan
Hits 58,
Record

SCOREBOARD

mw. Jactwmrii* tt rmnUnmam
• IM p m .-W T U .N M :
' KU

PfolddRpMd R

BOVS: DHtrkt 4A-* Tourn*m*H. SwnMMl Round: 7p.m.
- Pori Orangi Sprue* Crwk vs. Ooy*n* B**ch Mainland.
•:Mp.m. —UMMory vs. Stmlnot*
BASIBALL

I p.m. —L*k* Brantteyat BradwrtanManaHt
1:10 p.m. —Orlando BWwpMaarwat La&gt;* Hwaail
aa

Tw»

DOGS

n a »m - t i n t infom**nai Piayan

a a ai
a n ah

Tnd

I a pm - Wf SHI C*n*r 8*N*M d
lawdVlauNWMattUCUIll

4 CdoniMpi

1pm - WMOOtt CWNga PUrM 8
18 pm. - WCPX4. Nil

SvcktROaraga Buffo III

I pm—ISPN. CWfog* Jwt B*ff Taunt*man).Champlona** i—i (II (HMiatml
tapm - WO*. NM: Nm Tarl KMcUM
W M k iim U W lI U

f pm - ESPN. CaHtf* NRra Odd* at
KU

I pm - WFTVl PBA. Trv* VMM Qpan

IU

(Ml

I a pm. - WCPX4 Oaraf Opm. Third
rM d IU
4 a pm - WESM7. M m r i Kamgar
Oban, Thirdraundlll
I pm. - WOO. NHL
Ywt langaaal
OatraitRadWIngKl)
Tm Mi
17 a pm. - ESPN. Inforn*f*n*l Piayan
OumpmmNplLl laitalam I
Tract
I p m - ESPN. USA/MoM Mmr Champ
I pm - ESPN. Nr* Yart libartln at
l * 0 * -W F T V l. W*a World a/1*orti

I pm - ESPN. IMSA Grand Prli 4 Miami
IU
I a * m — ESPN. Caffogt Nofrt Oamaat
Margwtfo
noon - WCPX4 CWfoga OUlaham* d
Kantucty(L)
I pm - WESHI. CaHaga Norm CaraUna d
C m rp a T K tlU
&gt; pm - WCPX4 NBA Pfuladafoh* d
Moulton (U
I pm - WFTVl. CoHaga Indiana d

IHindiIU

7pm —WMOOaCdNpr LaddBMSldi

dAuMm

I p m - ESPN. CaHaga JauXwm Conftr
•net Toumamanf. Champ*nah* |U

e*H
« pm. - WCPX4 PCA. DcrdOpm. Find
nvndll)
1 8 pm. - WOR. N r* Y r t Ranptra at

WMnrftonlU

Sacctr
7 8 p m -SIN.FgtM lntartiKlond
MdiipM - ESPN. Oav*iand Foret d San
DagoSocttri
Ttna*
I pm - ESPN. Intarnatlanal Playtra
ChamplaniWpp, Q *rttrfln *:i (L) (aid 7
am )
Tract
7 pm. - NIK. H *n School SgnPIti Junior
Invitational
7p m - E SPN. Sportiaorld
I pm - WFTVl. Wldt World d SporN.
RacoAcrauAmtrica
RADIO
TtmpM

am m m am m n
M l—1/14 A: ItM
1 MHMMWfoMipc
B d 138 P a
4 JutitLat
8 8 1M
1 SamNMImr
Id
o im i m m p (h i m * i t ipppi
uaa
tm -L X D m n
t PlluckyToni
I d 4dIU
J jlm m diPrl*
18 I d
4 On i n
ra
0 O il a d : P IP lId d iT O H ) l t d
78 —S/14 0 :71J4
i Aomc*c&lt;tail
ra ra ra
4 siic»&lt;xid
&lt;a l a
7 CrdtyCraM
48
0 (Ml a a i p lip) a a i T i i p i i m m
d t-V tC M N
i SN/snd/im
t a t a pa
4 AN»SaHyA&lt;ti
Pd p a
7 AraoodCandy
SM
QIIP) M8| P (IP) 177*1 T (14717844
N t - in 4 C I1 .il
1 MLBuiidong
Id 4d Id
I PhdoPnraat
I d 18
I O'lDtmon
7d
0 (I II lU tj P O il M d: T O l d 488
Id t—S/14 P: 11.17
4 Oadpd
P a 78 7 d
I HgiMrMtrma
P8 1 M
p CddRrm ri
id
o iM ia d i P iP D P d iT iP is ia a
ltd —7/14 C: 71.74
7 Po*lTim,
4 8 141 1 8
1 MaiatwRUtr
78 18
1 N a n O iS **
48
0 (17) 118: P !&gt; l) H R ; T O i l) H IM ;
Pk 4 IU 1 74)1 7 n o n 4 8 4; PR4
7TJHN: N n JacMR 7 J 8 N
1 7 8 -7 /1 4 .4 :8 .0
7 W rg M U d
1 « 7 8 110
4 Surtlact
18 38
1 Sallitaa C4*acfi
741
01141 H R ; P 114) U R ; T (141) 10.8;
OR* DM 1178)17131
178 —1/1,1:8.41
1 HamRgnQuam
1 8 1 8 1.8
4 WUO i x m E
178 1 8
1 MinaWt Manat
38
0 (14) H « ; P 114) 8 .8 ; T (144) 1)18;
k ftria d a (144111 4 H 8
A—L)4L H —tm .lR .

BA SKETBA LL
PASKETIALLiNIA STANDINGS
E tlttrn C ttltr ttc t
Atlantic On tut*
W L Pet. OP
Potion
&lt;7 14 78 PK.iadtipM
71 U SU II

4

8 74 X 1 4
a i Pet M
a it &lt;u -

17a p a t a

! CJEaayBanta
88 t»
I wedftau
UP
o (H i &lt;744 p n o m m t (p h i m m
001*4788
M —i/1 4 8 : I I S
) OdiPdMd
ta ra la
i kmmum
o a ra
l llactnpd
UP
OIMIfUfo P lH t a P M T O d lla t a
• —S/14 0: 71.4*
i nrcM Pd M
u a l a xa
7 A n Rat Ad
pa I d
; L P 'lO W tS to d
SAP
o (m &gt;v m p » u * * i T »&gt;7) m m

7

a a sa in
v a .d) ii

M —17141: 21J1
4 IWWBrwwtfo
t a E d EM
I LliM rtm rtM
ra la
( SmablnFaat
ra
0 (»ll d M i P M l a * ( T (4*41 M ia

KU

14 8 Jtl 7fl
17 d 7M TTt

V 17 d l -

DM M O M :

t p m — (IPN. USA/MMd

tin

Jd

a 74 84 i

A
/*N
a’W
LA la ta n

a a id i
74 8 471 17
a a 8 7 141

a » 87

ii

&lt;7 I7 7d -

v a tu h
a a a i is&gt;t
a a .87 m
a a m )i

LA CHpptrt

1 44 ,ia av«

W adtdfdn I d Indent N

CMcapitai Nr*iarwy111
SanAnton*mPmiadifMaM
HMMntLUtdlH
Cddn Sla* 18. U 0*pmt Nt
Stattl* 114. Otn.tr in
P riP tr’ i O ia tt

(AflTMdEST)
Indantd Nr*Jtrtty.7:8pm.

Bmiin •&lt; Alt*n&lt;4 7:8pm .

PtrtlanHdOdralt.7:8pm.
PNia**MadDdimlpm
Catdn Statt at IA latta * a pm
IASXETIALL: TlMndr'i Cdhfl Hndh
C tdrd M ired. AM. Ann. T ttn t
F n t tr a d
Minton C $mi« t * Hampton P
NortdtSt f1.St A*(Mtd*'i77
WdttonSalmSt M St P*mTi 47
MtP ta d Cm M i m i Tm t m td
F apt Round
LtMoyntdl AdHpMU
M d d t Atlantic Ctdmaca Tmnum td
Stodtra D M t*a StmMnd
FrtnPId tnd Mannall 8 . Wadunftgn 77
M tfM tiifli c$n$|Mi$
F n t tt**d

I.KdKoctftlMwdNtHSl.a

FNrtdSl NAMIamllPIt l l t

NWNddLN*dnap».e
Lam araM cttm aSt 8
( H U M T W P. NE LavNlant n
M n d N d d ^ M j l C d td k d
NC A drH ia 71 Cmdd Cardda a
N n h Cardda 77,0*4471
Trrmcta H u m w . P dtd (Tim ) 74
V a d d tH tK P N rM ta
Cannn 171. Apodal 8
0rd *8 ,B rad iy 7 7
HintdiN a Sapdam Vadty PI
in CMcaptn.witcomJnCid
IllddtSt n C rdditond
IrM fltU c M p a n S tU
MpdarnKantgct/tP A ddndl)
Pwrdw 71 Indant pa
SI Mary’i 7P Sprd| Arttr d
Sandant llldott 17. Indana SI 8
Tartar ILAndvtanO
Waynt V. 74 Lett Soptrtw 71
WktHa SI. t t Tufiatl S rddttd
N r* M n ka « . Wytmlni a
OuacMtiaL CdHpt O fO tarttd
T tt d EL Pam47. Air Fare* B
T tu * San Andn* 8 . Gaary* Si. 74
Wadand Bapild n Jarv* O r ittM &lt;4
8 td
trldwm Yaw* PL San D * n St. 8
Cditam* 71. Aflran* St *7
Cant PMNnfdniaL AlattpAmataM
FdNrton SI. &lt;1 N r* Mtiiea SI. 8

Ndtd»Ran*74PdMSI.W
Marxian)Arlp74Md*«

San7adSi.OLUta48.77

SianMrdTLArtmnaTl

UCIradaaiFratnaSl.e
UC Santa lartara 7P Lanp la te * SI U
UCLA O. Savdarn Cal 74
UNLVB. Pacific (C d il)U
Utaii 71. Hawaii 47
W addfitnl1.0rtpa)74
Waddyton Si. 7X Orapon St 47

H O CKEY
HOCKEY: NHL STANDI NOS

Lndalliliai Odralt 7)
SI. LauHTLOrd R otam tl Xadw dp BvtNr
N N A IA O M ricia
Cadar.il* 77, Otflanc* 77
R * Grand, W. TKf* )4
W,Nh Tt. Men 13 (OT)
NCAC Trarnamert
AifctrwiyIPain. OmlionJt
ON* WnNyan 8 Mnyan 8 10T)
S*a M Cm * h * h Ta*nu*M*t
FId IR m *4
Alabama SYmingrum Tt. SsvXi AJaDm 44
Jadtionvll* 8 kuXi Florida 43
NC Char *Na 8 Virginia Camm Ti
WnNrn Kmtuck r 8 0 8 Dominion »
Watt VirgM, Cmtarwct Ta*r*ina*t
Fin! Raw*
Bluafia* TA A *n o n BraaMua 8
GNmrilW 79. ChprWalgn 71
W V*. Tath II. W Va. WaUayan 8
In t
Amhanl li.Cottt Guard Acabamy 41
BaOton Hi Framingham (t. 41
Potion Cd. 44 CannactlcvtM
CatHaNnSI D.W NraEnpKndU
M a rltlU S t F rtn c N IP tl 71
Monmoud 11 RotertMorrii U
PMiadtipnia T t iti* 74 Pact 17
SalvaRtgdatLCurryM
Sprlnpfltld 74 Amtrican inf 18
SI Anftlm Ip Mtrrlmack 8
St JoMp4 U I4.U Main* Fort KmlM
W « la .tn 7 iT u fN ti

W a ltt C a a ftra n c t
PatrtctOMida
W L T Fh.
77 It
PMIadtipMa
» 74
NY liiandtn
NY Ranptn
77 77
WatMnfton
74 I t
Pltiidirph
77 8
N r* Janay
74 11 1 11
Adam, Own—
Hartford
n la 4 Tt
Montreal
I t 74 t 47
Boafon
8 77 7 47
Quabac
14 11 1 U
Buffo*
71 n 4 11
CamgbtH Caa*raaca
Narrtt Dniua*
W L T PTl
Derail
17 14 9 4)
Minnaaaf*
14 21
St
SI. Laula
21 8 10 74
Chicago
n If * 74
Toronto
21 11 « a
SmyfRtOMO**
i Edmonton
Id It i II
8 8 i 74
Winnipeg
14 71 4 74
« 8 7 77
Vancov.tr
I t V I 44
■-4&gt;ta^n*N
r llu fid ai*—a
■
f pi i kaji*
^*1in

Many of the top girls track and
field teams In Central Florida
will be on hand Saturday for one
of the area's big early-seuson
events, the 16-team Lake Howell
Invitational, sponsored by Track
Shack.
The meet, to be held at Lake
Howell High School, begins at 10
a.m. with field events prelims
and finals followed by the two
mile relay at 11. running pre­
liminaries at 11:15 and running
finals at 1:30 p.m. Admission Is
$2.
Seminole County teams en­
tered In Satitrday's meet include
defending 4A state champion
S em inole H igh. Lake Mary.
Lymdn. Lake Brantley and host
Lake Howell. Other teams en­
tered arc Daytona Beach Father
Lopez. Daytona Beach Mainland.
W in ter Park, W est Orange,
Trinity Prep. Orlando Evans.
Orlando Jones. Orlando Lake

OA
III
7tt
78
717
84
171

711
214
SI
104
214

78
Ml
78
84
no

OF OA
» 217
a i ns

mw

734 2 *
111 741

711 714
744 m
ns ua
78 7 *

»7 an

T tm d a r't Rtwrn
Putta*pSi.Lavit7
DttraltLV4ncau.tr 4
BaHonPOuditc)
NY Itlandm L PlfNdirpli 4
CaiparY 4 Pniladtlpii* 7
Wmnipag 4 Lot Angt1*» 7

a &lt;■

By Chris Fitter
Herald Sports Writer

OF
7d
717
7*
711
78
Sid

U a lted P t i m I a t a n u t l o M l
Michael Jordan played an
extraordinary game Thursday
night — even by Michael Jordan
standards.
J o r d a n s c o r e d an N B A
season-high 58 points, including
26 of 27 from the free-throw line,
to spark the Chicago Bulls to a
128-113 triumph over the New
Jersey Nets.
The 58 points and 26 free
throws set Bulls regular-season
reco rd s. J ord an p la y e d 37
minutes, asking Coach Doug
Collins to take him out with 2:44
to play. Jordan hit 16 o f 25 shots
from the floor and added 8
rebounds. 3 steals and 2 blocks.
" I wanted the rest o f my
teammates to get a chance to
play," Jordan said. "T h e game
was under control. I had done
well and I didn't want to push It.
I wanted to break the Bulls
record, but I didn't want to go
any further than that. I didn't
want to be selfish."
Jordan scored 34 first-half
points, sinking 9 o f 13 shots and
16 of 16 free throws to give the
Bulls a 70-49 cushion.
Jordan, who has led Chicago
in scoring 52 of 53 games this
season, has scored 135 points In
his last three games, a 45.0
average. His career-high for a
game is 63 points, achieved
d u rin g last y e a r 's p la y o ffs
against Boston.
The Nets, who suffered their
14th straight road loss, were led
by Buck Williams' 25 points and
Orlando Woolridge's 20. John
Paxson scored 16 points, and
Gene Banks. Dave Corzlne and
Charles Oakley added 12 each
for Chicago.
Jordan, the N B A ’s leading
scorer averaging more than 37
points a game, has scored 50 or
more points three times this
season. Dominique Wilkins of
Atlanta had held the season-high
of 57 points, against Chicago
Dec. 10.
Elsewhere. Washington edged
Indiana 100-94, San Antonio
shaded P h ila d e lp h ia 96-94.
Houston nipped Utah 85-84,
Golden State crushed the Clip­
p e rs 1 2 9-1 0 8 an d S e a t t le
downed Denver 106-100.

Top Teams
T r a c k &amp; F ie ld
Highland. Orlando Colonial. Or­
lando Boone and Apopka.
Tw o meet record holders will
com pete Saturday Including
Seminole's Shownda Martin and
Lake Howell's Lisa Samocki.
Martin set the record in the 880
run with a time of 2:21.5 in 1985
while Samocki set the mile run
record at 5:13 In 1986.
Other standout performers for
S em inole include state 330
hu rdle ch am p ion D orch elle
Webster and state meet sprinters
Adrian Hillsman. Tasha Wynn.
Ramona Jamison and LaShon
Cash. Other top athletes for the
Lady 'Notes are hurdler Michelle
Pearson, middle distance runner
S h e r r y B u r g e s s , s p r in t e r
Najrlan McGill and shot put and
discus throwers Sonja
M ontgom ery and Andrienne
Smith.

Lake Mary Is expected to have
number one sprinter Ton ya
Lawson for Saturday's meet
while the Lady Rams are also led
by h u rd le r-ju m p e r O n ey k e
Berry, sprinters Tonya McCrae
and Kwaja Floyd, high Jumper
Jennifer Caputo and middle
d is ta n c e r u n n e r s H e a th e r
H e l k k l l a and C h r i s t in e
Adamson.
Lake Howell has one of the top
distance corps In th » state In
Samocki. Martha Fonscea. Mary
Fonseca and Jenny Bolt while
h ig h J u m p e r -s p rin te r K im
Hammontree and hurdler Cindy
Oliver have looked „.,on g In ih i
early season.
Lake Brantley has strength In
,l,„
r&gt;.
-P
tilC sprints with Chclscd Trotter
and Lisa Frizzell, a top-notch
hurdle prospect In Jennifer
Burrows and an up and coming
mller in Kristin Pauley. For
Lyman, shot put and discits
thrower Eileen Costello and dlstance standouts Julie Greenberg

and Tracy Fisher lead the way.
While the girls teams compete
In the Lake Howell Invitational,
the Sem inole. Lake H owell,
Lyman and Lake Mary boys
teams will take part In the
E d gew a tcr E agle R elays at
Showa.'ter Field In Winter Park,
Lake Brantley's Patriots will
split their boys team between
the Eagle Relays and DeLand
Invitational while Oviedo High's
boys und girls will compete in
the St. Cloud Invitational.
™ ir r &gt; r k D n fi
K tL U K U o
Lan* how* ii invitational Racordt
S S f c t Z t t t t S a i S
Shot put........... Lea. Oak Ridge. 794(19851
jr r ;
winiam*. Oak Ridge. w tliN ti
High lump...-........Carroll. Lyman, 54 (199*7
HOhurdlts.... Hunter, Odk Ridge, 14.3 ( 19&amp;4)
lOOmeter*.....Ingram. Oak Ridge. 127 (I9B6)
... Samocki. Lak*Mow*n,j:ij ()*•*)
730hurdles.....Williams. Lyman. 45 1 ( 1994)
PPOrun........Martin.Seminoi*.jijisimsi
R,d9* 'u **'
440 relay............... Oak Ridge. 49 s ( ivn)
Miiereiay..............Seminole. j j97(i9pj)

Seminoles7// Hits Pound Seabreeze, 7-5
In the fifth. Showanda Walker
blasted a solo home run and
three Seabreeze errors led to two
more runs. In the sixth. Walsh,
f illin g In for In ju red firs t
b a sem a n S h e ri P e te rs o n
(sprained ankle), led off with a
double and later scored on
Suggs' base hit. Walker then
singled, took second on an error
and scored from second on
Sarah Kline's fly ball.
“ Walsh did a good Job In place
of Peterson." Abney said. "She
came through with two hits and
played pretty good defense."
Abney said the one thing that
kept Seabreeze in the game was
10 walks by Suggs, most of
which he said were the result of
bad officiating.
" I swear she (Suggs) was
throwing strikes.” Abney said.
"O nly two of those walks were
legitimate. It was pretty bad. He
(umpire) called Amy Hawkins
out after she hit a foul ball with
two strikes. I said, 'hey slick,
this Isn't the ASA. but he
wouldn't let her back up."
Seabreeze blew an opportunity
to tie the score In the seventh
inning when tt hud the bases
loaded and two runs scored on a
base hit. The runs were dlsullowed, though, when the field
umpire said the runner on sec­
ond base left the bag too soon.

S o ft b a ll
LADY HAWKS WIN AGAIN
Lake H ow ell's Lady Silver
Hawks banged out 14 singles
Thursday afternoon en route to a
5-1 victory over West Orange's
Lady Warriors In prep softball
action at Winter Garden.
The Lady Hawks. 2-1, return
to action today at 4:15 at home
against Orlando Colonial.
Erin Hankins. Jaudon Jonas.
Leslie Barton and Tammy Lewis
had two hits each for the Lady
Hawks while winning pitcher
Storm i L ittre ll gave up no
earned runs for the second game
in a row.
Lake Howell Jumped out to a
2-0 lead In the top of the first
when Hankins singled. Marie
Peters reached on an error and
Lewis beat out an Infield single
to load the bases. Julie Barton
then drilled a single to drive in
Hankins and Peters.
The Lady Hawks made It 3-0
In the third when, with two outs.
Peters and Leslie Barton both
singled and Peters scored on
Lewis' base hit. Lake Howell
added two u(7earned runs In the
seventh for a 5-0 lead. West
Orange scored an unearned run
in the bottom of the seventh.

BOONE TOPS BRANTLEY
Lake Brantley’s Lady Patriots
banged out 13 hits Thursday
afternoon, but only got two runs
out of it in a 5-2 loss to Orlando
Boone's Braves at Merrill Park In
Altamonte Springs.
The Lady Patriots. 1-2, return
to action Tuesday against Or­
lando Evans at Lake Falrview.
Boone, which defeated Lake
Brantley In the region playoff
last year. Improved to 3-0.
Lake Brantley got both of Its
runs In the bottom of the first to
take the early lead. Niki Burke,
H e a th e r M e y e r and T r a c y
Brandenburg all singled to load
the bases. Burke scored on
Mandy Mathleson's sacrifice fly
and Meyer scored on Dawn
Gebhart's base hit.
APO PK A THUMPS LYM AN
A six-run fourth Inning paved
the way as Apopka's Lady Blue
Daiters claimed an 8-1 victory
over Lyman's Lady Greyhounds
Thursday afternoon at Lyman
High.
Lyman. 0-2 for the season,
goes for win number one today
against Winter Park at Lake
Falrview. Apopka Improved to
2-0.
The Lady Greyhounds were
held to four hits In the game, one
each by Gwen LaDuke, Ronna

Carter. Sabrina Jarrett and Carol
Cooley.

PARTS &amp; SERVICE
OPEN 7:30-5, M-F
No appointm ent n ece ssa ry !

w n sH m
Hwy. 17-92

321-7800

SEMINOLE
HIGH SCHOOL BAND

DOG
R A C IN G
NOW !
N IG H T L Y 7 :3 0 p j n .
Except Sunday, thru May 2

Matinees Monday, WtdlMsda
&amp;Saturday 1;00p.m.
Flay the exciting « h i*
paying
Double Qulnielas” and t
“Suportocta".

BOWLING
TOURNAMENT

THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission for ladie

MARCH 1, 1987
Starting Time 2 PM

Visit our two dim ate-controIlM
clubhouses tor your fin® din)nr
and entertainment pleasure?

BOWL AMERICA LANES
SANFORD
OVER 15 Trnphys Will Be Awarded

$10 DONATION COVERS
3 GAMES &amp; SHOES

CLUBHOUSE RESV.: 83MSIH

SANFOKD-ORIAND
KENNELCLUB
North of OriiiHJo. Just off Hwy. 17301 Dog Track Road, Lonowood
_______ Sotry, No 0n« Under I I

�r i

tor»M , I m M , n .

FrM«V, Flfc. 17,I W - H A
;r *rV**
I

ardening

'A:

1

Think Green This Year With A Regular Feeding Program For Palms
}Id, brown fronds hanging from your palm
ES this time of the year may be cut off close to
trunk with a pruning or pole saw. But. be
Eful not to pull off fronds that are firmly
jrched as Injury to the palm will occur. Think
:n this year by starting a regular feeding
am for your palms. You can use a special
fertilizer formulation or a regular N-P-K
lllzer with a high percentage of nitrogen, such
[16-4-8 or 12-4-8. A complete fertilizer with
Itlon al minor elements Is better, If available.
sung palms with no clear trunk need one to
pounds fertilizer per inch of trunk diameter
feeding. Palms with clear trunks should
tve one-half to one pound of fertilizer per Inch
ink diameter per feeding. Feed your trees
je tim es a year — m aking your first
llcatlon now. another In mid-summer, and a
In early fall. The fall feeding will slgnlfilUy increase cold tolerance and reduce the
’ jee of nutritional deficiencies that may occur
i the roots are less active.
r t ‘

Your lawn needs fertilizer, too. And. if you
haven't already done so, this Is a good time, now
‘ through the month of March, to get this little
Chore done. Select a complete fertilizer, such as

one or two times per week In the summer. This Is
the equivalent o f 300-600 gallons of water per
1,000 square feet per watering. All soils In our
area are not the same, though, so you will have to
adjust the amount of water to apply to your
particular lawn or shrub border.
There are several ways you can tell when your
lawn needs water. If you notice spots In the lawn
which first turn a bluish-gray color and then
brown, water Is needed. If footprints remain long
after you walk across the lawn, water is needed. If
we have a long, dry spell with high temperaturs
and strong winds, all of these symptoms may
appear. During these periods, the plants lose
water faster than they can absorb It and then wilt.
With a little experience, you'll be abte to tell when
your lawn needs water. But. you must water
when needed and not later, or permanent damage
may occur. If the grass plants are full of water,
they will be resilient and withstand foot traffic.
Avoid extremes when watering. Light, frequent
waterings arc Inefficient and produce shallow root
systems, making the plants more subject to
drouth. Excessive watering keeps the root zone
saturated and is harmful, too. Roots, like leaves,
need air to function and too much water can kill
the grass. The best time to water is early enough

Alfred
Bessesen
Urban
Hortlcultrlst
323-2800
E a t ^ lS l
16-4-8. 12-4-8, 10-10-10. or 6-6-6. Follow the
Instructions for application as shown on the bag,
or apply the equivalent of one pound o f actual
nitrogen per 1,000 square feet of lawn area. In
addition, proper mowing, watering, thatch con­
trol. and pest control must be combined to keep
your lawn beautiful. Remember, all fertilizers
may burn the grass If Improperly applied. Never
exceed the recommended rate and apply when
the grass leaves are dry. When finished, water
thoroughly.
Speaking of watering, many of the lawns and
sh ru b b o r d e r s In ou r a re a a re g r o s s ly
overwatered. This Is not only wasteful o f a
precious resource, but actually causes consider­
able damage to plants. As a rule, ail you need to
apply Is one-half to onc-Inch o f water every two to
three weeks In the winter and the same amount

In the day so the grass goes Into the evening dry.
This will help prevent lawn-destroying diseases.
H ow ever, early morning may not fit your
schedule, so you may have to water whenever
convenient.
Trees and shrubs need water, too. Especially
those with shallow root systems, such as azaleas.
On the other hand, deep-rooted shrubs, such as
hibiscus, need deep watering. Underwatering any
plants may cause severe wilting and subsequent
leaf drop — overwatering may cause similar
problems. Like turf grasses, roots o f trees and
shrubs need air. If too wet, the roots will suffocate
and you may lose the entire plant. Some, such as
Junipers and other needled evergreens, like it on
the dry side. If they get too much water, various
diseases may attack the stem and roots resulting
In the loss o f plants. Most trees and shrubs (citrus
Is the exception) will benefit from a one- to
two-inch layer of an organic mulch around the
base to hold moisture and keep the roots cool.
W hy not become friends with your plants. Get
to know them — their needs — their likes and
dislikes, and they'll reward you with seasons of
beautiful blooms, colorful foliage, and shade In
the hot summer.
Happy gardening!

Wrong Or Right, Public Should Not
Be Denied Life-Saving Information

Herald Photo by Marva Hawkln*

Sharing birthday festivities with Roberta Pittman, 84, left,
ar® her sister. Pearl McIntyre, center, and Mrs. Pittman's
daughter, Roberta Terry, hostess.

3 Generations Gather
To Celebrate Birthday
A special day for Roberta
(Mama) Pittman was the celebra­
tion of her 84th birthday. She
was born Jan. 16. but last week,
three generations gathered to
h o n o r M am a P ittm a n , the
mother of fourchildren: Harold
Pittman. Dolly Mac Pittman.
Annie Mae Hicks, deceased, and
Roberta A. Terry, hostess for her Carlcthla Merkerson Sanford.
mother’s birthday celebration.
Founders Day for Alpha Kappa
Mrs. Pittman has 13 grand­
children and 14 great grand- Alpha united local chapters of
the Central Florida area was
•^"children.
observed
at a week-long celebra­
Those attending the celebration.
Over
140 sorors repre­
§ lion with Mrs. Pittman were her
sister Pearl McIntyre: and grands senting chapters of Kappa Sigma
f t Sharon Williams, Cynthia Hicks. Omega. Sanford, Nu lota Omega.
Ij Emma Terry and Idclla Burke, Maitland, and Delta Omicron
f Sanford; and Attorney Debra Omega. Orlando, united In sis­
terly love for an early morning
b Roberts. Tallahassee.
breakfast held at the Omni
International Hotel. Orlando. In
Celebration of Love will be recognition and honor of Found­
held Sunday. March l. at 3:30 ers Day for the first black female
p.m. at Midway Elementary greek letter organization In the
School. Attorney W. George United States with special em ­
Allen, a former student and now phasis on rendering supreme
attorn ey p ra cticin g In Fort service to all mankind.
Lauderdale, will be the speaker.
Chapter participants for the
Special musical selections will program expressed emphatically
be presented by the Muller points relating to the life story
Family (The Generations).
and th*- valuable contribution
All graduates, former faculty the founders made to Alpha
and staff andf the public arc Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc. At
invited to attend this program. the end of each discussion, a
Annye L. Refoe. Lorene Fields white candle was lit in honor
Fossltt and Marylen Mobley and memory of each founder.
Jennings are the sponsors.
Corsages of pink tearoses with
pink and green ribbon were
worn by each soror.
B ethune-C ookm an C ollege
S o ro r E d d y c K. W a ld e n ,
National Alum ni Association
Founders Day chairm an for
joined hands with the Seminole
1987. Kappa Sigm a Om ega
B e th u n e -C o o k m a n C o lle g e
Chapter, presented the distin­
A lu m n i C h a p te r . B cth u n e g u ish ed a w a rd s to S o ro rs
cookman Evening Class Stu­
Margaret Oliver and Meriena
dents and Friends o f the Late
Johnson. Past Baslleus.
Louise Tiny Foster Smith to
Other program participants
found a local scholarship In
were Sorors Susie Blackshare.
honor of her dedication to the Bobria Alexander. Brenda Ford.
college.
Queen E. Jones. Marie Radford
Rev. Julius Kidd, past execu* and Geraldine Wright.
.live secretary of BCC Alumni
Founders Day activities con­
fund raising, has asked the tinued as the sorority attended
president of the Sanford Chapter the Morehouse College Glee Club
o f BCC A l u m n i C a r le th ia
recital ut Shiloh Baptist Church.
Merkerson and local chapter Orlando, and Founders Day
members to adopt this project as Worship Service at St. Paul
an annual goal for helping to M issionary Baptist C hurch.
provide financial help for stu­ Sanford. Participating sorors
dents desiring a college educa­ w ere Sandra P e tty , V elm a
tion.
W illia m s , R e b e c c a S w e e t.
Persons wishing to donate to Katheryn Alexander, B etlye
the Louise Tiny Foster Smith
Freddie, Priscilla Parks and
Scholarship Fund may do so by Baslleus Lurlenc Sweeting.
I contacting Rebecca Sweet or

M arva
Hawkins

I

DEAR ABBY: I used to think
you gave pretty good advice Tor
the most part, but you fall our
young people when you advise
them to use contraceptives for
premarital sex.
We know that premarital sex
Is wrong, Just as we know
shoplifting Is wrong. So, do you
think It's OK to say. "Shoplifting
is against the law, so If you're
shoplifting, come to me and I
will tell you how to keep from
getting caught"?
You tell people if you drink,
don't drive. Abby, people aren't
supposed to drink in the first
place, so why not Just tell them
not to drink Instead of saying. " I f
you’ re going to drink, don't
drive"?

About sex for unmarried peo­
ple: When you advise them to
use contraceptives to keep from
getting pregnant or catching a
disease, you are giving them
permission to have sex and
helping them get by with It by
telling them how not to get
pregnant or diseased. You might
as well say. "Although you’re
not supposed to have sex. go
ahead and have fun. kids — but
don't get caught." I would like
an answer.

D ear
A bby
UPSET IN
INDEPENDENCE, MO.
DEAR UPSET: One of the
most powerful urges inborn In
the human animal Is the sex
drive. Nature intended It to
ensure p erp etu ation o f our
species. It Is not comparable
with the temptation to swipe a
candy bar or n T-ahlrt..

A great many young people
are having sex. with or without
permission. So in the interest of
saving lives, they should know
how to prevent pregnancy and
disease — particularly since
AIDS Is incurable. Denying them
such Information will not stop
them from having sex: it will
only leave them Ignorant and
vulnerable to a life-threatening
disease. Wake up. What people
don't know can not only hurt
them, it can k ill them.

DEAR ABBY: My husband is
recovering from a severe heart
attack. " S o l" must lost 40
pounds, and his doctor has told
him that he may not smoke or
drink any more.
Sol is very unhappy about
these orders, and his frustration
Is compounded by comments
from his friends. One said.
"A fter my heart attack. I went
back to drinking, smoking and
eating." Another said. "You're
on a 1.200-caloric dtetl Why, I
eat that much for breakfast."
Then there are those who
Invite us for dinner and insist
that my husband have a second
helping of pie topped with Ice
cream. Sol knows lie shouldn't
have It. and so do they, but they
tempt him anyway.
Abby. I love my husband and
want itim to live, but all these
so-called friends are undermin­
ing his efforts to regain his
health. He can’ t afford another
heart attack, and I don’t have
the courage to tell them off In
front of Sol.
What can 1do?
W ORRIED W IFE
DEAR WIFE: Are those so-

c a lle d Irlen d s Ig n o r a n t o r
malicious? If they're Ignorant,’
e d u c a t e th e m . I f t h e y 'r e
malicious, find new friends.

DEAR ABBY: I've read letters
in your column from nearly
every segment of society. How
about giving some space to an
ex-bank teller? That Job ranks
No. I for the m ost abused
employees in the working w orld..
O f all bank em ployees, the
tellers have the most contact
with the public, making us the*
most vulnerable for extortion,
kidnapping, etc., yet we are the
lowest on the pay scale.
If a customer has a com plaint..
the teller hears U first — in th e}
must foul and abusive language
imaginable. When I'v e asked to
see an ID before cashing n check.
I've been called every name In
the book for not remembering
someone I may have seen be­
fore.
So, I am no longer a bank
teller. Thank you. I feel much
better now.
A DISGRUNTLED EX-TELLER
DEAR DISGRUNTLED: My
pleasure. That's what I'm here
lor. Have a good day.

Wedding
frvitations

Romantic Date Up For G rabs
At Fashion Benefit For ACS
Hair, make-up and fashions will reflect casual
wear, sportswear, swimwear, business attire,
evening fashions, and lingerie apparel.

Local businesses and professionals In the
community are donating 15 prizes to be given
away including a cruise for two on the SeaEscape.
Tickets for the drawings are on sale now at Just a
Trim in Lake Mary, 321-5788. and at the local
office of the ACS. 322-0849.Tickets, available at
the door, are $3 each or two for $5.

HOURS
Mon-Sat
900-5 30
Sun.
1200-500

m

25 tii/Sfefisfc

LAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER

F R ie e C H IC K e N

f

p a SAT,
i ____________ |

•5*nr«

•

W

p lo g s

on.
Z

o

7 ,

GK6U4 UjA&amp;Jt/yj
r x

K e &lt; 3 -3 ? ?

. e «»4rtetkei4 ) f p u rs|eu
,

(

Bird SPECAAL

(jiATcM ycur

PRIM6RJB

&amp; &amp;

c A r p i « n*u :rbpl\tfllQ .

V l0 T E t HARLV

SOON ICALL FOR DETAILS)

\MJ S. H a y . 17 92
lo n g w o o d

99S-0991

* 4 .9 5

I

^

95
1
9
EVENINGI WEEMENDCUSSES STARTING

4pm &amp; 6pm

" g r o w ing w ith th e tim e t "

.
\GPtLLDl4

$

CHRISTO’S CLASSICS

____________ — tC o viP o *?]------------

I

In c lu d M C ld itro o m ,
In d oo r H rfltr d Pool.
E q u lp m tn l, W tt S uit

E ftR LY B I R D S P E C IA L S

2400 WEST 25th STREET
SANFORD, FL • 321-2525

•

1 2 1 4 *2 7

SCUBA

Fashions provided by Connie's and Men's Den.
Seminole Center. RoJay and Forever Fashions, in
Downtown Sanford, and Native Casuals, at
Center Mall. Hair and make-up will be provided
bv Just a Trim.

»'• ucitod «tof ourput selection, so come on down!

I LAMb9:i\pe
I
I # X \e X Cre.*SoJc*^

C M trt.

Enter the special drawing, tickets at $2 each,
and win a date with the handsome, mystery
bachelor aboard the Rom ance cruise ship. You
must be single to be eligible to win and be present
at the drawing.Tiekets are available at the door.

A Hair and Fashion Show will be held on March
11. at 5.30 p.m. at Fitzgerald’s. Holiday Inn. Lake
Monroe. Sanford. Presented by Just a Trim Hair
Salon. Lake Mary, the show will benefit the
Sanford/Lake Mary Unit of the American Cancer
Society. Admission Is free,

f.S. Sprint to JP*wt

A vailable A t

SSSlrtSSturt

^oviM

ttertOt- B u y t o - W - a y s
c jc V 1 f r r e g -

c

w

s t r ip s

SHRIMP©IHN6R £

siRjsOiNsieriK we© fLociHeeRj
spfiSHern^/Mefirsfiace
i’
e fr r

f is h

w / H u s n p u p p ie s

All dinners available 6 p.m. ‘til closing S5.95

Cocktails, Beer, Wine
Fresh Seafood, Steaks, Prime Rib

wi|f / &amp; * = »

I

CHRISTO’S
CLASSICS
107 W . 1st S t .
S a n fo rd

22-3443

* .*

�in
■lo n k m e
t m a t *s

u n c u i

11A—fctrtfd HtfiM, Sanford, FI.
j a v

t m b

,

H IJM AN C A N N O N f t 2 1 " ^
T&gt;* y P W « B HIM « * H T .
O V T O T H B L IO N A C , ' r

Friday, Fab. 37, 1*67

by CMe Young

VOU'V/E SEEN A PV-AVEfl
REACH U P T O INTERCEPT
A PASS ?

by Mori Walter

B EET LE BAILEY

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Santoni

ARCHIE

by Bob Montana
I TOLD you JU6HE4P
IS THE KIND OP
STUPE NT WHO TESTS
BETTE P /d A T W e

EEK A MEEK

by Howl* Schneider

TH£ WJIFE -THIKJKS SRC
RDUDD A CAREER FOR
HERSELF THAT WJOUT
THROflEJO THE MARRIAGE

( B ftg r o ja ijs )

Chelation Therapy
Just Doesn't Work
this problem, but have learned.
to control It. How can I learn to
Just sit down and enjoy normal
examination of your upper Intes­
meals?
tinal tract to see If your problem
DEAR READER — It sounds as has a physical cause. The tests
though you are having stress- may include an esophagoecopy,
induced spasm of the esophagus. during which a specialist views
H o w e v e r, there are o th er the esophageal lining through a
possibilities, too: esophagitis and lighted tube. If your esophagus
stricture (narrowing) of the looks normal, the doctor may
prescribe medicines to relax
esophagus, for example.
your esophagus and allow you to
You should have a thorough swallow during times of stress.

DEAR DR. GOTT Since
there la apparently no prescrip­
tion medicine to remove arterial
plaque, what do you think of oral
chelation?
DEAR READER — Chelation Is
the bonding or one metal to
another to remove a toxic com­
pound from the body. It Is useful
In treating poisoning from heavy
metals, such as lead. Chelation
to r e t a r d o r r e v e r s e
a r te r io s c le r o t ic p laq u e Is
quackery. No valid scientific
study has ever shown chelation
therapy to be of benefit In
treating arteriosclerosis.
To give you more Information
about arterial plaque, Its effects
and management. .I’m sending
you a free copy of my new
Health Report. UNDERSTAND­
ING CHOLESTEROL. Others
who would like a copy should
send 91 and their name and
address to P.O. Box. 91428.,
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to mention the title.
DEAR DR. GOTT - Are hair
dyes dangerous? Are the chemi­
cals absorbed through the scalp
and Into the blood?
DEAR READER - For the
average person, hair dyes are not
dangerous. However, some peo­
ple experience allergic reactions
to the compounds. Although the
dyes arc not absorbed through
the skin, they can cause rashes
and hair loss in susceptible
Individuals.
DEAR DR. GOTT - In the past
five years I have developed a few
dozen fatty tumors, mostly on
m y torso. Could large and fre­
quent doses of antibiotics have
contributed to this problem?
DEAR READER - Antibiotics
do not contribute to the forma­
tion o f benign fatty tumors
(lipomas). No one knows why
these growths appear; the ten­
dency to develop lipomas may
be Inherited.
D E A R DR. G O T T - M y
husband and I are Involved In
many organizations and attend a
lot o f dinners and conferences
away from home. The problem Is
that, at mealtime. I gag, can't cat
and end up excusing myself
from the room. It's very embar­
rassing and frustrating. I love
people and can't understand
why I have this reaction. My
mother and brother also have

ACROSS
1
6
12
13
14

Understand?
Ovtrshadows
Patting
A potst
Perplexing mat­
ter
15 Belong
16 Irka
17 Upon
18 Never (poet)
19 Own (Scot)
20 Croat in a
church
2 4 Loam
28 Powerful
27 Rocky crag
30 Join
32 Chemical
particle
33 Basketball
league (abbr.)
3 4 Pointed shapes
35 Golfing aid
36 Energy
38 Abstract being
40 M ake
watertight
41 Time tone
(abbr.)
4 2 Osiris' wife
46 Adam's
grandson
48 Piano piece
4 9 Actor Weaver
52 Short period
53 M ake bare
54 Seesaw
55 Appeared
58 Made mistake

7
8
9
10
11

Departed
Not at sea
Suffer remorse
Pine
Sault_____
Marie

□non
□ nnnn
nn n n n

□□□□cm

nnnnnnn
n n n n n n n
n n n n n n n

□□□

n n n □ □ □ ddkdd
□non □□□□□
ann □□□□□ non
so d
ododo
non
□g o o d noon
□O D D OOO O O G

12 Actor Bruce
17 Slickness
19 Japanese
aborigine
21 Think nothing
22
23
25
26

Answer to Previous Piuile

□ on □□□□□□
□□□□non □□□□□
□ n o o o o G nnnoo

Sioux Indian
Force unit
Cry of pain
Dame Myra

□nnoooo onoo

3 9 One or the
other
41 Asked
4 3 Series of rooms
4 4 Laid off
4 5 Fortuneteller
4 7 Nest of
pheasants

27 Pairs
28 Musical
instrument
29 Hindu deity
31 Quis
37 Fullness

48 Vase-shaped

Jug
49 Dentist's
degree (abbr.)
50 Wide shoe size
51 Compass point
52 Consumed food

DOWN
1 Nature spirit
2 Novelist Zola
3 Detroit baseball
team
4 Beliefs
5 _____ for two
6 Demon of
Arabian loro

(c&gt; 1 98 7 b y NEA. Inc

WIN AT BRIDGE
.'

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Hargreaves A Sailors
I S U G G E S T YO U
P E ^T R o y ALU
C O RRESF&amp; N PEN CE
/ACRE T H A N &lt;5IX
Y E A ^ S

BUGS BUNNY

SH O O U P

I

/W\KE C O P I E S
F|R«5T P

&lt;?LP

by Warnsr Brothers

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

■ ;

By James Jacoby

M l

Without the takeout double by
West, South would not have
cared for his chances In four
hearts. But with West showing
opening-bid values, the likeli­
hood of the king of spades being
onside greatly Increased. At the
same time, since the double by
West Indicated support for any
suit that East might bid. there
was less chance that West would
have a three-card heart holding.
(A-K-J. A-J-x or K-J-x In hearts
would autom atically set the
game contract.)
On the opening lead, declarer
won East's queen of clubs with
his ace and Immediately led the
10 of spades and let It ride. Next
he played to the spade Jack and
cashed the ace. discarding the

»

Mi '

•

ii

Jack or diamonds. He now hoped
to hold his losses to two hearts
and the diamond ace. so he
played a trump to his sevenspot. West won the Jack of
hearts, cashed the diamond ace
and led the spade king. East
trumped with the king of hearts,
leaving the ace of hearts to score
the setting trick.
Declarer had missed one slight
beat In his thinking. After pit­
ching his diamond Jack on the
spade ace. he needed to continue
with dummy's remaining losing
spade, on which he should have
chucked the king oLdlamonds.
There would then be no way for
the defenders to make their high
trumps separately when hearts
were finally played by declarer.

NORTH
♦ A QJ5
▼ 10 8 6 3
♦ 9752
♦ 3

Z-27-17

WEST
♦ K 96 2

EAST
♦ 87 4

▼AJ
♦aq

▼K 2

♦ 8643
♦ Q5 4 2

io

♦ 10 9 8 6

SOUTH
♦ 10 3
▼Q 9 7 5 4

♦KJ
♦ AK J7
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
West
North East
South
Pass
Pass
t▼
Dbl.
3▼
Pass
4*
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: 4 10

HOROSCOPE
W h at T h e D ay
Wifi B rin g ...
YOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUAR Y 28. 1987
Over the past years you ac­
quired knowledge of greater
value than you may realize. In
the year ahead you'll use It to
maximum advantage.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Being too assertive today could
defeat your own purposes. Your
chances for success will be
enhanced If you play things a
little laid back. 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.
Mall $1 to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428.
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) It's
foolish to cling to archaic Ideas
that you know are unproductive.
Busy your nimble mind with
creating new concepts.
TA UR US (April 20-May 20)
There is a possibility that pals

ANNIE
TUMBLEWEEDS

by T. K. Ryan

60TTA UOOfi ELA0PB O A V lt?

co/virBTB in ssrouHBKtoawrfr

I

upon whom you can usually
depend won’t be available today
when you need them. Devise
procedures so you can get along
without them.
GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
T ake measures to safeguard
y o u r ow n In te res ts to d a y,
because people with whom
you'll be associating may only
be concerned about covering
themselves.
CANCER (June 21-Ju!y 22)
Assignments that you know you
should be taking care of yourself
should not be delegated to others
today. If things go wrong, you'll
have only yourself to blame.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You’re
likely to make material gains
today, but you might not enjoy
what you accumulate. The deal
could go down In an unpleasant
fashion.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Don't raise Issues today that
have led to serious disagree­
ments between you and your
mate In the past. You don’t need
another heated debate.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Your
route to financial returns might
be littered with obstacles today,
but If you are really moneymotivated. you'll come out OK.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Even though your com m on
sense will tell you otherwise, you
m ay be u n r e a s o n a b l y
e x tra v a g a n t today. Perh aps
you’d better select a diversion
other than shopping.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Material matters should go
favorably for you today, but this
pleasant edge could be dulled by
aggravation with which you may
have to contend In other areas.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Friends might not do every­
thing to your liking today. How­
ever. you'll spoil your day If you
keep score and start adding up
their shortcomings.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Be extremely careful today that
you don’t feather your own nest
at the expense of a friend. You
won't value your victory after
your pal loses respect for you.

by Leonard Starr
- I t WA5 BECAUSE

O f M B YOU WERE

EXPOSE? TO SUCH
oa u g e r .

I'M GLAD I
w a s Pete
T'HELP YOU,
“ PAPPY!

SI

�Tower Report:

— ■ H

Some Answers, More Questions
a n a l y s is
WASHINGTON |UPI) - The Tower CommlMlon
report on the Iran-Contra scandal shows Presi­
dent Reagan’s foreign policy with Iran was run by
"Ideological cowboys” negotiating an arms-forhostages swap, lawmakers say, but it still leaves
many questions unanswered for investigators and
policymakers.
The 300-page report, delivered to Reagan
Thursday, cleared him of any efforts to mislead
the public or "cover up unlawful conduct" but
said he bore ultimate reponslblllty for what,
despite his denials, clearly became an effort to
trade arms for Americans held hostage In
Lebanon by pro-Iranian captors.
The inability of the three-man board to trace a
money trail left It with no conclusions atwut what
happened to profits skimmed from the secret U.S.
arms sales to Iran, but it faulted key administra­
tion officials for not trying harder to stop the
clandestine deals'.
Indeed, the future of two of those officials —
White House chief of staff Donald Regan and
acting CIA Director Robert Gates — remains in
limbo in the wake of the most comprehensive
report on the scandal to date.
Shakeups at the White House are considered all
but certain as critics raise questions about
cagan’s ability to lead the nation and deal with
Congress In the last two years of his presidency.
Reagan promised to respond to the Tower report
in a nationally televised speech next week.
On Capitol Hill, lawmakers who differed in
cactlons to the report agreed that Investigators
still face a huge amount of work ahead In probing
he Iran arms sales and the scheme to divert
roflts to Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
As a step In that direction, the select Senate
nd House committees probing the scandal voted
to seek the first grants of Immunity for three
Inor witnesses in the case In an effort to fill in
he gaps.
"There’s very little on the money trail and very
ittle information on the Contra diversion." said
Sen. Daniel fnouye, D-Hawall, chairman of the
senate panel. He pointed out the Tower report
vas incomplete because of a lack of cooperation
from key witnesses such as Vice Adm. John
Poindexter, Reagan’s former national security
adviser, and Lt. Col Oliver North, his fired aide.
\ "What emerges is (the commission's) Inability
to answer completely what happened to the
money." agreed Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind.,
Chairman of the Watergate-style panel In the
House. He said there already Is evidence one uf
the main figures In the scandal. North, may have
■broken the law in shredding documents regard­
ing the affair.
”!■The Tower board said answers about the
Iran-Contra connection will have to come from
other Investigators — the congressional panels
and the independent federal prosecutor expected
to conclude their probes later this year.
Hut the report said for the first time that laws
ay have been broken and concluded that
eagan. who has said he cannot remember,
probably authorized In advance the first transfer
of U.S. weapons to Iran, through the Israelis, in
‘ 1985.
The report said former national security adviser
Robert McFarlane may not have had Reagan's
explicit approval for the deal In August 1985 but.
"H e clearly had his full support." McFarlane's
sworn testimony disputed the chief of staffs
assertion that Reagan reluctantly approved the
first arms shipment after the fact.
"The president made mistakes. I think that’s
very plain." concluded former Sen. John Tower.
R-Texas. who led the presldentially appointed
panel. "A lot of his subordinates made mistakes."
Rep. Charles Schumer. D-N.Y.. said he found In
the report an operation with ail the makings of a
Hollywood movie script, adding: "It shows that
the laws were ignored by Ideological cowboys
who thought their views were more important
and took things into their own hands and messed
things up."

Rep. Dennis Eckart. D-Ohio. put It more simply,
saying. "It's a report about a president out of
touch and a presidency out of control."
The report faulted top administration officials
for falling to try to stop the foreign policy blunder
and said Regan, whose resignation is now all but
certain, "must bear primary responsibility for the
chaos that descended on the White House."
While Gates was mentioned only o n d in the
report. Senate Intelligence Committee members
signaled their desire to hold up his nomination to
become CIA director until the special congressio­
nal panels complete their Iran-Contra probes.
That would mean months of delay and threatens
the nomination itself, but lawmakers said they
are concerned about Gates’s role in the affair.
The report made little reference to Vice
President George Bush, whose bid for the 1988
Republican presidential nomination — today he
was to campaign in New Hampshire — has been
harmed by the scandal, according to early polls.
In an interview published today in The New
York Times. Bush agreed "mistakes” were made

"Th* lost thing w « wont
out of this is any
impoochmont action. Wa'va
got only ono prostdont."

-Dante Fascell, D-Fla.
In the operation and that he has suffered
politically. But he said he would not campaign
nationwide "trying to cover my own backside."
Bush disputed the Tower board’s conclusion
the Iran sales were an effort to buy freedom for
hostages. Insisting the administration had no
such intention and that lt would have been
"w rong" to do so.
Tower, an avowed Reagan loyalist who headed
his 1980 presidential campaign in Texas, said in
an Interview Thursday night that Reagan shares
such a feeling about the intent of his policy.
"I think one of things he (still) thinks Is that...
when the story became publicly known, that
killed the prospect of the plan or the program
working to secure the release of the rest of the
hostages — that this approach would ultimately
(have gained) the release of all the American
hostages," Tower said on ABC’s "Nightllne."
Former Secretary of State Edmund Muskle. the
ex-senator from Maine who was the sole Demo­
crat on the Tower Commission, disagreed with
his Republican colleague on a (Inal Impression of
where Reagan’s thinking stands now.
"He may tonight be thinking about things that
were never brought to his attention before,"
Muskie said on the ABC program. "1 got the sense
today ... that he was listening to what we had to
say as if he was hearing things he had never
heard before."
Still, at the news conference earlier Thursday
where they released their blue, bound report,
Tower and Muskle stood in unison on their
primary conclusion with the third commission
member. President Ford's former national securi­
ty adviser Brent Scowcroft.
" T h e p o lic y w a s th e w r o n g p o l i c y a n d It w a s

the president's policy." Muskie said, speaking for
the trio.
Congressional reaction to that key conclusion
was mixed. Rep. Dante Fascell, D-Fla., the House
Foreign Affairs Committee chairman who is also
on the special House panel probing the scandal,
was one of those asked about the possibility of
Impeachment.
" I hope not," Fascell responded. "T h e last
thing we want out of this is any Impeachment
action. W e've got only one president. He’s got two
more years to run the country and I want him to
be as strong and active as possible and I hope
there are no Impeachable offenses anywhere."
North and other White House aides may have
tried to cover up the Iran arms deal once it was
disclosed last November by preparing a false
chronology to conceal Reagan’s role, the com­
mission said, adding that key notes by Poindexter
could be missing.

Regan's Resignation Expected
ANALYSIS
By Helen Thomas
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Chief
of staff Donald Regan, blamed by
the T ow er C o m m is s io n for
"chaos fhat descended on the
White House" in the Iran-Contra
scandal, is expected to resign
shorlly.
Regan has arranged to talk to
President Reagan early next
week about his future tenure,
but there were Indications that
may come sooner.
Regan. 68. has resisted being
drummed out o f the W hite
House by the first lady and
Reagan's close associates and
political advisers, particularly
while
the administration is
under fire In its worst crisis.
There have been reports, un­
confirmed by Regan’s office, that
the president has already asked
him to quit. But sources said
Regan, sometimes referred to as
"Mr. Prime Minister." has come
to the realization that he must
leave.
From Capitol Hill to the White
House, no one has come to
Regan’s defense, indicating he
has not built up a personal
constituency — with the excep­
tion of Reagan — during his two
years in the White House after
four years as treasury secretary.
T h e T o w e r C o m m is s io n ,
whi c h c r it ic iz e d m ost o f
Reagan's aides for not protecting
him against himself, delivered a
blow to Regan, who attended
most of the national security
meetings where the ill-fated Iran
policy was formed. The board,
in revealing the results Thurs­

day of its th ree-m on th in ­
vestigation Into the U.S. arms
sales to Iran and scheme to
divert profits to Nicaraguan
Contra rebels, said Regan shares
r e s p o n s i b i l i t y for the
circumvention o f normal pro­
cedure by the National Security
Council staiT.
"He was personally active In
national security affairs and at­
tended almost all of the relevant
meetings regarding the Iran ini­
tiative," the panel said. "He, as
much as anyone, should have
Insisted that an orderly process
be observed. In addition, he
especially should have ensured
that plans were made for han­
dling any public disclosure of the
initiative.
"He must bear primary re­
sponsibility for the chaos that
descended upon the W h ite
House when such disclosure did
occur." it concluded.
Sources had predicted former
Sen. Paul Laxalt. R-N'ev.. would
replace Regan as chief of staff.
Laxalt. a close personal friend of
Reagan, had said he would
accept the Job if asked, but
hoped the call would not come.
Laxalt. 64. said he met with
Reagan Thursday and told him
he would not accept the Job
because he is seriously consid­
ering a run for the presidency in
1988.
"I met with the president
today to tell him that I did not
feel it would be appropriate to
accept a position in the White
House," Laxalt said.
"Although no Job. no Job offer
w as m a d e t o me . r e c e n t
speculation led me to think long
and hard about a possible move
to the White House."
Laxalt added. " I f I were to
accept the post and then leave

after a period ot time, the
potential for disruption would be
unfair to the president and the
administration. In addition, I
feared that if I did accept the
post my credibility would be
compromised In light of my
potential candidacy.
"That too would have been
unfair to this president."
Republican sources told The
Washington Post today that
former Transportation Secretary
Drew Lewis also rejected an offer
to become Reagan’s chief of staff
in a telephone conversation with
the president Wednesday.
The president was to meet
today with congressional leaders
and Regan was expected to
attend. CBS reported also that
Reagan would meet later in the
day with friends and advisers to
consider a successor to his chief
of staff.
Tom Dawson, a Regan aide,
said the c h ie f o f staff was
"reading the report with great
interest" but would have no
immediate comment.
Regan told the Tower Com­
mission the president was told of
the pitfalls of his Iran arms sale
policy "bu t by no means was it
really tied up for him of what the
downside risk would be here as
far as American public opinion
w as c o n c e r n e d .” N or was
Reagan told that "all hell would
break loose” if the deal became
public, the panel said.
The report said Regan ap­
peared to know nothing of the
private fund-raising operations
of Lt. Col. Oliver North, the fired
NSC deputy, on behalf of the
Nicaraguan rebels. Regan has
said that he was not aware that
profits from the Iran arms sales
were being diverted to the Con­
tra rebels.

W.

S C a

VVvTlvV

Ugal Notfco

NOTICIOP
FICTITIOUS MAMK
Nolle* It hereby given that wo
i n engaged in baoMaso at PX&gt;.
Bax MM, CataoMerry, Somlnota
M#MByTH#SonlnoJcZnty
County, Florida 37707 under tho
Shariff Pursuantto FJ.
Ficflllou* Name of MEADE
Srt.TU.01
PRODUCTS, and that wo Intend
M0TICI0P
to register told name wtm th*
SHERIFF'S IALI
Clerk of th* Circuit Court.
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN, ttwrt by virtu* ot Hurt Somlnol* County, Florida In
cartainOrGar For AianOanmenl accordance with the Provision*
Pm artlnta. Issued out ot and of ths Fictitious Nome Statutes.
undar fha ml of ttw Caawty TeWit: Section 1*5.0* Florida
Statutes 1957.
Court at samlMla County,
Itl Marilyn Voorfwot
Florida, uponan ordar random!
/*/HoneyM. Voorhoes
In th# otoroMld Court on th#.
Publish February *, 13. 30, 37,
»••** day of February A.D. 1007.
In that curtain caao a* *tyl#d 1917.
atoava, which aforesaid Order DEL-49
woo delivered to me. eo Sheriff
of Somlnota County, Florida ond
NOTICE OF
I will on th* llfb day of
FICTITIOUS NAME
February A.D. It07 at 1I:M
Nolle* It hereby given that I
A.M., offer tor aale and toll to
am engaged In business at 1179
the hl«hoot bidder*. FOR CAIN
Buttonwood Circle. Altamonte
(NO CHICKS OR CRIOIT
Springs, Semlnola County,
CAROS), the following doI f V4M9CCMM
In X I : |n ~nw Matter ot

crlbod property, to wit:
Approximately tarty one UU
aai arted bicycles. A complot#
lifting may bo viewed at th#
Shorltfa Department’ * Civil
Division, Room too, Building
11B, Sanford Airport.

Sold sola to ba hsW at the
locptlon of th* Sheriff's Do
partmont’ s South Parking Lot,
Building 310. Sanford Airport,
tias lath Stroot, Sanford,
Florida.
That said sal* Is being made
pursuant to Chapter 70S of th#
Florid# Statute*.
JohnE. Path, Sheriff
Seminole County, Florid*
Published February IS. 37, with
the solo on February M, Ift7.
DEL-ID
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given that we
are engaged In business at 4274
U.S. Highway 17/93, Sanford.
Seminole County, Florida 31771
under tho Fictitious Nome of
The Body Shop, ond that wo
Intend to register said name
with th* Clerk of th* Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with th* Pro­
visions of th# Fictitious Nam*
Statutes. To-Wit: Section ass.o*
Florida Statutas 1*57.
/*/ Clayton E. Jenkins
/a/ Michele P. Jenkins
Publish February S, 13, 30. 37,
1107.

DEL-57
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that w#
are engaged In business at Sri
West Lake Mary Blvd., Suit*
303, Lake M ary, Samlnola
County, Florida 3374S under th*
Fictitious Name of Arnold's
Stained Glass, and that w*
Intend to register said name
with th* Clark ot th# Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with th* Pro­
visions of ths Fictitious Nemo
Statutes, To-WIt: Section USOV
Florida Statutes 1*57.
/s/M. Jane Arnold
/*/ Deborah Mllltello
Publish February 30, 37 A
March*. 13.1N7.
DEL-143
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’ S SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that by virtue ot that certain
Wrll ot Execution Issued out ot
ond undar tho toal ot tho Circuit
Court o f Stmlnol* County,
Florida, upon a final Judeemenf
rendered in th* aforesaid court
on th* *th day of Septamber,
A.D. tf*3. In that certain casa
entitled, Diversified Collection
Services. Plaintiff, —vs— Willie
Grace a/k/a Willie L. Grace
a/k/a Willie L. Grace Jr. etc..
Defendant, which aforesaid Writ
of Execution was delivered to
mo as Sheriff ot Seminole
County, Florida, and I have
levied upon th* following d*
scribed property owned by
Willi* Grace and Sherry Grace,
said property being located In
Seminole County, Florida, more
p a rtic u la rly describ ed as
follows:
L O T 417 F O X H U N T S E C . 3
W E K IV A H U N T C L U B P B I I
P G S I I to 93.
o n d t h * u n d e r s ig n e d a s S h a ri It
o t 5 * m l n o l * C o u n ty , F lo r id a ,
w il t a t 1 1 :00 A .M . o n th e 14th
d a y o f M a r c h , A . D . 19*7, o ffe r
lo r s a l* a n d s e ll t o fh * h ig h e s t
b id d e r , t o r ca s h . s u b |* c t to a n y
a n d a ll e x is tin g lo in s , a t th e
F r o n t (W e s t) D o o r a t I h * ste p s
o f t h * S e m in o le C o u n ty C o u rt
h o u se In S a n lo rd , F lo r id a , th #
a b o v e d e s c rib e d r e a l p r o p e r ty .

That said sal* Is being mad*
lo satisfy Ih# terms ot said Writ
ot Execution.
J o h n E . P o lk , S h # r llt
S e m in o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
T o b e a d v e r tis e d F e b r u a r y 30.
37, M a r c h 4 a n d 13 w ith I h e s a l*
to b e h e ld o n M a r c h TO, 1907
D E L -1 6 0

IN THE CIRCUIT
COURT OF THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA, IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY
CASE NO. I4-3J13-CA-09-L
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CITY FEDERAL SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION,
P L A IN T IF F ,
■VS-

D E N IS E A V I L A W IL S O N a n d .
DEFENDANTS

NOTICE OF SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
p u rs u a n t t o an O r d e r o r F in a l
J u d g m e n t o t F o re c lo s u re d a te d
F E B R U A R Y 17. 1907, e n te re d In
C iv il C a se N o . 14 3333 C A 09 L o f
t h * C ir c u it C o u rt o t I h * E lg h
te e n lh J u d ic ia l C ir c u it In a n d lo r
S a m ln o l* C o u n ty , F lo r id a ,
w h e r e in C IT Y 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 T IO N , p la i n t i f f (a ), a n d
D E N IS E A V I L A W IL S O N a n d . ,
a re d e le n d a n t( s ) , I w ill s e ll lo
th e h ig h e s t a n d b a s t b id d e r lo r
c a s h , a t t h # W e st fr o n t d o o r o f
t h * S e m in o le C o u r lh o u s * In
S a n lo rd , a t 11:00 o ’c lo c k to 3:00
o ’c lo c k , o n Ih * 19th d a y o f
M A R C H , 19S7, t h * f o llo w in g
d e s c rib e d p r o p e r t y as s a t fo r th
In s a id F in a l J u d g m e n t, to w it :
L O T 47, H O W E L L E S T A T E S
S U B D IV IS IO N R E P L A T . A C
C O R D IN G TO T H E P L A T
T H E R E O F A S R E C O R D E D IN
P L A T B O O K I I , P A G E S 47 A N D
41. P U B L I C R E C O R D S O F
S E M IN O L E
COU N T Y ,
F L O R ID A .
D A T E D a t S a n lo rd , F lo r id a ,
th is I71h d a y Of F E B R U A R Y .
I9S7.
(C IR C U IT C O U R T S E A L )
D a v id N B e r r ie n
CLER KO FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a
B Y : P h y llis F o rs y th e
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h : F e b r u a r y 30,27, 1987
D E L 169

Florida under th* Fictitious
Norn* ot B IB Enterprises, and
that I Intend to register sold
nemo with th* Clark of th*
Circuit Court, Somlnota County,
Florida In accordance with the
Provisions of the Fictitious
Name Statutes, To-WIt: Section
MS 0* Florida Statute* 1957.
/s/ Marl# K. Barnes
Publish February 37 A March
4,13,30,1907.
DEL-311

NOTICIOF INTENTION
TOR KOI STIR
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that th*
undsrslgnod, desiring to do
business under the fictitious
namels) ot CAS. CAS BANK,
C IT IZ E N S A S O U TH E R N
B AN K , C IT IZ E N S A N D
SOUTHERN BANK. CITIZENS
A SOUTHERN. CITIZENS AND
SOUTHERN, CITIZENS AND
SOUTHERN C O R P O R A T E
BANKING GROUP, CITIZENS
AND S O U T H E R N C O R ­
PORATE BANKING GROUP
OF FLORIDA, CAS BANK OF
FLORIDA, CAS CORPORATE
BANKING GROUP and CAS
C O R P O R A T E B A N K IN G
GROUP OF F LO R ID A at:
Highway 434. Longwood. Florida
32750 Intends to register said
namals) with th* Clerk of the
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida, In compliance with
Section 145.09 Florid# Statutes.
The undersigned corporation
Is th* only person Interested In
the business.
THE CITIZENS AND
SOUTHERN NATIONAL
BANKOF FLORIDA
By: Ronald G. Engltrt
Associate Counsel
Publish February 4, 13, 30, 27,
I9S7
DELS*
IN THE CIRCUIT
COURTOFTHE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIALCIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA, IN
AND FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY
CASE NO. 44-4135-CA-49-L
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CTX MORTGAGE COMPANY
F/K/A PLAVCO MORTGAGE
COMPANY, INC.,
PLAINTIFF,
•vsSTEVEN A. MAHONEY AND,
V IC K IE J . M A H O N E Y ,
H IS W IF E ,
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 I V E N
p u rs u a n t to a n O r d a r o r F in a l
J u d g m e n t o l F o re c lo s u re d a te d
F E B R U A R Y 17. 1917, e n te r e d In
C iv il C ase N o . S6 4135 C A 09 L o t
Ih * C ir c u it C o u rt o t th e E lg h
le e n th J u d ic ia l C ir c u it In a n d lo r
S e m ln o la C o u n t y , F l o r i d a ,
w h a r a ln C T X M O R T G A G E
C O M P A N Y F /K /A P LA V C O
M O R T G A G E C O M P A N Y , IN C .
p la i n li lt ( s ) , a n d S T E V E N A
M A H O N E Y A N D , V IC K I E J
M A H O N E Y . H IS W I F E . , a re
d e le n d a n tts l, I w il l s e ll lo th e
h ig h e s t a n d b e s t b id d e r to r c a s h ,
al I h * W e s ! f r o n t d o o r o l I h *
S e m in o le C o u rth o u s e In S a n fo rd ,
a l 11:00 o 'c lo c k to 3 :0 0 o 'c lo c k ,
o n t h * 19th d a y o f M A R C H , 1967.
th e fo llo w in g d e s c rib e d p r o p e r t y
as s e t lo r t h In s a id F in a l
J u d g m e n t, to w it :
LO T 39, R E P L A T OF
G R O V E V IE W V IL L A G E F IR S T
A D D IT IO N , A C C O R D IN G T O
TH 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 B O O K 26.
P A G E S 4. 5, A N D 6. O F T H E
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 ,
F L O R ID A .
D A T E D a t S a n lo rd , F lo r id a .
Ih ls 17th d a y o t F E B R U A R Y ,
19S7.

(CIRCUIT COURT SEAL)
D a v id N . B e r r ie n
C LER K OF TH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
S e m in o le C o u n ty ,

Florida
B Y : P h y llis F o rs y th e
D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h : F e b r u a r y 30, 37, t987
D E L I6S

IN T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R T , IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C A S E N O . S 7-33I-C A -04 G
IN R E : T H E M A R R I A G E O F
E D D IE B W IS E .
H usband.
and
H A Z E L A W IS E ,

Wile.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TH E S T A T E O F F L O R ID A T O
E D D IE D W IS E
1364 B o s to n R o a d
N ew Y o rk , N e w Y o rk
YO U A R E
H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D th a t H A Z E L A
W IS E h a s t ile d a P e titio n In th e
C i r c u i t C o u r t o l S e m in o le
C o u n ty , F lo r id a , to r D is s o lu tio n
o f M a r r ia g e , a n d y o u a r e r e
q u rle d to s e rv e a c o p y o l y o u r
w r it t e n d e fe n s e s . It a n y . o n
K E N N E T H W M e IN T O S H , o l
S T E N S T R O M , M e IN T O S H ,
J U L IA N . C O L B E R T &amp;
W H IG H A M . P A ., A tt o r n e y lo r
P e t it io n e r , w h o s e a d d r e s s Is
P o s t O ffic e B o x 1330, S a n fo rd
F lo r id a 32772 1330. a n d t ile th e
o r ig in a l w it h th e C le r k o f th e
a b o ve s ty le d C o u r t o n o r b e lo r e
M a rc h I I . A D 1987, o th e r w is e a
d e fa u lt a n d u lt im a t e ju d g m e n t
w ill be e n te r e d a g a in s t y o u lo r
th e r e l ie f d e m a n d e d In th e
P e titio n
W IT N E S S m y h a n d a n d o t
t id a l se a l o t s a id C o u rt o n Ih ls
s lh d a y o f F e b r u a r y . A D 1987
(S E A L )
L A V ID N B E R R I E N . J R
C le rk o f th e C ir c u it C o u rt
S e m in o le C o u n ty . F lo r id a
B y : C e c e lia V . E k e rn
A s D e p u ty C le r k
P u b lis h F e b r u a r y 6. 13,
20, 37, 1987
D E L 70

F r tfr y ,

«y&gt;

iIWMjW
___ 1 u s e1C-’r
FICTrTKXJt N A M I
Notice I* hereby given that I
am engaged In business *1 97t
Sunshine Lorn. Sulks O. A lte­
rnant* SpritS*- Florida 19714,
Somlnota County, Florida, under
the fictitious noma of HI TECH
MARKETING, and that I Intend
to register told noma with the
Clerk ot tho Circuit Court,
Somlnota County, F lorIdo, in
accordance with the provision*
ol tho Fictitious Norn* Statutes,
to-wlt: Section MJ.09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
NORMAN T. MOODIE, INC.,
a Florida corporation
By: NormanT.Moodta
Its President
Publish February 4, 13. » . 17,
1917

DEL-40
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notlc* Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 1300
South French Avenue, Sanford.
Florida 33771, Semlnola County,
Florldo, under th* flctltlou*
name ot R V S. INC. d/b/a
STATE MARKET RESTAU­
R AN T (D A Y AND N IG H T
GRILL), and that i Intend to
register said name with the
Clerk ol th* Circuit Court.
Somlnota County, Florida. In
accordance with the provision*
of th* Flctltlou* Nam* Statutas.
to-wlt: Section 8*5 09 Florida
Statutas 1957.
R VS, INC.
By: RlcklV. Stuart
President
Publish February 4, 13, 30, 37,
1907.
OEL-41

S IM fM O il COUNTY.

FLORIDA
CASK NUMBER:
•4-4441-CA-IFF
IN RE: Th#Marriageof
CLCANOR CHARLOTTE
HENRY,
Petitioner/Wife.
And

DONALD L. HENRY,

t e e n ia iM n t
iinppitani/rrmowma.
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
TO: Donald L. Henry
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that on
action tor dissolution ot morrlogo hot boon IItad by Petlt l o no r . E L E A N O R
CHARLOTTE HENRY. You are
required to serve a copy of any
written detenus, If any, to
NANCY RAINEY PALMER,
ESQUIRE. 5150 South Highway
17-93, Casselberry. Florida
33707, Petitioner's counsel, on or
before April 15. 1907. You are
required to HI# th# original with
the Clerk ot Court ot Somlnol#
County, either baton service on
Petitioner's counsel, or Immedi­
ately thereafter; otherwise, o
default will be entered against
you tor th* relief demanded In
the Petition.
WITNESS my hand end th*
tool of this Court on th* 35th day
of February. 1997.
(SEAL)
DAVIDN. BERRIEN
CLERK OF COURT .
By: Ruth King
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 37,
March*, 13,30,1917
OEL-330

AGENDA
SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
MARCH 14.19*7
4:M P.M.
TOWHOMITMAY CONCERN
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT tho Samlnol# County Board ot
Adjustment will conduct 0 public hearing to consider the following
A VARIANCES
1. JOHN SAMPSON - BA47 3 I7V - Planned Unit Development
Zone — Rear satback varlanc* from 30 ft to 37 ft * In tor a screen
porch addition on Lot 73. Phas# On*. Weklva Cove. PB 33. Pg M 90.
Section 4 31 39, N ol Sand Lak* Road. 400 ft E of Weklva Cove Road,
Ssldtof Trafalgar Plac*. (DIST3)
7. ALFONSO ARRIBAS - BAI7 3 2IV - M-l Industrial Zona Sid# strut setback varlanc* trom 35 ft to 33 It for a building addition
of Lot I3A. Block B. Semlnola Industrial Park. 2nd Addition, PB 14,
Pg 79 and Lot 12 and 13, Block B, Somlnota Industrial Park, 1st
Addition, PB 14, Pg 30. along with Tax Parcel S3H of $*ctlon 19 21 30,
NW corner ol Hwy 17-93 and Candace Or. ( DIST 4)
B. MOBILE HOME APPLICATIONS/A-t AGRICULTURE ZONE
1. BARBARA A. A OENO SALANITRO - BAI7323TE - To place
a mobile home on E 100 tt ol W 400 ft ol N 170 ft of Lot 3, Eureka
Hammock. PB I. Pg 104, Section 34-30-30, 400 It Wot Sanford Avenue
on N side ol Miller Road. (DIST 5)
3. JULIO OALARZA - BAI7 3F73TE — To place a mobllt homa on
(Tax Parcel N ), Lot IS In Osceola Woods, Sactlon 103033.400 ft E of
Bee Lana and N side ot Osceola Road. ( Dl ST 51
1. FELIX A. SOSIA — BAS7-3-74TE — To placo a mobile home on
(Tax Parcel 1J). Lot 30 ol Osceola Woods. Sactlon 103033, 14 mile
past B u Lana on N sid* ot Osceola Road. ( Dl ST 3)
4. RHONDA FISHER - BAI7 3 21TE - To place a moblla horn# on
S 75 It ot E 150 tt ot Let 130 ol Eureka Hammock, PB 1, Pg 104,
Sactlon 24 30 30. ’■&gt; mil* N ot Myrtle Strut on W side ol Sanlord
Avenue. (DIST 5)
5. ALADINO PEREZ — BA47 3 25TE — To place a moblta home on
Lot 19ol Osceola Woods, Sactlon 10 3033.14 mile past B u Lana on N
sldeolOsceola Road (DIST 5)
4. WILLIAM NEELEY - BAS7 3 I9TE - To plac* a moblta homa
(Renewal) on Lot F-IS ol Lako Harney Estates, Section 11-30-33, N
side of Settlers Loop, t mite S ol Osceola Road. ( DIST 5)
7. MICHAEL P. SHOWERS - BAS7 3-7ITE - To place a moblta
home on Lot B-14 ol Lako Jtomoy Estates, Section 10-3013, iy mil* S
ol Osceola Road on E side ot Ba* Lane. (DIST SI
I. JEFFREY DOYLE - BAI7 3 IITE - To piece a moblta homo
on Lot 14, Osceola Acre*. Section 9-10-11, W ot Osceola Road, 1000 tt
S. ot Shawnu Trail on W side ol Arapaho Trail. (DIST 1 )
REGULAR AGENDA
,
A. R t Q U t t T FOR S IX M O N T H E X T E N S IO N
1. H 4 M H O L D IN G B AS 4 f 4 IS E - C o m m e r c ia l Z o n e —
R e q u e s t lo r a s ix m o n th e x t e r ilo n ol a S p e c ia l E x c e p tio n a p p r o v e d
o n A u g u s t I I . 19S7, f o r a m e c h a n ic a l g a r a g e a n d p a in t a n d b o d y s h o p
o n E sid e o l 17-93. S o t N u r s e r y R o a d . S e c tio n 33 30 30. (C o n i, t r o m
F e b ru a ry 14. 19S7). ( D IS T 2)
2. S T E W A R T A B E L — BAM 9 44SE — A I A g r ic u ltu r e Z o n e —
R e q u e ll lo r a s ix m o n th e x te n s io n o t a S p e c ia l E x c e p tio n a p p ro v e d
o n S e p te m b e r 15. I9S6. lo o p e r a te a r e t a il p la n t n u rs e ry In a n A t
Z o n e a t th e N s id e o l SR 474. U m i l * W o l D e a n R o a d , S e c tio n
31 21 31, T a x P a rc e l SA, SB, SC. (D IS T 1)
3 M IC H A E L C R IS A N T E , J R . - B AS 4 9 45SE - C l C o m m e r c ia l
Z o n e — R e q ue st lo r a s ix m o n lh e x te n s io n o f a S p e c ia l E x c e p tio n
a p p ro v e d o n O c to b e r 30, 1944, to o p e ra te a m e c h a n ic a l g a ra g e In a
C 7 C o m m e rc ia l Z o n e a p p r o x im a t e ly 300 y a r d * E o l C 427, N s id e o f
SR 434.500 t t W o l J a c k s o n S t r u t . S e c tio n 1121 30 (D IS T 4)
4. T O M N E L S O N BAM 9 U S E - C l C o m m e rc la l Z o n # —
R e q u e s t lo r a t l x m o n th e x te n s io n o l a S p e c ia l E x c e p tio n to o p e ra te
a m e c h a n ic a l g a ra g e in a C l C o m m e r c ia l Z o n e o n T a x P a r c e l 21, N
s ld e o lO 'B r ie n R o a d . 1,000 I t W o f 17 97. S e c tio n 19 71 30. ( D I S T 4)
B . C O N T IN U E D F R O M F E B R U A R Y I * . 19*7 M E E T IN G
I. A L L E N D A L E C U S T O M H O M E S , IN C . - B A S / 2 13V - P la n n e d
U n ll D e v e lo p m e n t Z o n e — R e a r s e tb a c k v a r ia n c e fr o m 30 t t to 30 I t
fo r a 't in g le f a m ily re s id e n c e o n L o t 7, R e g e n c y G r u n . P B 31, P g S9,
S e c tio n 12 30 39, E s id e o l G ils lo n C o u rt. W o l H e a th ro w B lv d ., 300 I t .
N o l R e g e n c y P la c e . ( D IS T 5)
7 C A R L E D W A R D S - B A 8 / 3 1 IT E - A I A g r ic u lt u r e Z o n e - T o
p la c e a m o b ile h o m e o n L o t 40. L a k e H a rn e y E s ta te s , S e c tio n
10 20 37, E s ld e o l B u L a n e , ’ a m ile S o lO s c e o la R oad. ( D I S T 5)
C V A R IA N C E S
I M IC H A E L T U R N E R - B AS 7 3 IS V - P la n n e d U n it D e v e lo p
m e n ! Zone — S id e s t r u t s e tb a c k Iro m 25 I t lo IS I I 9 In lo r w o o d I t n c e
o n L o t 90. D u r R u n U n it 2 3 B . P B 2S. P g 73 &amp; 74, S ectio n 14 31 X . N W
c o rn e r o t B u c k s k in W a y a n d S w a n s n e c k D r iv e , Is m ile W o t
T u s k a w llla R o a d. N o t E a g le B lv d . (D IS T I)
7 M IK E R A B O R N - B A S / 3 19V - R I A A R e s id e n tia l Z o n e F r o n t s e tb a ck v a r ia n c e I r o m 25 It to 11 t t lo r g a ra g e a d d itio n o n L o t
3, M e r e d ith M a n o r. E S e c tio n o l B r a n lle y H a rb o r, P B 33, P g 43,
S e c tio n 4 31 39, 700 II N o t SR 434, SE c o r n e r o l M e r e d ith M a n o r B lv d .
a n d F e a th e r P la c e (D IS T 3)
3. A L B A T . H A L L — B A S 7 3 30V - R 1 A R e s id e n tia l Z o n e - S id e
s e tb a c k v a ria n c e I r o m 10 I t lo 7 It t o r a u t il it y sh e d o n L o t 76.
H ig h la n d P in e s. U n it 3. P B IS. P g 33. S e c tio n 30 21 30. '■* m ile E o t
O x fo rd D riv e on S s ld e o l W a v e r ly D r iv e ( D IS T 4)
4 E D W A R D E . L IN D Q U I S T - B A S 7 3 72V - C 7 C o m m e r c ia l
Z o n e — R e q u e s t o f v a r ia n c e to re d u c e th e n u m b e r o f p a r k in g s p a c e s
fr o m IS lo 16 a n d e lim in a t e th e re q u ir e d 5 f t la n d s c a p e b u f f e r
a d |a c e n t to th e e n tra n c e d r iv e . L o t S I le ss S ISO tt. F o re s t L a k e
S u b d iv is io n . P B 4, P g 8. S e c tio n 17 21 79. S s id e o f SR 436. 300 It W o t
A c a d e m y D riv e ID I S T 31
0 M O B IL E H O M E A P P L IC A T I O N S / A I A G R IC U L T U R E Z O N E
1. R O B E R T A T I N A R O O T - B A 8 7 3 TOTE — To p la c e a m o b ile
h o m e on L o t 34 o l O s c e o la W o o d s . S e c tio n 7 30 33. 5.5 m ile s N E o l
SR 4 6 on E O sce o la R o a d ( O IS T 5)
E S P E C IA L E X C E P T IO N S /O T H E R
1. C H A R L E S S W E A T / S O U T H E R N S T A T E S U T I L I T I E S B A S 7 3 9SE . R I R e s id e n tia l Z o n e — R e q u e s t a S p e c ia l E x c e p tio n to
p e r m it th e in s ta lla tio n o t a w a t e r t r e a t m e n t f a c ilit y on L o t 7. B lo c k
57, T o w n s lte o l N o r th C h u lu o ta . P B 2. P g 54 56. S ectio n T t 31 32. S W
c o rn e r o t 7th S tre e t a n d A v e n u e C . N C h u lu o ta . E o t C R 419. ( D IS T I )
7 U T IL IT IE S IN C . O F F L O R I D A B AS73SSE R -IA A
R e s id e n tia l Z o n e — R e q u e s t a S p e c ia l E x c e p tio n lo c o n s tr u c t a w a t e r
tr e a tm e n t f a c ilit y o n T r a c t B . B e a r L a k e F o re s t S u b d iv is io n , P B 33.
P g 70 A 71. S e c tio n 19 71 79, S W c o rn e r o t P la y a W a y a n d L ln n e a l
B e a c h D riv e 1D IS T 3)
3 B R E N D A R. W I L L I A M S - B A 8 7 3 I2 S E - C l C o m m e r c ia l
Z o n e — R e q u e s t a S p e c ia l E x c e p tio n to p e r m it a n a lc o h o lic b e v e ra g e
e s ta b lis h m e n t (p a c k a g e s to r e ) in a C 2 D is t r ic t . L o t 3 a n d N 61.10 t t
01 L o t 4. P ln e v ie w , 1st A d d it io n . P B 10. P g 33. S e c tio n 22 30 30. W o l
U S H w y 17 93. 3 0 0 I t S o f C R 427 ( D IS T 7)
4 P E A R L T A N N E R - D A 3 7 3 U S E - C l C o m m e rc ia l Z one —
R e q u e s t a S p e c ia l E x c e p llo n to p e r m it a n a lc o h o lic b e v e ra g e
e s ta b lis h m e n t ( r e s t a u r a n t a n d lo u n g e ) In a C I Z one, L o ts 24. 25. 26,
77 a n d L o ts 10 a n d I t , (le s s p a r t s o ld to R R ) . B lo c k 4. D a m e r o n *
A d d . P B 3. P g 88. S e c tio n 35 19 30. W s id e o l S o u th w e st R o a d ju s t N
o f 18th S tre e t, e x te n d in g lo D ix ie W a y , (D IS T 5 )
5 P E G G Y N E S T O R - B A 8 7 3 J3SE - A 1 A g r ic u ltu r e Z o n e R e q u e s t a p p ro v a l o l S p e c ia l E x c e p tio n to p e r m it o tt s t r u t p a r k in g
to r a n e x is tin g c o m m e r c ia l u s e , T a x P a r c e l 7. S e c tio n 36 19 30, N s id e
o l SR 46. E o l A C L R R o v e rp a s s . (D IS T 5)
6 R O B E R T D E L L O R U S S O - B A 8 7 3 I0 S E - C 3 C o m m e r c ia l
Z o n e — R e q u e s t a S p e c ia l E x c e p llo n lo p e r m it g a s p u m p s a s a n
a c c e s s o ry use to a c o n v e n ie n c e s to re . L o t 4, E c c o P a rk . P B 28. P g 16.
S e c tio n 29 2 0 3 0 ju s t E o l N E c o r n e r o l C R 427 a n d G e n e ra l
H u tc h is o n P a r k w a y ( D IS T 2)
F A P P R O V A L O F M IN U T E S
1 F e b ru a ry 16. 1987 — R e g u la r M u t i n g .
T h is p u b lic h e a rin g w il l tie h e ld In R o o m W I2 0 o f Ih e S e m in o le
C o u n ty S e rv ic e s B u ild in g , 1101 E F i r s t S t. S a n lo rd , F lo r id a o n
M a r c h is . 1987. a l 6 00 P M o r a s soon t h e r e a lt e r as p o s s ib le .
W r itte n c o m m e n ts t ile d w it h th e L a n d M a n a g e m e n t D ir e c to r w i l t
b e c o n s id e re d P e rs o n s a p p e a rin g a t th e p u b lic h e a rin g w il l b e
h e a rd F u r th e r d e ta ils a v a ila b le b y c a llin g 321 1130, E x t 444
P e rso n s a re a d v is e d t h a t it th e y d e c id e lo a p p e a l a n y d e c is io n
m a d e a l th is h e a rin g , th e y w il l n e e d a re c o r d o l Ih e p ro c e e d in g s , a n d
lo r su ch p u rp o s e th e y m a y n e e d to in s u re th a t a v e r b a tim re c o r d o t
th e p ro c e e d in g s is m a d e , w h ic h re c o r d In c lu d e s th e te s tim o n y a rid
e v id e n c e u p o n w h ic h th e a p p e a l Is to b e b a s e d , p e r S e c tio n 286 0105.
F lo r id a S ta tu te s
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y B O A R D O F A D J U S T M E N T
B Y R O G E R P E R R A , C H A IR M A N
P u b lis h : F e b ru a ry 27. 198/
D E L -1 9 3

�1&lt;A lawNwl HaraM, lanted, FI.

lagal Node*

Friday. FA. 17. my

Ltflol Notice
C IT Y O F
L A K E M A R T . F L O R ID A
N O T IC E OF
P U B L IC H f A R IN O
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
by the City Commission ol tho
City ot Loko Mary, Florida. that
tald Commission will hold a
Public Hearing at 7 30 P M . on
March A 1M7. to
a) Consider a request tor a
Conditional Ute tor tha purpose
Ol constructing a retail shopping
center In on area toned C l
General Commercial, and do
scribed at toitowt:
The North One Hall ol tho
Wott On* Han ol the East On
* Halt of tha Northeast Quarter
Ot the Northeast quarter In
Section Seventeen. Township 20
South. Range 10 East, being live
acres, more or lets, known on
tho plat at part of No IS Ih*
South Farms. Crystal Lake
Groves. Lots ih# East 1*3 00 feet
ol the North 200 00 feel thereof.
AND the South Five 111 acre* of
that portion ol tho N.W. U of tho
N E to ot the N.E. to of Section
17, Township 20 South. Range 30
East. Seminole County. Florida,
lying east ot the Lake Mary and
Orlando Road TOGETHER
WITH. The North 40 feet ol the
West to ot tho East to of the
South &gt;* ot tho North 1* of the
Northeast to of Section 17,
Township 20 South. Rang* X
East. Seminole County, Florida:
containing t.ei acres, more or
lets
The Public Hearing will be
held al the City Hall. City of
Lake Mary. Florida, on tho Sit*
day ot March. 19(7. at 7:X P.M.,
or as toon tharoalter at possible
at which lime Interested parties
tor and against the request will
be heard. Said hearing may bo
continued from time to time
until final action It taken by the
City Commission of the City ot
Lake Mary. The City Com­
mission will discuss the request
at a Workshop on March 3,19(7,
at 7:X P.M. or at soon thereat
ter as possible.
This notice shall be posted In
three public places within the
C ity ot L a k e M a ry, and
published In tho Evening
Herald, o newspaper of general
c ir c u la tio n , p rio r to the
aforesaid hearing. In addition,
notice thall be posted In the area
to be considered at least fifteen
days prior to the date of the
Public Hearing.
A toped record at this meeting
Is made by the City for Its
convenience. This record may
not constitute an adequate re­
cord for the purposes of appeal
from a decision mod* by the
City with respect to the forego
ing matter. Any person wishing
to ensure that an acftquate
record ol tho proceedings Is
m a in ta in ed for app ollate
purpose* It advised to make the
necessary arrangements at his
or her own expense.
CITY OF
LAKE MARY. FLORIDA
Carol A. Edwards
City Clerk
Publish: February 17,37,19(7
DEL 4

REQ UESTFOR
PROPOSAL
P R O F E S S IO N A L
S E R V IC E S
C IT Y O F S A N F O R D
City ol Sanford. Florid* I*
MoRtfig protestIon*I service* In
Itw discipline of historic pro
•ervatlon/survey research and
documentation A portion Ol ftt*
downtown business district l&gt;
protontIy registered at a N r
(tonal Hlttorlc Olttrlct. Addi­
tional ttudy It dot!rod In ttio
ad|aconl aroot to the south and
wott to Identify building* of
Motorlea I tlgnlflcanco. propara
matter tlto III* tormi for thete
building*, and make luttlllod
recommendations for dotlgna
tlon of additional aroat lor
Hattonal RogHtor Hlttorlc DIs
trkt dotlgnatlon and/or Identify
specific ttruefurot for landmark
ttatui. Additional study aroat
will bo at followt: 3rd Slrool to
ijtti S tm t from Sanford Avonuo
to French Avonuo; tit Stroot to
3rd Stroot bounded by Oak
Avenue and French Avenue;
wtndthtold turvoy larger area
from Seminole Boulevard to 13th
Stroot botwaon M tllonvllla
Avonuo and Holly Avonuo to
Identity tpeclllc ttruefurot Ol
hlttorlc tlgnlflcanco.
City of Sanford hat received a
13000 Grant from Florida De
partmanl of Stafo. City of San
ford will provld* matching
fund* Additional Information It
available from Mr. W.A. Sim
morn. Director of Engineering
and Planning. City of Sanford.
P.O Boa 1771. Sanford. Florida
31773 1771; phone 303/322 3141.
S t a t e m e n t ! o f In te r et!/propo**lt thall bo prepared
In triplicate and thall Include
Information concerning compa­
rable prior work, roferoncet.
Indication that work will bo
completed within 110 dayt fol­
lowing contract award, and that
payment will bo by lump turn.
Rtsponses ore to be lubmltted
to the above porton/addrott to
bo received not later than 4.-00
P.M.. March II, 1*7.
Publish: February 17, IN7
DEL 110
NOTICE UNDER
FICTITIOUS NAME STATUTE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
Notice I* hereby given that the
underlined, purtuent to the
“ Fletlllout Nam# Statute*’ ,
Chapter (45.09, Florida Statutai,
will rogltter with Ih* Clark ol
the Circuit Court. In and for
Semino!* County, Florida, upon
receipt-of proof of the publica­
tion of this notice, the fictitious
name, to-wit: Casselberry Fam­
ily Practice under which we are
engaged In business at M l
Semoran Blvd., In the City of
Casselberry, Florida.
That the parlies Interested In
said business enterprise are as
follows:
5TEVENH. SELZNICK,
DO.. P.A.
By: Steven H. Selmlck, D O.
President
D a ted i t C a s s e lb e r r y ,
Seminole County. Florida Febrgary 17,1997.
Publish February 30, 37 A
March «, 13.19(7
DEL 103

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OFTHE EIGHTEENTH
JUOICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.:
(7-(400-CA-99-0
BARNETT MORTGAGE
COMPANY, a Florida
wnwim'nirna
Plaintiff,
v*.
RAY HOLTZCLAW, *t al..
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO: LLCCORPORATION,
a United States corporation
ADORESS: Unknown
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action lo foreclose a Mortgage
on the following described pro
perty In Seminole County.
Florida.
Lot 32, LAKE HARRIET
ESTATES, according Ic th* Plat
thereof as recorded In Plal Book
12. Pages IS and 14. Public
Records ol Seminole County,
Florida.
hat been tiled against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written defenses. It any.
to it on Grace Anne Giavin.
Esquire, Plaintiff's attorney,
whose mailing addreii It 1079
West Morse Blvd., Suit* B, Post
Office Box 1177, Winter Park,
FL 32790 1177, on or before th*
10th day ol March. 19(7 and tile
tne original with the Clerk ot
this Court either before service
on PtaintlH’s attorney or Imme
dlatety thereafter; otherwise a
default will be entered agaiml
you for the relief demanded In
th* Complaint or Petition.
WITNESS my hand and seal
ot this Court on the 3rd day ol
February, 19(7.
(SEAL)
□AVION BERRIEN
CLERKOFTHECOURT
By: Jane E. Jasewlc
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 4.13.
X . 27,19(7
DEL-73

FLORIDA DOCUMENTf4
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
LOCK-SAFE. INC.
hereby give* notice,el tale,
under aald act, to wll: On March
14, IN7 at 10:00 a m. al LockSafe. In*.. 2450 W. 31lh Street.
Sanford. FL 33771.
Leisor will conduct a public
tala with reserve to the highest
bidder (or cash ol the contents ol
the following space numbers:
113 — Rhonda Taylor, 3400
Southwell Road. Sanlord, FL
33771
304 — Tonla Arnolo. 3329
Sanford. Avenue, Sanlord. FL
33771
208 — Janice Bishop. 1006
Scoll Avenue. Sanlord. FL 32771
224 — A B C P o o ls , 301
Greenbrlar Blvd., Altamonte
Springs, FL 32714
303 — Patricia Tammerell.
2934 Truman Blvd., Sanford, FL
32771
304 — Patrick Dixon, 101 E.
Altam onte Dr., Altam onte
Springs. FL 32701
322 — Laura Dodson. 112 Clear
Lake Circle. Sanford, FL 32771
324 — Elsie Oravec. Rl. I T «3.
Harpersvllle, NY 13717
33* — Theresa Downey. 1311
Palm Way, Sanlord, FL 32771
143 - Wallace Forte. 7112,9th
Ave. N.W. Drive, Bradenton. FL
33129
427 — Michael Johnson, 2005 S
Adams, Sanford, FL 32771
General description ol pro­
perty: household goods, tools,
lurnlture. wood. etc.
Tenant hat the right to re
deem contents within prior to
sale. This sal* Is being made to
satisfy a landlord's lien.
The public It Invited to attend.
Publish: February 27 A March
4. 19(7
DEL 194

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CWebrtty Cipher cryptogram* are creeled from quotation* by famous
people, peel end present
Each teller In the cipher stand* lor
another. Today s due f equals Y.

“ MD MNF IJ EF
XMMUQZR
HYMNM
HJ

...

QX

YL OO Q ZM X X .
QX

AQZE

JZM
QH

TJZHNJCCQZR
HYJ8RYHX."

...

XSNM

—

BLF

IF

FJSN
—

E L CM

TLNZMRQM.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Parents of young children
should realize that few people ... find their children as
enchanting as they do." — Barbara Walters.

BLOOM C O U N T Y
/ai smut?teretem
mm poemor

fMMoiA. n m r - \
n u m ber

mseif„AStm
te m tn v w fis
FROM NOW.

L

m xA ncN t
—^
NX6U m NOtXU ' ^

revet a

rmowASKMS
0U W 5U FT?

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

Orlando • Winter Park
831 -9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 U h m ..............................7 2 C • |
HOURS 3 c b r m c b U v r U m i M C i I

fe ll A.M. &gt;8:30 P.M.
7 w d H o f l t t Ham MC a I
MOMMY ttra FRIDAY 10 cetnaorthre t o n MC a I
SATURDAY • •Mrm
Cntract Rates AveMiMe
3 Linn

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
Monday • 9:00 A.M. Saturday
NOTE In the event of th* publishing of sryjri in advertisements, th* San­
lord Herald shall publish th* advertisement, alter It has been corrected al
no cost to th* advertiser but such Insertions shall number no more man on*
Ol-

A R M E D * U N A R M E D Security
Guardi. UcatiM preferred.
Maximum Security-..332-3012
A S S E M B L Y W O R K a t h e m e,
plus many others. Earn good
wages In spare lima. For
Information 5044410091 ext.
1448.7 days-....... C A L L NORM
A S S IS T A N T P L A N T M A N A G ­
E R wanted for rapidly grow­
ing Boy* Sportswoar Shop.
Mutt be experience In all
phase* of garment construc­
tion and pricing. Salary
comansurata with experience.
Apply In parson only: San-Del
Manufacturing, 2240 Old Lake
Mary Rd., Sanford....J IIM M
A S S IS T A N T M A N A G E R S A
C A S H IE R S , lull lima. Apply
In parson at Ttnneco.
1(00 French Ave., Sanford
B A K E R Y H E L P . Packer
needed. Apply 1533 S. Laurel
Ave. or Cell 321-33(1__________
SHIPPINO/RECEIVINO
No experience necessary. Per­
manent position. Never a teal

12— Legal Services
SOCIAL SECURITY Disability
Free Advlce.No Charge Unlett
W * Win I W ard W hile A
Attcclafet........... XS-331-tm

17—Cemetery and
Crypts
3 CEMETERY LOTS- Oaklawn
Prk. Carden ot Devotion. IDO
each. 333-3731 leavo message

21—Personals
A LOVER’S KNOT
WEDDINGS BY DOT
Notary Public________ 333-3141
A L L ALONE7 Call Bringing
People Together. Sanlord’*
moit respected dating tervli*
tine# 1977. Men over X (41%
dlicount)........... 1 (00933 4477

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
ABORTION COUNSELINO
FREE Pregnancy T**t*. Con
t ld o n t la l. In d iv id u a l
assistance. Call for appl. Eve.
Hr* Available........... 331-7491.
CRISIS PREONANCYCTR.
Free Pregnancy Tasl, conlldentlal. Call tor appt........ 331-7491
WHO KILLED MIOUEL
OSTOSf See "A Shot In th*
Dark’ ’, DeBary Fire Hall,
........... March 4, 7. fc (...........

23—Lost &amp; Found
FOUND
RC Sailboat
Identity....................... 323 9230
FOUNDI Puppy, Hidden Lake
area. Muit Identity.
Call.......................... 333-4121

25—Special Notices

27—Nursery A
Child Care
CHILD C ARI. My ctoan. loving
homa, 3 blks. from, bul net
associated with. Pool* Woods
Daycare. Playmate wanted 3
to 5 day* a week tor 3 yr. old,
but will toko Infant..... 333-3307
FOR Q U A L I T Y C A R E 4
NURTURING of your child’s
development call Elian at
1301) 333 (434________________
I WILL DO CHILD CARE In my
horn*. Reference* provided.
Call tor detail*........... 333-4739
I WILL DO BABYSITTING In
my home. Country Club area.
Intent* to toddler*......321 2349

55—Business
Opportunities
INVESTOR NEEDED. (S7.000):
percentage of business + In­
terest. Silent partner, short
term. Great returns. 333-4747
NEW 111.99 ONE PRICE SHOE
STOREI Tremendous oppor­
tunity Irom Prestige Fashions
to open you own show store
with top quality name brand
shoes that others otter lor (19
lo 140. Over 111 brand. 210
styles. First quality guaran­
teed. No seconds. 131.900 In­
cludes opening Inventory. In­
store training, fixtures A
grand opening promotions.
Call Anytime

Prestige Fashions
1-800-247-9127
* OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS *
NEW HOMES s ta rlin g at
119,310. See our quality built,
energy slllclent homes. Build­
ers dealership available. Un­
limited Income potential.
Call Kirk at Wausau Horn** Inc.

...... ^...JjliaTajjjO...........

BECOME A NOTARY
For Details: 1 (00 432 4254
Florida Notary Association
HEADACHE A MUSCLE PAIN
R E LIE F through massage
therapy, by appl........ 341 (549

Imgat Noth*
INTHE CIRCUIT
COURTOF THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL NO. (7-0442-CA-I3-L
W D RANDALL.elux.
el al,
Plaintiffs.
vs
D D DANIEL, etal. etc .
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO; D.D. DANIEL
his unknown spouse. If any,
hls hejrs al laws, devisees,
legatees, grantees and
asslgnedds and all other
unknown parties who may
claim by, Ihrough. under
or against D.D. DANIEL
C.S. OANIEL, Exec,
ol the estate ol D.D.
DANIEL, Dec. and C.S.
DANIEL, individually, hls
unknown spouse, it any,
hls heirs at laws, devisees,
legatees, grantees and
asslgnedds and all other
unknown parties who may
claim by. through, under
or against C.S. OANIEL
INEZ LUCILLE OLSON,
her unknown spouse. It any,
her heirs at law. devisees,
legatees, grantees and
asslgnedds and all other
unknown parties who may
claim by. through, under
or against INEZ LUCILLE
OLSON
The nature of this action is a
proceeding to quiet title In the
Circuit Court ol Seminole
County, Florida. Th* description
ot the real property involved In
the above styled case Is as
follows:
SW to ot SW to (Less the East
50 teet lor existing roadway 1.
Station 27, Township 21 South.
Range 11 East, Sem inole
County. Florida.
You and each of you are
required to file your written
defenses with the Clerk ot th*
Court and to serve a copy not
later than th* to day of March,
19*7 on JOHN MOTSINGER,
JR . 141 N. Magnolia Ave;
Orlando. FL. 32X1, attorney lor
the Plaintiff* or a default may
be entered against you tor your
failure to do so.
Dated al Orlando. Florida this
the 11day of February, 19(7.
DAVID N. BERRIEN
CIRCUIT COURT CLERK
BY: Jane E. Jasewlc
Deputy Court Clerk
Publish: February 13,
20. 27. March 4. 19(7
DEL 119

63—Mortgages
Bought &amp; Sold
F O R E C L O S U R E ? P r o te c t y o u r
c r e d it I W e w il l a * t u m * y o u r
m o r t o a g y p r o p e r t y . 323 7214

MTB B U Y I l f a n * S e e
MORTGAGES Nation wtdr
Call: Ray Legg Lie. Mtg
Broker, 940 Douglas Ave.,
Altamonte................. 774-7712

71—Help Wanted

66

Employment
323-5176
TOOW.lSthSf.

ADD TO YOUR INCOME
Sell Avon Nowl
322 0419 . . .....or......... 323 4M(

Legal Notice
INTHECIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 17-119-CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
OLIVE L. HUNT,
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The administration of the
estate of OLIVE L. HUNT,
d e c e a s e d , F ile N u m b er
87 119 CP. is pending In the
Circuit Court lor Seminole
County, F lo rid a , P ro b a te
Division, the address ot which I*
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanlord, Florida 32771. The
name* and addresses ol Ihe
personal representative and the
personal representative's at­
torney are set forth below.
All interested persons are
required to til* With this court.
WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (1) all claim*
agalnsl Ih* estate and 12) any
ob|ecllon by an Interested
person on whom this notice was
served that challenge* Ih* valid
Ity ol the will, the qualifications
ol th* personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ol the
court..
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication ol this Notice has
begun on February 27,19(7.
Personal Representative:
/*/ Newton L. Basslord. Sr.
320 AI den Avenue
Valdosta. Georgia 31403
Attorney for
Personal Representative:
/*/ G. Andrew Speer
200 E a s t C o m m e r c ia l S tr e e t

Suites
Sanford. Florida32771
Telephone: (301)322 42(5
Publish: February 37 A March
4. 19(7
DEL 219

b y B e rk e B reath ed

CANVASSERS earn 11 to *7 hr.
plus bonuses going door to
door making appointments.
Will train..........Call:240-l*41
C A S H IE R i Full llmt. Equal
Opportunity Employer. Apply
at: Little Food Town, 710 Lake
Mary Blvd................ 321 00M
CNAi Immediate full time posi­
tions. 7-3 or 3-tt shifts. Good
benefit* * atmosphere. Apply
Debary Manor. X N. Hwy.
17 92. DeBary 44*443*....EOE
CRT CLERK: Dale Input, typ­
ing A tiling. Sand resume' to:
American Pioneer Title In­
surance Co.. P.O. Box 1931,
Sanford, FL. 33773-1930

MILY WORK/DAILY PAY
NEEDMEN A WOMEN NOWI

LoutAnonM M / V* ) rtmet
rsi
bmt

f NO - FEE!
Report ready (or work at 4 AM407 W. 1st. St............. Sanlord

321*1590
k it it k'k k k k k k
DIETARY AIOE. Full time.
31-7. Food prep. 1 cleaning.
Lekevlew Nursing Cnt. t i t E.
2nd St., Sanlord 333-47(7
EXPERIENCED Rooftrs A
helpers. Own tools A transportallon. Call............... 331-3551
E X P E R IE N C E TRUCK A
HEAVY equipment mechanic.
Call:........................(34-1320

FREETUITION
TOREALESTATE
LICENSE SCHOOL
• A New Carter
• A New Beginning
Call Fran or Stu

323-3200

jtoues
n on»* utejWAWRRR
KEYESH INTHE SOUTH
HAIR STYLIST, Excellent pay,
must be 100% motivated,
Call.......................... 331-4114
HANDYMAN Rtpalrs
Nothing loo small.
and don't mind contusion, I
need you lo car* for my
parents from 2pm to 10pm.
Call 331-4437 trom 9am to 1pm
IMMEDIATE OPENING: One
ol Florida's oldast past control
companies Is looking (or an
Individual to be rout* techni­
cian. Apply In person with
resume' at Spencer Pest Control, 2142 Park Dr.. Sanford
LANDSCAPERS * Lawn Main
tenanc* personnel needed.
Exp. &amp; driver's license re­
quired. Pay equal to proven
experience............... 133-1133
LANDSCAPE Maintenance:
Experienced, over 31 yrs. old,
drivers license. No calls altar
5pm......................... 331 2934

MACNINE lnOF
Exp Individual capable of the
following: Light shoot mafaL
lathe, mill, hall arc. torch
w eld in g, oth er r r ia t a d
mechanical apparatus. All
manual operations, no CNC.
Florida atoctrontei. 321-3100

MANAOKR NEEDED. Generel
Nutrition Citttor. Benttits.
Call: MJ-BW-HX ask for
Charlie or Kittv h r Interview.
NANNY TYPE to care wr 2
children. Light housekeeping
Auto * references.....J22 *440
NSW CONSTRUCTION
CLEANINO
Calf:.........................WMIM

HOWHIRING

99—Apartments
Unfurnished/Rent

to

ALTAMONTE: Reduced tits
from 5450, 3 bdrm., tto bath
(ownhouse, pool, dub. 3390471
B A M B O O COVE APTS.
Move In before March llfh *
receive SIOO oil May's rent, t
bdrm. or alllciency available
(or Immedlate occupancy.
100 E . A irp o rt E l...............32244(1
• EFFIC. 1A3BDRM. APTS,
a FURN. * UNFURN.
a PAY WEEKLY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
E Isa Wftan You Can Live In

*

ci lie H i l l m u

*

M e d ic a l ,

M B B Personnel
“
PDOlt

323-4507

*

NURSES- CNA, Physical Thar
aplsts, * Live In’* urgently
needed Call: Care-At Home
774-1153
E.O.E.
ORDERLY- Completion of acuto
care nurse's aid* training
course or equivalent hospital
oxp. 7-3
3-11 shift. Must be
corltltod. Apply: W. Volusia
Memorial Hospital, 701 W.
Plymouth Avo., Oeland. Fla.

................
*

E F F IC IE N C IE S - I * 1
bedrooms. Call: Southern
Rentals altar 4pm......122 1449
GARAGE APARTMENT, Nice
neighborhood. Mature Adults
only. ReferencM. Call 123 79(4

GROVEVIEWVILUS
3300 Lake Mary Blvd.
DON'T RENT...Until you see
Sanford’s most spacious 1
bdrm., 2 bath apt*.....321 05*4

...

73—Employment
Wanted

PART TIME PERSON
clean
up. Work 2 hours a day, 4 4.
Tima flexible, must be bondebit. Call:
323 9590
PHONE SALES: We need 3
more smiling voices. All shifts
open.......321-4*47 10am 4pm
PHYSICIAN’ S OFFICE looking
for par: time medical assis­
ta n t, X -ra y axp arlan ca
helpful. Sanford area. Send
resume’ to:
Box 247, c/o
Sanford Herald, P.O. Box
1457, Sanford. FL. 32772 1457
PLANT WORKERS
Plant workar* for entry level
positions required for Sanford
manufacturing facility. Good
work record required. Call
323 3300.................. Personnel
PRE-SCHOOL teacher needed
Special person for a special
opportunity. If you are career
oriented, have a chauffers
license, over 25 yrs. old, have
classroom exp., able to com­
municate easily
function as
part ol a team, we would Ilk*
to hear from you. All reply*
confidential This Is a growth
position tor tha right person.
Send resume'to: Bex 249 c/o
Sanlord Herald, P.O. Box
1457, Sanford, FL. 32771-1457
PUBLIC RELATIONS REP. tor
Club Sunshine Line Inc. Boat
rental * memberships located
at Monroe Harbour
Marina
In Sanford. For appointment
c a ll
904 775 2022
N R S P O N B I I L K D R IV E R
needed. F lorida d riv e r’ s
license required...Call 322 5000
RESTAURANT HELP: Cooks,
dishwasher, waitresses. Day
night shift. Apply in person.
Cavalier Motor Inn Rtstaurant
1200 S. Orlando Av., Sanlord
RN NEEDED. Full time. Exp*
rlenc* as Charge Nurse and
geriatrics helpful. Apply DeBary Manor, 40 N. Hwy 37-97.
448 4424.........................EOE
PAINT SEALANT
TECHNICIAN
EARN UP TO IllJO HR. No
experience necessary. For lull
o r p a rt p osition s call
1(13 as* 7151
PART-TIME. Exp. pressman.
A.B. Dick 340. flexible hours.
Call
331 88)1

to

LUSHLANDSCAPING
Surrounds these single story,
energy efficient. I * 2br. apt*.
SANFORD COURT APTS.
110) S. SANFORD AVE
_______ 333-3X1 ext.Sto
MARINERS VILLAGE
Special 1bdrm.................. 1291
3 bdrm*.................... trom 5315
Call............................ 171(470
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
Ask about our move-ln special I
31(0 Rldgaweod Ave.....133-4428

BOOKKEEPING- My home.
Winter Springs-Longwood
area. Exp'd. Call:...... 49*4115
HOUSECLEANING 3 days a wk
Own car, distance no proto.
Reasonable. No child care.
Cleaning * Ironing. 1-298 (941

...........

to

91—Apartments/
House to Share

SANFORD: 1311 A Pin* Ave. 3
bdrm.. 1 bath, adults only, no
pels. SM wk or 5321 mo. 4 sec.
dep................... 429 00(1 days
327 1047or 327 2929nights
SHENANDOAH VILLAGE

F E M A LE R O O M M A TE to
share 2 bdrm.. 2 bath house.
123 4245........or........ 1214440
1 BDRM., 3 bath In very nice
neighborhood, kitchen *
laundry privileges. Prefer
female. 32I 04K...or...574 9419

★ ★ $199 ★ ★

93—Rooms for Rent

&amp;

LONGW OOD. Room with
private bath. Lakelront home.
Mature 145wk............ 747-2949
a REASONABLE RATES
a MAID SERVICE
a PRIVATE ENTRANCE
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Els* When You Can LIve 1n

,

1

&amp;

cl

h r U illtu ir

1

323-4507

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

SANFORD: Room for,rant. 140
week
*40 dep. Privileges
Call 323 4)27
or
747 874}
SANFORO: Furnished rooms
kitchenette ISi. $45 weekly
up. Walk to town, park and
lake. Call 445 40X..or. 121 4943
UNFURNISHED ROOM. House
privileges. *775. Mo Includes
utilities. Must have refer­
ences. 321 0151 after 4 P.M.

+

*

.........

4 ROOMS, Private, tto week or
1295 month 4- SIM dip.
ok. Call:..................J2t 0tjt

to

*

only. RalerwcM.it!
....... Jllstee

SANFORD- Hug* 3 Mrm. conT
Plata p riva cy, d o s t t0
downtown. Looking lor family
with 2 children. 1100 week l
S250 sac. Call:...... ....3tyt3m
1 B D R M . apartm ent, n o t
utilities Included, plus sec
321-4114... or— 123-4(2*

h#|P,u'- ^

HAPPY NEW YEAR. Wa need
you now. Now bonofit* In­
cluding group Insuronco and
vacation. Froo CEU'S. Dally
pay. Staff private duty.
MEDICAL PERSONNEL POOL
Call: 74*52*4

to

,

SECRETARY- Knowledge ot
building trade
office. Call:...............333-100
SECRETARY: Typing and ail
general office duties. Sanlord
office. Call 904 775 2022 tor
appointment
SERVICE STATION Manager *
assistant manager. Must have
local references. Apply at:
Highway Oil Co.
2425 French Avo...........Sanlord
SHIPPING/RECEIVINO LEAD
PERSON. Q ualified can­
didates should have forklift
capabilities and good basic
math skills. Musi be a detail
oriented Individual, direct
others, and have shipping and
receiving work exp. Company
benefits. Send resume'
Box
2271, Sanford 32772 2271
SHIPPING/RECEIVINO
S h ip p in g
R e c e iv in g
Supervisor required tor a local
metal manufacturing plant.
Warehouse
related duties,
experience needed tor this
position. Send resume' sala­
ry requirements to:
Box 150 Atton: Personnel, c/o
Sonford Herald, P.O. Bax
1457, Sanford. FL. 12772-1457
WELDERS NEEDED: Apply In
person at K&amp;D Trailer, 2901 E.
Celery Ave. Sanlord....321 945*
WORKERS NEEDEOI It you
need steady work paid dally,
Call Sam after 3pm 122 7554

NURSES, RIDES,
COMPANIONS

4^

IGTThl ntotolVUEkltl,
brtrm. furnished apt. rant.

SALES PERSONS
..ore made not bornl Have fun
while training Advancement
dart nowl Call:......240-5*73
SCREEN PRINTER, axpwlenced. Call for appointment to

Experienced Sawing Machine
Operators wanted on all
operations. Wo oftor paid holldays, paid vacation, haaltn
care plan, and modem air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rates. Witt train qualified
a p p l i c a n t s . S a n -D a l
Manufacturing. 2240 Old Laka
Mary Rd.. Sanford.....Mt-Mto
NURSE AIDE: All shifts, axparltncad or cortlflod only.
Apply Lakovlow Nursing
Contor, (1* E. 2nd St . Sanlord
NURSE AIOE: 3-11 shift, full
tlma. Friendly atmoshparo.
Bettor Living Canter
499-5003......... EOE/M/F/V/H

TMFPEBM____ 280-5100

♦7-Apartm#nti
Furnished/fait

71—H»lpW«nted^~

71-Help Wanted

71—HelpWanted

.... ....

*
*

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rent
ATTRACTIVE 1 bdrm., nicety
turn.. S100 wk Includes util.
Sec depS200
Call:321 4947
Furns Apts, tor Senior Citiiens
3)8 Palmetto Ave
J..Cowan. No Phone Calls

....

.........

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

Ask about move In special I
Call............................. 323 2920
TIRED OF BORING, Cramped
Apts? See our Irg. I &amp; 2 bdrm.
apt*. In charming 4-plex.
Format dining. * living rm.,
sun rm.. 9 tf. callings, C/H/A,
fully equipped eat In kitchen &amp;
more...,--448 5471....$3415400
lbdrm., tbath..............1331 mo
2bdrm.. Itobath.......... 53( 0 mo
* Central Heal*Air
# Pool * Laundry
FRANKLIN ARM!
1120 Florida Ave.
___________ 323-4410___________
5249 MOVE IN SPECIAL
ADULTS, POOL, LAKE
LAKE JENNIE APTS....113-0742

Train To Be A
luvel A^ent • loot Uuide
Airline Reseivjliormt
Start locally, lull llmelpart
lima. Train on live airline com­
puter*. Homs study snd resi­
dent training. Flnsrctal aid
avallabla. Job placamsnt
asslstanca. National haadquarters. LH.P..FL.

A .C .T . T ra v e l S c h o o l

1-800-432 3004
Accredited member N.H.9.C.

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EX PER T DO TH E JOB

To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993
Accounting &amp;
Tax Service
HUBERT PEARCE
Exp. Income Tax Servlco
323-0001 for eppt.

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B.E. LINK CONST.
Remodeling............X * 122 7029

Cleaning Service

Landscaping

Painting

APT. HOUSES, * OFFICES.
Raferences. Day or night.
Call:......................... 499 9175
HOME CLEANING with quality
and car*. Window* too. Call
44*4100........ or........ 332 X70
H O U S E C L E A N IN G - Fast,
th orou gh , and r e lia b le .

BOGUESt Expl Professional!
Lawn &amp; Garden Main! &amp; chain
saw work, mulch, Spring
clean upl Free Esll 333 (387
KING * EBBS Landscaping *
Lawn care. Clean up SX &amp; up
Hauling, cutting, trimming.

ALAN'S PAINTING * Paper
Hanging. Interior &amp; exterior.
No |ob too small Lie. 321 3022

SEMINOLE LANDSCAPING

FlnancIn^^^LI^CRCOOMT^

H andy M an

Appliance Repair

ELECTRICAL OR PLUMBING
problems? Call Ray. vary
reasonable................121 9251

ONE CALL GETS BEST REPAIRS OF ALU Any kitchen
* laundry appl. 90 day guarante* on repairs.........7(3 0391

Blinds &amp; Drapes
ORAPES/TOP TREATMENTS
DUST RUFFLES/PILLOW
SHAMS BY DIANE.... 1231144

Bookkeeping
BOOKKEEPING * Secrelerlal
Services at reasonable rates.
Days, 131-3401. Eves.,44*1719

Carpentry
A L L TYPES Ot Carpantry.
Remodeling * home repairs.
Call Richard Gross 321-1972.
RICHARDS CARPENTRY
to yrs In Central F lorlda
CalL—
jjjjjjjj.j^ j^ in ito /

Carpet/Floor
Coverings
FLOORING- Alt types Wood
Install, sand, relinlsh, stain,
wax. Tile, terracotta, torratlo. Ilnollum, etc. Clean, polish,
seal, wax. Lie/Bond. 747 (304

C a ll: ......................................345 4443

Home Improvement
CARPENTRY BY EDDAVIS
REMOOELING/RENOVATION
Large And Small Jobs Welcome
Sanford Ra*. ) ( yrs. 121-0442
COMPLETE HOME REPAIR
Door...... window......cabinets
Call Russell at 773 4504_________
P L U M B IN G . E l e c t r ic a l,
carpentry. Free estimates.

Landclearing
BACK HOE, Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing
Call:323 1804.....or..... 322 93)3
BUSH HOG. Box Blading. Ois
clng &amp; Tractor Roto Tilling
Call ......................... 322 2597
THORNE LANO CLEARING
Loader and truck work/septlc
tank sand. Freeest. 122 1433

322-8133
Lawn Service
BARRIER’S Landscaping!
Irrlg , Lawn Car*. Res &amp;
Comm,321 7S44. FREE E5TI
GEOROE S LAWN CARE
Reasonable prices
Call now to reserve service
F r e e n t ................................... 323-7582

"SUNNYS". Mow. edge, trim,
planting, mulching SPRING
Spec. Freeest. 322 7829

Masonry
Concrete Slabs, drives, patios &amp;
walks, 25 yr. exp. Lifelong
res.. Lie. * Ins. 349 9758 alt. 5

Moving &amp; Hauling
"JUNK TO THE DUMP"
Appliances, tree limbs, etc.

Paper Hanging
PAPER HANGING * PAINTING (Interior - Exterior)
Res * comm. 35 years exp.
Free Estimates. Call: Roy
Taylor a l. .................121-4023

Roofing
COMPLETE ROOFING or all
types of rooting repairs. Lie. *
insured.......
Call:321 4252 ,
RE-ROOF your home now In
time for spring rains. 20%
discount for a limited time
Stale Lie IC0CC 033710CC
Call.......................... 321-1555

Secretarial Service
Custom Typing- BookkeepingNotary Public. Call: D.J. Enterprises. (301) 332-7*91,

Sewer/SepticTank
HOWARD'S SEPTIC SERVICE
Repair Lines &amp; Clean Tanks
Free Estimates......... 322 0259

Tree Service
Nursing Care
Hlllhaven Heallhcare Center
tMMellonville Ave.
S a n lo r d ................ ................. 323 9544
OURRATESARE LOWER'
Laktvlew Nursing Center
919 E. Second St., Sanlord
333 4707

A L L T R E E S E R V IC E 1Flrewood Woodsplltter (or
hire Call Alter 4 P M 323 9084
ECHOLSTREESERVICE
Free Estimates! Low Prices!
Lie...ins...Slump Grinding.Tool
121-2229 day or nit*
"Let the Professional* do It**,
STUMPGRINOING
In s u r e d ..................F re e E s tim a te s

Call............................. 774 7508

�~v—

•s *♦ » &lt;

Apartments
■nlth&lt; /Rant
Unfurnished
SANDLBWOOO. 1 bdrm. 1
downstair*. UOO Mo.. t 200
dtp- Call...................3215819

103— Houses •
Unfurnished/Rent
* * * IN DELTONA * * *
• •HOMES POM H I N T * *
* » 574-1434 e a
LAKE MARY, 1 bid room,. )
bait). SIM Month. IMO depotIt.
Call........................... 321-5498
LK MARY. Hlddin Lake. 2 bd.,
2 bath, l car garage, amenl
Hit. &gt;450 mo. + tic ..... 32M2M
MOVE RIGHT IN- I bedroom
home* I Ctaanl New carpal.
Only &gt;450 mo..............321-Mil
SANFORD, 3 bdrm- IVY bath. 1
itory, lanced back yard. 5575
mo. plu* security.......321 6910
SANFORD, t bdrm., 2 '/» bath
home. Naar downtown. Two
story, llroplacit. 1550 mo. plus
sac...... J22-M10,30t Park Ayj.
SANFORD- 3 br„ I ba, large
yard with fruit tr m , carport.
SAWpar mo. + sac. B M W
SANFORD, 3 bedroom, I bath,
S3IJ M on th , 5100. D ip.
Call........................... I l l 5499
SANFORD- Rant or Buy. 3
bedroom, I bath. Phone:
&lt;30-3473................... evenings
SANFORD- 2br, dining rm, a/c,
appls. screened porch. 1313
mo+ 1st A last. Special price
for senior cltlsens.......321 0495
SANFORD 3 bedroom. 1 bath
Available on March 7.
Call:......................... 1300173
SUNLAND Estates lor qualified
tenant. 3/1, children ok, no
pets. S421. + sec. 373 1441

141-HpntM For Solo

141—Homts For Salt

ACCEPT OUR FIVE % listing
contract 4 see your home
advertised at no cost to You.
FIRST REALTY INC.... 33MBB2
A F F O R D A B L E W aterfront
Properly- Custom built, 3
bdrm -2bath. Cell:.... 3221135

BY OWNER, specious home.

C

CEDAR AVE: 2 bdrm- 2 bath,
carport, Inside utility, 5400
mo. -I- sac........... Call 134-7444
LAKE M ARY: 135 E. Lake
Mary Ave., Deluxe, brand new
2 bdrm- 3 bath duplex. All
appliances, wash/dry hook up,
vaulted callings, celling fans,
wooded lot. Really nice I U 50
mo. 3210699.....or..... 747 *910
LAKE MARY: 2 bdrm., I bath,
carpet, air, heat, appliances A
lencedyard...............131 *714
RIDGEWOOD ACRES- Deluxe
Duplexes. 2 bdrm. Families
welcome. Call Taml....3211211

117—Commercial
Rentals

. r o u p ,

HELPW AN TED t

Thli lovely 1 bdrm. home Is
crying out lor a nice family to
move In and enjoy life to Its
fullest. It Is a better than new
p o o l h o m e In e w e l l
e s t a b l i s h e d and q u ie t
neighborhood Call Sandy to
answer this plea. Sandy
Mandia, Broker/Salasman

SANFORD: 2 bdrm- 2 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer, sec. 1425 Mo.
Landarama Fla- Inc. 322 1734

141—Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY
U c . R e a l E s ta te B re k e r
3440 S a n fo rd A v e .

321-0759............. 321-2257
______ Alter hours 111-7441
C H A R M IN G O L D E R H O M E
C o m p le t e ly r e f u r b is h e d a n d
m o d e rn iz e d . F o r t u . s o o yo u
g e l p le n ty o l s p a c e In c lu d in g 3
b d r m . A c e n t r a l h /a . In to w n
a n d c o n v e n ie n t. R e a d y In a
le w d a y s ................. C A L L N O W !

CALL BART
R E A L ESTATE
R E A L T O R ______________I I H 1 1 I
D E L T O N A - C lo s e to O s te e n
s c h o o l A I 4. 3 b d r m - 2 b a th ,
s c re e n p o rc h . A s s u m a b le m lg
O w n e r / R e a lt o r ..............323 *072

S a n fo rd

Visit 1113 Chase Ave.
Tune your AM radio to 1050
end hear the detail* of this 3
br, Its ba. home. Price 144,900
SANFORD 2 bdrm., 2 bath CB
home, central heat A air.
Only.......................... 144.900
POOL HOME- 3 bdrm- 2 bath,
fireplace, screen patio A pool,
conlral heal A air, larga
corner lot.............
115.000

O n t u i yr

2 BDRM- 1 BATH FRAME.
Owner financing.......... 121.900
ZONED MR-2- Extra larga 3
bdrm- Its bath. Adult-care,
daycare or duplex use...145.000

JUNE PORZIO REALTY, INC
DELTONA- Excellent value,
assumable mortgage. Only
149.900. Call:.... CHARLOTTE
CROSLYN..................323 4072

LARGE 3 bdrm- 3 bath CB.
Good area, larga Fla. room.
................................. 152.500

322-8678

PAOLA- Lak. Markham Rd. 3
bdrm - 2 bath. Owner will help
with new financing......154.900

iu :\m

HIDDEN LAKE- Old section.
Large 3 bdrm- 2 bath double
garage........................149,900

m :\iT o it
HWY. 44 FRONTAOEI 3 bdrm.
home with lamlly room, Close
to I 41 Great starter home or
Investment Incomel
Only.......................... 134.900

BUILDING LOTS. ..From 14,000

141—Homes For Sale
OWNER DESPERATEI Re
located last week. Wenti sold.
Extre nice 1 bdrm- new
carpet 1 paint, central heat i
air. Lais than 13,000 down.
Sailor pays closing costs.
149,900. Don't miss oul I Call
now!.......BECKY COURSON.
RE/MAX 204 n. realty Inc.
629-4134........ Or........ 321-9419
PAYMENTS UNDER 1164 Why
rent? Features; large trees,
fenced lawn, shows great.
Call Today.......Call Anytime!
Alan B. Johnson, Ra/Max
Unlimited, 333-4101*r 164-1444
SAN LANTA. Sanford's newest
tingle lamlly development.
Construe, by McKee Devel
opment. 52 nicely treed loti.
(4) 2 &amp; 3 br models. FHA/VA
Financing starting In low 50's
Joanna Prince REMAX 144 n.
realty Inc. 331-7141.or.639-6334

1.4 ACRE IN GENEVA ...112.000
WE HAVE RENTAL HOUSING
CALLANYTIME
REALTOR................... 311-4991

POOL HOME! 1 bdrm- Us
hath, Fla room I Central H/A!
Privacy lence! Lrg. eal In
kitchen! Screen porch! In
ground pool 1...............147.500

l* r * ~ * + ^
» •: i « / \
&gt;7

323-5774

»U /0U N( ED
io « no w
IN HE Al ES1AIE

7M4 HWY. 17-92

LETS TRADE!
YOUR HOME
FOR ONE OF OURS
YOUR PLAN OR OURS
OUR LANDOR YOURS
CALL BOB SANDER NOW
TOSEE IF YOU QUALIFY

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
321-7823...... Em. 323-0809

REALTORS
Sanford's Salts Leader

L A R G E 2 s f o r y c o lo n ia l o n
w o o d e d I a c r e . F a m ily ro o m ,
g a m e r m . 2 f p l. , m a n y e x tra s .
1 1 3 7 .0 0 0 W . M a l l c i o w s k i
R e a lto r .................................317 7*13

WE LIST ANDSELL
MORE PROPERTY THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

L O G -A - F ra m e ,
c o m p le te o n 2
a c re s 2.500 s q I t . t , 585.000
T e rm s . O w n e r / B r k e r 323 2640
N E W - 3 /2 , c lo s e to s c h o o ls A
s h o p p in g . M a n y e x t r a s .
152,500. S e lle r s w il l h e lp w it h
f in a n c in g . Q u a l if ie d b u y e r
14,000 d o w n C a 11: .......... 628 1 562
O N L Y 134,9001 F o r th is 3 b d .. 1
b a . w / f lr e p la c e A la r g e tre e s .
C a ll T o d a y I .......... C a ll A n y t im e l
A la n B . J o h n s o n , R t / M a x
U n lim ite d . 333-4102 o r 260 I0 M
O P E N H O U S E , S U N D A Y I to 5
C u s to m 3 /2 . p r o l la n d s c a p e d
h a ll a c re In e x e c u tiv e a re a
308 K im b e r ly C t. L o c a tio n :
o n e m ile o f f W a y s id e l a l th e
I 4 A 46 I n t e r s e c t io n ) . See yo u
M a r c h 1st
R e fr e s h m e n ts
H o m e See k e r s R e a lly . . . 371 1835
O S T E E N A R E A - H a n d y m a n 's
S p e c ia l 16.000 d o w n a n d n o
q u a lify in g M o b ile h o m e o n 7
a c re s 132.000. C a ll: E G G A R ’ S
A R E Y N O L D S R E A L T Y IN C .
f o r d e t a ils .............. 683 4441 ........

C O M FO RTABLE H O M E I 4
b d r m - I t i b a th , fe n c e d y a r d ,
s p ill b r p la n , la m lly o r ie n te d
n e ig h b o rh o o d , p r ic e d r i g h t !
..................
140.000
E X C E P T IO N A L L Y N IC E I 3
b d r m - 3 b a th m o b ile h o m e ,
d o u b le ro o t a n d f lo o r In 19*4,
p a d d le fa n s, lo ts o l s to ra g e ,
d in in g ro o m , e a t In k itc h e n .
.................................................S40,250
P IN E A C R E S I 3 b d r m , 2 b a th
h o m e , p o o l, s to n e ( p i . ,
s c re e n e d p o rc h , s o m e m l r
r o re d w a lls , ’85' ro o l, I y e a r
h o m e w a r r a n ty 1................158.500

COMMERCIAL ZONING! 4
b d r m ., 2 b a t h h o u s e ,
h a rd w o o d M oors, t ile in la m ll y
ro o m , c e n tra l H /A , In s id e u t il
Ity w /w a s h e r ....................... 159,000
D E L T O N A L A K E S I 3 b d rm , I
b a th h o m e , s u n k e n liv in g
ro o m , la m lly ro o m &amp; d in in g
ro o m co m b o , e a l In k itc h e n ,
d o y o u r o w n d e c o r a t in g !
............................ .................... 160,000

O W N E R M u s t s e ll. 3 b d r m .. 2
c e r a m ic b a th s . Ig liv in g ro o m .
Ig lo t. 321 03 4 5... o r .... 322 70/6

D E S IR A B L E A R E A I 3 b d r m , 2
b a th h o m e , n e w c a r p e l, p a d
d ie Ia n s, w o rk shop, b r e a k fa s t
b a r, d in in g ro o m , s c re e n e d
p o rc h , c e n tra l H / A &amp; m o r e l
...................................................165,000

P la c e

Is W here Your Future Begins
From *53,500
F H A e V A Financing

S U B M IT A L L O F F E R S ! 3
b d r m . 2 b a th h o m e , c a th e d r a l
c e ilin g s , o u l d o o r b r e a k f a s t
c o u r ty a r d , s p ilt p la n . c e n t.
H / A ! .......................................179,000

CALOQSA
3 Bedroom - 2Bathroom - 2Ca»Oarage

Standard

R IV E R P R O P E R T Y I 3 b d r m , 2
b a th h o m e o v e r 1800 sq I I - 5
r a c re s , fir e p la c e , l a m l l y
ro o m o v e rlo o k in g r iv e r , e n jo y
lls h ln g . s k iin g , b o a tin g a n d
m o re
...................... 1197,500

Features

• Heel Pump
• Lot Included

• Mm-Blinds

• V o lu m e
C e ilin g s (per

E N D L E S S P O S S IB IL IT IE S ! 4
b d rm ., 2 b a lh h o m e o n 5 f
a c re s , p o o l. In c o m e p r o d u c in g
fe r n e r y b u sine ss, la r g e f a m ily
ro o m , c e n tra l H /A , a n d fh e
lis t g o e s o n l....................1342,000

plan)
• Builder pays
dosing costs
• Covered
Porch

174BtoLongwuudUncotn
Uereury.tfwnNorthon42T

217—Garage Salas

(TALKINGHOUSE)

1-4 INDUSTRIAL PARK: 1500 to
10,000 sq. It- . 1st month's renl
tree. Call................... 321 2445

121—Condominium
Rentals

B O A T B B P A IR •
All types of fiberglass repair
A custom painting JOyr exp.
Free alt. 131-54*4or 323-4118
&gt;81 &lt;OWAIDER SUCCESS Inch
‘15 traitor, I4S Mer. cruller.
Exc.cond.......... 133-1543 aft. 4

STem per

SPRING OAKSEXTRAI
This Is your answer to an
affordable lovely traditional
home. Formal living area for
entertaining plus a coiy laml
ly room and fireplace lor
relaxing. A lot to see so call
today. 142,500. Linda Keeling.
Realtor/Assoclate

ii\n

215—Boat* and
Accessaries

SANFORD: 3 bdrm- I both.
1317 Douglas, owner financing
or FHA. 135.900.........345-7113
SANFORD, 13000down. 3bdrm .
IW bath, coiy home In great
cond, screen porch, fenced
yard, w/d stay, dishwasher,
sprinkler system, cent. air.
Arch A Assoc. 463 3400..151,000
SANFORD Large family home,
quiet neighborhood, 4/2,
C/H/A. 2005 Hibiscus Ct.
Cell:........................ 323-oaso
HI Ai

767-0606

105—DuplexTriplex/ Rent

8m»rtl HbtbM, Iw N t i FI.

2/2, living room, dining room,
kitchen, porch A carport on
largesnedy lot. 322 1031,3 7.

C - \ , .Attwood

*454“ _

V A L U E IN T H E P R O P E R T Y I 2
b d r m ., I b a lh h o m e n e a r n e w
h o s p ita l, e x c e lle n t p o t e n t ia l
to r o lf Ice c o m p le x , a p p ro x , t
a c r e ! .................................. 1250,000

'Principle &amp; interest based on mortgage
of $59,150 Down payment $2500.
FHA BW% 30 year fixed. P rice subject to
change.

ConrwcTxxt Dmn

2559 Park Drive
(305)321-0140
WINTER SPRINGS 1 bd. 1 b a th
d o u b le g a ra g e , n e w ro o f, la rg e
fe n c e d lo t, s p r in k le r s , d e c k ,
Ia n s , s c re e n e d p o rc h , shed,
w a lk to s c h o o l. M o tiv a te d
171.000..................... 137 3941 e v e i

149—Commercial
Property / Sale
APPRAISALS ANOSALES
BOB M. BALL, JR. P.A..C.S.M.
REALTOR.............. :....m-4US
F lo r id a —V ir g in ia . . . M a r y la n d
C O M M E R C I A L / IN D U S T R IA L
• 1.71 a c re s , 17 93. o v e rlo o k s L k
M o n ro e , Z o n e d H lg h rls e SC 3
• 1.43 A c r e s : W M w y 46. Zoned
A I . .......................................... 138.500
• I N D U S T R I A L : Z o n e d R I 1 : 10
a c re , 16.5 a c re . 18 a c re , 38
a c r e ....................132,000 p e r a c re .
C o n ta c t: H O L L A N L A N D ,
A s s o c ia te I N T E L e V E S T
I3 0 J ) 361 4456

151—Investment
Property / Sale
O S T E E N - 2 re n ta ls . 4 b d rm . 2
b a lh &amp; 2 b d r m , I b a th o n I
a c re ................................... 169,500
W a lla c e C r e s t R e a lty , In c.
_____________ 311 0577_____________

153—AcreageLots/Sale
O S T E E N J u s t u n d e r one a c re In
F a r m lo n h u n tin g a re a R e
d u c e d lo 17.000 C a ll M A R T I
S E N S A K O V IC
323 3200
322 2287 e ve s

Kjsqes

FLORIDA INC.REALTORS

K E Y E S • ! I N T H E S O U TH

- ^ 4
:it/%
J

A ll tOU DEED
10 A NOW
IN REAL ESTATE

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford’s Sales Leadei

CALL ANY TIME
C-427, Santord

322-2420
321-2720

liras u&gt;
Lincoto Hofcurf. than M.
on C4J7 I f ml. to

Call toll free 1-800-323-3720
2165 P A R K A V E ............... S a n to rd
991 L k . M a r y B lv d
Lk. M a ry

Like everything else In Deltona —

D e lto n a P la z a

Itt

a t OW ING!

Mow 116,000 square feet of retail and office space
in the center of the "boom "
Jo in the newly expanded W inn-Dixie
O ff 1-4, Exit 53, 2 m iles north on Deltona Boulevard

Occupancy — Spring 1987
In Deltona, call
5 7 4 -9 7 2 0

or call collect ( 3 0 5 )

R &amp; H R e a lty C M a n a g e m e n t C o r p

9 4 8 -5 6 8 4

L ie . R .E . D r o k e i

T53—AcreageLots/Sale
CASSELBERRY: Lakslront. I
acre on Lake Triplett. 149,000
Call:331-9271 leave message
OCALA NATIONAL FOREST
High and dry wooded loll.
Mobile home, cabin, camping
O.K.-Hunting and fishing.
15,450 W/ (ISO dn., 163.71
monthly.....1904) 236 4579days
or.............(904) 622 3434eves

157-Mobile
Homes / Sale
FAMILY SPACES AVAILABLE
Carriage Cove Mobile Home
Park. Come see us Ii!
Gregory Mobil** Homes.:215200
FLEETWOOD: 19*4. 14 X 40, 2
bdrm- central air, taka over
payments. 1195.33 mo.......Call
322 1185........o r .........122 3433
REPO
SANFORD Carriage Cove- '81
S k y lin e , 24x48. A sk in g
S16.900/OBO. Call: Richard G.
Ketsler........... 122 1343 ex. 531

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
A L T E R N A T IV E T . V . 1 A P P L .
2954 H w y . 17-92
_____________ 322-5440_____________
B E D S , C H A IR S , f r e e ie r (18 cu .
f t . ) , A c h e s t . S e e a t 211
C h a p m a n A v e . o r c a ll 313 0307
L A R R Y 'S M A R T . 215 S a n to rd
A v e . N e w /U s e d t u r n . A a p p l
B u y / S e ll/ T r a d e 322 4131.
T W I N B E O S . D r e is e r , c h e s t, 3
n ig h t s ta n d s , c o n v e c tio n o v e n .
115 e a c h ......... 313 1838 a lt o r 3 p m
W E B U Y G o o d , c le a n , u se d
a p p lia n c e s W o r k in g o r n o t.
C a ll . . . ............ 322 6304 a lt e r 5 p m

163—Television/
Radio / Stereo
19 INCH COLOR TV
Good picture......... ............uo
C a l l ; ...................................... 322 0420

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
C U 5 T O M G A R O E N T IL L IN G
T h e T r o y B lit* w a y . F re e e s l,
Satifacllon guaranteed
G a rd e n s , f lo w e r b e d s, la w n s
322 1327a ll. 6 ... o r....w e e k e n d s

195—Machinery/Tools

1 /2 A C R E , R e s id e n tia l b u ild in g
lo t In L a k e M a r y . 117.000. C a ll
F r a n k o r L is a W ic k e rs . R e a l
to r /A s s o c

S an fo rd
.. L k . M a r y

A IR L I N E T IC K E T S T O H o u s to n
o n 1 /7 /1 7 , n o n s to p ( lig h t, r e ­
tu r n 1 /1 /8 7 . n o n s to p ( lig h t.
C o s t 1138 r o u n d t r i p . C a ll
356 3361 o r 323 5219 tv a s .
B ro w n R lv a r R o c k P a tio S tones
G r ta s a T ra p s 5 a n d D r y W e lls
R e a d y M ix C o n c re te
M ir a c le C o n c re te Co.
122-3751........................349 E lm A v e .
E V E R Y T H IN G M U S T GO
12 Y R . O L D P IN T O . 14 h a n d s
w /la ck. saddle, A new
w e a th e r b la n k e r . S400
C A D IL L A C - '76, ru n s g o o d , n e e d
b o d y w o r k ................................... 5400
H Y S T E R f o r k l if t w / s id * to s id e
c o n tro l, p ro p a n e f u e l......... 11000
M U S T A N G - '68, 302. 1 sp n e e d s
p a in t A I n te r io r w o r k . R u n *
g o o d .............................. H 200/O B O
I I F T . C A B o v e r b o a t A t r a ile r .
N e e d c le a n in g ..........................5300
S N A P P E R 22 IN . r id in g m o w e r,
n e e d * b a t t e r y A tu n e u p .
e le c tr ic s t a r ! ..............................S71
8 F T . S L A T E T O P P o o l T a b le ,
a ll b a lls A s t ic k * . . . . . .............. S200
C H E V Y *« T o n P ic k U p - ‘ 74.
n e e d * m o t o r ...............................5150
J O H N S O N B O A T M o to r , 10 H P .
n e e d s p o in ts A c o n d e n s o r .SJO
C a ll 434 1956 a s k t o r D e l* S r.
L A M P S , T V , s e w in g m a c h .,
m e fa i d e te c to r, A m li c . Ite m s
C h e e p I 321 4194. le a v e m e n a g e
PO O L: lif t . A B O V E G R O U N D
in good c o n d itio n . *500
C a ll................ 431 0271 a lt e r 3 P M
T E A K d in in g r m . ta b le A c h a ir s
S4J0. TRS80 c o lo r c o m p u te r
w /m a n y e x tra s . 5450 ..323 2386
T H O M A S O R G A N M o d e l 1300.
C le a n , f u lly e q u ip p e d , b e s t
o tte r M u s t S e ll...............322 1675
U T I L I T Y T R A IL E R - 8x6 h e a v y
d u ly , d o ll y , m a g s , r a m p .
C a ll: ..................................... 323 1582

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

Sa n to r d ..................................... 311-3113
B U IC K S K Y H A W K , ‘ 13
R e d u c e d , N o M o n e y D o w n .. 12993

M IX E D B R E E D DOO needs
h o m e In c o u n t r y A a n o th e r
d o g to p a ly w it h E x c e lle n t
h e a lth S p a y e d , m e d iu m s iz e d .
II m o s . o ld . s h o r t h a ir e d , g o o d
te m p e re d W ill g iv e to g o o d
p e o p le C a ll M r s G ild e r a t
904 275 4602. O r a n g e C ity
P R E C IO U S P E T , G r o o m in g ,
clipping, bathing
Flea
t r e a tm e n ts P ic k u p A de
livery, discounts avail
A p p o in tm e n ts ...........
322 3880

H O R S E B O A R D IN G .
Q u i e t c o u n t r y l e t t i n g in
G e n e v a C a ll
349 5932
Q U A R T E R H O R S E S AQHA
B a y M a re . P a la m in o M a r e
Both beautles/pleasure
h o rse 's A ls o . I B a y C o lt A ll
p r ic e d to s e l l ..................... 323 4616

FOR S A L E
3 T y p e s o l B a n ta m s
C a ll
...........................322 0074

Call toll free 1 800-323 3720

223—Miscellaneous

B a d C re d it?
N o C re d it?
W E F IN A N C E
W A L K I N ....................D R I V E O U T
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L E S
S a n lo rd A ve , A 12th SI. .321 4075

W E K I V A R I V E R ! 5 a c re s ,
p a r t ia lly c le a re d . 155.000. C a ll
R honda G o rtn e y. Real
to r /A s s o c ia te

322-2420
321-2720

U* Aluminum Cans..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Motels......... Glass
KOKOMO.................... 323-1184
JUNK A WRECKED CARSRunning or not, lop price*
paid. Free pick up. 321 2254
RECORDS WANTED. Cash
paid lor 45 RPM or LP's from
the 50 &gt;A 60'1 169 e3*9, Bob
WE BUY Good, claan, used
appliances. Working or not.
Call........... 322 4304 alter 5pm

S A T U R D A Y F E B 2 1 th, 1 0 A M
D o z e rs , ru b b e r t ir e d lo a d e rs ,
lo a d e r b a c k h o c s , e x c a v a to rs ,
b r u s h c h ip p e r c o m p r e s s o r ,
m u d p u m p s , w e ll d r i ll e r ,
c ra n e tru c k , b u c k e t tru c k ,
s in g le A ta n d e m a x le c h a s is
c a b s t r a c t o r u n it s A d u m p
(r u c k s , b u ss e s , la r m tr a c to r s ,
f o r k lif t s , r o lle r s , la g a lo n g A
d r o p d e c k t r a il e r s , c e m e n t
m ix e r s , c o n c re te s a w s
M A N Y M O R E IT E M S
A R R IV IN G D A IL Y
SALE C O N D U C TED BY
DAYTONA
A U T O A U C T IO N . IN C .
H W Y 92 D A Y T O N A B E A C H . F L
904 211 8311

203—Livestock and
Poultry

CALL ANYTIME

219—Wanted to Buy

231-Cars

L A K E F R O N T I 1/2 a c re M y r t le
L a k e 125.000, C a ll F ra n k o r
Lisa W ic k e rs , Real
t o r /A s s o c ia te s

• G EN EVAO SC EO LARD e
Z O N E D F O R M O B IL E S !
5 A c re C o u n tr y tra c ts .
W e ll tre e d o n p a v e d Rd.
20% D o w n 10 Y rs . a t IJ % !
F r o m 118.500!

FURNITURC. Weight set. mis
cellanaous Items. Set. only 8 to
4,1413 W, 3rd, Sanford
LOCH A R B O R , When
a
Grandma merries a Grandpa
there Is 2-t- of everything
including (urn- appliances,
crystal, linens, collectables A
much more. 310 Vlnewood Dr.
eft at-A Set. A Sun. 4-4________
MOVING SALE- Saturday A
Sunday, 9 am to 7. 813
Valencia Ct. N. Ml sc. Hams
RUMMAOE A BAKE SALEFrl A Sat. 1:10 am to 4:30 pm.
Fab. 27 A IS. 5)1 SR 434,
Wlntor Springs. To banatlt The
Grov* Counseling Center.
327 206........or.........3171745
SAT. ONLY. 819 W. 1st St. 3
vacuum claanars, 4 small
• lac1
, haatars. C om plete
Beauty shop equipment.______
YARD SALE, Moving. Thor*..
Frl- A Sat. 4 5. SOS’ s Wylly
Ave Santord

PUBLIC
EQUIPMENT AUCTION

201—Horses
R E S I D E N T I A L B U IL D IN G
L O T S I E a c h lo t 94 X 140
1 9 ,0 0 0 e a c h , C a l l N a n c y
B u lle r , R e a tto r/A s s o c

2565 P A R K A V E .
901 L k . M a r y B lv d

4

■

211—Antiques /
Collectibles
F R E N C H
A N T I Q U E
F U R N I T U R E . S id e b o a r d s ,
m ir r o r s , b u lle t, a n d h a n d
c a r v e d c u p b o a rd s
331 7040

213—Auctions
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
7PM R E A R O F BO BS U SE D
F U R N I T U R E .................... J4I4 17 92
W E BUY HO USEHO LDS
323 2110...............o r .................311 7067

BRIDGES AND SON
A u c tio n e v e ry T h u r s d a y 7 P M

WE BUY ESTATES!
H w y 46

323 2801

B M W 3701, '11
R e d u c e d . N o M o n e y D o w n ..56995

USEDCARS
S a n lo rd ....................................311 1111
B U IC K C E N T U R Y : '74. g o o d
c o n d . n e w p a in t g o o d in te r !
o r . 5800 o r b e s l o t t e r 323 3908
B U IC K E L E C T R A , '84
R e d u c e d , N o M o n e y D o w n ..18993

m 3r

231—Can

B v t t t / V in t

1979. 2
1175ft. Only

miles. Cell
— 321-448)
F O R D ES C O R T W O N . ’82. C443I
lifts Stmleele Ford, 3784
H a n r . i m . . . . . . . ........... J2214&lt;1
F O R D F A IR M O N T ,12. 4 d r.
C4427. S219S. Sem inal* Feed.

after 3:M pm

3714Hwy. 1792,..........222-1481

F O R D O R A N A D A .7 I. 4 d r .
ITIO O A B . 1793. Sent leeto F e rd .
37&lt;8 H w y . 17-91. .7..........J22-148)
F O R D O R A N A D A . l t d . 54200
T O Y O T A S U P R A , Loaded,
1943, 110,000, Both e x tra clean
an d lew m ileage. C e ll ..ill - 1079
F O R O L T D - '78, first 1500. Runs.
G o o d e x te r io r A In te r io r .
C e ll:...........................904-709-5291.
F O R O L T D - '1 0 . 4 d o o r ,
e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . S2.400.
C e ll:............... 322-1599 afte r 4:30
F O R O L T D IB M . , 7 1
RVBUCVflz
MWII y WwliiillfW

IB ID CARS
.321-2121

FORD MUSTANG- '49. Not orlg.
motor, 429 A C-4 auto., body A
Intr.- good cond. Naads brake.
transmission. S2200.222 1419
FORD MUSTANG,‘80 C441&gt;A
81995 Samlnela Ferd. 3718
Hwy. 17 91,................222 )481
FORO PINTO, 74. 7T06OC 5495.
Seminal* Ferd, 3784 Hwy.
17 92, Sanlord............322-1481
FORD T-BIRO- 1979. C4404.
11995. Seminole Ferd, 3714
Hwy. 17-92.................322-1481
HONDA ACCORD LX,'88
Reduced, No Money Dewn..52995

USED CARS
Santord..................
221-1123
HONDA ACCORD LX, *82S sp
Reduced, No Money Dewn..54995
AB­

USED CARS
..311-1113
MARK IV: 75, clean, low mile­
age, loaded, good cond. Musi
sell. Owner 51995........323 7214
MERCURYCOUOAR
74. first 5400.
Call:....................904 789 5291
MERCURY CAPRICE, '81
Reduced, No Money Down..17999

USEDCARS
C A D I L L A C , '13
R e d u c e d , N o M o n e y D o w n ..57991

USEDCARS
S a n to rd ................................... I l l 7123
C H E V Y M O N Z A : 'Bo’ 2 d r
h a tc h b a c k , P S , P O . a u to
I r a n i A a ir . S ale P r ic e 5695
lo r q u ic k sa le
C a ll 331 1670
O t E V Y M O N T E C A R L O .'84
R e d u c e d . No M o n t y D o w n ..16995

; ...... ............................ &lt;21-2111

TOYOTA X-CAB. I IBS, 4 X 4 .1

•peed, e lr , bucket seats.
«9J08.Cell................. 323-1079

23*—V ah ld tt
Wanted
WE PAT TOP IS tor wrack*)
cars/(rucks. We Sell guaran
teed used parts. AA AUTO
SALVAOB ef DeBary..64A4882

241—Recreational
Vehidas / Campers
HI-LO Travel Traitor; t l 21 tt.
87,700 Exc. cond. Be* Owen
Travel Trailers 331 N. Adelto
Ave., Qetond............. 738-5*58
KNOWN HANDTOP Pep-Up
camper:‘77, sleep* 7, 8'xlO'
add a room, 7 ownings, level
leeks, many more extra*.
Absolutely like new. Call
311 0161, see at 133 Bedford Ct.
MOTOR HOME: 28'. Class A.
sleeps 4, new rool A tires, elr,
generator, newly rebuilt 311
engine (-1000 ml.) UOOO/lrad*
TRUCK CAMPER: lO'V. sleep*
4, a ir . s e l f c o n ta in e d .
5700/ottor/trede....... 321-508&lt;
SEE THB HEW HI-LO TRAV­
EL TEAILER9 at Bob Owen
Travel Trailers 333 N. Adelto
Ave.. Deland.............738 5050

BUY HERE
PAY HERE
LOW
DOWN PflVMENl
GOOD CREDO BAD CREDO
NO ORE m i
NO

I N I t RE SI

USED CARS
Santord........................311-2123
MERCURY MARQUIS- 77. 4 dr.
7C243A. 51295. Seminole Ferd,
3786 Hwy. 17 92...........322 1481
PLY. BARRACUDA.'48. C4597 A
SI995 Seminole Ford, 3788
Hwy. 17-92.Sentord.....322-1481
PLYMOUTH HORIZAN- '81.
7CI08A. 57295. Seminole Ferd,
1784 Hwy. 17 92...........122 1481
PONTIAC FIERO,*84
Reduced, No Money Down..51995

USED C.1FO
1?19 S HWV 1/97
SANfORO 171717J

SA N FO RD
M O T O R CO.
AM C JEEP

USED CARS
Santord. ................ ..... 321-1113
PONTIAC O/P. 85
Raducad. Na Money Down..51995

I I PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
8 Cpt.

|u u &gt; e

Ik. litre lei

4 9 .1 3

7 7 AMC GREMLIN

USED CARS

*6 9 5

Santord........................ 121-1123
PONTIAC OP L I , '84 .
Reduced, No Manay Down..57995

S3 AMC CONCORD

JEZ S5 E3 3 2 I

*3495

USEDCARS

S a n to r d .....................................121-2123
P O N T IA C B O N N E V IL L E , '82
R e d u c e d , N o M o n e y D o w n ..53995

70 DODGE PICK UP

*1599

bln l e i

8 3 AMC ALLIANCE
4 0 ., H U M

USEDCARS

*2995

Im CMIre

S a n to r d .....................................3312111
P O N T IA C S U N B IR D . '15
R e d u c e d , No M o n e y D o w n ..53995

74 AMC MATADON 4 DN.
MAKE OFFER

flu 14 Mart Cut IMm UOOO

USEDCARS
Santord....................... 311-1111

3 4 1 8 S* OHaada D r.

P O N T I A C T R A N S A M - '7 8 .
6 T 8 2 9 B . 52495 S e m in o le F o rd .
3766 H w y . 17 92............... 322 1481
T O Y O T A C A R O L L A . '80
R e d u c o d . N o M o n e y D o w n ..129*3

WE FINANCE!
USEDCARS
S a n to r d ...................................121-2131
V W Q U A T R U M W A G O N '82.
7 T 2 0 IB . 54295 S e m in o le F o rd .
3788 H w y . 17 92............... 311 1481
V W S U P E R B E E T L E : '? ! . N e w
p a in t , e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n
51100........................... C a ll 311 2311

233—Auto Parts
/ Accessories

USED CARS

S a n lo rd ..................................... 111-1123

PrMqy, Nfc. 17, W T -tlA

F I V E 7 10x16 e ig h t P ly T r u c k
Tires
G ood sound t ir es
C a l l : .....................................121 1617
GOOD USEOM OTO R5
a n d tra n s m is s io n s
C a ll .......................................... I l l 1314

235-Trucks/
Buses / Vans
C H E V Y C u s to m v a n .’S l. a u to
a ir , c r u is e , s te re o , m u r a ls .
e tc V e r y d e a n _______ 121 1411
D O D G E : ‘49, lo n g b e d . g o o d
b o d y , e x c e lle n t lir e *
R uns
g r e a t 5471
323 1071
F O R D F250 X L : ‘ 83. s u p e r c a b .
c a p ta in 's se a ts, c e n te r c o lu m n
n e w tir e s . 4sp . 55000
3211088

NATIONAL
AUTO SALES
1120 S. Santord Avt.
Sanford

$

321-4075 $
82 PONTIAC T-1000
3800 DOWN

78 PLYMOUTH ARROW
3400 DOWN
79 MERCURY CAPRI
3500 DOWN
74 MUSTANG
3400 DOWN
73 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE
SPECIAL
3300 DOWN
76 PLYMOUTH 4 DR.
3300 DOWN
79 MUSTANG 4 SP.
3400 DOWN

*2 0
USEDCARS
Sa n lo r d ................................... 131 3171
C H E V Y Z 2 I . '85
R e d u c e d , N o M o n e y D o w n ..5699]

USEDCARS
S a n to rd ................................. ;. 121-2123
C H E V Y C IT A T IO N 80, 4 d o o r
6T642C. &gt;1695. S e m in o le F o rd .
3766 H w y . 17 92............ 322 1481
C H R Y S L E R i l h A V E , 13
R e d u c e d , No M o n e y D o w n ..1)993

s
USED CARS
Sa n to r d ................................... 221-2123
D A T S U N 2I 0 Z X - '79 O n e o w n e r.
S ilv e r b lu e . a u to ., a ll e le c
P ro o l o l m a in te n a n c e p a p e rs
R e a r A in t. w ip e rs , o rth o p e d ic
se a ts, tin te d w in d o w s 54,500/
O B O I 839 9)81 or 574 3276
D A T S U N 2I0 S W 1981
G ood c o n d itio n
C a ll
322 0363
D ATSU N S PO R T C P E .' l l
R e d u c e d , No M o n e y D o w n S2995

USED CARS
S a n to rd ..................................... 1 2 1 113)
D A T S U N B 2 I0 , 82. 7T321 A
51495 S e m in o le F o r d 3786
H w y 17 92........
172 118)

SPECIAL

Jim Lash’s

SPECIAL

BLUE
BOOK
CARS

321-0741

830-6688

HWY. 17-92 SANFORD

83 PONT. TRANS AM T-TOPS
AUTO., AIR, RED, LOADED, CLEAN
FULL POWER.
XTRA NICE. SHARP

S ft/ i
t i t

1986 CAMAR0 Z-28
IR0C "SER IES” , T-TOPS “ RED*'
LOADED, IT ’S NEW
ONLY 3,800 MILES

51 3 ,9 9 9

�r

r

U A - H iHt 8 H lfiM , Iw H w i, Ft.

■* VET**"*

■TTT1

■'r'T*

TT»

r -y

'No Crisis Ahead'

Lo cal In te r e s t
These q u o ta tio n s p ro vid e d by
m e m b e r s o f th e N ational
A sso c ia tio n o f S e c u ritie s Dealers
a re re p re se n ta tiv e Inter-dealer
p rice s a s o f m ld -m o m ln g today.
In t e r - d e a le r m a r k e ts ch a n g e
th ro u g h o u t the day. P rices do
not In c lu d e re ta il m a rku p or
m a rk d o w n .

Ask

Bid
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

8
35V*
28 V*

8V*
35%
28%

33% 33 V*
40% 40%
33 33%
26V* 26%
25% 25%
64 V* 64%
37% 38
147f&gt; 15
29V* 29%
24V* 24%
57% 57%
64% 65%

G o ld A n d S ilv e r
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold

London
Previous close 404.50 off 1.25
Morning fixing 405.75 up 1.25
Hong Kong
405.50 up 2.00

New York

Alan Ackerman, analyst at H enfeld &amp; Stem,
said selling is moving In and out o f Individual
Issues or groups o f stocks rather than pushing the
entire market sharply lower.
"T h ere Is a chance that the market could
decline at a faster tempo, but there Is no crisis
ahead." he said.
Ackerman contended Investors arc worried
about whether President Reagan "w ill be steady
at the helm " for the remainder o f his term. The
Tower Commission concluded Thursday that
President Reagan swapped arms for hostages In
his secret dealings with Iran and blamed the
scandal on a runaway National Security Council
staff.

Dollar And Gold
Both Move Higher
By United Press International
The U.S. dollar opened slightly
h ig h er a g a in s t m ost m ajor
foreign currencies In light trad­
ing today as markets awaited the
latest U.S. trade figures.
Currency markets were quiet
and directionless, a London
analyst said. Operators were
ma r k i n g t i me b e fo r e .th e
January trade figures were re­
leased In Washington.
British econ o m ic an alysts
predicted a deficit o f between
814 billion and 815 billion,
com p ared w ith D e c em b e r's
810.7 billion figure.
The Commerce Department
reported the U.S. /nerchandlse
trade deficit grew to 814.8 billion
In January, about average for
the past year, with exports
falling to their lowest level In 3
Vi-years.
In carllei trading In the Far
East, the dollar closed out the
week at 153.15 yen. down 0.02
from Thursday's close of 153.17.
In European trading, the Brit­

W A S H IN G T O N (UPI) Am erica’s merchandise trade
deficit grew to $14.8 billion In
January, about average for the
past year, with exports falling to
their lowest level In 3 V*-ycars.
the Commerce Department an­
nounced Friday.

Dow Jo n es

J a n u a ry ’ s Im ports totaled
$31.2 billion, while $16.4 billion
worth of goods were sent abroad.

Dow Jones Averages— 10 a.m.
30 Indus
2221.03 up 4.35
20 Trans
930.60 off 2.30
15 Utils
218.68 up 0.23
65 Stock
847.11 up 0.50

...C lin ic
Continued from page 1A
cannot solicit clients, but could
represent an Indigent clinic pa­
tient from the Oviedo clinic. If
they met the criteria and came
to hts office for help. In that case
they could ask the board on
behalf o f their client to file an
appeal with HHS. Only the board
can appeal. Scott said.
Clinic Board Chairman Pat
Southward told T h e H e ra ld .
’ ’ The fed era l regu lation he
brought to the board seemed to
Indicate there Is an appeals
process. Mrs. Moore was familiar
with the section and has had
occasion to use It previously, but
she was pretty certain It is not
applicable for technical reasons
In this case. The government
uses special language that Is
subject to Interpretation."
"She has had a whole lot of
experience In this sort of thing,
but we arc going to get In­
terpretations from a couple of
sources." Mrs. Southward said.
"Actually the condition of the
grant was closing the Oviedo
clinic and they don’t have to give

Over the month, the United
States ran up deficits totaling
$5.2 billion with Japan. $2.4

us a rraaon. It’s like Dr. (Luis)
Perez said, ’ He who pays the
piper calls the tune.’ "
Mrs. Southward said even If
the board should successfully
appeal the order to phase out the
clinic, unless additional funding
Is provided the money would not
be available to keep It open. She
pointed out that the amount of
federal money received was the
same as last year, while operat­
ing expenses have increased
which necessitated not only
closing the clinic, hut eliminat­
ing three staff positions at the
Sanford clinic.
Mrs. Southward said, "T h e
people In Oviedo are very deserv­
ing. There is a core group of sick,
old and poor who have no
transportation and a great deal
of trouble getting medical care.
In so many ways Oviedo feels
overlooked, neglected and taken
advantage of and I think that's
why they have a paranoid feel­
ing. They don’t realize they arc
not losing the service. It's Just
more difficult to get to the clinic
In Sanford.' We have one van
that Is booked solid and we need
one for the Oviedo area to order
to make health care accessible."

D riv e r's L ic e n s e s R eq u ire R oad T e st
Thursday's Progress Edition of wishing to get a Florida driver's
the S a n fo rd H erald contained license. The applicant Is given a
in c o m p le te In fo rm a tio n on complete written test, a vision
driver’s licenses.
test, a casual hearing test, and
T h e D iv is io n o f D riv e r 's
Licenses at 2587 S. Sanford road test, per a new law that
Ave., Sanford, added that a went Into effect In 1985. said a
complete road test Is also re­ sp ok esm an fo r the lic e n s e
quired for new Florida residents bureau.

S ta te P la n s D eB ary H all R e n o v a tio n
DeBary Hall, a partially re­
stored 19th Century mansion

HOSPITAL
NOTES
C « n tr « l F lo r id a R e g io n a l H o s p ita l
T h u rs d a y

ADMISSIONS
S a n fo rd :
L o u is E .
Leanner
A nna W.
E dm ond
JanusM

E s te s
Law
B a r t ln . H u n n ln g to n , C o n n .
E . K lo c e k . E lk G ro v e V illa . III.
. B a r k e r . D e lto n a

DISCHARGES
S a n fo rd :
R o b e rt R . D o n le y
C o n n ie J . H it e

ish pound s tre n g th e n e d In
London opening at 81.5445.
compared with 81.5395 at the
close on Thursday.
The dollar opened slightly
higher In Frankfurt at 1.8245
German marks, up from 1.811,
and In Zurich at 1.5352 Swiss
francs, up from 1.53.
The dollar opened at 2.062
Dutch guilders In Amsterdam,
up from 2.0605 on Thursday.
In Parts the dollar opened at
6.0735 French francs, up from
6.0575. and In Brussels at 38.19
Belgian francs, up from 38.05 on
Thursday night.
The dollar opened virtually
unchanged In Milan at 1.297.75
lire, compared with a previous
close of 1.297.55.
In early New York trading the
dollar was mixed against major
foreign currencies In moderate
trading.
Gold opened slightly higher,
gaining 81 an ounce In Zurich to
8405.50 and 81.25 In London to
8405.75.

January Trade Deficit Grows

Comex spot
gold open
405.60 off 0.90
Comex spot
sliver open
5.484 up 0.014
(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.)

built by German-born Baron
Frederick DeBary. located In
DeBary. Is not yet open to the
public as was stated In Thurs­
day's Progress Edition of the
Sa n fo rd H erald. Plans are un­
derway to restore the mansion to
Its former grandeur, and when
completed it will be open for
tours.
Dalton Hewett. administrative
assista n t to D ir e c to r Russ
Da ns e r o f t he Bur e a u of
Museums. Department of Natu­
ral Resources, said today the
state Inspected the budding this
month but he Is unsure when
funds would be available to
restore its safety and aesthetics.

f ■! »

t

Prmsldont C o n trib u te $ 1.000 For Operation

Friday, f » . V. I « 7

NEW YORK (UPI) - Prices opened higher today
In active trading of New York Stock Exchange
Issues.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which fell
9.56 Thursday, was up 1.12 to 2217.80 shortly
after the market opened.
Advances led declines 476-382 among the
1.314 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 10.283.500
shares.
Stock prices slipped In active trading Thursday,
pressured by profit taking and renewed concerns
about the economy, but the Tower Commission’s
report on the Iran-Contra arms affair had little
effect.
'

&gt; »■r *r -K^v v—*■f T ' ? f r r r*"* r r r - r

billion with Western Europe,
$1.6 billion with Canada. $1.6
billion with Taiwan. $900 m il­
lion with OPEC nations and
$700 million with South Korea,
the government said.
Data-collectlng problems make
it virtually certain the deficit
figure will be revised when the
next trade report Is Issued April
14. Today the Commerce De­
partment adjusted December's
deficit to 812 .7 3 b illion, up from

the $10.66 billion reported last
month.

She said the current van was
funded by a grant from the
Central Florida C apital Im ­
provements Fund. In addition to
funds for another van. the sala­
ry. Insurance and fringe benefits
for the driver, malntcnace and
repairs have to be considered.
"The board has tried to dem­
o n s t r a t e c o n - c e r n .” M rs .
Southward said, "b y appointing
two board members to serve as a
nucleus (of a group to work on
the problem).
"W e hoped a community effort
could be formed to find some
solution for providing medical
services to the people who need
It. It Is not supposed to be a
clinic effort, but a community
effort to address the problem In
an appropriate way. So far Inter­
est has been nil.
"It's a tough time for the
medically underserved." Mrs.
Southward added. "It Is some­
thing people don’ t realize — that
there are so few people taking
Medicaid patients. Most don't
want to be bothered by the red
tape. There is a lot of money In
Oviedo and a lot of good people
Interested In their neighbors
who have worked for them and
with them over the years. It
needs to be shaken lose.
"W e on the clinic board, the
clinic and HHS arc absolutely
not Insensitive to the people of
Oviedo.”
Commenting on federal fund­
ing cutbacks. Mrs. Moore said.
"W e're talking about the Oviedo
clinic closing now. but two years
from now we might oe talking
about closing the Sanford clinic.
In the future the state and local
governments arc going to have
to pick up the shift.
"A few years ago there were
over 600 clinics for the medi­
cally underserved ucross the
country, now there are around
400. It Is definitely u trend. It
costs a deal less to provide
health maintenance and pre­
ventive medicine than It does to
treat a very sick person."

R o n n ie

W a it s

PITTSBURGH (UPI) The
d ay after his 12-hour liv e r
transplant surgery, a rosycheeked Ronnie DeSUIers was
craving a glass o f milk and
awaiting a letter from President
Reagan, whose photo the boy
keeps beside his bed.
"H is color Is returning. Color I
haven't seen In seven years,"
said Marla DeSUIers. the boy's
mother.
"T o see rosy cheeks was a new
e x p e r ie n c e ." DeSUIers said
Thursday.
T h e s e v e n - y e a r - o ld F o r t
Lauderdale, Fla., boy was listed
In critical but stable condition
after "a restful night." hospital
spokeswoman Mary Ann Ferente
said.
DeSUIers said the White House
told her Ronnie would soon be
getting a letter from Reagan,
who contributed a 81.000 check
toward the transplant operation.
She also said Ronnie, In the
week since he arrived In Pit­
tsburgh. had received about
1.000 cards "from people na­
tionwide. as far as Alaska and
Hawaii."

F o r

foot."’ Castillo said.
"H e looked good to me. He's
always looking at (Reagan's)
picture. It's right beside him.
The doctors told us everything's
working so far.”
Surgeons said the first three
days after the operation the most
critical and that the boy was
being closely monitored for any
sign of Infection.
"H e's doing beautifully ... the
liver Is functioning as expected."
Dr. Carlos Esquivel said several

At one point, Castillo said, the
boy grabbed his mother’s hand
and said, "Please stay with me
so they don't give me. any
needles or shots."
"His right foot was itching. He
told me. "Please scratch mv

TEMPLE TERRACE (UPI) - A
three-week drive to apprehend
fugitive felons In a five-county
area around Tampa Bay was
highly successful, law enforce­
ment officials say. with 457
people back In Jail.

f u g i t i v e s . " D em p sey said .
"These people were felons and In
most cases repeat felons."
Dempsey, flanked by sheriffs
and representatives from other
law enforcement agencies, said
operation FAST III' (Fugitive
Apprehension Strike Team) was
carried out from Feb. 9 until
Thursday morning.
"W e believe we have taken
people off the street who arc
responsible for much of the
crime In the area." he said.
"T h e y made It (crime) a career."
Dempsey said offenses listed In
the warrants Included 112 nar­

...T ra p
Continued from page 1A
reported there was nothing of great value In the
•heel.
T h e boys told L e e they w ere exploring the

woods when they found the shed and were
curious about a can that was attached to the door.
Beck touched the can and saw behind it a lock on
the door. Kilgore pulled the can and that set off
the booby trap. A shotgun round discharged and

• • •Z o o
Continued from page 1A
want some of the older animals
and they would be kept here.
None of the animals will be
killed, she said.
She said the board wants to
get the animals off concrete and
from behind bars. She said one
criterion for ren ovatin g the
existing site Is " If we put money
In the existing zoo. It has to be
money that’s going to stay."
Others on hand at the Informal
meeting were: outgoing board
president John Smith, board
m em b e r B ill M a c L a u c h lln .
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e r B ill
Klrchhoff. and Tommy Peterson,
a former zoo board president.
In the past as an effort to
promote the need for a site and
funding for a proposed "state of
the a r t" zoologlgal park In
another location, the zoo officials
have tended to criticize the
existing site, but they admitted
this was probably a mistake. In
an effort to promote a more
positive attitude toward the
existing site at Lake Monroe,
west of Sanford, Mrs. Morris said
the board's new slogan Is "T h e
pride Is b ack ." The zoo Is

...L a m b e rt
Continued from page 1A
The deputy awakened the
driver and made the arrest
w ithout Incident. A further
check showed the driver. Lam ­
bert. was wanted for escape from
Lake County. Fla. and that the
car, too. was stolen.
Lambert was scheduled for
arraignment In Nevada today.
Convicted of rape, arson, bur­
glary and attempted murder of a
Se mi nol e Count y wo ma n.
Lambert had escaped from the
prison by cut t i ng hls way
through two fences. Officials
aren't sure where Lambert got
the tool to cut the fence.
T h e s a m e m o r n i n g he
escaped, a Cadilllc was stolen
from a nearby neighborhood.
Lambert was sentenced to 40
years for the crimes against a
67-year-old grandmother on St.
Valentine’s Day. 1984.
—Deane Jordan

hours after the operation.
Ronnie's plight attracted na­
tional attention and Reagan's
s u p p o rt a fte r th ie v e s took
84.000 hls classmates at a
C a t h o l i c s c h o o l In F o r t
Lauderdale had raised toward
hls medical expenses.
Another 8400.000 came In
from people around the country
after word spread that the boy
was dying o f cirrhosis of the liver
but hls family could not afford to
pay for a transplant.

Drive To Apprehend
Fugitives Successful

The drive was headed by the
Florida Department of Law En­
Ronnie called Reagan hls "b ig forcement and Included officers
hero" and kept the president's f r o m 2 2 a g e n c i e s I n
picture nearby, even holding It Hillsborough, Pinellas. Pasco.
as he was wheeled Into surgery Polk and Manatee counties. The
for the life-saving transplant o ffic e r s re p re s e n te d lo c a l,
operation that ended Wednes­ county, state and federal agen­
day. Doctors had said the boy cies.
would die soon without a new
Robert W. Dempsey. FDLE
liver.
commissioner, said Thursday
Hls mother said he had been the arrests represented 722
always been Jaundiced because w a rra n ts and 662 offen ses
o f hls sickness and called the
cleared.
operation "a gift o f life ...
“ These are not the ordinary
somebody gave him that."
run-of-the mill people who arc
A day after the su rgery.
Ronnie moved around In hls bed
and talked with hls mother and
stepfather. Jose Castillo.
"Mom. can I have some milk?
Some cold milk?" he asked.
The boy was being fed In­
travenously and a nurse told
him he’d have to wait for the
milk.
.

L e tte r

cotics cases. 98 for larceny-auto
theft. 43 for burglary. 18 for
rape-sex offenses and three for
murder. He said officers had not
had time to prepare details on
the Individual cases.
But he said more than twothirds o f those arrested had prior
offenses. 67 of whom had eight
or more prior offenses and 91
with between four and seven
prior offenses.
D e m p s e y h e l d up o n e
fugitive’s arrest record print-out
and it stretched about five-feet
and Included 33 arrests. He said
another was driving a stolen car
when arrested.
Dempsey said law enforce­
ment officials are aware of the
crowded prison conditions In
Florida which has led to the
release of some Inmates this
week, but said they have a duty
to arrest criminals.
"L a w enforcement cannot ab­
dicate Its responsibility Just
because of an administrative
problem with our Jails." De­
mpsey said.
The roundup was the third
coordinated by the FDLE In
Florida In the past year. De­
mpsey said FAST I netted 317
people In 16 Panhandle counties
last March, while 190 people
were arrested last May In FAST
II In five northeast Florida coun­
ties.

pellets hit Beck and Kilgore In their chests and
arms. Lee reported.
Lee said a string was attached from the can to
the booby trap, which was hidden under a
styrofoam cooler beside the shed. When the can
was pulled the string attached to It set off the rat
trap portion o f the device and that triggered the
firing of the pellets by driving a nail Into a p lf"
containing a shotgun shell.
The property where t h e d e v ic e ■wras 'S e l was not
fenced and not posted against trespassing. Lee
reported.

a c c re d ite d by the N ation al
Association of Zoological Parks
and Is rated above the required
standards.
She said committees have
been set up to study restoration
of the existing site, to 1/ivestigatc
possible sites for a full-scale
exotic zoological park, and to
look at the present facilities to
sec what needs to be done to
maintain them until extensive
renovations arc made. They arc
looking to how the zoo can be
developed in a natural habitat In
an educational, entertaining
way. she said.
Zoo officials arc meeting with
the Central Florida architects’
association to see If they will
work with the zoo In drawing up
plans for renovating the animal
exhibits.
Mayor Smith said. " I very

much want this site to be the
best site it could be."
Peterson said the zoo has
probably one of the best geo­
graphic locations In the area (on
Highway 17-92 near Interstate 4
betw een D isney World and
Daytona Beach.)
"It's going to take support of
local governments, corporations
and residents." Mrs. Morris said,
"to accomplish our goal at. this
site or any other one."
Mrs. Morris said the fund­
raising effort would be con­
d u cted th rou gh ou t C en tral
Florida from corporations and
private Individuals. MacLauchlln
said he Is looking at the possibil­
ity of approaching school boards
In Seminole and nearby counties
for contributions, pointing out
large numbers o f students visit
the zoo annually at "half price."

AREA DEATHS
R achel C ream er. Zion. III..
NO LIE BELLE LODOE
Mrs. Nolle Belle Lodge. t5. of A lb e rta B a rn c ll. Mary Lou
Mayberry, both of Decatur: eight
DcLand Convclescent Center.
DcLand. died Thursday at the g ra n d c h ild re n : eigh t g re a t­
center. Born Sept. 1. 1901 In grandchildren.
G ra m k o w F u n eral H om e.
Mitchell County. Ga.. she moved
to Sanford In 1923 from Georgia Sanford. Is In charge of ar­
and had lived In DeLand for the rangements.
past three years. A former San­
ford resident, she operated the Funeral Notices
Lodge Grocery Store on East
Second Street along with her late
Lodge. Noli* Ball*
husband. M.L. Lodge, for many — F u n e r a l s e rv ic e s l o r M r s . N o ll* B e ll*
years. She was a member of the L o d g * . 13. o l D e la n d , w h o d ie d T h u rs d a y w il l
be h o ld 10 a m . S a tu rd a y a t th « g ra v e s id e In
First Baptist Church of Sanford.
E v e r g r e e n C e m e te ry w it h th e R e v . P a u l
Survivors Include two sons. M u r p h y o t t lc ia t ln q T h e re w ill b e n o v ie w in g
Jesse. Goose Creek. S.C.. and B rls s o n G u a r d ia n F u n e r a l H o m e In c h a rg e o l
Malcolm "Sonny.” of Sanford; a r r a n g e m e n ts .Williams. Dan Sr.
12 grandchildren: numerous —Funeral services lor Dan Williams Sr., 79.
1 1 » S tr ic k la n d A v e .. S a n to rd , w h o d ie d F e b
great-grandchildren.
w il l b e h e ld 2 p m S a tu rd a y a t th e C h u rc h
Brlsson Guardian Funeral o10.
t G o d a n d C h r is t, w it h th e R e v. H .L . B ra d le y
Home. Sanford, in charge of o lllc la t ln g V ie w in g w il l b e to d a y . 4 to 9 p m .
a t th e fu n e r a l c h a p e l. B u r ia l w ill be a t S h ilo h
arrangements.
C e m e te ry . S a n to rd . S u n ris e F u n e ra l H o m e .
ROM A E. WHITE
S a n to rd , Is in c h a rg e o l a rra n g e m e n ts .
Mrs. Roma Ellen White. 67.
White. Roma, Ellen
184 Weklva Park Drive. Sanford, — F u n e r a l s e rv ic e s lo r M rs . R o m a E lle n
h ite . 67. 164 W e k iv a P a r k O r iv e . S a n lo rd .
died Thursday at Central Florida W
w h o d ie d T h u rs d a y w il l b e h e ld M o n d a y in
Regional Hospital. Born Aug. 29. D e c a tu r . III. I n t e r m e n t w ill be in B o ilin g
1919. In Clinton. III., she moved S p r i n g s C e m e t e r y . A r r a n g e m e n t s b y
to Sanford from Decatur. HI.. In G r a m k o w F u n e r a l H o m e , S a n lo rd
1986. She was a dry cleaner and
managed a laundry.
I C R E M A T IO N S P EC IA LIST S I
S u r v i v o r s i n c l u d e he r
O AK LAW N
'
husband. Clyde T.: daughter.
FUNERAL HOME &amp;
C atherine Gregory. Decatur:
sons. Sherrel. Samuel, both of
PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER
D e c a t u r , b r o t he r . G e o r g e
3 2 2 -4 2 6 3
E st. 105 4
fh4 m tf fs a is l
CamHary Samimoia Catint,
B eh ym e r. D ecatur: sisters.

L

I

�^ V - At ~

/i'ii

*

’

maiiUu

your art,
art, as does Sanford
artist Merle Richter,
watercotormeybethe
tlcketforyou.
Mrs. Richter who has
been painting with
.
watercolorsof about 40
years also passes the skill
a long to students. Over the

of watercolor socdns.
"Some people think I
dlfflcuIf.Fthlnktt'svei
easy," Mrs. Richter sa
. her art.
" I think.what scares
people Is It's hard to
control In the beginning
tends to run and that

fthesterritory.
S iS •IT

' Alice Marks, one of Mrs.
Richter's Sanfordstudents
said, "Control Is
Important, especially If
you're working wet on wet.

S L r " ^ 10

M is t M arks, who has
been study Ing with M rs.
Richter three years, said
"The main thing Is to let
your background dry
before doing dry brush
work over the
background."

S ee W A T S R C O L O R . page 3

Story And Photo
By Susan Lodon
Herald Staff Writer

Marie Richter, Sanford's premier watercolorist

I

’f t

�2—Sanford H riM , Sanford, FI.

Friday, Fob, 27, IW7

...W a te rco lo r
C o n tin u e d fro m page 1

In watercolor the
background is usually
created by applying
wanted colors to specific
areas of the paper and then
letting them flow and
merge over the wet
surface. After that Is dry
additional detailing can be
added using a less watery
mix of the paint, using a
dry brush.
That's the technique

another of Mrs. Richter's
students, Linda Renfro, of
Sanford, uses. She usually
lightly sketches In her
design before applying any
color. Mrs. Richter said
she also uses that
technique, but sometimes
paints pictures without
first having sketched In the
design.
"I like the softness," Ms.
Renfro said of the results
she gets using watercolor.
" I took oil painting. I'm not
an oil painter. To me oils
are harsh and clunky
where watercolor is nice
and soft.
"I think It's easy because
It's so easy to let your
colors run together and
make really soft shades,"
she said."
Ms. Renfro said she uses
a heavy, quality paper and
Mrs. Richter said one color
she doesn't hdve In her
watercolor box Is white.
Instead of using white
paint where she wants
white in her pictures she
leaves that area unpalnted,

allowing the natural white
of the paper to show
through.
„ Although watercolor may
produce a soft feminine
Image, Mrs. Richter said
men as well as women are
drawn to this medium.
Inthel9th Century
critics began noting that
this 'American medium' Is
adaptable and versatile.
Where oil paints are most
useful to the experienced
artist, watercoiors from
tins or tubes can be
en|oyed by children and
Sunday painters as well as
pros.
"There Is the appeal of
Its beauty and an intimacy
about watercolor that
make people relate to it,''
said Joann Moserof the
Smithsonian's National
Museum of American Art.
On technical grounds
watercolor's special virtue
seems to be its luminous
transparency and the
tactile appeal of textured
paper.
A century ago, Ms.
Moser said, "artists In
America achieved some of
their greatest expression In
watercolor. There was an

Interest In capturing the
Immediacy of the moment
outdoors. The Intentions of
artists coincided with what
the medium offered."
Florida, with Its warm,
tropical settings was a
draw to such artists. As
early as 1832 John James
Audubon treked
southward. The famed
naturalist created realistic
renderings of exotic birds
and beasts finely detailed
In watercoiors, she said.
Winslow Homer, who
was also preoccupied with
the fleeting life of nature
made seven winter trips to
Florida after 1885,
prlmarly to fish. But on
three trips he worked In a
bit of wah'r coloring when
the fish weren't bitting. His
blood-tinged "Life-size
Black Bass" is a classic
study of his theme of
struggle against mortality.
The French
Impressionists of that era
shunned watercoiors, but
Americans by the 1830s had
picked up on this medium
that was flourishing In
England, and made It their
own.
Although many

"serious" artists clung to
oil paints, many young
girls who studied In art
were taught to wield the
watercolor brush.
Boosting watercolor in
thell.S. In the first
American World's Fair,
watercoiors had a place
alongside the Industrial
achievements displayed In
five acres ofehlbltion
halls. There was room for
31 pictures, mostly
landscapes and It was the
first tim e watercolor
artists had their works
exposed to such a wide and
diverse audience.
As American art has
moved from one style,
from reallsim to
abstraction, from
picturesque to modern
subjects, watercolor has
reflected the changes.
Within the past decade
there has been a revived
Interest in watercolor,
which seemed to reach a
low point In the 1950s, when
that medium's loyalists,
thousands of them, seemed
out of touch with that
decade's avante-garde
painters, Ms. Moserof said.

Cagney &amp; Lacey Hits Milestone
HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - The
100th episode of "C a g ic y &amp;
Lacey" airs March 16. and
Tyne Daly and Sharon Gless
couldn't be more surprised.
"It never occurred td me that
I'd do 100 o f anything In my
life.” Daly says, "and I cer­
tainly didn't think there were

100 stories to be told about
Mary Beth Lacey.”
The show has earned this
milestone. It overcame a 1983
cancellation that made CBS eat
crow, and has gone on to net
three best actress Emmys for
Daly, one for Gless. two Eminys for best scries and one
Golden Globe this year for best
series.
Episode No. 100, marking
the directing debut of Jackie
Cooper, will find Detective
Lacey under arrest for taking
part in an off-duty protest rally
about the transportation o f
nuclear waste. Sgt. Christine
Cagney tries to get her out.
although Lacey prefers to re­
main incarcerated.
"S h c h e ra za d e told 1001
stories, and If I think of myself

as a storyteller, this Is a drop In
the bucket.” says Daly who has
been In every single episode
since "Cagney and Lacey"
debuted as a new m otion
picture for television In 1981.
This Is Gless’s seventh series,
but the first to last this long.
Her part was played by
Loretta Swit in the pilot, and
then by Meg Foster for the first
six shows. She’s been In the
last 94. but she says that when
this season began, It never
occurred to her that the 100th
was coming up.
"I always am just trying to
get through the next one, and
wondering If they will pick us
up next year." she said with a
grin, alluding to the 1983
cancellation, when the sets
were dismantled, then salvaged

MDCEI LNTEOMNAA
LIMITED ENGAGEMENT
Look
s n e a k in g
in t o t o w n !

^Interstate Plaza, Doltona Blvd. a t 1-4

L

574-9000

after the ctw ork nrecelved
2.000 protest letters.
Although the show Is seen 39
weeks o f the year. It only make
22 new episodes In an average
year.
“ Except for the year I gave
birth to m y child." Daly says
cheerfully. "W e made 24 that
year. Just to see if I could do It.
for the sport of the thing — or
maybe Just to sec If I’d drop
dead."
The producers decided to
have Daly's actual pregancy
coincide with a pregnancy for
Ma r y B e t h L a c e y . T he y
finished shooting In August
1985. and Daly had six weeks
to "nest before giving birth to
Alexander Brown on October

l."
Afterwards, they shot the
scenes of the birth of Lacey's
baby.
"I had to draw on my memo­
ries of the births o f my daugh­
ters. Elizabeth and Catherine.
15 and 18 years before." Daley
said. "I couldn't seem to work
o ff the memory o f Alexander's
birth. I remembered nothing."
She laughingly recalls how
difficult It was to cast the part
of her on-screen baby, because
none of the actors or actresses
who auditioned seemed to her
to be as beautiful as her own
newborn.
" I know it Is completely
u n fa ir." she says, "bu t I
thought they were bringing me
the ugliest babies I'd ever seen.
I said. 'Get me some pretty
babies.'"

�Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

TELEVISION

W hat's

Friday, Fob. 27,19(7-3

H nppcning?

February 27 Thru March 5
Labi* Ch.

(D O
(5)0
(D O

Cable Ch.
Independent
Orlando

(CBS) Orlando

0(35)
(8) CD

(NBC) Daytona Beach
Orlando

(10)0)

Orlando Public
Broadcasting System

(ABC) Orlando

Independent
Melbourne

■
,

By N ancy M . R c i c h a r d t

In addition lo the channels listed, cablcvision subscribers may lune in lo independent channel 44,
SI. Petersburg, by tuning to channel 1; tuning lo channel 11, which corries sports and the Christian
Broadcasting Network (C B N ).

Specials
SATURDAY
y/uuj|u/i
wi/nnirYsj

11:30

CD O CSS STORYBREAK "Arnold
ol the Ducks" Animated A young
bay become* lost In lb* wild and Is
raised by ■ Isrmly ol ducks. Votes*
by Muon Adams and Frank Walk*
ar.(R|q
AFTERNOON

3‘30

(CD BREAKING 'THE

SPELL II: A
U S. / SOVIET DIALOOUE Amerlcan and Soviet nuclear » parts
gal bar lo discuss the currant stilus
ol rsiallons batwaan Iba two super*
powers concerning nuclear arms
and joinl projects, such as a
manned Right to Mars.
EVENING

7:00

S ) (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Parnell Roberts narrates this study
ol the alligator and Its relationship
with the plants and animals Inhabit*
ing the 700 square*mile Okefsnok*
ee Swamp g

OOTDINO LIGHT

OfThe Week

James Cook" During tus first scien­
9*0
tific voyage around the world, which ® o
ru. TAKE MANHATTAN
began m 1568, Cook charted much Zach reconciles with Nina bul Uty
ol the uneiplored Pacific.
thwarts his divorce plans by an­
nouncing her pregnancy; Cuttar
7:00
0 (10) FOLK REUMON AT DEV­ move* lo San Francisco and mar­
IL'S LAKE Glenn Yarbrough, the ries his boss's paralyzed daughter.
LkneUlers and the Kingston Trio Stars Lynne Grtlfin, Jack ScaNa and
smg popular folk songs ol the late Adam LeFevra. (Part 2 ol 4) g
'50s and early 60s in a concert at
Devil's Lake Resort in Edmonton.
Alberta
MORNING

8*6

ID

ELU8 ISLANO In spile ol a
smear campaign Irom the opposi­
tion. Marco continues fits quest for
the slats senate even though his fa­
ther-in-law |Richard Burton) urge*
him to withdrew. IPatt 3 ol 3)

9*0

3 ) ■ I’LL TAKE MANHATTAN
Cutter and Lay announce their mar­
riage at a meeting ol the AmbervMe
board ol directors; Justin's arresied
on trumped-up drug charges; Lay
discovers the truth about Zach's
11:00
0 (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC death. Stars Francesca Annls, Bar­
Petnell Roberts narrates this Study ry Bostwick and Valerie Bertmekl
01 the alligator and 11s relationship (Part lo t 4) Q
with Ihe plants and animals Inhabit­
ing the 700 square-mile Okelenokee Swamp, g
EVENING

TUESDAY

9:00

(B 0 I’LL TAKE MANHATTAN
Based on ihe Judith Krenti novel
In post-World War II New York, sellmade millionaire Zach Ambervllle
makes a garment-industry publica­
tion the cornerstone ol l magaline
empire and romances an editor bul
marries an aspiring ballerina Stars
Valerie BertmeW, Perry King and
Francesca Annls (Part 1ol 4 )g
(Q) ELLIS ISLANO Lite In America
proves to have Its share ol hard­
ships as well as success lor the
quartet as they become embroiled
In prolesslonal disputes end per­
sonal jealousies; meanwhile. Marco
MORNING
(Greg Martyn) throws his hat Into
Ihe political ring (Part 2 ol 3)

THURSDAY

6:05

AFTERNOON

4:00

(3) O

SCHOOLBREAK SPECIAL

"T h e O rug K n o t" F orm er N ew Je r­
se y d e te c tiv e D avid Tom a re -e n a cis
h is r ta l- k la ro le in d re m a tita llo n * o f
s itu a tio n s In vo lvin g te e n-a ge rs that
h e has e n c o u n te re d In h it 18 years
a s a le c tu re r a gainst d ru g abuse
A ls o sta rs D e rm o l M ulroney and
(Q) WORLD MUSIC VIDEO O (t0) ASK DR SCIENCE In this
AWAR08 Via satellile from Los An­ spool. Dr Science (Dan Colfeyl ® Q I'LL TAKE MANHATTAN An­ T ra c y N e lson | R ) g

10:05

geles. London, Paris, Tokyo and
other major cities, music Ians
around the world select the best vi­
deo ol 1988 during a countdown ol
the year's top 20 Live appearances
by recording artists include Gene­
sis. Janet Jackson, the Bangles and
INXS In stereo.

MONDAY
11:30

poses questions on ihe wonders ol
nature, slimy vegetables and small
creeping creatures.
EVENING

9:00

gry over Marl's unwillingness to en­
EVENING
dure poverty. Rocco leaves. Zach
llies to Canada lo sort out his III*
Stars Barry Bostwick. Brett Cullen 0 (1 0 ) MARK RUSSELL
and Robert Addle (Pari 3 ol 4 (g

10:30

6:05

(ED ELLIS ISLAND Escaping Irom
war. poverty and the police, lour
immigrants (Peter Rlegerl, Greg
Martyn, Alice Krige and Judl Bowfi­
eri arrive in America In 1907 m
search ol the American Dream. Al­
EVENING
lhough they separate at Ellis Island,
through the year* their lives contin­
• 6:00
S&gt; (10) TEN WHO DARED' Caplain ue to intersect (Part 1ol 3)

SUNDAY

WEDNESDAY

FRIDAY

EVENING

MORNING

8:00
0

(10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
H al Holbrook narrates the story ol
lour Americans now living In China
a student, a journalist, a business­
man and a teacher g

11:00
O (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
H a l H o lb ro o k n a rra te s th e sto ry at
to u r A m e rica n s n o w kving in China:
a s tu d e n t, a jo u rn a lis t, a b usiness­
m a n and a te a ch e r g

Sports On The Air
SATURDAY
MORNING

6:00
ID WRESTLING
AFTERNOON

1:00

O ® WRESTLING

1.30

(3 ) Q PGA GOLF $ 1.000 000 D o ra l
O pen. Iro m B lue M o n s te r C o u rse in
M ia m i (Live)

C h a m p io n s h ip s (ta p e d ) w o m e n ’s In­
d iv id u a l lin a ls. Iro m Bat|lng, C hina,
5 8 th ru n n in g o l lh a F lam ing o
S la ke s (live) a m a jo r p re p -ra ce to r
Ihe K e n tu ck y D e rb y, run a t t 1/8
m iles. Iro m H ialeah Park In H ialeah.
Fla

D

4:35
SALTWATER ANGLER
5*5
5:35

D FISHIN' WITH ORLANDO WIL­
0 (2) COLLEGE BASKETBALL SON
R egional c o v e ra g e o l M ich ig a n a l
EVENING
Iow a o r L o u isv ille a l U C LA (Live)

3:00

CD o PBA BOWLINQ $150,000
True V alue O pen. Iro m L a n dm a rk
R e cre a tio n Plaza in P eoria, lit IL iv e i

6:05

SUNDAY
MORNING

F lo rid a a l A la b a m a IT a p e d l

O

3:30
NBA

BASKETBALL

M ilw a u kee B ucks a l C h ic a g o B ulls
(L lve |

4:30
O ® LPGA GOLF K e m p e r O pen.
Third R ound. Iro m P n n c a v ille G o lf
C o u rse in K auai. H a w aii (Live)

(B Q WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
S ch eduled W o rld C u p G y m n a s tics

EVENING

1:00
®

0
|8) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Louisiana Slate at Auburn (Taped)

1:30

TUESDAY

(D O HANK PARKER OUTDOOR
MAGAZINE

EVENINO

2:00

® 0 N B A B A S K E T B A L L P hila d e l-

10:05

d ia n a a l Illin o is (L ive )

0

11:30
0 ® WRESTLING
AFTERNOON

12:00

® SPORT8WORLD S ch e d u le d
N H R A W in te r N a tio n a ls D ra g R a c­
in g . Iro m P o m o n a . C a lif (T a p e d )

0

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

O k la h o m a 3 ! K e n tu c k y (liv e )

4:00

EVENING
0

7:30

(8) COLLEGE BASKETBALL

® LPGA OOLF K em p e r O pen, S o u th e a s te rn C o n te re n c e
fin a l ro u n d . Iro m P rln e a ville G o lt C a rd G am e (Live)
C o u rs e in K auai. H a w aii (L ive )
( D Q WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
S c h e d u le d
H ig h lig h ts o t R ace
A c ro s s A m e rica , a b ic y c le race
EVENING
Iro m H u n tin g to n B each ( C a lif) lo
A tla n tic C ity |N J H T a p e d )

W ild

FRIDAY

®
O
0 ® UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC AS­ O p e n ,
SOCIATION: FLORIDA BASKET. (L ive )

BALL
® O

THURSDAY

3:00

7:30

4:30

0

(8) COLLEGE BASKETBALL

5:30

D NBA BASKETBALL U le h Jazz at

S ou th e a ste rn C on fe ren ce O u a rle rPQ A O O L F D o ra l R yder ftn a l (Live)
final ro u n d . Iro m M ia m i

6:05

D WRESTLING

M ilw a u k e e B u c ks ILtve) (S u bje ct to

blackout)

•

LOVING
Louie Introduced Ava and Kale lo hrr
brother. Ned. Jim was upset to llnd out
that Shana has brrn taking birth-control
pills while lie wants to start a family right
aw ay. Clay was miffed when Shana
demanded that he consult hrr beforr
making business decisions at Aldrn En­
terprises llarry nrrusrd Gwyneth of only
wanting tn lx- with him because Clay has
thrown her out on her ear. Kelly tried tn
comfort Rot), who lost his factory job. Nick
roughed up Jenny. Illrn demanded that
she tell him wlial shr knows ahout Trisha
and Steve's trysts. Cecilia threatened lo
tell Nick all ahout Steve amt Trisha's
secret meetings.

ONE LIFE TO LIVE
Dorian met with a jailed Miss Spitz, who
died brforr shr could tell Dorian utxiut
Diane's just Murray filmed that Diane
didn’t pay him lor arranging MLss Spitz's
"su icid e." Dlunr conned Murray Into
rnhblng Dorian's safr. Muriay died altrr
Diane poisoned his drink. Dante Hipped
out when hr learned lhal Gubrlrlir Is
having Max's Uihy. Gubrlrlir grubbed
Dante's arm as lie palmed a gun al Marla,
who was wounded when tin- gun wrnl oil
Dorian and Diane struggled over a gim
alter Dorian rrnll/rd Hull Diane had killed
Murray. Jamlr knocked Cord out cold and
Illrn look Tina hoslagr. Sieve was sur­
prised lo learn Ilia! DellLi and Rafc arr
married Dorian didn't IH-Ilrvr Diane, who
said that Casslr and Jimalhan arr having
an atfalr. Judith told Herb lhal shr doesn't
think they should l x seen III public
tngrlhrr shire stir's not divorced from
Charles. Pamela liooght die Vernon Inn.

RYAN'S HOPE

7:00

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

N o rth C a ro lin a a l G e o rg ia Tech
(Live)

D WRESTLING

tB (8) COLLEGE BASKETBALL

3)

0

D FISHING WITH ROLAND MAR- phia 76ers al Houston Rockals D NBA BASKETBALL Los A ngeles
L a ke rs a t G o ld e n S tate W a rrio rs
(Live)
TIN
® Q COLLEGE BASKETBALL In- (Live) (S u b je ct to b la c ko u t)

2:30

H e n r y a u lT e re d a h e a rt a tta c k a fte r he
a d m it t e d t o V a n e s a a th a t h e 's h a v ln jt
f in a n c ia l tr o u b le . P a u l s h o o k u p C h elsea
b y s la t in g t h a t Ih e p e o p le In v o lv e d tn th e
a r t s c a m t h a t a h e 'a w r it in g a b o u t w o u ld n 't
h e s lla t r to h il l h e r a n d P h ilip . I I . D .. Jo a h
a n d F le tc h e r fo rc e d J o h n lo lu r e h is boas.
Lazarus ( a k a
’ ’ T h e M a n fro m
A m s t e r d a m " ) , lo Ih e L e w is h o m e fo r a
s h o w d o w n . K e v a . w h o h a d s to m a c h p a in s,
p a s s e d o u t a f t e r s h e t o ld R u s ty t h a t J o h n
a n d L a z a ru s w e re o n to J o s h . t i ll , a n d
F le tc h e r . T h e p o lle r a rre s te d L a z a ru s a n d
J o h n a lt e r R u s t y h e lp e d Ih e L e w is 's
c a p t u r e Ih e t w o m e n . J o h n n y s a w R o s ie 's
fa c e w h ile m a k in g lo v e w ith C h ris tin e .
S a r a h r a m e fa c e -to -fa c e w it h H a w k w h e n
s h e v is ite d R e v a In Ih e h o s p ita l. R e va a n d
h e r b a b y w il l b e a ll r ig h t , b u t Ih e d o c to r
o r d e r e d R e va lo re s t. M in d y p h o n e d R u s ty
lo s a y th a t s h e h a d e x te n d e d h e r s ta y w ith
H illy . P a u l b u r s t In to J o h n n y 's p a d w h e re
h e c a u g h t C h r is t in e in J o h n n y 's a rm s .

Hick is envious of his poller partner.
Sum. who has an Idyllic homrllfr. Huger
agreed lo sliarr a |ud with Dec Evan told
Pal lhal the herb Irealmenls Melinda lias
brrn using aren't really hrlplng hrr
lllurss Macs c warned Lizzie shr has l » lx
responsible aboul sex Jolmno agreed to
la- I lie spokesman lor his (rilow rollrgr
students, who voiced their disagreements
with Die college adminlsirallon. Johnno
I old Ll/zle he wants her In go buck to
school and finish her education. Johnny
d-xsn'l think .fix ran rorry out Ills plan In
make a new life for Joe and Slohhoti
SANTA BARBARA
Keith made sure Ihe press was present
when he arrested Kelly. Kelly frrllrd
a Ism I Jeffrey, who was wounded trying hi
prevent Kelly's arrest. M.iyley was al
lacked by a mystery person as she walked
on a jiler C C. lorrerl Kcllh to arrest Gllia
on embezzlement charges and Gina was
jmt lido a &lt; rll next lo Kelly Sophia and
C.C. witnessed Most in and Tort's murrUigr
ceremony On the anniversary of Amy’s
death, o drunken thick accused Huyley of
killing Amy In his haxlr lo sre Kelly.
Pearl led Keith ami his turn lo Kelly's
hilling place. Jakt- fumed lhal Ted was pul
In charge ol a horn lull of valuable horses
while Jake was jtasserl over lor Ihr Job.
Caroline admttlrd In Lionel Dial when
Alice was Insllliilloiuillzril. Caroline was a

h e a v y d r in k e r a n d h a d a ls o b e e n o rre a te d
o n p r o s titu tio n c h a rg e s . C a ro lin e b e g g e d
A lic e lo g iv e h e r a c h a n c e t o b e h e r
m o th e r. J u lia r e lu c t a n t ly r o n g r a lu t a le d
M a s o n o n h is m a r ria g e .

THETOUNO
AND THE RESTLESS
K a y w a s In I r a n i w h ile J i l l g lo a te d lh a l
P h ilip to o k J i ll 's a d v ic e a n d Is m o v in g In to
h is o w n p a d . V ic t o r h e a rd M a lt a d m it lh a l
h r lo v e s N ik k i. . J o h n to ld th e s h o c k e d
A b b o tt fa m ily t h a t A s h le y Is s e v e re ly
d e p re sse d a n d h a s b e e n tr a n s fe r r e d la a
m e n ia l h o s p ita l c lo s e r lo h o m e . E v a n
I h r r a lr n e d t o t e ll e ve ry o n e - lh a l L a u re n
tip p e d h im In M l r l i e l t r 's ( F a r e n l
w h e r r a b o u ls u n le s s L a u re n h e lp s h im g e l
M ic h e lle IF a re n ) b a c k . C a a ry o b je c te d to
N ik k i's s u g g e s tio n th a t C a s e y la k e N ik k i’s
p la c e In V ic t o r a n d V k - to r la 's liv e s a fte r
N ik k i d ie s. S le v r n t r ie d to p re p a re A s h le y
fo r h e r m o v e to I h r n r w h o s p ita l a n d D r.
J e n n in g s , w h o Is A s h lr v 's n e w s h r in k ,
la m m i d id n 't t x l l r v r E v a n , w h o s a id h r
d o e s n 't k n o w w h y M lr h e lle IF a re n ) h a d
h r r e a r a c c id e n t In M in n e a p o lis w h e n I h r y
w r r r liv in g in P itts b u r g h a l t h e lim e .
L a u re n h r l lr v r s lh a l M ic h e lle (F u re n ) w a s
r u n n in g a w a y Ir o m E v a n .

ALL MT CHILDREN
J u lie sa w R o ss a n d N a ta lie e m b ra c e
a f t e r I h r y d e c id e d I h r l r r e la t io n s h ip
s h o u ld e n d . T r a v is i i r o j x w d lh a l h r a n d
K r lr u s ta rt u p a m a g a z in e lh a l w il l b e h o t
i- u .- n p r lllk in lo r A d a m 's T e m p o M a g a z in e .
N a ta lie a g re e d lo g o o n a I r ip w it h P a lm e r.
M a ll a d m t t lr d In ik - n n y th a t h e to o k
E ric a 's m o n e y f r o m M a rk , b u l s a id h r
jd a u s to g r a d u a lly h i r i n r l I h r m o n e y b a r k
lo h r r a fle r lie r r c o u p s w lia l h e s j x n l lo
b u y I h r O a s is n lg l il r lu h . I . r s ’s a r r iv a l
s r a r r d o il O tis , w h o I r l r d t o f o r e r A n g le lo
r e v r a l Y v o n n e 's w h e r r a b o u ls . H r n o k r
a g r r r i l to r e t u r n lo T r m j x i w h e n A d a m
s a id t ir 'd a d m it 'D ia l lie d o c to re d h e r
a r t ic le o n T r a v is . D e l. V l n r r l l o r r l l l
re a liz e d D ia l O ils ' tx rs s Ls a n x io u s lo fin d
Y v o n n e a n d h e r b a b y . D e re k A s p a r t o l
t ils u n d r r r u v r r p la n . J e s s e a rra n g e d lo l x
n r r u s r d o f t a x e v a s io n . M a lt r r s r u r d
K n h ln Iro m L ll ln n . w h o w a s l u r n r d o v e r lo
D ir p o lic e lo r p r o m o t in g p ro s ! II u tlo n .

ANOTHER WORLD
Scott saved Vince from drowning
llrrnlr's signed slulrniriil rlrarrd Vlnrr of
Ihe charges lhal hr had Irlrd lo m.irdri
Reginald. Jamlr discouraged Lisa from
leaving Inwn. The serial killer attacked
Nancy rigid after I.Lsa had a prrinqiiltkiii
lhal Ihr klllrr would strlkr again. M J.
arrr|ited Adam's marrLigr |&gt;rnp&lt;»al, bul
wards lo krrp their plans a srrrei for
awhile. Scot I demanded lhal Itrgluald
rrvral Ihe name o f Seolt's real parenls.
Vlnrr decided he's gnltrn tils revenge
against Reginald when Marv mid Vince
Dial she's no longer a (sot of Reginald’s
lllr Mk liarl escaped from Trier's yarlil
anil rnllslrd Die Coast Guard's help III
saving Donna. Mllrh and Sarah from
I'rlrr'x Dings C lxryl and St oll have hem
on Ihe olds ever since Vlnrr talked Cheryl
mil of xjx-mllng a weekend alone with
Stoll Jamlr urged Lisa In work wdh Ihe
polkr on Ihr serial klllrr rase. Tony and
Nancy moved Itdoa (sol Inge liter
AS THE W O R LD TU KN S
lirl.i n billowed I lea I rice to Simla ml,
Dim lold her Dial hr loves her Kim Is
lorloiis Dial John kept mum about
Sabrina's parentage, even Ihnugh John
insisted Dial Howard told Idm Sabrina had
tllt-tl In ih e tra in w reck w ith the
Fullertons, H o b and Kim learned Irom
SridLind Yard lhal llowaid had coinmilled suicide. John ronijM-d in the sack
with Susan, who sfiowrrrd him with
sympathy over the baby xwlu h fiasco,
Lucinda grudgingly admit led to Idly that
Holden Is a cnm prlrnt businessman
Dusty rrjcclrd Meg. who's xiltl hong up on
him. Sierra lold Tnuln she wants a legal
separation. Emma Is furious with herself
Ixi ause she misses not having John
around. E m ily sen l Ellen a letter
postmarked from Dir city of Truro, whrrr

See SOAPS, page 5

�t

I*
4—Sanford Horakl, Sanford. FI.

Friday. Fob. 37,1ft7

February 27

FRIDAY
EVENING

6.-00
® ® B C D B N f..
(11) GIMME A BREAK)

S

(10) MAGMOL / LEHRER
MEWSHOUR
0 ( I ) KNIGHT RIDER

blackmalts Kit and usee her In his
plan to help Mm fight Angela: Mere­
dith savee Tony from Kollnafcl. q
(It)IN N HEWS
&lt;K» OPEN ALL HOURS
( 8) MARY TYLER MOORE

S

10:20
O

WILD. WILD WORLD OF ANt-

6 :3 0
• IT) NBC NEWS
®
8NC
W3 □
_ 0 C 8ABC
NEWS
' B (11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM*
FORT Henry*! Job Is In Jeopardy
when ■ picture of him poeing wtlh ■
political candidate and Coamle Cow
— 1-----In the papara.

•a*

6 :3 5
(DANDY GRIFFITH
7.-00
B ® NEWLYWED GAME
® B PM MAGAZINE The result*
of a poll on (he upcoming Academy
Awards.
m BJCO PARO Y
B (11) BARNEY MILLER
B (10) CONNECTIONS: AN AL­
TERNATE VIEW OF CHANGE *'Dis­
tant Vote**" Jamas Burke traces
llw chain of events which contribut­
ed to the production ol the modern
telecommunication* network. (R)Q
B (S) WONOERFUL WORLD OF
DISNEY "The Naahvtlle Coyote" A
country singer trying to make It In
the music business finds an unlikely
companion In a wild coyote.

7 :05
(Q) SANFORD AND SON

7 :30
O ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with comedian Jonathan
Winters; a report on Hollywood’*
sexiest man. In stereo.
3 ) Q DATING GAME
m O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
B (11) BENSON

7 :35
® HONEYMOONERS

8:00
B ® STINGRAY A mystery writer
Includes Stingray In a real-life crime
adventure. In stereo.
® B SCARECROW AND MRS.
KING A maniacal former agent
holds an outspoken famous poet
captive In the Virginia countryside
CD O WEBSTER While In Web­
ster's care, the autograph of heavy­
weight champion Mike Tyson Is ac­
cidentally wiped off ot a pair of
boxing gloves. Q
(11) HART TO HART
&lt;t0) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW □
B (&gt;) MOVIE "Body And Soul"
(1947) John Garfield. Lilli Palmer. A
boxer follows a crooked line from
the slums lo the top ot the fighting
racket only to refect his old ways.

«

11)SOB NEWHART
10) TWO RONNIES
(•) CAROL BURNETT AND

10:50

O

11:00

® ® 0 ® 0 news
(11) LATE SHOW Host: Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: actor Mel Gibeon. actress Valerie BertmeRI ("I’ll
Take Manhattan” ). In stereo.
B (W ) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING

«

emeus

6 :30
O M R BELVEDERE□
(10) WALL STREET WEEK
"Venturing for Capital" Guest: Ben­
iamin Rosen, Savin Rosen Manege-

TONIGHT

11:30

B

®
TONIGHT SHOW Host:
Johnny Canon. Scheduled: comic
actress Whoopi Goldberg, rock
oup Wang Chung. In stereo.
3 B M *A *8 ‘ H
DO NIGHTLINEq

£

9 :00

® MIAMI VICE An electronics
whiz works on both sides of the law.
In stereo.
® O DALLAS ClIITs disclosure
Stune the Ewings; April seeks com­
fort from the men In her life, q
(D O LOVE BOAT A reclusive bil­
lionaire (Peler Graves) decides to
send several people on a Love Boat
cruise lo Acapulco. Guest stars In­
clude Julie Harris, Florence Hender­
son, Arte Johnson, John Rubinstein
and Alan Thicke. Q
f f i (11) TRAPPER JOHN. M.O.
B ( 10) A FINE ROMANCE

9:30
B (10) FAWLTY TOWERS Sybil Is
mad whan she thinks that Basil has
forgotten their wedding annlversary.

10:00
O ® CRIME STORY Luca’s dsterminatlon to add another casino to
hie gambling organization brings hi*
empire to the brink ol collapsing. In
stereo.
( £ Q FALCON CREST Richard

»

S

5*30
B OUN8 OF WILL SONNCTT
(11) CNN NEWS

6.-00
(D B MOS ARE PEOPLE TOO
Quests: Anlmotlon, actors Tad
McGMey (’’Love Boat"). Tim RaM
("Simon and Simon") and Danny
Pmtauro ("Who's the Boas?'). (R)
B (11) CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
MOMTOR REPORTS
CNN NEWS
(1) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
SAVINGS

8

6 :3 0
m u ppcts

Kioto TV

12:00
B TAXI
CD O NIGHTLIFE

12:30
O ® FRIDAY NIGHT VIDEOS
"The Greateal Hits of the Summer
of ’88" Hosts: Malcolm-Jamal
Warner, Ahmad Rashad. Videos by
Huey Lewis A the News, Simply
Red. Janet Jackson. Billy Joel. RunOMC, Pater Gabriel and Madonna.
In stereo.
® B UNTOUCHABLES
(D o MOVIE "Hell And High Wa­
ter" (1054) Richard Wldmark. David
Wayne.
B (11) HAWAII FtVE-0

12:50
D NIGHT TRACKS

1:30
QNEW S
(11) BIZARRE Sketches: an
electric chair beauty salon; the Rev.
T.V. Seawall; Super Dave dedicates
lend to underprivileged stunt chil­
dren.

1:50
D NIGHT TRACK8

2:00
® 2 ROCKS TONIGHT
(11) DUKES OF HAZZARD

8

CDO

2:30

MOVIE "Circle Of Danger"
(1951) Ray Mllland, Patricia Roc.
D NIGHT TRACKS

3:00
ffi(11)BJ/LOBO
B (8) NIGHT OWL FUN

3:50
D NIGHT TRACKS

B

4:00
(11) DALLAS

CD Q

4:10

MOVIE "Treasure Ot Ruby
Hills" (1955) Zachary Scott. Carole
Mathews.
N a tiv e

Canadians
Three-quarters of the
Canadian people live
within 100 miles of the
Untied States border.
Some 45 percent are of
British origin, while
almost 30 percent are
French.

B (11) MOVIE "A Fistful Of Dol­
lars" (1987) Clint Eastwood, Mari­
anne Koch. The mysterious "man
with no nemo" enters a gang war
between two factions eager to sell
whiskey and guns to Mexicans and
BOO)GROWING YEARS
B (8) MSW AY BARGAINS

D get SMART

7 :3 0
YOUNG UNIVERSE
THIRTY MINUTES
O HHOGAN'S
O
HEROES

13

8:00

® KISSYFUR
B BERENSTAW BEARS q
O WUZZLES Q
( I t ) IMPACT
(10) LAP QUILTING
WRESTLING

8 :3 0
B ® DISNEY’S ADVENTURES OF
THEGUMMI SEARS q
® g WILDFIRE
_| CARE BEARS FAMILY q
(11) MOVIE "Tarzan's Secret
T reasu re"
(1941)
Johnny
Weissmuller, Maureen O’Sulllven. A
group ol white people seek Tar­
tan's aid In searching lor lost trea­
sure.
8 (10) HOMETIME

9 :0 0
B ® SMURFS
® O JIM HENSON‘8 MUPPET
BABIES
O FUNT8TONE KIDS □
(10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
D NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
PLORER
B (8) SHOP-AT-HOME AHO SAVE

S

9 :30
B (10) FRUGAL GOURMET

10:00
GDB PEE-WEE’S PLAYHOUSE
O REALQH08TBUSTERSq

S

(11) MOVIE "Airport ’77" (1977)
Jack Lemmon, Lee Grant. A |umbo
|et loaded with art treasures on Its
way to s Florida art museum
crashes and sinks at see after a hilack attempt or
B (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING

10:30
B ® ALVIN AND THE CHIP­
MUNKS
3 ) g TEEN WOLF
POUND PUPPIES
(10) THIS OLD HOUSE

11:00

B ® SCIENCE CENTER FUN
® Q GALAXY HIGH
CD O BUGS BUNNY 4 TWEETY

SHOwg

B

(10) INDOOR GARDENS
D
MOVIE "Macksnna's Gold"
(1909) Gregory Peck. Omar Sharll.
A man searches (or a canyon ol
gold belonging to Apaches and Is
Joined by a Mexican bandit and an
Apache murderess.

11:30
B ® PUNKY BREWSTER
® O CBS 8TORYBREAK "Arnold
ol the Ducks" Animated. A young
boy becomes lost In the wild and Is
raised by ■ lemlty ol duck*. Voice*
by Mason Adams and Frank Welk­
er. (fl)q
(D Q E W 0 K 8
B (10) BOOYWATCH
AFTERNOON

12:00
B ® LAZER TAG ACADEMY In
stereo
® O HULK HOGAN’S ROCK ’N‘
WRESTLING

5:00
B (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEWg
B (8) MAMA'S FAMILY Mime
competes m Rsylown's srm wres­
tling championship.

8:05
Q FISHING WITH ROLAND MAR­
TIN
5*30
B
(10) WALL STREET WEEK
"Venturing lor Capital" Guest: Ben­
jamin Rosen, Savin Rosen Manage­
ment.
B W ir S A L M N O
5:35
O FISHIN* WITH ORLANDO WIL­
SON

12:30
B ® AMERICA'S TOP TEN
&lt;T) B PUTTSf ON THE HITS
B (10) GROWING YEARS

EVEMNQ

1:00

) WRESTLING
0® W

Sir

(MORE REAL PEOPLE
MOVE "Ruckus" (1980)
Dirk Benedlcl, Unde Blair. A shell­
shocked Vietnam vet disturbs the
peace of a small Alabama town.
S (W ) EARTH, SEA ANO SKY

1:30

7 :0 0
B ® K K »V 1 0 E O
8 ( 1 1 ) THREE stooges

®

Host: David
Brenner. Scheduled: comic actor
Danny De Vllo. In stereo.
B (11) ASK OR RUTH Topic a for­
mer lesbian In a troubled hetero­
sexual relationship, q
B (8) NIGHT OWL FUN

I

Xiii

11:50

2:50

B

5 :0 0
B&lt;11)CNN NEWS

ID NIGHT TRACKS Included: A-Ha
("Cry Wolf"); Joan Jett and Michael
Fox ("Light ol Day"); Spoons
("Bridges Over Borders” ); Zerra
On* I 'Rescue Me”). In stereo.

8 :05
(D NBA BASKETBALL Philadelphia
7Sera at Dallas Mavericks (Uve)
(Subject to blackout)

POWER

MGHT TRACKS
PLAY

B
(•) BARGAINS
(Joined In Progress)

CD 8 DANCIN' TO THE HITS Mu­
sical guest: Melba Moore ("There I
Go Falling in Love Again"). In star-

5 :8 0
O M GHTTRACKS

10:30

6 :0 5
O BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

SATURDAY

February 28

6.-00
® ® 0 © 0 N E W 8
(11) SMALL WONDER Ted end
Joan's high-school friend, onee ■
wimp and now a professional wres­
tler, arrive* for a visit.
B (W ) FRUGAL GOURMET Prepa­
ration ot ■ basic brown sauce, a
deml glee*, e mushroom and mar*

«

® B PGA GOLF 81.000.000 Doral
Open, from Blue Monster Course In B (8) CHARLES IN CHARGE
Miami. (Live)
6:05
(M ) EARTH, SEA ANO SKY
(ED WRESTUNQ
MOVIE "Letters From A Deed
Men" (1986) Rolan Bykov, Yossll
6:30
RykUn. Stricken with cancer os s re­
0&amp;NBCNEW 8
sult of a nuclear explosion. ■ Soviet
3 ) 0 CBS NEWS
scientist attempts to put whet's left
(D O A S C N E W S g
ol his life In order.
(11) NEW QIOOET Gidget helps
Dannl's tomboy Irlend (Kimberly
2.00
Miller) who's preparing lo attend a
B ® LAUREL AND HARDY
B (11) MOVIE "Cool Hand Luke" school dance.
B (10) HOMETIME Removing and
(1987) Paul Newman. George Ken­
Installing various types ot siding, g
nedy. A young man on a chain gang
B (&gt;) ONE BIG FAMILY Brian *
with an. unquenchable thirst for
grades Improve with the help ot an
freedom defies all authority, gaining
attractive tutor.
Ihe admiration ol his follow con­
victs.
7:00
B (ID) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT 8 ® THROB Sandy lights lor har
Nte alter she's In a car accident
2:30
® B HEE HAW Co-hosts: Ihe Oak
B ®
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Ridge Boys. Quests: Janie Frlckle,
Regional coverage ol Michigan at
Bill Monroe.
Iowa or Louisville at UCLA. (Uve)
B (10) AMERICAN GOVERNMENT CD O RUNAWAY WITH THE RICH
ANO FAMOUS Actress Barbara
3:00
Carrera in the Far East; actor Ed­
(D Q PBA BOWLING *150.000 ward Albert in Maui, Hswell; sn un­
True Value Open, from Landmark
dersea hotel in Key Largo. Fla.
Recreation Plaza In Peoria. III. (Live)
Host: Robin Lsach.
a (10) FACES OF JAPAN
B (11) TEO KNIGHT 8HOW Gar­
B (8) COLLEGE BASKETBALL field the cal and his creator Jim
Florida at Alabama (Taped)
Davis stop by Hsnry's office.
B (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
3:30
Parnell Roberts narrates this study
®
B
NBA BASKETBALL
ol the alligator and Its relationship
Milwaukee Bucks at Chicago Bulls
with the plants and animals Inhabit­
(Live)
ing the 700 square-mile Okefenoka (10) TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
ee Swamp, g
The conclusion ol a tour-pert Black
B (8) DEMPSEY A MAKEPEACE
History Month special entitled "The
Booker T. Washington Freedom
7:30
Trail" visits Hampton University to
B ® FLORIDA’S WATCHING
look at the school's characterCD O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
building program.
B (11) 8 TO 8
(B) BREAKING THE 8 PELL II: A
8:00
U.8. / SOVIET DIALOGUE Ameri­
B ® FACTS OF UFE Beverly Ann
can and Soviet nuclear experts
lakes measures lo adopt Andy. In
gather to discuss the current status
stereo, q
ol relations between the two super­
® B OUTLAWS A man, sent to
powers concerning nuclear arms
prison with Ihe old ot Ihe Outlaws,
and Joint projects, such as a
vows revenge against them when
manned (tight to Mars.
fto's rolomod
4:00
f f l B SIDEKICKS Ernie and his
B (11) MOVIE "The Enforcer" friends come across a key that gels
(1976) Clint Eastwood, Tyne Daly.
Ihem In trouble with s pair of hoods.
"Otrty Horry" Callahan Is Joined by
e female partner In his pursuit of a
CD (11) MOVIE "Sword Ol The Vali­
group of California revolutionaries
ent" (1984) Sean Connery, Miles
terrorizing San Francisco.
O'Keele. A young squire from King
B (10) WE'RE COOKING NOW
Arthur’s court Is given one year to
either solve e mysterious Green
4:30
B ® LPGA GOLF Kemper Open, Knight’s riddle or forfeit his Ale.
B (10) FLORIDA'S PHANTOM
Third Round, from Prlnceville Golf
PANTHERS
Course In Kauai, Hawaii. (Uve)
CDO WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS B (8) STREET HAWK
Scheduled: World Cup Gymnastics
6:05
Championships (taped) women's In­
(B) MOVIE "Submarine X-1" (1969)
dividual finals, from Bailing. China,
James Coen, Rupert Davies. Three
58th running of the Flamingo
crew* ore trained by a naval com­
Stakes (live) a major prep-race for
mander to men midget submarines
Ihe Kentucky Derby, run at 1 1/8
against a huge German destroyer
miles, from Hialeah Park In Hialeah,
during World War II.
Fla
8:30
B (10) MODERN MATURITY
8 ® 327 The police ask Sandra
Scheduled, a comparison of cou­
lo help snare her larcenous boy­
ple* then and now (Part 1 ol 2); Salt
friend. In stereo.
Lake City senior* who are volunteer
CD Q SLEDGE HAMMERI Sledge
tutors; Social Security Admlnl atra­
takes raluge In an Amish communi­
don Commissioner Dorcas Hardy.
ty to escape a hitman's bullet. In
Q
stereo. (R )g
B
(10) ARTHUR C. CLARKE'S
MAX-JIM THORPE:
WORLD OF STRANGE POWERS
‘ ALL AMERICAN
Topic: premonitions
onCINEMAX

S

a

ONEMAX

4:35
(□) SALTWATER ANGLER

Aitv

9:00
B ® GOLDEN QIRL8 Blanche
considers having a face-lilt. In ster­
eo, q

® B MOVIE "Pais" (Premiere)
George C. Scott, Don Amech*
Three senior citizens end a runaway
teen-ager find themselves plunged
Into e world of feat living, new Iden­
tities and danger when two ol them
discover 13 million In the trunk of s
deserted Mercedes, g
(D B MOVIE "Supergirl" (1984)
Helen Slater, Faye Dunsway.
Supermen * cousin comes to Earth
lo recover a precious stone, ihe lifeforce of her planet, which has fallen
Into the dutches of a wicked, pow­
er-mad sorceress, g
B (TO) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
B ( S I FATHER MURPHY

9:30
B ® AMEN Fry* erroneously tails
a client that her husband has been
unfaithful. In stereo.

B®

1(h00

HUNTER A man. Jailed for
the attempted murder of ■ women,
vows to complete Ihe deadly task
when he's released from prison. In
stereo, q
(11) MN NEWS
(10) DOCTOR WHO "Warriors
Gate” The Tardis Is hijacked by s
tug!live navigator end vanishes Into
an earl* void,
a m BONANZA

«

10:05
&lt;D W ORLD MU8IC VIDEO
AWARDS Via sateHIte from Los An­
geles, London, Parts, Tokyo and
other major cities, music tans
around the world select Ihe best vi­
deo ol 1986 during a countdown ol
the year's top 20. Live appearances
by recording artists Include Gene­
sis, Janet Jackson, the Bangles and
INXS. In stereo.

10:30
B H D SOB NEWHART

11:00
0 ® ® O C D O new s
CD(11) MAUDE
B (8) POLICE WOMAN

11:30
B ® SATURDAY NIGHT UVE
Host: Valerie Bertlnelll. Musical
guest: Robert Cray ("Smoking
Gun"). In stereo.
® Q BTAR TREK
CD O LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH
AND FAMOUS Scheduled: the Bev­
erly Hills Hotel (Pari 4 ol 4); luxury
living In ihe 21st century; actress
Jane Seymour: John Davidson and
his lemlty.
B (11) MOVIE "Swamp Thing"
(1962) Adrienne Barbesu, Louis
Jourdsn.

B

12:00

(8) NIGHT OWL FUN

12:05
&lt;Q&gt; NIGHT TRACKS: CHART0U3TER3 Included: Zerra One {"Rescue
Me"); Journey ("I'll Be AlrighI With­
out You"); A-Ha ("Cry W olf); Paler
Gabriel ("Big Time"). In stereo.

12:30
® Q UNTOUCHABLES
CD 0 MOVIE "Anna Karenina"
(1946) Vivien Leigh. Ralph Richard­
son.

1:00
B ® OFF THE WALL

1:05
© NIGHT TRACKS

1:30
B ® MTV VIDEO COUNTDOWN

® QNEW S
CD (11) MOVIE "Circle Of Iron"
(1979) David Carradlne, Jeff Coo­
per.

2 :05
(Q) NIGHT TRACKS
2 :30
(D 0 MOVIE The Girl Who Came
Gilt-Wrapped" (1974)
Long, Karen Valenllne.

Richard

3 :00
B (6) NIGHT OWL FUN
3 :05
(Q) NIGHT TRACKS
3 :20
(D (11) MOVIE "The See Wolf"
(1941) Edward G. Robinson. John
Gartteid.

4 :00
® ® MOVIE "Elmer" (1977) Philip
Swenson, Lynn Perry.

4 :05
&lt;Q) NIGHT TRACK8

�March
MORNING

Oklahoma al Kentucky (Live)
• (11) MOVIE "The Ftrtl Deadly
Sin" (10S0) Frank Sinatra. Faye
5:00
Dunaway A veteran New York City
■ 111)CNN NEWS
police detective, whose wtle is suf­
fering from a serious illness, tries lo
5:05
catch a brutal kilter terrorizing Man­
JJ NIGHT TRACK8
hattan.
5:30
• (10) WONDERWORKS "A Little
0 B M N oed
Princess' Based on Francis Hodg­
(11) CNN NEWS
son Burnell's story recounting a
rich little girTa struggle lo cope with
6:00
sudden poverty In Victorian Eng­
LAW AND YOU
VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION land. Thta episode: Sara Crewe Is
sent to London to attend a school
|(11) IMPACT
lor young ladies. (Part 1ol 3) g
(CNN NEWS
J (I) BUNMSE SHOPPING AT A B (S) GOLD-A-THON

«(11)8JLVER SPOONS
B I O GLOW GORGEOUS LADIES
« ( 1 0 ) TEN WHO OARED "C a p le m OF WRESTLING
Jam es C o o k " D u rin g h is firs t sc ie n ­
tific vo ya g e a ro u n d th e w o rld , w hich
bagen tn 1568, C o o k c h a rte d m u ch
o t th e u n e a p io re d P a c ific

8

B

12:30

savings

6:30
■ ® FIORNM’S WATCHING
S O EON OUR TIMES PanMIit*
drtcuit modern technology and Hi
possible long-term alloc It on
tuner value*. (R)
(T iO ESSENCE
■ (11)W.V. GRANT
f l WORLD TOMORROW

7:00
■ ® 2*8 COMPANY
fflOROSERT SCHULLER g
(fj O COVER STORY
1 (It) BUOS BUNNY ANO PORKY
NO
O fT IS WRITTEN

7:30
■ ® HARMONY ANO ORACE
W\Q JIMMY SWAOQART
§(11)POPEYE
S TOM t JERRY ANO FRIENDS

8:00
■ m VOICE OF VICTORY
m O WORLO TOMORROW
■ (11) WOODY WOODPECKER
1(10) SESAME STREET (R )g

8’30
SUNDAY MASS
DAY OF DISCOVERY
ORAL ROBERTS
■ (11) JEM

I

9:00
■ 3 ) REAL TO REEL
3) Q SUNDAY MORNING S c h e d ­
uled the president ini campaign at
PM Robertson, profile ol opera
soger Leontyne Price
3) O FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH OF ORLANDO
(11) INHUMANOIDS
(10) OWL / TV H ow a n a n e m o n e

1

and a herm it c ra b h e lp e a c h o th e r:
polce horses th a t m ove lo m u s ic ,
protecting p e ts fro m ra b ie s . (R ) g

■ (I) FASHIONS

9:30
• 3 ) WORLD TOMORROW
3 O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
(11) TOM ANO JERRY
(10) FRENCH CHEF

S

9:35

(D A N D Y GRIFFITH

.10:00
3 ) VIBRATIONS
(11) MOVIE "Y o u n g F ra n k e n ­

1

stein" (1974) G ene W ild e r, P ale r
Boyle The g ra n d so n o l Ih e In­
famous Dr F ra n ke n stein a tte m p ts
to create a syn the tic m a n in th is
parody o l "F ra n k e n s te in " m o v ie s

B3 ) MEET THE PRESS

w ith in Ihe P alace Theatre: O s s ie re ­
ce ive s a sh o c k. D o n * T ingley (P a tri­

S

1
!
8

B

11:30

3 ) ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK Intarvtew w ith lh a Ju d d s In
Stareo

® B WKRP IN CINCINNATI
(D JERRY FALWELL

"D is n e y G oes to th e A ca d e m y
11:40
A w a rd s " H ost T o n y D a n z i p re se n ts
■
3 ) COLLEGE BASKETBALL d ip s fro m O s ca r-n o m in a te d Disney ® B SUNDAY EXTRA
North Carolina al Georgia Tech N a tu re s In clu d in g "S n o w W h ite ,"
12:00
(Live)
"F a n ta s ia " and "20.000 L e a g u e ] ® B CHECK IT OUT1 Edna s o u t­
® O HEROES: MADE IN THE U n d er Ih e S a a " ( R | g
ra g e d w hen an a ttra c tiv e health
U S .A.
fo o d re p re se n t a live a j p ra is e s In­
(11) FALL GUY
B (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
(1 0 ) FO LK R EU N IO N A T D EV ­ te re st in H o w ard (R)
" L o s t E m p ire s" Ju lie Btane leaves IL’S L A K E G le n n Y a rbro ug h . Ih e ®
S O LID G O LD Scheduled
b o th th e lo u r e n d R ichard: tin g a r L im e iite rs and th e K in g sto n Trio S u rvivo r, Krts K rtsloffe rso n, Kenny
I ll y F a rris (P am ela Stephenson) sing p o p u la r fo lk so n g s o t Ih e late Loggm s, th e Jets, B ob O etdol.
a n d h e r sinister accom panist join '5 0 s a n d e a rly '6 0 s m a c o n c e rt at S am antha Foil I'T o u c h M e I W ant
Ih e com pany. (P a rt S o f 7) g
D e vil's Lake R e s o rl tn E dm o n to n. Y our B o d y "). C arl P erkins ("B lu e
(Q) MOVIE “ L iv in g Proof: The Hank A lb e rta
S uede S h o e s ), C yndl Leu per (In ­
W illia m s Jr S to ry " (1983) Richard
®
M O V IE "S a v a g e W ild e rn e ss " ter view ) In stereo
T h o m a s. C lu G u lager A lta r ye a rs o l (1955) V icto r M a tu re . G uy M ad iso n B ( I t ) DREAM G IR L U.S.A. The
p e rfo rm in g in th e shadow o t his
w eekly be a uty co n te st series cu lm i­
W hen a pair o l tra p p e rs b e co m e
fo lk -h e ro la m e r, co u ntry-w estern A rm y scouts, th e y a tte m p t to co n - n a te s in a co m p e titio n betw een five
I in a im i P ru e s in clu d e cash and a
sin g e r Hank W illia m s Jr struggles
vince th e ir h o th e a d e d co m m an d e r
screen le s t at 20th C e n tu ry F o r
lo e sta b lish his ow n id e n tity
th a t an a tta ck o n In d ia n s w o u ld be
S tu d io s
u n w ise
&lt;D &lt; 8 | N IG H T O W L FUN
® B HANK PARKER OUTDOOR CB (4) C O LLE G E B A S K E T B A L L
12:30
L o u isia n a S ta te a l A u b u rn (Taped I
MAGAZINE
O ® A T THE MOVIES
2:00
(J ) O U N TO U C H ABLES
H a rriso n F o rd In
® 0 NBA BASKETBALL P hiladel­
© JO H N ANKERBERG
R ETUR N O F T H E JEDt
p h ia 76ers at H ouston R ockets
TP M on H BO
( liv e )
1:00
® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL In­
0 ® EBONY / JET SHO W C ASE
d ia n a a l Illinois (Live)
In te rvie w s singers N ancy W ilson
f f l (It) MOVIE "A g a th a (1979)
8:00
and C lin t H olm es
V an e ssa Redgrave. D ustin H off­ 0 ® EASY S TR EE T B ully d isp la ys QT|
O M OVIE "V irg in Isla n d "
m a n In 1926 Lon do n , an A m erican
h is c a rd -p la yin g s k ills at th a c o u n try (1959) John Cassavetes. V irginia
re p o rte r becom es involved w ith
a e |&gt;|i;||l
fa m e d m ystery w rite r A gelha C h ris­ clu b tn stereo
© JIM M Y SW AO Q AR T
tie . w ho has a p parently d is a p ­ ® Q M UR D ER . S H E W R O TE Jes­
p e a re d w ith o u t a tra ce a lte r leaving sica in v e stig a te s Ih e m urd er o t one
1:30
o l C a b o t C ove s m o s t illu s trio u s c it­ 3 ) a M U S IC CITY U S A.
her u n faith fu l husband
g
izens
f C (10) MOVIE In The G o o d Old
S u m m e rtim e " (1949) Van Johnson. ® O M O V IE C a sa n o va " (P re m ­
2:00
J u d y G a rland N either kn o w in g that iere) R ichard C h a m b e rlain . Faye ® 0 NEW S
th e o th e r is th e ir secret pan p a l. two D unaw ay A re c o u n tin g o t th e Hie © W O R LD TOM O R R O W
c le rk s in a m usic store a re con­ a n d e ip lo it ] o l Ih e le g endary 17thc e n tu ry Italian lo v e r g
2:30
s ta n tly on the o u ts w ith each other
f f i (1 1 ) M O V IE Rear W indow 3 ) O N IO HTW ATCH
11954) Jam es S te w a rt. G race K elly © L A R R Y JO NES
B (T ) SPOR TSW O R LD Scheduled A p h o to g ra p h e r, co n fin e d to his
N H B A W inter N ationals D rag Rac­ a p a rtm e n t, sp ie s on his n e ig h b o rs
2:40
in g , fro m P om ona. Cant (T a p e d l
u sin g b in o cu la rs a n d b e lieves he
© M OVIE " L ittle W om en ( !9 4 9i has w itnessed a m urd er
® o M OVIE "S a il In to D a n ge r"
Oenms
O Keefe. Kathleen
M957 |
J u n e Allyson. P eter L a w ton) Based
QD 110) N ATUR E A p o rtra it o l the Ryan
o n th e sto ry by Louisa M ay A lc o ll
c ra n e (P art 2 o l 3) In stereo g
The lo u r M arch sisters lo rg e em o­
3:00
tio n a l tie s n e ve r lo be b ro ke n d u r­
8:30
© C H R ISTIAN C H ILD R E N 'S FU N D
in g th e h a rd sh ip -tille d days o l ihe 0 ®
V A LE R IE Oavid and his B (8) N IG H T OW L FUN
m o th e r w ork to g e th e r on a p la y to r
C iv il W ar
th e co m m u n ity th e a te r In ste re o g
(E ) (B )Q O LO -A -TH O N

10:05
(D QOOO NEWS

10:30
3 ) TODAY’S BUSINESS
Q FOR YOUR HEALTH

"Stress"

(D O IT IS WRITTEN
■ (10) WOODWRIGHT'S SHOP

10:35
Q MOVIE V olca n o " (1 9 6 9 ) M a n mfcan Schell. B rian K e ith A g ro u p
Ireasure-seekers is c a u g h t up in
a massive tid a l wave c a u s e d b y the
sm ption o l a volcano

11:00
(SOTHIRTY MINUTES
0 Q SPEAK EASY
■ |K&gt;) NEWTON S APPLE

11:30
■ 3 ) WRESTLING
(B O FACE THE NATION
(D Q THIS WEEK WITH DAVID
BRMOEYQ
■ (10) GOURMET COOKING
AFTERNOON

12:00
■ ® UNIVERSITY A T H L E T IC A S ­
SOCIATION: aORlOA B A S K E T -

(E O

8:30

*

0 ® NBC NEWS
c ia Q u in n) ra p t a c ts her in th e G anQCSSNEW8
D u n a c t (P a rts o l 7 ) g
Q ABC NEWS g
m TALES FROM THE DARK*
■ I (11) WHAT'S HAPPENING SIDE Tw o la u d in g w itc h # * fig h t lo r
NOWtt Nadine and Ra| hope to re­ o w n e rsh ip o l a m ag ica l c a t’s paw
unite a lovesick maid with her boy­
friend
10:30
(11) BOB NEWHART
(SIMOMT GALLERY
WREtttMKRHIt
WttaT NewBeever Show
11:00
vmas
*&lt;«.
3 &gt; ® B ® B newb
(11) HAWAII FIVE-0
® NEW LEAVE IT TO BEAVER At(W) ADAM SMITH'S MONEY
ter m u c h e a v e sd ro p p in g . O liver b e ­ WORLO
c o m e * co n v in ce d th a t E d d ie Is
SPORTS PAGE
g o in g to m u rd e r h is w ife
m TWILIGHT ZONE

® B SMXEL A EBERT S THE
MOVIES Scheduled reviews: “ Tin
7:00
Men" (Richard Oreytuss, Denny B 3 ) OUR HOUSE G us c o n fro n ts
DeVito); "Some Kind ol Wonderful" a u se d -c a r sa le sm a n w h o so ld h im
(Eric Slottz. Mery Sluart Metier- and Je s sie a le m o n In ste re o , g
ton): "Beyond Therapy" (JuHe Hag- ( S ^ t t MINUTES
DISNEY SUNDAY MOVIE
erly. Jell Goldblum)

■ (10) JOY OF PAINTING
■ (I) SHOP-AT-HOME ANO SAVE

S

B m STAR SEARCH

1(h00

(11) INN NEWS
(10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"L o s t E m p tie s " A c o rp s e is found

C O LLEG E B A S K E T B A L L

1:00

2

1:30

3:00

4:00

O ® LPG A O O LF Kem per Open,
tin a l round, fro m Pnncevtlte G oll
C o u rs e in K auai. H awaii l Live}

O

9:00

M O VIE The D irty Dozen
The Deadly M is s io n " (P rem iere)
Telly S a v a la i. E rn est B orgnm e As
f f i Q WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS W o rld W ar It in te n sifie s in Europe,
S ch e d u le d
H ig h lig h ts o l Race an A m erican m a jo r assem bles a
A c ro s s A m erica, a b icycle race g ro u p o l m ilita ry co n v icts to u n d e r­
Iro m H u n tin g ton B each (C ali! I to ta k e a d a n g e ro u s m ission in te n d e d
A tla n tic C ity IN J ) | Taped)
lo d e stro y N azi plans lo develop
f f i (11) M O V IE W ail U n til Dark
a n d use ch e m ica l w eaoons In s le r( 1967| A udrey H epburn. A lan Ark in
A b lin d w o m a n o u tw its ■ In o ol
I'L L T A K E M A N H A T TA N
w o u ld -b e h erom thieves
R ased on th e J u d ith K rantz novel
Q) (10) A L L CREATURES GREAT In p o s t-w o rld W ar II New Y ork, sadA N D S M A LL It
m ad e m illio n a ire Zach A m b e rvilte
CD (8) BO N AN ZA
m a k e s a g a rm e n t-in d u s try p u b lic a ­
tio n Ih e co rn e rs to n e ot a m agazine
( J ) O PG A OO LF Ooral Ryder e m p ire and ro m a n c e s an e d ito r but
O pen, final ro u n d . Irom Miami m a rrie s an a sp irin g b allerina S tars
V atene B ertin e lli. Perry K in g and
(Live)
Francesca A nm s (P art 1 o l 4 | g
f f l (10) M YSTER YI The R eturn o l
GD ( 10) FIRING LINE
S h e rlo ck H o lm e s
The S econd
£ B ( I ) W ILD K IN O D O M Joan Em- S la m When H olm es is asked to
b e ry Irom th e San D iego Zoo and lin d a stolen g o ve rn m e n t d o cu m en t
a n th ro p o lo g is t Dr N a n cy Lu- b e fo re its p u b lic a tio n can lead to
th e ha u s study New G uinea s w ild- w ar, a pan o t n o ru d e n lica l b lo o d s­
life
ta in s p ro vid e S herlock H olm es w ith
a vita l cluo g
© N ATIO N AL GEO O RAPHIC EX­
(H i W R ESTLIN G
f f l (8) W H A T A C O U NTRY! N ikolai PLO R ER The C ulpepper and M arb e lie ve s he s be in g fo llo w e d by the n w e a th e r C ircu s o l Iowa a p ro file ot
th e A m azon ra m fo re st and p o ssible
KGB
m easures th a t can be taken lo p re ­
ve n t its d e stru c tio n , m od e rn -d a y
EVENING
p io n e e rs o l C anada S Yukon. Larry
a n d Peggy Thaw s 5 0 0 0 -m ile to u r
6:00
o l In d ia in a la n d vacht
0 ® ( E O ® Q news

4:30

5:00

5:30

®

3:30

© G ET SMART

4:00
® 0 M OVIE Things In Their S ea ­
s o n " (19741 P atricia Neal. Ed F la n ­
ders
© AGRICULTURE U S A.

Poisons In
Your Garden
In " S a v e Y o u r
Child's Life." author
David Hendin warns of
potential poisons
lu rkin g in com m on
food plants. Cherry tree
twigs release deadly
cyanide when eaten.
Peach tree leaves con­
tain hydrocyanic acid,
a dangerous poison.
The leaves and vines o f
to m ato and p o ta to
plants can cause severe
stomach and nervous
disorders, and rhubarb
leaves contain k i d ­
ney-damaging oxalic
acid.

Ssiiford HBTBtd, Ssitford, FI.

Friday, Ftb, 27, 1167-5

Robin Leach
A Silk-Pajama Host
B y Frank Sanello
H OL L Y W O OD (NEA) When Robin Leach plans the
topics o f his syndicated TV
shows — both Ihe nighttime
a n d d a y t i m e v e r s io n s o f
"Lifestyles of the Rich and
Famous" plus his new show,
"Runaway with the Rich and
Famous" — his first concern
isn't the rich and famous. It's a
mythical couple he calls Joe
and E th el, w h o hail from
som ewhere between Kansas
and Iowa.
" I f you yanked Joe and Ethel
off the farm and put them
Inside the lobby of Cher’s $6
mi l l i o n M oroccan fantasy
home.” say Leach, "the first
question Joe and Ethel would
ask is. ‘ Holy Moses! What on
earth did this cost?’ Their
second question would be.
’ What does she earn in order to
afford all this?'
"T h a t’s why on 'Lifestyles'
wc art* obsessed with price
tags."
But turn the tables on Leach
— ask how much lie makes —
and the affable Brit avoids Ihe
q u e s t i o n w 11 h a e I c v c r
an ecdote: " I 'm not a m il­
lionaire. /Ml I hope is that in
two years or whenever the
shows end. on the last episode I
can say. 'Thank you for mak­
ing me rich and famous.'"
As . c hi e f b a rk er for his
"Lifestyles" shows. Leach has
been called the Alistair Cooke
of pillow talk. It's an appella­
tion he loves. "I'm the best
p ra ctition er o f silk-pajama
journalism In the world." he
says.
As u Joke, a columnist for a
Florida newspaper accused
"Lifestyles” of being a commie
plot — by making capitalism
look so relentlessly vulgar.
Leach was prodding America

...S o a p s
Continued from page 3
Duncan was in have nut Mi ■Nell. Susan
amt Ellen rat h hlumrd tin- utlirr lor
Emily'* screwed up life Frannlr feel* like
a tilili w ftrtl noW dial tint) and Klin liavcSatrrtna. tt.ir1i.ira broke nil lirr romance
wnli Duncan

CAPITOL
.lordy liniml Lrunnr. wliu dird when she
trll ituwn tlir stairs Jrffrry and liaslrr
began a search tor Mall MrCundle**, aim
I* realty Alt’* yuungrf hr i idler, Prince
Marlm. and heir In thr ttirnnr ol llarui i|
ll-mlrr told Jrtfrry dial Clartasa dnr*n t
know about Malt * real parentage Kalr
kept mum that *hr wus arguing M id i
I.r.ninr al dir duir nl thr accident Jrtfrry
rrv ra lrd dial Mark * m yslrry boss.
Octopus. want* Matt dead Abdullah
lirgan bl*i|iir*t to lakr nvrr Itur.irij Ailinw
and Laurrrn *rt up housekeeping together
allrr In* Inrgril Sam's signature In a Irllcr
authorizing Laurm t's transfer tn annthrr
hospital. Thomasmovrd in with Kelly

DAYS O r OUR LIVES
Shunt rrult/rd dial Trddy l* rrjlly
Andrew ultrr 1‘uul shuwrd hint a liuhy
picture of Trddy Patch udmlllrd in Kayla
dial whrn hr wa* a youngster, fir tried tn
hunt tin* house down in an rllorl In kill III*
abusive lather liar tiara uiiitrrwrnt sur
jfrry after a car crash while Trddy
lAndrrwl escaped injury Shane ln-llrve*

Into the arms of communism.
Unfortunately for the colum­
nist. his readers apparently
didn’t get the Joke. They sent
in scaring letters, attacking the
writer for attacking their favor­
ite TV glamour hustler.
Leach has been Inside the
homes of some of the most
reclusive and inaccessible peo­
ple In the world. It took him a
month of hand-holding and
begging to gain access to the
pleasure palaces of Saudi arms
merchant Adnan Khashoggi.
But the only two celebrities
Leach really covets are Greta
Garbo and Jacqueline Onassls.
*Td love to interview Garbo
because she doesn’ t ta lk ."
Leach says. " I ’d love to do
Madame Onassls because I'd
love lo be the one who got to
ask her why she married a
Greek tycoon who wus much
older than she was. I'm afraid
we'll Iwith go to our respective
graves without doing those
Interviews."
Leach turned down Invita­
tions to visit with Ferdinand
M arcos and “ B ab y D o c ”
Duvalicr when they were tn
power. "T h e way they got their
wealth was immoral." he says.
So why was he cavorting on the
yacht o f Khashoggi. who sells
instruments of death around
the world? Leach equivocates.
"He sells other things, too."
"Runaway with the Rich and
Famous." which debuted in
February, was spun ofr a regu­
lar segment o f the original
show. It was the most popular
segment and attracted 100.000
pieces of fun mail weekly.
It's fun to imagine other
fantasy segments, which might
pit celebrities against Ihe ele­
ments or Incredible danger.

that ltarli.ira klllrd hiniuu Olivia admitted
that she loves Roman, who tell |»- wa*
brlniylng Marietta* memory whrn hr
kissed Olivia .Instill Rave Victor a dosslrr
that llo fumpllrd on Victor Ho spoiled
Orphru* III Inwn, hot wasn't able In catch
film Patch attacked Duke, who slapjicd
K.nl.i when six* tried to break up a fight
In IMrcii Patch and Duke Patch pulled a
gun nn Duke, thrratrnmg tn kill him
Leslie admitted to Chris dial site doesn't
led good about having pul Khulirrly
IhTiiik I liars Orpheus showed Martena
photo* nl tier i hlldren and nl Mnin.in and
Olivia.

GENERAL HOSPITAL
Pal rick and Terry rmnpeii tn the sack
Anna adnndcd In Duke that stir's worried
about Abigail's prediction that marriage
isn't in die future lor Duke and Anna
Can,cilia gut proof that she’s llanm
V.iroilV * daughter, not Angus' Sean was
intrigued liy Dr llrrin Itigstrom who was
Intcrvirwd liy Tiffany Scan and TlfTimy
wrul to M.irilntijue where Sean plan* tn
spend his time al the gambling tables
I i.&gt;1itit suspect* that an atllng Lucy t*
pregnant, tint ran I Hgurr out who la
Ihered dir huhy. Anna wa* shocked amt
Duke was lorlou* that Canirlll.i said she *
given up her plans in brrumr a nun and is
moving to Port Chartr* Krlv o loimd Kay,
who. had been tieulrn iiji Scan won lug
buck* oil Wullg.mg Von Si tinier, wlio |&gt;uid
Scan with a rubber check Frisco suspects
that Kay and Hllla.'V arc somehow tn
volvrd with d ir crime ring he’s tn
vrsllgallng

�r

l
A—Sanford Harald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Fab. 27,1W7

Daytime Schedule
0QOOOM ORM NO AMERICA
(11)0.1. JOE

S
s.-oo
•
f f l T H IS W C EX M C O U N T R Y
M
U S IC l(M O N )
MUM*
------ IT S COUNTRY (TUE-FRf)
9 &lt; £ I*BRANDED (TUE)
_ G U N S OR W ILL S O N N E T T
(W E D )
■ (1 1 ) C N N N E W S
© B EVER LY

ii'

6:30
■ ® T O O A V 8 BUS IN E B B
CD •
O U N S O R W IL L S O N N E T T
BRANOCD(TUE)
LOOK AT ME NOW (WED)
CAN YOU S I THINNER?
(11) CNN NEWS
ANOY GRIFFITH

6:00
|(T) NBC NEWS
) ■ BALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
) B EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
) (1 1 )0 0 0 0 DAYI
) CNN NEWS
__ (8) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
SAVINGS (MON. WED-PRI)
■ (I) TOOTBOAY (TUE)

6:30
NEWS
CSS MORMNQ NEWS
)(11)CENTURI0N8
*(10) FARM DAY
) TOM i JERRY ANO RRiCNDB

8

(10) SOUARS ONE TELEVISION

(10) A M . WEATHER

7:00
B fflT O O A Y

7:30

I

660

B (1D OENNW THE MENACE
666

6.-00
O ffl ffl Q (S B NEWS

f f l (11) GIMME A BREAKI
(QD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
d )(S ) KNIGHT RIOER

8:30

S

8

i

B f f l SCRABBLE
® B P f B C S IS RIGHT
( D O RAMS RONTUNI

MDFUNTBTONES
110) MISTER ROGERS (R)

866
a s BEWITCHED

960
I ® THB JUOQfl
I B DONAHUE
IBORRAHWINRREY
)&lt;11&gt;&lt;
(10) SESAME STREET (R )g
_J (• ) SHOP-AT-HOME AND SA'V t
(MON, WED-FRI)
B O ) FASHIONS (TUE)

966

(11) ALICE
(10) RLOREM’S PHANTOM
PANTHERS (MON)
B 0 0 ) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
(TUE. PRO
(10) THE SRAM (WED)
(10) NOVA (THU)
■
IS) SHOP-AT-HOME AND SAVE

It

11:30
B f f l --------WHEEL OR RORTUNE

(DO

a s DOWN TO EARTH

960

« ! »

ASK DR. SCIENCE (MON)

f f l LOVE CONNECTION
(11) PETTICOAT JUNCTION

S

AFTERNOON

966

( Q I LOVE LUCY

1260

1060

I

f f l SALE OR THE CENTURY
■ HOUR MAGAZINE
B TRUE CONFESSIONS

!

March 2

B ® ALF
®

♦

S RO-

1

O

8:00

® ® B ® B N E W 8
11) BEWITCHED
10) BERGERAC (MON)
(10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE

recording artists, whose music
fuses elements ol classical, folk,
rock and |azz Into a style defying
categorization, features acoustic
guitarist WUI Ackerman, alngersongwriter Michael Hedge* and the
sextet Shadowtax.
a (8) MARY TYLER MOORE

KATE A ALLIE

MACGYVER-America’*
fmaiiHa
— l
r lW T il n
H6fOl
ABC

10:30

Arte

(D O MACGYVER
0 ( 1 1 ) HART TO HART
© NEW LEAVE IT TO BEAVER Al­ 3 (10) PLANET EARTH Earth *
though he has promised to baby- past, man's role In Its future and the
til, Kip (Kipp Marcus) finds a way to possibility of a "nuclear winter" are
meat a cut* girl at Mayflald'a cen- examined. (R) q
tennlal carnival.
flD (■} MOVIE "The Miracle Work­
er” (1979) Patty Duka Attln. Melis­
6:30
sa Gilbert. Dedicated teacher Annie
B ( £ NSC NEWS
Sullivan tries every possible ap­
GDOCB8NEW 8
proach to communicate with her
3 ) O ABC NEWS □
O (11) TOO CLOSE ROR COM­ student -- the deal, blind and
FORT Mortal wonders whether she strong-willed Helen Keller.
should undergo a face-lift altar a
8:05
friend has one and looks much 03) ELLIS ISLAND Escaping from
younger.
war, poverty and the police, four
immigrants (Pater Rieger1, Greg
6:36
(Bl DOWN TO EARTH There Is ■ Martyn. Alice Krlge and Judl Bowkat) arrive In America In 1907 In
lire In Candy’s kitchen. In itareo.
search ol the American Dream. Al­
7:00
though they separate at Elll* Island,
B ® NEWLYWED GAME
through the year* their live* contin­
3 ) 0 PM MAGAZINE Ella Mac
ue to Intersect. (Part 1 ol 3)
pherson, the model who appeared
8*30
on Ihe cover of Ihit year's Sports
lllustralad swimsuit Issue; senior B ® MOVIE "The Karate Kid"
1 1984) Ralph Macchio. Norlyukl
citizen rowboat enthusiasts.
"Pat" Morlta.
( D O JEOPARDY
® O MY SISTER SAM
(11) BARNEY MILLER
(10) GREAT SPACE RACE
9:00
Stnle-ot-the-art animation Is used f f i O I’LL TAKE MANHATTAN
to bring to Ilia Russian and Ameri­ 2ach reconciles wllh Nina but Uly
can projects for colonizing space.
thwart* his divorce plana by an­
Included: lunar mining operations, a nouncing her pregnancy; Cutler
Mars colony, and free-floallng cap­ moves to San Francisco and mar­
sules housing a colony of 10.000 lo
ries his boss's paralyzed daughter.
20,000 people.
Stars Lynne Grlllln. Jeck Scotia and
(D (8) MOVIE "The Ghost Of
Adam LeFevre (Part 2 Of 4 )q
Cypress Swamp" (1977) (Part 1 of
(D Q MOVIE "The Bally Ford Sto­
2) Vic Morrow, Noah Beery. A teen­ ry” (Premiere) Gena Rowlands.
ager pursues a wounded black
Josef Sommer. The former first
pan Iher Into a remote swamp and Is lady's physical and emotional bat­
captured by a half-crazed hermit. A
tles with breast cancer, alcoholism
-'Wonderful World of Disney" pres­ and prescription drug dependency
entation.
are recounted In ihls adaptation of
her autobiography. □
7:05
f f l (11) TRAPPER JOHN. M.D.
(Q) SANFORD AND SON
(B (10) EVENING AT POPS Jamas
7:30
Galway plays selections on piccolo,
B f f l ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
penny whistlegend flute Jazz singer
Interview with actor Mel Glbaon, Ihe
Cleo Lalne and the John Dankworth
making of a "Night Court" episode
Quartet perform a musical salute 10
In stereo.
Hoagy Carmichael and Duka Elling­
( £ Q DATING GAME
ton.
QD O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
10:00
(S (1 1 ) BENSON
(B (11) INN NEW8
7:35
SO (10) ON STAGE AT WOLF TRAP
a s HONEYMOONER8
This performance by Windham Hill

6:05

l
t
i

B ( 10)NEWTON'SAPPLE(THU)
1160

( 3 1DREAM OR JEANNE!

(11) BOB NEWHART
(8) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

S

11:00
e® ® B ® B N E W 8
f f l (11) LATE SHOW Hoat: Joan
Rivers. Scheduled; actress Jan* Al­
exander. In stereo.
B (10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
01(8) POLICE WOMAN

11:05

03)

COUSTEALT8 REDISCOVERY
O f THE WORLD An exploration ol
the Sea of Cortez, commonly
known as tha Gulf of California, and
Ihe aquatic llta that Inhabits It, In­
cluding the leading behavior of tha
"visiting" finback whale.

11:30
B ® BEST OF CARSON From
February 1988; comedian Buddy
Hackell, Jazz musician Louis Ballson and Chicago Bears quarter­
back Jim McMahon |oin host John­
ny Carson. In stareo. (R)
( S Q M ' A ’ S'H
(D O N tG H T L IN E g

12:00
®
O
SIMON S SIMON
CD Q
NIGHTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. Scheduled: actor Barry
Baatwlck ("I'll Taka Manhattan");
comedian Robert Townsend. In
stereo.
0 ( 1 1 ) ASK DR. RUTH Topic: con­
dom ads on television. Guest: Rep.
James H. Scheuer (D-N Y.) g
0 ( 8 ) NIGHT OWL FUN

12:05

03)

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
PLORER The Culpepper end Merrlwealher Circus ot Iowa; a profile of
the Amazon rain lores! and possible
measures that can be taken lo pre­
vent Its destruction; modern-day
pioneers of Canada's Yukon. Larry
and Peggy Thaw’s 5,000-mlla tour
ot India In a "land yacht."

12:30
B ® l a t e n ig h t w it h d avio
LETTERMAN Scheduled comedian
Richard Lewis. In stereo.
(D Q MOVIE "The Black Rose"
( 19S0) Tyrone Power, Orion Welles.
(B (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

®

a

Q fTU B )_______________
• &lt;K» MYSTERY) (WED)
3 (10) ALL CREATURES GREAT
ANO SMALL 8 (THU)
(10) ANNA KARENINA (FRt)
(8) MKVOAY BARGAINS

»

10:30
9 $ '
0 B 8 U R C I M R COURT
B { 10) WILD AMERICA (MON, FRt)
B (10) PROFILES OR NATURE
(TUE)
B
(10) PHENOMENAL WORLD
(WED)

SESAME STREET &lt;R)g

MONDAY
EVENING

1066
©M OV*

&amp; (8 )C Z SHOW (MON)

6:46
■

^ J ID R i^ O U V
I (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (R)

1:10

MOVIE "The Phoenix"
(1981|Judson Scott, Shelley Smith.

1266

ORED)
B (10) MAGIC OP FLORAL PAINTMO (THU)
B (W ) PABfDNG CERAMICS (FRI)

(T) 0 CARD SHARKS
■ &lt;" &gt; BfLVERMAWKSn
3 ( « ) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

260

(8) HE-MAN AND MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE

^BCAPTTO L
(111 MY LITTLE PONY

1260
) WORDPLAY
YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS
BLO VM a
(ii)i

S

0 ( 1 0 ) SECRET CITY

160

® CAYS OP OUR LIVES
B A L L MY CHILDREN
(11) DICK VAN DYKE
(10) WE’RE COOKMQ NOW

as

m ov*

166
_ AS THE WORLD TURNS
(ll)F-TROOP
(10) NEW SOUTHERN COOKBIGi(MON)
(10) FRENCH CHEF (TUE)
(10) MADELEINE COOKS (WED)
(K » WOOOWTVQHTS SHOP

1
S

0 (1 O &gt; FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRO

260
B ® ANOTHER WORLD
m 3 ONE LITE TO LIVE
3 &lt;1DANDY GRIFFITH
(10) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
ACRYLICS (MON)
(10) JOY OF PAINTING (TUE)
(10) MAGIC OP OIL PAINTING

SANTA BARBARA
aUKMNQUQHT
GENERAL HOSPITAL
m i)8CO O SYD O O
I (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
0 (8) MEFOAV SARGAMS (MONWED, FTV)
B (8) STERUNQ SILVER (THU)

S

O TOM A JERRY ANO FRKNOS

IP

10) SESAME STREET (R )g

B®&gt;
®

0

460

a

.TAM
- - . v(MON-WED,
------------ 1FRO
Q p fcu L
BCHOOLBRCAX

S t t JEOPARDY
B (11) THUNOERCATS □
(8) 8HE-RA: PRINCESS OP

3

*

B ® ® 0G D 0N EW 8
(11) GIMME A BREAKI
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NCW8HOUR
f f l (8) KNIGHT RIDER

8

6:05
(Q) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6:30
0 ® NBC NEWS
( J } 0 CBS NEWS
CD o ABC NEWS g
3 (11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Monroe tails lor the Rush’s
Latin housekeeper who’s an Illegal

7:00
0 f f l NEWLYWED GAME
f f l O PM MAGAZINE Michael J.
Fox ("Family Tie*"); celebrities'
children who aren't In show bust-

CDO

JEOPARDY
f f l (11) BARNEY MILLER
3 (10) PLANET EARTH Earth's
past, man's role In Its fulure and Ihe
possibility of a "nuclear winter" are
examined. (R)Q
f f l (8) MOVIE "The Ghost O!
Cypress Swamp" (1977) (Part 2 ot
2) Vic Morrow. Noah Beery. A teen­
ager pursues a wounded black
panther Into a remote swamp and Is
captured by a hall-crazed hermit. A
"Wonderful World of Disney" pres­
entation.

7:05
03) SANFORD AND80N

7:30
B f f l ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
interview with actor-comedian
Howie ’ Mandat; the making of a
"Night Court" episode. In stareo.
f f l O DATING GAME
f f l Q WHEEL OF FORTUNE
f f l (11) BENSON

7:35
03) HONEYMOONERS

8:00
O f f l MATLOCK
f f l O SPIES (Premiere) A legend­
ary spy (George Hamilton) and his
idealistic partner (Gary Kroeger)
light crime Tonight: Slone and
Smylhe try to recover stolen gov­
ernment microfilm from an Internalional master spy.
f f l O WHO’S THE BOSS?

S 7 s) rambo

666
f f l GIUJGAN8ISLANO

March 3
(11) HART TO HART
(10) NOVA Filmed shortly before
Ns death in 1983, Russian emigre
George Kisliakowsky discusses de­
signing the atomic bomb, serving
as science adviser to President El­
senhower end. In later years, be­
coming an anti-nuclear activist. Au­
thor-astronomer Carl Sagan
conducted tha Interview. Q
(D (8) M O V* "The Thomas Crown
Affair" (1968) Steve McQueen. Faye
Dunaway. An Insurance Investigator
tail* In lov* with a wealthy crook.

2

MAX-RETURN O f THE
* JEW with Mark
Ford on Ctnemax

CUMMAX

8:05
© ELLIS ISLANO Lite In America
proves to have Its share of hard­
ships as well as success for Ihe
querist as they become embroiled
In professional disputes and partonal Jealous!**; meanwhile, Marco
(Grog Martyn) throw* his hat Into
Ihe political ring. (Part 2 of 3)

8:30
ffl Q
GROWING PAINS Carol
considers using Ihe money she won
In a radio contest to gel a nose )ob.
Q

SSS

3 ( (11)
i i ) j JEFF1RSOHS
c
(10) OCCAM * (MON)
B (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
(10) BUSINESS FILE (A) (WtD)
(W ) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
(10) ART OP BEMG HUMAN

1i .

ORCAM OP JCANMC

(8) KMOHT RIOER (THU, FA!)

B ROCKY ROAO (MON-THU)
(D SAFE AT HOME (FRI)
( 10) COMMANDERS
(8) MARY TYLER MOORE

S

1065

(□) NBA BASKETBALL Lo* Angeles
Lakers al Golden State Warrior*
(Live) (Sub|*ct to blackout)

10:30
B (11) BOB NEWHART
f f l (S) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENOe

1160
0 f f l 3 ) 0 0 ) 0 NEWS
B (11) LATE SHOW Host: Joan
Rivers Scheduled: actor Jamas
Brolin ( "Hotel ") In atarao.
f f l (10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
f f l (8) POLICE WOMAN

11:30

B f f l BEST OF CARSON From
January 1988: actor Gaorga Segal,
comedian WII Shrlner and L.A.
Lakers center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar |oln host Johnny Carson. In
stareo. (R)

(S Q M 'A '8 'H
ffl O

n ig h t line

10:00
B f f l HILL STREET BLUES Goldbluma turns to • young Informant
for help In finding a mass murderer,
f f l O JACK AND MIKE An ex-YIppie throws a costume party to cele­
brate the turbulent ‘60s In Chicago.

g

1260

f f l O TJ. HOOKER A psychic
helps Hooker search for a kid­
napped girl who will die If she Is not
found soon. (R )
f f l O NIGHTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. Scheduled: actress Julie
Hagerty ("Beyond Therapy"). In
atarao.
f f l (11) ASK OR RUTH Topic: new
developments In the treatment ol
herpes. Guesl: Dr. Alan Kllng q
CD (6) NIGHT OWL FUN

9:00
B f f l HUNTER McCall faama up
with a handsome new partner to
find Hunter, who seems to have fall­
en prey to Ihe mob. In slereo. q
f f l ( 1 I'LL TAKE MANHATTAN An­
gry over Mail's unwillingness to en­
dure poverty, Rocco leaves; Zach
dies to Canada to sort out his Ilia.
Stars Barry Bostwlck, Brett Cullen
and Robert Addle. (Part 3 of 4 )q
f f l Q MOONLIGHTING Meddle s
not entirely pleased when Sam and
David slnke up an uneasy friend­
ship q
f f l (11) TRAPPER JOHN, M.D.
f f l (10) SOLDIERS; A HISTORY OF
MEN IN BATTLE The cavalry as a
war weapon Narrator: Frederick
Forsyth

(11) INN NEWS

660

I PEOPLE'S COURT

666

4:30

6:36
(Q) ANDY GRIFFITH

S

B

® B THREE’S COMPANY (MONWED. FRO

TUESDAY

NOLLYWOOO SQUARES
111) FACTS OF UF1
(10) OCCAM * (MOM)
(10) UNOCRSTANOMG HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUO
I (ItykKMSY
PUZZLE
ffHU)
( 10) BUSINESS
FILE (R)
(WED)
(10)
ART OPUZZLC{
f BEING HUMAN
(W
) MONEY

(MON-WED)

466
© 8C O O SYD O O

6:00

S

360

3

EVENING

660
DIVORCB COURT
M*A*S*H

Q WOMANWATCH (FRQ

366
1:30

© FUNT8T0NES

266

360

B
(D
B
3

466

tT

(Ql PERRY MASON

12:20

03) MOVIE "Castle

K e e p " (1 9 6 9 )
B u rt L a n c a s te r, P a le r F a lk .

12:30
O f f l LATE NIGHT WfTH DAVID
LETTERMAN S c h e d u le d : a c to r s
S u s a n S a in t J a m e s ( " K a t e &amp; A llie " )
a n d J o h n S a v a q e . In s te re o ,
ffl O
MOVIE " S a t a n N e v e r
S le e p s " (1 9 6 2 ) W illia m H o ld e n .
F ra n c a N u y e n .

f f l (11) HAWAII FIVE-0

1:10
ffl Q

MOVIE " L e g e n d O f T h e

G o ld e n G u n " (1 9 7 9 ) J e f f O s te rh a g e ,
H a l H o lb ro o k

1:30
ffl

(11) BIZARRE G u e s ts : W illie

T y le r a n d L e s te r S k e tc h e s : h u m a n
A ta r i; M r. G a n d h i's N e ig h b o rh o o d .

2:00
ff l &lt;11) DUKES OF HAZZARD

02

2:20
MOVIE "A

D e a th " (1 9 6 7 )
L a u ra D e v o n .

C o v e n a n t W ith
G e o rg e M a h a rls ,

�Friday, Fab. 1 1,1W7-7

Sanford HaraM, Sanford, FI.

The Truth Of How 'Manderly' Burned
Dear Dick: I vonder if yon could help me
Inn a theory I have about Alfred Hit-fcfo ••Rebecca." I have atudied the prope
pad iateriora and exterior detaila of Manderly
the movie for yeara. I believe they photoaphed and burned a real country home In
j^land. Am 1right? — O.M.W.. Enid, Okla.
Dear G.M.W.: Sorry to burst your beautiful
bubble, but Hollywood's special effects people were
masters. In Francois Truffaut's book about Hit­
chcock. he quotes the director as saying that
Manderly was a miniature — "even the road leading
to it was a miniature." That wonderful 1940 film
was shot entirely in Hollywood.

Dear Dick: Please, oh, please, settle this
long-running dispute between my husband and
m e . Who played Agent BB in the TV series,
"Oct Smart"? My husband says Jane Fonda. I
say, "No way!" — E.H., Boston, Oa.
Dear E.H.: You’ re the smart one. It was Barbara
Feldon.

Dear Dick: On "Yankee Doodle Dandy,"
Marring James Cagney, one of the producers
was William Cagney and the one who played
his sister, Josie, was Jeanne Cagney. Is there
■ay relation between the three of them? —
B.M.J., Catawlssa, Pa.
Dear
Siblings, all. Bill and Jeanne were
Jimmy’s brother and sister.

Dear Dick: Could you tell me if Kevin Bacon,

WEDNESDAY
EVENING

6:00

S 0 ( S O ( S O NEWS

(11) GIMME A BREAKI
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER

MNSHOUR
O R KNIGHT RIDER

8.-05
O BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

8:30
■ Q NeCNEW S
(Eneas news

(7)0 ABCNEWSn
• (11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Hsnry takas drastic mea­
sures lo avoid paying a high penalty
Na tor library books that are live
years overdue.

6‘35

CD O PERFECT STRANGERS Belkl and Larry quit their Jobs at the
store and tlnd work In a small diner.
2ft (11) HART TO HART
S (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Hal Holbrook narrates the tlory of
tour Americans now living In China;
■ student, a journalist, a business­
man and a teacher, g
O (S) MOVIE "Exposed" (1083)
Nastassja Kinski. Harvey KMtel. A
fashion model s lover uses her as
bait to trap an International killer.

8:05

(B) ELLIS ISLAND In spite ol a
smear campaign from the opposi­
tion. Marco continues his quest lor
the stale senate even though hit fa­
ther-in-law (Richard Burton) urges
him to withdrew. (Part 3 ol 3)

8:30

O AHOY GRIFFITH

7:00
■ ® NEWLYWED GAME
X B PM MAGAZINE Comic actor
Danny De Vito; an unusual chlmptfttBe
(D O JEOPARDY
• (11) BARNEY MILLER
n |t0) WONDERWORKS "A Little
Princess" When Sara's new circum­
stances relegate her to the attic.
She befriends Becky the scullery
meld; Mr. Cerrlstord begins search­
ing tor the daughter of his old friend
end business partner. (Perl 2 of 3)

i

(8) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
OONEY "The Swamp Fox"Amerlcan Revolutionary soldier Francis
Merlon (Leslie Nielsen), alias the
Swamp Fox, frees tallow patriots
caplured by the British In South Ca­
rdins. (From 1959)

„

7:05

Q SANFORD AND SON

7:30
■ (3) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview wtin actress Use Bonet
("The Cosby Show"). In stereo.
( 2 ) 0 DATING GAME
® O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
• (11) BENSON

«

7:35

52) HONEYMOONS RS

8:00
B 9 ) HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN Ell
Wsllech end Anne Jackson star as
the parents ol a comatose son and
■ gullt-rlddsn daughter. In stereo.

8, O

NEW MIKE HAMMER A tun­
ny money case leads Hammer to en
attractive woman (Caryn Rlchman)
Mio'a also a compulsive gambler.

March 4

(D Q HARRY (Prsmlere) Comedy.
Alan Arkln stars as Harry Porschak,
the scheming head of Ihe purchas­
ing department In a metropolitan
hospital. Tonight: Hllber (Thom
Bray) goes lo Nurse Ouckstt (Hol­
land Taylor) with evidence thel Har­
ry's been selling hospital supplies.

Q
9:00
B
9 ) GIMME A BREAK! Nell
works on a plan lo encourage Sam
and Eric to stay In college. (Part 2 ol
2) In stereo. Q
(D o
I'LL TAKE MANHATTAN
Cutler and Lily announce Iheir mar­
riage at a meeting ol the Ambervtlle
board ot directors. Justin's arrested
on trumped-up drug charges; Lily
discovers Il&gt;e Irulh about Zach's
death Stars Francesca Annls. Bar­
ry Bostwlck and Valerie Berllneill
(Part 4 of 4|q
(D O DYNASTY Neat McVane
threatens Adam wllh blackmail;
Blake and Kryslla learn that Sarah
Curds has changed her mind about
Krystina's heart Irsnsplanl. Q *
OJ (11) TRAPPER JOHN. M.O.
H&gt; (10) MOVIE "Teahouse 01 The
August Moon” (1956) Marlon Bran­
do. Glenn Ford. When a young
Army c a p ta in In lro d u c e s A m e ric a n
customs to Okinawa his efforts
back lire .

9‘30
B 9 ) THE TORTELLIS Loretta and
Annie catch Nick and Anthony In
the pool with two gorgeous women
In stereo.

10:00
o 9 ) ST. ELSEWHERE Shirley
Daniels (Ellen Bry) returns lo SI Ellgius — this lime as a patient with a

Ask Dick
Kleiner
who played in "Footloose." ever played the ten
of Dr. Sarah McIntyre on "The Guiding Light"?
— A.K., Carriere, Mias.
Dear A.K.: Kevin Bacon did play a character
named Tim Werner briefly on that soap back In
1980.

Dear Dick: Pleaae solve this mystery for me.
Whatever became of the actor Anthony Dexter,
who played Rudolf Valentino In the movie
about Valentino's life? — P.T., The Woodlands.
Texts.
Dear P.T.: Nothing much, which Is the problem.
He never fulfilled the promise he showed In
"Valentino" In 1951. He Is still working at his
career, but the last thing I remember seeing him in
was "Thoroughly Modern Millie."

Dear Dick: June Allyson has been one of my
favorites. Years ago 1 saw her In a sea
adventure, I think maybe with Van Johnson.
Could you tell me the name of it? Was It "High
—"? — M.P., Amarillo, Texas.
pelvic disorder who's accused of
yet another murder, g
® O HOTEL At Christine's 15year high-school reunion, a former
waStlower emerges aa the most
successful graduate, and the exclose hero shows Interest In Chris­
tine. Guest iters Include Jett Cona­
way and Stephanie Faracy. g
(E)(11) INN NEWS
CD(8) MARY TYLER MOORE

10:05
(Q) MOVIE "The Slna Ot Rachel
Cede" (1981) Angle Dickinson, Pe­
ter Finch. A missionary loses Ihe re­
spect ol the natives alter she suc­
cumbs to lemplsllon.

10:30
Q ) (11) BOB NEWHART
(B (8) CAROL BURNETT AND
FR IE N D S

11:00
B 9) (D O ®

QNEW S
(B (11) LATE SHOW Host: Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: Michael J. Fox,
Whoopi Goldberg. David Copperfield In stereo.
S (10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
09(8) POLICE WOMAN

11:30

B 9 ) B E S T O F C A R S O N F ro m
J a n u a ry 1966: c o m e d ia n D o n R ic ­
kie s, c la rin e tis t P e te F o u n ta in .
G w e n P e le rs o n (ra c e s p ig s l a n d
c o w b o y p o e l W a d d le M itc h e ll |o ln
h o st J o h n n y C a rso n . In s le re o . (fl)
( 2 ) 0 M * A * 8 'H

® Q NIGHTLINE g

12:00
® Q A O D E R LY A d d e r ly re lu c ta n t­
ly a g re e s to h e lp a r e t ir e d a g e n t a d ­
just lo c iv ilia n life. (R )
®
O
N IG H T L IF E H o s t D a v id
B re n n e r S ch e d u le d : a c to r J o h n
M a lk o v lc h (" M a k in g M r R ig h t"). In
s le re o
IS (1 1 ) A S K D R R U T H G u e s t: a u ­
th o r S id n e y S h e ld o n , g
(B (8 ) N IG H T O W L F U N

12:30

B 9 ) L A T E N IG H T W IT H D A V ID
L E T T E R M A N S c h e d u le d : c o m e d ia n
S p a ld in g G ray In s le r e o .
® O M O V IE " T h e T ro ja n W o m ­
e n " (1 9 7 2 ) K a th a rin e H e p b u rn ,
G e n e v ie v e B u jo ld
f f l ( I D H A W A I I F IV E -0

12:35
( U M O V IE “ A S to le n L ila " (1 9 4 6 )
B e tte D a vis. G le n n F o rd .

1:10
® O M O V IE " B e y o n d E v il" ( I 9 6 0 )
L y n d a D a y G e o rg e . J o h n S a xo n .

1:30
I S (1 1 ) B IZ A R R E S k e tc h e s M r T
m e e ts S u p e r O avo

2:00
( S (1 1 ) D U K E S O F H A Z Z A R O

Dear M.P.: You may be thinking of “ High
Barbaree," which dates from 1947. 1 wouldn't
exactly classify It as a sea adventure, but It did have
many sequences on the ocean, so I guess It’s the one
you are remembering.

Dear Dick: Is a motion picture titled "Head,"
featuring The Moakeee, available on VCR? —
H.R., Bay City, Texas.
Dear H.R.: If you would have asked me a couple of
weeks ago. the-answer would have been no. But
Mike Nesmith, one of those four madcaps, tells me It
Just was Issued by RCA/Columbla. It was a pretty
good film — made by Bob Rafelson Just before he
made "F iv e Easy Pieces."

Dear Dick: What happens to the film that la
deleted when a movie la edited before release?
Ia It thrown away or la there any way to see the
cuts? It wonld be fascinating to see the cuta of
your favorite movie. — P.J., Knoxville, Tenn.
Dear P.J.: You are talking about one of the most
precious of Hollywood commodities, the outtakes.
They are full of goofs — some funny, some obscene,
some Just plain embarrassing — and that film Is
watched carefully. Some stars have It In their
contracts that outtakes must be destroyed. But
there Is a brisk trade among Hollywood Insiders In
outtakes. which can become valuable. Often, at the
wrap party — the party generally given when a
production closes — the outtakes are shown, to
general hilarity.
M a rch 5

THURSDAY
EVENING

6:00
B GD (3) B QD O NEWS
B (11) GIMME A BREAK!
B
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR

6:05
(Q) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6:30

B 9 ) NBC NEW8
(D O CBS NEWS

CD Q ABC NEWS g
B (11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Henry and Muriel eel as re­
ferees when a marital dispute
erupls between the Kennedy!
B (8) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
DISNEY "Cherokee Trail" A Louis
L'Amour story about a widow end
her daughter who run a stagecoach
depot In 19th-century Colorado.

6:35
© ANDY GRIFFITH

7:00
B ( £ NEWLYWE0 GAME
Q ) O PM MAGAZINE Siegfried
and Roy, entertainers with an ani­
mal magic act; an art studio lhal
craales commercials fealurlng liveaction and animation.
CD O JEOPARDY
CD (11) BARNEY MILLER
B (10) NATURE A portrait ol the
crane (Pari 2 ol 3) In stereo, g

7 :05
(H SANFORD ANOSON

7:30
B 9 ) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with comedian Don Ric­
kies. In stereo
( £ B OATINQ GAME
(D O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
a (11) BENSON
a
(8) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Southeastern Conference Wild
Card Game. (Live)

7:35
Q2) HONEYMOONERS

8:00

B 9 ) COSBY SHOW Theo asks
his lather lor permission to lake ttylessons. In stereo (R)Q
O WIZARD A prophetic dream
prompts Simon to embark on e res­
cue mission to Tibet. (R)
CD B OUR WORLD Slones from
the fall ol 1961 Include Ihe building
ol the Berlin Well. Ihe first Peace
Corps volunteers and Roger Metis'
quest to break Babe Ruth's single
season home-run record, also talks
wllh Mickey Manila, Sargent
Shrlver and Peter, Paul A Mary, g

S

P R O J E C T " T o M o v e M o u n ta in s

11:00

(11) HART TO HART
(10) LIVE FROM THE MET "An
Evening With Joen Sutherland and
Luciano Pavarotti" Scenes from
two Verdi worka, "Rlgolello" and
"La Travtata," as well aa Donizetti's
"Lucia Di Lammermoor," are per­
formed by soprano Joan Suther­
land and tenor Luciano Pavarotti.
Richard Bonynge conducts the
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and
Chorus. English subtitles. In slereo

«

8 :06
(Q) MOVIE "Cape Fear" ( 1962) Oregory Peck, Robert Mllehum. After
eight yeara In prison, an embittered
man seek! revenge on the lawyer
responsible lor his conviction.

B

8:30

9 ) FAMILY TIES Sklppy falls In
love with one of Mallory’s friends. In
slereo. Q

9 :00
B 9 ) CHEERS Sam and Diane at­
tend a prenuptial session with a
prominent marriage counselor
(John Cleese). In slereo. g
* O SIMON l SIMON A friend
who saved Rick's life In Vietnam Is
killed by members of a street gang
CD O THE COLBY8 Francesca
finds herself, once again, attracted
to Phillip Colby; Miles learns about
Channlng's secret regarding the
Colby heirs, g
CD (11) TRAPPER JOHN. M.O.

B

9 :3 0
9 ) NIGHT COURT Dan saves

Christine's life and then asks her lo
sleep with him as a return favor. (R)
CD (8) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

10:00

B 9 ) L.A. LAW Kelsey represents
an independent toy manufacturer
who wants lo fend off a takeover
bid. In slereo (R)
CD Q KNOTS LANDING Valene.
believing lhal Jean Hackney has
had her husband killed, seeks re­
venge; Gary misses his wedding Q
(D Q 20 / 20 Scheduled: a report
on possible problems wllhln Ihe
San Antonio. Texas, police torce g
(D (11) INN NEWS
6S (8) MARY TYLER MOORE

10:20
© MOVIE "Anzlo" (1966) Robert
Milchum. Peter Falk. An over-caulious and stubborn general nearly
turns the Anzlo Invasion Inlc a dis­
aster.

10:30
03 (11) BOB NEWHART
Q3(10) MARK RUSSELL
CD (B) CHRISTIAN APPALACIAN

B 9 D ( D O ® O new s
B (11) LATE SHOW Host: Joan
Rivers. Scheduled. Andy Williams.
In stereo.
B (10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
® (8) POLICE WOMAN

11:30

8 9 ) BEST OF CARSON From
January 1986: actor Dabney Cole­
man and scientist Dr. Carl Sagan
)dn host Johnny Carson. In stereo.
(R )

m O M 'A 't 'H
(D O NfGHTUNE g

12:00
(D C l NIGHT HEAT While walking
alone. Nicole Is accosted by three
thugs. |R)
CD O NIGHTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. In slereo.
B (11) ASK DR RUTH Topic: sexu­
al restrictions ot heart patients.
Guest: Dr. Hetman Heilersteln. g
CD (8) NIGHT OWL FUN

12:30
B 9 ) LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Scheduled: rock sing­
er Bob Geldol, comic Illusionists
Penn &amp; Teller. In slereo
(D O MOVIE "Abe Lincoln In Illi­
nois” (1940) Raymond Massey,
Ruth Gordon.
(D (11) HAWAII FIVE-0
©

12:50

MOVIE " H o m e B e fo re D a rk "

11 9 5 8 ) J e a n
F le m in g

*

B

S im m o n s ,

1:10

R honda

MOVIE " O h m s "

(I9 6 0 !

R a lp h W a ite . O a v ld B irn e y

1:30

GD (11) BIZARRE S k e tc h e s a b a s e ­
b a ll te a m o w n e r tra d e s a fa n ; Ih e
B ig o ts . Ih e fu tu re o t " 6 0 M in u te s "

2:00
CS &lt;11) 0UKES OF HAZZARO

2:30

CD Q N E W S
CD O MOVIE " R e tu rn

O f The T e x­
a n " (1 9 5 2 ) D a le R o b e rts o n , J o s n n e

Dru

3:00

CD O NIQHTWATCH
€D(1 t)BJ / LOBO
CD (6) NIGHT OWL FUN

3:35
© W O R LD AT LARGE

4:00

CD(111 DALLAS

© LUCY SHOW
CD Q

4:10

MOVIE " S la t te r y 's H u r r i­

c a n e " (1 9 4 9 )
V e ro n ic a L a k e

R ic h a rd

W ld m a rk ,

�•—Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday. Fob. 27, lf*7

G O GUIDE

Fashion Square. 3201 E. Colo­
nial Drive. Orlando.

p.m., Feb. 28 at the Altamonte
Springs Hilton and Towers.
Tickets for pageant and recep­
tion available at the Altamonte
Springs office of The First
Financial Centers or at the
pageant.
Rare Shell Exhibit by four
members of Central Florida
Shell Club. May 1-31. Winter
Park Library. 460 E. New
England Ave.. Winter Park.

Miaa Altamonte Springs
Scholarahip Pageant. 7:30

" T o t a l L o o k " Fashion
Show luncheon to benefit

M ilto n A v e ry

exhibit,

Maitland Art Center. Feb. 21
t hr o ug h Apri l 5. 231 W.
P ack w ood A vc.. M aitland.
Hours 1*4 p.m.

Handmade in America
Show to March 1. Orlando

Ma i t l a n d - S o u t h S e m in o le A rts &amp; C rafts Show. Fort
Chamber o f Commerce.' 11:30 Mellon Park on Lake Monroe.
a m. to 1:30 p.m., March 3. Sanford. March 7-8, 10 a.m. to
Maitland C ivic Center. Call 5 p.m. Hot air balloon rides,
644-0741 for reservations.
entertainment and food con­
Moonwatch. 8 p.m., March cessions. Annual Greater San­
5
ford Chamber of Commerce
John Young Planetarium. Or­ plant sale of azaleas and roses.
lando Science Center. 810 E.
Dinner t Detective Work, a
Rollins St., Loch Haven Park. benefit for Central Florida Zoo
Free to the public. Telescopes sponsored by WESH TV 2.
will be set up for a. public sky March 7. 6:30 p.m., Omni
viewing session.
International Hotel, Orlando.
St. Johns River Festival For reservations call 843-2341.

Klwanls Pancake Day and
Auction benefit. March 21. 8:30
a.m. to 6 p.m., Sanford Civic
Center. Sanford Avenue at
Seminole Boulevard.
Handicap Singles
Nightblrds Dance for 18 years
and older. Westmonte Park.
500 Spring Oaks Blvd., Alta­
monte Springs, every second
and fourth Friday. Hours.
7:30-9:30 p.m. Admission 35
cents. Call Claudia Harris.
Westmonte Park. 862-0090.

V

- — •HUNTUt'8 B M - S f liB iM a

coupon

FREE DINNER
Buy on * dinner at rag. price,
racalva another o f equal or ieeaar
value FREE.
W M - a iM ia n
, ^

___ __

m afl f a saw ee t

■'
1

MIX ’EM UP
CHOICE OF ANY TWO DINNERS

f,|

BREAKFASTBUFFET
Sat. A Sun. ONLY
6:30 a.m.

STEAK HOUSES

ALL YOU CAN EAT ON . . .

160 E. Hwy. 436
Casselberry
Next lo Seminole Plaza

Mon

Ai l! . f f

Tups &amp; ^un

SPARE RIBS

(on 436, 1 blk. E. of 17-92)

, _

260-5242

* 6

Wi-ii
&gt;

CHICKEN

2900 O rla n d o D r.
(H w y . 17-92)
P h . 323-0173
SA N FO RD

^4

4 ’

CRABS . CRASS •CRABS
STEAMED M A R Y LA N D STYLE
W ITH OLD B A Y

A L L -U -C A H TO ( A T

*

_

mm MS t *
_
_

C *V *M I E i p i r t t J / 11/17. S t n M

S ta r* O n ly

coupon

m iT iu

.1 K 0 .it nl . M i

13 • SIRLOIN TIPS
17 • STEAK ON A STICK
112-CHOPPED SIRLOIN
116 • SIRLOIN STEAK
1 DRINKS. TEA. COFFEE, SOFT DRINK
1 POTATO BARS

D A V ID 'S SU B SH O P

.m ’ 6 . 9 5

FULL SEA FO O D AMD ST R A K M IN D
COCKTAIL LOUNGE -

LUNCHEON SP EC IA LS • RAW BAR

•OR CRAB HOUSE

RESTAURANT
11 A M - 10 PM

A A 0 4 |
9 Z 7 - |) 0 0 2

LOUNGE
11 A M - 12 PM

260 E. SR. 434, W IN TE R S P R IN G S - 1 M ILE E. O F 17-92

FRIDAY SEAFOOD BUFFET

ImU m UN AFrM FHh, FrM State*
CrtfcFaMn. FrM titfhk,
HinJi Fupptas, Crak
t AOC
Up lUtet 1FpML
S*M B*r, Mck awrt.
W 4.3*1 p.m.

SATURDAY
i

Breakfast Buffet . ^ 3 • rm. noon
Dinner Buffet. . .

f rneier hfn
WMSKM

C a v a lie r

"TASTE THE DIFFERENCE"
• FU LL LIN E OF ITALIAN DINNERS • SU BS • GYRO ’S
O P E N 7 DAYS
SEM INOLE CEN TRE (WAL-MART)
M O N .-S A T . 11-10
S U N . 11-7

3631 Orlando Dr. Hwy. 17-92
Sanford, FL

O O t 1 COS

MON.-FRL

LUNCH
BUFFET

« 0 9 5

PRIME RIB
SPECIAL * G 95

Advertise On This Page
And Reach
42,000 Households.

4:30 - 9 p.m.

M o t o r In n R e s t a u r a n t

3200 s- Oriando, (Hwy. 17-92)
Sanford 321 -0690
(Across from K-Mart)

Sanford H erald

�f

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222141">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, February 27, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222142">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222143">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on February 27, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222144">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222145">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, February 27, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222146">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222147">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222148">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222149">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22249" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21853">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/2cb19fc9674e9d93e252d2008a8fb21e.pdf</src>
        <authentication>f4153f075088e248a5c26a7817cd3725</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222164">
                    <text>ManGets 35 Years In Shooting Death Of Bo

Longwood
•

•

By D eaaa Jordan
H erald S ta ff W rite r
A Cuban refugee w ho valued hia
credit rating more than his family life
was sentenced to 35 years Thursday for
the second-degree murder of a 7-yearold boy.
Circuit Judge Robert B. McGregor
also ordered that Osvaldo Lorenzo
Acosta receive counseling "as to the
value of human life as contrasted to the
mbre material things In life." Acosta.

■

50. of 326 Berkshire Circle. Longwood.
was stone still during the sentencing.
He could have received 40 years.
Acosta pleaded no contest Dec. 11 to
killing Rolddy Aragon, wounding the
boy's mother and slater. Miss Margarita
Montero. 33. and Lourdes Aragon. 15.
and shooting Inside a home. The
couple's Infant son was uninjured in
the attack.
"What troubles me here. Is that Mr.
Acosta was Involving the children who

•

were totally Innocent with the pro­
blems of the adults." said McGregor of
the June 20 shooting.
"W h y direct anger and frustration
towards them. They're Innocent. I
could better understand If Miss Montero
was the decedent." he said.
According to testimony. It was de­
teriorating finances, a rumpled 10 days
In a motel, and a drinking bout that
changed an upstanding family man
Into a child killer.

Acosta, testifying at the hearing in
the Seminole County courthouse In
Sanford, said he was a successful
Miami businessman who moved to
Orlando In 1985 for a fresh start. He
had a small brush with the law In Dade
County and chose Orlando because of
Its growing economy and low crime
rate, he said. He started a car repair
and sales business but It was running
poorly and by June he owed creditors
•2 0 .0 0 0 . He decided to sell his

Launch O v e r ,
Protest Vigil
To Continue

After Grandparent Complains
By Deane Jordan
H erald S ta ff W riter

By Fred Cooper
Herald S ta ff W rite r
ORLANDO — "You m ay call
me Periwinkle."
That was the response o f Jane
Doe 9 to U.S. Magistrate Donald
P. Dietrich Thursday afternoon
during the Inltal appearance of
two anti-missile activists ar­
rested W ed n esd ay fo r tres­
passing on Patrick Air Force

A complaint from the relative of a student at
Goldsboro Elementary School In Sanford pro­
mpted teachers to stop using a reward hand
stamp with the likeness of Martin Luther King Jr.
The Incident occurred Wednesday, the day
before King's actual birthday and a few days
before federal employees celebrate the holiday
next Monday, a federal holiday in King's honor.
There Is no school in Seminole County Monday,
but teachers will be working.
According to school district spokesman Karen
Coleman, teachers frequently use hand stamps to
reward children or highlight class activities. This
week elementary schools throughout the county
held events about King, Including essay and

M o r e p h o to s , 5 A

i

SeeACOBTA, page 14A

King Stamp
Use Halted

Day Of Protest, Moment Of Tears

Base. John Doe 5 and Jane Doe
9 followed the pattern o f most of
the others arrested In not Iden­
tifying themselves.
Anti-nuclear activists at Cape
Canaveral vowed to maintain
their protest vigil today with a
rally and the anticipated arrival
of Dr. Benjamin Spock to lead
d e m o n s tr a tio n s a g a in s t
Trldent-2 missile testa and de­
ployment.
*
But the call went out for
advocates of a strong national
d efen se to Join a coG nterd e m o n s tr a tio n a t C a p e
Canaveral A ir Force Station
u n d er the b a n n e r " P e a c e
Through Strength."
The Navy successfully com­
pleted its first test launch
Thursday of the new Trldent-2
long-range nuclear missile while
protesters screamed, cried and
threw themselves to the ground
to simulate nuclear war death.
About 38 protesters were at the
gate of Cape Canaveral Air Force
station when the launch occurred
at 10:25 a.m.
At least 19 more test firings
are scheduled from the cape, and
up to seven sea-based tests are
planned before the missiles are
deployed In 1989 aboard Ohioclass submarines.
In the c o u rtro o m . J u d g e
Dietrich requested Identification

Longwood house to pay off the debts
but Miss Montero refused to let a realtor
into the house, he said. Acosta and Miss
Montero argued. He left for 10 days,
sleeping In a motel and eating at
restaurants. He even tried to give the
house to a realtor to sell It without Miss
Montero's approval, he said, though
she had no legal right to the house.
Acosta was also behind In his Income
tax filing.

mi
•«

...teachers ' made the decision
to stop using them on their own
Individual lodgment.'
Before dawn, security officers drag off a protester who
was part of group that locked arms and sat down in front
of the A ir Force station gate to block traffic.

See PRO TEST, page 14 A

poster contests, speaches and readings. As a
result of one of those activities, students In a class

H w eM M w lw ¥ » L w k B«lmew4»

D e m o n s tra to rs joined hands to m a rc h fo r p e ace .

A d e m o n s tra to r th ro w s h im s e lf a g a in s t th e A ir
F o rc e station g a te and s c re a m s as th e T rid e n t
m issile soars s k y w a rd . A t th e s a m e m o m e n t,
ab o u t 12 p ro te s te rs th re w th e m s e lv e s to the
gro und In a m o ck d e a th scene.

Bovlo, director of elementary education for the
county, and complained that the King stamp was
on the child's hand. Mrs. Coleman said. The child
Is white.
Bovlo telephoned Goldsboro principal Leroy
Johnson who then held a stalT meeting to discuss
the Incident. As a result of that meeting, the use
o f the stamp has been discontinued. Mrs.
Coleman said. Johnson said there was no
particular reason given for stopping the use of the
hand stamp, but "they (teachers) made the
decision to stop using them on their own
individual Judgment."
In a related incident, a Sanford woman and
friend are trying to get a petition drive going to
have schools close on King's birthday and not on
designated Mondays, as Is the case with federal
employees.
Rosie Perkins of Sanford, who said she objected
as a parent of school age children to students not
being able to have their hands stamped with the
King likeness. She also said she thought It was
wrong, as Is the case this year, to celebrate King s
Jan. 15 birthday on Jan. 19.
Besides the petitions. Mrs. Perkins and her
friend. Jackie Stephens, said they are thinking
about getting stickers for the kids to wear asking
f o r th r r h n n d f * I n r r l e h r a t i o n d a v .

A w aiting Transport

Sanford Parking Ideas G et Scrutiny

P a ram ed ic s a tte n d to B e rt C o n an t, 22,
of Sanford fo llo w in g a c a r-m o to rc y c le
accident T h u rs d a y a t 1 p .m . In fro n t o f
the Sanford P o lic e S ta tio n . P a sse n g er
on Conant's m o to rc y c le , A vo K u b a r, 23,
of Sanford, re c e iv e d m in o r In ju rie s a n d
w as tre ated a n d re le a s e d . C on ant w a s
a d m itte d to C e n tra l F lo rid a R e g io n a l
H ospital fo r tre a tm e n t of a fra c tu re .
C o n a n t w a s s o u th b o u n d on U .S .
H ig h w a y 17-92, p o lice sa id , w h en a
C hevy d riven b y M a r th a L . P o tte r, 28,
D eltona, s ta rte d to d r iv e across th e
southbound la n e h e a d in g n o rth . T h e
m o torcycle s tru c k th e le ft fro n t fe n d e r
of th e c a r. P o tte r w a s ch arg e d w ith
vio latio n of rig h t of w a y an d C o n an t
w ith d riv in g w ith a suspended d riv e r's
license.

By K aren Talley
H erald S ta ff W riter
The pros and cons of a deck
parking lot and parking meters
In downtown Sanford were de­
bated during the two hours
com m u n ity r e p re s e n ta tiv e s
spent with a traffic consultant at
Sanford city hall Wednesday.
S p rin g b o a rd for the d is ­
cussion, which also considered
possible Installation of parking
m e te r s and t r a f f ic lig h t
slgnallzatlon on First Street, was
the p re lim in a ry draft o f a
downtown Sanford parking and
traffic study.
The city Is paying a private
consulting firm $12,500 for the
study. In effort to get the most
out of the firm’s services, city
staff arranged for one of Its
consultants. Jack Freeman, to
meet with about 15 local repre­
sentatives Wednesday.
The result "w as a very pro­
ductive session with plenty of
p o s itiv e In p u t ," said C ity
Planner Jay Marder. "T h e sug­
gestions that were offered will be
very beneficial for development
of the final product."
The plan Is to address allevia­
tion of present and anticipated
traffic woes in the downtown
area.
A list of "low cost” recom­
mendations to Improve present
trafTlc and parking downtown Is
likely to result from Wednes­
d a y ’s session. Marder said.
These proposals will include

H erald Photo by Deane Jordan

Sturm Seeks More Taxes For Roads
Seminole C ounty C om m is­
sioner Bob Sturm presented a
plan for raising transportation
and road-building funds to the
local le g is la tiv e d e le g a tio n
Thursday, and it got some sup­
port from lawmakers.
Sturm asked that counties be
allowed to raise gasoline tax to
10 cents a 'gallon and levy an
extra penny sales tax.
Senate President John Vogt.
D-Mcrrltt Island, said the Florida
Legislature will likely pass some

Increase In state or local gasoline
taxes this year. But he didn’t
know If a raise above the 5-cent
sales tax would be forthcoming.
Rep. Art Grindle. R-Altamonte
Springs, delegation chairman,
said he supported the gas tax as
a user fee, and even more than
10 cents may be warranted. But
he had some personal problems
with the sales tax.
Sturm said It was very Impor­
tant that the legislators act due
to the demise of the Metropolitan

Transportation Authority at the
ballot box. The MTA proposal
that was soundly defeated by
voters Included a property tax
provision.
Sturm said voters are looking
for a plan that Is affordable,
broad-based and user-oriented
like the sales and gasoline taxes.
Sturm said his proposal would
raise an extra $40 million In
gasoline taxes and $282 million
In sales tax by 1997.
—Kathy Tyrity

consideration of signage direct­
ing drivers to certain locations,
such as government ofTlces.
Wednesday's commentary will
be packaged by city stafT and
there may be another meeting
with the local representatives
before this data goes back to the
consulting firm. Marder said. A
final draft. Incorporating the
Input, should be presented by
the firm to city commissioners
within two months, he said.
Staff will then look to commis­
sioners for direction about re­
fining specific recommendations
and coming up with a plan for
implementation. Marder said.
Using various surveys and
s t a t is t ic s , th e s tu d y th at
downtown Sanford presently ex­
periences "m inor" parking pro­
blems In the First Street area. It

also sees downtown Sanford
pretty much bullt-out within the
next 10 years and recommends
courses o f action, such as the
parking deck, to alleviate the
anticipated crunch.
M ayor B ettye Sm ith, city
commissioners John Mercer and
Whltey Eckstein and Seminole
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e r B ill
Klrchhoff attended Wednesday's
session. Also present were repre­
sentatives of downtown busi­
nesses and associations and
marina Isle businessmen. The
Greater Sanford Chamber of
Commerce was represented by
Executive Director Dave Farr
and the downtown merchants
association by President Margie
Belne
M ercer opposed the deck
See P A R K IN G , page 14A

TO DAY
B r id g e ................. 10A
C lassified s. 11A-13A
C o m ics................. 10A
C om ing E v en ts..3A
C ro s s w o rd

. ID A

D e a r A b b y ........... 9A

D e a th s ..........
D r. G o tt.......
E d ito r ia l......
F in a n c ia l....
N a tio n ..........
P e o p le ..........

.... 14A
......10A
.... 14A
....... 5A
....... 9 A

P o lic e ......... ............2A
S ports......... ....6 A -8A
Television. ................ •
L E 1 S U R E
W e a th e r ... ......... 2A
W o rld ........ ......... 14A

'In s id e
• F A A probes alle g e d n e a r m iss coveru ps b y a ir tr a ffic
co n tro lle rs , 2A

�U w iri, H.

Friday, i n . u , i w

IN B R EF
Convicted
ChildMolotte
AccusedOf Striking Again
A 50-year-old Winter Park man convicted In 1964 on a
sex-wlth-child case and on probation haa been arrested
again on similar charges.
The m an is accused of exposing himself to and fondling
an elementary-school-age girl, who
wnc was in his care, on
several occasions since November.
The girl’s mother reported the allegations to sheriff's
deputies and Norris Delano Cothran, of 3311 Ellwood
Court, w as arrested at the sheriff's department at 13:53
.m. Wednesday. He has been charged with committing a
ewd and lascivious assault on a child and committing a
lewd act in the presence of a child. He was being held
without bond.

e

M l P rescrib e d F o r Drug O rdor
A woman who allegedly ordered and tried to pick up a
falsely prescribed pain killer at Eckerd’s in Butler Plaza.
State Road 436, Casselberry, was held at the store by
employees until Seminole County sheriff's deputies arrived
to arrest the woman.
The arrest was made at 3:12 p.m. Wednesday and Alice
Faye Harmon. 33, o f Orlando, was charged with attempting
to get a controlled substance by fraud.
The Eckerd’s pharmacist reported to sheriff's deputies
that she double-checked with a doctor's office when a
telephone order supposedly was called In from that office
for a prescrltlan for Anexsla D.
The pharmacist was told by the doctor's secretary that
no such prescription had been ordered and the secretary
Identified and described a woman whom she believed
might have Illegally ordered the drug.
When the woman matching the description showed up
and asked for the order she was detained at Eckerd's.
Ms. Harmon has been released on 61,000 bond to appear
In court Feb. 2.

Driving U ndor Influence A rrests
The following persons have been arrested in Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
— Michael Lewis Wharton. 32. of 700 Broadview Ave.,
Altamonte Springs, was arrested at 11:32 p.m. Wednesday,
on State Road 426, Oviedo, after his car ran a red light.
—Patricia Alice Henderson. 35. of 2000 Lake Mary Blvd.
116-0. Sanford, at 1:53 a.m. Thursday on First Street at
Myrtle Avenue in Sanford after her car ran a red light.
—John Anthony Kopke. 35. of 2424-B S. Lake Ave.,
Sanford, at 2:30 a.m. Wednesday on 22nd Street in
Sanford after he was seen driving with headlights turned

off.
—Vanessa Jean Haruschak. 24. of 5000 State Road 427,
Sanford, at 8:35 p.m. Wednesday after her car was In an
accident on State Road 434. She was also charged with
reckless driving.

Burglaries A n d Thefts Reported
Seminole County sheriff's deputy Greg Futch on patrol
reported finding at about 4:53 a.m. Wednesday that a front
window of the Cumberland Farms. 225 Oxford Road, Fern
Park, had been broken. A clerk for the store, who arrived at
the scene determined, that about 6112 worth of cigarettes
and'about 6106 w o rt h o fb e e r had been stolen from the
store.
Toros V. Khachatourian. 60, o f 103“ Longhorn Road.
Winter Park, reported to sheriff's deputies that a 6500
saxaphone and a 650 Instrument case was stolen from his
home between Jan. 8 and Tuesday.
Video equipment, Including a camcorder, with a total
value of about 61,500 was stolen from the home of William
T. Gunthrld, 45, of 178 Sorrento Circle, Winter Park.
Wednesday, a sheriffs report said.

A computer and related Items were stolen, along with 10
video tapes and a radio, with a combined value of 61.300
were stolen from the home of Martin Anthony Detucclo, 57.
o f 1311 W. Marvin St.. Longwood, Wednesday, according
to a sheriff's report.
James Richard Clayton Jr., 45, of 145 Wildwood Drive,
Sanford, reported to sheriffs deputies that his 1984 Toyota
pickup truck containing about 61,300 worth of tools and
with a boat trailer attached was stolen Wednesday from
beside a boat ramp off State Road 46 east of Geneva.
Delores H. Ferrell o f 7000 E. Red Bug Lake Road, Oviedo,
gave sheriff's deputies the name of a suspect who may
have stolen an air conditioner, a freezer and other Items
with a combined value of 6425 from her home between
Dec. 13 and Wednesday.
The 1978 Datsun of Billy J. Langley. 48. of 1772 Wllla
Circle, W inter Park, was stolen Tuesday. A sheriff's report
said the vehicle is valued at 61.500.

FHP A n n o u n c e s
A w a r d s P ro g ra m
The Florida Highway Patrol
has announced an awards pro­
gram for non-sworn civilian
employees within the division,
according to FH P director, Colo. nel Bobby R. Burkett.
T h e program Is designed to
reco gn ize th e FHP support
p e rs o n n e l f o r o u ts ta n d in g
service and Is accompanied by a
j cash Incentive o f 6500. the cost
o f which Is underwritten by

CUSPS M M M )

Jay, ja
m
Friday,
January
16, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 125
Published D a lly a n d Sunday, except
S aturday by T h e Sanford H e ra ld .
In c. 104 N . F re n c h Awe., S anford.
F la . 117)1.
Second C la it P o tta g e P aid a t S anford,
F lo rid a n il 1
H om e D elivery: M o n th . S4.7J; 1 Months,
II4 .2 S ; t M o n th * . S17.00; Y e a r,
SSt.OO. By M a il: M onth, 14.71; 1
M onths. 130.25; 0 M onths. S17.00;
Y e a r, 149.00.
Phone (10S) 111 2011.

private enterprise, and an en­
graved plaque on which the
annual recipient's name will
appear.
"F o r many years wc have
recogn ized our troopers for
various acts of bravery, heroism,
and dedicated service. Now the
awards program Is a means o f
showing our appreciation to the
“ unsung h eros" within the
ranks of our support staff," said
Burkett.
"O u r non-sworn employees
such as radio tech n ician s,
c o m m u n ic a t io n s o f f i c e r s ,
secretaries, clerks and custodial
personnel often make the dif­
ference between success and
failure In the FHP mission."
Burkett said.
The annual award will be
given to the most deserving
non-swom employee who. dur­
ing the year, has displayed a
dedication to duty and put forth
an extra effort towards division
operations.
"W e want our employees to
know their efforts are an Impor­
tant and necessary part of the
Florida Highway Patrol, and we
would not function without their
dedication," Burkett said.

FAA: Near-Miss Mistakes Covered Up
S A N T A A N A . Calif. (UPI) - Air
traffic controllers tracking flights
through the world's busiest air
corridor abut off equipment,
deatroyed evidence, falsified
reports and lied to investigators
to cover up mistakes that put
planes on collision courses, of­
ficials said.
Responding Thursday to a
report In the Orange County
Register, the Federal Aviation
Administration said the three
Incidents had resulted in dis­
ciplinary actions for two con­
trollers and a third had resigned.
The newspaper reported that it
had obtained FAA Investigative
reports that said the controllers
sh u t do w n c ru c ia l aircraft
tracking equipment In one of the
Incidents.
“ The Incidents were Immedi­
ately Investigated by the FAA
and disciplinary action was
taken," the FAA In a statement
Issued In response to the article.
“The cases are now closed."
The statement went on to say
that “ w h a t w a s esp e cially
serious in these incidents were
the attempts by those Involved
to cover up their errors. The
FAA emphasizes that Incidents
of this nature are highly unusu­
al.”
The Incldenta took place dur­
ing an eight-day span In 1986 at
the F A A 's Air Route Traffic
Control Center In Palmdale, 60
miles northeast of Los Angeles.
The center directs all highaltitude flights In Southern
California, the busiest air corri­
dor In the world.
The controllers allegedly tried
to hide the fact that they allowed
two planes to come within less
than five horizontal miles of
each other, a violation of the

standard requiring controllers to
maintain that horizontal separa­
tion and a 1.000-foot vertical
separation.
Such errors, along with the
name of the controller responsi­
ble, are automatically recorded
by the F A A 's Operational Error
Detection System Introduced In
1964. Without* the system, such
errors could go unnoticed.
On Feb. 16, an 18-pasaenger
Skywest Airlines commuter Jet
and a six-passenger private
plane were within 3.8 miles of
each other and on a collision
course when a controller re­
portedly turned off the computer
that was tracking them.
The action disabled the com­
puter's ability to recognize a
potential hazard and prevented
It from activating a conflict-alert
signal to warn controllers of the
Impending danger.
The controller also removed

crucial altitude and groundspeed
Inform ation from his rad ar
screen to prevent other con­
trollers from realizing the two
airplanes had been directed
closer than the FAA'a minimum
safe distance standard.
"W ith the above acta, (the)
employee demonstrated careless
and negligent behavior which
Jeopardized the Integrity of air
safety," Don Early. FAA air
traffic manager at Palmdale, said.
The controller Involved re­
signed.
On Feb. 13. a conflict alert
signal went off three times,
warning a controller that a DC-9'
and a private Jet under hla
control were within 2.5 miles
each other and on a collision
course.
The FAA investigation showed
the controller turned off the alert
each time to try to conceal the
error, and took no action to

divert the planes until three
minutes after, the first alert was
signaled.
The reports state that during
the investigation of the Incident,
the controller also falsified a
document submitted to FAA
officials.
On Feb. 8. two private planes
were converging after a con­
troller misread the altitude of
one of the planes. The planes
came within one mile of each
other before their flight paths
were altered.
During the FAA Investigation,
officials determined that one of
the controllers Involved In the
i n c i d e n t h a d li e d to h la
supervisors about the status of
one of the planes Involved.
Jack Meade, an assistant air
traflc manager at Palmdale, said
the controllers Involved In the
Feb. 8 and Feb. 13 Incidents
were disciplined "severely."

'Scarecrow' Ray Bolger Dead At 83
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Ray
Bolger. the limber-legged actor
and dancer who played the
Scarecrow In "T h e Wizard of
O z“ and the last surviving
member of the cast that followed
the Yellow Brick Road In the
1939 classic, has died of cancer.
He was 83.
B o lg e r d ie d T h u r s d a y at
N a za reth H o u se, a R om an
Catholic board and care facility
where he had been for several
weeks, said his wife of 57 years.
Gwendolyn Rickard, who was at
his side. The couple had no
children.
"His death was a long time
coming," Rickard said. "H e had
been HI on and off for more than

two years. But thank God he
didn't suffer."
Rickard said her husband died
Just five days after his 83rd
birthday. “We had a little Im­
promptu birthday for him there
(a t N a z a r e t h H o u s e ) w ith
champagne and a cake. He was
In good spirits.'* Rickard said,
"although very, very HI."
She said services would prob­
ably be held Monday evening at
the Church of the Good Shep­
herd in Beverly Hills, with burial
Tuesday at Holy Cross Ceme­
tery.
Bom Raymond Wallace Bolger
on Jan. 10. 1904, In Dorchester.
Mass., Bolger made hla screen
debut In “The Great Zlegfeld'.'

Ray Bolgar
...the Scarecrow o f Oz

WEATHER
N ation T om peratu ros
City 4 Forecast
Albuquerque w
Anchor * 9* in
Asheville cy
Atlanta cy
Billings pc
B irm ingham r
Boston ty
Brownsville Tax.*h
Buffalo pc
Burlington V t.c y
Cha rla i ton S.C. r
Charlotte N .C .cy
Chicago pc
Cincinnati cy
Clavalandcy
Columbus cy
D allas cy
Denver *n
Das Mo Inal pc
D etroit cy
Duluth sy
E l Paso pc
E vansvlllacy
H artford ly
Honolulu pc
Houston ft
Indianapolis cy
Jack ion M I m . r
Jackson vl lia r
Kansas City cy
Las Vega* tn
L lttla Rock cy
Los Angola* w
L oulsvllltcy
M am phlsr
M ia m i Baach sy
M ilw aukee pc
Minneapolis sy
Nashville cy
New Orleans r
New York pc
Oklahoma City r
Om aha cy
Philadelphia pc
Phoenix cy
Pittsburgh cy
Portland Me. sy
Portland Ora. f
Providence sy
Richmond pc
St. Louis cy
San Francisco sy
Washington pc

La F tp
23 .01
23
44 i ’i
u SO
12 04

35

SO
43
37
49
44
49

SI
20
31
27

S7

42

.02
30 .01

P tlyC ldy

PttyC ldy

PtlyCW y

40
12
49
50
S)

09
29
34
37
» 44
54 S3
44 24

0

0

1“

Lows

39
43
S4
51
54
55
74
37

II
33
37
44
35
S3
71
14

S3
59
57
4!
31
57
4T
47
40
43

41
S3
40

.01

31 00

!oi
.47

21 .07
09
34
34
30

.09

.02
.12

30

27

St 37

01

42 39
41 29

.01

40 41

...

Moon P h ases
F irs t
Fan. 5

Full
Fab. 13

B each C o n d itio n s
D aytona Beach: Waves are
about 2 feet and glassy. Current
Is slightly to the north with a
temperature of 59 degrees. New
S m yrn a Beach: Waves are 1 to
2 feet and glassy. Current Is
slightly to the north; Water
temperature, 56 degrees. Sun
screen factor: 12.

A ro a F o re c a s t
Today...variable cloudlnesi
and mild with a slight chance ol
rain or showers. High In the ml&lt;
70s to near 80. Wind south 10 tol
15 mph. Rain cahnce 20 per­
cent.
Tonight...partly cloudy and
mild. Low near 60. Wind south 5

.01

55 SI .03
73 54 .02

Thursday's high temperature
In Sanford was 81 degrees and
the low during the past twen­
ty-four hours was 50 degrees. No
rainfall recorded.

EE EE EE

23 02 .30
33

M IA M I IU P I) — Florid# 24-hour tamperetures and rainfall a t I a m . E D T today:
City:
HI Le Rain
Apalachicola
41 40 I . I t
Day torse Baach
so 57 0.00
Fort Lauderdale
70 43 0.00
F o rtM yars
so SI 0.00
Gainesville
7a 41 0.00
Jacksonville
7] S4 0.03
Kay West
79 44 0 00
Lakeland
71 S4 0.00
M ia m i
11 *3 000
Orlando
ao S4 000
Pensacola
to 57 000
Serasota-Bradenton
71 at 0 00
Tallahassee
ss 43 000
Tam pa
71 59 0.00
Vero Beach
S3 54 0.00
West Palm Beach
I t :o 0.00

Jan. 24

Ptly Gfdr

.04
.54

F lo rid a T e m p e ra tu re s

Last
Jan. 21

For Central Florida

ss so .01
SO 2* .02
73 40 .01
43
.01

pc partly cloudy
r-raln
sh showers
sm smoke
in snow
ay-sunny
ts-thunderstorms
w windy

COOES
c clear
cl clearing
cy cloudy
f fair
fy foggy
h i h a lt
m-misslng

Five-Day Forecast

HI
34
31
*3

Local Report

W inter Storm
Slams Rockies
United P ress Intern ation al

A W e s t e r n s to r m th a t
dumped an "incredible” 5 feet
of snow In Colorado' roared
across the Rockies today, clos­
ing schools, filling shelters for
the homeless and hurling high
winds that made the tempera­
ture feel like 50 below zero.
The storm, centered over
northeast Arizona, spread snow
In Wyoming. Utah. Colorado.
Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma
and Texas. Temperatures were
below zero from Montana to
Minnesota, and a freeze warn­
ing was Issued for parts of
Southern California, the Na­
tional Weather Service said.
Winds from the storm gusted
to 50 mph In Albuquerque.
N.M. Wind chill readings fell to
50 degrees below zero in Col­
orado and Wyoming and to 30
below zero in the Dakotas and
Idaho, the weather service said.
By early today, the storm had
dumped 60 Inches o f snow near
Rye in southern Colorado, most
of it Thursday, said Paul Fike.
an NWS forecaster.
“ T h a t Is a.i In c r e d ib le
amount of snow." Flke said.
Seventeen Inches had fallen
in Denver, Colorado Springs
and Pikes Peak by early today,
with another 2 to 6 Inches
expected In Colorado's eastern
plains and a foot or more
forecast for the state's southern
foothills, Flke said.
Fifteen Inches fell near Los
Alamos. N.M.. and a foot of
snow blanketed Mormon Lake.
Arlz. Winter storm warnings
were Issued In Colorado. New
Mexico and the Oklahoma
panhandle.
Even Phoenix, In the heart of
the Sun Belt, saw some snow
Thursday night.
"It was real nice,” said Aby
Rodriguez, a security guard In
a downtown building. “ I went
outside and tried to grab" the
snowflakes, which disappeared
when they hit the ground.
In Denver, public school

students were told not to report
for school today, and shelters
for the homeless were filled to
c a p a c ity as tem p e ra tu re s
dropped to 5 to 10 degrees
below zero.
"W e ’ve made four runs to­
night looking for people," said
Plnta Bossung o f the Catholic
A r c h d io c e s e 's S a m a r ita n
House shelter. "A ll of our beds
are full and we have 20 families
staying here right now."
Denver’s Stapleton Interna­
tional Airport reported delays
of three hours Thursday night,
and the delays were expected
to continue today. Airport
crews were pul on 12-hour
snow a le rt sh ifts, a irp o rt
spokesm an K evin Flem ing
said.
St. Anthony Central Hospital
In West Denver asked for vol­
unteers with four-wheel-drive
vehicles to help carry nurses to
and from work.
Hlgh-wind warnings were
is s u e d to d a y fo r U ta h 's
W asatch Mountains, where
gusts were expected to howl at
90 mph, and In California and
the southern Sierra Nevada,
where gusts of 50 mph were
expected.
Thursday, winds gusting to
65 mph battered California,
(lipping a single-engine Cessna
172 airplane onto Its back as It
was taxiing at the Oakland
International General Aviation
Airport. No Injuries were re­
ported.
The winds toppled trees and
p o w e r lin e s in N o rth e rn
California Thursday, blocking
the main road to the Lassen Ski
R e s o r t and te m p o r a r ily
knocking out electricity for
1 0 0,000 P a c ific Gas and
Electric customers.
Wednesday night, a woman
In Healdsburg, north of San
Francisco, was killed when a
huge tree branch that was
snapped off by wind fell on her
trailer, crushing her in her bed.

to 10 mph.
Saturday...partly cloudy and a
little w arm er with a sligh t
chance of showers. High near
80. Wind southwest 10 to 15
mph. Rain chance 20 percent.

A re a Readings
The temperature at 9 a.m.: 62:
overnight low: 56; Thursday's
high: 80; barometric pressure:
30.06; relative humidity: 96
percent; winds; South at 8 mph;
rain: None; Today’s sunset: 5:51
p.m., Saturday sunrise: 7:19
a.m.

Ex tend ed Forecast
The extended forecast. Sunday
through Tuesday, for Florida
except northwest — A warm
period except a little cooler
extreme north Tuesday. Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers
n o rth th r o u g h th e p e r io d
sp rea d in g o v e r the cen tral
peninsula Monday and Tuesday.
Lows in the 50s north and 60s
south but near 70 in the Keys
e x c e p t 4 0 s e x tr e m e n orth
Tuesday morning. Highs in the
70s but around 80 southern
peninsula and 60s extrem e
north Tuesday.

A r e a Tidos

S A T U R D A Y : D ayto n
Beach: highs, 9:27 a.m.. 3:2

p.m.; lows. 2:42 a.m., 9:49 p.m.
S m y rn a B each: highs
10:32 a.m.. 3:29 p.m.: lows. 2:4
a.m.. 9:54 p.m.; B ayport: highs
1:39 a.m., 3:02 p.m.: lows. 8:4!
a.m., 8:46 p.m.
New

B o a tin g

St. Augustine to Jupiter
— Today...wind south 10 i
kts. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Bay
Inland waters a light to mod
chop. A few showers north p
Tonight and Saturday..,
south and southwest 10 t
kts becoming southwest £
day. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Bay
Inland waters a light to mod
chop. A few showers north p

�COMING
EVENTS
THURSDAY. JAM. IB
RE BOS AA, noon. 5:30 and 8
m. (closed), Rebos Club, 130
ormandy Lane, Casselberry.
In te rn atio n al T r a in in g In
C o m m u n ic a tio n G r e a t e r
S e m in o le C lu b (p r e v io u s ly
Toastmlstress). 7:30 p.m., Alta­
monte Chapel Education Build­
ing on State Road 436, second
and fourth Thursdays.
Central Florida Civftan 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 (*4 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
m odification and Im proved
self-image, 7 p.m., Howell Place.
Airport Blvd., Sanford. Phone or
666-6783.
Freedom House A A (women
only). 8 p.m. (closed). Lake
Minnie Road, Sanford.
Sweet Adelines, 7:30 p.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center, 200
N. L a k e T r ip le t D r iv e ,
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.

E

'Killer Bees
CORPUS CHRISTI. Texas (UPI) ‘'Killer bees" could favadc south Texas
by 1969 In their northward migration,
th ro u g h M exico, a Departm ent o f
Agriculture official said, adding his
agency has done nothing to repel the

flttscki
The bees’ migration could bring devas­
tation to the honey Industry In the
United States, and the USDA has "zero
dollars" to combat the problem, said
Milton Holmes of the USDA'a Animal
Plant Health Inspection Service, speak­
ing to representatives of the American
Honey Producers Association Wednes­
day.
Cross-breeding of the Africanized bees
with American bees would make the

methods used to eradicate the "killer
bees" could endanger the American
bees. Holmes said.
"The economic health of the honey
Industry and the beekeepers could be in
jeopardy," he said. " I f the Africanized
bee la allowed to continue to migrate. It
can out-compete and replace the Ameri­
can bee."
Since 1957, when 26 African queen
bees escaped from captivity In Brazil, the
bees have continued a steady northward
march of about 200 miles per year
through Central America and Into Mex­
ico. Holmes said, adding they' would
reach south Texas In two years.
The swarms are now in Chalapas. at

the ■outHemmost Up o f Mexico, and are
expected to move post the Isthmus o f
Tehuantepec on the southeast Pacific
Coast of Mexico in the next 12 to IS
months, he said.
"Killer bees" got their name alter
"there were a number o f human deaths
In Brazil from massive sting Incidents."
said John Thomas, an entomologist with
Texas A&amp;M. "They have left a trail of
deaths along their movement north."
Holmes said, " I f (the swarm) marches
up past the Isthmus o f Tehuantepec and
into Mexico City and Monterrey (100
miles south of the Texas border) and
starts causing the same damages seen In
Argentina and Brazil, what are we going
to tell the people in Corpus Christ! and

the people of Houston?**
Industry le a d e n believe the

Join the program, but a Mexican barrier
would have little chance of suceeding
w ith o u t U .S . govern m en t m oneys
Holmes aald.

M isse s’ acrylic
cardigan sw eater.

FRIDAY, JAN. 16
Central Florida Klwanis Club,
7:30 a.m ., F lo rid a F ederal
Savings and Loan. State Road
436 at 434, Altamonte Springs.
Sem inole S unrise K lw anis
Club, 7 a.m.. Airport Restaurant.
Sanford.

'O p t im is t C lu b o f S o u th
Seminole. 7:30 a.m., Holiday
Inn, Wymore Road, Altamonte
Springs.
Rebos AA, noon, Rebos Club.
130 N o r m a n d y R o a d ,
Casselberry (closed). Clean Air
AA for non-smokers, first door,
same room, same place and
time.

Free blood pressure reading by
Medical Personnel Pool, 12:30
p.m.. Casselberry Senior Center,
200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.
National Association o f Retired
Federal Employees chapter, 2
p.m., Casselberry Senior Center.
200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.

ife;
knit sweater features patch pockets and ribbed
trim. Machine washable. Choose from lilac, green,
turquoise, purple and wine.

L a s t 2 d a y s of
W h it e S a le

Free demonstration by Lynne
Plttard, popular television artist
seen on Channel 24. will be held
at 4:30 p.m. at Art-teriors, 711 S.
County Hoad 427, Longwood.
Heritage Jubilee. 8 p.m., Fine

Arts Concert Hall. Sem inole
Community College. Sanford.
Wcklva AA (no smoking). 8
p.m . W e k iv a P r e s b y te r ia n
Church. SR 434, at W ekiva
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.
R ichard’ s Episcopal Church.
Lake Howell Road. Alanon. same
time and place.
Sanford AA Slep. 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.
S A T U R D A Y , JA N . 17

WU-WIn Rainbow Game Room
8-ball pool tournament. 10 a.m..
Fairway Shopping Center. 2676
Orlando Drive. Sanford. T o
benefit disabled. $10 entry fee
includes teacher.
Central Florida Puppet Guild
organizational meeting, noon.
1700 Sunset Drive, Longwood.
Guest speaker Norma Bigler,
director of Southeast Region of
Puppeteers o f Am erica. A d ­
mission free. For advance regis­
tration call Jan Wahl at 3236349.
Sanford Women's AA. 1201
W. First St.. 2 p.m., closed.
Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.in.
The Grove Counseling Center.
580 Old Sanford/Ovledo Road
(off SR 419). Winter Springs.
World Religion Day program
by Baha'is of Seminole County.
7 p.m., community room at
Publix. Jamestown Place, State
Road 434. Altamonte Springs.
Speakers will be Benjamin Levy
on Judaism: Dr. David Closson
on Christianity: Shahla Evans on
Islam. Music and refreshments.
Open to the public.
Sanford AA. 1201 W. First St.,
noon and 8 p.m.. open dis­
cussion.
Casselberry AA Step, 8 p.m..
Ascension Lutheran Church.
Ascension Drive (off Overbrook),
Casselberry.
Sanford Grace AA 11th Step
( c l o s e d ) . 8 p .m ., W e k iv a
Assembly of God. Longwood.
SUNDAY, JAN . 18
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), Rebos Club. 130
Normandy Lane. Casselberry.

Save on sheets,
comforters, towels,
drapes, Priscillas,
blankets, wicker
and bed pillows

S a v e 4 0 % to 6 0 %
Selection of women’s
fashions at fantastic savings,
in misses, juniors and
women’s sizes. Selection
includes blouses, pants, skirts
and sweaters.
Selection of children’s warm
sportswear. Includes long
sleeve shirts, sweaters,
corduroy pants and jog suits.
Styles similar to illustrations.
VtSAT

m m You're looking smarter than ever

Florida Mall
Sanford Plaza
M on.-Sat. 9:30-9
M on.-Sat. 9:30-9
Sun. 12-5:30
Sun. 12-5:30
Lake Square Mall
W inter Park Mall
M on.-Sat. 10-9
M on.-Sat. 9:30-9
Sun. 12-5:30
Sun. 12-5:30

TM

JCFtennev

�m ttm m m a m a

■.1! T

BiNWATTENBERO
&lt; u m « i -m )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 33771
A m Code 306-322-2811 or 831-0003
Friday, January Id, 1*«7—4A
Warn* 0. Otyta, i

Ifetne Delivery: Month. 84.78:3 Month*. 814.38:0 Months.
127.00; Year. 251.00. By Mall: Month. 80.78: 3 Month*.
820.25; 0 Month*. 837.00. Year. 880.00.

Light Of Reform

In

U.N.Tunnel

For too long, the budgetary proceaa o f the
tJnlted Nations has been a sorry spectacle. It
la reassuring, therefore, that Congress and
the Reagan administration finally got their
act together and dropped a fiacal ax. Lo and
behold, the light of reform shines at long last
in the U.N. tunnel.
Last year, the United States stood up to the
predictable chorus of shrieks from the Third
World-Soviet bloc coalition and withheld
$108 million of Its 1986 assessment of $206
million. The U.N. General Assembly, con­
fronted by the subsequent, shrunken travel
expenses and other diminished perquisites,
was forced to respond with some reform.
Delegates voted recently to Implement proce­
dural and cost-cutting measures that U.S.
Am bassador Vernon A. W alters hailed as
"really historic." The package paves the way
for a dose of budgetary accountability —
something the United Nations has thus far
looked upon as an insulting concept.
It’s Important to note that, heretofore, the
United States had almost no influence in the
mysterious decision-making process that de­
termined the size and distribution of its $206
million assessment (approximately 25 per­
cent o f the international b o d y 's entire
budget). U.N. funding Is based on a col­
lectivist formula — from each according to its
means and to each according to Its ability to
extract. So. for much of its existence, the U.N.
treasury has been a Third World-Soviet pork
barrel largely provided by the industrialized
West.
Studies show that U.N. officials are better
paid even than federal workera in the United
tates. In the U.N. Secretariat, for example,
le more than 11,000 officials receive approx­
imately 20 percent more than their federal
counterparts. Consequently, would-be U.N.
bureaucrats Jostle each other for these
positions like bidders at a potato market. In
many cases the victors kick back part of their
salaries to their bosses. According to Sen.
Paul S. Trlble, R-Va., the kickbacks have
in s titu te d an indirect U.S. subsidy to
undeserving recipients in utterly unintended
tacaleot'* * 1 1
i But from now on. a U.N. body called the
Committee for Program and Coordination
must decide on budgetary questions by
consensus. A nd most o f the developed
countries,which pay a lion’s share of the bills,
will be represented on the panel. The new
process also means that, perhaps for the first
time, there will be a U.N. body that seriously
examines the effectiveness of selected pro­
grams in conjunction with its budgets. This
should do much to prevent shoveling funds
into bloated programs which produce little
beyond the salaries and expenses of the
officials running them. And the committee
can work toward directing resources into
such worthy U.N. programs as the W orld
Health Organization.
But the General Assembly reform is only a
compromise, not an absolute victory. It’s still
possible that anti-West dlehards will attempt
to block any meaningful action by the
oversight committee. If that happens, then
the United States can reapply funding
p r e s s u r e . T h e real q u e s t i o n is w h y
Washington waited so long to require ac­
countability in return for its massive support.

S

PLEASE WRITE
L etters to the editor are welcom e fo r
publication. A ll letters m ust be signed and
include a m ailing address and, If possible, a
telephone num ber. The'San/ord H erald re ­
serves the right to edit letters to avoid lib e l
and to accommodate space.

D em o cratic Caucus Should U n-D um p
On Jan. 33, the Democratic Party will send a
message, wittingly or unwittingly, to the
American electorate. The message will either be
"Yes, we’ve been serious when we’ve been
telling you that our party is strong on defense,"
or “ No. we’ve only been kidding — soft-ondefense liberals still have a veto over our defense
policy.” '
What happens on Jan. 33 Is a meeting o f the
Congressional Democratic Caucus. The caucus
will determine who will be the chairman of the
House Armed Services Committee In the new
Congress. That is the committee that plays a
large role in spending, or not spending, about
$300billion per year to defend America.
Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wls., was the chairman of
the committee in the last session. On Jan. 7. in a
very rare action, the Democratic Caucus refuted
to retain Chairman Aspin. On an up-or-down
vote Aspin lost by the narrow margin of
130-134. The caucus will vote again on the
33nd to see who the new chairman will be.
Several candidates have been mentioned.
Some are more conservative than Aspin. some
are more liberal — and Aspin himself is still in
the running with a real chance to overturn the
original verdict.
The key question is, why was Aspin dumped?

After all. It Is pretty well acknowledged that he
Is probably the moat competent, knowledgeable
and experienced person in the Congress for the
Job. As always in these situations, there are
some personal and political machinations going
on. but the root reason is clear to those who
know the situation. Some (not all) Democratic
liberals are trying to mug Aspin because he
didn't toe the line and pass all the liberal Utmus
tests. Aspin has the audacity and knowledge to
think for himself. He has worked with.and for
liberals on many positions — many of which, by
the way. I personally disagreed with. But Aspin
has also had the effrontery to be for limited
production of the MX missile, for a slightly
higher defense budget than the liberals wanted
and for aid to the contras.
For these sins, some far-out liberals feel, the
asp has to be applied to Aspin. Never mind that
his successor might be more conservative.
These folks play politics like the old-fashioned
radicals whose motto w as "the worse the
better.” Bring down the temple, they say. (lex
the liberal veto and show who’s the boas.
For, to them. Les Asptn's real sin Is not that
he's a conservative. He Is a moderate-liberal
who believes In the common sense proposition
that we Americans live In a dangerous world,
that history has put us In the role of leading the

free world, and if we're to do that, w e’d better be
strong. It U a position that moat Americans
Intuitively and wisely agree with.
W hat bugs the liberals is that Aspin proves
that a politic*! leader can be liberal on domestic
Issues and many foreign ones. In favor of
reasonable arms control, and yet be realistic
about the potential danger from Soviet Imperial­
ism. Such men can be politically dangerous.
Such common-sense thinking can be con­
tagious. Next thing you k" ow
Democrats might become convinced. Itmlght be
possible to have a party that wouldn t be split all
over the lot on every foreign policy and defense
Issue. Aspin has worked hard to get some
consensus between left and right. In the best
Interest of the party, and the country.
But some of the liberals want purity at all
costs. Philip Burgess, former director of the
Democratic Policy Commission, who has been
through these sorts of wars, calls the Aspin
Incident "the hari-kari Impulse of the Democrat­
ic Party.”
W e shall see. Walt for Jan. 22. W e will see If
the Democrats are really serious about being
prepared to capture the presidency and govern
In a sensible way. Or whether they want to take
yet one more stroll down suicide lane.

WASHINGTON WORLD

SCIENCE WORLD

Regan
B ack In
S a d d le

S u m m e r's
V o lc a n ic
D is a s te r

M fE
U F lW h it
W A S H IN G T O N (UPI) White
House chief of staff Donald Regan
appears to have weathered- the
storm and is the man in charge
again.
Regan, 67, a take-charge man.
has incurred the wrath of many way
who refer to him as "Mr. Prime
Minister.” He was up against strong
opposition, including first lady
Nancy Reagan, who felt the presi­
dent would be better served with a
new team during the unfolding of
the Iran arms scandal.
Republican leaders, close friends
and political advisers of the presi­
dent. including former deputy chief
of staff Michael Deaver and a host of
others, pleaded with Reagan to
dump Regan, but Reagan stood fast.
In this respect he was In the
tradition of Dwight D. Elsenhower,
who was urged to fire Sherman
Adam s, his chief of staff, after
revelations that Adams had helpeda Boston Industrialist and had
received gifts from him.
“ I need him.” was Elsenhower's
reply.
Later, however, Ike bowed to the
the clamor from political associates
who felt that his administration was
threatened in the scandal of that
era.
Reagan Is loyal to those who serve
him. After firing Lt. Col. Oliver
North as a deputy national security
adviser In the Iran arms-Contra aid
scandal, Reagan called North a
“ national hero.”
He has demonstrated the same
loyal ties to others.
Deaver, who was like a son to him
for 20 years, dating back to hts
California gubernatorial days. Is
under investigation for alleged con­
flict of Interest since he left the
White House and set up his own
pu blic relations firm . But the
Reagans Invited Deaver and his
family to Christmas dinner at the
White House.
But Regan Is now acting like a
man who has the Job he obviously
enjoys for another two years, or at
least until he thinks the president is
over the hump and he* survived the
scandal.

fINRA

mtmmmmm

™**8r

M M Q IIiM g r a i
upKwmir
WILLIAM RUSHER

P re s id e n t U n lin k e d
From (he outset o f the Iran
controversy, It has been plain that
any hope o f damaging President
Reagan personally hung by two
slender threads: (1) establishing
that the central purpose or the arms
sales to Iran was to "trade arms for
hostages" — which would allegedly
violate aur firm policy o f not
bargaining with Jerrorlsts, and/or 12)
establishing that the president was
aware o f die alleged diversion of
profits from the sales to provide
I l l e g a l m i l i t a r y a id to th e
Nicaraguan contras.
Several weeks have now gone by
without the slightest evidence being
adduced that the president knew
about the alleged diversion. This, of
course, has made lt all the more
Important for the president's de­
tractors to prove that obtaining the
release o f our hostages In Lebanon
was the central purpose of the arms
sales. President Reagan's explana­
tion — that the sales were part of a
b r o a d e r a t t e m p t to d e v e l o p
friendlier relations with moderate
elem ents In Iran — has been
dismissed by his foes as so much
eyewash.
Small wonder, then, that the
White House has been eager to put
before the American people two
previously classified documents
dated Jan. 17. 1986, one In which
the president authorized arms sales
to Iran, and a second tn which
national security adviser Adm. John
Poindexter spelled out the reasons
for doing so. If the Senate In­
telligence Committee had released
th e r e p o r t on Its D e c e m b e r
hearings, the documents would
undoubtedly have come to light that

way. But the Senate Democrats are
sitting grimly on that lid, well aware
that the report’s net effect Is to
exonerate the president.
So the White House released the
documents Itself, and the Job of
misinforming the American people
about what they prove fell to
Washington's liberal press corps.
They asserted with a straight face
that the-documents demonstrate
that the release of our hostages was
central to the arms sales. They arc
lying through their teeth, knowing
that most people will never read the
documents themselves.
T h e second paragraph o f the
president's authorization defines
the scope of the operation. Note the
order o f the listed purposes:
“ Assist selected friendly foreign
liaison services, third countries and
third parties which have established
relationships with Iranian elements,
groups and Individuals sympathetic
to U.S. government Interests and
which do not conduct or support
terrorist actions directed against
U.S. persons, property or Interests,
for the purpose of: (1) establishing a
more moderate government In Iran,
(2) obtaining from them significant
Intelligence not otherwise obtain­
able. to determ ine the current
Iranian governm ent's Intentions
with respect to Its neighbors and
with respect to terrorist acts, and (3)
furthering the release of the Ameri­
can hostages held In Beirut and
preventing additional terrorist acts
by these groups."
So there goes the ballgame. Presi­
dent Reagan never adopted a "poli­
cy o f trading arms for hostages."

By United Frees International
A British scientific team has
concluded the Lake Nyos disaster
that killed or Injured thousands in
Cameroon last summer was caused
by a massive surge o f carbon
dioxide from a submerged volcanic
vent.
The gas. mixed with water mist
and traces of poisonous hydrogen
sulfide, swept through the valleys to
the north o f the lake and to
communities beyond, "leaving a
terrible toll of Injury and death in Its
wake.” the scientists said. More
than 1.700 people were left "dead or
dying."
Carbon dioxide can kill by dis­
placing oxygen in the air and
causing asphyxiation. The water
vapor would hold the gas close to
the ground.
The scientists reported in the
Journal Nature that late In the
evening o f Aug. 21, said the gas was
released above a volcanic vent in
the northeast corner o f the lake.
The report was written by S.J.
F reeth o f the D ep a rtm en t o f
G eology. U n iversity C ollege of
S w a n s e a , and R .L .F . K ay. a
hydrochemist with the British Geo­
logical Survey In Wallingford. The
two. accompanied by P.J. Baxter, a
toxicologist with the University of
Cambridge, visited the lake and Its
surroundings in early September.
T h e la k e Is In a region o f
volcanoes. A large volcanic cone
exists In the northeastern corner of
the lake. To the west of the main
cone Is a related, smaller, ash cone.
Help fo r horses

Researchers have developed a
new vaccine for equine diseases that
could save the lives o f thousands of
horses and millions o f dollars In vet
bills each year.
The vaccine, called endobactold.
helps control colic, lamlnltls and
other serious diseases that strike
horses, according to the researchers
at Mlssouri-Columbia College of
Veterinary Medicine.
Colic, a medical chain reaction
that can begin w hen a horse
overeats and ends with death or
d is a b ility , has s tu m p ed
veterinarians for years, the re­
searchers said In a report.

JACK ANDERSON

S u lta n N e v e r G a v e $ 1 0 M illio n To C o n tra s

BERRY'S WORLD

By Jack Anderson
And Dole Van A tta
WASHINGTON - The Sultan of
Brunei says the State Department
lied when it claimed he had donated
810 million to aid the Nicaraguan
co n tras, ac co rd in g to sou rces
speaking for the Southeast Aslan
ruler.
State Department officials Insist
that a "third country’s " money was
intended for "the Nicaraguan re­
sistance." But they maintain that
Brunei has never been officially
Identified as the country that was
Importuned to help with U.§. efforts
In Central America.
In numerous published reports,
however, Foggy Bottom officials
have said that Hassanal Bolklah.
sultan of the tiny, oil-rich country
and the world's wealthiest man. was
told that any donation he made
would go for non-military aid to the
contras. But Bruneian officials told
us emphatically that the U.S. re­
quest was for humanitarian aid to
the needy of Central America.
8

M,

"I see you slipped off the diet. You tested
positive for ICE CREAM USE. "

If the sultan had known that the
810 million was to be used to help
the anll-Sandintsta rebels, he would
not have given the money, the
Bruneian officials told us. Though

he Is a dedicated anti-communist,
the sultan docs not wish to prolong
the fighting between the leftist
regime In Managua and the contras
supported by the Reagan a d ­
ministration.
Dale Van Atta (lew to Brunei last
month to check Into the donatfon,
which has figured in the uproar over
secret funding o f the contras at a
time when Congress had forbidden
any official U.S. aid. The press-shy
ruler was Indisposed and unavaila­
ble for a personal Interview, but he
met with his top officials to prepare
a statement for us to explain his role
In the burgeoning scandal.
The carefully worded statement,
amplified by Bruneian officials on a
background basis, made clear that
the sultan and his advisers feel they
were "stung" by U.S. officials and
resent their Innocent Involvement
In th e R eagan ad m in istration
scandal.
The statement stated: "H is Ma­
jesty the Sultan and Yang DiPertuan of Brunei Darussalam (Brunei.
Abode of Peace) said that he had
made a personal donation to the
United States to be used for human­
it a r ia n p u r p o s e s In C e n tr a l
Am erica."

According to a secret report of the
Senate Select Committee on In­
telligence, the sultan was asked to
put 810 million In a secret Swiss
bank account controlled by Lt. Col.
Oliver North." deputy national secu­
rity adviser. North was fired from
his post after lt was discovered that
profits from the sale of U.S. arms to
Iran may have been diverted to the
contras through a Swiss bank acc
o
u
n
t
.
The sultan's aides confirmed that
he did donate $10 million. But they
insisted that the sultan had no Idea
the money was going to the contras.
They compared It to the $500,000
that the sultan gave to New York
Mayor Ed Koch In 1984 for the
city's mcals-on-whccis program, in
accordance with his desire as a
devout Moslem to follow the Koran's
injunction to the rich to care for the
poor.
"T h e donation was made at the
request of the United States secre­
tary of state. Mr. George Shultz, In
the summer of 1986." the Bruneian
statement said. Shultz, who has
denied that he personally asked for
the donation, met with the sultan
for 45 minutes In the course of a
two-hour visit to Brunei last June
24. U.S. Ambassador Barrington

King, who was present at t
meeting, refused to comment wh
we asked If the donation w
solicited at that time.
"It was his majesty's undersU
ding from th? personal repi
sentatlve of Mr. Shultz that t
donation would be devoted
welfare purposes, and his rnaje*
assumed that It had been
applied." the statement contlnui
"Once the money had been paid
was beyond his control."
Bruneian officials told us tl
Shultz's "personal representativ
was Elliott Abrams, assistant sec
tary of state fur Latin Amcric
affairs. The final paragraph of t
sultan's statement reflects his fe
ing of betrayal:
His majesty was given to u
derstand that the United States w
approaching other countries ... 1
donations. On this basis, he agre
to accede to this request In go&lt;
faith as a gesture of good will ai
friendship to the United States."
As It turned out, the Sultan
Brunei was apparently the or
philanthropist who bought tl
Shultz/Abrams sales pitch for aid
the contras — and he didn't ev'
realize where his money was going

�w w aanawc

i» W W «

r-»i

NATION

Among about 38 nuclear m f f l f pro­
testers who demonstrated outside Cape
Canaveral A ir Force station early Thursday,
the successful launch o f a Trident missile
shortly after 10 a.m. brought sorrow, tears,

IN BREF
M a n * Crath Kill$ 10, D a brit
Fa llt O var 40-Block A r m a
KEARNS, Utah (UPI) — A commuter plane making an
Instrument approach to Salt Lake City International
Airport collided with a small plane practicing landings,
lulling all 10 people on both craft and raining debris and
bodies over a 40-block area.
Nobody on the ground was killed or Injured In the crash
Thursday, the first fatal accident Involving a commercial
airline In the United States this year,
A twin-engine Skywest Airlines Metrollner, which was on
an Instrument approach to the airport after a flight from
Pocatello, Idaho, collided with a single-engine Mooney
about 12:50 p.m. MST over Kearns, 10 miles southwest of
downtown Salt Lake City.
Six passengers and two crew members aboard the
Skywest Flight 834 and a student pilot and his Instructor
in the private craft were killed, said Salt Lake County
Sheriff Pete Hayward.
National Transportation Safety Board, Federal Aviation
Administration and FBI agents were investigating the
accident. An NTSB official said the "black box” flight
Information recorder from the commuter plane had been
recovered.
FAA officials said the commuter plane was making an
Instrument approach with 2-mlle visibility when It
disappeared from radar. The Mooney, which was not
picked up on radar, was making visual touch-and-go
landings at Salt Lake Airport No. 2. 8 miles south of the
International field. The planes crashed Just north of Airport
No. 2.

In delay!
protest is
launchland protests

.

Protesters com fort each othar os,
despite their beat efforts, the launch
goea off aucceufully.

Adm iraltSaak Polndaxtar Funds
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Three retired admirals are asking
Navy colleagues across the country to contribute to a
defense fund for Vice Adm. John Poindexter, and officers
from Florida to California say their checks are In the mall.
A letter signed by retired Adm. James Holloway III seeks
donations to pay the legal fees of Poindexter, who resigned
Nov. 25 as President Reagan's national security adviser
under fire for his role In the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal.
Holloway, who served as chief of naval operations from
1974 to 1978, Is a trustee of the defense fund along with
two other retired officers: Vice Adm. Gerald Miller and Rear
Adm. Clarence Hill Jr.

Rocket Redesign C on cerns R a ised
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The panel overseeing the space
shuttle booster redesign effort Is concerned about the
adequacy of the test program planned for the next year and
says NASA needs to prepare better for unexpected results.
The National Research Council committee said some
preliminary tests of rocket parts already have produced
surprises. Indicating the need for additional design
alternatives to keep the project from bogging down.
"Nonetheless, we are concerned that valuable time
would be lost should it become necessary to turn to one or
more of the alternatives as a consequence of something
learned from the test program.” It said.

Legal Notice
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT,
E IG H T E E N T H
,v
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 UN TY.
F LO R ID A .
CASE NO. 84-3370-CA 09-P
STOCKTON, W H A T L E Y ,
O A V IN A C O M P A N Y ,
« Florida corporation,
P laintiff,
v».
N A T IO N A L H O M E -U Y E R S
ASSOCIATION. INC., a Florida
corporation; BARBARA
C LARK FARGUHARSON
P E T T IT , f /k /a BARBARA
C LARK P E T T IT ; G.
M A L L O R Y F R E E M A N , JR . A
ASSOCIATES. INC., a Florida
corporation; U N IT E D STATES
OF A M E R IC A ; S T A T E O F
FL O R ID A ,
Defendants.
N O TIC E OF SALE
Notlca It hereby given that,
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgment ol Foreclosure en­
tered herein. I will sail *he
property situated In Seminole
County. Florida, described as:
PARCEL)
P art ol Lot 43, together w llh
Ihe Southeasterly Id ol Lot 44,
S P O R T S M A N 'S P A R A D IS E ,
Plat Book I . page 31, Public
Records or Seminole County,
Florida, described a t follows:
Commence at the radius point ol
the plaited cut de sac and run on
an assumed bearing ol N S3
degrees 14' 34" E . M OO leet to
the right of way of said cul de
sac and the m id point of said Lot
44, being a chord distance ol S 77
degrees OS' 31" E, 11.78 (eet
Irom the Northwesterly corner
of said Lot 44. and the Point ol
Beginning; thence continue N 37
degrees 14' J4"E „ 300 00 leet to
a point on an arc having a
radius ol 34000 feet; thence
Irom a tangent bearing ol S 33
degrees 43' 24" E, run 93.20 feet
along said arc, thru a central
angle ol 14 degrees 30' 00"
thence S 48 degrees 23' 43" W,
303 89 leet to the right ol way ot
the platted cul de sac. having a
radius ot 40.00 feet, thence Irom
a tangent bearing of N Ot
degrees 04' 30", run 35.40 teet
along Ihe arc of said right ol
way, thru a central angle ol 33
degrees 48’ 14" to the Point of
Beginning.
P A R C ELS
P a r t o f L o t 4 4■ A ,
S P O R T S M A N 'S P A R A D IS E ,
Plat Book 8. page 32. Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida, described as follows:
Begin at the Northeast corner of
Lot 44, continue In a straight line
b ein g an e x te n s io n of the
Southeasterly line of said Lot 44,
on an assumed bearing ol N 48
degrees 32' 39" E, 40 00 teet,
more or less to Ihe shore of Lake
M arie; thence Northerly along
said shoreline to an extension ol
a line thru Ihe center of Lot 44;
thence S 37 degrees 14' 34” W.,
103.00 feel, more or less, to a
point on an arc having a radius
ol 340 00 feet; thence from a
tangent bearing of S. 32 degrees
43' 24" E, run 70 80 feet along
said arc, thru a central angle of
II degrees 14' 03". to Ihe Point
of Beginning.
at public sale, to the highest
and best bidder for cash, at the
West Front Door ot the Seminole
County Courthouse In Sanford,
Florida, at 11:00 A M on the
13th day of February. 1987.
W ITN ESS my- hand and Of
tid a l Seal of Said Court this 14th
day of January, 1987.
D A V ID N. B E R R IE N
C LER K C IR C U IT COURT
By: Cecelia V. Ekern
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 14,23,1987
D E K 87

Legal Notice
N O TIC E
Tha St. Johns R iver W ater
Management D istrict has re­
ceived an application for M a n ­
agement and Storage of Surface
W a te rs fro m :*

C EC IL A. M O O R E , 499 SR 434
SU C, A L T A M O N TE SPRGS,
F L 3 2 7 0 1 , A p p lic a tio n
142-117 0098AN, on 12/1/84. The
project 1s located In Seminole
County. Section 4, Township 21
South, Range 30 E as t. Tha
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 .7443 acres to be known as
LO N G W O O D C O M M E R C E
C EN TE R .
Action w ill be taken on the
above llslod application within
30 days of r e c e ip t of Ih e
application. Should you be In te r­
ested in an y ot the lis te d
applications, you should contact
Ihe St. Johns R iver W ater M a n ­
agement District at P.O. Box
1429. P alalka. Florida 32078
1429. or In person at Its office on
S ta le H ig h w a y 100 W e s t,
Palalka, Florida. 904/328 8321.
W r it t e n o b je c t io n to th e
application m ay be made, but
should be received no later than
14 days fro m the d a te of
publication. W ritten objections
should Identity the objector by
name and add res:, and fully
describe the objection to the
application. Filing a w ritten
objection does not entitle you lo
a Chapter 120. Florida Statutes.
Adm inistrative Hearing. Only
those persons whose substantial
Interests are affected by the
application and who file a peti­
tion meeting the requirements
of Section 28 3.201, F.A.C ., m ay
obtain an Adm inistrative H e a r­
ing. A ll llm ely filed w ritten
objections will be presgnttd to
Ihe Board for Its consideration
In Its d e lib e r a tio n on th e
application prior to the Board
taking action on the application.
DannlseT. Kemp, Director
Olvlslon ot Records
St. Johns R iver W ater
Management District
Publish January 14.1987
D E K 84
N OTICE
The St. Johns R iver W ater
Management District has re ­
ceived an application for M an
agemenl and Storage of Surface
Waters from
KAMA D E V E L O P M E N T CO ,
3100 CLAY A V E . SU 233. OR
LANOO. FL 32804. Application
44 117 0111 ACM. on 12/24/84. The
protect Is located In Seminole
County, Section 13, Township 20
South, Range 29 E ast. The
application is for a 137 acre
C O M M E R C IA L D E V E L O P
M E N T to b e k n o w n a s
N O R TH P O IN T O F F IC E PA R K .
A N O E N G R O U P OF
F L O R ID A , 1404 E L C AJO N
COURT. W IN T E R SPR IN G S.
F L 3 2 708 , A p p l i c a t i o n
44-117 0I54A, on 12/24/84. The
pro|ect Is located In Seminole
County. Section 23. Township 21
South, Range 31 E ast. The
application Is lor a 34 acre
R E S ID E N T IA L LOTS 8. ROADS
to be known as TW IN R IV E R S .
PHASE I. SECTIO N I A II. The
receiving w afer body Is L IT T L E
ECO NLO CKHATCHEE R IV E R
The Governing Board of the
District will take action to grant
or deny the appllcatlon(s) no
sooner than 20 days from the
date of this notice. Should you be
Interested In any of the listed
applications, you should contact
the St. Johns R iver W ater M an
agement District at P.O Box
1429. Palatka, Florida 32078
1429. or In person at Its oflice on
S ta te H ig h w a y 100 W e s t,
Palatka. Florida. 904/328 8321.

Rescue workers attend to a protester who suffers an apparant heart attack as the
Trident Is launched.

Bundy Wins New Hearing For Murders
A T L A N T A (U P I ) Con­
demned serial sex killer Ted
Bundy has won a new hearing In
federal court on his conviction
for the 1978 slaying of two Chi
Omega sorority sisters at Florida
State University.
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals overturned U.S. District
Judge William Zlochand in­
structed him to hear Bundy's
appeal of his conviction and
death sentences for the Chi
Omega slayings.
In a 28 pagc order Thursday,
the appeals court instructed
Zloch to conduct a "orderly,
careful and deliberate consid­
eration of the constitutional

Legal Notice
W r i t t e n o b j e c t i o n to th e
application m ay be m ade, but
should be received no la te r than
14 d a y s Ir o m ih e d a le of
publication. W ritten objections
should Identity Ihe objector by
nam e and address, and fully
describe the objection to Ihe
applicatio n. F iling a w rittan
objection does not entitle you to
a Chapter 120, Florida Statutes.
A dm inistrative Hearing. Only
those persons whose substantial
Interests are affected by the
application and who file a peti­
tion meeting the requirements
ot Section 28 3.201, F.A .C ., m ay
obtain an A dm inistrative H e a r­
ing. A ll tim ely tiled w ritten
objections w ill be presented to
the Board for Its consideration
In Its d e lib e r a tio n on th e
application prior to the Board
taking action on the application.
Dannlsa T. Kemp, Director
Division ot Records
St. Johns R iver W ater
Management D istrict
Publish January 14.1987
D E K 83

IN T H E C tR C U ’T COURT
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 ,
IN A N D F O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
F L O R ID A
CASE NO: 79-259 CA M -P
IN R E : TH E M A R R IA G E OF
L A U R E L J. IS IN G B A R K M A N ,
F /K /A LA U R E L J. IS IN G
M A R S H . W lfe/P etltloner.
and
A R T H U R W A Y N E M A R SH ,
H u s b a n d /R e s p o n d e n t.
N O TIC E O F A CTIO N
TO : W arren E. Parm elee
403 Falm outh D rive
Fredericksburg. V irg in ia 72405
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that an action to
declare the Chattel Mortgage
held by you given by Laurel
K oltm eyer B arkm an and re ­
corded In O fficial Records Book
1477, Page 441 of the Public
Records ot Seminole County,
Flo rid a, enforceable or unen
forceable against the following
described property located In
Seminole County, Florida:
A L L OF LOTS I A N D 2
L Y IN G SOUTH O F H O L ID A Y
A V E N U E , LESS TH E W EST 75
F E E T OF LOT I A N D TH E
EAST 73 F E E T OF LOT 2,
F R A N K D G U E R N S E Y 'S
P L A T . R E C O R D E D IN D E E D
BOOK 99. PAGE 324. P U B LIC
R E C O R D S O F S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y , FLO R ID A .
(also known as 3202 Holliday
A v e n u e , A p o p k a , F lo r id a
(hereinafter called the "P ro
p e rty ") has been filed against
you and you are required to
serve a copy ol your written
defenses, It any, to It on M e rrill
N . Cross. Esq., In tervener's
attorney, whose address is 175
W est W a te r Street, Taunton,
Massachusetts. 02740. on or be
lore Feb 3, 1987. and tile the
original with Ihe clerk ol this
court either before service on
Intervener's attorney or Im m e
dlately thereafter; otherwise a
default wilt be entered against
you tor the relief demanded in
Ihe com plaint or petition.
W ITN E SS m y hand and seal
ot this court on Dec 30. 1980.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
As Clerk ot the C ircuit Court
By: Jean B rlllant
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 7.9.
14. 23. 1987
D E K 15

Legal Notice
N O TIC E
The St. Johns R iver W ater
Managem ent D istrict has re­
ceived en application for M an­
agement and Storage of Surface
Waters from :
A N D E N G R O U P OF
F L O R ID A . 1404 E L CAJON
C O UR T, W IN T E R SPRINGS.
F L 3 2 7 0 8 . A p p lic a tio n
440-117 0071A, on 17/22/84. The
project Is located In Seminole
County, Section 23. Township 21
South, R ange 31 E ast. The
application is lor a 31 acre
R E S ID E N T IA L LOTS A ROADS
lo be known as TW IN R IV ER S.
PH I. SECT I. The receiving
w a t e r b o d y Is L I T T L E
ECONLOCKHATCHEE R IV E R .
Action w ill be taken on Ihe
above listed application within
30 days of r a c e lp t of Ih e
application. Should you be Inter
•s le d In an y of the lis te d
applications, you should contact
lha SI. Johns R lv *r W ater Man
agemenl District a l P.O. Box
1429, P alatka. Florida 32078
1429. or In person a l Its olflce on
S la t e H ig h w a y 100 W e s t,
P alalka, Florida. 904/328 8321.
W r it t e n o b je c tio n fo Ih e
application may be made, but
should be received no later than
14 days fro m the d a le of
publication W ritten objections
should Identify the objector by
name and address, and fully
describe the objection lo the
application. Filing a written
objection does not entitle you to
a Chapter 120, Florida Statutes.
Adm inistrative Hearing Only
those persons whose substantial
Interests are affected by Ihe
application and who file a pell
lion meeting the requirements
ol Section 28-5.201. F.A.C .. may
obtain an Adm In Is Ira live H ear­
ing. A ll tim ely filed written
objections will be presented lo
the Board lor Its consideration
in Its d e lib e r a tio n on Ih e
application prior to Ihe Board
taking action on Ihe application.
Dannise T. Kemp. Director
Division of Records
St. Johns River W ater
Management District
Publish January 14.1987
D EK 80

NOTICE OF
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
N olle* i* hereby given lha! I
am engaged In business *1 133
Hayes R d., W inter Springs.
Seminole County. Florida 32708
under the Fictitious Name of
$AS A IR C O N D IT IO N IN G 4.
H E A T IN G 8. R E F R IG E R A
T IO N , and lhat I intend to
re g lite r said name with the
C le rk ol Ihe C ircu it Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the Provision*
of the Fictitious Name Statutes.
To-Wit: Section 845 09 Florida
Statutes t957.
/ * / Villas R. Slone
Publish January 9, 14. 23, 30,
1987.
D EK 39

Issues Involved" In Bundy's
appeal.
Three death warrants have
been signed for Bundy, who was
also sentenced to death for the
1978 murder of a 12-year-old
Lake City, Fla., school girl. But
In each Instance, courts have
Intervened.
Zloch ruled last July 2 that 20
constitutional ch allen g es o f
Bundy's conviction had already
been heard by state courts and
he denied a stay of execution.
The Atlanta appeals court In­
tervened later that day.
A three-judge appeals panel
heard ora) arguments In the case
Oct. 23 and criticized Florida's
handling of Bundy's appeals by
allowing Zloch to rule without
first reviewing the trial record.
"T h is case went astray In the
district court in "kevdrtil R e ­
spects." the cotirt said. "It was

© t . R , •£. S u i

F re q u e n t H e a d a c h e ^
L o w B a c k o r H ip P a in
D u lln e s s o r L o s s o f S le e p
A. N u m b n e s s o f H a n d s o r F e e t
N e rv o u s n e s s
B. N e c k P a in o r S t i f f n e s s
A r m a n d S h o u ld e r P a in
Ctaliulxm Indudti: Posture Arulprs, fm tio n fn t. Short
ALL INSURANCC ASSIGNMENTS
U f Tot. Short Arm fo il And folk Wtlh Doctor.
ACCEPTED'
'Subject To Pelky Limit** A ik about ou r "M a k in g C h iro p ra c tic A ffo rd a b le " P ro g ra m
• tM t PATIENT AND ANY O TH ER PERSON R ESPO N SIBLE r o R PAYM EN T MAS A RIGHT TO H E F u S f TO
PAY CA N C EL p a y m e n t OR BE REIM BU RSED EO R PAYMENT f O R ANY O TH ER SER V IC E EXAMINA
TION OR t r e a t m e n t w h ic h i s p e r f o r m e d a s a r e s u l * o r AND WITHIN TJ HO URS o r HE5PON
DING t o THE ADVERTISEM ENT TOR THE r R E E SERVICE EXAM INATION OR TREATM EN T_________________

LA K E M A R Y D LVD .
C H I R O P R A C T I C C L I N IC , IN C .
907 I Lake
Mar y Blvd

322-9300

Suite
Q ayhcad

C e n te r

T H O M A S F . Y A N D I L L , J R . D .C .

EQUIPMENT REBATES
STILL ARE AVAILABLE
WATTS AIR CONDITIONING will
help you get what’s owed to you with:
Up to $ 750.00 discount on the Trane XL1200
+ Up to $ 350.00 F P L rebate
Up to $ 150.00 From Trane
Total

$1250.00 Cash back to you!

Invest in a high efficiency Trane XL1200 air conditioner
or heat pump before March 1st and you could put
$1250 in your pocket, enjoy the energy savings of a new
with efficiency unit — with a 10 year limited warranty —*
‘ Fin an cin g available with no dow n paym ent
Call us today.
‘ W ith Approved C redit

FR EE E S TIM A TE S

S E R V IC E A G R E E M E N T S
R E S ID E N T IA L C O M M E R C IA L

Air Conditioning &amp; Heating, Inc.

C A LL 322-2611
H erald

I heve retired as of 12/31/86.
I want to thank tha paoplo of
Samlnola County and tha
people ol tha surrounding
countlas for tha nlea
business and association
you hava glvan ms ovar 42
ytare.
My offica will ba open
January and Fabruary from
10:00 a.m. till 1:00 p.m. for
anyone who wlahss to In­
quire about thalr animals
records.
Thsnki

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N

heard on oral argument ot] a
motion , to stay, and then dis­
missed on the merits, in a
context of procedural uncer­
ta in ty . T h e c o u r t’s ru lin gs
embraced substantive errors to
which the procedural uncer­
tainty contributed.
“ The district court erred In
denying a stay o f execution, and
It erred in denying the petition
and ordering It dismissed." the
appeals court said.
"W e do not mean to Imply In
even the slightest degree that
Bundy is entitled to succeed on
the merits of any o f his claims."

For quick results,
place your ad In the
For Sale column of
the Classifieds!

Sanford

chief Judge John Godbold wrote,
"but without analyzing all of his
numerous claims, the petition
demonstrates a likelihood of
success In at least some respects
sufficient to Justify a stay.”
Bundy, a Utah law school
dropout who Is now 40, was
condemned for killing Lisa Levy
and Margaret Bowman In a
bloody rampage through the Chi
Om ega sorority house. Tw o
other sorority .sisters and a
young woman who lived nearby
were attacked and seriously In­
jured that night.
Bundy was sentenced to death
for killing Lake City school girl
Kimberly Leach and Is a suspect
In the deaths of 36 other women,
mostly In the Pacific Northwest.

N O TICE

fAJUL HTMIMe
LQKlftAOlftl

6 6 0 JACKSON AVENUE
WINTER PARK. F L 3*2789

(3 0 5 )6 4 4 - 5 0 6 1
To qualified homeowners

CAC 033413

�Bears
Fire
V ainisi

No. 9 'Notes
Meet Lyman
TM lgfct’1 SAC I c M a l a

B a sk e tb a ll

Lyman at Seminole

W U E Z-A M (1400). 8 p .m .
Oviedo at Lake Mary
Lake Brantley at Lake Howell

L y m a n 'a G reyh ou n ds, the
only conference basketball team
to Inflict a loss on Sanford's
Semlnoles last year. Invade Bill
Fleming Memorial Gymnasium
tonight for the second Seminole
Athletic Conference game of the
season.
The Semlnole-Lyman clash Is
one of three SAC games tonight.
In other action, Lake Mary
entertains Oviedo while Lake
Howell hosts Lake Brantley, All
tlpofls are set for 8 p.m. San­
ford's W U E Z -A M (1400) will
broadcast the Semlnole-Lyman
contest.
S e m in o le , L y m a n an d
Brantley are all 1-0 In the SAC
while Lake Mary. Howell and
Oviedo are 0-1. The conference
slate Is comprised of 10 games,
each school playing the other
twice.
Seminole, which climbed 10
notches to No. 9 In the Florida
Sports Writers Class 4A State
this week, has won six consecu­
tive. The Tribe is 12-4 overall
and coach Bill Klein said the
'Notes plan to live up to their
ranking.
" W e ' r e r e a d y . " he s a id
Thursday night. "W e love being
ranked. E veryb ody does no
matter what they tell you. But
ratings are a two-sided thing. It
gives the other team Incentive to
beat you, but hopefully It will
give us Incentive, too."
Lyman lost at Seminole last
year but came back to beat the
'N o le s at hom e w hen T .J .
Scaletta dropped In a pair of
pressure free throws. Lyman,
though, dropped another SAC
game down the stretch and

Seminole took the title.
This year. Lyman has had
been unbeatable at home (five
victories) but winless on the road
(four losses). “ 1 haven't figured
that one out yet,” coach Tom
Lawrence said. "Playing on the
road wasn't a problem last
year."
Lyman's nucleus Is composed
of 5-10 Robert Thomas. 6-2
Radzak and 6-1 Vince Florence.
Senior Thomas, coming from a
career-high 31 points against
Lake Howell last week, Is a good
p e n e t r a t o r a n d p e r im e t e r
shooting. Senior Florence Is the
quickest Greyhound who takes It
to the hoop with authority.
Radzak had a 37-point game
earlier this year to set a Lyman
scoring record. He also hits the
boards with the big boys.
Inside, 6-6 Shawn Hester has
done the Job rebounding while
Willie Brown handles the small
forward. Lawrence said he will
need a good night by Hester to
compete with Sem inole un­
derneath.

- S e m in o le c o u n te r s w ith
guards Andre W h itney and
Michael "Spud" Edwards along
with 6-8 center Craig Walker
and forwards Roderick Hen­
d erson and J e rr y " S t i c k ”
Parker. Brad Baird, a 6-10
center. Steve Hathaway, a 6-5
forw ard. R eginald "S p o o k ”
Bellamy, a 6-2 forward, and
Walter Hopson, a 6-4 forward,
provide the depth.
"T h e y 'r e big and qu ick.1*
Lawrence said. "That's their
strong suit."
• Lake Mary. 2-9. will attempt
to snap a four-game losing streak
at home against Oviedo. Coach
Willie Richardson’s Rams were
b low n out by Port Orange
Spruce Creek Wednesday while
the Lions slipped past Orlando

H t r iM m a t * by T im m y Vlncvtit

Seminole High's basketball fans have had
plenty to cheer about during the Tribe's
six-game winning streak. Another large
Bishop Moore for coach Dale
Phillips' 197th victory.

crowd is expected tonight at Bill Fleming
Memorial Gymnasium when Lyman comes
to town for a SAC basketball contest.

BASKETBALL

SAC PREVIEW

T h e Rams w ill open with
Oviedo Lions (1-1)
S cm iM lt S«mlnolM 01-41
Forw ard..................... Robb Hughes. 4-4. Senior
Terry "T h e C at" Miller and Mike Forw ard........ Rodarlck Handarton. 4-4, Sanlor
Forw ard................................... Jarry P arkar, 4-1,Sanlor
Forw ard............. 4-1 Chris G riffith. 4-1, Senior
Mandevllle at the guards with Cantar..........................Craig W a lk tr. 41. Junior
Center....... ...................4 5 Steve Kandell, Junior
6-2 Oscar Mcrthie at center G uard..................Michael Edw ardi. 52, Sanlor
G uard.......................... Brian Wilson. 4-1, Junior
G uard.......................... G arth Bolton, 4-0, Junior
a lo n g w ith fo r w a r d s E ric G uard.................fn d ra Whitney, S-ll, Junior
Ranch: Brad Baird, 4-10. Sanlor: Reginald
Bench: D ana H ill, 6-3, Senior; Roby
Czemlejcwskl and Matt Napoli at Bellam y, 4-1, Sophomore: Stave Hathaway,
Bowers. 4-0. Sophomore; Dwight Everett, 4-0,
the forwards. Corey Prom and 4-5. Senior; M ika Franklin, 4-0, Senlor;
Junior; A lan Greene, 4-1, Junior; Clinton
Cooper, 5-10. Junior; J .D . O 'N e a l, 5-10.
6-2 Bernard Mitchell supply de­ W altar Hopson, 4-4, Junior; Earnla Lewis.
Junior; Juan Diaz, 4-1, Senior
4-1. Junior; Leonard Lucas. 4-0. Junior;
pth.
Freddie Gadton, 4 0, Junior; Clay Walton.
Lake Howell Silver Hawks (1-5)
"W e need to cut down our 4 -1, Junior
Forw ard..............Aaron Gammons, 4-0. Junior
turnovers." Lake Mary coach
Forw ard..................... Randy Keller. 4-4. Senior
Lym an Greyhounds (1-4)
Center..................Alonzo Robinson. 4-4, Junior
W illie Richardson said. "W e Forw ard...................................Craig R adiak, 41, Junior
G uard.................................Phil Clark, 4-1, Junior
continue to make the mistakes Forw ard.................................D arryl Starkes. 4-1,Junior
Center.......................................Shawn Hester, 4-4.Sanlor
G uard.................................C. Gibson, 5 1 , Junior
at crucial times."
G uard....................... Vinca Florence, 4-1, Sanlor
Bench: M a tt Johnson. 4-4, Junior; Steve
Richardson said his team
hasn't been able to get Merthfe
involved in the offense early In
the game. Mcrthie had 17 points
against the Creek but only two
came In the first half.
"T h ey look quick," Phillips
said. " I 'm sure th ey'll piay
pressure defense. We will have
to be organized and contain the
See HOOPS, Page 8 A

G uard......................Robert Thomas. 3-10, Sanlor
Bench; W illie Brown, 4-0, Junior; Rick
M oulton. 5-11, Senior; M a tt Lamb. 4-1,
Junior, Junior; Rick W right, 4-1, Junior:
David Kendrick, 4 1 , Junior

Johnson. 4-3, Sophomore; G ary Weeden, 5 1 ,
Junior; Lowell Buffington, 4-0, Junior; David
Yapo, 5 1 , Junior; J ,J . Banks, 5-0, Senior

Lake Brantley Patriots (4-3)
Forw ard........................... Brent Bell, 5 1 , Senior
Forw ard......................D arren Leva. 5 1 , Junior
Lake M ary Rams (1-*)
Center..........................B arrl Shirley, 4-1. Senior
Forw ard.......................M att Napoli, 44), Senior
Forw ard.......... E ric Cternlo|awskl, 4-1, Senior
G uard....................................Joe Nolff, 5 0 . Junior
Center.....................................Oscar M erthle, 4-1,Senior
G uard............ ............Doug Lawson, 510, Junior
G uard.................. ......... Cory Prom , S-10, Junior
Bench: Bo Pam plln, 5 4 , Sophomore; Steve
G uard........................... Terry M ille r, 59, Junior
M orse, 3-10, Senior; Bob M ethven, 4-4.
Junior; D arren Hlnshaw, 4-0. Junior
Bench: M ike M andevllle. 4 0 . Junior;
Bernard M itchell. 4-1. Sophomore; Brad
Compton, 59. Junior: Jim Stewart, 4-1,
SOURCE: County coaches
Senior; Jim Aelker, 5-*. Junior
Compiled by Sam Cook
r 11 r

;i

i i

; , ’ c /.

L a d y R a m s C o lle c t 1 4 th C o n s e c u tiv e V ic t o r y
By Chris F itter
H erald Bporta W riter
Lake Mary's Lady Rams, behind a 19-2
first-quarter blitz, won their 14th con­
secutive game Thursday night with a
59-38 Seminole Athletic Conference de­
cision over Oviedo's Lady Lions at
Oviedo High.
Lake Mary, ranked third in the stale In
Class 4A, ran its overall record to 16-1
and now stands at 3-0 In the SAC.
Oviedo, which has lost six In a row, now
stands at 3-10 overall and 0-3 In
conference. Lake Mary returns to action
Monday at home against Spruce Creek
while Oviedo hosts Melbourne Central
Catholic Monday night.
"W e looked good In the first quarter."
Lake Mary coach BUI Moore said. "But
then we lost our Intensity and I wasn't
real pleased with that."
Lake Mary used Its pressure defense to

Basketball
devastate the Lady Lions In the first
quarter. After taking a 19-2 lead, the
Lady Rams went on to build a 29-9
halftime advantage.
Despite being out of the game. Oviedo
came back with a strong second-half
performance in which It scored 29 points
compared to 30 for Lake Mary.
"I was really pleased with our sec­
ond-half p la y ." Oviedo coach John
Thomas said. "W e moved the ball well
against their press and even got some
fast breaks of our own."
Senior forward Cynthia Patterson led
Lake Mary with a game-high 17 points
while senior guard Tonya Lawson had
an Impressive oullng with 14 points and

13 steals. Sharon Bonavenlurc contrib­
uted nine points and Ashley Thomas
tossed In six. Senior point guard Gabby
Olden played only sparingly due to foot
cramps.
Suzanne Hughes and Kristin Harrell
had nine points each for Oviedo. Bobble
Kelly added eight and Bridget Jenerette
had one of her best games of the year
with eight points, seven' rebounds, three
assists and two steals. Hughes also
added two steals and six blocked shots.
Thomas said Hughes twice blocked the
shot o f Lake Mary’s 6-5 center Terl
Whyle.

Tara Jackson charred the chords with
a game-high 22 points to lead Lake
Mary’s Junior varsity Lady Rams to a
49-36 victory over the JV Lady Lions.
Lake Mary Improved to 6-1 for the
season while Oviedo now stands at 7*4.
Behind Jackson for Lake Mary. Larra
Hall netted 10 ponts and Tanya Rouse
contributed nine. Michelle Wynn's 12
points were high for the Lady Lions with
Carrie Stellhorn and Brlgette Szobar
adding six apiece.

LA K E M A R Y (5 t) — P alterw n 17, Lawton 14, Thom at
4, Why tv 3. Roldan 4, Olden 0, D avit 1, Bona venture 9,
Daw ton 3. Totals: 1411 14 39.
O V IE D O (14) - Philpol I , Herbert I, Hughes 9.
Swllzar I, Kelly I, H arrell 9, Jenerette I. Totals: 15 4 19
34.
H alltim e — Lake M ary 29, Oviedo 9. Fouls — Lake
M ary 14. Oviedo 13. Fouled out — none. Technical —
Oviedo (six players on floor).

LA K E M A R Y JV (49) - H all 10, M itchell 2. Rouse 9,
Roundtree 0, Jackson 22. Kuvach 2, Sheppard 4, Totals
22 5149.
O V IE D O JV (34) — Stellhorn 4. I toga 4, Hollis 2,
Stainer 2, Szobar 4. Wllcoxson 4, Wynn 12. Totals: 17 2 13
34.
H alltim e — Lake M a ry 24, Oviedo 20. Fouls — Lake
M ary 12, Oviedo 10. Fouled out — none Technical —
none.

L A K E M A R T J V IM P R O V E S T O 6-1

Arriola Uses Quickness, Saavy
To Propel Howell Post Brantley
By Chris Flster
H erald Sports W riter
ALTAM ONTE SPRINGS - At
5-foot-10, Denise Arriola Is cer­
tainly not the tallest player in
Seminole County. In fact, she’s
only the third-tallest player on
the Lake Howell High roster.
But Arriola, a senior transfer
from Jacksonville, knows that
height doesn’t necessarily mean
might on the boards.
Thursday night, Arriola, the
county's leading rebounder,
used her quickness around the
basket and crafty positioning to
rule the boards as she hauled
down 18 rebounds and scored
10 of her 14 points off the
offensive glass as the Lady
Hawks trimmed Lake Brantley's
Lady P a trio ts . 64-58, In a
Seminole Athletic Conference
thriller before 361 fans at Lake
Brantley High.
It was the 10th consecutive
victory for the Lady S ilv e r
Hawks who Improved to 12-1
overall and 2-0 in the SAC. Lake
Howell has two big conference
games next week os It plays at
Seminole Monday night and
hosts Lake Mary Thursday.
Arriola, who averages 10 re­
bounds ppr gam e, said her
rebounding prowess is as much
outwitting as outmuscllng her
opponents.
"On the defense boards you
just have to get good position
and block out w ell." Arriola said.

Basketball
"But on offensive rebounds. If
the other player Isn't getting her
body on me. 1 try to fake her out
and go around her."
Lake Howell had a decisive
a d v a n t a g e o n th e b o a rd s
Thursday night as It had 43
rebounds compared to 31 for
Brantley. Kelley Grider, nine
boards, and Carey Manuel, six.
and reserve Val Lahr who had
some quality time In relief of
Manuel, were also key figures in
Howell's Inside game.
T h e L a d y H a w k s g u a rd
tandem of senior Erin Hankins
and Junior Tammy Lewis also
perform ed w ell as Hankins
poured In 16 points and Lewis
netted 16 points, dished out four
assists and added three steals.
Manuel, who became a key
figure when starting center
Carolyn Kuhl fouled out early In
the second quarter, contributed
nine points and Grider tossed In
seven.
Sophomore point guard Tracy
Brandenburg had a superb game
for the Lady Patriots with a
game-high 20 points and six
assists. Laurie Rivers played a
strong game underneath with 16
points and eigh t rebounds.
Janice Abaray added 10 points
and eight boards and Jenny
Tufford contributed eight points.

"T h e girls played well to put
themselves In position to win
but they got tired at the end,"
Lake B rantley coach Cindy
Frank said. "W e didn't do to well
blacking out and at the free
throw line though."
At first, the game looked like It
might be a Lake Howell blowout
as Hankins scored the first six
points o f the game and the Lady
Hawks later built a 16-G lead.
A defensive switch by Frank,
though, helped Brantley contain
the prolific Hankins and was a
big reason Brantley stayed in the
hunt. Frank went to a box and
one on Hankins with Junior
Susan Asplen applying the de­
fensive shackles. Hankins scored
10 of her 16 points In the first
quarter and did not score while
Asplen was guarding her.
" I wasn't worried when coach
Frank told me to stick to her
(Hankins)." Asplen said. "W e
worked on it in practice and I
though I could do it. I Just looked
at her stomach all the time and
paid attention only to her and

—

—

S u n d a y :

LAKE FOREST. III. (UP1) The Chicago Bears Thursday
fired General Manager Jerry
Vainisi one year alter the club
won the Super Bowl and less
than a month after it completed
a 14-2 regular season.
The anouncement was made
by club president Michael MeCaskey, who cited a "difference
In approach and philosophy."
Vainisi had one year remaining
on a contract he signed In 1983
with the late George Haias, the
team founder.
McCaskey. who claimed It was
inaccurate to say the move
amounted to a dismissal, said
Vainisi will remain as a "con­
sultant." He did not specify
those duties.

McCaskey said the decision
was made last week, and a
source said there were legal
difficulties in arranging the
move, leading to a delay In the
announcement.
" I remain ready, willing and
able to continue my efforts on
behalf of the Bears as I always
have," Vainisi said In a state­
ment through the Bears public
relations department. "Based on
Mr. McCaskey's statement, while
I apparently no longer have the
title o f general manager. I will
continue to serve the Bears to
the very best of my ability until
this matter Is resolved.
The club president did not
elaborate on why Vainisi fell Into
disfavor. He said he will name a
general manager but set no
timetable. Speculation has cen­
tered on p la y e r p erson n el
director Bill Tobin. Tobin's
brother. Vince, is the (cam's
defensive coordinator.
Coach Mike Dltka and Vainisi
are close friends and business
associates.
" I was taken by surprise and
very, very hurt." said Dltka, his
eyes clouded with tears and his
voicecracking.
McCaskey took over as team
president in 1983 after the death
of hts grandfather. George Haias.
He said he was confident Dltka's
position was secure.
"A s best I can make out. we're
on the same page." McCaskey
said. "W e believe that Mike Is
the best possible coach for the
Chicago Bears."
Dltka. who refused to answer
questions regarding his status,
said It was Haias' last wish that
Vainisi serve as general manager
and he serve as coach.
"W e worked together to put
out a team the city of Chicago
and the Bears could be proud
of." he said. "What hurts the
most Is that he Is my best friend.
The players and myself will miss
him very much."
Chicago has gone 32-4 over
the last two years, Including a
victory over New England In the
Super Bowl a year ago.

Fierce Snowstorm Forces
.Broncos To Move Indoors

L a k e H o w e ll's D en ise A r ­
rio la , le ft, and K e lly G rid e r
h it th e boards T h u rs d a y In a
v ic to ry o ver L a k e B ra n tle y .
not the ball."
Neither team cooled off In the
third quarter as Brantley scored
16 points compared to Lake
Howell's 14 to set up a 48-48 tie
g o in g Into the fin a l e ig h t
minutes.
Am ola scored the first two
points of the fourth quarter on
an offensive rebound and Grider
hit a Jumper to put the Lady
Hawks up by four. Brantley
stayed within two. 58-56. until
2:19 remaining when Hankins
hit a fast break layup, then came
up with a steal which resulted In
two free throws for Lewis. Lewis
canned both foul &gt;shots to put

B e s t

See HOWELL. Page 8A

P r e p s ------------—

T h e Sanford H erald's A ll-C o u n ty P re p F o o tball T e a m is
c o m in g S u nday. T h e six S em ino le C ounty coaches and
fiv e Herald sports w r ite r s select th e best p re p football
p la y e rs along w ith w in n e rs of coach, offense, defense and
so phom ore of th e y e a r a w a rd s w ill be announced.

D E N V E R (U P I) D enver
Coach Dan Reeves says practic­
ing Indoors this week will not
disturb the Broncos as they
prepare for the Super Bowl.
The Broncos were forced In­
side Thursday after a fierce
snowstorm had dumped more
than a foot of snow on their
outdoor practice field. The team
worked out for an hour under
the Inflated bubble at Its training
complex. Practices Friday and
Saturday will also be held In­
doors. team officials said, as
temperatures were expected to
remain In the teens the rest of
the week.
Reeves said the weather will
have little effect on the Broncos'
preparations for their Jan. 25
game against the New York
Giants In Pasadena. Calif.
" W e 'l l still get a lot ac­
complished," said Reeves, ad­
ding most of the team’s pre­
parations won't begin until the
Broncos arrive in California next
week.
Some players said they were
more anxious to get to California
b e c a u s e o f th e sn o w , but
quarterback John Elway said he
Is in no hurry.
"In some ways. I'm looking
forward to getting out there and.
som e ways, I ’ m n o t." said
Elway. who has been beselged
with requests for Interviews and
appearances.
He said he would try to
accommodate as many requests
as possible. Among the Invlta-

Football
tlons he declined was to appear
on Joan Rivers' talk show.
"I'll do everything I can for
e v e r y b o d y .” he said. "B u t
they've got to realize I’ve got to
win a football game. I don't want
to get tied up in all the hoopla.
I’ve got to get selfish and do
what's best for me. And If (the
hype) gets too much, I have to
back off a little."
Thursday's workout was more
Intense than some players had
expected.
"I thought It was going to be a
week In Umbo until I got out
there in practice today.” de­
fensive end Rulon Jones said.
"People were coming off the ball
pretty hard."
Reeves has been trying to
Intensify practices since the
Broncos were blown out in
Seattle the (Inal week of the
regular season. The strategy
paid off with victories over the
New England Patriots and Cleve­
land Browns In the playoffs.
"T h ere was a little bit of
contact today," Reeves said.
Three players did not work out
Thursday because of Injuries.
Linebacker Karl Mecklenburg
(hyperextended knee), lineman
Mark Cooper (foot) and offensive
tackle Dan Remsburg (sprained
ankle) are expected to be ready
for the Super Bowl. Denver
trainers said.

�^ 1'A I.U H .J * u x v :

..« ^

,vi.Ti.-i«.v« 7 r (&gt;»&lt;» y » » ; » t » &gt;• » ny «»■ #■

-•sisK.

v
•

*• • •T.17- yv,&lt;*. •#e,»v
I

■• ■

Jijrt'.-* , -;V* •' ' ■r '

_

.

f.

•

• •‘ .

.r

■in..-. . . t ' V . - V . &gt;

.

i

-Jj &lt;i-J

»

r V r .t
* i il ►*&lt;&gt;♦4* 1 •

Richmond Alls,
Parsons Tokos
Ovor As Drivor
Tim Richmond. NASCAR’s top
winner last year, will mi— at
least half of this year's schedule
due to Illness. Richmond Is now
recovering from a bout with
pneumonia. Team owner Rick
Hendrick said that It will be at
least July 4th before he will
return.
Richmond won seven races
last year along with eight pole
positions In his Chevrolets
fielded by Harry Hyde. He
finished in third place In the
p o in t s ta n d in g s an d w on
•772,700.
Former Winston Cup Champi­
on Benny Parsons will replace
Richmond on the Folgers Coffee
team until Richmond comes
back. Parsons will be a big asset
to the team as his experience
will help It come together before
the Daytona 500 next month.
P a r s o n s , 45, w h o s e la s t
NASCAR tour victory was In
1985, Is expected to drive In at
least 21 races for Hyde and
Hendrick, Including the season’s
first 16 races through the July
4th Firecracker 400 at Daytona
and five major races.
000
This month’s Stock Car Rac­
ing magazine has an excellent
feature story on local racer Rick
Wilson. It Is titled "Charging to
the Front in the Big Tim e."
Wilson's history in short track
racing Is covered as well as his
win In the Daytona ARCA 200.
It’s good to see one o f our
"W eekend Warriors" do good
and make national coverage.
000
The second leg o f the Gover­
nor’s Cup Championships are
coming up at Volusia County
Speedway. The championships
for the street stock and cyclone
divisions are set for this Satur­
day and Sunday.
"W e expect a large field of cars
for this on e." track spokesman
Jim Taylor said. "T h ere are a lot
o f guys who have been anxious
for the long winter to end.” Cars
and drivers from across Florida,
G e o r g ia an d A la b a m a are
expected for this big one.
The winner of the 100-lap
street stock event will receive
$4,000 while the winner o f the
50-lap cyclone feature will take
home $1,000. Tim e trials and
q u a l i f y i n g r a c e s fo r b o th
divisions are slated for Saturday
with the feature events being
run on Sunday.
The gates will open at 5 p.m.
on Saturday. The gates will open
Sunday at 3 p.m.
000
The field for the 25th annual
SunBank 24 at Daytona will race
for the highest purse in the
event's history — more than a
quarter o f a million dollars — on
Jan. 31 and Feb. 1.
The 24-hour event for the
high-tech sports cars of the
In te r n a tio n a l M otor S p orts
Association’s Camel G T Series
will feature a record $263,000 In
p o s te d a w a rd s . T h a t Is a
$63,000 Increase over last year's
purse.
Practice for the race will begin
on Thursday. Jan. 29. The pole
position starter for the race will
be decided in qualifying that
afternoon, and two hours of
night practice from 6-8 p.m. will
give the competitors a chance to
acclimate themselves and their
m achinery to the 3.56-m ile
circuit after dark.
The SunBank 24 begins at
3:30 p.m. on Saturday. Jan. 31.
T h e L o w e n b r a u S p e c ia l
Porsche 962 driven by four-time
IMSA champion A1 Holbert. Al
Unser Jr. and Derek Bell won
$41,500 for winning last year's
race at a record average seed of
105.484 mph. narrowly defeat­
ing the Swap Shop Porsche
driven by four-time Indy 500
winner A.J. Foyt. Danny Sul­
livan and Arle Luyendyk.
Both cars finished on the same
lap.

Howard Evana, an unknown player on
a little-known team, sparked No. 11
Temple to victory Thursday night.
17 of, his career-high 24
points in the secood half to lead the host
Owls to a 66-49 victory over Penn State
In an Atlantic 10 game. The Junior’s
performance helped offset a poor of­
fensive performance by fellow guard
Nate Blackwell. Temple’s leading scorer,
who finished with Just 11 points.
Evans hit 7 of his 10 shots. Including 4
of 5 from 3-point range, to help Temple
Improve to 15-2 overall and 5-0 In the
conference. Penn State fell to 8-4 and
2-2.
"Howard gave us a real lift tonight."
Temple Coach John Chaney said. "H e
sought Judiciously the 3-polnt shot.
When he Is taking the stralght-up Jump
shot, he’s great for us.”
Leading Just 26-22 at halftime. Temple
dominated the second half. During one
span of 2:29, Evans scored 9 straight
points. Temple scored 6 points on one
possession and led by as many as 22
during the half.
Tim Perry added 13 points for Temple.
Penn State was paced by Paul Murphy’s

DePaul. which became only the se
school to have 1,000 victories and fewer

B a sk e tb a ll
12 points.
In other gam es involving ranked
teams. No. 1 Nevada-Las Vegas defeated
Cal-Santa Barbara 88-74, No. 4 Indiana
bombed Wisconsin 103-65, No. 7 DePaul
whipped Loyola 84-65, No. 15 Alabama
slipped by Louisiana State 69-65, No. 16
Oklahoma edged Kansas 76-74 and No.
17 North Carolina State dispatched
Wake Forest 78-67.
At Santa Barbara. Calif., Artnon
Gilliam scored 25 points and Freddie
Banks added 20 to lead Nevada-Las
Vegas over Cal-Santa Barbara. The
undefeated Rebels used an 18-4 burst to
take a M g lead after trailing 64-62 with
7:40 remaining.
At Bloominfpon. Ind.. Steve Alford
scored 21 points, hitting 7 of 8 from.
3-polnt ranjge, helping Indiana crush
Wisconsin. The Hoosiers have won 14
straight against the Badgers.
At Chicago. Dallas Comegys scored 23
points and Kevin Edwards added 21 to
pace DePaul over city rival Loyola. The
victory was the 1.000th In the hlstnrv of

Lyman Pops
Patriots, 3-1
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports W riter
Lyman's Greyhounds, playing
one of their best games of the
s e a s o n , In c r e a s e d L a k e
Brantley's winless streak to five
Thursday night w ith a 3-1
Seminole Athletic Conference
victory at Lyman High.
Lyman. 7-3-3 overall and 2-1-2
In the con feren ce, goes to
Melbourne Saturday while Lake
Brantley. 5-6-3 and 1-3-1. is at
Winter Park Saturday.
“ I felt all week we were ready
to come around and start play­
ing some good soccer.” Lyman
coach Ray Sandldge said. "T o ­
night was a step in the right
direction."
Lyman took a 1-0 lead In the
first minute of play Thursday
when Todd Luke knocked in a
rebound olT a shot by Gerard
Mitchell that hit the post.
"That was one o f the best
goals we’ve scored this season,"
Sandldge said. "W e had four or
five real good passes In a row to
set It up."
Lake Brantley battled back to
tie It late in the half when Paul
Ahrens scored on an assist from
Greg Marko.
Mitchell broke the tie in the
second half when he dribbled
through the Brantley defense
and converted the one-on-one
with keeper Scott McCullough
for a 2-1 Lyman lead. George
Kourtls was credited with the
assist.
"W e were playing an offsides
trap and didn't pressure the
ball," Lake Brantley coach Jim
Brody said. "Mitchell Just drib­
bled through It and had a one on
one with the keeper."
Lyman scaled the victory with
six minutes left when Shaller
Bowers booted In a penalty kick.
While Sandldge said the of­
fense created a number of quali­
ty opportunities, the defense also
played Impressively.
"T h e entire defense hardly
gave up anything In the close
range." Sandldge said. "E very­
thing else was long range that
th e y 'r e not g o in g to b eat
(goalkeeper) Kelly Walden on."
Lym an's defensive leaders
were center defenders Kevin
Smlt and Chris Walden. San­
dldge said Mitchell played prob­
ably his best game of the season
coming off an ankle injury. Up
front. Sandldge said both Mark
Dubln and Greg Bailey had
outstanding games.
Brody said center forward
Chad Marlcn. w in g s K evin

VW « P P ? - v :

Soccer
Sowers and Elvln Carrera and
defender Scott Blackadar were
the leaders for the Patriots.
The Patriots go Into Satur­
d a y ’ s gam e at W inter Park
looking for their first win since
the second round of the Pizza
Hut Tournament. Brantley beat
W inter Park In the opening
round o f the Pizza Hut.
"W e need to stop giving away
s t u p i d g o a ls on m e n t a l
mistakes," Brody said. "W e've
given away a lot o f goals that
shouldn't have been scored. And
lately, except for the Pizza Hut,
we haven't had all 11 players on
the field play well at the same
tim e."
B A LLA U D O L IFT S HO W ELL
Al Ballaudo scored a goal In
each half Thursday night as
Lake Howell's Silver Hawks,
ranked ninth In the state In
Class 4A. Improved to 5-0 in the
Sem inole Athletic Conference
with a 2-0 victory over Oviedo's
Lions, ranked 10th In Class 3A,
at Oviedo High.
F o r L ak e H o w e ll. 11-2-1
overall, it was the second suc­
cessive game against a team
ranked In the 3A poll. The
Hawks and third-ranked Orlando
Bishop Moore fought to a 3-3 tic
Tuesday night.
"It was a really good team
effort tonight." Lake Howell
coach Glen Griffin said. “ The
kids knocked the ball around
well. Now they need to produce
the killer instinct."
Ballaudo's first goal came less
than seven minutes Into the
game when he knocked In a
rebounded shot. Ballaudo scored
again five and a half minutes
Into the second half on a cross­
ing ball from Jerry Philips.
Lake Howell’s defense, led by
Erik Bird and Kenny Higgins,
held Oviedo to Just three shots
on goal while the Hawks took 17.
Lake Howell goalkeeper Joey
Schulman made three saves In
recording his second shutout.
"E rik (Bird) did a super Job
marking Greg Brick," Griffin
said. “ And Kenny (Higgins) was
our sparkplug from the sweeper
position. He really plays with a
lot of Intensity and provides us
with a big spark."
Oviedo now stands at 6-3-3
overall and 1-2-2 In the SAC.
The Lions return to action Sat­
urday at Trinity Prep. Lake
H ow ell Is at M elbourne on
Tuesday.

A la.. Jim Parmer
19 points and Michael Ansley
grabbed 16 rebounds to lead the
Crimson Tide past Louisiana State. LSU
trailed by 14 points early but came back
to take the lead. The Crimson Tide then
scored 8 straight points.
At Norman. Okla., Tim McCalister hit a
15-foot Jump shot with seven seconds
remaining to lift Oklahoma post Kansas.
Ricky Grace preserved the victory by
blocking Mark Turgeon's 3-polnt shot at
the final buzzer.
At Raleigh. N.C.. Bennie Bolton scored
14 of his game-high. 18 points in the first
half to pace North Carolina State over
Wake Forest. The Demon Deacons have
lost 17 straight regular-season. Atlantic
Const Conference games.
Elsewhere, at Hamilton. N.Y., Jim
Biegalskl scored 21 points and Mike
Boswell hit 6 straight free throws In the
final two minutes to help Colgate snap a
32-game losing streak with a 76-64
victory over Manhattanvllle.
Colgate. 1-13. had not won a basket­
ball game since a 75-59 victory over

Florida's
i each from Stan
Crockiln to capture their fourth
live victory, an 89-78 conquest
Armstrong State before 802 fens
UCFGym.
T he K n igh ts Im p roved to 6 -9 .
Armstrong fell to 4-10.
UCF broke open a tight game by
outacoring Armstrong. 28-4. to open at
35-11 lead.
.j
A H D M I10II KEYS H I T BOW ROMP n
DeLand's Randy Anderson popped In
22 points and yanked down 20 rebounds
as the Stetson Hatters drilled Centenary.
100-78, In Trans America Athletic Con­
ference basketball Thursday, night at
DeLand.
Stetson. 5-7 overall and 3-2 In confer­
ence. zipped to a 17-2 lead over the
startled Generals, 6-8,3-5.
,,,
Gary Coachman added 20 for coach
Glenn W ilkes’ Hatters w hile Mike
Barnett chipped In 16 and Charles
Stevenson 12.
•e,

PREP L EA DER S:

SOCCER

a ta i.ll I * —•---------- • - ------•tsttstks MvseeS nwnSsy'i semes

OIRLS LKAO IRS

a ao

Julio DolRuoso (L B )..................... 14
M ayo Boll# B ry o n t(L )................. 14
Kolloy Broon (L M )........................IS
C ara M arlon (L B )....... ................1)
Donna Rohr (L M )...........................IS
M lcholloM attingly ( L M ) ............. 15
AVO Karon Abomothy ( L ) .................... 15
1.7 C athy Bargman (O )......................14
15
1.1 Crlssio Snow (L M )
Col loon Llovorti (L B ).................14
Of
Jonnlfor Josephs (L B )............... 14
0.4
Shorrl Rum lor (S )........................ 14
0.4
Both Schaofor (L B )..................&gt;.14
0.5
K im M ltcholl ( L ) ..........................14
0.5
Dana Boyoson (L )........................ 14
0.5
Rondl Huddleston ( L ) ................ 14
0.4
K lrstln Reosman ( L H ) ............... 14
0.4
Mlchollo Herbs! (L B )..................14
0.4
K elly P rice (O )............................. 14
0.4
Doris Arcomone (O )................... 14
0.4
Dawn Towle (L H )........................ 14
0.4
Nicola Compton (L H )................ 14
0.4
V icky P o ko vlc(S )........................ 13
OJ
0.2 Melissa Shuckmon (S )............... 14
0.2 Becky T ro v ln o (L H ).....................14
0.2 Heather Brann (L H )................... 14
0.2 Jonnlfor W hitaker (O )................ 14
0.2 Bonnl Stoeves (L )........................ 14
0.2 Cindy Bongo (S )...........................14
0.2 Tracey Forro lly I S ) . : ............... 14
0.2 Chris Frenkenberger ( L H ).......14
0.1 Leslie H o b o k (L M ).......................IS
0.1 Julia C a lla rm a n (L ).................... 14
0.1 J ill Knutson (O )............................14
Jenny Lomboosls (O )..................14
0.1
Karon K o p p (L B )..........................14
0.1
Karon Brown (L B )....................... 14
0.1
E ric a Josephs (L B )............. &gt;..14
0.1
Dabble B ray (L B )........................ 14
0.1
Rochelle D enm ark (S )............... 14
0.1
Shannon Sundvoll (S )..................14
0.1
Jennifer Llndemood (S )............ 14
0.1
0.1 Tori Campbell (L H )....................14

K I V i Seminole (S), Leke M e ry (L M ),
Lyman (L ). Oviedo ( 0 ). Leke Howell (L H I.
LekeB renlley (L B ).

SOYS LEADERS

0 OO
G r*g Brick ( 0 ) .......................................1220
E m la B ro a n n la (L M )..............14
1.
Dougl* L m (L H )...................... 14
1
Rick Broannla (L M ).................... 14
Todd Luko ( L ) .............................. 12
Jon Brooks (L M )......................... 14
Darren fo rd o (S ).........................J
Chris Roy (S )..................................•
Poblo Gorton (L B )..................... 14
Grog Bolloy ( L ) ............................12
Gorord M ltcholl (L ).................... 12
Grog M orko (L B )........................14
Jorry Philips (L H I.......................14
Todd Smith (L H )......................... 14
Loo Aloxondor (L M )...................14
Al Ballaudo (L H )......................... 14
JJr.t Guggonholm ( 0 ) ................. 12
Fronk Romsour (L M )................ 14
Fronk Boronowski (L M )........... 14
Tony Florontlno (L M )................ 14
M ike Moody (O )................
C hrlt Graham (L )....................... 12
M ark Dubln ( L ) .................
Tom Soils ( L ) ...............................12
Chod M orion (L B )...................... 14
Bill Longston tL B ).......................14
Koiwiy Higgins (L H )...................14
Joft Philips (L H )......................... 14
Pots Klnsloy (L M ).......................14
Pool Ahrons (L B )........................14
M lko A ltlto r (S )............................J
1
Alox Plquor (S )............
•
1
Scott Toylor (S )........................... J
1
J J . P ort low (S )............................ ■
1
Gory Gotwolt ( 0 ) ........................12
1
Oorok Sotos ( 0 ) .......................... 12
1
Tim Wolsonon (0 ).............. .....12
1
0.1
Chris Woldon (L )....................... .1 2 1 1
0.1
Brett W ortham ( L ) .................... 12
1 0.1
Bernard Harden (L )..................12
1 0.1
Shaller Bowers ( L ) .................... 12
o.t
Dave Daniel (L B )....................... 14
0.1
Dan N ila (L B )............................ 14
0.1
Cory Sheffield (L B )...................14
0.1
Jeff Shlrkey (L H )...................... 14
0.1
Todd M ille r (L H )........................ 14
0.1
Brian M ills (L H )......................... 14
0.1
Bryan D ro ie (L H )......................14
0.1
Scott Schmitt (L M ).....................14
0.1
Steve Sapp (L M )..........................14
0.1
John Yurlck (L M )....................... 14
0.1
Assists
Jim Guggenheim (O) I . Steve Sapp (L M ) 4,
Ernie Broennle (L M ) 4. Dougle Lee (L H ) 5.
Kenny Higgins (L H ) 5. M ike A ltlie r (S) 4.
Tony Florenllno (L M ) 4. Scott Schmitt (L M )
4, Jon Brooks (L M ) 4, Lee Alexander (L M ) 4,
Duncan Jones (O) 4. M ark Dubln (L ) 3, Jeff
Philips (L H ) 3. M ike Moody (O ) 3. Todd Luke
(L ) 3. Chris Graham (L ) 3. Greg M orko (L B )
3. Jerry Philips (L H ) 3. Tom Sells (L ) 2. E ric
Luben (L ) 2. Frank Baronowksl (L M ) 2.
Dave Daniel (LB ) 2. Bryan D roie (L H ) 2.
Chad M arian (LB ) 2. Greg Brick (O ) 2. Brett
Wortham (L ) 2. Jovl O rtli (L H ) 2. Gerard
Mitchell (L ) 2. Darren Forde (S) 1. D a r Nlta
(L B ) 1. E lv ln C a rre ro (L B ) 1, M a rk
Gardberg (L H ) I. Gordon King (O ) 1. Paul
Ahrens (L B ) I, M ark Welsgerber (LB ) I,
E rik Bird (L H ) 1. Ralph Padilla (L M ) I. Alex
Ptquer (S) I. Todd Smith (L H ) I. Al Ballaudo
(L H ) 1. Rick Broennle (L M ) 1. Derek Bates
(O) 1, Tim Walsenen (O ) I, Jim m y Abbott
(L H ) I, Chris Rlske (L M ) I. Pablo G arion
(LB ) I. George Kourtls (L ) I.
Goalkeepers
G GA AVG
Nam *
1
0.4
3
Scott B *t*in g *r (L M ).........
4
0.4
Jo*y Schulman (L H )................. J
13
l.l
M artin Nystrom (L H )....... .....II
17
Scott McCullough (L B )..... ..... 14
1.2
7
1.2
P *t* M cN ally (L M )...........
Gordon King (O )................
14
1.3
14
1.3
Kelly W aldtn ( L ) ............... .....12
Sean Sundvall IS )...............
29
34
Saves
Gordon King (O) 113. Sean Sundvall (S) 42.
Scott McCullough (LB ) 40. Kelly Walden (L )
59, Pete M cN ally (L M ) 3f. Scott Betsinger
(L M ) 34. M artin Nystrom (L H ) 35. Joey
Schulman (L H ) t5.
Shutouts
Scott Betsinger (L M ) 5. Scott McCullough
(LB ) 5. Kelly Walden (L ) X Pete M cN ally
(L M ) 3. Gordon King (O) 3. M artin Nystrom
(L H ) JW, Joey Schulman (L H ) 2V».

14
IS
14
12
12
11
11
10
1

1.0

Of

Of
0.f

0.1
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.7
0.4
OJ
0.5
0.4
0.4
0.4
0.4
0.4
0.4
OJ
0.3
0.3
0.3

0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2
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

Demi
Shannon Anderson (L B )............14
M ichelle Schroth (L B ).............. 14
Reenle Deaver (L B )....................14
Bobble Bowersox (O ).................. 14
Teresa Gatewood ( L M )...............15
Brooke Taylor (L M ).................... 15
Linda Schulthfls ( L ) ............... ....14

AVO

1
I
I
1
I
I
1

0.1

0.1
0.1
0.1
O.t

0.1
0.1

Assists
Julie DelRusso (L B ) 2t. Kelley Broen (L M )
17. Colleen L leverti (L B ) II . Care Marlen
(L B ) f , Dana Boyesen (L ) 5. M aya Belle
B ryant (L ) 5, Kristen Jones (L M ) 5. Donna
Rohr (L M ) 4. Diana Boyesen (L ) 4. Karen
Abernathy (L ) 4. Beth Schaefer (L B ) 4.
Jennifer Josephs (L B ) 4, Jill Knutson (O ) 3.
Crlssio Snow (L M ) 3. Tori Campbell (L H ) 3.
Kelly P rice (O ) X Rondl Huddleston (L ) X
M ichelle M attingly (L M ) X Cindy Benge (S)
X M ichelle Herbst (L B ) X Kim M ltcholl (L )
2, Jennifer W hitaker (O ) 2. Chris Franken
berger (L H ) 2. Stacey Roy (L ) 2. Carol
Lykens (S) 2, Karen Kopp (LB ) 2, Shannon
Sundvoll (S) 2. Sherri Rum ler (S) 2. Doris
Arcomone (O ) I, H eather Brann (_ H ) 1,
Dan E l Blaney (L H ) I. M indy Gardberg (L H )
1. Becky Trevino (L H ) I. Mlchollo Padilla
(L M ) 1, Melissa Shuckmon (S) 1, Amy
Alexander (L M ) 1. Vicky Pakovlc (S) 1,
Leslie Hobek (L M ) I, K erry Musante (L ) 1,
Teresa Gatewood (L M ) 1, Bonnl Sleeves (L )
I. Klrstln Reesman (L H ) 1. M arcy L a ia r
(L M ) 1. Jennifer Llndemood (S) I, Jennifer
Sutherlin (L ) 1.
Goalkeepers
N am e

G
..... 14

K im Walsh (S ).......
Sherri R um ler (S).

..... 15
..... 10
..... 10

OA
9
15
15
12
15
21
33

AVO
04
0.9
1.0
1.2
1.5
15
2.4

Saves
Lori Blackburn (O ) 132. Sherri R um ler (S)
100. Sherri Raynor (L H ) 90. Tam m y Scott
(L M ) 94. Kim Walsh (S) 49. Sarah Cobb (L )
44. Wendy Vickery (L B ) 44. D arcy Mlslak
(L H ) 21. Heather Brann (L H ) 17. Kris
Botticello (L M ) 4. Julie DelRusso (L B ) 2.
Shutouts
Sarah Cobb (L ) 4. Wendy Vickery (LB ) 7,
Tam m y Scott (L M ) 4. Sherri Raynor (L H )
2Vx K im Walsh (S) 2 ' r Lori Blackburn (O) 2.
Sherri R um ler (S) ivy. Heather Brann (L H )
•■X

Johnson, 2 Soviets Break World Indoor Marks
OSAKA. Japan (UPI) — Cana­
dian sprinter Ben Johnson and
two Soviets — pole vaulter
Sergey Bubka and triple Jumper
Oleg Protsenko — each set In­
door world records Thursday In

the Yomlurl International Indoor
Track and Field Meet.
Johnson ran the 60-meter
dash In 6.44 seconds, breaking
his own world record of 6.50 set
last year at the Osaka meet and

equalled at Edmonton. Alberta.
Bubka, who broke the world
Indoor record four times last
year. Improved his pole vault
mark by clearing 19 feet. 6 %
Inches (5.96 meters). Bubka

N e h e m ia h , Fo ster R e n e w R ivalry Tonight
LOS A N G E L E S (UPI ) — Renaldo
Nehemiah and Greg Foster open the indoor
season tonight by resuming one of track's
great rivalries in the 28th annual Sunklst
Invitational.
Nehemiah. the world record-holder in the
1 IO meter high hurdles with a time of 12.93
seconds, makes hls U.S. return to track after
three seasons as a wide receiver with the
San Francisco 49crs. He’ll face Foster and
1984 Olympic gold medalist Roger Kingdom
in the 60-meter high hurdles, clearly the
showcase Event at the Sports Arena.
"T h e rivalry adds a really big dimension.”
Foster said. " A lot of people are ready to see
this race. I've had a lot of people approach
me on the street and In the park and
everywhere else, telling me they’re going to
be there to see this."

Track &amp; Field
Both Nehemlah's and Kingdom's best
efforts have come at the expense of Foster.
When Nehemiah set the world record at
Zurich in 1981, Foster was second. And
when Nehemiah missed the 1984 Olympics.
Kingdom won the gold while Foster settled
for stiver.
Foster feels now Is the lime to reverse that
trend.
“ I've been asked so many questions about
Nehemiah having my number for so many
years." Foster said. "M y response to that is
that my number's been changed."
Nehemiah and Foster last raced against
each other on Jan 29. 1982. and Foster has

defeated Nehemiah only five times and tied
him once In 34 meetings.
The Sunklst Invitational and the Eastman
Kodak Invitational, also set for Friday night
at Johnson City. Tenn., signals the start of
the track year that Is pointed toward the
1987 World Championships In Rome.
Mller Steve Scott expects that meet, held
In late August, to Influence all those that
come before It.
"In a year like this, a lot of the athletes
don't go for the fast times until everything Is
over w ith ." said Scott, the American
record-holder In the Indoor and the outdoor
mile. "It's like playing a game of poker; tn».y
don't like to show their hand. They don't
want to show the other athletes their
strengths until the World Championships."

vaulted 19-6 (5.95 meters) Feb.
28, 1986 at New York.
Protsenko set an Indoor world
57 feet. 11 Inches (17.67 meters)
for the triple Jump, bettering the
57 feet. 6 Inches (17.54 meter).

P|. e

LB Taylor Is
Bell Winner
P H IL A D E L P H IA (U P I ) m
Lawrence Taylor, a name syn-,
onymous with the New York
G ia n ts d e fe n s e , T h u r s d a y
became only the third defensive
player to win the Bert Bell
Award, given annually by the
Maxwell Football Club to the
NFL's most valuable player.
"T h e re are a lot o f great
players In the NFL and It's hard
to say who Is the best player,’.’,
s a i d T a y l o r , an o u t s i d e
linebacker who has carried the
Giants to Super Bowl XXI. "T h is
year. I did some things that
stood out a little, but Fm not'
going to say I’m the best playerI'm glad to see defensive players'
are getting some recognition, but
there are a lot of good players In,
this league."
.,
Taylor, a six-year veteran who,
led the Giants with 20 1-2 sacks,
became only the third defensive,
player honored In the 28-year,
history of the Bert Bell Award,
named after the former NFL.
commissioner.
In ballots cast by Maxwell.
C lu b m em b ers an d aports,

the award over hls teammate,
running back Joe Morris, and
Miami Dolphins quarterback:
Dan Marino.
Morris received 68 first-place
votes and had 668 points, while
Marino was named first on 52
ballots and garnered 468 points.
Next in the balloting were Los,
Angeles Rams running back Eric
Dickerson. San Francisco 49ers
quarterback Joe Montana and
Denver Broncos quarterback
John Elway, who will lead hls
team against the Giants in the,
Jan. 25 Super Bowl.
"It's one thing to get to the
Super Bowl and we're proud to
have done that," Taylor said.
"But now we have to win it. We
have u lot of work to do if wc
want to accomplish our No. 1
goal — w in n in g the S u p e r •
Bowl."
Taylor Joins Merlin Olsen, a.
Rams tackle, and Giants end
Andy Robustclll as the only'
defensive players to win the
award.
HARBAUGH HOPE: NO. 2
MOBILE. Ala. (UPI) — J im '
Harbaugh accepts the obvious
fact Helsman Trophy winner
Vlnny Tcstaverdc Is going to be
the first quarterback taken In
this year's NFL draft.
What Harbaugh Is working on.
especially during Senior Bowl
week on the G ulf Const, Is
assuring he'll be picked.
Harbaugh. M ichigan's
quarterback. Is accustomed to
finishing second to Testaverde.
He was this past season's No. 2
All-America quarterback with
the Miami Hurricanes ace. of
course. No. 1.
"Vlnny probably didn't need
to come to the Senior Bowl,"
said Harbaugh. a 6-foot-3 208-’
pounder who threw for 2.729
yards and rushed for eight
touchdowns this past season.,

CENTRAL FLORIDA

ARMS SHOW
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY, JANUARY 17-18
9 a.m . - 5 p.m.
HELD IN LAKELAND C IV IC CENTER
L a k e la n d , FL.

ADMISSION: $3.00
O N DISPLAY ARE MILITARY
SPORTING a n d ANTIQUE FIREARMS
Sponsored by: LAKELAND RIFLE and PISTOL CLUB INC.
Members Lakeland Chamber Of Commerce

�SCOREBOARD

Continue
To Sizzle
ment of Lewis Lloyd and Mit­
the H ouston
Rockets earned their fourth
straight victory.
T h e W e s te rn C o n feren cechampion Rockets improved to
17-18 Thursday night with a
107-96 victory over the Chicago
B u lla . T h e t r iu m p h w a s
Houston's seventh In its last
eight games.
Tuesday. NB A Commissioner
David Stem had banned Lloyd
and Wiggins when they tested
positive for cocaine. The Rockets
defeated Phoenix that night,
118-100.
H o u sto n h a d sta rte d the
season without Ralph Sampson
and lost Akeem Olajuwon late In
November to knee and ankle
Injuries. Though the two have
returned, the team has struggled
and was 10-17 before its recent
run.
"I expected my guys to do the
best they co u ld u n d e r the
circumstances and respond posi­
tively." Rockets Coach Bill Fitch
said. "They know that even from
the most negative situation, a
positive can be m ade."
Robert Reid, who had swit­
ched to point guard last season
when John Lucas was waived by
the Rockets for drug use. scored
a season-high 26 points and
S a m p s o n ad d e d 25. R e id 's
switch in positions live games
before the end of the regular
season last year had helped the
Rockets to the NBA (Inals. With
the loss of Wiggins and Lloyd.
Reid is taking responsibility
again.
"I'm asked to replace Lewis
and Mitch and their paints every
night. Each time I'm on the
court. I’m under scrutiny." Reid

chell W ig g in s,

1 VnlKt

4 EMwKwtyT«
I TatyJatw

u u i

XX l
1

BtMILft PtHlltUhTtaOBIMUP

as M- -

Fftftl. M

n. Al

M cC o y's, Tip Top Win O p e n e rs
McCoy's Cleaners and Tip Top Super Market posted
victories Thursday as the Sanford Recreation Department
Junior League Basketball opened play at the Salvation
Army Gym.
McCoy's used 25 points from Travis Perkins to derail
First Union. 35-26. Dante Jones and Raymond Perkins
chipped In four points while Willis Davis added a bucket.
Maurice Terrell led the First Union with six points and Kit
Brown had five. Eric Ingram. Cliff Robertson and Charlie
Farmer had four each. JefT Wiggins totaled three.
Corey Bennett and Dcmitrlus Beamon tossed in 12 points
each as Tip Top rolled over First Federal, 32-19. Neville
Fuller added eight and Leon Butts had six. Corey Anderson
led Federal with 12. Andres Key tossed in five and Sean
Bumgarner added two.

Art.Meftfltfti.lv Meftl* Cel B
LMMrnNv1hTiMiU.il
a n o n tH M U v .m ic ti4 .it

IN p m - WFTVVWMePNrMOlSftrtv
Iw n w TrWhin Mvll Chtiftiwlft
TidMft
II pm. - ESFN. Amtrkl’l Cup V :
CWjengerp' Fite. Itct Ftp (LI

H n w -m on lyhm

M

Irlgte* Yevnpte.Se! Dttgi U. S
UCk i t e * CM». F a t e * X
Fiw iSI.nU l4hU .il
M v ftM U .lt MMVU.K
OrtfViU. P.tafferflCVH
Ftdncil.SMjMtU.S7
FoMLmTVCftlit.ltetifn
U. Mmt ’i (CUB.) U S*i Frtncta»
Sen D*ege7Xierile Clare II

iXpjH. - WFTV fcf t * WvMtfSprtl

UOAUQrtftOt

UNLVM UCSvft lerterl 71
UlMUtHMVITI
WteMftplenn, Arizona st. n
Nttor SLIP Merten* 70
W yftft| m Net Mulct M

N ew Z ea la n d D ra w s Within 2-1
FREMANTLE. Australia (UP1) — New Zealand capitalized
on Stars &amp; Stripes' collapsed spinnaker today to rally for a
38-second victory and draw within 2-1 In the best-of-seven
America's Cup challenger final.
Kiwi skipper Chris Dickson finally controled a race,
outtacklng his rival, Dennis Conner, and protecting the
lead over seven legs. Conner hurled an unusually high 131
tacks at Dickson over the 24.5-mlle course, but Kiwi
tacking supremacy prevailed.
In the best-of-nlne defender finals. Kookaburra III and
Skipper Iain Murray overcame Australia IV’s three-second
starting edge for a 46-second victory and a 2-0 lead over
Alan Bond's flagship.

Pithbvrgh

14ffl. - SIN. ArvnlM n. CoMenM
3 p m - ESFN Inter. lallimert I
ClevelandF»t»

Pacers 113, B a lle ts 105

I pm - ESFN. Fflpglt’t Light
PrkCtMrlly Clastic

10* m. - NVl_ Dote (olio I p m. II p m.)
t Pm - NVL American Sport, Cavalcade
(Ilia midnight)

JUCO
lAUtTIALL: M M F M ft CvftfMCl

M artina A d v a n ce s A t A u stra lia
MELBOURNE. Australia, (UPl) — Top seed Martina
Navratilova whipped Camille Benjamin 6-2. 6-1 today at
the Australian Open in a third-round match marred by
winds that overturned two chairs, ripped two flags from
their poles and sent hundreds of beer cans rolling down the
concrete steps of the stadium.
Navratilova, the defending champion In the $1.65 million
tournament, needed only 55 minutes to defeat her fellow
fo rt Worth, Texas, resident. Navratilova later revealed she
had been stopped by the Melbourne homicide squad
Thursday night In a city park. The unit was seeking
assistance in Its hunt for a stabbing suspect.

7: N p * ~ WHMA AM (ft). Tanneuca at
Florida
7:31 pm - WFIUFM (fIJ). Tempt at
Roflint
7 30 pm. - W H A M lift). Houihm
Baptltt at Station
7 30pm - WKISAM (7401, FloridaSloleat
Cineemail
TtM
I p m. - WftlSAM 17401, SparNTalk with
Orittaphcr Ruin
ioftdty
Tett
4 pm - WKISAM I7M). SporttTtlk with
Chrtttaptwr Ruuo

Johnson's 32 P ro p el N ew Life
Jimmy Johnson, a 5-6 sophomore guard from Sanford,
poured in 32 points and dished out 10 assists Thursday
night as New Life Christian School hammered Pine Castle
Christian, 92-42, at Orlando.
Behind Johnson for New Life, John Bryant pumped In 26
points, Joe Glallanza tossed In 16 and Donald Lewis added
10. Jeff Braga had 28 points for Pine Castle.
New Life, 3-3. returns to action Friday, Jan. 30 at
Orlando Dixie Village Christian School.

Bean Takes H ope Lea d By 3
LA QUINTA, Calif. (UPI) — Andy Bean conquetcd rain
and wind Thursday. PGA West Is his next obstacle at the
$900,000 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.
Bean cagled one hole and blrdled four others at Indian
Wells to move to 13-under par and Into the lead by three
strokes after two rounds. He’ll see the monster known as
PGA West todav.

Hoops
Continued from 6A
traps and presses."
Oviedo, 8-3. won seven In a
row to open the season, before
dropping two in its holiday
tournament and a one-pointer
last week to Lake Brantley.
Phillips has received consistent
play from guards Garth Bolton
and Brian Wilson along with
swlngman Robb Hughes and
frontcourters Dana Hill and
Chris Griffith.
Griffith, though, has
shlnspllnta and will be replaced
by Junior Alan Greene. "Alan is
a strong kid. he's our enforcer."
Phillips said about the 6-2,
195-pounder. "H e did a good Job
ofT the bench against Bishop
Moore. Hr got eight points and
made all four free throws."
Phillips was also impressed
with Hill, a 6-5 senior who had
12 points and live blocked shots.
Terry Campbell is the spark ofT
the bench.
• Tonight’s third game be­
tween Lake Howell. 2 4 . and
Lake B ran tley, 4 -5 , b rin g s
together rwo fierce rivals. The
rivalry was fueled by a fracas
last year al Lake Brantley. The
next time the teams played to a
full house at Lake Howell. Both
coaches are expecting another
barnburner — without the fls-

licufTs. of course.
"I heard the place would be
packed again," Lake Brantley
coach Steve Jucker said. "I saw
L a k e H o w e ll once ag ain st
A popka and w as impressed.
They switched to a man-to-man
defense to come back and win
the gam e."
Howell coach Greg Robinson
said he was equally Impressed
with Brantley’s victory last week
over Oviedo. "They don't turn
the ball over." he said. "They
control the ball and control the
tempo."
Brantley goes with all-purpose
Brent Bell at swlngman along
with 6-2 Barrt Shirley and 6-2
Darren Leva up front. Doug
Lawson and Joe Nolff man the
backcourt. Lawson and Leva
turned In career bests against
Oviedo.
"It will be a challenge for us."
Robinson said
When you beat
Oviedo at Oviedo you're doing a
good Job. Size-wise, we're a little
larger but they'll hurt us with
their quickness."
Lake Howell has the county's
top r c b o u n d c r — A l o n z o
Robinson — in the pivot along
with 6-6 forward Randy Keller
an d 6 -0 s w l n g m a n A a r o n
Gammons. C. Gibson and Phil
Clark are the guards. Robinson
said 6 4 Junior Matt Johnson has
been bothered with the flu and is
qucsitoituble. Sieve Johnson, a
6-2 sophomore, is the lift off the
bench.

At Indianapolis, Chuck Person
scored 11 of his 29 points late in
the fourth quarter to help Indi­
ana snap a three-game losing
streak. Indiana gained Its largest
lead. 88-66, with 3:30 remaining
In the third q u arter. John
Williams led the Bullets with 18
points.

OvMe
I
Thanday'ireuttl
LakeMary it. Oviedo31
Late Hotel R law Brantley M

Control Florid*
Valencia
Santa Fa
loft* City
St. Johns liver
S a m I t . Central Florida •
Daytona latch k Lika Oty 41
Valencia t l SI John, River 75
Flortdi Camnwuty N Santa Fea

•ASKITIALL: Thunday'l Callega Rttultt
tail
Alvernla U Harerterd SO
Amhtrtl Cel ft. New EnglandCat. 77
BrootlynCol n, Morgan SI. S7
Colgate 7k Manhattanv.lla 41
Fashion IntMute TP. fttattatuck 71
Frotlkrg St Ml, Nonport Newt tl
Getlyiburglf. Washington (Md 1MI0T)
Lehman kHuiter 71
Manhattan U. Fordham n
Massachusetts 71 Rutger, 47
North Ademttl Weitern NE Cel. 7t
Nyack *7. Bloomfield to
R ite k Buckrwtl 01
St Jot. (Fa) k St. Bonayonture 7]
St. FmalFalTLSt. FmcilNYlaa
SusquehannaIP. Juniata 74HOT)
Temple ti. PermSt 40
Tuttt ft. FraminghamSt. 74
UMeu BottonIL BridgeweNr tl
Wlteier t l NYU 44 (10T1
WotUlter FWy H. Worcester St. 71
Alabama it. LJU PS
Bapiltl It. WMhrop M
David Lptcomb lit. Barheiu
Ferrumtl.LongnaodSJ
Georgohmn I Ky ) It. Kanlucty St ti
Jamal Madiun TVControl Cam. 4310T)
Marthail IX Virginia Military 71
Mary Wtthlnghm f t Salisbury SI. tt
Men Orleanstt. Sam Houstontl
Newberry TVAllan 71&lt;0T)
NkltalN 77. Pan American 73

i4t

W L Fit. M

n i) iit -

A
H U M lit
Alan
It II . f t Sit
nor
14 73 431 I
rtmant)
1C H 111 1)
i Una
t it .341 14'*
Fk McDMVm
Lofton
. . jg I .77» ■fland
M U JU J t
ktoi State
31 it JO I
imp
it M jjc f
wnli
IS 33 f t 01*
Clipper*
S 11 .131 D
Thortftr't ftu lti
Attala l&amp; MilMuketfl
Intfanft HLWtiMrtgtan 1&lt;S
HMtaW.CNcftgeM
FhateiUL Utah lit
LALftfttrt 13VGatei Slat. 10*
Sacramtep 13V. Portland III
Frider'l Carnal
Clevelandallotte. 7:Xpm
HomtaatOetreit.lpm,
Dalla, it MJIotukat. I pm,
Denver at SeftWe. IP X pm
LA CUppftrt at Golden State. 11 p m.

H aw ks 130, Backs 91

TarvftltWreVt
WadihtfMr 1 Nr ttta te i t
Friday1! Gemot
Winnipegat MowJertar, 7:M pm.
Lai Angeles tl SI. Louis. I Mpm.
Calgary at Vsncwvor. IP IS p m
Saftrdiy'i Garnet
Pittsburg* tt lotion
Ptiiladftdila at MY Itlanftn
WashingtonotMerttord.nlgM
Quebecat Ootroil. night
tuttatoat Montreal. night
EVraiten at Toronto, night
Vancouver at Calgary, mgyi
Oilcage at Mmneioto. night

JOCCER: M ill STANDINGS

FOOTBALL
FOOTBALL: NFL FlaywMkftedvSt
Sopor I p w I X X I
S*efty.J«-3S
Oenver vt NY Giant* al Row Bant.
Posodane, Call!., p p m.

TENNIS

Martina Navratilova. Fort Worth. Trial II).
Pet Camilla Beniamin. Fort Worm. Taut, 4L
01. Hone Manpiitova. Cttchmlovakla (3). del
Anna Smith. San Antonia. Tout. PX 43, Pam
Shriver, Lutherville, Md. (3). del Elna
Relnech. South Africa. *1, 44: Caiorini
UnftvNt. Snedm (101. dll Merit Chrlstlnt
email. France. 44. 4-1. 4). Menueli
MeNova. Bulger’4 (4). dot Civile Curtpy.
Snlttartand PX PI. 75. Sylvia HamU Wmt
Germany. dM AftihoKI|lmuti. Japan, axP I

Lafond's

EiiNfiDtvniM
Dillu
Cleveland
Boltimor,
M.nrmoti
Chicago
New York

W L Pet. GB
1J t tit 11 I U l 11
tt 7 JM 3
I I .300 )V*
I II U3 I
1 IS .111 IP

Wntm Oniuoa
Tacoma
It ) 134 San 0«go
t I 131 1
Kansas City
t t 100 Sit
Wichita
B * .471 A
St Louit
7 II Ml 71*
Lot Aigalai
1 It i n I
ThurtPay't Garnet
Na geirti scheduled
Friftfi Garnet
Balt!more al Nan York. I PSpm
Delta* tl Cleveland I Pi pm.
Tacoma it Chicago. 1 33p m.
SanDwgeatWIchlkt 11pm
Miimowta at Kamel City, VOSpm.
SI Louit at Lot Angelet. 10 U p m

At Atlanta. Dominique Wilkins
scored 32 points and Kevin
Willis added 28 points and 15
rebounds for the Hawks. Atlanta
led by. ms many as 41 points late
in the game. Glenn Rivers had
18 a s s is t s for the H aw k s.
Milwaukee was paced by guard
Ricky Pierce's 19 points.

Suns 123, J sss 107
At Phoenix. W a lter Davis
scored a career-high 45 points
for the Suns. Davis scored 10
points In each of the first three
quarters and capped his perfor­
mance with 15 points in the
fourth. Karl Malone led Utah
with 27 points.

L akers 129, W arrio rs 109
At Inglewood. Calif.. Magic
Johnson collected 31 points and
12 assists and James Worthy
added 31 points to pace the
Lakers. Golden State scored Just
8 points over the final 5:47 and
16 In the final quarter. Los
Angeles had begun the game
with a 17-2 surge.

K ings 120, B lazers 118
At Sacramento, Calif., Eddie
Johnson's 3-point shot with
three seconds left lifted Sacra­
mento. The Kings snapped the'r
four-game losing string and the
Trail Blazers’ three-game winn­
ing streak. Kiltl Vandeweghe
paced Portland with a game-high
37 points.

Raiders

RAIN OR
SHINE

Basketball

__

__

12’ afhamirnc, allowe'd Santa

Fe

Howell

to pull within 55-54 with six
minutes to play. Lafond and
Pam Jackson then combined for
several free throws to thwart the
comeback. Lafond and Jackson
converted 13 of 14 attempts for
the game.
"Lafond came off the bench
and did the Job," SCC assistant
Debbie Scherr said.
Jackson, a Lyman High grad,
popped in 18 points to lead SCC

L A K E H O W E LL (A4) - A rriola 14, L tw it
IB. H anklnt It , Sehnllkar 0. K m ton 1. Lahr 0.
C r ld tr 7, B urnt 0, Kuhl 0. Manual 9. Tolalt:
2B 12 23 44
L A K E B R A N T L E Y (SB) - Brandenburg
10, A tplan 4, A baray 10, B lllm yar 0, Tufford I ,
R iv e r* IB. Totalp: 2 J I I5SB
H alttlm a — Lake Howell 14, Lake Brantley
n . F o u lt — Lake Howell IS, Lake Brantley
17. Fouled out — Kuhl. B lllm yer. Technical —
none.

N IG H TLY 7:30 p.m .

(except Sun.)

BUY HERE
PAY HERE
LOW
DOWN P A Y M EN T
GOOD CREDIT BAD CREDIT
NO CREDIT
NO INTEREST

M atinees M on., W ed.
&amp; S a t. J;00 p.m .

PLA Y TH E
E X C IT IN G &amp; H IG H
P A Y IN G ...
UP IC 6 ” &amp; “ B IG Q ”
THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission for ladies
Visit our two climate-controlled
clubhouses tor your fine dining
and entertainment pleasure!

CLUBHOUSE RESV.: 831-1600

SANFORD-ORLANDO
KENNEL CLUB
SANFORD

•forth ol Orlando. Just otl Hwy. 1 7 9 2
301 Oog Track Road. Longwood
Sorry. No One Under 18

�1

VVir

iff.

l Jt»

G a r d e n in g
It's Time To Decide On Seeds Or Transplants For Spring
■

Planning a spring vegetable
garden? If you are. now Is the
time to make the big decision as
to whether to plant seeds or set
transplants. Most gardeners arc
successful with either. Both have
their good and bad points. Before
you decide, let’s take a look at
both systems.
One advantage of transplants
Is an early start. Transplants are
grown In protected seed flats, or
seed beds. These allow the seeds
to germinate under the best
possible conditions. And, seeds
In flats can be started before the
weather Is really good for plant­
ing directly in the garden.
Whether your grow your own
transplants, or buy them at a
garden center, you’ll be several
weeks ahead o f gardeners who
start with seeds.
Using transplants allows you
to choose only the best plants.
When you seed your own. you’ll
have many more plants than

you need, so you can be choosy.
Pick only the healthiest
specimens. If you buy your
transplants, pick from the best
available.
I t ’ s e a s ie r to start from
transplants, especially If you
only need a few. This Is much
more practical than starting
f r o m s e e d s . By u s in g
transplants, you can minimize
seedling decay problems.
The main disadvantage Is us­
ing transplants Is that the cost
would mount up quickly If you
have a large garden and, many
crops are difficult to transplant
successfully. Beans, corn, cu­
cumbers, and turnips do better If
started from seeds planted di­
rectly In the garden.
If you plan to raise your own
transplants, they should be
ready for the garden when
they’re four to six weeks old.
Those you buy you can set out
Immediately. If the seedlings are

A lfr e d

Bessesen
U rban
H ortlcultrlst
323-2500
C at. 181
In Individual containers, moisten
the soli before removing them. If
they're grown In peat pellets,
insert them directly Into the soil.
Don’t try to remove them from
the pellets.
The best times to transplant
are: right after a rain, when It’s
cloudy, or late in the afternoon.
Handle the plants gently. Don’ t
press the soli too tightly around
the roots.
To give transplants a quick'
start, apply a "starter’’ solution.
You can buy ready-mixed, or
mix your own. For best results,
mix one or two tablespoons of a
high phosphate fertilizer, like a
10-50-10, In a gallon o f water.

Or. you can use an ordinary
all-purpose fertilizer, such as
6-8-6. Just pour about a pint of
the solution Into each hole as
you set the plants.
Don’t sell seeds short, though.
Especially If you’re planning ^
large vegetable garden. Besides
c o s t i n g m u c h less than
transplants, a major advantage
of starting your vegetable garden
directly from seeds Is that you
can choose from a wider selec­
tion of varieties. Many crops do
transplant well. They Include:
tom atoes, broccoli, collards,
lettuce. If transplants are avail­
able — they're probably a better
bet than starting them from
seeds, unless you plant a very
large garden.
While most vegetables can be
grown from seeds, there are
exceptions — sweet potatoes,
Irish potatoes, and strawberries.
For specific recommendations,
on the crops you want to grow.

check with your favorite garden
supply store.
If you decide to start from
seeds, get the best you can find.
Seed quality could mean the
difference between success and
failure In your garden. Always*
buy good seeds from a reliable
dealer. It isn't very practical to
try to save seed from your own
garden. Since most seeds are
relatively Inexpensive, you're
better off buying those you need.
If they're available.
• You should buy tested seed
varieties. Those recommended
for p lan tin g In F lorid a . O f
course, you can plant anything
you like. But. many gardeners
cheat themselves by continuing
to plant Inferior types, without
even trying those that grow best
in our area.
A note of caution to keep In
mind when handling seeds. Most
have been treated with chemi­
cals to reduce Injury and decay

caused by insects and diseases.
Usually, you can tell when seeds
have been treated , because
they're coated with brightly col­
ored dye.
It's a good idea to use treated
seeds. In fact, you should always
use them, when available. But.
remember that the chemicals on
such seeds a re p oison ou s.
Treated seeds should never be
eaten by people or animals.Handle the seeds with care and'
keep out of reach o f children and
pets.
Follow the planting directions
on the seed packets. If you plant
too deep, the young plants may
not be able to rrach the soil
surface after sprouting. And. if
you plant loo shallow, the seeds
may be washed away by rain.
Whether you use seeds or
transplants, or both. I wish you
success with your spring vege­
table garden.
Happy Gardening!

C h a ritie s ' C o lle c tio n T a ctics Irk R e a d e r
DEAR ABBY: I am not rich,
neither am I poor. I’ve always
contributed to the charities I feel
arc deserving, and nobody has to
remind me to make my annual
contribution, but things have
now gotten out o f hand.
Lately I have been deluged
with what appear to be "b ills "
from numerous well-known or­
ganizations, pleading that they
arc desperately In need of funds.
Yesterday. I received 16 requests
from charities — yes, 16 — with
urgent "plcase-h elp -u s-n ow ’ ’
letters, of which 12 were third
and fourth requests! I felt as
though I was being billed for a
debt that was long overdue.
t I am aware that charities need
funding, but I am so annoyed at
this point. I am ready to toss all
o f these l e t t e r s i n t o the
^wastebasket without even
jjgtiUpcning the envelopes.— even

[

D ear
A bby
though some may contain a
22-ccnt postage stam p that
cou ld be used for an oth er
purpose.
Abby. please get this message
across. These people need to
know how turned oil some of us
get when we a r e ...
DUNNED TO DEATH

DEAR ABBY: My husband
and 1 disagree about this pro­
blem: We have a friend who we
think has " I " trouble. She brags
about herself constantly. She Is
absolutely shameless when It
com es to pr ai s i ng h e rs e lf.
Examples: "I was by far the
b est-look in g w om an at the
party," and “ Oh. she’s a good
player, but. of course, she's nol
as good a player as I am ." "It
was a good group, but I was by
far the most Intelligent one
there."
I say this woman Is suffering
from an Inferiority complex. My

husband says she Is sutlerlng
from a superiority complex.
What is your opinion?
SICK OP BRAQGERS

'f a w v 'f e w w

O U T L E T STO R E

D E A R SIC K : Actually the
"sufferers" are those who have
to listen to her. Knowing nothing
of her qualifications. It’s clear
she has a very high opinion of
herself — deserved or otherwise.
But her apparent need to con­
stantly build herself up would
Indicate that she needs constant
reassurance of her worth —
which Is typical of one with an
inferiority complex.

2 5 -5 0 % O F F
ALL CANDY

THIS WEEK’S
SPECIALS

.HRISTO’S CLASSICS^

DEAR DUNNED: I couldn't
agree with you more. But please
don’t quit giving to the charities
of your choice because o f those
who dun you to death with
high-pressure tactics.

•a S i

EXULT BIRD SPECIALS
4pm *6 pm

*4.95
FRje© CtlICKeN CIrfM STRIPS
PRjMeRJ©
SrtlWMpeiHNSR
SIRJoOINSVSfflK Srflt&amp;D FLOONBefl

Reg. *1.19 to *15.95

SALE 43c to *6.99

W G H e T n ^ M e trrrsrto c e

CYTTfl&amp; fl w/tltlfrtlpuppies
All

d in n e r !

avalUbl* 6 p.m. ’til

d o lin g

19.93

Cocktails, Beer, Wine
Fresh Seafood, Steaks, Prime Rib

2 lb. Bagged Chocolates

SPECIAL GUEST DON P U T T ON
THE PIANO FRI. A SAT. WIGHT

H c n id Photo by M arva K aw klni

N e w ly In s talle d o ffic e rs o f K a p p a S ig m a O m e g a C h a p te r of
A lp h a K appa A lp h a a r e Sorors, fro n t row , tro m le ft, Susie
B lacksh eare, M a r g a r e t O liv e r , Q ueen Jones and L u rlen e
Sw eeting. B a c k ro w , fro m le ft, E d d y e K. W a ld e n , M y r tle
B row n and M a rle s s a R o b erts.

Our
Price

*5 " if perfect *1590

O ffer good w h ile supplies Is s t thru W ed. Jan. 28

S E M IN O L E C E N T R E O U TLE T S T O R E
H W Y . 17 9 2 S A N F O R D

Kappa Sigma Omega
Installs 1987 Officers

m

Kappa Sigma Omega Chapter
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc.
Sanford Chapter recently held
Installation of officers for 1987.
New officers are: Soror Lurlene
Sweeting. Baslleus: Queen S.
Jones. Anti Baslleus: Geraldine
:I2»-5118
Wright. Gramtnateus: Eddye K.
Walden. T am lorlch o: Myrtle
Alien Chapel AME Church will
Brown. Financial Grammatcus:
observe
Its annual Junior Men'^
Juani ta H arold. E plstoleus;
Day.
Sunday
Jan. 25. at the
Susie Blacksheare. Ivy Leaf Re­
11:00 a. m. s e r v i c e . G uest
porter: Margaret O liver.
Hodgcus; M arlessa Roberts, Speaker will be the Rev. BenPhllacter: and
Deloris Myles, Jaininc Adams. Sanford. Brother
Sysvcster Wynn Is chairman and
parliamentarian.
Actitlves planned for this tnlhe Rev. J.H. Woodard Is the
month are: Annual Founders pastor.
Day. Jan. 31. at
9:15 a.m.
We were happy to hear that
Special service are lo be held at
Omni International Hotel. Or­ R.B. Duke Boykin has improved
and Is able to leave Florida
lando.
Hospital. Mrs. Ann Boykin has
The gift of sharing and earing been vlstlng with the Boykins on
was extended to those In need by West 15th Street, and Mrs.
the Future Business Leaders Of Boykin will accom pany the
America Club of Seminole High Boykins to Phlladelpida where
School us they gave food boxes he will continue his thcarpy and t
to the necdly, Christy King and progress toward good health. •
Marie Radford were the sponsors
Mrs. Cathy Steele was honored
of this project.
The Morning Glory Missionary with a surprise birthday party
Baptist Church gathered the given by her husband Charles
poor and needy and treated over Steele at their lovely home. More ••'*vrrr*
100 persons to a Christmas than 25 friends helped lo make
the evening an enjoyable one.
D i n n e r d o n a t e d by l o c a l
Others having birthdays this
merchants In the Midway and
month
are Juanita A. Golden.
Sanford areas. Many of the slek
and shutins were given tokens of M a r s h a l l H o l i d a y . J r . Eva
Stephen. Issac Jones. Pam Seals.
love by this group.
Eddie Martin, the Rev. Andrew
Crooms Academy classes 1950
Evans and the members of
Morning Glory are lo be com­
mended for their much needed
effort and spirt of sharing and 5:00 p.m., at Elks Home Cypress
Avenue and 7th Street. Richard
giving to those in need.

M arva
Hawkins

4

Sa t u r d a y
A SU N D A Y
JA N U A R Y
■

1 8

ill

m

JCPenney
E la in e ’s H a llm a rk
Vogue
F r ie d m a n J e w e le rs
P la za T w in T h e a tre

H a ir-A -R a n g e rs
A - 1-T ra v e l
P e t A n im a l S u p p ly
M c C ro ry
A ll-B r ite C le a n e rs

G e n e ra l N u tr itio n C e n te rs
Z a le ’s
A lfre d H . C a n n , O .P .
B a lly 's G re a t E s c a p e
H o n g K o n g R e s ta u ra n t

£S&gt;s

w

w

S A N FO R D P Ld Z d

■

( D i c k ) E v a n s is a d v i s o r .

H ours: Mon. Fri. 10 9
So*. tO 9 Sun. 11:30 5:30

3 2 1 -8 8 1 5

" W h e r e G o o d T h in g s H a p p e n "

M o n d a y - S a t u r d a y 1 0 -9 , S u n d a y s fr o m

mm
&gt;&amp; £§«

M U M W

ip M B

mm

m rm

Ipp

■&gt;

1 2 :3 0 -5 :3 0

t ill

i ^
u • V '7 «

M

p

i l
I

�Three Treatments
Can Help Allergies
J &lt;3
FJI

BIRDS ARE \ THEYfrE
ATTRACTED I MESSING
TO YOUR / iTALLUPf
STATUE A
SHOO
______ /
\
THEM
.

hem, hwfnt seen

l O W STANDINGONMY

A SIDEW ALK^

T

FOCTi

T

^ c A iE iH ^ a a

I'M GUARDING THE OTHER
TEAM'S TOP SCORER/ IV E
GOT TO INTIMIDATE
-T HIM QUICK*/ J ,

SOy/ THAT
S T R A T e e v SURE
„ BACKFIRED/

I MCT A G W LAST WIGHT
WHO SAID H£S LOONIUG R3R
AW OLD-TIME G A L...

A

DEAR DR. GOTT — Last week
we bought a hamster, and It bit
me on the linger. The teeth went
all the way In and it bled a lot.
The hamster died 48 hours Inter.
Our local health department said
it docs not run rabies tests on
caged animals. I’ m still worried.
Is there anything 1should do?
DEAR READER — Domestic

T O f W IO R
A DIVORCE

WHO WOULD SIAM HOME AND
COOK AAJD CLEAW AMD TAKE
CARE. OF THE KIDS, SO THAT
HE COULD GO T D LAW SCHOOL
AMD Q/EKnUALLV MAKE
ENOUGH M O NEV...

DEAR DR. GOTT — Our aon.
13, Is constantly blowing his
nose, and his voice gets funny
from drainage In his throat. The
ENT doctor did cryosurgery on
him a year ago, but that didn't
help. The allergist Just says he’s
allergic to dust and mold. Could
something be done for the boy?
DEAR READER - Your son
s e e m s to be s h o w i n g the
classical signs of Inhalation
allergies. If. as the allergist
suggests, he Is sensitive to dust
and molds, desenaltlzation shots
may help.
With any allergy, there are
three basic treatm ents:
avoidance of the substance, use
o f m e d i c i n e s to c o n t r o l
symptoms and administration of
injections to reduce the severity
of symptoms.
Dust and mold are so pre­
valent In our environment that
avoidance Is virtually Impossi­
ble: antihistamines do reduce
nasal congestion and mucus
production. However, the only
suitable long-term solution to
your son's allergies Is probably a
program of regular Injections.
Ask the allergist about this
treatment.
DEAR DR. GOTT - I breast­
fed my child until he was 10
months old. Now my breasts are
soft. What can I do to firm them
up?
DEAR READER When
breasts are producing milk, they
enlarge and become firm. After a
woman stops nursing her child.
the milk glands shrink and the
breasts become smaller (and
softer). ! am not aware of any
natural method to enable you to
regain the characteristics of
lactating breasts. However, syn­
thetic methods — such as plastic
surgery — are worth looking into
If the condition of your breasts
really bothers you.

□nn
□g d
□g g g
n

onon

a n n n n n G

□o g g
s d d

nnno

n an n
nn n n
n n n n g iig g
d
n n n n n n n
no non
n n n n E

n n n
onnci

o g g g

nn nn

□□non n n n n n n n

n n c nnn
□□□□DGQ GGGGQ

□□D O
anon
□□ D O

OGGG

ggog

DODD

Kapitar

i

2

Ardor
Renown
Small valtay
Show o f hands
Com a by
Squeexea out
Dried up
N etw o rk

1
7

12
12

b

12

22

45
40
47
40
49
50
51
53

EDO
non
GDP

24

It

21

1
32

1

12
32

5 0 A irilns In fo rm s.
tion (abbr.)
5 7 R ow
5 0 N s c s u fty
6 9 Tunisian rulsr
0 0 H andle (Fr.)

|4 2
«■

42

47

12
•2

DOW N

II

WIN AT BRIDGE
By James Jacoby

by Hargreavea A Sellers
WHAT P IP you
LEARN A T &amp;GHOOL
M IG S T IN Y P

sne

ytOUR F / R &amp; r

PAY?/ &lt;
50 , W HAT
PIP y o u W RITE r*

I P^N T

K N O W ..I CAN T
REAP &gt;

^

AN ALLER0 V

SLOW

CAN
YO U DOW N

A reminder: Six outstanding
cards of a suit wilt usually divide
4-2. If you need them to be 3-3.
then play for that division, but
you will succeed more often if
you look for better alternatives.
North didn't particularly like
supporting his partner's spades
with only two cards, but they
were good ones (A-Q). and It was
certain that South had at least
five spades when he responded
one spade originally and then
bid diam onds ever opener’ s
Jump to Ihrce Hubs. South had a
comfortable bid of four spades
after the strong bidding by
North.
Hearts were led and con­
tinued, and declarer rufTed the
second trick. What now? If
spades divide evenly, declarer
can play A-Q, cash the diamond
ace, ruff another heart and pfek
up trumps with the king. If they

don’t divide 3-3, the defender
with the long trump will even­
tually trump In on the diamonds
and take some tricks. And if that
defender started with only two
diamonds, the contract will be
set.
The solution doesn't com e
easy, but declarer must sacrifice
his trump queen to make his
contract. After trumping the
second heart, he should play a
spade to dum my's ace. cash the
diamond ace and then overtake
the spade queen with his king.
The defense now has two trumps
left, both higher than declarer's
trumps, but South will simply
play out his winning diamonds.
The d efen ders will get two
trump tricks, whether or not the
trumps are In the same hand,
but declarer will have made his
contract, barring a very unusual
5-1 spade distribution.

NORTH
♦ aq
♦ 7 64 2

l -1•

♦ A

♦ A K 8752
W EST
♦ 10 7
f AK9
♦98653
♦ QJ9

EAST
♦ J 9 8 2
♦ Q 10 B 5
472
♦ 10 4
SO UTH
♦ K 654 3
♦ J •
♦ K Q J 10 4
♦ 63

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

Opening lead: ♦ K

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring.,.

FRANK AND ERNEST
T H l*

IS K E V U S /

CfZuise. V t E L L ,T h ?
T K A fP lC

p e p o fZ T E p f

T h ff

lo 5

A FE

-

N

SuWCHEP U ? A R P U N P
TH£WILUAM5 POAP
CURIE Bu t th ey J ri&amp;
t h in o u r P A s r d n s
GARFIELD
JUST WHAT 15
AN HEIRLOOM?

AN heirloom is som ething
THAT'S BEEN IN YOUR
FAMILY FOR GENERATIONS.

THAT NO ONE'S HAP THE
i GUTS TD PITCH OUT

YOUR BIRTHDAY
JANUAR Y 17. 1987
In the year ahead, you'll be
able to bring to fruition a
venture to which you've given
lots of time and energy. The
change for the better will be
slow, but consistently favorable.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Benefits can be derived from
a joint venture today If you don’ t
upset the applecart by asking for
more than what you're entitled.
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. Mail $2 to
Matchmaker, do this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
If a friend does something that
displeases you today, don't suf­
fer In silence and keep your
feelings bottled up. Air what

perturbs you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Today Is a peculiar day where
you may operate at one extreme
or the other. You'll either be very
industrious, or frivolous and
extravagant.
A R IE S (March 21-Aprll 19) If
you get Involved In an activity
today that has competitive ele­
ments, don’t let your ego get
bruised If a friend Is better at it
than you.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20) A
portion o f your time should be
allotted to looking out for the
needs of loved ones today. Do it
of your own volition Instead of
waiting to be asked.
G E M IN I (May 21-June 20)
You're a good salesperson today,
and others will be receptive to
what you have to offer. Just be
sure you only promote things In
which you truly believe.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You may be a trifle loose with
your resources today. It's OK to
spend on things you enjoy,
provided they bring pleasure to

others as well.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) For you
to properly enjoy yourself today,
It's best you take care of your
duties first. You won't be relaxed
If you have responsibilities
hanging over your head.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You’ll want to help others today.
This is a noble endeavor as long
as you don't make those you
assist feel they're obligated to
you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) A
friend of whom you’re especially
fond may be a bit more attentive
to another pal than to you today.
Don't be envious.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Uncertainties may plague you
early In the day. but when it's
time for you to swing into action,
you'll be remarkably resourceful
and competent.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You'll be amply endowed
with bright Ideas today, but
don't disregard the thoughts or
suggestions of others, especially
regarding commercial matters.

by Leonard Starr

TUMBLEWEEDS

TJ IF Wc COULD
EVEN ANIMALS CREATE A TIGER,
NO DOUBT WE
GO AROUND
HUNTIN'EACH WOULD PO IT
o th e r , mmmm PlFFERENTLY...

.B U T SINCE WE CAM NEVER
HAVE TH A T P0WEB.WE ,—

GOOD HEAVENS.' rr is
SOMEONE HAS branper
BEEN SHOT/m HIHG'S
. WOMAN.1

r

�* j* n

■f 7 ' P
a■r w
■ I

'M i

M | ll RO TKI

■'

W w llC w

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT.
IN AND P M

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT,
IN AND RON

F LO R ID A
CAIE MO. 88-18*9-CA-09-1
B IL L M . COOPER and
U L A N . C O O PER , h it
W IN,
Plaintiffs.

F L O R ID A
, CASE NO. i 84-3419-CA-99-P
R O B E R TS . T R A E O E R a n d
J U L IE T T R A IO IR .h t s wife,
Plaintiff,

N IC K R . B U T T IT T A t
W IL L IA M P. A N D E R S
a rW J E A N R . A N D ERS,
M t w IN ; T H E E STA TE
O P C H E S T E R W .R R Y S O N .
Doceaaad; O W EN B RYSON)
D O N A LD E . ROSS; ROSS
T IT L E C O M P A N Y .*
Florida Corporation; and
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N , Ttw
d a r k of Court of
SominoN County. F lo rid *.
OoNndantt.
N O T IC E O F SALE
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y given
that pursuant to Final Judgment
of Foractooure render »d on ttw
3rd day *1 December, It w . In
that cortaln causa ponding In ttw
C i r c u i t C o u r t In a n d lo r
S o m ln o l* C o u n ty . F lo r id a ,
wtwroln B IL L M COOPER and
L IL A P . C O O PER , his w IN . a r t
P la in tiff and N IC K R . BUTT ltT A . #1 al., aro Defendants.
Casa N um bor G -1109-C A 09E, I,
D A V ID N , B E R R IE N . Clark ol
ttw aforotald Circuit Court, w ill
a t 11:00 AAA. on ttw M th day of
J A N U A R Y . 1107. offor tor salt
and ta ll to ttw hlgfwst and host
bidder tor cash at ttw W ort front
door of ttw Sotnlnolo County
Court House a t Sanford, Florida,
the follow ing described real
property, situate and being In
Seminole County, Florida, fo­
w l! :
TR A C T I: That portion of ttw
following strip ol land which lies
b e tw e e n B lo c k s 0 a n d E ,
A L L E N D A L E , according to ttw
P la t thereof as recorded In Plat
Book 0, Pago 7, Public Records
of Seminole County, Florida,
to-wlt; A strip of land 30 teat
wide, l.e., IS feet on each side of
the center line ol ttw m ain tract
of the form er Seaboard Airline
Railroad Company, as form erly
located. In the SEta ol ttw NWto
of Section I I , Township31 South,
R a n g e 31 E a s t, S e m in o le
C o u n ty . F lo rid a , e x te n d in g
n o r t h e a s t w a r d ly Ir o m th e
northerly line of Lake Harney
Avenue 130 tool, m ore o r less, to
a point In the East line of said
S E U of ttw NWW of said Section
I I ; containing 0.43 of an acre,
more o r less, as shown on a
p r in t o l a p o rtio n o f th e
right o f-w ay and T r a d M ap
V.3-FLA./L-20/19, which print Is
attached and made a part ol
that c e rta in W a rra n ty Deed
executed from Seaboard Coast
L in e R a ilro a d C o m p a n y , a
V irginia Corporation, as suc­
cessor by m erger of the form er
S e a b o a rd A ir lin e R a ilro a d
Company, In favor of W illiam F.
Anders and Jean E . Anders, his
w ile, recorded in O .R . Book
1337, Page 134, Public Records
ol Seminole County, Florida.
TR A C T II: Blocks C. D and E.
A L L E N D A L E S U B D IV IS IO N ,
according to the Plat thereof as
recorded In P lat Book * . Pago 7,
Public Racords o l S am ln o lt
County, Florida.
Lessing out the follow ing
property from Tracts I and 11:
LESS Lots 1, 3. 31, 9 and ttw
West 31 laet of Lot TO. Block C.
A L L E N D A L E , according to ttw
Plat ttwraof as recordad In Plat
Book a, Pago 7. Public Racords
of Seminole County. Florida.
Also less ttw following:
Begin at ttw Intersection of
the South line ol Lot 31, Block C,
A L L E N D A L E , according to the
P la t ttwreol as recorded In Plat
Book 4, Page 7, Public Records
ol Seminole County, Florida,
and ttw W esterly right-of-way of
Old S.A.L. Railroad, run East on
ttw prolongation of la id South
lino of Lot 31, to a point 100.00
teat East ot the Southwest cor­
ner of said Lot 3t, thence North
to the W esterly right ol-w ay ol
said Old S.A .L. Railroad, thence
S o u th w e s te r ly a lo n g s a id
rig h t ol w ay to lha Point ol
Beginning. Also less the follow
Ing:
From the Northwest corner ol
Lot 19 ol Block D. A L L E N
D A L E , according to the Plat
thereof as recorded In P lat Book
4, Page 7. Public Records ol
Seminole County, Florida, run
East along the North line ot said
Lot 19, 31 teat (or a point of
beginning, run thence South
parallel to the West line o l said
Lot 19, 130 teet lhti.ee East
parallel lo the North line of said
Lot 19. 131 teet, thence North
parallel to the West line ol said
Lot 19, 101 teet to the P O ot a
curve concave to ttw left, having
a radius ot 31 teet and a central
angle ot 90*, run thence along
the arc ol said curve 39.37 teet to
the P .T. thence West along the
North line ol said Lot 19, too teet
lo the Point o l Beginning. Also
less the West I ] teet ol Lots t
and 30, Block D. A L L E N D A L E ,
and less Lot I I and ttw East W
of Lot 10. Lot • and the East '.i
ot Lot 7, Lot 1 and the East Vj ol
Lot 4. Block C. A L L E N D A L E ,
according to the Plat ttwreol as
recorded in P lat Book 4, Page 7,
P ublic Records ot Sem inole
County, Florida.
LESS Lots 1 ,3 ,3 . 4,1, 4. 7 .1 .9 .
10. I I . 13. 13. 14. II. 14. 17 and II.
and ttw West 's of Lot 19. and
Lots 30 and 31, all In Block D ol
s a id A L L E N D A L E S U B
O IV IS IO N .
A N D ALSO LESS Lot 4 and
the West h all o l Lot 7, Lot I I and
the West h all ol Lot 14. Lot 17
and the East hall ol Lot 14. Lot
t l and ttw West halt of Lot 19,
and Lot 30 and ttw East hall of
L o t 19. a l l In B lo c k C ,
A L L E N D A L E , according to the
plat thereof as recorded In Plat
Book 4 at page 7 ot ttw Public
Records o l Seminole County.
Florida.
S a id s a le w ill be m a d e
pursuant to and In order lo
satisfy ttw term s of said Final
Judgment.
D a t e d t h i s 7 th d a y o l
J A N U A R Y . 1947.
(SEAL)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C LE R K O F TH E
C IR C U IT COURT
By Phyllis Forsythe
Publish: January 9.14, 1987
DEK-41
N O TIC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notlca Is hereby given that I
am engaged in business at 3901
Wimbledon Drive. Lake M ary,
Seminole County, Florida 33744
under ttw Fictitious N am e ol
W Y S E T R A N S C R IP T IO N
PLUS, and that I Intend to
register said name with ttw
C lerk ot the- C ircu it C ourt.
Seminole County, F lo rid a In
accordance with ttw Provisions
ol ttw Fictitious Name Statutes.
To-W it: Section 143 09 Florida
Statutes 1917
/s / J.M . Gerber Henson
Publish January 9, 14. 33. 30.
1917.
D E K 34

VS*

HOW ARD W . M IN N E R and
CAROL A. M IN N E R . M l wlto,
N O TIC E O F SALE
N O TIC E I t H E R E B Y O IV E N
that David N . Berrien, a t Clerk
ot ttw Circuit Court, In and tor
Samlnoto County, Florida, under
and by virtue of a Final Judg­
m ent Issued out of ttw above
•m ille d court. In ttw above
■tylad cause, dated ttw 8th day
of January, 19*7, w ill sell at
public auction to ttw highest
bidder, the following described
property located In Seminole
County, F lo rid *, to-wlt:
Lot M , Block " E " , North
Orlando Terraco, Section 4 ol
U nit 1 as per P tat recorded In
P la t Book 17, Pago JJ. Public
Records of Samlnoto County,
Florida, a /k /a 141 Cortot Court,
W inter Springs, Florida 33704.
together with ttw Improvements
thereon and additions thereto.
a s th a p r o p a r t y o f th e
above-nam ed Defendants, on
ttw 13th day ot February, 1983.
a t 11:00 a.m ., before ttw West
F ro n t Door ot ttw Samlnoto
County Courthouse, In Sanford,
Florida. Said ta le w ill b a le ttw
highest bidder tor cash In hand,
ttw above-described property a t
ttw property of ttw said Defen­
dants. to satisfy said |udgment.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk of ttw C ircuit Court
B Y : Cecelia V . Ekern
Deputy Clerk
’ ublish: J,
Publish:'January
14,33.1907
DEK-88

T H E STATE O F F L O R ID A
D E P A R T M E N T OF
IN S U R A N C E A N D
TR E A S U R E R
Case No. I4-L-71IO M
IN T H E M A T T E R O F:
Public Deposits
and Public Depositors
ol Sunrise Federal
Savings and Loan
Association, their
assigns, beneficiaries
a n d c l a l m a n t s .
N O TIC E A N D O R DER
W H E R E A S , Sunrise Federal
Savings and Loan Association
(Sunrlsa) a federally chartered
savings and loan association
having Its principal place ol
business In Florida was a quali­
fied public depository as pro­
v id e d In S ection 1 1 0 .0 3 (1 ),
Florida Statutes; and
W H E R E A 5 , on or about Frl
day. Saplember 13, 1904, Sunrlsa
was declared Insolvent and was
closad and its operations de­
clared suspended by ttw Federal
Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation (F S L IC ); and
W H E R E A S , at ttw tim e ot
dosing on Septern beer 13. 1944
Sunrise held or m ay have held
public deposits deposited therein
by public depositors all as de­
fined In Section 380 03, Florida
Statutes; and
W H E R E A S , Section 380.08,
Florida Statutes, requires ttw
Slate Treasurer of the State of
Florida (Treasurer) to ascertain
the amount of funds ol each
public depositor on deposit at
each Insolvent public depository
and to validate a ll claim s tiled
thereunder.
Now, therefore, Ills
ORDERED:
I. A ll public depositors having
public deposits on deposit with
Sunrise Federal Savings and
Loan Association on September
13, 1916 shall Ilia w ith ttw
T re a s u re r In w ritin g , on or
before Januery 30, 1987, at the
following address:
The State T reasurer
Room P-3
The Capitol
Tallahassee. F L 33399 0300
(Telephone: (904)488 4814)
a claim , notice or other paper
staling the nam e of the public
depositor, each account name,
e a c h ac c o u n t n u m b e r, the
am ount ot the public deposit and
the statement that "Said public
deposit was on deposit with
5unrlse Federal Savings and
Loan Association on September
13, 1984" which claim , notice or
other paper shall be signed and
shall give the printed or typed
nam e, address, official position
and phone number ol the person
acting on behalf ol the public
depositor submitting the same.
3. This Notice and Order shall
be published once each week lor
lour consecutive weeks In the
Florida Adm inistrative Weekly
and In a newspaper ol county w ld e c irc u la tio n In each
county of the State ot Florida
and a copy hereof shall be
m ailed lo each public depositor
whose names are known to the
T r e a s u r e r a t w e ll a t a ll
associations made up ot public
depositors a t are known to the
Treasurer.
3. On or attar January 30. 1917,
the Treasurer shall Issue a Final
O rd e r (a ) a s c e rta in in g the
amount ot public deposits on
deposit with Sunrise on Sep­
tember 12, 1984. (b) the name ol
each public depositor having
said public deposits on deposit
with Sunrise, and &lt;c) barring all
future claims.
4. A ll claim s of all public
depositors who have not notified
the Treasurer In accordance
with Paragraph t, above, as ot
January 30. 1987, shall be forev­
er barred.
D one and o rd e re d at
Tallahassee. F lo rid a on D e­
cem ber 29.1944
B IL L G U N T E R
STATE TR EA S U R ER
By A NN W A IN W R IG H T
Assistant State Treasurer
Publish: January 9, 14, 33. 30.
1947
D E K 37
N O TIC E OF
FIC T IT IO U S NAM E
Notice It hereby given that we
are engaged In business at 441
South East Lake $1.. Longwood,
Seminole County, Florida 33710
under the Fictitious Name ol
LO NG W O O D FLORI ST
SHOPPE, and that we Intend to
register said nam e with the
C le rk ol the C irc u it Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
ol the Fictitious N am e Statutes.
To-W it: Section 441 09 Florida
Statutes 1917
A LTA M O N TE SPRINGS
FLO R IST INC
/ s / Kenneth C Pedlow
President

/S /L ouis G Ross
Vice President
/s / Terri A Pedlow
Sec./Trees
Publish January 9. 14. 23. 30.
1987
D E K 38

PrKRT. Jdat

legal Notteo
N O TIC E
N O T IC E to fw rabyglvon that ttw Fleming wtd Awftn^p W Pflm ipwpt
of Samlnoto County, Florida, and ttw Samlnoto
note county Land
rin g la review tor
F la m in g Agency Intend to hold a public hearing

ANO * - ! • • t l MOLE-FAM ILY DW ELLING DISTRICTS A l l
COMPOSIO OF A LOW AND M RDtUM DENSITY O F D « V f LONM IN T ; PROVIDING FOR M ULTIPLE USR OF WRTLANDC IN
PLANNED U N IT M VR LO FM O N T (PUO ); AMIMCHNQ OR F I IK ­

A N O R D IN A N C E A M IN O IN O T H E L A N D D S V E L O F M E N T
COOE O F S E M IN O L E C O U N TY . F L O R ID A (O R D IN A N C E NO.
AS A M E N D E D1 );
): A D O IIN
NG
O A N D A M E* N O
D IN G D E F IN IT IO N S
T O CHAP
k P T E R 1; P R O V ID IN G D E V E L O P M E N T O‘ E
. DERS
E S T A B L IS H T H E R E Q U IR E D IM P A C T F E E ; P R O V ID IN G
S TO R M W A TE R D IS C H A R G E P E R M IT S M A Y P E R E Q U IR E D
F R O M ST. JOHNS R IV E R W A T E R M A N A G E M E N T D IS T R IC T ;
P R O V ID IN G A R E P R E S E N T A T IV E O P T H E T R A F F IC
E N G IN E E R IN G O IV IS IO N SHA LL BE A M E M B E R O F T H E
D E V E L O P M E N T R E V IE W C O M M IT T E E A N D T H E O E P U T V
C O U N T Y A D M IN IS T R A T O R /D E V E L O P M E N T S H A LL C H A IR
T H E C O M M IT T E E ; P R O V ID IN G A G EN O A S FO R T H E D E V E L ­
O P M E N T R E V IE W C O M M IT T E E BE D IS T R IB U T E D A T LEAST
10 W O R K IN G D AYS P R IO R TO M E E T IN G ; P R O V ID IN G FOR
R E Q U IR E D DISCLOSURE B Y O W N ER S O F P R O P E R T Y IN
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E C A P A C IT Y O P P E R S O N S H A V IN G
B E N E F IC IA L IN T E R E S T S IN P R O P E R T Y IN C O N JU N C TIO N
W IT H A P P L IC A T IO N S F O R S P E C IF IE D D E V E L O P M E N T
P E R M IT S ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T T E M P O R A R Y P E R M IT S FOR
O C C U P A N C Y O F A M O B IL E H O M E O R R E C R E A T IO N A L
V E H IC L E B E L IM IT E D TO A 1 Y E A R P E R IO D A N D M A Y BE
R E N E W E D FOR 3 Y E A R P E R IO D S ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T M O B IL E
H O M E S SHALL H A V E S K IR T IN G IN S T A L L E D TO S CR EEN
U N D E R S ID E O F S TR U C TU R E ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T R-1, R-1B
A N D R-1BB S IN G L E -F A M IL Y D W E L L IN G D IS T R IC T S A R E
C O M POSED O F A LOW A N D M E D IU M O E N S IT Y O F D E V E L O P ­
M E N T ; P R O V ID IN G FO R M U L T IP L E USE O F W E T L A N D S IN
P L A N N E D U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T (P U O ); A M E N D IN G D E F IN I­
T IO N O F C O M M O N O P E N SPACE; P R O V ID IN G FOR E X H IB IT S
O N FLO O D P R O N E A N D W ETLA N D S IN P U D Z O N IN G A N D
P R E L IM IN A R Y M A STER P LA N A P P R O V A L A N D IN F IN A L
M A S T E R P L A N A P P R O V A L; A D D IN G A R T IC L E X X X , PCD
P L A N N E D C O M M E R C IA L D E V E L O P M E N T D IS T R IC T ; A M E N ­
D IN G A N D A D D IN G D E F IN IT IO N S IN FP-1 FLO O D PRONE
C LA S S IFIC A TIO N ; P R O V ID IN G NO S TR U C TU R E S SHA LL BE
C O N S T R U C T E D O R L A N D F IL L IN G O R G R A D E L E V E L
C H A N G ES IN 10 Y E A R FLO O D IN F P -I; P R O V ID IN G F IE L D
E L E V A T IO N S BE E S TA B LIS H E D ON V E R T IC L E CONTROL
D A T U M ; A O O IN G A R T IC L E X X X V II, W-1 W E TL A N D S O V E R L A Y
Z O N IN G C LA S S IFIC A TIO N ; P R O H IB IT IN G P L A N T IN G W IT H IN
O P E N D R A IN A G E W A Y S ; D E L E T IN G G U ID E L IN E S FO R
B ER M S F R O M A R T IC L E X L I; A M E N D IN G S U G G E STED T R E E S
FOR LA N DSCA PIN G O F P A R K IN G A R E A S; P R O V ID IN G FOR
R E P L A C E M E N T O F P LA N TS W IT H IN A T IM E P E R IO D N O T TO
E X C E E D 41 DAYS; A M E N D IN G T H E S IG N STANDARDS FOR
T R A IL E R SIGNS; P R O V ID IN G FOR O IR E C T IO N A L SIGNS IN
V A R IO U S D IS TR IC TS O F OUTDO OR A D V E R T IS IN G SIGNS A N D
T H E P L A C E M E N T T H E R E O F ; P R O V ID IN G F O R
C A R P O R T /G A R A G E SALES NOT TO BE C O N D U C TE D M O R E
O F T E N T H A N ONCE E V E R Y TW O Y E A R S A N D EACH SALE NOT
E X C E E D 3 D AYS; A M E N D IN G D R IV E W A Y R E Q U IR E M E N T S
FO R A U T O M O B IL E S E R V IC E STATIO N S A N D ALCO HOLIC
B E V E R A G E E STA B LIS H M EN TS ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T D E V E L ­
O P E R M A Y O P T TO BYPASS D E V E L O P M E N T P LA N PROCESS;
D E L E T IN G T IM E L IM IT ON AN A P P R O V E D D E V E L O P M E N T
P L A N ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T P R E L IM IN A R Y P LA N BE SUB­
M IT T E D T O T H E B O A R D OF C O U N T Y C O M M IS S IO N E R S
W IT H IN 3 W E E K S A F T E R R E V IE W OF P L A N N IN G A N D ZO N IN G
C O M M ISS IO N ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T S U B M ITTA LS ON R E V IE W OF
F IN A L P LA T SHALL BE R E V IE W E D B Y D E V E L O P M E N T
R E V IE W C O M M IT T E E (D R C ) W IT H T H E A P P L IC A N T OR H IS
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E P R E S E N T ; R E Q U IR IN G D E V E L O P M E N T
PLAN S A N D P R E L IM IN A R Y PLANS BE S U B M IT T E D IN 9
C O P IE S ; R E Q U IR IN G A SOIL C L A S S IF IC A T IO N M A P BE
S U B M IT T E D FOR P R E L IM IN A R Y P L A N ; R E Q U IR IN G I I
C O PIES OF F IN A L P LA T A N D 7 C O M P L E T E SETS O F F IN A L
E N G I N E E R I N G P L A N S ; R E Q U I R I N G 7 C O P IE S O F
E N G IN E E R IN G D RA W IN G S; P R O V ID IN G A D D IT IO N A L R E ­
Q U IR E D LE G A L S U B M ITTA LS TO BE C E R T IF IE D AS TO
A D E Q U A C Y B Y C O U N T Y E N G IN E E R . E N V IR O N M E N T A L
S E R V IC E S A N D /O R C O U N TY A T T O R N E Y ; R E Q U IR IN G C O PIES
O F F L O R ID A D E P A R T M E N T OF E N V IR O N M E N T A L R E G U LA
T IO N (D E R ) W A TER A N D W A STE W A TE R P E R M IT S A N D ST.
JOHNS R IV E R W A TER M A N A G E M E N T D IS T R IC T P E R M IT S AS
A R E Q U IR E D S U B M IT T A L FOR F IN A L PLATS; R E Q U IR IN G
T H E P L A N N IN G A ND TR A N S PO R TA TIO N G U ID E L IN E S A N D
T H E SUR FA CE W A TE R M A N A G E M E N T G U ID E L IN E S TO BE
U SED IN A D D IT IO N TO T H E D ES IG N STAN D AR D S IN A R T IC L E
IV O F T H E S U B D IV IS IO N R E G U L A T IO N S ; R E Q U IR IN G
A P P R O V E D M O D IF IC A T IO N S FOR LOW A N D V E R Y LOW
P O T E N T IA L SOILS; R E Q U IR IN G T H A T F IN IS H E D FLOOR
E L E V A T IO N S W IL L B E E S T A B L IS H E D B Y U T IL IZ IN G
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY V E R T IC L E C O NTRO L D A T U M ; P R O V ID ­
IN G V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S TO T H E D E S IG N STANDARDS OF
S TR E E T S C O N T A IN E D IN A R T IC L E IV OF T H E S U B D IV IS IO N
R E G U L A T IO N S ; P R O V ID IN G P E D E S T R IA N CROSSW ALKS
SHA LL BE IN ACCORDANCE W IT H TH E M A N U A L OR U N IF O R M
T R A F F IC C O NTRO L D E V IC E S , P R O V ID IN G T H A T A L L EA S E ­
M E N T S W IL L BE SHOWN ON TH E F IN A L P L A T A N D SHA LL BE
P R O V ID E D A T NO E X P E N S E TO T H E C O U N TY ; P R O V ID IN G
V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S TO IN S PE C TIO N S A N D TESTS FOR
R E Q U IR E D IM P R O V E M E N T S C O N T A IN E D IN A R T IC L E V OF
T H E S U B D IV IS IO N R E G U L A T IO N S ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T
M O N U M E N T S SHA LL B E S E T IN T H E G R O U N D SO T H A T T H E
T O P IS FLU SH OR NO M O R E T H A N 1 FOO T B E LO W T H E F IN IS H
G R A D E ; R E Q U IR IN G P E R M A N E N T C O NTRO L P O IN TS ; P R O
V ID IN G T H A T TH E M IN IM U M A L L O W A B L E FL O W L IN E
G R A D E OF CURBS A N D G U TTE R S SHALL BE 0.30% W ITH
E X C E P T IO N S ; C H A N G IN G T H E T E R M S T R E E T S T O
R O ADW AYS A N D V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S T H E R E U N D E R
P E R T A IN IN G TO C L E A R IN G A N D G R A D IN G OF R IG H TS OFW A Y , P A V IN G , BASE COURSES A N D W E A R IN G SURFACES;
P R O V ID IN G V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S TO S T R E E T N A M E
SIGNS. T R A F F IC C O NTRO L SIGNS, P A V E M E N T M A R K IN G S ,
T R A F F IC SIGNALS A N D T H E S P E C IF IC A T IO N S T H E R E O F ;
P R O V ID IN G FOR 9 C O PIES O F S ITE PLANS; P R O V ID IN G FOR
R E T U R N OF IN C O M P L E T E S ITE PLANS TO BE R E T U R N E D
W IT H O U T A C T IO N ; P R O V ID IN G M O R E TH A N 2 R E V IE W S OF A
S ITE PLAN W IL L BE C O N S ID E R E D A N E W A P P L IC A T IO N ;
P R O V ID IN G E N G IN E E R TO BE R E G IS T E R E D OR LIC E N S E D
TO P R A C TIC E IN TH E STATE OF F L O R ID A ; P R O V ID IN G
E X IS T IN G IM P R O V E M E N T S ID E N T IF Y IN G U T IL IT Y POLES
BE ID E N T IF IE D ; P R O H IB IT IN G TH E R E M O V A L O F O V E R 71%
OF HARDW O OD T R E E S FR O M SITE B E IN G D E V E L O P E D
UNLESS W A IV E O ; P R O V ID IN G LA TEST E D IT IO N O F TH E
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY SOIL S U R V E Y BE USED IN ID E N T IF Y IN G
SOIL P R O P E R T IE S . P R O V ID IN G SOILS W IT H V E R Y LOW
P O T E N T IA L S H A L L N O T BE D E V E L O P E D W IT H O U T
A P P R O V E D M O D IF IC A T IO N FOR C O UN TY M A IN T E N A N C E
A N D A C C E P T E D D E D IC A T IO N S ; C H A N G IN G T H E T E R M
S T R E E T S TO R O A D W A YS A N D V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S
T H E R E U N D E R W IT H R E G A R D TO SITE PLANS; P R O V ID IN G
FOR TY P E S OF TR E E S TH A T A RE E X E M P T FR O M ARBOR
P E R M IT S . P R O V ID IN G FOR R E P L A C E M E N T OF R E M O V E D
T R E E S ON A FOUR FOR O N E BASIS; U P D A T IN G W H A T TR E E S
A RE TO BE USED AS R E P L A C E M E N T STOCK; P R O V ID IN G
TH A T SUR VEYS A N D TO PO G R APH IC M A PS A C C O M P A N Y IN G A
P E R M IT FOR A BORROW P IT OR BORROW A R E A SHALL BE
C E R T IF IE D BY A S U R VE YO R ; P E R M IT T IN G A N Y M E M B E R
OF THE BOARD O F C O U N TY C O M M ISSIO N ERS. LA N D M A N
A G E M E N T D IR E C TO R OR C O UN TY E N G IN E E R TO SUSPEND A
P E R M IT FOR A BORROW P IT OR BORROW A R E A ON AN
E M E R G E N C Y BASIS; P R O V ID IN G N U M ER O U S A M E N D M E N T S
TO C H A P TER 10. D R E D G IN G A ND F IL L IN G ; P R O V ID IN G NO
P E R M IT SHALL BE R E Q U IR E D FOR CO NSTR U CTIO N W IT H IN
ROAD R IG H T OF W AY P R IO R TO A CC EPTA N CE OF TH E ROAD
R IG H T O F-W A Y B Y T H E C O UN TY; P R O V ID IN G FOR PRO­
H IB IT IO N S W IT H IN C O UNTY R IG H T OF W A Y ; P R O V ID IN G FOR
R E V IE W A N D A P P R O V A L BY D IR E C T O R OF E N V IR O N
M E N T A L S E R V IC E S O F A P P L IC A T IO N S FO R C O U N T Y
R IG H T O F W AY USE P E R M IT S AND F IN A L A P P R O V A L BY TH E
C O UN TY E N G IN E E R , P R O V ID IN G FOR A M A IN T E N A N C E OF
T R A F F IC PLAN BE S U B M IT T E D FOR A P E R M IT ; P R O V ID IN G
A P P LIC A TIO N S FOR P E R M IT S SHALL R E Q U IR E A PP R O V A L
O F C O U N T Y E N G I N E E R , T R A F F IC E N C IN E E R A N D
D IR E C T O R OF E N V IR O N M E N T A L S ER VIC E S; P R O V ID IN G
TH A T W ORK NOT C O M P L E T E D BY C O M P L E T IO N D A TE ON
A P P L IC A T IO N FOR P E R M IT W IL L BE SUBJECT TO STOP
O R D E R . R E A P P L IC A T IO N , A D D IT IO N A L F E E OR O T H E R
R E M E D Y AS M A Y BE R E Q U IR E D BY TH E BOARD OF C O U N TY
C O M M ISSIO N ERS; P R O V IO IN G FOR IN C LU SIO N IN TH E LAND
D E V E L O P M E N T CODE. P R O V ID IN G FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y A N D
P R O V ID IN G AN E F F E C T IV E D ATE.
at 7:00 p m ., or as soon thereafter as possible, at Its regular
meeting on the 4th day ot February. 1987, at the Seminole County
Services Building, Room W 120, 1101 East First Street. Sanlord.
Florida. Persons are advised that. It they decide to appeal any
decision made at this hearing, they wilt need a record of the
proceedings, and. lor such purpose, they m ay need to Insure that a
verbatim record ol the proceedings is made, which record Includes
the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal Is to be besed.
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clerk to the Board ol
County Commissioners of
Seminole County. Florida
Publish: January 16, 1987
D EK 90

ON f l o o o f r o m a n d w r t l a n o s in p u d z o n in g a n d

N O TIC E
N O TIC E Is hereby given that the Board ol County Commissioners
ol Seminole County. Florida. Intends to hold a public hearing to
consider the enactment ol an ordinance entitled:
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G TH E L a NO D E V E L O P M E N T
COOE OF S EM IN O LE C O U N TY . FL O R ID A (O R D IN A N C E NO
80 31. AS A M E N D E D ); A D D IN G ANO A M E N D IN G D E F IN IT IO N S
TO C H A P T E R 2; P R O V ID IN G D E V E L O P M E N T O R D E R S
E S T A B L IS H TH E R E Q U IR E D IM P A C T F E E ; P R O V ID IN G
STO RM W ATER DISCHARG E P E R M IT S M A Y BE R E Q U IR E D
FR O M ST JOHNS R IV E R W A TER M A N A G E M E N T D IS T R IC T ;
P R O V IO IN G A R E P R E S E N T A T IV E O F T H E T R A F F IC
E N G IN E E R IN G O IV IS IO N 5H ALL BE A M E M B E R OF THE
D E V E L O P M E N T R E V IE W C O M M IT T E E A N D THE D E P U T Y
C O U N TY A D M IN IS T R A T O R /D E V E L O P M E N T SHALL C H A IR
TH E C O M M IT T E E . P R O V ID IN G AGENDAS FOR TH E D E V E L
O P M E N T R E V IE W C O M M IT T E E BE D IS T R IB U T E D AT LEAST
10 W O R K IN G DAYS P RIO R TO M E E T IN G P R O V ID IN G FOR
R E Q U IR E D DISCLOSURE BY OW NERS OF P R O P E R T Y IN
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E C A P A C IT Y O F P E R S O N S H A V IN G
B E N E F IC IA L IN TE R E S TS IN P R O P E R TY IN C O NJU N C TIO N
W IT H A P P L IC A T IO N S FO R S P E C IF IE D D E V E L O P M E N T
P E R M IT S ; P R O V ID IN G TH A T TE M P O R A R Y P E R M IT S FOR
O C C U P A N C Y OF A M O B IL E H O M E OR R E C R E A T IO N A L
V E H IC L E BE L IM IT E D TO A 3 Y EA R P E R IO D ANO M A Y BE
R E N E W E D FOR 2 Y E A R P E R IO D S . P R O V ID IN G TH A T M O B IL E
HOMES SHALL H AVE S K IR T IN G IN S T A L L E D TO SCREEN
U N D E R S IO E OF S TR U C TU R E ; P R O V ID IN G TH A T R I, R IB

P R E L IM IN A R Y M A S T E R F L A N A P P R O V A L A N D IN F IN A L
M A S T E R F L A N A P P R O V A L; A O O IN G A R T IC L E X X X . PC D
P L A N N E D C O M M E R C IA L D E V E L O P M E N T D IS T R IC T ; A M E N ­
D IN G A M A D O IN O D E F IN IT IO N S IN FP-1 FLO O O PRO NE
C LA S S IFIC A TIO N ; P R O V ID IN G NO S TR U C TU R E S SMALL I I
C O N S T R U C T E D O R U N O F IL L IN G O R O R A O I L E V E L
C H A N G ES IN to Y E A R FLO O O IN F P -I; P R O V IO IN G F IE L D
E L E V A T IO N S R E E S T A B L IS H E D O N V S R T K L B CONTROL
O A T U M ; A D D IN G A R T IC L E X X X V II. W -l W R TLA N O S O V E R L A Y
Z O N IN G C LA S S IFIC A TIO N ; P R O H IB IT IN G P L A N T IN G W IT H IN
O P E N D R A IN A G E W A Y S ; D E L E T IN O G U ID E L IN E S FO R
■ E R M S F R O M A R T IC L R X L I; A M E N D IN G S U G G ESTED T R IE S
FOR LA N D S C A P IN G OP P A R K IN G AREAS) P R O V ID IN G FOR
R E P L A C E M E N T O P P LA N TS W IT H IN A T IM E P E R IO D N O T TO
E X C E E D 41 DAYS; A M IN O IN O TH E S IO N STAN D AR D S FOR
T R A IL E R SIGNS; P R O V ID IN G POR O IR E C T IO N A L SIGNS IN
V A R IO U S D IS TR IC TS O F O U TD O O R A D V E R T IS IN G SIGNS A N D
T H E P L A C E M E N T T H E R E O F ! P R O V ID IN G P O R
C A R P O R T /G A R A G E SALES N O T TO EE C O N D U C TE D M O R E
O F T E N TH A N O N C E E V E R Y TW O YEA R S A N D EACH SALE NOT
E X C E E D 3 D A Y S; A M E N D IN G D R IV E W A Y R E Q U IR E M E N T S
FO R A U T O M O B IL E S E R V IC E , STATIONS A N O ALCOHOLIC
B E V E R A G E E S T A B L IS H M E N T ^ P R O V ID IN G T H A T D E V E L ­
O P E R M A Y O P T T O BYPASS O E V IL O P M E N T P LA N PROCESS;
D E L E T IN G T IM E L IM IT O N A N A P P R O V E O D E V E L O P M E N T
P L A N ; P R O V IO IN G T H A T P R E L IM IN A R Y P LA N B E SUB­
M IT T E D T O T H E BO AR D O P C O U N TY C O M M IS S IO N E R S
W IT H IN 3 W E E K S A F T E R R E V IE W O F P L A N N IN G A N O ZO N IN G
C O M M ISSIO N ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T S U B M ITTA LS ON R E V IE W O F
P IN A L P L A T SHA LL EE R E V IE W E D B Y D E V E L O P M E N T
R E V IE W C O M M IT T E E (D R C ) W IT H TH E A P P L IC A N T O R H IS
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E P R E S E N T ; R E Q U IR IN G D E V E L O P M E N T
P LAN S A N D P R E L IM IN A R Y P U N S BE S U B M IT T E D IN *
C O P IE S ; R E Q U IR IN G A S O IL C U S S IF IC A T IO N M A P BE
S U B M IT T E D PO R P R E L IM IN A R Y P L A N ; R E Q U IR IN G t l
C O P IE S OP P IN A L P U T A N D 7 C O M P LE TE SETS O F F IN A L
E N G I N E E R I N G P L A N S ; R E Q U IR I N G 7 C O P IE S O F
E N G IN E E R IN G DRA W IN G S; P R O V ID IN G A D D IT IO N A L R E ­
Q U IR E D LE G A L S U B M ITTA LS TO BE C E R T IF IE D AS TO
A D E Q U A C Y B Y C O U N T Y E N G IN E E R , E N V IR O N M E N T A L
S E R V IC E S A N D /O R C O U N TY A T T O R N E Y ; R E Q U IR IN G C O PIES
O F F L O R ID A D E P A R T M E N T O F E N V IR O N M E N T A L R E O U U T IO N (D E R ) W A T E R A NO W A STEW ATER P E R M IT S A N O ST.
JOHNS R IV E R W A TE R M A N A G E M E N T O IS T R IC T P E R M IT S AS
A R E Q U IR E D S U B M IT T A L FO R F IN A L P U T S ; R E Q U IR IN G
T H E P U N N IN G A N D TR A N S PO R TA TIO N G U ID E L IN E S A N D
T H E SUR FA CE W A TE R M A N A G E M E N T G U ID E L IN E S TO BE
U SE D IN A D D IT IO N TO TH E D E S IG N STANDARDS IN A R T IC L E
IV O F T H E S U B D IV IS IO N R E G U L A T IO N S ; R E Q U IR IN G
A P P R O V E D M O D IF IC A T IO N S FOR LOW A N D V E R Y LOW
P O T E N T IA L SOILS; R E Q U IR IN G T H A T F IN IS H E D FLOOR
E L E V A T IO N S W IL L B E E S T A B L IS H E D B Y U T IL IZ IN G
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY V E R T IC L E CONTROL D A T U M ; P R O V ID
IN G V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S T O TH E D E S IG N STANDARDS OF
S TR E E T S C O N T A IN E D IN A R T IC L E IV OF T H E S U B D IV IS IO N
R E G U L A T IO N S ; P R O V ID IN G P E O E S T R IA N CROSSW ALKS
SHA LL BE IN ACCORDANCE W IT H TH E M A N U A L OR U N IF O R M
T R A F F IC CONTROL D E V IC E S ; P R O V ID IN G TH A T A L L EA S E ­
M E N T S W IL L BE SHOWN ON T H E FINA L P U T A NO SH A LL BE
P R O V ID E D A T N O E X P E N S E TO TH E C O U N TY ; P R O V ID IN G
V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S TO INSPECTIO N S A NO TESTS FOR
R E Q U IR E D IM P R O V E M E N T S C O N T A IN E D IN A R T IC L E V OF
T H E S U B D IV IS IO N R E G U L A T IO N S ; P R O V ID IN G T H A T
M O N U M E N T S SHALL BE SET IN TH E G R O U N D SO T H A T TH E
TO P IS FLU SH OR NO M O R E TH A N 1 FOOT B ELO W T H E F IN IS H
G R A D E ; R E Q U IR IN G P E R M A N E N T CONTROL PO IN TS; P R O
V ID IN G T H A T T H E M IN IM U M A LLO W A BLE FLO W L IN E
G R A D E OF CURBS AND G U TTE R S SHALL BE 0.30% W ITH
E X C E P T IO N S , C H A N G IN G T H E T E R M S T R E E T S T O
ROADW AYS A N D V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S T H E R E U N D E R
P E R T A IN IN G TO C LE A R IN G A N D G R A D IN G OF RIGHTS-OFW A Y , P A V IN G , BASE COURSES AND W E A R IN G SURFACES;
P R O V ID IN G V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S TO S T R E E T N A M E
SIGNS, T R A F F IC CONTROL SIGNS, P A V E M E N T M A R K IN G S,
T R A F F IC SIGNALS AND T H E S P E C IFIC A TIO N S T H E R E O F ;
P R O V IO IN G FOR 9 COPIES O F S ITE PLANS; P R O V ID IN G FOR
R E T U R N OF IN C O M P LE T E S IT E P U N S TO BE R E T U R N E D
W IT H O U T A C TIO N ; P R O V ID IN G M O R E TH A N 3 R E V IE W S OF A
S IT E P LA N W IL L BE C O N S ID E R E D A N E W A P P LIC A TIO N ;
P R O V ID IN G E N G IN E E R TO BE R E G IS T E R E D OR LIC E N S E D
TO P R A C TIC E IN T H E STATE OF F LO R ID A ; P R O V IO IN G
E X IS T IN G IM P R O V E M E N T S ID E N T IF Y IN G U T IL IT Y POLES
BE IO E N T IF IE O ; P R O H IB IT IN G TH E R E M O V A L O F O V E R 7S%
OF HARDW OOD TR E E S F R O M SITE B E IN G D E V E L O P E D
U NLESS W A IV E D ; P R O V ID IN G LATEST E D IT IO N O F TH E
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY SOIL S U R V E Y BE U SED IN ID E N T IF Y IN G
S O IL P R O P E R T IE S ; P R O V ID IN G SOILS W IT H V E R Y LOW
P O T E N T IA L S H A L L N O T BE D E V E L O P E D W IT H O U T
A P P R O V E D M O D IF IC A T IO N FO R COUNTY M A IN T E N A N C E
A N D A C C E P T E D D E D IC A T IO N S ; C H A N G IN G T H E T E R M
S T R E E T S TO R O ADW AYS A N D V A R IO U S A M E N D M E N T S
T H E R E U N D E R W IT H R E G A R D TO SITE P U N S ; P R O V ID IN G
FO R T Y P E S O F TR E E S T H A T A R E E X E M P T F R O M ARBOR
P E R M IT S : P R O V ID IN G FOR R E P U C E M C N T OF R EM O VEO X
T R E E S ON A FOUR FOR ON E BASIS; U P O A TIN G W H AT TR E E S
A R E TO BE USED AS R E P L A C E M E N T STOCK; P R O V ID IN G
T H A T SUR VEYS A N D TOPO G R APH IC M APS A C C O M P A N Y IN G A
P E R M IT FOR A BORROW P IT OR BORROW A REA SHALL BE
C E R T IF IE D BY A S U R VE YO R ; P E R M IT T IN G A N Y M E M B E R
O F T H E BOARD OF C O U N TY COMMISSIONERS. LA N D MAN
A G E M E N T D IR E C TO R OR C O U N TY E N G IN E E R TO SUSPEND A
P E R M IT FOR A BORROW P IT OR BORROW A R E A ON AN
E M E R G E N C Y BASIS; P R O V IO IN G N UM ER O U S A M E N D M E N T S
TO C H A P TE R 10. D R E D G IN G A N D F IL L IN G ; P R O V ID IN G NO
P E R M IT SHALL BE R E Q U IR E D FOR CONSTRUCTION W IT H IN
ROAD R IG H T O F W A Y P RIO R TO ACCEPTANCE OF TH E ROAD
R IG H T O F W AY BY TH E C O U N TY ; P R O V ID IN G FOR PRO
H IB IT IO N 5 W IT H IN C OUNTY R IG H T OF W A Y; P R O V ID IN G FOR
R E V IE W A N D A P P R O V A L BY D IR E C TO R OF E N V IR O N
M E N T A L S E R V IC E S O F A P P L IC A T IO N S FO R C O U N T Y
R IG H T O F W A Y USE P E R M IT S A N D F IN A L A PP R O V A L B Y THE
C O U N TY E N G IN E E R ; P R O V ID IN G FOR A M A IN T E N A N C E OF
T R A F F IC PLAN BE S U B M IT T E D FOR A P E R M IT ; P R O V IO IN G
A P P LIC A TIO N S FOR P E R M IT S SHALL R E Q U IR E A PPRO VA L
O F C O U N T Y E N G IN E E R . T R A F F IC E N G IN E E R A N D
D IR E C T O R OF E N V IR O N M E N T A L SER VIC E S, P R O V ID IN G
TH A T W ORK NOT C O M P L E T E D BY C O M P LE TIO N D A TE ON
A P P L IC A T IO N FOR P E R M IT W IL L BE SUBJECT TO STOP
O R D E R , R E A P P L IC A T IO N , A D D IT IO N A L F E E OR O T H E R
R E M E D Y AS M A Y BE R E Q U IR E O BY THE BOARD O F C O UNTY
C O M M ISSIO N ERS; P R O V ID IN G FOR INC LU SIO N IN TH E LAND
D E V E L O P M E N T CODE, P R O V IO IN G FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y AND
P R O V ID IN G AN E F F E C T IV E D A TE
at 1:30 p.m., or as toon thereafter at possible, at Its regular
meeting on the 10th day ol February. 1987, at tha Seminole County
Services Building, 1101 East First Street, Room W-130. Sanford,
Florida. Persons are advised that. It they decide lo appeal any
decision made at this hearing, they will need a record ol the
proceedings, and. (or such purpose, they m ay need to Insure that a
verbatim record ol the proceedings Is made, which record Includes
the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal Is to be besed.
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk to the Board ol
County Commissioners ot
Seminole County, Florida
Publish: January t6, 1987
D E K 91

N O TIC E
N O TIC E Is hereby given lhal the Planning and Zoning Commission
ol Seminole County, Florida, and the Seminole County Land
Planning Agency Intend to hold a public hearing to review lor
recommendation an ordinance entitled:
AN O R D IN A N C E TO BE KNOW N AS THE S E M IN O LE C OUNTY
ROAD IM P A C T F E E O R D IN A N C E ; P R O V ID IN G D E F IN IT IO N S ,
R U L E S b F C O N S TR U C TIO N A N D F IN D IN G S ; A D O P T IN G
C E R T A IN IM P A C T F E E S TU D IE S , P R O V ID IN G FOR THE
IM P O S IT IO N O F C O U N TY W IO E ROAD IM P A C T FE ES ON ALL
ROAD IM P A C T CONSTRUCTION OCCU R R IN G IN A LL AREAS OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY . IN C L U D IN G IN C O R PO R A TED AS W E LL
AS U N IN C O R P O R A TE D A REAS; D E F IN IN G TH E T E R M ROAD
IM P A C T C ONSTRUCTION; P E R M IT T IN G AN A L T E R N A T IV E
C ALC U LA TIO N OF C O U N TY W ID E ROAD IM P A C T FE E S , PRO
V ID IN G FOR TH E USE OF C O U N TY W ID E ROAD IM P A C T FE ES
C O LLE C TE D ; P R O V ID IN G FOR TH E IM P O S IT IO N OF COL
L E C T O R R O AD IM P A C T F E E S ON A L L R O A D IM P A C T
CO NSTR U CTIO N O C CU R R IN G IN D E F IN E D D IS TR IC TS W IT H IN
A LL AREAS OF S E M IN O LE C O U N TY . IN C L U D IN G IN C O R PO
R A T E D AS W E L L AS U N IN C O R P O R A TE D A REA S; P E R M IT
T IN G AN A L T E R N A T IV E C ALCU LA TIO N OF COLLECTO R ROAD
IM P A C T FE ES ; D E F IN IN G TH E B O UN D A RIES OF COLLECTOR
ROAD IM P A C T D ISTR IC TS; P R O V ID IN G FOR TH E USE OF
COLLECTO R ROAO IM P A C T F E E S C O LLECTED ; P R O V ID IN G
FOR E X E M P T IO N S AND V E S T E D RIGHTS IN C O NN ECTIO N
W IT H C O U N TY W IO E ROAD IM P A C T FEES A N D COLLECTOR
ROAD IM P A C T FE E S ; P R O V ID IN G FOR TH E P A Y M E N T ANO
C O L L E C T IO N OF C O U N T Y W IO E ANO CO LLECTO R ROAD
IM P A C T FE E S ; P R O V ID IN G FOR THE IM P O S IT IO N OF LIE N S
A G A IN ST ROAD IM P A C T CONSTRUCTION W H E R E IM PA C T
FE ES ARE NOT P A ID UPON ISSUANCE OF THE B U IL D IN G
P E R M IT ; A U T H O R IZ IN G T H E C O U N TY A T T O R N E Y TO
FORECLOSE SUCH LIE N S ; P R O V ID IN G FOR FORECLOSURE
P R O C E D U R E S ; A L L O W IN G C E R T A IN C R E D IT S A G A IN S T
C O U N T Y W ID E A N D COLLECTO R ROAD IM P A C T F E E S , PRO
V ID IN G FO R R E V IE W H E A R IN G S ; P R O V ID IN G FO R
A P P L IC A T IO N OF IN T E R IM IM P A C T F E E S ; R E Q U IR IN G
A N N U A L R E V IE W ; P R O V ID IN G FOR S E V E R A B IL IT Y ; PRO
V IO IN G A N E F F E C T IV E DATE
at 7:00 p.m ., or as soon thereafter as possible, at Its regular
meeting on the 4th day ot February. 1987, at the Seminole County
Services Building. Room W-IJ0, 1101 East First Street. Sanlord.
Florida Persons are advised that. It they decide to appeal any
decision made at this hearing, they will need a record of the
proceedings, and. (or such purpose, they may need to insure thet a
verbatim record of the proceedings I* made, which record Includes
the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clerk to the Board ot
County Commissioners ot
Seminole County, Florida
By: Billie L. Proiansky
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 16, 1987
DEK-73

W H IT M A R K IN C ., M l N
O O L D E N R O O E O . W IN T E R
P A R K . P L 33781. Aggllt M lm
M - 1 1 7 4 M A . an t 3 / t M L T tw
Ran S W tIVMm .
ptfwJEPlT Ink
rn
Wl1
County . Section 18. T a w w W p ft
South, R a n g * I t E a a t. Tha
aaatkatton to tor R OAO C O N
STRUCT IO N W IT H IN M A
tobaknaw n a * H U N T IN G T O N .
A d la n w ill b "
30 R aya a t r e c e ip t a t t h t
application. Should you bo Inter
o tto d In a n y a t th a lis te d
application*, you should contact
ttw St. Jaftna R iver W ater M an­
agement OI strict a t P.O. Ran
1439. Palatfca, Ftorld a 3JC78
1439, or in paraan a t It* a ffle * an
S ta t a H ig h w a y to d W * * t ,
Petatka. Ftorlda. 9*4/13^ 021
W r itte n o b |a c tl* n ta t h *
application m ey bo m ode, but
should bo recalvod no la te r m an
14 d a y * t r a m t h * d a ta a t
publication. W ritten *b In d ian a
should tdanllfy ttw abfactar by
ttw objection to
application. Piling a w ritten
objection d m not entitle you to
a Chapter HO. Florida Statutes,
A dm inistrative H earing. Only
Interest* a r t effected by the
application and who flto a petl;
tlon m oating ttw requirem ents
ot Sadlon J t -l.301, F .A .C ., m ay
obtain an A dm inistrative H ear­
ing. A ll tlm o ly fltotf w ritten
eb le d le n * w ill bo praientob to
ttw Board tar It* consideration
In I f * d e lib e r a t io n on th e
application prior to ttw Board
taking action an ttw application.
D annis* T . Kemp, D irector
D Ivitlen ot Record*
St. Johns R iver W ater
M anagement District
P ublIih January 14,19P7
OEK-83
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notlca I* hereby given that I
am engaged In business a t n t
B ra n tw a o d D r ., S a n fo rd ,
Samlnoto County, Ftorlda 33710
under tha Fictitious N a m * of
United M otor Sato* A Lasting
C o , and that I Inland to register
sold nemo w ith ttw Clark of ttw
Circuit Court, Samlnoto County,
Florida in accordance w ith ttw
P ro v is io n * of Ih * F ic titio u s
N a m * Statutes, To-W It: Section
•43 09 Florida Statut** 1917.
United Food Processors. Inc
/ * / Joseph G a ill, Pras.
Publish January to, 33. 30 b
F e b ru a ry *. 19*7.
DEK *4

H , I W F -1 U ,f

C U T STEEL r ,
ORLANDO. PL
flan p a -m W M A M L i
T h # p r s l a c l ta la c a t
Samtoata County, Section IT. ML to A m TawnaMp SB South.
Range W Eaat. Ttw applHaiton
to tor a U M a e r t P L A N N E D
U N IT D E V E L O P M E N T to be
known aa T H E CROSSINGS.
vrap rv m v in p iw pvr o w y is
S O LD IE R C R E E K .
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY , S M A
SO U TH G A TE D R . SA N FO R D ,
P L 3 3 7 7 1 , A p p lic a tio n
44-11741S1AO. an 11/17/**. T h *
la mi^PWPP IT*
bh PPffiinraNP
gw
IP
C o u n ty , S e c tio n 13 A 13,
Township 19 South. R ang* I f
E ast. Ttw appllcaftan to tor a 3M
a c re W A S T R W A T IR
T R E A T M E N T F A C IL IT Y to ha
known aa S E M IN O L E C O U N TY
NORTHW EST AREA R EG U ­
L A T IO N W A S T E W A T E R
T R E A T M E N T F A C IL IT Y . Tha
r e c e iv in g w a t e r b o d ie s la
A U L P U R C R E E K A W S K IV A
R IV E R .
The Governing Board o t ttw
D istrict w ill tabo a d ton to grant
or deny th * appttcatton(a) no
aaonor than IP day* from th *
data a t this nolle*. Should you b *
interested In any of Itw listed
applications, you shauld c an ted
ttw St. Johns R lvar W ater M an­
agem ent D istrict ot P.O . lo a
1439. P o tato *. Florida 33«7b
1439, o r in pa n o n at Its office on
S ta to H ig h w a y 1 *0 W a i t ,
P alatka. Florida, f 0 4 /3 » « H t.
W r i t t e n o b je c t io n to I h *
application m ay bo mode, but
should bo received no talar than
14 d a y s fro m t h * d a ta of
publication. W ritten object tons
should Identify ttw oblector by
nam e and address, and fully
describe ttw objection to the
application. Piling a w ritten
objection d m not ontltto you to
a Chapter 110. Florida Statutes.
A dm inistrative Hearing. Only
those persons whoeo substantial
Interests o r * affected by ttw
application and who Dto a peti­
tion mooting ttw requirements
ol Section It - l.lO l, F.A.C ., m ay
obtain on Adm inistrative H ear­
ing. A ll tlm oly filed w ritten
objections w ill bo presented to
Ih * Board tor Its consideration
In Its d e lib e r a tio n on th e
application prior to ttw Board
taking action on ttw application.
Dannis# T , Kemp, Director
Division ot Records
St. Johns R iver Water
Management D istrict
Publish January I* . 11*7
DEK It

N O T IC E OF A P U B L IC H E A R IN O TO C O NSID ER TH E
A N N E X A T IO N O F P R O P E R T Y BY T H E A D O P TIO N OF
AN O R D IN A N C E B Y T H E C IT Y OF
S A N FO R D , FL O R ID A .
N olle* I t hareby given that a Public Haarlng w ill be held In ttw
Commission# Room o l the City H all In ttw City ol Sanlord, Florida,
ol 7:00 o'clock P .M . on January 34, 1987, to consider the adoption ol
on ordinance by th* City of Sanford, Florida, numbered as follows:
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1813
General Description ol tha area to bo annexed and mop I t o t
follows:
A portion ot that certain property lying Northwest ol and abutting
ttw Intersection ol Airport Boulevard and Jewell L in *.

-L O .

/

i
r

W EST

HAVEN

ANNEXATION
REQUEST
- i

t

t

: r '" f

i y

O 0

- » . . i - ' ~ r ■■

C IT Y c 1 S A N F O R D

N
A complete description by metes and bounds end a copy of th*
ordinance shall bo available a l the O ttlce ol ttw City Clerk lor all
persons desiring lo exam ine Itw same.
All parties In interest and cltltens shall have an opportunily lo be
heard a l said hearing.
By order ot ttw City Commission ol the City ot Sanford, F lorida.
A D V IC E TO THE P U B L IC : If a person decides to appeal a
decision made wllh respect to any m atter considered at ttw above
meeting or hearing, he m ay need a verbatim record ol Itw
proceedings, including the testimony and evidence, which record Is
not provided by Ihe City ol Sanlord. ( FS 384 0101)
H.N T am m . Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: D ecem ber24. January 3 ,9 and 16. 1987.
DEJ-179
N O TIC E OF A P U B L IC H E A R IN G TO C O NSID ER TH E
A N N E X A T IO N OF P R O P E R T Y BY TH E A D O P TIO N OF
AN O R D IN A N C E BY T H E C ITY OF
SA N FO R D . F LO R ID A .
Notice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held In ttw
Commlsslone Room at the City Hall In the City ol Sanlord. Florida,
at 7 00 o'clock P M . on January 26, 1987, to consider the adoption ol
an ordinance by the City o l Sanlord. Florida, numbered as follows:
O R D IN A N C E NO. 1814
General Description ot the area to be annexed and m ap Is as
follows:
A portion ol that certain property lying Southeast ol and abutting
Ihe Intersection ot Park Avenue and W ylly Avenue.

I

|

2

)

2

&lt;

l

I

D
3

6

7

1
R

B

7

1
W YLLY A V E N U E

2
1
1 U1n " r
A
3
6

3

7

e

U
D

2

1

&gt;
&lt;

3

A

I

M A T T IE

■
* 1
V
1
3 ■ 4

;

r~

&lt;
•
1O
&lt; S EtM NOL E CO ’ 5,J
*
V
i*.
c;
K
7
7 • 0
B a
2
&lt;
u
*
ft.
c. '
AVENUE

T T
A complete description by metes and bounds and a copy ot Itw
ordlnanct shall be available at the Office ol the City Clerk lor all
persons desiring to exam ine the same
All parlies In Interest and cltirens shall have an opportunity to be
heard at said hearing.
By order ot the City Commission ot the City at Sanlord. F lor Ida
A D V IC E TO THE P U B L IC : It a person decides lo appeal a
decision made with respect to eny m atter considered at the above
meeting or hearing, he m ay need a verbatim record ot the
proceedings. Including the testimony and evidence, which record is
not provided by the City ol Sanlord. (FS284.0IQS)
H.N T am m . Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: Decem ber 14. January 2 ,9 and t6. 1987
DEJ 178

*
»

�i t »V 1

Friday. Jaw, 14, i w

f t f c j M jfcg HersML lanlGrd, FI.

legal N etk*
IN T H I C IR C U IT
C O UR T OR TH K
It T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT IN ANO
FO R S E M IN O LE
C O U N TY . F LO R ID A
C A IE N O . B 6 -tS 3IC A **E
C IT Y F E D E R A L SAVINGS
B A N K , f /k /a C IT Y
F E D E R A L SAVINGS A
LO A N ASSOCIATIO N,
t ie ..
P laintiff.
n.
S A M U E L A . W ILL IA M S O N ,
• til.
D efendant!*).
N O T IC E O F A CTIO N

CLASSIFIED AD S

*

TO : W IL L IA M A. W ILK IN S O N
B O N N IE S . W ILK IN S O N ,
It alive, end/or deed
• h it (th eir) unknown
h tlr t. devise**,
legatees or g ra n t*** and
all panon * or p a rtia l
claim ing by through,
under or against M m
(th em ).
R atldtnca unknown.
C O E Q U IT Y G RO UP, INC.
Itth a lri.d e v ls a ti.
logo last or g ra n fta t
and a llp a n o n to r
p a rtia l claim ing by.
through, undar or
against It.
A d d r t ii unknown.
YO U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
A ction lo r foreclosure of a
mortgage on the following pro­
p e r ty In S em in o le C o u n ty ,
Florida:
LOT f , BLOCK 7, NORTH
O R L A N D O RANCHES SEC­
T IO N t . A CC O R D IN G TO TH E
P L A T T H E R E O F AS R E ­
C O R D E D IN P LA T BOOK 13,
PAGES I t A N D 11 O F TH E
P U B L IC RECORDS OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
FLO R ID A .
has bean filed against you and
you are required to serve a copy
of your written defenses. It any.
to It on SPEAR A NO H O F ­
F M A N , A tt o r n e y s , w hose
address Is Coral Gables Federal
B uilding, ISdl Sunset D rive.
Second Floor, Coral Gables,
Florida 33143, on or about the
- lath day of February, IW 7, 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 o n S P E A R A N D
H O F F M A N , attorneys or Im m e­
diately thereafter: otherwise a
Default w ill be entered against
• you lor the relief demanded In
the Complaint or Petition.
W ITN E SS m y hand and Ihe
seal ot this Court on this 11th
day of January, IN / .
, (SE A L)
O A V ID N . B E R R IE N
As Clerk of the Court
By: SUSAN E . TABOR
A i Deputy Clerk
Publish: January is, 23,
1 0 ,February 4,1*07
DEKO*
IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
O F T H E IO T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT,
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O L E CO UNTY,
F LO R ID A
CASE NO: 14-44*4-CA-Of-E (L )
G O LD O M E SAVINGS BANK,
f /k /a G U A R A N TY SAVINGS
r A LOAN ASSOCIATION OF
' ST. PETE R S B U R G ,
}
Plaintiff,
; vs.
.
! B IL L FR E D E R IC K .
\ a tingle man,
H 1
Defendant Is ).
"
N O TIC E OF ACTION
1177)0
I TO: B ILL FR E D E R IC K
• If alive, and/ordeed
j his known heirs, devisees.
• legatees or grantees and
! all persons or parties
• claim ing by through, under
. or against him.
I Residence unknown.
; YOU A RE N O T IF IE D that an
A ction (or foreclosure ot a
mortgage on the following pro­
p e rty In S em inole C ounty,
Florida:
Lot 14, Block F, S PR IN G
V A L L E Y FA R M S S E C TIO N
' S IX , according to the p la t
J thereof, as recorded In Plat
. Book 15. Page f, ot the Public
' Records ot Seminole County,
, Florida.
J has been tiled against you and
, you are required to serve a copy
' J of your written defenses. If any,
, to It on SPEAR AND HOF
J F M A N , A tt o r n e y s , w hose
, address Is Corel Gables Federal
J Building, 1541 Sunset D rive,
• Second Floor, Coral Gables,
• Florida 13143. on or about the
Jnd day of February, IK 7 , and
to III# the original with the Clark
• ot th is C ourt e ith e r before
J 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* dlately thereafter; otherwise a
&lt; D efault w ill be entered against
J you for the relief demanded In
, the Complaint or Petition.
* W ITN E SS m y hand and seal
• ol this Court on this I t day of
* December, l**4.
. D A V ID N .B E R R IE N ; As Clerk ol the Court
r By: Jean Brlllant
J As Deputy Clerk
« Publish: January 2, *,
* t*. 13, i**7
■ D E K 14

!

S e m in o le

O r la n d o - W in t e r P a r k

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

L B R R B A IV D
DSP
V P H IT

HUO

OSPHOPU.
BF

A JG N H U B F J C ."

—

I

12—Legal Services

71— Help Wanted

SOCIAL S E C U R IT Y OfeeMHty
Free Advlco.No Charge Unites
W a W in I W a rd W h i t t A
A m &lt; to ta s ,.....,...3 B l-3 )M 3 )*
— — MM— I

Employment

323-5176
IN W. W h it.
A P P L IC A T IO N S being accepted
tor Production W orkers with
local m a n u fa c tu rin g plant.
Excellent co. benefits, must
be willing to work a ll shifts.
C a ll:............H 3 -1300 Personnel.
A S S C M B L Y /W A R IH O U S K
LA B O RER
P o s itio n s a v a ila b le , se ts
hour. N ever a feel

21— Personals
A L L A L O N E * Call B ringing
People Together. Sanford’s
most respected dating service
since 1*77. M an over 30 &lt;45%
discount).............. 1100*214477

CRISISPREGNANCYCENTER
A B O R TIO N C O U N S E LIN G
F R E E Pregnancy T e s ti. Con
fld e n tle l. In d iv id u a l
assistance. Call lor appt. Eve.
Hr» A vailable..... ......321-76*3.

TEMP PERM-------- 2M-5100
A U T O M O T IV E SALESPERSON
N E B D E O , ACR experience
preferred. C all P hil Bettis

HASTERURD/VISA!
No cred it check. A lto , new
credit card. No one ralusedt
For Info, call (refundable)
M I3 -733-4041 tu t. M -274

323-2123

25— Special Notices

BOOKKEEPER
T H E S AN FO R O H E R A L D Is
currently accepting resum e’s
for an experienced bookkeep­
e r to esslst Office Manager.

IEC0MEANOTARY
For Details: 1*00432 4354
’ Florida N otary Association

Requirements Include)
•T y p in g Skills
e Ca leu lator by Touch
e Pleasant Personality

27—Nursery &amp;
Child Care
C H IL D C A R E , M y hom e, ell
ages. CPR c e rtifie d .
R eferences....................311-4447
E F F E C T IV E 1/14 w ill babysit
for Intent A toddlers In my
home, full-tim e only, (only 3
openings) Call Now 321 4242
4 (tor........................................ 3:30
RESPO NSIBLE M O M . T.L .C .,
hot meals, flexible hrs, re t
sonebie rates. Rets.......311-3*13

43—Mortgages
Bought &amp; Sold
W E B U Y ts t an d 2nd
M O R TG A G E S Nation wlda.
C a ll; R ay Lagg L ie . M tg
Broker, *40 Douglas A ve.,
Allamonf#......................774-7732

Legal Notice
N O TIC E OF
P R O C E E D IN G FO R
USE O F S TR E E T
R IG H T OF-W AY
TO W HOM IT M A Y CONCE R N :
You w ill taka notice that tha
City Commission ol tha C ity of
Sanford, Florida, af 7:00 o'clock
P.M . on January 14. I*«7. In tha
City Commission Room a t (he
City Hall in tha City of Sanford.
Florida, w ill consider and da
termlne whether or not the City
w ill perm it the us« ot parking by
Ihe New Salem P rim itive Bap
list Church ol Oleander Avenue
lying South of llth Street and
between Block 4 and Block 7 ol
Meisch's Subdivision.
Persons Interested m ay ap
pear and be heard at Ihe tim e
and place specified.
A D V IC E TO TH E P U B L IC : It
a person decides to appeal a
decision made with respect to
any m atter considered at tha
above meeting or hearing, he
may need a verbatim record of
Ihe proceedings, including the
testimony and evidence, which
record Is nut provided by the
City of San lord. (F S 2 I4 0103)
City Commission of the
City ot S antjrd. Florida
By: H .N .T a m m , Jr.
City Clerk
Publish: January 14,1*47
DEK 43

GJFD
RJUG

BC

TE
UJLPUBAO

P R E V IO U S SO LUTIO N: VI wish this country gave as
much attention to poetry as It does to logging.” — Tess
G allagher.

BLOOM COUNTY
1 s m i fu l in ca m *
WNPCMR MMZR...
/ MKK I ’M 6&amp;m
37.
fiCt IR IS '

Wa O ffer:
e Insurance Plan
e Paid Vacation
e Friendly Atmosphere
e Job Security
If you meet the above require­
ments and would Ilka to be a
p a rt ol tha Sanford H erald,
sand resume' to:
SAN FO R D H E R L A D
P.O. BOX 1417
SAN FO R D , F L.H 77I-t4S 7
A ttni Office M anager
C A S H IE R Full-tim e, Apply In
person: Little Food Town, 710
Lake M a ry B lvd., Sanford.
E.O .E._______________________
COMPANY NEEDS YOUNG
In-ex per lanced A w illing to
travel Individual for rewardInq sales career. C all 74743*3

CONTRACT LABORERS
E arn S* to t i l per hr. Must
enjoy working outdoors. No
exp nec. For full or p art tim e
positions In Seminole Co. call
* a m to * p m .............111406-7131
★

★

W W ★

★

★

★

★

71-Hite Wanted

71—Help Wanted

71— Http Wanted

C A K P IN T IG S /H IL P IR S *

H E A V Y E Q U IP . O P ER A TO R S Exp. only. 1*33746)
1-*337447...... o r..........1 * 3 3 TOP
H O U S E K E E P E R . L lv a -lit or
cam . 6 days.
...C a U :ll 3 x a *
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G for
exp M edical Assistant/ RecepHenlst. Physician's ofc.
Goad tolephant skills. 4 InM ranca knowledge required.
M ust be a tte la function effi­
ciently In highly buey ofc.
M a ll resume to Box M L c /a
Sanford H a ro ld . F .O . Bex
1457, Santord. FI. 317*1.
IN S U R A N C E A G E N C Y In San­
f o r d n e e d s e x p e r ie n c e d
p e rs o n a l lin e s C u s te m e r

W R L O I R l - C e r t i f ie d / uncerltltad, 1*337041.
l-*3 3 7 4 6 l..,...,q r........ IW 3 7 W I

F u ll/a v e r H i m . 1 *317063.
1-4P-7I47 n m n if H M s H m u m
C E M E N T F IN IS H E R S - Start
today. 1403-7043. .a r..1433-7047
■*40H R )
D R IV E R S - L o cel/O ver read.
1*337061.......M .........14337047
■14Q37W1
IL IC T R IC IA R I/N IL P IR S Futl tim e, 14337041,14337047
o r.................................. 14337001
U P . D O N U T M aker 4 Finlehe r. M r. Danut. 37U Hw y. 1740.
N O P HO N E C A L L *._________
E X P E R IE N C E D FLOOR M A N ,
It ne expectance In latest fleer
m etho ds D O N O T C A U I
H U M work, 331-6713

FE0KRAL, STATE, A CtVIl

NOTE: In Ihe event ol the publishing ol errors In advertisements, the'Senlord Herald shall publish the advertisement, attar It has been corrected at
no cost to the advertiser but such Insertions shall number no mere than one
it).

A J JO.

m x ir m ir . / w w im *
I W , PONTKEUASeim.
H M M W M ttofS m e
tf&lt; U tiT S M (£ *

m b

DEADLINES
Noon The Day B.efore Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
M onday - 9:00 A .M . Saturday

*0 B C W

PHFE

72C a Dm
09C i Dm
SAC a Dm
SOC i Dm

I U

by CONNIE WIENER
DSP

R ATES

MONDAY tin FUMY ID
SATURDAY 9• Hmr
CMtntt Kates Av

C e le b rity C ip h e r c ry p lo g te m s e re c re e le d fro m q u o la iio n t by le m o u t
p e o p le , p e t l e nd pre s e n t
E ach la lte r In Ih e c ip h e r H a n d s I w
a n other T o d ty t O u t M e q u a ls V

BF

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

C LA S S IFIE D D E P T.
I
’ HOURS
3
•£0 AJL • 5&amp;D P.M. 7

C E L E B R IT Y C IP H E R

“ U P M IP

*****

J S L

★

DAILY WORK/DAILY PAY
N E E D M E N A W O M E N NOW I

I NO ^ FEE!

Report ready lor work at 4 A M 407 W . 1st. St..................Sanford

3 21 -1 59 0
k H ’ tH h H h h h f
D IE T A R Y A ID E - Full tim e, day
shift, w ill train. Apply D ebary
M a n o r, 40 N . H w y. 1 7*1,
betw een* A 4.......................EOE
D R IV E R S W A N T E D , Domino s
P ltia . Inc. Wages, tips, A
commission. S3 hr. guaran­
teed. Must have own car with
liability Insurance.
Apply: 1*10 French Ave. or
c a ll311 3000after lla m

legal Notice
IN TH E C IR C U IT COURT
IN S E M IN O L E C O U N TY ,
FLO R IO A
CASENO.44-1404-CA-M-E
IN R E ; The Adoption of
J .P .Z ..II
N O TIC E OF A CTIO N
TO : M IC H A E L LE W IS
B EM ISH
t l Elk wood Court
W inter Springs. Florida
YOU A RE N O T IF IE D that a
Petition tor Adoption has been
tiled against you. You are re­
quired to serve a copy of your
w ritten defenses. If any. to tha
P laintiff's attorney. LE O N B.
C H E E K , II I. ESQ.. 3100 S. U S.
H ig h w a y )7 -*2 , C asselb erry,
Florida 12707 on or before Feb­
ruary 4th, I* f7 , and Ilia tha
original with the Clerk ol this
Court either before service on
Petitioner's attorney or Im m e­
diately I hereafter; otherwise, a
default w ill be entered against
you for the relief demanded In
the Petition.
This notice shall be published
once each week tor lour consec­
u tiv e weeks In the Sanford
Herald.
W ITN E S S m y hand and seal
this lis t day of December, ItM .
(S E A L )
/ t / Ruth King
D EP U TY CLERK
Publish January 2, *, 14,23.1»*7
D E K 12

Service |eke new available in
your e re *. For Info, cell (NS)
4444333 Deet. 731
F U L L T IM E P L O O R M A N /
L aw n r i M i i m h . Good
benefits. Confect Hlllhaven
H e a lth C a ra C a n te r , ts o
M e llo n v llte A v ., S an ford ,
3234344. « . « « « » . . E.Q.E •
F U L L -T IM E /F A R T -T IM B , Ca­
shier, te r eftemoons/mldnlght
shifts 4 weekends Apply In
perm n to E C O L l-a 4 W /44
GR O W ER OR ASST GROW ER,
to supervise growing opera­
tio n f o r s m a ll D ra c s n a
Nursery, Cell 1*4707* or write
70s Terraco Blvd., Orlande,
F t.
LANDSCAPERS 4 lawn main­
tenance personnel n eM ed .
Exp. 4 driver's license re­
quired. Pay equal to proven
jx je rto n c o ................... .332-1133
M E C H A N IC /W rocker
G a t Attendant. Exp.
A pply etb B utch's Chevron
Service. 1111 Celery Ave.
N E E D E X T N A IN C O M E *
R N's, LPN's 4 C N A 't needed
tor Flexl-Pool. Excellent sala­
ry and working conditions. All
shifts available. C al1:444404
EOE
N E E D SOM EO NE TO C4ro For
Elderly Lady In Sanford. M utt
be m ature 4 have some exp.
References required. Reply:
Bax 243, c/o Sanford Herald.
P.O . Bax 1457 Sanford. 11773
N E W C O M PAN Y expending In
this area, needing puttie rela­
tion* people. E .O .E . H I-IB *S

NOWHIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
O p e r a f o r t w a n ta d on i l l
operations. We offsr paid holi­
days. paid vacation, health
care plan, and m odem air
conditioned plant. Piece work
ra le s . W ill tra in qualified
a p p lic a n ts . S an-D el
M anufacturing, 2240 Old Lake
M a ry R d , Sanford..... J31-M t0
N U R S E A ID E ) A ll shifts, expe­
rien ced or c e rtifie d only.
A p p ly L a k e v le w N u rsin g
Center. * l * E . 2nd St.. Sanford

RURSIS, AIDES,

' COMPANIONS
H A P P Y N E W Y E A R . We netd
you now. New t in e f lt * In­
cluding group Insurance and
vacation. Froo CEU'S. Dally
pay- Staff A p rivet* duty.
M E D IC A L P ER SO N N EL POOL
Callt744S144

m

typing skills. Paid holidays,
h o s p ita lis a tio n A d e n ta l.
C all............................3031135741
IR R IG A T IO N IN S T A L L R R S t
S killed 4 unskilled. Chouftoums license o plus,,, jn -a s io
R O O F IN G /E S T IM A T O R /
S ALESM AN Large single ply
reefing can tractor leakin g ex­
perienced sales E stim ator tar
Florida office. Send Resume 4
Salary requirem ent to; C F E .
Inc. t i l l Thornhill Rd. Bex 10.
Aubumdeto, F I. a m
S A L E S IN S P E C T O R ) N ew ly
As leader In our Industry,
O rkln needs the best sales
person wa can find to sham 4
insure our continued success.
U l-

l i - ...
WPDfw- TV
wt i,
1. Excel lent earnings
2. G reat benefit*
X C ar allowance
4. Co. paid retirem ent plan
5. Complete training
4. Guaranteed Incem *
during training
7. Ne overnight travel
1. Strong advertising
tWpfWff
* . Advancement Into

10. A tot Id. lucrative future
In * recession proof
Industry
W s Require:
1. D irect sales exp. or a
desire to learn
2. Adesiretosuccaed
3. Strong personality
4. Positive attitude
X Neat appearance, good
driving record.
4. Good verbal skills
7. A desire to help peopla
I f y o u a r e c o m m it t e d to
excel lone* end have the desire
end ab ility to succeed end
grew w ith a fortune 300 com ­
pany. we would like to m eet
you. C all between loam 4 3pm
tor an appointment..... 333 *371
Equal Opportunity Em ployer
S E C U R IT Y O F F IC E R
T R A IN IN O free If you qualify.
Full-tlm a em ploym ent w hile
you train. M ust be I I years or
older. No felon convictions. If
you are on public eld, low
Income, or unemployed, we
o ffe r 240 h r*, of s e c u rity
tra in in g . A fte r com pletion
you'll receive state license 4
all cert I (leaf Ion free to you,
1*4-1741, Thurs. thru Sat. * am
to 3, suite 313
T A X P R E P A R E R Needed until
4/13/17, Call Phil Bettis

M e d ic a l

Personnel

•Pool*

P A IN T E R S - Comm. 4 res. Exp.
only. 14137041.1 *13 7047
or................................... 1*13-70*1
P A R T T I M E , a f lo r school
teachars. Chauffeur's license
required. Call E llen.... J234414P A R T T IM E B in d ery,
Longwood print shop. Floxlblo
hours, w ill train............3314831
P A R T - T IM E - A T T E N D A N T /
S A L E S P E R S O N , A lo rl In­
telligent Individual naeded to
look lit e r amusement center
In Sanford P lata, nights 4
weekends. 13 to 20 hrs. per
week, 33.75 per hr. Must be
m ature, neat In appearance 4
bondable. For appt.......3214*03
P A R T T I M E L P N , Good
benefits. Contact Hlllhaven
H e a lth C a re C e n te r, *30
M e llo n v llle A v ., S anford.
3224344............................ E.O.E.
P A R T - T IM E S E W IN O
M A C H IN E M E C H A N IC
W A N T E D , must bo expertanted, on all types of Industri­
al sawing machines. Apply In
p e rs o n o n ly to: S en -D el
Manufacturing, 2340 Old Lakt
M a ry Rd., Santord.......331-3010
PERSON FOR C LE A N IN O 4
light m aintenance, must be
m ature and dependable, ref­
erences 4 exp erien ce re ­
quired. S4.00 hr to start with
last ralsa lor right person.
Call 3234430 tor an Interview
P L U M B E R /H E L P E R S - Call
today. 1 *33 7061,1 *33-7047
o r..,...............................1*337041
P R O G R A M A S S IS T A N T 1o
work In dlroct cero/trelnlng
position w ith m ontally reterded. Cell: 331-723!.________

323-2123
T E L E P H O N E SALES- l i per
hr. + bonus. Full or part lim a.
ALSO L IG H T D E L IV E R Y : *
am to 3 pm or 5 pm to I pm .
No exp, necessary...... 412 439s
T E X A S O IL C O M P A N Y needs
m ature person lor short trip *
surrounding Sanford. Contact
customers. W# train. W rit#
H .T . Dickerson. Pres., South­
w e s t e r n P e tr o le u m , B o x
*41003. F I. W orlh, Tx. 76101

M A R K E T IN G D E P A R T M E N T
Of the Rich Plan of Florida
naads help In o ur In s id e
advertising efforts. Exciting
p a rt-llm * work with opportu­
nity to earn full-tlm a Income.
Pleasant w ork atm osphere,
flexible hours, SS.OO per hour
-I- T R E M E N D O U S b o n u s
structure.
C all today lor Ihe details.
322-34*3, ext. 402 or * x t. 21*.
ask for C harles Bardel or
Jeanette H all
W O R K E R S N E E D E D I It you
need steady work paid dally,
Call Sam a lte r 3 pm ......322 7334

Urtfumfshtd / Rtfrt

Wanted
C E R T IF IE D Nursing
w ith a a ln -h o u te Gay
W ill
Ing 4 tranapertallen... .333-744*
I W IL L C LE A N Your Kam a tar
a reasonable rate. Exp. A ref.
C H I:................................«3M 7*3

I bd rm .. 1 bath,
ad u ito atty, n a p a fe .M lv r ii.e r
SMB me. -f icc. dim. * 2* Mas
d o irs J &gt; M M 2 a r 127-2*1* ntokH
IA N F O R D : I 4 2 b d rm .u n lt*ln
H is to ric D is tric t. Recently
renova ted. Bath have charm ­
ing sun per ches
location. S2M 4BM S..
S A N F O R D , T e v r n h e u ie , 3
bdrm ., I be., central a ir 4
heat, twit kitchen appliances,
w /d hook-ups. w ell to w all
carpets, storage shed, new
m in t, real Clean. &gt;2*3 2*01131
SHENA N DO AH V ILLA G E

★ * tin * *

91— Apartments/
Hoifsa to Share
IN P R IV A T E
W eekly rent, house privileges.
C ell: 74447**.....or..... 31341*3
SANFORO: W ill share 3 bdrm .,
3 b a th t o w n h o u te . R e n t
negotiable, + utilities 4 S IM
dap. Responsible person (s I
e t te .......... 4 3 ) -tw o, ask tor P ill

W — Rooms ter Rant
• R EA SO N A B LE R ATES
• M A ID S E R V IC E
• P R IV A T E E N TR A N C E
W hy Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

IJ 11 1* 1 1 1 11 i I l\C

323-4507

Ask about move In special!
Cell...................................... -323-2*20
ST. JOHN'S R IV E R at Lemon
B luff, I bdrm . garage apt. MOD
mo. + util. No d m ........322-904*
1 bdrm .. 1 bath................ .*333 m o
2 bdrm ., IVt bath.............AMO m e
• Central H eat A A ir
P Fool A Laundry
F R A N K L IN A RM S
It M Florida Ave.
2 B D R M ., 1 bath, kitchen appli­
ances, carpeted, *300 + dspo*It. No pots...... ...■■■Call 322-4*74
$299
M O V E IN S P E C IA L
a Now 2 bdrm . v illa * a M ini
Blinds a Hookups
F A R K S I0 E P LA C E APTS.
Just W . ot 17-09 oft 23th St. Turn
left on H artw ell. W e’re on the
.....■'....... ...........322-4474

SANFORD- 4
m
ceiling fa n e .,
0. +
...323-42*1
M c .C a ll:........
S A N F O R D - L a rg e h o use, 4
bdrm ., iVt baths, front perch,
plus 4 additional bedroom s/
study/offices; *423 p er mo. +
sac. P 2 4010...... or....... 322 *77*
U N F O R D ) 2 bdrm ., IW bath,
front rm ., Fla. rm ., scroonad
porch. SPSm a, C e ll.-J 2 1 -3 2 M
S FA O O U S - l a fa m ily room,
lanced, c /h /a . n e Feta. I42S 1st
B le a t.................. 323-27*1 after 3
S T. J O H N 'S R IV E R F R O N T Large 3 bdrm ., 2 bath. can.
h /a plus turn, guest house.
H ereto Halt Beatty
l- a w - lt l l o r t-447-12** *ve«.
SUNLAND- 724 Cherokee C fr.. 3
bdrm .. 1 bath, SMS mo. + sac.
No pets. C a l l . . . ...........323-4441
S U N LA N D ) 3/1, largo y ard, kids
A p et* o k . *430 mo. t in t mo.
-H3004QC. Cell............321-4*12

CALLBART

R E A L ESTA TE
R EA LTO R _____________ 222-74*0
3 B ED R O O M . IW Bath, 2 story
horn# w ith screened porch.
1310 S. M yrtle. *473 M e . availabla 3/1. C all 322 2*41 axt. 221

105-DuptexTriplex/R«nt

101— H o u m s

Furnishtd / Rtnt

»7— Apartments
Furnithod / Rant

H S I R t M f A R E A : 2 bdrm .,
completely turn. A vail. 1/1).

F em e Apts, tor S etter CW liiwo
311 P alm etto Ave.
J. Cowan. No Phone Cells
G E N E V A , 3 b d rm .. 1 b ath
house, turn, or unfurn., trig
yard . *300 Sac. Dap. 1330 M o .,
days 331-44*1, eves 322-2*11
N E A R TO W N - I 4 2 bdrm ., S7J
4 M S w eek. *130 deposit.
C e ll:.................................323-0*4

RELOCATING
Short form lasses, furnished
e ffic ie n c ie s , sin gle s to ry ,
private, near con van knees,SAN FO R O C O U R T A P T.
________ 223-MU ex. M l_________
SAN FO R O : Large I b r.. up­
stairs, very p rivate, tile bath,
e a t-ln - kitchen. E verything
furnished. *330323-1*17
I O D O M ., Couple w /t child.
P riv a te porch, drape*. *2*3
mo. -t- HOB d tp . 2 rets. .321-0121

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
• E F F IC .1 4 2 B D R M . APTS.
S P U R N . 4 UNFURN.
a PAVW EEKLY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
E ls * When You Can Live In

JtochMdrjnjwjjots^KMOJO^
103— H o u s e s

Unfurnished / Rent
D E B A R Y , large, neat 2 bdrm., 2
both home, central heat 4 a ir,
fenced yard, garage, laundry
room , S m in . to Santord.
avallablo about 1/1S, *423 +
IOC., *04-7)4-7403_____________
* * * IN D E LT O N A a * *
a * HOMES FO R R E N T a *
a a 374-1&lt;14 a a
LOO H O M E , Hw y. 41S. 1 bdrm ..
3 b a., cantral H /A , w atar
cond.. *330. M o . *12 2 M -M II,
MI-1412 attar 6, dap, required
R A V IN A FK: 4 bdrm ., 2 bath,
gam e rm ., can, h 4 a. fenced
yard, ell eppls. Exc. cond.
*300 mo -M ac dap.......321312*
S A N FO R D I 4 rooms, K 4 B.
Adults, no pots. V ery privet*.
*273/M o + sac, dop. 4444040
S A N F O R O ) O ft M a llo n v lll*
M o r e to r y o u r m o n ay. 3
bdrm ., 2 bath, A /C . *300 mo.
H .D . R ealty........................240 *400

LA K E M A R Y B LVD . A R E A , 2
br, unfurn., with pool. M ature
adults, ne children or pots,
M IS M o, l i t , last + sac.
311-0434 a tta r 4 pm.___________
N IC E , 2 bdrm ., 2 bath, wall to
wall carpat. cantral haat 4
air, dishwasher, w /d hook-up.
I l l M o n th -t security. No
Pots................................. .322-144*
N IC E . 3 bdrm ., 1 ba., central
heat/alr. no pats, 1343 M o.,
*230 dop. 1102 W . 3rd SI. Call
Sharon a t 443-3000. Lastar
Kalmanson, Assoc.

RENTAL
DAY - WEEK
M ONTH
LOW DEPOSIT
LOW RATES
n O U J^TB S Y
USED C A H S
1219 S H w y 17 92
S anlortJ
323 2123

u h r U illiinr
323-4507

Outstanding Opportunity For Experienced

M A R IN E R S V IL L A G E
1 4 2 b d rm s .....................from *123
C all............................. ..........323-1470
O N E B D R M . A P T . 12*0 par mo.

C A S H IE R S
G A S A TTEN D A N TS
FA ST FO O D S E R V IC E

Incl. util. + *200 sec. Singles
only. 222-7004... or... 323-7030

R ID G E W O O D ARM S.
2SM Ridgewood A v*.
123-4420
BAM BOO COVE,
300 E. A irpo rt Blvd,
321 44*1
S P E C IA L on any avallabla sire
ap t*. *30 off tha 1st 3 months
o l a * month loaso.

n i M M i j i u p v i j N in l i t m a m r y

ONE STOP CENTERS
• Auto / Truck RwluGling
• Full Line ConvantencG Store
• Fast Food

AIRLINE/TRAVEL SCHOOL

F rie d C h ic k e n , S u b *, D onuts

• Top Salaries
• Free Life A Hospitalization
• Paid Vacations Each Year
1 Wk. Every 6 Mos.
• Profit Sharing Plan

Train To B t A
T ra w l A fant • Tour Guida
Airline Rcsanrationist
Start locally, lull tlme/parl
11m*. Train on llv* airline com­
puters. Homo study and rssldanl training. Financial aid
a v a lla b la . Jo b placem en!
assistance. National haadquarlors. L.H.P..FL.

• Other Benefits
M A K E A F F U C A T IO N IN PERSON
A T 202 N . L au rel A v e ., S an fo rd
Ikn, r,May Silt AM ■4:3* PM NO PMONS CAUI P tlA U I

A.C.T. Travel School

1-800-432-3004

AccreOilsd msmbar N.H.S.C.

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATES

T o List Your Business...

W E A R E LOOKING F O R I
V E R Y S PE C IA L ASSOCIATES
TO JO IN OUR LA K E M A R Y
T E A M O F PROFESSIONALS
W EOFFERi
• Continuous Training
• Non-Comp* ting Managers
• Competitive Commissions
• Froo Listing 4 Sales Tools
• Froo Signs And Postage
• Toll Fro# LOCalls
• Newspaper 4 T V Advertising
• Relocation Service
• New Home Sales
• Professional Facilities
• Sanford. Lk. M ary Offices
C ALL B ETH HATHA W AY
Lake M ary Branch Manager
For A Confidential
Interview Today

ERASTENSTR0M
REALTY. INC. REALTORS
321-2720
322-9551 E m .

by Berke Breathed
6CTMI A
Q0AREITE P£fOK
I STICK you IN
A O tM X X .
J

D ial 322-2611 o r 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B .S . L IN K CONST.
Remodeling................30M 23 703*
Financing............Llc.lCRC00047t

Blinds &amp; Drapes
CUSTO M D R A P E R Y , balloon
c u r t a i n s , m in t - b li n d * 4
verticals. Free est. In home
lervlce. M adeline........323-4301
O R A P E S /T O P T R E A T M E N T S
D U S T R U F F L E S /F IL L O W
SHAMS BY D IA N E ......111*244

House Plans
CUSTOM B LU E P R IN T S
FaslS ervIcal Good quality I
K K D ESIG NS....................7*7-5*34

Dry Wall

Landclearing

D R Y W A L L R epairs, ceilings
ip ra y td , tree est., 574 0007 or
331-17*0..........Of........... 323 3444

THO RNE LANOCLEARINO
Loader and truck work/septlc
tank sand. Free est. 322 1433

Landscaping
Home Improvement
C A R P E N T R Y BY E D DAVIS
R E M O D E L IN G /R E N O V A T IO N
Large And Small Jobs Welcome
Santord Res. I * y r t. 221-0441
R E M O D E L IN G 4 A D D ITIO N S ,
M asonry 4 Concrete work.
Local number. 441 5143 EVES.
W O M A N 'S W O R K I Q u a lity
work with the woman's touch.
P aln lln g /p ap erh an g in g , file
i n s t a l l a t i o n , p la s te r re p alr/d ryw all taping.
Candace Grever, 122-1441

C4irpentry

Home Repairs

A L L T Y P E S O l C a rp e n try .
Remodeling 4 horn* repairs.

A L L PHASESol household
repair 4 Im provem ent.
a F R E E E S T IM A T E S * 323 1421
R E M O D E L IN G . C a rp e n try ,
P a in tin g . S m a ll e le c tric a l
repairs 4 Installation, plum b­
ing 4 installation. Hauling 4
lawn service. Call:
Ed or A llan.......................121 4210

^Cal^lehari^ros^2M*72.

Carpet/Floor
Coverings
W ES'S C A R P E T SALES
Remnants, R ail retch**
Licensed.......Insured....... 343-77)4

BOGUES^TxpT'Trofessionan

Lawn 4 Garden M aln t t chain
saw work I Lake M ary Resldent. F R E E E S T I1221347
PAULS LA N D S C A P IN G ,
Speclallilng In rose garden
Insulation, professional lawn
4 garden m alnt., 321 042S.
S E M IN O LE LANDSCAPING

322-8133
Lawn Service
B A R R IE R 'S U n d icap in g l
I r r l g , Lawn C are, Res 4
Comm , 321-7*4*. F R E E ESTI
Begues Landscaping- Planting
new trees 4 shrubs. A lio.
pruning 4 cleaning...... 321m ;
"S U N N Y S ". Mew, edge. trim ,
planting, mulching. SPRING
Spec. F re t tst. 322 ;» 2*

Masonry
C O N C R E T E D r lv e s /p a tlo s /
walks/slabs. Lie.4 Ins 25yrs.
t»p . I lie long res
. . . M *73*

Cleaning Service

Landclearing

Nursing Care

S P A R K LIN G C LEA N tor a d u ll
fro * home or office. I lim e,
weekly 4 m thlv rates. .322-5*58

BACK HOE, Dump truck. Bush
hog, Box blading, and Discing.
C all: 122 1104...... o r .,.. 222 *313

H IL L H A V E N H E A L T H CARE
C E N T E R , *30 M ellonvllle A v ,
322 15*4............................ E O E

Nursing Care
OUR R A TES A R E LOW ER
Lakevlew Nursing Center
f i t E. Second St., Santord
321-47*7

Painting
P A IN T IN G : Complete Interior
*3*3/E xterlor 1350 Satisfaction
guaranteed. Call...........45* 2216
PROFESSIO NAL, Q U A L IT Y
Painting by Dave
Interior, Exterior, Residential.
C om m ercial. Pressure
Washing, D ryw all Repair 4
PopcornCeillngs.
Lie.....Bonded...... Ins......223-4076

Secretarial Service
Custom Typing- BookkeepingNotary Public. Call: D .J. Enterprlses. 1303)333 74*2.

Sewer/Septic Tank
HOW ARD'S S E P TIC S E R V IC E
Repair Lines 4 Clean Tanks
_ Free Estim ates.............322 0259

Tree Service
ALL T R E E S ERVICE h
Flrew ood W oodsptlllar tor
hire Call A lte r 4 P .M 323 908*
E C H O L S T R E E S E R V IC E
Free Estlmatesl Low PricesI
Lie...Ins...Slum p Grinding.Tool
123-222* day or nit*
" L e ith * Pro (visional! do It".

�i v&amp; pm m b

te m T o m *

our, w r« e
h

© fc fc w e s .

&gt;

Specious3 Mrm.,1 be*, past.

R lv « r R un In A lfo m s n to
g g jg jfe C n i i n . m i l _________

ttwcMtC qw rtrgC lyfeR d^S m tard

319—W a n te d to B u y

among O ak* on 1/3 + aero,
w ithin w alking dlitanca of
Elem entary ichoal. Available
Im m e d ia t e ly , C a ll M a r t i
S a n s a k o v lc 313-3100,
• * • » ................................. 313-7107

MOTOR!

3701 H w r. 1101.,

£Oldi Fr»0£jCkv^i

3700Hwy. I7 W ,............ 177K O I

155— C o n d o m in iu m s
C o -O p /S a le
S i m c Tank Rock Patio Slonat
G raata T ra p * Sand D ry Walls
Raady M t* Concrete
M iracle Concrato Co.
313-1711..................J O * E lm Ave.

1 aero tracts. Ostoon/Maytown

S A N F O R D I G roat buy on 4
b e d r o o m , 1 b a th In th a
country. Only M 3.0001 Owner
m otivated to sell quickly. Call
M a r ti Sansakovlc 111-1700,
•v a s .................................. 333-7307

w/offtco. By Sanford Airport.
Rant or Naso................Jit-oaos

R d , paved road, trass. From
&gt;10.000 to m m . 30% down.
Financing available.
M3-717S..... .or......M3-13M OVOS

Pay Hera

S A N FO R O A R R A

1 ACRES A T "ASTOR FA R M S"
W E S T O F 1-4 O N L Y &gt;31.000.
TERM S

141— H o m e s F o r S ale
A IA R O K 1 B D R M . HOME
Fenced yard, citrus A tig trees.
Quiet location, very conve­
nient. JUST L IS T E D I

3 ACRES ON SM ALL LA K E IN
G E N E V A 131.000. TE R M S

A N EW B E G IN N IN G ! I bdrm .,
I both homo, large bdrm .
could be two, wood stained
celling, living room, fam ily
room, utility room w/attached
workshop and m ore. Com ­
m ercial toning.............. 143,000
A R AR E F IN D I 3 bdrm ., I bath
home In nice neighborhood,
den could be 3rd bdrm ., utility
room, fenced rear yard and f
year home warranty. Com­
m ercial toning.............. 143,000

STemper

W O O D E D 71 X 140 N E A R
" R O L L IN G H I L L S G O L F
COURSE &gt;33,000. TE R M S
P IN E A V E . 03 X 137 ACCESS
TO "B E A R L A K E " 123,000

SANFORD- 3 bdrm .. 3 bath, CB
home In good condition.
Only......................... ......... 144,NO

L A K E FR O N T E STA TE H O M E1 acre w /boat ram p, large
porch A wood decking. Call tor
showing.............. C HA R LO TTE
CROSLYN...................... 133-1071

D ELTO NA LA K ESI 1 bdrm . 1
bath hom e, sunken livin g
room, fam ily room A dining
room combo, eat-ln kitchen,
do your own d e c o ra tin g !
P ric e :............................... 140.000
SHADY LO C A TIO N I 1 bdrm ., 1
b ot h hom e w l l h p r i v a c y
fenced back yard, split plan,
fam ily room open to enclosed
porch w ith In-ground spa,
breakfast bar, vaulted
ceilings..............................173.*00

LOO H O M E ON 1 + ACRES.
Slone fpl., fenced for horses.
Only !7f,*00........ C HA R LO TTE
C R O IL Y M ...................... 313*073

U N IQ U E ! 4 bdrm , 2 bath home
with view of Lake Jessup,
pool, barn, porch A patio,
must see to b elieve!.....1*1.500

322-8678

ALL THE A M E N IT IE S I 3
bdrm ., 3 oath home, 1 wells,
greenhouse, nursery business,
completely fenced and land
scaped, workshop, csn tral
H /A . and lo ll m o r e l....II75.000

CONDO: Northleke Village. 2
bdrm ., 2 bath, fireplace, ca
th ed ral ceilings. Low 50‘i
322 ?474alter 1:30pm_________

ENDLESS PO SS IB ILITIES ! 4
bdrm .. 2 bath horns on i t
acres, pool. Income producing
ternary business, large fam ily
room, central H /A , and the
list goes o n l...................1343,000
C O M P L E T E L Y F U R N IS H E D !
Nice 1 bdrm ., with fam ily rm ..
In good location I Racantly
painted! Large frees I Approx
Im ately 11,500 dn., *.5% 30 yr.
1344 p e r m o P . l . T . I . I
139,900
Appraised.
IN VESTO R 'S D R E A M I 3 bdrm .
IV* bath, huge shade trees and
lush landscaping I Large eat In
kitchen I Fertced corner loti
Seller w ill pay all closing costs
lor buyer I ........................ Ml.JOO

V A LU E IN T H E P R O P E R T Y I 2
bdrm ., I bath home near new
hospital, txcellent potential
for office complex, approx. I

H A N D Y M A N 'S SPECIALLarge 3 bdrm ., flreplac*, sep­
arate dining, workshop, owner
will hold........................... 133,500

10 A C R E S N E A R
B E T H E L " 130.000

QUINSTAR: Camping, Cargo.
U t i l i t y , T illin g T r a lla r .
Unique.
le b Owen Travel
Trailers U 3 N . Abelle Ave.,

"LAKE

Its A C R E S N E A R E N ­
T E R P R IS E ROAD (ACCESS
TO "L A K E B E T H E L " 111,100.
TERM S

LETS TRADE!
YO UR H O M E
FO R ONE O F OURS
Y O U R P LA N O R OURS
O U R LA N D O R YOURS
C ALL BOB SA N D ER NOW
TO S EE IF YOU Q U A L IF Y

1*3—W a ttrfro n t
P roperty / Sale

P O I N C I A N A L A N E
W A T E R F R O N T . 1 1 1.100.
TERM S

NORMANDY
TERM S

B LV O . 137,500

Sanford
C H IV . C ITA TIO N '40', 7C174A,
17*1, Sem inole F ord, 17M
•H w y . 17 *3.......................333 1401
C H E V E T T E i'T *
Pay H ere.............

C H E V R O L E T C H E V B T T E IV ,
7T034A, U *5 . Seminole Ford,
37M Hwy. 17*3,..............172 1441

181— Appliances
/ F u rn itu re

mmmm.

T O Y O T A C O R O L L A *74',
7T114A, t l * l , Seminole Ford.
3704 Hw y. 1 7*3,........333-1441

T R A V E L C R A F T R V M o to r
homo, '03. Perfect cond. Ptveh
130,000 negotiable......... 331-0*74
11' SKYLA RK Travel trailer,
’l l , U til. shed. Insulated elum.
roof, ready to move Into.
Com pi. turn. See a t 11 Oaks
Campground, slta l i t . .....17100

VO LKSW AO EN , '74', MOO. Call
M rs . Lanier. Mon thru F rl.,
t w t w e e n f t e a a t s i- ll ^

37M Hwy, 17*2,

Instant Credit

2 55 9 Park Drive
(305)321-0140
1 B D R M . HOM E close to Leke
Jessup, together w ith 2 bdrm.
mobile home, rented for 1371
per mo. Both lor only 144.000.
Dwayne Ruby, Assoc...313-11IS
BOB M . BALL. JR . P.A.
R E A L T O R ......................... 333-4111
3 BED R O O M . 2 ba.. In country,
f lr e p la c * . g a r a g e , tre e s ,
ow ner fin a n c in g , consider
trade, 174, *00., 149-5717

149— C om m ercial
P roperty / Sale

C O U C H , c h a ir, and tables,
lam ps, T .V . center, double
bed, nothing over 175., Call
a lte r 1:30........................ 123 *24*
L A R R Y ’S M A R T. I l l Sanlord
Ave. New/Used turn. A appl.
B uy/Sell/Trade. 373 4132

3ZIl°Clb4D
■ B B B B
^
ID
/%
7
H I T0U kf
10 II NON
IN KtAI [ S u it

CASSELBERRY: I acre toned
PR 1. MJ.000 W . M a lle io w ik l
R ealtor........................... 323 7713

Sanford’s Salts L ia d tr
W E L IS T A N D 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 RTH
S E M IN O L E COUNTY

20 A CR E S Z O N E D IN O U STR I

Call toil fre t 1-800-321-3720
3 ACRES A T A IR P O R T
E N T R A N C E ................
5 ACRES STATE H IG H W A Y
FR O N TAG E ZO N E D H E A V Y
C O M M E R C IA L ........... 1194.000
131' X 100' LOT ZO N E D H E A V Y
C O M M E R C IA L .............. UO.OOt
140'X 130'CO RN ER ZO N ED
IN D U S T R IA L ON EAST25th

A t S a n fo r d P U c e y o n c a n e n jo y q u ie t c o u n t r y
l i v i n g w i t h t h e c o n v e n i e n c e o f » c lo o e b y lo c a ­
t i o n . T o n c » n c h o o o « C ro a t 6 f l o o r p l e n a f e a t u r ­
in g c a t h e d r a l e e illn g e , m in i b lin d s , u n d e r ­
g r o u n d u t il it ie s , s id e w a lk * e n d y e r d llg h tin g .

M A Y F L O W E R : '0 0 , P a r k
Model. J J 'X r Tip-out*. Neat A
clean 17,100 Bab Owen Travel
Trailers 111 N . M a d e Ave.,

Buy Here.

I t ACRES W ITH LA R G E
FA R M HOUSE ZO N E D
IN D U S T R IA L .............. i;

Two and thro* badroom
•Ingle-family homaa from 553.500,

241— R tc rM tfo n a l
V ehicles /C a m p e rs

Sanford

IVs A C R E S N E A R “ STONE
IS L A N D " 111.500. TE R M S

OnluiK

R EP O S .......R ESA LES........ NEW
Carriage Cove M obile Home
P ark. C om eseeuslt!
Oregery Mablles Hemes. 131-1140
S PR IN O H AM M OCK PK. Hwy
17 93 A 41* Resales from &gt;3000.
Adult community......... 133 0001

BUIC K R E G A L: 'M . 1 doer, V 4.
a ir, pow. steering A brakes.
Many other options. X X -N Icel
14*1 down........Phone:111-1470

COZY 3 bdrm ., owner finance,
only.................................. tis .n o .

321-0759.

JU ST R IG H T FO R Y O U I 3
bdrm ., 1 bath condo, living
room with fpl., fully equipped
kitchen with oak canblnett.
Jnd story unit woth vaulted
J ceilings..... ...................A M M O

Pay Here

.134,100
..137,000
.117,100
..114.500

CANALFRONT TO "LAKE
J E S S U P " 111,000. TE R M S

322-2420
W O U L D Y O U L IK E lo see
Y O U R H O M E advertised here
a t no cost to You? Ask about
our 4% *0 day listing a t...............
F IR S T R E A L T Y IN C ....W 4 0 P
ASSUM ABLE M O R TO A O E,
renovated home, 1 bdrm ., 1
bath, den, Ig living rm , dining
rm , fireplace, fenced back
y a rd , good neighborhood.
M 0 .n 0 ........340-1541 weekdays,
331-1004 eves A weekends

n o v a te d . M U S T S I R h a*
about everything...........131-0131

ON 17 *1 Z O N ED H E A V Y
C O M M E R C IA L *
ACRES

tirpm * n*n* i i i f i

G E N E V A , 10 acres, cen be sold
as 2 live acre parcels, one on
hard road, one with access
behind 1st percel. near tlsh
camp and Laka Harney, hunt
and fish hera In your extra
tim e 142.000, C e ll L inda
Morgan. R ealtor/ Astoclala

USED CARS
Sanlord

DATSUN, 314GX, '12'. 7 C1*3A.
111*5. Sem lnol* Ford, 37M
Hwy. 17 *2................. ,322 1401

bjMhajrer^

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

FO R D QRANAOA:'74 Buy Here
Pay H ere............. Instant Credit

BLACK TO Y POODLE, Female.
4 months old. Asking 175.
Cal!...................................I l l 0*74
TOY BLACK POOOLE- Female.
7 months old. P rice: 175

207— Swap Corner
I ACRE ASSORTED T IM B E R
F R E E tor cutting A hauling.
333-7*71. ALSO Good homa
free for un wanted rabbits.

W ATERFRONTI 5 f
acres,
toned for mobile home and
horses on Lake Little, owner
financing, loo. 135,000, Call
Terry Llvla, Reallor/Assoclata
e O E N E V A OSCEOLA RD. O
ZO N E D FOR M O B ILE S I
1 Acre Country tracts.
W ell treed on paved Rd.
10% Down. l 4 Y r s . a l U % l
From i l l . 5001

S to p b y o u r m o d e l c e n te r to d a y l

323-5076

151— Investm ent
P roperty / Sale
SAVE ON H IG H LABOR COSTS
and build It yoursalf. No down
payment Quality pre-cut m i
terials. Step by step Instruc
lions Call for details or attend
a seminar. .
305 451 1*41

NO CREDH
NO INTEREST

3213 S HWV 17 1?
SANFORD 323 2123

FO R D LTD : ’74. power steering,
power brakes, auto, air. Good
carl ItOOO........................149 5543
FO R D L T D It, '77', 7C1IJC,
117*5. S tm in o l* Ford, 37M
Hwy. 17 *2..... .................322-1411

FO R D M U STAN O :'7» Buy Here
Pay Here............ Instant Credit

B L A N K E T CHEST, Humpback
trunk, 4 oak kitchen chairs,
oak piano bench, drying rack.
appointment only, 323 1775

USED CARS
Sanford
Instant Credit

BOB'S U S E O F U R N IT U R E .
W E TA K E C O N IIG N M EN TS,
B UY OR S E LL.................313-311

PAYMENT

USED CARS

211— A n tiq u e s /
Collectibles

213— Auctions

DOWN

GOOD CREDIT BAD CREDIT

USED CARS
144 ACRES • O S TE E N , Divided
In 5 a c r e p e rc e ls . toned
agriculture, owner financing
w / 20% down. 10 % for 10
years, or other terms. Price
range, 113.500 - 139.500. Call
Red Morgen,
Brokar/Salesman

Call toll free 1 800-321-3720

Q U A O R A PLEX . 2 b d rm , 2 ba .
a p a rtm e n ts , positive cash
How. new b u ild in g , need
QUICK Sale. SIS*.*00. 574 0007
or 321 4790 or 321 $444

LOW

Sanlord
FO R D M U STAN G 7 4 ', C4577A.
1495. Sem lnol# F o rd, 37*4
Hwy, 17 *2...................... 333 1441

BRIDGES AND SON
Auction *v ery Thursday 7 PM.

WE 8UY ESTATES!

2741

830-6688

HWY. 17-92 SANFORD

f WAGON
:R LEBARON
IN TO
BOBCAT
LESABRE
AC DEVILLE
CHARGER
1C

79
79
79
79
78
77
77
78

CAPRICE CLASSIC
DATS0N B210
CONCORD DL
FAIRMONT
VOLARE WAGON
VOLARE WAGON
AMC MATADOR
FAIRMONT 4 DR.

Hwy 44............................. 333 2401

217— G arage Sales
C A R P O R T S A L E I Saturday
only, * III ?. 2431 Laurel Ave. 3
blksolf ol 17 *2 el 37th. St.

O A R A O E S A L E I 1105
M ellonvllla Ave. Saturday I to
5. Furn , Books, a lo tiolm lsc.
I D Y L L W I L D E , Saturday 1 30 lo
3 30, room divider, cabinet,
lots of Levis ( 32X 34), misc
Items. 104 Larkwood Dr.
M O V I N G S A L E I F u rn itu re ,
washer/dryer, etc.. Sal l a m
til noon only, 313 Me Vay Dr.
M O V I N G S AL E : F u rn itu re ,
housewares, bikes, clothes,
etc Sat * 5 , 104 Whispering
Pines Cl , Hidden Lake
M O V IN G SALE: 1140 Longwood
Lake M ary Rd across from
Circle K. Furn , a p p l. clothes,
baby items &amp; much more
Thurs. F rl. &amp; Sat 8am 5:X)pm

COMPLETE DETAIL SERVICE
ASK FOR LUDY
OIL CHANGES • TUNE-UPS • SAFETY INSPECTION
SPEEDY SERVICE! LOW COST!

3219 S. Hwy. 17-92
Sanford

USED CARS

PH. 323-2123
\

�•f* *?~v ■ r*ir*f. • •ry—
—V S —

UK

ia n lw t l H s rs M , t e o f o r i, F I.

-r"T»— * • ,

.

*t *g

t

...Acosta

$ H $ i j , J a n . !♦&gt; H t 7

1A£

S to c k s O p e n M ix e d
A

•

j

•
;

■ NEW YORK (UP!) - Prices opened mixed today
in active trading of New York Stock Exchange
issues.
The Dow Jones industrial average, which
scored its tenth advance in a row Thursday, was
up 2.39 to 2073.11 shortly after the market
opened.
Losers led gainers 421-386 among the 1,263
issues crossing the New York Stock Exchange
tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 11.529,300
shares.
The stock market scored another record­
breaking advance Thursday, sending the Dow
Jones industrial average to its ninth new high of
1987 in the heaviest trading Wall Street has ever

and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted in dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold
Previous close
Morning fixing
Hong Kong

415.50 off 3.75
414.50 ofT 1.00
414.75 oiT 1.75

Now York
Comex spot
.
*
gold open
414.10 ofT 1.80
Comex spot
silver open 5.603 unchanged
(London m orning fixing
change is based on the previous
day’s closing price.)

Lo ca l In fo ro st
These quotations provided by
m e m b e rs o f th e N a t i o n a l
Association o f Securities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
; prices as o f mid-moming today.
Inter-dealer markets change
throughout the day. Prices do
• not Include retail markup or
markdown.
Bid

’ 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
Westlnghousc

j

7%
34%
27%
33
42%
33%
24%
23%
54%
29%
13%
42%
23
50%
65

A sk

7%
35
27%
33%
42%
33%
24%
24%
54%
30
13%
42%
23%
50%
65%

seen.
The Dow has made a total gain o f 175 points
since the start o f 1987. Kidder Peabody A Co. Inc.
analysts said the Dow's 10-day advance was the
first such climb since July 1973.
Analysts said the stock market's advance was
mainly driven by Investors' voracious appetite for
equities.
"It's a frenzy.” said Larry Wachtel. market
analyst at Prudential-Bache Securities Inc. “ The
pension funds, the mutual funds, foreigners, the
public, everyone wants to get in."
Wachtel said the usual guidelines for figuring
out whether the market is nearing the end o f an
advance are irrelevant when the action is so
frantic.

D o lla r E nds S lid e ;
A s G o ld D e c lin e s
B y U n ited P ress Intern ation al

The U.S. dollar fell to its
lowest level In fiv e months
against the Japanese yen but
ended Its week-long slide against
most other major world curren­
cies at the opening o f trading on
major foreign money markets
today. The price o f gold was
lower.
.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, the dollar fell to its lowest
le v e l sin ce last A u gu st 21
against the Japanese yen. clos­
ing out the week at 153.10 yen.
down 0.70 from Wednesday's
close.
The closing Thursday of the
Tokyo foreign exchange market
for a national h olid ay also
seemed to break the downward
momentum, dealers said.
J a p a n 's Fi nance M in ister
Kiichi Miyazawa said again that
Jap an w ould In te rv e n e on
foreign exchange markets to
prop up the sagging dollar.
However. Miyazawa said he
did not consider appropriate an
emergency meeting of finance
ministers and central bankers of
five major industrialized nations,
known as the G-5 group, to
shore up the dollar against the
yen.

D ow Jo n e s

The group agreed In Sep­
tember 1985 to devalue the
dollar against several major
currencies, particularly the yen.
as a way to reduce Japan's huge
trade surplus with the United
States.

Dow Jones Averages — 10 a.m.
30 Indus
2087.88 up 17.15
20 Trans
870.88 up 7.14
15 Utils
223.74 up 0.74
65 Stock
805.12 up 6.02

Since then, the dollar has
d rop ped nearly 50 percent
against the Japanese yen.
In European trading the dollar
opened higher In Frankfurt at

W O R LD
IN BRIEF
U .S. M u st W aive D eath Penalty
In Extradition O f H ija cker

I I

I

BONN. West Germany (UPI) — The United States must
waive the death penalty if it wants West Germany to
extradite an Arab wanted for air piracy and murder in the
1985 hijacking of a T W A Jetliner, the government ^ald
today.
Mohammad All Hamadei was arrested Tuesday on his
arrival in West Germany from Beirut when three bottles of
the nitronltrate high explosive disguised as a grape drink
were found in his hand luggage, authorities said.
Hamadei is one of three Lebanese Shiite Moslems
charged with piracy and murder by the United States in
the hijacking of T W A Flight 847. during which Navy
seaman Robert Stethem was beaten and killed and 39
Americans were held hostage up to 17 days.
Justice Ministry spokesman Juergen Schmid told
reporters today West Germany has received a preliminary
U.S. extradition request for Hamadei. a Lebanese-born
Palestinian, and could extradite the suspect soon if it gets a
formal petition with an indictment.

C hinese Party C hief Resigns
PEKING (UPI) — Hu Yaobang — the second most
powerful man in China for nearly seven years — resigned
his position as chief of the world's largest Communist
Party, the state-run media reported today.
An announcement broadcast on nationwide radio and
television said a special enlarged meeting of the Central
Committee Politburo today unanimously elected Premier
Zhao Ziyang acting general secretary of the Chinese
Communist Party.
A communique issued by the meeting said Hu "m ade a
self-criticism of his mistakes on major Issues of political
principles in violation of the party's principle ot collective
leadership."
It said he requested the Central Committee approve his
resignation.

Blackout Im posed On A rm s Talks
GENEVA (UPI) — U.S. and Soviet negotiators Imposed a
strict news blackout today on the new round of superpower
negotiations on strategic and medium-ranged nuclear
missiles and space-based defense systems.
U.S. delegation leader Max M. Kampclman and his new
Soviet counterpart. Yuli M. Vorontsov, opened the new
round Thursday with a private working luncheon.
The news blackout was so severe that U.S. delegation
spokesman Terry Schroeder was unable to even say how
long the luncheon lasted. Kampelman was seen returning
to the U.S. Embassy after three hours.
The only basic detail released by both sides was the fact
that it was Vorontsov who proposed the luncheon to open
the new round.

1.843 German marks, up from
Thursday's close o f 1.834.
In Zurich the dollar opened at
1.5455 Swiss francs, against
1.5345: in Paris at 6.15 French
fr a n c s , a g a i n s t 6 .1 1 5 ; in
Amsterdam at 2.0735 Dutch
guilders, against 2.073; and In
Milan at 1,311 lire, against
1.303.50.
In London, the pound sterling
opened at $1.5045, against
Thursday's close o f f 1.50525.
In early New York trading the
dol l ar was s l i g h t l y h ig h e r
against all major foreign cur­
rencies In light trading.
Gold prices opened $1.50
o u n c e l o w e r in Z ur i c h
$414.50 per troy ounce and
$1 In London to $414.50
ounce.

an
at
fell
an

The morning fixing in London
was $ 4 1 4 .5 0 . o f f $1 fro m
Thursday’s close.
Silver opened unchanged in
Zurich at $5.55 per troy ounce
and edged slightly higher In
London, opening at $5.5825
against T h u rsday's close o f
$5.58 an ounce.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, gold closed out the week at
$414.75 an ounce on the Hong
Kong Bullion Exchange, o ff
$1.75 from Thursday's close.
In early trading on New York's
Comex. a 100-troy-ounce gold
futures contract for current de­
livery in January opened at
$414.10 an ouncr. off $1.80
f r o 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 January
opened at $5,603, unchanged
from Thursday.

...Parking
Continued from page 1A

parking lot. and also parking
meters for the downtown area.
Both proposals are contained In
the preliminary report, with the
meters suggested to help pay for
the $4 million deck.
The deck was supported by
architect Gerry Gross, who is
re-designing shops on First
Street. Gross said it could be Just
one level above ground Instead
of the four proposed by the
consultant and have walkway
access to First Street. The deck
would be built on the city's

”

Falling to sign the house away and due In
Miami to work on his taxes. Acosta w as kept In
Orlando by heavy rain and started drinking, he
said. When he went home that night after
drinking too much, he was armed with a .38.
Mias Montero. who loved Acosta but had
declined to m an y him in fear he would think she
did so for his money, let him in. She said he was
pale. T hey exchanged w o rd s then walked
towards the large home’s master bedroom where
the children had been sleeping with their mother.
Acosta lost control.
The first shot struck Miss Montero in the chest.
It came out her back. Acosta then shot the girl in
the legs or sent the bullet through the sleeping
boy's oraln. No one knows for sure- in which
order. Turning, he shot Mias Montero a second
time, in her back. The bullet came out her side.
Fleeing, she tried frantically to open the front
door. She couldn't. Behind her Acosta w as yelling
he w as going to kill her and solve all their
problems. But the gun was empty so he beat her
with a liquor bottle, he said. He tried to choke her.
Acosta said during the hearing he could, not
remember all o f the Incident, although he
reportedly told two court-appointed psychiatrists
about it. Earlier during the hearing. Acosta
calmly accused Assistant State Attorney Don
Marblestone of being an over-zealous prosecutor.
"Y o u r honor." said Acosta speaking though
Spanish interpreter Florence Vanhiaaenhoven of
Altamonte Springs. " I want to say to you that I
took. made, the decision to plead guilty in the
greater scale than m y score came to because I did
not want to arrive at this position of having to
stand before my Margarita, m y wife, the mother
of my son. And. on the other hand, because of my
personal criteria. I understand that your honor
has told me that Mr. Marblestone is a professional
and I respect him as that. But I reel he has
exceeded somewhat In his manner of dealing with
me. that he has tried to Invent things."
He said Marblestone looked Into the rela­
tionships of family members, accusing him of
creating Issues where none existed.
M arblestone w a s undaunted by A costa's
assessment of the prosecution.
"A ll charging documents used to say a crime
was committed against the 'peace and dignity of
the state of Florida." Marblestone said.
"Nothing is more against the peace and dignity
of the state of Florida or society than the killing of
an Innocent child while sleeping," Marblestone
told McGregor.
Marblestone acknowledged that Acosta's sen­
tence nearly guaranteed he would be an old man

...Protest
C ontinued fro m page 1A

for purposes of setting bond and
following the refusals of the pair,
asked if either was making any
claim to being under the age of
18. John Doe 5 responded "In
spirit, perhaps."
" I am reluctant to order them
held for a petty offense but with
the lack of Identity. I have no
choice."
.
The two Does were taken,
handcufTcd. back to Jail to await
arraignment.
Tw o observers In the magis­
trates courtroom , citing
■friendship with the arrested pair.
Jubilantly
claim ed to have
helped delay th e T h u rsd ay

municipal field, between the
Seminole County Courthouse
and the Sanford Post office.
The consultant's recommen­
dation would add 410 spaces to
the 360 in the municipal lot
there.
A study proposal to make part
of First Street Into a one-way
route apparently won’t come to
fruition as a result of repre­
sentatives comments Wednes­
day. Mardersaid.
Another proposal, to synchro­
nize First Street's traffic lights,
was offered by Gross and would
probably cost about $40,000.
Marder said.
Farr cautioned about avoiding

when he got out of prison. But. be said, the boy'
was r o b b e d o f a b o u t TO years of life ..
Miss Montero. also from Cuba, baked McGregor
to be lenient. She said her dead son would aak for
m e r c y and that she. for refusing to let Acosta sell
the house, was also guilty for her son's death. She
asked McGregor not to look at th e color
photographs o f the death scene the state
presented at the hearing for McGregor to view.
She asked him not to place the father of her
10-month-old son and adopted father of her
daughter and deceased son in Jail for 40 years. It
was but a "moment of m adness" she said, and
she forgives. If she can forgive him. she asked,
why can't society.
"W h y now do you Insist on hurting us?" she
asked, lo sin g her c o m p o s u r e as Mrs.
Vanhiaaenhoven finished the translation.
McGregor, who complained the attorneys were
presenting the same information and arguments
as they did at the December plea hearing, took
several minutes to think about what the sentence
would be. He had listened to 2% hours of
testimony and arguments.
"Sentencing Is the most difficult part of a
Judge's function," said McGregor as he turned
pages of a presentencing Investigation Into
Acosta’s background. It Included a previous
conviction of dealing In stolen property in Miami
and comments about his life under the commu­
nist regime In Cuba. There w as also the attempt
of Miss Montero to marry Acosta after his arrest,
to show her love for the ruined man. But officials
would not allow it.
"For a moment of time in his life, (Mr. Acosta)
found himself in a position where he was
prompted to do an extreme act that I don't believe
would likely occur again." the Judge s a id ..
McGregor, who described himself as a busisaid Acosta placed business credit
above that of his family life.
"That's being too much of a businessman." he
said.
He issued the 35-year sentence then ordered
Acosta to remain on probation for the rest of his
life after the prison term and to pay $9,673.77 In
funeral and medical expenses. He also sentenced
him to serve 3 years for attempted first-degree
m urder of Miss Montero, 3 years for the
attempted second degree murder of the girl and
15 years probation for shooting In the house. The
sentences are to run concurrent with the
second-degree murder sentence. McGregor also
gave Acosta credit for 200 days already served In
the Seminole County Jail.

According to comments made by Acosta's
attorney, Jerry Luxenberg o f Orlando. Acosta will
probably have to serve at least 17% years of the
sentence before becoming eligible for parole.

a complete success." said Lt.
Cmdr. Robert Pritchard, a Navy
spokesman. " I t looks like it
operated as advertised."
The unarmed rocket soared in
a clear blue sky above "Cancel
the Countdown" protesters, who
for seven days had attempted to
disrupt the launch by sneaking
past Air Force security in what
they call occupation tactics.
Nine protesters were arrested
Thursday when they crossed the
yellow security line painted on
the highway at the air station's
south gate.
"W e feel we were successful in
disrupting and postponing the
l a un c h t w i c e . " s a id J u d y ___
F r e l w l r t h w i t h N ajL iorfa l
Mobilization for Survival, one of
t hr e e a n t i - n u c l e a r g r o u p s
participating In the protests.
"But more importantly, wc
have raised the consciousness o f
First S treet's becom ing too
the people in Florida and around
much of an express route, with
the nation that the Trident-2 is a
drivers missing downtown's at­ first-strike offensive weapon."
tributes.
she said.
"Nothing (from the session)
Navy and Air Force officials
has been set In
concrete."
flatly denied the protesters had
Marder said. "T h is was Just a
any effect on the launch.
chance to get everyone together,
Frelwlrth said a rally would be
to receive their opionlons and
held today at Jetty Park, south
c o m m e n t a r y on the st udy
of the Trident launch pad. as
draft."
Spock, the pediatrician-peace
T h ose at the session had
activist, arrived from his home
received a copy of the 45-page
in the Virgin Islands.
study beforehand. Freem an
The protest Is to culminate
spent about 40 minutes sum­ Saturday with Spock leading a
marizing Its highlights and dis­ march to the air station and
cussing how recommendations, m any o f the dem onstrators
were developed before the floor
crossing the security line to be
was opened for Input.
arrested.
m orn in g launch for "th r e e
hours." They then advised the
prisoners not to worry, that the
demonstrators would be going to
Sebring from Cape Canaveral to
support the dozens of protestors
arrested and held at that city.
A bailiff declined to confirm
the holding of activist-prisoners
in Sebring. but he also declined
to deny the Information with the
comment that "Sebring is about
midway between the coasts and
we want to keep them away
from the water."
A p p r o x i m a t e l y 58 d e ­
monstrators have been arrested,
all for trespassing on federal
property, and are being held in
various jails, Including Seminole
County.
Regarding the launch. "It was

AREA DEATHS
LINA B A IR Y
Mrs. Lina Ruth Balry, 71. of 28
Gat e h o us e Court, Car r i age
Cove.. Sanford, died Tuesday at
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal. Born Aug. 22. 1915, in
Elmira. N.Y., she moved to
Sanford in 1966 from Montour
Falls. N.Y. She was a retired
police officer In Montour Falls.
She is survived by three sis
ters. Naomi Pelow, Sanford
Alice Devendorf. Bethel. Conn.
Katherine (Clarinda) Keach, Dc
Itona; two brothers. George Van
Nordstrand. Horseheads. N.Y.
Fay Van Nordstrand. Millport
N.Y.
G r a mk o w Fune r al H om e
Sanford, in charge of arrange
ments.
W ILLIE FUQUAY
Mr. Willie T. Fuquay. 48. of
1016 Willow Ave.. Sanford, died
Thursday at his residence. Bom
Oct. 6. 1938 In Chauncey, Ga..
he moved to Sanford in his early
years from there. He was a citrus
worker and a Baptist.
Survivors include his mother.
Daisy Fuquay, Sanford, father.
Otis Fuquay. Sanford; sisters.
Juan ita McFarltn. Ineda
Jackson, both of Boston; daugh­
ter. Tanya. Sanford, and one
grandson.
Sunrise Funeral Home. San­
ford. In charge of arrangements.
BERTHA GUSSOW
Mrs. Bertha Gussow, 86. of
101 Esplande Way. Casselberry,
died Wednesday at Park Lake
Health Care Center. Winter Park.

Bom July 11. 1900 in New York,
she moved to Casselberry from
Queens. N.Y.. in 1983. She was a
homemaker and a member of
the Congregation Ohev Shalom.
Orlando.
Survivors include a son. Abe,
Athens. Tenn.; daughter. Mrs.
Laura Solonche. Jerusalem; six
grandchildren, and 12 great­
grandchildren.
Beth Shalom Memorial Cha­
pel, Orlando, in charge o f ar­
rangements.
ADOLPH SCHREIBER
Mr. Adolph O. Schrelbcr. 67. of
1550 Warwick Place, Long wood,
iled Wednesday at Seminole
C o m m u n i t y H o s p i t a l In
Longwood. Bom March 23. 1919
in Akron. Ohio, he moved to
Longwood from Oakland. Calif,
in 1983. He was a retired Arm y
first sergeant and a Protestant.
He was a 33rd-degree Mason in
Columbus. Ohio, and a Shriner,
in Seattle.
Survivors include his wife.
Doris; daughters. Louise Brown,
Pal m Bay. De d r a T h o ma s ,
Hayward. Calif.; sons. Kevin.
Oakland. Robert. Longw ood:
sisters. Gert rude Prinz, St.
Petersburg. Clair Fisher. Kent,
Ohio: b ro th e r s . R ob ert
Murfreesboro. Tenn.. Earhart.
Colum bia. S.C.; four gran d ­
c h i l d r e n . and f o u r g r e a t ­
grandchildren.
Bal dwl n- Fal r chi l d Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs, in
charge of arrangements.

B E LLE H ARVEY
JU LIA ROBINSON
Mrs.
Belle
Harvey. 86. of 1502
Mrs. Julia Robinson. 87. of
1705 Strawberry Ave., Sanford, Grant S t.. L o n g w o o d . died
died Thursday at Central Florida Thursday at Longwood Health
Regional Hospital. Bom March Care Center. Bom Feb. 28. 1901
15. 1899 in Edgefield. S.C.. she In Banta. Ind., she moved to
moved to Sanford from there In L on gw ood from O rlando in
1921. She was a homemaker 1984. She was a retired restau­
and a member of Mt. Sinai rant worker and a member of
Faith Baptist Church. Orlando.
Missionary Baptist Church.
Survivors Include a daughter,
Survivors include two sons.
Ada
Hart. Orlando; brother.
Benny Robinson. Masury. Ohio,
Louis
Brunnemer. Beech Grove.
Robert Robinson. Sanford; two
daughters. Juanita R. Brinson, Ind., and two grandchildren.
W. Guy Black Funeral Home.
Sanford. Maeoia Harris. Geneva,
Orlando,
in charge o f arrange­
N.Y.; one sister, Fannie Mealing.
ments.
Edg e f i e l d. S .C .; 23 g r a n d ­
c h i l d r e n : 29 g r e a t ­
grandchildren. and one great- F u n e ra l N o tic e $
great grandchild.
T E R R E L L . V E R IL E E
Wllson-Elchelberger Mortuary
—Funaral services lor V e rlle * T errell. 4t.
ot 1302 W illia m * Ave . Sanford, who p atiad
in charge of arrangements.
VERILEE TERRELL
Mr. Vcrllee Terrell. 49. of 1502
W illiam s Ave.. Sanford, died
Wednesday at Florida Hospltal-Altamonte. Born Aug. 15.
1937 in Colquitt. Ga.. he moved
to Sanford in 1939. He was a
restaurant cook and a member
of First Shiloh Missionary Bap­
tist Church.
Survivors include his mother.
Mrs. Rosa Coachman. Sanford;
ei ght sisters, Emma Geter.
Annie Joyce Murphy, Delores
Te r r e l l . El enor a C oppedge.
Sheree Denise Hollis. Juanita
Redding, all of Sanford. Betty
Rutley and Altamease Ivey.
Rochestct, N.Y.
Wilson-Elchelbergcr Mortuary
in charge of arrangements.

away Wadn«*day. w ill b# hold 3 p.m . Monday
at First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church.
700 E lm St.. Sanlord. with Pastor H arry D.
Rucker officiating Intsrm ant to follow In
Rtstlawn Cam atary. Calling hours for frlands
will b* hald from 4 4 p.m . Sunday at tha
Chapal. W ilson-Elchalbargar M ortu ary In
charga.
ROBINSON, J U L IA
— Funaral sarvlcas for M rs. Julia Robinson,
17. of 1703 Straw barry A v *.. Sanford, who
passad away Thursday, w ill b * hald at M t.
Sinai Missionary Baptist Church. 1100 Jarry
Ava . Sanford. Tuasday at 3 p.m . with Pastor
Lao R. M yars officiating. Interm ent to follow
In Rastlawn Cam atary. Calling hours for
frlands w ill ba hald Monday Irom $ 7 p m. at
tha Chapal. W ilson-Elchalbargar M ortuary In
charga.

I DIRECT CREMATION $ 3 9 5 1

O A KLA W N
FU N ERA L HOME
CtU f m Ti m fre c S w f

322-4203
Eat. 1 9 0 4
n, mh r»*wW MMM/C«aWry/Saa«Mf* Cmutt

�Complete Wook't TV Listing*

�J—Sanford HtnM, Sanferd, FI.

----

Friday, Jaw. H, 1W7

...Relief
Continncd form page I

Sanford's Florida Victorian!
Architectural Antiques Is the
salvation of many examples of
relief art that In years past
adorned area businesses and
homes. Through that
company's salvage efforts,
intricately carved mantels and
cast metal panels that once
were the facade of business
establishments have a second
chance to be woven into the
fabric of a contemporary home
or business.
"People are looking for a lot
of detail. It's not just wood, but
has something more to catch
the eye," said Tom Custer of
that company.
Custer pointed out that on one
mantel the relief adornment on
the pillars had been cast In
plaster, while the ribbon design
across the face was carved of
wood and then applied to the
wooden mantel.
Even the more simple homes
of a bygone era were likely to
have some form of relief art
built Into the decor. More posh
buildings would even have
decorative relief cast hardware
to add a Midas touch to the
doors.
Today's fanciers of
architectural relief art may
have to come up with a creative
plan for Incorporating salvaged
decorative panels Into their
homes. But, Custer said, a
17*foot work of relief art pulled
from the front of a demolished
business might be |ust the
ticket to add a special touch to

|

a wall where a typical painting
| ust wouldn't do the trick.
Relief sculptors have also left
their m ark on home
furnishings. Today, a
woodcarver, according to
woodcarver and teacher Dan
DeMendoza of Sanford, can
take a plain, unfinished,
mass-produced piece of wood
furniture bought at a discount
house, and transform It with
relief carving Into a work of
art.
" It depends on how far a
person wants to go with It,"
DeMendoza, 64, said. "They
may want to keep It fairly
simple or they may want to
make It complicated."
The methods and tools used to
add floral designs or other
figures In wood relief sculpture
may vary, he said, depending
on the design and the item to be
carved. Also, a similar effect
may be obtained by carving the
design separately creating an
applique to be glued In place.
A relief carving Is the
starting point for students who
take DeMendoza'5 leisure time
carving classes at Seminole
Community College. Most, he
said, can master the craft and
many move up to great
advancement In the technique.
Such wood relief sculpture
can be found In fine antique
furnishings, created In bygone
days when even the most
simple objects were likely to be
adorned by a patient
craftsman.
The Idea of relief also thrives
in contemporary art. Variations
on the theme, sculptures that
hang from surfaces or paintings
that pop out of canvases thrive

among today's artistic efforts.
Even qullters who stuff
sections of their creations to
make them stand out from the
total piece are creating relief
sculptures In fabric form.
Relief has "always been a
useful tool to artist," said
Judith Zllzcer of the
Smithsonian Institution.
"Modernist techniques, such as
collage and assemblage, have
joined traditional modeling and
carving as ways to build up a
surface, to have an image*
bounce off the wall.
"Because relief Is both
tactile, like a sculpture, and
illuslonlstic, like a painting, it
poses an Inherent contradiction
that has continued to challenge
and inspire artists," who
consider what Is missing In
their work, where the shadows
play within the design to be as
important as the object.

First, Let's Kill The Law yers
By M ark Schwed
UPI TV Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) Two of my younger
brothers are rich, fatcat
lawyers, and I admit to
a tinge o f Jealousy over
their Jacuzzis, fancy
cars, luxurious
aceanfront condos and
landscaped designer
homes In Miami.
1covet their goods.
On my last visit to
one of them there was
a big trauma when I
broke a crystal cham­
pagne glass In the hot
tub. Yce gads, not the
hot tub.

5 WAYS TO
INCREASE THE
VALUE OF YOUR HOME

R e p la c e m e n t
W nw ow i

n
W mmF
■

■

BURNS &amp; SONS
ALUMINUM
C o m o its Aluminum Service

■. 1 F ln a n c lh g A v a ila b le

7 4 4 In d u s try R o a d , L o n g w o o d , FL 3 2 7 5 0

Phone: 831 *0522
S
toleC
ertifiedC
ontractor

Toll Free: 1•800-432-1874
aCACOI 2929

A lawyer friend of
one brother has a pro­
blem relating to his
lifestyle. You see, he
owns a very flashy
Porsche, but he can't
park It at the airport.
Three times thugs
h a v e s ma s h e d hl s
windows and ripped ofT
his 81.000 car stereo.
And It's a real hassle
filling out those insur­
ance forms. So he has
his secretary drive him
to the airport.
If these are the pro­
blems of young legal
e a g l e s t o d a y , no
wonder people both

You CAN Fool
Mother Nature!

Keep Mother Nature from freezing
your plants with a greenhouse!
• Fully Equipped
• Best Prices

• Sizes 6'x8' to 12’x24'
• C all For FREE Brochure

C .
OPEN
7 UTS

m

The Storage Expects

Lm | w m 4

699-9340

ad m ire
t h e m .

and

despise
E v e n

Shakespeare thought
t h e m c o n t e mp t i b l e .
“ The first thing we do,
let's kill all the law­
yers," the bard wrote
In Henry VI, Part II.
In the opening o f
"Ethics on T ria l," a
one-hour PBS special
a i r i n g J a n . 21
( WMFE- TV, Channel
24 In Orlando does not
have the show sched­
uled). CBS News corre­
spondent Fred Graham
points out that the
p u b l i c has more
esteem for used car
salesmen than lawyers.
Even Journalists out­
rank lawyers in public
esteem, a fact that riles
my brothers to no end.
"There's an old Mex­
ican curse — may your
life be filled with law­
yers," Graham says be­
fore getting to the meal
of "Ethics on Trial.”
T h e s p e c i a l , p ro ­
d u c e d by W E T A
W a s h i n g t o n , D. C. ,
l o o k s at A m e r i c a ' s
love-hate relationship
with lawyers and asks
whet he r the phrase
"legal ethics" Is a con­
tradiction In terms. Are
lawyers ethical, or are
t h e y J us t m o n e y gr ubbi ng . a m b u l a n ­
ce-chasing elitists? Are
they defenders o f truth,
or hard-core capitalists
more concerned with
Jacuzzis thanjusticc?
In order to Judge the
program Impartially,
we must first set aside
our disgust and envy
for the lawyer lifestyle.
A c c o r d i n g t o t he
special, lawyers have
far more serious pro­
blems than where to
park the Porsche.

�Stntanl

TELEVISION

Sanfort, FI.

FrW»y, J*w. H, 1W7 -3

J a n u a ry 16 T h ru J a n u a r y 2 2

Specials
SATURDAY

® 0

Of The Week

too

11:30

laaturing national covaraga f
Now York and Loa Angate
hoata Nancy Ouaa
rH w iO tif wOTWi n m a r , P itn e y
__ -a i i

WwwBs T O

(10) NATIONAL

m o tj t

1040

(1E| EAST OF OCOOENTAL

■ |W | m p i ftiSl C lim i Owl. ■! iiiy B i2 » ^ S n ! r ^ i* w V l5

nmofrion, uvnrav jvnii, niynv

7.00

•

TNa portrait of SaatEara M em aItonal Otatricl

MEMTiiing wCiiiTi* Of c w D r H p aisy

(T S C M S T O flV M IA K Q

•

TUESDAY

WEEKENO WITH THE
S T A M TELETHON A Hmd-rater

S B A S W S M S5SS3L-.—

n

u i| „ ( »—

hit arwm
constant
ama^^waa chaAsnoss
—
n
n^^^w saw
to a W
i s aiAw
a r
mg'on wor policy ara tha tocua of
r

THURSDAY

in n conimumg DfrOgrapny wMMMI DO

award elnrilnq producer*
WNam Manchoatar’a booh. (Pari 3
3.-00
4 Carai H u j w M n a
• (10) W BO AT 0 N T B F M B W pride of Iona during matr noctural
• (10) LAWRENCE OF ARABIA:
hunt tor food In SeuVi Africa'* T V S Organ buidar Oano Badlant ia
THE MASTER ILLUEIOMfT TNa
organ for
tor
nfUQSr PunonH p o t . rucnw u w w y aaan working on a trackar OfQifv
M0
portreya tha Mo ol
a church In Orar
, Mich. In
la h o narrator. In atarao. Q
® • N A T IO N A L BONOWRfTER Thome* Edward Lawrence and «
11J0
AWARDS From NuhvMa, Tana, plena lha motive* of Bmaa who M• ® NAACF M AOS AW AAM
EVEMNQ
orlng lha year's lop country song* ra te d by Na accidental daaih.
From the WWam Theatre In Loa Artand their w rites aa Mtactad by Mu­
gataa: Vw tW i annual awtrda pro­
M0
IfcOO
gram lo honor M M d u aia and eor- ® 0 OUT ON A UMB Shirley sic City New* subscribers. Catiagorpcradona. oho hava mado poaHIva Maclalna, Anna Jackaon and
LVED WITH DEATH ANO SUR­
contribution* lo lha Imagaa ol black Charlaa Dane# atar m tNa dramat­ country, country rock, movia aong
isation of lha autobiographical boat and country aong of tha yaar. Hon­ VIVAL Based on a San Frandaco
Sammy Davit J r ,* S tte * Wondar, •attar mat chronldao Shirley Mac- ored with tha President1* Award wM theatricsi production. FHmmakara
Meleokn-Jamal Wamar. Louia Ooa- Lama'a quaal lor paychic aaH-dia- bo (ingar Eddy Arnold. Hoata: Pa­ Robert Epstein and P a te Adair ex­
aatt Jr., Paul Simon and Ban covary Tonight; Shirtay-a nonstop trick Duffy, Mario Osmond. (Lfvaon amine AlOS' impact an lha gay
community through theatrical per­
Vartan; alto, a tributa lo apaca concart achadulo and an unfuHWIng Jan. 30 at 3 p.m. EST) In ateao.
ahullla ChaJIangar aatronaut raiationaNp with a Brittah poatidan ■
110) THE CONSERVATIVES formance excarpfa. penonal narra­
prompt har to quaatlon har roio
From lha IM S Aigar Hlaa-WNtiakar tion and kit e slent with the play*
Ronald McNair.
Chamber* espionage cava to tha actors, w rites and directors.
®
f l WCKKENO WITH THE Ufa. (Part lo l 3 |g
Raagan presidency, tha American
STARS TELCTHON A hjnd-i altar
12:90
Conm t v diva movement'* davaiop- 0 ACE AWARDS The eighth annu­
benefiting victim* of carat*af palay
laaturing national covaraga from
mant as a major pomleal forca Is al ceremony honoring aicaienca m
Hm York and loa Angalta with
aiaminad. Among thoaa Intar- cable horn the W kten Theatre In
viawad: Barry Goldwatar, C la n Loa Angate. Among the*# nomi­
hoata Nancy Ouaaautt. Floranca
am m aiaate
Handaraon. Dannia Jam#*, Wayna
Booth# Luca and WIHam F. Buck lay nated m the 60 categories ara BNly
Jr.
Nawton. John RHtar, Nancy Morgan
Crystal, Patar O'Tool*, Robert Car11:00
Fuller and Henry Wlnklar.
■ (10) M REMEMBRANCE OP Q l ACC AWARDS Tha eighth annu­ radio#. Susan Sarandon, Barbara
al
ceremony
honoring
axcoManca
in
1
Straisend and Robin WMfame.
MARTM Formar Proaidant Jimmy
Cartar. BW Coaby and tha Rav. cable Irom tha Wiltam Theatre in
Los
Angate.
Among
thoaa
nomi­
Jeue Jackton ara among thoaa
M
O
F
N
N
G
•ta n In ttwa tributa to tha Rav. Mar­ nated m tha SO categories ara BJty
EVEMNQ
lin luthar King Jr. Indudad ara ar­ Crystal P a te O'Toole, Robert Car500
chival footagt and highlight* from radm*. Susan Sarandon, Barbara
7.-00
®
O
WEEKEND WITH THE mamorial caramonte hold In IM S. Stratend and Robin WMlama. Co­
• (10) AMERICAN CAESAR Nar­
STARS TELETHON A tund-faiaar
hosts: Garry Shandkng and Bema- ration by John CoKcos and John
banafltlng victim* ol carabral palay
dalla Paters.
EVENING
Huston re-creates G oa Douglas
laaturing national covaraga Irom
MacArt hut'• victory at Layla, where
10:00
Now York and loa Angola* with
MO
hoata Nancy DuaaauM, Floranca ® o OUT ON A UMB Skeptical • ® UNSOLVED UV8TENK 8 An ha fultta Ns promise to return lo
Handaraon, Dannia Jama*, Wayna cohort* Bala Abiug and agant examination ol bizarre caaa histo­ the Philippine*, end hie commend
Nawton, John Ritter, Nancy Morgan Mori Vkwr watch a* Shirtay gala ries Including a Wyoming man who 01 the occupation forces In postwar
Japan. (Part Sol 5)Q
flitte and Harry Wlnklar.
more Involved In mataphyiica; a was found l hra * years attar ha van­
ished
without
leaving
a
trace,
a
72visit to a tr»nc# channeiar m Sww10:00
AFTERNOON
f f l POINTER SISTERS... UP
dan and a moating with a "spiritual year-old Michigan woman who •
claims
lo
be
lha
lost
daughter
of
12:30
ALL NTS Anita. Ruth and June
guida," who la id * har on a
■ (10) MQH WIRE A portrait ol months'-long Irak Into lha Anda t, aula magnate John Dodge, and a Pointer are joined by comic actress
tightrope waikar Philippa Pttlt a* cinch Maclaina's belief in tha Im­ look at lha death ol an Oklahoma Whoopi Goldberg and "Moonlghtha praparaa tor a 1662 walk at lha mortality of tha human soul. Star* man •• a murder that may ba part of log " co-star, Bruce Witts, lor an
Calhadral ol St. John tha Dtvin# in Shirtay Maclaino and John Hoard. | a nationwide series of contract kill­ evening ol music from various chibs
Now York City. (R)
in lb * Los Angat e area In stereo.
(Part 2 of 3 )0
ings. Host: Raymond Burr.

a

oisig

m

M0

®J5

m

MONDAY

SUNDAY

F R ID A Y

Sports On The Air
SATURDAY
MORNING

8:00
(Q WRESTLING
AFTERNOON

12:30
e ®

WRESTLING

1:00

4:30

1:30

r

0 ( 1 1 ) SENIOR BOWL Top college
5:35
4:00
seniors Irom the North sr* pitted
FI3HIN1 WITH ORLANDO WIL­ ® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
agelnsl the best from the South in
Louisville el Purdue (Uve)
this annual grid-iron classic, from SON
Mobile. Ala (Live)
EVENING

as

2:00

6:05

® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL (Q) WRESTLING
VWanova st Virginia (Live)

2:30

EVEMNQ

EVENING

(Q NBA BASKETBALL Los Angeles
Lakers at Indiana Pscers (Uve)
(Subtect lo bieckoul)

4:00

8:05

7:00

OS WRESTLING

10:00
(Q&gt; SPORTS PAGE

3:00

AFTERNOON
® O PBA BOWLING I1W.OOO
AC-Deico Classic, Uve Irom Union
12:00
Square Lanes In Union City. Call)
0 ) («) COLLEGE BASKETBALL Al­ a ® UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC AS­
SOCIATION: FLORIDA BASKET­
abama at Mississippi (Uvs)
BALL

THURSDAY

4:30

O ® PGA GOLF Bob Hop*
Chrysler Classic, final round. (Uve)

SUNDAY

■ ® COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Regional coverage ol Miami at Kan­
MORNING
sas or Arkansas t l Houston or
Bradley at Alabama-Birmingham
11:30
(Taped)
0 ® WRESTLING

® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Nevada-Las Vagas at Oklahoma
(Live)

W EDNESDAY

B ® POA GOLF Bob Hop* ® O HANK PARKER FISHING
Chrysler Classic, third round. (Uve)
EVEMNQ
QD O WOE WORLD OF 8PORT8
2:00
Scheduled: Ironman Triathlon ® O COLLEGE BASKETBALL
8:00
World Championship, horn Kona, Louisiana Stale al Kentucky (Uve!
0 (10) AN EVENING OF CHAMPI­
Hawaii (Taped)
ONSHIP SKATING U S. amateur
and professional skates star In thia
4:35
3:00
Harvard University skating e iN b i­
IQ) SALTWATER*ANGLER
• ® 8PORT 8WORLD Scheduled: llon that Include* a filmed retroWorld
Professional
Figure
Skating
5:05
tiv# of lorn.ar champions
OS FISHING WITH ROLAND MAR­ Championships. Irom Capital Cen­
(!) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
tra In Lenoover. Md. (Taped)
Kentucky at Vanderbilt (Live)
TIN

F R ID A Y
EVENING

7:30

MONDAY

1:00 e a t e m a i i O H *A
. ™
BASKETBALL
0O ® COLLEGE W
Nm ULL
t)
North Csrokna State al North Cero- iSubiWCt lo
Hna(Uva)

EVENING

8:05

O (11) NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawk* at Boston Celtics (Live)

8:05

(ED NBA BASKETBALL te w York
Knicks at Houston Rockets (Live)
(Subject to blackout)

BASKETBALL Atlanta
Detroit pistons (Uve)
10:30
blackout)
(Ol MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED

AU.MTam.DKKW
Angle fumed lo k a rri that Jcaoe and
Yvonne had a rendezvous whan Yvonne
waa living in Chicago. Roe* gloated lo
Adam that he didn't deatroy Palm er’*
research program because Palm er moved
the rearsrehen out of stale. Phoebe and Langley relum ed lo Pine V alley, but
Hillary stayed on In Paria and dated Jean
Louia B .o u et. a Frenchm an. Brooke
agreed lo run Tempo M agarlnc (or Adam,
wt-o moved Ihe magasine headquarter* lo
P.V. Natalie slapped Roes, who klaaed her
passionately. Mark snorted cocaine when
Brooke Insisted that he gel help to lick his
addiction. Angle feels lh a l J e ff la a
wonderful and dedicated doctor. M all
bought the Ron-Du-Voo nightclub. Jesse
let Yvonne more In wtlh him and Angle
after learning lhal Yvonne Is III. Roe* kept
m um that on A dam '* orders. Natalie broke
Into Cortland! Laboratories. Julie Is miffed
that Charlie spends all his lim e studying.
A N O TH E R W O R L D
Mary was shocked to learn that her
"attacker" waa Vince. Mary and Ada kept
Vince's presence a secret from the police.
Peler Is very Interealed In district a t­
torney. Peggy Lazarus. M ilch hacked
away from Rachel and apologized for
disrupting her life with Mac. The poller
don't hare any proof that Gomez druggrd
D o n n a . M ic h a e l s e a rc h e d f o r th e
mysterious photo that caused Donna lo
freak out at Ihe lim e Reginald showed II In
hrr. Vince was livid that M ary suggested
h r drop his vrn d rtla against Reginald and
lu m himself In to the police. Rose warned
Rachel never lo give up Mac. Victoria
decided lhal she wants lo leave (own so
that site ran gel out Irom under M trharl's
and Reginald's thumb. Adam was upset
when M J. refused In m rri his parents.
Greg nipped when he spoiled Nancy and
Tony In a romantic rllnch. Mac aharrd
Hose's birthday with her and reunited her
with Sarah. M J. had a run-in w ith Chad.
A S T H E W O R LD TU R N S
Lucinda warned Tonlo lh al If he wants
lo Inherit h rr business empire, he'd better
curb his womanizing ways and reeonrlle
with S irrra. Someone using John's name
sold Ihe ruckle lhal was stolen from
Firmly. John learned Ihe seller of ihe
ruckle Is connected lo Howard. H arrlrt
rautlonrd Shannon not lo get Invnlvrd
with Duncan again. Howard set out for
London. Peler adm itted lo Bob and Seth
lhal Mona had a very hefty savings
account. Rick, w ho’s really in rahools
with Howard, warned lhal John Is gelling
suspicious of Ih rm . Frannle'a friend
Jorlyn look note of Peter's phone number.
Iva and Lucinda sparred over Lily again.
Barbara warnrd Emily lo stay away from
James because h r Is big trouble. Emma
broke up with John a flrr learning that hr
had krpt m um about Meg's pregnancy
■care. Tom has been offrred a Joh In
W ashington. C o rln nr arid Jam es are
plotting to takr over Lucinda's business.
C A P IT O L
Crawford forced Angelica to give him
more payoff money. Meredith ad m ltlrd to
Dylan that she's In love w ith him . All
consoled Sloanr after Mark's funeral. Trey
Ihlnks of Krlly whenever he makes love lu
Angelica. K rlly rrallzes lh a l Thom as
wants more lhan friendship from Ihelr
relationship. Baxter oskrd W ally lo help
him reconcile with Clarissa. Sloanr and
All went oil lo a secluded cabin together.
Ihen he asked her lo m arry him . Wally
and Brenda are looking for Ihe right lim e
to tell Dylan lhal they're In love. Lranne
believes lhal Trey and Kelly still love ra i h
other.
D A T S OP OUR L IV E S
Patch spent time In Jail after Roman
Irarn rd that he had stolen, and then
relum ed, rv ld rn rr that points to Kimberly
as Em m a’s killer. Roman said goodbye to
Olivia and rushed home lo help Kimberly.
Alex testified that Kimberly had once tried
(o kill Emma. Kimberly told Ihe Judge that
ihe "altrm p trd killing" was part of a plot
lo get E m m a lo r e v e a l A n d r e w ’ s
whereabouts. Roman Is suspicious of

Adrienne s Interest In Patch. Kayla m s
rorccd to share her pad w ith Adrienne,
who said she had been robbed. Robin waa
pleased lo learn that Mike plans lo convert
lo the Jewish faith. Chris and Leslie spent
m ore tim e together outside the courtroom.
Frankie eras disappointed when Jennifer
said she'll w ill as long as necessary to
patch up her romance wtlh Glenn. Meliaaa
rejoined Lars' dance I roup. Roman doesn't
believe that Kimberly murdered Em m a.
Tony helped a nun. Staler C am ellia, who
Tainted when she saw a photo of Duke In
Ihe newspaper. Robin and Anna m id
goodbye to Robert, who returned to
Australia — and Hotly. A fellow prisoner.
E llrrbe. Toiled an attempt on Duke's life.
Angus la worried that organized crime
rivals have learned lhal Duke Is Angus'
son. Duke and Angus also worried that the
crim e leaders know ubout Duke's In­
volvement In a m urder al L'Otlean. Sister
Cam ellia adm itted to Tony that she'd been
in a sanitarium before she became a m m .
Yank I old Sandy and Patrick that he put
the strychnine In Buzz’s medical bag.
Ilobbl and Jake are hopeful lhat Gretchen
w ill soon be pregnant with Ihelr child.
S la lrr Camellia lofd Tania lh al h rr father
sent her lo ihe convent la protect h rr from
Ih r outside world. Buzz admitted to Anna
lh al h r doesn't have alibis for Ted's and
S heriff Broder'a murders. Monica look
Sandy under her wing.
O U ID IN G L IG H T
Philip Interviewed art gallery owner,
Fallh. for his article on underground art.
M indy adm itted lhat she’s al trai led to
Rusty. Maureen wants lo resign from her
hospital adm inistrator Job because shr
gets no respect and she wants lo spend
more lim e with her fam ily. Rick left town
after accepting Ihe Chicago Job olfcr.
Philip h lrrd Chelsea as his "G irl Friday."
then Ih r two romped In the sack. Dinah
and Cameron shared a kiss. Dinah soft­
ened her altitude toward Vancaaa. Josh
arranged for Juhnny to fly Hevu overseas
lo keep her away from Ihe people who are
trying to kill Josh. Hawk agreed lo tell his
first w lfr. Sarah, that he's going to marry
Lillian. Deapllr Christine's pleas. Johnny
still nixed working fpr Alan. Alan and Alex
Iram ed lhal someone sabotaged one of
Ihelr oil refineries In Korea. India fTrlled
lhal Fallh has Info for an expose on
rrooked art dealers.

Lo vm a
T h e A ld r n c la n , a n d e s p e c ia lly
Gw yneth, were shocked lo learn lhal Clay
AJilen Isn'l dead. A government agent. Mr.
Brown, told Ihe family lhat Clay had been
working on lop-secrrt assignments and
lh al he's been a prisoner In a Far Eastern
country. Mr. Brown said lhat Clay has had
facial plastic surgery. Cus. who works for
A ldrn Enterprise Trucking, reported lo
Nk-k (hat Ihelr m ystrrious "shipm ent"
arrived via one of the Alden trucks. Each
accepted a legal rase In San Francisco.
Trisha had another falling-mil with S lrv r.
T o n y rrfu s rd lo tell Avu about his
connecllontoNlck.
ONE L IFB TO L IV E
Kate rm i tided to Cord lh al her Irue love,
Patrick, disappeared In Ihe African Jungle
while they were working on an assign­
m ent. Asa rescued Pamela and Pete when
u volcano erupted on Mulakeva. Marla
Ripped oul when Tina showed proof that
she's prrgnant with Cord's baby. Aggrlplna told Jonathan lh a l she's tired of
playing decoy In hopes of luring D im itri
oul Into Ihe open. Kate Is convinced lhat
Jam ie arranged his slabbing Incident In
the prison. U ln l tried lo line up witnesses
who will testify In court lh a l II would be a
mistake ta let Vlkl have ruslody of her
children. Asa. who claims he was Injured
during the volcano eruption, fumed lhat
Pam ela w ouldn't reconcile w ith him .
Jonathan encouraged Dorian, who wants
lo work for prison reform. Jam ie, who
needs money lo buy a fake passport,
forced Diane ty cares about Lionel. Mason

See S O A PS, page 8

�t

r
4— fa w K H

J a n u a ry

FRIDAY

&gt;■
•*-

i&amp;ssr
&lt;?n£&amp;&amp;fUwa

to help aofva a murder in

J a n u a r y 17

SATURDAY

S s w fb H , F I.

H H t a iM

■TORY T o r n * .

B.-00
0

5:30

1(11) CNN M W *

*00

lps SS0H4KI to 1
mental tM h to re * to OgM organized

nrdi tform
o n s art ad-glriber
^ H H O M C T iM i

M b annual grid-iron
a im

M A T H SEA AHO SKY

130
•

O M m iio n a l

O N * M B PAMS.V Brian
dadng Oon'a former glri-

1036

.730

f t guM-atriefcitaaklng out cn
a tdgh-achoof data years aga(R )

®0 M
BH
A
WC
o
-h
o
at G
M
n

® S iU M B T Y ts S OP T H i RBN
ANDPAMOUS
® a T A »
0 ( M l EARTH, SEA A N D SKY

1:48

O M O W "Johnny Eager" (1942)
Roberl Tayfor, Lana Tum ar. A
young aoclology mafor
wtth an Important gang I

230

J

_

(Live)

M0 /

Sun

• ®

0

( M A M B B C A N CAESAR Gen.
MeeArthur'a victorias In
i during W orld W ar II and
_____
hall an 3— to Wash­
ington a n policy ara tha focus of
S h ia

—

»■ -

«

L .I-

«-

in M c o n in u a n g D v o g n p n y

»_______ t _ _

d in q

on

W a m M a n c ttm a ria booh. (P an 2
o ! 6| g
•
m N O N O O V U . W ORLD OP
OISNEY Cartoons from tha 1040a
and '90s featuring Donald Dock *
vacation adventures.

7:06
730
0 ® ENTERTAINMENT TO M Q H T
M m a w with singer Carty Simon.
G D SO A Tw aaA uc
® 0 W H t t L O F FORTUNE
0 ( 1 1 ) BENSON

7:36

*00

0 ® CTM Q A A Y Whan a sariaa of
murdars ara committed by aomeona driving a blacft Corvatia, Stin­
gray bacomaa tha prima suspect In
llf flQ .

( D 0 G ARFBLO M PARADISE
Animated, Jon. Odla and Oarflald
am bark on a low-budget vacation
to a tropical Island. Features tha
voices of Thom Hugo, Loraruo Muale and Wolfman Jack. (R)
CD O WEBSTKR W a t star '1 birth­
day party wW artbar consist of a
night at tha opara or an avanlng of
prnh aalonal wresting. q
(11) HART T O HART
( 10) W A SM N G TO N WEEK IN
REVW W g
• ( • ) M O V C "Tha BuHnghtar And
Tha Lady" (1090) Robart Stack, Cu­
b an Roland. A Broadway producar
daddaa to laarn buNflghtlng in ordar lo codact stags Idsas.

&lt;

836

O
NBA BASKETBALL Houston
Roefcota at Dotroll Pistons (Uva)
(Subfact to blackout)

8:30

CD 6 * B N O O P T S O E TTM Q M A R ­
R E D , CHARLIE BROW N Animated.
Snoopy taNa In lova with a French
poodta and plana lo marry har, but
tha arrival of hla brothar 8plks compkcataa m atters. (R)
® 0
M R . BELVEDERE Waalay
taka* hla hamster's daath so that ha
can got a now puppy, g
■ (tO ) W A LL STREET WEEK

•

830

(3) M IA M I VICE Crockatt and
Tubba Invaatlgaia Ztto'a daath.
which has basn rulsd a drug ovardoaa. (P a n 2 of 2) In starao.
CD 0 M O VIE "Amarlcan Harvaal"
(Pramlara) W ^yna Flexors, Earl Hol­
liman. W han aconomlcs and waalhar conditions lores a Kansas wheat
tsrmar lo gtva up hla land, ho must
raaorl to prtvalo contracting to aurvlw&gt; n
CD f &gt; G U N Q HO Much lo K a i't
dHmay, Hunt finds a fob for Umakl.
■ Ill)T R A P P E R JOHN, M.D.
0 (10) A FINE ROMANCE

8:30

CD O DADO Allan's aant to hla
room whan ha talks back to hla faIh o r.Q
•
(10) MJTTERPUE 8 Ban sua-

i

•

830

(S) B A R H A M TO M Q H T

® K»SYPUR
0 S E R C N 8 T A IN

11:30

0
( 9 TO M Q H T SHOW Host:
Johnny Carson. 8chadulod: aingsr
Jimmy Buffatl. In starao.
® 0 M *A * 8 *H
® 0 M Q H T L J N ig

1230

QTAX1
0
M Q H TU FE Host: David
Brannar. In starao.
• (11) ASK D a RUTH Topic tha
ralucfant groom.
O NIGHT TRACKS Inctudad: Bob
Oaldof ("Thto Is Tha World Call­
ing"): Tina Tum ar ("Two Peopis");
Cory H an ("C an’t Halp Fading In
Lova With You"): Luthar Vandross
("S lop To Lova"): Human Laagua
("I Naad Your Loving"). In starao.
■ (S) NIGHT O W L FUN

S

12:30
•
(3 ) FRIDAY M O H T VM3COS
Tampaatt Bladaoa ("Tha Cosby
Show") and Allison Smith ("K ata A
Alda") mtroduca videos by Pstsr
Q a b rM (“ Big Tim a"), Llonal Richie
I "Ballerina QtrTL Bon Jovt ("Livin'
on a Prayer"). Madonna ("Open
Your Mean"). In starao.
® U NT0UC H ASUU
o MOVIE “Way Of A Qaucho"
(1953) Rory Calhoun, Oana T tar nay.
■
(11) MILLION DOLLAR SE­
CRETS

S

1:00

0 M Q H T TRACKS

1:30
0N EW S
(11) BIZARRE Skatchas: a tele­
phone commercial spoof; tha Bi­
gots; Impersonations ot Donald
Duck. ET and John Wayna.

S

230
a (11) DUKEB OP HAZZARO
O M Q H T TRACKS

2:30
CD O LOST SPECIAL

330

( D O MOW S -Raising A Riot"
(1937) Kannath Mora, Handy Miller,
a (11) BIO VALLEY
O M Q H T TRACKS
a m M O H T O W L PUN

430

* (11) DALLAS
O M Q H T TRACKS

4:30
(D a MOve "W hita Cradle Inn"
(1943)

aw unung

(11) BIPACT
a (101 MAGIC OP DECORATIVE
P ASfTM G
O W RESTUNQ

330

TH E Q U M M I SEARS g

8 8 !I CARE BEARS FAMILYt gFear-

0

*3 0

a GD DfSM TTS A D V D
a (11) M o v e "Tarzan, Tha I
la s t " (1 0 3 3 ) B u s ta r C rs b b a ,
Jacqueline Weds. A young woman
andsla tha aid of Tarran and har
llanca lo locsta har missing taihar.
a (10) HOMETIME

830

8 V

I8M U9IF8
J M H C H 80N *8 MUPPCT 8 ,

8

®puntstonekios□

a

(10) FRUGAL GOURMET

(W ) FLO R D A H O M E GROW N
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
PLORER
8 &lt;•) SHOP-AT-HOM E AND SAVE

8:30
1030

® 0

436'

0 HD M O V C "The Bio Country"

0

REAL GHOSTBUSTERS g

(1953) Gregory Peck. Chsrtlon Healon. An Essterner becomes em ­
broiled in a bitter feud between two
T e x t* rancher* over water right*,
a ( W ) MAGIC OP OIL PAINTING

10:30

a

(3) ALVIN A N D THE C H IP -

® 0 TEEN WOLF
® 0 POUND PUPPIES
0 ( 1 0 ) THIS OLD HOUSE

m

11:00

IFOOFUR
| GALAXY HIGH
_____ BUGS BUNNY ANO TW EETY SNOW
B ) (10) MOOOR GARDENS
O M O W "Mutiny On Tha Bounty”
(1935) Clark G a b * . C hart** Laughion. The craw ol tha H .M .S. Bounty.
reboMng against tha cruel treat­
ment Inflicted by I heir captain, de­
cide* lo mutiny.

11:30
0
®
®
0

® PUNKY BREWSTER
O CSS 8TORYSREAK g
0 ALL-NEW EWOKB
( 10) SOOYWATCH
AFTERNOON

12:00

0 ® AMERICA'S TOP TEN
CD O HULK HOGAN'S ROCK 'N*
WRESTLING
® O DANCIN' TO THE HITS Mu­
sical guest: John Parr. In stereo.
(10) GROWING YEARS
(9) MID-DAY BARGAINS

S

12:30

0 ® )'W RESTUNQ

O D O IiPUTTIN' ON TH E HITS
0 |(10)G
( 10) R O W IN G YEARS

1:00

® 0 MORE REAL PEOPLE
CD O
MOVIE "The Frogmen"
(1951) Richard W ldm a/k. Dana An-

430

COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Nevada-La* Vsgas el Oklahoma
(Uva)
0 (11) M O W "Tha Drowning
Poor* (1979) Paul Newman, Joanne
Woodward. A private Investigator la
N n d by i woilthy P outturn o i h tifaas lo dlacover the Identity of tha
author of an Incrimmallng letter.
0 ( 1 0 ) W E’RE COOKING NOW
O

® S

3:30

(10) TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
Author Davkt Sorrow ("Bearing tha
Cross") diecuaaaa Ids badsf that
M artin Luthar King Jr„ was tor­
m ented by a daath wish In hla last
thro* year* of at*.

a PEE -W E TS PLAYHOUSE

CD

I (11) T V K M 8MT SHOW Henry
behind two rock musicians
I from the county's music

0~(Wn a t io n a l

obosrapmc

David and C ard Hughes
pride of Mona during thair noctural
famt for food m South Africa'*
Knrgar National Park, Richard K loy
Is tha narrator. In a ta ra o .a
0 (S) DEMPSEY 4 MAKEPEACE
A ttar all other m ethods fall,
1comae up with an Idea
taken In an attempted bonk rob-

7:30

a p R AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
PBA B OW UNG 9190.000
A C -tM c o Classic, dve from Union
8q u a r* Lanas In Union City, Cadf.
0 ( 1 0 ) FACES OP JAPAN
0 ( • ) COLLEGE BASKETBALL AL
1at Mtasttaippl (Uve)

L u s ita n ia

On May 7, 1915. the
Bri ti sh oc e an l i ner
Lusitania was sunk by
German
submarines.
Among many others,
some 128 Americans
(who were warned by
Germany not to take
the ship) were lost. As
a r e s ul t o f a U.S.
campai gn. Germany
ap ologized and pro­
mised to make finan­
cial restitution.

230

Raglonaf covaraga of Miami at Kan*
aaa or Arkanaaa at Houston or

®a

W ILD , W E D W ORLD OP A M -

430

®
PGA GOLF Bob Hope
Chrysler Cleailc. third round. (Live)
® 0 W H W ORLD OP SPORTS
S cheduled: Ironm an Triathlon
W orld Championship, from Kona,
Hawaii. (Taped)
0 (1 0 ) M OO ERN M ATURITY
Scheduled: workers and Industry
(Part t of 3) exam ine* technology's
Impact; Medtvan, an In-homa medi­
cal treatment program; former
Johnson administration Defense
Secretary Clark Clifford discusses
U.S. foreign podey sine* World War
II. g
Q SALTWATER ANGLER

0

630

(10) W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
RBW W g
0 ( • ) M A M A 'S FAMILY Mam a
crusades against pornography.

636

O FISHING W ITH ROLAND M A R ­
TIN

630

8
O

P O R T R A IT OP A M ER IC A :
M B A N A look at the natural
wonder* of this state Including fordata, Wanda, mountains: and also

Jims Carter Cash. KaNh WhWay,

York Clfy’* I

® -

v e N e d -b ie S n lo f 0&gt;r1M* nd
•**OD 0 8PM M M L P 0R M R * A dep re s s e d
s h o r t-o r d a r
cook
I to a murder ha m ay not
h f v f cofwolttod. □
0 (IS ) D O CTO R W H O "The Homa
O f Nknon” W ith the Tanks Im m obi.
the D octor gats pudad Into a

(10) W ALL STREET WEEK
( • ) IT S A LIVING

635
F ttH M * W ITH ORLANOO W ILEVENING

*00

® O ® 0 NEWS
0 (11) SMALL W ONDER Tad
lakes slaps to m ake Jamie proud of
Mm.
0 (10) FRUGAL GOURMET Vari­
ous lamb dtaha* Including shoahdefc. chop* and odvs pasta, and a
roast wtth balsamic vinegar.
0 (0) CHARLES M CHARGE
Charles attempts to help the Powed
children wtth thair problems.

635

( D W RESTUNQ

0 f f l PLORBA*S W ATCM NO
(7 ) 0 WHEEL OP FORTUNE
0 (1 1 )0 T O 9

® PACTS OP U P ! Blair and Jo
make resolutions for the new year.
In starao. g
® 0 OUTLAWS Tha Outlaws
loumay to New Orleans in search of
a treasure that Ic * McAdams buried
there In tha 19th century.
® 0 SIDEKICKS Ernie trie* lo
kldnapplng.g
(11) M O W "M am ie" (1904)
Tlppl Hadran, Sean Connary. A man
struggles to break tha thieving hab­
its ol his kleptomaniac wife and re­
store harmony lo thair marriage.
( 10) PROFILES OP NATURE
( I ) STREET HAWK

0

S

8:05
( D M O W "Tha Man From Laram­
ie" (1999) Jamas Stewart. Wallace
Ford. A man teaks revang* on tha
gunrunner* responsible lor Ms
brother's death.

8:30

0

® 297 Laatar reconsiders a
contracting bid when he learns that
tha construction company hai In­
vestments In South Africa. In ster­
eo
® 0 SLEDGE HAMMER! Sledge
lo * * * Ma tell-confidence when
thugs steal his prized Magnum. In
tia re o .g
0 (10) ARTHUR C . CLARKE’S
W ORLD OP STRANGE POWERS
Topic: dowsing for metals, oil and

830

0

® GOLDEN GIRLS Tha room­
mates swoon ovar a handsome TV
actor, appearing at thair community
theater, m stereo, g
® 0 M O W "Slater Margaret
And The Saturday fright Ladles"
(P ra m la ra ) B o n n l* F ra n k lin .
Rosemary Clooney. A determined
nun overcomes a series of obsta­
cle* lo establish a halfway house for
female parolee*, g
® O OHARA (Pramlara) Crime
drama. Veteran poltc# L t Ohara
(Pat Mortta) uses cunning and com­
passion In Ms ongoing light for tha
underdog. Also stars Richard Yniguaz. Tonight: a man Is unjustly
accused of killing a podcaman. g
0 (10) WALK THROUGH THE
2 0 T H C EN TU R Y W IT H B IL L
MOVERS Soma ot the Waal's earIIast miners talk about working con­
ditions In tha early 1900s and
event* that lad lo the 1913 United
M m * Workers strike and the 1914
Ludlow M ausers, g
0 (I)FATHER MURPHY

0

*3 0

® AMEN Attar several at­
tem pt*. Thelma seams 10 have
found Mr. Right. In stereo.
Martin M u ra W hit*
Radglon: HM offbeat
humor strike* again.
CMSMAX

i

1030
1130

(B iA R O A M B T O N K IH T

O

1136
M O H T TRACKS: CHARTBUB-

1130
0 ® N AACP M A O S AW ARDS
From the Wlttarn Theatre In Loa Angalaa: tha 19th annual awards pro­
gram to honor Individuals and corcontribution* to the Images of black
people, featu re* appearance* by
Sammy D evi* Jr.. Stevie W onder,
Malcekn-Jamal W arner, Louis Gos­
sett Jr., Paul 8knon and Ban
Varoan; also, a tribute to space
sh u ttle C h a lle n g e r a s tro n a u t
Ronald McNair.
®
W EEKEND W ITH THE
STARS TELETHON A fund-raiser
benefiting victims ol cerebral palsy
featuring national covaraga from
New York and Loa An galaa with
hosts Nancy Dussault, Florence
Henderson. Dannie James. Wayna
Newton, John Ritter, Nancy Morgan
Ritter and Henry Winkler.
® 0 LIFESTYLES OP TH E RICH
AND FA M O U S Scheduled: Rita
Moreno; Roy Ot bison; actor Ed­
ward Albert; singer Michael Para.
0 (11) M O W "1941" (1979&gt; John
BekisN. Toshiro Mifune.

0

830

0

)(1 1 ) M N

Ad.

1030
I ® HUNTER Hunter journey* to

1230

0 ( 9 ) M O H T O W L FUN

1236

0 NIGHT TRACKS Included: Kate
Bush ("Experim ent IV"); Corray
Hart (“C an't H elp Falling In Love
With You"); B ob Gaidof ("This It
Tha W orld Calling” ); Van Halen
(“Baal Of Both Worlds"). In slarao.

12:30

® 0 M O W "The Sound Barrier"
.(1 9 9 2 ) Ralph Richardson, Ann
Todd.

130

0

®
M T V TOP
COUNTDOW N

20

VIDEO

135

0

NIGHT TRACKS

0 (11) M O V IE

1:30

"No Tim * For Com­
edy" (1940) Jam as Stewart. Rosal­
ind Rusaell.

0®

230
2 R O CK S TONIGHT

235
O M Q H T TRACKS

2:30

®
o
W EEKEND W ITH THE
STARS TELETHON CONTINUES
( D O M O VIE “ I Can Oet It For You
W hole*sla" (1991) Susan Haywaid,
Dan Dailey.

330
0 ( 9 ) N IG H T O W L FUN

335

O M Q H T TRACKS

0

(11) M O W
(1959)

3:15

"Separate T a b le *'

435
O M Q H T TRACKS

4:30

® O G U N S OP WILL SONNETT

O ld T rees

T h e ol de s t l i v i n g
trees in the world are
t h o u g h t

1u

t h e

bristleconc pines. Most
o f t h e m are f ound
growing on the arid
crags o f California's
White Mountains.
Some of them are said
lo be more than 4.000
years old.

�t a r t s r f H s r s M , t a r t a r * , F I.

J a n u a ry 18

bar now Job aa co-hoel oI "The
Marrtng frogram " on CBS.

740

Nv&gt; Y w t and Las' Ansstos «*m
hotts Nancy Ous
Hundanon. D a m n
_
N o r to n , John N tt v , Nancy Morgan

0««N P M C M C M K A T 1
(11) MAWAd nvf-o
JOHN ANKENBENQ

S

f f i OUN HOUSE Kris, aicftad

11:40

©0 SUNDAY EXTRA
la tlunnad lo laarn that iha coupto'a
1240
• M i r A T N i ty a a r c M baby la tfw victim at (D 0 C N K K IT o u n Mariana
Instoreo.g
agraae to escort Murray to Ma
M O VIES Sctmdutod rtvtowa:
•shod dance. (N)
O M M V SUNDAY M O V * d) • BOL
--------Aomanta In Dlanoy AnbnaHacbk ‘D u a l tor Hon** Carol Bumort Introducaa d p a Chicago, B
MM. Cameo.
Ona” (JuSa
bow* Dtonay animal ad toatoraa auch
BM
• &lt; • MBH
A portraM M aa " fa r t ad a." "Mam Poppa*" and vtoarL Iha Craty World ol Arthur
0 AMOULTUNEUJA
Brown ("Flro"). In storao.
"Song of Vw South." □
(11) CNN NEWS
Q JMMY SWAOGART
i tor a ISSS m * al Sw
(11) FALL BUY
B (S | MONT OWL FUN
I ol SL John trio DMna In
M O
(10) AUSTM CTTY LASTS Faw&gt;
N s * Yorti City- (N)
• vw w komt on nutm tkm
1240
tortd: Cart Thomas Cortay ("Firs
( H ) aarACT
0 (D EBONY / J IT SHOWCASE
CNN M M
ol lovto* Vou"k Vinca ON kilarvlawi. actreal AooSonla KoOOLLSQS SASKtTBALL
(•) H I M aNOMWO AT A
toro. Iha Ptottora. Mmmakar Fred
("Turn Ma Loose")
North
CaroSna
Slala
at
North
CaroWUbamaon. Mother's Band (a
M M
Owm STUNQ
■na(Uva)
Washington, D C -based musical
M O
f f i 0 HEROES: M A M M T H I 0 (S) MOWS "The ThM Who
Cams To Otonar" (1973) Ryan
) F l O W M t WATCHNQ
SuBUNTfOUCHASLES
• (16) M A ITI N M C I THSATNI O'Neal. Jacgueane Biaaat A com. 0 (1 1 )O N E A M O IN L U .8 &gt; .
) |11) W.V. QAANT
"Ooodbyo Mr. CMpa" CMpa la (M a r anaryat moondghto as a aocal burglar and has an
WOULD 1
140
caught bshaoan toyattlas to Ida n a *
assay sodaty lady.
0 0 AT THE M O W S
8IXJ iw l lo n g iim # n O U 88808P8ia
740
© • Y O U WWTS THE SONGS
Mm. wtcfcon. (fart 3 ol 3 ) g
0 ® r S COMPANY
GD EASY STREET LK. be­ o w a
© • C O V E N STONY
1:15
an easy mark lor artndtors
140
• (11) S U M BUNNY ANOPONKY O MOWS "Throo Q odM han"
I O f f THE WALL
FIG
(IM S ) John Wayne, Ward Bond. A aAer helping a uppoeadty destitute
I MUSIC CITY U J J L
O r r a M im N
Irio ol bandtta pul thab Svaa on the tormar boxer gat back on Ma toot.
M O VC "Cry Panic" (1974)
Ina whan they attampi to datvar an Inaiarao
740
orphan they found In Iha daoart lo © 0 MURDER. SHE WROTE Jaa- John Forsythe. Anna Francis
© HARMONY AND GRACE
aica halpa a Scotland Ywd Inspec­ (Q) IANNY JONES
O jm m ysw ao q art
tor solve a murder and a (ewel
240
| 11)POP*YE
1:30
© 0 HANK PARKER F18HMQ
OUT ON A UMB SMrtay
CHW8T1AN CHILDREN'S FUND
TOMSJENNYANOFNENOS
MacLaina. Anna Jackaon and
M 0
Charles Dance alar In this dramat­
2:30
M O
CD 0 WEEKEND WITH THE
■ MQHTWATCH
0 © VOICE OP VICTORY
STANS TELETHON A lund-ralaar isation ol the autobiographical bast
BOSNEWHART
Cfi •
W H KC N O WITH T H I bmodtlng victims of corsbrsl psisy aalar that chronidaa SMrtay MacSTANS TELETHON CONTMUSS
loitufioQ natlonil c o w s q s from Laina'i quest lor psychic self-dis­
2:50
(11) WOODY WOOONtCXEN
Nsw Yort and Los A ngsltt with covery Tonight: Shirley's non-stop © • M O VC ""Hit Lady" (1974)
concert
schedule
and
an
untufflSing
(10) SESAME STREET (R )g
Yvette Mtmraui. Deck Rambo
fiosts Nancy Dussauft. Rorsnca
Handarson, Dsnnis Jamas, W iy m relationship with a British politician
8:30
340
prompt
her
lo
question
her
role
In
NiWiOO, joon rwirSE, rtancy Morion
■ CD SUNDAY MASS
O LUCY SHOW
Me.(Part t o * 21 g
Rlttar and Harry Winklar.
(7) O ONAL H O M N T 8
0 ( S ) MONT OWL FUN
© O COLLEGE BASKETBALL 0 (11) MOVC "The Law" (1974)
• ODJSM
Judd Hlrach. John Back A sensa­
Louisiana Slala at Kentucky (Live)
3:10
M O
• (11) MOVC "The People Va. tional homicide trial leads lo unsa­ © B M O VC "The Small Voice"
vory
maneuverIngs
behind
the
■ (3) NEAL TONSIL
(1951) Howard Keel. Valeria Hob­
Jean Harris" (1961) Elian Burttyn.
f f i O FIRST M L .
son
CHUNCH ON ONLANOO
scripts ol Iha trial ol Iha private • (10) NATURE A look al how Afri­
3:30
OWL / TV Handicapped school headmistress convictad ol ca's population growth and Iha
. . . . talk with the aid ol a com­ murdering her lover, “Scaradate need lor more food have adversely D GET SMART
effected the African elephant's nat­
puter; Bonapart attends a science Dwt" author Harman Tamo war
440
M r; the Mighty Mites observe how ■ (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES ural habitat. In stereo g
O AGRICULTURE U S A
a wstarWy traps a By; the Hoot Club "Dance In America: In M emory Ol... O NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
4:30
weaveasweb.g
A Banal By Jerome Robbins With PLORER Modal airplane enthusi­
0 (9) SHOP-AT-HOME AMO SAVE the New York City BaAel" Susanna asts; a six-member team's Journey O IT -S YOUR BUSINESS
FarreM. Adam Luders and Alaxan- to the North Pole; a trip down Thai­
M O
Hom e B o y e r's
dra Proia lead the ensemble in a land's rive's, Iha archaeology ol
• © WONLD TOMONNOW
T alk
production *et to Alban Berg's Vio­ Kenya's Rift Valley
© 0 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
lin Concerto. In storao.
0 (1 1 )T O M AND JENNY
In home buyer's lan­
8'30
0 ( 1 0 ) FRENCH CHEF
■ © VALERIE David gals harass­ guage. Freddie Mac Is
340
■ f f i SPONTSWORLD Scheduled: ed by Ms tutor's #x-boyfriend In the Federal Home Loan
M S
World Professional Figure Skating stereo g
(DANDY QMFF1TH
Mortgage Corp;, a ma­
Championships, horn Capital Cen­
940
1040
tra In Landover. Md. (Taped)
jo
r mortgage agency
© VCNATIONB
■ (10) WMO AT ONE'S FINGER­ ■ © MOVC "Blood Vows: The
(11) MOVC "The Prisoner Of TIPS Organ buSdar Gone Badiar.l la Story Ol A Malta Wile" (Premiere) that buys mortgages
Second Avenue" 11975) Jack Lem­ seen working on a tracker organ lor MaSaaa GSbart. Joe Penny. A fash­ from lenders. Fannie
mon. Anna Bancroft. Based on the a church In Grand Rapids. Mich. In ion designer s marriage lakes an Mac Is the Federal Naunusual turn whan she discovers
play by Hat Simon. An advertising Itereo
that her lawyer husband Is also a t i o n a l M o r t g a g e
aiacutha loses Ms )ob and Ms sani­ • (8) MIO-OAY BARGAINS
member ol an underworld 1amity In A s s o c i a t i o n , wh i c h
ty because ol the recession and the
3‘30
stereo, g
hectic Manhattan pace
O MOVC "Red River" (1948) John © O MOVC Warm Hearts. Cold docs the same thing.
■ (10) JOY OF PAINTING
Wayne, Montgomery CMft. A young Feel" (Premiers) Margaret Cokn. Ginnlc Mac is the Gov­
man and hit slaplathar quarrel over Tim Matheeon. A young married e r n m e n t N a t i o n a l
1045
OOOOONEW 8
the route ol their cattle drive.
couple who write lor rival Lot Ange­ Mortgage Association,
l a nawspapars share the wile's
440
1040
a governm ent-owned
© O COLLEGE BASKETBALL pregnancy with their readers, g
• 3 ) TODAY'S BUSINESS
■ (10) MYSTERY! "Agatha Chris­ agency that buys FHA
f f i O IT IS WRITTEN
LouisvtSe al PurA * (Uva)
■ ( 10) AU. CREATURES GREAT tie's Miss Marple: A Murder Is An­ loans from lenders.
■ (10) WOOOWNIGHr 8 SHOP
nounced" Miss Marple learns ol a
ANOSM ALLI
1045
• (S) AMERICA'S BIQOC8T BAR- major inheritance white trying to
D MOVC "Northwest Passage " GAMS
In terestin g
slop the murderer from kMing
(1940) Spencer Tracy. Robert
again (P a rt3 o (3 )g
Records
4:30
Young Under the command ol a
• ft) GLOW; GORGEOUS LADIES
In
1986.
Ashrita
■
©
PGA
GOLF
Bob
Hope
brave leader, Rogers' Rangers anOF WRESTLING
dure harsh weather. Indian attacks Chrysler Classic. (Inal round (Uva)
Furman claimed the
and privation to open up the North­
1040
540
world underwater
west Territory In Colonial times
©
O WEEKENO WITH THE B (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE pogo-stick Jumping re­
"Goodbye Mr CMpa" Despite win­
STARS
TELETHON
CONTINUES
1140
ning his quarrel with the new head­ cord. Wearing a wet
© Q WEEKEND WITH THE • (11) HAWAS FIVE-0
master. Chips' tranquil Ule at suit and a snorkel, he
f f l (10) FIRING LINE
STARS TELETHON CONTINUES
Brookfield School is menaced by
• (S)W tlDKMQOOM
© Q DIALOGUE
Iha rumblings ol a coming war Jumped for five hours
® (1 0 ) NEWTON'S APPLE
5:30
and 38 minutes un­
(P a rt3 o l3 )g
D BONANZA
D SPORTS PAGE
11:30
• (S) WHAT A COUNTRYI Taylor • (S) TALES FROM THE DARK- derwater In San Fran­
■ © WRESTLING
cisco Bay. On land,
© O THIS WEEK WITH OAVIO has a run-in with a new school offi­ SIDE A pawnshop mannequin
cial (Don Knolls)
comas lo Lie and wreaks havoc on Furman claimed a new
BRINKLEY g
those around her
a (10) OOUNMCT COOKING
record after he somer­
EVENING
10:30
AFTERNOON
saulted over the entire
■ ( 11) P M NEWS
12-mlle. 390-yard route
•40
1240
(12 JERRY FALWELL
0 © UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC AS­ © O N E W S
o f Paul R e v c r e ’ s
• (S) NIGHT GALLERY
SOCIATION: FLORIDA BASKET- ■ ( 11) SILVER SPOONS
f a m o u s r i d e in
1140
f f l ( 10) TEN WHO OARED
Massachusetts.
■
©
©
O
C
S
O
N
EW
S
•
(
I)
STAR
SEARCH
I (11) MOVC "A Case Cl Rape"

8

• a)

5

too

I

--------

too

ir

f

1

I

&amp;

F r i d a y , t a n . u , 1 9 *7 — s

B ro n s o n -lre la n d
S ucceed A s T e a m
By Vernon Scott

amuse tier.
Ireland Interrupted an
established career In English
films for her first role with
Bronson, a bit part In "V illa
Rides." In 1968. Her most
recent before "Aaaasalnatlon"
was "Death Wish II."
Inbetween there were "Rider
On The Rain." "T h e Family."
"The Mechanic." "Breakout."
"H ard Tim es." "Breakheart
Pass" and “ Love and Bullets."
among others.
"Jill plays different charac­
ters from what ahe Is In real
life." Bronson said. "M y roles
are close to myself. They’re not
way out. You don't see me
wearing eyeglasses or different
hair styles. I don't play extreme
characters. And there Isn't
much opportunity to express
humor."
OIT-screen Bronson has a
But none starred together In
as many dims. In most cases. subtle sense .of humor. He's a
Bronson had the more Impor­ gentleman to the nines. But. as
tant role. Like most married In most of his roles. Bronson is
teams the male member of the a loner, quiet, observant.

U F I Hollywood Reporter
H O L L Y W O O D (U PI) Husband-wife acting teams are
a rarity In motion pictures but
C h a r l e s B ro n so n an d Jill
Ireland have made It work for
two decades.
C u r r e n t l y the r u g g e d l y
handsome superstar and his
blonde. English'bom wife star
in " A s s a s s i n a t i o n . ” with
B ro n so n as a Secret
Serviceman guarding the na­
tion's first lady, played by
Ireland.
"Assassination” marks the
15th (Km Bronson and Ireland
have done together, perhaps a
record for husbands and wives.
There were Olivier and Leigh.
Gable and Lombard. Newman
an d W o od w ar d . Lunt and
Fontanne. Cronyn and Tandy.

duo was the bigger star.
Ireland, however, appears
m o r e p r o m i n e n t l y in
"Assassination” than Bronson,
as she did in their 1976 film
"From Noon Till Three." In
1984 Ireland co-produced "The
Evil That Men D o" with her
husband in the starring role.
A smiling Bronson said,
" J i l l ’ s role do mi nat e s
'Assassination.'"
Bronson in brown suit, dress
shirt and necktie looked dapper
and relaxed, a far cry from his
tough-guy screen persona.
" I haven't kept count of the
pictures we’ve made, but I like
working with my wife. She’s
easy to work with. Sometimes
we get Into a conflict over her
suggestions, but we work them
out. Often her Ideas are great
and I tell her so.
"J ill turns down a lot of
pictures, you know, including
some with me. She only ac­
cepts scripts she thinks are
absolutely right for her."
Ireland's British accent pres­
ents no problem. In most cases
it Is a c c e p t a b l e as N e w
England-ish or simply aristo­
crati c. to-the-manner-born
American. She also Is adroit al
American regional dialects.
Bronson grinned when he
said he was more comfortable
playing love scenes with his
wife than other actresses, ad­
ding. "Not that I get many
opportunities to play love
scenes with anybody.
"But It is easier to work
scenes with Jill because we
both know how to draw the
best reaction from each other.
"W e know each other so well
we're able to emphasize a word
or phrase lo draw the rtgh’t
response. It's not the words
themselves, but the emphasis
we put on them. Her tone of
voice can rile me immediately,
and If I stress a word a certain
way It will make her angry or

"For years I’ve had to play
characters with minimum dia­
logue." he said, "and that
makes It tough. Dialogue helps
develop the character, allowing
him to express himself. I have
to e x p r e s s my c h a r a c t e r
through attitudes and body
language.
" I t ’s been a long time since 1
played a villain or comedy role.
I have some light moments In
'Assassination' and I enjoyed
playing them. I’d like to do a
comedy If it was well-written.
But producers don't think of
me in those terms."
What they do conjure Is
Bronson with a gun In his
hand, meting out Justice.
"I'll be doing another ‘Death
Wish' this year." he said. " I
have script approval and will
do my best to minimize the
violence. But directors have a
way o f getting around m y
objections when I'm not on the
set."
The "Death W is h " scries
inspired the title for Ireland's
new a ut o b i o g r a p h y , " L i f e
Wish." In which the gallant
actress gives an account of her
battle with cancer.
"Assassination" Is ihc first
film she and Bronson have
done together since she was
stricken by the disease almost
three years ago.

�HtraM
&gt;iiwltrtf,FI.

F f\4 n , JSR. 14. 1W7

Daytime Schedule
(W | FARM DAY

IffM E M M Y

)(10)G A P T A M KANGAROO &lt;R)

10J6

7:15

•

M

uuncoaoM

MR

M COUNTRY

■ 0 fS C © U H T R V (T U E -F R I)

■nn oN N N nM
© B E V V E .V M L L M J J E S

1IS

7JO
program

• IR U T m g

10J0

0 ( IS ) PMMTMQ CERAMICS (FRI)

12J0

2J0
■ CAPfTOL
(111 M V LITTLE PONY *NT

W ORDPLAY

• 0 1
0 B S U P E R K M CO URT
B (t0 )$ -&gt; -1 C O NTAC T g
LO P PO R TU N S
_ » MONT
FAMR F O R T U M 4 R O -

(11) O O M B T M M B M C f

UCS
.. M R U M
a (M O N )
A M SR K A N CAESAR (T U I)
T M IR A M (W IO )

MOW^MU^

TM

n CRRL RUHTS YIARR,
0

MT1JI

1J0

I HR W T R E OOOKBSQ NOW

3J0

STREET(R)g

H u m *)

0J6
( O I L O W LUCY

8
•

(1 0 ) A M . W EATHER
TODAY

7JO

0
0
E
•

1 (1 1 )0 .1 . JOE

10J0

0 SALE OF TH E CENTURY
0 HOUR M AQAZM E
B trueco nf
(1 1 )F A U O U Y

J a n u a ry 19

iONDAY
•JO
• 0 0 B 0 B N iw a
8 (1 1 ) G IM M E A BREAK)

8
•

(10) MACNDL /

LKHRCR

(9 ) K M Q H T N O CR

•J O
O N * w L C A W r r TO M A W R
W atty, B aavar, Eddla and Lumpy reSuper Bowl.

!l1

8:30

B A S C N E w ag
(1 1 ) TO O C L O U FO R COM ­
FO R T B ara's reputation Is on tha
Una w han aha accepts a dinner data
and a prom otion tram the bank

6 :3 6
Q O O W N TO EARTH

7JO

• 0 NEW LYW ED O A M E
0 • P M M AG AZINE Author S te­
ven Oalnas ("H eroes and Villains:
Tha True Story o l tha Beach Boys");
a businesswom an who bought an
airc ra ft com pany.
0 0 JEOPARDY
8 ( 1 1 ) BARNEY M ILLER
•
&lt;H » FLORIDA H O M E OROW N
LIV E SPECIAL
J ( • ) M O W "The G host* O l Buxlay H a l" (i9 6 0 ) (P art t o l 3) Dleh
O'NaHt. V ictor French. The ghosts
o l th a founders o l a m ilitary acade­
m y torcad to m arge w ith a girls
school Join the b attia to save the
school whan a w ealthy woman
threatens Its oxlstanca. A "W onder­
ful W orld of 0 1 *0 0 /' presentation.

7J5

I S SANFORD AND DON

7:30

• QDENTER TAIN M EN T TO NIG HT
Interview w ith Richard Pryor.
CD •
U T T E R SH O PPIN G W ITH
PAT R O O M
O W HEEL OF F O R T U M
(1 1 ) BENSON

S

7:35

ID H O M Y M O O N E R S
•JO

■ G D A L F In stereo.
CD 0 KATE 4 A U J E
CDB MACGYVER
(1 1 ) HART T O H AR T
(1 0 ) PLANET EARTH An exam i­
nation o l hew the p la te tectonics
theory accounts for tha creation
and m ovem ent of th a continents
and oceans and tha developm ent o l

I

L

earthquafcee and wdcanoaa. (R )g
•
(&lt;) M O W "Nuciaar Terror"
(1 0 7 7 ) R ich ard H a rris , D avid
Jansaan. Baaad on I ho novN by A tlatar M acLaan. Paaaangsrs on an
ocean liner ara thraatanad with tha
possibility o l nuciaar destruction by
terrorists.
M A X-PER SO N A L B U T
* onC IN E M A X w M i

(W ) M YSTERY! (W ED )
(W ) ALL C R C A T U R U QRCAT
A ND SM ALL N (TH U )
B ( W ) IS IS (P E I)
Coray. The J m m and Younger
boys bagin to ride th a outlaw trail

11JO
0 0 B 0 B N E W 8
(11) LATE SH O W Host: Joan
Rivers. Scheduled: I he Com m odorea. D r. Ruth W eetheim er. com e­
dian Rich Jeni. In stereo.
• ( I) BARGAINS TO M Q H T

S

S

1

10:20

( £ B NEWS

2:30

lioloCSAN
U SM
OW
NIW
)
■fwf
SPW
. (IS) UNDSRSTANDMG HUMAN
DfAVKMKTUE)
NNBBS P U (R) (WED)
g
NSY PUZZLE (THU)

4J8

O SOOOSV DOO(MON, WED-FM)

IS

NT OF BONG HUMAN

4:30

ROADJTUS)

THREES COMPANY
_ CARO SHARKS
(ID U V ER H A W K Sg

CAM O F JEANNIE

8&lt;ii:

J a n u a ry 2 0

TUESDAY

6 :3 8

© ROCKY ROAD (MON, WED.
•THU)
(8) MARY TYLER MOORE
© SA FE AT HOME (FRI)

10:30

« (11) BOG NEWHART

(10) EAST OF OCCIDENTAL

EVEM N G
-

0:00

0 0 0 0 BREWS

S

(ll)G M M E A S R E A ia
(1 0 ) M A C N SIL / LENDER
NEW SHOUR
BEVERLY HE. L U L U S
(8 ) K M G H T M O ER

8

11:30

18

© M O W "Q raat Missouri Raid"
(1950) M acdonald Carey. Wended

8 O M UFE TO LIVE
(ll)ANDYONFFTTH
(10) M O M MASK) METHODS
M OS. (MON)
( M JOY OF PABfTMQ (TUB)
(10) MAGIC OF OIL PANTING
(WED)

10:30

•
0 BEST O F CARBON From
O ctober 1285: lin g e r Stave Law­
rence and actress M ary Arm strong
8 J5
©
NBA BASKETBALL A tlanta Join host Johnny C a n o n . In ita ra o .
Hawks a t D etroit Pistons (Live) m _
--------- M *A *S 'H
(Subject to blackout)
M G H TU N Eg
8:30
8 &lt; (1
w0 ) DAVE A LLEN AT LARGE
■ 0 AM A ZIN G STORMS A gulit12J0
rktden cop's team ed up with a mys­
terious policewom an who help* him 0 0 S IM O N 4 S IM O N (R )
NIG HTLIFE Host: David
overcom e the grist o l Ns previous ( D O
Brenner. Scheduled: country lin g er
partner's death. In slarao. g
□ary M orris. In stereo.
f f i Q M Y SISTER SAM
• (11) ASK OR. RUTH T o p ic ro­
•JO
m ance. Guests: actress Jana Sey­
• 0 C RIM E STORY WhlSs trying m our, singer Sergio Franchl.
to m aintain a sem blance of norm al­ • (8) NIGHT OW L FUN
cy In Ns m arried Ufa, Lt. M ika Torol­
12J6
io. ot Chicago's M ajor Crim e Unit,
suspects that an Independent con­ O NATIONAL GEOG RAPHIC EX­
PLORER
M
odal
airplane enthusi­
tractor la bahlnd a series of robberasts; a six-m em ber team 's Journay
lea. In slarao. (R )
to tha North Pole: a trip down Thai­
0 O NEW HART
0 0 O U T O il A U M C Skeptical land a rivers; the arc. neology o t
cohorts Balia Abzug and agent Kenya's Rift Vallay.
M ort Vlner watch as Shirley gats
12:30
m ore involved In metaphysics; a B 0 LATE N IG H T W ITH DAVID
visit io a trance channeler In Swe­ LE TTER M A N From D acsm bar
den and a m eeting with ■ ' spiritual
1985: "8 0 M inutes" producer Don
g u id e." who leads her on a Hewitt and anim al psychic B eatrice
moot h i'-lo n g Irak Into tha Andes, Lydecker m ake appearance*. In
cinch M acLam e’a belief m tha Im ­ tts ra o . (R)
m ortality of tha human soul. Stars 0 O M O W "M a li O rder Bride"
Shirley M acLaine and John Heard. (1984) Buddy Ebaan, K eirO ullaa.
(P s rt2 o f2 )g
B (1 1 ) HAW AII FIV E -0
(1 1 ) TRAPPER JOHN, M .O .
1:10
(10) M O W ' The Thief O f Bag­
dad" (1224) Douglas Fairbanks, Ju- 0 O M O W "U s Against Tha
lanne Johnston. To prove himself W orld" (1977) C hristina Bellord.
worthy of a princess, a notorious Donna MID*.
Ihief reform * and undertakes a ae­
1:30
ries o l hazardous adventures. P re­ B (11) BIZARRE S kalchat: tha
sented as part of "G reat Parform - Church ol Punk; an Interview with
m
Skhan Skhen; the future Johnny
Carson: the Rev. T .V . Seaw all.
0:30
0
O TH E CAVANAUGHS Pop
2:00
and Chuck la k a opposite skies 0 B M O W "Every Little Crook
whan a strike occurs a l Cavanaugh And Nanny" (1972) Lynn Redgrave.
Construction.
Victor M ature.
B (1 1 ) DUKES O F HAZZARO
10J0
0 o CAGNEY A LACEY
2 J5
© M O W "Fo rtun e* Ot C aptain
( I t ) IN N NEW S
Blood" (1950) Louis Hayward, Pa­
(8 ) MARY TYLER MOORE
tricia Madina.

S

! 0 ANOTHER WORLD

(11) BOB NEW HART
(S) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FR M N D 6

«

D W F W N T STROKES
je o p a r d y

(H)THUNOERCATSg
SOOOSV DOOfTUE)

12JO
(11) BEW ITCHED
SRQCRAC (M O N )
MASTERPWLC B T H fA T R f

I^ PEO PU rSC O U R T

4J0

0 MASNUM.F 1 _____

“.C
E L -w w r.
WOOOWRMaHrB

A FTIR N O O N

0:45

MO

*A n

IVES AM

ffid l O l B O l

ART OF BONG HUMAN

1J8

1 J0
) 0 AS THB WORLD TURNS
-------------KPYL1

(11) MAUDS

S

F u r n iw m

_________ Z Z L lfT H U )

l a S S M L HOSPITAL

%wvp UTU EMI W l n l V W f l E I f t f W

11J0

C D L O V t CONNECTIO N
(1 1 ) FSTT1COAT JUNCTION

•JO
1DIV0GCS COURT
M*A*S*H
J HOLLVWOOO SQUARES
(11) FACTS OF UFS

3J0
1 0 SANTA BARBARA
)8 S U 0 S M U B H T

• A U M Y C M LD R D f
(It) DICK VAN DYKE

MOW

4J5

O W OMANW ATCH (FRQ

{ 0 DAYS OF OUR LIVES

•

B (tO)I-t-1 P ONTACTg
O h J K T STONBS (TUB)

CITY

MM

I LOVING

11JO

•JO

R A B fTM B SOUTHERN

12J8

(W ) A M . W EATHER

0 QD T

(M

ow obS kfm cthu

il

0:30
I NBC NEW S

ABCN EW Sg

(1 1 ) TO O C LO SE FOR C O M ­
FORT Hanry and his boss sat out to
capture tha crooks who stole S ara's
purse.
© ANDY G RIFFITH

7 .J0

0 0 NEW LYW ED GAME
0 B PM M A O A ZW E A m an who
survived s suicide attem pt oft the
GokJan G ate Bridge; a m an who has
m ore than 485 spedae ot turtles
0 0 JEOPARDY
8 (1 1 ) BARNEY M ILLER
• (1 0 ) PLANET EARTH An exam i­
nation o l how the plats tectonics
theory accounts fo r the creation
and m ovement o f th e continents
earthquakes and volcanoes. (R) g
SANFORD A N D SON
( • ) M O W "Th a G host* O f Buxley H e ir (1980) (P art 2 ol 2 ) Dick
O ’N eill, Victor French. Tha ghoals
of tha founders o f a m ilitary acade­
my torcad lo m arge with a girts
school )oln tha b a ttia to save tha
school whan a wealthy wom an
threatens Its existence. A "W onder­
ful W orld o l Disney” praeenlmtlon.

8

7:30

B 0 ENTERTAINM ENT TO N IG HT
Interview w ith Huey Lewis.
0 B SETTER SHO PPING W ITH
PAT BOONE
0 B W HEEL O F FORTUNE
(1 1 ) BENSON
HONEYM OONER8

8

8:00

B 0 M ATLOCK M atlock defends
a popu lar B everly H ills m an
accused ot m urdering a starlet. In
slarao.
0 B W IZARD A m otorcycle gang
uses an Indian vtNage and Its Inhab­
itants to run a drug-m anufacturing
operation
0 0 W H O 'S TH E BOSS? Revela­
tions from Ns late w ife's p u t tut
Tony w ilh salt-doubt, g
(1 t) HART TO HART
(1 0 ) NOVA A look at tha IRAS
satellite, launched in January 1980,
and how Its ability io "see" tha In-

S

trarad spectrum m ay change m an's
view o f tha universe, g
© W ORLD O F AUOUSON The
straggles laced by the Florida
panther and the African cheetah aa
they attem pt to cope with the loss
o l natural habitats. N arrato r Loret­
ta Sw lt.
• (S) M O W "Tha Sign Of Zorro"
(i9 6 0 ) Guy W W ama, Hanry C aM n.
In 1820 C alifornia, a m asked aven­
ger battles a corrupt com m andant#
by night while m asquerading as an
aristocratic lop by day.
0

B

8:30

O RO W M G PAINS

•JO

• 0 H A L STREET BLUES
0 •
NATIONAL BONQWRfTER
AW ARDS From NashvUt. T a n a ,
tha seventh snnuai cerem ony hon­
oring tha year's top country songs
and thair writers u salacted by M u­
sic C ity New * subscribers. C ategor­
ies: traditional and contem porary
country, country rock, movie song
and country song of tha year. Hon­
ored with tha President's Award win
be singer Eddy Arnold. Hosts: Pa­
trick Outty, M aria Osmond. (Live on
Jsn. 20 al 9 p m. EST) In stereo.
0 0 MOONLIGHTING
(1 1 ) TRAPPER JOHN, M .D .
(10) THE CONSERVATIVES
From tha 1948 Alger Hiss-W hittaker
Cham bers espionage case to the
Reagan presidency, tha American
Conservative m ovement's develop­
m ent u a m ajor pollileal force is
exam ined. Among (hose Inter­
viewed: Barry Goidwslsv, C lara
Boo I ha Luca and W illiam F. Buckley
Jr.
© ACE A W A R 06 Tha eighth annu­
al cerem ony honoring excellence In
cable from tha W lllarn Theatre In
Loa Angeles. Among those nomi­
nated m the 80 categories are Billy
Crystal. Pater O 'Toole, Robert C arradtne, Susan Sarandon. Barbara
Streisand and Robin W illiam *. C o­
hosts: Garry Shandling and Berna­
dette “ ators.

1

10:00

B 0 UNSOLVED MYSTERIES An
exam ination of bizarre case histo­
ries including a Wyoming man who
w u found three years after ha van­
ished without leaving a trace, a 72 year-old Michigan woman who
claim s io 6 * tha lost daughtsr of
auto m agnals John Dodge, and a
look at the death of an Oklahoma
man - a murder that may be part ot
a nationwide series ot contract k ill­
ings. Host: Raymond Burr.
0 0 JACK ANO MtKE
• (1 1 ) B IN NEWS

This po rtrait of S aaltta'a In iem atlonal D istrict exam ine* how tha
neighborhood's Chlnaaa. Japanaaa
and FWpino residents have united
aa a political and social force, g

~

(8) CAROL BURNETT ANO

1 1 J0
0 0 B 0 C

I

(1 1 ) LATE SHO W Hoet: Joan
Rtvars. Schadutad: M ickey GUtey. In
slarao.
0 ( t O ) DAVE A LLEN A T LARGE
© M O W "The Viking Ouoan"
(1987) Don M urray, Adrienne C orri.
An M -fated rom ance develops be­
tween a Rom an m ilitary lead er and
a beautiful trib a l m onarch a l a tim e
whan B ritain is struggling under a
massive political upheaval.
• (8) BARGAINS TO M Q H T

11:30

•
0
TO M Q H T SHO W Hoal:
Johnny Carson. Schadutad: m usical
group tha P ointer Sisters. In slarao.
0 B M *A *8 *H
0 B M G H TU N Eg

12:00
0 0 T J . HOOKER (R)
0
B
N IG H TLIFE Hoat: David
Brenner. Scheduled: Cosm opolitan
m agazine e d ito r H elen G urley
Brown. In slarao.
• (11) A SK DR. RUTH Topic: con­
traceptives. Quests: D r. Louisa
Tyrsr ot Planned Parenthood.
B (8) N IG H T OW L FUN

12:30

B0

LATE N IG HT W ITH DAVID
LETTER M A N From S ep tem b er
1985: entertainer Sam m y Davis Jr.
and physics Instructor Dr. Richard
Brandt m ake appearance*. In ster­
eo. (R)
0 0 M O W "The Baal Pair O t
Lags In Tha Business" (1972)
B (11) HAW AII FIVE-4

1J0

©
M O VIE "Tro g" (1970) Joan
Crawford, M ichael Gough.

1:10

0 O M O V IE "N akla" (1974) Rob­
ert Forster. A rthur Kennedy.

1:30
B (11) BIZARRE Sketches: tha Bi­
gots; M is* Lady ot tha Evening con­
test; a Super Dave stunt.

2:00
B (11) DUKES O F HAZZARO

2:20

0 Q M O V IE "The Am orous M r.
Prswn" (IB M ) Ian C arm ichaal, Joan
Greenwood.
0 Q

NEW S

2:30

�■ V
FrM ay, J m . U .1 W -7

Ssfrisri HtraM. Im M , FI.

He's No Longer A King Of The ‘Hill’
Dick: How did Howard oa “Hill Street
Sloes** got demoted from ooptala oa the SWAT
team to desk sergeant? Somehow I aUeoed that
part la the story. — J.O., Rock Hill, 8.C.
Dear J.G.: You might call U just desserts. Howard
(James B. Slkking). In an episode early this season,
was ofT duty and pursued a suspect he saw robbing
a store. In the subsequent action. Howard shot and
killed the suspect with a weapon that had not been
approved by the department. For that, he was
demoted.

Dear Dick: I would like to know about Lance
LoOaalt. Ho waa la the “Magnum, P.I." augment
where hla so-called wife came back with a
child. Where was he born? Is he married? —
D.M., Port St. Lade, Fla.
Dear D.M.: LeGault. one of the best of today's crop
of heavies, was bom In Chicago, but his father died
when he was 4 and so he spent his formative years
here, there and across the street. He grew up In
orphanages and with relatives all over. Last time 1
checked with him, he was still a bachelor.

Dear Dick: Would you help ue with a name for
an emcee on a TV program who died while out

WEDNESDAY
IV B M N G

■ c s a a o D a iN iw s
m (1 1 )0 M M C A BREAK)
S
(191 M A C N fIL / LEHflER
u c u iu L w u urn

• (SIKMGHTNOCII
6 *8

© BEVERLY HILLS4LUCS

6:30

■ CSS NCW 8

O ABCNews Q

(it) too clow

ran com-

FONT Henry end M u rM 's table
doesn't Include a aeftlng for a Hon
that wanders Into their dinner parly.

6*0

© A N O Y GRIFFITH

m®

7.-00

NEW LYW ED GAME
d ) Q P M MAGAZINE Former
Apollo aatronaut W alter M . Schlrra
Jr.; a factory that memjfacturea
NFL loot belli.
CD O JEOPARDY
■ (11) B A R M Y MILLER
8 ) ( tO) W ONDERWORKS "Walking
on Air" Baaed on the itory by Ray
Bradbury, thla dram a focuses on
Denny, a wheelchair-bound young
boy who flghta to become part ol
the apace program. Lynn Redgrave
ala ra .g
© ( • ) MOVIE "Tha Young Runa­
way!" 11978) (Part 1 ol 2) Gary Colllna. Anna Francla. Out to reunite
her brother! and alatera, a feisty
13-year-old must outwit her par­
ent*. in * ponce, a TV new* crew
end the bank-robbing owners of her
trailer hideout. A "Wonderful World
ol Olanay" presentation.

7 *5

Q SANFORD A N D BON

7:30

© ® ENTERTAINMENT TO NIG HT
Interview wtth ectrea* Ally Sheedy.
CD O BETTER SHOPPING W ITH
PAT BOONE
(D O WHEEL O F FORTUNE
a (11) BENSON

7:35
© HONEYMOONERS

8:00
© ® HIGHW AY TO HEAVEN An
out-ol-lavor jazz pianist trie* to
■lari • new Ufa after suffering a
heart attack. In stareo. g
CD
NEW MIKE HAM MER An
am nesiac (T o n y D o w ) le a d s
Hammer Into a deadly confronta­
tion wtth American and Soviet

a

3 f o PERFECT STRANGERS Lar­
ry and Baikl try to outdo each other
In the kitchen to Impress their re­
spective dates, g
111) MOVIE "Hawaii" (1980) Ju­
ke Andrew*, Richard Harris. A mis­

a

a ( 10) AN EVEM NQ O F CHAMPI­
ONSHIP SKATING U .3. amateur
and professional skaters atar In this
Harvard University skating axMMtion that Indudea a Aimed retroltva of former champions.
(S) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Kentucky at Vanderbilt (Live)

r

8.-00

! ® NBCNEWS

jogging early in 1B8S? — Mrs. H., Waterloo,
Ontario
Dear Mrs. H: Jack Barry, the host of several shows
In the 1930s. Is who you are referring to. He died
while Jogging In Central Park In 1985.

© MOVIE "The Sona Of Katie
Eldar" (1965) John Wayne, Dean
Martin. Four brothers avenge tha
deaths of their per ants and the lots
of their ranch.

6:30

CDO HEAD OF THE CLASS Char-

He's forced lo consider cheating on
an exam In order to retain his li­
cense a t a teacher, g

0:00

© (3) GIMME A BREAK) The Kantskis and N *8 part ways with Katie
moving to San Francisco. Julia and
Jonathan galling a place ol their
own and Samantha attending cot­
tage in New Jersey. In stereo. (A) g
GD O MAGNUM. P.I. Mac. a deed
ringer for Megnum'e deceased
Navy buddy, passes hlmsell off as
the private detective.
CD Q DYNASTY Krystle searches
lor Blake and Alexis in Singapore;
Nick Kimball rescues Dominique, g
© (10) IN PERFORMANCE AT THE
W HITE HOUSE From the East
Room of Ihe White House, tMs trib­
ute to George Gershwin features
musical performances by Sarah
Vaughan. The Manhattan Transfer,
opera singers George Merritt end
Priscilla Beskerville, and host com­
poser-performer Marvin Hamllsch.
Also, Kitty Carlisle Hart shares per­
sonal memories of the composer.

10:00

Dear Dick: Around 1970,1 saw a merle with
Dennis Wearer, who was a truck drirer being
chased by someone. I enjoyed It but I can’t
remember the name. Could you lot me know
the name of the merle and Is It arallablo oa
rldeo tape? — P.M., Allegan. Mich.

Dear Mrs. M.B.: I've never seen Allen, so I'll have
to take your word for It that he looks like Farrah.
But they aren't brother and sister. Farrah has one
sister. Diane, and no brothers.

Dear P.M.: That was a fine TV film, although
Weaver played the driver, of a car menaced by a
trucker. It was called "D u el" and it was Steven
Spielberg's first full-length film. It Is not on cassette.

10*5

© M O VIE "Short Walk To Day­
light- (1972) Jam a* Broiln, Don
MItcheS. A small group of people
are trapped m s subway after an
earthquake destroys New York City.

a news
( I t ) INN NEW S

i

(10) DAVI ALLEN AT LARGE
(S) BARGAINS TONIGHT

a®

a

a

1:00

(11) HAWAII FIVE-0
*

1:10

®
Q
MOVIE "Fast Friends"
(1978) Susan Haldtond, Carrie
Snodgrass.

CD O

10:30

6 *5

H

_ O EQUALIZER A judge asks a
S&gt;

(9) CAROL BURNETT AND

6 *0
a ® ® a ® a N E w s
a (11) G IM M E A BREAK)
9
(10) MACNE1L / LEHRER
NEW SHOUR
© ( a ) KNIG HT RtOER

11:30

a

©

EVEM NQ

© BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
©
®
TONIGHT SHOW Host:
Johnny Carson. Scheduled: come­
6:30
dian Robert Klein, singer Phyllis Hy­
a ® NBC NEWS
men.
In
stereo.
_ M Q H TU N Eg
(S Q C B S N E W S
I M *LATE
A * 8 *HSHO W Host: Joan
(11)
(D © A B C NEWS g
Rivera. Scheduled: author Nancy
a ( 11) TO O CLOSE FOR C O M ­
Friday ("Jealousy"), com edian
FORT M urM 's former boyfriend
S la v * Mittlemen. In iterao.
slops by for dinner end directs hi*
attention to Jackie.
12:00
® QADO CRLY
6 *5
(D O NIGHTLIFE Host: David © A N O Y GRIFFITH
Brenner. Scheduled: actor Om ar
7 *0
Sharif. In stereo,
NEW LYW ED GAME
a ( 8) NIGHT OW L FUN
f f i O PM MAGAZINE The Super
12:30
Bowl cham pionship ring; the
® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
Pointer Slaters.
LETTERMAN From February 1988:
CD O JEOPARDY
actor Alec Guinness, magician Ka© (11) BARNEY MILLER
maar. Jazz musician Tito Puente
( tin NATURE A look at how Afri­
end “ Late Night's" Chris Elliott
ca’s population growth and Ihe
make appearances. In stsreo. (R)
need for more food have adversely
CD O MOVIE "A Place To D o" affected Ihe African elephant's nat­
(1964) Bernard Lee, Rita Tushlngural habitat. In stereo, g
ham.
© (8) MOVIE "The Young Runa­
a (11) ASK DR. RUTH Topic: cou- ways" (1978) (Part 2 of 2) Gary Col­
PMS In business together. Quest:
lins. Anne Francla. Out fo reunite
author Sharon Nation (“ In Love end
her brothers and sisters, a feisty
In Business").
12-yesr-old must outwit her par­
ents, the police, a TV news crew
12*5
and the bank-robbing owners of her
©
MOVIE "Once You Kiss A
frailer hideout. A "W onderful World
Stranger" 11969) Paul Burke, Carol
of Disney" presentation.
Lynley.

a

2:00

( 11) d u k e s OFH A ZZA RD

2:20

MOVIE "Not Now, Com ­
rade" (1976) Leslie Phillips, Roy
Klnnear.

® © NEWS

2:30
2:50

©
MOVIE "Countdown" (1968)
Robert Duvall. James C u n .

3:00

® Q NtQHTWATCH
a (11) BIO VALLEY
a ( 8) NIGHT OW L FUN

(D O

4:00

MOVIE "On The Buses"
(1971) Reg Varney, Doris Hare,
a (11) DALLAS

4:50
© W O R L D AT LARGE

J a n u a ry 22

THURSDAY

11*0

® (D a (D

a ® ST. ELSEWHERE Ehrlich
went a to believe that tha Oaeransxy* are ready hla long-lost pa/an Is
woman lor sexual favors as pari ol
an agreement to reduce her hus­
band's drug-possession sentence.
CDO HOTEL Dave's drug problem
Jeopardizes his chances of passing
I he bar exam, g
0
(10) EYES ON THE PRIZE:
AMERICA'S CIVIL RIGHTS YEARS.
1964-1965 (Premiere) Julian Bond
narrate* this examination ol black
America's tight lor equal rights. In
this episode: Mose Wright testifies
against the two white men accused
01 murdering his nephew; Rose
Parks refuses to give up her sett on
a Montgomery (Ala.) bus. g
a ( 8) MARY TYLER MOORE

Dear J.R.: Same old Linda. Who w as a very young
Linda during her days as Audra. The scries ran for
four years, and she was 23 when lt started. 27 when
It ended.

Dear Dick: I and my elater wonder If Allen
Fawcett, on TV SO, “Puttin’ On the Hits," and
Farrah Fawcett are brother and slater? They
look a lot alike. — Mrs. M.B., Sterling Heights,
Mich.

J a n u a ry 21

sio nary trlas to changa tha
Hawaiian*' customs, but time and
Ms wife's death change Mm bv

6.-00

Ask Dick
Kleiner

Doar Dick: I was watching an
Big Valley" and I noticed "
played Audra was massed Linda
this be the same Linda Brans
Krystle on “Dynasty." I hare mado a bet with
my husband. I say !t*s her. Could you settle It
for us? If It le the same persoa, how old was she
whan oho was la “The Big Valley'*? - JJt.,
Amarillo. Texas.

7 *5

© S A N F O R D ANO BON

7:30
a ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with actor Pat Morlta
("The Karate Kid").
® O BETTER SHOPPING WITH
PAT BOONE
CDO W HEEL OF FORTUNE
0 ( 1 1 ) BENSON

7:35
© HONEYMOONERS

8:00

O ® COSBY 8HOW In stereo, g
® O SHELL GAME Jennie and
John go undercover with the bunko
squad to expose a con artist on
television.
CD Q OUR W ORLD Slories from
Ihe summer of 1939 Include Hitler’s
invasion of Poland, the premiere ol
Ihe films "Gone With Ihe W ind" and
"The W izard of Oz." and Ihe publi­
cation ol John Steinbeck's "The
Grapes of W rath." g
0 (11) HART TO HART
S (10) W ILD AMERICA A portrait
of the com bat, meting, egg hatch­
ing and feeding behavior ol king
snakes g

2

m MOVC "The Shoottst"
(1976) John Wayne, Lauren Bacall.
A dying gunman seeks lo Nve out
Ms final days In peace, deepite per­
sistent challenges by w outd-b* suc­
cessors to N a lame and ru p e e !.

10*0

(11) BOB NEW HART
( 8) CAR O L BURNETT ANO

a

8*6

© NBA BASKETBALL Los Angeles
Lakers at Indiana P acer* (Live)
(Sub|ect lo blackout)

5 :3 0
a ® FAMILY TIES Mallory devel­
ops a crush on a glib graduate stu­
dent. In stereo, g
© (10) TH IS O U ) HOUSE Install*.
1km of the kitchen's custom-made
cabinets; Insialllng bathroom M u ;
Norm works on the Cape's Interior
Ir im .g

9 :0 0
a
® CHEERS Carla m ed iatu
whan her ex-husband, Nick, and his
new wife, Loretta, are having mari­
tal problems. In stereo, g
® Q SIM O N 6 SIMON
( D O TH E COLBY 8 A bullet In­
tended lor Jason wounds Cash
Cassidy; Jett confronts Ihe mother
ol mysterious Hoyt Parker, g
© (11) TRAPPER JOHN. M .D.
9 (10) LAWRENCE OF ARABIA:
THE MASTER ILLUSIONIST This
documentary portrays the III* of
Thomas Edward Lawrence and ex­
plores the motives of those who In­
fluenced him and the questions
raised by his accidental dealh.

9 :3 0
B ® TH E TORTELUS (Premiere)
Comedy. In IMa "Cheers” spin-off,
Carla's womnntztng ex-husband.
Nick (Dan Hedaya). and hla new
wife, Loretta (Jean Kasem) move lo
Las Vegas. Tonight: Nick hopes lo
make money u i TV repairman
while Lorelfa works ss a showgirl.
In slereo.

10:00

a ® l a . law
CD O 70 / 20 Scheduled: profile of
cartoonist Gary Larson, whose
slrtp, "The Far Side," reaches 80
million readers, g
O (11) IN N NEWS
© (10) AIDS SHOW: ARTIST 8 IN­
VOLVED W ITH DEATH ANO SUR­
VIVAL Based on a San Francisco
theatrical production. Filmmakers
Robert Epstein and Peter Adair ex­
amine AIDS' Impact on the gay
community through theatrical per­
formance excerpts, personal narra­
tion end Interviews with Ihe play’s
actors, writers and directors.
O ( 8) M ARY TYLER M OO RE

10:20
© M OVIE " Y s n k u Doodle Dandy"
11942) James Cagney. Joan Leslie.
Colorized edition ol Ihe Oscar-win­
ning biography of G eorg* M.
Cohan, whose patriotic Ideals car­
ried into hla acting, producing and
writing and made him a show busi-

11*0

® ® a &lt; z )a N c w 8

«

(11) LATE S H O W Hoei
Rivers. Scheduled: Dick Clark, the
Pointer Staler*, form er pro fool bad
player A d Donovan. In stereo.
I B (10) DAVE A LLEN AT LARGS
© (8) BARGAINS TONIG HT

11:30

©
® TO N IG H T SHO W Hoat:
Jo h n n y C a r s o n . S c h e d u le d :
oceanographer-explorer Bob Bal­
lard. comic actor Richard Pryor
("Critical Condition"), country mu­
sic duo the Judds. In atareo.
( D B U 'A 'I'H
CD © MI MGHTUNEg
IG H T
® a

12*0

NIGHT HEAT
CD 8 NIGHTLIFE Host: David
Brenner. Scheduled: actor Oexler
Gordon ("Round Midnight"), com e­
dian Robert W uhl. In stereo.
© ( ID ASK OR. RUTH Topic: coceine addiction. Guest: country
singer Larry Gatlin.
© (6) NIGHT O W L FUN

12:30

B ® LATE N IG H T W ITH DAVID
LETTERMAN From March 1986: ac­
tor Tony Randall, radio personality
Kim Williams, comedian Richard
Beizer and "Late Night’s" Biff Hen­
derson mske appearances In ster­
eo. (R)
CD © M O VIE "M r Belvedere
Rings The Beil" (1951) Clifton
W ebb, Joanne Oru.
8 (11) HAW AII FIVE-0

12:50

© ACE AW ARDS The eighth annu­
al ceremony honoring excellence In
cable Irom Ihe W illem Theatre In
Los Angeles Among Ihos* nomi­
nated m Ihe 60 categories are Billy
Crystal. Peter O T o o i*. Robert C arradine, Susan Sarandon. Barbara
Streisand and Robin Williams. Co­
hosts: Garry Shandllng and Berna­
dette Paters. (R)

1:10

f f i Q MOVIE "O nce Upon A Spy"
11960) Eleanor Parker, Ted Denson.

1:30

Q ( I t ) BIZARRE Sketches: Inter­
preting for smneslccs; Beverty Sills'
farewell address; Face Ihe Press
with Don Cor leone
0

2:00

(11) DUKES O F HAZZARO

2:20

(D

O MOVIE "Qlibert And Sulli­
van'' (1953) Robert Morley, M aurice
Even*.

2:30
® O NEWS

3:00

® o NtQHTW ATCH

(11) BIG VALLEY
( I) NIGHT O W L FUN

S

wrx*

�AUK

» - Sanford HtraM, Sanford. FI.
l *'

Friday, Jan. H, 1W7

GO GUIDE
Cypress Gardens. State
" P a c k o f L ien ", a drama
based on an actual Soviet spy -Road 540 near Winter Haven,
ring In England In 1961. runs will observe Law Enforcement
through Jan. 25 at the Edyth Week. Jan. 17-18 with de­
Bush Theatre In the Civic monstrations of crime preven­
T h e a t r e Co mple x In Loch tion techniques and latest
Haven Park. Orlando. Sunday equipment. Florida law en­
matinees arc at 2 p.m. and forcement personnel admitted
other performances at 8 p.m. free to park with official ID.
To reserve scats, call the box Others get $3 discount with
coupon from Scotty's.
office at 896-7365.
Members Show, through
Jan. 29. Mount Dora Center for
the Arts. 138 E. Fifth Avc..
Mount Dora.
10th A n n u el O rlan d o
Scottish Highland Games.
Jan. 17. Central Florida Fair­
grounds. 4603 W . Colonial
Drive. Orlando, beginning at 9
a.m. Highland dancing, piping,
drumming and athletic com­
petitions. games. Scottish foods
and wares. Admission $6 for
adults. $3 for children 6-12 and
free for children under 6.
Tartan Ball. 8 p.m.. ballroom of
the Court of Flags. Tickets $15
include buffet.

'T w o O antlem en from
Verona'. Florida Shakespeare

Park. 2416 N. Mills A vc..
featuring work by winners of
the museum's Annual Juried
Exhibition. Admission free to
the public. Hours 10-5. Tues­
day through Friday and noon
to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sun­
day.

p.m. Elephant rides weekends
and holidays. Video camera
rentals available. New a d ­
mission prices Including tax:
adults. $3.50: children 3-12,
$1.50: and senior citizens, $2.

Rollins College Cam pus.
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.
Black Artists Show — Four.
Plus Four. Crcalde Fine Arts
Gallery. Jan. 23-Feb. 27. 600
St. Andrew Blvd., Winter Park
(off Aloma Avenue). Artists
rccepetlon Jan. 23.7-9 p.m.

monte Springs, every second
and fourth Friday. H ours.
7:30-9:30 p.m. Admission 35
cents. Call Claudia Harris.
Westmonte Park. 862-0090.

Calder "Tapestries" exhib­ and older. Westmonte Park.
it. Cornell Fine Arts Museum. 500 Spring Oaks Blvd.. Alta­

Festival musical comedy hit
will be presented at 8 p.m. Jan.
17 at Ice House Theatre In
Mount Dora Community Center
on Baker Street. Call (904)
383-416 from 1-6 p.m. for
reservations.
"Dance Allvel". professional
d a n c e c o m p a n y b a s e d In
Family Field Trip Manatee
Gainesville, will perform at 8
p.m.. Jan. 17. In the Annie Watch to Blue Springs State
Russell Theatre. Rollins Col­ Park by the Orlando Science
lege. Winter Park. For reserva­ Center. Jan. 24 or 31 from 8:30
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Transporta­
tions. call 646-2145.
Artists Three exhibition tion provided by OSC. Advance
through Jan. 25. Orlando registration and payment due
Museum of Art. Loch Haven by Jan. 19. Call 896-7151.
Members $6. non-members.
$

...Soaps
Continued from page 3
krpl m u m lo Toft about hte rrlalkm ahlp
with Julia. Alter almost Mumbled upon
the robber, who hid In a c loset After an
angry confrontation over (lux's ease. Julia
said a h r'a not sure that she wants to
h a v r a r lm a n warned th a t h r th in k *
Slohhan I* betraying Max. Melinda adm ltlrd In Evan lhal her m yM rrlou* Illness
will someday kill her. but the nixed
having m rdk-al lest*. In a phone ra il. Max
agreed lh a l Jacqueline ra n rom r hom r.
Max r a m r close lo seeing Slobhan and Joe
lErtkl amoorhlng. Maggie overheard tie r
tell Huger lhal Magglr's ruined Ills life.
J a rk Is curious about Sktbhan’s connec­
tion In E rlk lJ o r).
S A N TA B A R B A R A
Jane wan shocked when Caroline adm lllrtt lh a l she Is Alk-r's mother. In a
shootout. C ru i wounded the black man
who really rnbbrd Eden. The wounded
man took rrfugr In Gus's* pud. In hopes of
laklng o v rr Mason's )ob as district a t­
torney, Keith Is determined lo pruvr lhal
Mason is helping lo hide Kelly from the
law. Caroline loid W arren that she really
cares about Lionel. Mason krpt m um lo
Tort about his relationship with Julia.

Alk-r almost stumbled upon the robbrr.
who hid In a closet After an angry
confrontation ovrr Gus's rase. Julia sakl
she's not sure lhal stir wants to have
Mason's baby. Jane Insisted that Alice has
a right lo know lhal she's Caroline's
daughter. Mason re a llirs that Jeffrey
doesn't like him . M rlrk and W arren
mender] fences. Mason was upset lo learn
that Sophia and Pearl eonlarled Kelly and
could possibly have given aw ay the
luratkm of Kelly's hiding place.
T U B TO U N O A N D T H E R ES TLE SS
Nina held Hoar at gunpoint while Ruse
demanded big bucks to rru n ltr Nina wllh
her baby. Nina pul the soft touch on
Philip, who borrowrd the money from
Kay. Steven rescued Ashley, who was
bring sexually assaulted by Krrd. Ellen
was shorkrd to learn lhal J a rk Is u
member of ihe wealthy Abbott family.
Slrphanle look her rh ild rrn and spill from
her pad. foiling Hone's baby-selling deal
wllh Ihe Warrens. The Judgr gave Kay
Irm porury custody of Philip while hr
makes his decision uboul Philip's adoptk&gt;n
case. Laurrn learned lhal F a rm Is preg­
nant. After comparing photon of F a rm and
M lrh rllr. Evan Is convinced lhal Faren Is
his missing wife. Philip screamed lhal hr
blames both Kay and Jill for his father's
death. Paid told Laurrn he's not sure that
they ra n work side by side at his detective
ugrnry. Tract and Mamie suspect that
Jack's fallen head o vrr heels for Ellen.

ECHOLS TREE SERVICE

Seminole County Museum.
H i g h w a y 1 7 - 9 2 at B u s h
B o u l e v a r d . In o ld A g r l Centcr/County Home building.
9 a.m. to 1 p.m.. Monday
through Friday and Sunday.
2-4 p.m.. Call 321-2489 for
evening and afternoon ap­
pointments.
Energised Day. Feb. 3. 9
a.m. to 2 p.m.. Orange County
Agriculture Center. 2350 E.
Michigan Avc.. Orlando. Exhib­

Greater Orlando Stamp,
Coin and Postcard Show.
Jan. 31-Feb. 1. Quality Inn
High Q. 5905 International
Drive. Orlando. Admission free.
Door prizes.

Square Dance for singles.

2 4 0 5 G ra n d v itw A v e n u t
S a n fo rd , F L 3 2 7 7 1

C o n ta c t Pete or T erry E ch o ls P h O n G

CALL

322-2611

l

tv

?

520 E. First St.. Sanford. 2-5
p.m .. S u nd a y . W e d n e s ­
day .Thursday. and Friday. .

C e n t r a l F l o r i d a Zoo.
Highway 17-92. Lake Monroe.
Open dally. Weekend animal
feeding times, primates, 12:30
p.m.: otters. 2 p.m.: cats. 3

i t Floyd Th— tree I

DON'T JUST SIT THERE
Go to Movie Adventure's il and choose the movie
you want to watch from their great selection.

i l l " X l,'

[ M L A Riveting Film..

1i'STAND

VCR &amp; 3 MOVIES
FOR 3 DAYS
ONLY

$19.95

*5.00 OFF
ALL
MEMBERSHIPS
Eap. 1-22-87

M

ZIP-A-DEE-DOO-DAH I

f ^ W M J D B M E Y 7JSSRIS
»WW J20

So uth
MONDAY SCH O OL HOLIDAY
MATINEE 2:20

S a n fo rd H erald

Wi t h

General Sanford Museum
and Library. Fort Mellon Park.

323-2229

FOR HOME DELIVERY
TO THE

bo red

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
Simunck at 767-5411.

LICENSED - FULLY INSURED - SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

• COMPLETE TREE SERVICE
• FREE ESTIMATES • STUMP GRINDING
• 24 HR. ANSWERING SERVICE

Mount Dorn Art Festival.
Feb. 7 and 8. Two Park N
Shuttle lots available for traffic
from H ig h wa y 441. Enter­
tainment in Donnelly Park and
children's art show. Book sale
to.beneflt library.
Chill Cook-Off to benefit
Central Florida Zoo. Feb. 21 at
the zoo. Gates open 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. Prizes for best chili,
bo ot h/ sh owma ns hl p. Little
Miss CFZ Chill Pepper and
Little Mr. Hot StulT contests,
age 3-7. and Pacyderm Poo
Pitching Contest. Donation of
$25 for up to four team mem­
bers to enter cook-off, Contact
Central Florida Zoo.

10.

rtA/A rwiN l

“ Let The Professionals Do It”

Handicap Singles
Nlghtblrds Dance for 18 years

Its. speakers, slides, lunch,
games, and prizes presented by
O r a n g e C o u n t y Extensi on
H om em akers. O pen to the
public.
Florida State Fair. Tampa,
Feb. 4-15. Over 1.000 free
entertainment acts. Livestock
shows, rodeo.

1 YEA R
M E M B E R S H IP W ith
P roof O f P urchase
O f Y o u r N ew V C R
E»p. 1 22 87

ANNUAL
MEMBERSHIP TO
ANYONE WHO IS
A MEMBER OF
ANOTHER CLUB.

M OVtfLANOQ/l

America’s Biggest]
Hero is back... I

ING KONG
LIVES
MOPASSES
TRICK OR TREAT

MOVIE ADVENTURES II
2491S. Airport Blvd., Sanford ( A ir p o r t B ir d , a a s t h s t .
Now Winn Dial* Plata)
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222131">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, January 16, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222132">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222133">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on January 16, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222134">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222135">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, January 16, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222136">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222137">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222138">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222139">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22248" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21852">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/9fc44742321faf9bc77a11a4241b16c5.pdf</src>
        <authentication>e0879102065b9d3fa3066b9ee5fba5ba</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222160">
                    <text>Ex-Hostage Tells Of Ordeal

Benjamin Weir
../a real role model/

By Jaae Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
The Rev. Benjamin Weir,
moderator of the Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.), captivated the
overflow audience of 2,000
persons at the Presbyterian Cel*
ebratlon held In Orlando Sunday
with the story of his life as a
hostage In Lebanon for 16
months.
Weir described how he was
thrown Into the back seat of a
car and a pistol pointed at his
head when he was kidnapped on
May 8. 1984 In Beirut by Shiite
Moslem extremists. He said he
was told not to look at his
captors or he would be killed.

He was held In solitary con­
finement for 14 months. When
one day he heard the door open,
he covered his face. When he
heard someone walking toward
him, he asked. "Who are you?"
and a voice answered. “I am
Father Jenco."
Here was not only another
human being to talk to. but also
Christian. After breakfast one
morning they put some bread
aside and after their captor took
the trays away, Father Jenco.
said, "Let's celebrate in the
Lord" and celebrated Mass in
the cell. The next day they set
aside bread, and the priest said
to the Protestant missionary.

Marina Isle
Shop Opens
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer
The first of several activity-oriented retail shops
.opened this weekend at One Harbour Place, the
14.000-square-foot commercial complex built
'east of the Holiday Inn on Sanford's marina Isle.
Beda Marine operator John Smith is the develop­
er. Word also came this weekend that a 52-foot
houseboat will soon make the city-owned Isle Its
port of call for time share rentals.
The new shop sells swim wear and ofTercs
scuba diving classes.
Smith. Chuck Volk and Holiday Inn co-owners
Ed Welch and Wally Schocttclkotte hold long
term leases with Sanford to operate businesses on
the 12-acre isle, which Juts into Lake Monroe. The
entrepreneurs pay the city a percentage of their
revenues as annual rental.
Volk said Saturday he will begin sub leasing
dock and office area to the houseboat, as he does
the Rivcrshlp Romance cruise ship.
The houseboat's rental office will be In a front
area of the Monroe Harbour Marina building Volk
leases from the city. Until last month, this 15 by
60 foot office had been used by Smith for his Beda
Marine sailboat operation.
Volk said "business reasons” prompted hts
request for Smith to close the Beda office after
two years. "He asked me to leave and I did,"
Smith said Sunday.
In December, Smith pulled his support from a
parking plan Volk developed to restrict boat
trailer parking on the isle and give both men
more customer parking. Volk scuttled the
proposal, which would have been made to the
city, after Smith publlcally opposed It. When
asked, Volk said his decision to end his rental
agreement with Smith "had nothing to do" with
the parking plan.
The houseboat will arrive by March 1. and be
docked Just east of the Isle's boat launch ramp.
Volk said. It will be operated by Sunshine Rentals
of Deland.
The Beda Marine operation may relocate at the
Hidden Harbour Marina, west of Sanford near the
Interstate-4 bridge. Smith said.
He added his attentions are on One Harbour
Place, and the "grand opening" celebration he
plans next month. More shops arc expected to be
located in the $1.2 million, two-story glassenclosed complex by then.
The first shop. Monroe Harbour Dive and Ski.
Inc. opened Saturday morning. The enterprise is
operated by Harry Ellis of Sanford and Fred
Wilson of Rockledge.
Wilson said the shop generated "a lot of
walk-ln Interest” during the weekend. He and
Ellis say they are continuing to stock the shop
and expect to begin scuba classes In one of its
upstairs offices later this month. Ellis said the
classes will be taught by certified Instructors, and
dives will be In the Holiday Inn pool, through
arrangement with Welch.
Smith said next mouth’s grand opening for One
Harbour Place will be marked with an "open air"
event on the Isle. Slated for the weekend of March
7 and 8. the opening will coincide with "The First
Annual St. John's River Fest Regatta," he said.
In upcoming weeks, a wellness health facility
and nautlcally-geared shops will move Into One
Harbour Place, which was designed by Sanford
architect Gerald Gross.
Ail enterprises "will be oriented toward the
outdoors and sports. In and around the water

See MARINA, page 10A

The prediction was greeted with
boos from the crowd of more than
1.000 winter-weary people that
gathered outside Punxsutawney for
the folklore tradition.
Today marked the 100th anni­
versary of the first official trek to
Gobbler's Knob outside the small
western Pennsylvania town of
Punxsutawney where 15 men In

Rev. Richard Danlelak of Sanford, left, shakes hands with
Rev. Ben|amln Weir at airport. Also on hand to greet Weir Is
Dr. John Lyles, Central Florida executive presbyter, center.

Waite
Held
Hostage

A Question Of C are

BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) - A
top Shiite Moslem Amal militia
official said today hostage nego­
tiator Terry Waite has been
kidnapped and efforts are under
way to free him.
A radical Moslem group that
has held two Americans for
almost two years Issued a
warning that its hostages would
be killed If the United States
tried to use force to free them.
Waite, the Church of England
envoy, disappeared in Moslem
west Beirut 12 days ago on a
secret mission to negotiate the
Waite's Instructions, 3A

H«raM Photo* by Ooano Jordon

Humane Society volunteer Patricia Blackstock, right, and veterinarian
DeHaven Batchelor Inspect a pregnant mare In apparently poor health at
Rhonda Wright's paddock.

Rhonda Wright watches as
o f f i c i a l s c o n f i s c a t e her
horses.
*

Officials Impound 21 Horses
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W riter
A woman’s stated good Intentions
slammed Into the law Saturday as
officials took custody of 2 1 horses she
said she was nursing back to health
and paying for by working three Jobs.
The Seminole County Humane So­
ciety. with the assistance of county
animal control and two veterinarians,
took the horses from 1264 Van
Arsdalc Road In Oviedo. The society
plans to flic animal neglect charges
and perhaps gel custody of the
animals. The herd Included Arabian
stallions, pregnant mares, geldings
and at least one foal. Not all of the

horses were underweight, a point the
owner made when she confronted
Humane officials.
"If I were starving all of my horses
they'd all be skinny and bony,” said
Rhonda Wright. 27. who's lived In
Oviedo about two months and Is
renting a paddock and trailer. "They
want you to cure them In two weeks."
she said referring to nn earlier visit by
a Humane Society Investigator.
"The horses speak for themselves.
They're In horrible shape." said
Humane Society president Helen
Wolk. "They look like their bellies are
all full of sand." she said. She. and
Investigator Joan Thomas, declined to

discuss all the details of their In­
vestigation.
Ribs and fatless muscle etched the
hide on some of the horses. Meatless
bones usually covered with plump
roundness cut angular patterns In
their skin. One leggy foal wore scruffy
winter fur. Some had lice. At few of
the animals, however, did appear In
good shape, well-groomed with
dapples showing, alert and bickering.
Before being trallercd to foster
pastures In the county each was
examined by a vet and identified lor
legal purposes. Four were pregnant.
See HORSES, page 10A

Red Driver's License Sought For Alcohol A busers
A Sanford assistant state attorney
and a probation officer have teamed
up and submitted a proposal to the
state legislature which if passed would
required everyone convicted of a
crime involving alcohol to be Issued a
red driver's license or state identifica­
tion card.
Assistant State Attorney Woody
Igou and probation officer Derek
Gallagher have call their proposal the
Criminal Alcohol Probation law. or
CAP. The law would require persons
selling alcohol to check everyone’s

Official Groundhog Sees Shadow
PUNXSUTAWNEY. Pa. (UPI) Punxsutawney PhU. the nation's
prem ier w e a th e r-fo re ca stin g
groundhog, emerged from a snowy
hilltop today and saw his shadow
- an Indication that six more
weeks of winter are ahead.

"It's your turn," and Weir cele­
brated the Eucharist as they
shared and fortified each others
faith.
Another spiritual help to Weir
during his imprisonment was an
Arabic Bible slipped to him by
one of his guards.
Weir had served as a Pre­
sbyterian missionary In Lebanon
since 1953. He was released
from captivity Sept. 14. 1985
and was elected as moderator In
Ju n e 1986 at the Oeneral
Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church.
The Rev. Richard Danlelak,
See WEIR, page 10A

black top hats stood around Phil's
electrically heated burrow to await
the groundhog's forecast, after he
was dragged out.
Other groundhogs around the
country had different results.
Dunkirk Dave in Dunkirk. N.Y..
saw no shadow. In Snellvtlle. Ga..
General Lee also couldn't see a
shadow, nor could Jimmy the
groundhog In Sun Prairie. Wls.
According to the legend, when
the groundhog sees his shadow he
returns to his den and spring Is six
weeks away. If he fulls to see his
shadow, which Phil has done only
six times, spring is Just around the
comer.

driver license or valid photo Iden­
tification and not to sell the product to
anyone with a red license or state
Identification. An Infraction of the law.
by cither the seller or the buyer,
would result In a citation, and for the
convicted person, a violation proba­
tion hearing. As a part of probation,
the Judge could order an alcoholrelated abuse program and extend
probation, according to the mens'
proposal.
They proposed the law because it Is
difficult for the legal system to

monitor the alcohol Involvement of a
convicted person.
While there has been some talk that
alcohol vendors would object to the
law. Gallagher disagreed.
"I think It would lower their liability
insurance." he said. Gallagher said
the law would apply to any crime
involving alcohol and Is In essence a
way to revoke a person’s dt inking
prlvlledge.
—Deane Jordan

R e p o rte r's R e le a s e So ught
By United Press International
The United States called on Iran to
release a Wall S tre e t Jo u rn a l
correspondent detained during u
tour of Iran by reporters Invited Into
the country by the government.
Iran’s official Islamic Republic
News Agency said on Saturday, the
day U.S. officials say the reporter
was arrested, that "a spy of the
Zionist regime who entered Iran with
a false passport and disguised as a
Journalist has been Identified and
arrested.”
The news agency said the suspect
had not been identified, and It was
not clear If Wall Street Journal
reporter Gerald F. Selb. a Middle
East correspondent based In Cairo.
Egypt, was the person cited In the

report.
"We do not know why he was
d e ta in e d ." S ta te D epartm ent
spokesman Bruce Ammertnan said
In Washington. "Selb should be
released Immediately and allowed to
depart Iran."
The news agency said "responsi­
ble Iranian officials" were questlonIranlan Cities A ttacked, 6A
lng the alleged spy. Ammerman said
the State Department was not aware
of any charges against Selb.
"We are aware of an Iranian news
agency report on Saturday claiming
that an Israeli spy has been arrested
In Tehran.” said the Wall Street
See RELEASE, page 10A

release of Western hostages.
"We as (the) Amal rnovemVht
condemn the kidnapping of for­
eigners and especially (the) ab­
ducting (of) Terry Waite because
the man has played a good role.
... He has played a mediation
role," said the ranking Ainal
militia official, who demanded
his name be withheld.
"Our security networks have
followed up the Terry Waite
matter. We are seeking to free all
the hostages and particularly
Terry Waite. But this matter will
take some time." he said.
He said Amal militia leader
Nablh Berrl "has given us In­
structions to play a humanitari­
an role concerning the hostngc
See WAITE, page 10A

F ir e fig h te r H u rt
In B u rn in g H o m e
A Seminole County firefighter
suffered steam burns in a blaze
that caused about $60.(XX) In
damage tu a Casselberry home
Saturday evening. And a tire In
Altamonte Springs Friday night
damaged a home’s kitchen, attic
and roof.
Firefighter .Jim Yates, dispat­
ched from the county's Fern
Park station, was injured In the
Casselberry fire. He was treated
and released from Florida Hospltal/Altamonte, Saturday night.
Although wearing protective
gear. Yates suffered first degree
burns on his face and shoidders
and second degree burns on his
hands. Yates had taken a shower
Just before the emergency call
came In and fire officials theorize
moisture that remained on his
body was turned to steam when
he e n te r e d t he b u r n i n g
structure.
See FIRES, page 10A

TODAY
Bridge...................4B
Classifieds........2B.00
Comics.............. 003B
Coming Events.... 3A
Crossword............ 4B
Dear Abby.............IB
Deaths................... 10
Dr. Golf................ 4B
Editorial...............4A
Financial.............I0A

*0
Florida..................6A
Horoscope.............4B
Hospital............... 10A
Nation...................5A
People................... IB
Police................... 2A
Sports..............7A-9A
Television............. IB
Weather................2A
World....................5A

School Menu
• T u e sd ay: C h a rb ro ile d b u rg er, g ard en
v e g e t a b le m ix , c r i s p y t a t e r to ts ,
a p p le sa u ce su rp rise , lo w fat m ilk .

I

�r
mmtty, F * . l . m r

IN BRIEF
Lake M ary Man A rrested
On Sex-Related Charges
A Lake Mary man has been arrested on sex-related
charges apparently stemming from two separate Incidents.
While there were no details Included In the report, the
Sanford Herald has learned that two of the charges stem
from an alleged Incident Jan. 12 Involving an 18-year-old
woman. The man was arrested by Lake Mary police at their
department Friday at 7:22 p.m.
Charged with exposure of sexual organs and battery In
connection with the Jan. 12 report Is Walter Francis
Porzlg. 36. of 177 Grandbend Ave.. Lake Mary. He was also
charged with sexual battery, two victims, sexual battery
with child by familiar custodial authority, lewd and
lascivious or Indecent assault on child, aggravated child
abuse, two victims, and sexual performance by a child, two
victims.
He was being held without bond Saturday.

Violating M anatee Zone
A Sanford man was arrested by a deputy because there
was an outstanding warrant for the man's arrest for
violating a manatee zone.
Deputy Tom Wise made the arrest on a warrant Issued
by Volusia County. Details of the Incident prompting the
warrant were not Included In the arrest report.
Arrested Saturday at 1:22 a.m. on the warrant was Alden
Duncan Council Jr., of Knudson Avenue. He was arrested
at the Drift Inn. E. State Road 46 and Beardall Ave..
according to the arrest report.

Teenager A rrested A fter Scuffle
A Sanford teenager has been arrested on charges of
possession of alcohol by a minor and resisting arrest
following an Incident Friday in Sanford.
According to a police report, the 18-year-old was arrested
in the parking lot of a convenience store at Celery and
Locust avenues. During a pat down for weapons, he
reportedly struck the officer in the face. The Incident
occurred Friday at 9:04 p.m.
Arrested and charged with possession of alcohol by a
minor, battery on a law enforcement officer and having an
open container of alcoholic beverage was Jamie Jerome
Brown. 18. of 111 McKay Blvd. His bond was set at $1,000.

Couple Faces Drug Charges
An Altamonte Springs couple was arrested after
City-County Investigation Bureau agents served them with
a search warrant and reported finding drugs in their home.
The agents said they found cocaine and marijuana in the
couple's bedroom. They served the warrant Friday.
Arrested on charges of possession of cocaine and
marijuna were James Bellamy. 47. and Dorothy Ann
Jackson, of 77 Spring St.
The agents also confiscated $ 1.295.

Arm ed Burglary Charged
A Sanford man was arrested on a charge of armed
burglary after a shotgun was taken from a Sanford home.
He was arrested Friday at 3:10 p.m. after witnesses gave
the police sworn statements.
Charged with burglary bnd grand theft was Michael
Lynn Smith. 33. of 901 S. Magnolia Ave. Bond was set at
$8,000.

Woman Falls, Hours Pass
A sheriffs deputy reported that an elderly Sanford
woman fell down In her home and spent about 14 hours on
the floor before being discovered by a friend.
According to a sheriffs incident report, the problem
occurred Friday.
He reported that the woman had several injuries because
of falls and apparently cannot take care of herself. She had
been on the floor about 14 hours when a friend found her
Friday afternoon.

Burglaries A nd Thefts Reported
A 38-caliber handgun and a gold chain valued at $560
were taken by unknown persons from the residence of Lisa
Diane Mobley. 24. of *107 Ridgewood Arms. Sanford,
between 7:50 and 11:50 p.m. on Monday, a police report
said.
Lynda Burgess. 40. of 2014 S. Lake Ave., Sanford,
reported to police that her son’s trumpet, valued at $395,
was taken from the bandroom at Sanford Middle School on
Tuesday.
A 1977 Chevrolet Impala was taken from the parking lot
of Empire Auto Body. 304 W. 2nd St.. Sanford, on Tuesday
at 9 p.m. where it was being repaired, according to the
car’s owner. Thcola Ahller. 73. of Sanford.
A black metal tool box was taken from a 1973 Ford truck
on Sunday at 3:50 p.m., according to John A. Petrunlo. 43.
116 Aldean Drive, Sanford, the truck's owner. He said the
truck was parked in his driveway at the time and there was
no sign of forced entry. The box. which was Inside the
truck on the passenger floorboard, had Craftsman and
K-Mart metric tools In It valued at $350.
Linda L. Thomas. 32. 102 Wilkins Circle. Sanford, told
police that unknown persons, between 6 and 10:30 p.m. on
Saturday, removed a 1976 tan Oldsmoblle 200 from her
residence.
A 1986 Suzuki motorcycle valued at $500 was stolen
from the home of Ralph Lowe Jr.. 19. of 2500 Howell
Branch Road *274. Winter Park. Saturday or Sunday, a
sheriff's report said.

W ife Attacked; Husband Charged
A Sanford man who reportedly
hit his wife while In the presence

(U S P S « i 240)

Monday, February 2, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 139
P ublished D aily and Sunday, except
Saturday by The Sanlord Herald,
Inc. )00 N. Fre n ch Ave.. Sanlord,
F la . 17/71.
Second Clas* Postage P a id at Sanlord,
F lo rid a 17/71
Homo O olivory: Month. H . / li 1 Month*.
*14.71; * M onth*. *77.00; Y e a r.
*11.00 By M a il: Month. *4.75; 1
Month*. *70.71; 4 Month*. *17.00;
Y e a r. M* 00
Phone (101) 171 7411.

of an officer has been arrested on
charges of battery and resisting
arrest without violence.
$
A Sanford officer said he was
dispatched to the scene of a
disturbance at 11 p.m. Friday.
On arrival at the address, a
woman began to walk towards
the patrol car. A man reportedly
ran up from behind her. knocked
her down, and began to strike
her.
The officer s^ld he pulled the
man ofT the woman and that the
man struggled during the arrest.
Charged with battery and re­
sisting arrest without violence
was Daniel Jackson. 24, of 1113
Orange Ave. Bond was set at
$500.

Man Strikes Officer In Mouth, Gets 60 Days
A Sanlord man has been
sentenced to 60 days In Jail for
striking an officer In the mouth.
Kensey Lee Sims, 25. of 1309
W. 11th St., was also ordered by
Circuit Judge O.H. Eaton to
serve 5 years’ probation and
complete 50 hours of communi­
ty service. Sims was given credit
for one day already served in Jail.
Sims was stopped by a San­
ford officer In July after- re­
portedly leaving the scene of a
disturbance at 1417 W. 12th St.

The officer said Sims threat­
ened him and hit him In the
mouth with his hand.
In a s e c o n d c a s e , A
Casselberry man arrested with
two other people on charges of
burglary, grand theft and crimi­
nal conspiracy has been sen­
tenced to live years* probation.
Gordon Charles Tennant. 30.
of 319 Elm Drive, was sentenced
by Eaton wo also ordered him to
pay the Public Defender's office
$250.

Tennant was arrested after a
box containing $435 worth of
I t e m s .w a s ta k e n from a
Casselberry home at 617 Jupiter
Way. The trio were reportedly
spotted near the scene and
identified by witnesses. Two
codefendants await final dis­
position of their cases. The
Incident occurred In August.
A Maitland man arrested after
agents made a deal to buy
cocaine was sentenced to five

______
m l u l l n n and
nnH n
r r lr r
years .ofr nprobation
ordered
to complete 50 hours of commu{
nity service.
Anthony Eric Davis. 19. of 169
Btrchwood Road, was also orj
dered by Eaton to pay the Publld
Defender's office $350.
The agents, who agreeed td
buy $40 worth of cocaine. Issued
a police bulletin for Davis whd
was arrested on North Street Iri
Altamonte Springs.
The Incident occurred Iri
March.

Blacks Press Forsyth County Demands
CUMMING. Ga. (UPI) Blble-toting blacks worshiped
with the "good people" of allwhite Forsyth County but left
church vowing to march again
unless officials agree to demands
that Include compensation for
land abandoned by blacks in
1912.
"If we don’t get some accep­
tance. some assurance sometime
(today). I'll call another major
d em o n stratio n for Forsyth
County." said Hosea Williams,
who led the black worshipers to
Cummlng Sunday after helping
lead a massive civil rights march
eight days before.
Sheriff Wesley Walraven said
Forsyth County leaders have not
had a chance to discuss the list
of demands hand-delivered by
Williams Friday.
"I have not had an opportunity
to meet with any county leaders
to do a n y th in g f u r th e r ."
Walraven said. "We have no
plans to meet soon."
Williams led 50 people Sunday
from Atlanta to eight churches
In Cummlng. the seat of all-

white Forsyth County, where
20.000 marchers and thousands
of angry whites gathered Jan. 24
In the South's biggest civil rights
demonstration since the 1960s.
A week before In Forsyth, a
mob of Ku Klux Klan members
and supporters hurled mud.
rocks and bottles to break up a
small march in honor of Martin
Luther King Jr.'s birthday.
After the second m arch.
Williams and other civil rights
leaders drew up a list of six
d e m a n d s . I n c lu d in g th e
establishment of a bl-racial
commission to ensure fair hous­
ing and hiring practices In
Forsyth and compensation for
the land that blacks fled In 1912.
No blacks have lived In the
rural county since rampaging
whites chased them out 75 years
ago after three blacks allegedly
raped and killed a young white
woman.
Protected by police, the visit­
ing blacks Sunday were quietly
accepted In the churches, which
were packed for the occasion.
"We met the bad people last

Saturday and the Saturday be­ ple. We met the good people
fore." Williams said after atten­ today.
Outside, however, a red pickup
ding the First Baptist Church
truck
and a blue car. both flying
with 15 other blacks. "But the
vast majority of people in this Confederate flags, cruised the
countv are good Christian peo­ town square.

G arbage M ay G at Crulta To Curacao
MIAMI (UPI) - Dade County Is
considering sending its garbage
on a cruise to the Island of
C u ra c a o off th e c o a st of
Venezuela.
Dennis Carter, the assistant
Dade County manager who
supervises garbage disposal, said
the county Is considering a
proposal from a British firm
h o p in g to b u ild a h ig h technology Incinerator in Cura­
cao. In the Netherlands Antilles.
The Incinerator would gener­
ate power by burning garbage, a
process already common in
Europe.
"It Isn’t that crazy." Carter
said.
Nick Balg. one of two directors
of the British Arm Power. Water

&amp; Waste Ltd., said his firm Is on
the verge of signing format
agreements with the govern­
ment of Curacao.
In a telephone Interview froiri
London. Balg told The Miami
Herald his firm would also build
a water desalination plant that
would use electricity generated
by the Incinerator. He said a
Danish shipping line, a British
bank and a Japanese securities
underw riter had agreed to
participate In the plan.
Carter said Balg's company
offered to haul away garbage for
$24 a ton. less than the $27 the
county pays now to dispose of
garbage at a county Incinerator
and a garbage dump.

WEATHER
Nation T e m p e ra tu re s
City a Forecast
Albuquerque »y
Anchorage cy
Asheville r
Atlanta r
Billing* w
Birmingham r
Boiton cy
Brownsville Tex.pc
Buffalo pc
Burlington Vt. in
Charleston S.C. r
Charlotte N.C. r
Chicago sy
Clnclnnatlpc
Cleveland pc
Columbus pc
D allas sy
Denver pc
Des Moines cy
Detroit pc
Duluth tn
E l Paso sy
Evansville cy
Hartford cy
Honolulu sy
Houston pc
Indianapolis cy
Jackson Miss, cy
Jacksonville sh
Kansas City pc
Las Vegas pc
L illie Rock pc
Los Angeles 1
Louisville cy
Memphis cy
M iam i Beach pc
Milwaukee cy
M lnneapollscy
Nashville r
New Orleans pc
New York cy
Oklahoma City pc
Omaha pc
Philadelphia pc
Phoenix sy
Pittsburgh cy
Portland Me. cy
Portland Ore. r
Providence cy
Richmond r
St. Louis pc
San Francisco r
Washington pc

HI Le
52 10
34 25
51 30
5* 47
54 34
41 50
34 I t
10 54
31 35
37 11
54 50
53 43
47 35
50 40
41 34
44 31
71 43
40 45
54 31
41 35
31 10
43 30
47 40
34 33
n St
44 54
43 34
64 S3
TO 49
41 34
47 41
54 44
75 SO
53 43
40 41
73 47
43 33
39 25
43 45
70 57
37 33
40 41
51 34
34 33
47 44
43 37
34 13
54 43
37 39
44 34
SO 33
42 54
39 34

Pep
....
....
....
.17
....
.34
....
....
....
.03
....
....
....
.13
....
....
.07
....
....
....
....
....
.41
....
....
.14
....
40
....
....
....
.73
....
.54
.19
....
....
....
.14
.37
....
....
....
.03
....
.04
....
.34
....
....
.04
....
.05

Five-Day Forecast

Sunday's high temperature In
Sanford was 72 degrees and the
low during the past twenty-four
hours was 52 degrees as re-;
ported by the University of
Florida Agricultural and Educa-;
lion Center. No rainfall recorded.

Fo r Central Florida
Suny

P tly C M y

P tly C M y

P lly CWy

fgg egg fgg
0 0

A rea Forecast

1--------1

@

0
Tu«*.

W ed .

Thurs.

F rl.

Set.

Source National Weather Service

W est W et, W in d y;
So u th , E a s t W arm
United Press International
The latest In a series of windy
storms pushed into the Pacific
Northwest today, bringing
more rain to areas already
ravaged by floods that washed
out a coastal highway and sent
a house sliding down a hillside.

Meanwhile, Midwesterners
were treated to springlike
warmth that set at least nine
pc partly cloudy
CODE*
records Sunday in Nebraska.
r rain
c clear
sh showers
South Dakota and Iowa with
cl clearing
sm smoke
cy cloudy
readings as high as 60 degrees
sn snow
f fair
In Lincoln. Neb., and 59 at
sy sunny
fy toggy
Huron. S.D.
tS'thunderstorms
h i haie
w windy
m missing
The unseasonable weather
, melted the little snow In the
Florida Temperatures | re g io n a n d c o a x e d s u n
•C 'j "
worshipers to shed their winter
gear fqr shorts and bathing
.MIAMI (U PI) - Florida 24 ho*-r temperasuits.
tures and rainfall • H a m. EOT toddy:
HI 1Lo Rain
City:
Kevin Glydcnvand. of West
43 52 000
Apalachicola
Des
Moines. Iowa, where It was
0.29
Crestvlew
64 54
Daytona Beach
70 55 000 a record 56 degrees, shed the
74 69 000 top of his convertible, saying.
Fort Lauderdale
Fort Myers
74 54 000
73 50 000 "It seemed like summer.”
Gainesville
70 49 000
Jacksonville
Rain today doused northern
74 70 000
Key West
Lakeland
73 53 000 California and the Pacific
M iam i
75 64 0.00 Northwest as flood warnings
Orlando
75 52 000
49 41 0.25 remained posted for rivers in
Pensacola
Sarasota Bradenton
74 54 000 western Oregon and western
67 37 000 W ashington, the National
Tallahas«-c
Tampa
73 54 000
Vero Beach
73 54 0.00 Weather Service said.
West Palm Beach
74 42 000
Heavy rains during the
weekend caused an unoccupMoon Phases
pied home to slide down a hill
and onto a beach at Vashon
Island. Wash., Sunday. The
incident prompted authorities
to evacuute a neighboring
home, but it remained on Its
foundation.
F irtt
Fu ll
Last
F ib . I
F e b .tl
Feb. 21
Feb. 27
Along the Oregon coast.
Highway 101 was closed Sun­
day Just south of Seaside by a
Beach Conditions
2-mlle stretch of hign water
along the Necanlcum River.
Daytona Beach: Waves are
"Unless you've got a boat,
about 2 feet and glassy. Current
forget
it. We're Just about ready
is slightly to the north with a to break
and head out to
temperature of 57 degrees. New sea." said off
State
Police Sgt. Bob
Smyrna Beach: Waves are 2
Pendleton
In
Astoria.
Ore., at
feet and semi-choppy. Current is
the
mouth
of
the
Columbia
slightly to the north: Water
temperature. 57 degrees. Sun
screen factor: 12.

3 0 0

Lo c al R e p o r t

River, where 3.34 inches of
rain fell during the weekend.
Others rainfall amounts since
Saturday Included 2.78 at
Olympia. Wash., and 2.71 In­
c h e s at T a c o m a . W ash.
Portlanders waded through
2.33 inches of rain, shattering
the city's record of 1.16 inches
set in 1963.
Flood warnings also were
posted today for northern
Idaho, where recent heavy
snows followed by heavy rains
and warming weather caused
flooding.
The rain changed to snow In
higher elevations of the moun­
tains of Washington and Or­
egon a-.d the northern Rockies.
Travelers advisories for snow
and gusty winds were posted
for the Cascades and Siskiyou
mountains in Washington and
Oregon and the mountains and
passes of western Montana.
Forecasters said 8 more inches
of snow could accumulate.
In the Washington Cascades,
snow fell at the rate of 3 inches
per hour Sunday at Snoqunlmt-. Pass, which was
closed. Sexton Summit. Ore.,
picked up 5 Inches of snow.
Gale warnings remained in
effect along the Pacific Coast
from Washington to northern
California after winds of 84
mph. with gusts to 100 mph,
were recorded at Cape Blanco
on the southern Oregon coast
early Sunday.
The high winds caused scat­
tered power outages in at least
two coastal Oregon counties
and in the Puget Sound area of
Washington.
Elsewhere, winds of up to 70
mph near Reno, Nev., howled
across the northern Rockies.
Gale warnings covered the
Maine and New Hampshire
coasts.

Today...partly cloudy. A slightchance of showers or thun-’
derstorms this afternoon. High;
In the mid to upper 70s. Wind;
southwest around 15 mph. Rain
chance 20 percent.
Tonight...mostly cloudy with a
30 percent chance of showers.
Low In the mid 50s. Wind
southwest 10 to 15 mph.
Tuesday...decreasing cloudi­
ness. A 20 percent chance of
showers. High in the mid 70s.
Wind northwest 10 to 15 mph.
A re a Readings

The temperature at 9 a.m.: 60;
overnight low: 52: Sunday's
high: 75: barometric pressure:
30.00; relative humidity: 87
percent: winds: South at 13
mph: rain: None: Today’s sun­
set: 6:05 p.m.. Tuesday's sun­
rise: 7:12 a.m.
Extended Forecast

The exrendcd forecast for
Florida except northwest. Wed­
nesday through Friday, is for
considerable cloudiness during
the period. A chance of showers
spreading over all sections dur­
ing Wednesday and continuing
except ending north frlday.
Seasonally mild temperatures
with lows averaging from the
upper 30s extreme north to 50s
south hut low 60s In the Keys.
Highs averaging from the low
60s north to low 70s south.

Area Tides

TUESDAY: Daytona Beach:
highs. 11:28 a.m.. 11:51 p.m.:
lows. 5:33 a.m., 5:51 p.m.: New
Smyrna Beach: highs. 11:33
a.m., 11:56 p.m.; lows. 5:38
a.m., 5:56 p.m.: Bayport: highs.
4:12 a.m., 3:59 p.m.; lows. 10:10
a.m.. 11:10p.m.

Boating

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
— Small craft should exercise
caution...
Today...wind mostly south
Increasing to 15 to 20 kts. Sea;
building to 4 to 6 ft. Bay and
Inland waters a moderate chop
becoming choppy. A few show
ers developing.
Tonight...wind mostly west
around 15 kts. Seas 3 to 5 ft. Bay
and irdand waters a modcrutt
chop. Scattered showers.

�SCHOOLS
IN BRIEF
Texas Firm Establishes Endow ed
Chair A t U. O f Central Florida
Rediffuslon Simulation. Inc., a British firm's Texas-based
subsidiary with world-wide markets for simulation
systems, presented the first of five annual $10,000 checks
to the University of Central Florida on Jan. 26 for the
establishment of an endowed chair in simulation and
training, according to the university's public afTalrs office.
Dr. J. Edward Neighbor, a 50-year-old physicist, has
been appointed to the newly established position of
associate vice president for faculty affairs at the University
of Central Florida, according to the university's public
affairs ofTlce.

Writers O f Week Recognized
Aspiring students at Lakcview Middle School achieve
recognition for outstanding writing in the "Writers of the
Week" program under the direction of Linda Goddard,
seventh-grade English teacher, according to assistant
principal. Fred Burnett.

Curriculum Fair Slated
Pine Crest Elementary School will hold Its annual
Curriculum Fair on Tues., Feb. 10. at 7:30 p.m. Students
will display science, math and social studies projects.

Fair Sales Spaces Available
Eastbrook Elementary Is currently accepting reserva­
tions for spaces for the purpose of selling individual
home-made crafts at Its annual PTA Spring Carnival on
March 14, 1987. Early registration Is advlsabte, call
671-6395.

3 Cited A s Students Of Month
Students of the month awards were given to Zoltan
Davis. Darrell Canada and Chris Causseauz by Lakeview
Middle School's faculty, assistant principal Fred Burnett
said.

Perfect Papers Presented
English Estates Elementary School's third-grade math
superstars who turned in perfect papers last week are
Anthony Plerdomtnicl, Mike O'Brien, Rachel Gllcksteln and
Travis Baggett, according to principal Freeman Baggett.

A rbor Day Celebrated
Arbor Day was observed at Pine Crest Elementary School
on January 21 with a special program and tree-planting
ceremony, according to principal Clay Carroll. While a
portion of the program was given to the history of Arbor
Day through students' selected readings and songs, the
Importance of trees to all people was stressed, Carroll said.

Book Fair Scheduled
Sanford Middle School will hold a book fair the week of
Feb. 2 through 6 in the school library, and a poster contest
will be held to advertise the fair.

Tree Planted A t Geneva
Geneva Elementary School held un Arbor Day program
on Jan. 26 at 1 p.m. and Mike Martin of the State Forestry
Division planted a tree, according to principal Nancy
McNamara.

COUNTY
IN BRIEF
County Agencies Set Busy
Schedule For Coming Week
County agencies have a busy schedule this week
although there is no county commission board meeting
scheduled until next week.
The Council of Local Govcrnmenta (CALNO) meets at 7
p.m. Wednesday at Longwood City Hall to discuss
legislative priorities to be presented to the Seminole
County Legislative Delegation on Feb. 9. Also a Com­
prehensive Plan for Education through 1993 Is scheduled
for presentation.
The County Parks and Recreation Advisory Board meets
a 7:30 a.m Thursday at the Environmental Services
Building, and the Development Review’ Committee has
several requests to consider at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Seminole County Services Building.
A major Item this week will be the Planning and Zoning
Commission/Land Planning Agency meeting beginning at
6 p.m. Wednesday in the county services building. Several
public hearings are scheduled including review and
recommendation on impact fees, and changes in the land
development code.

Commissioners OK Rezoning
In other action, the commission rezoned from residential
to residential-professional a property described as one lot
on the east side of Maitland Avenue, south of Florldahaven
Drive.

REALTY TRANSFERS
R C A to R ich a rd K D avis and W l Donna Jo,
Lot 100 Hidden Lake V illas. Ph III, 168,000
Joseph Feag lns and Wt M e rry to Cordon F
Pagano and Wt M argaret M , Lot i t Deer
Run. Un 21B. *96.000
B ert Schneider and W l Diane to Donna
Pollock. Lot 9, Deer Run Un. t i, *75,000
B rad ley W Young and W l M a ry E. to
E m e ry C. T om pkins and Wt Linda A Lot 27
Sabal Glen at Sabal Point. *180.000
F ra n c is J Boden and Wt P a tric ia to John
B. Russell and W l Catherine. Lot 147 Springs
Landing. Un. Four, *175.000
Calton Homes to Pete Drahuse and W l
Helen, Lot 89 Southridge at Country Creek,
*75,100
Calton Hom es to M ich ael L. Cam pbell and
W l M a rily n . Lot I IB Stillw ater. S93.S00
Calton Homes to M a rk W M itch e ll and Wt
Doreen, Lot 5 W oodbridge at Country Creek.
*80.400
M l Schottensteln Homes to Douglas R
G i ant. Lot 8 A la ta ya Woods. Ph VII. *77,300
Calton Hom es to George R Large and Wt
Pen! L „ Lot 85 Woodland Terr., Country
Creek, *101,000
Danbury Ltd to A rth u r C Sweeney, Lot 88
D anbury H ill, U n T w o A . *170.000
Calton Homes to M ich ae l J E Hedge. Lot I
Woodbridge at Country Creek. *78,900
W ilb urn T W ormlngton and Wt Jauqulta to
D avid F G allow ay J r and Wt Ronda J , Lot
43 Rose Court. *75,000

M /| Schottenstein H om es to Ja m e s T
Corm ier, Lot 43 A la lo y a W oodj, Ph I. Un A,
*77,200
FRC. Inc. to Subarl A d i adnata and Wt
D la n e E .L o t 137S um m erhill. Ph II ,*71.000
Carl P C o rliss III and W l Tam m y to Peer
D. McM ahon and W l K im b e rly , Lot 8 B lk O,
North Orlando Terr. SecO U n 1, *58.000
Philip G P itm an nnd C orey to D a ry l M
W ill and Wt Lynda S,. Lot 38 Tim berwood.
*94.500
Sy E T rabulsy and Wf F rie d a to John E .
Peschau and Wf Clare H , L o t 23 B lk C. D ru id
H ills Park. *77.500
Janice C hilcote to Donna F. Leom bruno,
Lot 221 Forest Brook Fourth Sec. *78.000
K e nsington P a rk . L td
lo B re n d a H
Stephens. Un 413 Kensington Pa rk P h III,
*104.000
Benjam in R T illm a n and Wt E m m a to
John E B rokaw and Danny L . part o l Lot 50,
Forest Lake s/d, 5210.000
Ronald J. M a y nr to C-eorge E H arp e r,
Bldg 8. W eklva V illas. *63,500
Rose L Rehlstaub to R ic h a rd M D avis, Lot
13 Blk 49, Toyrnslteol No. Chuluola. *52.500
Charles H, Slple and Wt C a rolyn to H enry
E Jones and Wt G lo ria A . Lot 107 Sunland
1st Addn , *50,900
The Huskey Co to A la n M , Cohen and Wt
Susan, Lot 4 Sweetwater Club , Un lV,t95,000
John E G allow ay to Te«styrene Corp . Un
3993, W eklva Hunt C lu b C o n d . *98.000

Waite:No Ransom,
Hostage Exchange
LONDON (UPI) - Missing
hostage negotiator Terry Waite
left emphatic instructions before
heading to Beirut — no ransom
payment or hostage exchange If
he is kidnapped.
Archbishop of Canterbqry
Robert Runcle. for whom Waite
serves as a special envoy, said
Sunday that he would abide by
the Instructions despite concern
for his envoy's safety.
Waite, a hostage negotiator
from the Church of England,
returned to Beirut Jan. 12 to
seek the release of Western
hostages. He disappeared 13
days ago while working for the
release of two kidnapped Ameri­
cans.
"I am very anxious where he
is. I have no fresh news,” Runcie
said after leading a church
service Sunday at Canterbury
Cathedral, 45 miles southeast of
London.
"He. of course, had said to me
more than once on past oc­
casions that should anything
happen to him. he wouldn't
want money or people to be
exchanged for him." Runcle
said.
"I think he felt quite strongly
that he had a particular charac­
ter of mission — that if anyone
was going to get him free, he'd
do that himself."
Waite, who played a role In the
release of three kidnapped Amer­
icans. returned to Beirut on his
latest mission under the protec­
tion of the Druze Moslem militia.
He left his hotel without body­
guards on Jan. 20. presumably

for a rendezvous with Moslem
extremists holding Americans
Thomas Sutherland and Terry
Anderson. He has not been seen
since.
The Sunday Telegraph re­
ported that minutes before Waite
left his hotel, he handed a
Western reporter a letter with
Instructions th a t It not be
opened unless he was kid­
napped.
"1 have heard of this letter, but
I have not seen It." Runcle said.
"It Is along the lines of things he
has said to me ... about having
no part in supporting any money
being paid or any exchange
being made should anything
happen to him.”
A C h u rc h o f E n g la n d
spokeswoman said Waite also
left behind "a written declara­
tion" before his latest mission
but Instructed that Us contents
remain "confidential."
Runcie said Waite had appar­
ently written the last letter In
Beirut "because I think he didn't
want people to say, 'Oh. well.
Terry Waite has made things
worse.'"
"He wanted to do what he felt
he was called to do ... but he
would not want to add to the
difficulties," said Runcie. who
during the service called on the
worshipers to pray for Waite and
hiafamlly.
Waite's wife, Francis, has gone
Into seclusion. His cousin, John,
said the family fears th a t
persistent reports from Beirut
that he has been kidnapped
"have the awful ring of truth” to
them.

COMING EVENTS
MONDAY. FEB. 2
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.
Central Florida Blood Bank
Florida H ospitai-A ltam ontc
Branch. 601 E. Altamonte Ave.,
9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
STANDING MEETINGS
Sanford AA. 5:30 p.m.. open
discussion; 8 p.m.. closed dis­
cussion, 1201 W. First St.
. Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m..
317 Oak A v e . , Sanford.
Apopka Alcoholics Anony­
mous. 8 p.m., closed, Apopka
E p is c o p a l C h u r c h . 6 1 5
Highland.
Al-Anon Step and Study, 8
p.m.. Casselberry Senior Center,
200 N. Triplet Drive.
Young and Free AA. St. Rich­
ard’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.
Ovcreatcrs Anonymous. 7:30
p.m.. West Lake Hospital, State
Road 434, Longwood. Call Mary
at 886-1905 or Dennis at 8627411.
TUESDAY, FEB. 3
Sanford Senior Citizen Club,
noon. Sanford Civic Center. Bag
lunch and bingo.
Countywide Forum on teen
problems and what the schools
and com m unity are doing
sponsored by Seminole Chemi­
cal Awareness Network. 7-9
p.m., Sanford Civic Center.
Free income tax help for retlreees. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
Florida National Bank. West SR
434 at Markham Road; VFW
Club. 420 N. Edgcrron Ave.,
Winter Springs; Longwood Rec­
reation Center, W. Warren
Avenue. Tuesdays through April
15.
STANDING MEETINGS
Casselberry Kiwanls Club.
7:30 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.
Free blood pressure checks, 9
a.m. to 1 p.m., American Red
Cross Seminole Service Center.
705 W. State Road 434. Suite C..
Longw ood. T u e s d a y s an d
Thursdays.
S o u th S em in o le C o u n ty
Kiwanls Club. noon. Quincy’s
Restaurant. Highway 17-92 and
Live Oaks B o u l e v a r d ,
Casselberry.
Sanford AA. 5:30 p.m. open
discussion, 8 p.m., Living Sober
closed, 1201 W. First St.. San­
ford.
Rcbos Club AA. noon and 5:30
p.m., closed. 8 p.m., step, 130
Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos Club, noon,
closed.
TOPS Chapter 79, 6:15-8:15
p.m.. Howell Place. 200 W.
Airport Boulevard, Sanford.
Toastm aster Internationa)
C l u b l n t he La k e
Mary/Longwood area at 7:15
p.m. at the Seminole Communi­
ty College. For additional In­
formation call Rosclla and Tom
Bonham. 323-8284.
24-Hour AA group beginners
open discussion. 8 p.m., 317 S.
Oak Ave., Sanford.
17-92 Group AA, 8 p.m.,
closed, M essiah L u th e ran
Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack
Road.
Overeaters Anonymous, open,
7:30 p.m., Florida Power &amp;
Light, 301 S. Myrtle Ave., San­
ford.
Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p.m.
(closed). West Lake Hospital.
State Road 434. Longwood.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 4
STANDING MEETINGS
Casselberry Rotary breakfast.
7:30 a.m., Casselberry Senior
Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive.
Sanford R otary-B reakfast
Club. 7 a.m., Skyport Restau­
rant. Sanford Airport. .
Sanford Optimist Club. 11:45
a.m.. Western Sizzlin Restau­
rant. Sanford.
Sanford Kiwanls Club. noon.
Sanford Civic Center.
REBOS AA. noon and 5:30 and
8 p.m.(closed). Rebos Club. 130
Normandy Lane. Casselberry.

Kfc. L ItW -tt

IN THE SERVICE

RICHARD A. BAUMGARDNER
A i r m a n R i c h a r d A.
Baumgardner, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John A. Baumgardner of
109 F o r e s t P a rk C o u rt.
Longwood. has graduated from
Air Force basic training at
Lackland Air Force Base. Texas.
During the six weeks of train­
ing the airman studied the Air
Force mission, organization and
customs and received special
training in human relations.
in addition, airmen who com­
plete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree
through the community college
of the Air Force.
He Is a 1983 graduate of Lake
Brantley High School. Forest
City.
DAVID A. TODD
Marine Lance Cpi. David A.
Todd, son of David E. and Arlene
H. Griswold of 1401 Sparrow St..
Longwood. recently returned
from a Western Pacific De­
ployment.
During the six month de­
ployment Todd was stationed at
M arine C orps A ir S tatio n
Iwakuni. Japan and also at
Naval Air Station Cubl Point.
Puerto Rico. He participated In
two mining exercises as well as
two high tempo operations.
Todd Is currently serving with
Marine All-W eather Attack
Squadron 224. Cherry Point,
N.C.
KEITH P. MERRITT
Navy Petty Officer 1st Class
Keith P. Merritt, son of Ann B.
Merritt of 280 E. Warren Ave.,
Longwood, recently returned
from a two month deployment
aboard the subm arine USS
Bremerton homeported In Pearl
Harbor. Hawaii.
During the deployment the
Bremerton cruised over 12.000
miles and made port visits tq
Nanoose. Canada; San Fran-'
cisco, and Bremerton. Wash.
T he B re m e rto n w as also
a w a r d e d I h e S u b m a r in e

Squadron Seven Battle Effi­
ciency "E" Award, the Subma­
rine Warfare "A" Award and the
Deck Seam anship "Crossed
Anchors" for outstanding per­
formance In 1986.
CHAD M. DENNY
Navy Seaman Recruit Chad M.
Denny, son of Patricia R. and
Dan M. Denny Sr. of 104
Rosebriar Drive, Longwood. FL,
has completed recruit training at
Recruit Training Command. San
Diego.
During Denny's eight-week
training cycle, he studied gener­
al military subjects designed to
prepare him for further academ­
ic and on-thc-Job training in one
of the Navy's 85 basic fields.
Denny's stu d ies included
seamanship, close order drill,
Naval history and first aid.
Personnel who complete this
course of Instruction are eligible
for three hours of college credit
In Physical Education and
Hygiene.
MICHAEL A. LELAND
Marine Cpl. Michael A. Lcland,
a 1981 graduate of Lake Howell
High School of Maitland. FL,
r e c e n t l y r e t u r n e d fro m
participating in NATO exercises
In V an d e), D e n m ark a n d
Slgonela, Italy with Marine
Fighter Attack Squadron 115.
home based at Marine Corps Air
Station. Beaufort, SC.
While In Denmark. Fighter
A t t a c k S q u a d r o n 115
participated in NATO exercise
Northern Wedding/Bold Guard
86. During the operation the
Squadron provided close air
support and practiced air in­
tercepts with several other
NATO countries.
S q u a d r o n 115 t h e n
participated In another NATO
exercise. Display Determination
86 in Slgonella. Italy. During
this exercise the Squadron de­
ployed to Turkey for a week.
JOHN C. DUBOIS
Navy Seaman Recruit John C.
DuBols, son of Carleton R. and
Jackie M. DuBols of 109 W.
Airport Blvd.. Sanford, FL, has
completed recruit training at
Recruit Training Command. San
Diego.
During DuBols's eight-week
training cycle, he studied gener­
al military subjects designed to
prepare him for further academ­
ic and on-the-job training In one
of the Navy's 85 basic fields.
DuBols's studies included
seamanship, close order drill.
Naval history and first aid.
Personnel, who complete this
course of instruction arc eligible
for three hours of college credit
in Physical Education and
Hygiene,

Boat Insurance?
( ) ih ‘ nam t* s a \ s it lu * sl.

T

TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
Mt

I

rP h. 322-0285
2 5 7 5 S . F r e n c h A v e ., S a n f o r d

kA u to-Owners

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N
A N l SI A l

i n i s I S KHT

pay to the

O U R

.

(uluition Includes: Postuie Anal|ti*. tuition Test. Short
it| T«|, Short Aim Its! And T*H With Docioi.

ALL INSUNANCt ASSIGNMENTS
„ „ r„ ,
ACCEPTED'
'S ub ject To rolicr Limit**

Frequent H e a d a c h e s
Low B a c k or H ip P ain
D iz z in e s s or L o s s o f S le e p
N u m b n e ss ol H a n d s or Feet
N ervousness
N e c k P ain o r S t i l l n e s s
A rm a n d S h o u ld e r P ain

A ik about our "M a k in g C h iro pra ctic A fio rd a h le " P ro g ra m

• imi patientand*n»oi»ih personresponsible fobpaymentmas amight r&lt;■&gt;*,►use to

H A , C A N C E l P A Y M E N T O B BE R E IM B U B S E O f O B P A T M E N ' E O « A N Y O t M E B S E R V IC E E A A M IN A
t ION O B T R E A T M E N T W H IC H i s PE S T O R M E D A S A B I S U t Y O r AND W IT H IN 72 H O U R S O f R E S P O N
p,NC. TO TME A O V E B ’ ISfcM FN T YOB Tm ( I B E E S E R V IC E E Y A M .N A T IO N » B T R EA T M E N T

L A K E M A R Y BLVD.
C H I R O P R A C T I C CLINIC, INC.
* 0 1 I. L ake
M a r y Blvd

3 2 2 -9 3 0 0

T o d a y

200
63-8757
2631

8 7

C U S T O M E R

OF SEMNOIJE
S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A

FO R

PHONE:

3 2 2 -1 2 4 2

2&amp;3ia?571*: ta&amp;oooQ

S u i t e 1 07

Bayhcud Center

T H O M A S F. V A N D I L L . JR. D .C.

$ FREE

ORDER O F ________________________________________

B R I N G T H I S A D IN A N D R E C E I V E Y O U R

\

W ARNING SIG N ALS O r P lN C H E D N ER V ES

"FREE CHECKING”
NO S E R V IC E C H A R G E
NO P ER C H E C K C H A R G E
NO MINIMUM BA LA N CE

insurance

I ifr, Home. fur. Husinrsv (&gt;ru- name sa&gt;s it alt.

F IR S T O R D E R

O F CH ECKS

F R E E DOLLARS

Uom ^■'umdlxfS i

:

�Sanford Herald
(USPS 491-290)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2811 or 831-9993
Monday. February 2. 1997—4A
Wayne D. Doyle. Publisher
The mat Giordano, Manef inf Editor
Maly In Adklnt, Advertising Director

Home Delivery: Month. 94.75:3 Months. 914.25:6 Months.
927.00: Year. 951.00. By Mall: Mnnth. 96.75: 3 Months.
920.25; 6 Months. 937.00: Year. 969.00.

Congress Should
Honor Promise
The Reagan adm inistration's Caribbean
Basin Initiative went Into effect three years
ago am id glowing predictions that it would
Invigorate the economies of a region vital to
U.S. interests. Despite massive infusions of
U.S. dollars, however, the policy has found­
ered and there has been precious little
economic progress among the nations it was
designed to help.
The Caribbean Basin is composed of about
two dozen small developing countries and
contains vital sea lanes through which 75
percent of U.S. oil imports m ust flow. It is an
Important m arket for U.S. exports and the
second largest source of Illegal immigration to
the United States. The volatile region Is
especially vulnerable to communist terrorism
and subversion, as witness the turmoil in
G uatem ala. El Salvador and Costa Rica
during the last several years. Cuban. Soviet,
and even Libyan efforts to destabilize the
Caribbean Basin are Increasing along with the
strength of their leftist allies.
Clearly, the time has come for Congress to
reconsider the Caribbean Basin Initiative with
an eye toward restoring those measures that
were contained in the original proposal.
The Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery
Act was crippled from the moment it became
effective on Jan . 1, 1984. Congress gutted the
program by stripping It of Its most important
features. Many goods, some of which arc key
Caribbean exports, were denied the open
access to U.S. m arkets that the bill was
supposed to provide. Moreover, heavy lobby­
ing by the AFL-CIO blocked the president s
proposal for a 10 percent tax credit for new
U.S. investm ents In the region. Little wonder
that economic conditions have worsened in
the region during the last three years.
Since 1984, the value of exports from
Caribbean nations has declined steadily. For
example, the value of their oil and sugar
exports to the United States decreased by 44
percent and 43 percent respectively during
the first six m onths of 1986 from a year
earlier. Caribbean sugar exports to the United
States will fall still further this year because
of a cpngres^lonally mandated formula on
Unemployment now averages be­
tween 15 percent and 25 percent In the
basin's work force. Constant-dollar pcr-eaplta
Income has fallen and regional debt has
increased. Inflation is ram pant and imported
goods a re beyond the m eans of m ost
residents.
What can be done to reverse this alarming
trend and revive the economies of this
strategically vital region?
Congress m ust remove the protectionist
trade barriers that prevent Caribbean goods
from coming into the United States. Tax
incentives m ust be made available to U.S.
investors willing to open businesses in the
region. And the 12-year limit on the program
m ust be removed. The Caribbean Basin
Initiative was not meant as an economic
quick-fix, but rather as an incentive to
long-term recovery and growth.
Concerns about the possible loss of U.S.
Jobs to C aribbean com petitors are u n ­
derstandable, but exaggerated. Total produc­
tion of the Caribbean Basin is equivalent to
less than 2 percent of the U.S. gross national
product. In fact, imports from the region
account for less than 4 percent of total U.S.
imports. It should also be noted that U.S.
companies hurt by Caribbean imports can
seek relief under the 1974 Trade Act.
The Caribbean Basin will be the Achilles’
heel of the Western Hemisphere so long as its
economic problems arc allowed to fester.
President Reagan recognized as much when
he proposed that the region be accorded
preferential treatm ent in trade and U.S.
Investment. The Demoeratic-controlled Con­
gress would do well to grant these con­
cessions in the interest of peace and pro­
sperity throughout the Americas.

BERRY'S WORLD

BEN WATTENBERG

Now The Question: Is Nunn The O ne?
Sen. Sam Nunn. D-Ga.. will soon decide
whether to run for president In 1988. Nunn told
me the chances were 6040 that he would decide
against running, but noted that a couple of
months ago his self-determined odds were 80-20
against.
If Nunn decides to run. he has some .big
factors In his favor, some surmountable pro­
blems he can surmount, and one particularly
big tactical decision to make.
In Nunn's favor: Should Nunn say yes he
would immediately get the support of a large
piece of the center-right establishment of the
Democratic Party. They are now scared that
their wing of the party may have no horse In the
race. Former Virginia Gov. Charles Robb would
travel and help raise money for Nunn. Robert
Strauss — still “Mr. Democrat" to a lot of people
— would work for a Nunn campaign and help
raise funds. Such backers give Nunn instant
political credibility.
Not that Nunn needs much credibilitybolstering. Of the possible Democratic can­
didates, he has the most national political

experience (elected to the Senate in 1972). He is
regarded as a “senator's senator" —diligent and
knowledgeable.
Nunn Is well positioned to attract attention.
He Is the chairman of the Armed Services
Committee, a member of the Iran investigating
committee and chairman of the Permanent
Senate Investigating Subcommittee which has
the franchise to poke Into almost any sexy issue
its chairman chooses.
As the field now shapes up. Nunn would have
a clean shot at a large natural constituency —
the moderate and/or Southern voters. Do not
under-estimate that constituency. The 1984
New York Times exit polls show that voters in
the Democratic primaries identified themselves
this way: conservative 21 percent, liberal 27
percent, moderate 47 percent. Thus: A moder­
ate can win: liberals don’t have an Insurmoun­
table veto.
Nunn Is Indeed a moderate. His aggregate
National Journal rating on economic, social and
foreign Issues for the latest three years is 44
percent liberal. By contrast, the other three

legislators with NJ scores are Sen. Gary Hart (88
percent liberal), Sen. Joseph Biden (74 percent
liberal) and Rep. Richard Gephart (69 percent
liberal). Conservative senators have single-digit
ratings.
What makes a Nunn-run so plausible is that
when no one was watchlhg America moved a
giant step toward a national primary. The
sequential primaries have been upstaged by the
advent of M ega-Tuesday, the so-called
“Southern Primary" on March 8. 1988. Already
16 states. 10 from the South, have signed up.
representing about a third of the electorate. The
following week comes Ohio. Illinois and Min­
nesota. yielding another 11 percent of the
electorate.
All potential early-small-staie strategies arc
risky, but all should take advantage of the five
C’s that come with Nunn: credibility, com­
petence. committee coverage, constituency and
cash.
In any event. If Nunn says go. he will
automatically be In the first tier of the field. And
the moderates will have a horse.

WASHINGTON WORLD

ROBERT WALTERS

Reagan's
Missed
Chances

Louisiana's
Petroleum
Fallout
NEW ORLEANS (NEA) — When
petroleum production peaked In late
1981. almost 500 oil and gas rigs
were operating In Louisiana. By last
summer, however, the number of
active rigs was barely above 100.
The industry has experienced a
modest recovery in recent months
and the state's rig count, according
to the Hughes Tool Co., now stands
at 127 — a figure that has local,
national and international ramifica­
tions.
The local economic dislocation
caused by the severe depression
within the oil Industry has forced
New Orleans to slash Its firefighting
force to 800. down from a peak of
more than 1,000 in 1977.
The city's police force, which
numbered more than 1,500 In 1978,
has been cut to 1,300 — a reduction
blamed for an outbreak of armed
robberies and burglaries. Other
municipal workers have been re­
stricted to four-day workweeks.
In suburban Harahan. the city's
five aldermen have been designated
as p a r t - t i m e v o l u n t e e r
“coordinators" of municipal de­
partments. replacing full-time paid
administrators whose services the
city no longer can afford.
For Louisiana's state government,
each $1 decline In the market price
of crude oil produces a revenue loss
of $35 million to $50 million. The
shortfall In the current budget Is
variously estimated at $260 million
to $410 million.
Gov. Edwin W. Edwards last year
Insisted that casino gambling or a
state lottery would solve those fiscal
problems — but the state legislature
rejected his suggestions.
The legislature then spent much
of December agonizing about how to
eliminate the deficit — before
a b a n d o n in g Its e ffo rts and
authorizing Edwards to make the
needed budget cuts. "What we're
saying." one lawmaker explained,
"Is that we don't want to face up to
our responsibility."
The situation elsewhere In the
country's "oil patch” Is equally
depressing. The number of active oil
and gas rigs nationally plunged
from a record high of 4.530 In late
1981 to an all-time low of 663 In
mid-1986. The current total Is 837.
M arginal producers in this
country, especially those relying on
low-volume " strip p e r w ells."
abandoned their operations rather
than sell at a loss.
With d o m e s tic p ro d u c tio n
plummeting and Imports from the
Middle East soaring, this country Is
setting Itself up lor future "energy
crises" Identical to those that devas­
tated the nation's economy In the
1970s.

ROBERT WAGMAN

Fence Sitters Inch Up
WASHINGTON (NEA) — Missouri
Rep. Richard Gephardt will an­
nounce his candidacy for the Demo­
cratic nomination at a fund-raising
dinner In St. Louis on Feb. 23.
Then, on April 6. New York Rep.
Jack Kemp will make his candidacy
official In a series of announcements
starting In Washington, moving on
to his home In Buffalo and going
from there to New Hampshire and
Iowa, the two key early-decislon
states.
Neither of these announcements
will come as a surprise. Both men
arc making formal what has long
been known.
But what Is raising political
eyebrows are the actions of two
Democrats who. so far at least, are
claiming they have no real interest
In the 1988 primaries.
Massachusetts Gov. Michael
Dukakis, who clearly has wider
ambitions. Is being strongly urged
to run by many Democrats who say
they arc willing to put their money
where their mouths are.
Dukakis continues to say he is
thinking It over and has no plans to
make the race. But an announce­
ment that he will spend several
days In Iowa In early February ts
being greeted with some excitement
by his supporters and with Interest
by Democratic Insiders.
Those close to Dukakis say that
he Is sure he can do well In New
England — and the New Hampshire
primary — but how he Is received
outside the region may well tip the
scales. The Iowa trip could be very
Important.
Meunwhlle, Gov. Mario Cuomo of
New York, the other great fencesitter In the Democratic field, con­
tinues to Insist that he has no plans
to run for the Oval Office In 1988.
Last week, though, there ap­
peared on the desks of West Coast
reporters press .k its detailing
Matilda Cuomo's Involvement In the
child-abuse Issue and information
ubout when she will be available for

Interviews when she accompanies
her husband to Los Angeles for a
speech he Is giving In mid-February.
The interest that first lady Nancy
Reagan has engendered with her
anti-drug efforts has not been lost
on the political Image makers. It will
now become dc rigucur for pro­
spective first ladles to get behind an
Issue, and this effort makes It clear
that Mrs. Cuomo’s will be child
abuse. The obvious question: If
Mafilda Cuomo has started a run for
first fady. can her husband be very
far behind?
In the best of times. Chicago
politics can be complex. But the
upcoming race, for mayor has
become positively Byzantine.
F o u r y e a r s ago Harold
Washington became Chicago’s first
black mayor. He won the Democrat­
ic primary with less than 40 percent
of the vote after Incumbent Mayor
Jayne Byrne and County Attorney
Richard Daley, son of the longtime
mayor, split the "white” vole.
This led to political chaos as
Washington squared off against the
rest of the Cook County Democratic
Party, which is led by his chief
e n e m y . A l d e r m a n E d wa r d
Vrdolyak. the party's chairman. •
For the party regulars It has been
a matter of waiting until the Feb.
2 4 . 1987. p rim a ry to o u st
Washington. We will not be caught
unawares again, they say. They
have wanted a one-on-one contest
between Washington and their
candidate —most likely Daley.
Then the complications began.
Byrne insisted she was deserved
another shot at Washington and
could not be dissuaded. She filed for
the office. Vrdolyak also said he was
going to run. Finally, so did County
Assessor Thomas Hynes, arguably
the most popular Democratic
politician around Chicago these
days.
As a result. Richie Daley has
backed off from the race completely.

By Arnold Sawislak
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ronald
Reagan’s instinct for the dramatic,
some say melodramatic, is the best
of any president since Franklin
Roosevelt, but It seems to have
deserted him last week In his State
of the Union address.
A president can command atten­
tion almost any time he wishes, and
the State of the Union Is first among
the occasions when all eyes are on
him.
It Is a time when the president has
a blank canvas on which he can
paint a picture of the world as he
secs It now and as he would like to
sec It In the future.
Reagan did not have a completely
clean slate to work with this year.
He faced two Issues — his health
and the Iran arms-Contra aid affair
— that begged to be addressed in
his first real public appearance
since late In 1986.
The health matter was easy. All
he had to do was show up. look well
and deliver the speech with vigor.
He looked great for a 76-ycar-old
man who. In the last six years, has
had several major operations.
His options on Iran were clear. He
could Ignore It, taking the position
that he had nothing new to say: he
could repeat what he has said tn the
past: he could say something new.
such a s a d m ittin g he made
mistakes and apologizing to the
public.
He did accept responsibility and
express regret at the outcome, but
he again defended the concept of
improving relations with Iran and
trying to free American hostuges.
That represented a small change
In previous pronouncements on the
Issue, and It became the focus of
media attention in reports about
and analyses of the speech.
Some might say this happened
because reporters arc mesmerized
by Iran. True or not, the president
gave them very little else substan­
tial to write and talk about.
And he did have an opportunity to
use the speech to shift attention
away from Irqn.
He mentioned, without details,
two subjects that could have
g r a b b e d the h e a d l i n e s —
catastrophic illness health Insur­
ance and welfare reform. He said
plans to deal with these two Issues
would be sent to Congress later.
If he didn’t think of It. It would
seem to be a rare instance of Reagan
missing the opportunity for a politi­
cal coup. If they didn’t. It would
seem to be another case of the
White House staff serving him less
than brilliantly.

JACK ANDERSON

Singapore Men Prefer Less-Educated Wives

"Actually, I A M standing tall. It's just that I'm
In a H O L E at the moment. ”

By Jack Anderson
And Dale Van Atta
WASHINGTON — Sexual equality
is getting enthusiastic official sup­
port in one modern. Industrialized
n atio n , w ith a g o v ern m en tsubsidized combination of "Love
Boat" and "The Dating Game.” The
aim Is to encourage college gradu­
ates to marry each other to boost
the national IQ.
The country Is Singapore and the
official matchmaker Is Lee Kuan
Yew. who has been prime minister
for nearly 28 of his 63 years. Lee
co n sid ers his e x p erim e n t In
eugenics to be vital to the future of
his Island nation of 2.5 million.
Singapore has virtually no natural
resources other than Its people’s
ability to compete with the rest of
the world tn high finance and high
technology.
In a recent interview with Dale
Van Atta. Lee explained the pro­
blem he hopes to solve with his
dating gam es Is the result of
insecurity among Aslan men and

social tradition.
"Men. particularly Aslan men.
must be seen for their own self­
esteem to be the master of the
household." he explained. "Never
mind whether he Is or not; that's a
private matter within the family.
That his wife Is a very dominating
personality and he takes her views
Into account Is private. But he must
be seen to be unchallenged."
Because of this. Aslan parents
who used to arrange their sons’
marriages would look for girls who
were "supposed to be, at least
, before they were married, meek and
docile." Lee said. But the postwar
world and the end of colonial status
brought great change to Singapore.
"We educated all the girls.” Lee
said, "and opened up all avenues —
Jobs, equal opportunities all the way
— without realizing that these
attitudes and values in the men
would not change as fast as the girls
were changing their status.
"The result should have been
obvious by the 1970 census. We

chose not to notice tt because It was
such a personal matter. We thought
this would solve itself. ... By the
1980 census. It couldn't be con­
cealed anymore. The numbers
became too grave: Sixty percent of
(college) graduate men in 1980
married non-graduate wives. They
married down. Only 40 percent
married their educational equals.
Because equal numbers had gone to
university, this left 60 percent of
graduate girls with the choice of
ma r r y i n g down, whi ch was
extremely difficult.”
Since the male college graduates
had their pick of the non-college
women, "the men at the bottom,
those who didn't make even Junior
high school, were left unmarried."
Lee explained. And the female
college g rad u a tes. Including
"high-ranking girls working In the
government ministries, stay un­
married."
Lee’s remedy was the creation in
1984 of the Social Development
Unit, which he said "Just offers a

venue, a kind of neutral meeting
place — seminars, dances, lunches,
cruises, whatever.”
The program has been only mod­
erately successful so far. For exam­
ple. 50 women signed up for one
cruise last year: only three men
signed up.
Lee believes that Singapore's
business leaders must force the
educated men to "shake off their
fetters — put on them perhaps by
their mothers, who led them tn
believe that If they had wives who
appeared to be as clever and well
educated as them, then their su­
premacy Is not so established."
On one thing Lee was clear: "We
can’t reverse course now. We can't
say. ‘Girls shouldn't go to university
or finish high school.' It's not
possible. The floodgates have been
opened. There Is no reversing."
Footnote: Lee himself put his
troth where his truth was. Years ago
he married Kwa Geok Choo. an
honors graduate of Cambridge Uni­
versity.

�.*

t ¥* * - -

t.

&gt;■&gt;

in fc rt W rU , I— W , FI.

NATION
IN BRIEF
IVWte House Says Congress
N eed Not S ee Reagan Notes
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan's personal
notes on dally doings In the Oval Office contain some detail
about the Iran-Contra scandal, but White House officials
say Congress can solve the puzzle without such "private
papers."
The notes, apparently complied for use In Reagan's
memoirs, were disclosed to the Senate Intelligence
Committee by White House chief of staff Donald Regan In
Its probe of the scandal last month. The Washington Post
reported Sunday.
White House spokesman Don Mathes confirmed that
Reagan "docs, from time to time. In the evening and in the
residence, make private notes on what he does during the
day."
But while the newspaper said Senate Investigators are
interested In seeing the notes — and possibly in
Interviewing author Edmund Morris, who Is working on a
Reagan biography — Mathes said Congress should not be
allowed access.

Fitzwater Becom es Spokesman
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Twenty years of faithful
government service that began In a bureaucratic
backwater thrust Marlin Fitzwater Into a center-stage hot
seat today as President Reagan's new chief spokesman.
Fitzwater. 44. who has been explaining government
actions and policies to the public since swapping a career
In Journalism for a job with the Appalachian Regional
Commission in 1965. Is the new man In charge of a White
House media operation run for almost six years by Larry
Spcakes.
The quiet transition took place Sunday, as Spcakes bid a
formal farewell to government and prepared to begin work
on Wall Street as head of communications for Merrill
Lynch &amp; Co. at a handsome six-figure salary.
With Speakes taking leave, the Iran arms-Contra aid
scandal and Its attendant headaches guarantee Fitzwater a
baptism of fire that could make his honeymoon with the
White House press corps a brief one.

Democrats Plan Activist Agenda
WASHINGTON (UPI) — House Democrats, buoyed by a
weekend retreat at a West Virginia resort, return to Capitol
Hill today ready to pursue an activist agenda they hope will
pay big dividends In the 1988 elections.
"Those who counsel caution are dead wrong," Rep.
Richard Gephardt. D-Mo., told his colleagues Sunday at the
close of their annual issues conference at While Sulphur
Springs. W.Va.
His speech was similar In tone to that of House Speaker
Jim Wright of Texas, who pledged Saturday to lead the
Democrats through "an agenda of action" and cited a
comprehensive trade bill as the No. 1 priority.
Wright also predicted confidently that Congress this
week will override President Reagan’s veto of the $20
million clean water bill.

IN BRIEF
Israeli S o u rc e :'Oliver North
Drove Us Crazy With Requests'
JERUSALEM (UPI) — Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin
rejected U.S. charges that he proposed sending cash and
captured Soviet-bloc weapons to U.S.-backed Nicaraguan
rebels, saying the allegations have "no basis in reality."
Rabin, responding to a U.S. Senate report on the affair,
said Sunday he was asked to ship weapons to the rebels by
"an American figure" on the U.S. National Security
Council.
Rabin did not name the person, but he appeared to be
referring to Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North. North. 43, was
fired Nov. 25 for his role in the Reagan administration’s
"arms-for-hostages" deal with Iran and the reported
diversion of profits from the scheme to the Nicaraguan
rebels, known as Contras.
The Israeli government has repeatedly denied U.S.
claims that it Initiated Washington’s covert dealings with
Iran and proposed siphoning the weapons sales profits to
the Contras. The Iran arms-Contra aid scandal came to
light in early November.

India-Pakistan Talks In 3rd Day
NEW DELHI. India (UPI) — India and Pakistan today held
an unscheduled third round of talks aimed at reducing
tension at their common border, the scene of recent
military buildups on both sides, a Foreign Ministry
spokesman said.
The delegations met today for talks aimed at preventing
"a further escalation of tension at the border and to
de-escalate the tension." he said.

U.S. Fails Infant
Death Reductions
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
United States has slipped to last
place among 20 Industrialized
nations In reducing overall in­
fant death rates, the Children’s
Defense Fund said today.
The CDF released a report
showing the nation's program to
reduce infant mortality stalled
for the fourth consecutive year
in continuing its 30-year decline
from sixth place.
Three countries — Finland,
Iceland and Japan — ranked
first with the lowest Interna­
tional Infant mortality rates be­
tween 1980 and 1985. Sweden
was fourth, while Denmark.
N e th e rla n d s. Norway and
Switzerland tied lor fifth place
and Canada. France and Lux­
embourg tied for ninth.
Vying for last place were
Belgium. Germany and the
United States.
In America, the report said,
nearly 40.000 of the 3.7 million
babies born In 1984 died before
their first birthday, a rale of 10.8

infant deaths per 1.000 live
births. In 1983. the rate was
11.2.
"A key major factor that
distinguishes the United States
from countries that have re­
duced Infant mortality rates
more rapidly Is the provision of
maternity services." the report
said.
" O f a ll i n d u s t r i a l i z e d
countries, the United States
stands alone In its failure to
assure pregnant women access
to prenatal care and delivery
services through either a public
health service or universal
health insurance.”
Other key findings of the
report were:
—Black Infants continue to die
at nearly twice the rate of while
Infants.
—Between 1983 and 1984,
infant mortality rates increased
in the District of Columbia.
Detroit. Milwaukee, Boston.
Cleveland and San Antonio.
Texas.

JL~}

Fifc. I, HP-*A

News Media. NASA Learn Lesson
By William Eerw eed
UPI S deaea Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - In the year
since the shuttle Challenger blew up.
relations between NASA and the news
media have soured and some reporters
believe agency management squandered
much of its credibility with journalists.
"In the future what’s going to happen,
there's going to be a lot more scrutiny and
for better or for worse, NASA's not going to
have Its past reputation to rely on.” says
Malcolm McConnell, a Readers Digest space
reporter and author of "Challenger — A
Major Malfunction."
At Issue Is the widely held conviction
among reporters that NASA management
adopted a "circle the wagons" mentality In
the hours following the accident that
severely limited the flow of Information to
the public and eroded a strong store of good
will among most reporters who covered the
agency.
"NASA's public affairs organization was
not equipped to handle the Challenger
accident." wrote Aviation Week and Space
Technology writer Craig Couvalt in an
editorial.
"NASA needs a public attairs staff which
not only has a firm understanding of space
flight and aeronautics but which can convey
It to the United States public Instead of
worrying about damage control and pro­
tecting NASA’s Image."
Public affairs officers frequently knew less
than reporters about the status of the

Investigation and many reporters felt NASA System.
But Green defended the a g e n c y 's
was attempting to cover up major aspects of
the disaster probe. A strong undercurrent of approach because of the sheer complexity of
anger and cynicism quickly developed that the Investigation and the ever-present pos­
sibility that early conclusions later would be
lingers to this day.
But Shirley Green, director of NASA disproved.
As an example. Green said when reporters
public affairs, points out that preliminary
data Is Just that, preliminary, and that In the - first asked If freezing temperature on launch
early days of the Investigation little was day was thought to have played a role in the
known with any certainty and that any such accident, they were told NASA had ruled out
public discussion would have Invited temperature as a factor. But It later turned
out that cold weather did. In fact, contribute
damaging mistakes.
"I do think NASA got a bad rap that we to the failure of Challenger's booster rocket.
Green said few reporters bothered to point
were unresponsive from the first," she said.
"In the first week, we did six press briefings. out then that NASA had originally said the
We released the photos of the flames (from conclusions about the Impact of tempera­
the booster rocket Joint leak). We were ture were strictly preliminary. Instead. It
telling practically everything we knew. We was Interpreted as more evidence of a
cover-up.
Just, again, didn't know much."
The emotional climate of the Challenger
But those briefings provided little concrete
news and film of the fiery gas shooting out disaster played a role as well.
One agency spokesman who asked not to
the side of the faulty booster was released
only after an NBC News report firmly linked be Identified said that day after day, NASA
the disaster to a booster failure. Even then. managers and public affairs officers were
NASA refused to call It a flame, saying only mercilessly "beat upon" by the media. The
result, he said, was a vicious cycle.
that it was an unusual "plume."
"You have to go back and look at some of
As It turned out. NASA engineers had
evidence of a booster failure within 24 hours the things that showed up In some of the
of the accident, according to an Internal most august publications and television
programs this nation has and some of the
history of the agency's Investigation.
"I think the most effective way to stuff wasjust outright garbage." he said.
"Those things didn’t occur In a vacuum.
approach a public relations problem is to
simply say what you know as you go along They happened because of the situation. It
and at least give both the media and the happened in some cases because public
public the feeling that you're being up affairs was screwed by management de­
front," says Jim Slade, a veteran space cisions that were made. So these human
reporter with the Mutual Broadcasting reactions sort of fed on each other."

Fighting Mars Philippine Election
By Fernando Del Hondo
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) Millions of Filipinos voted today
on a proposed constitution that
would keep Corazon Aquino
president for six more years.
Early re s u lts showed
overwhelming approval — well
beyond the 70 percent hoped for
by Aquino.
As Filipinos cast ballots, gov­
ernment troops clashed with
communist rebels In the south.
A military spokesman said nine
people were killed In the clashes
but the fighting had no apparent
effect on voter turnout.
"They came out in droves."
Ramon Felipe, chairman of the
government Commission on
Elections, said today at the end
of the eight-hour voting period.
He said as much as 85 percent
to 90 percent of the 25 million
registered voters cast ballots.
Only a simple majority is
needed to adopt the new con­
stitution but Aquino, who cam­
paigned personally for Its ratifi­
cation. suld she hoped 70 per­
cent of the voters would approve
the charter, which would let her
rule until June 30. 1992.
Final official results will be
announced next Monday but
early unofficial returns indicated
Aquino’s highest hopes would be
surpassed.
The National Citizens Move­
ment for Free Elections, an
independent public watchdog
organization, had an unofficial
vote total of 237.045 to 56.025

In favor of the constitution — an
approval rate of nearly 81 per­
cent.
First unofficial returns by the
Philippine News Agency for
1,247 of the nation's 86,200
precincts showed 256,494 "yes"
votes to 59.679 "no" votes for an
81 percent approval rate.
Ousted Defense Minister Juan
Ponce Enrlle, who spearheaded
the cam paign a g a in st the
charter, cast his ballot In his
home province of Cagayan and
told reporters, "I will bow to the
mandate of the people."
The constitution would give
Aquino a single six-year term as
president and replace Parlia­
m e n t wi t h a t w o - h o u s e
legislature like the U.S. Con­
gress.
The 250,000-mcmber military
was placed on red alert — the
maximum state of readiness —
but officials said the election
generally was peaceful.
Scattered violence on the eve
of the balloting left an Aquino
supporter dead and another man
wounded. There were 141 inci­
dents of election violations. In­
cluding harassment by soldiers,
com m unist g u e rrilla s and
backers of deposed President
Ferdinand Marcos.
In the bloodiest incident, a
14-man army patrol was am­
bushed by 400 communist guer­
rillas who were campaigning
against the constitution in

Fertility Key Issue
In Surrogate Trial
HACKENSACK. N.J. (UPI) T he “ Baby M” su rro g a te
motherhood trial resumes today
with testimony in the custody
phase, which legal experts pre­
dict may hinge on how broadly
the Judge defines the term "In­
fertile."
The eventual ruling, legal
experts predict, will set a prece­
dent that could determine the
role of surrogate parents In
infertility cases in the United
States.
The second phase of the trial,
dealing directly with the ques11o n o f c u s t o d y of t h e
10-month-old child, is expected
to last four to six weeks.
The first phase, completed In
mid-January, focused on the
legality of the contract signed by
a childless couple and the surro­
gate. Bergen County Superior
Judge Harvey Sorkow has said
he will rule on both questions
after the entire trial is com­
pleted.
Infertility emerged during the
first phase of the Baby M trial
last month as one of the most
crucial elements of the legal
battle between a childless couple
and the surrogate mother they
hired to bear a baby.
The woma n, Mary Beth
Whitehead, signed a contract
agreeing to take $10,000 — the
money was not accepted — to be
artificially Inseminated and
carry a child lor William Sterti
and his wife. Elizabeth.
According to the contract’s
terms, the "sole purpose of this
agreement is to enable William
Stern and his infertile wife to
have a child which Is biologically
related to William Stern.”
Act ual l y, testim o n y has
shown, there is no reason to
believe Elizabeth Stern was lit­
erally infertile. There Is no evi­
dence she cannot conceive a

Malungon, 640 miles south of
Manila, a regional military
spokesman said. Five guerrillas
were killed and three soldiers
were wounded In the three-hour
firelight. army brigade com­
mander Col. Orlando Soriano
said.
In nearby Santa Cruz town,
authorities said a gunbattle left a
militiaman, his mother and two
guerrillas dead.
On Mindanao island. Moslem
separatists snatched 50 ballot
boxes in the remote town of
Butid. in Lanao.del Sur province,
one of nine provinces regarded
as trouble spots. The National
Citizens Movement for Free
Elections said soldiers bran­
dishing firearms roamed a vot­
ing center In Muntlnlupa today,
frightening voters.
Aquino. 54. rose lo power In a
civilian-backed military revolt
after a fraud-tainted presidential
election in which she claimed
Marcos robbed her of victory.
She acclaimed today's plebiscite
as fraud-free.
"The plebiscite has been
clean, honest, orderly and
exceptionally heavy," Aquino
said. "My hope is that until the
final results are in. this admira­
ble demonstration of democracy
In action will not only continue
but usher in the political
stability that we all desire."
Aquino, accompanied by two
daughters and a son-in-law.
stood in line and was the 15lh
person to vote in a schoolhouse
at the family’s sugar plantation
In Tarlac province 70 miles
north of Manila.
She told reporters she hoped
the plebiscite would be "very
peaceful and that the constitu­
tion will be ratified."
Approval of the constitution
would bolster Aquino's efforts to
bring political and economic
stability to the nation of 54
m illion. But the proposed

charter faced militant opposlton
In some quarters — notably from
communist rebels and anti­
c o m m u n ist s u p p o r te rs of
Marcos.
In other violence, authorities
said gunmen in Zambales Pro­
vince shot and killed a 24-yearold Aquino supporter Sunday
night as he tried to drum up
support for the proposed con­
stitution.
Three bombs exploded shortly
before midnight Sunday In met­
ropolitan Manila — outside a
radio station, a church and a
bookstore. The blasts shattered
windows but police said no one
was injured.
In the s o u th e rn city of
Cotabato, a man was wounded
when a grenade exploded on the
roof of his house shortly before
midnight Sunday, police said.
Police investigating reports
that Marcos supporters planned
to disrupt the voting carried out
a scries of raids Sunday, arrest­
ing a man and woman and
seizing 940 sticks of dynamite,
authorities said.
Aquino was installed in a
civilian-hacked military rebellion
on Feb. 25 following a fraudmarred presidential election in
which she ran against Marcos.
Opponents from the left and
the right have been trying to
destabilize the Aquino govern­
ment. saying she lost her legiti­
m acy w hen she sc ra p p e d
Marcos’s 1973 constitution In
March and proclaimed a revolu­
tionary government.
In the two weeks before to­
day's plebiscite, 13 people were
killed in a leftist demonstration
outside the presidential palace,
the 23,000-member communist
New Peoples Army broke off
peace talks with the government
and soldiers loyal to Marcos
mounted their second unsuc­
cessful coup bid against Aquino
In a year.

child. The question is. instead,
should she?
The Sterns contend she is
infertile In a practical sense
because she has a mild form of
multiple sclerosis that could be
- ADVERTISEMENT aggravated by pregnancy.
But W hitehead’s lawyer.
Harold Cassidy, contends the
judge can rule the Sterns com­
mitted "equitable fraud" by
claiming in the contract that
HO U STO N , Texas — If you have hair loss caused by “sebum ", the prob­
Elizabutb Stern could not have a symptoms of “ sebum” hair loss; oily or lem starts when the male hormone pro­
child.
greasy forehead; dandruff, dry or oily; duction reaches its peak. This causes an
During the first two weeks of itchy scalp; and if your hair pulls out excessive discharge of to xic sebum, which
if not properly controlled, will gradually
the trial, both sides presented easily on top of your head, here’s help.
A firm of laboratory consultants has destroy the hair-producing cells on (op of
medical experts to back up their deseloped a scientifically advanced for­ the head.
contentions.
mula and regimen to remove and control
Hair loss caused by sebum can
One eminent neurologist said the continuous discharge of toxic sebum, also run in your family, and, if
Elizabeth Stern would have been so the scalp can function normally and you wait until you are slick bald
This, in turn, reduces hair loss
playing "Russian roulette" with effectively.
...stimulates natural hair cell production and your hair-producing cells are
her health had she risked a ...an d reverses the balding process.
destroyed, you are beyond help.
pregnancy. Another said she
This scientific regimen has proven
So, if you still have any hair on top of
faced very little increased risk at so successful the firm invites you to try your
head, and would like to reverse the
all.
it for 32 days, at their risk, and see for balding process...now is the time to do
something about it before it's too late.
According to the contract that yourself.
These experts point out that the
L.oesch Laboratory Consultants, Inc.,
she and her husband. Richard.
36. signed in February 1985. majority of cases of excessive hair will supply you with treatment for 32
a y s...a t their ris k ...if you have the
Whitehead agreed that "in the fall and baldness are the begin­ dsebum
symptoms and are not already
best interest of the child, (that) ning and more fully developed slick bald.
Just send them the informa­
she will not form or attempt to stages of male pattern baldness tion below. Or, call them toll-free at
form a parent-child relationship" and cannot be helped.
I -800-231-7157 (in Texas 1-800-833-8387)
with the baby she bore for the
But, tf your hair loss is caused or 8:00 a m. to 4:00 p.m ., Monday thru
Sterns.
Thursday and they will send complete
effected by sebum, here is help.
Whitehead. 29. testified sin­
Everyone has a full head of hair until information. 3bur reply places you under
ADV.
fully intended to honor that some time after puberty. In the ease of no obligation whatsoever.
agreement but was overcome
NO OBLIGATION COUPON
with maternal feeling during TO: Locsch Laboratory Consultants, Inc.
delivery and decided she could
3311 West Main Street
not give up the baby.
P.O. Box 66001 Houston, Texas 77266
I am submitting the following information with the understanding that it will be
The legal battle that has kept strictly confidential and that I am under no obligation whatsoever.
followed is the first disagreement Does your forehead become oily or greasy?_________________________________
between a childless couple and a How soon after washing?________________________________________________
surrogate mother to come to the Do you hase dandruff?_______ __________ Dry or oily?____________________
Docs hair pull ottt easily on top oi head?___________________________________
point of trial.
The two sides cannot even Any thin areas?_____________ W here?___________________________________
agree on a nam e for the Any slick bald areas?_____________ W here?______________________________
NAME____________
______ ________ S ex________ A ge________
10-month-old girl. The Sterns ADDRESS___________________________________________________________
call her Melissa. The Whiteheads C IT Y ______________________________ STATE________ Z IP ______________
call her Sara. Court documents
refer to her as Baby M.

"Going Bald?"
Here's Help If Cause is Sebum

x
— Tv

'* (

�V

i A - h i H H H tra m U * f r 4 , F I.

M w K a y , ¥ + . 7 , 1W7

FLORDA
IN BRIEF
Senate Committee Begins
Struggle O ver Lottery Plans
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — A Senate select committee
begins today the battle over establishing the Florida
lottery, the biggest political plum in many years with a
$150 million budget and scores or contracts and Jobs to
offer.
The Senate committee plans to schedule hearings,
workshops and fact-finding Junkets.
The House Committee on Regulated Industries and
Licensing during its opening meeting Wednesday will hear
presentations on the lottery.
The legislative meetings are seen as a warm-up for
months of hearings and debates over the logistics of the
statewide lottery approved by Florida voters in November.
Bill Bryant, appointed special counsel by Gov. Bob
Martinez to handle lottery Issues, Is scheduled to complete
the first draft of his bill Friday, before leaving on a national
tour to study other state lotteries.
Insiders say it is difficult to project how the three
separate operations will work to develop a structure that is
expected to be so profitable it could rank in the Fortune
500as a •l-bllllon-a-year enterprise.
They say the battle could become brutal In late spring if
the House. Senate and governor’s office come up with
dramatically different bills.

Search Resumes For M issing Boat
MIAMI (UPI) — Coast Guard planes and vessels resume
searching the Atlantic Ocean today for a 32-foot fishing
boat missing since Friday morning with three people
aboard.
Coast Guard Petty Officer Joe Dye said the agency hopes
to enlist the aid of Air Force planes In the hunt for the Carol
G.
The fishing boat set out from a marina at Ponce de Leon,
south of Cape Canaveral, at 9:25 a.m. Friday with the
owner saying he would return at 6 p.m. The marina called
the Coast Guard at 9:25 a.m. Saturday reporting the Carol
G missing.
Dye Identified those aboard as owner-operator Matt
Goodell, 60. of Ponce de Leon and two men who were
visiting him from out of state, identified only as Gordon
Fuller of New Hampshire and a Mr. Hutchinson of Missouri.
"Three Coast Guard vessels and three aircraft searched
from south of Cape Canaveral to Jacksonville, out 170
miles, all day Saturday and Sunday without finding any
sign of the missing vessel,*' Dye reported Sunday night.

Couple Sought In Double M urder
HALLANDALE (UPI) — Police hope an artist's sketches
will lead them to a mysterious young couple seen leaving
the apartment of Edward and Sylvia Nlpon a few hours
before the retired clothing designer and his wife were found
shot to death.
The bodies of the Nipons were found Saturday morning
in the living room of their apartment in a high-security
oceanfront condominium. Edward and Sylvia Nipon,
Philadelphia residents who spend winters in Florida, were
brother and sister-in-law to high-fashion designer Albert
Nlpon.
Edward Nipon. 58. was found shot In the chest, sitting in
a chair beside his wife, Sylvia. 67. She had been shot in the
stomach and back and lay face down on the living room
couch, Hallandale police said.
Police Chief Richard Fox said a man and woman In their
20s visited the Nipons at the Parker Dorado Condominium
for about 15 minutes early Saturday morning and are
being sought for questioning.

Affidavits Say Form er Haitian
President Stole $120 (Million
MIAMI (UPI) - Former Haitian
Presldent-for-life Jcan-Claudc
Duvalier ruled his country like a
greedy king and looted the
treasury of $ 120 million In seven
years, according to documents
filed in Paris.
Details of the charges that
Duvalier. his family and friends
siphoned millions from the Hai­
tian government, contained In
affidavits (lied In France, were
reported in The Miami Herald
Sunday.
"They behaved as if Haiti were
their feudal kingdom and the
coffers and revenues nf the state
their private property," wrote
Haitian Justice Minister Fran­
cois St. Fleur.
The French documents, a
16-volume collection resulting
from a four-nation inquiry, are
the first detailed account of what
St. Fleur termed a "pillage of
gigantic proportion."
The sum is remarkable in a
country where the 6 million
residents earn an average yearly
wage of $300, making Haiti the
hemisphere's poorest nation. In
a single month, the Duvalier
family appropriated $1.0-1 mil­
lion from government bank ac­
counts. the equivalent of the
annual wages of 3.484 Haitian
workers.
Duvalier possessed a stack of
blank checks on which he could
write the number of the state
bank account and the amount
he wanted, the affidavits said.
He collected weekly checks
totalling $1.6 million from the
state lottery, skimmed $29 mil­
lion from the department that
regulates the sale of consumer
goods and exacted 93 cents from
the sale of every sack of flour,
the report said.
"One of the most striking
things about what we have
learned is the number of dif­
ferent ways the Duvallers found
to bleed the Haitian economy."
said Curtis Mechling. an at­
torney for the current Haitian
government.
Government agencies ranging
from the customs bureau to the
phone com pany forwarded
money to bank accounts con­
trolled by Duvalier. his wife.
Michelle, and his m other.

Simone.
The Regie du Tabac. which
regulates prices of goods such as
tobacco and sugar, issued $4
million worth of checks in five
years to an employee, Hcnock
Lamothe, who endorsed the
checks to Duvalier.
Accountants at Regie kept a
ledger column labeled "various
monthly expenses." Duvalier
used the account os a private
checkbook, disbursing $11.7
million between 1978 and 1984.
One month he sent $1,460 to a
Port-au-Prince Jewelry store.
$1,650 to the chief of the secret
police, and $1,000 to Max
Adolphe, the leader of his feared
private arm y, the Ton-Ton
Macoutes.
Bank receipts inscribed with
"pursuant to the instructions of
the presldent-for-life" Indicate
that admlnsltrators transferred
large sums directly from Na­
tional Defense accounts to the
Duvallers' accounts.
The day after Christmas 1980,
Duvalier ordered the transfer of
$414,324 from a national de­
fense account to the Caribbean
Jewelry firm of Spritzer and
Fuhrmann.
The Duvallers also channeled
millions of dollars through bogus
philanthropies, the documents
said.
Regie alone issued checks
worth $6.79 million tc nonexis­
tent social agencies between
1978 and 1984. Each check was
endorsed by Duvalier. his wife or
his mother and deposited.
The swindle continued until
the bitter end, the documents
show. On Feb. 6. 1986, as
Duvalier was preparing to (Ice
the country, he pulled out his
book of blank checks, penned In
an account number and gave
himself $169,000.
Most of the money disappeared
into bank accounts in the United
States and Europe, where in­
vestigators urc searching for
assets with little success. The
Haitian government has located
only about $15 million worth of
assets.
Duvalier and his family fled to
France a year ago and are living
In a rented house in the town of
Mougins. near Cannes.

*

* *"*■&lt; ’f*1

Spectacular New Tampa Bay Bridge
By O m l Jackson
ST. PETERSBURG (UPI) — A spectacular
cable suspension bridge towering over the
mouth of busy Tampa Bay will be dedicated
tHls month with ceremonies focusing on the
future rather than dwelling on a tragic past.
The new $250-mllllon bridge — its
massive cables fanning out from two pylons
— replaces the twin spans of the Sunshine
Skyway Bridge, one of which was knocked
down by a freighter in a 1980'storm. killing
35 people, the second-worst U.S. bridge
disaster.
"We are trying to look ahead." said
Florida T ran sp o rtatio n D ep artm en t
spokeswoman Holly Waggoner of a planned
Feb. 7 dedication. "We have had six years to
reflect on what happened In the past. We
want it to be an upbeat event."
"This Is not a memorial service." added
Carol Wedge. St. Petersburg Area Chamber
of Commerce official coordinating the day's
activities. "This is a celebration of the new
bridge."
The Skyway tragedy occurred when the
empty phosphate freighter Summit Venture
slammed Into a bridge support in a sudden
and violent early morning storm, dislodging
a 1,260-foot section of the bridge that
plunged 15 stories into the storm-tossed
waters. Eight cars and a Greyhound bus
drove off the bridge and into the abyss.
Government agencies generally agreed
bad weather, coupted with the lack of a
severe storm warning for mariners, contrib­
uted to the tragedy. The Coast Guard also
said human error by harbor pilot John
Lerro, commanding the freighter, and the
ship's captain contributed to the tragic
accident.
Lerro said he lost radar contact with
navigational buoys and when he saw the
bridge loom out of the fog, he ordered
anchors dropped rsc. but Its forward speed
carried it into the span.
Highway and bridge planners considered
building a tunnel and removing the bridges,
repairing the damaged span, or constructing
a new bridge that would be higher and
wider than the existing bridges.
They settled on a new bridge modeled
after the Brotonne Bridge over the Seine

River In France and built the targest pre-cast
concrete cable-stay span In the Western
Hemisphere wiUi a 1,200-wide center span.
Construction created Its own set of
problems that plagued bridge builders.
Three workers died, Including one man
killed tast year when the boom arm of a
crane collapsed on the sixth anniversary of
the Summit Venture collision.
Designers discovered problems with lowlevel piers, cracks In underwater main pier
supports and Improper tension on five
suspension cables, leaving one side of the
span 2 W Inches lower than the other where
they met.
All of those problems were corrected.
Former state DOT Secretary Thomas E.
Drawdy said when the last segment of
roadway was lifted Into place In August, it
celebrated the efforts of "dedicated individ­
uals who put their blood, sweat and tears
into It.”
"This bridge is not merely a monument of
hard work." he said. "It's also a result of
courage —a great deal of It."
The new bridge, to open for traffic In
March, is 4.14 miles long, but the total
distance of bridge and causeways spanning
Tampa Bay is about 11 miles.
Huge lights will Illuminate the cables
supporting the bridge, some as big as 8 VSi
Inches In diameter. The cables are strung
through pylons rising 430 feet above the
water and once they are painted should be
visible for miles at night.
"The bridge is not Just an engineering
m arvel." said dedication commission
Chairman Pam Iorio. "it is also visually
spectacular when illuminated at night. It
will become a tourist destination in itself."
Transportation Department official Kathy
Palmer said the project cost about $250
million, with another $15.5 million to be
spent In the next five years to replace one of
the drawbridges to the north of the main
span and to bring the causeways up to
Interstate highway standards.
When the new bridge is open, the old
bridge will be demolished and the two
causeways on the southern end will become
8.000-foot-long fishing piers — longest in
the world.

I Lady Liberty Fee Assailed
NEW YORK (UPI) Lady Li be r t y ha s
sta rte d asking her
many visitors to pay
for the pleasure, pro­
mpting the outrage of a
New Jersey senator.
Visitors to the Statue
of Liberty are charged
a $1 entrance fee under
a test program laun­
ched today. It marks
the first time that visi­
tors have had to pay to
see the statue up close
in the m onum ent's

100-year history.
Sen. Bill Bradley.
D-N.J., says he will
press for an end to the
fee. which will be col­
lected until September
"Lady Liberty says
at her base. 'Give me
your tired, your poor,
your huddled masses.'
She doesn't ask them
for a dollar," he said.
The fee is in addition
to the $3.25 adult fare
and $1.50 children's
fare visitors, must pay

Iran Says
Iraqi Raid
Kills Girls
United Press International
Iraqi war planes struck 11
Iranian cites and hit two schools
in the city of Mianeh, killing 68
schoolgirls and wounding 150
others. Iran's IRNA news agency
said today.
Iranian forces occupying
southern Iraq launched three
"limited assaults" against Iraqi
troops east of Basra. Iraq's
second largest city, according to
Iran's state-run Islamic Republic
News Agency.

Military com m uniques In
Tehran quoted by IRNA said
Iraqi Jets bombed 11 Iranian
cities, including Mianeh, killing
or wounding "scores" of people
on Sunday.
The girls were attending
classes In two schools, one
elementary and the other sec­
ondary. when the attack took
place on Mianeh. 250 miles
northwest of Tehran. IRNA said.
It did not say how many people
were killed in the other 10 cities
bombed.
Iraqi Jets also appeared to be
taking aim at ships In the
Persian Gulf.
Shipping insurers Lloyds of
London said Iraqi warplanes hit
the 163.173-ton Iranian shuttle
tanker Alamoot off the Iranian
port of Bushehr In the gulf over
the weekend. The ship ran
aground.
Iraqi Jets also attacked the
Cyprus tanker Lady A above the
propeller. The attack started a
small fire which was extin­
guished. but Lloyds reported no
casualties on board.
Lloyds also confirmed an Iraqi
missile hit an Iranian oil tanker,
the 138.000-ton Kharg 3, 20
miles south of Kharg Island.
Iraqi warplanes raided Isfahan,
Tabriz, Miandoab. Mianeh.
Maragheh and Islamabad Ghard,
the Iraqi News Agency said. Iran
fired missiles late Saturday at a
"military center" in Baghdad In
retaliation, the agency said.
Following the missile attack.
Iraqi warplanes staged more air
raids on Isfahan and Tabriz. In
the two air raids on Isfahan,
"scores of civilians" were killed
or wounded. Iran’s news agency
said.

Legal Notice
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E

Nolle* is hereby given that I
am angagad In business a l 109
N . Country C lub Rd., Lake
M ary. Samlnola County, Florida
31746 under the Fictitious Name
Ol L A K E M A R Y LOCKSM ITH,
and that I Inland to reglstar said
nama with tha Clark ol tha
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordanca with the
P ro v isio n s ot tha F ic titio u s
Nam* Statutas, To-WIt: Section
*45 09 Florida Statutas 1957.
/s/ David A. Varblow
Publish January 19,14 A Febru­
ary 1,9, 19(7.
DEK-100
P U B LIC NOTICE
FLO R ID A D E P A R T M E N T
OF E N V IR O N M E N T A L
REG U LA T IO N
TWIN TOW ERS
O F F IC E BU ILD IN O
1440 B lair Ston* Road
Tallahassee, F L
11199-1400
Public N olle* No. 41
January IS, 1917
NOTICE OF ISSUANCE OF
A N E M E R G E N C Y P E R M IT
U N D ER THE RESOURCE
C O N S E R V A T IO N A N D R E ­
C O V ER Y ACT AND THE
F L O R ID A R ESO U R C E R E ­
CO V ER Y AND M A N A G E ­
M E N T ACT
T h e D e p a r t m e n t ot
E n v ir o n m e n t a l R e g u la tio n
( D E R ) h a s I s s u e d an
E m e rg e n cy P e rm it to 'J.S,
E n v ir o n m e n t a l P r o te c tio n
Agency Region IV, Atlanta,
Georgia and Seminole County
S h e riff's Department, Bomb
Squad Unit, Sanford, Florida.
The treatment site was located
a l Sanford Airport Building 1117,
C a r r ie r A v e n u e , S a n fo rd .
Florida. The permit authorlied
d e to n a tio n o l an unknow n
crystalline compound which Is
believed to be a shock sensitive
material.
A n e m e r g e n c y p e r m it
pursuant to Sections 401.714(5)
a n d 1 1 0 .5 9 (1 ), F . S . . a n d
I710.no. F.A.C., was warranted
because there was an Imminent
and substantial endangermenl
to h u m a n h e a lth and the
•nvlru.~ent. This issuance of
t h i s p e r m it r e s u lt e d In
e n v iro n m e n ta l b e n a llls a s
compared with the previous
storage conditions of the waste.
The pe rm it w as dratted In
accordance with the provisions
ol the Resource Conservation
and R ecovery A ct and the
Florida Resource Recovery and
Management Act and were de
signed to protect human health
and the environment.
Persons wishing to comment
upon the permit Issuance or to
the permit conditions are invited
to submit same in writing within
lorty-llv* (45) days o l the date
of this notice to the Florida
Department ot Environmental
Regulation, Twin Towers Office
Building, 1400 B lair Stone Road.
Tallahassee. Florida 3239*1400,
ATTENTIO N: Raoul Clark. The
public notice number should be
Included In Ihe first page ol
comments.
A ll comments received within
the 45 day period w ill be consld
ered In the formulation of future
emergency permits.
Publish: February], 1707
DEL-19

for the ferry ride to
Liberty Island.
Under the legislation.
133 of the other 338
parks and sites under
the control of the Na­
tional Park Service also
will charge new or ad­
ditional fees.
T he Re a g a n a d ­
ministration. in Its lat­
est budget proposal,
also has requested that
64 o th er parks be
allowed to charge new
or increased fees.

legol Notice
L E G A L AD VERTISING
BID 04/17-19
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that the City of Sanford, Florida,
w ill receive sealed bids up to
1:30 p.m., Tuesday. February
14, 1917. lo r the fo llo w in g
service:
STREETSW EEPER
T he s e a le d b id s w ill be
publicly opened later that same
day at 1:00 p.m. In the City
Commission Chambers. Room
117, Sanlord City Hall.
Specifications and the proper
Bid Forms are available, at no
cost. In the Purchasing Office,
300 N. Park Avenue. Sanford,
Florida 1305) 3113)41, ext. 194.
The City ol Sanford reserves
the right to accept or r*|ect any
and a ll proposals, w ith or
w it h o u t c a u s e , to w a iv e
technicalities, or to accept the
bid which. In Its judgment, best
serves the Interest ol the City.
Parsons are advised that It
they decide to appeal any de
cislon mad* concerning the
award of this proposal, they w ill
need a record ol the proceed
logs, and for such purpose, they
may need to ensure that a
verbatim record o l Ihe proceed
Ings Is made, which record
Includes the testimony qnd evi­
dence upon which appeal Is to be
based.
CITY OF SANFORD
Walter Shearln
Purchasing
Publish February!. 1997
D E L 17
IN T H E CIRCUIT
COURT 0 r SEM INO LE
COUNTY, FLO RID A
CASE NO. 14-4111-CA-04-L
IN RE: M A R R IA G E OF
S H IR L E Y P . B U T L E R
Patltloner/WII*
andLEW IS B U T LE R
R esponden t / H usba nd
AM ENDED
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO. LEW IS B U T LE R
Address Unknown
YOU A R E N O TIFIED that an
action for dissolution ot the
bonds ol marriage between you
and S H IR L E Y P. B U T L E R has
been tiled against you seeking a
special equity in the marital
residence.
Lot 45 A C A D E M Y MANOR.
UNIT 1, according to the plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
14. Page 14 of the Public Re­
co rd s ot Sem inole County,
Florida, a/k/a 111 Academy
Court, Sanlord. F L 31771.
and you are required to serve
a copy ol your written defenses,
If any. to It on B E R N A R D D.
SOMM ERS. ESQ.. Petitioner's
attorney, whose address is P.O.
Box 1193, M aitland. Florida
31751. on or belor* M arch 4,
1907. and tile the original with
the clerk ol this court either
before service on Petitioner's
attorney or Immediately there­
after,- otherwise a default will
be entered against you (or the
relief demanded In the Petition.
WITNESS my hand and the
seal of this court on this 30 day
of J a n . 1907
(SEAL)
D AVID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk of the Court
By:/s/ Jean Brlllant
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 1,9,
14.13. 1907

OFl It

Until the demolition begins later this year,
motorists will be Jarred by the sight of the
eerie gap in the western-most span from
which the 35 victims plunged to their
deaths.
,
Only one person survived. Wesley Macln- ■
tire escaped death when his pickup truck ■
rode a section of the span down to the deck
of the ship, then bounced into the water.
;
It was the nation’s second worst bridge •
disaster, surpassed only by the collapse of
the 1.756-foot Silver Bay suspension bridge
linking Kanagua. Ohio, and Point Pleasant.
W.Va., Dec. 15. 1967. The exact death toll
there was never determined, but 35 bodies
were recovered.
The new bridge will provide a wider and
higher entrance Into Tampa Bay from the
Gulf of Mexico. The main spans of the old
bridge are 800 feet wide and 150 feet above
the water. The new span ranges from a
minimum of 175 feet to more than 180 feet
above the water.
Bridge designers also developed a system
to prevent future collisions from destroying
any part of the bridge.
The six piers closest to the shipping
channel are protected by rock-edge Islands,
and the two main piers are flanked by four
60-foot bumpers, called dolphins. Oiled with
crushed stone and surrounded by steel to
withstand an Impact of up to 30 million
pounds.
Although the formal dedication Is Feb. 7.
crews still have work to finish, such as
applying a coat of gold paint on the 42 huge
cables that support the 1.200-foot span,
painting lane markers and Installing traffic
signs. The bridge will open to traffic In
March.
Officials say the afternoon Is reserved for
entertainment, a massive parade and the
pedestrian walk, with a dedication ceremo­
ny at 5 p.m.. followed by the lighting or the
bridge and a possible fireworks display at
dark.
Huge lights will illuminate the cables
supporting the bridge, some as big as 8 l/i
Inches in diameter. The cables are strong
through pylons rising 430 feet above the
water and once they are painted should be
visible for miles at night.

Legal Notice
NOTICE OF
FICTITIO US N A M E
Nolle* Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business ot 1110
Sanford Av*., Sanford. Seminole
County. F lo r id a u n d e r the
Fictitious Name ol ECONO M Y
CA T ER IN G , and that I Intend to
register said name with the
C la rk o l the C irc u it Court.
Seminole County, Flo rid a In
accordance with the Provisions
of the Fictitious Nam* Statutes,
To-Wit: Section 045.09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/s/M u rra y E.NImon
Publish January 14 A February
1.9,14.1917.
DEK-144____________________
NOTICE O F INTENTION
TO R E G IS T E R
FICTITIOUS N A M E
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
G I V E N , th a t P I E T R A E N ­
T E R P R I S E S . IN C ., a New
Jersey corporation, desiring to
engage In business under Ihe
f ic t it io u s n am e o l P . E . I .
H O M E S , lo c a t e d a t 419
Montgomery Road, Suite 175,
A lta m o n te S prings, F lo rid a
317ta, intends to register lhat
name with the Clerk of The
C irc u it C o u rt lo r Sem inole
County pursuant to F lo rid a
Statutes, Section 145.09, and to
engage In business under that
name.
P IE T R A E N T E R P R IS E S ,
INC , a New Jersey
corporation
By: A T T ILIO DIMARCO
President
Publish January 19,14 &amp; Febru­
ary 1,9,19*7
DEK-99
NOTICE O F
FICTITIOUS N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at P.O.
Box 791, Casselberry, Seminole
County, Florida 31707 under the
F i c t i t i o u s N a m * of
STEPH EN SO N AND SON. and
that I Intend to register said
name with tha Clerk o l the
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florida in accordance with the
P ro v isio n s ol the F ictitio u s
Nam* Statutes. To-WIt: Section
445.09 Florida Statutes 1957.
/s/Terry E. Stephenson
Publish February 1, 9. 14. 13.
19117._________________ D E L IB
IN T H E CIRCUIT
COURT,
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT,
IN AN D FOR
S E M IN O LE COUNTY,
FLO R ID A.
CASE NO. 44-1791-CA
DIVISION:
ST O C K T O N . W H A T L E Y .

DAVIN A C O M PA N Y,
a Florida corporator
Plaintiff,
vs.
A LA N W. NICHOLAS,
JE N N IF E R L.N ICH O LAS;
S U N B A N K , N.A..
Defendants.
NOTICE OF S A LE
Notice Is hereby given that,
pursuant to a Summary Final
Judgment o l Foreclosure en­
tered herein. I w ill sell the
property situated In Seminole
County, Florida, described as:
Lot I, Block 13. Tier 5. TOWN
O F SANFORD, according to the
plat thereof as recorded In Plat
Book t. Page 40 of the Public
Records o l Seminole County,
Florida. Together with: Range,
Refrigerator, Washer. Carpet
at public sale, to the highest
and best bidder for cash, at the
West front entrance o l Ihe
Seminole County Courthouse in
Sanlord. Florida, between 11:00
A.M. and 2:00 P.M. on the 9TH
day of M arch. 1947.
WITNESS my hand and O f­
ficial Seal of Said Court, this
11ND day of JA N U A R Y . 1997
(Seal)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C L E R K C IR C U IT COURT
By: P h y llis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 14,
February!, 1947
O E K 154

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT
COURT OF THE
EIG H TEEN TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT.
IN AND FOR
SEM IN O LE COUNTY,
FLORID A
CIVIL ACTION
CASE NO. 44-1951-CA-09-L
THE FIRST, F A , a
corporation,
ABCO M II, INC.,a
Florida corporation,
HEATHRO W LAN D AND
D EVELO PM EN TC O RP ,
a Florida corporation,
and WIN DOW WORKS OF
C E N T R A L FLORID A, INC.,
Defendants.
N O TIC E O F S A L E

Notice Is hereby given' that
pursuant to the Final Judgment
ot Foreclosure and sal* entered
In the cause pending In the
C ir c u i t C o u rt In and fo r
Seminole County, Florida, being
Civil Number 44-3953, the un
dersigned Clerk will sell the
property siluated in Seminole
County, Florlda. described as
Lot 31. EAST CAM DEN, ac
cording to the plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 30. Pages
47 through 49, Public Records of
Seminole County. Florida
at the public sale, to the
highest and best bidder lor cash
at 11:00 A.M. on the 4th day ol
M ARCH, 1947, at the West Front
Door of the Seminole County
Courthouse in Sanford, Florida.
D A T E D this 30th day of
JA N U A R Y , 1947
(SEAL)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By: Phyllis Forsyth*
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February},9,1947
DEL-25
IN THE CIRCUIT
COURT FOR THE
EIG H TEEN TH
JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA,
IN A N D F O R
SEM IN O LE COUNTY
CASE NO. 44-I744-CA-09-L
G E N E R A L JURISDICTION
DIVISION
W E Y E R H A E U S E R
M O RTG AG E
CO M PAN Y,
P LA IN T IFF,
-vsR O B ER T L .M A R T IN . JR.
and. P A U L A S .M A R T IN
his wile,
D EFEN D AN TS
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y GIVEN
pursuant to an Order or Final
Judgment of Foreclosure dated
JA N U A R Y 4. 1947, entered in
Civil Case No. B4 1744 CA 09 L ol
the Circuit Court of the Eigh­
teenth Judicial Circuit In and lor
S e m in o le C o un ty, F lo rid a ,
w h erein W E Y E R H A E U S E R
M ORTGAGE CO M PAN Y,
plalntift(s). and RO BERT L.
M ARTIN. JR. and. P A U LA S.
M ARTIN his wife,, are defend
ant(s), I w ill sell to the highest
and best bidder tor cash, at the
West front door ot the Seminole
County Courthouse, Sanford, at
11:00 o'clock to 2:00 o'clock, on
the UTH day of FE B R U A R Y .
1947, the following described
property as set torth in said
Final Judgment, to wit:
Lot 49, Block A, CARRIAG E
H ILL, UNIT NO. I, according to
the P la t thereof as recorded In
Plat Book 14, Page 97, Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
D ATED al Sanlord. Florida,
this 22ND day ol JA N U A R Y.
1947.
(CIRCUI ( COURT SEAL)
David N. Berrien
CLERKO FTHE
CIRCUIT COURT
Seminole County, Florida
BY: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 14,
February 2,1947
DEK-1J7

CALL NOW
TO PLACE YOUR ADS

322-2611
For’Fast Personal Service

�••

r«
•”* '; ‘T * '

I, tenter*, FI.

• -.2'

}997-7A

Holbert Holds On
Auto Racing
3 .56-m lIe road c o u rse at
Daytona International
Speedway.
The average speed of 111.599
mph also was a record on the
5-year-old course, and the
Porsche covered 2,660.68 miles
In the 25th 24-hour race at
Daytona. The winner’s share of
the purse was $50,000.
The Italian team of Oscar
Laraurrt. Massimo Slgala. and
Gianfranco Brancatelll — who
were In 42nd place after 10 laps
when they were forced to make
five pit stops — finished second
in a Porsche 962. eight laps ofT
the pace. Price Cobb, Rob Dyson
and Australian Vem Schuppan
finished third in a Porsche 962.
another five laps back.
Foyt, Sullivan, and Unser Sr.,
who battled for the lead most of
the race, finished fourth in a
Porsche 962.
Porsche again dominated the
event in the GTP class, with
962s taking the first six places.
It was the 11th consecutive
24-hour race at Daytona won by
a Porsche-powered car. and the
ninth 1-2-3 finish for Porsche.
‘‘I was afraid I might have
gone too conservative with the

COLUMBIA
CKEST

HvraM Ptotofcy D M n y V i n n n

Number one, the A .J. Foyt Team, was In the
running until it ran out of steam in the last
50 minutes of the 24 Hours at Daytona. The
Foyt Team was gaining ground on first
place Al Holbert before mechanical dif-

ficulties forced Foyt and teammates Al
Unser Sr., and Danny Sullivan out of the
running. It was the second consecutive
triumph for the Holbert Team at the 24-hour
event. '

Bill Elliott. Scott Pruett. Lyn St.
smaller engine,’’ Holbert said. "I Jumped in.
"I was worried for a while that James and Tom Gloy finished
knew It would be a race of
patience. And our guess worked our driver rotation change (Un- first In the GTO division and
scr Jr. switched with Bell) might seventh overall In a Ford
today."
cost us the race because this Mustang. Amos Johnson won
Holbert. who is cutting back race was using up our drivers." his third straight 24 Hours at
his driving schedule to help Holbert said. "So we were saving Daytona In a GTU car when he
Porsche develop an Indy car. did our 'Sunday punch* for them finished first in that division
not plan on driving In the race. A and it was me. I hadn't planned with Dennis Shaw and Bob
combination of fatigue and heat on driving, but all along I Lazier In a Mazda RX-7. Don
exhaustion caused by a missing thought I might have to."
Bell. Jeff Kline and. Bob Earl
right window left Robinson. Bell
finished first in the Camel Lights
and Unser sick, so Holbert
The team of stock-car racer category In a Flcro GTP.

Irish Knock Off No. 1 North Carolina
United Press International
The Notre Dame home crowd claimed
another victim Sunday — top-ranked
North Carolina.
The 60-58 Fighting Irish victory
marked the fifth time in *13 years that
Notre Dame and Its faithful In South
Bend. Ind., had teamed up to defeat the
nation's No. 1 team.
"They were awesome." Notre Dame
Coach Digger Phleps said of the crowd.
"They knew what we could do with their
help."
David Rivers, uncharacteristically quiet
In the first half, scored all 14 of his points
after halftime to spark Notre Dame.

Basketball
Rivers hit a key Jumper and added two
free throws In the final 63 seconds of the
game.
"In the first half I didn’t have many
opportunities to take my shot and I
wasn’t going to force It because that
would benefit North Carolina." Rivers
said. "I was Just patient and waited until
my shots came."
North Carolina played without point
guard Kenny Smith, who will miss a

minimum of two weeks after undergoing UCLA edged Washington State 61-60.
arthre . )plc surgery on his kneee.
and Oregon whipped Stanford 68-55.
With 3:16 left In the opening half.
At Auburn. Ala., Freddie Banks scored
North Carolina led by 16. But the Irish 36 points and Armon Gilliam added 31
went on a 16-2 spree, carrying over to the Sunday to power UNLV past Auburn.
second half, to get back in the game.
UNLV hit half of Its 28 3-polnt shot
Gary Voce added 15 points and 10 attempts with Banks connecting on 9 of
rebounds for the Irish, including two free 13. Jeff Moore had 17 {mints and 10
throws with five seconds left. The Tar rebounds for the Tigers.
Heels were led by Joe Wolf with 14
At Boston. James Major scored 21
points. J.R. Reid had 12 and Jeff Lein) points and Mark Bryant added 18 to carry
finished with 11.
Seton Hall past Boston College. Dana
In other games. No. 2 Ncvada-Las Barros scored 27 of his 35 points In the
Vegas routed No. 17 Auburn 104-85. second half to rally the Eagles.
Scton Hall nipped Boston College 79-76.
See HOOPS, Page 9A
Georgia Tech held off Maryland 76-72.

District 3 Survival Could
Be Tougher Than Final 4
Tonight's D istrict 1 Pairings
1 p.m. — Seminole vs. Winter Park at Ward
Park
7 p m .— Rockledge at Lake M ary
/ p.m. -v Oviedo at DeLand
7 p.m. — Titusville at Lake Howell
7 p.m . — O rla n d o T r in it y P re p at
Melbourne
7 p.m. — Eau G allia at Orlando Bishop
Moore

By Chria Flster
Herald Sports Writer
The survivor of the 14-team
District 3 Girls Soccer Tourna­
ment will have an excellent shot
of reaching the Final 4 In the
state.
Getting out of the district,
though, may be Just as hard If
not more difficult than reaching
the state playolTs.
Among the 14 teams in the
district arc four of the top 10
ranked teams In the state. The
top seeded team is secondranked Lyman which comes In
with a record of 16-1-5. Sec­
ond-seeded Lake Brantley,
ranked third In the state, has the
most wins of any team In the
state with a 22-1-2 record.
The number three seed in the
tourney Is Melbourne which
stands at 16-1 and is ranked
sixth In the state and number
four seed Lake Mary comes In
with a 15-4-3 record and ranked
ninth In the state.

S o ccer
The District 3 Tournament
gets under way tonight with six.
first-round games at six different
sites. They Include Seminole vs.
Winter Park at Ward Park.
Rockledge at Lake Mary. Oviedo
at DeLand. Titusville at Lake
Howe l l . T r i n i t y P r e p at
Melbourne and Eau Gallic at
Orlando Bishop Moore. All
games are scheduled to start at 7
p.m.
Tuesday night. Lyman will
h o s t t h e w i n n e r of t h e
Seminole-Winter Park game
while Brantley hosts the Lake
Howell-Tltusvllle winner.
"Whoever wins the district
will have a good chance at going
a long way.” Lyman coach
Laura Drydcn said. "The tough
part Is getting out of the dis­
trict."
The only loss Dryden’s Lady
Greyhounds suffered this year
was to top-ranked Tampa Leto
the first week of the season.
Lyman also owns the only victo­
ry over Lake Brantley while the
tw o S e m i n o l e C o u n t y
powerhouses tied In two other
meetings.
Lyman is missing many of the

players that took It to second
place in the state a year ago. but
there is still plenty of talent on
th e f i e l d for t h e La d y
Greyhounds. Among the leaders
is senior m idfielder Karen
Abernethy. an all-state player
th e p a s t t h r e e s e a s o n s .
A bernethy has moved her
dominating play from defender
to midfield where she has
become a potent part of the
Lyman offense and has scored
13 goals.
Other experienced players for
Lyman include senior forward
Maye Belle Bryant, the team’s
goal producer with 21 goals,
while Kandl Huddleston (10)
goals and Kim Mitchell (nine) arc
also dangerous offensive players.
Another experienced senior who
solidifies the Lyman lineup and
plays well on both ends of the
field *s Diana Boyesen. Senior
goalkeeper Sarah Cobb has 11
shutouts to her credit In her first
year as full-time keeper.
Among the outstanding young
players who figure to keep the
Lyman winning tradition going
are sophomore sweeper Julia
C allarm an. freshman mi d ­
fielder-forward Dana Boyesen,
freshm an m idfielder Kerry
See DISTRICT. Page 9A

Harald Photo by T om m y Vlncant

T w o of S e m in o le C o u n ty 's best — L y m a n 's K a re n A b e rn e th y ,
left, and L a k e B r a n t le y 's C a r a M a rie n — b a ttle for
possession. B oth g ir ls ' te a m s w ill begin d is tric t so c c e r p lay
T u e sd ay a fte r re c e iv in g firs t-ro u n d byes.

Pro Bowl: AFC Downs Sloppy NFC, 10-6
HONOLULU (UPI) - Coach
Marty Schottenhelmer of the
Cleveland Browns said turnovers
and a critical penalty enabled
the AFC to defeat the NFC. 10-6.
Sunday in the Dro Bowl game.
"We made a couple of big
Interceptions, but the big play as
far as I'm concerned was the
offside call against them when
(Eric) D ickerson s c o re d .”
Schottenhelmer. the AFC coach,
said.
The NFC. trailing 10-3. had
possession on the AFC 1 with
about eight minutes left in the
game. Dickerson of the Los
Angeles Rams plunged over for a
touchdown, but the play was
nullified when Washington
guard Russ Grimm was called
for being offside.
On the next play. Lloyd Burruss of Kansas City picked off a

pass by W ashington’s Jay
Schroeder to end the NFC's
drive.

.

&gt;'

* ~-&lt;^r *■4 i

Closes In
On Cup

Durablility O utlasts Foyt’s Pow er
DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) - A1
Holbert's decision to go with
durability over power In the 24
Hours at Daytona race Tor In­
te r n a tio n a l M otor S p o rts
Association cars resulted In his
second straight victory in the
endurance event.
Holbert. the leading driver In
IMSA history, went with the
2.8-llter engine in his Porsche
962. While he said It was not as
powerful as the 3.0-llter version
In other cars. It was more likely
to run for 24 hours. For the first
22 hours of the race. It appeared
that move would come back to
haunt Holbert and his team of
Chip Robinson. Derek Bell and
A1 Unser Jr.
A.J. Foyt and co-drivers
Danny Sullivan and A1 Unser Sr.
were closing In on Holbert’s
Porsche and looked to have the
more powerful car. However,
with two hours left In the race,
the Foyt car began to lose power
and it stopped altogether with
one hour left.
Holbert. who took an un­
planned turn at the wheel with
three hours left, handed the car
over to the Englishman Bell 20
minutes after Foyt’s car died
with an eight-lap lead on the
field. Holbert. Bell and Unser Jr.
won the race last year, and this
year the team completed a
reco rd 753 laps over the

•

F o o tb a ll

"Another big play for us was
when (Miami rookie John) Offerdahl pushed Dickerson out of
bounds at the 2." Scottenhcimer
said, "h stopped them from
scoring the tying touchdown."

NFC 17 and it resulted In a
10-yard scoring pass from Den­
ver's John El way to Todd
Christensen of the Los Angeles
Raiders.

"I had single coverage on
Dickerson and Just came up and
Offerdahl. only the fourth
made the tackle. Thank good­
rookie to start in the i’ro Bowl,
ness."
set up a 26-yard field goal by
Instead of going In for the New England's Tony Franklin
lying touchdown, the NFC had when lie recovered Sikahema's
With about five minutes to to settle for the second of two second
fumble at the AFC 44 in
play. Dickerson took a swing field goals by New Orleans' tile second
period.
pass from Tommy Kramer of Morten Andersen.
Minnesota and appeared to have
A 24-yard pass from Boomer
a lane to the end zone when he
The NFC turned the ball over Esiason of Cincinnati to New
was pushed out of bounds by five times. Mark Haynes picked York's Mickey Shuler on a
Offcrdahl.
off a pass in the second quarter fourth-and-slx situation was the
that stopped an NFC drive at the big play of the drive. The NFC
"We knew they hud the lag 16 and St. Louis punt return scored on Andersen Held goals ol
pass play with the running back specialist Vai Sikahcma lost two 38 and 19 yards.
coming out of the backfleld." fumbles in the first half that led
Sikaherua rebounded in the
said Offerdahl. "The backs to both AFC scores.
second half with a pair of nice
switched so it was kind of tough
to cover, but we were aware of
Fredd Young of Seattle recov­ rollbacks, one of which set up a
the play.
ered Sikahcma’s first muff at the field goal. The second return, a

V

(1*1

23-yarder. started the NFC drive
that ended at the AFC I on
Burruss' Interception.
"Il was the same old thing —
mistakes." said NFC Coach Joe
Gibbs of the Washington Red­
skins. "We played hard, we had
a lot of yards, we had some
scoring opportunities. But then,
we made mistakes. We Just
c o u Id n ' t over c o m e the
mistakes."
Slkahema said it was "a rough
day.”
"The first one (fumble) Just got
lost in the sun. The other two
(one which did lot figure it. the
scoring), there's Just no excuse.”
lie said. “1 Just had trouble
catching the ball today. He (AFC
punter Rohn Stark) kicks lefttooled and maybe that had
something to do with it."

FREMANTLE. Australia (UPI)
— Stare &amp; Stripe* overpowered
Kookaburra III by a mammoth
1:46 today, bringing skipper
Dennis Conner within one victo­
ry of reclaiming the America's
Cup for the United States.
Conner’s triumph, achieved
after a report of a bomb aboard
Kookaburra III. was the third In
a row In the best-of-aeven series
and left the Americans needing
one more victory.
Kevin Parry, head of the
Kookaburra syndicate, said an
anonymous caller had tele­
phoned during the race and said
a bomb had been placed on the
boat.
"Y o u 'v e got a bom b on
board.” a race official dispatched
In a chase boat told beleaguered
skipper Iain Murray, frantically
trying to catch the flying Con­
ner.
"We checked our options list.”
Murray recalled afterwards.
"Our Immediate response was.
What’s the bad news?"*
"We decided to continue. We
didn't figure a bomb going off
would affect the race outcome.”
Parry gave the crewmen the
option of cancelling the race and
evacuating when Kookaburra
was on the final leg of the
eight-leg race. The 11 crewmen
said they would stay aboard and
finish. No bomb was found.
In the race. Stars &amp; Stripes
smashed Murray's last hope of
superiority in light to moderate
winds with such ease that Con­
ner turned the wheel over to his
tactician for 15 minutes while he
had a drink and observed
Kookaburra III far behind.
But Conner, still stinging from
1983 when he lost the trophy to
Australia.snapplng a 132-year
winning streak, refrained from
premature celebrating.
"We remain scared to death
until we get one more victory."
he said.
The next race was postponed
until Wednesday at Conner's
request, with light wind forecast
for Tuesday.
■.
.
Murray acknowledged for the
first time the blue-hulled Stars A
Stripes "appears to be faster.”
"But we'll fight the whole
way." the spirited helmsman
warned. "We won’t give up."
No skipper in 135 years of
America's Cup competition ever
has overcome an 0-3 deficit to
win yachting's supreme prize.
The closest winning margin was
In 1983 when Australia II
overcame a 3-1 deficit to defeat
Conner 4-3 and bring the trophy
to Perth.
Conner, the San Diego Yacht
Club helm sm an seeking to
avenge the devastating loss, led
around every mark of the 24.1
nautical mile Indian Ocean
course today. Although
Kookaburra III won Sunday's
start, the golden-hulled 12-Meter
has not rounded one of the 24
marks ahead.
T he c l o b b e r i n g was
particularly demoralizing follow­
ing an aggressive first leg. Con­
ner pursued his favorite left side,
only to see his rivals cross In
front.
Kookaburra III bowman Don
McCracken scaled the 90-foot
mast to (lx a broken luff zipper
regulating the mainsail while
Murray unleashed 14 tacks to
thwart C onner's attem pted
breakthrough. But Murray's
failed "slam dunk." a quick
tack, opened the cover and Stars
A Stripes sailed ahead.
Rounding the critical first
windward murk 12 seconds in
the lead. Conner resorted to his
winning strategy, straight-line
speed leaving the Kookaburra III
team reeling.
Murray, d efeated In the
12-to-18 knot gusts he hoped for.
was left with the formidable task
of winning the next four mat­
ches.
With the end of the five-mon­
th-long regatta so close. Conner
said he plans to leave three days
after the last race, hopefully
carrying the trophy with him to
Its new home in San Diego.
T h e Be a c h Boys s o n g .
"California Girls." blared from
four loudspeakers and boister­
ous fans shouted. "One more
race!" as Stars A Stripes pulled
Into the dock.
Proud residents of Conner's
home city gathered at the yacht
club and in hotel ballrooms late
at night to watch the races
broadcast live.
The myth that Stars A Stripes
was vulnerable in light air was
shattered in Conner's 1:41 romp
over Kookaburra III Saturday.
Murray saw another cherished
belief smashed Sunday with
Conner strong downwind.

r

I
|
;i

�M - in k r i HtnM, U Mr d , FI.

MwriBy, Fab, h 1*7

Inside, Outside Raiders Drill Lake City, 104-90
By Mark Blythe
Herald Sporta Writer
With Vance Hall and Claude Jackson paving
the way on the Inside and Malcolm Houston
bombing away from the perimeter Seminole
Community College downed Lake City Communi­
ty College. 104-90. Saturday night In Mid-Florida
Conference action before 253 fans at the SCC
Health Center.
The Raidera are now 24-3 over all and 8-2 In the
conference. Lake City fell to 13-13 and 2-8.
Hall and Jackson combined for 25 rebounds
and Houston nailed seven three-point goals
helping SCC to . rebound ofT Its loss to Florida
Junior College last Wednesday.
"This is a big win for us. we needed to win this
game" Raider head coach Bill Payne said. "No
one played extremely well, but It was a quality
elTortasa whole."
Houston led the way for Seminole with 25
points. Hall tossed In 18. Jackson notched 13 and
Barry Dunning added 10.
Carmen Anderson scored a game-high 26
points for the Tlmberwolves and Darryl Cherry
connected for 18.
Seminole came out ready to play as Hall took It
to the basket strong early with Houston connect­
ing from long range to build take a quick 5-0 lead.
Houston then continued his long range alfalr
connecting on his next two shots from three-point
land upping the lead to 11-6 with 15:27 left In the
opening half.

t Chris
Fister
SANFORD
HERALD
SPORTS
WRITER

Hillsman
Makes Big
Impact
Impact players in the game of
basketball aren't Just those who
funnell In 30 points per game or
swat opposing shots five rows
up.
The ones who usually make
the difference are those who can
also get the key rebound, hand
out the big assist, make a steal
In the clutch or play string
music from the free throw line
down the stretch.
In Seminole County. Just
about every team has one or
more Impact player on Its roster.
Using a formula of 10 points for
first, nine for second, eight for
third, etc..., the following players
rank as the statistical leaders In
the county when combining the
Top 10 in scoring, rebounds,
assists, steals, blocked shots and
free throw shooting.

J C Basketball
After Hall picked up his second foul Dunning
went to work In the middle. Dunning first
connected on a short Jumper followed by two
consecutive power-moves to put Seminole up by
lOat 31-21.
Houston came alive again scoring the next five
points. Danis Gallagher, who finished with a
game-high 13 assists, then found Carl Hackworth
under the basket for the duece giving the Raiders
a 38-21 edge and forcing Lake City coach Tony
Johnson to call timeout.
"I felt comfortable shooting tonight." Houston
said. "I shot some early In the day and felt good
warming up for the game and was comfortable In
the game.”
Cherry then connected on a short Jumper
before managing a steal. Houston then stole the
ball back and took off all alone on the break with
four Tlmberwolves In front of him. Houston chose
to put the ball up from outside and connected on
his fifth three-pointer off the half.
After Robert Williams put Seminole up. 43-29.
with four seconds remaining. Gallagher cut ofT
the Inbounds pass and managed to get a
three-point shot off that fell In upping the score to
46-29 at the half.
The Raiders kept the lead at 17 before opening
up a little with 5:04 to nlav. Gallaoher then made

a steal and fed Hall who slammed home two of his
12 second half points putting a lid on any Lake
City comeback efforts.
"I was disappointed with my shooting, the
shots I was missing I usually make." Hall said. "I
went to the boards well and we got the win which
Is the most Important thing."
Holly Keller kept things rolling for SCC with
taking the ball to the hoop for a pair of layups late
to keep the Tlmberwolves a safe margin away.
Anderson then connected on a four-point play
with 3:11 left to cut the margin to 98-82.
Kenny Gordon then put down three-of-four
free-throws down as all Lake City could do was
foul.
The lead was cut to 14 after SCC missed four
straight from the charity stripe with the Timberwolves coming back down and sinking
three-pointers.
Seminole will travel to Valencia Wednesday
and Payne feels his team will have to play their
beat to come away with the win.
"Valencia is always up for us and always plays
us tough In their gym." Payne said. "We're going
to have to be up and play well if we want to win."
POLK SHOCKS LADY RAIDERS
Polk Community College's Demise McKay
dropped In a ten-foot Jumper with three seconds
to play to upend Seminole Community College's
Lady Raiders. 62-60. Saturday afternoon at the
SCC Health Center.
The Ladv Raiders are now 15-8 and will travel

to Santa Fe Community College Tuesday for their
final Mid-Florida Conference clash. Polk Improved
to 10-12.
"We took them for granted." assistant coach
Debbie Scherr said. "Polk came out ready to play]
and we didn't respond."
The two teams played even the whole way until
the final shot by Mckay that made the difference. 1
"The loss hurts because you are ranked by
your record In state." Scherr said. “We need to
beat Santa Fe in hopes of a better bid."
Fatima Lafond turned In a brilliant effort for
Seminole with a career and game-high 19 points.!
Lafond also had a game-high nine rebounds. Pam
Jackson added 14 and Lisa Starkes contributed!
eight.

Tribe, Ram s, Lyman \
Struggle In Finales !
By Chris Filter

Herald Sports Writer
ir Seminole. Lake Mary and
Lyman are to survive In the
rugged District 3. they hope to
play a lot better than they did In
their season finales this past
Saturday.
• Injury and Ineligibility
plagued Seminole, down to Just
13 players, came back from Vero
Beach with a 4-1 loss and

i

S o ccer

there are no easy ones In this;
game."
At Lyman High. Bonn! Sleeves!
came through with the winning!
goal with 50 seconds remaining;
as the Lady Greyhounds edged;
Orange Park.
I
Lyman finished the regular'
c o n c lu d e d th e r e g u l a r s e a s o n
season at 16-1-5 and will take'with a 9-9-4 record.
over the top spot in the state poll
• Lake Mary's Lady Rams after Tampa Leto was upset by ]
were on a roll until they hit a rut Seffner Arm wood. 3-0. Lake]
Saturday and wound up In a 1-1 Brantley will move Into second]
tie with Orlando Bishop Moore.
In the state which means the topi
• Lyman, which will take over two teams In the state will b e'
the number one ranking In the competing In the same district
state going Into the district tournament.
tourney, sleepwalked through
On Saturday. Orange Park!
most of Its game Saturday but took a 1-0 lead with 20 minutes
woke up In the last 10 minutes left to play and Lyman was held
to pull out a 2-1 victory over scoreless until 10 minutes left
Orange Park.
when freshman forward Dana
Seminole created a number of Boycscn scored her 10th goal of]
scoring opportunities against the year on an assist from Karen
Vero Beach but didn't have the Aberncthy. Before the sixth tie]
firepower to finish them. The could be chalked up on Lyman's
Lady 'Noles outshot Vero. 20-16.
record, though. Sleeves dribbled
• "We've had so much bad luck Into the open and unloaded a*
the last two weeks of the long shot over the keeper's head. ;
season." Seminole coach Suzy
"T h e girls showed some
Reno said, "But I'm still confi­
charachtcr
In coming back like»
dent the girls can do well In the
th
a
t."
Lyman
coach Laura
district."
Vero Beach took a 1-0 lead less Dryden said. "But now they
than six minutes Into the game have to turn around and play
but Seminole tied It six minutes like they know they can to be
later when senior striker Sherri able to get out of the district."
Rumler scored her 13th goal of
Tracy Wortham, moved up!
the season on an assist from from the Junior varsity, played
Tracey Farrelly.
the whole game at goalkeeper for .
Vero then got a goal from the Lady Greyhounds and made
Jennifer Reynolds for a 2-1 two saves. Senior Diana Boyesen
halftime lead and scored two made Wortham’s first varsity
unanswered goals In the second start
more comfortable by turn­
half to seal the victory.
ing In a strong defensive effort.
At Bishop Moore High. Lake
Mary and the host Lady Hornets HORNETS-RAMS SCORELESS
fought to a scoreless tie for the
Lake Mary's Rams and Bishop
first 70 minutes of play. Bishop Moore's Hornets were even In
Moore took the lead with 10 every statistical category Satur­
minutes remaining on a goal by day and it was the same way on
Kristin Adamkiewicz but Lake the scoreboard as the two battled
Mary came back one minute to a 0 0 .tic at Bishop Moore
later to tie It on a goal by Brooke High.
Taylor ofTKelley Broen's assist.
The Rams. 14-3-4 overall, and
"We got the ball down the field Hornets, 12-3-4. both took 13 !
real well all game." Lake Mary shots on goal and had three
coach Bill Elssele said. "But we corner kicks apiece. Lake Mary
didn't finish any of our op­ goalkeeper Pete McNally made
portunities. I Just hope this nine saves In recording his
makes the team realize that seventh shutout.

Here's a look at the Top 10:
• (37 points): Seminole High
sophomore Adrian Hillsman Is
the only player In the county to
rank among the Top 10 in all six
categories. The Jet-quick 5-8
point guard is first in scoring
(20.3). third in steals (5.0). fourth
In assists (3.4). fifth In rebounds
(7.2) , sixth in free throw per­
centage (61.8) and 10th In
blocked shots (0.5).
• (32 points): Lake Howell's
Tammy Lewis, a 5-5 Junior
guard, leads the county in steals
(6.3) , is second in assists (7.3).
fourth In scoring (13.1), seventh
in rebounds (6.7) and ninth In
Lake M ary's Cynthia Patterson makes a scoop to the hoop.
free-throw accuracy (58.3).
• (29 points): The older half of
the Lake Howell "W onder PREP ROUNDUP:
BASKETBALL
Twins" backcourt. 5-2 senior
guard Erin Hankins, leads the
Sl44l«
0 ST AVG
LINEUPS
county in free throw shooting LEADERS
Tammy Lewi* (LH )........... ..18 113
8.3
(78.6), Is second In scoring
K E Y : Seminole (S), Lake M ary (LM ),
Gabby Olden (L M )............. ..22 134
8.1
TONIOHT'S P R E P LIN E U P S
(L). Oviedo (0), Lake Howell (LH),
5.0
04
Adrian h illsm an (S)........... ..17
(16.5) . is fifth in assists (3.1) and Lyman
Lake Brantley (LB).
4.8
105
Tonya Lawson (L M )........... .22
Seminole Seminole* (4-4)
seventh in steals (2.8).
3.4
55
Tracy Brandenburg (LB)....
Forward................. L li Long, 4 0. Sophomore
• (21 points): Seminole's Liz
Seminole County Girl* Ba*ketball Leader*
44
3.0
Cynthia Pattarson (L M )..... .22
Forw ard..... Mechelle Toomb*. 5 8. Fre*hman
47
2.8
E rin Hankln* (LH )............. ..17
Long and Lake Mary's Terl
Center...... Chlnete Gllchrl*t, 5 10. Sophomore
Storlna
0
PT
AVO
44
2.4
Kelley Grider (LH )............ ..18
Guard..... .’....Adrian H lllim an. 5 8. Frcshr.en
Whyte. Long, a 6-2 sophomore Adrian rm li.n ja IS)..........
146
20.3
38
2.2
LaShon Cash (S)................ .17
Guard..................... LaShon Ca*h, 5-4. Junior
forward, is second In free throw Erin Hankins (L H )............
780
16.5
34
2.0
Sherod Keeton (LH )........... ..18
Bench; Sheri Reddick. 40. Sophomore;
Cynthia
Patterson
(L
M
)....
...n
155
37
1.7
18.1
Terl Whyte (L M )................ .22
shooting (69.2), third In blocks
T am m l Scott, S-4, Sophomore; L e ticia
Tammy Lewis (L H ).......... .18 214
13.1
..14
31
1.8
Suianne Hughe* (O)...........
Strickland. 5-4. Sophomore; Sharon Stephen*.
Lyman High's varsity wrestl­
(1.3) and seventh In scoring Tonya Lawton (L M ).......... .12 242 11.4 Carolyn
28
1.8
Kuhl (L H )............. ..17
SO. Junior.
ing
team has taken on the chin
(10.5) . Whyte, a 6-5 Junior Laurie River* (LB)
.16
187
34
11.7
1.5
Sharon Bonaventure (LM)... ..22
more often than not this season,
center, is lirst In blocks (3.5), L it Long (S)....................... ...17 174 10.5 Sutan A tp ltn (L B )............. .14 24 1.5
Brandenburg (LB) — ..14 145
10.3
14
1.5
Ashley Thomas (L M )......... ..11
Lake M ary Ram* (2 M )
but the Greyhounds' slide may
second in rebounds (10.1) and Tracy
Terl Whyte (L M )...............
222
10.1
1.4
24
Denise A rrio la (L H )........... ..It
Forward.......... Cynthia Patter*on. 5 4. Senior
not last too long If Saturday's
ninth in scoring (10.1).
Denlte Arriola (L H )..........
181
10.1
1.4
26
Jodie Sw itier (0 )............... ..14
Forw ard..... Sharon Bonaventure. HO. Junior
.72 144
as
78
1.3
Gina Dawton (L M )............. .72
Optimist Club Junior Varsity
Center........................ Terl Whyte. AS, Junior
• (19 points): Cynthia Pat­ Gabby Olden (LM)
Bonaventure ILM).. 22 185
8.4
Guard.................... Tonya Lawton. S4. Senior
Tournament Is any indication.
terson and Gabby Olden, two Sharon
Kim Boyle ( L ) ...................
106
8.2
Guard..................... Gabby Olden. SS. Senior
Behind six individual champi­
more reasons why Lake Mary's Kelley Grider (L H )........... ...14 134 7.7 Blocktd Shot*
Bench: Gina Dawton. 5 7. Junior; Athley
0 BL AVO
Tuftord (L B )........... .16 123
7.7
ons. the JV 'Hounds took the
3.5
Thoma*. 5 5. Senior; Tonya Davit. 5 J.
78
Lady Rams are 21-1 and ranked Jenny
Terl Whyte (L M )...............
LaShon Cash (S)................
127
7.5
2-3
43
Senior. M arn ie Frey. 55. Junior; Dina
Suianne Hughe* (0 )..........
toummaent championship and
third in the state in Class 4A. Jodie
140
7.4
Switier (0 )...............
Mulholland. 4-1 Senior; Patti Roldan. 5-7,
23
1.3
L it Long (S)...................... ...17
showed hope for the future. The
Patterson a senior forward, is The lee Bouey (L ).............. ...13 42 7.1 Carolyn Kuhl (LH )........... . ...14 18 1.0 Senior.
132
At
first-year tourney, sponsored by
10
14
third In scoring (16.1). sixth in Suianne Hughe* ( 0 )..........
Sheri Reddick IS)............. ....14
124
Harrell ( 0 )............
48
06
11
Bridget Jenerette (0 ).......
the Seminole County Optimist
rebounds (6.9). sixth in steals Krlttln
Lyman Greyhound* (1-14)
Bobbie Kelley (0 ).............
122
4.4
0.4
10
Toomb* (S)........
Club,
was held Saturday after­
Forward.........
............
Kim
Boyle.
58.
Senior
(3.0) and 10th in free throw Sheri Reddick (S).............. .14 77 5 5 Mechelle
0.4
10
Kelley G rider (LH ).......... ...18
Forward.............. Tammy Brook*. 54. Junior noon at Lake Brantley High.
0.5
10
shooting (57.3). Olden, a senior
Bobble Kelley 10)............
Center............. Mechelle Harden. 511, Junior
0 RB
AVO
Rebounding
0.5
4
Chlnete G ilchrist (S)........
Lyman took first place with
point guard. Is first In assists Denlie
Cuard.....................The lee Bouey, 54. Junior
Arriola (L H )......... . ...14 221
12.2
4
0.5
Adrian Hillsm an (S)......... ...17
17IV
* points followed by Lake
Guard................
Chondra
Robert*.
5
4.
Senior
(7.5) and second In steals (6.1).
10.1
Terl Whyte (L M ).............. ...22 222
0.4
7
Carey Manuel (LH )...........
Mary at 142, Lake Brantley at
• (17 points): Lake Mary's Sharon Bonaventure (LM ) 22 160 7.3 Sherod Keeton (LH )......... ...18 1 0.4
7.3
114
Laurie Rivers (L B )........
0.3
4
Lake Howell Silver Hawk* (153)
Kristin H arrell (0 )...........
137. Daytona Mainland (90),
T o n y a La ws o n . Ovi e do' s Adrian
7.2
H lllim an IS)......... .
123
Denlie Arrio la, 510. Senior
Oviedo
(88). Seminole (82). Lake
Suzanne Hughes and Lnke Cynthia Patterson (L M )..... 22 152 8.4 Gretchen M u ll (L B ).......... ...12 4 0.3 Forward..............
Forward................. Kelley Grider. 54, Junior
Howell (71) and Kissimmee
Center.................... Carolyn Kuhl, 4 0. Junior
Brantley’s Tracy Brandenburg. Tammy Lewi* (L H ).........., .18 121 8.7 Foul Shooting
M A PCT
0
112
6.6
Guard..................... Erin Hankln*. 52, Senior
Manuel (L H )..........
78.6
Gateway (22).
E rin Hankins (LH )........... .17 7084
Lawson, a senior guard, is fourth Carey
117
4.5
Kelley Grider (L H )........
Guard....................Tammy Lewi*. 55, Junior
44.2
L it Long (S)...................... .17 27 39
"The tournament went over
In steals (4.8). fifth In scoring Kim Boyle ( L )....................
85
4.5
440
Suianne Hughe* ( 0 ) .-...... .14 24 42
really
well," Lake Brantley
85
5.3
(11.9) and seventh In assists Janice Abaray (L B )...........
66
7
22
33
Bobble Kelley (0 ).............
Oviedo Lion* (5-13)
74
5.1
Blllmyer (LB)
coach
and
tournament director
63 1
1214
Carolyn Kuhl (L H )............
(2.0) . Hughes, a 6-014 sopho­ Julie
Forward. .Suianne Hughe*. 6 O'*. Sophomore
74
5.3
Sheri Reddick (S).............. ...14
41.8
Adrian Hillsm an (S)......... .17 83 102
Kevin
Carpenger
said. "We had
more forward. Is second in Suianne Hughei (0).......... ...18 48 5.2 Jenny Tullord (L B )..........
Forward..... Wendy Malchow. 54, Sophomore
40.7
17 28
blocks (2.3) and third In free- Sherod Keeton (L H ).......... ...18 40 SO Ashley Thomas (L M )........ .11 4 IS 60.0 Center................... Bobbie Kelley. 510. Junior over 100 wrestlers compete and
Guard.................... Jodie Sw itier, 54. Junior
583
It looks like there's a good
Tammy Lewis (LH ).......... IS 42 72
t hr ow p e r c e n t a g e (6 9 .0 ).
Guard.................... Tereta Phllpot, 54. Junior
57.3
0 AS AVG
72 :59 103
Cynthia
Patterson
(L
M
)....
A
lliltl
chance
we'll be holding It again
Brandenburg, a 5-5 sophomore Gabby Olden (LM)
57.1
7.5
72 164
20-35
Sheri Reddick (S).............
next
year."
point guard, ranks third In Tammy Lewis (L H )..........
57.1
7.3
132
Carey Manuel (LH ).......... .17 14 28
Lake Brantley Patriot* (4-7)
3.8
54 5
41
Lyman crowned champions at
Sherod Keeton (LH ).......... .18 13 23
Forward................ Julie Blllm yer, 5 8. Junior
assists (3.8). fifth In steals (3.4) Tracy Brandenburg (LB)...
3.4
17
54
55.5
58
Teresa Phllpot (0 )........ . .14
Forward................. Janice Abaray. 58. Junior
109
pounds. 116. 136. 142. 189
and eighth In scoring average Adrian Hillsman (S)....... .17
37 54
55 2 Center................. Laurie
57
3.1
LaShon Cash (S)
River*, 510,Senior
and
224 to pull away from the
(10.3) .
54.5
37
7.2
Gina Dawton (L M )........... .22 30-55
LaShon Cash (S)................
Guard.... Tracy Brandenburg. 55. Sophomore
u
rest of the field. Lake Mary had
20
540
Tracy Brandenburg (LB)... .14 27 50
Guard.............Jenny Tullord. 5 6, Sophomore
Other county players among Tonya Lawson (L M ).......... 22
2.0
524
22
ih lty Thomai (L M )........ II
Sharon Bonaventure (LM).. .22 45 85
Bench: Sutan Asplen. 5 8. Junior; Gretchen
t h r e e c h a m p i o n s while
the statistical leaders Include ABobbie
1.7
33
M u ll, 4-0, Sophomore- C arln Lldke. 5-7
Kelley (0 ).............
Seminole. Lake Howell. Lake
Lake Howell's Carolyn Kuhl (13 Kelley Grider ( L H ) .......... 18 78 1.5 SOURCE: County Coaches
Senior; Jennifer Peters. 58. Junior; Karen
Brantley. Mainland and Gateway
26
1.5
Hamlett. 57, Senior.
Brooke Burns (L H )............ ...17
Compiled by Chris Fitter
points).

Lyman W ins JV Tourney
W re s tlin g
had one apiece.
Seminole's Invidldual champi­
on was Don Sellers who won the
130-pound class with a narrow
8-7 decision over Lake Howell's
Jimmy Kress.
T « m sce rtt - Lyman (L) 17IV&gt;. Lake
M ary (LM ) 142. Lake Brantley (LB) 137.
Daytona Mainland (M) W. Oviedo (O) M.
Seminole (SI 12. Lake Howell (LH) 71.
Kissimmee Gateway (G) 22.
C H A M P IO N S H IP F IN A L S

1*2 - Robert* (LH) d. G ill (LB ). It 10; 104
— Sknypek (L) d. Oudsheft (LH), 12 3; It* Garrett (L) p. Glattlng (LM ), 3:49; 122 —
Archer (LM ) d. Wyka (LB). * 4 ; 124 Seller* (S) d. Kre*i (LH). 8 7; 124 - Morrow
(L) p. Newton (O), 4:54; 142 - Decker (L) d
Johentm eytr (LM ). 13 4; 144— Brown (LM)
p. Bamberg (LB). 3:42; IS* - Jone* (M) p
Fagan (LB). 2:35; 171 — Beiaw (L B ) d Hall
(M ) , 10-7; 114 — Callglurl (L) p. Mobley (S),
5:43; 224 — Breen (L) p Bennett (S). 4:t»;
HWT - Slmm* (LM ) p. Sterling (M), 2:44;
U N L - D u M a r* ( G ) p . Maler (LB). 1:20.
C O N SO LA T IO N S

102 — Baker (O) p Elliott (M). 4.44, 104 Newton (O) d. Vandiver (LM), H57; 114 Brlndle (S) p. Linton (LH), 2:51; 123 - Boyd
(O) p. Gilbert (LH). 2:14; 120 — Wright (LB)
p Shower* (L), 3:43; 134 - Carbia (LM) p
Nathan (S). 3:57; 142 — Gutch (O) p McClain
(LB), :30; 144 - Eberly (L) d. Rockart (LH).
15-7; 154 — Lee (O) p Cooperider (L), :46;
171 — Thomas (S) p. Terry (L). 2:17; 114 —
Sundstrom (LB) p Runlck (M). :S0; 224 —
Fulcher (M) p Lewi* (LM). 1:00; HWT —
Qu*»t (L) won by torfeit; UNL — Isreel (LM)
won by forfeit.

�•r* r r-r**«

T^1

m m dn, Fek. t t w - f *

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

SCORfcBOAKD
ICOHKAtDiIlfMUUimiat

I I 1 1)1
It?
14 4 H4
i t 5 in

LMOHm B

lim

TV/RADIO
TWtWPiMHilUMii

G artner Ties Club Record,
Skates Capitals Pat Jets
For most of the season. Mike Gartner knew nothing but
frustration. Sunday, he tied a franchise record for
consecutive games with at least one goal.
"Gartner has worked hard all season." Washington
Coach Bryan Murray said after his right winger scored
twice to help the Capitals record a 6-4 victory over the
Winnipeg Jets at handover. Md.
"His luck Is better, and the puck Is going In for him."
Murray added. "We have a better chance of winning now
that he is going well."
But for the longest while It was not well at all for the
28-year-old Ottawa native.
Gartner, who scored 35 goals last season, had only 10 In
his first 45 games this year — a pace of Just 18 goals over
the whole season.
Sunday’s output, however, gave him 12 goals and three
assists In his last nine games, and enabled him to tie Alan
Haworth’s team record, set last season, of scoring a goal In
nine stalght games.
Elsewhere, Buffalo blasted Detroit 6-1, the New York
Rangers edged Boston 5-4, Hartford outscored Pittsburgh
8-6, Quebec defeated Los Angeles 3-2. Chicago topped
Edmonton 6-4, and Minnesota shaded Vancouver 4-3.

N ew World Tops Raiders, 11-6
Miaml-Dade New World Community College's Jamie
Navarro kept Seminole Community College In check with a
nice pitching performance before bowing out In the
seventh as New World claimed an 11-6 victory In Miami
Saturday.
New World started off quick picking up three runs in the
first and tacking two more In the fourth and the sixth to
takecontrot.
Tony Farabc started on the mound for the Raiders before
Brian McGInnus took over in the fifth. David Riddle took
over In the seventh and Matt Lawton completed the came
coming In In the eighth.
Seminole managed to get back In the game by pushing at
least one run across the plate over the last four Innings.
Joe Sims got the only extra base hit for the Raiders with
a RBI double.
Adam Terrace, Mike Lloyd, Carlos Agorta and Jose
Romero each had two hits apiece for NWCC.
Seminole will be home against Florida College this
Tuesday at 3 p.m. — Mark Blythe

Jenkins Sets U.S. M ark In 600
SHERBROOKE. Quebec (UPI) — Chip Jenkins set an
American record In his first 600-meter race, and Canadian
sprinting star Ben Johnson captured the 60-meter dash
Sunday to highlight the seventh annual Sherbrooke
International Track Meet.
Jenkins, a Philadelphia resident representing the
Atlantic Coast Club, covered the distance In 1:15:80 —Just
3-100ths of a second shy of the world record set Feb. 4.
1986 In Genoa, Italy, by Italian Donata Sabia.
The previous American mark was 1:16:18. It was set at
SherhroQke last year by Marcus Sanders, also of the ,
Atlantic Coast Club.
"It’s the first time I ever ran (600 meters In competition)
In my life." said Jenkins, who normally competes In the
500 meters. "I wasn’t looking for any record. I Just wanted
to win."

&gt; ML - ttm ,

HIM* Pt CM*

K U M n ’tlLI

IIpm,—ESPN.Aiwrlcp'iCs*FlntLRaca
Ftur.IlM
r ml - M V it nan. c*n*fr go*
1:11 pm - WtUVAM (M l. NSW AM
HUM, UM ft CtatopMM FMrWiStM
M l Ml- - SUII AM (US). WXYOAM
imw , m o o am n m c*n*p vem at
■AOJO: m i d AM(MM U w t
ml

MINkTMLL
01MLS — 7:45 p.m. — Lake Mary at Saminata; J:41pjn. —
Lyman at Lek* Heemlli I p.m.— OvM* at Lake Brantley

IMIU.Mttlt.JH
4* pm- trCJi Cdtfi
CmNnt
UMif0**4III
Ipm—ISP*. *0R,CfHpfl CwrttMaa

lit . t. 1:11

TONIGHT'S SC

II

UtoltttfMr

-

iMtrlMI- SSPtwi*1DukaUnhunltj
Tuasdky.Fa*VTpm-NAlCAtUm
ZWMOy. F«* AMl in - Collafa
BmMMI- HmmIMMnityttSMm
FrMy, Fit. L7* pm. - HI* ideal
RatotMl - Lit* M l tt SinttrS StmMt
Satirtay, Ft* 7, 1:1) pm - Calk*
BmWMI- IWitnMM»*u*tiillnMnlty
1*4*1. Ft*. I ll:Stm. -PnpRMattall
FftmThtlmldi
Swdty. Ft* L Jew—MAN—luach
OmA/ARCAXI
Sunday.Fib11 *pm—
OnPitRoad
Monday. Ft* 1. I.X p.m - CoJkft
Bukattall - Gamyia Halt Unhanlfy it
Wattan
Tuatday.Fa*H7pm.- NASCARLlut
Ft* ft. F:Npm. - CalMpa
-Mtaiuipplal Florida
. Ft* a Jean - MAN- Ml
Tata
Tfenday. Ft* H f» *m. - CaHaya
HI - GatryMStutern CaUtya at
Thunday, Ft*, tl t 4Spm.- NASCAR
Ih* IpatWEdMion(Tim*Appm. - Ttpt
Daily)
Friday. Fa* 11TMpm.- Hi* Ideal
taNM - OtltdbMSamhot*
Safwday, Ft* 14natn- MAN- Daytona
m
Saturday.Fa*Ut:Npm-OnPllRoad
Monday. Fab. !i 1:11pm. - Conagt
Battalball - Stational Hardin- Slmirent
Dnhnrilty
Tuatday.Ft*IT,7pm.- NASCARLlut
Tuatday. Ft* IT. 1:11 pm. - CaHtpo
BatAttball - Stationat IMutnltyofTout
SanAntoiio
Wtdnatday. Fa*. ILT:d pn. - Callogt
Batkttball- Floridaatfirman
Saturday.Fa*11.TIA- Callo«oAaMofboll
- StationalChaminadaUnluanlty
Sunday.Fa*,a, 11:41am.-Prolatkattail
FramThalraJda
Staiday.Fa*a. 11:Upm.- OnPitRoad
Sunday. Fobn.HOp.m.- MRN- MllMr
40
Tuatday,Fab.H7pm- NASCARHub
Thnday, Fa* li 7.JOpm. - College
BaUtlbal!- SamtordUnluanltytlStation
Saturday. Ft* JL l:Jt pm. - CdWpo
Baakatball - Uniitnityat Arkansas- Little
RockatStation

PREPS
IASKITIALL: SamMtATMttkCtnfarwct
POTS

Cl All
—
174
1 14)
1 II
] ST
1 4M
1 II)

Twin
Somlnclt
Lyman
LakiMary
LaktSrantlay
Lakt Hawaii
OvtoSo

W L
4 0
) 1
TI
1)
1 )
1 S

GIRL)
Ta*m
Lika Mary
Sambo*

W l 0* Ail
5 1 — IM
) I t 41

io n
Ti m
LMHm II*
LMMary
OMS
Lyman
L*k*lrM1*y

I I T N
1 ) 1 j i i n
I ) I 4
I ) ) a
1 1 II*
1 1 I *

M
IM
14)4
1541
4)4
4*4
141

foecko
OIRLS — DliTrlct 3 Toomement: 7 p.m. — Stmlnel* v*.
Winter Park *5 Ward Park; 7 p.m. — RockMg* at Lek*
AAeryj 7 p.m. — Oviedo g) DeLand; 7 p.m. — Tltutvlll* at
L*k*How»ll

i w u m i Wi

DatratlHCNcapan
Portlandin. DatiaaliT
SanAnkMalMMUmukaalU
UM
A1)1.SacramantaID
NaeYetatdMunpa^T:Mpm.
LA OtNMn M Dww. P.Mpm.
DaHnttLALaAmnapm
NawJanayalSaaffl*MMpm
RationatAtlanta,nigput
PtdladiMAtaatIndan*atp*
VOLLEYBALL
NaaMnyknalCMca*.Mpd
MawTartatMHwaukaa.nl*i
VOUITIAU: Mart RacrMtaLaapmt
Darner«Hautlan.m*t
GatdmStana&gt;SanAnNnlpnl*l
Madty'lC*E4ILa*tut
SacramantoatUtdLmlgptt
H t SI
Ti m
PfeeUia*Portland.mpM
CMyWrt
44
))
1
tall Motor LM
41 )
Upturn
IAMITIAU: Sandro's
Finacml K«S4f Karmr
))
)
lad
44 1
Gatan
CanetlK Harvard T)
4) 1*
TptHylTMGlrj
LaMaytaILMrcyHnlM
T
)l
luifcrflnfrt
AAitlertvtHaILRtnddpbMaconTl
PartAn Far*
44 1
Rtedi ItlandOLPannSlattTS
Gad SHptwtf LitfhranOmrcfi
11 1
SatanHaATt.SootonCalloyiTl
OwdiaMMOlPrtptitcy
41 1 Seri*
ItuafiatdtT,WattLMartyIT
TnMy'sC*(dALa*fn
GavpaTartM.MarylandTJ
Ti m
ID S
UNLVMLAuburnB
—
SIIIS
Ti m
latolrantlty*
Lyman
LMMary
LakaHontl
SarnKM
OriM
•SACOiayln

IT L T SI
t i : 1 5 ) 1
i l l )
1114*
17)4*
I T1 T

—

Fptrlofl
Outrgpn
OtltenaSadSamlet
Bioston
Inn Pm *
lM *S cn«
HijfiJumprs
OMpMna

41
41 —
M 1
7) 1IS S
)7 1
14 T
If 1

BASKETBALL
lAlAETIALl: NIA STANDINGS

tisfar* CaaltrMct
AIMkDMM)
* l Pci. 01
Boston
n n .7* —
PWladephia
MIt 571 By
WasMngton
DII J11 N*
Nr* York
i] it m ic
Nr* Jarsay
n n bo a
CaMralDMsM
Dttrwl
Tl IS AH—
Atlanta
MII 4M 1
MllwauUt
* * .10 1
Oilcago
li n mi 7*
Indiana
» li ass •
CMwiand
It V .40 11*
WisMuQnlinM
M
SdsnrStDMata
* L Pet. SI
a it am—
Dallas
M11 Jtl )
Utadi
Houston
tl 11 so 1
*11444 1*
Oonvtr
San Antonio
14ST IM«*
Sacramanto
(4 a jii 14
PacificDtmiaa
LALaktrt
M19 .771 —
* it m 7*
Portland
Saattl*
74 n S4SIt
GakSmJtaN
U 21 SB **
If TT.41114
Phoanlk
7IT 1STV
LACllppars
Sahtrday'tRiwttt
OttrollIMNr*YorkII)
WashingtonHi Ptuiadupftiat«
Cltvtlond W
l. Indiana 100 Dcnvar Id.
Sacramtntoll]
LAClipper*lie utet«ill I0T) SaatnaIII
illTIOTI
Sunday'!Rnutti
HoutlonlOLAtlanta104
GoJdtn State 110. Na* Jtnty 147
HOT)

Mitoowi m KnnoStaN M
Naira OamiM. NorikCaratMoM

TrimJt Acin
Mad
Orryanli StanfordU
UCLAIt, WadvlnytonStaMM
Sad*
Alabamaa GaorylaTlIOT)

AlabamallrmlnpemTlOldDamkilanIt
AlbanySI.It MorateuuM
AppalachianSt TlTkaOtaddN
AtlanticOrld.N,LanairAkyre17
Auburntl. FieIdaM
RtuafMMSt 7LWfealiny11
Contrail. EelkamO
Ckrta.Nmpet71.VaWrUryanM
CMminll,Yiryiniaa
CatumbuiCat Y7,SavamakSt.M
CancelM,MadliertyU
CumbetandN.Mllliyan7S
DavfdmMWymUMltHeyU
DukaU.WaktFaradMI0TI
E.Carolina71.AmekanIt
EadetiMnranHaH.Maryvilla7!
FairmonttiWaynafery14
Farrump. RalmontAbbay71
FleldiAAM1)1.CdiaedWatan04
FMridaSautkefiTLFlandiTadiP
FrndtMeenn. ClaTIlnlS
Fgrmnd.WVrtkrapU
GrambllnyII Mm.VelNyIII0TI
GuiltedHMelHillT)
HardinSimmoraII.GaoryiaSou.II
HiyhPointTLCatawbaH
IndantyoMUNo.KantuctyII
JackwniiltN,SoulkAlabamaM
JamtiMadiionTLDaeyaMaunat(OT)
JohnCarroll41RatkanySt
Kantaitl LounvilMSI
KantuctySO.MiuiuippiSI M
LljnmJonttl,CmtralWatlayan44
LindwyMilunI). RmclaR
MarikalllLE TtnnaunSI 7]
MaryWtaNnytonto.ShenandoahM
MtmphilSlalt7a,Nr*Oriaani7)
MiddleTmntuatILTam.SI.4S
Miuiuippia Taimauaa70(OT)
MeaJeadState17,EKantuctyO
Ml.0liv«f7,NtwportNrutMIIOT)
MurrayState41.AutlinPtaySO
Nary47,NCMllminytonu
N.C.GraeeboraP.MattedUtMOOT)

Sw eded Wins World Ski Event
CRANS-MONTANA. Switzerland (UPI) — Plrmln
Zurhrlggen of Switzerland skied aggressively today to win
the men's super-giant slalom at the World Alpine Ski
Championships.
A second place finisher In both the downhill and
combined event. Zurbrlggen made sure of becoming the
first-ever world champion In the super-giant with a run of
one minute 19.93 seconds.

...D istric t
Continued from 7A

Musante and freshmen defend­
ers Tammy Fulsang and Jen­
nifer McAvoy.
Lake Brantley has been on a
roll since losing to Lyman In Ihe
finals of the B urger King
Tournament. The Lady Patriots
have won 13 In a row and were
rarely threatened In that stretch.
The Lady Patriots have the
leading goal scorer In the district
in Junior Julie DelKusso who has
28 goals and 30 assists. Cara
Marten, also a Junior, had an
exceptional second half of the
season and finished the with 19
goals and 19 assists. Junior
Colleen Llevcrtz and freshman
Beth Schaefer are also outstand­
ing offensive players for Brantley
but both missed the last week of
the regular season with injuries.
"We’re giving all the girls
Saturday and Sunday off so they
can get some re s t." Lake
Brantley coach Wolfgang Halblg
said. "Llevertz and Schaefer
didn't play all week and hope­
fully will be able to play Tuesday
but we're hoping for Thursday
for sure. They’re two very Im­
portant players to us.”
Senior Michelle Herbst has had
as good a season as any mid­
fielder In the state while the
defense Is keyed by Junior
sweeperback Reente Deaver and

senior fullback Jennifer Josephs.
J u n i o r goalk eep er Wendy
Vickery has done a superb Job In
her first year In the net with a
county-leading 12 shutouts.
Lake Mary boasts one of the
most prolific offensive players In
Seminole County history In se­
nior forward Kelley Broen. This
season. Broen has scored 24
goals and dished out 22 assists.
Sophomore Donna Rohr (15
goals), junior Michelle Mattingly
(13) and freshman Crlssie Snow
(10) have also chipped in to give
the Lady Rams one of the most
high-powered offenses around.
Defenslvley, sweeperback
Amy Alexander has come on
strong In the late season while
Vicky Warner. Jolle Hoffman.
Michelle Padilla. Lisa Fraher and
goalkeeper Tammy Scott have
been steady all year.
"I think we've progressed to
where we're playing our best
soccer of the year at this point,"
Lake Mary coach Bill Elssele
said. "Hopefully, we'll keep It
going all next week and give
everybody we play a pretty good
match."
Seminole High. 9-9-2. came on
strong at the end of the season
and was looked at as a possible
darkhorse In the tournament but
Injuries have riddled coach Suzy
Reno's team In the last two
weeks. In Friday's game against
Lyman. Seminole lost two
starters. Jennifer Roberts and
Heather Brown, to Injury and
Renn said 11 Is doubtful they will

HOCKEY
HOCAIYiNHLSTAN0IN4I
Molat Caaltraaao

n.a- I a

lilnei
TSinCBIVflM
M L
la 14
NYf
IS)t
n it
NT Aanyan n n
Nae Jretry
II v
II J4
VM
Mantrttl
)4 a
Ration
HII
TOH
Quebec
Buffalo
II M

•P RA

111 IN
104 174
its m
nt m
IDM
IH IP
in its
114 in
in ip
in in
ITSMl

Mpnl WlTMP

NL PtL •P OA
I) IP IIS
&gt;i n M Ml 111
n a 17 Hi in
II N 44 in m
it a a in in
Saryiba Otrtun
Edmonton
]4 IS 77 m in
Wianipty
N M
II tit in
Calyary
Mtt SI mi »
L*i Anyetn
a )a
H TIT314
VincaunrfilluadlRie1**imli—~aM~ 54 ITSlit
Hiiiwf twwni
M
YNanyetLPhiladelphiaI
BoaMnLWMyay)
NYlalndetLHeltedl
MontrealLLosAnyain1
Calyary L Nr* Jonty)
Beirut a. Tannu)
i 4 (I.Lada4
Sua4ey'tAm*!
WaihlnytonI WimlptyI
RuttaleLDatroltl
NYAanyelLBoston!
HartfedlPittsburyhl
QuobacLLoiAnyrMi)
ChicayoLEdmontonl
M.nneiota4,Vanccmer3
kMaday'sCam
PhiladriphiaalTeonfa7)Spm
WodntsAay'sGamas
Minnesota
Detroit
Si. Lautai

a it

Montreal at Qutbtc. niyM
Edmontonal SI Louie night
Vancuurtr atCapary. niyM

SOCCER
tOCCEA:MUL
Sunday’sAawNi
Baltimore 7, SanOiryo]
WichitaLSt Louisa
Minresctal.NrwYek)

Chicaao LLosAnytMt 1(a0|

Play Better Golf with JACK NICKLAUS
MOAT
POPULRP.
TP.I&amp;C.HFMNG
TECHNIQUE ON
THE TDUIL, HMD
THE ONE 1
F5WOFV. 1ft THE
FOP.VlftfLO PRESS l
R SUGHT
INCLiNhTION of
the hrnds
TOWARDS THE
TARGET. FROM
WHICH YOU
J'(EN GEWTL.V
"R E to O U N O -'
INTO THE
TAKEAWAV.

Koch Announces Retirem ent
ROSTOCK. East Germany (UPI) — Marita Koch of East
Germany, possibly the greatest female track and field
athlete of all time, Monday announced her retirement from
the sport.
Koch, who will turn 30 Feb. 18. said she was quitting
because of recurring trouble with her Achilles tendon.
"It has hardly been possible to train recently, and it Is no
help now to be optimistic, one has to be realistic. Koch
said.
Koch set 16 world outdoor records and 15 Indoor world
bests In a career that brought her every major honor. She
said she would continue her medical studies and marry her
long-time coach. Wolfgang Meier, later this year.

OUdemalLNCirdlMSt M
Pun»deSttH*nM
AkTanedlLWMe*AMeyM
Aardemnei*Nn$y*wyn
AatlkeaSlLMll
It AufudlnriMFayannllNIt 71
SejtkUnSt n.MdCad,Band
SeuttarnMltdTt.SouthCedlnaST
IF.Audind, SELauHianad
StatonTt.TneaSetAnkniaTS
TtnmaaaTickTlAnmlronySIII
TreeytuntaM,PMauUiaM
Unionlly111TfemmMort71
wminponiLaiOLlynd*tr|TI
ff. RantuctyMUNCOenattaiO
VatdeJiM.MUuinptnK
Vndp*WiLLni»iMSi.U
Va.(MnmennHk« SFlarldilMOT)
VirplnlaTackB.FloridaSt TtI0T)
VryMtaUnMnP.Hamptnlnal.il

M
a t)
141)
1444
) 4I
4*1
an 4

Play Better Golf with JACK NICKLAUS

A

N OVEK- TIGHT
GfMP UPSETS
TEMPO AND
FVHVTHM bV POPCINQ
VOU TO SVUINQ
JERKILY. PRRTICULftRLY
PT
THE
tt—STRP.T
OF
THE
RCTlON.

be bacK for Ihe district.
"Right now. the district looks
bleak." Reno said. "We’ve now
lost two starters to injuries and
two to grades. If we can survive
Monday night and play Lyman
tough again Tuesday, I'll be
happy."
Oviedo and Lake Howell are
the two other Seminole County
teams in the district and both
are capable of pulling o(T the big
upset If they get some breaks.
Oviedo. 4-11-4. played Lyman
to a 1-1 tic early In the year and
has played tough against Lake
Mary and Lake Brantley In Its
last two conference games. Of­
fensively, Oviedo Is led by senior
Cathy Bergman who leads the
team with 14 goals. Senior
striker Kelly Price has been
bothered by injuries most of Ihe
season but could be a factor if
she's healthy for the district. At
midfield, junior Jill Knutson,
Bobble Bowersox and Jennifer
Whitaker lead Ihe way while
Doris Arcomone and goalkeeper
Lori Blackburn anchor Ihe de­
fense.
Lake Howell. 7-9-3, has played
Lake Mary to a 1-1 tie and
dropped a narrow 2-1 decision to
Melbourne late In the season.
Among the Lady Hawks top
offensive players are Klrstin
Reesman. Dawn Towle and Tori
Campbell. Goalkeeper Sherri
Raynor along with Darcy Mlsiak
and Heather Drann arc the top
defensive players.

HOLD
THE CL-Uto EA&amp;IL.V
RT, ADDHESb. FIRM
UP YOUR HRND&amp;
SL.IGHTUV JUST bEFORE
YOU START tiACR.
THEN TRY TO KEEP
YOUR HAND PRESSURE
THE SAME
THROUGHOUT
THE
&amp;ACR-___^
SWING.
AVOID PARTICULARLY
GRAbfclNG TIGHTER
WITH either hand
ONCE THE CLUb
SS IN (YSOTION.
OltliKiFtqF«*M«3Vrndtfdl*|n&lt;WalJFujMt

...Hoops
Continued from 7 A
At Atlanta. Duane Ferrell
scored 25 points and Craig Neal
hit two foul shots with 23
seconds remaining to lift Georgia
Tech over Maryland. The Yellow
Jackets led hy as many as 13
points in the second half before
the Terrapins rallied.
At Los A ngeles. J e r ome
“Pooh” Richardson scored 13
points and Montcl Hatcher and
Dave Immel added 12 each as
UCLA held off Washington State.
Washi ngt on S t a t e ’s Brian
Wright missed a short shot at
the buzzer.
At Eugene. Ore., Anthony
Taylor scored all 16 of his points
in the second half to spark
Oregon over Stanford. Oregon
tilt 62 percent of Its shots in the
second half while Stanford made
Just 35 percent from the floor

United Preae International
The New Jersey Nets, who
usually need Just 48 minutes to
lose, extended the Golden State
W arriors to four overtimes
Sunday before dropping their
11th game In 12 outings.
Joe Barry Carroll scored 5 of
his season-high 43 points In the
fourth overtime to lift the host
Warriors to a 150-147 triumph
In a game that featured 251 shot
attempts and 129 rebounds.
It was Just the seventh time an
NBA game has gone to four
ov ertim es. The record for
overtimes is six. established by
Indianapolis and Rochester In
1951.
Nets Coach Dave Wohl called
It "a great game from a fan's
perspective" but less so for him.
"We had great staying power
but we couldn't execute at the
end." he said. "We were strug­
gling offensively because of fa­
tigue and we passed up open
shots. But I was very pleased
with our effort."
Car r ol l , who p lay e d 55
minutes, hit a layup with 3:27
left in the fourth extra period to
put the Warriors ahead for good.
"I’m very, very weary." Carroll said. "It was one of the most
exciting games I've played In.
It's also the longest I’ve ever
played. Fortunately. It had a
happy ending."
The game was tied 108-108 at
the end of regulation, 118-118
after the first overtime. 127-127
at th e end of th e second
overtime and 138-138 after the
third extra period.
"It's the most up and down
I've ever seen a ball game go,"
Golden State Coach George Karl
said. "There was tremendous
Intensity with lots of fatigue.
Rockets 106, Hawks 104
At Atlanta, Robert Reid scored
27 points, including 11 In the
fourth quarter, to lift Houston.
The Hawks missed three shots
that could have tied the score In
the closing seconds. John Battle
scored a career-high 27 points
for Atlanta.
Spurs 120, Bucks 118
At San Antonio. Alvin Rob­
ertson scored 28 points to lead
San Antonio to its ftfUx.sqnacesjt,
tlve victory. Milwaukee closed
out the game with an IB-8 spurt.
The Bucks were paced by Terry
Cummings, who had a gamehigh 32 points.
Pistons 94, Bulls 92
At Pontiac. Mich., Adrian
Dantlcy scored 25 points and
Detroit held off a late Chicago
rally. Chicago's Michael Jordan
scored a game-high 38 points,
including 17 in the fourth
quarter, but missed 3 shots In
the final 12 seconds that could
have s e n t the g a me Into
overtime.
Trail Blazers 133, Mava 117
At Portland. Ore.. Klkl Vandeweghe scored 38 points to lead
seven Portland players In double
figures and lift the Trail Blazers
over Dallas. Mark Aguirre scored
36 (joint s and R o l a n d o
Blackman added 33 to pace the
Mavericks.
Jazz 121, Kings 113
At Sacramento. Rickey Green
scored 24 points and rookie Del
Curry added 18 to spark Utah.
Eddi e J o h n s o n s c o r e d a
season-high 29 points for Sac­
ramento. Green also had a
game-high 13 assists and 7
rebounds.

after halftime.
Elsewhere Sunday. Cornell
downed Harvard 80-73, Rhode
Island bested Penn Slate 84-75,
Missouri beat Kansas State
68-64 and Texas got past Rice
70-69.
In Saturday games Involving
ranked teams. Michigan stunned
No. 3 Iowa 100-92. No. 4 Indiana
beat No. 5 Purdue 88-77, No. 6
S y r a c u s e lost to No. 13
Georgetown 83-81 In overtime.
No. 8 DcPaul nipped LaSalle
58-54, No. 9 Oklahoma edged
North Carolina Stale 86-82, and
No. 10 Alabama downed Georgia
83-74 In overtime.
Also. No. 11 Duke got by Wake
Forest 62 60 In overtime. No. 12
Illinois beat Colorado 69-65, No.
14 CIcmson defeated Virginia
89-83, No. 15 Texas Christian
stopped Arkansas 73-66, No. 16
Florida fell 81-68 to No. 17
Auburn. Providence surprised
No. 18 St. John's 93-81.

MISL: Sting Upends Lazers
INGLEWOOD. Calif. (UP!) Frank Klopas scored 1:14 Into
the second overtime Sunday
night to give the Chicago Sting a
2-1 victory over the Los Angeles
Lazers In a Major Indoor Soccer
League game.
Gus Mokalis gave Los Angeles
a 1-0 lead 5:07 Into the second
period. Batata scored for the

Nip Nets
In 4 OTs

Soccer

DOG
RACING
NOW!
NIGHTLY 7:30 p.m .
Except Sunday, thru May 2nd
Matinees Monday, Wednesday,
&amp; Saturday 1:00 p.m.

Play the exciting A high
paying “Plc-6” - minimum
jackpot $5,000. Also two
“Double Qulnlelas" and the
“Superfecta”.

THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission for ladies
Visit ouf two climate-controlled
clubhouses tor your tine dining
and entertainment pleasure'
CLUBHOUSE RESV.: 8 3 1 -1 6 0 0

S ling wilts 9:08 It-ll In regulation
tn send th e gam e Into overtim e.

Chicago Imoroved to 12-13.
while the Lazers. who lost their
sixth consecutive game, dropped
lo 6-16.

SANFORD-ORLANDO
KENNEL CLUB
North ol Orlando. Just of! Hwy. 17-92
301 Oog Trads Road. Longmod
Sorry. No On* Under 18

TV*

�M A - l o n f t r * N tr iM i

I#FI.

ttomday, Fai. I, 1W7

Stocks Open Mixed
NEW YORK (UPI) — Prices opened mixed today
In active trading of New York Stock Exchange
issues.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which
slipped 1.97 Friday, was down 7.03 to 2151.01
shortly after the market opened.
Advances led declines 483-481 among the
1,491 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 14,349,000
shares.
The stock market finished narrowly lower
Friday after late buying erased sharper losses
caused by pre-weekend profit taking and limited

Local Interest
These quotations 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 m a rkets change
throughout the day. Prices do
not Include retail markup or
markdown.
B id A s k

futures-related selling.
“ Friday's action has nothing to do with
anything a rational person might think." said
Albert Goldman, market strategist at A.G.
Edwards In St. Louis. "The market wasn't
concerned with the better-than-expected trade
deficit data or with any particular news develop­
ment. It was Just calling ‘time out.'"
Goldman said Friday's decline In slower trading
than has been the market's recent habit was
positive.
"The sign of a healthy market Is that it can get
very 'overbought* In a short period of time and
then not collapse." said Goldman.

Dollar Waivers;
Gold Moves Up
By United Press International

The U.S. dollar opened mixed
on most major world money
markets today. The price of gold
moved higher.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, the dollar strengthened
slightly against the Japanese
yen on buying by exporters,
closing at 153.15 yen. up 0.85
yen from Friday's close of
152.30 yen.
In Eu r o p e a n t r a di ng In
Frankfurt the dollar fell to
1.8245 German marks from
Friday‘s close of 1.825.
In Zurich the dollar opened at
1.531 Swiss francs, down from a
previous close of 1.5415, and in
Paris the dollar began the week
at 6.0805 French francs, down
from 6.12 on Friday.
In Brussels the dollar opened
at 38.20 Belgian francs, against
38.60 and In Amsterdam the

dollar fell to 2.05 Dutch guilders
from 2.06 on Friday.
The dollar went against the
downward European trend in
Milan, where It opened slightly
stronger at 1.291 lire, against a
previous close of 1.288.29.
In London, the pound fell
marginally to $1,519 from Fri­
day's close o ff 1.512.
In early New York trading the
dollar was slig h tly higher
against most major foreign cur­
rencies.
Gold opened $5.50 an ounce
higher In Zurich at $405.00 and
edged up 87.5 cents in London
to open at 405.25 an ounce.
The morning fixing In London
was $406.45. up $2,075 from
Friday's close.
Silver remained unchanged in.
Zurich at $5.50 an ounce and
opened 1 cent an ounce higher
in London at $5.52.

Jo an Thom as, Hum ane Society In­
vestigator, fills out notice of seizure to be
put on owner's door. Ms. Wright later
appeared. ’

H«f«M Photo* fey Om

m

J*r4an

Vet Price Craig with an apparently healthy horse.

Joan Thompson. Investigator
for the humane society, said the
horses were being impounded
because the society's believes
Ms. Wright has not and can not
properly care for them. If the
society gets custody of them,
they will be put up for adoption.
Ms. Wright, her 8-year-old
daughter and at least three of
her adult equestrian students,
told officials the horses are far
healthier when they arrived by
trailer from Nebraska In Nov­
ember.
Ms. Wright, an Orlando native
who raised and trained horses In
Nebraska, said she had paid a
man In that state to keep her
horses for her and was appalled
when they arrived emaciated.
They were reportedly in his care
7 months.
She said she considered suing
the man. a quarterhorsc Judge,
but decided to put the money
towards restoring the animals'
health rather than on attorney
fees.
*Tve been working three
Jobs." she said on the verge of
crying as the horses were being
loaded. She has already spent
her anger arguing with officials.
"Just about everything I've
made has gone to these horses. I
don't have new clothes. Do you
sec what I'm driving for a cor (an
old Pinto statlonwagon)? 1 could
have bought u new car with the
money I've spent on these
horses." she said.
She said she had to leave one
Job because she was spending

too much time with the ailing
horses. She also said she has a
heart problem aggravated by
stress, which she said she eased
by working with the horses.
"We were Just beginning to see
the light." she said referring to
horses' health. "This will Just
about put me out of business."
she said.
She said she would contact an
attorney about the situation.
While neighbors and other
horse owners In the area said
Ms. Wright told them the horses
also had a highly contagious
disease called strangles, the vets
In their preliminary examination
of the first few found no active
evidence of the disease. It is an
upper respiratory bacterial In­
fection. explained one of the
veterinarians. The disease often
causes swelling between the
horse's Jaw bones.
Humane oftlcals and animal
control workers were unmoved
by Ms. Wright’s anger and ex­
planations for the horses condi­
tions and continued to Inspect
and trailer them away after she
arrived at the scene.
"This Is going to put us In the
poor house," said Mrs. Wolk
referring to the cost to keep and
care for the 21 horses until the
issue is decided in court. She
said contributions and donations
would be appreciated. She
estimated the total cost of caring
and feeding the horses would
run In the thousands of dollars.
Kim Nobl e, an Or l ando
equestrian.' told the Sanford
H erald that she thinks the
horses look worse now than
when she saw them in De­
cember. contrary to some of Ms.
Wright's adult students.

Mrs. Noble, who has owned
horses and signed up to take
lessons from Ms. Wright, said
she had been looking for Ms.
Wright since Jan. 3 to discuss
financial matters about nine of
12 lessons she has not taken.
She said she went to her Oviedo
home early Saturday but did not
find Ms. Wright. She said she
saw the horses. Just hours before
the Humane Society had arrived,
and they looked more u n ­
derweight than when she saw
them In December.
She did say. however, that if
they were s uf f e r i ng from
strangles the Infected horses
would have to be cured before
they would begin to gain weight.
She said she wanted to discuss
the lessons with Ms. Wright
because the three lessons she
had were Indoor and she felt Ms.
Wright was not In a position to
give on- t he- hor se le sso n s
because of the animals' apparent
condition and lack of equipment.

ments.
EUGENE BOWMAN JR.
Mr. Eugene M. Bowman Jr..
67, of 401 W. Seminole Blvd..
Sanford, died Sat ur day at
Florida Hospital. Orlando. Born
Dec. 21. 1919 In Pittsburgh, he
m o v e d to S a n f o r d f r om
Steubenville.
Ohio, in 1986. He
"a simple servant. He was not
was
a
retired
foreman
for a steel
laden with diamonds and there
corporation and was a member
was
no
fanfare.
He
Is
an
humble
Continued from page 1A
of Holy Name Cathedral Catholic
man.
Church. Steubenville. He was an
co-pastor ol First Presbyterian
"He didn't have the flair of a
Army veteran of World War II.
C h u r c h of S a n f o r d wa s Billy Graham, he was extremely
Survivors Include his wife.
coordinator of the annual event humble like one who has been
Frances M.; brother. Thomas C..
sponsored by the Central Florida through an ordeal, one that has
Pacolma, Calif.: two sister. Anna
Presbytery and held at First crawled and then experienced a
Louise Brown. Steubenville.
Presbyterian Church. Orlando. new creation. He Is one who as
Catherine. Pasadena. Calif.
Dr. John S. Lyles. Presbytery Christians we could use as a real
Oaklawn Funeral Home, Lake
executive. Danlelak and his wife. role model."
Mary.
In charge of arrange­
Rose, met Weir at the Orlando
Danlelak added. "He Is one
ments.
airport Saturday night, where a who wouldn't have chosen to be
SARAH K. BEILER
press conference was held by singled out. but it’s like the dear
Sarah Katheryn Belter. 71. 202
Weir. The Danlelaks then took Lord pointed a finger at him and
Yura Lane. Oviedo, died Satur­
him to his hotel room where said. 'You will be a light which
day. Born In Pennsylvania, she
they sat and talked together.
will shine In the darkness, and a
moved to Oviedo from Paraguay
"He is a counterpart of Mother voice that will spread the Good
In 1986. She was a foreign
Teresa," Danlelak said of Weir. News.'"
missionary and a member of the
New Tribes Mission.
Baldwln-Falrchild Funeral
firefighters responded io the
s c e n e f r o m t h e c i t y of Home. Goldcnrod. In charge of
Casselberry and Fern Park sta­ arrangements.
Continued from page 1A
MAMIE ANDERSON
tions after a neighbor saw smoke
Continued from page 1A
affair, and we will use diplomatic
Mrs. Mamie E. Anderson. 96.
coming
from
the
home
and
and other means and try and
of 1601 W. 16th St.. Sanford,
Temperatures In the concrete called 911.
pressure the abductors."
died Sunday at Central Florida
The
fire
was
brought
under
block home were between
He did not elaborate on what 500-600
Regional Hospital. Born Nov. 1.
control
after
about
an
hour
and
a
degrees,
said
Seminole
“ ot her means' * mi ght be County Batalllon Chief Mike half. Roush said.
1890 In Elloree. S.C. she moved
employed. Asked If Amal would Roush.
to
Sanford from there In 1901.
In the Altamonte Springs fire,
consider using force, the militia
She was a homemaker and a
burning
grease
In
a
pot
caused
While
Yates’
body
didn't
come
official said, "This depends on In direct contact with the (lames, extensive damage to a home at member of Allen Chapel AME
the circumstances and condi­ "the moisture that remained on 102 Oak Lane Friday night. Church, Sanford.
tions."
Survivors Include a daughter,
him from the shower probably Roush said.
In London, the Church of built
Evelyn O.. Sanford; foster
No
injuries
were
reported.
The
up
steam
in
his
protective
England said Sunday it had no
to cause the burns." Roush tire reportedly began when a daughter. Eartherlean Williams.
confirmation Waite had been gear
resident of the Harmony Home Sanford; two sisters. Hassle
said.
seized despite widespread fears
subdivision
left a pot of grease Simmons. Pearl B. Wright, both
Yates
was
In
the
living
room,
for his safety.
of Sanford; two brothers. Hassle
on his stove, at around 9:30 p.m.
hosing
the
"core
area"
of
the
The pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad blaze, when burned. Roush said.
The fire burned kitchen cabi­ Simmons of Sanford; brother.
Organization today Issued a An electrical short started the nets. and the home's roof and William J. Thompson. New York
statement warning the United
City: eight foster grandchildren:
attic. Roush said.
he said.
States against military Interven­ fire,
13 foster great-grandchildren.
No
damage
estimate
was
avail­
No
one
was
In
the
15
Plumosa
tion. saying American hostages Ave. home when the fire broke able.
Wilson-Eichelberger
will die If force is used to free out at around 6 p.m. About 15
Morturary.
Sanford, in charge of
—Karen Tallev
them.
arrangements.
PHILLIP L. TWIGGS
Mr. Phillip Louts Twiggs. 77.
Smith's long-term lease also Includes a vacant
parcel Just east of One Harbour Place. He said this of 1901 W. 18th St.. Sanford,
area is lagged for subsequent development as died Friday at Central Florida
cither a yacht club or another commercial Regional Hospital. Born Jan. 31.
Continued from page 1A
1909 In Live Oak. he moved to
complex. Smith, son of Sanford Mayor Bcttye
Sanford
from there In 1930. He
Smith,
was
granted
the
lease
by
city
commission­
Smith said. "We're definitely going to be geared
was a retired construction
ers in late 1985.
toward active people and their style of clothing."

worker and a member of Second
Shi l oh Mi ssi onary Baptist
Church. Sanford. He was a
World War II Army veteran.
Survivors Include a daughter.
Eloulse Davis. Rochester: 13
grandchildren; several great­
grandchildren and great-great­
grandchildren.
Wllson-Elchclbcrger Mortuary.
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
ments.
MICHAEL KRIKORIAN
Mr. Michael Krlkorian. 57. of
604 S w e e t w a t e r Blvd. ,
Longwood. died Friday . Born In
Braddock. Pa., he moved to
Longwood from Chicago In
1979. He was a president of a
security company and a member
of the Episcopal Church of the
Resurrection. He was a member
of American Society of Industrial
Security, a past president of
American Society of Safety
Engineers, member of the
Central Florida Chapter of Amer­
ican Society of Safety Engineers,
the American Society for Indus­
trial Security. Veterans of Safety.
Na t i o n a l Fi re P r o t e c t i o n
Association, a past general
chlarman of National Safety
Council — Chemical Section, a
past chairman of Illinois Manu­
facturers Association Health and
Safety Committee, past member
of the National Safety Council
Board of Directors.
Survivors Include his wife.
Janet; sons. David, Duluth.
Minn., Edward, Altamonte
Springs. Brian, Orlando. Jack.
West Hartford. Conn.: sister.
Sophie Lachln, Rockville . Md..
Sue SabonJI an. Hashr ook
Heights. N.J.. Bertha Myers. St.
Petersburg. Mary Welser. Elllcott
City. Md.: one grandchild.
Baldwln-Falrchild Funeral
Home. Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.
ANNETTESTARKE
Mrs. Annette Starke. 69. of 10
Carriage Cove Way. Sanford,
died Saturday at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Born Jan. 16.
1918 in Fairbury. III., she moved
to Sanford from Mansfield
Conn.. In 1980. She graduated
from East Connecticut State
College at age 62. A homemaker
and social service worker, she
was a member of Lutheran

Church of the Redeemer. San­
ford, Alzhclmers Support Group.
Federation of Senior Citizens of
Seminole County. Over 50 Club.
Golden Age Games. American
Association of Retired Persons,
Florida Silver-H aired
Legislature. FMO. and Home­
owners of Carriage Cove.
S u r v i v o r s I n cl u d e her
husband. Albert C.. Sanford;
three sons. Robert C.. Richard J.
and John M.. all of Easton. Pa.:
mother. Louise R. Jensen. Alta­
monte Springs, sister. Ruth
Wesslnger. Brewster. Mass.;
seven grandchildren.
All Faiths Memorial Park.
Casselberry. In charge of ar­
rangements.

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
Westlnghouse

7% 7%
33% 34
24% 25
33% 34
42% 42%
31 31%
24% 24%
25% 25%
56% 56%
31% 32
13% 13%
42% 42%
'21% 22
56 56%
62% 63

Gold And Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted In dollars per f o r ounce
today:
Gold
London
Previous close
404.375 oil
4
.
G
2
5
Morning fixing 406.45 up 2.075
Hong Kong
405.25 off 10.25
New York
Comcx spot
gold open
407.20 up 2.10
Comcx spot
sllveropen
5.51 up 0.013
(London mo r n i n g fixing
change Is based on the previous
duy’s closing price.)

Dow Jones
Dow Jones Averages — 10 a.m.
30 Indus
2156.78 off 1.26
20 Trans
873.55 off 1.33
15 Utils
223.92 off 0.80
65 Stock 821.12 off 1.05

Steelworkers Opt For Work, Less Pay
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - A new
contract between the United
Steelworkers and USX Corp.
that cuts pay but Improves some
benefits set the stage today for
the gradual reopening of steel
plants shut down for a record six
months.
"You don't turn a switch, and
everything turns on again," said
Thomas Fcrrall, spokesman for
the nation's No. 1 steelmaker.
"All ... plans are tentative, sub­
ject to customer orders."
Maintenance workers were
called back first to get plants
fired up for steel production.
USX officials would not estimate
when all the company's plants
would be back to full capacity,
but said the start-up phase

the Journal editor said. "We see
no reason to link Mr. Selb’s
detention with the Iranian news
agency report." Continued from page 1A
Pearlstlne said the newspaper
J o u r n a l's Nor man edit or, learned of Seib's detention early
Pearlstlne. "That report says the Sundny through diplomatic
person arrested entered Iran channels. "We have not been
with a false passport and was informed of any reason for this
posing as a Journalist.
detention," he said, adding that
“ Jerry Selb entered Iran Journal officials requested his
legally on a valid U.S. passport.” Immediate release.

...Release

...Weir

...Waite

...Marina

...Fires

probably would last about three
weeks.
Approval of a four-year con­
tract by the steelworkers In a
19.621 to 4.045 vote Saturday
ended a 184-day work stoppage,
the longest In the history of the
nation's steel Industry.
T h e a v e r a g e USX
steelworker's pay will fall from
$12.28 to $10.95 per hour dur­
ing the life of the contract.
Workers also lose nearly
another $1 an hour In benefits.
Including elimination of a week's
vacation and three holidays. In
return, the company said It
woul d I mpr ove i n s u r a n c e
benefits and pensions and begin
a profit-sharing plan.

...Horses
Continued from
1A
page

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hotpltal
ADMISSIONS
Sunday
Sanlord:
Elm er Estabrooks
W illiam F Harriett
DISCHARGES
Saturday
Sanford:
Baby Boy Hopson
Dan H. Tucker
Ernest Wilson
Melvin J Henger, Osteen
Sunday
Joseph G. Marceau. DeOary
Debra J. Yoder and baby girl, Oviedo

AREA DEATHS
JOHN A. COX
Mr. John A. Cox. 60. of 301
Larkwood Drive, Sanford, died
Saturday at Florida Hospital.
Orlando. Born Feb. 17. 1926 In
Pennsylvania, he moved to
Sanford from Orlando in 1975. A
machine products specialist, he
retired from Burroughs Cor­
poration after 35 years. He was a
member of Holy Cross Episcopal
Church. Sanford. He was a
World War II Navy veteran.
Survivors include his wife.
Margaret; son. Richard. Orlando:
four daughters. Pam Butler. De­
ltona, Debra Dale, Windermere,
Melinda Draper. Apopka. Donna
Whedon. Hamden. Conn. ;
m o t h e r . Ma r y R a b o r i a .
Washi ngt on. Pa.; brot her.
Joseph Raboria. Washington.
Pa.; two sisters. Connie Frazier.
Ki t t y S l m o n l n i , b o t h of
Washington. Pa.: six grand­
children.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary. In charge of arrange-

Funeral Notice
COX. JOHN A.
— Funeral services lor John A. Cox. 60. ol M l
Larkwood Drive. Santord, who died Satur­
day. will be held Wednesday at 4 p m. at
Oaklawn Funeral Home Chapel with Father
Frederick Mann officiating Interment In
Oaklawn M em orial P ark V isita tio n for
family and Iriendt Tuesday J 9 p m. Oaklawn
Funeral Home. Lake M a ry /S a n lo rd In
charge
S T A R K E .A N N E T T E
— Two memorial services are planned for
Annette L Starke. 49. of Santord. who died
Saturday. The first w ill be held ai the
Lutheran Church ol the Redeemer In Sanford
at 3p m Saturday. Feb 7. The second w ill be
held at St. Peters Lutheran Church in M ay or
June. 1907 In Easton. Pa Her friends are
Invited to atttnd one ol these memorial
services In lieu ol llowors. donations are
suggested to one of her churches, the
AUheimer Caretakers Support Group of
Santord. or the American Cancer Society.
TWIGGS. P H IL L IP L.
— Funeral services lor P h illip Louis Twiggs.
77. ol 1901 W llth St.. Sanford, who died
Friday, w ill be held It a m. Saturday at
Second Shlloah M issionary Baptist Church.
1975 Airport Blvd . Sanford, with Pastor W.J.
Pope officiating Interment to follow in
Restlawn Cemetery Calling hours lor friends
. 31 p m . Friday at the chapel. Wilson
E Ichelberger Mortuary In charge.
ANDERSON, M A M IE E.
— Funeral services for M am ie E Anderson.
96. of 1601 W. 16th St.. Santord. who died
Sunday, w ill be held 11 a m.. Saturday at
Allen Chapel AM E Church, 1703 Olive Ave .
Sanford, with Pastor John H. Woodard
officiating. Interment to follow In Restlawn
Cemetery Calling hours for trlends w ill be
held 3 6 p m Friday at the chapel Wilson
E Ichelberger Mortuary In charge

I CREMATION SPECIALISTS I

O A K LA W N
FU N ER AL HOM E &amp;
PRE A R R A N G EM EN T C EN T ER
3 2 2 -4 2 0 3

E a t. 1 0 8 4

e*tf Faanal Hama CtmHarj/iamimta CmMtj

*
I

�-•—•—l

r

r -

\

I

• t r r

•••

t

•r y

r~r~i

v

i t .

,

PEOPLE

tontari HsraM, tarter*. FI.

Meirtey, Fab. L 1»*7—1b

Man's Shining Success Built
On A Foundation Of Scum
DEAR ABET: I ran Into an
acquaintance from high school
■whom I haven't seen In five
years. He's an American success
Dear
story. He owns a highly prof*
liable b us i ne s s , several
Abby
expensive apartment complexes,
an d t h r e e c a r s — one a
top-of-the-llne foreign import. He
attained all this without a college
education and he's only 271
After our brief encounter on the Jealous or not. it would be a
street I was very Impressed and public service to notify the
narcotics division of your local
congratulatory.
.
Later, through mutual friends, police department.
I learned the real story. This guy
D E A R A B B Y : I am a
Isn't ambitious and diligent, but
26-year-old
college student
one of the biggest drug dealers in
(female)
although
I look about
the areal His "business" Is a
18.
I’ve
been
married
for three
front for his operations. To make
years
(no
kids)
and
I
go
to
college
matters worse, people who don't
full
time.
My
problem
Is
I am
know of his Illegal activities
think he’s an' exemplary Indi­ sick and tired of college men
who make passes at me. I
vidual.
suppose
they Just assume 1 am
Abby. I slugged It out in
not
married,
so they Jump right
college for four years and work
In.
turn
on
the
charm and ask
like a dog. but It's not easy
for
a
date.
Wouldn't
you think a
making ends meet. I have a wife
guy
would
ask
a
girl
If she was
and two kids to feed. Should I
turn this piece of scum over to available first? It would save a
the police? Maybe I'm Jealous — lot of time.
I am friendly and open, but I
but I'm also...
IRATE do not flirt or lead anybody on.
Maybe if you print this, the guys
DEAR IRATE: You need not I have In mind will see It and
justify blowing the whistle on a take the hint.
TAKEN
dope-dealing "scum” by com­
paring his Ill-gotten gains to
DEAR TAKEN: The guys you
your comparatively modest In­
come earned by the honest have In mind will probably not
sweat of your brow. He may cat recognize themselves, so It's up
better, but you sleep better! to . you to handle the problem

from your end. Wear a large,
wide, heavy wedding band. (If
the guys get too aggressive. It
can serve as a brass knuckle.)
T: My otherwise
masculine husband Insists on
drinking through a straw In
public. I say it makes him look
slsslfled: he disagrees. Your
opinion, please.
MORTIFIED Of MINNEAPOLIS
DEAR MORTIFIED: Drinking
through a straw or straight from
the glass Is a matter of personal
preference and has nothing to do
with a man's masculinity or the
absence of It.
DEAR ABBT: After you
printed that letter from "Paul in
La Mirada." who enrolled In law
school at age 42 and Is soon to
graduate, I had to write.
*
I served 30 years as a naval
officer. After that I had two
businesses — real estate In
Florida and buffalo raising in
South Dakota.

by Laeret T rem b lay

Beta Sigma Phi Torch Team Hosts Coffee
Members of the Torch Team of Sanford
City Council of Beta Sigma Phi were
hostesses to a coffee, held at the Fern Park
home of Sandie Blount, for B S P transferees
and members-at-larg. Among the guests,

members of Beta Sigma Phi but not yet
affiliated with an area chapter, are: from
left, Jan Barker, M ary Thorne, Judy Clark,
Jackie St. Andrei and Elizabeth Rowe.

Other BSP members and guests are: from
left, Becky P lla n d , Kathy Cote, Sue

Gayhart and Goldie M ae Taylor.

Then I entered law school at
age 61.1 am now 70 and have a
thriving law practice.
E.K. HALSEY,
VERO BEACH, FLA.
D E A R MR. H A L S E Y :
Congratulations. It's too late to
fulfill your dream only If you
think It Is.

TONIGHT'S TV
EVENING

6:00
O (3) ( S O CD O n e w s
Q) (11) GIMME A BREAKI
0 (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
NEWSHOUR
d ) |S) KNIGHT RIDER

6:05
32 NEW LEAVE IT TO BEAVER Edd« HasKairs purchase ol a pizza
ptrkx turns out to b« a financial
disaster

s ) (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
"Oteilo" This production of the Ver­
di opera, baaed on William Shake­
speare's tragic story, about a Moor­
ish general who la tricked into
behaving his wife has been unfaith­
ful. features tenor Jon Vickers as
Oteilo and soprano Mirada Freni as
Desdemona Herbert Von Kara|an
conducts the Berlin Philharmonic
English subtitles

9:30
(J) O THE CAVANAUGHS Pop
loses his driver's license, and to
add Insult to !n|ury, Kit secretly
plans to sell his car.

10:00

8

CD O CAGNEY &amp; LACEY A highschool basketball star's death may
be drug-related; Lacey's home is
robbed, g
(D (11) INN NEWS
0 (8) MARY TYLER MOORE

6:35
32 SAFE AT HOME

( S ( 11) BOB NEWHART
® (8) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

6:30
0 ® NBC NEWS
3 ) 0 CBS NEWS
0 ABC N E W S g
(11) TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Henry (eels me pains ot un­
employment after he's fired for sati­
rising the President in s cartoon

10:30

7:05
32 SANFORO AN 0 SON

(D (11) LATE SHOW Host: Joan
Rivers Scheduled Jane Brody
| "Jane Brody's Good Food Book ")
Co-host: Joan-For-A-Oay winner. In
stereo.
0 ) (8) BARGAINS TONIGHT

Behind the scenes of actor Gene
Hackman's recent film protects
(J) o 0ATING GAME
( D O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
CD (11) BENSON

7:35
32 HONEYMOONERS

O (3)

8:00

ALF ALF tries to convince
Dorothy that she should starl dating
again In stereo
(J)
KATE ALLIE Chip and his
mentally handicapped friend, Louis,
put together a model rocket while
the women of the house are at each
other's throats Q
0 O G I V E ME SHELTER
CD ( ID HART TO HART
0 (10) PLANET EARTH Climatolo­
gists study current weather pat­
terns m an effort to determine
whether the earth is entering a new
ice age or becoming a superheated
greenhouse that will eventually
cause ettensive hooding (R)Q
QD (8) MOVIE "Stunt Seven" (1979)
Christopher Connelly. Christopher
Lloyd A team ot stunt eiperts at­
tempt a daring land, sea and air
rescue of a kidnapped movie star

o

8

8:05
31 MOVIE "A Gathering Of Eagles"
(1963) Rock Hudson. Rod Taylor
Shocked by her husband's seeming
harshness to his men. an Air Force
commander s wife leaves him

8:30
O (3) AMAZING STORIES A strug­
gling comedy writer's amazing spi­
der plant helps him pen popular TV
scripts In stereo g
QD O MY SISTER SAM Sam gets
the runaround when she attempts
to gel a refund on Patti a broken
headphones g

0 ® BEST OF CA R 80 N From
January 1986: comic actor Tim
Conway and actor Hal Unden loin
host Johnny Carson In stereo. (R)
( D Q M 'A 'S 'H
®
NIGHTLINE Q

O

O

9:00

(3) MOVIE
Convicted A
Mother s Story" (Premiere) Ann Jilkan. Kiel Martin Two sisters face a
series of emotional trials after one
Is sentenced to prison for embez­
zlement and leaves her children In
the care of the other In stereo g
(D O NEWHART Dick helps Joan­
na overcome her tear of eye doc­
, tors and patches up a squabble be• tween George and Stephanie g
J 0 O P.O.W.: AMERICANS IN EN- EMY HANDS Personal interviews
1 Interweave with dramatic photo» graphs and him footage to trace the
* eipenences of nine former prison­
' era ol war Host: Robert Wagner
I ( D I ID TRAPPER JOHN. M D

«L

11:35

5:30
) TOOAY’S BUSINESS
(LOOK AT ME NOW (WED)
“ CAN YOU BE THINNER?
(THU)
0 ( 1 1 ) CNN NEWS
3 1 ANDY GRIFFITH

6:00
NBC NEWS
SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
) O EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
1(11 )0 00 0 DAY!
) CNN NEWS
(8) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
SAVINGS

■

6:30

O SIMON 6 SIMON(R)
O
NIGHTLIFE Host: David
Brenner Scheduled country singer
Gary Morris In stereo.
CD (11) ASK DR. RUTH Topic: teens
and se i Guest: author *Ruth Bell
("Changing B odies Changing
Lives") g
0 (8) NIGHT OWL FUN

S

12:05
3 1 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
PLORER An underwater helicopter;
Gurkhas, the Queen’s Army for the
British crown; Patrick Edlmger
scales cliffs overlooking the Verdon
River In France; the repair of Stradlvarius violins. Alaska's Denali
(Mount McKinley National Park)
0 ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN From October 1985
actor John Larroquetta ("Night
Court") Japanese fast-food en­
trepreneur Den Fugita and "Lata
Night's" Chris Elliott make appear­
ances In stereo (R)
0 O MOVIE "The Spiral Stair­
case" (1946) Dorothy McGuire.
George Brant
0 ( 1 1 ) HAWAII FIVE-0

1:10
® O MOVIE Matt Haim" (t975)
Tony Franc iota. Patrick Macnee

1:30
CD (11) BIZARRE Sketches Super
Dave fights for truth and (ustica.
Bronson on another "Death Wish"
hunt

2:00

0 O MOVIE " F re Weeks In A
Balloon" (1962) Red Buttons. Fabi­
an
CD(11) d u k e s o f HAZZARO

2:05
31 MOVIE "Dear Heart" (1965)
Glenn Ford. Geraldine Page.

2:30

Q

0 O MORNING PROGRAM
( D ( U ) TRANSFORMERS
0 (10) SESAME STREET (R)g

8:00
0 ( 1 1 ) DENNIS THE MENACE

8:05

0(11)FLIN T8TO NES
0 ( t O ) MISTER ROGERS (R)

8:35
3 1 BEWITCHED

9:00
O ® THE JUOQE
(J) O DONAHUE
0 O OPRAH WINFREY
(11)OREEN ACRES
(10) SESAME STREET (R)g
0 (8) SHOP-AT-HOME AND SAVE

S

12:30
0 ® WORDPLAY
0 O YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS
0 LOVING
(11) BEVERLY HILLBILUES

8

3 1 DOWN TO EARTH

9:30
O ® LOVE CONNECTION
0 ( 1 1 ) PETTICOAT JUNCTION

8-35
10:00
O ® SALE OF THE CENTURY
0 O HOUR MAGAZINE
O TRUE CONFESSIONS
(11) FALL GUY
0 110) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (R)

S

10:05
3 1 MOVIE

3:00

O NIGHTWATCH
HAPPENING

now ii

(D U ) NIGHT OWL TUN

3:30
CD ( 11) CISCO KID

4:00
0 O MOVIE "Marry Me Again"'
(1953) Mane Wilson. Robert Cummmqs. ,

1:00

0 ® O A V 3 OF OUR LIVES
(JJ O A L L MY CHILDREN
■ (11)D C K VAN DYKE
0 (10) W E'RE COOKING NOW

1:05
31 CENTENNIAL

1:30
0 O AS THE WORLD TURNS
ffi(11)F-TRO O P
0 (10) NEW SOUTHERN CO O K­
ING (MON)
0 (10) FRENCH CHEF (TUE)
0 (10) MICROWAVES ARE FOR
COOKING (WED)
0 (10) WOOOWRIOHT'S SHOP
(THU)
0 (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
(FRO

2:00
0 ® ANOTHER WORLD
O O N E U F E T O LIVE
(11) ANOY GRIFFITH
0 (10) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
ACRYLICS (MON)
0 (10) JOY OF PAINTING (TUE)
0 (10) MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING
(WED)
0
(10) PAINTING SOUTHERN
LANDSCAPES (THU)
0 ( 1 0 ) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

S

2:30
0 Q CAPITOL
0
(11) MY LITTLE PONY 'N'
FRIENDS
0 ( 1 0 ) SECRET CITY

3:00
0 ® SANTA BARBARA
{'J ' O GUIDING LIGHT
(7) O GENERAL HOSPITAL
0 (ll)S C O O B Y DOO
0 ( 1 0 ) MISTER ROGERS (R)
0 (8) MID-DAY BARGAINS

3:05
31 TOM 8 JERRY ANO FRIEN03

3 .3O
0 ( 1 1 ) SMURFS' ADVENTURES
0 (10) SESAM E 8TREET (R) g

9:05

4:00
0 ® MAGNUM. PI.
0OTAXI
(?) O JEOPARDY
O (1 1 )T H U N 0 E R C A T S g
0 (8) AMERICA'S BIGGEST BAR­
GAINS

4:05
32 5COOBY DOO

4.30
I THREE'S COM PANY
I CARO SHARKS
0 ( 1 1 ) SILVERHAWK8 □
0 (10) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

Rev. King Presents Travel
Program To ESO Chapter
The Epsilon Sigma Omlcorn
Chapter of the Woman’s Club of
Sanford met Jan. 21 at the
home of Bunnlc Logan with
Carolyn Cornelius and Hazel
Cash co-hostesses.
Chairman Pat Foster prcsldlcd
over the business meeting after
the social hour.
Book Chairman Doris Harrlman told the group that there
arc many books available for
member use. Bcttyc Smith, club
president, said she has a number
of books she would like to donate
to the group.
Chairman Foster said because
of changes In reporting, courses
completed to State that It will
necessary for members to report
to the secretary each month and
the secretary will keep a record.
Program Chairman Hazel
Cash Introduced the Rev. Leo
King, guest speaker, whose
subject was New Zealand and
Australia. King was the pro­
motor and guide for a trip to
these countries In 1986. Mabel
Piety and Melba Cooper were
members of the group. Charlotte
Smith has visited the New
Zealand and Australia with a
woman's club group and Bunnle
Logan visited there for three
weeks once, living In a native
home.
During his talk the speaker
called on the four women to tell
something of their experiences
and observations. Photographs
made dn the trip were shown, as
well as maps and literature.
Some facts pointed out by the
five were: 21 hours of air time
from Los Angeles to Auckland.
New Zealand; rubbing noses Is
the native greeting: greatest
Industry is sheep raising: and
visiting a glowworm cavern was
described by King.
King's group witnessed shcap
shearing and observed 569
sheep sheared by one man In

9

10:30
0 ® BLOCKBUSTERS
0 O SUPERIOR COURT
0 (10) WILD AMERICA (MON. FRI)
0
(10) PROFILES OF NATURE
(TUE)
0
(10) PHENOMENAL WORLD
(WED)
0 (10) NEWTON'S APPLE (THU)

11:00
o ® WHEEL OF FORTUNE
5 O PRICE IS RIGHT
0
O FAME FORTUNE 8 RO­
MANCE
0 ( 1 1 ) ALICE
0
(10) TERRY FOX: I HAD A
DREAM (MON)
0 ( 1 0 ) AMERICAN CAESAR (TUE)
0 ( 1 0 ) THE BRAIN (WED)
0 ( 1 0 ) NOVA (THU)
0
(10) EYES ON THE PRIZE:

AMERICA'S CIVIL RIGHTS YEARS.
1944-1965 (FRI)

new s

(11) W HAT'S

7:00
Q ® TODAY
0 O OOOO MORNINQ AMERICA
ffi(1 1 )O .LJO E
0 (10) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

3 1 1LOVE LUCY

12:30

0
ffi

6:45
S ) ( 10) A M . WEATHER

12:05
31 PERRY MASON

6:30

12:00

(D O

NEWS
CBS MORNINQ NEWS
(11)CENTURK)NS
(10) FARM DAY
TOM 8 JERRY AND FIUENDS

3 1 1DREAM OF JEANNIE

3 1 WOMANWATCH

,

5:00

THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
MUSIC (MON)
■ ® r s COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
0 ( 1 1 ) CNN NEWS
31 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

7:30

11:30

7:30

O (3) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT

O®

IQ) THIS IS AMERICA A special
presentation in honor of Black His­
tory Month profiling the lives of s ii
successful black Americans who
represent the highest level of
achievement In their chosen fields

11:00
0 (3) (DO CDQ new s

( 10) BERGERAC (MON)
(10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
J(TUE)
) (10) MY3TERYI (WED)
j (10) HENSON'S PLACE (THU)
&gt;(10) ANNA KARENINA (FRI)
) (8) MIO-CAY BARGAINS

S

MORNING

10:35

7:00
O ® NEWLYWED GAME
(1) O PM MAGAZINE A woman
who pulled out of a coma, champi­
on water-skiers in Florida
* ( D O jeo pa r d y
0 ( 11) BARNEY MILLER
CD (10) HENSON S PLACE This
profile of Muppets creafof Jim M e n son traces his career from the
1950s. when he created Kermlt. to
his latest him. "Labyrmtn." Also
clips of other Henson creations
such as characters from "Sesame
Street.M
(D (8) WONDERFUL WORLD OF
DISNEY Four animated tales. "The
Brave Engineer" (Casey Jones).
"The Martins and the Coys." "Ca­
sey at the Bat" and "Johnny Appleseed "

iira ra i

11:30
0 ® SCRABBLE
0 O WEBSTER (R)
0 (1 1 ) MAUDE
AFTERNOON

12:00
O 0 0 O 0 O N E W S
0 ( 1 1 ) BEWITCHED

4:35
31 FLINT3TONES
5:00
O ® DIVORCE COURT
IJIO M T S ’H
(7) O HOLLYWOOO SQUARES
0 ( 1 1 ) FACTS OF U FE
0 ( 1 0 ) OCEANU3 (MON)
0 (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
0 ( 1 0 ) BUSINESS R L E (R) (WED)
0 (10) MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
0 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRO
0 ( 8 ) RAM BO

2t 7b02

HIAZA IWIN

5:30
0 ® PEO PLE'S COURT
0 ) 0 ® O NEWS
0 ( 1 1 ) JEFFERSONS
0 ( 1 0 ) OCEAN US (MON)
0 (10) UNDERSTANDING HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
0 (10) BUSINESS FILE (R) (WED)
0 (10) MONEY PUZZLE (T H U )
0 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
0 (8) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

5:35
ROCKY ROAD (MON-THU)
SAFE AT HOME (FRI)

Lattanzio -Faron
Mrs. Frances C. Weller of tanzlo of West Seneca. N. Y.
Miss Lattanzlo Is a 1985
Deltona and Dominic Lattanzlo ol Sanford, announce graduate of DcLand High
the engagement of their School. DcLand. and pres­
daughter. Adrienne Italia ently attends Rofflcr Hair
Lattanzlo of Deltona, to Design College. Winter Park.
Alfred Faron of Orange City,
fiance, bom In Sanford.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Is Her
a
1985
graduate of DcLand
Faron of Orange City.
High School. He Is employed
Born In BufTalo. N.Y.. the
bride-elect Is the maternal at A1 Faron Plumbing.
The wedding will be an
grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Hcssney of Deltona, event of Feb. 14. at 11 a.m.,
and the paternal grandson of at Our Lady of the Lakes
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lat­ Catholic Church. Deltona.
- ADVERTISEMENT -

DM P ill System Sweeping U.S.

Super Dream Pill
Guaranteed Weight Loss
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH According to a review of custo­
mers’ files, here’s what people are
saying about the amazing, vastly
improved “new version" of the
world famous Dream Rll System
for fast, guaranteed weight loss
featuring Super Lite Dreams
tablets:
“/ lost 25 lbs. w it h a 30 day supply."
Mr*. J.N.S., Ft. Payne. AL.
Mr. J.G., Pinevtlle, KY.
"I've lost 34 lbs. and I’m still losing."

Mr*. J.K., Garden Grove, CA.
“I have been on Dream Pill for one
month and feel great . . . have lost
27 lbs.
Mr. A.D., Anadarko. OK.

--STARTRCEKJEI

m

r

\v

United WUy

Members present were: Bcttye
Smith. Lourlnc Messenger. Pat
Foster. Melba Cooper. Florence
Mon for t on. Mabel Pi et y,
Charlotte Smith. Marty Colegrove. Edythe George. Estelle
Davis. Hazel Cash. Derry Harris.
Bunnlc Logan. Doris Harrlman
and Bill Glelow.

Engagement

“Losing 1 lb. per day."

I Floyd Theatres I

5:05
31 OILUQAN'S ISLAND

nine hours as the local record. It
was pointed out that a sheep
cannot erect himself once he
falls.
Christchurch Is King's favorite
city In New Zealand and he
added that Sidney Is the largest
city and the most populated area
in Australia.

The System’s Dream Pill com­
bines two natural substances called
L-argirtine and L-omithine which
can stimulate the body’s produc­
tion of growth hormone. Diet
researchers believe that growth
hormone may be what’s responsi­
ble for allowing teenagers to down
thousands of calories in ham­
burgers and other foods and still be
thin as a rail.
Growth Hormone is present in
people up through the teenage
years, then slowly diminishes with
age. But L arginine and L-ornithine
make the body ’think’ it belongs to
a teenager again, allowing adults to
eat as much as they want — and
still be thin and wiry.

Life Extension Authors
Confirm Results
Durk Pearson and Sandy Shaw,
graduates of MIT and UCLA
respectively, introduced these mir­
acle substances to the public in
their runaway best selling book,
Life Extension.
Much to her
am azem ent, while taking Larginine for its healing effects on a
broken foot, Sandy lost 25 pounds
of fat and put on 5 pounds of firmtoned muscle in six weeks. Accord­
ing to Ddrk’s calculations, the pill
caused Sandy to lose 400 times as
much fat as she would otherwise
have lost — without dieting!

Extraordinary Guarantee
Place your order now. If you are
not completely satisfied simply
return the empty container for a
full refund of your purchase price.
You can order the Dream Pill
System and a 30 day supply of
remarkable Dream Pills for $19.95
or a 60 day supply for $34.95 (plus
$3.00 shipping and handling.)
To order simply call Dream
Pill,24 hours a day, 7 days a week,

TOLL FREE:

1-800-453-4810

and use your VISA or MasterCard.
Dream Pill will also accept C.O.D.
orders over the phone! But please
don’t wait. Order today. You won’t
risk a thing. Either you get a
slender new you —or you get a full
refund of your purchase price.

•Copyright 1986

1-800-453-4810

&lt;!*

�• « %* &gt; \

%

IN —la n fa ri MarskJ. Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice

Manday, Fab. M W

INTMK CIRCUIT
COURT O f THK
■IRMTIINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA
IN AND FOR
IIMI NOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION
CASK NO. M-ttM-CA-tt-0
DOLLAR SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION,
a Pennsylvania
Corporation,

said property

All

P la ln tllf
P E A R L L A K E ASSOCIATES
L IM IT E D P A R T N E R S H IP .o
Now Jersey Lim ited
Partnership. D O N ALD J.
F L A N A G A N .S A F E H ARBO R
P R O P E R T IE S , INC., o
Now Jertoy Corporation,
JASON IN VESTM EN T
L IM IT E D
P A R T N E R S H IP , a Now
Jertoy Lim ited Partnership,
M A R Y F .S E L L IN , and
F R A N K E. CAR D E L L ,

NOTICE OF SALE
PURSUANTTO
CHAPTER 4J
Notice It given that pursuant
to a f in a l lo dgm en t dated
January 22, ift7 In Cate No.
M-IUO-CA-OF-G of the Circuit
Court of the Eighteenth Judicial
C irc u it In and for Seminole
C o w n ly , F lo r id a , I n w h ic h
D O LL A R SAVINGS ASSOCIA
TION, a Penntytvanla Corpora­
tion, It the plalntllf and P E A R L
L A K E ASSOCIATES LIM IT E D
P A R T N E R S H IP , a New Jertoy
Lim ited Parfnerthlp, DONALD
J. F L A N A G A N . S A F E
H ARB O R P R O P E R T IE S. INC.,
a New J e rto y Corporation,
JASON IN V EST M E N T
L IM IT E D P A R T N E R S H IP , a
New Jertoy Lim ited Parterthlp.
M A R Y F . S E LL IN . and F R A N K
E. C A R D E L L , are the defen­
dant!. I w ill tall to the hlgheit
and belt bidder for cath at the
Wett Front door of the Seminole
County Courthoute In Sanford.
Seminole County, Florida, at
11:00 e.m. on February 10, I9t7,
the tallowing described property
le t forth In the order of tlnal
lodgment.
E X H IB IT A
That part of lott 30. II A 31,
"F O R E S T CITY ORANGE
P A R K " , a t recorded In Plat
Book 2, Page 60, Public Record!
of Seminole County, Florida,
deter Ibed a t follow!:
From the point of Intenectlon
of the E a tle rly right-of-way line
of P E A R L L A K E CAUSEW AY
a t thown on the tald plat of
" F O R E S T C IT Y O R A N G E
P A R K " , and the Southerly
right-of-way line of State Road
1434 a t now laid out and exist*,
run South 00 degree! 41 minutes
2S seconds Wett along the tald
E a tta rly right of way line of
P E A R L L A K E CAU S EW A Y 400
feet tar the point of beginning;
run thence South 71 degrees 01
minutes SS seconds East MO M
feel to the point of a curve,
concave Northeasterly, having a
radius of 3X7. f t feet; thence run
Southeasterly l*.3l feel along
the arc of said curve through a
central angle of 00 degrees t*
minutes 39 seconds to the end of
said curve; thence North 00
degrees 41 minutes 23 seconds
East 142.2* teal; thence South 74
degrees 43 m ln u ti 44 seconds
East 13.15 feet to the beginning
of a c u rv e c o n c a v e
Northeasterly having a radius of
3431.04 f e e t ; th e n c a ru n
Southeasterly along the arc ot
tald curve 72 feet, more or less,
to the shore line ot P E A R L
L A K E ; run thenca Southerly
along said shore line to a point
on the North boundary ot the
Southwest 'A ot the Southwest to
of the Northwest 'A ot Section 14,
Township 21 South, Range 79
East; thence North S* degrees
44 minutes 57 seconds Wett 313
feet more or lets, along the
N o r t h b o u n d a r y o f s a id
Southwest to of the Southwest ’a
ot the Northwest to to a point on
th e a l u r e s u l d E a s t e r l y
right-of-way line of P E A R L
L A K E C A U S E W A Y ; thence
North 00 degrees 41 minutes IS
seconds East 371.09 feet along
said Easterly right of way line
to the point of beginning
A N D A L S O : A l l o f th e
Southwest to ol the Southwest to
ot Northwest to ol Section 14,
Township 31 South, Range 29
East.
T O G E T H E R WITH: A ll build
Ings and Improvements situate
upon said Property and a ll
fixtures, equipment, and other
personal property, both tangible
and Intangible, located In the
buildings and Improvements on
tald properly. Including but not
lim ited to the following property
and rights:
A ll m achinery, apparatus,
equipment, fittings, fixtures,
w h e th e r a c t u a lly o r c o n ­
stru ctiv e ly attached to said
property and Including all trade,
domestic, and ornamental tlx
tu rn , and articles of personal
p rop e rly of every kind and
nature whatsoever, now located
In, on, or under said property or
any part thereof, and used or
usable In connection with any
present or future operation of

lesser In end to e ll teeses of the
property, or any pert thereof,
heretofore mods end entered
Into, together with any and atl
guarantees thereof and Includ­
ing, without limitation, e ll pres­
en t and fu tu re ca sh and
securities, security deposited
thereunder to secure perfor­
mance by the lessees of their
obligations thereunder regard­
le s s o f how s a id c a s h o r
securities are held, and a ll
advanced rentals
A ll ludgm snls, aw ards of
damages end payments, In­
cluding Interest thereon, and the
right to receive the same, made
with respect to the property
A ll trade names, names of
businesses or fictitious names,
lice n s e s , Including but not
lim ited to occupational and li­
quor licenses, perm its, site
plans, development agreements,
and governmental approvals,
used In con|unction with or
o p e ra tio n ot a n y b u iln a t s
located on the property
A ll Mortgagors Interest In all
utility security deposits depos­
ited In connection w ith the
property
A ll unearned premiums ac­
crued. accruing or to accrue
all Insurance
pollclat and all proceeds pay­
able for the lost or damage to
(a) the real property, or (b)
rents revenues. Income, profits,
or proceeds from leases, fran­
chises. concessions or licenses
o l or on any part ot tho property
Witness my hand and official
taal ol tald Court, this 22ND day
of January. 1917.
(SEAL)
David Berrien
Clerk of Circuit Court
By:s/C ecelia V .Eke rn
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 24.
February 2,19*7
DEK-159
L E O A L AD VERTISIN G
BIDM/17-2*
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IVEN
that tha City of Sanford, Florida,
w ill receive sealed bids up to
1:30 p.m., Tuesday, February
17, 1917, for tha fo llo w in g
service:
W O R K ER UNIFORM S
T h a se a le d b id s w ill ba
publicly opened later that same
day at 2:00 p.m. In tha City
Commission Chambers. Room
117, Sanford City Hell.
Specifications and tha proper
Bid Forms are available, at no
cost. In the Purchasing Office.
300 N. Park Avenue, Sanford,
Florida (301) 322 3141. ext. 294.
The City of Sanford reserves
tha right to accept or re|ect any
and a ll proposals, w ith or
w it h o u t c a u s e , to w a iv e
technicalities, or to accept the
bid which. In Its judgment, best
serves the Interest of the City.
C IT Y OF SANFORD
Walter Shearln
Purchasing
Publish February 2,1917
DEL-14
IN T N E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEM IN O LE COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PR O B A T E DIVISION
File Number 17-23 CP
Division PR O BAT E
IN R E : ESTATE OF
M A R Y E L A IN E M E A R E 5
a/k/a M A R Y E. M E ARES.
Deceased
NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The adm inistration ol the
e s ta te ot M A R Y E L A I N E
M E A R E S a /k /a M A R Y E.
M E A R E S , d e c e a s e d , F ile
Number (7 25 CP, Is pending In
Ihe Circuit Court lor Seminole
C o u n ty . F lo r id a . P ro b a ta
Division, tha address ol which Is
Seminole County Courthouse,
Santord. Florid a 32771. The
names and addresses ol the
personal representative and tha
personal representative's at­
torney are set forth below.
A ll Interested persons are
required tc tile with this court,
W ITHIN T H R EE MONTHS OF
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE: (I) all claims
against the estate and (2) sny
o b je ctio n by an Interested
person on whom this notice was
served that challenges the valid­
ity ol Ihe will, Ihe qualifications
ot tha personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of the
court.
A L L CLAIM S AND O B JEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Publication ol this Notice was
begun on January 14.19S7.
Personal Representative:
C A R O LYN E. LIT T LE
31 Queemborough Square
Marietta. Georgia 30044
Attorney for
Personal RepresentativeR O B ER T K.McINTOSH.
ESQUIRE
STENSTROM. MclNTOSH.
JU LIA N , CO LBER T
A WHIGHAM, P A .
Post Of flea Box 1330
Sanford, Florida 37771-1130
Telephone: (303)311 1171
A (34-9119
Publish January 24 A February
1,1917
D E K 150

C E LEB R IT Y CIPHER

C e le O rily C ip h e r c ry p to g ra m s a re c ra a t s d fro m q u o la lk x ia b y fa m o u s
p e o p le . p a a l a n d p re se n t
E a c h ta lle r In th e cip he r it e n d s tor
another. Todty t c i t e M equate P

**G

...

MTBRWY

VINVBMAIEW
Q ABQ'V

AICE."

GE

DAWCW

TWBCEWY
—

Ol

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

QAW
Z I T T WH W

—

Q

QUO

SR

I DE

ICOGTTW

CWYWEXBZAWC.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Nolthsr my wife nor I nor our
two cats want to llva In Los Angeles.1' — Jerry Or bach.

IN TNI CIRCUIT
COURTOPTHK
tOTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN AND
FORSIMINOLR
COUNTY. FLORIDAOKNIRAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
CASK NO. 04-4341-CA-99 P
K IS LA K N ATIO N AL BAN K ,
a national bonking
association.
Plaintiff,
vs.
THOM AS S. M ONFO RT, e l at..
Defendants.

NOTICK OP ACTION
-CONSTRUCTIVE
SERVICE-PROPERTY
TO: THOM AS S. M O NFO RT,
A /K /A THOM AS SANFO RD
M O N FO R T , A /K /A THOM AS
M O N TFO R O ; JA M E S C.
CODDINGTON; A N D T A N Y A
A. M O N FO R T a/k/a T O N Y A A.
M O N FO RT; AND PA U LA
F E RN THOM AS MON FO RT
R E S ID E N C E UNKNOW N
end any unknown party who Is
or may bo Interested In the
subject m etier of this eelton
whose names and residences,
after diligent search end Inqui­
ry, are unknown to Plaintiff end
w hich said unknown parties
may claim as heirs, devisees,
grantees, assignees, lienors,
cre d ito rs, trustses or other
claimants by, through, under or
against the said Defendants,
THOMAS S. M ONFO RT, a/k/a
THOM AS SANFO RD M O N ­
FORT, a/k/a THOM AS
M O N T F O R O ; J A M E S C.
CODDINGTON; and T A N Y A A
M O N FO R T a/k/a T O N YA A.
M O N FO R T ; and P A U L A F E R N
THOMAS M O N FO RT or any of
them who are not known to be
dead or alive.
YO U A R E N O T IFIED that an
action to foreclose a mortgage
on Ihe tallowing property In
Seminole County, Florida, tow ll:
Unit C-7. SANOLEWOOD, a
Condominium, according to the
D eclaration of Condominium
(hereof, as recorded In Official
Records Book MS, at Pages
0900-0941, P ublic Records of
Seminole County, F lor Ida.
has been filed against you end
you are required to serve a copy
of your written defenses. If any,
to If on Diene Hildebrand. E s­
q u ire , P la in t if f 's a fto rn s y ,
whose address Is: C EN T R U ST
S A V IN G S B A N K . 101 E a it
F la g le r S lre e l, t lt h F lo o r,
M iam i, Flo rid a 33131, on or
before February 11, 1917, and
Ilia Ihe original with the Clerk of
this Court either before service
upon P la in tiff's attorney or lmmedlataly thereafter; otherwise
a default w ill be entered against
you tor the relist demanded In
ihe Complaint.
W ITNESS my hand and Ihe
seal of this Court on this 9th day
of January, 19(7.
(S EA L)
□ A V IO N .B E R R IE N
As Clerk ol Ihe Court
By: Susan E. Tabor
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 12,19,
24, February 2,11*7
DEK-47
NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that we
ere engaged In business af P.O.
Box 1411, 301 East 17th Street.
S a n fo rd , S e m in o le C o un ty,
F lo rid a 32772-14(1 under the
Fictitious Name ol Seminole
Mobile Radio Service, and that
we Intend to register said name
with tha Clerk ot the Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
in accordance with Ihe P ro­
visions of Ihe Fictitious Name
Statutes, To Wit: Section 845 09
Florida Statutes 1937.
/s/ JohnH. Bennett
/s/ Daniel W. Jett
Publish January 12, 19, 24 A
February 2,1967.
OEK-43
IN T H E CIRCUIT
C O U R T O F TH 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 IV IL DIVISION
CASE NO.: (4-4119-C A -09-E
FIR S TU N IO N NATIONAL
B A N K O F FLO R ID A. INC.
f/k /a T H E FIRST B A N K E R S
O F O R A N G E COUNTY, a
National Banking
Association,
Plaintiff,
vs.
R O B ER T J.H U G H E S a n d
C A R O LY N A .H U G H E S
his wile, and
H U N T IN G T O N H O M E D W N
ER 'S
ASSOCIATION, INC.,
Defendants.
C L E R K ’S
NOTICE OF S ALE
Notice Is hereby given that
pursuant to a Final Judgment of
F o re clo s u re entered In the
above styled cause of action In
the Circuit Court of Ihe Eigh­
teenth Judicial Circuit, in and
for Stmlnola County, Florida, I
w ill sail at public auction to the
hignest bidder, lor cash, at the
west front door of Ihe Seminole
County Courthouse, Sanford,
Florida af the hour of 11:00 A.M.
on the 14th day ot February,
19(7, that certain parcel ot rsal
property situated in the County
ot Seminole, Slate ol Florida,
more particularly described as
follows:
Lot 24. HUNTINGTON HILLS
SUBDIVISION, according to Ihe
plat thereof as recorded In Plat
Book 24, Page 23. Public Re­
co rd s o l S s m ln o ls County,
Florida.
D ATED THIS J0TH D A Y OF
JA N U A R Y , 19(7.
(SEAL)
CLERKO FTH E
CIRCUIT COURT,
IN A N D F O R
S EM IN O LE COUNTY.
FLO R ID A
By: P h yllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 2,9,19(7
D E L 23

BLOOM COUNTY

RELATIONSHIP-

\

ON IN.

PEA!

\

.tTS UHWWS..CKN
MOREPOTENTIALLY
CATASTROPHICTHAN m
WORKING
•m m o u c’
ffm

LAST WEEK '

\

ON MY
LATEST

TAINTING..

\

^ %

L«gal Notica

Lagal Notica

INTHK CIRCUIT
COURT OP THK
KIOHTKKNTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SKMINOLR COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO. t

INTHK CIRCUIT
COURT FOR THK
NINTH JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IN ANO
FORSIMINOLR
COUNTY. FLORIDA
CAII NUMBIRi
M-MM-CA-89-L

FLORIDA RARNO.t
R 'H T M ORTGAGE SERVICE
CORPORATION,
Plaintiff,
PATR ICIA A U D R E Y C A R R I­
ER,
• f a l„
Defendants.
NOTICE OP ACTION
TO: P A T R IC IA A U D R E Y
C A R R IE R AND A L L H EIR S
AND UNKNOW N OTHER
P E R S O N (S ) H A V IN G OR
CLAIM IN G A N Y RIGHT, T I­
T L E , ANO IN TEREST IN AND
THROUGH THE D E F E N ­
D ANT. P A T R IC IA A U D R E Y
C A R R IE R . NOT KNOWN TO
BE D EA D O R A LIV E .
RESID EN CE; UNKNOWN
YOU A R E NOTIFIED that an
action lo foreclose a mortgage
on the tallowing property In
SEM INO LE County. Florida,
L o t 41, H I D D E N L A K E
PHASE III. UNIT It, according
to the plaf thereof as recorded in
Plat Book 27, page 4( and 4*.
P u b lic Rscordt of Seminole
County, Florida.
has been filed against you and
you are required to serve a copy
ot your wrlttan (tetanies, If any,
to G R A C E A N N G L A V I N ,
ESQUIRE, Plaintiff's Attorney,
whose mailing address Is 107*
W. Morse Blvd., Suits B, P.O.
Box 1177, Winter Park, Florida,
22790-1177, on or before the 31th
day ol Fsbruary, 1917, and III#
tha original with the Clark of
this Circuit Court either before
service on Plaintiff’s Attorney
or Im m e dia te ly th ereafter;
otherwise a default w ill be
entered against you tor the
relief demanded In the Com­
plaint or Petition.
WITNESS my hand and seal
of this Court on tha 22ND day of
January, 19*7.
(SEAL)
DAVID N. B E R R IE N
C L E R K O F THE COURT
By: Cecelia V .E k srn
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 24.
Febru4ry 2, *, 14,1*17
DEK-141
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAM E
TO WHOM IT M A Y CONCERN
Notice Is hereby given that the
undersigned pursuant to the
" F ic tit io u s Nam s Statute",
Chapter 145.09, Florida Statutes,
will rsglstsr with tha Clerk ot
the Circuit Court, In and tor
Seminole County, Florlde. upon
receipt of proof ot the publica­
tion ol this notice, the fictitious
n a m s lo wi t ; H e a lt h c a r e
Pharmacy Services under which
we ere engaged In business at
54* Wsst lake mary Blvd., Su.te
302, L a k e M a ry , Sam lnole
County, F lorid a 3274*.
That Ihe corporation Interested In said business enterprise Is
as follows:
Driftwood Village
Pharmacy, Inc.
J.M . Valt, Co-President
RichardG. Ruvel,
Co-Prasldant
Publish January 13, If, 24 A
February 2,19*7.
D E K 44
IN TH E CIRCUIT
COURT IN AND FOR
SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLORID A
CASE NO. (4-1001-CA-09-P
J E F F R E Y F IN L E Y ,
Plaintiff
vs
W ILLIA M H . M A Y O end
AN N O . M AYO , and
F A R M E R S SAVINGS AND
LOAN ASSOCIATION.
Defendants
NOTICE OF
FO RECLO SU RE SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that Ihe undersigned, David N.
Berrien, Clerk u l Ihe Circuit
C o u r t , S a m ln o le C o u n ty ,
Florida, will on the 2nd day ol
March. 1917. at 11:00 A.M., at
tha wast front door of iha
Samlnole County Courthouse,
Sanford, Florida, otter lor sal*
and sail at public outcry to tha
highest and best bidder lor cash,
the tallowing described property
In Seminole County, Florida, to
wit:
Begin at tha most Southerly
Corner of LOT 7, BLOCK 2.
R E P L A T OF P A R T OF
TOWNSITE OF NORTH
CHULUOTA. according to the
Plat thereof as recorded In Plat
Book 13, Page 44. Public Re­
co rd s of Sem inole County,
F l o r id a ; run Ihsnce
N o r t h w e s t e r ly a lo n g tha
Eattarly right ol way Ursa of
State Road Number 419, on a
, curve concave to the Southwest,
having a radius of 1940.0* feet
and a central angle ot 00*44‘S5",
an arc distance of 24.73 feet, run
thenca N 54*10'27"E parallel to
the most Southerly line of said
Lot 7, 120.00 feet, run thence
Southeasterly along a curve
concave to Ihe Southwest, hav­
ing a radius of 2080 oa faet and a
central angle of 0l*57’2 l". an
arc distance ot 71.004 feet, run
thence South 54*I0'77" Wast
parallel to the most Southerly
line of said Lot 7, 120 00 faet to
said Easterly right of way line
of State Road Number 41*. run
IhatKe Northwesterly along said
right of way line, on a curve
concave to Ihe Southwest, hav­
ing a radius ot 1940.M faet. and a
central angle ot 0I*17'37", an
arc distance of 44.23 teat to the
Point of Beginning.
pursuant to tha Final Judg­
ment ot Foreclosure entered In
Ihe above styled pending cause
on January 29,19(7,
WITNESS my hand and eaal
of tald Court this 30th day of
January. 19(7.
(SEAL)
O AVIDN. B E R R IE N
Clark of the Circuit Court
By: Cacella V.Ekern
Deputy Clerk
Publish; Fsbruary 2,9,19(7
D E L 24

by Berke Breathed

however, m ew s
ANBTHERk m h c
IM P m e AfTM AOM r
on me mm op
ooR m m m
cove

4

3

M E R IT O R M O R TG AG E
CO RPO RATIO N-EAST
s u c c t s m

* *rt l r , t o r e s !

to C E N T R A L M O R T G A G E
C O M PA N Y, successor In
interest to F IO E L IT Y
M O R T G AG E CORPORATION.
Plaintiff,
vs.
G E O R G E D. V AN G IN H O V EN
and L A K E B R A N T L E Y C LU B
H O M EO W NERS
ASSOCIATION, INC..
Defendants.
NOTICE O P SALK
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that, pursuant to the Summary
Final Judgement af Foreclosure
entered In this causa by the
C ir c u it C o u rt o f S o m ln o lo
County, Florida. I w ill soil tho
proparty situated In Samlnole
County, Florida, described as

7 1 —H e lp W a n te d

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole
322-2611

O rlando - W inter Park
831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
.............
1 t* M
HOURS
I C N W t Y the h a m

•aOAJL.fcMMK

N O W A Y tkra FRIDAY
SATURDAY • • Nkbr

TIC
M C
7 CMSMCOithe tin m 54C
I O m m b c X the Ih M t SOC

a Nm
i Rm
a Dm
a Bn*

Contract to te * AvaRaM*

3

1 U

m

H

U

m

n

ir

DEADLINES
Noon The D ay B efore Publication
Sunday - N oon Friday
M onday - 9:00 A .M . Saturday
______
NOTE:in the event of the publishing ol errors In advertisements, the Sen
lord Herald shell publish the advertisement, alter It has been corrected at
no cost to the advertiser but such Insertions shell number no more then one

!U.

____________________

NOTICK OF
FICTITIO US N AM E
Notica Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at (S3
A lta m o n te D r ., A lta m o n te
S p r in g s , S s m ln o la C o u n ty,
F lo rid a under tha Fictitiou s
N a m * of C H A R M E R D O G
GROOM ING SALON, and that I
Inland to register said noma
with the Clark o l the Circuit
Court, Samlnole County, Florida
In accordanc* with the Pro­
visions of tha Fictitious Nam*
Statutes, To W ll: Section (43.09
Florida Statutes 1937.
/»/ Gladys Wilson
Publish January 2S A February
3, f, 14,19(7.
D E K -157
IN T H E CIRCUIT
COURTOFTHE
EIG 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 SE NO. (4-2(31-CA-09-L
F R A N C E S W. TO M PKINS.
Plaintiff,
vs.
K I E F E R G. T U C K E R , JR .,
Individually, and as Truttea;
SAN JO SE P A R T N E R S , LTD.,
a
Florida limited partnership;
S A L P R O P E R T IE S , INC.,
Individually andasganaral
partner of SAN JO SE
P A R T N E R S . L T D ., M T L D ,
INC.,
a Taxas corporation, G.
C H A R L E S CO LE, Individually
and as Trusts*, and
R O N A LD H . RUIS. Individually
and as Trusts*.
Defendants.
NOTICE O F SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that on the ISTH day ol F E B ­
R U A R Y , 19(7, at 11:00 a.m. at
the Wast front door of the North
Park Avenue entrance of tha
Courthouse of Samlnole County,
S a n fo rd , F lo r id a , the u n ­
dersigned Clark will offer tor
sal* tha tallowing described real
property:
A portion of the SE to of tha
NE to of Section 33, Township31
South, Rang* 30 East, Seminole
County, Florida, Being more
fu lly d e s crib e d a* follow s.
Beginning at the SW corner of
Iha SE to ot tha NE to of the
a fo re m e n tio n e d Section 33,
Thenca Run N 00*22’34" E,
150.00 feat to tha Southerly right
of way lin t of Winter Woods
Boutovard, Thence run along the
Southerly right of way lln* of
Winter Woods Boulsvard the
following Three courses and
distances (I) S 89*17'04" E,
472.44 feat to the P.C. ol a curve,
(2) along a cu rv e concave
Northerly having for Its ele­
ments a radius o l 1(0 00 feat and
a central angle of 21*34'34", tor
an arc distance of 4(.94 feet, (3)
N 44*24’ 20" E, 29 61 (cot. Thonc*
run S 00*20'20" W. 173 U foot.
Thane* run N #9*39’ 40" W, 547.52
leet to tha Point of Beginning.
Tho aforesaid sal* w ill b*
mod* p u rsuan t to a F in a l
Judgment of Foreclosure en­
tered In Civil No. 14 2(32 now
pending In tho Circuit Court of
tha Eighteenth Judicial Circuit
In and tor Semlnol# County,
Florida.
D A T E O this 23RD day of
January, 19*7.
(SEAL)
□ A V IO N . B E R R IE N
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Court
By: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 26,
February 1,19(7
D E K 140

C E R T IF IE D NURSES A ID E for
3-11 shllt tor senior retirement
community. Please apply to
2C0 W. Airport Blvd.________
CNA: Immediate full lim e post
Hons 7-3 or 3-H shifts. Good
tenants A atmosphere. Apply
Debery Manor, 40 N. Hwy
If 92. OeBary 44( 4436.... EO E

CONTRACTLABORERS
Earn t f to S tl par hr. Must
*n|oy working outdoors. No
axp. nac. For full or part tlm*
positions in Somlnolo Co. call
*omto*pm......... (13(04-7131
C R T O P E R A T O R - (100 wk.
Clot* to hornet Move up hare!
Plusn tlrm! Inventory knowl
edge a plusl A AA Employ
ment, 700 W. 13th St
323 3174

DAILY W0RR/DAILY PAY
N I E O M E N * W O M EN N O W l

A

f@
llaw%*

Lot 4. L A K E B R A N T L E Y
C L U B PHASE I, according to
tho plaf thereof, recorded In
P la t Book ”30". Pago* 35 and 34,
P u b lic Racords of Somlnolo
County, Florida.
af public sola, to tha highest
and best bidder, for cash, at the
West Front door of tha Samlnole
County Courthouse In Sanford,
Somlnolo County. Flo rid a at
11:00 A.M . on February 23, 1N7.
D A T E D t h is 30th d a y o f
January, 'f*7.
(S E A L)
D A V ID N. B E R R IE N
CLERKO FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y Phyllis Forsyth*
Publish: Fsbruary2,*, 19(7
DEL-22

ADO TO YO UR IN CO M E
Sell Avon Now I
3120459........ Of......... 333-4088

labo r
w a x

21— Personals
A L L A LO N ET Call Bringing
People Together. Sanford's
most respected dating service
sine* 1977. Man over 30 (43%
discount)...........I (00-*22-4477

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER

43— Mortgages
Bought &amp; Sold
W E B U Y 111 i n f l t d
M O R T G A G E S Nation wide.
C a ll: R a y Legg Lie. Mtg
Broker, 940 D ouglai Ave.,
Altamonte..................774-7752

ABOR TION C O U N S EL IN G
F R E E Pregnancy Tests. Con

7 1 - H e l p W a n te d

fldantlal. Individual
assistance. Call tor appf. Eva.
H rt Available........... 321-74*3.

EMPIRE DIAL-A-SERVICE
for oil your BUSINESS needs,
(Please list with us), personal,
household A fam ily noadt
also, For Information pleat*
call, 303-240-(435

23— Lost A Found

ACCOUNTS R E C E IV A B L E
BO OKKEEPER
T H E SANFO RD H E R A L D Is
currently accepting resume's
tor an experienced A/R Book­
keeper. Outlet Include pric­
ing, posting A billing on a
manual systam.
Raquiramants Includa:
•T yping Skills
a Calculator by Touch
aptaasant Personality
a Computer Exp. a Plus
We Often
a Insurance Plan
a Paid Vacation
* Friendly Atmosphere
* Job Security

LOST: Female Doberman, 2
yrs. old, black A tan. Carriage

^oresrtaiRaw*rd;;;;J2tJOe^
25— Special Notices
BECOME A N0TART
For Details: t (00-433-4234
Florida Notary Association

27— Nursery &amp;
Child Care
LOVINO M OTH ER, w ill babysit
In my home. Day or night,
part/full time, a lla g a s lll 0976
M OTHER of 7 yr old w ill care
tor your child with T LC In my

3 1 - Private
Instructions
A R E YO U W I L L I N G TO
SPEN D money on salt lm

If you meet the above require­
ments and would Ilka to be a
part of tha Sanford Herald,
sand resume' lo:
SAN FO RD HERLAD
P.O. BOX 1457
SANFORD, FL. 32772-1*57
Attn: OHIc* Manager
A CCO U N TIN G T R A IN E E - 35
hour. W ill train sharp figure
oriented personl Learn com
putar, tool Casual office puts
you at easel A A A Employ
menf.700W.13mS).... 313-5176
AD M IN ISTR ATIVE
ASSISTANT
SO W PM
4 typing Experl
enced, professional Image
Permanent position. No Feel

_JJrove^ le^ t?£all^ ;;;;;;;^ 2 2 JW

TEMP PERM
260-5100
ADVERTISING SALES
ie e e eeee**ae*i

55—Business
Opportunities
E X T R A TO F U L L Income from
your home operated business,
training provided. 3216194

legal Notice
IN T H E CIRCUIT
COURT IN AND FOR
THE EIG H TEEN TH
JU D ICIAL CIRCUIT
IN A N D F O R
SEM IN O LE COUNTY,
FLORID A
CASE NO. I4-I747-CA-49-0
M I D L A N T I C H O M E
M ORTGAGE
CORPORATION, f/k/a
COLONIAL M O R TG AG EE
CORPORATION,
Plaintiff,
vs.
JA M E S W. LE SLIE and
CAROL M. L E S L IE a/k/a
CAROL M. W A LK E R , and
SUN BANK. NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
Dtfendants.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that on tho I9TH day o l F E B
RU AR Y , 19(7, at 11:00 A.M . al
Iha WEST FRONT door of tho
Courthouse ol Semlnol* County,
SANFO RD , Florida, the un­
dersigned Clerk will offer for
set* the following described real
property:
The Wost 16.47 (eel ol Lot 9, all
ol Lot TO, and tha East 14.47 (eel
ot Lot II, Block A. L A K E
W AYMAN HEIGHTS, according
to the plat thereof as recorded In
Plat Book 3, Page (2, ol the
Public Records ol Seminole
County. Florlde.
The aforesaid sale w ill be
made pursuant to a F in a l
Judgment entered In C iv il No.
(6-1747 CA 09 G now pending In
the Circuit Court ef the Elgh
teenth Judicial Circuit In and lor
Seminole County, Florida.
D A T E O this 22ND day of
January. 1987.
(SEAL)
DAVID N. B E R R IE N
Clerk ol the Circuit Court
By: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 24,
Fsbruary 1, 1947
D E K -158

NOTICE OF P U B LIC N EARIN G
S EM IN O LE COUNTY
F E B . 24,19(7
Tha Semlnol* County Board of County Commissioners will hold a
public hearing In Room W-120 of Iha Samlnole Counly Services
Building, Sanford. Florida, on F E B R U A R Y 24, 1987 AT 7:00 P M., or
as soon therealtsr as possible, to consider the tol lowing:
&gt;■ P A T R IC K K E L L E Y - R EZO N E FRO M A-1 A G R IC U LT U R E
TO R-t SIN G LE F A M IL Y O W ELLINO DISTRICT - PZU7-2)-34 Lots 7, (. I, 11, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, Whitcomb's Addition 1; Geneva.
Block (. Section 21-20S-33E. t J acres. (Further described as located
on the north tide of SR 44. to m ile west of SR 424) (DIST. 13)
2. D O NALD HOLLINGSW ORTH - REZO NE FROM R-IAA
S IN G LE F A M IL Y D W ELLIN G DISTRICT TO R P R E S ID E N T IA L
P R O FES SIO N A L PZ((7-1)-12 — Parcels 37A and J7C In Section
24-3IS-29E. (Further described as two parcels located at the
southeast corner of M aitland Avenue and Florldahaven Drive)
(DIST. 14)
3. C A N IN A S S O C IA T E S - R E Q U E S T TO A M E N D T H E
G R EEN W O O D L A K E S (TH E CROSSINGS) PUD M ASTER P L A N
— PZ{(7-2)-33 — (DIST. f2)
Basically, the request Is to reduce the density In Parcsl J-l from Its
currently approved density of 13 OU/AC 063 multi family units) to
(.1 D U /AC it]', patio home units) and a redistribution ol the
remaining 13a units lo Parcel A-3. The requested change does not
alter Ihe PU D's overall approved unit count ol 3.000 uni Is.
Those In attendance w ill be heard end written comments may be
tiled with the Land Management Director, Hearings may be
continued Irom lim e to lim e as found necessary. Further details
available by calling 321-1130. Extension 444.
Persons ere advised that It they decide to appeal any decision
made at this mealing, they w ill need a record ol the proceedings, and
tor such purpose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim record ol
the proceedings Is made, which record Includes the testimony and
evidence upon which !h* appeal Is to be based, per Florida Statutes,
Section 2M.0103.
B O A R D O F COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
S EM IN O LE COUNTY, FLORIDA
BY: H E R B HARDIN, DIRECTOR
LAN D M ANAGEM ENT
Publish: FebrudryZ, 1987
D E L 26

A R E A : Q u a lity
megailne. Excellent earnings
for limited time.
C a ll M r. Page I (00 282 7458
A L A R M T E C H . Top sa la ryl
This Is no "m aybe" career,
this career Is a must! No liner
company than this one! AAA
Em ploym en t. 700 W. 2Slh
St.......................Cal 1:333-5176
A S S E M B L Y W O RK at home,
plus many others. Earn good
wages In spare time. For
Information 504 441 0091 ext.
1449. 7 days........ C A L L NOW!
ASSISTANT P LA N T M AN AG
ER wanted tor rapidly grow
Ing Boys Sportswear Shop
M ust be experience In all
phases o l garment construe
lio n and p r ic in g S a la ry
comansurale with experience.
Apply in person onty: San Del
Manufacturing, 27*0 O’d Lake
M ary Rd , Santord.... 32114)0
AU TO M O TIV E SALESPERSO N
N E E D E D . ACR axpariance
preferred C a ll:..... Phil Bettis
SANFORD

323-2123
A P P O IN T M E N T SETTERS
P leasant w orking conditions
with 40 yr. old local company.
New department seeks expe
rienced appointment setters
only. 15 hr. plus tremendous
bonus structure Call 322 3443
ext. 314............Charles Berdel
CARPENTER HELPER
T R A IN E E
Entry level, permanent post
lion. Experience with power
tools helplul. Santord'Deland
area. Never a leel

tem p

Pe r m ...............26Q-5100

C A SH IER : Convenience Store,
top salary, h^pl filia tio n , 1
week vacation each 6 months,
other benefits. Apply 202 N
Laurel Ave ( 30am 4 30pm
Monday through Friday.

Legal Notice
IN T H E CIRCUIT
COURTOFTHE
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
OF T H E STATE OF
FLO RID A, IN AND
FOR S EM IN O LE C O U N fY
CIV IL ACTION
CASE NO.: (4-2(72-CA 09-E
M OLTON, A L L E N A
W ILLIAM S. L T D ,
an Alabama Limited
Partnership,
Plaintiff.

-vs

R O B E R T H JA U D O N ,etal..
Defendants
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice is hereby given that,
pursuant to a Final Judgment of
F o re c lo s u re entered In Ihe
above sty le d cause. In the
C ir c u it C o u rt ot S em ino le
County, Florida. 1 will sell the
property situated In* Seminole
County. Florida, described as:
Lot 119, SUNRISE V IL L A G E .
UNIT III, according to the plat
thereof as recorded in Plat Book
27, Page 59, Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida.
at public sale, to the highest
and best bidder, tor cash, at the
W E S T F R O N T door ot the
Seminote County Courthouse, at
Santord. Florida at It 00 A.M
On M AR CH 3. 1987
D A T E D THIS 22ND D AY OF
JA N U A R Y , 1987
(S EA L)
D A V IO N . B E R R IE N
Clerk ol Circuit Court
By: P hyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 26,
F e b ru a ry !, 1987

D E K 155

rav er
SMThff

! NO ^ F E E !
Report ready for work at 4 AM
407 W. 1st. St.............. Santord

321 1590

***fH H i*t**
D IS H W A S H E R w anted, fu ll
time. Responsible person onty.
Galleria Restaurant....311-7217
D RIVERS W ANTED. Oomlno's
P in a . Inc. Wages, tips, A
commission. 35 hr. guaran
1red. Must hava own ca r with
liability Insurance.
Apply: 1910 French Av*. or
call 321 5000 alter 1’ im
E X P . B U ILO E R /LA M IN A T O R
for store display A fixtures
M u st have kno w le dge of
commercial tools. E. Santord
location, benefits. 323 4494
E X P E R IE N C E CO N V EYO R
Assemblers A Installers
C a ll:..........................333-7970
P A R T T IM E E X P . O F F IC E
PERSON tor last paced office.
Must have typing A calculator
experience. Non-smoker only.
Apply In person: San Del
Manufacturing, 2240 Old Lake
M ary Rd.. Santord..... 32) 3(10
FAST FOOD P R E P A R A T IO N .
Top salary, hospitalliation, 1
week vacation each 6 months,
other benefits. Apply 202 N
Laurel Ave. (:30am-4;J0pm
Monday through Friday,
FINANCE M AN AG ER
T R AIN EE, 3300 wk. Tip topi
Go places I Fine national loan
company! W ill tra in H.S.
grad, that wants c a re e rl
Excellent opportunity! AAA
Em ploym ent, 700 W. 25th
St...................... Call:313 5176
F U L L CHARG E B O O K K E E P ­
ER , 16K Enjoy y o u rse lf)
Great working conditions!
Take charge! Very secure
f ir m ! N e e d s n o w l A A A
Em ploym ent, 700 W. 25lh
St...................... Call:323 5174
F U L L T IM E A LT ER A T IO N S
PERSON tor Boys Sportswear
Shop. Must be experience on
Industrial sewing machine
Apply In person only: San Del
Manufacturing. 2240 Old Lake
Mary Rd., Santord..... 321 3410
G E N E R A L O FF IC E C L E R K
Apply In person: Lowe’s Truss
Plant. 7901 Aileron Clr. San
lord Airport Industrial Park
G E N E R A L O FFICE T R A IN E E
34.50 hour. W ill tra in on
computer and tor all around
olflce duties! Your chance!
AAA Employment. 700 W. 25th
Street........................ 373 5)74
HIRINOt Federal Gov jobs. In
your area &amp; overseas. Many
Immediate openings, without
w a t t i n g l i s t s or t e s t s
315 544.000 Phone call relun
dable......402 338 8485 ext 1244
L I N E L E A D E R
lor
electro/mechantcal manufac
turer. Background must In
elude soldering, assembley.
n-d manufacturing procures
relating to m ilitary standards
and specifications. F u ll time,
permanent position Benefits.
Send resume’ and salary his
lory to: BOX 744, c/o Sanford
Herald. P.O Box 1457, San
ford, FL 32772 1457__________
M A IL INSERTER O P ER A T O R
T R A IN EE. JCPenney Credit
Processing Center currently
has part time and full time
positions In our M all Services
D epartm ent lo r M a ll In
sorters Positions w ill entail
operating a Pitney Bowes
COM System &amp; an Insertamax
Inserter. Previous experience
helplul. &amp; lifting required.
The q u a lifie d ca n d id ate
should be production oriented
and willing to work a Monday
thru Saturday work schedule
with flexible hours according
to mail volume
We otter a good training
program , op p o rtu n ity lo r
advancement and an excellent
benefits package which In
etudes a discount plan In
JCPenney stores.
Please apply In person be
tweenSam 3:30pm. Mon. Frl.
JCPenney
Credit Processing Center
l i t Wekiva Springs Rd.
Longwood. FI. 32779
714-4100
Equal Op'ty Employer. M /F

MANUFACTURER’ S R EP
Nationwide wholesale jewelry
tlrm seeks rep. No jewelry
exp. necessary. Sales exp
helplul. No direct selling,
(Wholesale only). Earn 340K
1+ 1 in commission annually.
Serious applicants only. Call
lor confidential In terview
713 974 3000 __________
M E A T CUTTER 335 Top pay
tor your skills! Secure spot!
Classy clientele! Call now!
AAA Employment. 700 W. 25th
Street........................ 323 St74
M E C H A N IC needed, e xp e ri
enced with diesl A gas with
own tools. C a ll:331-5231

AIR LIN E/TRJJ/ELJS C H O O L

Train To Be A
T/avel Agent • Tour Guide
Airline Resentalionist
S lid locally, lull time/part
time Train on live airline com
pulert. Home sludy and resi­
dent training. Financial aid
axallabla. Job placem ent
is s is lin c e . National head
quarters L.M.P.FL

A.C.T. Travel School

1-800-432-3004
A c c ftd ittd m«mb«r N M S C.

�» * t •

71-H«lp Wanted
I X P . S A U T E ' B r o ile r 1
b rea kfo st cook, full lim a.
A pply In parson, Deltona Inn
Tu*».-S*l. 2pm loSom_______
M C T A L FA B R IC A TO R . To 1390
wh. Con’l toot III Any experi­
ence! Customer service duties
add aplca lo this alraady
rawarding caraarl Don't miss
o i l ! R enatltr. *ool
AAA
E m p lo y m a n l, 700 W. JJIh
St.......................... C*II:323S174
NOW HIRINOI Imm. naad for
c o n tra c t P T . RN , C N A 'S .
L I V E -I N S 4 Homemaker*,
new pay K a le • Medi care/
private,. 774-IIS1. Mon./Frl. 10
IIH. C A R E A T H OM E. E .O .E .

NOW HIRING

/• ✓

71— Help Wanted
S T O C K T R A I N E E - (330 wk.
Start out stocking 4 helping
cu s to m e r* . M o v e up Into
mgnt. quick I A A A Em ploy
moot, 700 W. 2Stti St.....373-3176

»1— Apartments/
House to Share
FEM A LE ROO M M ATEi 3
bdrm .. 3 bath home. 373 4745
or 333-4440 ash tor Renee
S A N F O R D (34th St. 4 17 97
area) house to share. Prater
non smoker. *350 mo.. .112-1150

93— Rooms for Rent

Experienced Sawing Machine
O p e ra to r* w an ted on a ll
operation*. We oiler paid hall
day*, paid vacation, health
care plan, and modem air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rate*. W ill train qualified
a p p lic a n t s . San - D a l
Manufacturing. 77*0 Old Lake
M a ry Rd.« Sanford......371 3010

• REASONABLE RATES
a M A ID S E R V IC E
• P R IV A T E EN T R A N C E
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Elsa When You Can Live In

N U R S E ’ S A ID ES- all th ills,
part 4 full lim e. Better Living
Center. 449-5003..EQE/M/F/H

323-4507

N U R S E A ID E : A ll thlltt. exp*
rle n c e d o r c ertified only.
A p p ly L a k e v le w N u rs in g
Center. *10 E. 3rd St.. Sanlord

NURSES, AIDES,
COMPANIONS
H A P P Y N EW Y E A R . We need
you now. New benefit* In
eluding group Insurance and
vacation. Free C E U ’S. Dally
pay. Stall 4 private duty.
M E D I C A L P E R S O N N E L POOL
Call:740-57M

Medical
Personnel
P o o l.

O PP O R T U N IT IES open for full
4 part time teacher* In a
trend-setting pre school/chlld
care corp. Love of children a
mutt. Exp. 4 education a plus,
but we w ill provide training
and education............ 333*435
O P T IC A L T EC H . T R A IN E E ,
S4.50 hr. Don't waltl Anxious
bots w ill hire todayl Schedule
appointments lor patients 4
assist with exams. Way to gol
A A A Employment. 700 W. 25th
St.......................Cal I-323 S17a
P A R T -T IM E SEWING
MACHINE MECHANIC
W A N T ED , must be experl
enced. on all types of Industri­
al tewing machines. Apply In
p e rs o n o n ly to: San D el
Manufacturing. 7740 Old Lake
M ary Rd.. Sanford..... 371 MIO
P A R T T IM E Audltorshelper for
I n v e n to ry c re w . IS h rs .
m in im u m . Above average
wage. Apply at X I E. 35th SI.,
Sanford Call 373 43*7 lor Into
PH O NE PERSON Need-d for
Domino’s P in a . Inc. Apply:
1910 French Ave. or phone
371 5000 alter I lam__________
PH O NE O PERATO RS needed 5
afternoons 4 evenings a week.
*4 hr. + bonus Call 331 4207
PH O N E SOLICITORS- Positive
attitude 4 pleasant phone
voice Is all you need! Exp
h e lp lu l but not necessary
377 2*11 between* 304 5:30
P R O G R A M A S S I S T A N T to
work In direct care/training
position with m entally re ­
tarded. Call: 331 7231._______
R E C E PTIONIST, FILE
C L E R K . NO TYPIN G ! Happy
place for a beginner! File 4
answer phones! Enjoy work
,lng with figures. This boss Is a
doll I A A A Employment. 700
W . 25th St................. 323 5176
RECORDS COMMUNICA­
TIONS SPECIALIST tor part
time shift work. Must demon
strata proficiency In office
s k ills ........................Contact:
M s Llberatore. Lake Mary
Police Dept.............. 377 1)52

REPS NEEDED
For Business accounts Fu ll
tim e 140.000 5*0,000. P art
time S12.000118.000 No sell
Ing, repeat business Set your
own hours. Training provided.
I 612 931 6*70 M F, * am 5 pm
(Central Standard Time)_____
R E S P IR A T O R Y THERAPISTFu ll lime. CRTT. Fla lie. II
pm 7 am. Apply: W Volusia
M em orial Hospital. 701 W
Plymouth Ave., Deland. Fl.
RN OR L P N needed. Full lime.
3 to 11 shift. Experience as
Charge Nurse and geriatrics
helplul. Apply DeBary Manor,
60N .H w y 17 97.64* 4476 EOE
S A LES PERSO N Wanted, earn
high commission on sales, also
bonus commissions paid for
big producers Training pro
vlded Apply In person to A 4
B Wafer treatment at 2597 S.
Sanlord Ave. Palm Plaza, or
c a ll............................321 4207
S A LE S P E R S O N S
... are made not born! Have fun
while tralnlnq Advancement
■■■Startnowl C a ll:...... 260 5673
S A LES PERSON: Established
used car dealership with fl
n a n c in g . E x c e lle n t com
mission. Call Leo at 371 4075
S A L E S S E C R E T A R Y - Boat
manufacturer has opening for
Sales S»cretary Computer
exp helplul See Sharon At
chley. Cobla Boat Co . 500
S ilv e r Lake Rd., Sanlord,
Mon F rl 9am 4pm Dally
SH IP PIN G /R EC EIV IN G
No experience necessary. Per
manent position Never a lee!

TEMP PERM_____260-5100
T A X P R E P A R E R Needed until
4/15/87. Call Phil Bettis

IT
323-2123
T E X A S R E F I N E R Y CO R P .
needs mature person now In
Sanlord area Regardless ot
training, write H.T. Hopkins.
Box 711, Ft. Worth. T x.74101
W ANTED : Manager Trainee lor
nations largest amusement
chain. Must be dependable 4
bondable. Electronic back
ground preferred 15 per hr.
A p p ly at B a l l y ' s G r e a t
E s c a p e , S a n fo rd P l a t a .
Mon Thurs 10am 3pm_______
WOOD PROOUCTS M F C CO
Has openings tor people who
d e s ir e o p p o rtu n itie s lo r
advancement Saw m ill exp
helpful. Company oilers com
petltive wages 4 benefits,
apply Monday thru Friday *
to 4 at Trusso M lg Inc..
Santord Airport____________
W O O D ^ W O R K E R 15.25 hr.
Quick raise to S6 In 30 days!
Any experience qualities you!
F u n g ro u p l Securel A A A
E m p lo y m e n t. 700 W 2Slh
St...................... Call:373 5176
W O RK ERS N E E D E D ! If you
need steady work paid dally.
Call Sam alter 3 pm__322 7554

a lir

U ilU m r

103— Housm
Unfurnished/Rent

121— Condominium
Rentals
S A N F O R D : 2 bdrm., 2 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer, sec. *425 Mo.

127—Office Rentals

O S T E E N : 1 bdrm. apt. fully
lu rn lsh e d, adults only, no
children or pets. 1350 mo +
1700 sec C a ll................. 373-4743

S A N F O R D , 1st St.: 2 offices.
Secretarial service avelleble.
*123 mo. each, utilities In­
cluded................. Cell:37l-3797

RELOCATING

A T T R A C T I V E - 3 bdrm ., 1100
week. Incl. all util., sec. dep.
1700. C a ll:..................... 371-4947
* E F F I C . 1 4 7 B D R M . A P T S.
* FURN. 4 UN FURN.
* PAY W E E K LY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

a lir

U illc m r
323-4507

NICE, newly remodeled, new
carpet. I bdrm. apt. 1265 mo.
-t- dep C a ll:377 1093
ONE YR . OLD. 2 bdrm . 2 bath,
washer/dryer, screen porch,
air. 1395 dep........... 444 3491
SANOLEW OOD V ILLAS- 1 br. 1
be. washer/dryer, downstairs.
1325 -t- sec. Att. 7,473 3734
SANFORD : 7 bdrm . 7 bath,
cen heat 4 air. Ig living room,
eat In kit. with dishwasher,
washer/dryer. Adults or small
child. 645 2*14.... o r.....898 38*1
SANFO RD D U P L E X : 2 bdrm ,
private yard, laundry room.
1375 4 dep. 323 571 lo r *34 5333
SANFORD: 2 bdrm . 2 bath,
water paid. 1400 mo. 4- 1300
sec. Adults, no pets. C a ll
Kathy tor appt........... 321 0795
SHENAND O AH V IL L A G E

★

★ $199 ★

★

Ask about move in special I
C a ll.............................. 373 7970

RIDGEWOOD ARMS 4
BAM BO O COVE S PEC IA LI
Rent any site apartment by
Feb. 1st and receive March
rent F R E E I
2510 Ridgewood Ave...... 773 4420
700 E. Airport B l........... 323 44*1

1bdrm , I bath...............1335 mo
2bdrm , IW balh ......... 13*0mo
• Central Heat 4 A ir
e Pool 4 Laundry
F R A N K L IN ARM S
1120 Florida Ave.
_________ 323 4430___________
2 BD RM . 2 F U L L BATH, large
(1.000 sq.lt.3 apt Furn. kitch­
en. w/w carpet, c/h/a. clothes
washer/dryer. 1340 mo One
year lease, no pets. Large
pool 323 9040 o r.... 373 9543

103— Houses
U nfurnished / Rent
B E A U T IF U L 3 bdrm., 2 bath
pool home. 5550 mo. plus sec.
C a ll:.......................... 322 2547
• • * IN D ELTO N A • • *
• • HOM ES FOR R E N T • *
* » 574 1434 * e
L A K E M A R Y A R E A - 3 bdrm . 2
bath, garage. 5500 month/
discount C a ll:............*300092
M E L L O N V IL L E A R E A . 3 bdrm
I bath. 1450 mo 4 sec Avail.
2/t/*7......... 373 *353 alter 5 30
P I N E C R E S T - 3 bedroom, 2
-bath, f enc ed, c a r p o r t .
Call:
321 3*5*
R EN T OPTION: 1512 S Elliott
St., 2 bdrm . I bath. 14.000
down. 1400 mo
I 425 3345
SANFORD. 3 bdrm.. H i bath,
central H/A. garage. No Pets.
1445 t- deposit Call
695 200*
SANFORD- 3 bedroom, t bath
147$ m onth p lu s d e posit.
Call: ....................... *3) 9445
SANFORD- 3 BR.. It* BTH ,
Garage. C/H /A. 1470 mo 2*45
Gall PI. Call
321 7352
SANFORD: 2 bdrm. newly dec
ora te d , c/h /a . a p p lia n ce s
lurnlshed
Call 699 *951
SA N FO R D Rent, lease with
option to buy. 3/2. H/A, appl ,
dbl garage, fence 1475 mo,
1st, last, 1)00 sec Call 371 *444
SPACIOUS 1 bdrm . I bath,
enclosed porch, hardwood
floors, lull attic. garag» with
workshop. 1500 mo..... 331 3731
SUNLANO: 101 Oakland. 3/1.
new paint, ceiling Ians, fenced
yard Kids 4 pets OK 1450. 1st
‘ wo 4 1300 sec 321 6917 alt 4pm
3 BDRM .. I BATH, fenced back
yard. 1425 rent t sec dep No
pets Call ...
373 444)

C O R N E R LO TI I acre -4. toned
C-t. Hwy 50 E .. 3 blks from
E a st W e il Expw y., varied
utet. J . Strong. 100 % Real
Ettata Inc. 043-1300 o r 799*100

t (Mr fryMR M

141— Homes For Sale
B Y O W N E R , Lake M a ry : 4
bdrm ., IV* bath, great room,
screened porch, 34’X!4' pool
approx. 1700 tq. It. living area,
tread lot. M2.300 337 3717 alter
4pm wfcdays/anytlme wkends
A C C E P T O U R «%, 90day listing
contract A see your home
advertised at no cost to You.
F IR S T R E A L T Y INC.....139-4007

0 5 A f f&gt;0 S

ST e m p e r

141— Homes For Sale

^7

/V \ m v ( H ) d

G ro u p ,

767-0606
BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Reel Estate Broker
2444 Sanlord Ave.

321-0759_______ 321-2257
_____ Alter hours 177-7*43_____
B Y OW NER, 2 bdrm.. 1 bath. In
Ideal Sanlord location. Newly
remodeled kitchen 4 bath,
fenced back yard, screened
front porch with swing. Re­
duced *7000 OWNER MUST
R E LO CATE . *43.900 days
321 0777 or eves 377 0*07

G n tu f*
JU N E PORZIO R E A L T Y , INC

322-8678

* * * * * * * * * * * * *

STENSTROM
REALTORS
Sanford’* Salts Loader

1 -: ■&lt;/%
V

W E LIS TA N D S ELL
M O R E P R O PER TY THAN
A N Y O N E IN N O R TH
SEM IN O LE CO UN TY

INVESTORS LOOKI 7 bdrm., 1
bath house on large lot, loned
GC-2. owner may hold mlg.
with substantial down pay­
ment........................... t is . *00
S A N O L E W O O D C O N ­
DOM INIUM S! 2 bdrm., 2 bath
condo, new paint 4 vinyl tile,
screened porch, washer 4
dryer, walk In closet, central
H / A !............................*31.900
O W N ER FINANCIN GI Need a
really good start? This seller
Is w lllln gl Only 14000 down 4
assume VA loan, seller holds
the rest. Total monthly pay
ment will still be under 1400 4
bdrm., M* bath, screen porch,
fencing........................ 139.500
PEACEFUL

SETTINOI

323-5774
740* HWY. 17 97_______
HO M ESEEKERS REALTY
"S E R V IN G A R E A B U Y E R S ”

322 8825
IO Y LLW ILD E I Enchanting. 2
story, 4 bdrm., 1 bath brick
h o m e in sought a f t e r
neighborhood, boasts 2.207 sq
It. ol luxurious living area.
Reduced now to 1105.000! Call
M a rti Sensakovic. 371 3700.
o r.......................177 77*7 eves

Keyes

*10**04 INC RfAlfOHS

K E Y E S #1 IN TH E SOUTH

m

JAMES LEE

REALTOK

I

b d r m . , IV* b a t h h o m e ,
screened porch, Inside utility,
split plan, new awning over
sliding glass doors....... 149.900

A R E A L P L E A S U R E I 3 bdrm, 2
bath mobile home on 5 acres,
vaulted ceilings, fpl., great
room, breakfast bar. water
conditioner, stereo system and
m ore........................... 149.900

in *141 H U H

REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford’s Sales Leader
COMMERCIAL/MULTIPLE
USE, Prim e property fronts
on heavily traveled street, lot
site It* x 13*. zoned GC 7.
1*7.000. Call Beth Hathaway.
Realtor/Assoclate
G E N E R A L COMMERCIAL
ZONINGI 7.15* sq It. build
Ing, land size 164 x 117,
(corner lot), on high Iralllc
sleet. 1106.000. C a ll John
Bulner. Broker/Salesman
G R E A T INVESTMENT O P­
PO RTU N ITY! 4.4 acres zoned
lor 15 units per acre, over 500
It. road Iron), Ideal location
tor multi residential. 1395.000
C a ll Terry Llvle. Realtor/
Associate

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720
Call toll free 1-800-323-3720
2545 PA R K A V E ........... Sanlord
901 Lk. M ir y Blvd....... Lk. Mary

322-2420
321-2720
Call toll free 1-800-323-3720
1545 P A R K A V E ...........Sanlord
901 Lk. M ary Blvd....... Lk. M ary
V E T E R A N S , No down payment,
no closing costs. 1 bdrm , 2
bath In country, llreplace,
garage, trees. &gt;74,900. 349 5717
W ASHINGTON OAKS: 4 bdrm
IV* bath. Owner w ill he'p
finance 143.500......... *49 7237

LET’S TRADE!
YOUR HOME
FOR ONE O F OURS
YO UR P L A N O R O U R S
OUR LA N D O R YOURS
C A L L BOB S AN D E R NOW
TO SEE IF YOU Q U A L I F Y

STENSTROM

s

STUMP

( M im m t O iiii iir a iM C o m K in

2559 Park Drive
(305)321-0140
1 BEDRO O M . 7 car garage. 1700
It house on 7 lots, enormous
possibilities. In superior con
dltion. upper 140's..... 349 SS45

z ,a

a

213— Auctions
BO B'S U S E D F U R N I T U R E .
W E T A K E C O N SIG N M EN TS.
B U Y O R S E L L ............. 333-3150

BRIDGES MID SON

R E A L ESTATE
REALTOR
131-7490

Auction every Thursday 7 P M .

WE BUY ESTATES!
..........................373-1*01

153— AcreageLots/Sale

215— Boats and
Accessories

3V, A C R E S . 145 ft. paved road
frontage by 440 It. deep (2
orange groves). 17,000 down.
1135 mo. 373 9040 . o r.,.373 9541

1* Ft. O LA S T R O N Bowrlder. IS
Jo h n so n , w ith g a lv a n lte d
trailer. M any extras, must
sell I S3.895..........4 0 *735 alt *

7 .7 % APR
CONSTRUCTION FINANCING
FOR UP TO 2 YEARS

219— Wanted to Buy

S A V E ON HIOH L A B O R COSTS
and build It youriell. No down
payment. Quality p re c u t ma­
teriel!. Step by step Instruc­
tions. C ell lor detail* or attend
e la m in a r.............. 305-451-1941

*55 Aluminum Cant.. Newspaper
Non-Ferrous M etals.......... Olast
K O K O M O ........................ 373-11*0
J U N K A W R E C K E D CARSRunning or not. lop price*
paid. Fra* pick up. 171 7754

oooee

colt* ?«. tews,
. Semlaata Rare, rm

FORD FAIRMONT « d r T 't m
C4S74A, *1795, ItmtaaN Par*
370*Hwy. 17R .........J33-140I
FO RD DRAMA DA- 74, 4T905B.
SOTS. Sem laata Fard, 37*4
Hwy. 17-93,...............-3ZH01
FORO LTD- 79, 7C09M . S1d * l
Sem inal* Fard , J7M Hwy.
1797................................ 333101

FORO MUSTANO U . T-Top.
4C400A, S399S. SeaUaaN Fard.
370*Hwy. I7-93..........-33H01
FORD MUSTANO 7*. C4577A.
Seminal* Ford. 370* Hwy.
17-93,.......................-323-101
HONDA CIVIC- 'M. 7C100A.
11795. Seminal* Fard. 37*4
Hwy. 17 93,................333-101
MERCURY MONARCH- 77.
7T029B, *995. f M i««* F a rd .
371* Hwy. 17 92...... ......313-101

M E R C U R Y C O U O A R - ‘ II.
7C154A. 137*5, Somtnelo Ford.
37A4 Hwy. 17 91............ 333-101
M E R C U R Y M ARQUIS- '74.4 dr.
7C14AA, 14*5. Seminal* Fard.
371* Hwy. 17 93...........JM M O I
O LD S D E L T A Ofr ‘74. Runt
good. tlOO/botl otter. C a ll
attar 5:30 pm..............495-4153
PONTIAC- '72. 3 dr. 7T1SSV.
1595. Sam lnal* Fa rd . 17*4
Hwy. 17-93................. .373-101
R E N A U LT A L L IA N C E ’l l ,
7T2J7A. 52*95. Samlnal* Fard,
371* Hwy. 17 97............333-101
R E N A U LT - 13. 7C077A. 5995,
Sam lnal* F a rd , 1714 Hwy.
17-97........................... 333-101
T H U N D E R B IR D - ' l l . 31.000

mllas. auto., air. Vary clean,
must tall) Taka over pay
ment*.................3»9453af1.6
VW BUO- 71. 4TI03IB. *795.
Sem inal* Fa rd , 3714 Hwy.

233-Auto Part*
/ Accessories
OOOD U S ED MOTORS
and transmissions
Call:..'.......................... .371 7714
1977 O LD S STRONO 3M with
quad A transmission. Approx.
•0.000 mil**. Doesn't smoke,
m o II run. 73* W. 19th St.
373-177) «lk tor G ary

157-Mobile
Homes / Sate

223— Miscellaneous

A B E A U T Y - Skyline. 24X52. 2
bdrm.. 2 bath. Fla. rm PLUS
screened area, eet-ln kitchen.
Priced *0— 111..............377 0 IQi

Brawn River Rock Pello Stone*
Great* Trap* Sand Dry Wall*
Ready M ix Concrat*
M iracle Concrete Ce.

C A R R IA O E C O V E : Adult Sec..
2 bdrm., 2 bath, 7 c a r carport,
screenad porch A utility rm.
Ex c. cond. 114.500.......377 7976

773-5751.................3*9 Elm Ave.

C A S S E L B E R R Y ) with nice lot.
1/1, Remodeled, nice tree*.
Bergtln, Ow ner...........499-1113

DIAM ON DS are forever but love
Isn't. Set. A 7ct. H e w le tt
diamond*. Ha ha Jonathan. I
told you I'd *all them. 3*5-3140

O M C S T E F V A N ) 7 ) . good
cond.. new paint, *1100/otter
^ C a lh M M M S o r M lT W ^ ^ ^

F O R S A L E ) 4x7 storage shed.
S7S. Upright refrigerator. ISO.
Call etter 4pm............ 373-147*

231— Vehicles
Wanted

H A L F PRI CEI Flashing arrow
signs 57*91 Lighted, non arrow
52791 Unllghted 12391 Free
letters! See locally. Call to
day I Factory: 1100 433 0141

W E P A Y TOP M lor wrecked
cart/trucks. W* Sail guaran
teed uMd part*. AA AUTO
S A L V A G E el P*B*ry..46a-6003

B U Y ........... S E L L ........... T R A D E
Mest Anything
Huey'* Crewn Fawn.......373-07*4

FA M IL Y SPACES A V A ILA B L E
Carriag e Cove M obile Home
Park. Come see u*l 11
Gregory Mobiles Homes.3731700

163— Waterfront
Property / Sale
ANXIO U S OW NER- 4 4 acres
* with home and cottage on the
Weklva River.
Energy Realty Inc..... 171-3919
Julie Boyd Realtor/Assoc.
1491*07 eves. A weekends
SANFORD : Lakefront lot in the
city limits. Sewer A water,
ready lo build on. Fish, ski,
swim. Call N ow l........ 331 3797

231— Cars
VW R A B B IT D IE S E L L- *2.
Baby blue w/belg* cloth Int.
A/C. J sp . 53.000 ml.. 40 mpg
city, 55 mpg hwy., 3 mo.
Mlchelln tires. Like new cond.
Must Sol 1113.300 nrg 574 3790
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FIN AN CE
W A LK IN..............D RIVE OUT
NATIO N AL AUTO S A LES
Sanlord Ave. A 12th SI... 331 4075
CAO ILLA C D E V IL L E - '7*. fully
loaded, g re a t cond., one
owner. 14.500.377 7953.9 6pm
C H E V R O L E T C H E V E T T E '»!',
T4564B. 11295. Seminole Ford.
37*4 Hwy. 17 92........... 322 101
C H E V R O L E T N O V A ' 74' .
6C473C. 1595. Seminole Ford.
37*4 Hwy. 17 97........... 377 101
C H E V R O L E T CAM ARO- '75.
6C473C, 11795. Seminole Ford.
37*4 Hwy. 17 97........... 377 101
C H E V R O L E T M A L IB U - '79.
6C667A, 11595. Seminole Ford.
37*4 Hwy. 17 97........... 377 101
C H R Y S L E R L e B A R ON '*1',
C4580. 11995. Seminole Ford.
37*4 Hwy. 17 97.......... 377 101

181— Appliances
/ Furniture
A L T E R N A T IV E T.V. A A P PL.
J95* Hwy. 17-91
______ W 172 5000__________
KENMORE WASHER A
D R Y E R . Excellent condition.
1I3S each Call ..........377 4304
L A R R Y 'S M AR T. 215 Sanlord
Ave New/Used turn. A appl.
Buy/Sell/Trade 377 4132.
SOLID R O C K M A P L E HUTCH
P rice :............................. 1350
C a ll:...............
373 4704
7 PC. PVC PATIO turn, set!
1450. Patio table A 4 chairs.
1300 Solid white oak gun
cabinet, 1700 Acoustic guitar
w/case. 1/5 A ll Like Newt
C a ll:..........................371 0976

235—Trucks/
Buses / Vans

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
HONDA Automatic 434: '01. new
cond 2500 org. m l. 51700
C all 321 3553or 371 7349
Y A M A H A SECA 450: '*3. Oxc.
c o n d . 5.000 m l. B I L L Y
C A 3T ER gollclu b*. 331 37*4

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
HI LO Travol T rallor: *7. 71 II.
57.700 Exc. cond. Bob Owen
Travol Trallor* 333 N. Adello
Avo., Poland............. 73*-5450
M A Y F L O W E R : ‘ 10. P a r k
Modol. 35 X4' Tip outl Noel A
clean 57.100 Beb Owen Travel
Trailer* 333 N. Adelle Ave.,
Deland...................... 73*-5450
QUINSTAR: Camping. Cargo.
Utility, Tilling Tralltr.
Unique.
Bob Owen Travel
Trailer* 333 N. Adelle Ave.,
Oeland...................... 73A3450
S EE T H E NEW HI-LO T R A V ­
E L T R A I L E R S al Bob Owon
Travel Trallor* 333 N. Adelle
Ave .D eland............. 73* 5050

CONSULT OUR

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

SO U TH ER N VI CTORI ANI 3
bdrm , 2 bath home. L shaped
porch, eat In kitchen, central
H/A. celling Ians, spacious
rooms 4 storage......... 176,900

CALL ANY TIME

LIQ U ID ATIN G Slock ot uphol
(lory A decorator furniture.
C e n , 333 N. Adel I*
.— 734-159*
Ave., Deland

CALL BART

S E R E N E PEA CEFU LN ESSI 2
bdrm ., 2 bath home w ith
screened porch overlooking
lake. fpl.. eat in kitchen, din­
ing area, central heat and air.
.................................... 173.000

• G E N E V A O S C E O L A RD. e
Z O E O F O R M O B IL E S I
5 Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
20% Down, to Yrs. at 11%I
From 111.500!

211—Antiques/
Collectibles

O L D P A R K A SH O P BLDO.
15.000 sq.ft.. also ad|acant bldg.
Needs to ta ll to settle estate.
300 ft. on Park Ave. 170 ft. on
Hwy. 4*. High traffic area.
Plenty ol perking. Owner f i­
nancing....................... 1495.000.

O R O V E M ANOR I 3 bdrm , 2
bath home, screened porch,
pool, utility room, w/washer 4
dryer, central H 4 A. built In
B B Q ............................ 172.500

321-7823......Eves. 323 0809
L A K E M A R Y - Huge corner
shaded lot. 1 bdrm. 2 bath
screen porch, many extras.
Wallace Cress Realty. Inc.
__________ 271-0577__________
L A R G E 2 story colonial on
wooded I acre Fam ily room,
game rm. 2 fpl . many extras.
1117.000 W. M a lic io w s k l
Realtor..................... 177 7911
LOW DOWN P A Y M E N T ! 3
bdrm., I bath, new paint,
carpet, etc. Priced to sell a*
141.000
C A LL AN YT IM EI
Alan B. Johnson, Re/Max
Unlimited. I l l 4101 or 140 1000
SANFORD: New 3 bdrm , 2 bath
homes Block, FHA, low down
SS4.900
499 2100or 4*2 1472

/

i n tou hi i d
to snow

STENSTROM

CALL BART

L O V E L Y V I L L A In Hidden
Lake! Extra clean and nice 2
bdrm , 7 bathl Assume, no
qualityingt Cen. air. 155.500.
Rent or lease purchase

149— Commercial
Property / Sale

REALTY, INC.

FAN TASTIC B U Y I 4 bdrm. 2
bath home on IV* a c r e i.
fenced and cross fenced, din
Ing area, screened porch, spill
plan, central H 4 A 1..... 149.000

WE N E E D LISTINGS
E X T R A NICE CUSTOM BUILT
HOME I Almost new. 1/2 split
plan, fireplace, garage. CHA.
heat pump, good terms 154.900

SPACIOUS H O M E. 3/3. living
room, dining room, kitchen,
porch A carport on large
shady lot. Call 373 1031,3 7.

ih at si nun

BUYERS PROTECTION
P L A N I 3 bdrm . IW bath
home, freshly painted Inside,
paddle fans, green house, ac
cessory b u ildin g 4 m orel
....:...............................157.900

IIALL REALTY
REALTOR

S A N F O R O : 3 bdrm.. 1 bath.
1317 Douglas, owner financing
or F H A . *15,900.......... 3*5-7111

»!l 10U M I D
to (NOW

C H A R M IN G O LO E R HOME
C om pletely refurbished and
modernized. For 543.500 you
get plenty o l space Including 3
bdrm. 4 central h/a. In town
and convenient. Ready In a
few days.............CALLN O W I

R E A L ESTATE
R EA LT O R ___________ 122-749*
C H A R M IN G W E L L K E P T 2
bdrm , I bath home In Country
Club Manor. Large corner lot
with 7 util, bldgs. 4 fenced
backyard.....................148.000
Energy Realty Inc..... 121-291*
Julie Boyd Realtor/Assoc.
349-1107 eves. 4 weekends
FOR S A LE /LE A S E OPTION. 3
bdrm., 2 bath, brick, air 4
heat on I acre Lots ot trees,
corner lot...................321 0154

SA N FO R D - 3 bdrm.. 3 bath,
screen porch, (enced yard,
*41,000. F H A a ssu m a b le .
*3.000 down, total payments
under *475. 377 *07* eves.

O W N E R D E S P E R A T E I W ill
pay all closing costs and sell
under appraisal. Extra nice 1
bdrm ., Ilka new condition.
P a y m en ts less than rent.
*49,900 C e ll:............... B E C K Y
COURSON. R E/M A X 700 n.
realty Inc. 439-*3M.or.173-947*

C A LL A N Y TIM E
R E A L T O R ...................... 371-4991

yy

141— Homes For Sate

tOhp.

Q U A R T E R HORSE M A R E .
Sorrel, good pleeiure horse.
M U S T S E L L I *350......JH 9 0 4 3

A FFR A IS A LS A N D SALES
B O B M. B A L L J R . F .A . .C 1 M .
REALTOR
m -a tte

^^and4rimaFl4;Jnc;3MJ734

N E A R TOW N, I 4 3 bdrm t.. *45
lo 1*5 wkly. 1150 sec. A LS O
Efficiency. 373 *794, evenings

“ 1

231— C a r s

U

201— H o r s e s

P r o p a r t y / S a te

O E N E V A - 3 bdrm.. IV* bath,
u n f u r n i s h e d , IV* a c r e .
C a ll:............................ 349-5409

O F FIC E S - 700 4 1000 sq.ft. In
growing 4-Townt/Dtfaary area
on Hwy, 17 97 64* 6915 eves.

m

(OT' cutting caFOdty X 3V»
depth w/tcartng unit. 333-5303
P O R T A B L E W E L D E R Fo r
M l*, oc/dc. Wetdan Power. I*
hp, ga* driven, elec (tart, MB
ft lead* B carry** cover. X A D
Trrltee. 373945* or 33M M 0

BEA U TIFU L 4/3V* BRICK N X .
Mt. home. him ./Blue Ridge
Pfcwy. Basement, cablnet/glf?
shops, 3 fpl*. I acre 4 175.000
FIRST R E A LT Y IN C ...

149— C o m m a r d a i

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent

C L E A N 2 bdrm., apt. Nicely
furnished, carpet. No pets. *95
wk. + security............. 371-3190

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent

Things That, whcn i'M
&lt;9W*R, IW WOU) BGTTfeR.
THAfTTb Do .

SANFORD:
3bdrm., 1 bath,
newly decorated. Kids, pets
O K . *335 4 dep.........&gt;490044

117— Commercial
Rentals

19 S — M a c h i n e r y / T
HORIZONTAL Panel l i e

oae O f

S A N F O R D : I bdrm., heal A air,
large rooms, suitable (or
couple. *3(0 mo. -f *700 sec.
C a ll..............377 94*7 after 4pm

S A N F O R D , Large 2 bdrm ., with
screen e d p orch . Com plete
privacy. 190 wk. + 1250 sec.
dep. C a ll............. ;......... 373-7749

Short term leases, 3 bdrm .
u n fu rn ish e d , sin g le story,
private, near conveniences.
SANFORDCOURTAPT.
_______ 373-3301 ex. 401

T his i$ p fco B A &amp; iy

O U P L K X t 3 bdrm., carport,
clean, extras. 13*5 mo. plus
security. C a ll...............373-3443

L A R O E STO R AO E ROOM
*40 month
C a ll: ............................ 371 4947

/

P ro p a rly / S a t e

Deluxe Duplex Comm. Screen
perch, laundry A tie r ape rm .,
lautn earv, prevtded.....77t-«7H

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent

Furn* Apts, lor Senior C lliie n t
31* Palmetto Ave.
J. Cowan. No Phone Calls

r r '/ ’s

1 4 J - O u t o f S ta te

105— Du pl exTriplex/Rent

113— Storage Rentals

COZY- I bdrm. apt. lurnlshed,
llreplace. 1270 mo. plus tec.
C a ll:..............................371 3190

r r e r r * * *

K IT W C A R L V L B Cfry La rry W right
r ---------------------—
■

3 B I O R O O M , IV* Bam, t story
home with screened porch.
1310 S. M yrtle. 1475 Mo. avail­
able 7/1. C e l l i n i * * ! ext. P l

SA N FO R D - Unfurnished room,
privileges. 140 week. C a ll:
373 6177......... o r.......... 767 1745

COZY- I bdrm. apt. lurnlshed,
fireplace. 1770 mo. plus tec.
C a ll:.............................. 3713190

/

Accounting &amp;
T i x Service
H U B ER T P E A R C E
Exp. Income Tax Service

G eneral Services

Lan d clearing

F R E D 'S ERRAN D S
24 hr service. Reasonable
C a ll:............................. 371 0795

THORNE LANDCLEARI NO
Loader and truck work/seplic
lank sand Free est 377 3433

^_^327M09lor4ppt^___
Additions &amp;
Rem odeling
B E. LIN K CONST.
Remodeling............ 305 377 7029
Financing......... LlciCRCOOOo/1

Blinds &amp; Drapes
CUSTOM D R A P E R Y , balloon
c u r t a i n s , m in i b l i n d s A
verticals Free est In home
service Madeline
.323 4301
D R A PE S/TO P TREATM EN T S
DUS T R U F F L E S / P I L L O W
SHAMS BY DIANE .... 323 *344
O N E C A L L GETS BEST RE*
PAI RS OF ALL. Any kitchen
A laundry appl 90 day guar
antee on re p a irs ....... 78* 0795

B uilding Contractors
NEW HOMES FROM 519.900.
Lie *CBC0I9840 Commerical
remodeling specialist, main
tenance. additions...... 323 4832

Handy M an
HOUSEW IVES, Tired ot walling
lor your husband to do those
small repairs? I specialize in
sm a ll bothersom e repairs.
Free estim ate Satisfaction
guaranteed No job to small or
large. C a ll................. 371 4943

H ealth &amp; Beauty
A B S O L U T E L Y M ASSAGE
Massage at home or workplace

_j3lfUermicafe^B5 854^^^
Hom e Im provem ent
C A R P E N T R Y BY E DDA V I S
R EM O D E LIN G /R E NOVATION
Large And Smell Jobs Welcome
Sentord Res. I* yrs. 131 4442
C O M P L E T E H O M E R E P AI R
Door ... window...... cabinels
Call Russell at 774 4544________

Hom e R e p a irs

CUSTOM BL UEPRI NTS
Fast Service! Good quality!
K K DESIGNS..............7*73934

A L L PHASES ol household
repair A Improvement
« F R E E E S T I MA T E S • 173 1621
R E M O D E L I N G . C a rp e n lry ,
P a in tin g , S m all e le ctrica l
repairs A installation, plumb
Ing A Installation, Hauling A
lawn service Call:
E d o r Allan
331x210

Carpentry

L a n d cle a rin g

House Plans

A L L T Y P E S Of Carpentry
Remodeling A home repairs
Call Richard Gross 371 5977
RICHARDS C A R P E N T R Y
18 yrs In Central Florida
Call ................ ........ 321 57*7

BACK
hog.
Call
BUSH
cinq
Call

HOE, Dump truck. Bush
Box blading, and Discing.
377 1804
or
377 9311
HOC. Box Blading, DIs
A Tractor Roto Tilling
........................... 322 2597

Landscaping
BAHI A A St. AUGUSTINE SOD.
W ax M y r t l e s a ll s ite s .
C a ll............................349 972S
BOGUESI Exp! Professional!
Lawn A Garden Main) A chain
saw work! Lake M ary Resl
dent F R E E ESTI 373 *147
SEM IN O LE LANDSCAPING

3228133
Law n Service
A L L SEASONS lawn service A
landscaping Commercial or
residence. F re e e sl..... 4*7 7079
B A RRI E R' S Landscaping!
Irrlg . Lawn Care. Res A
Comm. 371 7*44. F R E E ESTI
G EO R G E'S LAWN CARE
Reasonable prices
Call now lo reserve service
F re e e sl........................173 75*7
"S U N N Y S " Mow. edge, Irlm,
planting, mulching SPRING
Spec Freeesl 32? 7*29______

M asonry
Concrete Walks, slabs, pallos,
drives 25 yr exp lllelong
resident. L lc/ln s 349 975* a ll 5

Nursing Care
HI L L H A V E N HE AL T H CARE
CENT ER. 950 M ellonvllle Av..
372 *544
..........
EOE
OUR RATES A R E LOW ER
Lakevlew Nursing Center
919 E. Second St.. Sanlord
122 6707

Painting
A L A N 'S PAIN TIN G A Paper
Hanging. Interior A exterior.
No job too small. Lie. 121 1022
P R O FESSIO N AL. Q U A L IT Y
Painting by Dave
Interior. Exterior. Residential.
Commercial. Pressure
Washing. Dryw all Repair A
Popcorn Ceilings.
Lie.... Bonded ....Ins.....323 4074

Roofing
RE-RO O F your home now In
lim e lor spring reins. 24%
discount on a ll types of roots
during month ol Feb. Stale
Lie «C0CC 033710CC .321 1555

Secretarial Service
Custom Typing- BookkeepingNotary Public. Call: D .J. En
terpnses. 1105 ) 3237491.

S e w e r /S e p tic T a n k
HOW ARD'S S EPTI C S ERVI CE
Repair Lines A Clean Tanks

FreeEstlmale^^^^770259
Sewing M a ch in e s/
V acuum Cleaners

AUT HORI Z ED E L E C T R O L U X
Sales A Services Vacuums A
sham pooers. Servicin g all
makes Ken Echols....372 2071

Tree Se rvice
A LL TREE SERVICE y
Firew oo d W oodsplltter lor
hire Call Alter 4 P M 373 9044
ECHOLS T R E E SERVI CE
Free E tlim a le sl Low Prlcosl
Lie...Ins...Stump Grinding.Tool
111 2229 day or nite
''L e t Ihe Professionals do It".

.

.

r

�-1

M -V

4 1 -Im M

■ LO N M C

H*raM, tenter*, FI.

Matteay, Fafc.», 1W7

by CM e Young
J U * T A N MOOR A 0 O ^
TUB W BLCOMB WAGON
OPOVB OVER M V ROOT

by Mori WaJkor

BEETLE BAILEY
b e e t l e

LISTEN, IP I WERE
OOP &gt;t&gt;U WOULPN'T
HAW TO OBEY ME

/

PICK UP
THAT
MESS/

THE BORN LOSER

by Art Sansom

by Bob Montana

EEK A MEEK

I C A N T B R E A T H E ...
M Y H E A D IS F O JO C H M G ...
"THE. RAIK) IS I N T E N S E ...
X N EED
R E L I E F ..

TAKE 7UFPEW N..
rr DOESN’T KILL PAIN...
...IT BUILDS
CHARACTER

STDPCDWaAlNllO0...
DONT ttJHINE! GET A
GRIPON YOURSELF..
GB30UP!

1

1

»

J

1

»

M

)

r

I

'i

r

1

*

t

Better See Specialist
About Mouth Swelling
DEAR DR. GOTT — I can
hardly cat or swallow because or
a swelling under my tongue.
What could cause this? Neither
my dentist nor my physician
seem to know.
DEAR READER - A swelling
under the tongue could be a
growth, an infection or a cyst
that should be treated. Ask for a
referral to an oral surgeon or
another doctor for an additional
opinion.
•
DEAR DR. GOTT - 1 devel­
oped cramps In my toes, calves
and above my knees. The pain
was unbelievable. The doctor
gave my Quinamm. which helps
some, but I'd like to treat the
cause rather than Just mask the
symptoms. Could the medicine I
took for a kidney Infection
(Uroblotlc) be responsible?
DEAR READER - Quinamm
Is quinine sulfate. The drug
affects muscles by Increasing
their excitability (making them
less likely to contract under mild
stimulation) and affecting the
distribution of calcium within
muscle fibers. These cITccts help
to relieve cramps that are caused
by arteriosclerosis and poor
circulation. Uroblotlc. a combi­
nation of antibiotics, has not
been reported to cause muscle
cramps.
When leg cramps result from
deficient circulation or poor
blood supply, surgery may be
necessary to Improve circula­
tion.
DEAR DR. GOTT - I take
calcium supplements, but am a
little confused about the best
time to take them. I've heard
that they should be taken before
meals, after meals and at bed­
time. Which of these Is correct?
DEAR READER - Calcium Is
best absorbed Into the body
when there Is food In the stom­
a c h . Therefore, calcium
su p p lem en ts, will be most
beneficial when taken during or
right after meals.
DEAR DR. GOTT - My
husband has had urethritis for
years. He has tried many antibi­
otics and antibacterials with no
Improvements. Must we assume
that his condition is unbeatable?
DEAR READER - Urethritis Is
an Infection of the urethra, the

tube that discharges urine from
the bladder. Ordinarily. It Is
should be exami ned by a
easily cured by antibiotics.
In m e n . h o w e v e r , t h e urologist, since prostatitis is a
symptoms of urethritis (burning, more difficult Infection to clear
urinary frequency and a whitish up and may require long-term
d isch arg e) resem ble those antibiotic treatment or other
caused by prostatitis (Infection of therapy. To give you more In­
the prostate gland). If your formation. I am sending you a
husband's symptoms have not free copy of my Health Report on
responded to antibiotics, he the PROSTATE GLAND.
ACROSS

□

1 Magic (tick*

7 Marks time

6 __________
Silver!

8 Popular tonga

10 Polar faatura
12 S om ttim t salt
Ingrad iant
14 Erotically
15 Thaw td
16 Supariative suf­
fix
17 Rand
19 Abstract being
20 W tttsrn
mountains
2 3 Diminishes

26 Poatlc
contraction
27 Alias (abbr.)
30 Froxan watar
column
32 Grammarian's
concern
34 Part of circla
35 Console
•

Answer to Previous Puxxie

0 Agricultural lm-

9 Singletons

□

□

□

n n E E O E

n

n

o

□ n n n n n n

22 Indefinite par-

□

n

o

n

23 Knew
24 Maple
genue

D

O

D

e

e

e

e

27 Aleutian Island
28 Act rate
M ad eline------29 Fires (si.)
31 Tendency to
blunder

i

4

n

d

nni

e

e

e

DDD

ID E E

n

d

n

n

d

d

e

d

d

e

d

d

o

g

D ED D D E
DGGODD
46 Berlin's divider

33 Midday
38 L ig h t.
feather
40 Spanish title
41 Revolve
42 That boy
43 Cooled
44 Bitter nut

25 Pleasant

n

B o n n

O

D D O ED D
□□□□□

ton

36 Three (praf J
37 M rs, in Madrid
1
&gt;
(abbr.)
39 Words which
10
nama
14
40 Parannial
candidate
ia
H a ro ld _____
42 Boy Scout
activity
45 Short slaap
46
________ton aoup
49 Of taertd
images
51 Glacial epoch
(2 wds.)
54 Tune
55 Metal
decoration
56 Taka a chance
57 W o o d y _____

o n

□ n

n

DDDD D E E
DQDODDD

18 M aks angry
20 Denomination
21 Ha who
hasitatas------

□

d

o

e ie d e c

H EED
□DDE

commune

e z n n n o

□ n n n n n

nnn

12 Influanct
13 Netherlands

o

c m

n

11 Pila ol wood

n

n n iu iD D O

4 7 Amorous look
4 8 Inert get
50 Chemical suffix
52 Spy group
(abbr.)
53 Snakelike fish

a

17

DOWN
1 Vanarable

High cards
Nearest
601, Roman
Salt (pharm.)

( c ) 1 0 8 7 b y N E A . In c

WIN AT BRIDGE
By J u n e * Jaco b y
XX

by Hargraavea A Sailers

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

"'N. I

R N P A LX 5TRA LIA
&lt;5&gt;N T H E M A P R ? R

,
=

M E , MR.-SMALL.

/
.

C ’te.’

*»4W l

Y T H A T *5 R k 5 W T . - '
N ^ W , M R . FU N N Y ,
T E L L M E WHO

,
I T 4?

/ THERE,
-------

P I« 5 &lt; S W E R E D

A U S T R A L IA

r

^

&gt;
2-2

by Warner Brothers

BUGS BUNNY

Even beginners realize that a
defender's opening lead reveals
much about the hand, thus
helping the declarer to make
good play decisions. But de­
cisions In the play should also be
Influenced by what the defender
falls to lead.
Against four spades. West led
the four of hearts. South could
count nine tricks and needed a
club trick for his 10th. So he
won the king of hearts in
dummy and played a club to his
queen and West’s king. Back
came another heart. A second
club was now played. East won
the ace and gave his partner a
heart ruff. Since declarer still
had to lose a diamond, the
contract was set.
Delarer’s play would be right

whenever West held both the ace
and the king of clubs, but was
wr ong u n d e r the pr esent
circumstances. Declarer would
do well to ask what he himself
would lead as West If he held the
ace and king of clubs. The
answer, of course. Is the club
king from A-K. Just to take a look
at dummy. After the heart
opening lead. It was a fair
deduction that West did not hold
b o t h

h i g h

c l u b

NORTH
♦ J 62
VAK2
♦97642
♦6 2
WEST
♦ 9754
♦ 43
♦ KJ 85
♦ K 10 3

EAST
♦ 3
♦ J 10 8 7 6
♦ Q3
♦ A9874
SOUTH
♦ A KQ 10 8
♦ Q95
♦ A 10
♦ Q J5

h o n o r s .

Therefore, South should play
more cautiously by winning the
heart In his hand, drawing
trumps even though It takes four
leads, and then playing a second
heart to dummy so that he can
lead up to his club Q-J-5. By
getting back to dummy with a
third heart to play clubs once
again, he makes his game-going
trick.

X-2 *7

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Weal

North

East

Pass
Pass

2♦

Pass
Pass

Pass

South
1♦
4♦

Opening lead: V 4

HOROSCOPE
W hat The D ay
W ill B rin g .,.
FRANK AND ERNEST

THE SCHEME I
OF THINGS
W fc,\s-o INC. 0 ^ 1 ^

_______________ m
£ -

( r

r

\

1

^

i*

m

1

'

fo p p x , tu m u fZ G ,

X'/Vl

B u r You JU S T
Po

n t

»•/

* ..

b t id "

p it

T

in

m a v

«5 2 -z
•• wt

by Jim Davis

YOUR BIRTHDAY
FEBRUARY 3. 1087
Indicators for the year ahead
portend successful trends both
socially and financially. There
will be&gt;an appropriate balance In
the important areas ufyour life.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. ID)
If an old friend of yours Is eager
lo introduce you to someone
new. comply with his or her
wishes. People entering your life
at this time are lucky for you.
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 $2 to
Matchmaker, c/o this newspa­
per. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland.
OH 44101-3428.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) As
of today, raise your sights a bit
where your financial objectives
arc concerned. The possibilities
for achieving your goals look
very good.
.
AN N IE

TUMBLEWEEDS

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Your unique methods for man­
aging things today might not be
orthodox, but they will be ef­
fective. Use them, regardless of
how strange they may appear to
associates.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Use your Ingenuity In your
commercial affairs today. If con­
ventional methods don't cut the
mustard, experiment with some­
thing more Imaginative.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
There’s a chance you might reap
some unusual benefits today
through a partnership arrange­
ment with a person with whom
you don't normally associate.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A
career opportunity for which
you've been hoping could sud­
denly present Itself today. You’ll
have to move fast to make the
most of It.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Spon­
taneous activities will prove to
be more fun for you today than
those which arc too tightly
structured. Do things with pals
who have adventurous spirits.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22) A
pleasant surprise could conic
through an old. reliable contact
today. There will be financial
overtones associated with the
happening.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You
have the ability today to utilize
and Improve upon the Ideas of
others. It's to your benefit to
hang around with people who
have lots of smarts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
There arc strong Indications that
your present rate of earnings Is
going to be Increased. Chance
will have a big role In what will
soon transpire.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Things could start moving
rather swiftly now regarding a
matter which you thought was
going to be delayed. The new
timetable will be to your liking.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Events will conform to the
way you envision them today, so
be s ur e to hol d posi t i ve
thoughts. Don’t let negative
thinking dilute your possibilities.
by Leonard Starr

h m b u ch s T J

7 $ o m b i \ m b $ i vVish w e

f

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222121">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, February 02, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222122">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222123">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on February 02, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222124">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222125">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, February 02, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222126">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222127">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222128">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222129">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22247" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21851">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/43927bc3a6cd5ba0d7156a78e1d218fd.pdf</src>
        <authentication>37ec8cfc2890e7cb89c0575e4dd266b9</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222150">
                    <text>Cc

Cents

P ric e

Sanford, F lo rid a — Tu esday, M a rc h 24, 1987

79th Y e a r, No. 182

Supreme Court Rules Out Censorship For Cable
Proa Staff And Wire Reports
The Supreme Court’s ruling Monday that states
may not censor adult-oriented cable television
shows unless they are legally obscene ’’opens a
pipeline of moral sewage” into American homes,
says a Seminole County evangelist.
John Butler Book, self-styled evangelist and
minister of Northslde Church of Christ In
Altamonte Springs, said Monday’s 7-2 ruling
Indicates "we need a new court.’’
But Jim Mott, sales manager of Storer Cable in
Altamonte Springs, said the Court's decision

represents a positive move for folks. In general, to
watch what they want. It scares me when people
start to dictate what I can or cannot watch."
Book said for the Supreme Court to argue that
major TV networks should be under closer
scrutiny than cable television media is "lunacy
and a typical compromising stance of in­
consistency which the Supreme Court is becom­
ing noted for.
"I feel that the Court has overlooked the fact
that when people travel In hotels and motels,
they’re not always given the choice of which they

want, cable or not." Book said. “ Mom and Dad
are at the swimming pool and 5- and 6-year-olds
turn on the TV and their minds are bombarded
1th pimps, perverts, pornography and prostitu­
tion. The psychological ramifications on our
future generation can and will be devastating."
Book added that the First Amendment does not
guarantee cigarette advertisements, “ yet the
pollution of the mind is not of primary im­
portance; to the Court." he said.
The Justices rejected arguments from Utah
officials, who were challenging a federal appeals

v

Motion To Block Passes

iSy Tww*r Vtsew*
Sanford M a y o r Battya Sm ith listens as C om m ission er John M e rce r
discusses having the c ity 's Planning and Zoning board serve as the group
homes review panel. H is motion w as defeated 3-2.

staff worked up to open more of the city
to group homes.

■sarpsssx s s r a

zoning proposals would be adopted
after all Interested city residents had
o p p o rtu n ity to speak at pu blic
hearings.
The elder care Issue sparked controveraey last fall when 16 seniors
faced eviction from four group homes
that operated Illegally according to city
code. The homes were all located In

residential zones where such opera­
tions are presently prohibited and were
be allowed to remain open while the
city began grappling with possible
zoning amendments.
.
The city’s zoning restricts ilder care
operation In residential zones. Accord­
ing to proposals from staff all residen­
tial zones would be opened to the
operations, with certain conditions

Bee PANEL, page 18A

Charges Swapped As
Evangelists Squabble

1

Bee COURT, page 12A

Sanford Snubs
Seminole Plea
On Road Fees

Group Hom es
Panel Nam ed
A nine-member citizen’s panel has
been appointed by Sanford commis­
sioners to work this spring on amend­
ing the city’s zoning laws to allow
group homes In more parts of the city.
The panel's establishment was unan­
imous. after a 3-2 vote defeated Com­
missioner John Mercer's motion for the
panel to be the city’s nine member
Planning and Zoning Board.
The P&amp;Z earlier this year recom­
mended against opening more parts of
the city to elder care group homes.
Mercer said the board could now
consider possible amendments In light
of a state statute counsel has presented.
It requires all cities to plan for these
homes, in terms of housing the elderly
ps well as the retarded or disabled.
Mercer said he felt the P&amp;Z’s acting aa
&amp; the review panel was appropriate,
"because they’ll be the ones upholding
the (amended) codes." Mercer's motion
was supported by Commissioner Bob
Thomas.
After Its defeat, all five commission­
ers turned toward establishing the
citizen's panel.
Its members are Planning and Zoning
Board Chairman John Morris. Code
0; Enforcement Efoard Chairman Ned
Yancey, attorney Marc Id Llpplncott,
nursing home administrator Art Harris.
Seminole County Mental Health Center
V iM (jla ^ d ittg | R 0 p P 8 Z tnaoter^Jiit
Malone, and local residents Harry Bills,
Charlotte Smith and Thelma Mike.
Sanford commisloners earlier this
month endorsed a conditional opening
of all residential areas to group homes.
The citizens panel will be meeting this
spring to work up specifics related to
the zoning amendments. The panel's
formation was recommended by city
counsel. It will be looking at guidelines

court ruling striking down the state's 1983 Cable
Television Programming Decency Act.
Although it did not Issue an opinion, the court’s
action affirming the appeals panel Is considered
precedent binding on lower courts.
Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Justice
Sandra Day O’Connor voted to hear the case.
Media law expert Floyd Abrams, who repre­
sented the Home Box Office cable network, said
the court's decision Is "a major step toward

FORT MILL. S.C. (UPI) - A Implicated.
Both men are ministers In the
"religious civil war" between tele­
vision evangelists heated up today Assemblies of God church and
have huge television followings.
with open bickering between
In another development. The
Jimmy Swaggart and deposed PTL
leader Jim Bakker while Moral Observer reported PTL attorney
Majority leader Jerry Falwell tried Norman Roy Grutman said he
wanted to meet with Swaggart to
to calm the broiling waters.
Bakker charged Monday that "prevent a religious civil war."
“ I think It’s extremely Ironic that
revelations about his tryst with a
church secretary were part of a Jimmy Swaggart should be at­
"diabolical plot" by an unnamed tacking Jim Bakker and If he goes’
but well-known minister to seize forward with additional things I
think he would regret it. because
control of PTL.
.
we would have to retaliate, and
Swaggart said he was sure
there Is Information that I have
Bakker was talking about him.
which I think will paint Jimmy
On PTL’s dally "Jim and Tammy
Swaggart blacker In the same
Show" Monday. Bakker said from
particulars In which 1 think he’s
Palm Springs. Calif., that he and
trying to daub Jim Bakker."
his wife Tammy did not leave their
Swaggart evidently assumed that
$172 m illion religious empire
Grutman.
who called his attorney
because of a sex apd drug scandal.
Monday night, was acting pn behalf
"W e ’ve resigned for a much
of Moral Majority Leader Jerry
larger problem than this." Bakker
Falwell, who took over PTL at
said. "W e’ve learned that there
Bakker’s behest, and not PTL or
was going to be a hostile takeover
Bakker.
of the PTL ministry."
"1 was greatly shockedt" Swag­
Bakker did not name the person
behind what he called the "diaboli­ gart told The Observer. "Here was
a man I have held up and respected
c a l plot." but Swaggart told The
and we have worked together, and
Charlotte Observer in a telephone
then he’s having his lawyer to call
Interview from Palm Springs he
me and threaten me. That hurts.
believed "beyond a shadow of a
• m ROUAMLB. pegs ISA
doubt" he was the person Bakker

By Karen Talley
Herald StafT Writer
S em in o le C ou n ty C om m ission
Chairman Fred Streetman failed Mon­
day in his plea for Sanford commis­
sioners "to withdraw, or at least delay"
adopting an ordinance against collect­
ing transportation impact fees the
county commission Is expected to
approve tonight.
‘ Only Mayor Bettye Smith sided with
Streetman at Monday’s commission
meeting. The city’s four other commis­
sioners carried the motion of A.A.
McClanahan. who termed the city’s six
month moratorium on the fee’s collec­
tion a strategic "C.Y.A." maneuver that
will serve as "Insurance" while the city
and county continue to work out
differences over the fee system.
After appearing before commission­
-era. Streetnam said he. too.jcemalna
optimistic the county and city can work
out their differences regarding the fees,
and the city’s ordinance can be re­
scinded. Streetman added, however,
the county will take Sanford to court to
decide the matter If an agreement Isn’t
reached.
If approved, the cou n ty’ s fees
wouldn't take affect for another 90 days
and If the differences aren’t worked out
by then, "W e would be required to seek
a court determination to see If the
ordinance passed by the city can block
the county’s ability to collect the fees."
Streetman told the Sanford Herald.
Streetman added that while he felt the
matter would not have to Involve court
action, the county would win if It did.
The transportation impact fees arc to
be charged all new development in
unincorporated and municipal areas to

pay for growth-related road needs.
The fee for each new residence In
Sanford is set at $445. with larger
projects to charged commensurately
higher.
•
McClanahan said the city’s action
"will give us a bit of Insurance while we
work towards an Interlocal agreement
(regarding the fees collection In San­
ford)."
Staff meetings and sessions between
Individual county and city commis­
sioners were raised by both sides
Monday to solve the dispute.
The transportation Impact fees "will
be adopted" tonight through ordi­
nance. to take effect In 90 days.
Streetman said.
He told commissioners Monday the
county was willing to give Sanford a
46A within two years, through local
option gas tax accruals, although city
Engineering and Planning Director Bill
Simmons labeled the offer a "token
consesslon."
Streetman said the request for the
road had been made by city staff.
Simmons said the roadway was not a
city "priority."
The city of Winter Springs earlier this
winter established an ordinance de­
claring a three-month moratorium on
the fee's collection in that city.
Seminole's five other cities have criti­
cized the charges and accompanying
road work plans as Inequitable, but
have not acted against them through
ordinance.

See FEE8, page 12A

Surfing Accident Victim

Memorial Services Set For Teen
A memorial service is scheduled
Wednesday for an Oviedo teen who
died of head Injuries while surfing near
Ponce Inlet.
Peter Ruble. 16. a self-taught surfer,
disappeared around 10:30 a.m. Friday
while surfing with a Casselberry friend,
Mark Acker, also 16.
A two-day search by the U.S. Coast.
Guard, law enforcement and lifeguards
ended Sunday when his body was
found lodged In rocks of the north Jetty,
according to the Coast Guard. Ruble's
surf board was found broken and
rock-battered inside the inlet appar­
ently after being carried over the Jetty
by a wave, said Senior Chief Wendell
Bush.
Ruble's body was out-of-water when
found during low tide. Bush said. The
medical examiner’s office In Daytona
Beach has determined Ruble's cause of
death was head Injuries.
Acker said he and Ruble were surfing

on the north side of the Jelty when he
decided to go to shore because a strong
current was moving them towards the
granite Jetty. When Acker looked
behind him after riding In. Ruble, a
good swimmer, was gone.
Bush said Ruble was either taken by
a wave to the Jetty or tried to swim to
the Jetty. He described the surf as
rough, kicked up by a 15-knot wind.
The tragedy occurred on the first day
of spring break for Seminole County
students and was also the first time
Ruble had been allowed by his parents
to to drive his Volkswagen to the coast.
Ruble, a sophomore at Oviedo High
School, was considering art school, said
a member of his family.
The memorial service is scheduled
for 10 a.m. at the First United Method­
ist Church In Oviedo. Funeral ar­
rangements had not been made b b of
today.

16,000 Flee Chemical Cloud From Plant Fire
NANT1COKE. Pa. (UPI) - A fire
broke out at a metal-proccasing plant
early today, sending a chemicalfilled black cloud
_
the area and forcing some 16.000 to
evacuate from two towns,
Officials were unsure what started
the blaze at the Spencer Metal
Processing Co. In Nantlcoke but
feared the cloud It created contained
sulfuric acid i
Virtually the entire town of Nanticoke, population 13.044. was
evacuated and at least 3,000 people
were ordered out of nearby Newport
Township but no serious injuries
were reported, said Nantlcoke Mayor
John Haydock.

"M y entire family was evacuated
to my home In Wilkes-Barre — my
mother, my father and three sis­
ters." said Ellen O'Brien, a reporter
at a Wilkes-Barre radio station.
"They were ^scared. My younger
sister is only 10 and she even took
her Uttle bird In her cage."
N an tlcoke C ouncilm an Mark
Yeager said the blaze erupted about
12:30 a.m. and officials feared It
would send sulfuric acid fumes
wafting across the area.
Officials said the plant contained
six 55-gallon drums of sulfuric acid
as well as undetermined amounts of
various other chemicals. Including
chromic acid, sodium bicarb, nitric

-7

acid, phosphoric acid and caustic
soda.
" I f you ask me. it Just smelled like
a burning structure but you never
know what's In that cloud," said
Tony Prushlnski. one evacuated
resident.
The fire was battled by seven fire
companies and was brought under
control by 5 a.m. Officials said the
cloud was drifting toward the nearby
town of West Nantlcoke and the
1.500 residents there were being
warned of a possible evacuation.
John Elmy. town secretary of
Newport Township, said the chemi­
cal cloud remained for the most part
o v e r N a n tlc o k e and N ew p ort

Township, both near Wilkes-Barre in
northeastern Pennsylvania.
Residents of the two towns were
evacuated to area high schools In
buses, cars and emergency vehicles.
Elmy said fire officials said the
evacuations were more "precau­
tionary than anything else."
The state fire marshal was at the
scene and Pennsylvania environ­
mental officials were taking air
samples. No cause had been de­
termined.
Elmy said the plant, which is on
the western side of Nantlcoke. cleans
and replates various types of metals.
He said the plant was a "relatively
new operation."

- D U M Jordan

TODAY
Florida.......
Horoscope...
Hospital...... ........12A
Nation........
People...................IB
Police.........
....12A Sports.........
..... 4B Television... .........IB
4A Weather..... ......... 2A
19A World........ ..........8A
.... 4B
2B,3B
4B
..... 3A
.... 4B
Deaths.

• W ife of hostage pleads for husband's
m edical care, 2A
• T e a ch e r pay still lags in south, 3A

i

�I
3A—Sanford HtraM, Sanford, FI.

Tuotday, March 34,1M7

Wife Begs Kidnappers To TreatiHusband

POLICE

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP1) - The
tearful wife of American hostage
Alann Steen today called on the
Moslem extremist kidnappers of
her husband to allow him to
seek medical treatment.
The underground Islamic
Jihad for the Liberation nf Pales­
tine announced Monday that
Steen was gravrly ill and could
die In 10 days. The pro-Iranian
group gave no details of Steen's
ailment In a two-page statement
delivered to the Beirut newspa­
per An-Nahar.
In its statement, handwritten
In Arabic, the group offered to
free Steen in exchange for 100
Arab prisoners held in Israel. '
Hours after the captors' an­

IN BRIEF
Sanford Police Car Damaged
In Collision During Chase
About $1.500 damage was done to a Sanford police car
that was rammed by a car being pursued by a second
police car.
The chase began at about 4:45 p.m. Friday, when
policeman Greg Smith on 20th Street began a pursuit of a
car he clocked traveling 35 mph In a 25 mph zone. The
suspect's car. which had four occupants, eluded Smith In a
chase that hit
Mellonvllle and Summerlin avenues,
Langston. Hughes and McKay streets. First and Third
streets, as well as other streets in the area.
Smith had radioed for help and a police car that pulled
Into the Intersection of Burrows Lane and First Street, was
hit by the lleeing car. which did not stop. There were no
Injuries, Sanford Police Chief Steve Harriett said Monday.
The suspect stopped the car a 138 Scott Drive, Sanford,
and was arrested there.
Homer Dennis Walker. 21. of that address, has been
charged with fleeing to elude police, reckless driving and
aggravated battery with a motor vehicle. He was being held
In lieu of $5,000 bond.

Seminole County Sheriff’ s
deputies Monday were in­
vestigating two unrelated re­
ports of rapes.
In o n e I n c i d e n t t w o
12-year-old girls have been
accused of raping with objects
a 10-year-old girl during a
Friday backyard campout at a
home near Sanford.
The Sanford girl told her
mother she was held down
and attacked by two girls
during the 5:30 p.m. campout.
Seminole County sheriffs Lt.
George Hagood said the girl's
mother took her to a doctor
w h o s e e x a m in a tio n d e ­
termined that she had been
molested. The girl was appar­
ently not seriously Injured.
Hagood said.

An Altamonte Springs policeman who watched as a man
allegedly smoked marijuana inside his car parked at the
Hotline Bottle Club. State Road 436. Altamonte Springs, at
about 4:25 a.m. Sunday confronted and charged that man
with possession of less than 20 grams of marijuana.
cocaine and drug paraphernalia.
Marijuana, cocaine and a smoke pipe were reportedly
found In the suspect's car. Richard Edmund King Jr., 22.
of Ocoee, has been released on $500 bond to appear in
court April 4.

Woman Loses Purse In Struggle
When Frances M. Lacey, arrive home and got out of her
car in her garage at 429 Meadow Blvd., Fern Park, at about
8:10 p.m. Sunday, a man walked up and grabbed her purse
containing $50. They struggled over the purse and when
its strap broke Ms. Lacey fell to the floor and the robber ran
with the purse. She was bruised, a Seminole County
sheriff's report said.

The following persons have been arrested In Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the influence:
— William James Packer. 34. Kissimmee, arrested at
10:44 p.m. Saturday after his was found passed-out in his
car parked in the Intersection of Winter Springs Boulevard
and Tuscora Drive, Winter Springs. He has also been
charged with possession of marijuana and drug parapher­
nalia.
—James Bruce Mullins, 36, of Orlando. Jailed at 1:25
a.m. Saturday after his car was in an accident on County
Road 427. He was also charged with careless driving.
—Krystal Sue Tucker, 24, of 240 Oxford Road *88, Fern
Park, at 4:45 a.m. Sunday after she drove onto the median
o f State Road 436, Altamonte Springs.
—Carl Ronnie Butcher. 32, of 101 E. Altamonte Drive
*1320, Altamonte Springs, at 3:10 p.m. Saturday, on
Altamonte Drive after an Altamonte Springs policeman
who had been alerted to a possible drunk driver spotted his
cat. He was also charged with driving with a revoked
license.

N at io n T c m p o i oturos
HI Lo Pep
51 35
41 33
44 3471 S3
40 37 .04
77 55 .11
43 33
•3 51
43 37
51 30
34 31
47 45
47 45
70 14
40 31
47 44

City A Forscut
Albuquurqu* cy
Anelwug* ey
Ashcvllte cy
Atlanta r
Billing! pc
Birmingham l&gt;
Boston ty
Brownivllt# Tsx.pc
Buffalo ly
Burlington Vt. sy
Charts*ton S C sn
Charlotte N.C.cy
Chicago fs
Cincinnati cy
Ctevolandiy
Columbus sy
Dallas sy
Donvarcy
Das Moines r
Detroit pc
Duluth eh
E l Paso sy
Evansville ts
Hartford sy
Honolulu sy
Houston pc
Indlanapoflsts
Jackson Miss, pc
Jacksonville ts
Kansas City r
Las Vegas pc
Little Rock pc
Lo* Angeles w
Louisville sh
Memphis cy
Miami Beach ts
Milwaukee cy
Minneapolis ts
Nashville fs
New Orleans sy
New York sy
Oklahoma City pc
Omaha sh
Philadelphia sy
Phoenix pc
Pittsburgh sy
Portland Me. sy
Portland Ore. f
Providence sy
Richmond ty
SI. Louis sh
San Franclscpsy
Washington ty

Burglaries And Thefts Reported
William H. Docile. 62. of 3441 Country Club Road,
Sanford, reported to sheriffs deputies that two ,38-callber
revolvers with a combined value of $460 were stolen from
his home Saturday.
About a dozen pieces of Jewelry of unreported value were
stolen from the home of Howard A. Sackel. 36. of 625
Riverpark Circle, Longwood, between March 14 and
Saturday, a sheriff k report said,
A $125 chainsaw, a $600 lawnmower and a $100 lawn
Jockey were stolen from the home of Ellen Wilson Ott. 71,
of 282 Sandlewood Court. Fern Park, between Nov. 1 and
Saturday, deputies reported.
Vandelson Dclima, 32. of 537 Misty Wood Drive.
Casselberry, reported to sheriff's deputies that a $400
microwave, a $350 video recorder, a $250 television, a
$200 stereo, a $100 phone, a $175 answering machine and
a $100 camera were stolen from his home between March
17 and Saturday.
Eighty-eight plants with a combined value or about
$1,000 were stolen from the entrance of Oak Leaf
subdivision, East Lake Drive, according to a report filed by
a representative of owner. Klml Court Home Owner's
Assoc., deputies reported.

45
73
M
47
43
77
43
17
73

33
50 .03
31
3t '.M
43
57
31
mm ....
40 .03
70 50 ....
7» 50 .77
73 53 ....
77 44 .14
40 3t ....
47 44 1.15
44 54 ....
74 SI
M 54
74 70
54 40
54 47
77 41
70 at 1.11
44 41
45 31 .34
55 40 .35
47 35
71 55
43 41
43 Jt
S3 43 .13
4t 33
43 35
75 54 .10
43 41 .If
44 41

r-r*ln

sm-omoke
ty-eunny

fyMggy

tt-murMrttormi

ht-hare
m m lasing

H onda

A radar detector, shoes, clothing and other Items with a
combined value of about $2,000 were stolen Thursday
from the car of Lillian V. O’Hearn. 38. of 441 Dogwood
Court. Altamonte Springs, a sheriffs report said.

I t a lip o t ot u r os

MIAMI (UPI) tu rn and rainfall i t l a m CDT
Hi la
City:
79 03
Apalachicola
C res tv lew
•1 44
71 03 S ir
Daytona Booch
Fort Lauderdale
70 70 0.80
SI 44 •SO
Fort MyerS
74 &gt;t 040
Gainesville
73 S3
Jacksonville
75 73
Key West
41 40 O.tr
Lakaiand
77 n Sir
Miami
74 43
Orlando

John Wesley Rogers. 35, of 2430 Byrd Ave., Sanford,
reported to sheriff's deputies a $290 television and a $300
video recorder were stolen from his home Saturday.
Cathy Baaa, 33. of 2105 S. Magnolia Ave.. Sanford, told
police that on Tuesday between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m..
aomeone entered her son's bedroom and removed $130
worth o f items including $37. nine tapes and three shirts.

71 43
•1 41 o.t&gt;

M

FIRE CALLS
•cue workers have responded to
the following calls, details
on Are department reports:

ni toMiijf*
gu VdiM CaaMrd
tec. JM « . Froftd) Avt., IssiWd,

Fis. am.

CUu Awtsfs Poklot (M art

FtorManni

,44.75; 3

414.33; * MssMtt, 417.04; Y—r,
M1JS. Sr MsUi MsmHi. M7I&gt; &gt;
MssWu. OSH; * Wales, l ) r «
Vssr, MVJN.
(isi) m in i.

—7)4$ a m , 4300 S. Orlando
Drive, rescue. A 43-year-old man
reported chest pain. He was
transported to the hospital
—•($ 0

f

10

•t 44
7* 44
71 40

Vero Beach
Watt Palm Beach

0«

O.tr
O.tr

0.01

I »xeii

MONDAY
Tuesday, March i t its?
Vel. 7f, Ns. »$J

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The
nearly one ton of cocaine seized
by authorities In California's
largest single drug bust is a clear
sign of a "sickness" rampant In
the United States. Police Chief
Daryl Gates says.
Authorities confiscated 1.907
pounds o f cocaine with an
estimated street vpluc of $325
million and arrested one Cuban
and two Colombian nationals
Monday following an investiga­
tion that began earlier this
month. Gates said at a news
conference.
He said that although the
suspects were foreigners, other
countries should not be held
responsible for the drug problem
in the United States and that the
cocaine seized was "a clear
Indication of (this country's)

sickness."
"You can blame the people in
the United States who want this
stuff." he said indicating the
bundled coke stacked on tables.
Following a lip from an In­
formant. detectives staked out a
hotel near Los Angeles Interna­
tional Airport on Monday and
observed Jorge Humberto Restrapo. 40, of Colombia, drive to
a suburban department store,
where he bought a large suit­
case. Gates said.
Restrapo droVc to a residence
in another suburb, he said, then
left a short while later and met
Juan Vicente Murray-Bianco. 33.
also of Colombia, back at the
hotel.
Detectives arrested the pair as
they were unloading the suitcase
from the car.

mar.*

Apr. 4

PtAf *"

-Apr. IS

Apr. 34

I
H tM Jf h

( t H id ilio n s

4
' »-

ssaw.. #» busividvi putuiif
gas In his car briefly ignited the
nouel area when he accidentally
tripped the cigarette lighter on
his watch. No injuries or damage
resulted.

—1 j$T am .. 205 Villa Drive,
rescue. An 80-year-old man suf­
fered a possible heart attack. He
was transported to the hospital.

Local Report

F iv e - D a y F o r e c a s t

Monday's high temperature In
Sanford was 75 degrees and the
8 a.m. low today was 60 degrees
as reported by Unlvcrsily of
Florida Agricultural Research
and Education Center. No rain­
fall was recorded. Partly cloudy
today with possible scattered
th u n d e r s t o r m s and high
expected near 78.

For Central Florida
PttyCMy

PtlyCldy

PttyCMy

EE. EB SB
0

0

0

A rn o

47 ae

pc-partly cleody

COOKS
c-claer
chc tearing
cy-cloudy
H a ir

Sandra Barton. 35, reported to sheriffs deputies that
about $1,500 worth of Jewelry was stolen from her home
between March 10 and Saturday.

mm) .

The Incident, which oc­
curred on the outskirts of
Sanford was first reported by
the victim's mother to Sanford
police, who called in sheriff's
deputies.
In th e o t h e r c a s e , a
15-year-old Sanford girl told
sheriffs deputies she was
grabbed by two men while
walking on Southwest Road at
18th Street, near Sanford, at
about 9:30 p.m. Sunday. They
dragged her to the east side of
railroad tracks In front of the
Deluxe Bar and one man held
her while the other raped her.
a sheriffs report said.
The girl gave sheriffs depu­
ties the name of one suspect
and the first name of the
second.
—Busan Lodsn

W EATHER

Driving Under Influence Arrests

uhw

care.
"Our humanitarian motives |
prompt us lo release the sick spy £
In exchange for 100 prisoners \
held In (Israeli) Jails. Therefore,
the American administration $
should move within this period
and pressure the Zionist enemy
to arrange the swap." It said.
“ The American administration j*
and the Zionist enemy bear the
full responsibility of the dangers
that will face (Steen), and a
videotape film will be prepared
within the coming 72 hours in
which his Illness will be shown."
The group promised to prepare
a list o! 100, prisoners and
arrange the logistics for an
exchange.

California Drug Bust Nets
Nearly A Ton Of Cocaine

G i r ls A c c u s e d O f A s s a u lt ;
T e e n R e p o r ts R a p e B y 2 M e n

Smoking In Car Leads To Arrest

Are fighters and re. •7
. f
*• -

wonderful work Alann has
done." said Virginia Steen, her
voice breaking as she wept
throughout the news conference.
Steen's wife said she failed to
sleep through the night after the
captors Issued the statement
claiming her husband was 111.
Asked whether her husband was
ill before he was taken hostage,
she said. "N o."
The pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad
for the Liberation of Palestine
said in Its statement. "Th e
American spy Alann Steen is
suffering an Illness, and his
health condition might worsen*
and he might die after 10 days,
according lo doctors who are
advising a special (medical)

nouncem ent. S teen 's w ife,
Virginia, said her husband was
not 111 before he was taken
hostage and called on the captors to to allow him to be treated
Tor his undisclosed ailment.
Speaking at a news conference
at the Beirut University College
in west Beirut from where her
husband was abducted. Virginia
Steen said. "I will ask ... that
they they release my husband so
he can see a specialist and can
be treated."
"I ask if they believe In the
word humanitarian that they
release him and get him into the
best possible hospital at this
time. I hope they know, and I am
sure they know, how much

DljrtlM BooBill Waves are
•bout 2 to 3 feet end rough.
Current is slightly to the north
with a temperature of 63 de­
grees. Now Sm yrna Beaehi
Waves are 2 to 3 feet and
choppy. Current is slightly to the
north; Water temperature. 63
degrees. Sun screen factor: 12.

B

Wed.

@

Thur*.

0

Frt.

® 0
Set.

Svn.

Source: Hetlenel Weether Service

Killer Blizzard
Rakes Plains
United Press International
took four pregnant women lo
A spring blizzard blamed for hospitals to give birth, deliver­
two deaths paralyzed parts of ed Insulin to diabetics and took
the central Plains today with a man Injured in an oil rig
wind-whipped snow, closing accident to a hospital. The
roads, stranding hundreds of snow tapered off late Monday,
travelers and forcing Natlonai
but four National Guard trucks
Guard convoys to search Tor kept searching through the
the Injured and the ill.
night because of blowing snow.
The storm moved east early
Winds or more than 70 mph
today, spreading wind-driven
M on day cau sed flig h t
rain and snow from Arkansas diversions and cancellations at
and Kansas to the Dakotas and
Dallas-Fort Worth International
Minnesota after hurling winds Airport, stranding some travel­
of 78 mph at Dodge City, Kan., ers.
and dumping 18 Inches of
Heavy rain fell to the east of
snow at Pampa, Texas, on
the snow In the Plains, pro­
Monday.
mpting a flood warning for
In Oklahoma Monday,, two
eastern Nebraska and flood
watches In the Dakotas, east­
people were killed In separate
traffic accidents blamed on the
ern Kansas and northwest
Iowa.
storm.
Windblown snow that cut
Six-foot floods from the Big
visibilities to nearly zero closed
Beaver Creek chased about 60
dozens of roads In New Mexico,
people from their homes in
Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma
Linton. N.D.. where authorities
said it could take a week for the
and K a n sa s. In w e s te rn
water to recede.
Kansas, where snow drifts
reached 5 feet, eight major
Streams were flooding In
central Kansas, where Medicine
highways. Including 80 miles
of Interstate 70. were shut
Lodge was Inundated with 7
down.
Inches o f rain. In eastern
Nebraska, flooding was re­
"There 1b no more hotel
ported along the Little Blue and
space, and we have a lot of
Big Blue rivers, and the Platte
stranded m o to ris ts ," said
River overflowed Its banka
Morris Denning, a sheriffs
below the Elkhorn.
dispatcher in Ellis County,
Blizzard warnings remained
Kan., w h ich op erated on
in effect today for western
em ergen cy pow er Monday
night.
Kansas, where up to a foot of
snow was possible. Travelers
The National Guard was
advisories for blowing snow
called out,in Kansas and Texas
were posted in parts of Col­
to rescue stranded travelers,
orado, New Mexico, Texas,
in c lu d in g b u s lo a d s o f
Oklahoma and Nebraska.
schoolchildren. 'In the Texas
Pete Reynolds of the National
panhandle city of Pampa. of­
ficial! said 200 stranded travel-' .Weather Service said Monday
ers had been taken to shelters
night that southeastern Col­
by Monday night and another
orado, western Kansas and the
T e x a s an d ' O k la h o m a
. ISO were waiting to be rescued.
"W e're trying to clear the - panhandles all had experienced
blizzards.
roads to get to them. On all the
" I f this Is spring. I'm glad
highways going in and out of
town we've got stranded peo­ winter's not still here." said
Dennis Knight, a police dis­
ple." said Pampa City Manager
Bob Hart.
patcher in the Texas panhan­
dle town of Periytown.
Hart said guardsmen Monday

F orecosf

T o d a y...b ecom in g mostly
cloudy windy and mild with
showers and thunderstorms
likely. High In the mid 70s lo
around 80. Wind southeast 15 to
25 mph. Rain chance 60 per­
cent.
A ri-ci R r c id m q s
The temperature at 9 a.m.: 69:
overnight low: 63; Monday's
high: 76: barometric pressure:
29.89; relative humidity; 81
percent: winds: SE at 14 mph;
rain: None: Today's sunset: 6:39
p.m.. Wednesday's sunrise: 6:23
a.m.

T h e e x te n d e d fo r e c a s t,
Thursday through Saturday, for
Florida except northwest —
Variable cloudiness with a
chance o f showers m ainly
central and south through the
period. Temperatures averaging
near seasonal normals. Lows
near 50 extreme north to around
60 lo mid 60s south except near
70 In the lower Keys. Highs In
the mid 70s north to around 60
south.
A rea

T id e s

W E D N E S D A Y : Dayto na
Bsaeht highs. 4:35 a.m.. 4:59
p.m.; lows, 10:39 a.m.. 10:52
.m.; New Smyrna Bsaeht
Ighs. 4:40 a.m.. 5:04 p.m.:
lows. 10:44 a.m.. 10:57 p.m.:
B ayparti highs. 11:06 a.m..
10:18 p.m.: lows, 4:33 a.m.. 4:38
p.m.

R

Bo

tj 11n g

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
— A small craft advisory is In
effect.
T o d a y ...w in d s o u th e a s t
around 20 kta. Seas building to 5
to 7 ft. Bay and Inland waters
becoming choppy to rough.
Scattered Bhowers and a few
thunderstorms.
T o n ig h t and W e d n e s ­
day...wind southeast around 20
kts. Seas 5 to 8 ft. Bay and
Inland waters rough. Scattered
showers and thunderstorms.

�$ 9 0 0 ,0 0 0

Southeast Teachersf Salaries
Still Lag Comparable Workers

G iv e n A w a y
In B i n g o
BIG CYPRESS (UPI) - A
14 hour bingo binge In which
nearly SI million was given
away filled a 5.600-Beat gaming
hall on the Big Cypress Seminole
Indian reservation.
People from 42 states came to
the Saturday opening of Big
Cypress Million Dollar Bingo,
whose biggest winner was David
Hill. 39. of Pompano Beach, who
collected a $125,000 jackpot,
spokesman Steven Blad said.
"I had a heart attack four
times.'* Hill said. "When they
called 13 (his number), I Just
died four times."
The game provided a big
payofT for the Indians and devel­
opers. who collect between $99
and $249 for "admission packs"
that contain several cards.
The giant bingo hall on the
reservation in south Florida is
the latest project that has helped
move the Semlnoles from dismal
poverty to a thriving financial
concern.
The Semlnoles helped pioneer
reservation bingo in 1979.
sparking a legal battle that
climaxed last month when the
Supreme Court ruled states
cannot regulate bingo on Indian
reservations.
The bingo money Is to be used
for education and other projects
to benefit the tribe, which also
sells tax-exempt cigarettes on
the reservations.
Fort Lauderdale developers
Richard Knowlton and William
Van Norn put up the $4 million
to build the bingo hall and they
manage the games. They said
earlier they hoped to realize $1
million profit for the Semlnoles
from each bingo night. At least
two more are planned this year.

By Oenle Lindberg
Herald S ta ff W riter
Although teacher salaries In the Southeast have
risen steadily over the past four years, the
average teacher In the region still earns about
$10,000 less per year than other college-educated
workers, a new Southeastern Educational Im­
provement Laboratory report says.
The report was written by Ron Bird who holds
the D. Abbott Turner Chair of Economics and
Free Enterprise at Wesleyan College In Macon,
Georgia, and by Douglas Wakcman. Assistant
Professor of Economics, Meredith College In
Raleigh, North Carolina.
tl analyzed the March 1985 Current Population
Survey data from the U.S. Census Bureau to
determine earnings characteristics of teachers
and other college-educated workers In the
Southeastern states of Florida. Alabama. Georgia,
Mississippi, North Carolina and South Carolina.
"Although much has been done to Improve
beginning teacher salaries, the salaries of other
professional workers have also Increased, said

Charles J. Law, J r„ Executive Director of the Lab.
"Furthermore, the difference between teacher
salaries and those of other college-educated
workers becomes more noticeable as experience
increases.
"Based upon these data, significant amounts of
new money will have to be added each year for
several years before teachers are paid at a level
comparable to other college graduates," Law
said.
\
.
*
"But I believe that this generation In the
Southeast has the vision and the will to catch up
now rather than pass the burden to our children’s
generation."
The report presents a competitive salary
schedule for 10-month contracts for teachers.'
Under this schedule, a beginning teacher with a'
bachelor's degree and no classroom experience1
would receive a starting salary o f $19,609. This!
teacher would then receive $35,887 with 20 years'
of experience, and $44,441 with 20 years of&lt;
experience and a master's degree.

Brain Tumor Therapy Shows Promise
Abandoned puppy " J e r e m y "
shows affe ction and
p la y fu ln e ss w ith Sem inole
C o u n t y H u m a n e S o c ie t y
w orker Coleen C h am berlin
F rid a y . Je re m y was picked

up In the area of State Road
436 and W ym ore Road. His
e a r s h a v e been c u t o ff,
possible when he was Just 3
months old, H um an Society
w orkers say.

SAN DIEGO (UP!)
An exper­
imental therapy for deadly can­
cerous brain tumors suggests
that specially treated white
blood cells Implanted In the
brain may prolong life or even
e r a d ic a t e th e tu m o r s , a
neurosurgeon reported.
The new Immunotherapy be­

ing tested on 60 patients with
malignant brain tumors. In­
cluding former Kansas City
Royals manager Dick Hawser,
arm s the body's own lym ­
phocytes to light gliomas, the
most common brain tumors In
udults.
Dr. Skip Jacques described the

preliminary research under way
at the Huntington Medical Rej
search Institutes In Pasadena]
Calif., during a gathering Mont
day at an American Cancer
Society forum.
J
"It's not a panacea ... it'd
highly experimental," he cau]
tloned. "But In a disease that
heretofore has been entlreljj
fatal, there's finally some hope
for these people."

R EALTY
TR AN SFER S
ASF Inc to Sprlnglleld Prop Inc a, Michael
•S Zamora 1 WF Gayle D , l t 17 Th# Estate*
A l Spring* Landing, US.fOO
Hacker Horn** Inc to Chart** W Barry J r A
WF Connl* L. U 13 Northrldg*. *143,300
Doug DaLamoa A WF Bavarly to John S
Kraut A WF Tina M. land In Sac 15-11-32,
1109,*00
Hadrlck Conttr to Joseph J Da Rota A WF
Rotamary J, Lt 40 Blk B Sweetwater Oak*
Sac II, *340,000
Thl Hay Harmon to Kannath S Witnltki A
WF Em ily Y, Lt 14 Blk □ Tanglawood Sac 3
rap I, *30,000
CCI Prop to Carl E Willingham A WF Tarry

tl i m

n .i^

'tanona

^ R in P R B W n J r * w p Batty la Thorp#*-E"
Knickerbocker, Lt • It** EJ’ of I 41.03'
Dorrallt/d, 1100,000
Lawrence Knott A WF Mary to W Richard
Hall A WF Nancy, Lt 17 Sant Soucl, *71,500
John F Nagle* A WF Mary to Erwin
Hammarllng A WF Martha, Lt 7 Alexander
Place, 144,900
Amar Pioneer Sav Bk to David S Shield*.
Bldg 10 Un 135 A Waklva Villa* Cond, *57,300
Ryan Home* Inc to Mark S Glnda A WF
Tarry L, Lt 10 Garden Grove, (11,100
Itala Sllvattrl Inc Ltd to Shabblr Khan A
WF Nuraan, Un 107 Bldg 100 Altamonte
Village I, Cond *30.000
Itala Sllvattrl Inc Ltd to Shabblr Khan A
WF Nuraan, Un 101 Bldg 100 Altamonte
Village I, Cond*30,000
Itala Sllvattrl Inc Ltd to Shabblr Khan A
WF Nuraan, Un *11 Bldg 100 Altamonte
Village I. Cond *30.000
Loretta P Trafford A Carolyn T Power* to
A lllw n Dav A Conttr Corp, Bag NE corot Blk
B Meredith Manor Edgawood Sac. *47,300
Garnay F Bohannon Sr A WF Balt* to A A
B Rooting Co Inc. land In Sac 4 10-31, *300,000
Heathrow Land A Dav to Strautt Heathrow
Attoc Ltd. land In Sac 11-20-19, *1,333,000
J ttc K E Hall A HB Frank to S 5l*v*
Frailer, truttaa, Lt* &lt; A 9 Foratt Curve
Hornet, 1330.000
Madeline Ranti to Michael J Ranti A WF
Julia L. Lt 17 Blk B, San Sabatllan HI*. Un I,
**3,000
Feather Edge Jt Ventura to Linda J
Gonial#*, Un 3A Feather Edge Cond Ph II,

i

(15.100

Magnolia Svc Corp to Wad# W eil A WF
Barbara, Lt 3 Sabal Gian Al Sahel P o in t,.
(140,000
Sud* Inc to Steven B Black A WF Dawn, LI
12 H a iti Gian. (11.500
John W M o rrlii A WF Sheryl lo Stephan G
Staarman A
* WF Mary
"
*
S, Lt 13 Blk C
Sweetwater Oake Sac 3, (150.000
Charles Saguln A WF Batty to Hubert R
Earley, Lt 44 A Wl* of 44 Watt*' Farm,
*3*3.000
Suda Inc to D am n J Sander* A WF Kim,
Lt 31 H a iti Gian, (44,700
Larry W Nation, tr, to Michael J Gordon A
WF Jar I, Lt 15 Eaet Camden, *90,000
FRC Inc to Ratandra A Mehta A WF
Kaumdlnl, LI 115 Tlberen Hill*. Ph 3. It 13.700
Thanna Kulath to Paula L Cobaan, Lt 10 A
E70' ol S 15' ol 5 Blk E, rev plat Markham
Park Hie. *43.000
Kannath J Gabon A WF Llnnaa to T
Edgar ton Clarke, Lt 1*4 Woodcrett Un 5.
*71,000
Joseph Etpoelto A Clara to Kurt J Prunty A
William N Prunty A WF Batty J. Lt 35 A W
41‘ ol Lt 14. Blk O, Watt Altamonte Hte Sac 1,
*73.300
Joaaph E Kemmerer J r A WF Rot* lo
Janie* H Falk, E W ol W 433.7' ol N 231' ol
Lt 79 M cN eill Orange Villa, 144.000
Gregory A Johnson A WF Cynthia to Phillip
A Harvey A WP Pamela. Lt 101 Greenwood
Lake* Un3.tn.000
Paul J Delia Jr A WP Dianna lo Syad
Mu|a*b A Qwdrl A WF Jowalrd. Lt 32 Blk B
Spring Vally Farm* Sac 3.3130.000
Walter Steal# Etc Co rapr E tt L Burk*
Steal* lo W illia m E Mayhood A WF
Geraldine, Lt* 1 A 2 Blk 4 Tier 7, E R
Trafford* Map of Sant. *30.000
Wlngllald Dav to Jack L Schlrer A WF W
Ranee. Lt *1 Wingfield Reserve Ph III,
*43.000
Jamae H itle r A WF Shirley to Gordon F
Von G rail A WF Judy, Lt 40 Grove E tli.
1*4.300
Arthur V Kallar A WF Patricia to William
F Prater. Lt 71 Davoneh Ire. *110.000
Dannli M Kinney A WF Pamela M to
Michael Gabald*. Lt • Blk Q Th* Woodlandi
Seel. 144.900
Ram Conttr to Harman A Crux A WF Karan
M. LI 17Tuecawllla Un I4A. (139.000
Sheldon A A Janet Walnstaln lo Jamaica
Plain Attoc, Ir, Lt 144 Dear Run Un 2, (#0.300
Sheldon A Janet Walnstaln to E u a c Atiolc,
tr, LI 13Cedar Ridge U n i, *41.000
Mary Fltchar te Gaylord S Yagga A WF
Martha. Lt 2 A E7' of 1 Underoak*, *94,100
Marjorie Hughe* to Toy* G Davit, Lt 45A
Branch Tree, *44.900
Cal Ion Home* to John M Bray A WF Sarah
C. Lt 94 Th* Trails A l Country Creak, (79.000
Waklva Retarv* Ltd to Jonathan A Hall, Lt
71 Waklva Reserve Un 1.149,300

In O ra n g e a n d S e m in o le C o u n tie s , c a ll 6 2 8 - L O A N (5 6 2 6 ).
/nuns! un Lulu k ru n j K |IH,|
uufidjvirki/ufuf Ivlh, [tin fwur jv k . u/ttt.’ kmnr/fu» l&gt;» unliol i»fmntfnmti.»ouW rtkki willU JtxbiUbJt Ofjtt^^ltnunly k&gt;H&lt;mr
Luinsut Linn kfki S V/I44I
lirnisjki/rinkjo ■mJ.'mniwiJli'if in f t* k ii
AwkJkrit hik Junjn f* „’ 5
uf tkinluin ( Imkium
. i n J / i J u,
t»tn, i|fifk,n« ryuit&gt; hruiuf SJS.IMtt t IVjf7&amp;irni It

Inodw
Jiikjiur fntfjiru. i^Jtt
f ‘t»kiu. Inc ASli.,mrfl K .n li.in mtmhtttcf FO fC

�r
T*****“«M**\i**

S a n fo rd H e
(USPS W - M )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

Tuasday, March 24, 1967—4A
Wayne 0. Doyle, Publisher
Themes Giordano, Manaf Ing Editor
Matvin Adkins, Advertisln* Director
Home Delivery: Month. 04.75; 3 Months, 014.25:6 Months,*
027.00; Year. 051.00. By Mall: Month. 06.75: 3 Months.
020.25; 6 Months. 037.00; Year. 069.00.

Oil Conservation
Efforts Needed
Americans are heedlessly throwing energy
conservation to the wind, despite an alarming
Increase In this country's dependence on
foreign oil. If present trends continue, it is
only a matter of time until the United States
finds Itself back at the m ercy of the
O rg a n iz a tio n o f P e tro le u m E x p o rtin g
Countries. At stake will be not only the
Am erican economy but the stability of
Western Europe, Japan and the rest of the
oil-consuming world, including such Third
World debtor nations as Brazil.
The twin trends of rising Imports and
declining domestic production are acting like
pincers to drive the United States back Into
OPEC's grip.
On the production side, American petro­
leum output fell by 3 percent last year, and is
expected to drop by about 4.5 percent this
year. Due to bottom-basement oil prices on
the world market, about three-quarters of all
U.S. drilling rigs are standing idle. Only 800
domestic rigs are pumping today, compared
yith 4,530 In 1981 when crude-oil prices
peaked at $34 a barrel. In many cases, rigs
4re being dismantled for scrap.
] Even more ominous for the long term Is the
dramatic drop-off In domestic exploration,
fc-aat year, American investment in new
production fell by more than half. Costly
dxploration Is highly unprofitable at today's
price of about $18 a barrel. Middle East
producers can generate new oil for as little as
$1 per barrel. According to industry analysts.
U.S. producers require a floor of $22 a barrel
to assure healthy profits. President Reagan's
n ew n atio n al secu rity a d v ise r. F ran k
Carluccl, is so concerned about the weakened
condition of the U.S. petroleum industry that
be has begun an analysis of the potential
dangers for America's security posture.
• While production has been declining,
lean consumption has been rising — by about
$.5 percent per year. Consequently, Imports
last year grew by 28 percent. The United
States now relies on foreign sources for 38
rcent o f its supplies.
The current worldwide oil glut may contue to depress prices well Into the 1990s,
ereby lulling AWgfigDflB‘lfff5Tih' Increasingdangerous false sense of security. By the
me U.S. dependence on OPEC becomes
Virtually irreversible, the oil cartel will have
regained the dominance it held during the
early 1970s, when it was able to boost prices
almost arbitrarily.
h The United States is far from powerless to
Evert economic ruin, provided we appreciate
today’s warning signs. Perhaps the most
effective defenses against OPEC's revitaliza­
tion is energy conservation, which is out of
vogue now, even though It was largely
tosponstble for the collapse of the cartel's
"Effectiveness.
A proposal by ah administration task force
leaded by Vice President Bush to abolish
fuel-efficiency standards is unwise. A bill in
ngress to boost the efficiency standards of
and electrical appliances also is opposed
the White House even though it would
jfletd enormous energy savings needed as a
edge against OPEC's comeback. And the
levelopment of alternative energy sources by
leans of
federally financed deihonstration
projects would provide further insurance
Against the day when petroleum prices start
to take off.
* There is a broad agreement among industry
eperts that the days of cheap oil must come
an end. The real question to be answered,
lerefore, is whether the United States will
(nore today's portents and be caught
ipplng again.

!

z

YS WORLD

"

g e o r g e McGo v er n

Diversion Of Funds: Who Ripped Off Whom?
"I didn't know about any diversion of funds to
the contras." President Ronald Reagan told the
nation In his recent address on the IranNlcaragua affair.
If ever a presidential claim stretches credibili­
ty, this one does.
It Is not surprising that the committees
looking Into administration activities associated
with the arms sales to Iran and diversion of
proceeds Is not accepting Mr. Reagan's state­
ment as final truth.
For two years, following the cutolT of funds to
the contras by Congress, the president openly
encouraged private citizens, aides and others at
home and abroad to get around the congressio­
nal ban by offering aid to what he called "the
freedom fighters."
Thanking some of those who responded to his
plea for an end run around Congress, the
president permitted himself to be photographed
wearing a T-shirt Inscribed, "I'm a contra too."

private citizens and groups, retired military
officers, foreign governments and international
arms dealers In supplying aid to the contras.
Article Two o f the Constitution says that the
president shall take care that the laws "be
faithfully executed ...." A president acting In the
spirit, tf not the letter, of the Constitution could
not have reacted to the congressional ban on
arms for the Nicaraguan rebels by publicly
encouraging and praising efforts to defeat the
law of the land.
It Is possible that Mr. Reagan did not know his
aides were diverting funds from the Iranian
arms sales to Nicaragua.
If so. It Is one of the most amazing Instances of
presidential Ignorance In American history. But
a crucial point Is that even If the president were
Ignorant of this operation, as he claims, he
deliberately set the tone that led Adm. Poindex­
ter. Lt.Col. North and others to arrange the
contra diversion plan.

It may not have been a technical violation of
the law for the president to urge these private
contributions against the will of Congress, but It
was a violation of the spirit of the law. The
president certainly knew that his aide Lt. Col.
Oliver North was coordinating a network of

There can be no doubt that such a diversion
was In clear violation of the law and an illegal
expense for the U.S. taxpayer.
After approving the arms sales to Iran, the
president was under legal obligation tp Inform
Congress of his decision. The president broke

the law In withholding this information from
A lf of this makes It easier to understand why
Mr Reagan's aides decided that they too would
break the law by sending funds belonging to the
American people to Nicaragua, even though

Patrick Buchanan
publicly exulted over the fact that nta Whltc
House colleagues had "ripped off the Ayatollah"
by using his money to help the contras. But
Buchanan, aside from Ignoring the lawbreaking
involved, was confused as to who was ripped off.
The arms sold to the Ayatollah had been paid
for by American taxpayers. Proceeds from the
sale of this American property belonged to the
A m e r i c a n people — not the contras.
Beyond this. It is far from certain that all the
arms-sale money went to the contras.
The Tower Commission gave us a brief look
into these matters, but there are still more
questions than answers. The Independent pro­
secutor and House and Senate committees have
their work cut out for them.
If the dark cloud now hanging over the U.S.
government Is to be cleared away. Congress, the
press and the public must move forward with a
painstaking Investigation for months to come.

ANTHONY HARRIGAN

SCIENCE WORLD

Foreign
Oil Not
'Cheap'

Booster
Firings
Planned

WASHINGTON - Suppose that
Nazi Germany had offered to sell
Great Britain fighter aircraft In the
1930s, at a price well below what
British firms were to sell Intercep­
tors to their own government.
Would that have been a bargain for
the British government and people?
Of course not. Britain would have
been at the mercy of the Germans
when war came In 1939.
That lesson of history Is lost on
Michael Kinsley, editor of The New
Republic, who wants the U.S. to
remain dependent bn Middle East
oil. He recommends that "W e need
to counter any OPEC production
restrictions by dumping oil on the
market from our Strategic Petro­
leum Reserve."
In the same column from The
Wall Street Journal, Mr. Kinsley
asks; "What, exactly, la wrong with
'dependency' on foreign oil?" If Mr.
Kinsley
kqoWvU's too late to
educate h im ..He ii, however, old
enough.to rftnernWr when Amerl- cans lined-up at gas stations In a
desperate state because the U.S.
was dependent on oil from the Arab
nations. The United Stations is
rapidly returning to such depen­
dency,
Given America's need for oil, and
Its growing dependency on Im­
ported oil, the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve is grossly Inadequate as an
Insurance policy. Saudi Arabia
alone, on which the U.S. will be
dependent for 70 percent of Us oil
by 1992, has the most colossal
reserves. The dumping of oil from
the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
would be a drop In the proverbial
bucket.
Mr. Kinsley can only see things In
terms of price. -He argues that the
U.S. would save vast sums of money
by depending on "cheap" imported
oil and letting the domestic oil
Industry go to the wall. He dis­
misses the national security argu­
ment for a strong domestic oil
Industry, saying that national secu­
rity "always Is the lost refuge o f the
protectionist." Fortunately, others
have a better appreciation of the
Importance of national security.
Apparently Mr. Kinsley kndws no
more about the oil Industry than he
does about national security. He
says that "It . makes sense to use
foreign oil today and hoard our own
supplies." He falls to understand
that the domestic oil IndusUry can't
be shut down, and reactivated the
minute a crisis occurs.

ROBERT WAGMAN

The Zero-Zero Plan
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The re­
cent Soviet proposal for removal o f
Interm ediate-range m issiles In
Europe Is attractive to the Reagan
administration, but accepting it
'would* raise many tough questions
about future U.S. relations with the
NATO alliance.
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's
"zero-zero plan" states that If the
United States removes its Pershlngs
and cruise missiles from Europe,
the Soviets will remove all their
SS-20a within range of Europe.
In proposing this, Gorbachev has
essentially offered the same "zero
option" Ronald Reagan brought
forward In 1981.
When the Reagan administration
first announced the zero-option
proposal, it was seen as a way of
scoring a significant publicity victo­
ry at the Soviets' expense.
The Soviets had In place more
than 100 Intermediate-range SS-20
missiles pointed at Europe. The
United States had not yet deployed
any of Its medium-range Pershlngs
or cruise missiles In Europe.
If the Soviets had pulled out their
SS-20s. the United States would
have agreed not to deploy Its
Interm ediate-range m is s ile s 'in
Europe.
It was an offer everyone knew the
Soviets could not possibly agree to.
Now the Soviets are turning the
tables. Why? Because there are now
reasons for the United States to
think twice about the offer.
Our European allies Initially
approved booing of U.S. Intermedi­
ate-range missiles on their soil at
significant political cost and amid
great internal strife. Most of our
allies, especially the British and

By William Harwood
UP1 Science Writer
HUNTSVILLE. Ala. (UPI) - Fullsize shuttle booster firings are about,
to begin but a smaller-scale project,
at the Marshall Space Flight Center,
promises to provide the beat data on
the tremendous forces the rockets
experience at launch.
The "transient pressure test aril-’
cle," or TPTA In NASA Jargon, will
become operational this summer for
a scries of key tests that will go a
long way toward verifying the
operation of the rockets' redesigned,
fuel segment Joints.
"O ne of the things that the
presidential commission told us to
do Is make sure we tested these;
things dynamically and we tested
them so as to simulate the flight,
conditions as well as we could,"
said veteran shuttle commander
Robert "Hoot Gibson. "That's our

Dutch, were able to win domestic
approval only by Insisting the
missiles were critical to their .own,
• b e s t'* * * .* ’ national survival.
It was a booster,Joint,failure that!
To agree to their removal so soon doomed Challenger last year and
id $
after installation — and under a
shuttle (lights arc to resume carl;
plan that was actually on the table
arlyj
next year as planned, the new Joints'
lints'
In 1981 — would be to admit that
will have to pass a battery of tests
the missiles' Importance had been
drastically overstated and that the
designed to weed out any deficien­
cies.
anti-nuclear movements In those
Before the next shuttle flight, five
countries were right all along.
full-scale booster test firings are
This would have serious internal
planned at the Morton Thlokol Inc.
political repercuulons In several
plant In Brigham City. Utah, with
countries, especially Britain, where
the first on tap for mid-May.
nuclear policy Is a key Issue In
Margaret Thatcher's upcoming reBut in those tests, the rockets will
election effort.
be fired In a horizontal position.,
w h ich n e c e s s a rily a lters the
The measure is also raising sever­
behavior of the 14-story boosters,
al thorny Issues within NATO.
preventing engineers from com­
A number of our closest NATO
pletely "m odeling" the environment
allies, Including Britain, are in­
experien ced ■during a vertical
volved In sharp Internal debates
over whether they should upgrade
launch.
In the TPTA. two booster seg­
and modernize their own nuclear
ments will be Joined and mounted
arsenals. Those In favor of mod­
vertically In a giant test stand where
ernization seem to be winning the
a small charge of propellant will be
argument In most or the countries.
Ignited to produce the same Internal
But If the United States now
pressure Jump that would be
agrees to remove Its Intermediatecreated in a full-scale firing. It was
range missiles, and the Soviets’
during this "pressure transient"
SS-20s are pulled back, the debate
could easily swing in favor of the
that Challenger's faulty Joint was
sizable anti-nuclear contingent
compromised.
"W e'll fire a small Igniter with
within the Western alliance.
Just enough propellant In It to give
Then, too. there is the Issue of
"coupling."
us the pressure surge that It would
see In a normal motor firing," said
At the heart of the NATO alliance
James Odom, director of science
Is the linkage of Europe's defense to
America's nuclear might — most of
and engineering at the Marshall
which Is an ocean away or under
center.
the sea In submarines. The United
"What we’re really trying to do Is
States has never been willing to
literally put the Joints through the
separate the Issue of Europeanworst conditions in that configura­
based missiles from the broader
tion that any of the Joints ever see at
Issue of overall nuclear power.
the launch site." Odom said.

JACK ANDERSON

G ets A Low-Interest Loan

if if !

0

"... And, comrada. what If this new oponnass
turns us ail into YUPPIES?"

L»,L l

1J— spkEpsar
W A S H IN G T O N - D espite a
"m eans test" for assistance to
borrowers, the Small Business Ad­
ministration gave a company owned
by the family of an affluent busi­
nessman — a Rockefeller, no leas —
a low-interest loan subsidized by the
taxpayers.
Godfrey A. Rockefeller, president
o f Acosta Groves, the family citrus
business In Florida, signed for a
$231,000 loan from the SBA at 4
percent, the lowest interest rate the
agency charges. When our reporter
Lisa Sylvester asked Rockefeller, a
distant rela tive o f world-class
banker David Rockefeller. If the
company had been unable to get a
bank loan, he replied, "Frankly, we
didn’t try."
The 10-year subsidized loan was
obtained In December 1984 to ball
the Rockefeller citrus grove out of
hard times stemming from the 1983
Florida freeze.
Rockefeller lives In the exclusive

Maryland community of Gibaon
Island, on the Chesapeake Bay near
Annapolis, where guards man the
gates to keep out all but residents
and Invited guests. We reached him
In the resort area of Del Ray. Fla.,
where he was vacationing and
entertaining friends.
Rockefeller readily acknowledged
that he had obtained the disasterrelief loan, but said: “ We abided by
all the rules and regulations in
applying for the loan."
He was absolutely correct. Here's
how the SBA rules and regulations
allowed a Rockefeller-owned busi­
ness to qualify for a loan Intended
for the needy:
A Small Business Administration
official said the agency — which no
longer lends money to farmers —
subjects loan applicants to a "credIt-etsewhere test" that la supposed
to keep "fa t cats from taking
advantage of the government."
The official, who Insisted on
anonymity, said he would have a
hard time explaining the credit-

elsewhere test In laymen's terms,
because "I don't speak laymen's
terms."
The complex test involves cash
flow, existing debts and the effect a
higher-interest loan would have on
the prospective borrower’s busi­
ness. But despite Its name, the test
has nothing to do with the appli­
cant's actual ability to find credit
elsewhere, as was demonstrated in
the case of Rockefeller, who didn't
even try.
Bob Alexander, the SBA's Atlanta
area counsel, said the creditelsewhere test was Implemented In
the early 1980s In hopes of en­
couraging borrowers who could
afford It to get their funds from
rivate lenders. He acknowledged,
owever. that there Is no require­
ment that applicants try the private
sector before seeking a governm en t-su b sld lzed loan.
In defense o f the SB A's loan
methods, Alexander said, "There,
are 10,000 things you have to go
through, and the requirements are

B

more stringent than a bank's.
A couple of other citrus I
with SBA loans agreed that 1
process Is painful, like plcklr
way through a barbed-wl
tanglement.
David Bailes, whose now
father, Harry, got a couple
disaster-aid loans In 1984, s
family "had to mortgage
thing," including his grandm
house, to get the loans. Ball
the family citrus grove 1
struggling to recover from th
freeze, and said: " A lot of
applied for the loans and dk
them. Many people were af
mortgage their homes."
Another citrus grower. WU
Keeblcr. said an Important
many farmers didn't get loa
because theydldn'lhave " i t
In their office" who could flgi
how to meet the credlt-ela
test. Keebler said he m
through the SBA maze beca
employee had a master's de
business administraion.

�COMING EVENTS Engine Test Expected To Delay Shuttle Flight
Losing Extra Wolght
Sensibly Is Group's Goal
TORS Chapter 79. 6:15-8:15 p.m., Howell Place. 200 W.
Airport Boulevard, Sanford.

A A Groups To Moot
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 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 A ve„ 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.

Toastmasters Gather A t SCC
T o a s tm a s te r In te rn a tio n a l C lu b In the Lak e
Mary/Longwood area at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Seminole
Community College. For additional Information call Rosella
and Tom Bonham. 323-8284.

Ovoroators Support Group
Overeaters Anonymous, open to the public, will meet at
7:30 p.m., Tuesday at the Florida Power &amp; Light, 301 S.
Myrtle Ave., Sanford.

Rotary Clubs To Moot
Rotary meetings on Wednesday Include:
• Casselberry Rotary breakfast, which meets at 7:30
a.m., at the Casselberry Senior Center, 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive
• Sanford Rotary-Breakfast Club, which meets at 7 a.m..
In the Skyport Restaurant at the Sanford Airport.

Optimists Hold Mootings
Wednesday Optimist Club meetings Include:
• Sanford Optimist Club, 11:45 a.m.. Western Slzzlin
Restaurant, Sanford.
• Optimist Club o f Semoran, 6 p.m., Quincy's
Steakhou se, L ive Oaks C enter, H igh w ay 17-92,
Casselberry.

Klwanls Lunchoon Slatod
Sanford Klwanls Club will meet at noon. Wednesday at
Sanford Civic Center.

Blood Bank Hours Sot
Central Florida Blood Bank Seminole County Branch,
1302 E. Second St.. Sanford, is open for donors
Wednesdays from B a.m.-S p.m., and Florida Hospital*
Altamonte, State Road 436, 11 a.m.-7 p.m.; Longwood
Branch. South Seminole Community Hospital, Suite
103-A. 521 W. State Road 434.

Tako OH Pounds
TOPS Chapter FL-491 (weight loss) will meet from 6:30
to 8 p.m., Wednesday, at the Salvation Army, 700 W. 24th
St., Sanford. Open to the public.

Danco For Sonlor Cltlzons
Sanford Serenade™ Dance for seniors will be held
2:30-4:30 p.m., Wednesday; at the Sanford Civic Center.
Free admission with live band.

Now Mooting Placo
The Greater Seminole Club of the International Training
in Communications, which formerly met at Altamonte
Community Church, now meets at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday
at Watson's Realty, 1405 State Road 434. Longwood.
Meetings are held on the second and fourth Thursday of
each month.

Audubon To Soo Film
Seminole Chapter o f Florida Audubon will meet at 2 p.m.
Thursday, March 26 in the Sunshine Room of Florida
Power A Light Co.. N. Myrtle Ave., Sanford. Film narrated
by Robert Redford, Endangered Species. will be shown.
Open to public.

FLORDA
IN BRIEF
Tax Panol Chairman Fllos
Local Option Salos Tax Bill
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - The head of the Senate tax
committee has (Ued legislation to enact the one penny local
option sales tax proposed by Gov. Bob Martinez.
The legislation, part of a package of tax reform for local
governments, would raise as much as $1.5 billion for local
building projects if each of Florida's 67 counties adopts the
full 1-cent increase, Tim Deratany said Monday.
Deratany, R-Indlalantic. chairman of the Senate Finance
and Tax Committee, said the amount could be less,
depending on which exemptions to the. sales tax are
repealed by the Legislature this year. Local voters would
have to approve the Increase, and the counties would have
to share the proceeds with the cities. The proceeds would
be targeted to specific road, sewer, stormwater or other
capital projects.
Martinez proposed a 1-cent local option sales tax when
he released his $17.9 billion state budget.

Suporeollldor Sltos Consldorod
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Members of a state task force
may have to weigh Charlotte County's hydrology against
Florida State University's physicists when they pick a
potential site for the world's largest supercollider.
The Superconducting Supercollider Task Force will send
its recommendation on a proposed Florida site for the $6
billion super high-tech installation to Gov. Bob Martinez
next Monday. If Martinez agrees, the selected area would
become the centerpiece of a site application that could
bring the state 2.000 new Jobs, an annual budget o f $250
million and a construction budget of $4 billion to $6 billion.
Selecting a site is the first step in Florida's attempt to
bring the supercollider, the largest facility of Its kind ever
built, to the Sunshine State. The federal Department of
Energy will select a state to house the huge scientific
installation early in 1989.
' Once completed, the supercollider will test the basic
makeup of all matter by sending single atoms of matter
rocketing around the 52-mlle circular pipeline that will
make up the supercollider. Scientists will use supercom­
puters to record what happens when those atoms collide
with other atoms.

S

CAPE CANAVERAL (UPU Space agency managers arc
expected lu approve a launch
pad test firing of the shuttle
Discovery's main engines before
It Is cleared for blastoff next
year, a test that would delay the
crucial flight at least a month.
NASA sources say.
D is c o v e r y t e n t a t iv e ly is
scheduled to make the first
post-Chalienger launch Feb. 18.
1988, but most NASA managers
believe that date will be Im­
possible to meet whether the
engines are test fired or not
because of a heavy workload
required to Implement design
ch a n ges p rom p ted by the
Challenger accident.
But until NASA managers
have a better idea of when
Discovery can. In fact, be laun­
ched they feel they must stick
with the advertised date.
Chief astronaut John Young
said In a published report last
week the proposed launch date
will be Impossible to meet — "It
sure ain't going to happen In
February, that's for sure" —
simply because of the sheer
amount of work that must be
done to Implemenl required de­
sign modifications.
While an official decision has
not been made, sources said
approval of a "flight readiness
firing," or FRF. is expected and
It could be the first formal sign
that NASA will be unable to
make the target launch date.
In an FRF, the shuttle Is '
hauled to the launch pad and Its
three liquid-fueled main engines
fired up for 20 seconds or so to
verify performance of the overall
vehicle. Because the engines
must be Inspected after any
firing. Discovery's launch would
be delayed four to six weeks at
least.
"W e re In favor of an FRF."
said veteran shuttle commander
Robert "H o o t" Gibson In a
recent Interview. "W e think that
would be a very prudent thing to
do. It's been a long time since
we've fired any engines (In a
shuttle) and Discovery has been
sitting around for quite a while."
An agency source at the Ken­
nedy Space Center said director
Forrest McCartney has ordered
engineers to begin planning for
the test as a contingency and
another source at the Johnson
Space Center in Houston said
preliminary plans for engineer­
ing television coverage of the
firing are In work.
"It’s going to happen," said a
top engineer whb asked not to be
identified. "It’ll make everybody
feel more comfortable.''
In the past, an FRF wbb
conducted before each shuttle's
maiden flight. The test Is carried
out by remote control and no
astronauts are on board.
Ironically. Joseph Lombardo,
main engine project manager at
the Marshall Space Flight Center
In Huntsville, Ala., said his office
has no requirement for an FRF
because each engine will be
thoroughly tested before In­
stallation on Discovery.
But the test would help shuttle
booster engineers verify the per­
formance of redesigned fuelsegment' Joints us well as the
performance of the overall shut­
tle vehicle.
During a real launch, the main

W o think that (tha
angina fast) would ba
a vary prudant thing
to do, It't baan a
long tlma tinea we’va
flrad any anglnat and
Dlteovary hat baan
tiffing around for
qulta a whlla
-Astronaut “Hoot" Gibson
engines are fired about six sec­
onds before the boosters Ignite.
Because the engines are ofTset
from the shuttle's vertical axis,
their thrust bends the vehicle
forward while It remains on the
launch pad.
The tip of the external fuel
tank, for example, moves more
than 2 feet before rebounding to
vertical, at which time the
boosters arc fired to begin the
flight.
This bending Is known as
"tw ang" and It puls tremendous
stress on the lower fuel-segment
J o in t s In e a c h b o o s t e r .
Challenger was destroyed by a
Joint failure.
Gibson said Morton Thlokol
Inc., builder of the big rockets, at
one point recommended an FRF
with dummy boosters, which
could be more extensively In­
strumented than actual flight

c

321 29 57

IM IA j

■ ■ M

S S

NEW YORK (UPI) - Former
Secretary of State Alexander
Haig Jr.. Jumped the gun today
and announced he was a Re­
publican candidate for president
on national television, more than
an hour before his official an­
nouncement news conference.
Asked by NBC's Jane Pauley,
"Can we make it official? Are
you a candidate?" Haig replied,
"Yes. I am. Jane. You can do
that."
Haig. 62. termed his an­
nouncement "both momentous

and frightening and a little
Intimidating because 1 don't
know any more honorable en­
deavor for any American."
The longtime military mad
promptly distanced himself from
the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal
that has shaken the Reagan
administration.
Haig resigned from the Reagan
administration In 1982 after a
stormy 18 months as secretary
of state.
"O f course It's uphill." Haig
said of his candidacy.

Cook Of The Week
T M c h a r M o k « A O n P I . C n ir t . C
O n B is c u its A n d E F o r K P E ffo r ts

E x p e r t : Im a g in a tio n Is
_
T h e O n ly Lim it W h e n Y o u r e
C o o k in g W ith I c e C r e a m

February
Is Canned
Food Month

(Aiimiut tstifii

$5 00

" B

Haig Announces
Presidential Bid

People Section

DOC OR CAT

.

new Joint design. Even so. "It's
my guess we'll probably do
one.
"W e will have strain gauges on
the vehicle so If we do a flight
r e a d in e s s fir in g w e 'll be
measuring the response of the
vehicle through the twang," he
said. " I suspect we're going to do
It."
As for the launch date, most
engineers believe summer 1988
Is a more accurate target for
Discovery's flight and Gibson
stressed there Is nothing maglO
about the Feb. 18. 1988 target. "Our Iqput Is we need to
launch It’ right more than w$
need to launch It quicker." h*said.

The Sanford Herald is being read by more and more
people everyday. Here’s just one of the many
reasons —

G R O O M IN G
DENA S PETS k

hardware.
"They wanted to make an FRF
mandatory' for first flight and
they actually wanted an FRF on
dummy solid rocket boosters,"
he said. "I don't think anybody
is going to want to commit to
that. That would be a major
schedule Impact.
"I think we would get a lot of
good data out of an FRF using
the actual boosters, so It's a good
Idea for them and we feel It's a
good Idea Just for the overall
program."
Gerald Smith, manager of the
b o o s te r p r o je c t o f f i c e at
Marshall, said In an interview In
Huntsville that he believes other
teats will more than validate the

1

J

(Only) J

I 100 N. MAPLE AVE., SANFORD I
i
I Blockon Harr I7M C B.R. 4B
v

| 322-1289"^7321-36051

3 2 2 -9 4 3 0

ALASK A

t iS

, 1 .0 ,1 ' W « U io , f o o t ' lo o k To H o *o li

*1*4 &lt;
j«
** , \
.
. .• Mr S ■
i
J ,L,| itkitehl 1* UMMte
Itw «

‘
•; •

* .r,. v .

i —- •

m T k J.

UZItMIt 4«»
*y-’teW**-*»*•’'*■

. ....

I.t |hM*M t -'&lt;#-**' **
.Tin(te~dfc
*'11

■

Everyday you’ll read the latest news in our community. Just a few
o f the articles you'll And in the Sanford Herald's people section are
- Dear Abby, Cook o f the Week, Recipes, Wedding and Birth A n ­
nouncements, Video Beat, Movie Ratings and many more.
Subscribe today to keep up with what's going on around you.

Call 322-2611 to start your subscription today!

S a n f o r d H e r a ld
"Your local newspaper since 1908”
300 North French Ave.
Wtetef Wn S BM . Winter Tart

6 7 1 -5 2 5 3

Sanford, Florida

|

�4A Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI

J im

Business

Tuasday, March 24, 1W7

A L L S M A LL CAR PARTS

^

R e v ie w

W AN T REAL IM PO RTED C A R PARTS f

Lash’s
B lu e B

callu s—
____ *
^M B^.

* SALES: SS

321-0741
13 0 4 6 11
HWY. 17-92

* SERVICE:

* RENTALS:

- ’W.-NCWS
iOM «l
V * mV»i * V

SANFORD

3 2 3 -7 2 0 0

WS CARRYTHSARAL TJitoO—
saowi so PASTS MAM OVCSSSAS
WHOMTNI CASS ASSMAM.
THISMMT QUALITYAMOTHi SMHT
PTTTOUSSRYOUSCASPHUOSMWIQ
AT ITSMST. ATTNIWONTPMCf
S1MOSLANOCOS—(ITW)
ATTNUMTSAMCSTOR-MASTPLAU

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

Cote 322-2611 Kami

Herald Advertiser

PUT rO O R BUSINESS O N THE M OVE •
A D V E R T IS IN G

ADVERTISING

ADVERTISING

NAME BRAND FU R N ITU R E FOR L E S S
ON ALL IN STOCK

G .E . D I S H W A S H E R S
Mt*«&lt; -tot) ectlon, 3 war sound
control. IO?e*r warrantr on PormaM tub
S door linar
_

LARRY SAMPSON'S
DISCOUNT FURNITURE WAREHOUSE

p
T m lfK s r n
ft *
1
r\
" " l

1401 S. H W Y . 17-72
(305) 322-4452 • S A N F O R D

hi

F R E E LA Y -A -W A Y

FREE LOCAL
DELIVERY
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
PH. 322-3883

B

UP TO 34 MOS. FINANCING
MON. SAT. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
SUN. NOON • 4 p.m.

E32
«

1

•w
,-*&lt;r

y

*

1

J L S U L S L U J L a J L a . a g.TJLLEJLg.

? DAY
V V 9G D
POLLY’S
PET

SALON

mm ort* at *nr locatm
2640 HIAWATHA AVE.
SANFORD

TLC QROOMINQ lor all tin
dog*...teacup lo QtmI Danas
ALSO SPECIALIZING IN
LONG A SHONT HAIR CATS
O I T A MON T1IKU S A T

ALL BREEDS
REASONABLE PRICES
T r r r s ir r r r m m x r r in r T Y r ir r r in r r r r r r r W '

M N T C A M

- C o lo r

O NLY | I I . H

(Meat Exclude Soacian, Cara)

Windshield Strips ssoo Eitra

SMALL TR U C K S .................................. $45.00
LARGE TR U C K S....................... $55.00
V A N S ......................................Start at $65.00

A ll Sm all Car Parts staff, from left, Ed Stoveken, Kathy Thompson, Mary
Ann Davis and owners, Randy and Sue Thompson.

.

SAVE AT
M a c T A V I S H

C u rls - P e rm s - C u ts

D IS C O U N T C A R P E T
203 M A G N O L I A A V E S A N F O R D
PH 322-4694

OUT OF THE HIGH RENT
AREAS
l It y U S . . . . Y O U

Professional
Car Care
»w - M a ir a &gt;

r

3 2 3 -7 2 7 2 ^

’I f you can Beat our Price A Qumlitjr
E g g s « ro u Got a good DemT’S m m m

W IL .L L O V E U O

rcoNoutcu

fam iiy m i * cam

Custom Rsflnlshing
And Rapalrs
• Furniture Stripping
• in Homo Touch-Ups
• Insurance And
Moving Claims
•

LOfffRE OAUWITZ

WOULDLIKETOWELCOME
AIL or HERCLIENTSTOTIIE
AREASMOST PRESTIGIOUS
FULL SERVICEFAMILY HAIR
CARESALON.

(305) 322-7496

All Small war Parts
Sanford's Own Imported Auto Parts Store
All Small Car Parts, located at the Highway
17-92 entrance of Kmart Plaza. Sanford,
specializes In parts for imported and small
domestic cars.
They carry original equipment quality parts
imported from the countries where the cars arc
madcr All Small Car Parts Is the authorized
distributor of Vera Imported Parts. Imported
directly from 300 overseas manufacturers.
The store is owned and operated by Kandy and
Sue Thompson. They arc assisted by their
daughter. Kathy. Ed Stoveken and Mary Ann
Davis.
Randy first came to Sanford 20 years ago with
the U.S. Navy. After getting married to a local
girl. Ihe former Sue Davidson. Sanford became
his home for good. Upon his return to civilian life.

K A R E N 'S
INTER
IO R S
AT NIX BEDDING A UPHOLSTERY

H e n d r ix
A n t iq u e s &amp;
F u r n it u r e R e f in is h in g

• DRAPERIES A BEDSPREADS
• ALL STYLE BLINDS
• SLIP COVERS
Custom Work fly Karen Carter

A 26 yrs. experience
P
Dial

J T

3 6 5 -3 7 4 0

323-2494
I P rE
*

V O LKSH O P

v

I iS

d a y o r n ig h t

Free estimates, pick-up 6 delivery

Say “ I Love You'
. With Flowers

FREE SPINAL EVALUATION

Specializing In Servlet A Parts For
V.W.'s, Toyota and Datsun
(Corner 2nd A Palmetto)

Kandy went back Into the auto parts business as
a manufacturer's representative specializing In
the Import parts market. Of Randy’s 16 yean
experience in the automotive aftermarket. 10
years were spent with Bosch of Germany.
Experience and resourcefulness are the key
Ingredients at All Small Car Parts. In addition to
the full coverage offered by Vera, other brand
names such as Bosch of Germany.
Experience and resourcefulness arc the key
Ingredients at All Small Car Parts. In addition to
l he full coverage offered by Vera, other brand
names such as Bosch. KYB Shocks, Lucas and
NGK spark plugs arc in stock. "Contact!
established over the years have really helped us
In meeting our customers’ needs. We art on the
phone dally to New York and California sourcing
difficult to get pans. Service Is the name of the
game, we try hard to please our customers.’’
Hours of operation are from 8 a.m. to 6 pm.
weekday and from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdiy.
Master Card and Visa are accepted, along with
approved personal checks.
Slop in soon and visit the friendly folks at All
Smull Car Parts. They are anxious lo make you
another of their satisfied customers.

In tho Middle East, a bargain Is sometimes still sasM
with salt, much at it waa a thousand yaars ago.

SIGNALS Of PMCNE0 NERVES

, V\214 $. PsbMtto Av«.
SANFORD
PHONE

W f/

\
| W ( / 'l : M

M

y

». BE \

l

■Vv'
WJkv
a s
r lK w IV ^ ^ I
W BSCyX y j N

1. F r e q u e n t H e e d e c h e e
2. L o w B a c h o r H i p P » ln

u m a a ttscaaon

tntaMNa M a te hdsn Aadpa. Fa-

acams*
Med i« rest tan

dim T«L Short Ls|T«L Shari Ana Its)
M TNI Nidi Doctor.

• Ask Mewl eul “N M Int CMraerscllc AHerdsMs" Progrsm

*TMBPAfUiirr aaeci ah*tM«wMfMitCH.
PAT CAacXiPan»iwTO«»C toiaret^us

rnmratw|i«T' **• aNMBmTTOMFljU tfl

to* AN. ui*4*u **&lt;A toadaiiuN
O
atto
tN
aaIM
oCM
WO
WflIDit » Nlouiaaioi.
kAt td*U
&gt;*•’•
*N
*,4r|iOM
hA
dfa
AcM
NhlN
M
$oitmH
IH
Pto
onN
&gt;to«M »MHXiMTO

LAKE
Vour hair never had it to
good A new updated spring
look it as close as our salon.
Slop In or call today.

VOTED BEST PSYCHIC
In Cwrtral Florid* 1984

3. Dullness or Loss ot Sloop
4 Numbness ol Hands or Foot
5 Nnrvousnaon
0 Neck Pein or Sllllnoss
7. Arm end Shoulder Pain

MARY

BLVD.

C H I R O P R A C T I C C L I N I C , INC

f I —
1

U
J

Tells you the past, present,
and future, reunites the
separated, asks no questions,
helps you find the right
employment.

HELPFUL ADVICE ON ALL PROBUMS

LOIfGWOOD

Between SR 434 G Dog Track Rd. on Hwy. 17-92
Call for appt.
I S S -T H S
8 a m - 9 pm

- J Y J ia O f f FAlmhrt Rtiding iw sin b/tskm

H a ir b iz
F A M IL Y H A IR C A R E
BOHHA FIT2I232SI

AHOY MARINE

Ph. 322-2252
2640 Hiawatha Ave.

».to20% Off

DISCOVER

Tnihrs Bp

M AM AAAM AIM AAANM M NM M

Indudn Cvl CSr»N CVIM, Onlt
FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
MARINE PRODUCT PROTECTION P U

S?EVnSfADORS

E 5 2 L m* * 5 S *
VM*r own ham#
..
• • MBrtMWrtTfFf
r r S f iZ H S ^ l
U »ta« •» CARRIAGE
^ ^ l* * 2 't * * y - W ( « # a |srd)|WiaMi milts
P1
®*- IM I* One MsMtt Mb m Cbioifvmnlfv kin

• i py&gt;T

family

availaMs.
CALL ttS-1144

,
;
I
J
jj
j
j
p
*
.
,
]

�i

i

y y

l

R e v ie w

T*

Prepared by Advtrtlilng Dept, of

rr *
^ 1fWy/

Cote 322-2611 Howl
• out

r o u » Business OH TUI M O v t

ADVERTISING

Advertiser

$5.00 Gift Certificate
Off !\ny Merchandise
Or Cinrice. wrm coupon

ADVERTISING

113 W. 2T1h St.. Sanford

490 N. 17-92

Say “ Happy Birthday
with BUZZ! • Character Balloon Delivery
• C a rd s G T re n d y G ifts

• Party Ooods &amp; Novelties
• Latex Mylar Balloons
• Bellygrams

MONKEY BUSINESS

Longwood

695-6900

The /Voir Greens House of Beauty
S p e c ia liz in g In L e is u re C u rls
_____ ALSO AVAILABLE

Carefree C u rls.........$45.00
Relaxer Retouch___$22.50
Haircut 6 Shampoo .$12.50

695-6699

S e m in o le C e n t r e * S a n f o r d

321-2 7 3 0

ANTIQUES
THE RUNCIBLE SPO O N
TEA ROOM

1050 N. MWY. 17-92
(1st Light N of 434)

Longw ood

A tS ro w ia r'ftS a ra
In Lontw ood't Historic D u trlc t
IK w ju tu » Avtnu.

260-5615

^

I a i K k Stfcind P o ll O fftt*

Lunch Served II A .M .. 2: JO P.M.

a USED

1740 N. HWY 17-92
(2nd Light N. of 434)

T M tliy ■tetvrUay
Hememade Seep. Salad. Sandwichea
Saeclaltv D tu n li
DELICIOUSLY D IFFE R E N T
II

Longwood
321-2063

C&amp;B AUTO PARTS

Glenn Owen is the latest addition to the experienced mechanical staff at
Volkshop.

SPECIAL ORDERS • DELIVERY
• OVERNIGHT AVAILABILITY

Put Your Car In The Hands
Of Volkshop Specialists
Keep your Volkswagen rolling by letting the
Volkshop In Sanford keep It In tip-top shape.
Volkshop has the know-how and experience,
They specialize In providing repairs, maintenance
and parts for VWs. Toyotas, Datsuns, Nlssans.
Hondasand Mazdas.
Located at 214 Palmetto Ave.. In Historic
Downtown Sanford. Volkshop specializes In
engine and trans-axle rebuilding. They also do oil
and lube Jobs and repairs on brakes, fronl ends,
transmissions and exhaust systems.
,
. . .
... , .
„
.
°wner Marvin Wright at 321-0120 for anappointment to have your car worked on or for a
free estimate on your particular make and model.
T&gt;«y *111 cbcc^ your car for defects without
enarge.
i "T o some dealers, It’s Just another car," said
Marvin, "but at Volkshop, we take each one
Individually. We treat our customers right, that's

why we have numucii repeal business."
Marvin and his team or experienced tcchnl
arc dedicated to keeping your vintage VW
looking and running Us best,
The latest addition to the staff Is Glenn C
who came aboard five months ago. Borr
raised In Sanford. Glenn has more than 19
experience working on Volkswagens.
.. .. ^,OUr VW 8 snowing Its age, the fo!
Volkshop can completely recondition an
fuJb sh 11 from ,hc « r™ nd UP 5«\on “ f™ct
what a new car would cost. This Includes
paint Job, new engine and brakes,
For lho9e car owners who prefer to do thel
rcpalrs&gt; Volkshop has the quality parts need
(he Job. They stock TreuritafT and Bosch ]
Continental belts and hoses and Castrol i
oils for Volkswagens. Toyotas and Datsuns.
Volkshop Is open Monday through Friday
8 u.m. to 5 p.m.

it Wc Don't Have It. We'll Get It.'
£

Personalized service
c o m b in e d w ith 30
years o f experience
make the Blair Insur­
ance Agency a solid
Insurance agency you
can depend on.
The folks at Blair
Agency, at 2510A Oak
Ave.. Sanford, regard
their clients as “ fami­
ly." They arc not Just
numbers to Steve Blair,
office manager of the
Blair Insurance
Agency, or his mother,
Genic Blair, owner and
founder of the agency.
In fact, the agency's
business philosophy is
expressed In the motto
which appears on their
letterhead — "Person­
alized service Is our
business."
W ith 18 differen t
com panies to draw
from, the Blair Agency
is able to shop around
for the beat deals,
tailored to the needs of
their customers. Steve
said.
T h e a g e n c y w as
fou n ded by B la ir's
mother. Genie Blair, In
Sanford 15 years ago
a n d s h e r e m a in s
actively involved In all
aspects o f Its operation.
Considered an expert
in the Insurance field.
Mrs. Blair was for a
lime the only woman
licensed In both real
estate and Insurance in
the stale early in her
career In Sanford.
Th e B lair Agency
•ells personal Injury
protection insurance,
but recommends liabil­
ity insurance as well.
Blair said PIP. as It is
commonly called, is
cheaper Insurance but
is "self-centered pro­
tection which provides
nothing for your fellow
man."
Liability, which he
said provides better
coverage for all con­
cerned In an accident

V

210 S. French Ave.
Sanford
321-7169

_
.f!!

$25°°

SENIOR CITIZENS (55

IC E

a

* BEER

a

I ACKl F
* WORMS

a MINNOWS a S H IN E R S
a WILD S H I N E R S

a

a GUIDE S E H V IC F

10% OFF ON BAIT
WITH COUPON

SEE

l

Older)

COMPLETE

WITH PARTICIPATING STYLIST
MUST PRESENT THIS COUPON

"Let Our Reputation Go To Your Head'

14 F «M !&gt;2
Lake M o m o o , Fla

I n la p h o n t
i I0S) I .V 0.14(

CUSTOM BUILT CABINETS
AND COUNTER TOPS
“ put

a t H fcwK O m m "

—DEFACING SPECIAUSTS—

TRI-CITY CABINETS
2303 French Avenue

323-3027

Sanford

222 HICKMAN D*.
COUPON

i C IT Y
I

B la ir Insurance A g e n c y
H as That P e rso n a l Touch

TAM M Y'S BAIT &amp; TACKLE

Com plete Line O f Auto
Perte And Acceseories

L IG H T S

Under 20’s Club
DJ Every Fri. &amp; Sat. Night

COUPON

J A Y ’S H A I R S T Y L I N G D E N
L e is u r e

Curls

TUESDAY. MARCH 24th
1/2 Price Admission
m ini
(Ladies Only With This Ad)
HWY. 17-92 SANFORD 321-7S1S

ARNOLD’S STAINED GLASS
C L A B 8 E 8 8 T A R T 8Q O N
• Custom Stained Glass Windows 6 Panels
• Stained Glass Ceilinp 6 Sidelights
• Tiffany Style Lamps • Tools A Supplies
' S NHL AM 4 PN CLASSES ISO ? ? S

'U S

Store Houn

Yy
1
£Kv.jjfij n 1

105 PM M f
101 PM SAT

STEMCMKTCUMING

43 .0 6
Carefree
Curls

37.06

\ T if c

A

M

Curls
36.00

■?§

2729 Hwy. 17-92 (Center Mill)
SANFORD
Mu«1 P u ttn l Coupon

FOUR JAYS
Land Clearing
L o ts and A cre a g e
R easonab le R a tes
^
^
C lean F ill D irt
ucamavii
P ro m p t S e rv ic e

Serving Centml Florltln Over 15 Ycnn

Phone 3 0 5 -3 2 1 -7 0 1 8

BLAIR AGENCY

4/*o Avallobl*:
• Carpel A Uphotsta/y Protector

MN*eU MAKES

SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR 22's FILED

Coupon E ip c ti S3147

GORMLY'S
For Appojntmord

ALSO INSURE MOBILE
HOMES, MOTORCYCLES
HOMES, REC-VEES
Serving Sanford lor 27 Yean

f

OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 9-5

LA K E

MARY

FLO R IST

"CALL BLAIR AND COMPARE"I

323-7710 or 323-3860
2510A OAK AVE. SANFORD,
Corntr of S. Pork Avo. t Oik

G«nie B lair, owner and founder of B la ir Insurance
Agency/ and her son, Steve/ office manager.
situation, is made more
affordable at the Blair
Agency.
Blair said he ulso
specializes In helping
drivers who have Irouble gelling insurance
due lo too many tickets
or accidents.
"Let me have all the
bad drivers In San­
ford." he says. "I will
help them out."
But d riv e rs w ith

lough records aren't

•he only ones who will
b e n e fit from B la ir
A g e n c y s e r v ic e s ,
Drivers with clean records will also like the
s e r v i c e s a n d t he
savings they find at the
Blair Agency. Blair
said.
They will like dealing
with the Blair Agency
stuff, which Is trained
and educated to give
their clients the best
service. And because
the agency isn't a high

volume agency. U
says, it treats each c
tomer In a special wa
" I f I service my
counts honestly u
properly. 1 don't hr
to worry about mon
Being honest is i
profit In (he coin in c
ly. You're not going
find anybody mi
honest from 9 to 5 ll
right here." he says,
Call Blair ut 3!
7710 or 323-3866 a
compare.

ROSES

2701-B S. ORLANDO OR. - SANFORD
(Pinecreit Shopping Ctntor •27th A 17-92)
Ph. 321-4760

SPRING CLEARANCE SALE
FRI &amp; SAT ONLY 20% OFF
Regular Puce On All Furniture
And Appliances.
v» m m &lt;m i p d n
FVe b u y &amp; Sell f u r n i t u r e &amp; A p p lia n c e s

RENT •TO OWN
TV’S -V C R ’S
FURNITURE &amp;
APPLIANCES

FIRST WEEK

Q Q C

�Irradiated
Spy Planes

Walsh Gets Delay On
Immunity For Hakim

W ASHINGTON (UPI) The Soviet Union fielded
Committee as a possible conduit for money sent
more nuclear weapons last
Illegally to the Contras.
year and fired laser beams
Evidence at this stage is skimpy, but in­
against planes and ground
vestigators are trying to learn more about a
targets that tem porarily
cryptic notation on a flow chhrt found In North's
blinded pilots and caused
safe with the words "Inti. Youth Comm.."
battlefield casualties, a senior
thought to be the partly government-funded
Pentagon official said today.
International Youth Year Commission. Walsh also
His statements elaborated
has been alerted to possible connections between
on a reference to "recent
‘
■ . HA*
S o v ie t I r r a d i a t i o n ” o f
Western spy planes and ships
that appeared in the sixth
edition o f the Pentagon's
By Scott Sander
"Soviet Military Power," a
Herald Sports Writer
compilation of Moscow's mil­
itary accomplishments In the
LONGW OOD — M onday
past year, to be released
night's opening round game In
today.
the Lyman Greater Greyhound
No U.S. military personnel
Invatlonal baeball Tournament
were Involved In laser Inci­
between the host Greyhounds
dents. the official said.
and Lake Highland Prep didn't
figure to be much of a game at
The Soviets have fielded
m o re th a n 100 tru
______
ckmounted one-warhead SS-25
After all. when the two clubs
Intercontinental ballistic
met
earlier In the season, the
Ghorbanlfar. a key middleman In the arms deals,
missiles, up from 72 the
game
had to be stopped after five
but It remained uncertain If he would be
previous year, and a new
Innings because of the 10 run
summoned to testify In Washington.
rule.
class of missile submarine,
In an Interview In The Washington Times
the Delta 4. has Joined the
As It turned out, Monday's
Monday. Ghorbanlfar charged the Tower Com­
fleet, the publication said.
contest was a carbon copy as
mission's report on the scandal Included "laugh­
The SS-X-24 ICBM. with up
Lyman thumped the Highlan­
able ClA-blased Information that may have
to 10 warheads each. Is to be
ders. 16-6, before 88 fans at
deployed aboard railroad cars
Lyman High. In five Innings of
play.
by year's end. the official
said. A similar prediction was
The victory ups the 'Hounds to
made last year.
8-6 overall. Lyman will take on
Defense Secretary Caspar
Lake Brantley, who received a
Weinberger was scheduled to
first-round but In the tourney,
Herald Pheto by Tem my Vincent
tonight at 7:30. In other action
unveil the 159-page glossy
Lak e Howell coach B lrto Benjam in (left)
booklet the biggest
- • pro­
round gam e. Lak e M a r y plays O viedo In on Monday Lake Mary took care
has a word with pitcher D avid Frle sn e r In
duced. at a news conference
or Lake Howell. 8-3. Mary will
second-round p la y tonight at 5 while Lym a n
M onday s G re a te r G reyhound Invitational
this morning. The Pentagon
take on Oviedo, who also re­
goes
against
La
k
e
B
rantley
at
7:30
at
NOTICK UNDRR
tournam
ent.
The
Sliver
Haw
ks
dropped
an
official gave reporters a
ceived
a buy. tonight at 5.
L
ym
a
n
High.'
FICTITIOUS N AM E LAW
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IVEN
briefing prepared for release
8*3 decision to La k e M a r y In the opening
Lake Howell will take on the
th«* III* undersigned, desiring to
I today.
loser o f the Lyman-Brantley
tng*g* In business under the
!
Crammed with color phocontest on Thursday at 5. Lake
f ic t it io u s nam e o f B o b by
of his two hits: a solo homer to Blrle followed
Highland Prep wilt face the loser'
Rublno's Place for Ribs at
I tographs. charts and graphs,
left. The round-tripper was the left, plating L
number
2*3
Douglas
Avenue,
In
of the Mary-Ovledo game on
the magazine-sized publicstf*a City of Altamonto Springs.
Thursday at 7:30.
tlon contains data gathered
Florida, Intends to register the
and declassified by the Pen­
Lyman pitcher Ross Urshan
M id name with the Clerk of the
C ir c u it C o u rt of Sem inole
tagon's Defense Intelligence
rclelvcd
started Zac Maddox and
County, Florida.
A gen cy and depicts the
took the win for Lyman. Urshan ;
Dated at Fort Lauderdale,
status of Soviet nuclear and
In now 3-1. Tommy Logan took ;
Florida, this 23lh day of Febru
ery, IW7.
conventional forces and re­
the loss for LHP. Lake Highland :
Seminole Rib*, Inc.
had four hits In the game.
search and development ac­
by: Frank Galgano, President
NOTICK OF
NOTICE OF
tivities.
Lyman slapped out 12 hits in :
Attorney for Applicant
FICTITIOUS NAM K
FICTITIOUS NAM E
Dominick F. MlnlecI, P A .
Notice
It
hereby
given
that
w*
The grim booklet seeks to
the game as the Highlanders :
In
the
game,
but
the
Rams
made
Nolle*
It
hereby
given
that
we
•re engaged In butlnett at 105
M l East BrowardBlvd.
Justify U.S. defense spending
are engaged In business i t 402
seemed to be little more than I
all of them count.
Fort Lauderdale, F L 31301
C o m m e rce W ay. S a n fo rd .
E
v
e
s
h
a
m
P
I
.,
Lon
gw
ood.
of 8300 billion a year to keep
batting practice for Lyman.
Seminole County, Florida 33771
Publl»h
March
J,
10.17.14.1*07
The game was somewhat
Seminole County. Florida 3277*
■CATV)
OEM-13
under the Fictitious Nam* of
up with the Soviet military
"This game gave me a chance *
sloppily
played
as
Lake
Howell
under the Fictitious Nam* of
“ im r
Harwood
Industrie*.
Inc.,
i n InnW n « a r m in n l i t i . . — •• t ________*
..
.
V
J . ' ,n^
*f and
WHI
Specialties, Etc., and that w*
to look at some players." Lyman :
machine by detailing the
committed four errors, while
w Intend to register M i d
Intend to register said name
forces arrayed against the
coach Bob McCullough said. (
"■msi with the Clerk of the
Lake Mary had three.
with the Clerk of the Circuit
NOTICE OF APPLICATIO N
C
rcuit
Court,
Seminole
County,
"W e are gradually trying to turn i
United States and Its NATO
Lake M ary sh ortstop
FOR TAX D EEO
The
big
hitters
for
Mary
were
Court.
Seminole
County,
Florida
Florid* In Accordance with the
allies.
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
things around."
In accordance with the Pro­ !
Shane Letterio, one of most
Blrle
and
Lisle.
Lisle
went
2
for
2
N
O
T
I
C
E
I
S
H
E
R
E
B
Y
Provisions of the Fictitio us
GIVEN, that J E M Associates
visions of the Fictitious Nam*
"Each year ... we confront
ta le n te d a th le te s that
S ^ u N s. To-WIt: Section
J E M Associates
with a homer and three RBI.
the holder of the following certllThe Greyhounds took advan- •
Statutes, To-WIt: Section 1*3.0*
•*3.0*
Florid*
Statutes
1*37.
the holder of the following cert Ifa m o re t e c h n o lo g ic a lly |
Seminole
county has ever
1 Icates has filed M id certificates
Florida Statutes 1*37.
Lisle
now
has
14
for
the
year.
tage o f nine errors by the *
Icates
has
filed
M
id
certificates
/•/ Ruth C. Harwood
for a tax deed to be Issued
/*/ Barbara Frank
a d van ced S o v ie t Union,
seen, has announced that
Blrle went 2 for 4 with a homer
/•/Josephs. Harwood
tor a ta«_ deed to be Issued
Highlanders. Lake Highland’s :
thereon. The certificate num­
/a/EvaNew shuti i&lt; ,
, ,
which has been aided by
♦t*f»on. The certificate num­
he will sign a grant-ln ald
and two RBI, giving him nine for
defense
was exuberantly sloppy, •
bers and years of Issuance, the
Publish
March
3,
10.
17.
24.
11 *
bers and years of Issuance, the
theft and legal acquisition of
on April 8 to play baseball
description ol the property, and
1*17.
'*
the season. Shane Lctterlo also
Lyman didn’t play spectacularly •
D EM 1*1
description
of
the
property,
and
the names in which It was
DEM 31
W estern tech n ology and
ul the University of Miami.
chipped tn with a pair of singles.
the names In which It was
In the field as the Greyhounds I
assessed are at follows:
*'My Cholches were LSU.
growing sophistication of the
NOTICE UNDER
assessed
are
as
follows:
"Its
nice
to
get
that
kind
of
had five errors o f their own.
CER T IFIC AT E NO. 1*70.
I
C E R T IFIC AT E NO. IS3*.
FICTITIOUS N AM E STATUTE
USSR’s own scientific knowjNOTICE OF
G e o rg ia . F lo rid a , and
hitting support." Flaherty said.
Y E A R OF ISSUANCE: 1W4.
TO WHOM IT M A Y CONCERN:
Y E A R OF ISSUANCE: l*B4.
Sophom
ore
Chrld
Radcliff*’
FICTITIOUS NAM E
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O ­
edge." Weinberger said In a
Miami."
Letterio
said.
"I
"They really ripped the ball
Nolle* Is hereby given that the
pPJJCRiPJI^N
PRO­
Notice Is hereby given that we
PE R T Y : L E G LOT II B L K M
oP»EJLCR. lf T ,0 N OF
OF P
RO
swung the big stick for Lyman
preface. "Our technological
today."
undersigned, pi
chose Miami because I real­
P E R T V : L E O LOT M MILTON
- -«*• •
*i
y***ors|Br'A&lt;i.
pursuant lo fh*
•re engaged In business at 1131
NORTH CHULUOTA PB 3 PG
as
RadcllfT went 3 for 3. hitting a •
"
F
ic
t
it
io
u
s
Nam
e
S
ta
tu
te
"
SQUARE
PBS
PGM.
'
lead is being Increasingly
ly wanted to be close to
M is s o u r i A v e ., S a n fo r d .
After a scoreless first inning,
Chapter U3.0*. Florida Statute,
Nam e In w hich assessed
n L l i l e s m ile s a s he
pair
of homers and driving In •
Seminole County. Florida 32771
Nam* In which assessed Rob­
| challenged."
home.
It
has
been
a
life-long
the Rams got on the board first
will register with the Clerk of
Columbus Steele, Eiger Steel*.
under the Fictitious Name ol
ert P. Soball, Allyton Soball.
four runs. Gib Lundqulst also •
ids third after d rillin g a
dream
fo
r
me
to
play
the Circuit Court, In and for
The commitment by the
A
ll
ol
M
id
property
being
In
with
a
run
In
the
top
of
the
Harwood Industries, and that we
A ll of M id property being In
h ad a h o m e r f o r the&gt;
Seminole County, Florida, upon
the County of Seminole. Stats of
baseball at Miami."
S oviets to m aking their
Intend to register M id name
second. Blrle led of with the first
the County of Seminole, State of
Florida.
«celpt of proof of the publica­
Greyhounds.
!
with
the
Clerk
of
the
Circuit
Florida.
ICBMs mobile and hardening
0
tion of this notice, the fictitious
Unless such certificate or cer­
Court, Seminole County, Florida
Unless such certificate or cer­
the silos o f fixed ICBMs
name, to-w lf: M R . C's
tificates
shall
be
redeemed
ec
In accordance with the Pro­
tificates shall be redeemed ac­
"These
games
are
fun.
but
J
cording to law the property
SOUTHERN FR IE D CHICKEN,
against nuclear blast is the
visions of the Fictitious Nam*
cording to law the property
they really don't do a lot of J
under which I am engaged In
described In such certificate ok
Statutes, To-WIt: Section M3.0*
described In such certificate or
"most serious" of their mili­
business at 2100 S. French
certificates will be sold to the
good." Lundqulst said. "Playing
Florida Statutes 1*37.
certificates
w
ill
be
told
to
the
tary achievements In terms
Avenue In the City of Sanford.
highest bidder at the court house
/*/ Ruth C. Harwood
teams In the county does a lot I
highest bidder at the court h o u M
County of Seminole. State of
door on the 30th day of April,
or upsetting the U.S.-Sovlet
/•/ Josephs. Harwood
door
on
the
20th
day
of
April,
more
for the team."
Florida.
1M7
at
11:00a.m.
BfcUSTIN. Texas (UPI) - Although the
Publish March 17, 24. 31 A
1*07at 11:00a.m.
balance or power, the official
inducements for players to sign with
tbs party Interested In
Approximately 1123.00 cash
A pril?, I**7.
player
and
allowing
pluyers
to
use
his
K
A
A
has
charged
the
University
of
Approximately
*123
00
cash
said.
The game was close for three !
lor fees is required to be paid by
M id business Is as follows:
Texas in its letter to the university.
D EM 1*4
car.
lor lees Is required to be paid by
■ x a s football program with 51 rules
STURDY. INC.
tlirra ia .1
___» ..
Innings, but Lyman took control I
"You've got to find the
successful bidder
al the sal*. f successful bidder at the M l*
Dodds
said
he
ugreed
with
an
edict
by
"I am awure whut I did was wrong and
BY: LI TEH YU.
Relations — three by new Coach David
Full payment of an amount
Full payment of an amount
mobile targets — which is not
In the fifth. Lake Highland I
university President William Cun­
PRESID EN T
equal to the highest bid plus
I apologize for It." McWilliams said.
■bWUllams
—
school
officials
say
they
equal
to
the
highest
bid
plus
scored the first two runs of the '
easy — that operate lOO
Dated at Orlando. Orange
applicable documentary stamp
ningham
that
anyone
who
violates
applicable documentary stamp
"They
(violations)
are
certainly
serious
e pleased the probe uncovered no
County, Florida, this 3rd day of
Included among the NCAA's concerns.
and recording fees |* due
game In the bottom of the •'
miles out." of their bases, he
lax** and recording fee* u due
NCAA rules In the future will be
because they're wrong. Certainly. I made second.
March. If*7.
raajor blemish."
w
ith
in
34
h
o
u
rs
a
fte
r
the
«
Dodds referred to questions about the
w
ith
in
24
ho
urs
a
lte
r
the
said, speaking on condition of
immediately
fired.
Cunningham
ulso
Publish March 24, 31 A April 7,
a mistake on those things.
advertised time of the Mte. A ll
The university Monday released a
advertised time of the sal*. All
lease
of
an
expensive
car
by
former
anonymity.
14,1*17
^
said if uny athlete knowingly violates an
payments shall be cash or guar­
payments shall be cash or guar­
Dodds said the school wus aware of
Lyman came back with six, I
ter from the NCAA In which in­
OEM-214
running back Edwin Simmons, the lease
anteed Instrument, mad* pay­
The United States does not
anteed Instrument, mad* pay­
NCAA rule, he will no longer be eligible.
McWilliams'
violations when he was however. In the top of the third. J
stigators
accused
the
program
of
rules
able
to
the
Clerk
of
Circuit
of
apartments
to
some
players
and
other
able
to
the
Clerk
of
Circuit
have a mobile ICBM. but the j
Asked why the rule was not applied
Court.
hired.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
Highland tied the game at six •'
Couri.
olatlons in 20 categories between 1980
allegations raised In newspaper reports.
administration has proposed
FOR SEM INOLE COUNTY.
retroactively.
Cunningham said, "Well. I
Itg***4 ‘ hi* 4th day of March.
with
four runs in the third. But '
id
1986.
FLORIDA
However, he said the NCAA found no
basing 50 MX missiles with
l**7*,#d ,hl* 4' h d*y 01 Mareh’
However. Dodds said the alleged vio­
guess It wusJust my personul decision."
Lyman
scored three and seven !
FRO BATE DIVISION
(SEAL)
Athletic
Director
DeLoss
Dodds
told
a
(SEAL)
"major
blemish"
on
the
Texas
football
10 warheads each aboard 25
lations were not "ftagrant" efforts to
The NCAA said at leust three violations
File Number 17-as-CF
David N. Berrien
runs
In
the fourth and fifth to
iws
conference
Texas
will
file
a
formal
David
N.
Berrien
program. .
six-car railroad trains and
Influence recruits or of the type that
IN RE: ESTATE OF
were committed by McWilliams while he
Clerk of Circuit Court
Clerk ol Circuit Court
blow the game open.
sponse
to
the
charges
on
April
19
and
M
ORTIM
ER
W.
DONOVAN.
The NCAA allegations include charges
Seminole County, Florida
has proposed building 500
would "place other Institutions which
was an assistant to former Coach Fred
Seminole County, Florida
eel with the NCAA Infractions ComDeceased
By: Michelle L. Silva
that a player received financial support
By: Michelle L. Silva
follow
the rules ut an unfair dlsadvansingle-warhead Mldgetman [
Six out of the nine Lyman ^
Akers,
who
was
fired
In
December
after
NOTICE OF
Deputy Clerk
Ittee April 24.
Deputy Clerk
from a professional sports agent, com­
m is s ile s that w ou ld be
ADMINISTRATION
starters got a hit in the game, \
the Longhorns finished 5-6 In his 10th
Publish: March 10. 17.
"I am not pleased with the allegations
The adm inistration of the
plimentary tickets were sold for more
mounted on trucks hardened
1N7
season at Texas.
Knox Nunnally. a Houston lawyer and and seven of the nine scored a 1
• s ta le o l M O R T I M E R W.
avered
in the NCAA’s letter." Dodds
D
E
M
M
.
than face value and former corches and
to withstand nuclear blast.
? D O N O V A N , deceased. F ile
run.
McWilliams, who was head coach for
former Longhorns player hired by the
kid. "But I am especially glad to learn
boosters provided improper loans and
NOTICE O F APPLICATION
In response to questioning I Number 17 at CP. Is pending In
one season ut Texas Tech before re­
university to conduct an internal probe,
ta t... most of the accusations of alleged
FOR TAX D EEO
"W e are trying to become
the Circuit Court lor Seminole
other Inducements to players.
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
about^ laser beam
•.
---- weapons.
turning to Texas in December, wus
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
said the largest amount of money more consistent." McCullough
C o u n ty , F lo r id a . P ro b a te
)T
v
io
la
tio
n
s
w
hich
have
made
The
NCAA
also
cited
illegal
contacts
the official went beyond data
FOR TAX DEEO
^ V E N , that J E M Associates
accused of providing Improper loans to
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
Division, the address ol which Is
Involved wus $200 for the selling or said, "ft's a slow process, and It
leadlines In the recent past were not
n o t ic e
is h e r e b y
Ih* holder ol the following cerllfwith recruits and offers of Improper
published in the booklet and
Seminole County Courthouse.
players, arranging lo pay u fine for u
I
fh
lX
IL
?
',h**
Tho"'«*
K
Krauw
football tickets.
cates has filed said certificates J the holder of the following certll
will take some time."
Sanford,
Florid
a
32771.
The
ttwVtoirt.!h*itiI??om** * ' Krause
•aid the Pentagon has had
°'
following certllcates has filed said certificate:
names and addresses of the
£
*
b ,*d 10
looed
Icates has filed said certificates
" s e v e r a l r e p o r ts ” from
thereon. The certificate num
for a fax deed to be lssu*&lt;
P*f so°al representative and the
for a tax deed to be Issued
hers and years ot issuance, the
thereon. The certificate num
Afghanistan, the Middle East
personal representative's at­
•hereon. The certificate numdescription of the property, and I 5^* ??? vosrt ol Issuance, thi
torney are set forth below.
and elsewhere of Soviet rays
the names in which It was I 2r*£r p on ° ‘
A ll Interested persons are
Property,
and
blinding pilots and causing
description of the property, and
assessed are as follows:
the names in which It was
required to file with this court.
the names In which It was
CERTIFICATE NO. 1*10.
I assessed are as follows:
casualties on the ground.
W £ H IN TH R EE MONTHS OF
•Messed ere as follows:
I Unitsd Press International
Y E A R OF ISSUANCE: 1N4.
CERTIFICATE NO. 74*
f i r s t PUBLICATION OF
"There have been Incidents
CERTIFICATE NO. 74*.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F PR O
^®AROF ISSUANCE: IMS.
THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims
■
Jerry Tarkanian s Runnin’
told I’ltlno to cut the honeymoon NCAA Tewraamenf Netebeek
of lasertng against ground
YEAR OF ISSUANCE: i*B3.
P E R T Y : L E G W SO FT OF LOT
D E S C R IP T IO N O F PRO against the estate and (3) any
W
ebels
have extra incentive to
short and go to Cincinnati to
20 S A M U E L A ROBINSONS
equipment and aircraft (that)
ob|*ctlon by an Interested
L E 0 LOT » INDIAN
i C
P
i 'i f e '.
n t II
0 FINDIAN
F* °
SEATTLE (UPI) — Iowa 7-footer Brad
■apture this year's NCAA chamrecruit Louis Orr.
r SEKRTTYI:TLEG
LOT
S U B D P B 3 P G I.
I RIDGE ORB 123*PG 134*.
person to whom this notice was
have had an Impact, both tn
LoSaus. whose college career ended when
Nam
*
in
w
hich
assessed
RIDGEORB
1
W
P
0134
*
N
play
defense
better.
The
(1976)
■lonshlp
—
if
alleged
recruiting
n *7 * *5 **»leh assessed Indlcta," n*M the valid
ranked Nevada La* Vegas beat the
Joan* Soft.
terms o f blinding pilots and
Namt In which n u m d indiNo. 10 Syracuse beat Georgia top
Ity of the will, the qualifications
*n.RI9®e P*1l° Heme*.
■violations prove true, they could team with (Quinn) Buckner and
Hawkey**, said the Runnin* Rebels will win
Afoge Patio Homes.
A '' of said property being In
W h e r e N C A A b a s k e t b a ll
In terms o f some battlefield
ot the personal representative,
Southern. Western Kentucky. the national title.
(Bobby) Wilkerson was a great
■ « ineligible for next year's title.
the County of Seminole. State ol
, * ' ' * “ * f o f e t y being In
venue, or jurisdiction of the
casualties In terms of some
"I would Ilka to see a Big Ten team do It.
Floridu and North Carolina to
0&lt;
of
Florida.
foe County of Seminole. State of
court.
team."
Knight
said.
"This
club
t
i
t
l
e
s
h
a
v
e
b
e
e
n
d
e
c
i
d
e
d
~
U
A
c
c
o
r
d
i
n
g
to
a
r
e
p
o
r
t
but I think UNLV can definitely do It," he
physical burning." he said,
Uni***
such
certificate
or
cer
reach
the
NCAA
Tournament
„
D
h
N
ss
»i*h
certificate
or
cer­
-.A L L CLAIM S AND O B JE C ­
■mbilshed Sunday in Newsday. has stayed together and done a
tlfIcates shall be redeemed ac­
tificates shall fa* rsrtooiinj ecadding that the blinding was
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
Final Four for the first time
Vm t Location
C h w p lm ih tp results
■JNLV broke NCAA rules during lot of things together on the
cording
to
law
the
properly
*» lew lh * T £ £ BE FO R E V E R B A R R E D
temporary.
SYRACUSE. N Y. (UPI) - About 3.000 l
under
Boeheim in 11 years.
described In such certificate or
floor.
It’s
been
an
enjoyable
team
10 •**»» certificate J
Publication of this Notice has
Bts recruitment of Lloyd Daniels
W M Ortas
Syracuse basketball fans lammed Hancock ‘
Louisville 72-69 over Duke
The booklet displayed a
certificates will be sold to the
Providence
made
the
elite
group
certificates w ill be sold to the
begun on March 17, I*i7.
P&gt;y giving the basketball stand- to coach."
International Airport to welcome the Or- j
hlghwt bidder al the court house
highest bidder at the cow-1 house
color photograph o f a detail
Personal Representative:
M M Lsxhmaa. Kv.
by b e a t i n g A l a b a m a Villanova 66-64 over Georgetown
•ngemen home after they won the East »
For Iowa, the loss to UNLV
lout cash, gifts and other in£ £
&lt;fo/ of April.
OAIL BROWN
B irm ingham . Austin Pcay. Regional.
t$$4 SsBttti
331E. Relder Avenue
■ducements. Such infractions ended a surprising season under
Georgetown 84-75 over Houston
Alabama
and Georgetown.
_ "I'm speechle u ," senior forward Howard !
Approximately
(123
00
cash
Longwood. Florida 33730
Icould lead to sanctions against first-year coach' Tom Davis. The
1 M I Mbumuarjus, N.M. North Carolina State 54-52 over Houston
Trlch* said of the welcome. "I mean, we
Attorney lor
for tees Is required lo be paid by
Hawkeyes' 30-5 record was their
Ithe program.
successful bidder at th T s « u
Ricky's done an unbelievable didn't even win the (national) championship
Personal Representative:
device that "has been used
1t$2
Msw
Ortaaas
North Carolina 63-62 over Georgetown
successful bidd« a l t h T w ^
Full payment ol an emSJni
L.W. CARRO LL. JR..
I Coaching against Tarkanlan best since the school started
Job with his team." Boeheim I'd hate to see this place It we win."
by the Soviets to irradiate
•Rwet to the highest bid plus
ESQUIRE
----------- " iQ fill
Indiana 63-50 over North Carolina
Iw lll b e Bobby Knight, also no playing basketball In 1902.
said. "They've played well all
ROCHESTER. N.V. (UPI) - Jim Boeheim
Western patrol aircraft. Such
applicable d o c u C I . r y ,tam2
LAW REN CE W. CARROLL,
Davis said the UNLV-Indlana
Is
tr
a
n
g
e
r
to
controversy.
of Syracuse and J e r ry T a rka n la n of
y
e a r l ong. T h e y beat
r
t
$
f
M
M
w
aprtS
Louisville
59-54
over
UCLA
irHIMn°t r*f°r*,lnfl ♦••* I* due
laser irradiation, depending
'•M * and rocordk* &amp;
Nevada Las Vegas, who led their teams to
1200sl u'$. Highway 17 *2
within *4 hours after the
UNLV rallied to beat Iowa game is difficult to call.
Georgetown and St. John's and the
• 7 1 S r t L r ts City
upon the distance, could
Final Four, were named Kodak Coaches
Michigan Stale 75-64 over Indiana State
advertised time of the sal*. A ll
Post Office Box 30
*4 hour» e ffe r the
"It
will
be
interesting."
he
184-81
Sunday
behind
a
3-point
very
easily
could
have
beaten
us.
payments shell be cesh or guer
o f t h e Year In their Individual districts
payments shall be cash or guar­
permanently blind."
Casselberry. Florida 33707
«
7
t
S
L
Lasts
Kentucky
94-88
Duke
AnOOoAy*
•meed Instrument, med* pxy
Bhooting assault led by Gerald said. "The officiating style will
anteed Instrument, made payTelephone: (303)240 33*0
The Soviet "tactical laser
•bl* lo the Clerk ol Circuit
Syracuse defeuted Providence rv.F !,!**n D'^sfon I coaches and eight each In
•W ef »o the Clerk of Circuit
1877 Adams
have an efTect. I think in the
Publish: March 17,34.1*07
Paddlo.
Indiana
needed
a
Rick
Marquette
67-59
over
North
Carolina
Court.
•
program has progressed to
O EM 1*4
In both Big Eust meetings this Division II and III were chosen by the
Calloway rebound layup with Indiana game it could be a war
Doted this 4th dey ol Merch.
National Association of Basketball Coaches
I^Dsted this 17th day of March. ;
w h e re b a t t le fie ld la s e r
seuson.
In the first gam e. Kodak's national Coach of the Year In each
I*07.
because
both
teams
go
at
It
'■even seconds to go to hold off
weapons could soon be de­
(SEAL)
(SEAL)
pretty good.
Syracuse overcame a 7-point division as selected by the NABC will be
Louisiana State 77-76.
fore the Iowa victory.
Dev Id N. Berrien
ployed with Soviet forces."
David N. Berrien
deficit with nine minutes to go at announced Sunday.
"Both
teams
arc
capable
of
"This
is
lough,
very
tough."
Clerk of Circuit Court
Syracuse's Jim Boeheim will
Clerk of Circuit Court
the booklet said. "The Sovi­
Indiana, the Big Ten co­ playing very good physical de­
Boeheim said o f facing his Providence to win 89-85.
Seminole County. Florid*
Seminole County, Florida
,
CINCINNATI (UPI) — This was Bob
be
coaching against his former
ets have the technological
By: Michelle L.SIIve
By: Michelle L. Silva
champion, enters the Final Four fense and both are very fine
Knight's mid year appraisal ol his second
former
assistant. "W e vacution
assistant.
Rick
Pltlno
or
ProDeputy Clerk
capability to deploy lowDeputy Clerk
"W e can’t go Into that game ranked Indiana Hooslers ''A lot of guys think
for the first time since 1981. The basketball teams."
together. Our wives are very
vldence. in the other national
his is a good team." he told reporters. ' But
power laser weapons.
thinking
we beat them twice,
h u m ' M*rCh ,4* 31 4 April 7.
Hooslers won the national title
close."
Indiana beat Fairfield. Auburn semifinal Saturday at New Or­
that
we
got
it
made."
Syracuse
that year.
D EM 1*3
and Duke before downing LSU. leans. Pitino was an assistant on
When Boeheim first hired guurd Sherman Douglus said. Isn't* good belldub."
'
.....
t 'T h is team has hung In there. UNLV lopped Idaho State.
Boeheim's stalT ut Syracuse for
Six weeks leter. the Hooslers ere heeded to
Pltlno In 1976 his new assistant "W e have to forget about those
I’ve had some other teams that Kansas State and Wyoming be- two years.
the Finel Four In New Orleens end only two
was on his honeymoon. Boeheim other games."

am s G o Deep
&gt;n Lake Howell
Baseball

Stuck

WORLD
Carter Receives Assurances O f
Syrian Help To Free Hostages
AMMAN. Jordan (UPI) — Former
Carter, newly assured of Syrian help
rviiicncan nostages In Lebanon, arrived In J o fd in ^ d d a ^ o
explore the prospects for peace In the Middle East.
Y
nnrt n.Ch ~ a r *!ipc^ ed l° ho!d meetings with King Hussein
and other Jordanian officials on various approaches in
regional peace, Including an International con£rence with
Israel advocated by the Arab camp.
niercnce with
P n *»4a w nmml*I _ _ I

••*

■.

?

MOSCOW (UPI) — Secret meetings between Soviet anc
sUwc S o n 8 10 t,hClpa8t four month9 could give the
Western
A
ncw M,dd,c East peace talks,
western nnH
and Arab
sources said.
The sources, who requested anonymity, said the talks
produced no breakthrough yet. but Moscow's
immediate goal is to win Israeli support for a Soviet role in
he Soviet Union has called for such a conference which
wou,d provide ih KremMn wlth a ncw
^ le Vi a

S U , c . K T d i “d,cSh“

bCCn domlna" d br 'he United

Marcos Denies Bomb Connection
MANILA. Philippines (UPI) - Ousted ruler Ferdinand
denTcora^nn^
Mpr?Postcrous" suggestions by Preslnt Corazon Aquino that soldiers loyal to him planted
iS d ra dJy.lhC Ph,,,pp,ne Military Academy, an a io cia tc
to v’l S X w
advl8ed our sympathizers never to resort
b fo S
f WC Wanl a° y chan« c- « should be done In a
£ K . 7 N e w W ? : ; " u COnrad° EMrella' a n tcm E r o f
pESiinS;wASoc,,ety Movement, quoted Marcos as saying.
“ ld Ba,urdar d'-gruntled Midler.
1°^". ,to Marcos were suspects" in last Wednesday's
bnrabjng
Uk 'academy. I S Phtltpplne. V o p m f i y '
' •

8

*

/

'

u « ^ N.~ s .We*,1
, Qf rfn®ny CUPI1 - Right-Wing leader
nana-Jochen Vogel has been chosen to succeed Nobel
JJ***
former Chancellor Willy Brandt as
chairman of the Social Democratic Party.
MonSu * £ hL*?k ^
demands for his resignation
Monday. He had been scheduled to retire in June 1988 but

eoooy-Trap Bomb Kills Two
Ireland (UPI) _

exas Football Charged With 51 Violations
Football

here May Be No 'Next Year' For The Runnin' Rebels

Willy Brandt Ratlgns

M-n h ir n

Letterio Chooses Miami

Two

g g S M B B B N jg .

i M {" A Eis trying
B B
B M iB *
to drive the British out of the
r e ^ lf o U ^ lh
P o V1k^ ofN orthern In la n d a£d
reunite it with the Roman Catholic Irish Republic to the

Basketball

Winning Sites

victories *w *y from enother netlonel title.

�»**&lt;
■■■■»»*%.-0 S *

tOA—Sattford HwaM. Sanford, FI.

“"**■
*■*#**

*■
*■
»••-

-r-r

Twwday, March 34,1ti7

M ia m i's F r a s e r C l o s i n g In O n
MIAMI (UPI) — Ron Fraser took over the
baseball program ot the University or Miami In
1963 with one thought in mind — leaving.
Fraser wanted to put In a few years with the
Hurricanes, then find a Job with a "real" baseball
school. After all, he had a team with no uniforms
or equipment, a ratty field without lights, and an
office that looked more like a rellblock. He
worked part time as an athletic director at a local
youth center for nine years to supplement his
paltry salary.
But Fraser — despite several offers from major
league clubs. Including a lucrative one from the
New York Yankees — never left Miami. Now, 25
years and 996 wins (through Sunday) later, he
has turned the Hurricanes into a model baseball
program for colleges across the country.
Using ofT-thc-wall promotions that would make
BUI Vccck smile, Fraser has turned the Hurrlcanes from a rag-tag bunch into a slick squad that
has attracted more than 100,000 fans In each of
the last six years, Including an NCAA record
163.000 In 1981. The Hurricanes have two
College World Scries titles, and have appeared In

Baseball
post-season ploy a record 14 years In a row.
Fraser, who has never had a losing season at
Miami. Is four wins away from becoming only the
second Division 1 baseball coach to win 1.000
games, with ex-Southern California skipper Rod
Dedeaux — who won 1.332 games In 45 years —
the other. He has more wins than any active
Division I coach, and his winning percentage of
.740 was eighth-best among active coaches going
Into this year.
"That (1.000 wins) was the furthest thing from
my mind" when he took over the program. Fraser
said. "I never thought I’d be here this long.
"You wouldn’t believe It." Fraser said of the
conditions when he started. " I had the worst field
In Florida. There wasn’t any Interest In baseball.
My office was a cement block with one exposed
light. That office was something. It had termites,
and a leak In it when It rained. The only thing in
there when I got there was an old bottle of

1 ,0 0 0 W in s

blackberry brandy."
Fraser now has n building named after him,
and his plush office features a window facing out
onto Mark Light Stadium, a facility complete with
lights. Superturf, a pressbox. a scoreboard, and
room Tor at least 5.000 fans.
Fraser said his resolve to win a College World
Series with the Hurricanes forced him to change
the way college baseball was perceived in south
Florida. He became publicity-conscious, outfitting
his team In Kelly green gloves on St. Patrick’s
Day. hiring parachutists to land on the held (one
missed the mark by a couple miles), using striped
bases, bat girls known as "Sugar Canes." brought
In the San Diego Chicken, and staged a
85,000-a-platc dinner on the infield.
The promotions worked. The more publicity
the Hurricanes received, the more fans came out
to sec them play. The more fans, the more money
for the baseball program.
The turning point in the program came In
1974, when Fraser saw his budget cut after the
Hurricanes' first College World Scries appear­
ance.
"So I thought well. I better make it a revenue

producing sport;" he said. "Instead of lettfng the
thing get cut. I'm going to run It like a business
like a minor league ballclub. I went to all kinds ol
seminars-and learned a lot of tricks, and it
worked. It could have failed and 1would have left,
I guess I was wacky."
All the work In selling the baseball team made
him famous — as a promoter — and Fraser fears
people think of him as a promoter first and a
baseball coach second.
"I think I'm going to like It. winning 1,000. Jubi
to maybe let people feel ‘maybe he wasn't a bad
bnscball coach cither."’ he said. "Anytime I'm
introduced. I'm Introduced as the guy who had a
$5,000 a plate dinner on the infield, or the guy
who said no to George Stclnbrenner. I'm always
Introduced as a promoter."
After 25 years with the Hurricanes. Fraser still
talks about leaving the Miami program, this time
to retire.
"It's going to be very hard to leave it." he said.
"When It gets down to doing It. it probably will be
the toughest thing I've ever had to do In my life.
I've been with the thing from birth."

Faulk
Wins
Feature

Knight:
Growl
To Smile
CINCINNATI (UPI) - In the
middle of Indiana's Big Ten
season, an outraged Bobby
Knight chided Ills team for its
poor performance against the
worst teams in the league.
"A lot of guys think this is a
good team." Knight barked at
reporters. "But I've forgotten
more about basketball than most
of you know and I'm telling you
this Isn't a good ball club."
; The date o f Knights' claim was
Feb. 11.
Six weeks later, the Hoosiera
are headed for the Final Four in
New Orleans and only two victo­
ries away from turning Knight's
.growl to a smile.
. Indiana, the .Big Ten cocham pions, w ill ca rry the
league's banner Into the Final
Four for the first time since
1981. The Hoosiera won the
national championship that
year, and no Big Ten team has
gone to the Final Four since.
No. 2 Indiana will face No. 1
;UNLV Saturday in the first
.m e e tin g b e tw e e n the tw o
.schools.
But Knight and many Indiana
ifollowers weren't thinking Final
.Four when the club barely beat
lowly Northwestern 77-75. was
.taken into triple overtime by
.low ly Wisconsin B6-85 and
barely beat lowly Minnesota
72-70 at home.
"This team has hung In there.
,1'vc had some other teams that
play defense better. The team
(With (Q uinn) Buckner and
.(Bobby) Wilkerson was a great
team," said Knight, referring to
•his first national championship
In 1976. "This club has stayed
together and done a lot of thlngB
■together on the floor. It's been an
enjoyable team to coach."
Indiana was able to regroup
,after guard Steve Alford broke
•out of a shooting slump and led
;Indiana to a share of the confer­
ence title.
; Alford contributed 20 points In
•the 77-76 comeback victory over
•Louisiana S tate. in Sunday's
•Midwest Regional Final. He was
; 10 for 10 from the free throw
line, and he expects foul shoot­
ing to help his team In New
Orleans,
I "W e've been a good free throw
shooting team all season and
that's very important In the
tournament." Alford said. "W e
are the kind of team that forces
turnovers and wants to be in a
position to be on the line at the
end of the game."
Alford helped Knight make a
coaching decision down the
stretch against LSU. The guard
said It was his Idea to have Steve
Byl replace him in the final
seven seconds.
* "I was going to do it anyway."
Insisted Knight, who needs one
more victory to become the
wtnnlngest coach in Big Ten
history. "I told him in the huddle
and he said, ‘good idea.' But
where a lot of guys would just sjt
on the bench. Steve was out
there huddling the guys up and
getting them ready for the Anal
seven seconds."
^Beating LSU has been a harb­
inger of flood things In the past
for Indiana's drive for a national
championships.
Indiana Is 4-0 against LSU in
iNCAA tournament competition.
U beat LSU in 1953, the
lera went oq to defeat
i s f o r t o second national
K night's second national
championship squpd also beat
LSU in the national semifinals
and then disposed of North
•Carolina to win the NCAA crown
in 1901.

___— An Oviedo
In a photo in Monday's
' H erald was incorrectly
as Tony Belflower. The
was of Glenn Reichle.

H*r*td Photo by Danny Vantvra

M

in o r D r a g

L a r r y M in o r r o a r s down the p a v e m e n t in S u n d a y 's
G atornationais drag racing event at G ainesville. M in o r did
well in the Top Fu el category as he won his first two races,
but he lost to eventual cham pion Joe A m a to In the
sem ifin als. Th e big nam es d id n 't fare as w ell as M in o r as

" B ig D a d d y " Don G a rlits lost in the first round and Shirley
"C h a C h a " M uldow ney lost in the second round. F o rm e r
Houston O ile rs and O akland R aid ers quarterb ack Dan
Pastorlni also m ade the sem ifin al round.

Alford, Robinson Head UPI All-America
NEW YORK (UPI) - Steve
Alford, the sharpshooting senior
guard who led Indiana to the
Final Four, has been named to
United Press International’s
1987 college basketball AllAmerica team.
Alford was Joined on the team
announced Monday by senior
center David Robinson of Navy,
senior guard Kenny Smith of
North Carolina, senior forward
Reggie Williams of Georgetown
and Junior forward Danny Man­
ning of Kansas.
Alford and Manning were sec­
ond-team choices a year ago,
Robinson made the third team
and Williams and Smith re­
ceived honorable mention.
The 1987 team was selected
by a panel of 50 sportswrtlerB
and broadcasters from across
the country.
The 6-foot-2 Alford averaged a
team-high 22 points a game for
the second-ranked Hooslers. The
four-year starter is Indiana's
all-time leading scorer.
"H e doesn ’ t post up, he
doesn't get rebound baskets and
he really doesn’t take the ball to
the basket to score," Indiana

Basketball
Coach Bob Knight said. "He's
Just got to work like hell to get
the Jump shot. He’s about as
good a scorer for being strictly a
Jump shooter as anybody I've
ever seen."
The 7-1 Robinson Is expected
to be the No. 1 pick in this year's
NBA draft after averaging 28
points, 12 rebounds and 4.5
blocked Bhots a game thlB
season. He became the first
player In NCAA Division 1 histo­
ry to finish his career with more
than 2.500 points and 1.300
rebounds and shoot at least 60
percent from the field.
"H e’s an excellent prospect
who doesn't lack anything,"
Washington BulletB General
Manager Bob Ferry said. "With
his shot-blocking skill, he'd be
good against anybody. And he
can shoot and run the court.”
Robinson scored 50 points In
an NCAA Tournament loss to
Michigan in the final game of his
collegiate career. Earlier In the
season he had 45 points, 14

rebounds and ll0 ^ l 9ck^.,iji
game against Kentucky!
S m ith . 6-3, set a North
Carolina career assists record
with 767, breaking the mark set
by Phil Ford. The flashy point
guard led the Tar Heels In
scoring this season and is
expected to be a top pick in the
NBA draft.
Williams. 6-7. led a young
Georgetown team to the NCAA
Southeast Region final this
season. He averaged 24 points
and 9 rebounds a game this year
and finished third on the Hoyas'
all-time scoring and rebounding
lists.
Manning. 6-11. is the all-time
leading scorer and rcboundcr at
Kansas. He averaged 24 points
and grubbed 10 rebounds a
game this season to lead1 the
Jayhawks Into the Round of 16
In the NCAAs.
The second team consists of
Derrick Chlevous of Missouri.
Armon Gilliam of Nevada-Las
Vegas, Dennis Hopson of Ohio
State. Mark Jackson of St.
John's and Derrick McKcy of
Alabama.
T h ird -tea m ch o ices w ere

Temple’s Nate Blackwell. DeP a u l ' s Da l l a s C o m e g y s ,
Clcmson's Horace Grant. Pit­
tsburgh's Jerome Lane and
Tennessee's Tony White.
The following players received
honorable mention: Tom m y
Amakcr, Duke: Freddie Banks.
UNLV: Tyrone Bogues. Wake
Forest: Fennls Dembo. Wyom­
ing: Billy Donovan. Providence:
Ladell Eacklcs. New Orleans:
H ersey H aw kin s. B rad ley;
Winston Garland. Southwest
Missouri State: Gary Grant.
Michigan; Carven Holcombe,
Texas Christian and Kevin
Houston. Army.
A lso re c e iv in g houoruhlc
mention were: Troy Lewis.
Purdue: Reggi e Lewi s,
Northeastern; Tim McCalister.
O k la h o m a ; B ob M cC a n n .
Morehcad State: Roy Marble.
Iowa: Vernon Maxwell. Florldu:
R eg g ie M iller. U C LA : Ken
Norman. Illinois: Jose Ortiz,
Oregon State; J.R. Reid, North
Carolina; David Rivers. Notre
Dame; C harles Sm ith. P it­
tsburgh: Rod Strickland. DcPaul
and C h r i s t i a n W c l p.
Washington.

Tips On Small P assen g er V e sse ls
Taking a boat trip soon?
If you use your own boat, you
know where all the safety Items
are and how to use them, but
what If you take an excursion
boat, dinner boat ride or a
fishing charter?
What do you need to know?
Almost all small passenger
vessels, with very few excep­
tions. are required to adhere to
certain Coast Guard safety regu­
lations. Among other things, the
regulations state that: 1) A safety
orientation must be provided for
passengers: 2) An emergency
check-off list must be posted In a
conspicuous place accessible to
crew and passengers; 3) there
must be a life-preserver, for
everyone on board: and 4) the
vessel must be certified safe by
the Coast Guard.
Sm all passenger veh icles
usually have small crews com­
pared to the number o f passen­
gers, and the duration o f the
cruise is usually short, so it Is
not practical to hold emergency
drills for the passengers. Since
aqy watercraft can come In
contact with sudden storms or
unexpected rough seas, It is
important to know some basic
safety Information In the event
of a sudden emergency. Since a
safety orientation must be pro­
vided, many operators use
pubHc announcements or pro-

C a rl
C a r ls o n
HERALD
BOATING

vide Instruction placards, some­
times both and must be provided
In a manner that affords all
passengers the opportunity to
become acquainted with:
1) Stowage location of life
preservers.
2) How to put on and adjust
life preservers.
3) Descriptions and locations
of other life-saving equipment on
board, such as life rafts and life
rings.
4) Location and descriptions of
the emergency check-off list.
The emergency check-off list is
primarily Tor the crew, but
passengers should be aware that
this list should contain, at a
m inim um , in stru ction s for
em ergencies such as rough
weather at sea. man overboard
and fire at sea.
In addition to the requirement
that there be one life preserver
for each adult aboard, there

must be an additional 10%
allotment of children's life pre­
servers aboard. Children's life
preservers must be stowed sepa­
rately from the adult life pre­
servers. All life preservers must
be easily visible to the passen­
gers or In labeled containers so
that passengers can easily locate
and distinguish the adult and
children's preservers.
Is the vessel safe?
It must have at least a certifi­
cate issued by the Coast Guard,
readily visible to the passengers
as they board, the vessel in­
dicating that the vessel has been
Inspected by the Coast Guard.
This certificate Is valid from the
date of inspection for a period of
time from one to three years
depending on the type of vessel
and usage. The Coast Guard
shows the expiration date by
punching nut the appropriate

day. month and year. If the
certificate shows that the expira­
tion date has expired, the vessel
may no longer be fit for the
commercial service and it Is
Illegal for the operator to carry
passengers in the service for
which It was originally certified.
Boating Tip: Next time you go
boating with a friend, ask him to
show you where all the safety
Items are located. Most small
boats, especially those that have
been examined by the Coast
Guard Auxiliary, will have life
preservers, horns, lights, fire
extinguishers and many times a
first aid kit. in the Coast Guard
Auxiliary, each time we crew
upon another member's vessel
we arc required to know where
all the equipment Is. Any one of
us could be suddenly In com­
mand.

Belgian Top Seeds Breeze
BRUSSELS. Belgium (UPI) Three seeded players, headed by
No. 5 J o n a s S ven n son o f
Sweden, scored straight-set vic­
tories Monday to advance to the
second round of the $315,000
Belgian Indoor Tennis Champi­
onships.
Svensson downed Peru’s Pablo
Arraya 6-3. 6-3. Sixth-seeded

J a k o b H la s e k o f S w e d e n
overcame Jonathan Canter of
the United Stales 6-2, 6-4 and
No. 8 Amos Mansdorf of Israel
ousted Australian Brod Dyke
6-3.6-3.
In other matches, Italian
S i m o n e C o l o m b o b eat
Czechoslovak Karel Novacek 6-2,
4-6. 6-4.

NEW SMYRNA BEACH - Lee
Faulk drove the Champion TV
Rentals Firebird to victory in the
25-lap late model feature on
Suturday night at New Smyrna
Speedway.
Finishing second was talented
young pilot Stan Eads who Just
edged David Rogers across the
llnlsh line. Rounding out the top
five were Joe Middleton and
John Massey.
A severe m ulti-car crash
marked the start of the thunderenr feature. The drivers were
not injured, but live cars left the
track on the hook. At the finish,
World Series high point Cham­
pion Pete Starr was the winner.
He was followed by Junior
Simmons. James Carter, Joey
Wannack and Rand Rhodes.
Wray Shafer took the Florida
Modified win, while Gene Van
Alstine was the class of the
four-cylinder field.
In road runner action. Wayne
Marshall won the feature, but In
the preliminary event, he was
defeated by his fourteen-year old
son Ricky.
This coming Saturday, the
End of the Month Championship
events will be on tap. with the
super late models being featured
In a 50 tapper.
LATE MODELS
F m I#*! Qualifier: David Roger*. Orlando.
II.MfMC.
Heat 110 laps) — I. Roger*.
Feature 175 laps) — 1. Lee Faulk, Orlando;
7. Stan Eadt, Tltuivllle: 3. David Roger*.
Orlando: 4. Joe Middleton, South Daytona; S.
John Maitey. Port Orange: 6. Don Hetiall,
So. Daytona; 7. Jim Pfellter, Apopka; I.
Buddy Teed, Orlando; f. Barry Layne.
Scotttmoor; 10. Chrl* Robert*. Ormond
Beach.
THUNDEMCARS
Fa»te*t Qualifier: Mark Hlnkotler, Watt
Palm Beach.
Heat (Ilap*) — l.HInkoffer.
Feature (70 lap*) — 1. Pete Starr,
Rockledge; Junior Simmon*. Sanford; 3.
Jame* Carter, long wood; 4. Joey Warmack,
Sanford; 5. Rand Rhode*. Longwood; 4. Mark
Hlnkotler. Wett Palm Beach; 7. Marc Klnley,
Oiteen; I. Darrell Cole, Daytona Beach; t.
Suiy Whlllord, Daytona Beach; 10. Jim Voth,
Melbourne.
FOUR CYLINDERS
Heal (A lap*) — 1. Gene Van Alitlne,
Rockledge.
Feature 110 lap* ) — I. Gene Van Alttlne,
Rockledge; 7. Billy Hooven, Orlando; 3.
Bobby Sean, 0*teen; 4. Tommy Symont,
New Smyrna Beach; 5. Jim Trevarthen, New
Smyrna Beach; A. Trip Carpenter, Ocoee; A.
Jerry Symon*. New Smyrna Beach.
ROADRUNNERS
Heat (A lap*) — 1. Ricky M a rih a ll,
Malabar.
Feature (10 lap*) — I. Wayne M anhall,
Malabar; 7. Mike Kubanek, Longwood; 3.
Don Ewen Jr., DeBary; 4. Roeamary Plitor,
Deltona; 3. Ricky Marthall. Malabar; A.
Chuck Ruth, Orange City; 7. Terry McOade,
Lake Mary; I. Howard Hueier, Turkey Lake
Park.
FLORIDA M ODIFIED!
Heat (I lap*) — I. Ted Hodgdon, Daytona
Beach.
Feature (15 lap*) — 1. Wray Shafer, Lake
Helen; 7. Tommy Pattenon. Scotttmoor; 3.
Gary Salvatore. Daytona Beach; 4. A l Gray.
New Smyrna Beach; 5. Ted Hodgdon,
Oeytona Beach; A. Jeff Btehr, Deltona.

NIT Holds
Final Four
NEW YORK (U PI) - The
National Invitation Tournament
has offered a second chance and
created some special problems
for the four remaining teams.
Each of the teams ended their
conference seasons on sour
notes, but have advanced with
three victories In the NIT. The
quarterfinals were decided last
Saturday night at regional sites
and that left coaches scrambling
to find any information they
could on their next opponents.
The semifinals for the 50th
NIT are set for Tuesday night
with Arkansas-Little Rock meet­
ing LaSalle in the opening game
and Nebraska facing Southern
Mississippi in the late match in
Madison Square Garden. The
final will be played Thursday
night.
Arkansas-Little Rock, which
beat Notre Dame in the NCAA
Tournam ent last year, was
beaten by Georgia Southern at
home in the Trans America
Athletic Conference final.

�* i ^ t 1 t ♦

.

la n ia r d H s r a M , l a n i a r d , F I .

SPORTS
United P re u International

LONDON (UPI) — Frank Bruno says he is a few months
and a victory over James Tillls away from his second shot
at the heavyweight championship.
If Bruno defeats Tillls impressively Wednesday night, he
is expected to get a shot at world champion Mike Tyson in
July or September.
"Tyson, yes. I fancy my chances against him, but let us
get Tillls out of the way first." Bruno said. "It will be a very
difficult fight, but Tyson and I know we will get together
soon."
In his last fight. Bruno was knocked out last July at
Wembley Stadium by then World Boxing Association
champion Tim Witherspoon. Tillls was the first man to
take Tyson the distance in a fight last May. Tyson knocked
out his first 19 foes and has stopped 26 of hlB 29 pro
opponents.

North Stars’ Assistant GM Dies
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) — John Mariucci. assistant general
manager of the Minnesota North Stars, died Monday at
University of Minnesota Hospital following a long bout with
cancer. He was 70.
A spokesman for the North Stars said Mariucci had been
in the hospital for a week before he died, and had been in
and out of the hospital the last couple of years.
Mariucci. who was bom in Eveleth on Minnesota’s Iron
Range, Is a member of the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame and
was on the selection committee for the NHL Hall.
Mariucci. who starred for the University of Minnesota,
played defense Tor the Chicago Blackhawks for five seasons
during a period when few Americans were in the NHL. He
recorded 11 goals and 34 assists in 223 games and was the
team captain during his last season with Chicago. 1947*46.

Shaefer Retires After Loss
FAIRFAX. Va. (UPI) — For Kim Shaefer, after eight long
years on the professional tennis circuit, the end has come.
" I Just retired. You saw it." Shaefer said after losing to
West Germany's Sylvia Hanlka 6-2. 7*5 Monday in the first
round of the 9150.000 Virginia Slims of Washington.
Shaefer. 29, winner of the prestigious U.S. Indoors in
1983, said she was no longer willing to pay the price of
professional tennis.
"I'm not going to do all I can to win and I know that,"
said. Shaefer, who was ranked No. 25 in the world in 1984.
"I don't like practicing anymore. I do not miss playing four
hours a day. i do not miss running six miles."
"I do not miss doing those things," she added. "You have
to be willing to do that to be one of the best players In the
world and I'm not willing to do tfiat now."

LBHS Honors Chambers, Rivers
Wclghtllflcr and track and ilcld athlete Bucky Chambers
and basketball player Laurie Rivers were selected the Lake
Brantley High Athletes of the Month for February.
Chambers, a senior, finished third in the state
weightlifting meet at 198 pounds and has the state's fourth
best throw in the shot pul with a school-record 55-8.
Rivers, also a senior, led Lake Brantley with 14 points
and eight rebounds per game and was selected First Team
All-Conference.
Other nominees for February were baseball player Greg
Ebbert, basketball player Brent Bell and wrestling team
manager Anthony Arbucias for the boys and tennis player
Kristin Longmlrc and softball player Mandy Malthicsen for
the girls.

Jacobs New AD A t Jacksonville
JACKSONVILLE (UPI) — Donald Jacobs of Jacksonville
Beach, acting athletic director at Jacksonville University
since last September. Monday was named director of
athletics, effective April 1.
Jacobs. 36, at the university since 1982 when he became
coordinator of athletic development, was the unanimous
choice of a committee named to find a replacement for Paul
GrllTln. who Joined the University of South Florida last
May.
"The school spirit has been better than evbcr. and that is
a reflection on Don. his staff and the student body," said
President Frances Kinne.

Dolflns To Host Stroke Clinic
The Justus Dolflns will be hosting a free stroke clinic for
novice swimmers at the Alfond Pool at Rollins College
campus at 8:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 4, according to
Harry MelBcl, Dolflns coach.
Melsel said the clinic is open to area youngsters between
five and 10 years old, and especially to those who may be
participating in "Rowdy Gaines Jr. Swim League"
programs this summer.
Parents with an interest in the swim clinic, as pool
representatives and prospective league coaches may
con tact Meiscl at 646*2123 for further information.

Justus To Draw 800 Of Finest
ORLANDO — More than 800 of America's finest Junior
swimmers will be at the JuBtus Aquatic Center to compete
in the United States Swimming Junior Olympic Short
Course Championships East on March 31-April 4.
Swimmers range in age from 10 to 18 years and come
frum&amp;tatcsca&amp;torihsJ^lsaiatgppi. - .

T U E S D A Y 'S S C H E D U LE

•A S IIA U , FNrtM Igwll WMIi m W

Ruotsalalnen Haunts Old Team,
2 Goals Lead Oilers Over NY

Bruno Seeks Bout With Tyson

T v e s d s y j M a rc h M , 1 W 7 - 1 I A

SCOREBOARD

IN BRIEF
The NHL can thank Phil Esposito for providing the
Edmonton Oiler?an offensive spark they didn't need.
ReIJo Ruotsalaincn returned to the New York area after
being dealt to the Oilers and recorded two goals and three
assists Monday night to pace Edmonton to a 7-6 victory
over the New Jersey Devils.
Ruotsalaincn had been with the Rangers five seasons
when, last year, he decided he no longer wanted to play
under then-coach Ted Sator. Ruotsalaincn Joined the
Switzerland league and Esposito, the Rangers' general
manager, traded his rights to Edmonton In October. A
month later. Sator was fired.
" I f Esposito had waited, 1 probably would have returned
to the Rangers.” said Ruotsalalnen. one of the NHL's
smoothest skaters. "I didn't like the hockey in Switzerland.
I was In good shape, but there Is a different intensity and
different level you have to play at here. I’m coming around
now."
In the only other game Monday, at Bloomington. Minn.,
Bemlc Federko scored two goals and Doug Gllmour
contributed a goal and three assists to help St. Louis
extend the North Stars' slump. Greg Paslawsk! and Mark
Reeds each had a goal and two assists for the Blues, who
moved Into sole possession of second place In the Norris
Division. Minnesota has won only only one of its last 11
games (1-8-2).

»

I *m - ESPN. NHL. WMhffWi «l No*
VortlH indKtiLl
I S | m - E1FN. Wonwi't Fro Mktutot
TndBFUd
I] S • m - ESPN. NCAA
and Wvnwi'i ChmftamAift

I. M*i |

DOGS
DOOEAClM.'Ali
tt t- l/ H . 1:11.11
i A E iH v w y
t n in in
i EM NKM trT**
&lt;a m
i Loom Po d
IH
o i l s t i a , F t i- iit u t iT ( m i i n n
0 4 - 1 / 1 0 740
i nturtEmir
on tn i«

• NMMi
1

m IN

H n U rti
in
o n o a n , p (M i n»&lt; r (i4i&gt; n n i
D o m n in
h - V it o : t in
i Tov'rtTooNlct
1141 ItN AM
i i n * h Ton
tn in
4 AoV'JoA*
in
q i a d n n , r (Ail u n , r u - H i n o n
•k —1/1A M: IIJ1
4 noAyrtJtn**
100 t n t «
I M in te d Lo*
I N 1U
I Mjnoto L trttil
1U
o (M i i n , f ( tn u n , T (ai d tt n ,
a * dm i n t o i n n
N K - 1/14.0:11-11
4 LlfMninljrry
i n 4M 1M
i M m M ttu iT
tn tn
4 DcmoDin***
.m
o (m i i l k , p (a ii a n , T (a h ) 1*1n
M ,- V I A C i l i a
I fry*Oortt-I
M U I lH i n
1 BMiW ntot
in in
i Cob*c*i
in
0 (i t i u n , p n i t i n n , t o m i i . m n
n t - V U . 0:1141
I S ty lM M o
II M t n 4M
t ctbFott
on tn
4 Ocmo AJIlfitor
in
011-11 UMi MI-11 ALU, T 11-1-4) MAM
M —VIA A: IAU
1 M A n d
H U MM AM
1 Good Swill K k i
i n 1M
I 0**f n*H ill
4M
4(1 O H M , M I D U M , T I M 'llt n n
M -tn A &amp; n n
I HurryS*
I M (44 1M
4 Monotot Lily
in tn
5 LK'iAbitidifari
i i

OontA
L V iim l Colon**
I S* 040*4
l M4*ml Sm^vMgi
i Gw*:.*, To*
S Cotgor Clly
I loot Worm loan'd
I. W o Moot
I SI F t* Nrwwott
» Jortionrll* 1w*t*wO04
N Flonl Clly
QoMlA
I loco *o*n Foot J&lt;0r Oou*
1. Fort I M Ctrdmol C 4 t n
1 Auburndo*
A Fort Loudwdo* SbonoNn
I Fcrt Loudordo* No..
A Toiio4*o u m Low
1- (M o*
I Ftmondmo nock
0 FontocM FW Forttl
N. MtodMtur)
OoutA
1 ToUi M w m Florid! High
1 0m * cU F oco
A SorooolO Cordmol Mowoy
4 Miomi Nn,mlnt**r CVNtion
5 A*on Fort
4 Tomgo Como**
1 Ft Fiorco W o Corroll
I GoMnrtIN F.K. Tongo
» C*w**n
W Joctwn.il* Bolin
Clow A
I Joctvril* Torng* Orhtion
1. Miomi Loto*
A Moyo Utojotto
A SI FttOrttorg NS OrKKon
A Tom** Tom** HoigMt
A Conhoy
t. Ocolo SI M w LufNrtn
I. Florrtolion Amoricon HorHoft
0 Morrtontn
M Wtlnwl Hill E rm t Wad

BASEBALL
■ A ll (ALL: Ih W i A H M c Cm N ooco
Too*
W L
61 A l
LottWory
4 (
- 111
U M M
4 I
'J l i t
Sommo*
t I
t IS
O rM l
I 1
l*i I I
LokilrmNty
11
1 111
Lymon
• l
4 II

TfONtAl gOBOl
AILynMHt*,
J y n L o tiM ir y n OrMo
1M»m lymonrt L*4oBfl«t*y

11 1
1 II1 1
01
lilt
II ]
II
Al
II
A ll
M l
IM
(11
If
t it
111
,m
’ IM
144

04

111
0A1
HI
II
04
Al
Al
SI
ft
Al
44

Florid* AaNr ColWgi M
Indian 4 Ivor
.
FI* Comnvuty. J*i
ttiimlDo*. Now World
HUMborough
F*lm l*odi
Mono*.
1- CNooU .
I MwmiDodi Norik
0. St JWm Fluor
N Folk
1.
1
1.
A
I
A

It.
141
Ml

Ut
lit
MIO

Ml

110
I lf
01 ]

B A SIU LLi

0*klo«d rt c*rtl*nd *l Fotm Sp lig l
Cold
Son Front'tco rt So* 0*go ol Ywno.
Arn
Boilon rt
NT Yonkon or Ft
Loudrdo* ml
WodaortiT'i Oomot
40*444 CHy it C*Or*,* *• Ltkrttnd
NY 44*N Tt Mimttoto l! 0rlo*do
Fk&lt;lodilokl* n Chicogo WkiN So. (u)
01 Sir040*4
ToronNrl SI LOv * 4*S* FoNnOgrg
CkKOgO WM* S04 IN) rt Hoirt*n lit)
liKiuimmoo
Hovtkn (Ml
n
FRhbur|k 0*
Bridtnton
Alton*! n Menktot o* Wn* Film
L it A*gt*t rt C « m r* l ol Tompo
Soon* «i Ooki«*do4Pkotmi.A/ii
C*irtl0kd O Mllwavkot 4* C*md*r
Aril
So" FrtncNto n ColiNmi* ol p*,m
Soring. Cllit
CkictgtCubit. SonD*goOlYumo Aril
■oltimoron Ttto. 0*Fort Ckortof* (n|
■*lNn vt
Lowdrdo* |n|

NY

Yontoot

o*

Ft

.uponip.14

Kifltdtl Lt§fw
SI Loir*
Son FrancNco
Son D*g*
Now York
Gnclm**l
Oucoga
Plthbvrgk

Allmto

F*rido 0, Alobomo Bommgkom 1
Miomi IA Mo** 4
Soufk F*rld41 Hortlord 1
Akron A Joe Hon, it* 4
•msw iIroiiitkeil
hi iianpni
AtOvUod
0k* *e. 0k* S i '
Sktwntl.SI- Xov*r, III. t]
StvtwnlAOMoSI t
N gkldaol
Toylor A DoLond I
Cltemonl IA Crovtlond 1

SO FTBA LL
SOFTBALL: S t n M t Atktvlic CooNrtMt

W L
II 1
It S
II 0
W t
0 t
0 1
N W
1 I
1 I
1 0
I II
t II

Tom
Or*d0
LoM BronHoy
LlkoMory
LikoHowtll
Somme*
Lymwi

W L 01
1 I , 1 - 4
1
I I
1 1
I
1 15
I
4
1
Monday! rvw*t
Ov*dolSI C*udl
•

AN
IIS
4
41
14
*
A ll

BA SKETBA LL

Smttkn L N fH
t t »
Now York

MIHotukao
Crty
CoMoron
Tnw
Ooklond
Soon*

ii i
0
•
1
0
1
0
•
1
t
t
«
4

BASKETBALL: NBA STANDINGS

I
A
I
N
0
It
It
N
0
M
II
14

lotNoo Ctnh rooti
AHinkc DtvHNn
Fkllidrtgkio
- WiUiing*n

Now ran
Control DlvWaa
■ AHonto
40 0
I Ootrort
41 0
iMilwOvkn
d M
CMcogo
0 0
tndiono
0 IS
CNvtlond
H 0
WtMort ConNrtnco
MOFooil Dtvhioo
W l Pci GB
iD olloi
4) 0 441 -

ktoodoy'ilowm
TerwtNA Dotroil t
CMcogo IAL) 1, Kontot City t
FilNburgkt. Tout I
MonlroolO. Now York IADS
Now York |NLIA FNIodUgklol
Lot Ango*. t. HouoNn III) I
SI. Lou* 0. Cinorvvolil
M.l*ou4oo IX Ooklond I
C*M4wdASooti*4
CoMwnioACMcogoINLIl Mlmlngi
loMmoro Nl t a N k l
nbvmMFa^^mvaaoa
Son FroncHte i t Ion D*go 1
Tooodoyk Ooaot
CMcogo WM* So. at. Tout ol
Chorlol*
Toron* VA Unooo CHy *1 FI. MyOrt

U*0k

AHomo n loHlmne Iw) ol Miomi
BoMmort Iwl va ttomrool *1 Wnt
FoimBoock
Dotroil n Hounten ( ill .* Kiuimmoo
Fkilodrtpkio v. NY Mo*l 0* SI.
Ffloriburg
Hcuttan lit) vt. Loo Ango*. (I Voro

Mndoy’i nodN
Loti ttory A Loto Howotl 1
Lymon IA Lott HlgMond I

3 p . m . — L * k * C ity a t S « m ln o l* C o m m u n ity C o llt g t ; 5 p m .
— L a i * M i r y w O v ie d o (G r# *t*r G re y h o u n d In v ita tio n a l) ;
7:30 p .m . — L y m a n v t L a k e B r a n t la y ( G re a te r G re y h o u n d
In v ita tio n a l) .

4 4W0.4: NNadty't Itwth

0 (HI MMi f CHI aMi T&amp;4II DIM
M i - V A C im n
t #E'iJ(4*ny
t in i n tn
t OriM San
in in
1 MHfrinci Atoort
in
0 IM) M.a&gt; M M I n n , T 11-All MAM
IIS —VIA 0:11.0
1 EAwdniourvM
u n tn Nn
I Wr+flhl F*
11U i n
1 Mill 1m 4t
4M
Q (M l AtMl P (H I ItAHl T I1«l) M in t
Nc V i &lt;11 M l II. 4 U ! p*U I wtawn
in H ,C o rrym r:t)A 0 A n
t i n —v t A C : it n
1 PoMf Snoring
WM 4M IM
1 Mottur'lDty
IM I H
t KoNvctyS*!
IM
o (i n u n , p o i l n n , T ia i -ii t u n .
M o EM (TAD) a m
IM -V A A :M JI
I Comput F»im
14M n n 4M
1 Modol Song
n n 140
I HwnptanQuotn
IM
Q (1 11 DAM, P (M l IS M , T 11-MI
1,144.*: S A I I A A in im t l
A -U R jH -U 7 L 7 4 f

lit
IM
lit
AI
lo ll
ill
HI
It
t|]
Al

Si. LauHvi.CmcmnotiotTornoo
Milwaukoa n Soon* at Tamgo. Art*.

MX Ml 7

HowNn
0 0 10 I't
Dtnrtf
14 M 04 14’ .
Son An*n*
M 0 . .01 »
Socromon*
» N 144 11
fU
. *
rtLirK urriUH
i LA Lokort
0 14 144 iFortlind
a M A ll *1
Soon*
u u m M
GoWm Sto*
0 0 JMN
Fkoomi
14 O M l 14'i
LA C le o n
II I) .til a
■-dWcMoWyettlMlk
m_uM M f i mmm
SoiWollL Now York (IHOTl
Dolloi M l PMloWlgkio NO
Indnno NI. WotMngNn 41
Dotro't 114 Moulton I*
UlokULDtnvorlll
T m dtfiG oaw i
(01141 ol Now Jorwy. 1 M p m
C*volond vt. lotion ol HorttorA 1 Mpm

Sixers

A*t*n*ao*WoVing*tn.lgm
Now York t l MiNoukte, I M* m
FMIodrigk* ol CMcogo I M * m
i W w **ton AMon* t 0 * m
LAClegOrt4*Oonvtr.0 Mgm.
LALoktr.41 FkooniA0 Mom
Por*&lt;ondt*Socman*.« M*m.

United Press International
The CHy of Brotherly Love
carried a double meaning for the
Dallas Mavericks Monday night.
jQ
t||i|(99fi
The team recorded Its first-ever
Milnautao t l Indent nigkl
victory In Philadelphia and re­
U**k I* LA Cl**trA nigkf
ceived an apology from forward
DokeitiGeidwiS*** mgk*
Mark Aguirre.
Rolando Blackman scored 4 of
H O CKEY
his 38 points in the final 33
seconds to propel the Mavericks
HOCNEYiNKL STANDI NOS
to their fifth straight victory,
WoN. Conliroon
103-100 over the 76ers. The
Falnrt tHrti**
W l T FN. OF GA
decision marked Dallas' first
»Fk.i*
14 0 1 n 144 01
victory in seven games at the
NY IHtndtri
« * II 14 IM Ml
W ill &lt;*fton
0 0 4 It IM HI
Spectrum since its franchise was
NY aongon
0 J4 I 0 M l IM
formed in 1980.
PrtlUrvrgk
0 ]] 11 ol HI Ml
A g u ir r e , w h o c o n s id e r s ’
Now Jonty
14 &lt;1 4 It M l 01
AdimtOIvNtt*
himself
the Lone Scar of Dallas,
■ Hortlord
a 17 1 II It) U)
scored
12
points In his first game
i Montrool
U 14 II M 1« 04
4 Bolton
H 0 1 0 HI 114
since engaging in a shouting
Quobtc
11 14 M 4. IM Ml
match with Coach Dick Motta.
BvtlOil
11 14 1 t l Ml 10
* CmipItMCMrvttet
Aguirre was ejected from Satur­
"•rrn uiiiwm
day night's 122-118 victory over
n t t fia OF GA
Ortrorl
0 0 N It M IM Detroit- and exchanged words
SI Loutl
M 11 II 1« 10 10
with Motta. Before the game
CMcogo
II 0 It 40 MO It,
Monday, he apologized to his
Minnawll
14 N 4 II IM Ml
Toron*
II It t II Ml 144
teammates.
"Everything’s line except for
i Edmonton
44 0
1 17 0 ! M l
I Cligory
.4 H
1 ft M l M l
me." Aguirre said, "it's more In
i Winning
M It I 14 M l 144
my mind than anybody elsc’s.
l « *ngrt.
H0
I 44 141 M4
I'm still thinking about it. It's
Vincouvor
IS 41 | M 1U 04
•■ (iiRcnv
-a!--■---------------p ifrti wn#
going to take some time.
jjui 04,
Edmonton 7. Now Jorwy 4
S* LouHA M-nrwyelll
Tandoy'iGmri
Toron* I* Bu«4*. 1:0 |m
Pkllodrlgklo 0*Piftiturgh, 7 Up m
Montrool ol QuotoA I :B | m
Wotfimgkmot NY liiondn. 1 es p m
Widwtdoy'.Gomo.
Now Jorwy ot NY aongort n*M
Edmonton ol HortNfd. ni^K
Mmntwll It Toronto, nigkl
Lot Angoln ol DvtrWI. mgkt
St Lm N 0*CkicogA nigkt
Cligory ot Wmetg nlgM

S o n lc s 1 2 6 , H o ic k s

1 2 1

At New York. Xavier McDaniel
recorded a career-high 40 points
and Dale Ellis contributed 27 —
9 In overtime — to lead Seattle.
Gerald Wilkins led the Knicks
with 32 points. Louis Orr added
20 and Kenny Walker had 17.
Tom Chambers added 33 points
Tor the SupcrSonlca.

TEN N IS
TENNIS: MMMoy'iaowm
II MAW VtrgW* SawM *04(*g*n
At WuhingNo. DC. Morck 11
Windy Wki*. Fort Workv. T o u t drt. Louie
Alton. Son Anton*. Tern. OL Al. Sytv*
HoniU. Writ Gormony, dll. Kim Shoatvr.
G r ill F ill. Vo. A t 1 1: Ann HonGrlckUon.
NUMomadi. Mmn. dal Eliubott Smyt*.
Auikol*. I i Al. Al; BarterI Potior, Wood
bury, Com, drt. Dmky Von Karaburg Souin
Afneo 4A At. KotorIno lindertll. Sntdm.
drt JonoFormon.Frovidwco a I . OAII
Cottwrino Tonyiar. Franco, drt Htotkor
LudWt. Foitor City. Cold. 01 Al. Kalky
Hinoid. Amolj IHand. Flo. drt Stafkan*
Rat*. Heklond. Colli. AA IA 74 1141
Carling Down. Canodo. drt Elly Hokomi.
Tdwron.C4Ut.lA41
MIAOW lo t f W M
Al BmwH. Irtgium. Mjrek 0
FintBound
Simona Colombo. Holy, dal Korol Novocok.
CnckoUovM*. I t 41 04; JkOob HlotaA A
Snllicrlond. dal Jonoltion Cantor. Lot
Angoln 01,0 4. Jon#. Swnuon. Swodwi. dal
P rt* ArrayA Part,. 41 41. Carl Llmborga*.
Aurtrilio. dll Korol *| MuyncA Bflgium. &gt;L
1A 14. Amw Momdorl. L lv « l. drt Brad

DyU. AuttutlA A1 11

D EA LS
DEALS:Mandly'lSeorttTrinuctw.
Chicago (A ll - Ratoowd wtond bowman
M toC rn
Cmcmnilt - Plocod lir.l bowman Nick
E wUy on ]1 dor diub*d lial.
Montrool - oplenod |utd*f Sorg* VHdal
and cotckar Willrido Tajodo * lndiona*oliio(
it* IAAA) Amarlcon Aiwciotlan
Toronto - 0*t«n»d wcond bowman Nation
Liriono * Syroruwot Iko (AAA) Intornolional
looguo

Pacers 101, Bullets B2
A t I n d ia n a p o lis . S t e v e
Stlpanovlch scored 27 points
and John Long contributed 5
points in a critical 13-2 run that
lifted the Pacers. Indiana used
the tear to turn an 82-82 tic with
5:26 remaining Into a 95-84
advantage with 2:08 left. Jay
Vincent ted Washington with 25
points.
Pistons 114, Rockets 110
At Houston. Islah Thomas and
Bill Lalmbecr each sank a pair of
free throws in the final 23
seconds to lead the Pistons.
Adrian Dantlcy paced Detroit
with 25 points. Thomas finished
with 21 points and 12 assists,
and Lalmbecr added 17 polnlk
and 19 rebounds. Akccm OlaJuwoh notched 38 [joints for
Houston.
Jass 122, Nuggets 118
At Sait Lake City, Mark Eaton
sank his only 2 free throws of the
game with 19 seconds left and
Karl Malone scored 33 points lo
carry the Jazz. Darrell Walker
scored 39 points for Denver and
L a fa y e tte L e v e r and A le x
English added 22 points apiece.
Utah also received 20 points
from Darrell Griffith.

D efense Lifts Lady Lions
By Chris Filter
Herald Sports Writer
Oviedo's Lady Lions did a little
Spring cleaning at Red Bug Park
Monday as the defense vacu­
umed up everything hit In its
direction in a 3*2 victory over St.
Cloud's Lady Bulldogs.
The Lady Lions improved to
12*5 overall and will lake the
rest of the week ofT for Spring
Break. Oviedo returns to the
diamond next Tuesday against
Seminole Athletic Conference
co-leader Lake Brantley. Oviedo.
Brantley and Lake Mary are all
3*1 In the SAC.
Oviedo committed only one
error Monday and Junior pitcher
Jodie Switzer allowed no walks
as the Lady Lions disposed of St.
Cloud in 45 minutes.
"Both teams played really well

Softball
on d efen se." Oviedo coach
Jackie Miller said. "It was 1*2*3
In most of the Innings."
Oviedo broke a scoreless tie
with two runB In the bottom of
the third and added another in
the fourth for a 3*0 lead.
In the third, Anna Hollis, who
was 2 for 2 in the game, rapped a
one-out single, Switzer drew a
two-out walk and Caroline
Chavis singled to drive in Hollis
with the flrst run- Switzer then
scored when Jessica Bradley
reached on the only St. Cloud
error of the game.
In the fourth. Jill Knutson led
off with a single but was forced

ul second on MiKKi buy s
groundnut. Tcri Coe followed
with a single and Kellie Gaines
stroked a base hit to drive in
Eby.
St. Cloud remained scoreless
until it put on a cardiac com­
eback with two outs In the lop of
the seventh. After a pair of
singles, the Lady Bulldogs got o
two-run triple to puli within 3-2.
Oviedo closed the door on St.
Cloud though when Chavis
fielded a grounder and threw to
Coe at first for the final out.
"I was pleased with the de­
fense but would liked lo have
socn a little more hitting," Miller
said. "Our big guns haven't been
hitting much lately. (Corrie)
Lawson. Bradley and Eby all
went without a hit today and
that hurls."

DOG
R A C IN G
NOW !

NKUm.V7i90R.rn.
Except

Sunday, t h r u Mty 2nd

A S M a y lM p m

t a n s llU N .IN ln
MthMWe(MaMtt” aa4NM

Oviedo Pounds
Mount Dora, 77-7
The Oviedo Lions pounded
Mount Dora. 11-1. In noncon­
ference baseball action on
Monday afternoon at Oviedo.
The victory ups the Lions,
ranked seventh in the state in
Class 3A, to 9-3 overall.
Oviedo will return to action
tonight at 5 against Lake Mary
in second-round action of the
Lyman Greater Greyhound Inv a ta tlo n a l T o u rn a m en t at
Lyman. The second game pits
Lyman, a 16-6 winner over Lake
Highland Prep on Monday, and
Lake Brantley, who also received
a but, at 7:30.f
The Lions will take on Mary,
an 8-3 winner over Lake Howell
on Monday. The Rams handled
the Lions. 4-0, last Friday in a
Seminole Athletic Conference
game.
"1 think that It will be a
different story this time." Oviedo
coach Howard Mable said. "I
think that we will get out of the

l
lWP.

T H U R S . - F R E E g ra n d
s t a n d a d m is s io n fo r la d ie s

Visit our two cHmste-contiolled
dubhousss tor your line dining
end entertainment pleeeurel

CLUBHOUSE RESV.: S IM M S

Baseball
gate much quicker."
Lake Mary coach Allen Tuttle
said that either Steve Shakar or
Eric Blrle will be on the mound
against Oviedo.
Mabie said that he may give
M a rk M e r c h a n t o r T o n t
Belflower a try on the hill. "W e'll
Just have to see." Mabie said.
"I'll make a decision as to who
will pitch at gamelimc."
Against Mount Dora, Alan
Greene notched his first win of
the year as he tossed a five
hitter.
Merchant was the big hitter in
the game as went 2 for 2 with a
double and a solo homer. The
round-tripper was Merchant's
second of the year. Belflower
also had a sound game as he
went 2 for 3.

— Scott Sander

IN C O M E T A X E S
F IG U R E D F R E E
B r i n g U s Y o u r I n c o m o T a x R e tu rn s
W s ’ll F i g u r e T h s m P R B I I I

Use Your Refund As Your
Down Payment — Drive Home Today
Why Walll Wa'va Got Your Daal!
Limited otter • Expiree April IB. 1N 7

,
)/iy
S A N fO R O

U S ED
s

m w y

323^1^3

i/y*’

s a n

CARS

i out)

O H l A N D O

4^1) S U B S

�12A—Sanford Horald, Sanford, FI.

...Court

Tutday, March 14,1W7

M a rk e t M a k e s G ain s
NEW YORK (UPI) — Stock prices opened mixed
today In active trading of New York Stock
Exchange Issues.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose
30.26 to a record on Monday, was up 2.84 to
2366.62 shortly after the market opened.
Declines led advances 536-440 among the
1,464 Issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
„ IM n n n
Early turnover amounted to about 17,153.000
shares.
Stock prices forged new highs Monday as
Investors Ignored the chance to take profits.

Local Interest
These quotations provided by
m e m b e r s o f the N a t i o n a l
Association o f Securities Dcalcts
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
8%
American Pioneer
8
38% 38%
Barnett Bank
28 Vi 28%
First Union
Florida Power
32 Vi 32%
&amp; Light
38% 39
Fla. Progress
35% 36
HCA
Hughes Supply
26% 27%
Morrison’s
28% 28%
69
69%
NCR COrp
40% 41
. Plessey
•Scotty’s
14% 14%
Southeast Bank
30% 30%
25% 26
SunTrust
Walt Disney World 61% 62%
Wcstinghousc
53% 53%

Gold And Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold

London
Previous close 408.25 up 3.75
Morning fixing 410.30 up 2.05
Hong Kong *
410.50 up 3.85
New York
Comcx spot
gold open 410.20 unchanged
Comex spot
silver open
5.713 olT 0.025
(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
Dow Jones Averages —
30 Indus
2364.63
20 Trans
050.34
15 Utils
221.15
65 Stock
885.22

10 a.m.
up 0.85
up 2.79
ofT 0.41
up 0.69

Instead extending a rally that has seen the Dow
Jones Industrial average advance 467.83 points,
or 25 percent, since Jan. 1.
•’This market now Is full steam ahead for the
bulls." sold Ernie Rudnct, manbger of block
trading at Mabon, Nugent &amp; Co. "W e’re going to
go through 2400 like a knife through butter."
"The market got Its problem — the triple­
witching hour — off Its back, and It’s close to the
end of March." said Robert Ritter, a technical
analyst with L.F. Rothschild. Unterberg, Towbln
Inc. "A lot of Institutions are putting cash Into
use" as the quarter draws to a close.

Dollar Declines;
Gold Moves Up
By United Press International
The U.S. dollar, weakened by
the failure of national banks to
Intervene, plunged* to Its lowest
level In more than four years In
London and weakened on other
major world money markets at
the opening of trading today.
The price of gold was sharply
higher.
Dealers In London predicted
the dollar could fall even further
In the next few days or weeks.
In earlier trading in the Far
East, the dollar fell to a new
post-World War II low In Tokyo,
where It closed at 148.80 yen,
down 1.93 from Monday's close
or 150.73 In active trading.
In European tra d in g. In
London, the British pound ster­
ling again surged at the dollar's
expense to open at $1.62. up
from Monday’s close of $1,617.
It was the weakest point for the
dollar against the pound since
Jan. 5. 1983. when sterling
closed a f$ 1.622.
The dollar fell In Frankfurt,
opening at 1.8105 German
marks, down from Monday's
close of 1.8205; In Zurich the
dollar opened at 1.5115 Swiss
francs, down from 1.5245 and In
Paris at 6.026 French francs,
dwon from 6.0585.
The dollar also lost ground In
Brussels, opening at 37.38
Belgian francs, down from
Monday's close of 37.95, In
Amsterdam at 2.047 Dutch
guilders, down from 2.0565 and
in Milan at 1.288 lire, against
1.205.40.
In early New York trading, the
dollar was mixed In moderate
trading against key foreign cur­

House Probes Link Between
Contras, Youth Commission
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A little-known youth organiza­
tion Is under Investigation by the House Forelgrt Affairs
Committee as a possible conduit for money that was sent
Illegally to the Nicaraguan Contra rebels, sources say.
Evidence at this stage Is skimpy, but Investigators are
trying to team more about a cryptic notation on a flow
chart found In the safe of Lt. Col. Oliver North, the fired
White House aide central to the Iran-Contra scandal. •
House staff members tolfl United Press International
Mondav their attention was drawn to the partly governmentrfunded International Youth Year Commission
because a box on the handwritten chart bore the words
"Inti. Youth Comm."
A dotted line linked that box to one labeled "F.D.N.."
believed to signify Initials of the Nicaraguan Democratic
Force, the main army of the U.S.-backed Contras trying to
overthrow Nicaragua's leftist Sandlnlsta government.

W ife pleads for his life, page 2A

with KGO radio In San Francisco. "I will gladly go over and
take his place. Something has to be done. Evidently
nothing else is being done."
In Beirut Monday. Moslem extremists holding Alann
Steen hostage said he is 111 and could die within 10 days.
The group, the pro-Iranlan Islamic Jihad for the Liberation
of Palestine, said In a statement It would release Steen in
exchange for 100 prisoners held In Israel.
4•
5
The group did not give details of Steen's ailment.

: Soviets Accused Of Propaganda
WASHINGTON (UP!) — A top U.S. arms control official is
charging a Soviet counterpart with trying to score
propaganda points by charging the Reagan administration
does not really want a medium-range nuclear missile
agreement.
•
Kenneth Adelman. the Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency director, described the allegations by Viktor
Karpov, head of the Soviet disarmament directorate, as
"playing games."
Karpov said In Moscow Sunday the United States Is using
the issue of Soviet superiority In shorter-range missiles as a
pretense to sandbag an agreement eliminating mediumrange nuclear missiles from Europe. Karpov said President
Reagan's 1981 ‘zero option" proposal was a bluff from
the very outset
111* w

♦•

Gold reacted strongly, opening
in Zurich at $411 per troy
ounce, up $3.50 from Monday's
close, and in London, gold
opened $2.50 higher at $410.75
an ounce.
The morning fixing in London
was $410.30. up $2.05 from
Monday's close.
Silver scored solid gains,
opening 10 cents higher In
Zurich at $5.70 per troy ounce
and 9.5 cents higher In London
at $5,735 an ounce.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, gold closed at $410.50 an
ounce on the Hong Kong Bullion
Exchange, up $3.85 from Mon­
day's close.
In early trading on New York's
Cotnex, a 100-troy-ounce gold
futures contract for current de­
livery In March opened at
$410.20 an ounce, unchanged
fr o m M o n d a y 's c lo s e . A
5.000-troy-ounce silver futures
contract for delivery In March
opened at $5,713. ofT 2.5 cents
an ounce.

Continued from page 1A
assuring the American public will be able to
decide for Itself what to watch and what not to
watch on cable."
James Mooney, president of the National Cable
Television Association, said the case "under­
scores the futility or the legislatures trying to use
so-called indecency statutes to prevent people
from watching in their own homes what they can
sec In their neighborhood movie theaters."
"W hat’s involved here is not obscenity."
Mooney said, "It's mainstream movies for
grownups who want to make their own Judg­
ments about what they can watch."
The 1983 obscenity law was Utah's second
attempt to limit the sexual content of cable
programming.
In 1981. the legislature passed a law making It
a misdemeanor to "knowingly distribute by wire
or cable any pornographic or Indecent material."
A federal court struck down that law as
"constitutionally overbroad." prompting the
legislature to enact a second statute.
The new law enabled the attorney general or
any city or county attorney to bring nuisance
charges against anyone who "as a continuing
course of conduct ... knowingly distributes
Indecent material within this state or over any
cable television system or pay-for-vlewlng televi­
sion programming."
A first olTense was punishable by up to $1,000.
a second offense by $10,000.
The act defined “ Indecent material" as a
display of sexual activity or organs that the
average person would consider patently offensive
taking Into account the time and manner In
which It Is presented.
Following passage of the act. a group of cable

subscribers and programmers, Including HBO,
filed suit alleging the law was unconstitutional.
A federal district court and the 10th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals agreed, ruling the law
was "unconstitutionally overbroad and vague
because It was not limited to obscenity.
Under Supreme Court precedents, a work may
be deemed obscene — and therefore not protected
by the First Amendment — tf tt appeals to the
prurient Interest. Is patently offensive and lacks
literary, artistic, political or scientific value.
Seeking high court review, the state of Utah
said states have a right "to alleviate the assault of
cablecast Indecency upon unwilling adult viewers
and to limit Its widespread availability to
impressionable children."
The state said the Cable Communications
Policy Act. passed by Congress In 1984. preserves
the right of states to regulate "not only obscene
speech," but other speech which may be
objectionable to the community.
Lawyers for the cable channels and viewers
opposed the appeal.
"Choice Is what cable is all about." they said,
adding that the law would force cable program­
mers "to guess" whether movies they show
might be considered Indecent. •
In other action Monday, the court:
• Let stand a ruling owners of baseball teams
hold exclusive broadcast rights of the games In a
major blow to players seeking a legal right to
share In the lucrative proceeds.
• Agreed to decide how much discretion the
Immigration and Naturalization Service has In
considering motions to reopen deportation pro­
ceedings. The case involves Asslbl Abudu. a
doctor from Ghana the government Is seeking to
deport for drug violations.
• Let stand a ruling forcing the government to
rehlre four air traffic controllers Involved In
contract negotiations who were fired with fellow
union members during their 1981 strike.

The 6 percent gain followed a
revised January drop of 9.9
percent In durable goods orders.

In dollar terms, durable goods
orders, for “ big ticket" Items
built to last several years. In­
creased $5.7 billion last month
to a seasonally adjusted $101.2
billion.

The February Increase was the
strongest since the Indicator
scored a 7.6 percent Jump In
September 1986,

Excluding defense, new orders
In February Increased 3.8 per­
cent compared to a revised
January decline of 7.7 percent.

setting the moratorium last
month, awaiting the outcome of
that meeting, which apparently
didn't produce desired results.
The county has been criticized
for allegedly falling to seek
municipal input during the last
eight months spent developing
the fees.
Streetman said city repre­
sentatives will be assured a say
in the future as part o f a

c o m m i t t e e t h a t w i l l be
established to review the fees
each year.
Sanford representatives also
take Issue with the fee system's
not being used on any large
collector roads within the city.
Mrs. Smith, however, said the
traffic problem In Seminole
County is all-encompassing, and
that the fees were a step towards
alleviating It.

Durable Good* Ordors Up 6 Porcont
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Buyers
boosted orders for durable goods
by 6 percent In February on the
strength of purchases of trans­
portation equipment, electrical
machinery and primary metals,
the Commerce Department said
Tuesday.

• • •

Continued from page IA
Three of Sanford's five com­
missioners — Mayor Smith.
John Mercer and Whltey Ecks­
tein — and city staff attended a
session the county hosted last
week for discussion of the fees.
Sanford commissioners held off

...Squabble
C o n tin u sd from pag• IA
My answer, feel free to use any
document you have and tell the
o f ch arism atic Pen etcostal
believers.”
Charlsmattcs — those who
believe they have "gifts of the
Holy Spirit." Including speaking
in tongues, healing and proallowed In all single and multi­
family residential zones. Homes
for three or four people In single
family zones would have to De
approved by conditional permit,
requiting a public hearing. The
same conditional use permission
is proposed for more than three
residents of homes In multi­
family zones. Conditional use
permission would also be re­
quired any number of elderly to
be cared for In commercial,
agricultural and Planned Unit
development districts, according
to staffs'proposals.

Including compliance with state
licensing criteria and annual
inspections by the city.
In a review conducted earlier
this winter at commissioners
request, a majority o f P&amp;Z
members recommended against
changing the city's zoning codes
to allow more areas for group
homes. Morris, now also a panel
member, opposed the P&amp;Z ma­
—Karan Talley
jority. which said present codes
provide sufficient area for the
operations. Malone, also now a
panel member, led the majority.
The three men pictured cook­
After the P&amp;Z review, com­
missioners turned the matter ing pancakes during a Klwanis
over to staff for further study 'Club of Sanford Annual Pancake
and guidelines were worked up Breakfast and Auction held Sat­
with a combination of legal urday at the Sanford Civic
counsel and building, planning Center were mlsldentlfled In
and engineering department Monday's Sanford Herald. The
men are, left to right, Rick
Input.
The staff proposes group care Voltollne, William Pegram. and
facilities for up to two people be Dick Coates.

C o rre c tio n

phesylng — have long been at adding the first phase of the
odds with the more conservative scheme was to reveal his sexual
encounter with a 21-year-old
fundamentalists.
news media and all concerned woman In Florida seven years
anything tt you think you have ago.
Bakker adm itted the en ­
on me because It's a lie."
Falwell. for his part, called counter last week and said he
Swaggert a "great man of God" paid nearly $115,000 In hush
■
and said " I did not Instruct Mr. money.
Grutman said last weekend
Grutman to talk with him. I have
no knowledge of any conversa­ famous people englnccrcdUio-*-'
tion he may have had. It Is my downfall of Bakker apd~£ald
Intention to call Jimmy Swag­ “ people who live In glass
gert tonight to make every effort ch u rch es sh o u ld n 't1 throw
to correct any misunderstanding stones."
T h e co m m en t p rom p ted
that may exist between the two
speculation that C alifornia
of us."
Swaggart, whose $130 million minister Robert Schuller, who
m inistry Is based In Baton preaches from the Crystal Ca­
Rouge. La., flatly denied any thedral. may have turned on
part In exposing Bakker's en­ Bakker. Grutm an said his
counter with a church secretary comment was not directed at
or attempting to seize the PTL Schuller.
Falw ell, a fundam entalist
ministry that Bakker surren­
dered last Thursday to Falwell. Baptist whose "Old Time Gospel
H ou r” te le v is io n m in istry
founder of the Moral Majority.
"I'm totally aghast (at rumors operates out of Lynchburg, Va.,
of a takeover plot)," Swaggdrt also has come under fire for
told the Observer, "because a greein g to take over the
nothing like that has ever been charismatic ministry Bakker has
considered, thought of or re­ headed since PTL's Inception In
the early 1970s.
motely engaged In."
Dr. R. Wayne Miller, president
Bakker. who resigned from
PTL two weeks after his wife of Gloryland Bible College in
admitted she was being treated Florence. S.C., said he was
for drug addiction, said the launching an effort to get Falwell
"complete game plan" of the out of PTL because "It Is Immor­
takeover attempt "fell Into our al for a fundamental minister to
ch an ge the d irectio n o f a
hands.”
"The person who spread this charismatic ministry that has
plot Is well known." Bakker said. been built by the gifts of millions

A R E A D EA TH S
LUCY C. PETTIGREW

Substitute

KINGS ISLAND. Calif. (UPI) - Shaken by reports that his
hostage brother Is gravely ill In Lebanon, Bruce Steen said
he would gladly trade places with him because "something
has to be done."
"I have no qualms whatsoever If something can be
arranged with all parties Involved," he Said In an interview

;

The statement apparently was
aimed at convincing currency
traders to ease upward pressure
on the yen. The leading Indus­
trial nations agreed at a meeting
In February to work toward
stabilisation of exchange rates.

Continued from page IA

IN BRIEF

OffmrsSelf

In Tokyo. Japan's Central
Bank chief said his Institution
would take "necessary steps.
Including In terven tio n ." to
support the American currency.

...P a n e l

NATION

Brothmr

rencies.
Zurich dealers said downward
pressure on the dollar had been
increased by the failure of na­
tional banks to intervene to halt
the currency’s decline.

...M a rtin
Continued from page IA

Dean Martin and his former
wife. Jeanne, have been notified
of their son's disappearance.
Menslk said.
Guard spokeswoman Carolyn
Hamilton said Martin's plane
and two others received tower
directions to change course to
avoid the peak — Southern
California's highest — moments
before It dropped o ff radar
screens.
"Tw o of the planes responded
to the directions, the other one
didn't." she said-

H O SP ITA L
N O TES
Central Florida

ADMISSIONS
San lord:
Sabrina S. Conya n
Richard T. Lombard
H.E. William*. Oallona
IrwInA. Howell. Enttrprlia
DISCHARGES
San lord:
Janlca D. Whit lay. Long wood
Patricia A. Rapln and baby boy
SIRTHS
Sabrina S. Conyort. a baby girl

The younger Martin, known as
Dlno. was formerly married to
actress O livia Hussey and
O lym pic skating cham pion
Dorothy Hamill. He played on
the professional tennis tour, and
at age 28 was ranked 50th
among the world's top players.
He co-starred with All MacGraw
In the movie "Players" about the
pro tour, and Just completed a
film. "B ackfire." with Keith
Carradlne.
A fte r “ P la y e r s '' flopped.
Martin earned a business ad­
ministration degree from the
University of Redlands then
Joined the Air Guard, getting his
wings In 1981.
He told United Press Interna­
tional in 1985 that flying an F-4
supersonic Jet fighter "... Is one
of the great thrills of a lifetime."
After pilot training. Martin
returned to acting. He appeared
In the 1983 movie. "Heart Like a
Wheel.” starred In the 1985-86
series "Misfits of Science." and
finished a pilot last month for a
television series. “ A Single
Man."
As a teenager. Martin was In a
rock group called Dlno, Deal and
Billy with his high school pal.
Deal Arnaz Jr. He and Hussey
had a son. Alex. 14, who re­
portedly watched his father take
off Saturday.

1

* .* * - ,-* .___ .

" K"&gt;**y •v”

Mrs. Lucy Clarke Pettigrew.
84. of 210 Temple Ave., Fern
Park, died Saturday. Bom In St.
Joh n 's, Newfoundland, she
moved to Fern Park from Maine
In 1963. She was a retired
bookkeeper for a bank and was a
Protestant.
Survivors Include two sisters.
Gladys Day and W innefred
Ashford, both of St. John’s.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs. In
charge of arrangements.

MARY ELLEN PREVATT
Mrs. Mary Ellen Prevatt. 61. of
550 Lake Geneva Drive, Geneva,
died Monday at Florida Hospital.
Orlando. Bom Oct. 24. 1925 In
Westwood. Ky.. she moved to
Geneva from Westwood In 1930.
She was a homemaker and a
member of Geneva United Meth­
odist Church. She was a member
of Ladies of Elks Lodge 1241.
Sanford.
Survivors: husband. Thomas;
daughter. Judy Lynn Cleveland.
Orlando; son. Thom as Lee
Kegley. Los Angeles; brother.
Clyde Kegley. Los Angeles; two
grandchildren.
G ram kow Funeral Home.
Sanford, In charge of arrange­
ments.

PETER A. RUBLE
Mr. Peter Andrew Ruble, 16.
557 Whippoorwill Lane. Oviedo.*

died Friday In a surfing accident
at Ponce Inlet In Volusia County.
Born In St. Louis Park, Minn., he
moved to Oviedo from Minnesota
In 1972. An Oviedo High School
student, he was a member of
First United Methodist Church.
Oviedo.
Survivors Include his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ruble,
Oviedo; two sisters, Debbie
Round. Los Angeles. Cindy, New
York City: brother. Mike. Or­
lando; maternal grandmother.
A lice Butterw orth. Denver;
paternal grandmother. Betty
Ruble, Billings, Mont.
Baldwln-Falrchlld Funeral
Home. Goldenrod. In charge.

Funaral Notlca
PREVATT, M AR Y E LLE N
— Funeral aervlce* tor Mary Elian Prevatt,
41, Geneva, who died Monday, will be II a.m.
Thursday at the Geneva United Methodltt
Church with the Rev. Gary liner officiating.
Interment will be made In Geneva Cemetery.
Friend* may call at Gramkow Funeral
Home. Wednetday, 2 4 and M p.m. A r­
rangement * by Gramkow Funeral Home,
Sanlord.

I CREMATION

SPECIALISTS

O A K LA W N
FUNERAL HOME A
PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER
$$a-4$$$
IWmtf tnwl tensss Caagtir^, j

I

�tr

1

%-1 &lt;• I « &lt; ' ‘

. PM '

1

PEOPLE
Senford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Communication,
Not Skin Color,
Is The Problem
DEAR ABBY: I must take
Issue with your reply to "Col­
or-Blind" — she wrote about an
acquaintance of hers who had
taken her son to the emergency
hospital and demnnded a white.
American doctor. You called that
woman a bigot and a racist.
Abby. I think you were wrong.
With the recent Influx of foreign
doctors. I’m sure all that woman
wanted was a doctor she could
communicate with. Some have
accents so thick, they can’t be
understood, and other doctors
can’t understand the questions
they arc asked. I don’t care what
color a doctor's skin Is, but If I'm
paying the doctor bills. I wunt
one I can communicate with.
One smiling doctor even Jok­
ingly said to me, “ Your 2-ycarold speak more better English
than me."
This is no Joke. Abby. It's a
serious problem when a family
member Is Injured or sick and
you need to discuss diagnosis,
treatment and prognosis with a
doctor who Just nods and smiles
mutely. Did I make my point.
Abby?
’
NO RACIST

DEAR NO RACIST: You did
Indeed. And very well. I can
understand why u person would
insist on having a doctor who
coud speak English clearly —
but what does color have to do
with It?

Tuesday, March 24,1M7—IB

Ellis-Hockenberry Vows
Repeated In Church Rites

Dear
Abby
nice (expensive) restaurant, and
after we each had a cocktail, the
next thing I knew, this lady had
one of her shoes olT and she
started "stroking" my leg with
her shoeless foot!
What was she trying to tell
me?

DEAR ABBY: Please print the
answer to our problem because
I’m sure others will run Into this.
With wedding Invitation time
near, how should we deal with
JOHNNY
relatives and friends who say.
"W e will come to the wedding,
DEAR JOHNNY: Maybe her
but our son wants to bring his feet hurt, or she was anqltng for
g irlfrie n d ." and so-and-so's a foothold on a more Intimate
daughter won’t come unless she relationship — strictly under the
can bring her boyfriend — she'll table, of course.
be bored to tears without him.
Another friend told us that they
DEAR ABBY: I am marrying
will be having friends visiting my ex-husband In September.
from out of town on that date, so We never gave our marriage a
please Include them.
chance, and were divorced
Abby. we arc cutting corners shortly after we were married.
as It Is to the point of omitting
Our first wedding wasn't
some people who probably much. We were married by a
expect to be Invited. We arc Justice of the peace \ylth a few
already In over our heads, so close friends and some family
how do we answer these sup­ members present. This time we
posedly Intelligent and well- are having a church wedding
mannered people? Thank you.
with lots of friends and relatives.
MRS. D.
The problem: Our relatives
and close friends who attended
DEAR MRS. D.:. Simply say our first ceremony already gave
that you arc unable to add even us lovely wedding gifts, and I
one more person to your guest want them to know that they are
list. You arc under no obligation not expected to give us another
to provide a reason, so respond gift. However, we do want them
with conviction and no apolo- to share our day of happiness.
filesWould it be all right to enclose a
little note with the invitations to
these special people saying. "No
DEAR ABBY: A friend at gift please. You already gave"?
SECOND MARRIAGE
work kept telling me about a
SAME MAN
young lady he thought I should
take out.,I finally called her and
DEAR SECOND: No notes.
Invited her out for dinner. We
Tell
them privately that a second
urc both m ature adults —
mld-30s. Well. I selected a very gift Is not expected.

T O N IG H T 'S TV
JlUESMf
EVENING

6:00

• (10) SOLDIERS: A HISTORY OF
MEN IN BATTLE Tr* rota o' tr»
combat angina* Narrator: Fradar•ck Fortyth

(Z)

10:00
O

JACK AND MIKE A man.

•JI EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
1(11)0000
DAY1
(ID
) CNN NEWS
|(S) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
CNF
SAVINGS
(•)
6:30

{

( S B LOVING
B (1D BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
1r00
I DAYS OF OUR LIVES
ALL MY CHILDREN
) (11) DICK VAN 0YKE
) (10) WE RE COOKING NOW

- Teresa Ann Ellis and James L.
Hockenbcrry were married Feb.
14. at 5 p.m.. at the Nativity
Catholic Church. Lake Mary.
Father James C. Seibert was the
officiating clergyman for the
nuptial mass.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Laughrey.
Altamonte Springs. The bride­
groom’s parents arc Mr. and
Mrs. James L. Hockenbcrry,
Longwood.
Given In marriage by her step
father and mother, the bride
chose for her vows an organza
and Chantilly lace gown, fash­
ioned along the Victorian silhou­
ette. Accenting the sheer yoke
and long tapered sleeves were
ruffles at the shoulders. Pearls
and sequins embellished the
fitted bodice and the lace skirt
cascaded into a sweeping chapel
train bordered In ruffles. Her
headpiece was a lace hat that
held her veil of Illusion and she
carried a cascade of burgundy
and w h i t e c a r n a t i o n s ,
lily-of-thc-valley and baby’s
breath surrounding a pink
orchid.
Kellie Ellis attended her sister
as maid of honor. She wore a
dusty rose satin gown wwlth
ruffled sleeves. Her headpiece
was a crown of flowers and she
carried a fan arrangd with lilies,
roses und baby’s breath.
B r i d e s ma i d s w e r e L is a
Watkins Dixon, sister of the
bride, and Stephanie Beaver,
sister of the bridegroom. Their
gowns and flowers were Identical
to the honor attendant's.
Ty Qulllan served the bride­
groom as best man. Ushers were
Mike Hockenbcrry. brother of of
the bridegroom, and Timothy
Bcrkcbllc.
Jennifer Roberts, niece of the
bride, was flower girl and Mat­
thew Laughery. brother of the
bride, was the ring bearer.
Following the wedding, the

6:05
O BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
6:30
• ® NBC NEWS
CBS NEWS
ABCNSWSQ
(11)
TOO CLOSE FOR COMl "
FORT April tchamat to ottocl a re­
conciliation bah— n Marwy and tha
broth* ha hawi'l apokan to lor 40
yaart
6:35
(D ANOY GRIFFITH
7:00
B (3) NEWLYWED GAME
(7) 0 PM MAGAZINE Dr. Ruth
Waathahnar; a tkl tournamant lor
ctNidran
B JEOPARDY
(11) BARNEY MILLER
(10) NATURE OF THINOS
(•) MOVIE "Donovan* Kid"
(1979)(Part 2 ot 2| Darran McCann.
Mtckay Roonay WhMa attampu^
to liaa Na *wt# and daughtar from
tha whuanca ot a dommaaring ratativa. a con man and hta partnar drift
Into a aarwa of adventure* A
"Wonderful World of Disney" p l ­
antation

i

7:05
QSANF0R0AN0S0N
7:30
B ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIOHT
Intarvtaw with actor Mtckay Rourka
("Angel Maari 'l In ttarao.
(X) ■ OATMO GAME
® B WHEEL OF FORTUNE
B (ID BENSON
7:35

LOO

B ®MATLOCK

Matlock a triad
tor Jury tamparmg whan a midmannarad furor claima tha attornay
oftarad him a bnDa In ttarao
(D B SPIES Bon Smytha taka in
to«a with an Aaian double agent
CD B BRIO'S THE BOBS? Tony
ancouragat mtakactual Jonathan to
antar a gytnnaatica compaction (Ft)
&amp; (11) MOVIE "Louiaiana" (1994)
(Part 2 Of 3) Margot Kidd*. Ian
Chartaaon Throughout tour decadat of aocial uphaaval and pofctical turmoil, a woman tanaoouNy
canga to har Louiaiana plantation
B (10) NOVA Fumed In Nopal.
Ethiopia and Chaia. thia examinelion of aoa aroaion'a link to alarvalion focuaaa on both tha cauaaa and
i curat tor tha problem. g
(9) MOVIE "Scorchy" (1979)
viia Siavana. Caaara Danova
An attractive undarcovar Saattta
poheawoman attampta to tmaah a
dangarout drug rmg
1:06
a
NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawka at Washington Suitata (Uvol
(Subtact to blackout)

®B

6:46

10:20

(D MOVIE "Mountain Man" (1977)
Denver Pyta. Kan Barry. A man who
la auffarmg from miner'a lung dltaaaa aata out to find froth air m the
wMdarnaaa and bacomaa a champi­
on ot contarnation.
10:30
(11) BOS NEWHART
(S) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIEN08

1

11.*00

(101A.M. WEATHER
7:00
TODAY
_ OOOO MORNING AMERICA
(11)0.1. JOE
(10)
no SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

SI
•

7:30
® B MORNING PROGRAM
■ (11) TRANSFORMERS
8 (10) SESAME STREET (R) g

® ® B ® B news

«

6:00

(11) LATE SHOW Hot!: Joan
Rivera, m ttarao.

B U D DENNIS THE MENACE

B (10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS

8:05
OX I DREAM OF JEANNIE

B (9) BARGAINS TONIOHT

11:30
® TONIGHT SHOW Hott:
Johnny Carton Scheduled actor
Patrick Duffy, comica tha Smothert
Brothert In ttarao
M *A *i‘ H
NIGHTUNEg

B

8

12:00

® B T.J. HOOKER
® B NIGHTLIFE Hoat: David
Brenner. Scheduled jhe mutlc
group Crowded Houae. In ttarao.
B (11) ASK OR. RUTH Ouaatt:
New York Matt player Kafth Hernandai and New York Gianta player
Ph» McConkey. g
B (9) NIGHT OWL FUN

8'30

«

8:35
OX BEWITCHEO*
9:00
I ® THE JUOOE
Q DONAHUE
) B OPRAH WINFREY
j (11) GREEN ACRES
) ( 10) SESAME STREET (R )g
) (9) SHOP-AT-HOME ANO SAVE

OX MOVIE "Rabat Without A
Ceuta" (1935) Jamaa Dean. Natalia
Wood.

9:35
OX I LOVE LUCY

w on
12:*°
B ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVE)
LBTTERMAN
Scheduled:
eongwritera Jerry Laibar and Mika
Stoner, m ttarao.

B ® SALE OF THE CENTURY
® 8 HOUR MAGAZINE
® 8 TRUE CONFESSIONS
8&lt;11)7ALL QUY
8 (10) CAPTAIN KANOAROO (R)

Q D BH BCO VER
B (ID HAWAII FTVt-0
_ _
1:00
® B MOVE) "Carman Jonet"
(1934) Harry Baiafonta. Dorothy
Dandridga.
^

1:10

_

® B MOVIE "Tha Poataaaad"
(1977) Jamaa Farantino. Joan
Hackatl
1:30
B (1D SHARPS Shelchet: an auto
mechanic ayaa an attractive car
owner; a tragic comedy dub; Rutelan female atMetee g
M 0
B (111DUKES OF HAZZARO
® B

news

2:35
OX MOVIE City That Never
Sleepa" (1933) Qig Young. Mala

10:00

10:05
( 9 MOVIE

si

(10) WILD AMERICA (MON. FRO
10) PROFILES OP NATURE

(tue!
(10)
a &lt;

PHENOMENAL WORLD

SS^O) NEWTON S APPLE (THU)

11.-00
AISLE
PRICE IS RIOHT
FAME FORTUNE A RO11) ALICE
WEST OF HESTER STREET
(MON)
B (10) NORTHERN E00C (TUE)
8 110) NATURE OF THINGS (WED)
B ('0) NOVA (THU)
8 HO) HOLLYWOOD'S FAVORITE
HEAVY: BUSINESSMEN ON PRIME
TIME TV (FRI)
-

11:30

- 6:30

® l l MOVIE "A Oiffaront Affair"
(Pranadra) Anna Archar, Tony Rob­
erta A radio paychiatnat a Ufa la
draaucady altarad whan tha loafer
chad aha hat bean financially aponaortna arrivot on har doormap g
® B MO0NUQHTM0 A clergy­
man aaarchaa for a woman ha t
• (R )g

10:30
BLOCKBUSTERS
SUPERIOR COURT

WHEEL OF FORTUNE
WEBSTER (R)

6.-00
THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
')(M0N)
«"• COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
BAANOEOCMD)
(11) CNN NEWS
BEVERLY MUSI

AFTERNOON

®

IS

6:30
TOOAY-S BUSINESS
CAN YOU SS TMNNERT
(MON. THU)
1
BRANOCO (MON, FRI)
$ 1 ' CAN YOU BE THINNER)

8V

SS!
B an

(11) CNN NEWS
ANOYORWFTTH

u

6.-00

NSC NEWS

SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL

12:00

S
(WED

ING (THU)

B (10) FAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)
2:30
(11) MY LITTLE PONY 'fT

a

8
&lt;10| LAST WALTZ ON A
TIGHTROPE (TUE)
(10) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE

K

(10) THIS IS NOEL COWARO
(THU)
B d0|
(M) ANNA KARENINA (FRO
8 (9(9)
)1MO-OAY BARGAINS

12:05
OX PERRY MASON
12:30
■ ® WORDPLAY
® B YOUNG ANO THE RUT-

Mr. and Mrs. David (Cindy)
W illiam son o f Sanford, an­
nounce the birth of (heir first
child, u 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 (Murion) Bethea.
Sanford. Paternal grandparents
arc Mr. and Mrs. Russell (Anita)
Williamson. DcBury. Paternal
grandmother Is Mrs. Thelma
Williamson. Sanford.

on March 12. She weighed 10
lbs.. 4 ozs.
Maternal grandparents arc Mr.
und Mrs.Edward Allrld of Orange
Park. Paternal grandparents urc
Mr. and Mrj». Calvin Jurdlnc of
Lake Mury.

.&lt;
7 rio e£ a lio n &amp;
TUB-DIMENSIONS Ml V I/ 1
PRINTINO
Vs
sr

_ ) (10)
a
in MAGIC OF FLORAL PAINT­

S ( 10) SECRET CITY
2'35
OX WOMANWATCH (FRI)
3.-00
I ® SANTA BARBARA
J
GUKXNQ LIGHT
D8 GENERAL HOSPITAL
1(11) SCOOSY OOO
) ( 10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
l (9) MID-DAY BARGAINS

8

Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Lisa)
Gary. 3804 W. Florida Route 46.
Oviedo, announce the birth of a
son. Charles Allen Gary II. on
March 11. at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sanford. He
weighed 8 lbs, 4 ozs.'
Maternal grandparents arc
Agnes and George Edwards.
Sanford. Paternal grandparents
are Joan Butler. Orlando, and
Homer Gary. Kissimmee.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert (Kathy)
Jurdlnc of Boynton Beach, an­
nounce the birth of their first
child, a daughter. Elysc Nicole.

427

3 3 9 -6 0 6 2

lonowooo

CLOCK

TUXEDO
RENTAL

SALES A SERVICE
We carry all leading
manufacturer's docket

available at

FASHION
CLEANERS

Seminole Centre
to Laundromat)

3.-05
OX TOM S JERRY ANO PRKNOS

323-5M3

Sale* 6 Service

"

4)0 I m k CL laacmaE 331-5560

3:30
(11) SMURFS' ADVDfTUfWS
(10)SESAME STREET(R)g

1
R

WEDNESDAY SPECIAL

4M
MAGNUM. P.I.

3 Piece Dinner!

TAXI
JEOPAROY
) THUNOERCAT8g
AMERICA'S BIGGEST BAR4*30

2

CYCLONE— # — ®
DIRTY WAR

THRU-S4:05
com pany
_
CARO OOO
SHARKS
OX SCOOSY
(ll)SILVERHAWKSg
(10) SQUARE ONE TELEVISION

B

4:32

$

2 79

3 pieces of golden brown Fam ous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and two fresh, hot biscuits.

0XFUNTSTONES

COUPON

6A0

) DIVORCE COURT
| M 'A 'S 'M

J

FEED 4 FO R

iHOUnAfOOOSOUARtt
1) FACTS OF LIFE
j (TO) OCEANUS (MON)
5 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN

Rl)
J (9) HE-MAN ANO MASTERS OF
THE UNIVERSE (MON, WED. FRI)
B (4) SHE-AX PRINCESS OF
POWER (TUE, T H U ) ^ ^ ^
O OILUGAN-S ISLAND (MONTHU)
(B ROCKY ROAD (FRI)

B® ® a® aN sw s

8 (11)SEWTTCHE0
8 (*0) BERGERAC (MON)

..

I

9:05
OX DOWN TO EARTH
8:30
® LOVE CONNECTION
(11) PETTICOAT JUNCTION

’t' '

Mr. and Mrs. Michael A.
BOLD ANO THE BEAUTIFUL
Vaughn of Abilene. Texas, an­
(It)F-TROOP
nounce (he birth of their first
(10) NEW SOUTHERN COOKchild,
a son. Andrew Jacob, on
INQ(MON)
Feb. 15. He weighed 7 lbs.. 15
B (10) FRENCH CHEF (TUE)
ozs.
B (10) MADELEINE COOKS (WED)
(THU)B (10) WOOOWRKIHT'S
..
SHOP Mrs. Vaughn, (he former Bev­
B (10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
erly Jo Martindlll of Sunford. is
(FRI)
the daughter o f Betty and
2.-00
Charles Willis. 206 Mirror Drive.
B ® ANOTHER WORLD
® 8
THE WORLD TURNS
Sanford. Paternal grandparents
® 8 ONE LIFE TO LIVE
arc Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughn.
8(11)AN0YQMFFITH
B (10) WONOERFUL WORLD OF
Abilene. Texas. Maternal great
ACRYLICS (MON)
grandfather
Is Lowell Martindlll
110) JOY OF PAINTING (TUE)
Sr..
DcBary.
(10) MAGIC OF OIL FAINTING

FRIENDS

12:20

OROWBFO PAINS Whan
Jaaon bacomaa dapraaaad ovar hit
ago. Maggie organuat a reunion
with mambara of tut coaaga rock
band (R ig
fcOO
B (D NUTCRACKER: MONEY.
MADNESS ANO MUR0ER Francaa
naaa In aocial ardoa. bacommg a
mafor aupportar of tha Now York
City Banal. Richard ta«t Marilyn tha
truth about Frankkn'a murdar
Stan Laa Ramiek. John Glovar and
Inga Swanton. (Pari * ot 3 )In atar

(11) FLINTSTONES
(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

udvlsor. by Palm Springs Print­
ing Inc., Altamonte Springs. The
bridegroom Is employed us an
air conditioning technician by
Advanced Air Conditioning. Or­
lando.

N EW A R R IV A LS
rT ’ -

)(9) MARY TYLER MOORE

M r. and M rs. Ja m e s L. H ockenbcrry

reception was held at the Winter
Park Elk’s Lodge. Winter Park.
After u wedding trip to Marltta.
Ohio, the newlyweds arc muklng
their home In Longwood. The
bride is employed as a customer

6:30
COURT

8
® 8 ® bnew s
B u d je f f e r s o n s
B n o i OCEANUS (MON)

iiisssasnsi'ss r
8 (10) ART O F -------- L

ST.,

K s iid r e a m o f j e a n m e
.
5:36

OX LEAVE

IT TO BEAVER (MON-

THU)
Q&gt; SAFE AT HOME (FRI)

* 7 9 9
Look at what you get: 8 pcs. of golden brown
Fam ous Recipe Fried Chicken, 1 pint mashed
potatoes, Vi pint gravy and 4 biscuits. An entire
family dinner for only $7.99.
Good Thura., Frt., Sat.. Sun.

*'

8*

COUPON
100 WaSStog

*1 1 4 6
100 S r s t a t i s s

Clalnc*N
Hallmark
Shop
"W t an still on* tf
Nm UrgMi and bttl Hallmark
« « »
Shagi In IN iaufhtait
322-6982
SANFORD PLAZA M.H Omv T. PMwri

A Taste of the Country
SANFORD
190S FRENCH AVE.
HWY. 17-92

CASSELBERRY
41 N. HWY. 17-92

i

�r

r
i B—Sanford Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuotday, March 24, 1M7

Legal Notice

Le g a l N o t ic T
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO
LAND USE CHANGE AND D EVELO PM ENT
OF REOIONAL IMPACT
The Seminole Count/ Local Planning Agency'Planning ano Zoning
Commlitlon (LPA/PAZ) will conduct a publlr hearing on April I,
1*17 at 7:00 P.M. nr a* »oon thereafter at Ulbl*. m ihe Stmlncle
Coun.y Service* Bul’Jtng, 1101 Ea*l F lrtl SH-wt. &lt;anto*d j'hylda
32771, Room WI2U
The public hearing It being corkl-:lnl *o contloer and near
comment* on the General Santoro Estate* Development of Regional
Impact (DRI), undergoing a ORI ic .e r - and to make r;'ommendalion* to Ihe Board ol County Commissioner* concerning the
development. The L PA /PA Z w ill a lK contldcr a requeit.J
amendment to the County Comprehen*lve Plan (Short Rang*
Development Plan), Irom Low Dentlly Retldenllal/Pretervallon to
Planned Unit Development and reionlng from A I (Agricultural,
R-1A and R-IAA (Single Family Dwelling Olttrlct) to PUD (Planned
Unit Development) attoclaledwllh the development.
Name at Oevelepmenti Oeneral laniard Estates: Sit* el
Development: a ll acre*, more or let*. Location of Development■The
*lt* I* located In the touthwaat quadrant ol Airport Boulevard and
Slat* Road 4*A bounded by State Road 44A on Ihe north, Airport
Boulevard nn the *a*t, and by Old Lake Mary Road on the *outh. A
portion ot the *11* It alio located on the touth tide of Old Lake Mary
Road ad|ec*nt to th* Seaboard Coattlln* Railroad (tee map below)
(BCC Olttrlct S). Oeneral Detcriptlonat Development: Th* propoted
development will Include l.a fl homing unlit, clubhouie, 300,000
tquar* feel, more or lett, ol commercial *pac* and 10.000 tquar*
teat, more or let* ol office tpac*. Th* protect It propoted to b*
developed In twopha*** between it t f iw t. Legal Detcriptlon:
M*.I acre* located touth and watt ot the inleiectlon of S. R . 46A and
Airport Boulevard; f .l acre*, located al th* toulhwett corner of S.R.
44A and Lake Boulevard: and 44.4 acre* located touth ol Ihe
Intertacllon of Airport Boulevard and Old Lake Mary Road. Th*
propoted 41*.* acre development It located In Section* ] and 10,
Townthlp 10 South, Rang* 30 Ealt, Seminole County, Florida. The
complete legal detcriptlon ot Ihe propoted protect. Including the
Propoted Preliminary Matter Plan. It on (lie In th* Ofllc* ol
Planning al the addrett below:

Thot* In attendance at th* public hearing detirlng to pretent Input
will be heard and written comment* may be filed with the Local
Planning Agency/Planning and Zoning Commlttlon at the public
hearing or by mailing tame to th* addrett below, c/o Planning
Director. Th* hearing may be continued Irom lime to lime at found
necettery. Further Information pertaining to thlt application may be
’ obtained from th* Office of Planning, Room NMI. Seminole County
Service* Building, 1101 E atl F in t Street, Sanlord, F L 33771, 33M1J0.
attention 371. Per torn are advlted that It they decide to appeal any
daemon mad* at thlt hearing, they will need a record of th*
proceeding*, and for tuch purpote, they may need to entur* that a
verbatim record of th# proceeding It mnde, which record include!
the tettlmony and evidence upon which th* appeal It to be mad*.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
BY: ANTHONY VANDERW ORP. PLANNING DIRECTOR
Publish: March 10,14, 1*47
OEM 44

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT

NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX DEED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
GIVEN, th a lj E M Attoclalet
Ihe holder ol th* following certllIcalet hat Iliad tald cerlllicatet
lor a taa deed to be Ittued
thereon. Th* certillcat* num
bef t and year* ot luuance. tha
detcriptlon ol the property, and
tha namat In which II wat
a lien ed area* follow*:
CERTIFICATE NO. 1341.
VE A R O F ISSUANCE: 1*44.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F PRO
PER T Y: LEG LOTS 101 + 101
RE PLAT OF WINWOOD PARK
PB1PG30.
Nam a In which a tta tta d
Odetta M. W. Irving. Eitateof.
All ol tald proparty being In
Ihe County ot Seminole, Slat* ol
Florida.
Unlen tuch carllllcala or cerllflc a ltt thall ba redeemed ac­
cording lo law lha proparty
detcrlbed In tuch certillcat* or
cerlllicatet will be told to the
htgheit bidder at tha court houta
door on the 10th day of April,
IN7 a l l 1:00 a.m.
Approximately 5115.00 cath
lor loot It requlrad to ba paid by
tuccattlul bidder at tha tala.
Full paymanl ol- an amount
equal to tha hlgheit bid plut
applicable documentary tfamp
taw* and racordlng fact It dua
w llh ln 14 hour* a tta r tha
advertlted lima of th* tala. A ll
payment* thall bo cath or guar­
anteed Inttrument, made pay­
able to Ihe Clerk ot Circuit
COurt.
Dated thlt 4th day ol March.
IN7.
(SEAL!
David N. Berrien
Clark ol Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: MIchallaL. Silva

""nztzsr'” -

P R O M T S DIVISION
File Number 17-MI-CP
IN RE: ESTATE OF
G LEN H. R A Y alto known at
G LEN HOLMES RAY,

NOTICE OP
ADMINISTRATION
■ Th# admlnlitralion of Ihe
;g*tata of GLEN H. RAY, da’caatad, File Number IM0I-CP,
U pending fn th* Circuit Court
tor Seminal* County, Florida,
Orobote Division, tho addrett of
Which It P.O. Drawer C, San­
ford, FL 31771. Tho nomet and
.poorvBMrf inf ptfionAi rtpn*
aentatlv* and th* pertonal rep
resentallve’s attorney are tel
l.

iw in uElwW,

• All Inlcretted pertont or*
required to tile with thlt court,
.WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF
TH E FIRST PUBLICATION OF
iTHIS NOTICE: (1 ) oil claims
Molntt tho etlit* and (1) any
BO(octlon by on Intorottod
l an whom thlt notko wot
t thot chellenget the valid1Of tho will, Ihe quallflcallont
tho poraonol rapraaontatlvo.
. mue, or jurisdiction ot tho
■I: ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC­
TIONS NOT SO FILED WILL
!9E FOREVER BARRED
*•Publication ot thlt Notice hat
begun on March M, I*07.
, Poraonol Rapraaontatlvo:

I OERALOR.RAY
2IMClutter BranchCt.
' Orlande, Florida SMS)

• RICHARD V. RAY
t III) turning Tree Ct.
: Stuart, F L
Attorney for

Poraonol Represented**:
JOHN L. THOMAS. II
•01E. Jackton Street
Orlando, Florid* 33S0I
Telephone: (3*3)443-12*0
Publlth: March34,31, IM7
OEM-313

Denijtv Clerk

Publlth; March IS, 17,14 A 31.
1*47
D I M ’fO

CILKBMTY CIPHER
SACS

"O C Q B P

L

lOCPB’V

ULDC

IS

KOVU

Z S P O E P ."

PBBI

OELOU

LIJVUQ IP

V*

K Q S IO IP

EH

-

SLHQCZZP.

OQSX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Tho psychic gears CAUMd by
bobovtnfl Owl you art ugly b m a pqrmanant mirk on
your paraonaMy." — Joan Rlvara.

■LO O M

CO U N TT

71— Help Wanted

NOTICE OF CHANOE OF LAND USE
PUBLIC HEARINO
A PR IL 14,1*07
THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF SEMINOLE
C O U N TY W IL L HOLD TH E SECONO OF TWO P U B L IC
HEARINGS ON A PRIL 14. 1*17 TO CONSIDER REQUESTED
SM ALL SCALE AM ENDM ENTS TO THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
COM PREH ENSIVE PLAN (SHORT RANGE DEVELOPM ENT
PLAN), AND ANY ASSOCIATED REZONINGS. SMALL SCALE
D EV ELO PM EN T ACTIVITIES ARE D EFIN ED AS RESIDENTIAL
LAND USE OF FIVE ACRES OR LESS AND A DENSITY OF FIVE
UNITS (OR LESS) P E R ACRES. OR OTHER LAND USF
CATEGORIES OF TH R EE ACRE5 OR LESS. A t public comment
hat been received pt th* Local Planning Agency'Plannlng and
Zoning Commlttlon and first Board Public Haarlng, thlt tacond
Board Hearing it tor th* purpote of receiving new and/or additional
Information on lha raquetted amendment* and lo take final Board
action. Tha haarlng will begin al 4:00 p.m. or at toon thereafter at
pottibla In Room WIIO ol lha County Service* Building, 1101 Eatt
F lrtt Street, Sanlord. Florida. SHOULD THE BOARD OF COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS DECIDE TO AM END THE COMPREHENSIVE
PLAN, AN ORDINANCE WILL BE ENACTED TO ACCOMPLISH
THIS PURPOSE. THE ORDINANCE BELOW IDENTIFIES THE
PROPERTIES WHICH WILL BE THE SUBJECT OF THE PUBLIC
HEARING. THE PROPOSED ORDINANCE IS ENTITLED
Ordinance 17-----------Seminole County, Florida
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G O R D IN AN C E 77 15, TH E
SEMINOLE COUNTY COM PREHENSIVE PLAN: AMENDING
THE LAND USE E LE M E N T OF THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
COM PREHENSIVE PLAN AS TO THOSE PROPERTIES D E ­
SCRIBED H EREIN. PROVIDING FOR EXCLUSION FROM THE
SEMINOLE COUNTY CODE; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY;
AND PROVIDING FOR AN E FFEC T IV E DATE
John Wilton — located at th* toutheail corner ol Lake Ruth Drive
and C.R. 417. Amendment from Low Denilty Residential lo Low
Intensity Commerclal/Olllce; Retene Irom A-l (Agriculture) to OP
(Oflice District) on property detcrlbed at follows:
Lot 1 Nelton't Lakavlew Heights amended plat, recorded In Piet
Book t l Peg* f t ot th* Public Recordt ol Seminole County, Florida,
containing 0.70 acres more or lett
(BCC District 1)

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

Orlando - Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
1 tiino.................. 72c a line
HOURS 3 CMiMctitWa times G$C a lint

8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.

MONDAY thru TRIDAY
SATURDAY 9 - Nu«n

7 consecutive times 5€C t lire
18 constcuthe limes 50C a lino
Contract Ratos Available
3 Unas Minimum

D EA D LIN E S
N o o n Th 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 - 9:00 A . M . S a tu rd a y
N O T E In the evenl of Ihe publishing of erro rs in ad vertise m en t, me S in
ford H erald sh all p u b llth the advertisem ent, after II h is been corrected at
no cost to Ihe ad v ertise r bul such Insertions sh all num ber no more than one

HI

COOK- Soma experience helpful.
Apply *1 DeBary Manor, 40 N.

Hwy 17*2................ EOE

CUSTOMER SERVICE- 5200 +
wkl Fun A eaiyl Lite typingtrain fully I AAA Employment,
700 W. 2SthSt.............323 5174
* * • HAIRSTYLIST * • *
to work Tuesdays-Salurdayx.
Up to 40% commission....!!! B**l
HIRINQI Federal Gov. jobs. In
vou- ere* A ow seas. Many
Imme-Jiate openings without
w a i t i n g l i s t s or t es t s .
315-144,000. Phone call return
dable......403-534 1445 ax 1,1243
HIRINQI Federal government
|obi In your area A overseas.
Many Imm. openings without
walling list or test. 515-44.000.
Phon* call refundable. (403)
431 1445...................Ex), 12*3.

HOSPITAL STAFFING
NURSES NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY
New be n ellls, Ire* C E U 'S ,
Vacation, dally pay, flexible
hours.

12— Legal Services

71— Help Wanted

SOCIAL SECURITY Olsablllly
Free Advice.No Charge Unless
W* W in l W ard W h ile A
Associates........... 303-33I-151*

ADD TO YOUR INCOME
Sell Avon Nowl
372 045*........o r........ 323-4444
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
JOBSI JOBSI JOBSI
International company expan­
ding to thlt area. 51200/mo.
beginning pay. Various posi­
tions. Rapid advancement,
company training, no experi­
ence necessary, excellent
benefits. Call today lor In­
terview. 747 43*5.
College Students Accepted

21— Personals

A LOVER’ S KNOT
Elwyn Babbitt — located al tha toulhwett corner ol S.R. 434 and
WEDDINGS BY DOT
Laka Howell Lane. Amendment Irom Medium Dentlly Residential lo
Nelery Public_______ 323-31*5
Commercial; Retene Irom A-l (Agriculture) lo C l (Retail
A L L ALONE7 Call Bringing
Commarclal) on property detcribad at follow*:
People Together. Sanford's
Baginning 10 laat South ol tho Northwest corner ol the Northwest
most respected dating service
'» ol the Southeast la of Section it, Townthlp 31 South, Rang* 30
since 1*77. Men over SO 145%
East, Seminole County, Florida, run Eatt 145.0 last to tha wetttrly
discount)...........1 400*31 4477
right al way llna ol Slata Road 414, lhanca toulhaatlerly along tald
CRISIS FftEONANCYCTR.
right ot way tin* 374.S3 feet, thence Wet! 3*4 0 feet lo Ihe wett line ol
Free Pregnancy Test, conllden
tald Northwest U, thence North along tald line 255.0 feet to th* Point
llel. Cell for eppt....... 331-74*5
ot Beginning, and alto Lot 13 and lha North 11.0 lael ol Lot 11 ol Opal
Terrace at recorded In Plat Book 13 on Pag* 34 ot th* Public Recordt
NEWCREDIT CARD!
ot Seminole County, Florida, containing 1.4 acres more or lets.
No o ne r e f u s e d . C a l l :
(IC C Olttrlct 4)
1-4l*-545-t533axl. CI03FL.
Richland Pi apart!** — located on th* touth tide ol South Street,
.............34hours.............
approximately 400 feet west of U.S. 17 *3. Amendment Irom Low
SREW ARD I For Into as lo
Density Residential to Low Intensity Commerclal/Olllce. Retene
whereabouts ol dark green
from R-IA (Single Family Dwelling District) to OP (Office Olttrlct)
van In recent accident on Dog
on property detcrlbed at follow*:
T ra ck Road. Damage fo
Lott I and 3. Block B. Oak Ridge Park at racorded In Plat book I,
d rlv irt side...............222-112*
Paga It of th* Public Recordt ol Seminole County, Florida,
" ----- J
containing 0.41 acre* more or last.
I IC C Olttrlct 4)
23— Lost &amp; Found
Lexington Heme* — located on the wett tide ot Dean Road
surrounded by th* Aloma Band PUD. Amandmant Irom General
REWARD- 550 for return of
Rural to Planntd Unit Development; Retene Irom A-l (Agriculture)
black A fan 71V wk. female
lo PUD (Planned Unit Development) on property detcrlbed at
D oberm an P ln c h e r pup.
follows:
Sfolan from yard 3/72/47 on W.
Commence at tha Southwest corner of th* Northeast la ot tha
14th St. Sanford. No quasiions
Southaast U of Section 31, Townthlp 11 South. Rang* 31 Eatt,
asked. Or 1100 REW ARD lor
Semlnola County, Florida; Ihenca run North 0*30'0l" Wett, along lha
information leading lo tha
Watl llna of th* Northeast &lt;a of th* Southeast la ol tald Section 31,
arrest and conviction ol lha
754.4a tael; Ihenca run dua Eatl 3**.7I (set lo lha Southwest comer
person or persons respan, lor
and lha Point ol Beginning ot th* tract about to be described: Ihence
th* theft of our pet. Call:
run due North, 7*1 leet; thence run due Eatt 315.17 feet to th*
322 7*12........ or........ 323 W4*
Westerly right ol way line of Dean Road; thence run Southeasterly
along tald rlght-ol-way llna and along a curve concave
Southwesterly, having for Its elements a radlut ol S74 47 faet, a
25— Special Notices
central angle of IO*OT and a chord bearing of South 31*07'3I" Eatl,
lor an arc distance ol 103.14 tael to tho P.C.C. ot a curve concave
Southwesterly; thence run Southeasterly along th* aforementioned
BECOME A NOTARY
right-of-way line and along tha tald curve having for lit element* a
For Datalls; 1-400-432-4354
radlut of 1*7.0 feet and a central angle of I4*3I’50*, for on arc 1
Florida Notary Association
distance ol 234.M feet; Ihence run due Wett, 350 54 feet to the Point ot
HEADACHE A MUSCLE PAIN
Beginning. Situated, lying end being In Seminole County, Florida,
R E L I E F through massage
containing l.jn icret more or lett. (RCC District 1)
therapy, by appt........345-454*
Myresi Freedman — located at tha southwest corner ol Filth
Avenue end C.R. 41*. Amendment Irom General Rural lo Low
Intensity Com marc la I/Of IIce. Retene Irom R-3 (Multi-Family
27— Nursery A
Dwelling District) to RP (Residential Professional) on property
Child Care
detcribad at follow*:
Loft 4, 7 and I. Block 41, Towntlfe of North Chuluote. Lett road
right of way, recorded In Plat Book 3, Paga(t) 54 54 of tha Public
I W ILL BABYSIT pra schooler*
Records of Semlnola County, Florida, containing 0.40 acre* more or
In my home Monday-Friday
lots. (BCC District I)
Breakfast A lunch If Raslred.
Circle K Corporation - located al tha southeast corner ol S.R. 434
Reasonable rates. 323 44*4
ertd Carrigan Avenue. Amendment from Low Density Residential to
LOVINO
D AYCARE, 7:30 to
Commarclal on tha property detcrlbed at follows:
S:30 week-days, Lake Mary
Lott I and 2 In Block E of Semlnola Terrace Raplal according lo
*. Call.................. 333 4154
th* plat thereof recorded In Plat Book II al Page If ol Ihe Public
LOVINO MOTHER will babysit
Recordt ol Seminole County, Florida, containing 0.43 acrat more or
In my homa. Day or night,
last. (BCC District I)
part/lull time, allages33Hl*74
The public It encouraged lo attend thlt hearing. Those In
attendance will be heard and written comment* may be Iliad with
Ihe Board ot County Commissioners. Hearing may ba continued from
*3— Mortgages
time lo lime at found necettery. Further Information pertaining to
Bought A Sold
tha proposed amendment* may be obtained from th* Ofllc* ot
Planning, Room N34I, Semlnola County Services Building, KOI Eatt
First Street, Sanford, Florida 13771, or by contacting tha Office ol
W E B U Y 1 st a n d in d
Planning (305) 331-1110, axlantlon 171.
MORTOAOES Nation wide.
Pertont are advlted that It they decide lo appeal any decision
C all: Ray Lagg Lie. M lg
mad* at theta meeting*, they will need a record ol the proceeding*,
Broker, *40 Douglas Ava.,
and tor tuch purpote. they may need lo ensure that a verbatim
Altamonte.................774 7752
record ot th* proceeding* It made, which record Includes th*
testimony and evidence upon which th* appeal It to ba made. Florida
Statutes. Section 244.0105. BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
71— Help Wanted
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A . B Y : A N T H O N Y V A N
DERWORP, PLANNING DIRECTOR:
Publlth: March24 A April 7,1*47
DEM 204
CASHIER: Convenience Store,
top salary, hospItalUatlon. 1
weak vacation each 4 month*,
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
FOR TAX D EED
other benefits. Apply 103 N.
FOR TAX D EED
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
Laurel Ava. 4:30am-4:30pm
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
Monday through Friday.
GIVEN, that Thomat K. Kraut*
GIVEN, that Thomas K. Kraute
the holder ol th* following certif­
Ihe holder ol th* following certif­
CHURCH YOUTH W ORKERicate* hat Iliad tald certificates
icate* hat filed tald certificate*
Exp. in working with youths In
lor
a
tax
deed
to
be
Issued
lor a tax dead to be Ittued
church salting required. Part
thereon.
Th*
certificate
num­
thereon. Th# certificate num­
time position Irom Sept,-May.
ber* and year* ol Issuance, the
ber* and yaara ol luuance. the
Full lima June-Aug. 132 4171
detcriptlon
ol
th*
property,
and
detcriptlon ol lha proparty, and
or Write to: 1*1 United Math
lha
namat
In
which
II
wat
lha nama* In which II wa»
odlsf Church, 41* Park Av*.,
attauad or* at lot lows:
a ttattadart a* follow*;
Sanford 13771
CERTIFICATE
NO.
741.
CERTIFICATE NO. 741.
Y
E
A
R
OF
ISSUANCE:
1*13.
Y E A R OF ISSUANCE: INI.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O
D E S C R IP T IO N O F P R O ­
PE R T Y : L E G PHASE 3 INDI­
I t f lo l N o tic e
P E R T Y : LEO LOT 7 INDIAN
AN RIDGE ORB 1234 PG IU*.
RIDGE ORB 1234 PC 134*.
Nama In which auataad Indi­
Nama In which attattad Indi­
an Rldfa Patio Homot.
an RldgaPatio Hornet
NOTICE OF APPLICATION
A ll of u M property being In
FOR TAX OEED
A ll ol tald proparty being In
th* County ot Semlnoi*. Slot* of
N O T I C E IS H E R E B Y
Ihe County ot Semlnola, Slata of
Florida.
GIVEN, that J E M Associates
Florida.
Unleti tuch certificate or cer­
lha holder of Ihe following certllUnleu tuch certificate or cer­
tificate* thall be redeemed ac­
Icafes hat Iliad tald carllllcala*
tificate* shall be redeemed ac­
cording to law tho preparty
lor a fax deed to ba ittued
cording to law tho property
detcribad In tuch certificate or
thereon. Th* certillcat* num
detcrlbed In tuch certificate or
certificate* will bo told to tho
bar* and years of Issuance, th*
certificate* will be told to tho
highest bidder al tho court houu
description of Ihe property, end
highest bidder at th* court howto
door on the 4th day ot May, IN7
Ihe names In which It wat
door on the 4th day ot May, 1*07
at U.-QOa.m.
assessed are at follows 1
a l l i :00a.m.
Approximately 5125.00 cath
CERTIFICATE NO. 1273*.
Approximately 1125.00 cath
lor toe* It required to bo paid by
Y E A R OF ISSUANCE: 1N4.
lor leet It required lo bo paid by
tu cctu lu l bidder at the tale.
D E S C R IP T IO N O F PR O
tu cctu lu l bidder at tho tala.
Full payment ol an amount
PER T Y: L E G W te OF LOT 17
Full paymanl ot an amount
equal to th* highest bid plut
(LESS W N FT OF N 400 FT +
equal to th* highest bid plut
applicable documentary stamp
N LY 4 FT R/W A N S04 FT OF E
applicable documentary stamp
(axes and racordlng Io n is duo
N FT + W 100 FT OF S 100 FT
lax#* and racordlng loot It due
w ith in 24 hour* o tte r tho
OF N 50* FT A S 500 FT)
w ith in 24 hours o ile r th*
advertised time ot the sol*. Alt
WATTS FARMS P B * PC 40.
advert Itod lim e ot tho tale. All
payments shall be cash or guar­
Nam* In w hich a tte ste d
paymanl* shall bo cash or guar
anteed inttrument, modi pay­
anfood Instrument, made pay­
Walter W. M iller, Palsy R.
able to the Clerk ot Circuit
Millar.
able to tha Clark of Circuit
Court.
AH ot told property being In
Court.
Dated this 17th day ot March.
th* County ol Seminole, Slat* of
Dated thlt 17th day of March,
1N7.
Florida.
&gt;
IN7.
(SEALI
Unless such certificate or cer­
(SEAL)
David N. Berrien
lllicatet thall be redeemed ac­
David N. Berrien
Clark ot Circuit Court
cording to tew th* property
Clerk ol Circuit Court
Semlnola County, Florida
detcrlbed In tuch certillcat* or
Semlnola County. Florida
By: Michelle L. Silva
certificate* will be sold lo the
By: Michelle L. Silva
fWiirtv Clflfk
highest bidder at th* court house
Deputy Clerk
Publish: March 14, 31A April 7,
door on th# 30th day of April,
Publ
ublllh: March 34, 31 B April 7,
14. IN7
1*47 at 11:00 a.m.
14, IN7
D E M IN
Approximately S12S.OO cath
D E M IN
for lea* is required to be paid by
successful bidder ol th* tel*.
Full payment ol an amount
equal lo Iht highest bid plus
applicable documentary stamp
taxes and recording teas It duo
w llh ln 24 hour* o tte r Ih*
advertlted time of th* sate: All ‘
payments shall be cath or guar­
anteed Instrument, mad* pay­
able to Ih* Clark of Circuit
Court.
Doted this 4th day ol March,
1*47.
(SEAL!
David N. Berrien
Clerk el Circuit Court
Seminole County, Florida
By: MIchallaL. Silva
Deputy Clark
Publish: March 10. 17, 34 A 31,
1*47
D EM *2

m &amp;

0m m

#

m

ALAR M INSTALLER- 55 Super
career opportunity) Don't
wall) AAA Employment, 700
W. 25th St................. 333-3)74
ASSEM BLY WORK al home,
plus many others. Earn good
wages In spar* lime. Into
504 442 00*1 exl. 144*. 7days
CABINET MAKERS- Challenge
lor right person, exp'd. In
custom laminated casework a
musl. alto design A drawing
h e lp lu l, excellent salary,
bena'lls, A future with a
growing A established co.
331-5144 ask lor Lou or Jim
CANVASSERS earn 45 lo S7 hr.
plut bonuses going door to
door making appointments.
W ill train...........Call:340 5447
CLER K/TYPIST lo type medl
cal records 10 hrt. a week.
Must be accurate, type at
least 45 WPM. Medical knowl
edge required..................Call
431-2411 for appointment.
CNA: Immediate lull lima posi­
tions. 7-3 or 3-11 shifts. Good
benellls A atmosphere. Apply
Debary Manor, 40 N. Hwy.
17 *2. DaBary 444 4434 EOE
C O M P A N I O N / L I V E - I N , To
care tor ladles. Musi be dependebl*. Cell.......... 431-4714
C O N S T R U C T I O N
SECRETARY- To 5750 wkt
Secure spoil Nice b o u l Learn
computer I AAA Employment,
700 W. 25lh Slrael...... 173 5174
CONSTRUCTION D ELIVERY57+ hrt Keep tract of materi­
als. make dallverlasl AAA
Em ploym ent, 700 W. 25th
51reel..,-.................... 133 5174
D IIT A R V AID- Part lima. No

experience necessary. Apply
al DaBary Manor, 40 N. Hwy
17*3..............................EOE
DISTRIBUTORS N EED ED
A L L NEW “ M A ILM A LL 400".
333-4075 lor recorded message.
D R IV E R A Warehouseman,
Must have valid chauffeur
license. C all.............. 331 1003
E X P . CARPEN TER S A H E L P ­
ERS, tools A transportation,
good pay, vacation A benellls
...... - ...................305 121-1335
E X P , ROOFING Sale* person
needed on expense and commission basis.......305 321 1533
E X P E R IE N C E D COOK. Italian
cultln* specialist. Top pay.
Apply in person: 120 E. Lake
Mary Blvd,, Lake Mary_____
EXPERIEN CED LAND­
SCAPERS pay equal to experlanct. Full time. 333 4113
FAST FOOD PREPARATION:
Top salary, hospllalliatlon, 1
week vacation each 4 months,
other benellls. Apply 103 N.
Laurel Av*. 4:30am 4:30pm
Monday through Friday..
FRAMING CARPENTERS,
Experienced In elevations.
Call 333-411* evenings_______
D A R D E N SHOPI Highly
motivated people person, love
ol plants, to serve our retail
customer*. Hourly + Incenlive* 1........................ 321-2523
O R O U N D S P E R S O N S4hrl
Mow, edge A plant I Gal some
tu n l Quick rate**)
AAA
Em ploym ent, 700 W. 25th
St., San lord................ 3233174

AJtUNE/TMVU SCHOOL

71— Help Wanted
ME D I C A L ASSISTANT- 5200
wkl W ill train with any medi­
cal I AAA Employment, 700 W.
23lh SI.......................323-5174
M ILL ELECTRICIAN, familiar
with DO. 220. 440 Volts, ac
motor A starter repair and
installation. Fam iliar with DC
A some el ectroni cs back
ground, able lo make
m echanical rapalrs A
x u p e r v l i e mairiionnnce
personnel Soulhcrn Cypress,
904 734 3*11_______________

NOW HIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
O perators wanted on all
operallons. We offer paid holi­
days. paid vacation, health
care plan, and modern air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rales. W ill train qualified
a p p l i c a n t s . S m Del
Manufacturing. 2340 Old Lake
Mary Rd-Sanlord.....321-3410

N O T IC E

Call: 744-5144
M ED ICAL PERSONNEL POOL

M e d ic a l
P e rs o n n e l
• POOle
H O U SEKEEPER WANTED
2 days a week.
_______ Call 222 2*7*________
H O USEKEEPERS
HOUSEMEN
C o m p e t i t i v e s a la r y , good
benellls. excellent working
conditions. 40 hr. work week.
V IL LA O E O N T H E O R E E N
500 VILLAO E PLACE
Longwood....................402-0230
INSURANCE AG ENCY In San
l or d n aed t e x p e r i e n c e d
p e rto n a l lin e s Customer
S e r v i c e A c c o u n t Rep
Licensed preferred, good
typing skills. Paid holidays,
hospital A denial, 303-333-3742
IRRIGATION INSTALLER or
Helper. Exp. required. Full
lime. C all:................322 5133
LAWN MAINTENANCE- Expe
rlence required. Full time.
C all:........................ 332 4133
LOOKINO for hard working,
energetic, people lor th* Oeland/Sanford area. No axp.
required. A ulo Insurance
World. 1544 S. French Ave.
Apply In Person____________
LPN Needed lor busy Dr's oil.
P T, * to 5 Thur* A * to I Frl.
Musi be able lo drew blood,
start I.V. A type. Starting sal.
54.50 hr. Call Mrs. Thomat
Tuas or Wed 333 3250________
LPN: 3-11 shill A 11-7 thill, good
working environment, tuition
reimbursement program!
Longwood Healthcare Canter
_________ 13**100_________
M AIN TEN AN CE MECHANIC,
Eleclrlcal/Hudraullc control
system s M aintenance
Mechanic with at teas! 5 year*
experience needed lor well
e sta b lish e d A lum inum A
Copper fabrication operation
with experience, trouble
shooting electrical A large
hydraulic systems. Electronic
background helpful. Wag* his­
tory. return* A wag* re ­
quirement* to box P.O. Box
-2137, Panto

-% 'S M M B t* 8 8

SUPERVISOR
Hands on typ* Individual needed
lo supervise personnel In a
well established aluminum A
copper fabrication operation.
M u s i ba pr o f ic i en t with
e l e c t r i c a l and e l e c t r o hydraulic controlled circuits
with tom * knowledge ol
electronic*. Ability to read
hydrallc diagrams a mutt.
Resume' and wag* require
menti to Box 250. c/o Sanlord
Harald. PO Box 1457, Sanford,
FL 32772 1457____________
M A N A G E M E N T COUPLE51000 mo.I Plus apt. W ill
train I AAA Employment, 700
W. 23th St..................333 3174
M A T U R E , Stable Individual
w ith strong management
background needed to manage
real estate holdings lor non
resident developer In Sanlord
area. Sand resume' lo Box 252
c/o Tha Sanlord Harald,* P.O.
Box 1457. Sanford 33772

FOR ALL YOUR
TA X N E E D S . . .

TAXSMITH
834-1040
1 • 5 P .M .

KNIGHTS
OF

COLUMBUS
JACKPOT *250
BIG N ’ 250
BIG X
’ 250
GAMES
S3S-S40-S50
Thur*. A Sun. 7 p.Rt.
2504 OAK AVE.,
SANFORD

TEMPLE SHALOM

m
Saturday 6:45 ML
Wednesday 5:45 P.M.
All RtguUr Germs
$50.00
1765 Efccea
(Career

DeHerr, FL

0
KIWANIS CLUE
0FCASSEUEMV
FWEAV MEET 7 PJL
U5154IIM
(2) DM IACXPCTS
Secret Lake Park,

•M-M21

SANFORD POLICE
BENEVOLENT
ASSOCIATION

SAT. - SUN.
$250
JACK POTS
EARLY BIRDS
6:45
WELCOME TO THE
START OF 0UI
SUNDAY NfTI

R lU M T D fa

LOCATED ON
LAKIFMNT

T R U C K DRIVER

P.B.A.

HEAVY EQUIP.
OPERATOR

econnroNDiMct/

ItStOCHT TXAIHtNQ

* LOCAL * NATIONAL 704
PLACIM tHT A ltlST A N CI
• FINANCIAL 7110 AVAIL
a A C O S O trtO M IM m

NM I C

m 645-3001
available!*"}** placement
‘ ' to. NoUm '
L.H.P..FL.

Pharmacist
Nbw Accepting A pplications
For A Pharm acist In The
Sem inole County Area.
Starting Salary $ 3 9 ,0 0 0 +
Dally Hours 9*6 PM
42 hr. Work Week
Good Benefits
S e n d R esum e To

Mala Its rM
AW . CLACK

P.0. BOX 15200
ORLANDO, FLA. 12S5S

CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
332-2411

�*

&lt;T

p *

71- H e lp Wanted
LICENSED IN A A H? Interest
ed In managing your own
Itam7 Exp, A resume re­
quired. Contact Barry Dunn
**521*4............-10am to tom
LOCAL D RIVER SSI
Mon.-Frl.-days! Clean FCL
lands thlsl AAA Employment,

WOW. 25thSI..........373 sue

NOW HIRING Manufacturer ot
wood components serving the
module* horn* industry has
lull lima posit'ons available.
Experience with' carpentry,
sawing, painting, A material
handling helpful. Company
benefits. Apply In person 7am
to 3:30pm, Trusso Mlg., 1143
E . 30th St., Sanlord Airport,
N U R S E S A I DE t A ll sh ills,
exp’d. or certified only. Apply
Lekevlew Nursing Center
*1* E. tod St..............Sanford
NURSES AIDES. 3 to 11 shift A
11 to 7 sh llt, tuition re ­
imbursement program)
Longwood Healthcare Center
ttt-tm
NURSES AIDES, 3 to 11 shift,
lull-tim e , friendly at­
m osphere, Better Li vi ng
Center. *** 5002. EOE M FVH
O FFICE ASSISTANT, *4 hr! No
typlngl Good with figures all
th a t's needed! AAA
Employment, 700 W. IJth St.,
Sanlord.....................333 517*
OPPORTUNITIES open for full
A part time teachers In a
trend selling, Preschool - Child
Car* Corp. Love ol children a
must. Exp. A education a plus,
but w* will provide training
and education............333 8435
ORDER F IL LE R , No exp. nec­
essary, • to 5, Mon. thru
Thurs. Altamonte.......(31 5515
PAINT SEALANT
TECHNICIAN
EARN UP TO SIJ.50 HR. No
experience necessary. For lull
or p a r i p o s i t i o n s c a l l
............ 1113(1*7151............
PAINT A BODY *1.50 hrl Stable
company. Excellent benefits!
AAA Employment, 700 W. 35th
St., Sanlord...............333-517*
P A R T T IM E Educational
Olrector lor Child Car* Cnlrs.
Exp. A BS Degree In early
childhood a must........333 (435
PART TIME
ATTENDANT/SALES PERSON
needed to look alter amuse­
ment center In Sanlord Plata
nights A weekends. 15 to 30
hrs. par week. M u st be
mature, neat In appearance,
and bondable. Phone lor appolntment 331-4903
PART TIME Greenhouse help
wanted. E xperi enc e p re ­
ferred.................Call 333 5313
or..............331 (141 alter 7pm
PA Y R O LL C LER K. S5.25 hr.
Ideal spot! Will hire today!
AAA Employment, 700 W. 35lh
St..Sanford................333 517*
PHONE SOLICITORS «
M onday through F r i d a y ,
5:30pm to 1:30pm. Positive
altitude A pleasant phone
voice Is all you needl Experi­
ence helpful, but not neces­
sary. Call 333 3*11 between
1:30am A 5:30pm
PLANT WORKERS
Plant workers lor entry Igvel
positions required lor Sanlord
manufacturing facility. Good
work record required. Call
331-1100................. Personnel
PLANT M ANAGER
, Manufacturer In
opening. Individual must have
Industrial management expe­
rience with good organliatlo nal, com m unication A
planning skills. Position re­
sponsible for all plant func­
tions, PAL, A customer rela­
tions. Send resume’ to:
Bax 153, c/a laniard Herald
P.O. Bax 1*17
Sanlord, FL. 31773-1*57
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Auto parts rebuilding. Located
on Sanford Airport.....333 4931
P R O F E S S I O N A L DOO
OROOM ERS wanted. C all
Tuesday through Friday, be­
tween *am A tom .......574 4730
PUBLIC RELATIONS
PERSON N EED ED
_______CALL: 331-3445_______
QUALITY CONTROL
INSPECTOR- Minimum 3 yrs.
exp. with circuit board, must
know color cod*. Permanent
position. Never a lee!

TEMP PERMlaeaa»*■«*§»**i260-5100

REPS NEEDED
For Business accounts. Full
time, S40.000 *10,000. Part
time, 113.000 SK,000. No sell­
ing, repeat business. Set your
own hours. Training provided.
1-412 *1*4(70, M /F. (am to
5pm (Central Standard Time)
RN'S, LPN'S, CNA'S
(ALL PART-TIME)
Contact:
Hlllhaven Health Care Center
(SOMellonvIlleAve.
Sanlord..........321(1** E . OE .

SALESMAN WANTED
lor fast growing carpet store.
Sales exp. helpful. Must be
from Sanlord area. Apply In
person, F lo rid a Carpel A
Vinyl, 1**7 S. Orlando Dr.,
Wal-Mart Plata, Sanford
SE C R E T A R Y /B K K P 11000 mol
Lovely boss, handle phones A
computer! Will train! AAA
Employment, 700 W. 35th
St..............................333-517*
SEWINO MACHINE O PE R A ­
TORS Wanted, will train qual­
ified applicants, paid vaca­
tions A Holidays, Clark Ap­
parel, 347 Power Ct„ 1-4 Industrlal Park, 333 339*______
T E L E M ARKETING) Are You:
C L E A R , CONCI SE . CON
VERSATIONAL A CONVIN
CING. Then I want to talk to
you about part lime work at
full time wages. NO S E L L ­
ING. Hourly wag* plus bonus.
W ill Train...................... Call:
Mrs. McDermott at 574 *550
TRUCK DRIVERS needed. 35
yrs. or older, at least 3 yrs.
experience. O.O.T. require
monts................Call:331 5331
W ELD ER- M (5 -f- hr! Any
experience Will hire today!
AAA Employment, 700 W. 35th
Street.......... :............ 333 517*
* * * * * * * * * *

WORK IMMEDIATELY
N E ED M EN A WOMEN NOWI

U N i&lt; A r &gt; 7 0 M f
ssxi ass*

w

DAILY PAY
Work Assignments
• Dally • Weekly • Monthly

•
N O FEE

321-1590
NOFEE

WORKERS NEED ED I II you
need steady work paid dally,
Call Sam alter 1 pm.... 333 755*

Sanford HtraM, Sanford, FI.

KIT *N' C AR LYLE «toy Larry Wright

91— Apartments/
House to Share

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

COM FORTABLE home to share
In very nice neighborhood,
kitchen and laundry prlvlleges. 33I-04K....or.... 574*41*
F E M A L E Needs roommate to
share 3 bd. 3 bath apt. t*0 wk
t- some util. Christy, 333 53**
3 a DBM., ph., elec., W/D. 1*5 a
week. 1-4 A L M. Blvd area,

* * * IN DELTONA a * *
• a HOMES FOR R E N T * a
* e 124-1434 » »

-177 7707 belore 5 pm

93— Rooms :or Rent
FLORIDA HOTEL
Reasonable weekly rates
500 Oak Avo.................333-W0*
LA R G E ROOM In private home.
Bath, meals, laundry, cable,
telephone, shopping, taken to
Doctor It needed Senior cltlten preferred. Lovely home
lor right person.........333 7*47
• REASONABLE RATES
■ MAID SERVICE
• PRIVATE ENTRANCE
Why Consider Living Anywhere
E Isa Whan You Can LI vt In

Li h r

H illin g
323-4507

ROOM M ATE, room with prlv.
ent., super clean, *300 mo.,
share util, asp. 133-50(4______
ROOM FOR RENTS40wk
701 Brlarcllff St.
_ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ S a n to rd ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

97— Apartments
Furnished / Rent
A-1 CLEAN Sanford, 1 bdrm,
apt. Completa privacy, closa
to downtown t*0 week -t- (700
sec. Includes util........333 33**
E X TRA CLEAN- 3 bdrm. apt.,
turn., a/c. w/w carpet. 5115
wk. comp. Ret, -f sec..331-3190
Furns Apts, tor Senior Cltltens
Si* Palmetto Av*.
J. Cowan. No Phone Calls
SANFORD- Lovely 3 bdrm. with
screened porch, complete
pri vacy, t*0. wk -t- *300
sec....................Call:333 33**
SANFORD- 1 bdrm, apartment
with fenced yard. t(5 wk +
*300 sec..............Call:333 22*9
STUDIO A 1 B R „ Adults, no
pels, quiet res., modern. *335
A up per mo. + Pep....333 (01*
UPSTAIRS, very p rlv it* . I
bdrm., tile bath, ulllllla* Ineluded. *350 -t dap......333-1*17

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
APTS TO COME HOME TO
Quiet, slngla story living with
anargy saving features. 1 A 3
bedroom apartments with at­
tic storage A private patios.
SANFORDCOURTAPTS.
3301 S. SANFORD AVE
_______111-3301 ext. 311_______
• EFFIC. t A3 BDRM. APTS.
• FURN. A UNFURN.
• PA Y W E E K L Y
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Elsa Whan You Can Live In

Ll hr ill Ihi ur
323-4507
FU R N IIH EO E FF . 1 bdrm. A
Unlurn. I bdrm. water Inc. No
Attractive 3 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 VILLAO E
APARTM EN TS............ 331-3*30

GR0VEVIEWVILLAS

&gt;000 Lake Mary Blvd.
DON'T RENT...Until you sea
Sanford’s most spacious 1
bdrm.. 2 bath apt*......131 05(4
L A K E M A R Y , Condo, 3
bedroom, 3 bath, (575 Mo +
sec., available April I, 7*7*331, Ralston A Assoc_______
M ARIN ERS V ILLA G E
Special I bdrm................... *3*5
lb d rm s.....................Irom *335
Call.............................. 3331*70
SANFORD- 3 br., 3 be, all eppl.,
w/d, Irg. unit, w/w carpal,
c/h/a, Irg. pool. 131 *5*1. *145
mo. lease, no pats. *3*5 dap.
S A N F O R D A R E A ) Studi o
apartm ent with separata
kitchen. Furnished $375 or
Unfurnished (135. Utilities In­
cluded, no children.
Call 7(1153* alter *pm
SANFORD) I bdrm. garage
apt., qulal neighborhood. (315
month. C all...............333 3*1*
UNFURN. OARAOE APT. (ISO
dtp. 1375 mo. 1 bdrm., 1 bath.
C a ll:....... .......331-4*01 attar 5
RIDGEWOOD ARMS APTS.
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
MOVE IN SPECIAL
On I year lease, you gel t
month ol your choice (reel
15(0 Ridgewood Ava......313-44is
MC E. Airport Bl...........131*4*1
1bdrm., ibath............. *135 mo
Ibdrm., lijb a th .......... *3(0mo
• Central Heal A A ir
O Pool A Laundry
FR AN K LIN ARMS
111* Florida Ava.
333-4*50
*14* MOVE IN SPECIAL
ADULTS. POOL. LA K E
L A K E JEN N IE APTS....nS-*m

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
D E B A R Y - V a r y n ice 3/1.
C/H/A. washer, dryer, refrig.,
new carpel, verticals. 333-1411
or *45 44*1. Adults (450______
MOVE RIGHT IN- 1 bedroom
I Is bath. CHA, New carpel.
Only (450 mo..............331-3(51
OVIEDO- 3 bdrm., I bath,
carpal, heat A air, kitchen
■quipped. *4*5............34* 5701
SANFORD) 1*01 W. Kits St.
Clean 1 bdrm., 11s bath *1*5
mo. -t- dap. C all......... A3* 3331
SANFORO) 3 bdrm., screened
porch, a/c, appliances, no
pats. *3(5 mo. Ownar/brokar
Call: 31311*7.....or..... 331 04*5
SUNLAND, 734 Charokaa Cir.
3/1, children ok, no pels. (435
discounted.-)- sec....... 123 44*1
TH R EE BDRM., Its be., fenced
yard, appliances, laundry
hook up. *435 Mo. + lit, last
■f *100 sec. 133 Hayes Dr.
1 BDRM. near downtown San
ford. First, last, -r security.
References Call:..*04 775 4512
1 BDRM., 1 be, family room,
fireplace, garage, storage
shad. exc. neighborhood near
Seminole H.S. *525 Mo. sec.
dep. A I yr. lease. 323 1335

V ' '•

153— Acreage*
Lots/Sale

NoPets^jjjjjjjjjjj^^jrasa?

115-Industrial
______ Rentals______
SANFORD- Lease. 5000 sq. It. on
busy h w y . I n d u s t r i a l,
warehouse, commercial, or
ole. Will remodel to suit te­
nant. From **17.50 par mo.
_ £ o n la c tM lk a a l* 0 4 7 to tl* ^

117— Commercial
Rentals
OFFICES) 700 A 1000 sq.ft. In
growing 4 Towns/Debary area
on Hwy. 17 *3......*6* **l5eves
O FFICE SPACE FOR LEASE, 4
lap. offices avail, or lease all.
Walling room A recpl. oil.
a v a i l , l o c a t e d on bu s y
highway, *135 per a lik e ,
utilities,Inc.,
l
-------133
3*62
SHOP SPACE FOR LEASE,
1000 sq. It., *350 per mo.,
Utilities Inc., 323 3(*1

121— Condominium
Rentals
SANFORD) 2 bdrm.. 3 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, lennls,
washar/dryer. sec. *435 Mo.
Landarama Fla,, Inc. 311-173*

127— Office Rentals
LA K E MARY) Lease 3*0 sq. It.
Downtown, 2 rooms. Includes
all utilities 13*5 mo.....*31 *430
O FFICE FOR RENT 17 *1 A 437
Intersection, Longwood (350
mo.................. .CaJJ: 321-4*52

GREAT SANFORD IOCATION
ON EAST 25lh SI. 100’xlX r
ZONED LIGHT INDUSTRi
AL. (50.000 WITH TERMS.
B U I L D T O S U I T . OR
POSSIBLE TRADE
LAROE CORNER LOT AT t*TH
AND P A R K A V E ZONED
FOR UP TO (UNITS *45.000
374* FRONTINO ON 2nd ST. AT
RAILROAD/OVERPASS OFF
AIRPORT BLVD. SANFORD
A RE A ZONED C 3.......*75.000
«• A C R E S F R O N T I N O ON
DOYLE ROAD IN OSTEEN
*3*0.000 OR W I L L SUB
D I V I D E 10 A C R E S OR
M O R E........GREAT TERMS.

141— Homes Fo r Sale
BRICK HOME, J/l&lt;&gt;. many
extras I Call for details, 2413
Elm Ava.. *45,000 (negl. 133
(415.321 4300 aval__________
BY OWNER- Sanlord. 1 bdrm., I
bath, garage, new carpel,
vinyl, paint A root. Cen. heat
A air. Assum. mlg. Priced tor
quick sale............303 374 4*3*
OROVEVIEW VILLAOE: 1/2
home. Assume mortgage.
Ready for occupancy. Call
Judy Schlff 7*1 (474 Ra-Mai
Unlimited Inc. *........ 1*0-3000
HEATHROW A RE A 4 bdrm..
1.5 ba.l 1.000 sq. ft. t , under
a lrl Champagne ol homes for
a beer price. *304.900. Minutes
to 1-4. Good financing, obtain
abla. United Sales Associates,
Inc...........................3211(11

141— Homes Fo r Sale
SANFORD. 3 bdrm.. 1 ba..
nawly remodeled w/deteched
garage /work shop- on 4/10
acre. Appraisal 147,000, asking
*44.000 A Includes satellite
disc A 12 H P Riding mower.
311 1750or *01*11-1739. .col lect
SANFORD/LAKE M ARY, Must
sell. 3 bdrm., 2 ba.. must see
to app , 153.900. 313 5943
SANFORD, 3/2, lam. room,
screened porch, pool, fenced
yard, $7,000 cash to mtg. no

STe

m p e r

(TALKING HOUSE)
H I \ l l ( H&lt;

321-7623......Em. 323-0609
LEASE OPTION-1 bdrm., 2 ba.
on 1 acre. Corner lot. loti ot
trees.........................331-015*
LOO-A-Frame, 1* complete on 3
acrei 2.500 sq.ft.-), ((5,000.
Terms, Owner/Brker. 1311*40
M A R K H A M WO OD S RO.
Q U I C K S A L E I Below
assessment, large executive
home, 4/3&gt;i, olflce, 2 dining
rooms. Owner/Asso., 131 7(35
NEWIIt
2 bedroom, I bath on 3 acrei t ,
Motivated seller......... 131 015*
R E T I R E E OR S T A R T E R
HOME, 3 br., block, hardwood
doors, nice neighborhood!
................................. *35,*00

1517 OSCEOLA OR
Tun* your AM radio to 1050
and hear the details ot this 3
br, 2 ba. home. Price 1*5,000
SANFORD- 3 bdrm., 2 bath CB
home, central heat A air.
Only.......................... *44,900
1 BEDROOM , U s bath, cb
home, Draamwold (action,
FHAor VA.Only.........*54,*00

ZONED MR-1- Extra large 3
bdrm,, 1W bath. Adult care,
daycare or duplex us*...*(5,000
LAROE 3 bdrm., 2 bath CB.
Good area, large Fla. room
................................. *53,500
PAOLA- Lake Markham Rd. 3
bdrm., 3 bath. Owner will help
with new financing......(51,900

ENERGY REALTY

BATEMAN REALTY

HIDDEN LAKE- Old (action.
Large 3 bdrm.. 1 balh double
garage........................*49,*00

Lie. Real Estate Broker
1*40 Sanlord Ave.

BUILDING LOTS....From S4.000

.Attwood
7^7 Ctmup,

767-0606

After hours &gt;31-7*43
til
»■; H

,A

^

y

in xiti t stall

STENSTR0M
REALTY, INC.

NEAT A CLEAN A SA FIN
3 bdrm., 11* bath, central h/a,
lanced yard, storage, allay
access. Ready to move In.
Only........................ t53.no

REALTORS
Sanford’s Saks Leader

CALL BART

WE LIST ANO SELL
MORE PRO PERTY THAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEMINOLE COUNTY

ii\ii m :\i.n
it i : \ i .t o k

STARTING OUT OR RETIR­
ING? 2 bdrm., I bath home,
wooded stained celling, utility
room, w/delached workshop,
fenced rear yard, w /lrult
trees..........................(19,900.

R E A L ESTATE
REALTOR
222 74M

E X C E LL E N T TERMS A VA IL­
A B L E on this 3 bdrm. home I
Lovely real Cedar paneling! 5
paddle Ians I Fanced yard with
privacy I A t condition I Naw
carpatl Large shade treel
Low down A low monthlyl
Seller will pay closing costs
lor buyer I..................*49.500
GORGEOUS HUGE OAK* sur­
round thli 4 bdrm. homa on
large 130x114 lo ll C/H/AI
Sprinkler systaml Nothing
down lor VA buyarsl (1.500 lor
FHAI Sellar will pay closing
coils I........................ (50.000

323-5774
240* HWY. 17-tl

O n tu iY r JUNE PORZIO REALTY, INC
B E T T E R THAN NEW Pool
homa In idyllwilde. J bdrm., 2
bath, large family room with
stone fireplace. Screen porch
has wet bar, beautiful land
scaped yard features pool with
prlvecy fence, cool deck.
Many more extras. Come see.
M A R N ITA CA R LI..... 323 1*17
NEW HOME over 1*00 sq It In
quiet residential Loch Arbor. 3
bdrm., 2 bath s p ill plan,
lealures extras found in more
expensive homes. Buy now
and pick your colors.
M A R N ITA CA R LI..... 331-1*07
DELTONA LA K E FRONT, all
brick, 1 br., 3 ba., on Lak*
D upon I ONLY (124,*00
C H A R L O T T E
CROSLYN)]].|072

ADULT COMMUNITY! 2 br.. 3
ba. home, needs a little TLC.
central H/A, pool, priced al
appraised value I.........S44.000
ASSUME FHAI W/S10.900 down,
3 bdrm., I1* bath, paddle fans,
plush lawn, fenced rear yard,
central H /A................141,900
I N D E P E N D E N T

5 ACRES, G E N E V A A R E A OFF
O S C E O L A R O AD (25.000
TERMS AVAI LABLE

5E IEin ER
H

I A L T Y

L BMP
ma[1L4D
SANFORO) Bring your horses A
build your dream home on this
2’ j acre mini astala. Close lo
boating A Hiking.........(14.900
JoAnh Tompkins Properties
Inc, RE AL TOR.......... 1*0 5111

*11 Hill

(■: MZ/tk
y /

to «•
in Rl»i

PECANS FOR RESALI

REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford’s Salts Leader

WB toAVB^RRNTAL HOUSING

HORSE* A MOBILE* WBL-

149— Commercial
Property / Sale
A P P R AI I AL SAND SALES
BOB M. BALL, JR. P.A..C.S.M.
RE AL TOR................. 11)4111
Florida... Virginia...Maryland
CASSELBERRY) I acre zoned
PR I. (*5,000. W. Malkiowskl
Realtor.................... 133-7*(J
SALE OR LEASE) 1*0 x105’
Corner Property, c/h/a, (54
sq. It. bldg. West F lr il 51.
Sanlord....................323 7*19

153— Acreage*
Lots/Sale
OCALA NATIONAL FOREST
High and dry wooded lots.
Mobile home, cabin, camping
O.K.-Hunting and llih ln g.
(5.450 w/ *150 dn., *43.71
monthly.....(9041 21* 4579 days
or.............(9041*21 143* aval.
O W N E R F I N A N C I N G 10.*1
wooded acres, (7* It. on
highways*.
Wallace Cress Realty. Inc.
131-0177

* COMEI 5 *97 acres In Geneva.
S3*,500. Nancy Butler, Real
tor/A&gt;ioclale
BUILDING LOTI 100 X 300,
level and treed, prestigious
area. *15.000, Call Frank or
Li sa Wi cker s , RB a i­
lor' Associates
VAL UE IN LAND A LOCA­
TIONI 4.10 acres, toned In
dustrlal, 5250.000. Call Bath
Halhaway. Reallor/Assoclalt
• G ENEVA OSCEOLA RD.e
ZONED FOR MOBILES!
5 Acre Country tracts.
Wall treed on paved Rd.
30% Down. 10 Yrs. a t llN I
From 111,500!

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420
321-2720

STRAWBERRIES) U Pick
Poohberry Farms
C J I 373(7*7

231-Cars
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
WE FINANCE
WALK IN..............DRIVE OUT
NATIONAL AUTO SALES
Sanlord Ave. A 13th SI . .331 4075
COLT: '13. 4 eyl., auto, air.
Extra Cleanl Can arrange
financing.......... Calt:33l 1070.
CUTLASS Brougham Supreme77. Rebuilt engine A Irons, by
Ron J o«y Warranty still on
Irani. Tilt, cold air, naw
battery, new brakes, good
tires. Owned and driven by
adult. 11560.574 *933 alt 5
DODOE CHAROER 1H5, fully
equipped, 17,000.
Call anytime:............133 3310
FORD ORANADA 1*27. 2 dr ,
auto., ac., am/tm. Clean, runs
good. *1500. Call 311-lld eve*.
F O R D LTO&gt; '00. 4 door,
• xcellan l condition. (3000
Call.......333 15*9 otter 4:1Spm
MONTE CARLO- 1*7*. runs
good *1,000 or besi offer.
C all:.........................333 311*

1 5 9 -Reel Estate
Wanted
AN INVESTOR Wants to buy
Income property. Will look at
all. any cond. Call 323 M44

181— Appliances
/ Furniture
AIR CONDITIONER, Reverse
cycle, GE. used less than *
months. Originally t*70. Sell
lor *4*5.333-749(. eves 34* 5717
ALTERN ATIVE T.V. A APPL.
3*M Hwy. 17*3
__________333-5000_________
BED, DAVENPORT. Dresser,
other Items, (t* W. 1st St.
313 3045__________________
LARRY' S MART. 215 Sapford
Ave. New/Used turn. A appl.
Buy/Sell/Trade. 3114133.
M A PLE DINING table and «
ladderback chairs *425. Large
Pecan china cabinet *425.
Call............322 521*altar 6pm

199— Pets &amp; Supplies

i

233— Auto Parts
/ Accessories
GOOD USED MOTORS
and transmissions

235— Trucks /
Buses / Vans
*

238— Vehicles
Wanted
WE PAY TOP (( lor wrecked
cars/lrucks. We Sell guaren
Iced used parts. AA AUTO
SALVAOEol DeBary.AOA-M*)

213— Auctions
BOB’S AUCTION
E V E RY MONDAY NIONT
7PM. REAR OF BOBS USED
FURNITURE.............341*17*3
WE BUY HOUSEHOLDS
313-3H0..........or.......... 331-70*7

WE BUY ESTATES!
Hwy **..................... 33) 1001
P U B L I C A U C T I O N . Wad
March 25th It am, Southern
Chemicals Inc., 30* E. Elm
St., Sanlord. For further Into
call MS 339 7030

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Cam pars
T R A V E L C R A F T R V Mot or
home’s) perfect cond. Plush
Reduced, 111.500 llrm 1310*7*
21 FT. T R A V E L T R AI L ER ,
sleeps *, roof air, plus extras.
C all...........................313 7317

BUY H E R E
PAY H E R E

217— Garage Sales
C A S S E L B E R R Y Community
Methodist, 17 *3 between 434 A
43*. Saturday March nth, • to
S. rain...........or..... ..... shine
PATIO A YARD SALE. Thurs.
Sun. • 5 2530 Elm St. furniture

^Wols^of^ever^lhlnj^^^^^

low
DOWN PflYMINI
rnnp

Nl) I.Ml I*' I

NO INTI (it NT-

219— Wanted to Buy
t i t Aluminum Cans..Newspaper
Non-Ferrous Metals......... Glass

KOKOMO....................Ill-HOP
JU N K A W R EC K E O CARS
Running or not, lop prices
paid. Free pick up. 321-2354

i r . f n i a h ’-

i.’ l'l s IIW*

IN CO M E T A X E S
FIG U R ED F R E E
Bring Ue Your Income Tax Returns
We'll Figure Them P M I 1 I
Use Your Refund Ae Your
Down Payment — Drive Home Today
Why Welti We've Got Your Dead

Limited otter •Expires April II, INF

U S E D CAU N

Call toll frat 1-800-323-3720
35(5 PARK A V E ...........Sanlord
*01 Lk. Mary Blvd.......Lk.M ary

*

C H E V Y P/U- 1*74. 4 wheel
drive. 150 auto.. A air. (1,3*5.
Call:.........................332 5350
CHEVY CIO pickup) 73. Runs
good, good liras, power steer­
ing. SiOO............Call:*** 0775

F R E E to good hornet Mixed
breed female puppies. 34* 9*47
...........................alter 4 p.m.

BRIDGES A N O SON

STENSTR0M

321-0199

good cond.. part, turn.. Adult
section. *7500 neg. 331-3410
FAMI L Y SPACES AVAILABLE
Carriage Cove Mobile Home
Park. Come see us It I
Gregory MobMe Homes..l3l-5300
MAFIA? t E : ’It. 14x5a. 2 bdrm..
t ' i balh. Sal up. l.i trailer
. park. Ready lo move In. Call:
111 (5*0 between (am A Spm
M AN ATEE- ’7*. 2 bdrm. In
family park with pool. No
money down. A ssum e
mlg ......................... 331-5(45
OSTEEN/FARMTON Area, old
trlr A lot. fanced yard, owner
finance. *i down. S7500. For
into, come by 1501 Mellonville.
Sanford alter* PM

Auction every Thursday 7 PM.

I .(ACRE IN OENEVA....*33.000

l.'14 S HWY I / ‘I.
bANI OHl)
S ANt OHI ) &lt;•' l . ’ i . ’ l
Did ANIK) -1.", MIMM

a

CA R E F R E E I 2 bdrm., 3 balh
home, breakfast bar, dining
are*, vaulted calling, mini
blinds. A great buy I....*50.900.

C O N S U LT O U R

BSKSSHIBUSnii

PINE ACRESI 3 bdrm. 2 balh
homa, pool , stone (pi.,
screened porch, some mlr
rored wells, '(5’ root, 1 year
homa warranty I..........SSI.500

A N D L E T AN EX P ER T D O T H E JO B

N E A R EV E R Y T H IN O I 3
bdrm., 3 balh horn* on 2 lot*.
Zoned GC1, fam ily room,
completely fenced, accessory
bldg., heat A air............ 40,500

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

SUPER LOCATIONI 4 bdrm,
2!&gt; bath home, sunken living
room, solar watar heater ,
patio A lam lly room I... .591 000
ST. JOHNS RIVERFRONT! 2
bdrm., I bath homa on 1.71
acres. Great room overlooking
river A wood deck, vaulted
ceilings, dining room w/stone
fpl- barn, shad, dock A much
more!....................... 1121.900
WISE I NV E S T M E N T ! Vary
new duplex, lloor to calling
fireplaces, cathedral calling,
paddle tans, appliances. A
single garage’l l .........*150,750
A L L THE A M ENIT IES! 1
bdrm., 2 bath home. 2 walls,
greenhouse, nursery business,
completely fenced and land
scaped, workshop, central
H/A, and lots m oral....SI75,000

Accounting A
Tax Service
H U B E RT P E A R C E
Exp. Income Tax Servlet
331 M0* tereppt.

Additions A
Remodeling
-------- T T u m k Z S S * ? . -------Remodeling............M3 333 702*
Financing.........Lic.«CRCOOO*7l

322-1671
GOVERNM ENT HOMES
From *1 {U repair) Delin
quant lax properly Call:
1 *19 545 1*57 a il. HI03FL lor
current ttpo list.___________
GOVERNM ENT HOMES
From (I (U Repair). Also lax
delinquent and foreclosure
properties For listing please
ca ll..................(Refundable I
1113 713*0*3..........EXTG17*
GREAT FA MI L Y HOMBI 3/2
spill, with dbl garage, lush
landscaping, pool, tennis,
basketball, ale. A ll appliances
stay.ONLYta4.5O0
Alan B. Johnson, Ra/Max
Unlimited, 321-41*1 er 2*0 2000

3 ACRES ON PAVED ROAD
WI TH S M A L L L A K E IN
G E N E V A ...................*25,000

ORLANDO) 100 X 4*5 lol lor
residential or mobile use,
*30, 000, R e d M o r g a n ,
Broker/Salesman

REALTO R ................... 131-4*91

Kill XI 10
III M i ll *

ONE ACRE WITH POND ON
LAKE MAR Y BLVD 150,000
S E L L E R WILL HOLD
MORTGAGE

1 BDRM., 1 BATH FRAME.
Owner financing.......... *31,*00

141— Homes For Sale

321-0759............. 321-2257

2 M il A C R E T R A C T S
P A S T U R E L A N D OR
WOODED TRACTS IN OR
ANGE CITY A RE A FROM
*1*.S00............WITH TERMS

qual...........................333 5915

SOUTH SANFORD- Older * rm.
home. Aluminum siding, 3
large lots. 137.500...... 333 5350
S4I a | T)1*4&gt;

COUNTY, HANDYMANS PAR­
ADISE, 3/1 frame, *30,*00.
Owner financing

115 N. COUNTRY CLUB RD.
__________311-1*3*_________
ACCEPT OUR FIVE % lilting
contract A see your home

221— Good Things
to E at

157— Mobile
Homes / Sale
CARRIAGE COVE. 1/1, 11X53.

105— Duplex*
• Triplex / Rent
A L T A M O N T E SPRINGS, 1
bdrm., 1 be.. 1400 month +
Jac. avail A1*'ll 1, 707 X733
Rolston A Assoc___________
D UPLEX- Large 3 br., 1 be.
c/h/a, washar/dryer hook-up.
(400 mo. -t- dap..........333 (9*0
LA K E MARY- 2 bdrm., 1 bath,
carpal, central air A heat,
appl, fenced yard..... 111*714
LAKE MARY DUPLEX, 2
bdrm., t ba., large yard, child
A sm all pet OK, *175. +
sacurlly.................. *441**1
RIDGEWOOD ACRES- Deluxe
Duplexe*. 3 bdrm. FamlHet
welcome. Call T(ml....31)011
SANFORD, 2 Units available. 2
bdrm.. 3 bath, epplt, blinds,
can. air A heat, carpet. (175
mo. Call M l A**0 weekday*
2 BDRM, 2 ba. w/w, cent. H/A,
w/d hook-up, all kllchan appl.
attar 4pm.no pets. 312 1***
3 BDRM., 2W ba.. *475 -t- dep. A
3 bdrm., U* ba., (375 -i dep.

Twosday, March 34,1W7—31

CAU ABY TIME

322-2420
321-2720

Cleaning Service
SPRINOCLEANINO
Res - Comm. • New Const.
For lhal special touch.

Csll loll free 1-600-323-3720

Cleaning Service

35*5 PARK A V E ........... Sanford
*01 Lk. Mary Blvd.......Lk. Mary
4 HOUSES on 4 edloinlng lots.
Naw garaga/workshop 24 X 1*
A I storage bldg t l X 30.
121 1750or M l (31 1739 collect

A^O^DABL^^^Thorough
homa cleaning lor *40 00. R tl
erencas available. *99 *7?o
JJ Q U A L I T Y C L EA N IN G ,
Main).. Janitorial A Maid
Service. *71 5505 A 2*0 051

Paper Hanging

BOOUESI Expl Professional!
Lawn A Garden Main! A chain
taw work, mulch. Spring

P A PE R HANOINO A PAINT INO (Interior
Exlerlor),}
Res. A comm. 35 years exp.-.
Free Estimates. Call: Royi
Taytoral................... 331 4033'

etoarvto^re^slliaAlIT

Home Improvement

Lawn Service

CO M PLETE HOME REPAIR
Door..... .window...... cabinets
Call Russell 01 774 *51*________
CUSTOM POOL/SUN DECKS.
PRIVACY F E N C E . S C R E E N
PORCHES............... 574 5571
P L U M B IN O , Electrical,
carpenlry. Free estimates.

BAR RI ER’S Landscapino'
Irrlg., Lawn Care, Res A
Comm, 3H-7A4*. F R E E ESTI
OEOROE’ S LAWN CARE
Reasonable prices
Call now lo rasarva service
Free st!...................... 333 0*01
QUAL ITY LAWN SERVICE!
Time to Thatch, FarllUia A
Clean up. Free Est.....311 071*
"SUNNYS” . Mow, edge, trim,
planting, mulching. SPRINO

Carpentry
A L L T Y P E S O l Carpentry.
Remodeling A home repairs.
Call Richard Gross i l l 3*71
RICHARDS CARPENTRY
II yrs In Central Florida
Call..............................1315717

Landscaping

Landclearing
BACK HOE, Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing.
Call: 333 1*0*
or
333 *313
BUSH HOG. Boo Blading. DIs
clng A Tractor Roto Tilling.
C all......................... 333 15*7
THORNE L A N D C L E A R IN G
Loader and truck work/saptlc
tank sand Freeast. 122 3413

^ga^reaast^^^M T n *

j
Sewer/Septic Tank
HOWARD’ S SEPTIC SERVICE:
Repair Linas A Clean Tanks

Free Estimates.......... 133 02&gt;»

Sewing
SEAMSTRESS) Wedding, Oc
cation, A Accessories. Call?

Donna Canada a l 133 0707

Moving A Hauling
MAN WITH TRUCK Will haul,
dellvar, clean garage, cut A
care tor lawn. Wa trim trees.

^^u^aleijlshfiarTTa^tl^^
Nursing Care
OUR R A T ES A R E LOWER
Lekeview Nursing Canter
*1* E. Second St.. Sanlord
322-4707

Tree Service
ECHOLS TREE SERVICE
Free Estimated Lew Priced
Lie...Ins...Slump Grinding,Tool
323-133* day or nits
“ Lai the Pretotslenels do It” ,
STUMP ORINDING

Insured............ Fra* Estimates
Call.............................. 774 750

�n

7 T

r r

r T T T f

Tutsday, March 14,1997

Floppy Heart Valve
Isn't Dangerous

1 4

w o u ld

' r~r~ r r r

•r*,i —r

f &gt;

OO A THINS

lock th at r

som e oth er, m ore unusunl
cause.
DEAR DR. GOTT - ! had my
stomach stapled 1Vb years ago
and have lost 165 pounds. The
problem Is that my skin is
flabby, as If It didn't shrink to fit
my new size.
DEAR READER - The elasticItyofskin is unpredictable. After

DEAR DR. GOTT - I am
supposed to have surgery on my
shoulder, but 1 have a worsening
roblem with my heart skipping
eats. The doctor says It’s a
(loppy valve. Is shoulder surgery
safe In this case?
DEAR READER — Any one of
the heart’s four sets of valves
can become ’ ’floppy": this can
be a serious condition if It affects
the aortic, pulm onary and
tricuspid valves. However, a
floppy mitral valve is different.
Mitral-valve prolapse Is a com­
mon condition In healthy adults
and consists of a weakness of
one of the two utnbrella-llke
leaflets of the valve. This allows
a tiny Jet of blood to spurt
backward during the heart's
contraction, causing an extra
heart sound (murmur) or a click.
There Is no reason why people
with floppy mitral valves cannot
undergo su rgery. H ow ever,
experts recommend that such
patients be given antibiotics
before, during and after certain
p r o c e d u r e s — s u c h as
cystoscopy, colonoscopy and
dental surgery — that may
r e le a s e b a c te r ia in to the
bloodstream. Bacteria are more
likely to adhere to a floppy
mitral valve than to a healthy
one.
If you have mitral-valve pro­
lapse, shoulder surgery should
be safe and you will not need
antibiotic coverage.
DEAR DR. GOTT - Fifteen
months ago. I hud a C-section
and was given an epidural. Since
then. I’ve had a numb feeling In
my hip area and upper leg. It's
fading, but it concerns me. Is
this numbness normal?
DEAR READER - Epidural
anesthetic In volves the In­
troduction of anesthesia Into the
lower spinal column to deaden
nerves to the legs and abdomen.
It is a sa fe and e ffe c tiv e
alternative to general anesthesia
for many patients, but persisting
numbness can occur. If your
symptoms are beginning to de­
crease. remain patient and allow
nature to take its course. If the
numbness persists, check with'
your gynecologist to see if it has

E

W HAT
K IN D OF
A BOOK?

X CAM R E A P
StDU L I K E A
B O O K , SARGB

BIOLOGY.
YpU'RE GEOGRAPHY!

y o u 'R E H O T

T H IN K O F M E A S A
BIOLOGY T E X T . T U R N
M V RAGES AHC? L f A f t t J

CAN'T YOU
REAP M E?

Uo&amp;

FDR.&lt;STAPTER5, *CU TALK.

I 'M HOT E C O * TO \
HAVE LUMCH WITH

A LO T,

) / WHY

vvouA*tfMopa.yl won

P O P . I P B C IP E P

\

COMPUTERS ARE )
GOING T O B E
^
M V F U T U R E / X REALLY f

BUT TDD

MEVEP-

HAVE AMVTHIM6? TD

COMPUTER
REPAIRMAN

PROGRAMMER"*
ANALYST f y "
* C H E M IS T r &lt;

CO Atrw TCK

V C PAIR

I SBiryicB

S C IE N T IS T ? )

i w x m rr
■
touch IT

ACR O SS

6 Friends (Fr.)
7 Mothar of

1 British Navy
abbreviation
4 Old English
coin
8 Actor
O'Naal
12 Povorty-war
agancy (abbr.)
13 Harnass part
14 A rc h ite c t_____
Saarinen
18 Russian
community
16 Having an
offensive odor
17 Inside (comb,
form)

Castor and
Pollux
8 Sandplpar
B Barbra
Straiaand
movla

A M
C 0

n m n n n

10 Bandlaadar

Shaw
11 Nary a aoul (2
wda.)
19 Tarm of
add rasa
21 Royal Mall
Barvlea (abbr.)
24 Exploslvs
(abbr.)
26 Poatio
contraction
IB Adam's
27 W ho (It.)
grandson
28 Own (Scot.)
20 Despot
22 Metal container 2B Fuma
30 Washington's
23 Actress
nation (abbr.)
Hayworth
28 Confused fight 33 Tax agancy
(abbr.)
27 Memorial
38 Tacit
mound
36 Urgant wlralaas
29 Trick
signal
31 Qraat success
37 Tast
32 Cravats
39 Morasl laft at
14 Corrode
msal
38 California
41 First coplaa
county
(abbr.)
40 Measure of
42 &amp;
.
follower
43 Slice of toasted
bread
48 Part
47 Capsules
80 Please reply
81 Chance
82 Margin
88 Pertaining to
dawn
88 Ostrich
80 Precipitate
62 New Zealand

pregnancy or weight loss, sxin
usually shrinks back to Its
normal size. However, skin in
some parts of the body will not
shrink after It has been stret­
ched. Plastic surgeons are often
quite
adept
at removing un.
.
wanted skin bulges

1

2

j

□ d e e
n n E E
n n n
□ □ B E D
n n esE n n n

E ED E

46
47

Maria
Evert

Lloyd
48 Coarse person
49 Disburse
50 Lacquer
ingredient
53 A Scott

DDD

54 Mystic
66 Air (comb,
form)
57 Aromatic
ointment
69 Auto club
(abbr.)
81 Possesses
•

Is

.i

12

14

IS

17

IS

!

11

1 23

21

13
27

10

2B

11
IS

68 incline the head

si
as

1 Baseball goal
2 Chlokan chow
3 Collage group

s^

as
ss
( c ) I 9 B 7 by NEA. Inc

W IN A T B R ID G E
By J a m e s J a c o b y

c o h g r a t u l # tic&gt;n g
/ V R .e U M T / I H EA R
y o u Q m ^ o ije s E X JF

T E O , l/VL A
NK9HT WATCHMAN!

oh

! WHAT o o
W ATSH

\

A cornerstone of the famous
K u p-lan-Sheinw old b id d in g
system Is the weak no-trump. On
many deals it is difficult for
opponents to Judge how best to
compete against It. particularly
when th eir ow n h igh-card
strength is divided evenly. And
competing on less than sound
v a lu e s can be a d isa ster,
particularly when partner Is
broke. Occasionally the weak
one-no-trump bidder must pay a
price. My teammate from last
S e p t e m b e r 's W o rld T ea m
Championship in Miami. Dr. Jim
Sternberg, has a weak-no-trump
anecdote that surely must have
its place in the world of bridge
trivia.
When South bid one no-trump.
Dr. Sternberg, sitting West, felt
his hand was Just as good as the
n o-tru m p b id d e r s, so he
doubled. East was happy to

)

? )

l KMOW-

pass, and one no-trump doubled
became the final contract. When
the opening lead of the diamond
ace drew the deuce from Eaat.
West switched to a low club.
East took the king and returned
a diamond. Back came a club
and back another diamond.
West had two more clubs and a
good diamond to cash, and on
those three winners East dis­
carded all three little hearts.
Next came the queen of spades,
and you can see what happened.
Sad to say. the defenders took all
13 tricks.
I'm the first person to admit
that I have had my share of bad
results when confronted with the
weak no-trump, so don’t think of
t hi s p ie c e as p o l i t i c a l l y
motivated. I do advocate strong
no-trump openings and can ab­
solutely testify that I have never
been doubled at one no-trump
and failed to take a trick.

NORTH
4 K I4

▼ 10 7 4 2
♦ 73
4 6532

WEST
♦ Q J6
*63
♦ A KJ9
♦ Q 107 4

EAST
4 A 10 7 5 3
*98 5
4852
♦ AK
SOUTH
492
VAKQJ
4 q 10 6 4
4J98

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

Opening lead:

4A

H O RO SCO PE
What The Day
Will Bring.,.

X C A N T AFpo/JP
GFflPS "A" N .
C H IC K E N .

,

- How A B e u r A
a p A P f

** 6 ” c H t c p e N

W HO C H B A TEP

■ ON Triff E X A M ?
Th AVCJ

I THINK MOU'RE

TABLE,

P LE A SE ,

_ BERTHA,____ _

8 *2.4-

WHAT PO VOO HAVE TO PO TO
GET ANV SCR VICE. ARCONP HERE?,

VOO HAVE TO
GET TO VOOR
JABLE FIR5T
THAT'S A
STO PIP
ROLE

W m M PRM DI

TOUR BIRTHDAY
MARCH 38.1087
An old friend you haven't seen
for quite a while will re-enter
your life in the year ahead.
There will be a collective in­
volvement In an unusual ven­
ture that will turn out beneficial
for each of you.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Appraise situations realistically
today, or else you may attach
greater value to them than they
merit. Miscalculations could
involve you in bad situations.
Get a Jump on life by un­
derstan din g the in flu en ces
which are governing you in the
year ahead. .Send for your
ABtro-Graph predictions today.
Mall 81 to Astro-Graph, d o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 91128.
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Y ou 're still in a favorable
achievement cycle, but you
must be careful today not to

WILL WE ALL SO M ETIM ES, AN N IEB U T A B B V IS A BIT
BE TAKIN'
YO O N G M R THAN
CLASSES
SOU A R E T'G E TH E R ,
MISS SLATE?

oliend associates In your zeal to
fulfill your ambitious alms.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A
close friend's urgent request
might take you away from what
you'd like to do today. You'll
help, regardless o f the inconve­
nience it may cause you.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Either today or very soon you
will be compensated for a matter
where you rendered a service for
another. However, you might
not get all for which you're
hoping.
L E O ( J u l y 2 3 - A u g . 22)
Harmony in an important career
relationship is essential today.
However, it can only be attained
if you're prepared to make some
concessions.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It’s
best today not to take on tasks
which overtax you physically.
Your most productive work will
be done with your brain, not
your brawn.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If
you've been a trifle too loose
with your finances lately,
beware: your mate might sud­
denly declare a moratorium on

-A N D D E R M O T IS O L D **,
SO SOU'LL B E G E T T IN G
INDIVIDUAL TUTORING f~
a s w ell/ m - T T —
'

ARE WE
THROUGH
FOR THE
CWV, M ISS
.S L A T E ?

your spending.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Don't let outsiders make impor­
tant financial decisions for you
today. You're on a lucky trend
and your Judgment In these
areas is apt to be keener.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Late In the day when you arc
a bit fatigued you might blurt
out the first thing that comes to
your mind. Listeners could be
wounded by what you say.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) This should be a profitable
day for you. provided you don't
let your emotions cloud your
Judgment in your commercial
dealings. Keep a cool head.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 19)
Try not to take your wrath out
on innocent bystanders if some­
thing doesn't work out as well as
you expected today. If you're
going to be angry, restrict It to
those involved.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You may feel an associate is
placing too great a load on your
shoulders today. Time will prove
that what he did wbb for your
benefit.

YE5. ANNIE AND I WILL B E I
G ETTIN G ACQUAIN TED /
-J U S T L E A V E SOUR I— 1 O
H O M EW O R K OH THE
;
TA BLE, P ER M O T / f —

!

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222111">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, March 24, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222112">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222113">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on March 24, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222114">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222115">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, March 24, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222116">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222117">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222118">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222119">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22246" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21849">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/5fd82dc2ea88e572d250c9ed200b2518.pdf</src>
        <authentication>6e2392e7bce3973e76487643158602f6</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222130">
                    <text>IKM

Sanford, Florida — Thursday, January 15,19t7

P e a rls Of W isd

'We're All The Same
Entertainer Says

Pearl Bailey
you don't plan life,
you live It.

A chieving "tr u e and perm anent
brotherhood" requires a collective and
continually reinforced commitment to
caring from all sectors o f society,
according to Pearl Bailey.
The 68-year-old entertalner/author
and self-described philosopher offered
her concepts of unity and spiritual
growth to about 350 receptive local
citizens at the Sanford Civic Center
Wednesday afternoon. Miss Bailey's
entry and exit were marked with
standing ovations.
She relied heavily on personal expe­
rience and wit to convey home-spun
wisdom and "truism s." Her concepts
promote a return to basic values, such
as those found In the Bible, in the
family and the community.
In an hour-long talk. Miss Bailey
provided a message of "peace, hope,
love and unity."
She said these Ideals can be secured
with a conscious effort from all parts of
society. Miss Bailey also said she

Tm not Into civil rights,
Pm only Into humen rights.
I am o human being and by
golly I won't bo treated like
anything else, regardless of
my race, religion and creed.
subscribes to these notions by shunn­
ing "titles and tables" and "looking at
people for what they are, not what color
they are.
"I'm not Into civil rights. I’m only
Into human rights. I am a human
being, and by golly. I won't be treated
like anything else, regardless of my
race, religion and creed."
Miss Bailey's appearance at the noon
luncheon was part of Sanford's weeklong tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. Among those at the luncheon were
State Rep. Art Grindle. Sanford Mayor
Bettye Smith, and Greater Sanford

Baa BAILEY, paga 12A

H tra M Pfwlet by Ta m m y Vincant

View from the Sanford C iv ic Center stage W ednesday a s P e a rl B ailey speaks to local audience.

Community To Help Pay Luncheon Shortfall
Former Chamber of Commerce Pres­
ident Shirley Schllke will apparently be
reimbursed the $4,000 In personal
funds she put up to bring Pearl Bailey
to Sanford Tor a Martin Luther King
tribute luncheon.
A $4,000 shortfall was expected due
to poor ticket sales and disappointing
response to requests for luncheon
contributions from private citizens and
businesses.
Mrs. Schilke. who Just completed her
term as president o f the Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce, said
todav a number of community repre­

sentatives are now saying they'll help
cover any shortfall that remains after
ticket receipts are added up. She said
the pledges of support are response to
word earlier this week that the lun­
cheon would apparently fall $4,000
short of the break even point.
Miss Bailey charged $8,000. plus
expenses, to come to Sanford.
" I think we're going to come out
O K ." Mrs. Schllke said. " I ’ve been
getting calls saying if you’re having
difficulty breaking even. I’ll help out."
The luncheon, held Wednesday, was
Initially hoped to come In at a profit.

with these monies going for scholar­
ships In King's name.
Mrs. Schllke sent 75 letters to local
business and private citizens In De­
cember. asking them to contribute to
the luncheon. She said last week she'd
received five replies. The disappointing
number of responses combined with
slow ticket sales led to her assessment
late last week the luncheon was going
to come In around $4,000 short.
Mrs. Schilke put up the $4,000 In
December to cover the deposit for Miss
Bailey's appearance.
See P A Y , page 12A

M is s ile

T est

W it h o u t H it c h
9 More Protesters Arrested
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - The first
Trldent-2 missile, newest of the Navy's
,submarine-based rockets, blasted away
from a land firing pad today and
streaked toward an Atlantic Ocean
target area as anti-nuclear activists
protested.
The four-story-tall, three-stage rocket
was launched at 10:25 a.m. and left a
long white trail of smoke'ln Its wake as
It raced Into the cloudless sky. The
unarmed missile was visible for about
two minutes.
"It appeared that everything went off
Just like clockwork." Navy spokesman
Lt. Cmdr. Bob Pritchard said.
"T h e first booster separated at 65
seconds as advertised and the second
went off at about 130 seconds, which
again Is Just as it should be."
Security was heightened around the
perimeter o f the missile test center In
response to a week o f "Cancel the
Countdown" demonstrations organized
by three anti-nuclear groups protesting
deployment of what they said was a
first-strike offensive weapon.
Nine protesters, anticipating the
launching, were arrested earlier today
during an early morning vigil near the
gates of the Cape Canaveral Air Fore
Station, the Air Force reported.
Spokesm an Herb Illin gw orth at
nearby Patrick Air Force Base said the
protesters were arrested by Brevard
County sheriffs deputies, bringing to
55 the number of demonstrators ar­
rested since Friday at the Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station. Patrick
and the nearby Kennedy Space Center.
Before dawn, dozens of protesters
gathered peacefully at the base's south
chanting slogans and displaying ban­
ners reading "Blessed are the Peace
Marchers" and "Teach Peace."’
Several o f the protesters Joined hands
and briefly attempted to block the
station's entrance before being moved
off the road by Air Force security.
"People were actually hurling their
pink bodies in front of cars In an
attempt to disrupt traffic." said Lt. Col.
Bob Nicholson, spokesman for the Air
Force, which was In charge o f security.
No one wasin|ured.
Twenty to 25 test flights are planned
before the missile becomes operational
In 1989, Pritchard said. Up to seven
ship-based launches also are planned.
The $23.7 million Trident-2 Is sched­
uled for deployment In December 1989
aboard Ohio-class nuclear submarines.
The weapons can carry at least 10
warheads, each with up to 500 kiiotons
o f explosive yield.
T h e 126.000-pound, 44-foot-tall
rockets are thought to have a max­
imum range of up to 6,900 miles,
depending on how many warheads are
carried.
The $1.5 billion USS Tennessee,
launched Dec. 13 at Groton. Conn., is
the first submarine built to carry the
Trldent-2 missiles. The Ohlo-class

nuclear submarines are equipped with
24 missile tubes, compared with 16 for
Poseidon submarines.
"W hat Is significant, and why we are
focusing on the first Trident-2 launch Is
that it Is a first-strike weapon." said
Judy Frclwlrth. spokeswoman for Na­
tional .Mobilization for Survival, an
activist group based In New York.
U.S. officials deny the missile Is
Baa LAUNCH, paga 13 A

Secret Slips Out,
Job In Jeopardy
A television reporter may loae his
Job over releasing Wednesday the
then-secret launch time o f a pro­
testor-plagued trident missile that
was scheduled to lift off today from
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
In trouble Is Mike V ictor, o f
WCPX-TV. channel 6. Victor told
reporters he has been asked to
resign, but early reports said he had
quit.
Tom HaufT. news director for the
station, blamed the Ill-timed broad­
c a s t o f th e la u n c h on m is communication and declined to
discuss the Incident in-depth.
"W e're going to meet In the next
few minutes." said HaufT at midmomlng.
"I'm not comfortable discussing
that right now,” he said referring to
whether Victor has been asked to
resign or had quit.
"W e may have screwed UP. but
Wednesday. Air Force Sgt. Mike
Beeman called news organizations
and told them of the launch time on
the condition they embargo It and
keep It confidential. The time Is
given to the media so they can
coordinate and plan coverage.
Victor agreed and was given the
Information, according to Beeman.
He then called the TV station's Just
before noon to update the protest
situation. At that time, Victor re­
portedly mentioned the launch time,
but did not mention that it was
embargoed. He assumed the station
knew of the embargo, according to
HaufT.
The station then broadcast the
time on Its noon segment raising the
Ire of the Air Force, which com ­
plained about the broadcast.
Victor. 35. has been with W CPX
for about 6 months and covers
Brevard County.
About 40 protestors have been
arrested at the Cape in connection
with the launch. Launch o f the
trident, a 130,000-pound missile
designed to carry nuclear warheads,
was delayed several times this
morning.
—Deane Jordan

County To Lease Land For Neglected Kids' Home
By K a th y T y r it y
H erald S ta ff W r ite r
The Seminole County Commission this week
directed Us stalT to prepare a low-cost lease for
property to be used us a home for abused and
neglected children.
The lease would be for property at U.S.
Highway 17-92 and State Road 427. known as the
Five Points area.
Lesee would be Sharing Concern for Seminole
County Shelter Children (SC3).
Before finalized, the lease would be brought
back before the commission In early February.
SC3 Is headed by Semlnole-Brcvard Circuit
Judge Kenneth LefTIcr who plans to solicit about
$250,000 in private donations to build a home

TO D AY
Bridge..............
Classifieds.......!
Comics.............
Coming Events.
Crossword.......
Dear Abby.......
Deaths.............
Dr. Gott............
Editorial..........
Financial.........

Florida....
Horoscope
Hospital...,
N a tio n .......

People......
P o lic e ......
Sports......
Television
Weather...
W orld.......

School Menu
• F rid a y : Oven-fried ch ick en , buttered
rice, seasoned green beans, fresh fruit,
oven-baked roll and lowfat m ilk.

large enough to house 12 children, ages 6 to 17.
The home would provide temporary shelter and
care for youngsters who have been removed from
their families under emergency conditions.
The staff recommended 1.5 acres next to the
Juvenile detention center at the county operations
complex be given to the group under a long-term
lease. It is off U.S. Highway 17-92. south of
Sanford.
One possible stumbling block remains and that
is the route o f the proposed expressway to go
through Seminole County. That decision Is
expected to be more definite by August, and so
the shelter's plans remain somewhat Indefinite
until then.
A second choice of land. If the Five Points

acreage is not available. Is next to a sewage
treatment plant on Dodd Road In south Seminole
County.
The county also encouraged LelTler's group to
continue looking for a private benefactor.
In other action, the commission:
• Approved an Interlocal agreement with the
city of Winter Springs, ending a lawsuit brought
by the county. The agreement Is on how
annexation will be handled because of a road
right-of-way on State Road 434 annexed by
Winter Springs and now coming back to the
county:
• Denied a request to build a single-family
home on property said to be In the 10-year and
100-year flood plain. Owner Renata Coffman said

the property, at the corner of North and Oliver
streets, was sold to her and she has a $90,000
bank loan for which she was not told she needed
flood Insurance. She said her builder ussured her
he hud contacted the engineering department and
the lot was bulldable. It was to be built on stilts,
and commissioners were concerned that muck
and water would flow beneath the house, barrlnlg
access to emergency vehicles:
• Moved to begin condemnation on a residen­
tial property In the Stevens addition to Midway
(Lot 43. Block C) because the owners are
deceased and the house burned down. The
commission considered It a "haven for rats and
snakes" dangerous to children and others In the
See COUNTY, page 12 A

Bills To G o (/p $7 A Months On Average

Sem inole Votes W a te r, Sew er
The Seminole County Commission
approved on a 4-1 vote a 26 percent
rate hike In water and sewer fees,
which will mean about $7 extra per
month for the average residential
customer.
C om m ission er Barbara
Christensen voted against the rale
hike, commissioners Bob Sturm. Bill
Kirchhoff. Sandra Glenn and Fred
Streetman voted for It.
County Administrator Ken Hooper
said before the Tuesday vote the

Increase was needed for Improve­
ments In the system and expansion
for all customer needs, and he said
there hasn't been an Increase since
1982.

used for that purpose.
Two others wrote letters of protest
and one other objector presented
questions on why the Increase was
needed.

Protesters of the rate hike. In­
cluding Art Davis of Sanford and
Grant McEwan of Casselberry, said
they felt the money would even­
tually go to pay for the county's
purchase of property known as
Yankee Lake, and they objected to
the purchase and the money being

Since the Increase was approved,
higher rates will begin showing up
on customers' bills next month. The
Increase is intended to raise $1.4
million during the next two years to
help pay for improvements to the
county's sewer system.
. Hooper said customers are not

supposed to help fund construction
required because of growth, but the
rate revenue must be pledged toward
the repayment of $50 million worth
of bonds to be sold soon to fund
expansion and renovation of treat­
ment plants.
The Increase raises the sewer bill
for county custom ers w ho use
10.000 gallons of water a month
from $ 19 to $26.
K ath y T y r lt y

�r

r
n.

if*

T r a i n
T e s t

C r a s h
P o s i t i v e
;

IN BRIEF
Unprovoked Attack

Patron

Seminole County sheriffs deputies reported arresting
two men on an aggravated battery charge as they were
driving away from Charlie's Bar. 2000 Howell Branch
Road. Winter Park, the scene o f a reported unprovoked
attack on a bar patron.
Deputies were called to the bar at about 12:50 a.m.
Wednesday and witnesses pointed out the pair of suspects
who were In a car. Deputies approached and questioned
the suspects. One had blood on his p&amp;nts and shoes.
The victim, Thomas Colvin, told deputies the man with
blood on his clothing. James Allen Jay Bozeman. 25, of
Orlando, had for no apparent reason hit Colvin with a
napkin holder while both were In the bar. The other
suspect. Steve Glenn Coulter., o f Winter Park, then’
allegedly hit the victim with a glass.
Colvin suffered cuts to his forehead and was treated at
Winter Park Memorial Hospital, Winter Park, a sheriffs
report said.
In addlton to the aggravated battery charge a search at
the Jail, which reportedly turned up several partially
smoked marijuana cigarettes In Coulter's pocket, brought
him an additional charge o f possession of less than 20
grams o f marijuana. They have been released on $1,000
bond each and Bozeman Is scheduled to appear in court
Feb. 2. The date of Coulter's court appearance has not been
set.

Jailed On Forged Check Charge
A 30-year-old Orlando man has been charged with
uttering a forgery after allegedly trying to cash a stolen,
forged check at an Altamonte Springs bank at about 10
a.m. Tuesday.
Officials or Pioneer Savings, State Road 436, were
suspicious of the check presented at a drive-up window.
They checked the signature against their records and It
didn't match. Altamonte Springs police were called to the
bank and questioned the suspect who was a passenger In a
car that was still at the bank.
Bank officials contacted the owner pf the check, an
Elizabeth Thompson, and she said her checkbook had been
stolen and she had not written the check, police reported.
David Roger Sylvester, arrested In the case, was being
held In lieu o f$ l,000 bond.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Drug
teste show the engineer and
b r t k e m in fo r a C o n ra tl
locomotive that crashed with an
Amtrak train, killing 16 people,
had used marijuana within the
24 hours preceding the accident,
investigators said.
Also Wednesday, Maryland
motor vehicle records revealed
the engineer. Ricky Gales, has
been convicted , o f 11 traffic
violations — two for which his
license was suspended — since
1972, and was charged with
drunken driving last month.
"T h e engineer and the brakeman or the Conrall movement
both tested positive for presence
o f cannablnolds (marijuana) in
both the urine and plasma." the
Federal Railroad Administration
said in a statement Wednesday
night.
An FRA spokeswoman said
there was no evidence either
man had been drinking. Crew
members o f the Amtrak train,
w hich ram m ed the Conrall
locomotive, tested negative for
both alcohol and drugs.
The statement emphasized
"the findings do not constitute
an allegation of fault or determi­
nation o f probable cause."
"These findings will be con­
sidered with all other evidence
developed during the Investiga­
tion" of the Jan. 4 accident 15
mites northeast o f Baltimore, the
statement said.
The drug findings also will be
c o n s id e r e d In d e te rm in in g
w h e t h e r to f i l e c r i m i n a l

E n g i n e e r ,
F o r

n e g lig e n c e c h a r g e s . i$ ld
Baltimore County S late’s At*
tomey Sandra O'Connor. If the.
investigation finds cause for
negligence, the charges would be
16 counts o f m anslaughter,
carrying a penalty o f up to five
years each.
The accident occurred when
th e t h r e e - e n g i n e C o n r a ll
locomotive ran through a stop
signal at a crossover switch Into
the path o f Amtrak's Bostonbound "Colonial." T h e 12-car
passenger train rear-ended the
locomotive at 105 mph. killing
16 people and injuring 175
others In Am trak's deadliest
accident.
The FRA statement djd not
say howsbofibeTorelhe accident'
Gates and brakeman Edward
Cromwell had consumed mari­
juana.
B u t M ik e G l m b e l , t h e
Baltimore County Drug Abuse
Coordinator acting as an adviser
to officials investigating the ac­
cident. said the tests Indicate
"they had used marijuana a
couple of hours before (the
accident) but no more than a day
before."
A urine sample taken from
Gates 2 Vi hours after the
accident showed levels of THC,
the intoxicating ingredient in
marijuana, In a concentration of
67 nanograms per milliliter, the
FRA said. A nanogram Is onebillionth of a gram. A urine
sample taken from Cromwell
nearly 8 Vi hours after the crash
showed THC In a concentatlon of
87 nanograms per mlllllter.

M

a r i j u a n a

Marijuana remains In the body
for 30 days or'longer and THC
levels gradually decrease follow­
ing use of the drug.
"Having a 67 to 80 nanogram
means they could have smoked
the marijuana anywhere up to
24 hours" before the accident.
Glmbel said. "Obviously It aaya
they didn't do It three or four or
five days ago."
Gates's lawyer. Stephen Tully.
declined to comment without
having seen the FRA report, but
added, "T h e Issue Is what Is the
state of somebody on the day In
question."
New federal regulations pro­
hibit employees from reporting
to work impaired by dlcohol or

Burglaries A n d Thefts Reported
About $850 worth of building materials were stolen from
a construction site at 368 Longwood Ave.. Longwood.

Richard D. Pappas,.36. o f 344 E. Alpine S U Altamonte
Springs, reported to sheriffs deputies that a $500 video
recorder and 150 baseball cards valued at $450 were stolen
from his home Tuesday.
Jewelry, two watches and cash with a combined value of
over $130 were stolen from the home of John B. Scott. 31.
of 300 Hibiscus St. Chuluota, Thursday, a sheriffs report
said.
Craige D. Knudsen. 17. o f 1040 Weatherwood Circle.
Winter Springs, reported to sheriffs deputies his 1981
Suzuki motorcycle valued at $500 was stolen on Lake
Drive In Casselberry on Monday or Tuesday.
A $310 air compressor was stolen from the van of Leon
H. Lindsay. 52. of 201 Eileen Ave., Altamonte Springs,
between Jan 6 and 11. according to a sheriffs report filed
Tuesday.

Two Suspects Arrested
For Store Burglaries
L a k e M a ry P o lic e C h ie f
Charles Lauderdale said the
Wednesday arrest of a 23-yearold Oviedo man and a 16-yearold boy found at about 1:30 a.m.
; In a car parked near a Circle-K
convenience store has cracked a
burglary ring that through the
month of December hit six area
,Clrclc*K stores.
There was no burglary to the
Lake Mary store. A Lake Mary
police officer approached the
suspects* vehicle on Fourth
Street at Wilbur Avenue and
j: found the two suspects who
:allegedly had burglary tools in
•j their vehicle.
Lake Mary policeman Kreig
;:Raffety reported smelling mari­
huana smoke In the car. He saw a
j; marijuana cigarette on the front
seat o f the vehicle.
Douglas Marton Gcnton. of
i Route 2. Box 1130. Oviedo, who
was in the car has been charged
j with possession of marijuana as

(U S P S 411-210)

Thursday, January 15, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 124
Published Daily and Sunday, excepl
Saturday by The Sanford Herald,
Inc. 100 N. French Ave., Sanford.
Fla. 32771.
Second Class Postage Paid at Sanford,
Florida 32771
Horn* Delivery: Month. 14.73; 3 Month*.
114.11; 4 Month*. 127.00; Yoar,
331.00 By M ail: Month. M i l ; 3
Month*. 320.25; 4 Month*. 337.00;
Yoar, 344.00.
Phone (305) 322 24)1.

well as possession ol burglary
tools, loitering and prowling.
Tools were reportedly found In
the front passenger side of the
car when RafTety searched the
vehicle.
The 16-year-old. who was in
the backseat of the car while
Genton was in the front, faces
the same charges. Genton was
being held in lieu of $1,000
bond. The boy was arrested as a
Juvenile and released to his
parents.
Lake Mary police investigator
Tom Taggart said while the two
arrested were being questioned
ut the police station a third
suspect showed up there and
reportedly discussed his alleged
Involvement In the case. Two
other suspects have also been
named and additional arrests are
pending. Taggart said.
Seminole County sheriffs Sgt.
Puul Jaynes said that the Lake
Mary police investigation has
uncovered the names of three
additional adult suspects In the
burglaries.
In the burglaries, where the
stores were entered through
holes made by the bandits In the
roof, a total of about $6,500 was
netted by the thieves.
Locations of stores hit and
dates o f the burglaries are:
Ballard Street In Altamonte
Springs. Dec. 5; U niversity
Boulevard in Orange County.
Dec. 10; Howell Branch Road at
Al o ma A v e n u e , near
Casselberry, Dec. 14; Sanford
.Avenue, Sanford. Dec. 16; State
R oad 434 at G ran t R oad.
Longwood. Dec. 21: and Spartan
Drive near U.S. Highway 17-92.
near Maitland. Dec. 28. Jaynes
said.
— Susan Loden

drugs and ban on-the-job alcohol
pr drug use. These regulations,
contested In federal court by the
railworkers, authorize drug and
alcohol testing after accidents or
when there Is a "reasonable
suspicion o f Impairment.
Gates had been arrested Dec.
5, a month before the train
accident, on charges o f drunken
driving and running a stop sign
and a red ligh t, B altim ore
County police spokesman Jay
Miller said. Gates's trial was set
for March 4.
The Washington Post reported
that Jerome Evans, the Amtrak
engineer killed In the wreck, had
two speeding convictions since
1981.

Court: Tenants Can Sue
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Supreme Court ruled Wednes­
day tenants In Roanoke. Va..
could file a lawsuit to enforce a
federal law Imposing a celling on
rents charged in public housing
projects.
The public housing tenants
charged they were overbllled for
utilities, which are included In
the rent, and brought suit In
federal court to enforce the
Brooke Amendment to the Hous­
ing Act of 1937. which Imposed
a celling on rents.
However, federal courts held
private citizens could not bring
suit to enforce the act and that
right was reserved for the De­
partment of Housing and Urban
Development.

The Supreme Court. o n a S 4
decision, reversed those rulings.
Justice Byron White. Joined by
J u s tic e s W illia m Brennan.
T h u r g o o d M a rsh a ll, H arry
B la c k m u n an d J o h n Paul
Stevens, said nothing In the
"Housing Act or the Brooke
A m en d m en t evid en ces that
Congress intended to preclude"
such lawsuits.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
dissented and' was Joined by
Chief Justice William Rehnqulst
and Justices Lewis Powell and
Antonin Scalla.
85-5915 Wright el al., vs. City
of Roanoke Redevelopment and
Housing Authority.

WEATHER

D riving Under Influence Arrests
The following persons have been arrested in Seminole
County on a charge o f driving under the Influence:
—John Edward Tllghaman, 20, of Deltona, was arrested at
9:12 p.m. Tuesday after his car was in an accident on U.S.
Highway 17-92, Sanford.
—Darryl William Smith, 25. o f Polk City. Fla., on
Wednesday morning after his car failed to maintain a
single lane on U.S. Highway 17-92. Longwood.

U s e

Nation T emp er a t ur e s
City a F e ric itl
Albuquerque cy
Anchoragew
Asheville cy
Allanta r
Billing* in
Birmingham cy
Boston sh
Brownsville Tex.pc
Buffalo r
Burlington VI. *h
Charlaiton S.C. cy
Charlotte N.C. r
Chicago cy
Clnclnnatlcy

Denver *n
Det Moines cy
"Detroit cy
Duluth pc
El Pasocy
Evanivilltcy
Hartford »h
Honolulu pc
Houston pc
Indianapolis cy
Jackson Mis*, cy
Jacksonvlllt r
Kama* City pc
La* Vega* pc
Uttla Rockcy
Los Angolas *y
Louisville cy
Memphis cy
Miami Beach sy
Milwaukee cy
Minneapolis pc
Nashville cy
Naw Orleans cy
New York r
Oklahoma City cy
Omaha cy
Philadelphia r
Phoenix pc
Pittsburgh r
Portland Me. cy
Portland Ora. sy
Providence sh
Richmond sn
St. Louis pc
San Francisco sy
Washington cy
CODES
c clear
cl clearing
cy cloudy
1 fair
ty foggy.
hi hate
m m'silng

HI La Pep
SI 31 ....
24 IS .01
40 41 .01
44 40 .09
31 04 ....
54 44 .37
47 41 ....
4* 34 ....
44 40 .14
37 33 ....
40 SI ....
43 44 i .04
43 33 ....
32 44 ....
- V '32 4* .07 ■
49 .44 -01
41 49 ....
34 32 - .02
45 29 ....
* 42 37 :i2
13 04 ....
47 39 ....
S7 41 ....
47 13 ....
74 43 ....
39 34 .01
44 40 .01
50 44 .00
73 SI ......
44 10 ....
51 31 ....
51 43 .01
71 47 ....
54 43 .01
56 43 .04
74 71 ....
45 30 ....
41 11 ....
53 45 .03
51 49 1.23
54 44 ....
62 39 ....
42 26 ....
34 44 01
.
45 43 ....
S3 43 .0)
35 35 ....
43 37 ....
43 40 ....
69 32 ....
S3 33 ....
33 47 ....
37 44 .11
pc partly cloudy
r rain
sh showers
sm smoke
snsnow
sy sunny
ts thunderstorms
w windy

I Florida T e mp er a t ur e s
MIAMI (U P I) - Florida 24-hour tempera
turas and rainfall a l l a.m. E D T today:
City;
Hi Lo Rain
Apalachicola
44 54 0.03
Daytona Beach
74 54 0.00
Fort Lauderdale
75 44 0.00
Fort Myers
77 S3 0 00
Gainesville
72 30 0 00
Jacksonville
73 51 0 00
Key West
74 70 0 00
Lakeland
74 49 0 00
Miami
77 42 0 00
Orlando
74 51 0.00
Pensacola
62 51 0.33
Sarasota Bradenton
73 37 000
Tallahassee
43 30 003
Tampa
73 34 0 00
Vero Beach
75 52 0 00
West Palm Beach
76 61 0 00

Five-D ay Forecast
For Central Florida
P ttyC ldy

last

N «w

Jan. N

Jan. 24

First
F«b . S

Full
F#b. 13

Beach Conditions
D aytona Beach: Waves arc
about 2 feet and glassy. Current
is slightly to the north with a
temperature of 59 degrees. New
Sm yrna Beach: Waves are 1 to
2 feet and glassy. Current Is
slightly to the north; Water
temperature. 56 degrees. Sun
screen factor: 12.

Wednesday's high tempera
ture In Sanford was 72 degrees
and the low during the past
twenty-four hours was 45 de­
grees. No rainfall recorded.

Ar e a Forecast

Arctic Blast
Chills Plains
By U n ited P ress
In tern ation al
An arctic blast of Canadian
air swept into the north central
part of the nation today, drop­
ping wind chills to 50 below
zero in the northern Plains Just
two days after the region was
basking in unseasonably warm
weather.
The wintry blast pushed
tem peratures to the single
digits from the northern half of
the Rockies across much of the
northern Plains, the National
Weather Service said. Below*
zero readings were recorded
from Montana lo Minnesota.
Wind chill factors fell to 35
below zero across much of the
northern Plains. At 2 a.m. EST.
Grand Forks. N.D.. reported a
temperature of 1 degree below
zero, with winds gustlng to 35
mph.
Accompanying the wintry
chill was light snow that dusted
the northern Plateau, the
northern Rockies and parts of
the northern Plains.

mpting a few others to don
bathing suits.
But the cold Canadian air
ended the warm spell. At
Willlston. N.D.. the tempera­
ture plunged to 7 degrees
below zero Wednesday com­
pared to a reading of 42 on
Tuesday.
In contrast, much of the
eastern half of the nation
basked In unseasonably warm
weather Wednesday. Records
for the date included 48 at
Binghamton. N.Y.. 46 at Green
Bay, Wls.. 42 at Greer. S.C.. 45
at Alpena. Mich., and 41 at
Marquette. Mich.
Elsewhere, winds gustlng to
30 mph and higher were pre­
dicted for the northern moun­
tains of southern California,
and fog stretched from the
central gulf coast to the lower
Great Lakes. Rain fell from
Florida to the Ohio Valley.

The cold weather in sections of
the United States and all across
"It's Incredible. I didn't wear Europe has proven Itself no
a Jacket for the last two days, respecter of persons. Jordan's
and today I wake up to snow." King Hussein left for Rome 90
s a i d L o r i s E b e r h a r t o f minutes late today as his Royal
Bismarck. N.D.. where It was Jordanian Airlines chartered
30 degrees and snowing Wed­ plane had to be unfrozen twice
nesday afternoon.
before taking off.
"I don’t like it. but there's
nothing you can do about it, so
why complain?" said Nettle
Monroe, also of Bismarck.

Moon Phases

PttyCldy

Local Roport

Snowfall in Idaho Wednesday
totaled 5 Inches at Grangevillc.
Moscow and Nampa, and 4
inches at Mullan and McCall.
Up to 3 inches fell In northeast
Nevada, with up to 8 inches in
the higher elevations.

Hussein, who ended a threeday visit In which he won
French support for a new Middle
Eust peace Initiative, arrived Monday Just in time for a cold
snap that two days later brought
the capital's heaviest snowfall In
21 years.

Hussein and his wife, Queen
Noor, waited once for the plane's
body and wings to be unfrozen
with alcohol, but in the time it
The January heat wave, took to exchange pleasantries
which began In the northern
with Prime Minister Jacques
Plains on Sunday, set more
Chirac and board the plane. It
than 50 high-temperature re­
froze again In 14 F weather.
cords through Tuesday from
After alcohol was applied a
Montana to Michigan and as far
south as Missouri, sending second time, the plane took off at
golfers to the links and pro­ 11:30 a.m.. 90 minutes late.

, Today.,.partly cloudy and mild I
with a ,Blight .chance of shoprra. /
High byithe mid 70s to near 60.1
Wind south 10 to 15 mph. Rain]
chance 20 percent.
Tqntght and Friday...partly
cloudy and mild with a slight
chance of showers. Low In the
lower 60s. H iglfln the mid 70s to
around 80. Wind southwest
around 10 mph. Rain chance 20
percent both tonight and Friday.

Ar ea Readings
The temperature at 9 a.m.: 61:
overnight low: 52: Wednesday's
high: 76: barometric pressure:
30.09; relative humidity: 87
percent; winds: SE at 5 mph;
rain: None: Today's sunset: 5:51
p.m., Friday’s sunrise: 7:19 a.m.

Extended Forecast
The extended forecast. Satur­
day through Monday, for Florida
except northwest — A warm
period with considerable cloudi­
ness and a chance of showers
north m ainly Saturday and
again Monday. Partly cloudy
south. Lows In the 50s north and
60s south but near 70 in the
Keys. Highs In the 70s but near
80 southern peninsula.

A r e a Tides

F R ID A Y : D ayton a B each:
highs. 8:53 a.m., 9:05 p.m.;
lows, 2:06 a.m., 2:51 p.m.: N ew
S m yrn a Beach: highs. 8:56
a.m.. 9:10 p.m.: lows. 2:11 a.m..
2:56 p.m.: B ayport: highs. 1:02
a.m.. 2:35 p.m.: lows. 8:20 a.m..
8:09 p.m.

Boating

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
— Today...wind south 10 to 15
kts. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Bay and
inland waters a light to moderate
chop. Widely scattered showers
north part.
T on igh t and Friday...wind
southwest 10 to 15 kts. Seas 2 to
4 ft. Bay and Inland waters a
light to moderate chop. Widely
scattcrd showers north part.

1

�V

m

Residential Street Out As Clinic Access
A city ordinance protecting
residents' privacy haa been
unanimously upheld by Sanford
commjaaioners.
Comm Isaloners'* action reaf­
firmed an earlier Planning ft
Zoning Board recommendation
against allowing a residential
roadway to be used aa access
route for a mental health clinic’s
vans.
The vans are used to transport
disabled clients to the clinic. Its
director told commissioners
Monday. The city's approved
entry point to the site is from
another roadway, In a commer­
cial area.
The ordinance commissioners
and the PftZ relied on dates back
to 1050. It requires buffer zones
be maintained between com­
mercial and residential pro­

perties.
According to city code, the
Seminole Community Mental
Health Center violated the ordi­
nance by re-openlng a driveway
on Oak Avenue. The driveway
was closed over with part of the
six foot site proof fence that
separates the commercial site
and the residential Oak Avenue
area.
The clinic and two other busi­
nesses are located In the old
Foodfalr Supermarket Center on
Park Avenue. The clinic's execu­
tive director, James Berko, told
commissioners vans carrying
Impaired clients were having a
hard time maneuvering to the
clinic's on-slte drop-off point
when coming In from 25th
Street, which Is the approved
entry route. He said the Oak

Avenue entry led diitctly to the
protected drop-off area.
One of the clinic's drivers told
commissioners he was unaware
of the city ordinance when he
cut the buffer fence last fell to
reopen the Oak Avenue driveAbout 20 Oak Avenue resi­
dents presented a petition op­
posing the driveway's use and
asked commissioners to visit the
site. Many of the residents were
at Monday's meeting, but did not
comment during the public
session.
•Commissioners' vote came
after hearing from Berko and
City Attorney William Colbert,
who discussed the protection
ordinance.

—Saras Tails j

Ktrchhoff To Spook At Looguo Bonquot
Charter government and
intergovernmental relations
will be discussed by Seminole
County Commissioner BUI
Klrchhoff at the League of
Women Voters' of Seminole
County's dinner January 22.
The public la Invited to
attend, according to Betty
Mackey of the league.

The event wUl take place at
the C ap ri Restaurant In
Springs Plaza on Route 434 at
6 p.m. and will cost 813.95
per person. Three menu
choices are available.
R e s e r v a t io n s , d u e by
January 19, may be made by
calling 862-9912 or 339-5359.

U n lta d W k y

T h n e y r J o * lf» H P —I A

n

■

COMING EVENTS
m m s o A T .jju t. i i
REBOS AA, noon.' 5:30 and 8 p.m. (dosed).
Rebos Club. 130 Normandy Lane. Casselberry.
Tough Love/Parents With Love weekly daytime
support group, noon. Suite 206, 900 Fox Valley
Drive. Longwood (off Weklvs Springs Road).
International Training In Communication
G r e a t e r S e m i n o l e C lu b ( p r e v i o u s l y
ToasUn(stress). 7:30 p.m.. Altamonte Chapel
Education Building on State Road 436. second
and fourth Thursdays.
Central Florida Civitan 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 (M mile east of Fashion Square). Meets
second and fourth Thursdays.
Maitland Bridge Club, 7:30 p.m.. Maitland Civic
Center.
B-SUm Diet Club for behavior modification and
Improved aelf-tmage. 7 p.m.. Howell Place,
Airport Blvd., Sanford. Phone or668-6783.
Freedom House AA (women only). 8 p.m.
(cloaed). 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.
n U D A T .J A N . 18
Central Florida Klwanls Club. 7:30 a.m..
Florida Federal Savings and Loan, State Road
436 at 434, Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls Club. 7 a.m.. Airport

OptlnMst Chib of South Sturinote. 7:30 a-m..
Holkfeytnn. W ym oreRo^Ahm nontetertngs.
Rebos AA. poon. Rebos Chib. 130 Normandy
Road, Casselberry (cloaed). Clean Air AA for
non-smokers, first floor, same room, same place
and Ume.
Free blood pressure reading by Medical
Personnel Pool. 12:30 ]p.m., Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.
National Association o f Retired Federal
Employees chapter, 2 p.m.. Casselberry Senior
Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive.
Free demonstration by Lynne Plttard. popular
television artist seen on Channel 24. will be held
at 4:30 p.m. at Art-teriors. 711 S. County Road
427. Longwood.
Heritage Jubilee. 8 p.m.. Fine Arts Concert
Hall, Seminole Community College, Sanford.
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, 1201W. First St.. Sanford.
24-Hour AA. 8 p.m. (open discussion), 317 S.
Oak Ave.. Sanford.
SATURDAY. JA N . 17
Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m. The Grove
Counseling Center. 580 Old Sanford/Ovledo Road
(off SR 419). Winter Springs.

FRIDA Y

SATURDAY
* SUNDAY
JA N U A R Y

8M PH

m m
m m

ISHbSK

Th# n le t il Ihlnga about R a d k a rr
fpatmanartl wava* ara tha way thay
laat and laava yo u r hair In axcallanl
condition. A ll Radkan*
parm a,
whalhar a d d or alkallna, aaolharm lc
or klrtailc, con lain good-lor-your-halr
In g ra d la n la a n d a ra c u a lo m lormulatad lo r d llla ra n l hair lypaa.
Your Radkan* alyliat will dalarmina
w hich parm la baal lor you. Com a to
our Radkan aalon lo r a haadlull o l
long-laallng cu ria .

Regency
Weddlnp
Invitations
100 for
$ 2 1 .6 0

too a n o k u t

voa

•‘We're Mon Than Just A Card Shopl"

E la in e ’s H a l l m a r k

if'R if O M A N 'S INVI11 S YO (l 1( ) DPI N YOUR
OW n P E R S O N A L CHARGE ACCOUNT

Shop
Sanford Plaza

322-6982

V- s * £ » %
.

o n V 0 O ,n _

a
'■ V*':!:'

£

Buy now and get 10% off
the regular low price.

• Party includes: a fret Aladdin's Cattle T-Shirt and an extra 30 same
tokcra tor the Birthday peno n; 30 game tokens tor each person,
gilt certificates tor all guests, and morel
• Regular price: Only *3.50 per person (18800 minimum). Buy now
and save an additional 10%.
• Just te l us h o w many guests you have and well take care of
everything — Including adult supervision and cleanup!

Save 30% to 40% Off
On selected group of winter sportsweer. Selection Includes,
W OM EN’S • JUNIOR’S • C H ILD R E N 'S • M EN'S

|

TOPS • PANTS • SW EATERS

G re a t Escap e

Near Plaza Tw in Theatres
S A N FO R D PLAZA
321-4903
&lt;■&lt;,. Nearly 350 locations Including Winter Park Mall

You'relookingsmarterthanever.'

^

Sanford Plaza
.O

y / iH u u a m m iiiiiH iiH fiH iH H U H H H iim u i^

Mon-Sat 9 30 9 Sun 12-5:30

®REDI&lt;EN
--------------- C O U P O N -------------------

*10.00 OFF A N Y |
REDKEN PERM j
OfFER GOOD IAN. ltFU. U

“One Of The Largest Hallmark Shops
In The Southeastw

Sanford “
Plaza

ffl

WITH COUPON &gt;

HAIR-A-RANGERS

«»»

I

3 22-0580

!

�S a n f o r d H e r a ld
(usnaim)

300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

Thursday, January 15, 1907—4A
Way** D. Doyta, PvMIshtr
Thomas Giordano, Mana«lnv Editor
^^EmWwWo nlRIIIIaf
Home Delivery: Month. 94.75; 3 Months, $14.25; 6 Months.
$27.00; Year. $51.00. By Malt: Month. $6.75: 3 Months.
$20.25: 6 Months. $37.00: Year. $69.00.

No Respecter
O f Ignorance
There Is no cure for AIDS. There Is only
prevention.
Doctors once spoke o f high-risk groups.
They now speak of high-risk behaviors. They
once called It an outbreak. Now It Is
threatening to become pandemic.
AIDS. Is breaking out of the homosexual
community and Into the general community.
It now threatens anyone who Is exposed to
the virus through blood or sexual practice.
Scientists are working on a cure for AIDS
and a vaccine against It. But researchers say
they are at least five years away from either.
What can we do now to prevent millions of
people from being exposed to AIDS?
Proposals have been made for legislation
requiring public high school Junior and senior
high students to learn about AIDS — and how
not to get it. The first step would be to
purchase existing AIDS education videotapes
and distribute them to the public schools. The
second step would be to set up a program
geared to students.
W hy do teenagers need to know about
AIDS? Because they are coming of age in an
era o f sexual danger unprecedented in
modern times. Groups that are concerned
about the moral impact of AIDS-prevention
education on youth should weigh the danger
o f letting kids not know what mortal danger
they may face.
Many Junior and senior high, school stu­
dents are sexually active. A number use
intravenous drugs. People with the deadly
AIDS virus often don't know they are infected
— and can Infect others. The best way to
prevent AIDS from spreading like wildfire
among young people is for students to say No
to sex and No to drugs — Yes to health. AIDS
is considered almost 100 percent fatal. The
threat o f death is a powerful Inducement to
teens to remain virgins and drug-free — if
they are told the facts.

Don't Be Misled
The media are mesmerized by Mikhail
Gorbachev's highly publicized campaign to
open the Soviet Union's closed society.
Hardly a d a ^ f f e s W 'tfltfttfut yfcftfH b m tr
glowing'account of the communist leader's
courage as he nudges the balky Soviet
bureaucracy forward an inch or two.
Lest our readers be carried away with the
purported greening of Gorbachev, we would
remind that, despite the release of a few
prominent dissidents, life remains basically
the same for those under the heel of the
totalitarian state. A case in point is the
Inability o f most Soviet citizens to leave the
country.
The new Soviet emigration law that became
effective Jan. 1 Is frequently heralded as an
example of the Kremlin's new flexibility. Yet.
there is every reason to believe that the
so-called reform could, in fact, make it even
more difficult to depart Mother Russia.
The statute, for the first time, codifies the
grounds for seeking — and for denying —
! emigration from the U.S.S.R. The operative
\word here is denying. Soviet authorities are
e m p o w e r e d to wa i t ' ' i n c e r t a i n
Icircumstances’* up to six months before
ru lin g on an application to em igrate.
Moreover, persons deemed to be in possession
of knowledge that could affect Soviet state
security may not leave until expiration of the
circumstances. This provides an open-ended
excuse that could lead to the Indefinite denial
of emigration applications. Don’t look for a
mass exodus from the Soviet Union anytime
soon.
The statute also stipulates that potential
emigres provide a letter of invitation from an
immediate family member living abroad
before their application can be considered.
This proviso effectively rules out most
persons who wish to emigrate for religious or
political reasons; few have close relatives
outside the country. More ominous still, the
law makes no provision for "repatriation" —
grounds that numerous Jewish activists have
cited In applying to emigrate to Israel.
An estim ated 30,000 Soviet Jews at­
tempted to emigrate In 1986. During the last
two years, the Kremlin has granted less than
2.000 exit visas to Jews compared with the
51.000 wiio were permitted to leave in 1979.
It should also be noted that would-be Jewish
emigrants often lose their jobs and then are
prosecuted for being unemployed.
if Gorbachev is truly sincere about opening
Soviet society, let him allow those who want
to leave the Soviet Union to do so. Failing
that, he should be regarded as yet another
Soviet wolf in sheep's clothing.

P LE A S E W R ITE
L e tte r s __ to the e d ito r are w elcom e fo r
publication . A ll le tte rs must be signed and
Include a m a ilin g address and. I f possible, a
teleph on e number. T h e Sanford Herald r e ­
serves th e righ t to e d it le tte rs to avoid lib e l
and to accom m odate space.

george

h

M cG o v e r n

Decency Sometimes Prevails, Not
T h e prevailin g view o f p olitics Is that
successful politicians must be cynical, devious
and clever, but not too decent, straightforward
and sincere. "N ice guys finish last." said Leo
Durocher about baseball, but he could have
been speaking about the accepted view of
political behavior.
Niccolo Machlavelll wrote. “ Whoever desires
to found a state and give It laws, must start with
assuming that all men are bad and ever ready to
display their vicious nature, whenever they may
find occasion Tor it;"
Acting on this assumption. Machlavelll laid
down the animalistic qualities o f a successful
ruler; " A prince being thus obliged to know well
how to act as a beast must Imitate the lion and
the fox. for the lion cannot protect himself from
traps, and the fox cannot defend him self from
wolves. One must therefore be a fox to recognize
traps, and a lion to frighten wolves."
There is doubtless considerable insight In this
view of politics. Such diverse political leaders as
Caesar. Napoleon. Hitler. Alexander Hamilton.
Franklin Roosevelt and Richard Nixon have
borrowed heavily, and successfully, from

Machlavelll. I do not make this observation from
contempt: these men were able to command
powerful political forces partly on the basis of
clever and cynical manipulation o f human
beings.
When I sought the presidency In 1972, I was
repeatedly asked by political observers if 1 was
not "too nice."
"A re you a big enough s.o.b. to be a good
president?" asked one news magazine editor.
I tried to assure doubters that 1 had the
necessary qualities of meanness, toughness and
cynicism to be a successful president.
But I must confess that the Machiavellian
view of political leadership has never much
appealed to me. I don’t feel It in m y-"gu t." And
as I get older, I Increasingly sense a widespread
hunger In Am erica and elsew here for a
leadership based on decency, fairness and
compassion. This is not to say that such
qualities will always prevail. It Is to say that
from time to time such benevolent concerns will
win out — perhaps by a narrow and temporary
majority.

It seem* to me that decency is now struggltng
to prevail in the Philippines under the leadership of President Coraxon Aquino. No one can be
certain th at th is seem in g ly honest and
benevolent woman will remain in power In the
long-troubled Philippines. But who wlU dispute
Time magazine's brilliant choice of Aquino as
•woman o f the year"? And who can dispute the
thrust of Tim e's thesis that, after the greed and
cynicism o f Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos, the
people o f the Philippines yearned for the old
fashioned decency and simplicity of a Corazon
Aquino?
Is It possible after long years o f wandering In
the wilderness o f Vietnam. Watergate and now
Irangate that the American people are looking
with some degree o f wistfulness and envy at
Aquino's miracle In Manila?
Duke University Professor David Barber re­
cently wrote: "T h e Reagan-era American has
been asked not what he can do for his country
but whether he Is making more money than he
was before."

SCIENCE WORLD

ROBERT WALTERS

Lasers
In Super
Computer

Debating
About
Debates
W ASHINGTON (NEA) - With
another presidential campaign get­
ting underway. It's time to rescue a
valuable but endangered institution
— the non-partisan candidate de­
bates sponsored by the League of
Women Voters.
In 1976. the league revived the
debates, which had not been held
since 1960. then sustained them In
1980 and 1984. As a result of these
nation ally televised face-to-face
confrontations, millions of voters
could assess presidential and vice
presidential candidates.
Now, however, the two major
political parties want to assume
sponsorship o f the debates, an
audacious move certain to endanger
the institution’s integrity and in­
dependence while posing the threat
that It may be abandoned.
Although the organizers of pre­
vious league-sponsored presidential
debates have occasionally been
supercilious and self-important,
they have generally done a first-rate
Job o f performing a complex, politi­
cally delicate task.
Scores o f items must be negoti­
ated prior to each debate. Among
them-.* - *
-------How many television cameras will
be used and where will they be
located? How will the lighting be
arranged? What format will be used
to question the candidates? If there
Is to be an audience, how will it be
selected?
Will the candidates stand or sit?
How far apart will they be? If there
Is a podium, how high will It be? If
there arc tables and chairs, how will
they be arranged?
Even If the political parties took
over the debates, they would need a
trustworthy neutral Intermediary —
like the league — to negotiate those
details. In addition, Nancy M.
Neuman, league president, notes
that party sponsorship poses even
more serious, substantive ques­
tions:
"W ould they put the Interests of
the public ahead of their own? Can
we expect them to pressure can­
didates (to accept) lively formats?
Would they be likely to put the heat
on one of their own nominees who
did not want to debate? Would they
even consider Including a thirdparty or Independent candidate if
one posed a viable challenge?”
The story ol how the Republicans
and Democrats decided to fix some­
thing that wasn't broken dates back
to February 1985, when a Com­
mission on National Elections was
a s s e m b le d by the C en ter fo r
Strategic and International Studies.

ROBERT W ACM AN

Expulsions Backfire
The United States had long relied on
WASHINGTON (NEA) - A wellS o v ie ts as cooks, chauffeurs,
publicized efTort by the Reagan
plumbers and laborers and had
adm inistration to "stan d t a ll"
jrelied on them to spend the long
against the Soviet Union has appar­
hours necessary In Moscow to shop
ently boomeranged. The net result
is that U.S. diplomatic and es­
for the rank-and-file diplomats.
To say the least, this action was
pionage efforts In the Soviet Union
unexpected.
have been hurt and U.S. coun­
terespionage efforts here are In
In the following days there were
turmoil.
pictures In the papers of U.S.
lL a ll started after the arrest last
A m b assad or* -Arthur Hartmann
August of Soviet U.N. employee
driving
his own &gt;car and of his wife,
G en n a d i Z ak h arov on -spying,.,
charges. He was eventually allowed 'plte&gt;hli a r ,fH&gt;,r6*&gt;&gt;lkWI&gt; -pi epsre the
embassy's lunch. Editorial cartoons
to plead no contest and return
poked fun at U.S. diplomats fixing
home.
c a rs and c a r r y in g p lu m b e rs ’
Then the tlt-for-tat round o f
plungers.
expulsions began.
President Reagan expelled 25
It was all treated as good fun. but
members o f the Soviet U.N. mission
experts at both the State Depart­
In New York on the grounds that
ment and the CIA knew that, In the
they were Involved in espionage.
long run. the joke was going to be
White House officials let It be known
on us. They were worried.
that among the two dozen were the
They knew that eventually they
KGB station chief in New-York and
were going to have to replace the
his principal aides. They also hinted
Soviet workers with Americans and
that, as a result of the expulsion
those Americans would be counted
order, the Soviet spy network at the
ugnlnst the new limit of 251. Put
U nited Nations had been d is ­
mantled.
simply. U.S. diplomats and spies
The Soviets Immediately retali­
would have to be sent home to
ated by expelling five U.S. diplo­
make room for cooks and chauf­
feurs.
mats from their country.
This might have ended It, but
At first the State Department
tnose close to the president thought
sought to reduce the Impact by
this was a perfect time for him to
trying to find diplomats whose
show Mikhail Gorbachev that he
wives — who do not count against
could play hardball. So Reagan
the 251 limit — could fill some of
Immediately ordered the expulsion
the Jobs. A few were found, but not
of an additional 55 Soviets from
enough. Now the State Department
their embassy In Washington and
has contracted with a private Los
their consulate In San Francisco.
Angeles firm. Pacific Architects and
That move effectively lowered the
Engineers Inc., to provide about 80
number of Soviet diplomats here to
service employees for Moscow and
251 and left 256 American diplo­
Leningrad.
mats In the Soviet Union.
The Soviets then expelled an
As each arrives In the Soviet
additional five Americans, evening
Union, an American will have to be
out both diplomatic rosters at 251.
sent home. Reportedly the State
That was expected — but at the
D e p a rtm en t and the CIA are
same time the Soviets ordered some
bickering over whose people are
200 Soviet citizens out of U.S.
more important as the lists of those
missions In Moscow and Leningrad.
to be sent home are drawn up.

B y G a y le Young
U P I Science W rite r
NEW YORK (UPI) - European
scientists have successfully used
lasers instead o f electricity to create
c o m p u t e r c i r c u i t s , a hi gh
technology achievement toward the
type of super computer that number
crunchers dream of.
Scientists say laser circuits In
computers are potentially faster and
smaller than electrical circuits and
could perm it the simultaneous
processing of calculations.
The ability to calculate significant
amounts or data simultaneously Is
known as parallel processing and
would allow massive amounts of
information to be processed In less
than a second.
Most current computers process
calculations Individually, In rapid
succession.
S.D. Smith and his colleagues at
the Departm ent o f Physics at
Herlot-Watt University near Edin­
burgh, Scotland used tiny lasers In
model computers they designed.
The computers contained a new
circuit system that uses a thin filter
to keep the beams of light consls„ tem and on track.
T h e y reported In the British
science journal Nature that the new
system worked well and could be
used In parallel processing.
"Optics can- be exploited to give
unrestricted Interconnections be­
tween large numbers of points In
parallel, a performance inconceiv­
able with electronic Interconnec­
tions." they wrote in their report.
Computer experts In the United
States said the achievement was
significant but said years of re­
search stand between the com­
puters In use now and laser com­
puters that can parallel process.
"T h ere are many who argue It can
never be done," said a computer
expert at a large, private research
facility who asked not to be Iden­
tified. "I would say this is an early
step toward an optical digital com­
puter."
Scientists have attempted to de­
sign computers that parallel process
using electronic circuits but they
have proved unwieldy, he said.
Beams of light are not only faster
than electricity but travel at a
constant speed, according to the
report in Nature. The beams also do
not Interfere with each other, which
can be a problem with parallel
electrical circuits.
However, there are a myriad of
problems with light beams that still
need to be worked out, the report
said . P o te n tia lly , a laser can
diminish In Intensity If It traverses
through several circuits.

JACK ANDERSON

SBA Lobbying Tactics May G o To Jury
By Jack Anderson
A n d Joseph Spear
WASHINGTON - Allegations that
the Small Business Administra­
tion’s chief congressional lobbyist
may have broken the law have been
referred to the U.S. attorney for
possible presentation to a grand
Jury.
The referral was made by the
agency's own Inspector general
after an Investigation Into com­
plaints about the way a demolition
team of high-level SBA officials tried
to get Congress to approve Presi­
dent Reagan's plan to dissolve the
agency. The campaign failed; Con­
gress kept SBA intact.
Sources told our associate Stewart
Harris that the Inspector general
looked Into the possibility that
Richard Nelson, SBA's top Capitol
Hill lobbyist, broke the law in an
effort to help his superiors cause the
agency to self-destruct. The sources
declined to give specific details of
the possible violations for fear of
jeopardizing future Investigations.

In addition to Nelson's role In the
suicide mission, the Inspector gen­
eral examined the legality of an SBA
pamphlet. "T h e Future of the SBA,"
which argued how easy It would be
to dissolve the agency and turn Its
remaining functions over to the
Commerce Department.
Also mentioned In the inspector
general's report were acting ad­
ministrator Charles Ueatherly and
communications director Richard
Utley, who with Nelson spearheaded
the lobbying campaign with Con­
gress.
SBA employees, both current and
former, blame the three officials for
low morale within the agency. On
his first day In charge — April 1.
1986 — Heatherly fired the regional
SBA adm inistrators in Boston.
Philadelphia. Dallas. Denver and
San Francisco; the Chicago director
was fired the next day.
The Senate Committee on Small
Business, a staunch advocate of
SB A’ s continued existence, has

been denied a copy of the closely
held Inspector general's report. A
congressional source told us the
committee expects to receive a copy
once the federal prosecutor decides
whether to pursue the allegations
against Nelson.
Last May the committee, then
chaired by Sen. Lowell Welcker,
R-Conn., asked the comptroller gen­
eral to Investigate the possibility
that Heatherly and his cohorts had
violated federal law In expenditures
made during their kamikaze attack
on the SBA.
As we first disclosed, the com­
ptroller general cleared Heatherly
and other agency officials of all but
one charge. According to the com­
ptroller. SBA officials violated a
f e d e r a l b a n o n t h e use o f
appropriated funds for "publicity
and propaganda" when they pre­
pared editorials for use by newspa­
pers favorable to Reagan's plan to
scuttle the SBA.
"T h e editorials.” the comptroller
concluded, "are misleading as to

their origin and reasonably con­
stitute ‘ propaganda’ within the
com mon understanding of that
term ."
The comptroller did not refer his
findings to the federal prosecutor,
because of "the difficulty In de­
t e r m i n i n g the e x a c t amount
expended Illegally as well as the
Identity of any particular voucher
Involved" In the production of the
pamphlet.
"W e recommend, however, that
the administrator of the SBA take
action to ensure that future vio­
lations do not occur." the com­
ptroller added.
Footnote: Nelson said he had not
heard of the Investigation, and said
the inspector general didn't In­
terview him. The U.S. attorney's
office would neither confirm nor
deny that It Is studying the In­
spector general's report. Acting In­
spector general Raymond Randolph
did not return repeated telephone
calls.

�Hijacker
Arrested

VMBREF
Florida Guardsmen Participate In
Ponomo Canal Dafanta Training
ST. AUGUSTINE (UPI) — More than 600 Florida National
Guardsmen leave for Central Am erica later this month to
take part In the Panama Canal defense exercise currently
under way.
MaJ. Ken Forrester said members o f the 53rd Infantry
Brigade will be in the western Panama province o f Chlrlqul
for tw o weeks beginning Jan. 31 as part o f the
six-week-long "Kindle Liberty-Candela ,87."
The annua] exercise began Monday and will have
Involved 4,000 U.S. and 500 Panamanian troops by the
time It ends Feb. 25. said Forrester. That Is twice the
number Involved In last year's exercise, but comparable to
the number trained In Kindle Liberty the year before, said
Forrester.

Single Ceremony For O tttcen
FORT PIERCE (UPI) — T w o detectives shot to death
during a drug probe will be eulogized In a single ceremony
with full honors Friday, and buried 12 feet apart In
matching metal caskets.
The funeral for Fort Pierce police Lt. Grover Cooper and
Officer James Wouters. who both died of Injuries In the
gunflght. Is set for 10 a.m. at the National Guard Armory In
Fort Pierce.
"T h ey were really close friends In life as well as In work.
Very close." said Claude Hobbs, director o f Halsley-Hobbs
Funeral Home.
The gunbattle Monday night also wounded Officer Robert
Spring and killed drug suspect Jam es Daniel Hunt. Spring.
34. was In serious condition Wednesday night at
Lawnwood Medical Center.

Ju ry Wants Tapes A 4th Time
MIAMI (UPI) — Jurors for a fourth lime may hear secretly
recorded tapes of drug smugglers talking to some of the
seven former police officers accused o f operating a
multi-million dollar strongarm drug theft scheme.
The Jury requested to hear the tapes Wednesday, but
U.S. District Judge Kenneth Ryskamp ordered them to
continue their deliberations and scheduled a hearing on
the matter 9 a.m. today. The panel has been deliberating
for a week.
Defense lawyers objected strongly when Jurors requested
to hear the tapes for a third time. Ryskamp overruled them
and the tapes were played Tuesday.
Jurors first heard the tapes during the trial phase of the
proceedings. They requested to hear them a second time
shortly after they went Into deliberations last week.

Afghans
Outline
Plans
KABUL. Afghanistan (UPI) On the flrht day of his declared
ccasc-firc. Afghan ’ leader Najtb
today raised doubts over the
future of national reconciliation
talks with Moslem rebels by
hedging on his general amnesty
offer and vowing his Communist
Party will never be defeated.
Less than 12 hours after the
six-month cease-fire ofTered to
Moslem rebels took effect. Najib
delivered a speech emphasizing
the "revolutionary" polices of
his Soviet-backed communist
regime would continue.
The capital was calm, al­
though aircraft continued to
drop flares to confuse heatsccklng missiles often used by
the rebels against government
planes.
But the meeting of the Na­
tional Fatherland Front with
Najib in attendance was told
rebels In Khost Province near
the Pakistan border planned to
Ignore the cease-fire, which took
effect at midnight.
Najob told a coalition of pro­
government groups he agreed
with Moscow on the "complete
return" of the 110.000 Soviet
troops In Afghanistan, but said it
"w ill directly depend on the
steps taken by the other side."
"It is appropriate to remind
those who are supporting and
financing the undeclared war
that In case of the continuation
of aggressions against the Dem­
ocratic Republic of Afghanistan,
the Soviet Union will not let us
be alone," Najib said In apparent
reference to the United States
and Pakistan, who have backed
the rebels.
The Afghan government has
repeatedly said the Soviet troops
will leave after the fighting has
stopped and international guar­
antees against foreign Interfer­
ence are provided. The rebels
have refused to lay down their
arm s until the Soviets are
withdrawn.
The Moslem guerrillas have
labeled NaJIb's offer a pro­
paganda ploy to coincide with
next month’s United Nationssponsored talks In Geneva be­
tween Afghanistan and Pakistan
on the timetable for Soviet troop
withdrawal.
Najib. who has appealed to
Moslem rebels to Join him in
national unity talks, told the
pro-govenunent groups some
opponents hope to weaken his
ruling party through the recon­
ciliation talks.
“ It Is necessary to tell these
individuals once again that na­
tional reconciliation does not
mean the destruction of the state
and the defeat of the party.
Najib said. "Such wishes will
never materialize."

M EAT PRODUCERS OUTLET

PEA CE

M

FRANKFURT. West Germuny
(UPI) — A Palestinian sought In
the 1985 17-day hijacking o f a
T W A Jetliner In Lebanon was
arrested trying to enter West
Germany with explosives In his
luggage, officials said today.
A spokesman for the Frankfurt
Proscecutor's Office said the
22-year-old Palestinian, who had
flown to West Germany from
Beruit. was arrested Tuesday
after Frankfurt Airport customs
officials found explosives In his
bags.
H e s a i d t h e s u s p e c t 's
fingerprints matched those of a
man sought under an Interna­
tional arrest warrant in the
hijacking of a T W A Boqlng 727
after lt took o ff from Athens for
Rom e on June 14. 1985. The
gunmen ordered the plane to
Beirut.
T h e spokesman declined to
say what role the suspect was
suspected o f in the hijacking but
I n t e r io r M in is te r F ried rich
Zlmmetold a Bonn news confer­
ence the man was a "a big fish."
Informed sources said the man
was carrying a forged passport
and will be charged with plann­
ing a terror bombing In West
Germany. The United States also
Is expected to seek his extradi­
tion to face trial for the airplane
hijacking, the sources said.
Moslem Shiite fundamentalists
and members of the pro-Iranian
H ezb ollah , or Party of God
group, took responsibility for the
hijacking, which was resolved
after diplomatic moves Involving
the United States. Israel and
Syria.
After Moslem Shiite gunmen
commandeered T W A Flight 847
carrying 153 passengers and
crew, mostly Americans, pilot
John Testrake was forced to
crisscross the Mediterranean
three times between Algeria and
Lebanon.

J U S T IC E

.

•s- a

FRESH MEATS sad FRESH SEAFOOD

2397 S. French Avs. Ph. 321-2398 Sanford, Fla.

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

SUN. TMO TMMS. $
pja*
FRI. and SAT. 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.
OMPLETE U K OF SCAFOOt
mOM MULLET TO CAVIAM

TMiaS., MIL 15 THRU WED, MIL 21
1/4 PO U N D ER S-40 PER BOX

PORK •EXTRA LEAN ft MEATY

C H U C K

P A T T IE S

10

$ 1

LB .

B O X

1

«179

SPARE
RIBS

C 9 0
3

1 „

LYKE8 (ALL MEAT)

EXTRA LEAN

79

BOILED
HAM

WEINERS - HOT DOGS

1 I

SLICED TO ORDER

«

G U LF - PINK

*

■

*

1

2

”

WHITE OR RED

FRESH $ a 95 MULLET t o g s
SHRIMP 4 , ROE
O ,

LO V E

C O M M IT M E N T P E A C E

mw
•J'.rir*i

•••.A 1

y

i
H e

rum&gt;ir

h a d

Y o u

a

c a n

d r e a m

.

t o o .

Together we can move
forward in his name.
Martin Luther King; Jr.
1 9 2 9 -1 9 6 8

M AYOR
B E T T Y E S M IT H

OSBORN’S BOOK &amp;
BIBLE STORE

YES, W E R EM EM B ER .

2599 SA N FO R D AVE.

SANFORD CHAMBER OF
COMMERCE
400 E . 1st ST.

322-2212

COM PLIM ENTS O F T H E
MANAGEMENT &amp; S T A F F O F

LARRY’S NEW &amp; USED
FURNITURE MART
215 SA N FO RD AVE.

McCOY’S DELUXE
CLEANERS

PEACE

1301 W. 13th ST.

FLORIDA NATIONAL
BANK
323-7209

FREEDOM
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
1515 W. 5th S T .

323-1010

101 E. 25th ST.

321-6890

EL-BETHAL CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
915 W. 3rd ST.

322-1363

322-4132

FROM D.C. McCOY OF

1109 W. 13th ST.

JOE’S
GARAGE

323-5098

323-4640

NEW BETHAL
AMC CHURCH
3615 E. MAIN ST.

323-8815

J U S T IC E L O V E C O M M IT M E N T P E A C E

SanfiirdHecald
J U S T IC E L O V E

J U S T IC E

LO V

�logoi Notice
legal Notice

Itfl Nttet
IN T N I C IR C U IT C O U R T
I N T N E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT

D O N O V A N , --------------------D O N O V A N , unknown sgawao of
D A V IO H . D O N O V A N , If i

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
i
F L O R ID A
CASE N U M R IR V-M ee-CA-13-L
N AZI Y A M . B O T E I ,
|
Plaintiff.
L E O N A R D t . W A G N E R and
A N N A B E L L E M . W A O N IR .h f s
wtta, and L U T H E R J . P IP P IN
a n d B O N N IR B .P IF F IN .h ls
wife, and R O B E R T F A U L
•PIPPIN and S A N D R A L.
-P IP P IN , h it wtto, at. w u
at. ala*
I
N O T IC E O P A C T IO N
jTO i L E O N A R D I . W A G N E R
end A N N A B E L L E M .
W A G N E R , h i t e rlf a , a n d
L U T H IR J . P IP P IN and
iB O N N IE 1 . P IP P IN . M s w ilt,
.and R O B E R T P A U L P IP P IN
and SA N D R A L . P IP P IN , his
cell Parties claiming Interests
Hrjrt mrpggn, u n o if or opoifisv
the aferesetd named Parties and
'alt Parties having or claiming to
(have any. right, tltta or Intarett
In th* p r e f e r t y herein daY O U A R E N O T I F I E D that on
action far declaratory relief as
. to the following property in
Seminole County, Florid*, to
wit:
Let 11. Blech B. IO W A N A
I S U B D IV IS IO N A M E N D E D
1 P L A T , according to the plat
\ thereof** recorded in Plat Booh
' to. Page It . Public Records of
. Seminal* County, Florida.
hat bewi filed against you and
: you a n required to serve a copy
{ of your written defenses. If any,
to it an Hep* Strong III, Es1 q u ire , P la in t if f 's a tto rn e y ,
! whose address It P.O. Boa M7,
&lt; Winter P a rt, Florida 327*0 On
I ■or bafort
th* 3tthday
dayolof Fobru_____ ________
ery, IN7, and file the original
, with the Clark of this Court
, elthar before service on Plain; tiff’s iH o m e y, or Immediately
i thereafter,- otherwise a default
will be entered against you tor
, th* relief dem anded In th*
[ Complaint.
t D A T E D on th* tth day of
: January. IW7.
DAVID N. B E R R IE N

As Clerk ol tho Court
By Jane E . Jasowfc
A* Deputy Clerk
, Publish January 15, 22. 3* L
| February 3,11*7
! DEK-43

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T .
IN A N D FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C ASE NO . M-333S-CA-OS-E
M c L E A N S A V IN G S L LO A N
A S S O C IA TIO N .
Plaintiff,
O A V ID H . D O N O V A N .--------------D O N O V A N , unknown spouse of
D A V ID H . D O N O V A N , If
married. E L I Z A B E T H K IN G
D O N O V A N , and th* UN IT E D
S T A T E S O F A M E R IC A , and
any unknown hairs, devisees,
grantees and other unknown
persons or unknown spouses
claiming by, through and under
any ot th* above-named

N O T IC E O F S U IT

T O i E L IZ A B E T H KING

YO U AR B H IR E B Y
N O T IF IE D that an act Ian to
following reel and personal
property In Seminole County,
Florida, to-wit:
Lat *, F A IR W A Y O A K S A T
D I E R R U N , according to the
lhoroof a* locoidod In Plat
SL Pages 41, *3 and &lt;3.
P u b lic Records at Seminal*
County, Florid*.
•gainst
dietary
i serve* copy
of your written defenses. If any,
to It an C . V IC T O R B U T L E R ,
J R „ ESQ., t i l l East Robinson
Street, Orlande, FlerWe M il.
and III* the original with ttw
Clark at the above styled Court
an ar before the l*th day of
February, 1W7, otherwise, a
Ju d g m e n t m a y be e n te re d

C

mended In th* Comptolnf.
W IT N E S S m y hand and seel
ot said Court on the 131h day ot
January, 1W7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
CLER K O F TH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y rC e ce lle V .E k e m
Deputy Clerk
Publish
hjblisto JJanuary 15, 21, J* L
February 5. IW7
DEM I

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 FOR
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C ASE NO. M-4TO5-CA-OFG
L ID E R T Y N A T IO N A L B A N K ,
a national banking corporation,
Plaintiff,
vs.
S A M U E L A . W ILLIA M S O N

etal.,
Defendants.
N O T IC E OP A C T IO N
T O : T 'E T E R O . W A G N E R
714 Florida Beultvard
Altamonte Springs. Florida
C O E Q U I T Y G R O U P , INC.
by notifying Its
rag Ittored agent
P E T E R D. W A G N E R
714 Florida Boulevard
Altamonte Springs, Florida
H h — —a*.___ -j - j --------s— a - ---- *.
In # OfTWf O tftfK U n rl HOT OtIng served under this notice of
s u it a r a : S A M U E L A .
W IL L IA M S O N . B R E N D A J .
S IE N IA , JA M E S Z. C R A F T ,
C H A R LO TTE H AR VEY,
C H A R L E S A . C R A M P TO N .
B R IA N O A V ID R IS T , K IM
M A R IE JA C O B S R IS T . and
A P R Y L L . W ILLIA M S O N .
Y O U A R E N O T IF IE D that an
action to foreclose a mortgage
on th* following property In
Seminole County, Florida:
Tho East 150 foot of Lott • and
7. B R A D L E Y ’S A D O IT IO N T O
LO N G W O O D . lets the South 240
teat of Lot 7 and lets the North
7*4.77 foot of Lot 4. according to
the plot thereof at recorded in
Plat Book 1, pegd 17. of the
Public Records *1 Semlnol*.

of yo u r written dotonoos. H any,
to It on J . Robert Hunkapfller,
p la i n t i f f s a tto rn e y , whoso
address to R A L W IN A B A U M .
710B South U .S . Highway 17 *2.
F ern P a rt, F torIda 32720. on or
botore Feburary i t 1*17, and
ffto the original wtm the clort at
this Court either before service
on plaintiff’s attorney or Immedletolu thereafter, otherwise
a default will be entered against
you tor the relief demanded In
me complaint or petition.
D A T E D an January *, tt*7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N .D E R R IE N
Clerk ot the Circuit Court
B y ; Susan E . Tabor
Deputy Clerk
Publish January I t 29. 2* A
February 1 1*17
DEK-40

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 IM t
M a g n o lia D r . , A lta m o n te
S p rin g s , S e m in o le C o u n ty,
F lo rid a undar the Fictitious
Nemo of M A T H IS A P P L IA N C E
S E R V IC E , and that I Intend to
register said name with the
C le rk of tho C irc u it Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
of the Fictitious Nemo Statutes.
To -W it: Section MS.O* Florid*
Statutes 1*97.
/•/ Holley H . Mathis
Publish January I , 15. 22. It,
1W7.
DEK-32

N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Nolle* Is hereby given that I
am angagad In buslnou at MOO
S. Hw y. &gt;7-91. Casselberry.
Sam Inola County. Florida 32707
undar ttta Fictitious Nam* ol
B E T T Y 'S Y A R N S E T C ., and
that I Intend to register said
name with the Clerk of the
Circuit Court. Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
Provisions o l the Fictitious
Name Statutes. To-W II: Section
MS.Ot Florida Statutes 1757.
/s/ Betty J . Harris
Publish January IS. 22. 2* A
February S. HE7.

N O T IC E OP
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 40* S.
Alder-wood St., Winter Springs.
Seminole County. Florida 33700
under the Fictitious Nam* ot
R O BC O Industrial Supplies, and
that I Intend to register said
name with the Clerk of th*
Circuit Court, Seminole County,
Florid* In accordance with th*
P rovisions of th* Fictitious
Nemo Statutes, To-W it: Section
145.0* Florid* Statutes 1M7.
I l l David L. Robinson
Publish January t, I , IS. 23,

.

IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T
R fO W T lIN T N
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT ,
IN A N D F O R
S B M IN O L B C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
C A S E N O . IS-T7M-CA-2S- P
IN T H E A D O P T IO N O F

J.M.D.
A M E N D E D N O T IC E
O F A C T IO N
T O : V O R IS P A T R IC K C O N N O R
Route t, Box t i t
New M o rta l, Virginia
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that an amended
filed In the above referenced
matter and that you or* re ­
quired to serve a copy of your
Rssponto or A n sw e r to tho
Petition upon tho Petitioner'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 I R E . P ott
O f f lc o B o x 1330, S a n fo rd ,
Florida 33772-133*. and ffto tho
original Response o r Answer In
th* office of the Clerk of tho
C irc u it C o u rt fo r Sem inole
County, F lo rid a of Sanford,
Florida on or botore the 3rd day
Ol February, lf*7. It you tell to
do to, a Default Judgment will
be taken against adoption and e
Final Judgm ent entered grant­
ing unto the Petitioner, R IC H ­
A R D D I B A R T O L O M E O , his
demand tor tho adoption of
J.M .D .
D A T E D at Sanford, Seminole
County, Florida, this J lt f day of
December, A .D . 1VM.
(S E A L )
C LER K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y: Ruth King
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 15, 23, 2* A
February 5 ,1»*7.
DEK-71

D O R O T H Y T . S C H M ID T , etc.,
stal..
Defendants.
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 pursuant to a Summary
Final Judgm ent of Foreclosure
entered In the above entitled
causa In th* Circuit Court of th*
Eighteenth Judicial Circuit. In
and lo r S e m in o le C o u n ty .
Florida, I will sell at public
auction to th* highest bidder for
cash at the West front door of
th* Courthouse In th* City of
S a n fo rd , S e m in o le C o u n ty ,
Florida, at the hour of 11:00
a.m. on January 30. 17*7, that
certain parcel of real property
described as follows:
Th* South 1/3 of Lots 14, 15
and U . Block C. S A N D L A N O O
S P R IN G S . L A K E O A K SEC
T IO N , according to th* Plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
*, Pag* 2S, Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida.
Dated this 7th day of January,
17*7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C LE R K O F C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y : Phyllis Forsyth*
_ ....

,

„

Lagol Notice

legal Nottee

IN T N I C IR C U IT C O U R T
IN A N D r OR
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
C IV IL D IVISIO N
c a s i n o . to-sesiCA-at-p
GOVERNM ENT EM P LO YEES
CO R P O R ATIO N ,
Plaintiff,
VS.
SAM TIM P A N O a n d C IN D Y L .
TIM P A N O , and SUN B A N K ,
N .A .,
D e f e n d a n t s .
N O T IC E O F M L !
Notice It hereby given that,
pursuant to a Final Judgment of
Foreclosure entered in th*
a bo ve -style d cause. In Ih*
C ir c u it C o u rt of S e m ln o l*
County, Florid*. I will tall th*
property situate In Semlnol*
county, Flortdl, described a t:
Lot II, S Y L V A G L A D E , ac­
cording to tho Plat thereof as
records* tn Plot Book 22. Pages
20 end I I , Public Rscords of
Semlnol*County, Florida,
at public sale, to th* highest snd
best bidder, tor cash, at th* west
front door of the Sem inole
County Courthouse, at Sanford.
Florida, at lt:00 O'clock A .M .,
on February 2,1507.
O A V ID N . B E R R IE N
C L E R K C IR C U IT X O U R 'U
B y: Phyllis Forsyth*
Deputy Clerk
Publish January 15,22, IN 7
DEK-44

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T ,
IN A N O F O R
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y .
F L O R ID A
CASK NO.M-2172-CA-W-P
C. V IC TO R B U T L E R , JR .,
F R A N C E S B U T L E R F L IP P E N
and FIR S T F L O R ID A B A N K .
N .A ., as Trust**,
Plaintiff,
vs.C . R ICH AR D BROWN and
F R AN K T U T E N, and any un
known hairs, dsvliaas, grantees
and other unknown persons or
unknown spouses claiming by,
through and under tn y of th*
above named Defendants,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F
FO R EC LO S U R E S A L E
N O TIC E Is hereby given that
th* undersigned D A V ID N .
B E R R IE N . Clerk ol ttw Circuit
C o u rt of Sem inole C o u n ty ,
Florida, will on th* 30th day ol
January, IN 7, at 11 a.m. at th*
West Front door of th* Semlnol*
County Courthouse, Sanford,
Florida, slier lor set* end sell at
public outcry to th* highest end
best bidder for cash, th* follow­
ing described property situate In
Semlnol* County, Florida.
Lot 7, Block F, D IX IE T E R ­
R A C E , 1st Addition, according
to th* plat thereof, es recorded
In Plat Book 10, Peg* 2*. Public
Records of Semlnol* County,
Florida.
pursuant to th* Final Judgment
entered In a case pending in said
Court, Ih* style of which Is
Indicated above.
W ITN ES S m y hand and of­
ficial seal ot said Court this 7th
dayoIJsnuary, IM7.
(S E A L )
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 Clerk

.* ■

DEK-10

i

S-n_ , c . - y __ -

-

IN THE C IR C U IT C O lfR T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT
IN AND F O R S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A .
C A S E NOli M -O 4 0 -C A -0 FF
CH A SE H O M E M O R TG A G E
C O R P O R A T IO N
Plaintiff,
J O H N W . C O L L IN S , at ux..
•fat..

(•)-

N O T IC E O F 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 . If
living, and D IA N N E J . COL­
L IN S , If living, Including any
unknown spous* of said Defen­
dants, If either has remarried,
and If elthar or both of said
Defendants are deceased, their
respective unknown heirs, dsvlsees, grante es, asslgness,
creditors, lienors and trustees,
and all other persons claiming
by, through, undar or against
ttw named Defendants.
W H O S E R E S ID E N C E IS U N ­
KNOW N
You ara hereby required to
til* your answer or written
defenses. If any, In ttw above
proceeding with the Clerk ol this
Court, and to serve a copy
thereof upon ttw Plaintiff's at­
torney, whose name and address
appears hereon, on or before ttw
13th day ot February 1*17, ttw
nature of this proceeding being
a s u it fo r f o ra c lo s u r a of
mortgage against ttw following
described property, to-wlt:
L o t 30, H I D D E N L A K E
P H A S E III, U N I T IV. according
to th* plat thereof as recorded in
Plat Book 21, Pages 1 and 2,
P u blic Records ol Semlnol*
County, Florida
It you tall to ffto your answer
or written defenses In th* above
proceeding, on Plaintiff's at­
torney, a default will be entered
against you for ttw relief de­
manded In the Complaint of
Petition.
DONE AND O RO ERED AT
Sanford. County ol Semlnol*.
State of Florida, this *th day of
January, 15*7.
(S E A L )
David N. Berrien
Clerk of th* Circuit Court
B y : Cecell* V . Ekem
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 15, 22, 2* A
February 5.17*7.
DEK-70

N O T IC E U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
NAM E S TA TU TE
T O W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
Notice Is hereby given that th*
undersigned pursuant to th*
" F ic t it io u s nam e S ta tu te ".
Chapter asi.oe, Florida Statutes,
will register with the Clerk ot
th* Circuit Court, In and for
Seminole County. Florida upon
receipt of proof ot th* publica­
tion of this notice, th* fictitious
name, to-wlt:
Chuck's Bakery, under which
w* are engaged In business at
•51 S ta te R o a d *34 E a s t.
Longwood, Florida 32730.
Th a t th* parties Interested In
said business enterprise are as
follows:
P H O E N IX D R A G O N . IN C.
Dated at Sanford, Seminole
County, Florida, December 12,
1996,
Publish January 13, .22, J9 1
February 5 •|)^ . , - , |.
,

H iU M
IN T N I CIRCUIT COUBT
OF T N I NINTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT.
IN A N O F O R
O R A N G E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
C A S I N O l V -M M -C A -IS -L
L IN D A J . C H A T T I N .
Plaintiff,
R O LA N D E .H O O O , J R . and
E L IZ A B E T H E . H O O D , his
wtto, II alive, and If dead, ftwlr
unknown children, legatees,
grantees, hairs, devisees, or
claimant* cla im ing Otherwise
by, under, o r against them,
n .it
u Jaala
O
W fiuinTI.
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 . J R ,
end E L I Z A B E T H E . H O O O , his
wife. If allvo, and If d M d . ttw
heirs, dsvlsoes. grantees, credi­
tors or other parties claiming
by. through, under or against
saki R O L A N D E . H O O D , J R .
and E L I Z A B E T H E . H O O O . his
wtto, and to all
P A R T IE S O R P E R S O N S
having or cla im ing any right,
title or Interest In and to ttw
tollow lng-dascrlbed pro p e rty
situate and being In Orange
County, F lor Ido, to-wlt:
Lot 14. P I N E S H O R E S S U B ­
D IV IS IO N , according to ttw plat
thereof as recordsd In Plat Book
’’V " . Pago **, Public Records of
Orange County, Florida.
YO U A R E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that an action to
quiet title to tho above described
property, located In Orange
County. Florida, has bean tiled
•gainst you and you are re­
quired to servo a copy of your
written defenses. If any, to it on
E V E L Y N W . C L O N IN G E R . of
the law firm of C L O N IN G E R
A N D F IL E S , P .O . Box 337,
Oviedo, Florida 33745. on or
before February 14, 1W7, and
III* ttw original with ttw Clark ol
ttw Circuit Court either before
service on Plaintiff's attorney or
Im m e d ia t e ly t h e r e a f t e r ;
otherwise a Default w ill be
entered against you tor th*
relief demanded In ttw Com ­
plaint.
W ITN ES S m y hand and of­
ficial seal of Ih* C ourt at
O r la n d o , O r a n g * C o u n t y ,
Florida, this *th day of January,
15*7.
(S E A L )
Jan* E. Jasewlc
CLER KO F TH E
C I R C U IT C O U R T
Publish Ja n u a ry 15, 13. 2* A
February S. It*7
OEK-41

N O T IC E O F A
P U B L IC H E A R IN O
T O C O N S IO E R T H E
A D O P T IO N O F A N
O R D IN A N C E B Y T H E
C IT Y O F S A N F O R D ,
F L O R ID A
Nolle* Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing w ill be held In
ttw Commission Room at th*
City Hall In ttw City ol Sanford,
Florida, at 7:00 o’clock P.M . on
January 24, tt*7, to consider Ih*
adoption ot an ordinance by Ih*
City of Sanford. Florida, tilt* ol
which Isas follows:
O R D IN A N C E NO . 17*2
AN O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
C IT Y OF S A N F O R D ,
F L O R ID A , C LO S IN G .
V A C A T IN G A N D A B A N D O N
IN G A P O R T IO N O F G E O R G IA
A V E N U E L Y IN G B E TW E E N
W E S T 2 5 TH S T R E E T A N D
W E S T 24TH S T R E E T A N D A
P O R T I O N O F W E S T 2 4 TH

P L A C E L V IN O B E T W E E N
O E O R O IA A V E N U E A N D
H A R TW ELL A V E N U E . R E ­
S E R V IN G A U T I L I T Y E A S E M E N T O V E R T H E
W E S T E R L Y 15 F E E T O P S A ID
P R O P E R T Y ; P R O V IO IN O
FO R S E V IR A B IL IT Y . CON­
F L IC T S A N D E F F E C T IV E
D ATE
A copy shall bo available at
ttw Office of ttw City Clerk tor
all persons desiring to examine
tho same
A ll part to* In _______ ____
citizens shall have an opportunl
ty to be heard af said hearing.
B y order of ttw City Com­
mission of the City ot Sanford,
Florida.
A O V IC E T O 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 meeting or hearing, he
m ay need o verbatim record ot
ttw proceedings. Including th*
testimony and evident*, which
record Is not provided by the
C ity of Sanford. (F S 314.0105)
H. N .T e m m .J r.
City Clerk
Publlth: January 15,1W7
OEK-57

N O T IC E O F F O R E C L O S U R E
•
S A LE E Y C L E R K
OP C IR C U IT C O U R T
Notice li hereby given that th*
undersigned O A V ID N. BER
R IE N Clerk of Circuit Court of
Semlnol* County, Florida, will,
on ttw 2nd day ot February,
1M7, at 11:00 o'clock A M ., at
the west front door ol Ih*
Semlnol* County Courthouse,
Semlnol* County, In the City ot
Sanford Florida, otter for sal*
and sail at public outcry to ttw
highest and best bidder tor cash,
th* following described property
situated In Semlnol* County,
Florid*, to-wlt:
Lot 547, W IN T E R SPRINGS
U N I T 4, according to ttw Plat
thereof, es recorded In Piet
Book IB, Pages 4,7 and I, ol the
Public Records ot Semlnol*
County, Florid*,
pursuant to th* Uriel decree of
foreclosure entered In * case
pending In said Court, th* style
of which Is
U N IT E O V IR G IN IA
M O R T G A G E CORPORATION,
Plaintiff

vs.
P E T E R W AG N ER end
V A L E R IE W AGNER,
hls wile, etal.,
Defendant
and ttw docket number of which

I*
number 14-134CA07- L
W ITN E S S my hand end the
official seal ol said Court, this
tth day of January, 1M7.
(S E A L )
D A V ID N. B E R R IE N .
Clerk of th*
Circuit Court of Semlnol*
County, Florid*
B y: Phyllis Forsyth*
Deputy Clerk
Devld M . Krause, Esq.
Attorney tor Plaintiff
Publish January 15,22.1W7.
DEK-44

MM*

t* 3o4jtH
#rnB**at'fth

N A T IO N
IN BRIEF
N orths “Operation Recovery1Set
Action In Four February Days
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North
conceived a step-by-step master plan that envisioned the
delivery of 1,000 anti-tank missiles to Iran, the release of
all American hostages held In Lebanon and the stepping
down o f Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini during a momentous
four-day period In February 1986, it was reported today.
The long-range plan, drawn up 0 / the former National
Security Council staff aide, was found In North's files and
dated Jan. 24. one week after President Reagan signed an
intelligence "fin d in g" authorizing resumption of secret
arms sales to Iran. The Washington Post reported, citing
unidentified sources.
In a separate report. NBC News said Senate documents
showed that "North outlined a step-by-step plan to trade
arms for hostages, a plan he predicted would lead to the
downfall of Ayatollah Khomeini."

President Salutes King Today
WASHINGTON (UPI1 — President Reagan, speaking on
the topic today to American high schools, is saluting the
civil rights work of Martin Luther King Jr. even though he
opposed the effort that created a federal holiday In memory
of King.
The White House arranged for Reagan to address
students today from the Oval Office with a live broadcast
on the Southern Educational Communications Association
network and participating Public Broadcasting System
stations.
The president's salute extends to hls formal declaration
of Monday as the second annual federal holiday to mark
King's birthday. Reagan opposed efforts by Congress to
create the controversial holiday before he held ceremonial
duties in the matter.
Reagan's high school address at 2 p.m. EST becomes a
step toward reasserting hls public profile after last week's
prostate surgery. His doctor said Wednesday he is "doing
beautifully" but remains on a limited schedule for
recuperation.

There’s So m eo ne Special
Waiting 1o Hear From Ybu.
T h e re ’s som eone w ho w ould love to
h ear the sound of your vo ice. G ive
them a call. It m eans so very m uch.
A n d co sts so little. C o m p ared to the
co st of postage, time o r travel, long
d istan ce is a very in exp en sive w ay tc
keep in touch. Call today. Th ere’s som(

Discovery's Launch Faces Delay
SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) - NASA probably will
test fire Discovery’s main engines before It makes the first
post-Chailenger shuttle launch, a top official says, which
could force a delay In the blastoff targeted for Feb. 18.
1988.
Discovery’s veteran crew for that milestone mission —
commander Frederick Hauck. co-pilot Richard Covey.
George Nelson, John Lounge and David Hllmcra — planned
to meet with reporters for the first time as a crew today to
discuss their assignment.
NASA faces a tough schedule to get Discovery ready for
launch with 30 mandatory modifications required for the
shuttle’alone that will cost some $50 million.
Richard Colonna. manager of the shuttle projects office
at the Johnson Space Center, said In an interview
Wednesday managers aljo are considering a "flight
readiness firing" for Discovery's three liquid-fueled main
engines at the Cape Canaveral launch pad.

Southern Bell
A B C L L S O U TH

Company

A L R E A D Y IN T O U C H W I T H T HE F U T U R E

~~irw~

�!«, H 0 -7 A

PI.

.• A

Urban League Reports Increased Racism
IN BRIEF
form al Arm* Talk* Cancalad,
Gat-AqualntadLunehaon Slatad
GENEVA (UPI) — The United States and Soviet Union
began a new round of space and nuclear arms talks today
with a get-aqualnted working lunch between the two
delegation leaders Instead of the usual plenary session.
The new Soviet chief negotiator. Vuli M. Vorontsov, had
proposed the restricted opening meeting Instead of the
customary joint session between full delegations.
U.S. officials said c h ief U.S. negotiator Max M.
Kampelman accepted the Invitation as a matter of
courtesy. The lunch was held In a guest villa In the
grounds of the suburban Soviet diplomatic compound.
Today's luncheon was the first time Kampelman and
Vorontsov had met and American officials said the session
at the Soviet diplomatic mission In Geneva was a good way
to become acquainted.

8 Dead, 38 Injured In Philippines
ZAMBOANGA. Philippines (UPI) — Officials rushed troop
reinforcements and helicopter gunships to central Min­
danao island today to counter a wave o f attacks by Moslem
rebels that killed eight people and wounded 36.
The armed forces chief, Gen. Fidel Ramos, declared the
situation under control.
The rebels, seeking recognition of their demands for
autonomy in advance of a scheduled weekend visit by
President Corazon Aquino to Mindanao, launched attacks
over a two-day period In four provinces.
In Manila. Press Secretary Teodoro Benlgno said Aquino
is expected to push ahead with her trip to six cities In the
strife-tom region.
Government and communist rebel negotiators met for
four hours today in Manila, but failed to reach agreement
on a common agenda for the second phase o f peace talks In
the 18-year communist Insurgency.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Black Americana
epter 1067 besieged fay a resurgence of
violent racism, economic depression and a
national climate of selfishness marked by a
retreat from civil rights, the National Urban
League said Wednesday.
John Jacob, league president, placed the
blame for the blacks' beleaguered economic
statua — symbolised by the racially
motivated December murder of a black In
the Howard Beach section of New York City
— on the shoulders of the Reagan ad­
ministration.
"W e can't forget that for six years and
more. Americans have been told that racism
la a thing of the past." Jacob said. "That
poverty la caused by the habits of the poor.
That government can't do anything about
social problems."
"T h e result Is a national climate of
selfishness and a failure of government to
take a positive role In ending racism and
disadvantage." Jacob said.
Jacob made his remarks In releasing the

league's annual report. "The State of Black
America." a compilation of 13 papers'
ranging across such issues as education,
school desegregation, drug use. blacks and
AIDS, and the status of the black family and
the underclass.
"The papers .... show Americans slipping
back into being comfortable with reaegregation in the schools, with a retreat from civil
rights, with drug abuse, failed economic and
social welfare policies and Increased black
poverty." Jacob said.
In his paper on .the economic status of
blacks, Director David Swlnton of the
Southern Center for Studies In Public Policy
at Clark College, found that the "deep
recession that has gripped the Mack com­
munity throughout the Reagan era has
continued."
"Since the advent of the Reagan ad­
ministration.” he said, "black family In­
come has declined, poverty rates have
increased, and the labor market difficulties
of blacks have Intensified." he said.
The report noted that 15 percent of the

. -o

.

from fobs bv plant
since 1970 have found new Jobs and those
with new jobs earn less than 60 percent o f
their former wpges.
"Over the past dozen years, the typical
Mack family has lost 61.500 In income while
economic need Increased." the report said.
"This erosion in Mack ,purchasing power
has had devastating effects on Mack com­
munities and on the economics of cities In
which Macks are a significant portion of the
population.”
Jacob accused the administration o f
mounting a "disinformation" campaign on
Its domestic policies that parallels Its foreign
policy, such as the Iran arms scandal.
"The persistent disinformation campaigns
and factual distortions characteristic of the
administration's public relations thrust on
domestic matters were simply translated to
foreign policy." Jacob said.
The league made a number of recommen­
dations. including a broad-based attack on
violent racism.

NOTICE OF CHANGE OF LAND USE
PIIBUC NEARING TO BE HELD JANUARY 14 AND 2 1,19 8 7
TH E SEMINOLE COUNTY LOCAL PLANNING AGENCY (LPA)/PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION (P&amp;Z) W ILL
HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING TO CONSIDER REQUESTED AMENDMENTS T O TH E SEMINOLE COUNTY COMPREHEN­
SIVE PLAN AND OFFICIAL LAND U8E MAP. TH E PURPOSE O F THIS HEARING IS T O CONSIDER TH E REQUESTED
AMENDMENTS AND TO PROVIDE RECOMMENDATIONS T O TH E BOARD O F COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
REGARDING TH E REQUESTED AMENDMENTS AND TH E CONTINUED APPROPRIATENESS O F LAND USE DESIGNA­
TIO N S WITHIN CERTAIN PORTIONS O F T H E MAP PRINTED IN THIS ADVERTISEMENT.

Accused Arsonist A Bird Lover
BOSTON (UPI) — The wife o f the man accused of setting
the New Year's Eve (Ire at a Puerto Rico hotel that killed 96
people described her husband as a good-natured birdwat­
cher and athlete. It was reported today.
“ I pray for all the victim s." suspect Escudero Aponte's
wife, Nllsa, told The Boston Herald In an interview
Wednesday from San Juan.
Mrs. Aponte said her husband helped rescue victims
from the San Juan fire before coming home to celebrate the
holiday with his family.

SEMINOLE C O U N TY, FLORIDA

Waite Says He's
Making Progress
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) Hostage negotiator Terry Waite
said today he has made contact
, with the kidnappers o f Western
‘ hostages In Lebanon hnd that
his mission to free the captives is
making “ great progress."
Waite, on his fourth day In
Moslem west Beirut, declined to
elaborate on the details of his
contacts but said that "e v e ry ­
thing Is OK."
Speaking with reporters after
m eetin g with Mufti Hassan
K h a le d , a Lebanese Sunni
Moslem leader. Waite said there
was a secret side to his trip.
" I held several meetings this
week with several leaders. ...
This is the public part of my
mission ... and there Is the quiet
part of my mission which I
would like to keep quiet.
"Yes. there has been great
progress made this week,” Waite
said.
E a rlier. Wai te was asked
whether he had been in contact
with the kidnappers during the
night.

"Y e s ." he replied. "But I do
not want to say anything more
for the moment. Everything Is
OK. I am not saying anything
further. The work Is going ahead
well. That Is all."
Waite also repeated earlier
warnings to foreigners to stay
away from Lebanon, saying It
would "n ot be wise for any
foreigner to come here."
Waite denied reports that he
might visit Syria for talks with
government officials.

I SI' \l

Consignment Shop
END O F YEAR Clearance
1 0 % O R A N G E TA G S
2 0 % B LU E . 0 R A Y , PURPLE T A O S
5 0 % RED. G R E E N , PINK T A O S

IN F A N T TO SIZE 14
M ATERNITY Clothes Available
WE BUY CRIBS
IS Hwy. 17-92 Across From Post Office
Debsry

668-8265 M
£?!S

I Ills

IN K K t l

F re q u e n t H e a d a c h e s
L o w B a ck o r H ip Pain
D iz z in e s s o r L o s s of Sleep
N u m b n e s s of H a n d s or Feet
N e rv o u s n e s s
N e c k Pain o r S tilln e s s
A rm a nd S h o u ld e r Pain
Evaluation Intludti: Putins Analyiit. Fiutwi Tut. Shari
Itf 1st). Short Him Tut And Talk With Doctor.

rw

INSURANCE AS SION MINTS
ACCEPTED*
’ Subject Ts Psikr Limitti Ask sbo u l ou r " M e k in g C h iro p ra c tic Affordable” Program
• THE PA RE N T AND AN* OtMtfl PtflSON RESPOS&amp;lOUf TOR PAVMCNT MAS A BIGHT TO REFUSE &gt;0
PA* CANCEL PAfMENt OR BE REIMBURSED FOR PAYMENT TO R ANT O t M l B SERVICE IXAMINA
TION OR TREATMENT WHICH IS PEHFORMCO AS A RESULT O f AND WITHIN I ) HOURS OF RESPON
[&gt;ING TO t h e ADVERTISEMENT r o l l THE FREE SERVICE EXAMINATION OR TREATMENT

LAKE M A R Y BLVD.
C H I R O P R A C T I C C L IN IC , INC.
907 K Lake

3 2 2 -9 3 0 0

M a r y O lv d
-

T O

TH O M A S

T A L

F. Y A N D ! L I ,

Suite

I0 1

U u y h c a d Center

JR . D C.

I N S U R A N C E

S E R V I C E

REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

r

APPLICANT NUMBER FROM •TO

SIZE

L O C A T IO N

1

Jack Zimmer

2

LDR- COMM

2

John Wllaon

2

LOR •LIC/OFF

3

Edwarda/Yourig

2

LIU/PRES - COMM

4

Robed Lamer

2

LD R•COMM

.22 ACRES

Eaal side of Semlnola Blvd , 400 test south ol U.S. 17-92

3

Emil Gasperonl

3

LDR - MDR

.73 ACRES

Southeast corner of Brantley Drive and Wekiva Springs Road

to as ACRES
.70 ACRES
3.76 ACRES

North aids ol Florida A ys . 400 fast sail of U S. 17-92
Sou Ihaul cornar of C R . 427 and Lake Ruth Drive.
Essl side of Lon awood Lake Mary Road, 1f2 mils north of C R 427.

6

Elwyn Babbitt

4

M DR■COMM

7

Jeremy Cooper

4

LDR •UC/OFF

16 LOTS

Norm and south ildsa ol O'Brien Road. 600 teal west of U S. 1792

8
9

Alex Qreenspoon

4

HDH/PRES-COMM

11.24 ACRES

Wail aide of Oxford Road, 113 mile south of Fernwood Boulevard

Richland
Properties

4

LD R•COMM

to

Lee Munlzzl

5

O R ■LOR

11

ZOM Company

5

OR - COMM

1.40 ACRES

63 ACRES
3 00 ACRES
00.40 ACRES

Southwest cornar ol S R 436 and Lake Mowall Lane

South side of South Street. 400 last west ol U S 17-92
Northwest corner ol Henderson Land and Old S R 46
Northwatl corner of S R. 46 and 1-4

APPLICANTS TO BE CONSIDERED ON JANUARY 21, 1987
22.30 ACRES

South aide ol S.R. 426, ad|acent lo ine west side ol Aloma Bend PUD

12

Jim Huckiba

1

G R -M D R

13

Lexington
Homes

1

G R -P U D

14

Jeff Gamer

1

GR/PRES - PUD

IS

Thomas Brooks

1

GRCOM M

16

Jsns Adrlsllco

1

GR - COMM

17

Ksewln Company

1

GR/PRES •PUD

18

ZOM/Flylng
Cloud

1

LIU - COMM

X ACRES

Southeast corner of Lake Hayes Road and S R 434

19

Clrclt K Corp

1

LO R •COMM

.42 ACRES

Southeast cornar ol S.R. 434 and Carrlgan Ava.

20

Robed Cantu

1

GR/PRES -MDR

71.60 ACRES

21

Jon Msdin

1

GR/PRES PUD

138.00 ACRES

On McCulloch Road. 800 teat west ol Lockwood Road

2 .X ACRES
92.00 ACRES

West aide ot Dean Road surrounded by Aloma Bend PUO
Eaal aide of S R 426 adjacent to nodh side ot Aloma Bend PUD

2.00 ACRES

Weal aide ot S R 426, 1/3 mile nodh ol Mikler Road

1.34 ACRES

Weal side of S R. 426, 1/3 mile nodh ol Mikler Road

23 X ACRES

South aide ol Red Bug Lake Road adjacent to Ihe weal aide ol Keewln PUD

East ol Palm Valley Mobile Home Park, 3/4 mile west ol Lockwood Road

22

Paul Vines

1

GR/PRES •LDR

129 00 ACRES

Watt aide ol Lockwood Road, 1/2 mile nodh ol McCulloch Road

23

James Moore

1

GR/PRES •LDR

111.81 ACRES

West aide ol Lockwood Road. 3/4 mile nodh ol McCulloch Road

24

ZOM Company

1

GR/PRES •LOR

217.56 ACRES

West side ol Lockwood Road. 1 mile nodh ol McCulloch Road

23

Jon Hall

1

G R -IN D

26

Myron Freedman

1

G R •COMM

27

Duds Lands. Inc.

2

GR/PRES •LDR

28

Ken McIntosh

2

LIU •COMM

20 00 ACRES
40 ACRES
294 00 ACRES
3 90 ACRES

Easl aide of Sixth Street, 600 tael south ot S R 426.
Southwest corner ol C R. 419 and 5th Street in Chuluola
Nodh aide ol Red Bug Lake Road. 2/3 mile wesl ot S R 426
East aide of Tuskawilla Road. 300 leet south ot S H 434

MDR •Medium Density Residential
HDR - High Density Residential
COMM •Commercial
PUD - Planned Unit Development
IND - Industrial

IN ORDER TO PROVIDE ALL INTERESTED PERSONS AN OPPORTUNITY TO BE HEARD REGARDING THE RE­
QUESTED LAND USE DESIGNATIONS SHOWN IN THE MAP BELOW, THE LPA/P&amp;Z WILL HOLD A PUBLIC HEAR­
ING THAT WILL OCCUR ON TWO SEPARATE EVENINGS: JANUARY 14 AND 21, 1987 WITH ITEMS THAT HAVE
NOT BEEN SUBJECT TO PUBLIC COMMENT BEING CONTINUED FROM EVENING TO EVENING. T H E PUBLIC HEARING W ILL BEGIN AT 6:00 P.M. EA CH EV EN IN G , O R A S SOON T H E R E A F T E R A S P O S S IB L E , IN ROOM W120 O F
T H E SEM IN O LE COUNTY S E R V IC E S BUILDING LOCATED AT 1101 EAST FIRST S .R E E T IN SANFORD. A LL IN­
T E R E S T E D PER SO N S A R E U R G ED TO ATTEND.

me.

413 W T\t st St.
Ph. 322-5762
William H. "BUI" Wight C.P.C.U.
President

MBER

GR - General Rural
LIU - Low Intensity Urban
LOR •Low Density Residential
LIC/OFF •Low Intensity Commerclal/Olllce
PRES •Preservation

KARNS
A G E N C Y

BCC
D IS TR IC T

S ITE

LE G E N D :

MARYLAND CASUALTY
COMPANY

4 *

IN S U R A N C E

APPLICANTS TO BE CONSIDERED ON JANUARY 14, 1987

SA LE!

W A R N IN G S IG N A LS O F PINCHED N ER V ES

_

IT H R O U G H @

Little Stuff

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N
AN

■to J

Sanford

Pattons are advised that II trey decide to appeal any declilon made at this mealing, they a.it need s record ot proceedings and. lot such purpose, they may need to ensure met a verbatim
record ot Ihe proceedings Is made, which includes me testimony and evidanca upon which the appeal Is to be based

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, CONTACT THE SEMINOLE COUNTY PLANNING OFFICE. 1101 EAST FIRST STREET, SANFORO, FL 32771. 321 1130 EXTENSION J7I

Cv/

�'* '* * * ■ * '

....

^ * V

W

*• — &lt;• —**'” ' * ♦ - * » « - * - « • « * •

■&lt;•«* » ■■&lt;■» ■&lt;■■&lt;

- V f H v # * -* *-&gt; • «# --«^ *»*r*

--- .- r « - r ~ - —- r -"»-&lt; I &lt; r * 1 I iW * r ^ T » f f &gt;

C~ ; -. •“ '•J,tW,-Kif-;'--'i-St ’ .!■■.'»' T4ffl 't'.l.tf* *1V.. •»..
- .
M -S m M

Sam
Cook
SANFORD
H ER ALD

SPORTS
EDITOR

A

Atlanta Beckons
With Convenient
Locale For Raines
Tom Reich Is no dummy. He Is
one o l the shrewdest baseball
agents around. Tim Raines Is
one of his clients. Therefore.
Raines, an All-Star outfielder for
the Montreal Expos the past six
years. Is no dummy either.
On the surface. It appears that
R aines and nine other free
agents took a big gamble when
they chose to not re-sign with
their old club last Thursday.
This meant they could not nego­
tiate with their team again until
May 1. The season would be
approaching a month old.
Is It a gamble or not? There Is
talk of collusion — the teams
banding together and freezing
out the free agents to drive down
the salaries. There Is talk that
the free agent will get less from
the other teams than his original
team Is offering.
Who do you believe? It ap­
pears T im Raines and Tom
Reich know more than they are
letting on. They have to know
more. Feelers must have been
sent out by other clubs. If not,
why would Raines gamble on his
next three years? Why gamble
when he could have signed for
94.8 million over three years
from the Expos?
Why? Raines. 27. did not want
to go back to Montreal. He has
confided that many times. As
the negotiations dragged on, he
r e i n f o r c e d th a t p o s it io n .
Montreal stood steadfastly with
its ofTer. Sure, the $1.6 million
per year was nice money, but It
was a token raise. Raines made
91.5 million last year. Before he
won the N.L. batting title, scored
91 runs, stole 70 bases and
became an All-Star for the sixth
time.
The Expos still cling to the
song they have a chance to
Te-algn Raines May l . No way.
They closed the door on the
game's best left fielder Jan. 8,
The Expos finished 2914 games
.behind the Mets with Raines and
Andre Dawson (who also said he
will not return). How far down
the line will they be without
•them? No doubt "Telescope
■Day” will be the Expos' first big
promotion.
R a i n e s , a r me d w i t h six
seasons os one of baseball's best
and most consistent performers,
Us for sale to the highest bidder.
Well, maybe not the highest
bidder. A high bidder In a locale
which pleases the tastes of Tim
and wife Virginia.
Let's narrow down the options.
Raines wants to stay In the
National League and play for a
contender. Or a team which Is on
the verge o f contending. The
only way he would play for an
American League club would be
If the offer was "too good."
Raines will not go to St. Louis,
P i t t s b u r g h . C h i c a g o or
Philadelphia. AH those areas are
too cold. Raines said he would
orefer a warm-weather site. The
Mets, due to their bucks and
charisma, are a consideration.
But they Just purchased Kevin
McReynolds for left field.
T h a t l e av e s the W estern
Division. Throw out Cincinnati
and San Francisco for the chill
factor. Probably not Houston
either. They already have Jose
Cruz In left. San Diego was a
prime consideration until they
dumped manager Dick Williams.
The Padres arc too unsettled.
That leaves the Atlanta Braves
and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Both ureas huve all that Raines
desires. He yearns for warm
weather and attention. LA la a
b ig m edia m arket and the
Braves have the Super Station.
Both, however, were mired in
the second division last year.
The Dodgers, though, had an
excuse — no Pedro Guerrero.
The Braves had a lot of excuses
— no pitchers. The Dodgers
could turn it around in a year
with a player like Raines.
T h e B raves? RaineB likes
Atlanta and his wife and family
would love being Just eight
hours (car) or one hour (plane)
from Sanford/Heathrow. Geno
Paulucci should have his own
airport in a couple of years, too.
About the same time Raines gets
his pilot's license and Lear jet.
Of course If Bob Homer does
not return to the Braves, which
he claims, he will not. Raines
would be taking a chance as to
whe n T e d d y T u rn er's boys
would contend. A chance he
might take.
Atlanta — that is the choice. It
is too convenient to turn down.

H tra M , S in ta ri, PI.

■

ThwrwU r , Jan. u , 1 * 7

•■

i *1* i -. a il

•

'

SCC's 'Spread' Salts Aw ay
ly l t a r k B l j t l i
O C ALA — Seminole Commu­
nity College used a strong Inside
attack for moat o f the game, then
went to a spread offense with
seven minutes to play to salt
away a crucial 89-80 MId-Florlda
Conference basketball victory
Wednesday night over Central
F lo r id a b efo re 101 fans at
CFCC’sgym .
The Raiders Improved to 20-2
with the victory and more Im­
portantly 4-1 In the Mid-Florida
Conference. It was the fifth
consecutive 20-victory season
for coach B ill Payne. SCC,
ranked No. 3 In the state poll,
hosts Santa Fe in another con­
ference game Saturday. The
Raiders stayed one game behind
MFC leader Daytona Beach,
w h ic h w a llo p ed Lake City,
84-68, at Lake City.

Coach Benny Gabbard's Patri­
ots. meanwhile, lost for the first
time in five outings In the MFC
and fell to 15-5 overall.
SCC found Itself In trouble
e a rly w ith th re e -p o in t ace
Malcolm Houston and small
forward James Morris on the
bench with a pair o f fouls apiece.
Payne was forced to use a bigger
lineup w h ich cam e through
against the smaller CFCC squad.
"T h e inside people played
really well tonight." Payne said.
"(Barry) Dunning did a great Job
on the boards."
The Raider trailed most of first
half — 21-16 midway through —
before rallying to pull within one
point at halftime.
D u n n in g , a 6-7 b a c k u p
forward, finished with a gamehigh 12 rebounds. Vance Hall, a
6-8 center, and Claude Jackson,
a 6-7, forward, also had a hand

Basketball
with the Inside game as Hall
snatched 11 reb o u n d s and
blocked five shots. Jackson put
together a great first half and
finished with nine rebounds as
the Raiders outrebounded the
Patriots. 41-27.
T h e R a id e r s a s s e r t e d
themselves from the opening
bucket of the second half when
Hall scored on a short Jumper.
Darels Gallagher led the way
for the Raiders with 24 points
and 11 assists. The penetration
o f G a lla g h e r h u r t C F C C .
especially when Payne elected to
go to a spread offense with seven
minutes to play, holding a 65-54.
"The defensive method they
(Central Florida) used against
the spread hurt them ." Payne
said. " T h e y le f t H a ll an d

Jackson open down low and
when Gallagher penetrated he
could get the ball to one o f them
easily."
Payne said the road victory
was extremely Important for the
Raiders who will now gear up for
three home games.
"It was a very big road win for
us." Payne said. "Florida Junior
Is probably the best team In the
conference and the rest o f us are
playing for the tournament."
Jackson kept SCC close in the
first half scoring 12 or his 13
p oin ts and d om in atin g the
backboards. "I was getting the
ball where I wanted," Jackson
said. " I had the shots I wanted to
take."
The Patriots then concentrated
their defense afound Jackson
and left Hall wide open. Hall took
advantage of the opportunity
and scored 19 of his 21 points in
the half. "I was getting good

flA llU fc f

D U llflf

passes from Dairis (Gallagher)."
Hall aald. "T h ey (CFCC) were
trying to atop Claude (Jackson)
and left me open."
Gallagher riddled the Patriot
defense all night. At one point
the entire press was geared to
prevent Gallagher which re ­
sulted In an SCC turnover. At
that point, Gallagher Instructed
his teammates to help out.
" I told the team that they

B «« SPREAD, Page 11A

'Catfish/
Williams
Join Hall

HeraM M a la by Lewis Relmeed*

L a k e M a ry 's Ivan C arb la scram bles to get a w a y . C a rb la , the
R a m s' 122-pounder, didn't m ake It, losing a 4-3 decision to

La k e Gibson's E d B ra n tle y . Th e R a m s won, 39-33, on a pin by
400-pound T ro y Ja c k so n In the m eet's final match.

Jackson Pins Back Lake
By Chris Plater
Herald Sports Writer
Senior captain Troy Jackson is a leader off
the mat, an enforcer on it and a cornerstone
o f Lake Mary’s wrestling success. Because
the Rams have been so dominant In dual
matches, though, the 400-pound titan has
very rarely had an opportunity to win a
match for his team.
Wednesday night. Lakeland Lake Gibson
and the Rams were locked In a 33-33 tie
going Into the unlimited division. Jackson
then got his big chance to pull the Rams
through — and that Is exactly what he did.
After battling Todd Bryant to a 0-0 tie
after one period, Jackson threw Bryant to
the mat with a hip toss and then pinned him
to give the Rams a 39-33 victory over the
highly-regarded Lake Gibson squad before
401 fans at Lake Mary High School.
"Jackson came through for us when we
need him the most." Lake Mary coach Doug
Peters said. "It was an excellent between
two good athletes. Troy (Jackson) came off
the bottom with a good stand out, turned
Into the guy (Bryant) hip-tossed him to the
mat and pinned him. The crowd went
crazy."
Jackson's heroics enabled the Rams to
boost their dual-meet record to 3-0. Lake
Mary has a big weekend ahead as it travels
to Atlanta for the Southeastern Duals
Invitational which includes eight of the
strongest team in the Southeast.
"In order to advance In the tournament,
the entire team has to win to instead of Just
Individuals." Peters said. "W e're excited to
be invited to it and really looking forward to

SB XXI Facts
AlSlake: IVHfaNFI ( tumpiomhip jih)
the Vlncr I jxiilurili Trophy
Participants: AH: ( lunipHin n NK
&lt; lumpKHi
Dale: Sundry. January JV 1VH7
Tim e: 3.00 P M ft* i/k Time
Site: The Rinc Bowl. h u k m ( Ji(ivnu
This is the fifth time a Super Howl will he
pliyn l at the Riar Howl
Capacity. 104 DUO
T elevision : &lt; BVTV
Radio: NIK Radio Network
Player* Shares: i.WMkkt to rscti
member id the winning trim and
41H 1)00 to rat h member nf the lining
tram , in r s m i nf I J fa m illio n for the
personnel of the competing club.
Uniform s: ThrNFt will he the home
tram and will hatr the choke &lt;4 wear
ing while or colored y m cyi ThrNH i
•cam will use die west hcnch ( p rc »b o s
side). the AFt: team w ill ucc the caM
bench
Sudden death: If the game is tied ai the
end nf the regulation fat) minutes, it will
eonlinuc into MMidcn death mcrumc
The team scoring first— hy safely field
goal, nr touchdown— will win I nlike
preseawMi or regular season games us
which a single is minute eclra period is
played all NFI poalscoonovertime
gamesctsnnnuehy IS minute periods
with two-minute intermiaMons. unlit
there is a winner
Attendance history: l.fat I OHMpersons
lease attended the lirst JOMJfscr how Is
Ihc largest crowd was I lit.OHS at Super
Howl XIV al live Mine Howl where ihr
Pittehufgh Mcekrsdefeated flic Ins
Angeles Hams Cl i o

Wrestling
getting away from the area."
Merritt Island will be the other repre­
sentative from Florida while the state
champions from Alabama, Georgia, Ten­
nessee, North Carolina and South Carolina
will also be on hand.
In W ednesday’s match against Lake
Gibson, a team that won the state champi­
onship two years ago. the Rams got some
key performances from the top of the roster
down to Jackson's climactic pin.
Senior Wayne Clayton had a big early
victory for the Rams as he blanked Don
Herbst, 7-0. at 115 pounds. Clayton’ s
victory was an Important won since Lake
Gibson won three of the first five matches.
Lake Mary's only other win in the early
matches was via forfeit at 101 pounds.
"Clayton had a big win for us at 115.”
Peters said. "Lake Gibson's first four kids
are state caliber so we needed someone to
break them up. Clayton dominated his
match from the top position.”
Lake Gibson won the next two divisions
after Clayton's win but Junior Rob Richards
broke Gibson's momentum when he pinned
Rick Welch In 1:54 at 135 pounds.
"R ob (Richards) is doing an outstanding
Job for u s." Peters said. "H e 's been
consistently pinning people and that's what
we want to see."
Sophomore Shane Stanley kept the Rams
In the lead as he quickly put Brad Sykes on
hts back and pinned him In 45 seconds.

Lake Gibson stuck close with a pin at 148
but Bill Richards, the Rams' senior cocaptain, then came through with a technical
fall. 21-4, over Charlie Reynolds at 158.
Lake Gibson picked up a decision at 170
but senior Brad Goeb kept the Rams in front
by pinning Tom Gunden In 3:25 at 188.
Lake Mary was victimized by some bad luck
at 222 pounds as Dustin Simms could not
w restle due to a knee Injury during
warmups.
"H e (Simms) threw his knee out while
warming up." Peters said. "It was an old
football injury that resurfaced. It forced us
to forfeit the match which put Gibson right
Into It."
Gibson used the six points from the forfeit
and another six from heavyweight Cecil
Holcomb's pin to tie the score at 33-33 going
Into the final match.
"O ur heavyweight (Todd Wright) had two
takedowns and then threw the other guy
dow n," Peters said. "But he got a little high
and the guy (Holcomb) rolled through and
caught him in a pin.
"S o It came down to the last match."
Peters added. "Lake Gibson had a good kid
wrestling Troy and it was a back and forth
match until Troy put the guy dow n."
L A K E M A R Y I f , L A K E L A N D L A K E O IB S O N J3

101 — Her* (L M ) woo by lorlell; 100 — Idel berg (L G ) p.
Donlero, 5:37, I I I - Clayton (LM ) d. Herbst. 7 0; 117 Brantley (L G ) d. Carbla. 4 3; 111 - Oliver (L G ) d Winder.
10-7; 115 - R Richard* (L M ) p Welch. 1:54; 141 - Stanely
(L M ) p. Sykes. 45; 14* — Grant (L G ) p. Louvoran, 1:01; 15*
- B Richards (L M ) t». Reynolds. II 4; 170 - Rabe (L G ) d
Roman, 7-1; ISO — Goeb (L M ) p Gunden. 3:75; 710 — Bass
(L G ) won by lorfetl; HWT — Holcomb (L G ) p. Wright, 1:33;
U N L — Jackson (L M ) p Bryant, 7:&gt;f. JV score — Lake
Gibson 50. Lake Mary 3*.

G ia n ts G o B ack To W ork
EAST RUTH ERFO RD . N.J.
(UPI) — Videos and personal
appearances go on hold today
when the New York Giants begin
workouts for the event that has
made them celebrities — Super
Bowl XXI.
The Giants were scheduled to
practice for the first time since
beating the Washington Red­
skins 17-0 last Sunday In the
NFC Championship Game. For
their first Super Bowl appear­
ance. the Giants are nine-point
favorites to defeat the Denver
Broncos Jan. 25 In Pasadena.
Calif.
In the days since advancing to
the Super Bowl. Giants players
have worked on a music video,
been the toast o f radio and
television talk shows, and been
congratulated and celebrated
f r o m B r o o k l y n , N . Y . . to
Bayonne.
"The Super Bowl excitement
won't affect us that much."
Gi a n t s A l l - P r o l i n e b a c k e r
Lawrence Taylor said. "(Giants
Coach) Bill (Parcells) won't let It.
When Bill starts coaching out
there. It will be a wild week.

Football
When he starts getting excited
and starts coaching, watch out."
The Giants plan to leave for
Pasadena Sunday. Parcells had
originally talked about m oving
the team to Palm Springs this
week, but decided the Giants
could get more done If they
continued to practice and study
films In East Rutherford.
One of the films they are sure
to view Is a game against Denver
Nov. 23 at Gian's Stadium and
won 19-16 by the Giants. It was
the fifth victory In what has
become an 11-game win streak
for New York.
But there is much for the
Giants to rectify from that game.
Denver outgalned New York 405
yards to 262 and had 24 first
downs to 12 by the Giants. But
Raul Allegre kicked four field
goals — including a g a m e­
winning 34-yarder with four
seconds left — and D enver
committed four turnovers, in­
cluding an interception with

which defensive end George
Martin lumbered 78 yards for
the Giants’ lone touchdown.
" I remember George Martin's
play." Parcells said when asked
about the game. "It was one of
the greatest plays I’ve ever seen
In football. Also, 1 never realized
how big John Elway Is. He ran
out of bounds on one play and I
said to myself ‘God. he's big."'
Elway. who is 6-foot-3 and 212
pounds, completed 29 of 47
passes for 336 yards and was
Denver’s leading rusher with 51
yards on eight carries In the
game.
"W e will beat Denver, but
John Elway Is the type of
quarterback who gives us the
most trouble." Giants safety
Kenny Hill said. “ His running
m a k e s hi m the h a r d e s t
quarterback to stop."
"T h e biggest thing about the
Broncos Is taking care of John
Elway." Taylor said. "A lot of
defensive players came away
from the last game thinking that
h e is o n e o f t h e b e s t
quarterbacks In the league. We
have a lot of respect for him."

NEW YORK (UPI) - Through
six years of eligibility. BUty
Wi l l i a ms agonized over his
exclusion from the Baseball Hall
o f Fame, and Wednesday night,
his wait ended. Jim “ Catfish"
Hunter, who shrugged at the
p o s s ib ility o f enshrinem ent,
waltzed In on his third try.
‘"W alt 'til next year' Is now a
p h ra s e o f th e p a s t ," sai d
Williams, who was named on
354 of the 413 ballots cast by
members o f the Baseball Writers
Association of America. "Being
elected to the Hall of Fame Is like
an Oscar for an actor or actress,
a Pulitzer for a writer and a
Noble Prize for a scientist. I don’ t
know whether to laugh or cry
right now.”
Hunter was Inclined to do
neither.
"1 didn't ever think I’d get to
the big leagues, much less the
U qll o f F a m e ." he said by
telephone from his Hertford.
N.C. farm. "It hit me so quick, I
don’t know what to say."
William s’ sojourn to the Hull of
Fame began In 1959. but nearly
ended prematurely. While play­
ing for San Antonio In the Texas
League that year, he Jumped the
club and went back to his
Whittier, Ala., home. He re­
turned a week later and. In two
months, made his major-league
debut.
" I thought about quitting
m any tim es," Williams said
from a news conference tn
Chicago. "W h en I was with
Ponca City In the Sooner State
League. I was the only black
player on the team. The white
boys went to a hotel on the road
and I had to go to a private
home.
"I always was the last one to
be abl e to g o to sleep. It
happened tn A ball, too. with
San Antonio. A lot of restaurants
wouldn’t serve me. I had to eat
In the kitchen with the help.
"But I kept going because I
wanted to play in the majors. It
wasn't a Jackie Robinson-type
thing. It Just was the way of life
then. It sure made me appreciate
the majors more."
Williams. 48. a lifetime .290
hitter with 426 home runs In 18
seasons, was the only eligible
player with more than 400
h om ers that had not been
elected to the Hall. He had held
the National League record for
most consecutive games played,
1,117, before it was surpassed
by Steve Garvey with 1,207 In
1983. He had missed election by
four votes last year.
The NL’s Rookie of the Year in
1961 twice finished runner-up In
Most Valuable Player balloting.
His best season came In 1973
when he won the NL batting title
with a .333 average, and had 37
homers and 122 RBI.
Hunter, the first player to sign
a megabucks free-agent con­
tract. seems to have left his
baseball accomplishments
behind.
" I f I get elected. I'll still live In
North Carolina and be a farmer,”
he had said prior to the voting.
"It would not change me that
much."
The right-hander had a life­
time record of 224-166 and a
3.26 ERA over 15 seasons with
the A 's and Yankees. He helped
Oakland to three consecutive
World Series titles from 1972-74,
and had a 5-3 World Series
record.
"1 Just took the ball and tried
to throw strikes." the former
mustachioed control specialist
said.

�Dead Worm ? A
How can a fisherman doing the best
appear to be doing the least? Simple,
by using the "dead worm " technique.
The "dead worm” technique, as bass
professionals call It. does not appear to
be an effective way to appeal to a bass'
preference for live bait. However,
fishing a dead worm Is very similar to
live bait fishing. You simply cast out
the worm and wait.
Sounds a little Ashy, doesn't it?
The twist to this method is that the
worm is only "dead” to the angler.
Although the bass angler Imparts no
action to the worm, the movement and
current o f the water causes the floating
worm to enticingly undulate in a
lifelike manner. The ultimate appeal o f
the dead worm comes from the bass
that swims up to inspect the offering.
The water disturbance from the bass
swimming up to the worm causes the
bait to wiggle even more. This action
often proves too tempting for even the
most finicky Ilinker.
For best results, use buoyant worms
j and rig them Texas style. Use no
. weight unless you are In a current.
The hook provides enough weight to
keep the worm on the bottom without .
|burying It out of sight.
T o test the sight appeal o f a
particular worm, simply Insert a hook

and drop It into a bowl o f water. If It
sinks to the bottom and lobks like a
stick, search for another type of worm.
Many o f today's popular brands o f
worms are extra buoyant and feature
tails that float well off the bottom.
C u rly and rlp p le ta ll w orm s are
especially productive because they
respond readily to the slightest water
movement or disturbance.
The dead worm technique Is best In
areas of open water such as sandbars
or mussel beds. The bass can spot the
worm at a distance and will be drawn
by Its seductive undulations.
The dead worm method can work In
weeds and grass, but the bait must
remain visible for best results.
Bass experts are not sure why this
technique Is so deadly. Many think
that the action o f the dead worm
makes It appear to be foraging or
burrowing In the bottom. The worm
appears vulnerable, and easy prey for
a hungry bass. For whatever reason,
bass are definitely fascinated by the
dead worm technique.
W hy not Impress your fishing bud­
dies this weekend by catching a bunch
of bass while nonchalantly fishing a
dead worm? They may think that you
are lucky, but you will know dif­
ferently.

*.sr

CMS SgeckMparchfHMngNwuMbegee* In

ss M
ki M
is sM
any
nw
m alw
i ■■■■ wipawt- issa fMilsa
iiwnnf ksa
nw

fair withisms larger SanNetngcaught malnty
ti are aM ferine caugM
SIMMS i m T

hao bass llmltod H Mnation, neew er. i
ih n p S irt Trow* or* rs M « t* o M
and tadtas rtvsrt. Ofi IKMra ws orttNsi *W m sm
roal c«M weather to fare* tha trout InM c s M and

■lueflth art aflll SsmlfMtlnf Nw action of
OtVp nw oi M W l
wff 1
.
M mMm IMot. They or* Mtil*s oswoU any typo of
Fithint at sw mm tmrrm |oMto Ma
lure or |lg. an* oftior apecia* Midi it aoofrouf art
llmltod dut to high taao craMNwg o s r io n
hard to csfdi bacama the MuN art M thick. Snook
i St I
an dormant bocauoo of tho cold orator tempera
turn, but toma huga flounder an boing caught qn , booh an tho north aMo at tho "Wjk loflloo.
tlngarmuttattlihaddewyalongthabottom.
Shupihiod. dnmt. «ndo toor hoimMr «H11M eacyhl
Captain Jack at Fort Caaavarat roporti that ao ooonao tho moo tukoidt. Uw thro*rtny «n tha
tithing it at a tfanditlil dut to high wind*. Ofhhoro bottomwithamallwafght torthobootroowho.

Hines, Hamlin Hook Bass 'G rand Slam'

###

SHUPE’B SCOOP - When rigging a

The first Sunday of 1987 -was
windy and rainy, but that didn't
deter 48 boats from participating In
the Monthly Osteen Bridge Bass
Tournament.
The weather dictated the Ashing
strategy for most of the Ashermen.
and many anglers elected not to
travel far distances because of the
blustery winds and frequent rain.
Crossing open water such as Lake
Monroe was also a risky proposition
as whltecaps were smashing against
the Sanford sea wall.
In spite o f the Inclement weather.
Roy Hines and A l Hamlin managed
to pull ofT a "grand slam " — they
captured both Big Bass and first-

plastic worm Texas style. It is Impor­
tant to run the point of the hook
completely through the worm before
you leave the point burled Inside the
worm. When you set the hook, a path
has already been made, and energy
will not be wasted by the point of the
hook first having to cut through the
worm before It goes Into the Jaw of
Mister Bass,

it#

F IS H IN O FO R K CAST
Rick Raw IIn* at Highland Fark F lth Camp roporti
that ipockltd porch rotod os good In Laho Woadruff.
Soma lim it itrlngar* havt boon pulled out by trolling
Hal Flla*. Bat* a rt Improving dolly, with lom o t
poundor* boing caught rocantly. F lth thlnar* naar
molted, floating cover in J J foot ol wotor for fho bo*f
re to lit.
Doll Abornothy tald that high winds hove ham ­
pered tithing a groat deal at tho Ottoon bridge F lth

place honors. Hines caught the big
bass of the tournament with an 8
pound 12 ounce lunker. Hamlin and
Hines had a combined total weight
of 17 pounds with only 3 Ash! They
were on some real monsters.
Jack Davis and Franki Dodson
won second place with 12 pounds,
3W ounces.
Rick and Darren Bishop came in
third Place with 10 pounds. llVfr
ounces, and D. R. Birle and David
Perkins nabbed the fourth Place
honors with 9 pounds. 13Vk ounces.
Dell Abemethy announced with
pleasure that all o f the bass caught
In the tournament were released
alive and healthy.

Bowersox,
W hitaker
Lift Oviedo

'Cats Hold Off Gators;
M urphy Leads Jax Win
LE X IN G TO N . Ky. (UPI) [Freshman Rex Chapman scored
116 p o i n t s a n d K e n t u c k y
[withstood a late Florida rally
Wednesday night to defeat the
[Gators 67-62 in a Southeastern
[Conference game.
T h e victory Improved Ken­
tucky’s record to 9-4 overall and
13-3 In the SEC. Florida fell to
112-4 and 4-1. Vernon Maxwell
ired a game-high 26 points for
(Florida.
Kentucky enjoyed a 63-40
idvantagc with 6:44 remaining
:fore the Gators Bcored 17
itraight points to pull within
-57 with 2:14 left.
Ed Davender ended the Ken­
tu c k y drought when he scored
)ff Chapman's missed free throw
dth 23 seconds remaining to
rgl ve the Wi l d c at s a 65-57
advantage. Maxwell hit both
inds o f a 1-and-l and a three*
ilnter to make the score 65-62.
Maxwell fouled out when he
was forced to foul Davender with
nine seconds remaining.
H$jrig|&gt;avender missed his free throw,
iiut Kentucky rebounded. Re­
serve guard Paul Andrews was
muled and hit two free throws to
sal the victory.
Kentucky's man-to-man de­
fense limited Florida, which en­
tered the game averaging 90,9
tints, to 35 percent shooting
Ifrom the Aeld.
Davender scored 15 points for
|Kentucky and James Blackmon
added 13.
DOLPHINS TOP W KU
JACKSONVILLE (UPI) - Se­
nior forward Ronnie Murphy
scored 17 points and Danny

Basketball

By Chris Flstsr
Harold Sports W riter

Pearson added 16 to lead the
Jacksonville University Dolphins
to an 80-71 win over Western
Kentucky Wednesday night.
Jacksonville. 9-5 overall and
4-0 In Sun Belt competition, won
their seventh straight game In
downing the Sun Belt Confer­
ence pre-season favorites. The
Hllltoppers fell to 14-5 and 3*1.
JU is alone in Arst place In the
SBC.
JU led throughout most of the
Arst half and was ahead 39-35 at
halftime.
JU came out strong In the
second half, taking a 45-37 lead
with 17:52 to go before Western
Kentucky charged back. There
was f ive ties and five lead
changes In the second half.
W K U ’s biggest lead In the
game was 67-63 with 3:48 to go
before Jacksonville hit key 3polnt shots.

MIAMI WINS BA9ILY ,!

_

MIAMI |UPI) — Eric Brown
scored 24 p oin ts and Ti to
Horford added 13 as the Unlverslty of M iam i defeated
Maryland-Eastern Shore 88-66
Wednesday night.
The Hurflcanes (8-7) Jumped
out to an early 15-2 lead behind
seven points from Brown.
Miami, who never trailed, led
at halftime 46-32.
The Hurricanes pulled away
for good with 7:57 remaining In
the game when Dennis Burns
and Joel W arren scored on
consecutive steals.

- **i

Htrald PhotobyTommy VintonI

King-Sized Opening
Lady R aid er Carol King, left, looks for an
opening against C entral Flo rid a 's Cheryl

Iowa Rallies From 22 Down
To Overcome Illinois, 91-88
United Press International
Iowa, which has been on the winning end o f
several blowouts this season, rallied to avoid a big
loss Wednesday night against host Illinois.
Trailing 61-39 early In the second half, the
third-ranked Hawkeyes came back to send the
game Into overtime before beating No. 10 Illinois
91-88 In a Big Ten showdown. Iowa Improved to
16-0 overall.
"W e wanted to make the game respectable.”
said Iowa center Brad Lohaus, who scored a
team -high 23 points. "W e di dn’ t want a
blowout.”
Iowa Coach Tom Davis had difficulty recalling
how the Hawkeyes had mounted their comeback
from the 22-potnt deficit.
"It will take me a day or two to sort It out. Just
how we did It." Davis said. "I was Just speechless
In the locker room afterward."
B.J. Armstrong's basket gave Iowa an 89-88
lead In overtime and, after an Illinois turnover.
Lohaus hit two free throws, Ken Norman, who
finished with 23 points, missed a 3-point attempt
as time expired.
In other games Involving ranked teams. No. 2
North Carolina ripped Virginia 95-80. No. 5
Purdue slammed Minnesota 86-59. No. 9 Auburn
beat Tennessee 66-56 and No. 12 Clemson
bombed Furman 94-77.
Also. No. 13 Duke routed Maryland 85-61. No.
14 St. John's destroyed Brooklyn 70-48. No. 18
Pittsburgh edged Seton Hall 87-85. No. 19 Texas
Christian got by Southern Methodist 57-53 and
No. 20 Navy held off Lafayette 75-71.
At Charlottesville. Va.. Kenny Smith scored 19
points and three teammates scored In double
figures to help North Carolina rout Virginia. The
Cavaliers stayed close In the first 10 minutes
before an 8-0 North Carolina spurt.
At West Lafayette. Ind.. Doug Lee scored 19
points and keyed a Purdue rally late in the first
half to help the Boilermakers case past Min­
nesota. Purdue equaled Its best start since 1938
as It Improved to 13-1 overall and 5-0 In the Big
Ten.
At Auburn. Ala.. Frank Ford scored 15 points
and Mike Jones grabbed 11 rebounds, helping
Auburn rally to defeat Tennessee. Gerald White
hit 4 straight free throws in the last minute to
hold off the Volunteers.
At Clemson. S.C.. Horace Grant scored 33

B o b b le B o w e r s o x g a v e
Oviedo's Lady Lions the lead
with a goal Ave minutes Into the
game and Jennifer Whitaker
scored an Insurance goal with
Ave minutes leA to play as the
Lady Lions snapped a four-game
losing streak with a 2-0 victory
over DeLand's Lady Bulldogs
W ednesday night at O viedo
High.
O viedo im proved to 4-7-3
overall and returns to Seminole
Athletic Conference (0-4-2) play
Friday at Lake Howell. DcLand
now stands at 1-10.
A fter Bowersox scored the
early goal, her Arst o f the season,
the Lady Lions spent the rest of
the match trying to add to their
lead but could not put another
one between the pipes until
Whitaker's goal, her third of the
year.
Oviedo assaulted the DcLand
q o r i w i t h M s h e t o w h l l e DcLand
manuged Just seven shots. The
Lady Lions also took eight cor­
ner kicks compared to DeLand's
two. O viedo goalkeeper Lori
Blackburn made four saves In
recording her second shutout of
the season.
"Cathy Bergman didn't score
but she did really well on
offense." Oviedo coach Gene
Lcscallettc said. "She had a
number of good shots on goal
and a couple o f them hit ofT the
post. Defensively. Laurel McFall
had an excellent gam e."

R ice. The SCC women whipped Central
Flo rid a. Th ey host Santa Fe tonight at 7.

Buy R o a d King tires a n d c a r s e rv ic e o n re vo lvin g c h a r g e

O pen an account In minutes If you have a valid major national credit card

BIG
S A N F O R D — 2408 F R E N C H A V E . — (H W Y . 17-92)
P H O N E (305) 321-0920
O R A N G E C I T Y - 1695 V O L U S IA A V E . - (H W Y . 17-92)
P H O N E (904) 775-7971

Basketball
points and Anthony Jenkins added 17 to lead
unbeaten Clemson past Furman. Gram scored 23
points In the first half on 11 of 12 shooting to help
the Tigers build a 25-po:m halftime lead.
At College Park. Md.. Danny Ferry scored 20
points and grabbed 19 rebounds, leading Duke
over cold-shooting Maryland. Maryland missed 7
of Its first 8 shots.
At Easton. Pa.. David Robinson scored a
game-high 30 points and pulled down 15
rebounds to lead Navy over Lafayette.
Elsewhere. Arkansas topped Klee 62-54.
Georgia ripped Vanderbilt 76-53, Jacksonville
surprised Western Kentucky 80-71. Kentucky got
by Florida 67-62. Richmond downed Virginia
Tech 77-62. Iowa Slate cruised by Colorado
66-52. Memphis State edged Oral Roberts 59-58
and Texas Tech beat Baylor 56-50.

9 0 DAYS SAME AS CASH
M in im u m m o n th ly p a y m e n t r e q u ire d All fin a n c e c h a r g e s re fu n d e d w h e n p a id as a g r e e d
COUPON

'C O U P O N * »

LUBE, OIL &amp; FILTER m!

^ ™

BRAKES!
----------------- |

■■

'C O U P O N " ™ ™ " ■ ™

MB

^

mm

Road King Premium* Plus 78
Road Kir
Steel Bell
traction

Creek Buries Rams
Levon Darthard tossed In 14 points, handed out
eight assists and collected three steals as Port
Orange Spruce Creek walloped Lake Mary. 63-49.
In prep basketball Wednesday night at Spruce
Creek High.
The Creek Improved to 13-2. Lake Mary fell to
2-9 with Us third consecutive setback. The Rams
host Oviedo In a Seminole Athletic Conference
game Friday.
Spruce Creek jumped to a 10-2 lead and led.
27-17. at halftime. The Hawks pushed the margin
to 13 points after three quarters and to 21 points
before pulling the starters with 4:34 to play.
Oscar Merthle. who didn't score until eight
seconds were left In the first half, finished
strongly with 17 points. Mike Mandeville and
Terry "T h e Cat" Miller each chipped In eight.
Miller sat out much of the first half with foul
trouble.
LAK E M ARY (4f): Napoli 7. M«rthle 17. Miller a. Ciermei«w*kl S.
Prom 3. Mandeville I, Mitchell 2, Total!: 1911 I I «
SPRUCE CR EEK (43); Darthard (4, Sean a. Bell 8, B a rn 3, Cook*
12, Smith 4, Rough 3. Galbrealh t, Luca* 7, William* 2, Scarbrough 2.
Total*: 279 1743.
Halftime — Spruce Creek 27. Lane Mary |7. Foul* - Lake Mary
17, Spruce Creak II. Fouled out — Miller, Technical — none

Terrific traction for
light trucks, RVs!
Raised white outline letters.

™

^

Rood Kina
Wldakack Radial 70
Eifcerglaw belled 70tone*
radol wrmiporfy look*l

$70

Size

Price

E tH E S m U E IlM
31x10. S0R15LT 6

91.66

32t1150R15LT 6

97.03

33il2.50R15LT 6 106.81

Raised
Outline
Letters

w w v

Deep traction tread for
pickups, vans, RVs!
•Deep high ange treadoar*
•Alt oojihon tread pattern
•Bold raved wt-.lo letter*

* 7 2 65
(Sue) Tubeless
Plu s 78 F E T

Otner n/es available

$1499S

White letter radial with
a wide tread!

Road King Widetrack Big Baja

R o a d King
W datrocfc Big Baja

»a».UO

MUFFLER $3295

•Krltf agureiu,** hood
•AcvkkJ wtvie outlie leiten

Road King Widetrack
Radial Baja

■ *

Include* Point* Plug* Condemn

[ Whitewall j
m
hoirraiHS btttti
PitsreoHii
34,12
P17IM0R11
MX
17*4
914440813
P144T7IRI4
M.ra
P194774R14 40*4
P20V7IR14
42.49 INSTALLED
P2IU7SAI4 . ** *L
P204S7SRIS
4141 COMPLETE
P2IU7SRII
46Si .
P22V75A1S
4127
n z s s m n iK z n i EXHAUST

Super-wide traction tire
for pickups, vans, 4WDs!

,

COUPON■ ■ » ™

* 1 5 95 : &amp; = s s s

U P ^C a r*

Tough, long weanng tread
on a imoottvriding
polyeiler cord body

™

FRONT END ALIGNMENT i| ™“ c^? TL
L U..............
P .S ....!n.c.'

s r $12 95 *3 9 95! r
30 WT.

^

sue
P19S/70R13
P205/70R14
P215/7QR14
P225/70R14
P235/70FI14
P225/70R15
P235/70R15
P255/70R15’

Price
$48.38
52.19
54.94

S7.78
60.00
60.45
63.76
67.56

�FI.

y.

Urn,n , m&gt;

J a c k s o n : S u p e r B o w l L o s s Is 'U ltim a te L o ss
DENVER (UP1) - Linebacker
Tom Jackaon M y* losing the
Super Bowl Is the "ultimate
loos." and the Denver Broncos*
defensive leader w a n ts hla
teammates to be aware of that.
Jackaon Is one of the few
Broncos to have played on Den*
ver's first Super Bowl team. In
1978. He said the 1978 Broncos
had been happy Just to get to the
championship game, and that
was a contributing factor In a
27*10 loss to the Dallas Cow*
boys. He Is warning his team­
mates about such thinking.
"I’m telling them Just don’t be
satisfied to get there," Jackson
said. “ You think, *My goodness,
we’ve done It all.* The reality is,

we haven't done It alL"
Jackson said It’s time for the
Broncos to stop celebrating and
start preparing for the Super
Bowl.
"For the first few days, you
have such a tremendous feeling
of accomplishment that the
S u p e r Bowl Is alm ost an*
tldlmactic," Jackaon said. "W e
needed a few days to relax and
enjoy this, but It’s time to get
down to business."
The Broncos beat Cleveland
23-20 In overtime last weekend
to advance to the Super Bowl
XXI against the New York
Giants Jan. 25 In Pasadena.
Calif.
Jackaon. who has played 14

Gamblers
Confront
Worst Day

P u ts
AUTO
PARTS

COLD! finttfree,

WjfPrtce
40011

[£99

[sale Prlce1.S9
Rabat® - . 5 0 '
Pr,c# -a o m
After *| H O
Rebate le W W

Wj&amp;
VIVAA

I
8 T P O II
IVMtm cnt
Regular A New
tour cylinder
1V
wMuuPIL
* Reduce engine
^

f

Dupllcolor

(2gallons)

Enamel
or Lacquer

i£galtansj_

Rebate

I • Various
co lo rs
available

J

v - Rebate

1oi5j

1.89
Bare

[1.9?

S P J O Hand

your choice

g /

m
ar

ipermatex
Form -aiG eiket
iR T V Bluej
lSttteonej

■79
qt.
Havoline

XV TMB

tub.

• 20w50

ci6

Sandpaper

Gas Qy

L im it 12 q ts per
c u s to m e r

fgSSgS
a— LineFreete

W ,
«**•"**

3004. 3005. 3007, 3013, 3015.
13017.3019

l mow**

£•99 mao

FT89

Mfdgat

‘ w I cm - T

L u W j w i c " 15°

u rn

|

©

24.95
SUN THple Gauge
• Angled mounting ring enables
gauge to be tilted 15* towards
the driver tor easy readability
• T diameter gauges
• U S and metric scales

H Castrol

//

YOUR « , . ■
CHOICE,

5 W 3 0 Ciiot*

1

ZS£

P ro d u c tio n o r
% i
W e to rd ry S a n d
Paper
In va rio u s g ra d e s ■—
9 " x 11" Sheets

‘lav unite

• Saves gasoline

.

r

. FHish i®*1* * * ^
cooling system
rust-

■Mfcw

• Exceeds touqh AP I S F
motor oil performance
standard

Auto-Pek

Bordon

1

• 10w30
• 10w40

4 9

1super SMl4t,

Engine Protection
You can trust

219

1.49

i2

Motor Oil

Cooling
Systam
Staler
&amp; Water
Pump

6BB.

•Wtdeswoep maters

•All hardware included

IAutomatic
iTtanamlssioi
Fluid
| • Dexron II and Type F |

available

Qmaaa GunJ

§2rs
Qm
ss*

I *500
I Amsr'ca's

u i
Cylinder Seta
• Cylinder

each

Custom

M

Accessories

|
'

H5001
H5008

•acb Assorted

1 7 Q

P0OO6
■ f 27 PlayBoy
Sprey

• S e ll sticking A
m o u n t.
L l

j
58-0500Extra Thick

Superior
Steering
Wheel Covers i

9

Autosure
Water Pumps

.9 9

Resistor

Champion

Matinees Mon., Wed.
• E xce p t H ig h
T o rq u e M odel

&amp; Sat. 1:00 p.m.

PLAY THE
EXCITING A HIGH
PAYING...
MPIC 6” &amp; “BIG Q”

• S o le n o id not
inclu d e d
, with e x ch a n g e

with
Internal R e g u la to r

r

•Quality

Remanufactured /
•Fit* most

domestic
cars &amp;

J u s t attach y o u r cash register
receip t &amp; p ro o l ot pu rcha se to
m a il-in c o u p o n with S2 00 lor
h a n d lin g (o r each T u rb o
M in i-V a c (m a xim u m 2 ) See
store (o 'd e ta ils

R e g u la r

D om e stic
Alte rna to rs

1 9 .9 5

H6054

H4651
H4658

Buy a Wagner Halogen
Headlight— and get a
FREE Turbo Mini-Vac!

. 0

by Custom Accessories
13.14 and 15 inch available
Removable basket
tor easy cleaning.
96660. 96661
96662

58-0400

PB002 canted

s e ,c '14

64 Spoke Wire
Wheel covers

Lim it 12 qts

Playboy
Air Fresheners
Car
Compass

RAIN OR
SHINE

8 . 9 5 or 3 5 . 6 9

favot'i®
! y/mie-wa!'
1 cieo'1®'

r ‘ teludes
f 302

G a m b lin g p r o b le m s a r e
expected to be worse this year in
New Jersey since the New York
G ia n ts , w ho p la y In E ast
Rutherford, are in the Super
Bowl and are heavy favorites, he
said.

I

frm m w v i t n l a a a a u lt tO m h b e r v .

• Protect* Metal
• 9 Ounce
Size

T h e c o iin c t l ' o p e r a t e s a
1-800-GAMBLER h otlin e for
people with compulsive gambl­
ing problems "and every year we
are flooded with calls from
people after the Super Bowl."
Wexler said.

(except Sun.)

DENVER (UPI) - The eager
"winners” grinned and signalled
a " V " with their outstretched
arms, ready to claim their free
tickets to the Super Bowl. When
they reached out, however,
police clamped handcuffs on
their wrists.
The police band was playing
"Jallhouae Rock" Tuesday for
what Denver police called one of
their most successful sting
operations — a ploy to attract
scofflaws out of their hiding
places. In all. 67 fugitives were
arrested.
Slxty-flve of those arrested
were wanted for felonies ranging

Lubricant

"It’s easy to hide when you’re
a compulsive gambler," W exler
said.

DOG
R A C IN G
N
OW!
NIGHTLY 7:30 p.m.

VS1

lOSCTB.
Jackson said Sunday's AFC*
title victory over Cleveland was
more satisfying than the 1977
AFC Championship triumph
over the Raiders at Mile High
Stadium.
"This was better because of
the way we did It. fighting that
kind of adversity and not having
our crowd with us." he said. "It
was like It was 45 against
85.000."
Jackson also said the ac­
complishment will lose much of
Its gloss If the Broncos are
beaten by the Giants.
"The Super Bowl may be the
ultimate win." he said, "but it's
also the ultimate loss."

1.49
WD40

Usually, though, there are no
physical signs marking those
affected.

"Many compulsive gamblers
will try to get even on the Super
Bowl by betting enough to cover
the losses they had on the whole
football season that Just passed."
Wexler said. Often, calls from
relatives concerning the Super
Bowl do not com e In until
several days after the game,
when the money is discovered
missing, he said.

seasons with Denver, Is one of
three active Broncos with Super
Bowl experience. Comerback
Louis Wright and safety Steve
Foley also played on the 1977
D en v er team . N ose tackle
Reuben Carter and offensive
guard Paul Howard, both on
Injured reserve, were also
members of that Super Bowl
squad.
‘‘W e ’re not going to stop
here." said Wright, an ll*year
player with the Broncos. "We’ve
got a lot more to do."
That sentiment Is shared by

BEATf

"It could be someone like a
wealthy doctor or an accountant,
all the way to someone unem­
ployed and rolling the dice who
shows up with a day-old beard at
the track," he said..

The callers typically Include
gamblers looking for emotional
support when they see everyone
else placing bets, or wives look­
ing for help after their husbands
have wagered away the month’s
rent, he said.

Football

’—

o u r p r ic e s ...

TRENTON. N.J. (UPI) — Super
Bowl Sunday is to compulsive
gamblers what New Year's Eve
Is to alcoholics, and the fact that
the Giants are playing may
make It even worse this year In
New Jersey, the head of a
state-funded gambling hotline
said Wednesday.
"The Super Bowl la the biggest
betting event of the year." said
Amle Wexler, executive director
of the Council on Compulsive
Gambling of New Jersey.
'it's the last game of the year
and the compulsive gambler
wants to be able to brag to all
their friends how well they can
pick a winner, and let people
know how smart they are."
Wexler said.
Wexler said about 400,000 of
the nation’s 12 million com ­
pulsive gamblers live In New
Jersey, and about 79 percent o f
those bet on sporting events.

•

Denver Coach Dan Reeves, who
has been Involved In five pre­
vious Super Bowls as a player
and assistant coach with the
Cowboys.
"W e have a lot of players going
for the first time, players who
are Just so happy to be going
they lose the objective of winn­
ing." he said. "W e're happy to
be the AFC champions, but
we've still got one more to go.
We haven't got what we want
yet.
"This Is what you play these
other games for. to eventually
wind up with a champion. If. we
don’t win the Super Bowl, we
will feel like we’ve missed some­
thing. Nobody remembers the

K
V

Autosure
Alternators
• with exchange i

• Fits
m ost
d o m e stic

*1
1

o f t
y U

30106 30138.
30108 30139.

AutoValve

30,09 30136 5 Chilton

T h e rm o s ta ts

wii73H

|c Repair
§i Manuals

• S u e s to h i
m o s t c a rs

M Available
domestic
imported
6 or trucks
E?vans

THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission for ladies

I.
II
ft

40 Piece
socket Set

lor
or
cars
and

$ 7655. 7670.
fa 7672

Visit our two clim ate-controlled
clubhouses lor yo u r line din in g
and entertainment pleasure!

CLUBHOUSE RISV.: 831-1100

SANFORD-ORLANDO
KENNEL CLUB
Northol Orlando. Just ofl Hwy. 17-92
301 Dog Track Hoad, Longwood
Sorry, No One Under 18

APORKA
in W H u n S I

MS-MIQ

MIRRITT ISLAND
33N Court*n*yR tw f

432 MI0

MT. DORA
Ootdwi Tn.ngl. C.nr*.

S A T IL U T S B IA Q H

3*3-113}

IIHHw A-t-A

DILAND
H I W K n T g iU i.
•USouin 14m St

T I T U S V IL L A

73X2131
314-ISIS

■iNf' r.fUfi h or &gt;fftjf c irO'.

273SSOO

mas WMhinqlonA,«
2092 S4,no Bd S4.no Pl.t* 234 1722
233W HjIxkui Bl.O
223-3417

242-uio

W IM T IR G A R D E N

VWlI Orangt Shopping
C.nl.r sot South
Dtiiaiast
tTriaai

SANFORD
60S W ism St

O PE N

7 D AYS

A

W E E K !

31*44 to

Prices good through Jan. 21. 1987

�r - r r f — .to -* - r r

r r r r f- r

f r y r r

■r~*~ #■' r"

"to"

V

8jLm

S C O R E BO A KD
TV/RADIO
TWMSMsTi l»fl III i |
M - in s t fS J B
I U U ta O cta r
It *
)■ &gt;■
t Ita ta K M
JM lO
I ShtaltM W
MS

TtLIYKIOa

Chovrior Thwarts
N o w Jorsoy

Shots.
Tops

I * « - I I M . Cdtogi- Kama* it
Gklahmlll
• pm - u u . £•«•**. w u n *

Atana(L)
t

ml

- :tra. u s * mm f«

m

a

tatoCardinal atoll)

CHICAGO (UPI) - Alain Chewier stopped 46 shots,
including 22 In the final period, to -upply a victory New
Jersey Coach Doug Carpenter found difficult to describe.
waa 8Uperb’ or 4h*H. * »*y satisfying. or
S ^ . UCTi . r
Wednesday, night after the
Devils defeated the Chicago Blaekhawks 3-l."It was
rewarding for the players. They deserved it."
The Blaekhawks outshot the Devils 22-5 In the third
period and 47-25 overall. John MacLean scored his 19th
goal of the season for the game-winner and assisted on New •
Jersey's Insurance score, helping the Devils win for only
the second time in their last 12 games. The victory
Improved their road record to 5-14-2. •
, In other action Wednesday night. Hartford topped
Boston, 3-1, Winnipeg nipped Pittsburgh, 4-3, Minnesota
slipped past Buffalo. 3-2, New Jersey dropped Detroit. 3*1,
Montreal and Buffalo tied. 3-3, the Rangers whipped
Calgary. 8-5, and Loo Angeles blanked Vancouver. 4-0.

Edwards' 61 Loads

Classic

L A QUINTA, Calif. (UPI) — First-round 61s, David
Edwards will tell you, lose meaning when followed by
18-hole scores that approach Bob Hope's age.
. "O ne round certainly doesn’t make the whole tourna­
ment or the whole year," Edwards said Wednesday after he
eaglcd two holes and blistered Indian Wells for a course
record-tying 11-under par, and held a two-shot lead in the
8900,000 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.
"Maybe It’s somethlng-that will carry over all week. We'll
find out tomorrow."
Andy Bean, playing Tamarisk, shot a 63 and was alone
In second place. Dan Foreman shot a 7-under 65 at Indian
Wells and waa In third place.
Keith Fergus. Mark Lye and Willie Wood matched scores
of 66 at Tamarisk, Fuzzy Zoellcr had an Identical score at
Bermuda Dunes, and Andy Dillard and Dan Halldorson the
same at Indian Wells. Among those at 67 were Mark Hayes
and Tim Simpson, who played Indian Wells; Ed Florl and
Bob Tway, who were at Bermuda Dunes; and Al Gelberger
at Tamarisk.

Spink* Skip* Town O n Rlbalta
MIAMI (UPI) — Former heavyweight champion Leon
Spinks dropped out o f his scheduled 10-round fight against
Jose Rlbalta Saturday night without notifying promoters,
officials said.
They said he left town without a word Wednesday. He
and manager Marv Haupt checked out o f the Eden Roc
Hotel Just three days before the fight was scheduled.
Matchmaker Mike Acrl said he hoped to announce a
replacem ent to figh t Rlbalta later today. He said
possibilities Include veteran Jimmy Young (42-14) who has
begun a comeback and Philip Brown (34-2) of Hartford.
Conn.
Spinks. 33, has lost his last two fights and was the target
.of a a humorous verbal attack by master of ceremonies
Richard Bergman Monday at a news conference promoting
the fight.

I i m. - I V K lull Santa y* V(Wf

Pt&gt;fur. IWo i mSwilptt
it l

- t in t MM Fra tad)

ml

T:M* m. -M U R AM (I4MI. Ctanary *

lAM tTUU:

FREMANTLE, Australia (UPI) — Kookaburra III dominat­
ed shifting winds today and defeated Australia IV by 94
seconds in the America's Cup defender finals after both
yachts had been disqualified from the opening match In ai&gt;unprecedented Jury decision.
Kookaburra III Skipper Iain Murray, who had argued
about the opener until the early-morning hours, overcame
Australia IV’s two-second edge at the start and thwarted
every comeback attempt by helmsman Colin Beashel to
reclaim the first victory in the best-of-nlnc series.
Kookaburra III had won the first attempt by 29 seconds
Wednesday.
The challengers were off today.

Altam onte LL Tryouts Saturday
The Altamonte Springs Little Lcauge will hold tryouts
and registration Saturday at 9 a.m. for Majors (11-12 year
olds) and Juniors (13 year olds) at the Eastmontc Complex.
On Saturday, Jan. 24. the league will hold tryouts again
for Juniors and for Minors (9-10 year olds).
On Saturday, Jan. 31. the league will hold tryouts for
Seniors (14-15 year olds). For Information, call Eastmonte
at 830-3880.

Rams To Sell Light Sponsorships
Lake Mary High School, which plans to have a lighted
baseball field this spring, is selling billboard advertising
which will be displayed on the outfield fence.
Sponsorships may be purchased by calling Evon Lisle at
323-2110 (school) or 862-3065 (home).

...' Spread'
Continued from 8A
Central Florida) were denying
ne the ball and that one o f them
night have to get the bail up
ourt." Gallagher said. "W hen I
lid get the ball in the offense I
vas able to penetrate and dish
iff to the big m en."
Tw o o f Gallagher’s biggest
assists came with In 20 seconds
if each other In the second half
loth with Hall converting. With
1:22 r e m a i n i n g G a l l a g h e r
senetrated and hit Hall down
ow. Hall faked, then turned,
quared up and hit a soft
umper. Tony Milton then hit a
hort Jumper for the Patriots
)efore G a lla g h e r again
tenetrated and hit Hall with the
ame pass and the same result
vhich ended a rally attempt to
[IveSCC breathing room.
Gallagher and Hall hit clutch
ree throws down the stretch to
teep the difference to large for
he long distance three-point
hooting oLJohnson and Molden
o make up.
CFCC was led by Alphonso
lohnson who finished with 24
tolnts and John Molden who
inlshed with 22. which Included
tine three-point goals.

SEM IN OLE ( 0 ) - G*llagh«r 1 IT 2 ] 24.
Rallly 00 12 1. Houiton 5-7 0-0 12, Hackworth
00 00 0. K*ll*r 12 0 0 2, Morrit 0 2 12 I.
Gordon 2-2 0 0 J. J*ck»on 5-13 2-S 12. Dunning
4 1 0 0 1. Hall f 14 3-3 21. William* 12 0-1 2.
Total*: 34 *4 10 ISO*
C E N TR A L FLOR ID A (M l - Joknion 9 23
2 3 24. Milton 2 11 3 4 1 Moldan 7 14 3 3 22.
Ford 4 52 5 10. Wllllt 3 9 0 1 4. Llttl* 1 1 0 0 2,
Pry 2-4 3-4 7, Robarion 0 3 0-0 0. Tola)*: 29-72
13 20 00
Halltlm* — Central Florida 45. Samlnol*.
Foul* — Samlnol* 19. Central Florida 21.
Fouled out — Morri*. Technical — none.
Three-point goal* — Seminole 5-7 (Gallagher
2 3. Houiton 2 3. Gordon 1-1), Central Florida
* 31 (Johnion 4-11. AAotden 5 7. Willi* D3).
Rebound* — Seminole 41 (Gunning 12. Halt
11, Jackion 9). Central Florida 27 (Johnson
9). A u ltlt — Seminole 14 (Gallagher 11),
Central Florida 17 I Mil Ion 10). Record* —
Seminole 20-2, Central Forlda 15 5.

BUY HERE
PAY HERE
LOW
DOW N P A Y M E N T
GOOD CREDIT-BAD CREDIT
NO CREDIT
NO INTEREST

USED CARS

3219 S. HWY. 17-92
SANFORD
323-2123

I i f -* lorn t o r
is u i ts
W R I S T 1 IM
I UCOmtoto
U II S
* MUCarta Cat
IS
7
New AmndWleMdittlsM Howell
• O S tu b F (M l n S i T 0*41 BUM
00 (M l M S
M -V M . M ils
flOCCIR
t M s ta ta t a
it s ; s i s
4 F ta C ta
U SMS
■OTflt • o.m. - LsfcM B rsitlay * t L ym ta; • p.m. - l a t e
1 C a f W lt a )
UI
HowoilotOvMs
• 041 tu b F (M l IM A T 0411 M is
• a - ik s im b
1 LiM FIC ta .
tm
IS IS
7 K rn M y ta
1MU I
Dm MRI
IM M In
14
CtNrtfl It. 71Ad ForctS
HataolDiMLasi
• ttn a * f a n tu k f u m t a *
MSoMImO
OtaOMMtatartM*
oa* w a u n m s
RO AlStaO S
DatwraittltMatM
m - v s c ia a
LAOtan a Cota Ita. Spt
4 M itM a r
U I U IU I
1 ta ta L M
tm I S
I MlnpFiDtay
IS
o im is l a F i t D s s T it is m a
RAMtTIAU:
m -V M ,fli&gt; t.ii
t AcUUnBWy
33M IIS i s
4 Frim lta
tS IS
CtaFntUtanTi
I iM W r lt
IS
tta iM R S ta N ta y m U
f lt u i
f in i m m t a t n m s
m -V E ttflL N
U J S iF ta n C o P M lltS IO T l
I t a D lt a t y
a s tta t s
ltd
a n as w a m * o t a m
I M fm
■ IS IS
AtafiLSHaMimsta)
t a U - Son l to a n W . too loota
t 11aui O t a
ui
AMfllT.MtaU
im
ISOMUFIrmtakSI.il
« o s m m t a s h u m t (to w n s
s i it - lion a tom* *»■ to* Zm m
htHM.RtaMtrNtall
m - v w A ts s
US)
t N m ls t a
ns. u t a s
IrockpollAMttata 1*
Jtn.M-Nnlstart. totl tout
i t a im .it a o
ts as
Iryta *0,Iw M fM 41*
Jt*. 1 7 -N n b a M n .U n R to ta
4 la t y t t a
AS
C n ta M ta n T N a ii
iim. II-N m I S M s t a i l I M *
Q IM IIIS t F o il U S , T O H ) MAS
CoataM 77,Fiatar|It.47
i Jm . i f - Nn Z o ta fn I t a I l*rtpm
CMrNpa FRI SoSrtTT
m - v u .C i n .ii
pJoiM-Noa M M * H n k tolps
CtMyC.ltkiantn
t fa s n M n
I S IS I S
t Tuff llacfcy
U S MS
tt a l a Foot ll.-flSrtaS ’
I HWfWFl*
IS
F.DkkktaSMoortain
F a t a M t a n . It. Lit 17
• o nrnst F u -u n jh T o t u n s
im - V U :S M
Frwtlki FNRtM U. JttVIU
JOL U
I Ha* f i t 0*4*
11S M S t s
(»:Jfl
t R F 'lQ u rta
1M AS
Gown M.JdmCorral 41
Jan. 13- sural* IV &gt;1 R a t t a n Itl
t ta t* Dm
UI
HvmoiV. t a EnfUnd U. 71
JolM-AourawiViiKtaukoniil
a 04) nj/h F 041 IMS) T O H ) 1.M1S
IdtaMHaUria
JOL 17- AufnAolVn.ltMtarnlll
IH t-l/1 1 TA:M ff
l 4 Mp7toB.RtaftfWIFom.IM
3m.N- Auaraio iv n. t u a t a n 111
t O n n * Hill
MS I S AS
lick Hmot H Rtaokurf B
ttOLlf -A u ttru ttiv n -U a ta n lll
lyl*mInf MlAtRrlfM30
4 RC’tH in fy
IS 4S
■Jan M-Aiatrait IVn. ktaukurridl
I T ta ta
IS
RMiaioianoUNtoFatim
*Jan.37- Auarai* iv«t. i w t a m 111
0 It*) tlM i F (H I HUM T (H I)
D o t a t t f lt a W t a iS
■
Jinn - AudriH* IV«a KMkJkm III
Ntatack 3i Itnttry SI
IJM S i Fk H i O IH H I. I a t **M I
■ tar IMAii Carry11w . S IM S
MPaKUMMEmtStataritl
Hkn*r‘i Fotua
Niry II IMiyttH 71
im - is c t s n
SouUttaotY » t a 13 MII kndv Son I
1 MadriSanf
I S I S 1M
OotaS7.ttlt.RMM
1 EbtwSuiM
AS IS
Fm 77, m t a t a t Tfdll* 17
4 ta ft tO m ta
)S
P it t a * 17. Mot Htilfl
0 on K « F (M l M S) T O H ) M ISi
Ftottaco UCoMKflcaS
Ota M IS S ) H IS
St AntttinIa Ainokm Inf1 *)
*
im - V L A iS H
St. JOM‘110. IrMtyn 40
I S ta tC ii*
t s AS t s
St. Lt»r*naU.Cl4rl*onL1
NOCRCTi NHLITAN0IN0I
t It a k
t s IS
Shta"*in 71Cotihralo (FM 71
I Oirltnlcetl
1M
S*n«M VormontN
M ill! ClOlOMOtl
SoutnCarolina71 Ion* M
0 (I II IA S i F I I I I M S) T (l-H ) ISM i
F o ta O M ta
WlltAllUAM
Sia«iiiui7.a«udi7t
M L T FM OF 0A
A -U M jH -U tljn
TarwnU.DtataJ3
pwitsipkit
ti n i 11 in 114
UttciTiditl. FrfSnItSI.B
ny itittan
n 17 * o 1*1 1*1
WtfwTr.MamoakU
NT Rtngoi
II M 7 *3 IU 111
OMlta MoytaWM RUStOof «t
FUhkwgk
17 II I *1 IN IN
WUfcai M D m M
Nt* Jrrwy
II II I ll 1411*7
FOOTflALL: N IL n irS lld ta M
Mltklngton
tt H 7 17 IU 117
M ill C t r l «•■ *»
M o w Rrotai U M nt Italy R
Montrnl
n ir
I 11 10 to
ta taf,0 N .M
AtantATwroiMM
Htrtkort
II H I 4 UI I I
A F C -ta Y ir t J t t iS K S ta C ilf 1)
Intcli IA LinStytotals
II
If
3
*3 UI 134
CTorOMotUlkalMWia
NFC-M«M nta If. LA lUrm 1
13 30 7 41 141 UI
ClomaiM Furmtn77
D lilllf iil F llf t lll
Raittt
II »
I M U* IM
M iM M arytall

BAILUVQ

Tim

M LM M

1I
l I
1«
*t
It
it

L t a t a t f*
Orta

UMM
Lakitay

- IH
- M
- 41
1M
I 31
in

Twtay'itaM
Orta U Orta* Map ta rt II
Sgrvct D M O. UAt Mry if
MRU

M LM M

11 - tn
11
h in
i t 1M
it i n

LaMMtoy
LaUHawll
LakaBranttoy

Lyman

I 1 IV* I f
I I I 31

iMMaaiftain
LMt MiryM OtflM MainlandM
I t a Hmti (A OrlandoWNrto
IOCCl It:
M
t» n
1131
4U
41)
53)
131

BU T S I
* B • 1111
1 11 I
1 1I I
1 I 1 IV*
1 I I4D

Tmm
U M H tai
UkaMary
O ita
Lyman
lakaBranlky
*--1
—■JfDflWl

taday'inwil
Lakt Maryl SamInotol

HOCKEY

TttaTirMNi

OttalOrlandaLauMigklandO

LikaHtntll OrlandoBlika*tart!
I M Brwttoy l. Ctolandt
GIILI
Tmm
UuVmttoy
lyita
L M ta y

M

in i

ai

tittilt

nit
mi

&gt;111

4*1

til l

U lM I

»»t

1 i 1M

t71
*7-1

Orta

wamiif i rwwm
La**Mary 3. Strata I
LyitatDtland*
watotay'irttuit
Ovta 3. Daland!

JUCO
IA M IT IA U : M tM M n o taC iM n K *
N LU
Dayton* Baacti
Strata
Contrtl Florida
FloridaCommunity
Vital*
Santa Ft
LakaOty

Al

1* - 111
*1 I 303

- at

*1

it

t

at

n t it
it t »it

i t !
• t a t a y ’irrwfl*
Strata®. Cantral Honda®
Oayta Stack14, lakt City®
V ital! TL St Jatwt Dlrtr ft
Ftoridi CC, Sanf* Fi CC.notartitabto

FOOTBALL

A F C -C ta ta a NY jfh M(t OT)
NFC-Wtaiinglan 17, Oilug* U
la ta y .it* . I
NFC—NY Gianh S . I m F rmciva )
A FC -D n sr a N n England II
AFC
lilt

Otnvrr a Ckvtlta » (OTI
NFC CliMflfllki* Out
NY Gsnt) II. WAtkington t
l * | t r 1**1 I X I
wt‘
WtaJM,* „
Dmm n NY CUntt a Rom I m *.
PiUtaACalf, 4pm. f

tt t in

St MmBta

Kookaburra Whips Australia IV

MFOIRlWi tM-HO. — f l s t a N C C o l l t a l t a R C C
OIRLflt • M.m. —. i s t i t M m y of Ov M n T.m M-m

•mnmms m amtiw h ,uus

Ml

BASKETBALL
IA1KRIALL: NIASTANDINGl

VO LLEYBALL

lu lir * Cfiltriaci

AltntkOtrtta '

V O U IY IA ll: Saata BacrtalM Laagw*
TMMiy’tCaUkUaga*
Turn
W LSI
Otlton*ScdS*r»ict
I B It a r t
3 » Pairion
3 1 Outrggari
3 0 Mgk Jiaripan
0 3 3
Doipkim
9 3 3
looMScrnn
0 3 3
IronPiopi*
0 3 3
T a ta r'* matt*
Dfllon* Sad Sonic*d. High Jumptn 1541 ISt.
131
B lfifcn4 Qalpkin* 131 ISO. 137
Patrkhd Loom Sera** l i t 131.154
Oulriggtrid lrenPao*k*H 1313.13a
M tay-tC ! Ed 1 laagw
r**»
Dirty Mark
Ball Motor Ima
Pincmi kiddk Cornor
S*ik*y 4 Tht Gang
Buflar Fmgart
Gator*
Churck (X Gad01 PragkKy
k ta iy 'irtu m
Dirty Work 13 Propktcy 1
Dirty Work !LS«iktyS
Dirty Wort 17, PlnmrrU I)
Dirty Work IS. Bill Motor L in t
Bon Motor lint IV Protaty &gt;
Bill Motor lin t 11 Butar F ngr, I
Bai Motor lin t 11 Gitonl

Ptamt a Propnotyif

PmKmt a ctio n *
Pinocml I I Suitor Fingm U
S*xMy I I lutlor F mgtri 5

Sp'trr11P. ttay *

Spikly bytert»i1ovtr Citon
Suitor F.nger) a Cotori 0

w L 6B
40 31 1
31 1
31 1
13 3
»* 4
4a a

* L Pci. GB
Boiton
25 10 714 —
Pkiladtipkia
31 14 Si* J
If 17 3» IV*
Waikington
17 34 313 13’*
Nr* York
Nr* Jtrwy
10 70 171 IS1*
Caalral Dttnn*
34 10 704 Atlanta
33 10 477 to
Ottrotl
73 14 UJ 3 t
Mltwaukat
11 11 345 Sto
CMcago
17 II 4M 7to
Indiana
14 73 3» 11
Ckraland
Wmlan Ctaranc*
Mjdwil OiriUM
W L Pet OB
32 13 Ut Dalla*
llt*h
31 13 411 1
Houiton
11 11 471 1
14 32 431 1
Danrtr
lacramonto
t 34 337 I3to
t 31 343 Uto
San Antonio
Pacific Dmuoa
LA lakart
37 1 771 14 14 433 4 j
Portland
11 14 JM 7
Gotttn StaW
II 14 339 Ito
Soattk
14 32 3*9 13 *
Pkoanu
LA C lta rt
i 31 .137 22to
M ta ta y 'l R**alt*
Boiton 117.0*114*101
PMtdtlpnio M. Atlanta71
Worninfion11LNowJirwy l «
Dttro.110*. ClMta) 17
IA Clgftn in Donnr HI
Won't IM Ion Antonio 10*
TkvnAiy’tGontM
MilatolM Ol Atlontt 130pm
WoVonptanilIndlAM 7 30pm
Hautiontt Ouotfo, 1 30p m
UtaillPttali.t.Xpm
GotaHitt»tIAIMirv 1030pm
Portltnd it Sacrimonto. H 30 p m

Etd TommM 73.Tomtm It. P
EMOnt KaNwky17. UNC AiiorilMM
FtardlSoutanm, RodimO
Goorp&gt;47AVlAdotdt S3

CtafltTtdi a NorflCinta AAT 07
JoduontlOto MnNni Ktntgcky71
AmtucIytf.Flor4t«3
Miami a Mortal Etartt Sta U
Miuiuippi St U Miuluippi (1

NortiCjrdlniW, Virginia®
Nortton Ktntucky71Thomti Mar*U
NO lovtait IA McNomt St. 31
RtaoOn.VIrfMaTtckil
ttogftatiiaamM.
SouHornMiuiuippi IA lOdlirllk H
Tnmytrmlt to Ctntrt7110T)
Vlrgmit Comm, 11, SautkAltktmt M
t a i Viromit», Gtorgt WtaNngtonso
Wnl Vt. V. O. Gknrllk M
MV* Tick13,Concord®
WVt. Wnkym « . Fdrmonl HI (OT)
Wtmling 101Oiriil ElklntO
Aim* U AlbionM
Okion 17, Batkin
C*ntr»l AUngv. U Miami lOWo) SI
CMcagoSI 77. E llllnotl 7*
C«inn*tl 71Morthefd SI H
Conurtllt |Mim171Mtctktltr 17
Dtttat IS. Btuition10
DtPun* 71, OtbnhSO
E*ikrn MichiganV. ToMott
Guittrvt 71. St Mjry i (Minn IM
HtmldtaAugiburgS}
Hop*MAO Unit
Iowatt. INinouMlOTI
InditnjU PurOutlnd. It!.Marion77

NorNOktta
W L T Fh.
If M ) 41
It 39 1 4 )
» 11 i e
14 19 7 17
11 11 1 37
SarrNtoDhta
Umonton
31 1) I N
Colgary
8 l« 1 31
Wnnipog
13 17 t »
La* Angakt
19 11 4 4

Minn**o44
Mmt
CNcogo
11 Lwli
Toronto

OF GA
131 Itl
IU UI
159 111
UT IU
347 114
177 141
111 IM
UI 143
ID 114

flVfOTMtoy » NneiiT
Hartferf 3. Bmlonl
Montnai Butt*k3tTkl
Mimtwtal TorontoI
Wlnmptf APittiburgk!
Ne« Jrriry l CMttgo 1
NY Rangtri ACalgary)
Lot Angotn A Vancounr I
TkonSy'i Gama)
HarttorOal Boaton. I 3Spm
Montrool at PtiitalpklA 7:3) pm
EOnontonat Quota. 7 3Sp m
Torontoit Ootroit. 733p m
Woininfion a NY lilandorv 103 pm
FrMirYGtmra
Wmnipogal Hori«y. ngnl
lot ArgriMaI St tool, nigkl
Calgary it Vancouvr,nigkl

SOCCER
SOCCER: Mill STANDINGS
laitor* Dtrtiioi

FanyonM. DantaU
Miisouri 71 OldOwnmon44
Mount Union14. Baldwin Wtllact 71
MulkjftgumU. Marana 37
Ctorflmilk. Cat* Wnttrn Unary, 13
OkioWnlayan UGWoMkr 77
OhioU M. Kant St 70
Oilrat 71 Kaiamaioo 77
Otttrktin10. Hatoalbarg S7
Pyrdual i Minnaufa 37
37Jokni IMinn 173.37 Oaf M
Si louilB. FloridaAAMU
3A Bapi.it USE Miuour173
Wtltom1llinolt73, Nortktm1IIinoil 70
WtitomMickgana Ball St M
An. EtuClatiH. tkn-1* Cram S3

Wit Stout17. Ml) Superior 77
Ml* Wtutwakr fi. 411 Banntici.noM
Wittaorg 41. Capita S4
ArkamaaU Rmsa
MtmpkttSI SI.OrtIRobtrttSI
OktA City 7ACantra lOkla I at
Pkillipi47. OzarkikS
SF AuttlnIt. Prark Vk« AAM*3
Ttijk Ckriitlan17. SoutkomMatte S3
Taut TackSABaylor 30

Dalla*
Ckraland
Bflkmor,
Minnnota
Ckicago
Maw York

N L Pci.
13 7 444
11 4 4*7
U 7 Ml
1 1 300
4 It 133
1 11 III

GB
—

to
1
3to
I
to

WattaraOntua*
Tacoma
14 3 04 —
San Dega
7 1 07 3
Ktnrn City
7 7 too 3to
Wickila
1 7 471 4
» loot*
7 11 in fto
Lei Angato*
3 M 133 1
WaSowtay'i Raiulti
Da.i*4 I. Now York * Son C.ago A
Miwrvilal
Tacoma l SI. law* *
TkonSy’i Gomt*
No garni* *cka4ult4
Frday’iGamn
Ball.mort at NowYork, I 03p m
OadaiatCkvoland.1 OSpm
Tacomaal Chicago. 135p m.
SanDkgo at Wich.lA I 35p m
Mmrwiaa at Kama* City, • 03p m
St. lout* tt Lot Angtln. 10 33 p m

When J eff Ruiand o f the
Philadelphia 76ers suffered a
knee Injury Nov. 2. the Los
Angeles Clipper* were l-I . Upon
hi* return Wednesday night,
they Improved to 5r31.'
Ruland. playing for the first
time aln ce u n d e r g o i n g
arthroscopic knee surgery after
the second game of the season,
scored 19 points and grabbed a
key rebound to pace the 76ers to
a 96-93 triumph over the Atlanta
Hawks.
Later Wednesday, the Clippers
snapped a 16-game losing streak
with a 123-105 triumph over the
Denver Nugget*. Tne victory
was the Clippers* second of the
season over the Nuggets. Los
Angeles had beaten Denver
115-112 Nov. 11 and, In the next
30 gomes, only defeated Seattle
Dec. 10 before downing Denver
again.
Ruland — who played in only
67 gasnes the previous two
seasons because of injuries to his
knee, shoulder and foot — will
be limited to 24 minutes per
game and he can't play on
back-to-back nights. He sank 7
of 8 shots Emd grabbed 5 re­
bounds. Including a key grab
with 14 seconds left.
Charles Barkley paced the
76ers with 24 points and 20
rebounds. Including a free throw
with six seconds left. Dominique
Wilkins led all players with 27
points.
Said Ruland of his return: "U
felt like the first night of my
honeymoon. I had a great tim e."
The 76crs had been criticized
for the ofTscason deal that sent
Moses Malone, forward Terry
Catledge and two No. 1 draft
3tcks to the Washington Bullets
or Ruland und forward Cliff
Robinson.
Los Angeles has been criti­
cized for Just being lousy. The
triumph ended
the Clippers'
opportunity to reach the Cleve­
land Cavaliers' record of 24
straight losses set between the
1982 and 1983 seasons.

!

Pistons 104, Cavaliers 87
At Pontiac, M ich.. Adrian
Dantley scored 26 points and
Sidney Green added a -.season•high 22 to lead the Pistons to
their fifth straight victory. The
Cavaliers have lost seven of (heir
lost eight and converted Just 21
of 40 attempts from the foul line.
Bullets 118, New Jersey 100
At L an d ovcr. Md.. M oses
Malone scored 21 points to guide
the Bullets. Malone was 11 of 11
from the free-throw line and
e xt e nde d his s t r eak to 41
straight from the line. Mnlone
also moved into 12th place on
the NBA all-time scoring list
with' 19.268 points, passing
Dolph Schayes and Bob Lanier.
Celtics 117, Mavericks 108
At Boston. Larry Bird scored
25 points. Including 14 In the
third quarter, and Kevin McHale
added 25 for the Celtics. Danny
A i n g c . w h o w a s l i s t e d as
doubtful because o f u sprained
ankle, added 24 points for
Boston. Sam Perkins led the
Mavericks with a game-high 29
points.
Sonlcs 130, Spurs 104
At Seattle. Dale Ellis scored 32
points to power Seattle to its
fourth victory In Its last five
games. Walter Berry paced the
Spurs with a season-high 24
points. The Spurs have lost 12 of
their last 14. Al t o n Li st er
grabbed 15 rebounds for Seattle.

IN V E N T O R Y
C LEA R A N C E S A LE

REMINGTON TIRES

PONY
BASEBALL
When We PUj like Ihs Pm

C U STO M A IR E
Steel Belted Radial
• T w o lula w id th sto o l b o lls ( o r s d d o d sta b ility
a n d d u ra b ility
• T w o s m o o th rid in g p o ly s s ts r c o r d b o d y p ile s
• W r a p a ro u n d s h o u ld e r e le m e n ts
• “ A ll-c o n d itio n " I road d e s ig n lor in cre a se d traction
• F u ll D e p th ’ VL*" s h o u ld e r, ’ %a” c e n te r
• R e in fo rc e d c e n te r rib fo r im p ro v e d s te e rin g
a n d c o r n e r in g

P165/80R13.................
P185/80R13.................
P195/75R14.................
P205/75R14.................
P205/75R15.................
P215/75R15.................
P225/75R15.................

...................34.95
...................38.95
...................39.95
...................40.95
...................42.95
...................44.95
...................46.95

A0K TIRE MART
M O N . -F R I . 8 -5 :3 0 . S A T . 8-3

2413 S . F R E N C H A V E .
322-7480
SANFORD

I

Registration
S a t. J a n . 1 7 , S a t. Jan . 2 4 : 1 0 a .m . - 2 p .m .

5-Polnts Complex
SR 4 19 (ft Ml. E . of 17-9 2 )

Wrangler (5*6) to Games T-bsll......
$25
Pinto (7-8) 1/2T-ball, 1/2Coach Pitch .
*35
Mustang (9-10) Major League Rules.. — *40
BronCO (11-12) Major League Rules ..
*40
Pony (13-14) Major League Rules ....
*40
Colt (15-16) Major League Rules...... ......*40
(Family Plan Available)
League starts early March and runs until the end of May.
Players from Casselberry, Lk. Mary, Longwood, Sanford,
Winter Springs and surrounding areas are eligible to play.
All games played at league complex
—
and practice held in your community.

327-2198
Call F o r Details

�^
f

'— *7'

’T

'. - 1— 'J J t «»! «»."

■'T

t v

o ■■ *■ i 1" ! » t m m m R ' ^ ' ^ V Y

r

• • •

Stocks

area. They sold the land alone (50 X 240 ft.)
would be worth at least $1,710.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Prices opened higher today
In active trading of New York Stock Exchange
Issues.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which
scored Its ninth advance In a row Wednesday
with a gain or 22.07. was up 9.28 to 2044.29
shortly after the market opened.
Advances led declines 565-333 among the
1,308 issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to about 13,692,000
shares.
The stock market roared ahead Wednesday In
heavy trading as the Dow Jones industrial
average set its eighth consecutive record close.
Analysts said persistent demand by instltu-

Gold And Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold &amp; silver prices
quoted In dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold
London
Previous close 419.25 up 10.00
Morning fixing 415.00 off 4.25
Hong Kong
416.50 up 1.65
N ow Y o rk
Comex spot
gold open
413.20 off 4.70
Comex spot
silver open
5.557 off 0.035
(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.)

Local Interest
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 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
NCR Corp
Plessey
Scotty's
Southeast Bank
SunTrust
Walt Disney World
Westlnghouse

Bid
7%
34 Mi
27 %

A sk
7V*
34%
27%

32 Vi
42V*
32'/a
24%
22%
53V*
29 %
13V*
41%
22%
51
62%

32%
42%
32%
24%
23
53%
30%
13%
42
23V*
51%
62%

Dow Jones
Dow Jones Averages —
2044.99
30 Indus
856.83
20 Truns
222.08
15 Utils
791.15
65 Stock

a«

10 a.m.
up 9.98
up 3.87
off 0.57
up 2.89

tlonal and individual Investors for equities
spurred the rise.
Traders said a strong appetite for equities by
large and small investors has continued unabated
since the start of 1987. The market's ability to
advance despite some profit-taking has made
buyers less cautious about the potential for a
sharp correction, they said.
Analysts said investors willing to buy on price
dips are keeping the market from backsliding,
thus encouraging more aggressive buying.
A recovery In IBM was also positive, analysts
said. The bellwether issue dropped about 6 points
earlier this week, sliding as Wall Street lowered
its earnings estimates for the computer giant.
.

Gold Turns Mixed
As Dollar Falls
By United Press International

In London the pound opened
at $1.5045, against 8 1.4952.
The only European market
where the dollar improved was
in Frankfurt where the It ap­
peared to rebound sligh tly,
supported by reports that Feder­
al Reserve Board Chairman Paul
Volcker said, it has fallen far
enough, dealers said.

The U.S dollar continued its
slide against most major foreign
currencies today at the opening
o f trading on world m oney
markets. The price of gold was
mixed. .
E x p e rts said the d o lla r ’ s
w eak n ess re fle c te d w o rrie s
about the huge U.S. trade deficit.
They said the dollar's sharp
fall Wednesday was triggered by
a New York Times story In­
dicating the U.S. government
would welcome a further decline
In the dollar in order to make
American exports cheaper and
thus more attractive.
In early New York trading the
dollar rebounded after falling for
three days and was slightly
higher against' all major foreign
currencies In moderate trading.

The dollar closed Wednesday
in Frankfurt trading at 1.829
marks. Its lowest point in more
than six years. Thursday morn­
ing the dollar was changing
hands at 1.8435 marks.
In Japan the financial markets
were closed for a national holi­
day. Trading will resume on
F rid a y Gold opened 81 higher in
Zurich at 8416 per troy ounce
and lost 83.50 an ounce In
London, falling to 8415.75 an
ounce.

New York traders said the
foreign currency market was
volatile, but added that trading
activity was lighter than Wed­
nesday due to a holiday In
Japan.

The morning fixing In London
was 8415. off 84.25 from W ed­
nesday's close.

In European trading the dollar
opened In Zurich at 1.5362
Swiss francs, against a previous
close of 1.5542.

Silver opened unchanged in
Zurich at 85.60 per troy ounce
and In London it lost 6 cents to
$5.58.

In Paris the dollar opened at
6.1625 French francs, against a
previous close o f 6.175: In
Amsterdam the dollar fell to
2.0815 Dutch guilders, against
2.084: and In Brussels the dollar
opened at 38.50 Belgian francs,
against a previou s close o f
38.875.^

In earlier trading In the Far
East, gold closed at 8416.50 an
ounce on the Hong Kong Bullion
Exchange, up 81.65 from W ed­
nesday's close.
On New Y ork's Com ex. a
100-troy-ounce gold futures
contract for current delivery in
January opened at 8413.20 an
ounce, off 84.70 from Wednes­
day’s close. A 5.000-troy-ouncc
silver futures contract for de­
livery in January opened at
85.557. off 3.5 cents an ounce.

The dollar began trading In
Milan at 1.313 lire, against
1.324.65. Its lowest level in Italy
since June 4, 1982 when It
closed at 1.308.05 lire.

for about 883.
Fujlsankel spokesman Hldeshe
Tukaml said sutcllllc shoppers
a v o id th e m an y la y e rs o f
middlemen In Japan that make
the items expensive. Fujlsankel
buys directly from the manufac­
turer and delivers directly to the
customer, Takam l said. The
customer pays cash on delivery.

S e llin g U .S . G o o d s V ia Satellite
TOKYO (UPI) — A Japanese
television network. In a hightech effort to reduce the massive
trade surplus with the United
States, today began a "satellite
s h o p p in g" broadcast to sell
American goods to Japanese
consumers.
Fuji Television, one of Japan's
largest commercial networks,
kicked off what it billed as the
world's first "satellite shopping"
broadcast, offering U.S. clothing
and luxury Items for sale.
"T h e viewer calls a special
number, one o f 100 operators
standing by takes the order on a
choice of among 14 Items and
two weeks later the Item arrives
from New York.” said Hlsae
Kltamura of Fuji subsidiary FuJlsankel Communications.
During the broadcast. New
York m odels cavorted on a
catwalk at the Pier 17 shopping
mall, displaying hologram wat­

...P a y
Continued from page 1A
Tickets were sold for 817.50
w ith the lu n ch and 8 7.50
without. Mrs. Schllke's secre­
ta ry . M avis L o v e r in g , said

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Central Florida Rational Hospital
Wadno(day
ADMISSIONS
San lord:
Julia Mlnott
Robert L. Yon. Altamonte Spring*
Carol A. Lee. Deltona
Belva L. Llmpl. Deltona
Debra L. Brlckley. Orlando
Teresa C. Averltt, Winter Spr ingt
Rhonda K. McNeil. Winter Springs
Paula M. Walsh. Winter Spring*
DISCHARGES
Sanford:
Bertha L. Lashbrook
Martha M. Sweggerty
Edward J. Convl*. Lake Monroe
David A. McCullough. Long wood
C e le it e R . B a lte r and baby b oy,
Catielberry
Sandra E Arlta and baby boy. Longwood
BIRTHS
Maryann H. Jonet. a baby boy. DeLand
Sandra E . Arlta. a baby boy. Longwood
DebraL. Brlckley. a baby boy. Orlando
Paula M. Walsh, a baby girl. Winter
Spring*

ches from Sharper Image, boxy
suits from Anne Klein II and rain
ponchos from a shop called The
Weather Store.
Some $2 million o f mostly
brand-name goods — chosen
from stores on New York's Fifth
Avenue and Pier 17 — were
offered during the broadcast.
Japan's trade surplus with the
United States was nearly 850
billion In 1985. the latest avail­
able yearly figures. The more
Am erican products Japanese
consumers buy. the closer the
two nations will come to cutting
that gap.
"T h e most popular Item so far
was the 'Top Gun’ flight Jacket,"
a hip-length reversible garment
with brown vinyl on one side
and blazing orange on the other,
said FuJIsankel's K ath erin e
Melchior.
The Jacket, named after the
popular movie "T op Gun." sells

" I f you could find these Items
In Japan, they’d cost two to
three times more." Takaml said.
Melchior said the hour-long
broadcast aired In Tokyo at 10
a.m. and about 1,000 orders
valued at about 8500,000 had
been called In within an hour of
the show's end.
During that hour. 10 orders
came In for diamonds from New
York's 47th Street. A one-carat
diamond without setting was on
sale for the equivalent of 82.483
an d a o n e - c a r a t s o lit a ir e
e n g a g e m e n t r in g sold fo r
82.475.
"Japanese women will buy
Jewels sight unseen as long as
they see them on television."
remarked a woman In the Tokyo
studio audience.

Wednesday about 270 tickets
were sold at 817.50. She said
much less were sold at 87.50.
L u n c h e o n p la n n in g w as
headed by Mrs. Schllke as part of
the King celebration Sanford city
commissioners called for last
year. Commissioners asked their
Hum an R e la tio n s A d v is o r y
Board to plan a week-long trib­
ute coinciding with King's Jan.
15birthdate.
The 10 member board brought
In various community members,
such as Mrs. Schllke ' x the six
month effort. It pruuuced four
events, all of which were to be
held at the civic center.
The King tribute concludes
Saturday at a banquet to honor
various community members
with "Brotherhood Awards" for
promoting King's Ideals.
On Friday night, local young
people will be celebrated with a
tribute program featuring win­
ners of art. essay and oritorical
contests held In honor of King.
The evening will also feature a
play about King performed by 65
children and young adults.
Sanford's King tribute began
S u n d a y , w i t h an I n tcrdenomlnatlonal religious ob­
servance. attended by about 750
members of the city’s white and
black communities.
—Karen Talley

Takaml said about^ 2 million
people from the Tokyo area
watched Thursday's broadcast.
The network plans to produce
a n o th e r s a te llite s h o p p in g
broadcast March 20.
For eight years. Fuji Television
has run almost dally short ad­
vertisements called "Telephone
S h o p p in g ." o ffe r in g J a p a ­
nese-made practical and luxury
Items to viewers.

...Launch
C ontinued from page l A
designed for a first-strike.
"W hat this does is provide our
sea-based leg of the (nuclear
defense system) a weapon capa­
ble of holding at risk the full
spectrum o f Soviet targets."
Pritchard said.
Protesters Wednesday also
lofted several silvery balloons to
confuse the radar equipment
installed to track the Trident-2.
The reflective balloons were sent
aloft at a radar site at Jupiter,
about 100 miles south of Cape
Canaveral.

I
4

• Discussed the fourth draft o f a revised county
Land Development Code, which contains stronger
measures for the preservation of trees on many
development sites, adds a wetlands overlay

o f the regukttm w for
builders o f subdivisions, gives more negotiating
room for setback requirements, f -------------------- depths, and contains a new
Development section.
That section gives, more flexibility ^ n j m w to
develop commercial
controls,
trols. and makes conditions "site specific" in
that It trims code conditions to apply to each
specific site, according to County Administrator
Ken Hooper.

...Bailey

7 can't « m how anyono
thlnka thoy havo tho
riaht to toll tomoono
otto how to llvo,"

Continued from page 1A
Chamber of Commerce Execu­
tive Director Dave Farr. Most
attendees, however, were local
residents, whites and blacks,
who came to hear Miss Bailey's
"Pearls
of Wisdom."
•

rfmmtI Boil*y

She stressed the importance
for those In the audience de­
monstrating unity to continue
the concepts everyday.
Miss Bailey's arrival was pre­
ceded by a lengthy rendition o f
her accomplishments from trib­
u te lu n c h e o n c o m m i t t e e
c h a ir m a n an d c h a m b e r o f
commerce post president Shirley
Schllke.
In addition to being a singer
and actress. Miss Bailey has
served as special advisor to the
U nited Nations through ap­
p o in tm e n ts from P re s id e n t
Gerald Ford in 1975 and *76.
S h e w a s g r a d u a t e d fr o m
Georgetown University in 1985
and has received several honor­
ary. degrees from colleges all
over the country. She Is the
author o f five books and a
recognized lecturer.
Miss Bailey said she finds it
. " d i f f i c u l t to s p ea k o f a c ­
complishments when I feel 1 am
on this earth to do whatever God
wills. There are no limits to what
one can. and must do to help
humanity."
•
Miss Bialley complimented the
city's appearance, but said, " I f I
look around. I bet I could find
som eth in g swept under the
rug.” She said this can be the
case In all cities she visits.
She said man’s technological
advances pale when compared
to Inabilities that prevent him

from realizing "hum an truths."
"W e're all the same. Some­
where In all o f us. and In like
measures. Is the grace of God.
No one has the right to act as
though th e y 'r e b e tte r than
someone else. W e’re alike and
the only people we 'owe' are
ourselves. Others don't owe us
and pan't say we owe them. Our
responsibility, our debt. Is to be
the best we can possibly be to
ourselves and one another."
Miss Bailey said King's desire
"was for all to overcome by
living right and respecting each
other. That’s lost when you
w a ste tim e p u ttin g oth e rs
down."
It's also hampered by those
who "Interfere with another's
right to live freely In this world,"
she said. " I can’ t sec how
anyone thinks they have the
right to tell someone else how to
live."
Miss Bailey, who travels by
t r a in , s a id s h e 's n e it h e r
"pessimist nor optimist; I'm a

realist.
.
.
"A s I travel America I keep
gaining values. I keep seeing and
learning more and more about
people and their ways o f life."
She said the observations extend
to other countries and into
classrooms, where she is both
teacher and student.
Miss Bailey said she sees too
much o f a reliance on technology
to the detriment o f students'
classroom education. She warns
against too much of a depen­
dence on computers "fo r pro­
viding easy answers, instead o f
making our young people think
for themselves."
She also sees the family unit
deteriorating and advises that
time be taken "to repair the
division before it's too late.
W fth o u t the fa m ily , w e 'r e
nothing."
Her travels have also pro­
mpted a respect o f Neighborhood
Watch programs which "pro­
mote the sense of com m unity"
and put residents on the of­
fensive. rather than the de­
fensive when it comes to pre­
venting crime.
Miss Bailey also said too much
time "Is spent on discussion
Instead of deeds. We need deeds,
they're the true religion. You can
tell someone T love you.' but
what really matters Is that you
show it.
"You don't plan life, you live
it. and go forward with the truth,
that's the only w ay." she told
Sanford's citizens.

REALTY TRANSFERS
General Hom«t lo Loul* Brown Jr A WF
Belinda. Lt JO Holkrwbrook, *9*. 100
Joseph T Bo|anowksl A WF Christine to
Juan H Gonial*i A Amy L A Leonard M
Langford. Lt 3 BIN 10 Tier a E. R. Trafford*
Map Of Sanford. *57.000
General Home* to John F Lukasak A WF
Carol, LttOAIafaya weed* P h i l . Mo^oe
General Home* to Thome* F Neary A
Conitance, Lt 1*0 Alafaya Woods Ph II.
**4.700
General Home* to Christopher L Wlssert,
Lt 71 Alafaya Wood* Ph 11, *90.000
General Homes to Leroy Tucker A WF
Gloria. Lt 90 Blk B Lakewood At The
Crossings Un 3. *10.000
General Homes fo Barry R Degraff A
Frln-Jo. Lt 73 Blk A Lakewood At The
Crossings Un J. 1104.000
Marlon Dev. lo Marlon Corp. Un. 303. Zem
Sprlngslde Office Center I. Cond L. *111.500
Richmond Amer Homes to Cindy L.
Mltanovlch and Hb Robert E.. Lot 14 Blk I
The Reserve At The Crossings. Ph I.U4.I00
Richmond Amer Homes to Sherrill Haft
and Hb Arthur F., Lot I Blk 3 The Reserve At
The Crossings. Ph I
Darlene Koerner and Hb James A. lo Bellie
J. Fabrlilo and Hb Louis R.. Lot 131 Weklva
Hunt Club Fo* Hunt Sec 3. *104.400

Marsha Ensor and Hb Joseph E. to Sharon
K. Bishop and Hb Philip I.. Lot S3. Seminole
Esls. P h i. *131.100
Lleselott Appel and Hb Rudolph F. to
Pansy F. Shuck and Hb Ralph, Lot 339
Weklva Hunt Club Fox Hunt Sec 3. *131.100
Celton Homes to Robert S. Croiford. Lot

Burkhardt A WF Sandra W. Lt 43 Blk A
Seminole Hts. *54.900
Richard B Turton A WF Lynne to Mary E
Redjluewtkl. Lt* 30 31 AS** of 33 Blk 19
Sanlando Sub Beat Altamonte S4c. *54.300
Harris American Homes lo Ralph P
Salerno A WF Linda O. LI 54 Hyde Park,
...... ......
_
'^ox^orj? ^^enTeeTefxrttl"endH^ameT^^ff^fel'3_ lede*idwwva-V(F A m y L to
A WF Theresa A . Lt 105
L . Lot *0 Replat, Amended Plat Longwood
C h a rle s )’’’ Widen
1
Villas of Casselberry Ph 11. *59.400
Green. *103.400
John Relst. Tr, to William S Hemmerly A
Nettle Zimmerman to Debra Morris and
W F Paula G. land In Sec 37 30-29. (100.000
Hb William E. Jr.. E 54’ of Lot 57 and W 34’ of
Harris Amer Homes to Marla T Marquei.
51 Blk H, Oakland Esls. 3nd Sec. *77,700
Lt U4HydePark.t94.M0
Ammon H. Hutchings and Wt Janet to
Frank MckHudgins A WF Theresa to
Cralg-A. Secla and Wf Arlene R., Lot 31
Spring Oaks, **5.300
Richard E Mole Sr A W F Diane. Lt 91
Wrenwood Hts. **3.000
Jonl Morrison and Donald to David F.
Sunbenk Mtg to Robert Cattail A WF
Brenlllnger and Wf Diane P.. Lot 49 Cypres*
Landing al Sabal Point, *133.000
Diane. Lt 35 Green Village. *105.000
Tec Homes to Andre B Raab A W F Nancy
Elitabelh Ekdalh and Hb Robert lo Raisa
J . Lt 31 The Estates At Spring Landing.
D. Carlageno and Hb Nelson A., Lot !• Blk F.
*370.000
West Altamonte Hts. Sec II. *13.300
Cynthia Kelly and Hb Frank J. to Jodi L.
Green Indus Inc to Donal L Davison A WF
Lleving and Hb Terry A . Lot 13 Alafaya
Joan. S 15’ of LI 33 AN 55' of 31 Blk B
Woods. Ph I. Un B. *40.900
Seminole Terr Repl. *49.900
Due Inv etc lo Terry L Berardl. Lt 49
Eira M Fltigerald A WF Della lo Paul W
Ramblewood. *49,900
Alger I A WF Patricia J. Lt 37 Shadowbay Un
L. *104.900
Anden Group to Dloscorldes Collaio A WF
Teresa. Lt 54 Sunrise Ests Un 3. *73.900
James C Gamble A WF Eydle to Kenneth

AREA DEATHS
BELTON JERNIGAN
Mr. Belton Karl Jernigan. 63.
o f 119 Plnecrest Drive. Sanford,
died Tuesday at Veterans Admlnistratlon Hospital.
Gainesville. Bom Dec. 10. 1923.
In Greenville. N.C.. he moved to
Sanford from Jacksonville in
1959. He was a retired deputy
sheriff and a member of Lake
Shore Baptist Church.
Jacksonville. He was a retired
Navy senior chief petty officer, a
veteran of World War II and the
Korean and Vietnam wars, and a
member of Masonic Lodge 62.
F&amp;AM . Shrine Lodge Bahia
Temple, both In Sanford.
Survivors Include his wife.
Ruth: sons. David, Post Falls.
Idaho. John. Valrlco. Dr. Robert.
R o c k v ille. Md.; four gran d­
children.
G ra m k o w F u n eral H om e.
Sunford. in charge of arrange­
ments.

JESS L. SLOAN
Mr. Jess Leonard Sloan. 67, of
865 T im berland T rail. A lta ­
monte Springs, died Wednesday
at Florida H ospltal-O rlando.
Born March 2. 1919 In Ardmore.
Okla., he moved to Altamonte
Springs from Wichita Falls. T ex­
as In 1957. He was a retired
federal employee and a member
o f S o r r e n to P r e s b y t e r ia n
Church. He was a member of
American Legion Post 19. Or­
lando. and National Association
of Retired Federal Employees.
Chapter 95.
Survivors Include his wife.
Lenora C.; sister. Faye Harrell,
Ardmore; brothers. E.M. "B ill."
and E.W . " G e n e . " both of
Ardmore.
B a ld w ln -F a irc h lld Funeral
Home. Orlando. In charge of
arrangements.

ZELM A F. TAYLO R
Mrs. Zelma Frances Taylor.
81, of 265 Myrtle St.. Sanford,
JOSEPH TILLIS
died Wednesday at Hill Haven
Mr. Joseph Silas TUlis. 85. of Nursing Home in Sanford. Born
221 W. 17th St.. Sanford, died ‘Nov. 7. 1905. in Columbus.
Wednesday at Central Florida Ohio, she moved to Sanford from
Regional Hrspllal. Bom Dec. 23. Newcomerstown. Ohio, In 1944.
1901 In Gardner, Fla., he moved She was a homemaker and a
to Sanford In 1922 from Arcadia. Baptist. She was a member of
He was a retired car foreman for the Royal Neighbors of America.
the Seaboard Coastline Railroad.
Survivors Include sons. Rob­
He was a member of the Central ert. Sanford. F loyd. T exas;
Baptist Church, member of the dau ghters. W a u n lta Sm ith.
Masonic Lodge. York Rite No. Sanford. Linda Quintero. Miami;
62. F&amp;AM. Morocco Temple of seven grandchildren, and 14
Jacksonville, and the Elks Lodge great-grandchildren.
of Sanford.
Brlsson G uardian Funeral
Survivors Include two sons. C. Home. Sanford. In charge of
Duane o f Sanford, and Joseph arrangements.
W. o f Orlando; seven grand­
CELESTE HARVEY
c h i l d r e n :
14 g r e a t ­
Mrs. Celeste S. Harvey. 87, of
grandchildren, and one greatgreat granddaughter; slste’r, 201 W. 15th St.. Sanford, died
Mary Donaldson, of Lake Mary: Wednesday at her residence.
and two brothers. Homer of Born July 29. 1899, In ProNashville, Ga.. and Clarence of sperty. S.C., she moved to San­
ford from there in 1924. She was
Lake Mary.
G ra m k o w F u n eral H om e. a homemaker.
Survivors include one son,
Sanford. In charge of arrange­
Leslie, of Orlando: two grand­
ments.

d a u g h te rs , and on e g re a tgrandson.
Arrangements by Gramkow
Funeral Home. Sanford.

Funeral Notices
j n u r a n r n r r o ; -------------------------------------------

— Funeral servlets with full pollc* honors
tor Mr. Ballon K. Jsrnlgan. 43. of Sanford,
who dlsd Tuesday, will bo Isold 1 p.m.
Saturday at Gramkow Funoral Homo with
tho Rov. Emost Thomas officiating. Pallboarors will bo Jim Hibbard. Don Wllbargtr,
Davo Zorlan. Chuck Braackloln. P.C.
Yolvorton, Bill Pordrtaux. Informant with
Masonic gravosldo rltos will bo In Evorgroon
Comotory. Frlonds may call at Gramkow
Funoral Homo Friday 34 and 4* p m .
Arrangements by Gramkow Funoral Homo,
Sanford.
TIL L IS , JOSEPH
— Funoral servlets for Joseph Silas Tlllls,
•5. of Sanford, who died Wodmosday will bo
hold 3 p.m. Friday al tho Gramkow Chapel
with tho Rov. Dr. Frsddlo Smith officiating.
Interment will bo mad* In Oaklawn Momorl al Park. Frlonds may call at Gramkow
Funoral Homo Chapel tonight (Thursday)
from 4 • p.m. Mr. Tlllls Is survived by two
sons. C. Duane Tlllls. Joseph W. Tlllls,
brothers Homor and Claronc* Tlllls; slstor
Mary Donaldson, as wall as grandchildren.
Larry Tlllls. Jo* Tlllls. Charles Tlllls. Carol
Ann Grlnor, Gall Tlllls. Patricia Sessions,
and Kathi* Pool*, fourteen grandchildren,
and one great great granddaughter. A r­
rangements by Gramkow Funoral Homo,
Sanford.
H A R V EY . C E LE S TE
— Graveside funeral services for Mrs.
Caleste S. Harvey. *7, of Sanford, who died
Wednesday will b* held 11 a m. Friday at
Oaklawn Memorial Park with the Rov. Leo
King officiating. Mrs Harvey Is survived by
a son. Leslie, two granddaughters. Paula
Krueger and Laura Harvey, as well as a
great grandson. For those who wish, memo­
rial contributions are suggested to a charity
of one's own choice Arrangements by
Gramkow Funeral Home. Santord
TA Y LO R . ZELM A F.
Funeral services will be at 3 p m. Friday at
Brlsson Guardian Funeral Home with the
Rev Albert Friedman officiating. Interment
will be In the Evergreen Cemetery. Viewing
will be from 3 pm . until • p m Thursday.
Brlsson Guardian Funeral Home In charge ot
arrangements.

I D IR EC T C R E M A T IO N S 395 I

O A K LA W N
FU N ER A L HOM E
CtM fm

322-4203

7r*t *r«»»/«

Bat. 1004

7*4 —It humt! Htmt. CtmUTf U mimtlt Cornell

�r

r r r f

r f *

r r r » *" i r • ' T r r » » r r f

f f r r r

r r f f r r

T f r ^ f r r r

PEOPLE

iMtori MsraM, UaBerd, PL

TlMsrtdar, Jaa. U, 1W7- 1B

Private's Fancy Concern To ©fficer

B rie fly

DBAS

ABIGAIL

VAN

BUREN: This is in reference to
the letter from "Private Person."
who described himself as a slim,
trim. 26-year-old. happily mar­
ried man who is now serving in
the U.S. Army. His problem was
t h a t he e n jo y e d w e a r in g
w o m e n ’ s u n d e r w e a r . Y ou
advised the private to keep the
matter private.
T o enlighten yourself regard­
ing the military and what it can
do for those who find themselves
burdened with a desire to wear
women's underwear, you should
call the military's Installation
h o s p ita l and speak to the
psychiatrist about the medical
and psychiatric assistance that
this man is entitled to gratis.
But now that you have already
advised the soldier to keep his
problem hidden, perhaps you
should learn what might happen
to such soldiers if they continue
to hide such aberrations. Then
your advice to others in similar
circumstances might change, as
It should. In order to be correct.

G irl Scouts Taking Ordors
ForCooklos Through Jan. 1$
Girl Scouts In the Central Florida area will be taking orders
for Girl Scout cookies through Jan. 18.
According to Doris-Bacon Elsea. there are seven varieties of
cookies available including Hoedowns. Golden Yangles.
Scot-Teas, the traditional Thin Mints. Savannahs and, in honor
o f the 75th anniversary o f Girl Scouts in the U.S.A.. Classic
Cremes and Jubilees.,
Selling price is $2.00 per box to be collected when you
receive your cookies after Feb. 20.
Scouts use the profits earned by their troop during the cookie
sale for camping trips, equipment and other troop program
activities. Profits earned by the council provide funds for
m aintaining and Im proving camp properties, financial
assistance for girls and other council operations.

Ohioans To M oot For Picnic
The 39th annual picnic of Ashtabula County. Ohio, will be
held Tuesday. Feb. 10. at the civic center auditorium. North
Bay Street. Pendelton Park. Eustls. Registration starts at 10
a.m.
A covered dish lunch will be served at noon. Those planning
to attend are asked to bring table service, their own coffee or
tea and food to be shared. Donation Is $1.00.
For Information, contact Roger and Bonnie Olds. 208 Aspen
Circle. Leesburg. 32748. or phone 904-787-3276.

JAY If. HAMILTON
LIEUTENANT COLONEL.
U.8. ARMY (BET.).
GRANT’S PA M . ONE.

Spokos Sot Luncheon-Meeting
Seminole Spokes of Welcome Wagon will meet for the first
luncheon o f the new year on Jan. 21. at Quality Inn North,
Longwood. Bridge will begin at 9 a.m. followed by a buffet
luncheon at noon. A program on "Self-Improvement through
Hypnosis” will be presented.
For reservations, call Ann Brooks. 682-1925. or Annabell
Hetzel. 321-3874.

D E A R A B B Y : " P r iv a te
Person" wrote to you about
b e in g In the Arm y — and
wanting to wear women's un­
dergarments. You advised him
that the two Just wouldn't fit
together.
When I was with the Navy
SEAL Team in Vietnam, we ALL
wore panty hose. We were out In
the muck of the swamps and
Jungle for days on end, and the
nylon really cut down on the
friction, which could otherwise
rub us raw. An added plus was
that removal of the panty hose
also rem oved m any o f the
leeches that Invariably clung to
us — sometimes more than 100
per man!
It was always an amazing
sight before every mission to see

Student Nam ed To 'Who's Who1
Tracey Kerbs o f Oviedo is among the 46 students at West
Georgia College. Carrollton, listed In the 1987 edition of Who's

Who Among Students tn American Universities and Colleges.
Outstanding students have been honored In the annual
directory since it was first published In 1934.

TV A rtist To G ive Free Demo
Television Artist Lynne Plttard will give a free demonstra­
tion on Friday. Jan 16. at 4.30 p.m.. at ART-TERIORS. 711 S.
County Road 427. Longwood. For Information, call 339-3192.

tiling that requires "cunning.",
unless, o f course, it creates
marital o f martial problems.

Dear
Abby
01
Navy commandos all camou­
flaged and painted green and
black, struggling to get their
hairy muscular bodies Into the
panty hose. But it workedl Sign
m e...

EX-PANTY HOSE WEAKER
AND DAMNED OLAD OP IT
P.S. Many o f our wives and
girlfriends reported embarrass­
ing moments when shopping in
San Diego stores for dozens of
size X L and X X L panty hose.
(W e didn’t have the nerve to go
buy them ourselves.)
.

JERRY J. FLETCHER,
LA JOLLA, CALIF.
DEAR JERRYt The things I
learn while writing this column!
You N avy com m andos wore
p a n ty hose o p e n ly , out o f
necessity, but the aforemen­
tio n e d A r m y p r iv a te w o re
w o m e n 's lin g e rie for kicks,
which Is quite another matter.
Cross dressing Is nothing new:
it's been with us for centuries.
It's a compulsion — not some-

rt What do you
say to a person who calls you on
the telephone while she Is eating
an apple, potato chips or hard
candy? The sound o f her chew­
ing and chomping grates on my
nerves! Also It's hard for me to
understand her when she talks
while she's eating.

W . V A . HILLBILLY
DEAR H I L L B I L L Y ) S a y:
"Goodbye. Call m e back when
you’ve finished eating."
DEAR ABBYt I don't care
what your survey showed, men
do prefer blondes. I am a natural
brunette, now 30 years old.
attractive, with a very nice
figure. I attended a large high
school and sat on the sidelines
w h ile’ the blondes got all the
prize dates.
When I got ou t in to the
working world. I noticed that
more heads turned when a
blonde walked by. so guess what
I did? I went blond!
It was a drastic change! I
worked as a teller at a bank at
that time and was very visible. I
had been in that position for five
years as a brunette, but I didn’t

get nearly the attention. As a
blonde. I've been stopped on the
street. In stores, at the movies, at
church and In bars by men .who
wanted to make conversation
with me. I was beating them ofT
with sticks! Customers at work
told me that they had never
noticed me before. Some of m y
family didn't care for m y blond
hair. But almost everyone else
did.
Well, my family and a few
girlfriends talked me into going
back to my natural color. I kept
it that way for about three
months, then I realized I was no
longer very "special" looking, so
last Saturday I went back to
being a blonde.
If you can't beat 'em — Join
'em! '

OOLDILOCK8 IN SARASOTA

OLDEN CHILD cop-

*5OFF
Catch that special smile
at this special Kmart Price.

2 -8x10s
3 -5x7s

t

I? X

NOWONLY

k

15wallets

¥

plus 95&lt; titling h o

TONIGHT'S TV
- Itm

u bsm y

1m |

EVENING

8:00
■ ® d ) 0 ® O NEWS
0 (1 1 ) OJMME A BKEAKI
&lt;9 (10) MACNEll / LEHRER
NEW8H0U*
0 (I)

k n ig h t r io er

6:05

that smuggled liquor during Prohihstton
a IW
rMW
0W
fm$wl
cacha VI
of
M
iURRr ckkn •
NRRI WMW
loot as their*
..
( S O T W COLBYB Jason and
Francesca are stalked by a sniper.

6:30
O CSS NEWS
O ABC NEWS Q
'
0 (i i) t o o c l o m for c o m ­
f o r t Murtaf moves out whan aha
and Henry disagree ovar Sara's
new (Oh

S

6:35
32 ANDY GRIFFITH

7:00
0 (3) NEWLYWED GAME
CD O PM MAGAZINE SNrley MacLama. psychtc Kavtn Ryarton

( 7 ) 0 JEOPARDY
(11) BARNEY MILLER
(10) NATURE A study ol man s
rslationshtp wtth tha Arctic and its
talldMa (Part 3 ol 3) In starao. (R )g
0 (8) MOVIE "Grayfrtars Bobby"
(1M1) (Pari 2 ol 2) Donald Crisp.
Lauranca Naismlth A Sky* larrtar's
atarnal davotton to Its mastar frustralaa but ultimataty tains ovar tha
laadars and popuiaca ol 1340’s Ed­
inburgh Basad on a trua story A
Wonderful World ol Oisnay" prasantallon.

8

7:05
32 8ANFOROANOSON

7:30

0 (D

NIGHT COURT Mac leaves
Quon La after becoming depressed
ovar their financial problems.

0 QD L A .

CD O DATING GAME
(7) O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
0 (1 1 ) BENSON

7:35
32 HONEYMOONERS

8:00
0 QD COSBY SHOW Clift's par­
ents invite Rudy to spend tha night
at their house. In starao. g
CD O SHELL GAME Jennie and
John's involvement with tha recipi­
ent of a parking tickat loads them
into an investigation ol an unsolved
murder
(7) O OUR WORLD g

1040

LAW Markowtu sus­
pects Kelsey of having an affair wtth
an aircraft executive in stereo.
(D 0 KNOTS LANOtNQ Paige re­
fuses to wait lor Anne's arrival and
hides In Peter's apartment: to
Abby's relief. Olivia loins Gary at a
meeting for aicohoacs g
f f l O » / 20 g
0 (1 1 ) INN NEWS
0 (10) IN REMEMBRANCE OF
MARTIN Former President Jimmy
Carter. Bdl Cosby and the Rev
Jesse Jackson are among those
seen m this tnbute to the Rev. Mar­
tin Luther King Jr. Included are ar­
chival footage and highlights from
memorial ceremonies held In 1983
0 ( 3 ) MARY TYLER MOORE

Randolph Scott. David Brian. A
gunslinger-turned-newspaperman
finds that his prowess with a sixshooter is sbN more effective than
words m dealing with lawless ete-

10:30
0 (1 1 ) BOS NEWHART
(2 (3) CAROL BURNETT
FR1ENOS

S

11:00

QGDOGDON ews

(11) LATE SHOW Host: Joan
Rivers Scheduled actor Pat Mort­
is. in stereo.
(K » DAVE ALLEN AT LARGE
(I) BARGAINS TONIGHT

S

11:30

0

(D TONIGHT SHOW Host:
Johnny Carson. Scheduled: ac­
tresses Ros Ryan and Lauren Ba­
ca* In stereo

»

M’A*S‘H
MQHTUNEg

(10) WHO AMERICA Studying
8
two ducks native to North America
tha marked wood duck (also called
a "woody") and tha hooded mer­
ganser (or "hoody") g
£D (3) MOVIE Escape From Iran:
Tha Canadian Caper" |t33t) Gor­
don Pmsent. Cvis Wiggins The
trua story of su Americans whu
eluded tha militant takeover of the
U S. Embassy In Tehran and were
given refuge by the Canadian Am­
bassador. who successfully engi­
neered thaw escape from the coun­
try

CD 0 NIGHT HEAT O’Brien and
Giambone Investigate the seamier
side of the fashion industry (Post­
poned from an earlier data.)
CD O NIGHTLIFE Host David
Brenner. Scheduled: actor Ian
McKeOen (In Broadway play "Wiki
Honey”) In stereo
0 (11) ASK OR. RUTH Topic fami­
ly reiationshipa Guests Dick Van
Pattsn and tam*y
O (3) NIOMT OWL FUN

12:00

8:05
32 MOVIE "Coogan'a Bluff' (1933)
cum Eastwood. Lee J. Cobb. When
an Aiuons deputy arrives In New
York to capture an escaped mur­
derer. he rakes upon lus back-home
strategy and methods.

8:30
O QD FAMILY TIES Rob's wife
pays a surprise visit to the Keaton
home to confront her husband
(Part 2 of 2) m stereo, g
0 (10) THIS OLO HOUSE Work Is
begun on the kitchen's custom cab­
inets. an antique home's ofd-fashtoned cabmen, piastermg g

'

9:00

O (D CHEERS To save tus friend
money. Norm helps Sam obtwn a
copy of the expensive engagement
ring that Diane chose In sMrao Q
CD O SIMON 3 SIMON A gang

12:30
O ® LATE NIOMT WITH DAVID
LETTERMAN Scheduled: comic ac­
tor Richard Pryor. In stereo
QDO MOVIE "The Ghost And Mrs.
Muir'' (1947) Gene Tierney. Rex
Harrison
0 (11) HAWAI FIVE-0

32

12:50

•Oays Of Wine And
Roses" (1933) Jack Lemmon. Lee
Rermck.

0 M O H TW A TC H
(11) IK J VALLEY
(3) NIGHT OWL FUN

i

3:20
32 MOVIE "Macao" (1952) Robert

(2) Q MOVIE "The Last Survivors"
11975) Martin Sheen. Diane Baker.

1:30
0

(11) BIZARRE Sketches inter­
preting tor the naked: cemetery
apartment. Super Dave in a magnet
itunt. John Byner as Marv Griffin.

2:00

FAME FORTUNE S ROH

11) ALICE
K » A CHANCE TO LEARN

4:00
(D O MOVIE "West 11" (1933) Al­
fred Lynch, krtc Portman

4:50
32 WORLD AT LARGE

(*)
AFTERNOON

1240

0 (1 1 ) DALLAS

4:10

Advertisedpackage
ed pack _ .poses our soltction. Only SI titling
_ fee
•ach additional
oddif
for eoch
subject in tome portrait. Not valid with
any
offer. One odvertited .poci ogeper subject,
or
. other offo
.
group
_
3up potod fitogether.
We welcome children of all ages.
adults and groups.

O N E W EEK O N LY!

11:30
•® i
® oi
• in)

Mitchum, Jane Russell.

0 ( 3 ) ( £ 0 ( 7 ) 0 new s
0 (1 1 ) BEWITCHED
®(10)1"18
0 (I) MID-DAY BARGAINS

THURSDAY, JANUARY 15 thru MONDAY, JANUARY 19
DAILY: 10 AM • 7 PM
SUNDAY 12 NOON - 5 PM
ORLANDO DRIVE, SANFORD

1245
32 PERRY MASON

12:30
M0RMNG

5.-00
I (11) CNN NEWS
9BEVERLY HILLBIUJES

5*30
( ® r 8 COUNTRY
M U) CNN NEWS
) ANDY QfBFFTTH

5.-00

0 ( 3 ) WOROPLAY
(2) 0 YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS
GD O LOVING
0 (11) BEVERLY HtLLBtLUES

THE PORTRAIT PLACE

140
0(3) DAYS OF OUR LIVES
( 7 ) 0 ALL MY CHILDREN
•
0 (1 1 )D IC X VAN DYKE
0 (10) WE'RE COOKING NOW

G O IN G O U T
O F BU SIN ESS

1:05
32 MOVIE

1:30
) ® NEC NEWS
O AS THE WORLD TURNS
) 0 BALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
(II)QOM ERPYIE
0 EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
(10) FLORfOA HOME OROWN
I (11) GOOD DAY1
9CNN NEWS
240
1 (S) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A 0 ® ANOTHER WORLD
SAVINGS
® Q ONE LIFE TO UVE
0 (1 1 ) AN0Y GRIFFITH
6:30
0 (10) PAJNTMQ CERAMICS

I

C M MORNING NEWS
(11) CENTURIONS
TOM 4 JERRY ANO FRIENOE

i

6:46
740

32 WOMANWATCH

to d a y

S _11)G.LJ0«
i OOOO MORNING AMERICA
S ISW) FARM DAY

7:15

0 (1 0 ) A J* WEATHER

7:30

1

ENTIRE STOCK

S

2:35
3:00
• ® )(SANTA IARSARA

® o &lt;|GUtOtHG LIGHT
m
m oo &lt;GENERAL HOSPITAL
0(11)8COOEYOOO
0 (fO) MISTER ROQERS(R)
O (8) MIOOAY BARGAINS

0M ORNM O PROGRAM
345
111) tr a n s f o r m e r s
32 TOM B JERRY ANO FRIENDS
(10)
SESAME STREET (R)g

3*30

840
0 (11) DENNIS THE MENACE
845

0 (11) SMURFS'ADVENTURES
0 (10) SESAME STREET |R) g

630
0 (1 1 ) FUNT9T ONES
0 (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

® MAGNUM. P.L
O GIFT RENT STROKES
Q JEOPAROY
(ll)THUNOERCATSg
0 (S) AMERICA'S BIGOEST BAR­
GAINS

3 2 1DREAM OF JCANNIE

635
32 BEWITCHED

940

) ® THE JUOQ3
) Q DONAHUE
) 0 OPRAH WINFREY
(11) G R B N ACRES
)(10) SESAME STREET (R)g
I (8) SHOP-AT-HOME ANO *AVE

945
O DOWN TO EARTH

9:30

8

EVERYTHING MUST GO!

2:30
OCAP1TOL
(11) MY LITTLE PONY N*
FRIENDS
0 (1 0 ) SECRET CITY

(10) A.M. WEATHER

® LOVE CONNECTION
(11) PETTICOAT JUNCTION

9:35

3 2 1LOVE LUCY

m o v ie

1:10

*

3:00

11:50

32 WORLD OF AUOUSON The

WHEEL OF FORTUNE

MOVIE "Flesh And Blood"
(1951) Richard Todd. Glynia Johns.

10:05

struggles faced by the Florida
panther and the African cheetah as
they attempt to cope with the loss
of natural habitats Narrator Loret­
ta Swtt.

(11) HART TO HART

(D O

32 MOVIE "Fori Worth" (1951)

O ( £ ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Intarvtaw with husband-and-wila
actors Charlas Bronson and JiN Ire­
land

CD 0 NEWS

0 (10) A CHANCE TO LEARN

(Q BEVERLY HtLLBILUES

0 ( 3 ) NBC NEWS

230

0 (11) TRAPPER JOHN, M.0.
9:30

11:00

0 (1 1 ) DUKES OF HAZZARO

t

1040
9 ® SALE OF THE CENTURY
) o HOUR MAGAZINE
) Q TRUE CONFESSIONS
1(11) FALL GUY
I (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (ft)
32 MOVIE

1045

10:30
0 (3) BLOCKBUSTERS

® 0 SUPERIOR COURT
0(10)3-3-1 CONTACT g

440

5

445
32 SCOOSY OOO

4:30

(£ O THREE'S COMPANY
CD O CARO SHARKS
0 (ll)SILVERHAWKS g
0 ( 10)3-3-1 CONTACT g

^

^
^
^
^
r*

SANFORD BODY SHOP ONLY!
ALL NAME BRAND JR. FASHIONS!
INCREDIBLY LOW PRICES!
FABULOUS SELECTIONS!
SANFORD'S BEST BUYS!
PERMIT ft 022404-8

4:35
O FUNTSTONES

5:00
0 ® DIVORCE COURT
( 4) Q

m *A*S*H

(7) O HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
0(11) FACTS OF UFE
0 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
0 ( 8 ) RAMBO

545
32 OU.UQAN'S ISLAN0

5:30

PEOPLE S COURT
_ ( D O NEWS
(11) JEFFERSONS
0 (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
0 (I) I DREAM OF JEANNIE

5:35
(U SAFE AT HOME

V IS A

M A STER C A R D

A M E R IC A N EX P R ES S

SANFORD PLAZA STORE ONLY!

�'I 1 ^

^

\

, F I.

IN T N I C IR C U IT C O U R T
F O G T N B E IG H T E E N T H
J U W C 5 A L C IR C U IT
O R n O R l t t k , IN A N D T O R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
C A IIN O .IM 1 M
G E N E R A L J U R IS D IC T IO N
D IV IS IO N
U N IT R D V IR O IN IA
M O R T O A O f C O R P O R A T IO N ,
P L A IN T IF F .
P IT C H 0 . W AONER,
**--------------" A N U N K N O W N
T IN A N T S jS ), L A K I O P T H i
W O OO S H O M E O W N E R S
A S S O C IA T IO N . IN C , L U L A R.
W O O O A R D P/K/A L E I L A R .
• A R R O N . A G G R E S S IV E
A P P L IA N C E S A N D P IN E
P U R N IT U R C . L IN D A R .
W IL L IA M S O N , J IM M Y R .
T A Y L O R . D. J A D E T A Y L O R .
A N G E L O H A L K IS a n *
B A R B A R A H A L K IS . H it Wlto.
D E N N IS L .S A L V A O IO ,
E L L I N S. K R IC G E R . L A R R Y
E . K R IE G E R . L E O N A R D O
R IV E R A . J R .. J A S M IN A M .
R IV E R A .
D E P EN D A N TS.
N O T IC E O P 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 T Y
T O : L A R R Y I . K R U G E R ANO
E L L E N S . K R IE G E R
R ttM m c a Unknown, If living.
Including any unknown spouse
of tho w M DoNndonft, If oltfwr
hoc rem arried and If olttwr or
both of said Dofondwnft ora
Rood, fholr respective unknown
h t l r t , d o v lt o o t , g r o n t o t t .
OM lgnooa. creditors, Honor*,
and fruafoot, and oil othor
claiming by, through.
and

th o

a n t ( t ) a n d o u c h o l th o
oforomontfonod unknown Dofo n d a n t* a n d su ch o f tho
aforementioned unknown De­
fendant* a* m ay b* Infant*,
*ul|url*.
Y O U A R E H E R E B Y
N O T I F I E D that an action ho*
boon ccm moncod to toroc looo a
mortgage on tho following rael
property, lying and being and
situated In Seminole County,
Florida, more particularly doicrlb od a t fellow*:
L O T If . L A K E O P T H E
W O O O S TO W N H O U S E S SE C ­
T IO N O N E . A C C O R D IN G T O
T H E P L A T T H E R E O P . AS
R E C O R O C D IN P L A T BOOK
IV, P A G E SO, P U B L IC R E ­
C O R D S O P S E M IN O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A ,
mora commonly known a* i n
E A S T W IN D L A N E , P E R N
P A R K . F L O R ID A 31730.
Th l* action ha* boon filed
again*! you and you aro re­
quired to oarve a copy of your
written dofonoe. If any, to It on
S H A P IR O , R O SE A F IS H M A N .
Attorney*, whoso addrat* Is MO
North Roo Street, Suite m
Tam pa, F lor Ido SMdt-IOlJ. on or
before February tl. 1fS7, and
file tho original with the Clark of
thl* Court either before service
on Plaintiff* attorney or Imme­
diately thereafter; otherwise a
default will be entered against
you for the relief demanded In
tho Complaint.
W IT N E S S m y hand and teal
of this Court on the 12th day of
January, 1107.
{C O U R T S E A L )
D a vId N . Berrien. C L E R K
Circuit and County Courts
B Y r Susan E . Tabor
Deputy Clerk
Florida Bar n s i !22
•*-1949
Publish January IJ, 22, 29 A
February S, 1N7
DEKS9

S A TISFIED
P EO P LE
maka classified
advertising work.
Why don* you try
the dassdhds!

S a n fo rd
H e r a ld
CALL
322-2611

i

N O T IC E U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
NAM E STA TU TE
T O W HOM IT M A V CO N CER N :
Notice I* hereby given that the
undersigned pursuant to the
" F ic t it io u s nam e -S ta tu te " ,
Chapter e*3.09, Florida Statutes,
w ill register wtlh the Clerk of
tho Circuit Court, In and for
Sem inole County, Florida upon
receipt of proof of the publica­
tion of this nolle*. Ihe fictitious
R O M A IT A L IA N B A K E R Y ,
IN C .. M l State Road 4M East,
Longwood, Florida227JP.
T k ^ l i a a ■ o ■ S lo e 1 - * ------ « - « |_
i nor mo
hiivi is iiy m

•old business antorprlso are as
P H O E N IX DR A G O N , INC.
D ated at Sanford, Seminole
County, Florida, Docombor 22,
HO*.
Publish January IV t t I f A
February S. 1*07
D E J -IM
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
F O R S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y ,
F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IVISIO N
PH* Number SANS-CP
IN R E : E S T A T E OF
H E L E N J. R O G E R S
Docoeied
N O T IC E OP
A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
T h o adm inistration of the
estate of Helen J. Rogers, de­
n o te d . File Number M-91S-CP,
Is ponding In the Circuit Court
for Seminole County, Florida,
Probate Division, the address of
w h ic h Is S em ino le C o u n ty
Courthouse, Sanford, Florida
1277) The name and address of
the personal representative and
of the personal representative's
attorney ore oof forth below.
A L L C LA IM S AN D O B J E C
T IO N S N O T SO F IL E D W IL L
B E FO R EV ER BARRED.
A ll Interested persons aro
required to file with Ihe court
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 O F
T H IS N O T IC E : ( I ) all claims
against tho estate and (2) any
ob|*cllon b y an Intarosted
person to whom notice was
mailed that challenges the valid­
ity of the will, tho qualification*
of the personal representative,
venue or jurisdiction of Ihe
court*
Date of tho first publication of
this notice of oomlnlstraflon:
January I . is*7
Rodney Allen Rogers
Personal Representative
Attorney for
Personal Representative:
Charles J . Collins, Jr.
410 Bradshaw Building
P .O . Box 151 Orlando, Florida 12S01
Telephone: (305)143 5932
Publish: January I , IJ, 1*07
D EK-39
________
I N T H E C IR C U IT
CO U R T OP TH E U T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT IN
A N D F O R S E M IN O LE
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
CASE NO. 0S-2SMN P
D U V A L F E D E R A L SAVINGS
A N D LO A N A SSO C IA TIO N ,
Plaintiff,
v*.
J A Y T . G ILS O N , SR.; of Ol.
. Defendants.
N O T IC E O F SALE
P U R S U A N T T O C H A P T E R «S
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
pursuant to an Order or Pinal
Judgment of foreclosure dated
January *, 1*07, and entered In
Case No. *4 2*30 0* P of the
Circuit Court of the Eighteenth
Ju d ic ia l C irc u it In and for
S o m ln o le C o u n ty , F lo r id a
w h erein D U V A L F E D E R A L
S A V IN G S AND LOAN
A S S O C IA T IO N plaintiff, and
J A Y T . G ILS O N , SR.; al al. are
defendants, I will sail to the
highest and bast bidder for cash
ot tho west front door of tho
Seminole County Courthouse In
S a n fo rd , Som lnole C o u n ty ,
Florida at 11:00 o'clock A .M . on
the 12th day of February, IM7,
the following described property
as sat forth In sold Order or
Final Judgment, to-wlt:
Lot 4 and the East vsol Lot 5,
B lo c k B, L A K E W A Y M A N
H E IG H T S . L A K E A D O IT IO N ,
according to the Plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book 4, Pago
21, Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida.
Together will oil structures
and Improvements now and
haraofter on sold land, and
fixtures attached thereto, and
oil rents, Issue*, proceeds, end
profit* accruing and to accrue
Irom said premises, all of which
are Included within tha lorego­
i n g d e s c r i p t i o n o n d th o
habendum thereof; also all gas.
steam , electric, water, and
o th e r heating, cooking, r e ­
frigerating. lighting, plumbing,
v e n tila tin g , Irrig a tin g , and
power systems machines, appli­
a n c e s . f i x t u r e s , and a p ­
purtenances, which now are or
m ay haraattar pertain lo. or ba
used with, In, or on said pre­
mises, even though they bo
detached or detachable.
Dated at Sanford. Florida, this
tlth day of January. ISS7.
(S E A L )
David N. Berrien
C L E R K , C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y Cecelia V E ke rn
D E P U TY C LER K
Publish; January IJ, 22.1*17
D E K -J I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Cetaftrlfy Cipher cryptograms are creeled tram quotations by famous
OeopW. past and present
Each Isttar m tha cedar stands lo*
another TotU, i ciua S squats V
by CONNIE WIENER

“Q

IQUZ

PZQU

NCBVPHM

JU

OBNZ

JPPYVPGCV

WJ 8Y
PC

ACYPHM

JU

PC

DCW WOV W."

QP
—

KC YU
PYUU

N O T IC E O P A
P U B L IC H E A R IN D
T O C O N S ID E R T H E
A D O P T IO N O P A N
O R D IN A N C E B Y T H I
C I T Y O P S A N F O R D ,.
F L O R ID A
Notlca Is hereby given Hist a
Public Hearing w ill b t hold In
tha Commission Room at tha
C ity Hall In Its* C ity of Sanford.
Florida, at 7 :M o’clock P .M . on
Jan u ary M , 1M7. to conoMor tha
of on ordinance by the
C ity of Sanford. Florida, title of
which Iso* follows:
O R D IN A N C E M X IMS
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
C I T Y O F S A N F O R D .
F L O R ID A . C LO SIN G .
V A C A T IN G A N D A B A N D O N ­
IN G A P O R T IO N O F F I F T H
S T R E E T L Y IN G B E TW E E N
P E R S IM M O N A V E N U E A N D
P O M E G R A N IT E A V E N U E
LYING BETW EEN THE
S E A B O A R D C O A S T L IN E
R A IL R O A D R IG H T -O F -W A Y
AND TH E S O U TH W ES T
CORNER O F T H E A L L E Y B E­
T W E E N W E S T 4TH S T R E E T
AN O W E S T STH S T R E E T .
R E S E R V IN G A U T I L I T Y
E A S E M E N T ; P R O V ID IN G
FO R S E V E R A B IL IT Y , CON
F L IC T S A N D E F F E C T IV E
D ATE.
A copy shall bo avalloba at ttw
Office of Ihe C ity Clerk for ell
persons desiring to examine ttw
A ll perlles In Interest and
cl I Isons shell have on opportuni­
ty to bo hoard ot sold hearing.
By order ot the City Com ­
mission ot tho C ity of Sanford,
Florida.
A D V IC E T O T H E P U B L IC : If
a person deckles to appeal e
decision mode with respect to
any matter considered at the
above meeting or hearing, he
may need a verbatim record ot
tha proceedings. Including the
testimony and evidence, which
record I* not provided by the
City ol Sanford. (F S 2*4.0)05)
H . N. Ta m m , J r .
City Clerk
Publish: January IJ, Its?
D E K -J t
I N T H E C IR C U IT
C O U R T S IM IN O L E
C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
C A S E N O : 14-244* CA-09-E
LI BE R TY F E D E R A L
SA V IN G S 4 L O A N ASSO C IA­
T IO N ,
Plaintiff,
vs.
W O O D L E Y B U IL D E R S , IN C .,
etal.,
Defendant.
A M E N O E D 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 on Amended
final judgment detod Docombor
31, 1*1*, In C a se N u m b e r
•4-2*4*-CA-Of-E of tho Circuit
Court ot tho Eighteenth Judicial
District In and tor Seminole
County, Florida, In which L I B ­
E R T Y F E D E R A L SAV IN G S 4
LO A N A S S O C IA TIO N era tho
P la in tif f s , a n d W O O D L E Y
B U IL D E R S , IN C ., ot al, ore tho
Defendants, I will sell to the
highest and bast bidder tor cash
at the West Front Door of the
Somlnole County Courthouse, In
Sanford Florida, at 11:00 a .m „
on January 2*. 1*07, tho follow­
ing described property set forth
In tho final judgment:
The Soutn I leal of Lot 10 an
Lot 11 lest the Southerly I tael,
P A L M P A R K , according to the
plat thereof as recorded m Plat
Book It, Page 4, Public Records
of Seminole County, Florida.
Lot 33, P A L M P A R K , a c­
cording to tho plat thereof as
recorded In Piet Book It, Page
4, Public Records ol Seminole
County, Florida.
D A T E D this lis t day of Oocember, 1*0*.
(S E A L )
D A V IO N . B E R R IE N
C LER K O FTH E
C IR C U IT C O U R T
B Y : Phyllis Forsyttw
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January IS, 22 1M7
DEK-72

I N 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
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. l*-*4l2-CA-0t-P
T H E H O W A R D SAV IN G S
BA N K ,

Plaintiff,
v*.
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 wife
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 , INC.,
a corporation,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F F O R E C L O S U R E
SALE BY CLER K
O F C IR C U IT C O U R T
Notlca It horoby given that ttw
undersigned D A V ID N. B E R
R IE N Clerk ol the Circuit Court
ol S E M IN O L E County, Florida,
will, on ttw 2nd day ol February,
1*07, at 11:00 A M ., at the west
front door ol ttw S E M IN O L E
County Courthouse, In the City
ot S A N F O R D , Florida, otffer for
tale and sail at public outcry to
ttw hlgheit and bast bidder tor
cash, Ihe following described
property situated In S E M IN O L E
County, Florida, to-wlt:
Lot I and ttw West 30 (set of
Lot 2. Block “ F ” , Ridge High
First Addition, according to the
plat ttwreof a t recorded In Plat
Book U , Pago *5, In ttw Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
pursuant to the final decree of
foreclosure entered In a cat#
pending in said Court, ttw style
of which Is: T H E H O W A R O
SAV IN G S B A N K vs. C H A R L E S
D. N O L A N ,e lu x .e ta l
W IT N E S S m y hand and of­
ficial m s I of said Court this *th
day ol January, 1M7.

(SEAL)
D A V IO N . B E R R IE N ,

WJRRJWZYH.

Clerk

PREVIOUS S O LU TIO N : "Foma la a va p o r,... riches taka
wing. Only one thing endures, and that Is character.” —
Horae# Qroatay.

B y ; Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publ Ish January IS. 22, lfS7
OEK-47

BLOOM COU N T Y
R

M m tuw em rtp
m c m pom, wt r
m za r pc u s

wry.

iH M toiotn a sr
Mr 6copfw to ow e
tN K K K tto

OM&amp;rris
COPTVKfY.
V

FH. UmOWMLRX
canm ourw xeM e
1 SHALL RETJM
SVUY.

v(

CLASSIFIED ADS
S«minol«
332-2611

7M 0

m . soeMoSO

TVfttL/

ifo fm iN O

SMU.P.-UH,
HAPP£N~
iu s e e to / IKN0U.
ru m
vw .

HEAVY KOUIP. OPERATOR**

Orlando •Winter Park
831-9993

Exp. only. 1-933-7041

1-90-74*7......*r......1-933-7SSI
H O U S E K E E P E R . Llvo-ln or
llveeut. Child care. * day*.
. . . C a l1:323-3229

C L A S S IF IE D D E P T .

RA TES

J

HOURS

..........

7 2 C ■ fesa

j

fc M M L

N C

i

I

n

H C

i

I

m

SBC a Rm

IB
t A T V R B A V • •Nb b b

SUMS

DEADLINES
Noon Th« Day Before Publication
Sunday • Noon Friday
Monday - 9:00 A .M . Saturday

I M M E D I A T E O P R H IH O tor
ot0. Medical Assistant/ Recep t ten 1st. Physician's ofc.
shills, 4 In­
s u r a n t knowledge required.
Must ba able to function aft)clantly In highly busy ofc.
Mall rosuma to Box 2*3. c/o
Sanford Harald, P .O . Box
1*57, Sanford. F I. 3277).
IN S U R A N C E A O E N C Y In San­
f o rd n a a d s o x p a rlo n c o d
p a rs o n a l linos C u s to m e r
Service Account Rap. Good
typing shills. Paid holiday*,
h a s p Tta llta llo n 4 d o n ta l.
Can........................ .305-322 57*2

N O T E . In the event of the publishing of e rro rs In advertisem ents, th e Ja n
to re H arald shall publish ttw advertisem ent, after It h a t been c o rre cte d et
no cost to the advertiser but tech Insertions shall n u m b e r no m ere than one

IR R I G A T I O N IN S T A L L E R S :
Shlltod 4 unskilled. -Chauf
fe u re tllc a m a a p lu e -Ja -M io

ID .

L A N D S C A P E R S 4 lawn m ain­
tenance personnel needed.
Exp. 4 driver's license re­
quired. Pay equal to proven
axparlenc*..................322-h 131
M E C H A N IC / W re c h tr D riv e rGas Attendant. Exp. Ptoaoo.
A pply at Butch's Chevron
Service, i l n Calory Ava.
N E E D E X T R A IN C O M E *
RN's. L P N 's 4 C N A 'i needed
tor Flexl-Peel. Excellent sala­
ry and working conditions. A ll
shifts ovallobi*. Call:**#-442*
tor appointment............... E O E

12— Legal Service*

25— SpBclal N o tic tt

S O C IA L S I C U R I T Y Disability
Free AdvIca.NoCharga Unless
We W in I W a rd W h ila 4
...... ,3M-121-111*

F or Details: 1-100-433 4234

BfCOME A NOTARY
^Ftorjda^totar^uoctotlor^
2 7 -N u rs c ry A
Child Cara

21— Personals
A L L A L O N E ? Call Bringing
People Together. Sanford's
most respected dating service
since 1*77. Men over JO (* j%
discount).............H O P *224477

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
A S O B TIO M C O U N S EL IN G
F R E E Pregnancy Tests. Con­
fidential, Individual
assistance. Call far appt. Eve.
Hrs Available.............3217**1.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
BERNADETTE
HOW OLD?!!!?
I W IL L N O T be responsible tor
any debts Incurred by anyone
o th e r th e n m ysa ll e t of
l/tl/17. Theron Tyrone Corbin

MASTEKAID/VISA!
N o credit check. A lto, new
credit card. No one refuted1
For Into, call (refundable)
1U S -732*0*3 axt.M 27*

B A B Y S IT T IN G In m y Sanford
homo. M o n .-F rl. 1 y rs . or
older. Retorencas....... .3210013
C H IL D C A R E . M y hom o, all
•go*. C P R c e r t if i e d .
...... ........322 *4*7
E F F E C T I V E 3/1* will babysit
tor Infant 4 toddlers In m y
home, full-time only, (only ]
openings) Cell Now. 331-4243
a l t e r .............................................. 3 :3 0

R E S P O N S IB L E M OM . T .L .C .,
hot meals, ftaxlbi* hrs, reasonable rates, Rats..... .3213*23

43—Mortgages
Bought A Sold
W K B U Y 1 s t a n d 3 nd
M O R T G A G E S Nation wide.
C a ll: Ray L tg g L ie . M tg
B ro ka r, f40 Douglas A ve .,
Altamonte....................774-7751

7T— Help Wanted

Legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T
OF T H E H TH
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 TY ,
F L O R ID A
O E N R R A L JU R IS D IC TIO N
D IVISIO N
CASE NO. M-*7t7-CA-**-P
C IT IZ E N S F E D E R A L
SAVINGS A N D L O A N
A S S O C IA TIO N , a corporation
organlied and existing under the
laws el tha United States of
Am erica,
Plaintiff.
vs.
JO A N G R U B E R a/k/a JO A N
M . G R U B E R , a single woman;
S P R IN G W O O O V IL L A G E
C O N D O M IN IU M ASSOCIA­
T IO N , IN C .,# Florida non-profit
corporation; 5PRINGW 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.
SP 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 , INC., a Florida corpora­
tion; SPR INGW OOD V IL L A G E
C O N D O M IN IU M ASSOCIA
T IO N O F LONGW OOD, IN C .,a
F lor Ida non-prollt corporation,
Cross-Claimant,
vs.
JO A N G R U B E R a/k/a JO A N
M. G R U B E R , aslngla woman.
Cross-Defendant.
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 te a Final Judgmant of
Foreclosure dated December 10,
1*M, entered In Civil Cate No.
**07*7-CA09-P ol the Circuit
Court of ttw Eighteenth Judicial
C ircu it In and lor Seminole
County, llorlda, 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 LO AN ASSO CIATIO N It
th o P l a i n t i f f e n d J O A N
G R U B E R a/k/a J O A N M .
G R U B E R , a slngla woman;
S P R IN G W O O D V IL L A G E
C O N D O M I N I U M A S S O C IA ­
T IO N , IN C., a Florida non-prelll
co rp o ra tio n ; S P R IN G W O O D
V I L L A G E C O N D O M IN IU M
A S S O C I A T I O N OF
LO N G W O O D , INC., a Florida
non-profit corporation, ere the
Defendants, I will tall to tha
hlghast and best bidder tor cash,
at the West Iron! door ol the
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanford. Florida, at 11:00 a.m.,
on ttw 2tth day of January, Ifl7,
the following described property
as set forth In said F in a l
Judgment, to wit:
Th a t certain condominium
parcel known et Unit No. 10SC
and an undivided 1/2M interest
In the land, common elements
and com m on expenses a p ­
purtenant to said unit, ail In
accordance with and sub|ect to
ttw covenants, conditions, re­
strictions, terms and other pro­
visions ot that Dvclaratlon ol
Condominium ol SPRINGW OOD
V IL L A G E , a Condominium, as
recorded in Official Records
Book 1331, Pag* KM9, Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida.
D A T E D th is f lh d a y ol
January, Itf7.
(C IR C U IT C O U R T S EAL)
O A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clerk of Circuit Court
B y : Phyllis Forsyth*
Deputy Clark
Attorney tor Plaintiff:
Linda L. Beach, Attorney
S T U Z IN A N D C A M N ER , P A .
f4JJ Koger Boulevard
Suite 100, Hendry Building
St. Petersburg, Florida 33702
Publish January 1J, 22.1*17
DEK4*

by B erke Breathed

OFFONMfmStON.
W H W K fM M K s ,

7 1 - H « l p W a n te d

lagal Notice

• - .

* ^ ■* * i

T I rntbOb y * J o b . H » m t

legal Notice'

Legal Nottea

D o f a n d a n t(t);

r

• *•
•* " H, •

Employment
323-5176

N E E D M A T U R E Individuate to
llva-ln with tha aldarly. Long
4 short farm care. Call T L C
H o m t Companions for Intormatlon. 323-1093 or 322 3*11
N E W C O M P A N Y expending In
this area, needing public relatlons people- E .O .E . 322-1195

M W HIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
O p e ra to rs w antsd on a ll
operations. W* offer paid holi­
days. paid vacation, health
care plan, and modern air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rates. W ill train qualified
applicants. Sen-Del
Manufacturing, 224) Old Lake
M ary Rd„ Sanford.....J21-M10
N U N S I A ID E ; All shifts, axperlanced or certified only.
A p p ly L a k e v lo w N u rs in g
Canter, 919 E . 2nd S t, Sanford
N U R S E A ID E I
Cartlllad. Completion of acuta
core N urse Alda tra ining
course or equivalent hospital
a x p a rla n c a . A p p ly W a i t
Volusia Memorial Hospital,
701 W. Plymouth Av*.. Doland, FI._____________________

700 W. 11th St.
A S S IM B L Y / W A R E H O U S E
LABOR ER
P ositions a v a ila b le . S4-SS
hour. Never a fee I

TEMP PERM.

,260-5100

A U T O M O T IV E S A L E S P E R S O N
N E E D E D . A C R experience
preferred. Call Phil Battls

NURSES, BIDES,
COMPANIONS
H A P P Y N E W Y E A R . W t need
you now. New benefits In­
cluding group Insurance and
vacation. Free C EU'S. Dally
pay. Staff 4 private duty.
M E D IC A L P ER S O N N EL PO OL
Call:T40-52S*

Medical a
Personnel
.Pool.

«

323-2123
B A H A M A J O E S Is now accept­
ing applications for all flalds.
Restaurant axparlenc* re ­
quired. Apply In person Mon.
thru Thurs. between 2 4 4 pm.
No phone calls pleas*_________
BOOKKEEPER
T H E S A N F O R O H E R A L D It
currently accepting resume’s
for an experienced bookkeep­
e r to assist Office Manager.
Requirements Include:
•Typing Skills
• Calculator by Touch
• Pleasant Personality
Wa Otter:
• Insurance Plan
• Paid Vacation
• Friendly Atmosphere
•Job Security
It yuu me*, the above require­
ments end would Ilk* to be a
part ol the Sanford Herald,
sand resume' lo:
SANFORD H ER LA D
P.O. B O X 14S7
S A N F O R D , F L . 37772-1457
Attn: Office Manager
CARPENTERS/HELPERSFu ll/o ve r lim e , 1 933 7043.
1-933-70*7........o r ........1-933 70*1
C A S H IE R Full-tim e, Apply In
person: Little Food Tow n, 710
Lake M ary Blvd., Sanford.
E -O .C .________________________
C E M E N T F IN IS H E R S - Start
today. I 931-70*3..or..I 933-7047
o r..................................1-933-70*1
COM PANY N EED S YO UN O
Inexperlsneed 4 willing to
travel Individual for rewardIng sales career. Call 747-8395

CONTRACT LABORERS
E a rn 19 to 113 per hr. Must
*n|oy working outdoors. No
exp. nec. F or lull or pert time
positions in Seminole Co. call
Tam to 9pm.............1)3 4*4-7151
★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

P A IN T E R S - Comm. 4 res. Exp.
only. I 933-7043,1-913-70*7
or.................................1*1170*1
P A R T T I M E , a lta r school
taachars. Chauffeur's license
P A R T T I M E B i n d 0iry .
Longwood print shop. Flaxlbla
hours, will train...........331-4431
P A R T -T IM E A T T E N D A N T /
S A L E S P E R S O N , Ale rt Intelllgent Individual needed lo
look alter amusement center
In Sanlord Plata, nights 4
weekends. IS to 20 hrs! per
week, S3.7J per hr. Must be
mature, neat In appearance 4
bondeble. For appt
321-4*03
PERSON FO R C LE A N IN O 4
light malntalnance, must ba
mature and dependable, rtforrnce s 4 experience r e ­
quired. 14.00 hr to start with
last ralsa for right person.
Call 123-4430 tor an Interview
P L U M B E R / H E L P E R S - C a ll
today. I 933-70*3.1 933-7047
or................................ 1933 70*1
P R O G R A M A S S I S T A N T to
work In direct care/tralning
position with mentally ratarded. Call: 331-7231.________

REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATES
W E A R E LO O K IN G FOR 3
V E R Y S P E C IA L ASSOCIATES
T O JO IN O U R LA K E M A R Y
T E A M O F PROFESSIONALS
W EOFFER :
• Continuous Training
• Non-Competing Managers
• Competitive Commissions
• Free Listing 4 Seles Tools
• Free Signs And Postage
• Toll Free LD Calls
• Newspaper 4 T V Advertising
• Relocation Service
• New Home Salts
a Professional Facilities
a Sanford. Lk. Mary Offices

★

C A L L B E T H H A TH AW AY
Lake M ary Branch Managar
For A Confidential
Interview Today

DAILY N0RK/DAIIY PAY
N E E D M EN 4 W OM EN NOW I

U IM

MILT BOM

^

FORCE

ERASTENSTROM
REALTY, INC. REALTORS
321-2720
322-9551 E m .

DULY Rif

! NO ^ F E E !
Report ready for work at * A M 407 W . 1st. St................. Sanford

321-1590

•k h lrlfk -k -k lfk lt
D E L I V E R Y D R I V E R lo r
flo r is t . M u s t Know a re a .
C a ll: 321-S044 Ire m 9em to Spm
D I E T A R Y A ID E - Full lime, day
shift, will fraln. Apply Debary
M a n o r, 40 N . Hw y. 17-92.
between**, 4 .....................E O E
D R IV E R S W A N T E D . Domino s
P l « a . Inc. Wages, tips. 4
commission. S3 hr. guaran­
teed. Must have own car with
liability Insurance.
Apply: 1910 French Av*. or
c a ll321-5000after Item
D R IV E R S - Local/O ver road.
1 933 7043....... o r........1933 7047
o r..................................1 933-7001
E L E C T R IC IA N S / H E L P E R S Full lime, I 933 7043,1 933-7047
o r..................................I 933-70*1
E X P . D O N U T v a k e r 4 Finish
*r. M r. Donut, 37S5 Hwy. 17-92.
N O P H O N E C A L L S __________
E X P E R IE N C E D FLO O R M A N ,
It no axperltnco In latest floor
m ethods D O N O T C A L L I
Night work, 321 4712__________
F U L L T IM E F LO O R M A N /
L a w n m a lnta n a nce . G ood
benefits. Contact Hlllhaven
H a a ith C a ra C a n te r. 950
M a llo n v llle A v . , S a nford,
377*544............................E .O .E .
O R O W E R OR A S S T O R O W E R ,
to supervise growing opera­
tio n lo r s m a l l D r a c a n e
Nursery. Cell *9*-7079 or w rit*
70S Terrace B lv d , Orlando.
FI.33S03

S A L E S IN S P E C T O R : Newly
Opened Lake Mary Branch.
As leader In our Industry,
Orkln needs the best sales
person we can find to share 4
Insura our continued success.
W* offer:
t. Excellent eernlngs
2. Great benefits
3. Car allowance
4. Co. paid retirement plan
5. Complete training
*. Guaranteed Income
during training
7. No overnight travel
I . Strong advertising
support
9. Advancement Into
management
10. A solid, lucrative future
In a recession prool
Industry
W* Require:
1. Direct salts exp. ora
desire to learn
2. A desire to succeed
1. Strong personality
4. Positive attitude
5. Neat appearance, good
driving record.
*. Good verbal skills
7. A deslra to help people
If

y o u e ra c o m m i t t e d to
excellence and have the desire
end ability to succeed and
grow with e fortune 500 com­
pany. w* would Ilka to meet
you. Call between 10am 4 1pm
for an appointment......322-4571
Eaual Opportunity Employer

71-HtlpWairtBd
P A R T T IM E LPN,

Good
benefits. Contact Hlllhaven
H o a lth C a ro C a n te r , fJO
M a llo n v llla A v . . S anford,

P A R T -T IM E SEW IN G
M ACH IN E MECHANIC
W A N T E O , m uff ba experi­
enced. an all typo* of industri­
al tawing machines. Apply In
p a rs o n o n ly to : S a n -0 a l
Manufacturing. 22*0 O ld Lake

Mary Nd., Sanford.....311*10
N N F O R C R IS IS U N I T IN
S A N F O R D . » hr. week wtlh
F U L L R E M E F IT S . MI-4217 _
ROOF IN 0 / ESTIMATOR/
S A L E S M A N Largo single ply
roofing contractor soaking ex­
perienced sales Estimator for
Florida office. Send Resume 4
Salary requirement to; C F t ,
Inc, H IS Thornhill Rd. Box W,
Auburndoto.FI.3M 22
S E C U R IT Y O F F IC E R
T N A I N I N O fret If you qualify.
Full-tim e employment while
you train. Must ba I I years or
older. N o felon convictions. It
you are on public aid, to«(
Income, or unemployed, we
offer 240 h rs. of security
tra in in g . A lt e r completion
you'll receive state license 4
all certification fret to you,
•*4-2741, Thurs. thru Sat, * am
toS,sulto3IS_________________
T A X F R R F A R R R Needed until
4/IS/I7. Call Phil Battls

325-2123
TEXAS OIL COMPANY

need*
mature person for short trips
surrounding Sanford. Contact
customers. Wa train. Write
H .T . Dickerson, Pres.. South­
w e s te r n P a tr o la u m , Bex
MIOBS, F t. Worth. Tx.7*t01

WELDERS-

C a r t llla d / uncerltlfad, 1-933-70*3,
I 933-70*7........or........1-9337011

M A R N E T IN O D E P A R T M E N T
Of tha Rich Plan of Florida
naads h a lp In o u r Inside
advertising efforts. Exciting
part-tim e work with opportu­
nity to earn full tlma Incoma.
Plaasant work almosphara,
flexible hours, SS.OO per hour
+ T R E M E N D O U S bonus
structure.
Call today tor tha datalli.
322-3**], axl. 402 or oxl. I l l ,
ask for Charlas Bardot or
Jeanette Hall

W O R K E R S N E E D E D ! It you
need steady work-paid dally.
Call Sam after 3 pm
321-755*

73— Em ploym ent
Wanted
C E R T I F I E D Nursing assistant
w l s h a s In -h o u s * day
employment. Will do house­
work, shopping, meal plann-

99— Apartm tflfs
Unfurnished/
MARINER! VILLAGE

tAlbdrm*..

tramtas

Call.... .................. — JOatTS
I BO tM A , 1 both, klfchan appIT
ance*. carpeted. S100 + depeeIt. Me gets.............Call 322-4974

MOVE IN SPECIAL
1 bdrm. villas •
Blinds B Hookup*
FAEKSIDB PLACE APTS.

• Now

Just W . of 17*2 off ISth St. Turn
left on Hartwell. We're on the

101-Houses
Furnished/ Rent
H A SR «*W ARIA:

2 bdrm T
completely torn. Avail, t/is.
No children, no pet* 323 *090

103— Houses
Unfurnished / Rent
DEBARY. largo, neat 2 bdrm., 2
bath home, central heat A air,
fenced yard, garage, laundry
ream , I m in. lo Sanford,
available about 1/tS, $425 +
IOC.. 904-734-74*3__________
• • • IN D E L T O N A a e e
• e H O M E S FO R R E N T e e

e e S74I434 e e

LO O H O M E , Hwy. 41S, 1 bdrm.,
3 ba.. cantral H/A, water
cond , *350. Mo.. f12-2t3-ltll.
MI-1411 after*, dep. required
R A V E N A F K : 4 bdrm ., 2 bath,
gams rm ., csn. h i s , fenced
yard, all appls. Exc. cond.
*500 m o -t- sac, dap...... 321-312*
S A N F O R D I 4 rooms. K 4 B,
Adults, no pats. Vary prlvata.
S27S/MO + sac, dtp- *4*4040
S A N F O R D - 4 bdrm., IW bath,
calling tons. 14*5 mo. + tiso
sec. C a ll:....................... 123-4795
S A N F O R O : O lt M allonvllle
M o re to r yo u r m oney. 1
bdrm ., 2 bath, A/C. 1500 mo.
H .D . Realty..... ................ jeOjjOO
S A N F O R D - La rg a housa, 4
bdrm ., 2VS baths, front porch,
plus 4 additional bedrooms/
study/olflcas; I42S par mo. +
sac. 122 *S10...... or...... 3224779
S A N F O R D : 3 bdrm., m bath,
front rm .. Fla. rm „ screened
perch. 1373 mo. Call.....131-2100
S A N F O R O : 2 bdrm., 1 bath,
aat-ln-kltchan. refrigerator 4
stove, can. heat 4 elr, w/w
carpet. 13S0 + sec....... 321-3190
S T . J O H N 'S R IV E R F R O N T Large 3 bdrm., 2 bath, can.
h/a plus turn, guest house.
Harald Hall Realty
1-429-1*12 or 1-447-7199 av*S.
S U N LA N D - 724 Cherokee Clr., 3
bdrm., I bath, S42J mo. + sec.
No pets. Call.................323 4441
S U N L A N D : 3/1, large yard, kids
4 pets o.k. *450 mo. first mo.
-I-S100 sec. Cell............321 4912

2/1 Mobile Heme........
2/1 ApartmentiH
«*&lt;INftHttM ....5)71
2/1 Heuse.......

^n2_4transgortatlon;;;22r74**

91—Apartments/
House to Share

CALL BART
REAL ESTATE
R EA LTO R

C O N D O - 2 bdrm ., 2 bath, nicely
turn., has averythlng, privacy,
full p rivile g e s, u til, paid,
singles only, *75 wk..... 323 010*
R O O M IN P R IV A T E H O M E.
Mfeekfy rant, house privilege*.
Cell: 740-S790.....or..... 123 4193

93— Rooms for Rent
* R EASO N ABLE R A TES
# M A ID S E R V IC E
• P R IV A T E E N T R A N C E
Why Consider Living Anywhere
E Iso When You C*n LI ve In

a he

Hilliinr

323-4507
97—Apartm ents
Furnished / Rent
F O R R E N T - O ne B edroom
Apartm enl. 2100 Mellonvllle
Ave.. Sanlord.________________
Furns Apts, tor Senior Cltliens
111 Palmetto Ave.
J . Cowan. No Phone Calls
G E N E V A , 2 b d rm ., I bath
housa, lurn. or unlurn.. big
yard, 1300 Sac. Dep. *330 M o ,
da ys321 *491,eves322 29If
N E A R T O W N - 1 4 2 bdrm ., 175
4 stS week. S1S0 deposit.
C a ll:................................323*294

RELOCATING
Short term leases, furnished
e fficie n cie s, single sto ry,
private, near convenlances,
S A N FO R O C O U R TA P T.
________ 123-3301 ex. 401_________
S A N F O R D : Large I b r., up­
stairs, very private, tile bath,
eat-ln- kitchen. Eve rything
turnlshed. *350 123 19)7_______
I B D R M ., Couple w/1 child.
Private porch, drapes. 1295
mo, 4 -Slop dep, 1 rets .32100?I

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
• E F F IC .1 4 2 B D R M . A P T S .
• FURN. 4 UNFURN.
• PAYWEEKLY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

CL hr H i

Ilnur

323-4507
R ID G E W O O D AR M S,
2580 Ridgewood Ava.
323 » 4 »
B A M B O O C O VE,
300 E . Airport Blvd,
323*411
S P E C IA L on any available size
apts. 150 oil tha 1st 3 month*
of a 9 month leasa.____________
S A N F O R D , 2 bdrm ., 1 bath 12*0
mo. + 1210 sec., appli.. w/w
carpet, air. 323 9040 or 323 9543
S A N F O R D : 2 bdrm ., 1 bath,
adults only, no pets. ISO wk. or
*320 mo. -t- sec. dep. 429 00*5
day\ 327 1047 or 327 2929 nlaht*
S A N F O R D : 1 4 7 bdrm units In
H istoric D istrict. Recently
renovated. Both have charm
Ing sun porches. Convenient
location. S350 4 S3S3.....444 4500
S H E N A N D O A H V IL L A G E

★

★

$199 ★

★

Ask about move in special I
Call.................................... 323-2920
S T. JO H N 'S R IV E R at Lemon
Bluff, t bdrm . garage apt. S300
mo. + util. No dep.......322-9049
1bdrm ., t bath................ *315 mo
2 bdrm ., IV* bath............ *3*0 mo
* Central Heat 4 A ir
# Pool 4 Laundry
F R A N K L IN ARM S
1120 Florida Ave.
321-4454

m-7490

105— DuplexTriplex / Rent
eeee**e*eeeeeeee
Deluxe Duplex Comm. Screen
perch, laundry 4 storage rm.,
lawn serv. provided.....31M11S
D E L U X E D U P L E X : 3/2 cen
heat 4 air, garage, many
extras. S550 mo Includes yard
care. I y r. lease.............. ...Call
Red or U n d e Morgan at
3222420..... or
123 51** eves.
D U P L E X : 2 bdrm., carport,
clean, extras. 13*5 mo. plus
security. Call............... 323 3442
D U P L E X A P T . , I b d r m .,
riverfront on East Hwy. 44.
349 5942..........or.......... 321 2300
E X C E L L E N T location on Park
Ave. cen. H 4 A . lirst 4 last
mo Call........................ 322 3794
L A K E M A R Y B LVD . A R E A , 2
br, unturn., with pool. Mature
adults, no children or pet*.
S3IS M o, 1st, lest + sec.
321 0424 alter 4 pm.
S H A R P I 2 bdrm., 2 bath. *375
per month plus security, No
Petst............................. *49 4547

107-Mobile
Homes / Rent
E L D E R S P R IN G S M O B IL E
N O M E PAR K . 2/1. U 5 wk..
S200 deposit. Call 774 1340
R E N T O R S A L E : 1 bdrm .
trailer. Ideal lor couple or
single Person. *275 + dep
C ontact office al K a tie 's
Landing............ Rt. 44, Sanford
2 BD R M . Mobile home in re­
tirement park at Lake Ashby.
No pets. C e ll:................323 9009

115— Industrial
Rentals
1000 SO. F T . Warehouse space
w/oltlce. By Sanlord Airport.
Rent or leasa............... 32HM*9^

121 —Condominium
Rentals
S A N D L E W O O D V IL L A S - 2/2,
kit. appl.. washer/dryer, pool.
1390 mo. + sec. 121 0940,
322 44*7..... o r..... 1100-437 5531
S A N F O R D - 2 br. townhouse,
living rm , family rm , eat In
kitchen, cathedral celling. In­
side laun., big bdrms , pool,
water 4 garbage Incl. In rent.
S375 mo. Megatrend.. ..774-4054

141—Homes For Sale
) B E D R O O M 7 ba.. In country,
fire p la c e , g a ra g e , tre ss,
owner financing, consider
trade, S74.900,349 5717

A IR lIN E / T R A V E i SCHOOL

Train To Be A
Travel Agent • Tour Guide
Airline Reservationist
Starl locally, lull llma/part
lima. Train on Ihe airline compulera. Home study and reildenl training. Financial aid
available. Job placemenl
assistance National head­
quarters. L.M.P..FL.

A.C.T. Travel School

1-800-432-3004

Accradilad mtfnMr N H S.C.

�f r

, r r ' i r r i * V ' r r r *■ r *

r' r ' r ' r r r r /

&lt; '

r

'

r

a

t+ r**

*rtrttttttt

r r t r r r

^

CALL ANYTIMI
A ■ALTON................... m -4m

MNFORD: 3 bdrm., 2 bath,
control heat A air. extra*.
RAM...........-223-13*3
MNFORD: Now 3 bdrm., 3bath
ly u M A W R I j m L E U $
iW
n n . D KICKa r MA* Km OOWfl.

.4*9-210$or 4C7 1472
MNFORD: 3 Bdrm., 1 bath,
family rm. renovated, nice
neighborhood. Offer...-323-2777

porch, (Irapine*........ $149,300.

PIRST RKALTY INC...J3P4M1

im iM O C !
YOURHOM E
F O R O N E O F OURS
Y O U R P L A N O R OURS
O U R LA N D OR YOURS
C A L L BOD S A N D E R NOW
T O S E E IF Y O U Q U A L IF Y

TtowRoily

IS?

.

r

7

'n n o w

mm

.m

STENSTROM
REALTY*REMJOR
Smterfs Satesbate

221-9977
CONDO: Narthlaka Village. 3
bdrm., 3 Bath, fireplace, ca­
thedral callings. Low 30's
322-247*afterS: 30pm_______
OELTONAI Naw 3/2 custom
home, brick A stucco, arch
window, bay window, cathe­
dral callings, fireplace. Imm.
occ.. $44.9001 574-0007 or
321-0790........or........ 323-54*4

ENERGY REALTY

W E L IS T A N O S E L L
M O R E H O M ES 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

323-2SM

M

r

(345)321-4140

CALLMV TIME

ii \ i i

322-2420

iu

K IM

A C A D E M Y M A N O R I 3 bdrm .
Ito bath home. L shaped liv­
ing room.w/extra 10 x I area,
family room, washer A dryer,
screened porch I............ $47,300
ASSUM E F H A I W/f 10.900 down,
3 bdrm., Ito bath, paddle tans,
plush lawn, fencad rear yard,
central H/A....................$40,900

O n t u it f .
J U N E P O R Z IO R E A L T Y , IN C
S A N F O R D : O w nar llnanclng.
Radacoratad Intlda A out.
Naw carpal A vinyl, 4 bdrm*.
on largo shaded lot. R o o m nnbl* down. O w nar will hold lit
mortgage 20 years........ $42,000
B R A W IL L IA M S O N ........323-4742
DO LLHO USE ON LA RO E L O T:
Move In condition, 2 bdrm.
carpet, c/h/a. W on't last long
at $43,300
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ........323-4742
M O V E U P T O D E L T O N A : Pro
tty 2 bdrm ., horn* feature*
fam ily room, screened room
A garage...........................$43,000
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ........323-47*2

C O R N E R L A K R V IE W L O T I 3
bdrm., I bath home, complete­
ly refurbished, mirrored wall
In living room, storage shod,
laundry room A m orel..$33,900
P IN E ACR ESI 3 bdrm. 2 bath
h o m e . p o o l, ston e I p l .,
screened porch, some m ir­
rored walls, 'OS’ roof, I year
home warranty I............ $30,300
D E S IR A B L E A R E A I 3 bdrm , 2
bath home, naw carpet, pad­
dle fans, work shop, breakfast
bar, dining room, screened
porch, central H/A A moral
......................................... $43,000
P O P U LA R H ID O E N L A K E S I 3
bdrm, 2 bath home, breakfast
b a r, fa m ily ro om , p a tio ,
fenced yard, split plan. '04'
roof A m o ra l...................$49,900

N E A T 2 S T O R Y H O M E : Near
shopping A big lake. Ready
tor restoration In Sanford's
Historical District. $44,300
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ........323-4742

HO USE S EN SEI 3 bdrm.. 2 bath
home, breakfast bar, family
room, split plan, sunken living
room w ith fp i., screened
porch, paddle fans, vaulted
ceilings, newly painted Inside
A out................................$73,900

D E L T O N A : Walk to shopping A
banks. Super pretty horn* In
first are a. 2/2, garage A
m ore.................................$31,300
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ....... 323-47*3

N E W LOO H O M E I 3 bdrm . 2
bath home In Osteen, front
porch, rear deck, water con­
ditioner, vaulted ceilings, split
plan, aluminum soffits..$74,900

C O N V E N IE N T to Lak* M ary.
Sanford. A Long wood Spot­
less 3/2 In great area. Naw
paint, naw heat pump, ready
to mov* In........................ $37,300
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ........323-47*2

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, spilt plan, cent.
H / A I................................$79,000

N E A R S E M IN O L E H IO H : N»at
3 bdrm ., cottage on double lot
with pool, 4 car garage. A
work shop........................ $43,000
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ........323-47*2

P O S S I B L E
L E A S E
PUR CHASEI 4 bdrm, 3to bath
home on 2-1- acres, small laka
with pool A waterfall, great
room, garage converted to
In Law suite................. $139,000

D E B A R Y , LO O HOM E ON
W O O D E D 1 A C R E . Custom
built features. Italian tile In
foyer A fireplace. Solid wood
doors, built in microwave.
pool. A much m ore....... $99,000
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ........323-47*2

L IV E IN L U X U R Y I 4 bdrm, 3W
bath, executive home on 13
acres with lake, pool, rec A
family room face pool A lake.
3 fireplaces A many extrasl
........................................ $293,000

L A K E M A R Y : Country home on
nearly 2 acres with horse stall
A paddock. Features great
room, stone fireplace, large
k i t c h e n w i t h b u i l t In
microwave, office, screened
room 2 car garage A new roof.
Great buy at $112,000
B E A W IL L IA M S O N ....... 323-47*2

322-8678

* « d to Me* family
lit! finance
321 $4&gt;4*V**tll».____________
F A M IL Y P A R K , I bdrm ., I
bath. can. h/a. cam p, rana va ta d . M U S T t i l has
about everything......... JS I-S IH
m

H A C IE N D A V I L L A B I
3 bd.. 2 bath, lavety...........0 4 .9 0
2 b d , I bath, fum .............. .$27A M
2 bd., 2 bath. 19*3............. .0 7 J M

I. fum.. 11x00........ IMAM
M ANY M ORE
O P P IC B R R S A LE S .------- 327-9M1
L O V E L Y ' 0 Park Model 35
a w n in g , furnish ed, clean,
shad, Ig shrubbed com er let In
secured park..........904 3*3107*

Lots/Sal#
A S S U M A B LI M O R TO AO B .
renovated home. 2 bdrm ., 1
bath, dsn, Ig living rm , dining
rm , flraplac*. fenced back
y a rd , goad neighborhood.
221-1044 eve* A weekends

\ m
io k

^ 7

P IN E C R IS T , B E S T B U Y I 4
b d r m . w ith la rg o m aster
b d r m ., new plush carpet!
Paddle tan* I Naw roof I Walk
to e l e m e n t a r y s c h o o l l
A s s u m a b le no q u a lif y in g
mortgage I O nly........... $32,300
A P F O R Q A B L E I 3 bdrm ., homo.
Hug* 120 x 120 ft. lot, detached
g a r a g e , s c re e n e d p o r c h .
P rlcadtosalll............... $30,900

323-5774
______ 2*44HWY. 17-92
H I D D E N L A K E : B e a u tifu l
trees surround Immaculate
3/2 horn*. Only $3,000 down, no
qualifying. $39,900........323-2*71

M N FO R DAR EA

L k . Real Estate Seeker
2440 laniard Ave.

321-0759_________ 321-2257
After Hears 222-7*43
B Y O W N ER - Spacious 2 bdrm .,
3 bath homo on large shaded
lot. Call............ 323-10313-7 pm
H I D D E N L A K E . L o v a ly 3
bdrm ., 3 bath homo, features
screen porch, family room,
lanced lawn. Only..........$49,900
Alan B. Johnson, Ro/Max
Unlimited, 223-41*2 er 2M-2M*

149—Com m ercial
Property / Sale
AP P R AISALS A N D $ALES
BOB ML B A L L , JR . P.A..C.S.M .
R E A L T O R .................... 222-41H
C A S S E L B E R R Y : 1 acre zoned
PR 1. $43,000 W. Malkaowskl
Rea Her....................... .222-7901

151— Investment
Property / Sale

20 A C R E S Z O N E O IN D U S T R I­
A L ................................... $300,000
3 A C R E S A T A IR P O R T
E N T R A N C E .................$130,000
3 A C R E S S T A T E H IG H W A Y
FR O N TA G E ZO NED H E A V Y
C O M M E R C IA L ............Sltf.OOO

Q U A D R A P L E X . 3 bdrm .. 2 ba..
apartments., positive cash
flow , naw b u ild in g , need
Q U IC K Sale. $139,900. 374 0007
o r 0 l 1790 or 0 3 5466

153—AcreageLot s/Sale

124* X 2*0* L O T Z O N E D H E A V Y
C O M M E R C IA L .............. $30,000
100* 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 23th
. S T ......................................$30,000

7.7% APR
CONSTRUCTION FINANCING
FOR UP TO2 YEARS

DEBARYAREA

321-2720

UKEMARYOFFICE
Call toil ffM 1-800-321-3720
23*3 PARK A V E ............. Sanford
901 Lk. Mary Blvd.........Lk. M ary

O N 17-92 Z O N E D H E A V Y
C O M M E R C IA L *
A C R E S ............................. $99,000
A L L T H E A B O V E H A V E L IB ­
E R A L T E R M S A V A IL A B L E
B Y M O T IV A T E D S E L L E R S .

5REALTY
EIGL ER

( iroup.

MTEMMREALTY

10 A C R E S W IT H L A R G E
FARM H OUSE ZONED
IN D U S T R IA L ..............$200,000

SAV E ON H IO H LABOR COSTS
and build II yoursalf. No down
paymant. Quality pre cut m i
lerlals. Stop by stop Instruc­
tions. Call lor defells or attend
a seminar...............303-432 1941
SACR ES/SAV E $30001
R E S I D E N T I A L / L a k e Jessup.
Can sub divide much ol land
daarad. Great for building
slta or mobile home site. Very
convenient to Lake Jessup
park and boat ramp (to m l.)
Rtducad to $39,900 with great
terms available.
Stuart Macdade 313-1290 or
alter hours $9t-917J.

LH M D
32I-DL4Q

JO H N S A U LS , SR.
M l Estate Broker
S acre tracts. Ostoan/Maytown
Rd., paved road, treat. From
$30,000 to $39,500. 30% down.
Financing aval labia.
m -7 1 7 8 ....~ 0 ~ ~ 0 l-IS M eves

Attwood

767-0606

149—Com m ercial
Property / Sale

LRN D

N EW I R I D R O O M Palm
Harbor In retirement park
C a ll:..............................- 0 2 N 0
R E P O S ___ R E S A L E S ------- N E W
Carriage Cava AAoblla Home
Park. Came saa u t il I

141-Homes For Sato

$44.900......2*0-3341 weekdays.

W E N E E D L IS T IN O S

H H M

MoteBe

MOBILE NORM, f

M OTHER-IN-LAW NOMRI
PLUS stately, 3 bdrm.. 3
story. PLUS 2 Bdrm rental,
pool, beautiful tread lot, ask­
ing $139,900. MAKE OFFER.
CaN:.......BECKY COURSON,
RE/MAX mb a realty toe.
OSTEEN: 4 bdrm., 3 bath and 2
bdrm., I bath. 4- 1 acre,
excellent rentals..........$49,900

a

RIAL I STAY■
RtALTOR__________ 02-740
WIKIVA I STAT IS- Raducadl
Rambling exocutIv* 4 bdrm.
•gilt. Rig pool, acraanod

•Ma jjt Only ................ j f t . H i

C all:.................... *994227 eves

VETERANS
NO DOWN PAYMENT
3 bdrm., 2 bath, garago, c/h/a.

CALL BART

------- m M L s|

•H i t P V w p P m tel I l l i W P wte&gt;&gt;

Kenes
n 0*104 iwc.era iron*

K E Y E S l t l N T H E SO UTH

LRN D
SANFOROARBA
9 ACR ES A T "A S TO R FA R M S"
W E S T O F 14 O N L Y $39,000.
TER M S

P R O F IT A B L E B U S IN IIt.
Service station, mobile park,
ole. In Longwoad/Sanford
area lor ownar management

CANALFRONT TO "LAKE
M A R K H A M " $22,000. T E R M S
CANALFRONT TO "LAKE
J E S S U P " $19,000. T E R M S
2 A C R E S O N S M A L L L A K E IN
G E N E V A $25,000. T E R M S
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN O S A R E A
W O O D E D 7S X 140 N E A R
" R O L L IN G HI L LS G O LF
C O U R S E $23,000. T E R M S
P IN E A V E . (2 X 137 ACCESS
T O " B E A R L A K E " $23,000
D ELTO N A A R IA
t

A C R E S W O O D E D . (2
H O M E S I T E S ) $33, 000.
TER M S

10 A C R E S H E A R
B E T H E L " $30,000

"LAKE

2 to A C R E S N E A R E N ­
T E R P R IS E R O A D (AC C ES S
T O " L A K E B E T H E L " $11,900.
TER M S
Ito A C R E S N E A R " S T O N E
I S L A N D " $12,300. T E R M S
P O I N C I A N A
WATERFRONT.
TER M S

L A N E
$12, 900.

D E L T O N A
E S T A T E S
L A K E F R O N T . $39,000
NORM ANOY
TER M S

B L V D . $17,500.

SEICLER
R E A L T Y
* ». m i

iit it i

m m

LRN D
3ZI°0b4D
TW O L O TS - Paved street. Os
teen. $500 down. Owner will
finance. $10,000 total.

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

^jjarlouobu^arjnMOOaveo^

1*3—Watarfront
Pro party / Sal a

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
A L T E R N A T IV E T . V . A AP P L.
2054 Hwy. 17-0
____________312-3400____________
C O U C H , ch a ir, and tables,
lamps. T .V . cantar. double
bad. nothing over $75.. Call
attar 3:30...................... 2 0 049
L A R R Y 'S M A R T. 215 Sanferd
Ava. New/Used turn. L *ppl.
Buy/Soll/Trode. 327 4131.
R E F R I G E R A T O R , Wasti nghouse, 17' Irostlree. wood
tone. Ilka naw $195....... 333 7*40

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo
R.C.A. COLOR C O N S O LE. 25
IN C H . $50.00, Call 104145
altar................................... 7PM
Z E N IT H 25" Ramoto Control
Console Color. Sold now over
$900: balance due $244 cash or
lak* over payments. 0 5 mo.
Still In warranty. N O M O N E Y
COWN. Free homo trial; No
obligation. 861 5394 day or eve.

B LA C K T O Y P O O D L E , Female.
4 months old. Asking $73.
Call................................. 010974

B .E . L IN K CO N ST.
Remodeling............... 303 322 7029
Flnenclnq........... Llc.fCRC00047l

Blinds &amp; Drapes
C U S T O M D R A P E R Y , balloon
curtains, mlnl-bllnds A
vertical*. Free est. In home
service. Madeline....... 333 4301
O R A P ES/TO P T R E A T M E N T S
DUST RUFFLES/PILLOW

House Plans
C U S TO M B L U E P R IN T S
Fast Sarvlral Good quality I
K K D E S IG N S ................... 7*7-3934

O R Y W A L L Repairs, callings
sprayed, tree est.. 374 0007 or
321 4790..........or.......... 323 3444

THORNE LANDCLEARING
Loader and truck work/saptlc
tank sand. Fra* est. 322-3433

Landscaping
Home Improvement
C A R P E N T R Y B Y E D D A V IS
R E M O O E L IN O / R E N O V A T IO N
Large And Small Jobs Wtlcoma
Sanferd Rt*. 1$ yrs. 311*441
R E M O D E L IN G A A D D ITIO N S .
Masonry A Concrete work.
Local number, 644 33*3 EVES.
W O M A N ' S W O R K I Qual i t y
work with the woman's touch.
Palnling/paparhanglng, tile
I nst al l at i on, pl as t er r apair/drywall taping
Candace Graver, 322-2*4*

Carpentry

Home Repairs

A L L T Y P E S O l C a rp e n try.
Remodeling 1 home repairs.
_ C a ll Richard Gross 331 3972

A L L PHASES ol household
repair A Improvement.
e F R E E E S T I M A T E S * 323 1*21

Carpet/ Floor
Coverings

R E M O D E L I N G . C *r p *nt r y .
Painting. Sm all electrical
repairs A installation, plumb
tng A installation. Hauling A
lawn service. Call:
Ed or Allan.......................321 4210

W ES 'S C A R P E T SALES
Remnants, Restratchas
Licensed...... Insured....... 343 7714

Cleaning Service
S P A R K L IN O C L E A N lor a dust
tree home or office. I time,
weekly L m thly rates .3 0 5858

B O O U E S I Expl Professional)
Lawn A Garden M ainl A chain
sew workl Laka M a ry Reel
dant. F R E E E S T I 323 4347
PAULS LANDSCAPING,
Specializing in rose gerdan
Insulation, professional lawn
A gardanm alnt ,321 0*23.
S E M IN O L E LA N D S C A P IN G

3228133

Nursing Care
O UR R A T E S A R E LOW ER
Lekeviaw Nursing Cantar
919 E. Second St.. Sanferd
322-6707

Painting
P A IN T IN Q : Complete interior
t29J/Exterior $330 Satisfaction
guaranteed. Call.........*34 7216
P R O FES SIO N A L, Q U A L IT Y
Painting by Dave
Inferior. Extarlor. Residential.
C om mercial. Pressure
Washing. Drywall Repair A
Popcorn Ceilings.
Lie.....Bonded ....Ins......323 4076

Lawn Service
B A R R IE R 'S Lendscapingl
I rrl g , Lawn Care, Res A
Comm. 32 1 7444. F R E E E ST I
Bogus* Landscaping- Planting
new trees A shrubs Also.
pruning A cleaning...... 373 $317
" S U N N Y S " . Mow, edge, trim,
planting, mulching Call now
tor fell Spec. Free est. 323 7129

Masonry
C O N C R E T E Dr l v es/ pel l os/
walks/sldbs Lie A Ins. 23 yrs.

e«pJlfe^ong^es^™_l49Y7S*

Landclearing

Nursing Care

BACK HOE, Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing
Call:372 1806
or......322 9313

H IL L H A V E N H E A L T H C A R E
C E N T E R . 930 Mellonvill* A v .
322 8366........................... E O E

Secretarial Service
Custom Typing- BookkeepingNotary Public. Call: D.J. Enlarprlsas. 130$) 323-7*92.

Sewer/SepticTank
HOW ARD'S S E P T I C S E RV I C E
Ropeir Unas A Clean Tanks
Free Estimates............322 0259

Tree Service
A L L T R E E S E R V I C E 4Firewood Woodsplllfer tor
hire Call Alter 4 P M 323 90*4
ECHOLSTREESERVICE
Free Estimatesl Low Prlcesl
Uc...Ins...Stum p Grinding,Tool
323-1229 day or nil*
" Let the Professionals do It".

W n S a C e w e t o C e !.
223-1741-------------- ------209 I l M Ava.
2 3 1 -C a r t
P IP , SR-22, O W I.................... Saa:
A A U T O IN S U R A N C E W O R LD
2544 S. French Av*.......... 0 3 -7 2 0

P L Y M O U T H B A R R A C U D A : 71
Maying, must add. 440 angina,
ntot braka t y tto s . RastarabM
0 gaad 4$r porta. SMB 0 kaa*
affair...................... Call: 03-4O5
P L Y M O U T H V O L A R R , T V Buy
H tra ............................Pay Hara

IfT T l f l i t
m u m
la n ia rd..............................0 1 -0 0
S P E C IA L ! 1 J I M L A S H R E N T A
r s s u n u aa as «
me
« p .................................. .01-041

iK ia tm
Sinlord..........................311*212)

m o c a ts
Santord.........................0 1 1 1 0
Bad Credit?
N* Credit?
W l F IN A N C i
W A L K I N ..................D R IV E O U T
N A T IO N A L A U T O S A L E !
Santord A va. 4 12th SI.... 0 I 4O75

V O LK S W A G E N , T V . 440. Call
M rs. Lantor, Mon thru F rl..
katw aanttosaf 0 1 0 1 4
V O LK S W A G E N B U G : '4 4 Sun

rmH. im tot r m + wmk. % m
6f k t l t (M r •C e II m,., ••.223- 4)^4
V W B U G i T I ................. Buy Nora
Pay Hara..............InslantCradlt

M I R I0 0 R C M S
01-041
B U IC K R E G A L : M . 3 doer. V *.
air, paw. steering 4 brakes.
M any other options. X X -M c a l
4495 down....... Phono:01-1470.
■ U IC K E L S C T R A :'4 0
Buy Hara........................ Pay Haro
1nitw it Cf •Oil

VW D U N E B U G G Y : 74. 0 lv * n
dally, runs good. tap. aids
curtains A m any now parts.
4120 C all...................... 323*437

/ A c c e s s o rie s
Santord.............................. 0 1 -2 1 0
C JU M A R O W
Buy H sr*........................Pay Hera
Instant Cradlt

USED CABS
Santord.............................. 0 1 -2 1 0
C N E V S T T B :'7 9 ............Buy Hora
Pav H e r a - ........... Instant Cradlt

U SED C AB S
Sanford.............................. 01-210
Buy H er*...... ......... ....... Pay Her*
Instant Credit

USED CARS

I A C R E A S S O R TE D T IM B E R
F R E E tor culling A hauling,
01797$, ALSO Good horn*
Ire* lor un wanted rabbits.

e o o o USED MOTONS 4
transm issions. In sta lla tio n
available..............C a ll:0 l-2 2 S 4

235— T r u c k s /
B u s ts / V a n s
C H E V R O L E T V A N S : one 190*
Box A on* 1979, Irrigation A
plumbing bins. Call Bob after
4pm at 05-222-4075
D O D G E P O W ER W A Q O N , T V
*34-7004
Make offer..
F O R D R A R O E R '$$', 4 X 4. 5
spd. overdrive. P.S., P .B.. A
stereo. 27,000 m l., take over
pym nt. Attar 12 Noon. 01-7112

Sanferd..............................0 1 -2 1 0
C H R Y S L E R . 7 T : ....... Buy Her*
Pay Her*...............Instant Credit

238—V ah id as
Wantad

w
USED CARS
Sanford........................... 01-3123
D A T S U N , 11$ O X *M*, New
paint, partial now Interior,
good co n d , $1200,01-54*4
D O D O E D A R T 1 0 ). 0 3 slant
six angina. 0.000 actual mil**,
$500.00 C a ll....................30-1*13
F O R D O R A N A O A :'7 4 Buy Her*
Pay H are............ Instant Credit

USED CARS

W E P A Y T O P $$ tor wracked
cars/trucks. W* Sail guaran­
teed used parts. A A A U T O
S A L V A O E at D a i r y . .444 *001

239—M o t o r c y d a s
and B ik ts
H A R L E Y X L X Sportster.'**.
lOOOcc, $2*00 firm . Vary low
miles. 2 0 4050 or 904-719-1021

Sanferd.............................. 0 1 2 1 0
F O R D L T D - '77, 3 door, good
c o n d i t i o n , on* o w na r .
C a ll:................................2 0 2*29
F O R D M U S T A N O :‘7t.Buy Her*
Pay Her*...............Instant Credit

San lord.............................. 01-2123
F O R D M U S T A N G 75*
Buy Her*....................... Pay Haro
Instant Credit

S a n f e rd ....................................0 1 1 1 0

F O R D P IN T O :'7 9 ........Buy Hare
Pay Hare...............Instant Credit

241— Racraational
V ah id as / Cam pers
H I-L O Travel T ra ile r: ' 0 , 21 ft.
$7,700 Exc. cond. bob Owen
Tra ve l Trailer* 3 0 N. Adelfe
Av*., Defend................. 7245454
M A Y F L O W E R : ' 10. P a r k
Model. 35'X)‘ T ip outs. Neat A
clean $7,100 Bob Owen Travel
Trailer* 3 0 N . Adalla Av*.,
Defend............................ 724505*
Q U IN S T A R : Camping. Cargo.
Utility. Til ting Trailer.
Unique
Bob Owen Travel
Tralfer* 3 0 N . Adalla Av*..
Defend............................7245*54
S E E T H E N E W H I-L O T R A V ­
E L T R A IL E R S at Bob Owen
Tra ve l Trailers 3 0 N. Abell*
Av*., Defend................ 731 5050

COUNTRYWIDE REALTY
Rag. R .E . Broker
322 1235 or 221-1207
470 Hwy. 415, Osteen______

STENSTROM
REALTY'REALTOR

211—Antiques/
Collectibles
B L A N K E T C H E S T. Humpback
trunk, 4 oak kltchan chairs,
oak piano banch, drying rack.
appointment only, 0 1 8773
L IQ U D A T IN G Slock of uphol
stery A decorator furniture.
Peddlers Cart. 1 0 N. Adalla
Ava., Da land................734-1399

213—Auctions

Sanford’s Salts Ltadcr

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 ...............05-2150

WE LISTANOSELL
M OR E 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

Auction every Thursday 7 PM.

322-2420
G E N E V A , 10 acres, can b# sold
as 2 five acre parcels, one on
hard road, ona with accass
behind Isl parcel, near fish
camp and Laka Harney, hunt
and fists here in your extra
t i me. $42,000. C a ll Li nda
AAorgan, Realtor/ Associate
140 A C R E S - O S T E E N . Divided
in 5 acr e par cel s, zoned
agriculture, owner financing
w/20% down. 10 % for 10
year*, or othar terms Price
rang*. $72,500
$39,500. Call
Red AAorgan.
Broker/Salesman
W A T E R F R O N T ! 5 4acres,
zoned lor mobile home and
horses on Lake Little, owner
financing, too. $35 000, Call
T e r r y Llvle, Real­
tor/Assoc late

* G E N E V A O S C E O LA R D . *
Z O N E O FO R M O B IL E S !
5 Acre Country tracts.
Well treed on paved Rd.
20% Down. 10 Yrs. at 12% I
From SI 1.5001

Call toll f i t t 1 800 321-3 720
2545 P A R K A V E ..............Sanferd
901 Lk. M ary Blvd.........Lk. Mary

*****

AM C W AGON T V
Buy Hera........ — ..........Pay Her*
Instant Credit

207—Swap Corner

BRIDGES AND SON
WE BUY ESTATES!

217—Garage Sales
Landclearing

I I P T I C Tank Rack Patio Stones
G ram a Trap* la n d P ry Well*

199— Pets A Supplies

Hwy 44......................... 3 0 2801

Dry Wall

M R C H A N IC A L 4 R O O F IN G
T O O L S . Is4tors. Im m matot.
equip., etc. 0142*2. eves.

apwteafe

233— A u t o P a rts
A N X IO U S O W N E R - 44- acre*
with home and cottage on tho
Weklya River.
Energy Realty Inc.........123-795*
Jwlto lo y d Realtor/Assoc.
349-5407 eves. I
C A N A L F R O N T near Laka
Monroe. View the St. John’*
river trom your 1/2 home on
and ol canal. Boathouse with
electric hoist A seawall, sunk­
en living A family rm., S
paddle Ians, central vacuum,
satellite dish. Make this home
a pleasure. 052.400.....481-38)3

CALL ANY TIME

Additions &amp;
Remodeling

C R O C N R T 1 D King i it o p r u d .
ChlWcraft with dictionary. 2
electric blankets, girt* R o m
bike. Tleradfeh**-.......1224247

USED CARS
TW O L O T S - Oft Doyl* Rd. $500
down. O w nar wilt finance.
$1,000 total.

All T0U NUD
10 SNOW
IN Mil fSUK

To List Your Business-

2/tto, endotod Fla. rm . 9x12
attached util., adult park,
pool, sauna. 41400. Must toll.
By ownar............ *99-4227 avoa.

159—R b b I E stitB
WantBd

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

S P R IN G H A M M O C K P K . Hwy
17 92 A 419 Rosales from $5000
Adult community.........222-01$I

K r t H a S n iiis
tog s r not. tap p r im
Free pick up. 012334

I

HANDYM AN'S SPRCIALLarf* t bdrm., fireplace. **parato dining, workshop, ownar
Will hold.....................433.300.

MOMRSERKRRSREALTY
"SERVING ARIA BUYERS"

8

COSY 3 bdrm., owner (Inane*,
only........ ................ J30.W0.

KmrCAm.YLl®teyLarryWrtotet

if

SANFORD- 3 bdrm.. &gt; bath. CB
homo Ingoad condition.
Only......................... .144,WO

OSTESNI Handyman SpecialI
•MM down A no duoilfytng.
Mobile homo on 7 ocros.
$34.too. Call Eggaro A
_*2£wjd*j!**it]f1Inc. 402-4442
OWNER MUST SELLI 3 bdrm.,
I to bath, no guollfylng,
' &gt;, Call.'-------MLR BY OWNER- 3 bdrm., 3
bath, air. lOnced yard. S47.1BE

141—HamasPtr Sato

1

ST e m p e r

141-Homas For Sato

f

141—HomosForSalt

n k

C O F F E E T A B L E , bar 4 stools.
A househol d I t oms. Sat.
$am 2pm 3300 S Park Ava

217—Garage Sales
M O V I N O S A L E I Furni ture,
washer/dryer, etc.. Sat f a m.
til noon only. 211 M cVay Or.

USED CARS

T R A V E L C R A F T R V M otor
hum*. ’0 . Perfect cond. Plush
$30.000 negotiable.........0)0974
33' S K Y L A R K Travel trailer.
' 0 , Util. shed. Insulated alum,
roof, ready to movo Into.
Compl. turn. So* at 12 Oaks
Campground, sit* 0 1 ...... $7500

Sanferd.............................. 0 I-H 1 1
H O N D A C IV IC :'$ 0 ...... Buy Haro
Pay H are............ Instant Credit

USED CARS
S a n fo rd ....................................0 1 1 1 2 3

IM P A L A '***
Buy Hare........................ Pay Hare
Instant Credit

USED CARS
San lo rd ........................................01 1133
M O N T E C A R L O '77'
Buy Hare........................Pay Her*
Instant Credit

BUY HERE
PAY HERE
LOW
DOWN PAYMENT

USED CARS

Santord............................. 0 1 -1 1 0
M O N T E C A R L O 78'
Buy H ere.................................. Pay Her*
Instant Credit

a

USED CARS

GOOD CREDIT BAD CREDIT

NO CREDIT
NO INTEREST

Sanferd.............................01 310
M O N T E C A R L O 77'
Buy H a re.................................. Pay Her*
Instant Credit

USED CARS
Sanford.............................01 210

—

•~ USED CARS

3? 19 S HWY 17 9?
SANFORD 323 2123

COMPLETE DETAIL SERVICE
95
tu sk *

Vook

79

Dr? 1 PjSS Up
Th,s 0ffer!

ASK FOR LUDY
OIL CHANGES • TUNE-UPS • SAFETY INSPECTION
SPEEDY SERVICE! LOW COST!

3219 S. Hwy. 17-92
Sanford

USED CARS

P H . 3 2 3 -2 1 2 3
_
1

fw F
,

�1 1 '■&gt;

Y X *4 4 T C i ^

Ttwrgday, Jaw. if, 1987

by CMe Ysvfif

.
•
TI4MTRNIN4 OUR M L T «
anobctim

by Mort Walter

BEETLE BAILEY

EVEN PR EAM 6
H A V E A W AY O F
T U R N lN © O H YOU

by Art Bueom

THE BOHN LOSER
fc THAT A QUEST**),
R»C*e,OPAfZENDU

HOWIABCUT

lUVmM'/WET'UOIW

NtNIMABiTCF
U B A im z ^ S

S te ,
by Bob Montano

ARCHIE

by Howto Schnaidar

EEK A MEEK
THE T O U B L E

WITH ME IS.
“V------

MV RntMTlAlfCRGREATW65&gt; HAS

bow m

v butted ev mv

TEIODEWCV TO PttXRASTWJATE...

MAK/IUG ME A PRECOCIOUS,
UIUDERACHIEMJG,
LATE-BtOOMER

» r O r i *f,'f Y Y K ’l

• - • 1

'i 'N ^ ' 4 ‘xl X Y %f i c

New Book A Good
Nutrition Update
DEAR DR. GOTT I am
confused about diet, weight loss,
vitamin supplements and the
relation of diet to disease. Is
there any up-to-date book on
these subjects?
DEAR READER - Yea. there
la. “ P o p u l a r N u t r i t i o n a l
Practices: A Scientific Apprais­
al." by Jack Yetlv, M.D.. Ph.D..
provides a comprehensive anal­
ysis of today's nutrition issues
and covers a wide range of
topics, from osteoporosis to
hlgh-flber diets.
The book was published In
1986 and Is sure to become a
valuable resource for people who
are Interested in nutrition. It can
be ordered from Popular Medi­
cine Press, P.O. Box 12607-G.
Toledo. OH 43606.
DEAR DR. G O TT - What are
the earliest signs of breast
cancer?
DEAR READER - The earliest
sign of breast cancer Is a lump
that may or may not contain
flecks of calcium. Careful palpa­
tion of the breast may disclose a
small cancer. In addition,
mammograms (breast X-rays) —
or other Imaging methods —
often are used to discover small
lumps that the doctor or the
patient may not be able to feel.
The purpose of any breast exam­
ination is to detect a small lesion
or mass and to distinguish It
from cysts or other normal
breast lumps.
Early detection greatly In­
creases the potential for suc­
cessful trea tm en t o f breast
cancer. Therefore. It is very
Important that every’ woman
know how • to exa m in e her
breasts and to perform a self­
examination every month. Ask
your gynecologist to show you
the proper way to detect breast
lumps. Become familiar with
what is normal for your breasts
so you can detect any changes
early.
DEAR DR. G O TT - About six
months ago, m y wife had a polyp
operation and had three Inches
of her colon removed. It was not
cancerous. Now every time she
cats, she gets bad cramps and
diarrhea. She Is taking Imodium,
but to no avail. She also takes

Theodur. Aldomet and Xanax.
DEAR READER The re­
moval o f three Inches o f colon
would be an unlikely cause of
d iarrh ea. Theodur (a n anti­
asth m a d ru g). A ldom et (for
hypertension) and X an ax (a
tranquilizer) all can cause diar­
rhea. Your wife should ask her
doctor to change her medicines
on the chance that she may be

ACROSS
1 Attain 1
4 Wallaces
namesakes
• Jewish month
H Fo M sr
IS Clay and sand
mixture
14 Architect____

reacting to them.
W hat Is H YPOGLYCEM IA and
how la it treated? You can find
out in Dr. Gott’a new Health
Report on the subject. Send $1
and your name and address to
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428.
Answer to Previous Punts

S SovWt rsfussl
4 Ostsctivs
|V ««-------1
newwM
w)

7 Clever
B More uncanny
B HUo Bartends

10 Impel

SB Entertainer
---------Bumee
37 Choooo Bteto
(abbr.)
38 Chemist’s
burner
31 Fruitless
40 Quid# a ear
42 Actress____
44 Compost point
48 Derby. e.g.
47 Something

□□□□

n in e

n n n n

r c n n c i

n o n

a n n o

n

□ □ □

2B ANsy of
ttsblss
2B Landed
27 Emit cohered
light
21 Net any
30 OM English
coin
31 Actor Jennings
32 Northern

n

82 Dancer Verdon
B3 Monty
B4 Slangy

41 Actor Montand
41 Dispatched

57 Bom

r
r

1

13

13

13

10

11

-

at
"

is

unexplained

1 Which thing
2 Villain in
“Othollo-

n

B0 Old time
39 Turn down
41 Dinner oouroo
43 Ornamental tuft
4B Smashup
47 One of on

35 Hotheaded

51 Soaking wat
55 Eternally
56 Long times
55 Vary small
59 Sand hill
50 American
Indian
61 Old musical
note
62 Ancient Italian 4 7 44
family
63 Ship part
u
64
________degree
DOW N

n

n n n n o n n n n ra n n
nnn nnn
□nnnn nnnnnnn
nnn nnnn nnnn
nnnn nnnn nnn
nnnnnnn nnnnn
nnn nnn
□nnnn nnnnnnn
m nn n n n n n n n n
nnn nnnn nnnn
□nn nnnn nnnn

a
|a|.|n #
n_nt&gt; *
I &gt;
IRfUW
IW

1S Birthday figure 11 Profit end
1 i Buddhist monk
17 OftdrilUng
1B Arabian ration
21 Not now
IB From heed
23-------- and
20 Blemishes
22 Married
women's title
24 Mao_____
tung
21 EE. Asian
2B Made mistake
S3 Qu»to
34 Poor of the

noon

43

r

43

IS

it
•1

si

J

i

00*1

u

M

••

SO

■■

•3

L

(c) 19 S 7 b y N I A . Inc

WIN A T BRIDGE

by Hargraavas A Sallara

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

17’«5© P L S A ^ e . IF Y H ER E^ A N Y /WORE
1 TR O U BLE CCWMN© , &lt;?ENP IT /VO&lt;V
W HILE lM U S E D T o IT /
^

E**3 A T E

M Y IO E O ^ E A M ,

I L^S T M Y
ARM Y
P EN K N IFE- -

by Wamar Brothara

BUGS BUNNY
Yo u r s u r g e r y w a s a
SUCCESS. NOW riS T im e TO
REMOVE 1HE BANDAGES.

HAVE Y O U
EXPERIENCED ANY
S P IN N IN G * _
S E N S A T IO N S ?

YOU VV/UL^

B y J a m es Jacoby

suit as you can. After the second

After an arduous bidding se­
quence. North-South arrived at
four hearts on a 4-3 fit. It's true
that five diamonds or five clubs
would be easy contracts to
make, but it Is natural In bridge
to try for a 10-trick game in a
major suit. Even three no-trump
would be makablc played from
the North seat, since It would be
difficult for East to find a spade
lead when North had bid that
suit. However, the contract was
four hearts and West did lead
and continue spades.

spade to led, declarer should ruff.

NORTH

play a diamond to the queen and
ruff another spade. Now a club to
the queen allows South to ruff
dummy's last spade. Declarer
can now cash the king o f hearts,
go to dummy with the club ace
and take the A-Q of hearts,
t h r o w in g d ia m o n d s . E ven
though the outstanding defend­
ers' trumps do not all fall. West
ts not able to set the contract,
since he has only one remaining
spade to go with his master
trump. In fact, when one of the
defenders holds five spades, the
other defender would normally
hold four hearts, so this line of
play would be likely to produce
11 tricks. Finally. If each de­
fender had only three hearts,
declarer would make 12 tricks.

VAQ6
♦ Q7
4AQ5 4

It won't work for declarer to
ruff the second spade and draw
trumps. One way to handle a 4-3
fit Is to minimize the danger of
the defenders' long suit by
ruffing as many cards of that

♦ 9599

WEST
4 K Q 1 0 76
V J972
♦63
♦ 106

EAST
♦ A 94
*5 3
49542
4J762
SOUTH
♦ J
V K 10 8 4
♦ A K J 10 6
♦ K 93

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Nortk
14
14
2 NT
3*
4*

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
l ♦
2*
34
44
Pass

Opening lead: 4 K

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring...

by Bob Thaves

FRANK AND ERNE8T

iTy A "T Y F £ A "
v iF u ? ... H e
. w a p n p p t h e v a c c in e

not to iNTepeepe
w it h

Hi.? c A jie e p

(SOA-US.

iw n w a

l?

by Jim Davis

GARFIELD

mate like very much. Don’ t
select companions selfishly.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Today you’ll be the one who
tackles serious situations from
YO UR B IR T H D A Y
which co-workers have shied
J A N U A R Y 16. 1987
Negative conditions will be away. Your responsible attitude
resolved In the year ahead, and w ill be noted by th ose In
y o u 'll be ab le to m ake an authority.
AR IE S (March 21-Aprll 19)
important change you’ve felt Is
long overdue. It will then pro­ You can perform a helpful role
duce advantages for yourself as today In teaching a friend how to
look for all the good things that
well as for others.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan. life has to offer, instead of
19) A business associate who dwelling on the bad.
T A U R U S (April 20-May 20) A
knows that you're a person who
can be trusted and relied upon change that you might Initially
might come to you with a very resent may be foisted upon you
interesting commercial proposal today. However, if you analyze It
today. Major changes are ahead carefully, you’ll sec that It has
for Capricorns In the coming definite advantages.
GEM INI (May 21-June 20) An
year. Send for your Astro-Graph
arrangement
that you make
predictions today. Mall S I to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper. with a reliable associate today
P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH should turn out to your liking,
44101-3428. Be sure to state but Its benefits will be a bit slow
to surface.
your zodiac sign.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
AQ U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
If you're planning something Devote your time and efforts
social today, be sure to Include a today to situations that offer you
couple that both you and your m ateria l rewards. In other

by Leonard Starr

ANNIE

by T. K. Ryan

TUMBLEW EEDS

“FRBTHARPYAlUPlHe VVfeLL' ,
Fflg? VWV1HRE OF THE HANG&amp;.
I W

L

l-

W

p

I

NT

^

F&amp;FOflg MEALfr)

words, be busy for profitable
purposes.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
friends won't mind stepping
aside today to let you take
charge of events. Collectively,
they’ ll sense that you’re the one
who should call the shots.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Don't be intimidated by any
obstacles that might clutter your
path today. Challenging situa­
tions will arouse your fighting
Instincts.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Your
greatest asset today Is your
ability to spot opportunities that
others overlook. Although they
may be sparse, you'll know how
to make something from them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A
long overdue debt Is going to be
repaid today. If you don’t get It
today, you w ill In the near
future.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Sometimes It’s essential to
disengage ourselves from other
involvements In order to focus
on our own Interests. Operate In
this mode today.

HUH?

HOW
CO/YiE?

THE TIGER MUCH
PREFERS TH E
hunting in ws

NATIVE H A B lW -

- 0 UT WHEN HE G R O W S ________
OLP, HIS NORMAL PREY ( L T u c "
PROVES TOO QUICH j

w * w t &amp; r siJ2!&amp;
H IM - l _ i i HUNTING SLOW,
I CLU M SY HUMANS.

t

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222101">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, January 15, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222102">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222103">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on January 15, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222104">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222105">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, January 15, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222106">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222107">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222108">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222109">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22245" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21850">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/38a83625bf0cf755e2f9061c8ec0cf38.pdf</src>
        <authentication>ef8915a53abce8ab75d6a20fa2256b19</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222140">
                    <text>Tower Panel Says Arms Dealing Misguided
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Tower Commission
concluded today President Reagan's dealings
with Iran were a misguided swap of arms for
hostages conducted outside established channels
by a runaway National Security Council staff.
And It said It was "plausible" that the President
approved the first shipment in advance.
"The Iran Initiative ran directly counter to the
administration's own policies on terrorism, the
Iran-Iraq war and military support to Iran." the
commission said In a thick report summarizing

more than two months of Investigation.
"This Inconsistency was never resolved, nor
were the consequences of this Inconsistency fully
considered and provided for." the panel said.

Gallows humor pentodes White Houso, 4A
"The result taken as a whole was a U.S. policy
that worked against Itself."
The commission, named by Reagan Dec. 1.
cited Ignored procedures, "unprofessional" con­

duct and Inattention to detail and consequences
In faulting the White House for a failure to subject
the Idea of selling arms to Iran to normal levels of
review.
The three-member Special Review Board also
disputed the rationale Reagan has given for the
risky and secret foreign policy gambit that
exploded Into public view last November and
since has rocked the very foundation of Ids
presidency.
While defended by Reagan as first and foremost

an attempt to cultivate "moderate” elements In
Iran, the commission said. "For still others, the
Initiative appeared clearly as an arms-for-hostage
deal from first to last."
"W hatever the intent." the panel said, "almost
from the beginning the Initiative became In fact a
series of nrms-for-hostagcs-dcals."
The report contained no "conclusive Judg­
ment" on the critical Issue as to whether Reagan
gave advance approval of the first shipment, an

See TOWER, page 10A

C o u n ty C u ts
21 J o b s
But A dds 66 For Libraries
By Kathy Tyrlty
Herald Staff Writer
P e r s o n n e l c u ts a n d Job
changes that will save $188,000
a year — and an additional
outlay to cover 66 new library
positions at a cost of $ 1.5 million
— were approved by the county
commission Tuesday, but at
least one commissioner Is angry
and pushing for changes In the
method used to make these
recommendations.
C o m m is s io n e r B a rb a ra
Christensen said recommenda­
tions made by the Personnel
Board — consisting of herself.
C o m m is s io n e r Bob S tu rm .
Public Works Director Larry
S e lle r s , Land M an agem en t
Com m itm ent Inspector Sally
Sherman. County Administrator
Ken Hooper, and the non-voting
chairman. Personnel Director
Lois Martin — Hr,r|,*||lfiH^lUg|

t j r - t r K i r i ■ii.-z/.st:'*•"

►

fa ilin g ***
Into Progress

A Hocord-torooMng dOO entrants fn December's
14th Annual Florida C itru s eow f S ailing
Regatta on Lake Monroe In Sanford w ere |ust
one exam ple of the growth and progress being
experienced in Seminole County throughout
the past year. Today, The Sanford H erald

presents Its \9 S 6 -ff Progress ' Edition examlnIng developm ents In business, education,
health care, social services, public safety,
recreation and m ore. It also offers a newcom
er's guide to the area and a listing of leisure
tim e opportunities.

Mayfair Lease Scrutiny Costs $1,560 So Far
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer
Sanford's city attorneys have
been paid $1,560 for their part
In the soon to be completed
Mayfair lease review.
Depending on final results, the
review, which also Involves the
efforts of city hall staff on city
time, could lead to court action
to invalidate the long term lensc
Jack Daniels holds for operation
of the city-owned golf course and
country club.
Stairs evaluation of Daniels'
lease com pliance began last
sum m er, based on charges
levelled by City Commissioner
John Mercer.

M ercer c o n te n d s D an iels
operates Mayfair In violation of
lease terms, although Daniels
disputes the claim.
Results of staffs' review should
be ready for presentation to
commissioners by the middle of
next month, according to City
Attorney William Colbert.
Colbert told commissioners
Monday his firm. Stenstrom.
McIntosh. Julian. Colbert and
Whigham. Is "about two hours
away" from finishing Its part In
the effort.
Sanford pays the firm S65 an
hour. Billing began In November
for the M ayfair review and
comes to 24 hours or $1,560

through January, the firm 's
vouchers show.
Questions about the review’s
status and attorney's fees were
raised Monday by Commissioner
Whltey Eckstein.
E c k s te in took o ffic e last
month. Inheriting a role In city
commission payment of legal
fees for efforts that began before
his election.
"Since I've been a commis­
sioner. I've been voting on these
(attorney's fees) but yet to sec
the first thing on M ayfair."
Eckstein said. " I ’d like to know
what's going on."
" I Just think that m aybe
you’ re stuck In this area." he

said to Colbert.
Commissioners, at the request
of Mercer, told staff last summer
to conduct a detailed evaluation
of Daniels' Mayfair operation.
Four areas o f the lease are
receiving the majority of staffs'
attention. These arc: Capital
spendings that must go Into the
course, on site construction's
compliance with lease terms and
city building codes, proof the
course Is Insured, and prepara­
tion of annual financial reports
by a certified public accountant.
Daniels contends he has com ­
plied on all counts and says his
See MAYFAIR, page 10A

N aked Threat Spurs Bill Passage
ATLA N TA (UPI) — Georgias House passed a bill to
pull the beverage licenses of bars that feature nude
dancers after the bill's sponsor made a not-to-bc-vclled
threat.
The bill submitted by Rep. Luther Colbert. R-Roswcll.
passed the House 145-11 Wednesday despite pleas by
Rep. Billy McKinney. D-Atlanta. to delay the mcasuie
until after the 1988 Democratic Convention.
As McKinney reminded lawmakers: "You're talking
about a conventloner's major means of entertainment."
But the the House Rules Committee moved quickly to
put the bill on the day's agenda after Colbert threatened
to dance nude before them.
"Then you'll see how disgusting it Is." he said.

Hons. She is asking that more
Input be gained from the de­
partment heads, possibly using
some o f them to sit on the board.
" W e need to re v is it this
Personnel Board as far as Its
structure and makeup: wliut
we're getting now Is no more
than a staff recommendation."
she said, meaning It's a recom­
m e n d a tio n o f the top a d ­
ministrators. "I think we need to
get the departments Involved
and check Individual merits of
these people."
In a case that troubled her. the
board decided since her aide had
left they would replaeo her with
the County Commission's Office
Manager Pat Warren after her
position had been eliminated,
amoutlng to a demotion for Mrs.
Waren.
Mrs. Christensen said Mrs.
W a r r e n , w h o now e a rn s
$28,558. was given a 10 percent
pay cut effective April 1 while
the other aides were given a 5
percent Increase. She stepped
down from the office director
position because the board felt
those responsibilities could be
divided among the five commis­
s i o n e r s ' a i d e s , w it h th e
chairman's aide coordinating the
work.
To voice her objection to Mrs.
Warren's pay cut.
Mrs. Christensen voted against
the entire Mid-Year Personnel
S t a f fin g C h a n g e R e q u e s ts
p a c k a g e s u b m itte d by the
Personnel Board and Office of
Management and Budget. But
Commissioners Fred Streetinun.
Bill Klrchhoff and Sandra Glenn
voted In favor and It passed 3-1.
Commissioner Bob Sturm was In
the hospital recovering from gall
bladder surgery.
Peggy Fleming of the Office ol
Management and Budget said

A r m e d R o b b e r ie s P r o b e d
By Susan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
Seminole County sheriffs deputies
today continued Investigating two
a r m e d r o b b e r i e s , o n e at a
Casselberry sandwich shop and one
In a Longwood motel parking lot.

Branch O ffice

H«r«ld Photo bv Louis Rolmondo

Gliding into Its nest atop a Sanford courthouse antenna, as seen trom
the roof of the courthouse, an osprey clutching a branch readies to
land. For a month, he and his m ate have been building the nest,
which is re a lly an addition to sm aller accommodations built last
spring. Courthouse naturalists say the pair are about ready to settle
In for the birds have been carrying moss to cover and soften their
featherbed.

In the Lon gw ood Incident, a
woman had her purse stolen by a
man brandishing a gun.
Catherine R. Wegner. 27. o f Fulls
Church. Va.. told sheriffs deputies
she got out of her car and was
walking toward her room al the
Quality Inn at Interstate 4 and Stale
Road 434 at about 4:30 p in. Wed­
nesday when a man approchcd her
from behind.
He called to Iter and when she

turned to face him the robber pulled
a small automatic postol from his
belt and pointed the gun at her.
"Give me you're purse and don't
scream .’ the bandit said. Ms.
Wegner handed over her purse,
valued at $100. which contained
$550 and an airplane ticket. She saw
the robber run to a small tan car.
There was a second man In the car
and the pair fled in the vehicle, a
sheriff s report said.
In the 2:45 p.m. Wednesday rob­
bery of the Subway shop at Butler
Plaza. State Road 436. Casselberry,
the clerk said a man entered the
store and asked for change for a
quarter.
See ROBBERIES, page 10A

* ’'. “* "

the recommendations approved
came from the various depart­
ment heads, and some of the
cuts were the result of the
county going to private services
for such things ns maintenance
agreements. She said this year's
cuts were a continuation of last
year's In which similar cuts were
made for the same reasons.
The changes approved Include
21 position deletions, 13 re­
classifications. and nine new
positions. In a separate package,
the library positions approved
Include 41 full-time positions,
and 25 part-time positions. Ms.
Fleming said the cost of salaries
and operations for the five new
libraries will come to $1.5 mil­
lion.
These are the general fund
positions that were terminated \
und some of the one-half yearC o u n ty c 6 m m l s s to n ers
(8 1 8 ,1 8 8 .8 8 ); c le rk ty p is t,
purchasing: m icro com puter
p ro gra m m e r, health/human
s e r v ic e s : a c c o u n t c le r k ,
purchasing: four facility mainte­
nance positions — three mainte­
nance worker-IIs and one facility
m a in te n a n c e m a n a g e r (at
$16,746.65): a flscal/probatc
coordinator in Circuit Court; two
communications specialists, and
a parks recreation technician.
The new positions coming
from the general fund and their
total half-year costs including
equipment, will be:
• A payroll processor in the
clerk's office |$9.510): an ac­
count clerk in communications
($9,612.82): a micro computer
programmer ($4,858); a clerk
typist in animal control ($7,163).
See CUTS, page I0 A

Sturm 'Stable'
A fter Surgery
County Commissioner Boh
Sturm Is in Florlda-HospltalAltamonte. Altamonte Springs,
recovering from gall bladder
surgery.
A hospital spokeswoman said
Sturm was in stable condition
early today. The surgery was
performed Friday.
His aide. Theresa Coker, said
Sturm Is doing very well and is
expected to be released about
the first of next week
"H e's In very good condition,
and we're very pleased." she
said.
Sturm had undergone some
tests, and in the process doctors
found out he had gall stones. Ms.
Coker said.

TODAY—

Bridge....... ....... 2B
Classifieds... ....4B.5B
C om ics...... ....... 2B
Coming Events... 3A
Crossword... ....... 2B
Dear Abby... ....... IB
Deaths....... ...... 10A
Dr Gott..... .......2B
Ed itorial... ....... 4A
Financial....,......tOA

Florida....... .......6B
nn
Horoscope....
Hospital..... ..... I0A
Nation........
People....... ....... IB
Police........ ...... 2A
Sports............ 7A 9A
Television...........IB
Weather....
W orld........

Sch o o l M e n u
F r id a y : Italian spaghetti, fresh gard en
s a la d , s e a s o n e d p e a s , J e l l o wi t h
stra w b e rrie s and lowtat m ilk.
pflM—

— —

—

—

BflKM yTW HinffflW TTf ^

�I
Mntord HtraM, S im irt, FI.

THwrMtoy, Ft#.

POLICE
IN BRIEF
Couple In C ar A t Rest A re a
J a ile d On Drug Charges
s*

A Sem inole County s h eriffs deputy checked the
identification of a Casselberry man and woman who were
sleeping In a car at the westbound rest area of Interstate 4.
Longwood. at about 3:30 a.m. Wednesday, arrested both
after marijuana and prescription medications were re­
portedly found In the car.
The man was first arrested on a Hlllsbrough County
warrant. Doth Michael Humphrey. 29, and Carolyn D.
Brewer. 37. of 831 W olf Trail, have been charged with
possession o f con tro lled p rescription m edication,
possession o f marijuana and drug paraphernalia reportedly
found In the car. Ms. Brewer, owner of the car was also
charged with possession of a concealed weapon after a
martial arts throwing star was reportedly found In the car.
Bond was set at $1,000 each and both have been
released from Jail.

S treet Screams Lead To A rrest
Lake Mary police reported arresting a 24-year-old Lake
Mary man after they were called to Tracy Road at County
Road 15 at about 7 p.m. Tuesday and reportedly found the
man In the street screaming and cursing at a woman.
The man reportedly refused to obey a police order to
calm down. He allegedly resisted being put Into a police car
when arrested ana had to be carried Into the Seminole
Countyjall.
Alvin Glen Long. P.O. Box 527 Tracy Road, has been
charged with disorderly Intoxication and resisting arrest
without violence. Bond was set at $500 and he has been
released from Jail.

Towering A rre s t For M a n , Boy
An 18-year-old Lake Mary man was arrested along with a
boy after Lake Mary police Investigated a report of
witnesses having heard two suspects up In a water tower
on the corner of Crystal Lake Avenue and County Road 15.
In Lake Mary, at about 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Police nabbed the two as they climbed down from the
tower. Owner of the tower, Otis SJoblom. told police he
wanted to flic charges and the suspects were arrested on
charges o f trespass In a structure. The tower was posted
"n o trespassing." police said.
Arrested along with the boy was Lance Cooper Plyler. of
258 A Third St. He has been released from Jail without
posting bond.

D riving U nder Influence Arrests
The following persons have been arrested In Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the influence:
—Nancy Warren Walsh. 28. o f 219 Shipman Circle, Lake
Mary, was arrested at 2:55 a.m. Wednesday on Longwood
Hills Road at County Road 427. Longwood, after her car
failed to maintain a single lane. She was also charged with
making an improper turn.
—Kenneth Roger Westfall. 38, 134 Wilson Drive. Lake
Mary, at 2:40 u.m. Wednesday after his car failed to
maintain a single lane on U.S. Highway 17-92. Sanford. He
was also charged with having an Improper license tag.

\

Burglaries A n d Thafts Rsportsd
Cheryl L. Appollonl, 35. of Deltona, reported to Seminole
County sheriffs deputies that a radar detector, suitcase.
Jewelry and clothing with a total value of about $1,175
were stolen from her car at 420 *212 Versailles Place.
Longwood. Feb. 16. The loss was reported Tuesday.

An AM/FM stereo cassette deck valued at approximately
$-100 was taken from a 1966 Ford Galaxy In the parking lot
o f Sandlcwood Villas, 100 W. Airport Blvd., by someone
who forcibly entered the driver’s side door of the vehicle
belonging to John Sternberg. 20. of 110 W. Airport Blvd..
between Sunday at 8 a.m. and Tuesday around midnight.
Rollle J. Tallmun, 55. o f Plymouth, reported to Seminole
County sheriff s deputies that part of a depth finder and a
compass with a combined value of $225 were stolen from
his fishing boat at American Brokerage, 4350 Carraway
Place, Port of Sanford. Lake Monroe, on Sunday or
Monday.
Brenda Cohen of Land and Water. 1667 U.S. Highway
17-92, Longwood, reported to sheriff's deputies that at
about 3:50 p.m. Tuesday three men who appeared
Intoxicated entered the store. While she was distracted by
one of the men. she told deputies $225 was stolen from the
store’s cash register.

:Sex At A Discount Charged
Two sisters arrested by San*
‘. lo r d p o lic e on c h a r g e s o f
; assignation to commit prostltu|tion reportedly offered a police
'.agent a discount on sex with
|both women.
The price for one. which police
; aid was quoted to the agent by
\ the women, was $15. Or he was
: offered sex with both women for
a total of $20. a police report
! --aid.
The reputed negotiation and

offer was made In a public park
on Fifth Street at U.S. Highway
17-92 in Sanford at about 4:30
p.m. Tuesday. Two police of­
ficers overheard the conversa­
tion and the women were ar‘ rested.
Twalla Joann Miller. 22. and
her sister Cathy Marie Pass. 24.
both of Midland City. Ala., have
been charged In the case and
released from Jail without post­
ing bond.
— Susan Loden

FIRE CALLS
Sanford firefighters and rescue
; workers have responded to the
; following calls, details based on
1lire department reports;
TU ESD AY
i —3:83 p.m.. 950 W. 13th Street.

S tu d u rd H e n id
t u s p s 4«i n o t

24, )987
Vol. 79, No. 140

T h u rs d a y . F e b ru a ry

Published D aily and Sunday, except
Saturday by The Sanford Herald.
Inc. TOO N. French Ave., Sanford,
Fie 37/71.
Second C la s t Postage Paid at Sanford,
F lo rid a 327/1
Home D elivery: M onth. S4.74 &lt; J Months,
S U .M ; 4 M onths. 527 00; Y e a r,
SSI.00 By M a il; M onth, S4.I4; )
M onths, SJO 2$; 4 M onths, 117.00;
Y e a r. 14V 00
Phone (105) 111 1411.

car accident. Carol Moy. 19. 270
Muddy Lane. Seminole County,
suffered a possible neck injury
and Ruth Evcrctte. 29. . 165
B cth u n c C irc le , su ffered a
possible back Injury. Both were
transported to the hospital.
W EDNESDAY
— 8 :4 2 a.m.. 1506 W. ,13th
street, rescue. A 51-year-old man
suffering from general Illness
was transported to the hospital.
— 10:15 a.m., 25th Street and
Old Lake Mary Boulevard, car
accident. No Injuries reported:
no action required.
— 3:21 p.m., 2617 Orleander
Drive, rescue. A 64-year-old
Sanford man was hit by a car
while trying to cross the road,
firemen said. He was taken to
the hospital for treatment or a
possible injury to his upper left
leg. The Incident Is being In­
vestigated by Sanford police

Libel Suit Filed Against Television Station
A Winter Springs man filed a
$4 m illion libel suit against
W C P X -C h a n n e l 6 T u e s d a y
claim ing the station used a
videotape o f his arrrest to pro­
mote a reporter.
Howard Mlnner. 55. filed the
suit at 4:22 p.m. after he gave
the medium a 5-day notice that
he w as g o in g to sue. T h e
notification was In keeping with
a state law requiring a media
company be notified before a
suit is filed. The notice must
Identify the specific broadcast
that Is alleged to be defamatory.

according to law.
Mlnner Is seeking compensa­
tory and punitive damages, said
his attorney. Ed Leinster, of
Orlando. Mlnner. 55. claims the
ads for the station’s "action
reporter" ruined him financially
and put his wife In the hospital
over nerves.
"In general terms they made a
commercial out of him." said
Leinster. He said he thinks that
about the only way the station
could undo the damage he
claims has been done Is to run
eight months worth of commer­

T w o G u ilt y P le a s
In F o r g e r y C a s e s
A man who was charged by
Sanford police with forgery was
sentenced to 20 weekends in Jail
and five years probation. It was
one of two cases of unauthorized
use of people’s checks or credit
cards heard In court recently.
Larry Devon Miller. 22. of
1822 Harding Ave.. was also
ordered by Circuit Judge O.H.
Eaton Jr., to pay $1,071 In
restitution. Miller pleaded guilty
In January to uttering a forgery.
Police arrested Miller after he
allegedly cashed at least two
c h e c k s d ra w n w ith o u t
permission on the account of
Callltha Melkerson. Polfce said
both checks were cashed at the
Tip Top Store at 1100 W. 13th
St. Miller was Initially charged
with 12 counts of forgery.
In the second case. Toby Reed
Flake, 18. of Altamonte Springs,
pleaded guilty to forgery, tres­

pass. grand theft and fraudulent
use of a credit card.
Circuit Judge S. Joseph Davis
Jr. set sentencing In the case for
April 7.
According to an arrest report.
Flake was charged In connection
with the theft or a purse from a
woman and the use of credit
cards that were In the purse.
T h e w o m a n ’ s p u rse was
snatched by the passenger on a
motorcycle which passed by the
woman while in the parking lot
of a supermarket In Altamonte
Springs In November. The pas­
senger on the back of the bike
grabbed the purse and rode
away.
Flake was linked to the case
after the woman's credit cards
were used and a video tape was
made of one of those transac­
tions at .a Winter Park service
station.

cials saying Mlnner was found
not guilty.
Mlnner was found not guilty
by Jury Feb. 11 of grand theft In
connection with the sale o f two
mobile homes. He was found
guilty of not getting an occupa­
tional license and a mobile home
dealer license.
L e in s te r said he had no
particular problem with the air­

ing of footage showing Minner’s
arrest. But. he said, the resulting
reruns took It out of the realm of
news. "This was a commercial
promo for Ellen McFarlane."
Leinster said.
By state law. the station has
10 days after the notice to run a
retraction, thus, making It liable
for compensatory damages only,
according to law.

Five Guilty, One Acquitted
OF DUI, Reckless Driving
The following persons have
pleaded or been found guilty of
driving under the Influence or
h a v in g an u n la w fu l b loo d
alcohol level.
The first-time offenders have
had their driver license suspend­
ed for 6 months, been ordered to
pay a fine and court costs
usually totalling $367.50 and
complete 50 hours of communi­
ty service. When a guilty or no
contest plea is entered or If the
defendant Is found guilty o f an
alcohol-related charge, other
charges are usually either not
prosecuted or dismissed. Most of
the first-tim e offen d ers are
allowed to apply for businessonly driving permits. In cases
where the sentences differs, the
actual sentence Is reported:
—Edward J. Lasko. 29. of Or­
lando. arrested Nov. 27 after his
car was clocked traveling 75
mph In a 45 mph zone on U.S.
Highway 17-92 In Fern Park.
—Richard Meeker, 19. o f 621 Iris
Road. Casselberry, arrested Nov.
3. after his vehicle was clocked
traveling 62 mph In a 40 mph
zone on State Road 436 in

Altamonte Springs.
-J u d ith Flarlty. 31. of 321 N.
Lake Blvd.. Altamonte Springs,
arrested Oct. 7 after her vehicle
was Involved In an accident on
Palm Springs Drive.
The following persons arrested
on a charge of driving under the
Influence have pleaded guilty to
the lesser charge of willful and
wonton reckless driving:
—Michelle Klauck Muncle. 29. of
1191 Jackson St.. Oviedo, ar­
rested Nov. 28 after her car was
In an accident on County Road
426 cast of Winter Park. She was
find $150 and ordered to pay
court coats.
—Donald Geiger. 22. of Box 206
Lake Geneva Drive, arrested
Nov. 1 after his car failed to
maintain a single lane on 13th
Street In Sanford. He was fined
$250 and ordered to complete 50
hours of community service.
T h e follo w in g person was
found not guilty of driving under
the influence:
—Harold Nodslc. 39. of 1765
Owasco St.. Winter Springs, ar­
rested Oct. 30 near Tuskawllla
Road after hts speeding car
reportedly failed to make a turn.

WEATHER
N ation

Tem D G iatures

City A Forecast
Albuquerque tn
Am arillo cy
Anchorage cl
Asheville cy
Atlanta r
Baltimore ly
Billing* ly
Birmingham r
Bismarck in
B o ll* I
Bolton ly
Brownsville sh
Buffalo ty
Burlington V t.ty
Charleston S.C. r
Charlotte N.C .cy
Chicago pc
Cincinnati pc
Cl tv * land ly
Columbus pc
Dallas t i
Denver sn
D ei Moines cy
Detroit sy
Duluth cy
El Paso pc
Evansville pc
Hartford sy
Helena ty
Honolulu f
Houston sh
Indlanapolltpc
Jackson Miss. r
Jacksonville r
Kansas City r
Las Vegas pc
Little Rock It
Los Angeles pc
Louisville cy
Memphis r
M iam i Beach pc
Milwaukee pc
Minneapolis cy
Nashville cy
New Orleans Is
New York sy
Oklahoma City cy
Omaha r
Orlando r
Philadelphia sy
Phoenix sh
Pittsburgh ty
Portland Me. sy
Portland Ore. I
Richmond sy

Hi L« Pep
44
44
2*
43
47
44
20
41
24
39
41
44
34
30
44
44
45

«*

IS
49
50
37
51
39
34
44
47
39
22
II
44
49
43
44
54
39
44
57
44
41
75
39
42
41
56
43
49
50
73
41
47
45
36
52
50

•*«
32 »
40
15 „„
37
41 IM
S
24
14
44
17 04
19 *
**»
39
40 .52
14
19 *
•••
44 *
»•*
42 ....
23 ....
**
29 ,*
19 *
.»•
26 *..*
47 .02
24 .01
29 ....
23
23 ....
32
37 ....
21
10 «
**•
51 06
a .39
30
44
52 ...»
34 „„
33 .34
40 ....
41 .17
34 ....
40
71 ....
24 «...
24 ,,,,
32 ....
51 33
27 ....
44 ....
34
49 :vi
24 ...»
40 101
23
IS
25
29

COOES
e clear
e f t leering
cy cloudy
f fair
fy foggy

pc partly cloudy
r rain
sh showers
tm smoke
sn snow
sy sunny

h lh a ie

ts thunderstorms

m m il ling

w windy

F lo r id a T e m p e r a t u r e s
M IA M I IU P I) — Florida la hour tempera
lures and rainfall at I a.m. EOT today:
City:
HI Lo Rain
Apelectilcole
44 S3 O.tr
Crestvlew
54 SO 000
Dayton* Beech
47 54 000
Fort Lauderdale
74 47 000
Fort Myers
I I 43 0.00
Celnesvllle
73 54 3.00
Jacksonville
45 72 000
Key West
I I 74 0.00
Lakeland
79 40 0.00
M iam i
74 69 0.00
Orlando
73 40 000
Pensacola
55 51 000
Sarasota-Bradenton
40 44 0.00
Tallahassee
44 51 000
Tampa
71 41 0 00
Vero Beach
77 54 000
West Palm Beach
71 44 ooo

Five-Day Forecast

Wednesday’s high tempera­
ture In Sanford was 71 degrees
and the low during the past
twenty-four hours was 56 de­
grees as reported by the Univer­
sity o f Florida Agricultural and
Education Center. No rainfall
recorded.

For C entral F lorida

A re a F o re c a s t

F rl.

Sat.

Sun.

Mon.

Tu**.

Sourca: National W tather Servlc*

Snow Lashes
Los Angeles
U n ited P ress International
An unrelenting winter storm
that has spread up to 5 feet ol
snow from the beaches of
Southern California to the
mountains of Montana drubbed
the region for a fourth day
today, stunning hard core sur­
f e r s a n d c l o s i n g m a jo r
highways.
T h e slow -m ovin g storm,
which begun dumping heavy
snow In the Southwest Mon­
day. prompted Arizona Gov.
Evan Mccham to declare a stale
of emergency Wednesday In
two central Arizona counties.
"T h ere’s snow all over Ihc
place, and we're expecting
m ore s n o w ," said Jean ic
Ramlercz. a dispatcher at the
Yavapai County sheriffs office
In Prescott. Arlz., where 26
inches of snow covered the
ground. "You can't get In or
out without four-wheel drives
or chains."

The same storm brought
thick fog and rain to Texas and
was blamed for hampering the
search for three oystermen
missing off the Galveston Coast
since the beginning o f the
week. It also Impeded searches
lor tw o m issing planes In
N e v a d a and S o u th e r n
California.
A winter storm warning re­
Moon Phases
mained in effect today for the
higher elevations of northern
and c e n tr a l A rizo n a , the
northern and west central
mountains of New Mexico and
the southwest mountains of
_
First
Full
Last
Colorado.
F *b .M
M a r.7
M ar. IS
M ar. 12
T h e N a t io n a l W e a t h e r
Service said the storm dumped
2 to 5 feet of snow in the
B e a c h C o n d itio n s
mountains of central Arizona.
Up to a foot of new snow was
D aytons Beach: Waves are possible in Arizona's White
about 2 to 3 feet and choppy. Mountains, where 42 inches
Current Is slightly to the north already has fallen in Hannagan
with a temperature of 57 de­ M eadow s. T h e storm was
grees. N e w S m y rn a B each: expected to spread heavy snow
Waves are 4 to 5 feet and throughout Colorado, Wyom­
choppy. Current Is slightly to the ing and Nebraska all day.
south; Water temperature, 57
degrees. Sun screen factor; 12.

r

L o cal R e p o r t

Billings. Mont., reported 4 In­
ches of snow overnight*.
A flash flood watch was
posted today over the south
central deserts of Arizona, al­
ready washed by up to 2 Inches
of rain, and a livestock advisory
was posted In South Dakota.
Travelers advisories were In
effect In eight states.
Traffic accidents blamed on
the storm Wednesday closed
sections of the Pacific Coast
H ighw ay in C alifo rn ia. In
Arizona. U.S. Highway 60 be­
tween Superior and Globe was
closed as blowing snow cut
visibility to 50 feet, and In­
terstate 515 was closed after a
sanitation truck slammed into
the support p illa rs o f an
overpass.
In the higher elevations.
California Highway Patrol of­
ficers escorted 100 motorists at
a tim e along Interstate 5
through the Tejon Pass, and a
50-mlle stretch of Interstate 15
was restricted to vehicles with
chains.
T r a v e l a c r o s s n o rth e rn
Arizona also was restricted to
cars and trucks with chains.
Including 100 miles o f In­
terstate 40 between Ash Fork
and Winslow.
In C aliforn ia, the storm
brought ligntnlng. hall, snow
and record-low temperatures to
beaches near Los Angeles,
stunning barefooted surfers
who braved the elements to get
to the water.
"People lost their minds for a
while." lifeguard Paul Mllosch
said. "W e ’ve never had snow
on the beach before."
The Coast Guard called o ff its
search for a small plane, car­
rying two men. that was struck
by ligh tn in g Tuesday and
plummeted into the Pacific
Ocean off the Malibu Coast.
Poor visibility also prevented
N e v a d a and C a lifo r n ia
authorities from searching for a
small plane that failed to arrive
at Fullerton, Calif., Monday.

Today...mostly cloudy with a
good chance of light rain or
showers. High In the mid 70s.
Wind cast 15 mph. Rain chance
50 percent.
Tonight...mostly cloudy with a
30 percent chance of showers.
Low near 60 to the mid 60s.
Wind southeast 10 to 15 mph.
Friday...considerable cloudi­
ness with a 30 percent chance of
showers. High near 80. Wind
southeast near 15 mph.

A rea Readings
The temperature at 9 a.m.: 6-1:
overnight low: 60: Wednesday's
high: 73: barometric pressure:
30.20; relative humidity: 90
percent: winds; NNE at 5 mph:
rain: None: Today’s sunset: 6:23
p.m., Friday’s sunrise: 6:53 a.m.

Extended Forecast
The extended forecast. Satur­
day through Monday, for Florida
except northwest — Cloudy with
scattered showers continuing
over the north Saturday and
Sunday. Showers ending In the
north Monday and spreading
over the remainder of the state.
Lows In the 60s in the north and
the 70s in the south Saturday
night and Sunday night. Highs
In the upper 70s and low 80s In
the north Saturday and Sunday.
Elsewhere highs In the mid 80s.

F R ID A Y : D ayton a Beach:
highs. 7:34 a.m.. 7:53 p.m.;
lows. 12:53 a.m., 1:29 p.m.;
N ew S m yrn a Beach: highs.
7:39 a.m.. 7:58 p.m.; lows. 12:58
a.m.. 1:34 p.m.: B ayport: highs.
12:12 a.m., 1:15 p.m.: lows. 7:12
a.m.. 7:11 p.m.

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet
— Today...wind east around 15
kts. Seas 3 to 5 ft. Bay and
Inland waters a light to moderate
chop. Patchy rain with a few
showers north part.
Tonight...wind southeast near
15 kts. Seas 3 to 5 ft. Bay and
Inland waters a moderate chop.
Widely scattered showers.
Friday...wind southeast near
15 kts. Seas 3 to 5 ft.

�i

hh

Sanford
Wastewater
Plans Still
Changing
By Karen Talley
Herald SUIT Writer
Sanford commissioners have
Indicated the city’s multi-million
dollar wastewater management
program will remain in a state of
flux, because o f their uncer­
tainty about frequent changes In
state requirements.
Sanford will again look east,
towards a pair o f mllllon-dollar
plus parcels, as potential effluent
disposal sites. The parcels, one
priced at $4 million, the other at
91.615.000, are described by
c o m m is s io n e r s an d c it y
engineers as potential hedges
a g a in s t e f f l u e n t d is p o s a l
shortfalls Sanford may face from
amended state requirements.
The city has. however, re­
ceived “ a ray of sunshine" In
regard to the program. City
Manager Frank Faison said
Monday. Indications have been
received that Sanford may quali­
fy for a multi-million dollar grant
to offset project costs, he said.
An application for the funds will
be prepared by city staff this
spring. Faison said.
C o m m is s io n e r s ' a c t io n s
Monday will renew purchase
discussions on a 2.200-acre site
whose owners want 94 million.
The city's last offer on the site.
In December, was 91.8 million.
Commissioners have also agreed
to request "n e w " DER officials
study effluent disposal potentials
at a 1.700 acre site, whose
owners wanted 91.6 m illion
when the city first indicated
interest in it last year.
A $1 purchase option for the
site will be paid by Commission­
er John Mercer, who offered the
proposal Monday for commis­
sioners to request a study by the
new DER representatives. A l­
though the city’s first purchase
option for the site was 95,000.
Mercer said a second option for
91. ‘‘or something not much
more," was agreed to by he and
the parcel's realtor before Mon­
day's commission meeting.
Mercer said he hopes DER
officials who were appointed
after the November election will
be more inclined than previous
representatives had been to
Judge the site favorably for the
c ity 's w a s te w a te r p rogram .
Questions about the parcel's use
as a holding area for effluent and
Its ability to be licensed for
disposal were raised Monday by
McClanahan.
.........
The parcels He o ff State Road
46. on either site o f Lake Jesup
In u n incorporated S em inole
County.
"1 wouldn't be surprised if we
needed b oth ." Mayor Bcttyc
Smith said.
City representatives say their
uncertainty over the wastewater
program considers whether the
state will grant Sanford perma­
nent permission for a measure o f
effluent disposal in Lake Monroe.
Studies during the next two
years will decide whether the
approval will be granted, and if
so for how much, city engineers
said Monday. Discussion consid­
ers about one m illion daily
gallons of lake disposal, aside
from annual year-round disposal
of approximately 4 million daily
gallons of effluent at sites the
city already owns.
The sta te D e p a rtm e n t o f
Environmental Regulation is
requiring Sanford to cease the
majority of lake disposal by May.
1989, with Indications some
disposal, down river from the
lake, will be allowed.
A $38,(XX). two year study to
determine the lake allocation
will begin this spring. The city
may be reimbursed as much as
75 percent of the expenditure by
state and federal agencies, city
e n g in e e r s s a id . T h e fir s t.
S19.CXX) allocation was approved
by commissioners Monday.
The 2.200 and 1.700 privately
owned potential effluent disposal
sites were initially targeted by
the city last year, before turning
towards parcels it already owns
for the majority of disposal. The
S a n fo r d -o w n e d s it e s are
parklands. the M ayfair g o lf
course and the Sanford Airport.
An uncertainty about cost
effective use o f these sites,
p a r tic u la r ly th e s c a tte r e d
parklands, was raised Monday
by C om m ission er A .A . Mc­
Clanahan. He proposed at last
week's commission work session
the city renew purchase dis­
cussions for the 2.200 acre site
to offest p oten tial disposal
shortfalls, including those in­
volving the city owned sites and
DER allowances for continued
measures of lake disposal.
A p p o in te d M o n d a y to a
negotiating team for the 2.200
acre site were Mayor Bcttye
Smith. C ity M anager Frank
Faison and Engineering and
Planning Director Bill Simmons.
The system planned by San­
ford without the eastern sites is
estimated at $36.5 million, with
roughly $8.6 million offset by
state and federal grants.

Versatile accents in
our tops and skirts.

9 9
Above:
You'll be in style for spring with these versatile, colorful m isses' coordi­
nates. Pair up our soft and comfortable oversized crewneck sweater
with a bold floral print, 100% cotton skirt. Or choose our brightly printed
button-down top with available matching skirt.

Colorful separates in
women’s sizes.

Left:
Spring separates for a colorful matchup. Choose this oversized short
sleeve sweater in seven different colors or this brightly printed pull-on
skirt. Available in women’s sizes.

TM

e v e r,
Sanford Plaza
M on.-S at. 9:30-9
Sun. 12-5:30

W in te r Park M all
M on.-S at. 9:30-9
Sun. 12-5:30

F lo rid a M all
M on.-S at. 9:30-9
Sun. 12-5:30

( &lt; i » •»

Lake S qu are Mall
M on.-S at. 10-9
Sun. 12-5:30

J C F te n n e y

�1••

r

•r—r - r *

Sanford Herald
(u *w a i m )
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

"7^*1»*^V■'

v n &gt; ^ r * •f&gt;r H.

CHUCK STONE

The W e lfa re System - It's Broke, So Fix It

Thursday. February 26.1967—4A
Wayne D. Deyle. FuMItlier
Theme* Oterdane, Mana«ln« EdUer
Melvin Adkins, Advertlsinf Director
Home Delivery: Month. *4.73:3 Month*. *14.23:6 Month*.
*27.00: Year. *51.00. By Mall: Month. *6.75: 3 Months.
•20.25: 6 Months. *37.00. Year. *69.00.

Actions Behind
Kremlin Walls
N o b o d y , least o f all Mikhail G orbachev, can
p re d ic t w h eth er the continued ru m blin gs o f
c h a n g e in the S oviet Union w ill one d a y
p ro d u ce a gen u in e transform ation o f an
e c o n o m ic a lly backward, totalitarian society
in to a less repressive one patterned after
W e s te rn norm s to the ve ry lim ited exten t
c o n ceiva b le under C om m unist Party rule. N or
ca n an yon e Judge at this point w h ether the
K rem lin o f the 21st century w ill be any less o f
a geo p olitical m en ace than w as the S o viet
lead ersh ip o f the post W orld W ar II era.
B ut the current faw n in g in som e W estern
q u a rte rs o v e r Mr. G orb ach ev’s p u blicityattractin g gestures, such as the recent party
in M oscow for sym path etic Am erican w riters
an d H ollyw ood stars, is prem ature at best.
T h u s far. at least, the K rem lin lea d er’s
in itia tives have am ounted m ore to a public
relations offen sive than a fundam ental reform
o f the ossified S oviet system .
T h is is not to suggest that Mr. G orbachev is
not sin cerely tryin g to liberalize the rigid
Russian econ om y and, to a m uch lesser
d egree, the political system as well. C om m u ­
nism is a fossil o f 19th-century thinking that
ipust be greatly m odified, as It already has
been in China, if it is to survive at all in the
fle x t century. By releasing a few dozen
(political dissidents, tolerating som e criticism
&lt;jf the govern m ent, and easing up a bit on
censorship o f the arts — the m uch celebrated
p o lic y o f g la s n o s t, or op en n ess — M r.
G orbach ev hopes to foster Innovation at h om e
J|'nd case criticism abroad.
&gt;: Y et, only the m ost naive would frill to
question w h ether the energetic, relatively
y o u n g General Secretary o f the C om m unist
P arty w ill m ake m uch o f a real difference o v e r
Ihe lon g run. A question that m ust be asked
Increasin gly is how long Mr. G orbachev can
dem an d sw eepin g changes o f the entrenched
party elite and ordinary citizens (such as his
unpopular curbs on vodka sales) w ith out
b ein g dealt the sam e abrupt fate as N ikita
K h ru sh ch ev in 1964.
T o date. Mr. G orbachev's changes have
b een m ore a m atter o f style than substance.
C on sequ en tly, new contradictions abound
th rou gh ou t R u w la n society. T h e case of galled
dissident lo s ifZ . B egun is Illustrative.
Mr. Begun w as thrown Into the gu lag In
1 9 83 fo r, a m o n g o th e r S o v ie t c r im e s ,
lea ch in g H ebrew . His Im prisonm ent attracted
in t e r n a t io n a l a tt e n tio n a ft e r S o v ie t
p lain cloth es p olicem en roughed up his rela ­
tiv e s and som e W estern reporters at a rare
p u b lic dem onstration in M oscow. T o score
p oin ts abroad, Mr. G orbachev decided to
release Mr. Begun. Thus, G eorgl A . A rb atov, a
K re m lin officia l close to Mr. G orb ach ev,
an nou nced d ram atically on A m erican te le v i­
sion that Mr. B egun had been freed. But the
p ro p a ga n d a flourish initially turned sou r
w h e n th e K G B r e fu s e d to f o llo w M r.
Q o rb a c h c v ’s order. He was fin ally released
an d reunited w ith his fam ily.
r&lt; M r. B e g u n 's p lig h t im p lie s th a t th e
K re m lin ’s n ew c h ie f is not m ak in g as m uch
h e a d w a y as he and m any in the W est w ou ld
lik e to believe. M ore Im portantly, h ow ever.
^Westerners m ust understand that a le g iti­
m a te relaxation o f Sovlet-Am erlcan riva lry
$111 occu r o n ly if the K rem lin reform s go w ell
b e y o n d the cre a tive im age-m aking that has
jlieen the hallm ark o f Mr. G orb ach ev's twoy e a r reign. If he is sincere In his recent plea
for "la s tin g peace, predictability, and con*
fetructivcness in international rela tion s," he
$111 find the U nited States an eager partner,
p ro g re s s m erely aw aits true S o viet flexib ility
Cn arm s control, a troop w ithdraw al from
fghanistan, an end to w idespread abuses o f .
um an rights, and serious negotiations on
Aithcr contested issues.
y. In the m eantim e, Jcane J. Kirkpatrick,
f o r m e r u .S . a m b a s s a d o r to th e U n ite d
R a tio n s , offers the wisest advice: "W h a t w e
should do is try to keep an open m ind and see
What h a p p en s."

A

Politicians and bureaucrats have a saying
they run up their protective flagpoles whenever
reforms threaten their flefdoms:
" I f It ain’t broke, don’ t fix It."
This time, it’s broke, and the welfare system
not only needs to be fixed. It should be
overhauled, rebuilt and eventually eliminated. .
Even some of Its beneficiaries who have
perfected the art of ripping off governmental
good Intentions will concede privately that the
welfare system has gone the way of Humpty
Dumpty.
And all the president’s horses and all the
congressmen can’t put together again this crazy
quilt of almost half a million employees who
disburse $15.8 billion to 11 million people.
Welfare Is no mere system. It’s a sovereign
nation with Its.own army of bureaucrats.
Before politicians can reform welfare, they
must change radically the way they look at it.
Current make-work proposals — Including
those being advanced by ol* Mr. Benign Neglect.
Sen. Daniel P. Moynlhan. D-N.Y. — are
Ideological band-aids, not economic cures. They

don’t attack root causes.
Any effective welfare reform must encompass
the following points:
1. The administration must make a national
commitment to increase the number of Jobs.
2. The economy must be non-dlacrlmlnatory.
Black fathers and mothers who want to work
must enjoy the same access to Jobs as white
fathers and mothers. The close correlation
between racial discrimination in employment
and a disproportionately high percentage of
blacks on welfare is no accident.
3. A subsidized system o f child care must be
offered to low-income mothers who are willing
to work.
4. The requirement that fathers support
families receiving public assistance must be
enforced with heavy penalties.
Beyond these four points, a change In attitude
toward welfare — especially among black
Americans — must take place.
A few days ago my brilliant economist friend
Walter Williams and I were reminiscing about
the deep shame we felt as kids when we received

- even temporarily - surplus fb o d ^ o d a y Ihat
shame has largely disappeared in the black
community. Because of the greater •n'ffuhy of
racism, some blacks feel * e,f* rer . * ven whe*]
abused - represents some kind of 40 acres and
a mule" form o f reparation.
But increasingly, black voices are denouncing
a svstem that perpetuates what Thomas Wolfe
called "unbroken progressions o f fertility" as a
one-way ticket to second-class citizenship.
This is why I was pleased when 32-year-old.
black Albert A. Mond. who works as a cab
dispatcher, wrote me a detailed slx-page pro­
posal for phasing out welfare gradually.
First, wrote Mond. "Make It mandatory that
the state establish who the father Is before It
takes the responsibility for the welfare o f the
child.
Mond’s system Involves a complicated taxIncentlve plan tied to the earnings of the
baby-making fathers.
But. for the first time, he and other blacks arc
telling politicians. "T h e welfare system is broke.
Fix It."

DON GRAFF

ROBERT WALTERS

D ashed
H o p es O f
P e o p le

M e d ic in e
For T h e
P e o p le
EMMAUS. Pa. (NEA) - You re­
quire hospitalization for elective
surgery — but you're directed to a
hospital where your doctor has
privileges to practice, not necessari­
ly the Institution most suitable for
your needs.
The pile o f paperwork you en­
counter at the admitting office
Includes a "blanket consent form "
you must sign. It Is a brazen
attempt by the hospital to disclaim
all responsibility for whatever hap­
pens to you — even if the hospital
staff makes a mistake.
While you're hospitalized, you ask
to examine the chart at the foot of
you r bed that sum marizes the
Information about your condition
and treatment.
A doctor or nurse who firmly
explains that the chart is none of
your business. Even if you were
allowed to look at the chart, you’re
told, you w ou ldn't understand
much because It’s filled with abbre­
viations whose meaning is known
only to doctors and nurses.
"L ife in America Is the pursuit of
liberty. Life as a patient In an
A m e ric a n

h o a p lta l u

m a rk e d

by

submission to custody." notes Rob­
ert Rodale. founder and president of
the People’s Medical Society.
"W hen you enter a hospital, you
cross a border and leave many of
y o u r fre e d o m s b e h in d ." adds
Rodale. "Alm ost everything about
your life... is decided by the Institu­
tion ."
Rodale heads a highly successful
m agazin e and book publishing
business. Many of its publications
discuss health, but none Is as
aggressive as PMS In confronting
the medical establishment.
Enhancing the knowledge and
self-confidence of hospital patients
Is only one goal of PMS. a 4-year-old
o r g a n iz a tio n dedicated to e m ­
powering consumers of health care
with Information and self-reliance
so they can deal with medical
institutions that can be Intimidat­
ing.
"T h e Idea Is simply to avoid
becoming a victim o f the system
that is supposed to help you."
explains Michael Rooney, one of 11
staff members who serve more than
65.000 members from a shingle
house that has been converted Into
PMS offices in this small eastcentral Pennsylvania community.
In return for $15 a year, members
receive a monthly newsletter and
discounts on scores of PMS publica­
tions ranging from booklets on
"Y ou r Heart" and "Blood Pressure"
to leaflets on health maintenance
organizations and children’s health.

" rrS AMCME ABOUT WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF R3RSY1H COUNTY,GEORGIA,TOOK
OVERTUE UNITED STATES,"

WILLIAM RUSHER

Cry O v e r 'A m e r ik a '
Ordinarily liberals have very little
to complain about as far as the
performance of the major media is
concerned. They arc accustomed to
seeing the networks, the news
magazines and the major national
newspapers beat the drum industri­
ously for every liberal cause, from
ever-greater welfare expenditures to
blocking the space shield. Small
wonder that, when the subject of
media balance or fairness is raised,
the average liberal assumes what
Mark Twain once described as “ the
serene expression of a Christian
holding four aces."
We conservatives, on the other
hand, drink the bitter gall o f sensed
Injustice every time we switch on
the evening news or open The New
York Times. Familiarity with the
liberal bushwah that oozes from our
TV sets and drips off the pages of
the nation's most Important news­
papers has never reconciled us to It.
We know from bitter, tooth-grlndlng
experience that the media are. quite
simply, our enemies.
There is. therelore. for con­
s e r v a tiv e s a c e rta in d is tin c t
S c h a d e n fre u d e (th at fin e old
G erm an word for pleasu re at
another's discomfort) In noting the
liberals' reaction to a recent media
event that didn't toe their sovereign
political line. Hell, It transpires,
hath no fury like a liberal who
detects. In the media, a political bias
he or she dislikes.
Recently the American Broad­
casting Company presum ed to
broadcast a 14l/i-hour mlnlserles
entitled "Amerika.” a fictional por­
trayal of life in the United States 10
years after a Soviet takeover. The
Soviets, as you might expect, come
off rather badly in the film, as do

some "peace-keeping forces” that
look vaguely like U.N. troops.
What prompted ABC's executives
to stick their faces In this particular
Mlxmaster Is unclear. This is the
same network that a few years ago
— less than a m on th b e fo re
Fershlng missiles were to be de­
ployed in NATO Europe — ran a
horror film on a nuclear attack
called “ The Day After" that did Its
cynical best to scare the U.S.
population Into blocking deploy­
ment. so we can presumably dis­
miss any notion o f rightist Intrigues
at ABC. Probably the bottom line
was the same In both cases: a
strictly apolitical appetite for sensa­
tionalism and high Nielsen ratings.
But If this Is so. ABC quickly
learned that, as George Orwell
pointed out, all animals may be
equal but some arc more equal than
others. The fury of liberals over
"Am erika." even before they sdw it.
was positively awesome. They did
their level best to gel ABC to drop
the broadcast altogether. When that
brazen attempt at censorship failed,
they bludgeoned the network Into
agreeing to precede and follow the
series with various "expert" panels
designed to pooh-pooh the notion
that the Soviets have any desire to
occupy America, or that the United
Nations Is made out of anything but
sugar and spice.
May w e e x p e c t th at A B C 's
experiment will prove to be one of
the first robins of an Intellectual
spring in which non-liberal view­
points get an equal hearing In
America's major media? Don't hold
your breath. The unshlrted hell that
liberals raised over "Am erika" had
a chilling effect on TV producers
that will last for years to come.

Hope crowded the narrow streets
of La Palma on Oct. 14. 1984.
Fulfilling a campaign promise. El
Salvador's newly elected president.
Jose Napoleon Duarte, was meeting
with rebel leaders in the picturesque
mountain town in what Just might
have been the start of beginning to
negotiate a solution to the country's
brutal civil war.
Salvadorans by the thousands
poured Into La Palma Just to be
there.
I also was there. I saw them
perched in trees, lining roofs of
surrounding buildings, packed body
to body In the small plaza, as the
conferees emerged from the village
church to announce the result of
their discussions: Differences were
as deep as ever, but they had agreed
to keep talking. Hope, for the
moment, was preserved.
Another meeting a month later
ended In mutual recriminations and
placing of responsibility for the
continuing bloodshed. Since, there
has been only talk about negotiation
— and less and less of even that.
Hope has been dashed.
We aren’t hearing much abouHEl
Salvador these days. It Is no longer
Central America's No. 1 crisis point.
That designation has long since
gone to Nicaragua.
But the b lo o d le t t in g In El
Salvador goes on. Eight years of
warfare have claimed more than
60,000 lives, mostly civilian.
Opting for a m ilitary over a
political solution In El Salvador
when It took charge of American
policy six years ago. the Reagan
administration has only succeeded
In prolonging a war. not ending one.
The rebels have been set back, but
th e r e b e l l i o n h as n o t been
suppressed. T w o -th ird s o f the
country is a war zone.
U .S .-su p p lied g u n s h lp s . the
"moaning death" of the Vietnam
War that were supposed to have
g ive n S alva d ora n g o vern m en t
forces a decisive edge, have only
made the killing more efficient.
The economy Is bankrupt. Infla­
tion is running at 40 percent
annually and unemployment, to the
extent It can even be measured In
such devastation, approaches 50
percent. The country exists on U.S.
aid. which Is now Us major In­
dustry. supplanting traditional
"brown gold" — coffee.
The United States has poured
close to $3 billion Into El Salvador
In the last seven years. The annual
bill currently tops a half billion and
is climbing toward the billion mark.

JACK ANDERSON

C o a s t G u a rd Boats M a y E n d a n g e r C re w s

BERRY'S WORLD
V

By Jack Anderson
And Joseph Spear
W A S H IN G T O N T h e Coast
Guard's fleet of about 100 aging
patrol boats must handle a variety
o f missions: rescuing stranded sail­
ors. helping the Navy repel enemy
attack and chasing drug smugglers.
But internal government documents
show that the replacement patrol
boats ordered by Congress may not
be able to do their Jobs because of
serious design flaws.

® IMMUNE* me

‘AR E YOU CRAZY — doing the speed lim it
on an interstate! STEP ON IT !"

Sixteen o f the Island Class re­
placement boats already delivered
have shown an alarming tendency
to develop cracks in the hull when
running at high speed through
heavy seas. A contract for 21 more
was recently awarded to the ship­
yard that built the first batch. It Is
owned by the Republican Party's
Louisiana state chairm an. Don
Bollinger.
Sources In the Coast Guard criti­
cal o f the Island Class boats told our
associate Corky Johnson that an
admiral in the engineering section

was rebuffed recently by Adm. Paul
Yost, the service’s commandant,
when he objected to the proposed
purchase. Yost acknowledged that a
"very open and honest debate" had
been going on over the boats. But he
said it was an "honest difference of
opinion." and no one has suggested
any waste, fraud or other abuse of
the contracting process.
It’s not that Congress wasn't
warned about the alleged inade­
quacies of the Island Class patrol
boat, a 20-year-old British design.
"The Island Class does not meet the
wide range of mission performance
requirements %for a fleet-wide re­
placement vessel." former Coast
Guard Commandant J.S. Gracy told
a House committee. He said the
Coast Guard wants to design a
better patrol boat but was ordered
to buy the Island Class craft any­
way.
The problems are serious. A Navy
analysis last August said the plating
scantlings, or steel ribs, "a re
marginal or deficient through most
of the bottom and In many areas of

the side plating."
While the Navy decided the hull
problem s posed no im m ediate
structural hazard, they "w ill result
in permanent deflection of the hull
plating between framing members.”
Ihe report said. To prevent this,
"high-speed operation o f the craft In
high seas must be avoided" — a
drawback that would give drug
smugglers an obvious advantage.
The steel hull plating Used Is so
thin that special maintenance Is
required. Sandblasting must be
avoided, for example. Yost admitted
that the hull plating Is "th in." but
said the Island Class is "a good boat
at sea." and he Is happy with it.
Coast Guard critics ol the Island
Class boats say the hull problems
constitute potential dangers to the
crews. "Absolutely there are safety
problems." one source said.
O th er p ro b le m s In c lu d e an
oversize engine and high idling
speed, which tend to churn up the
water and swamp small boats being
towed, and a lack of capability for

some Important defensive missile
and gun systems. "T h is is not a
gunboat." grumbled a Coast Guard
source.
An internal discussion paper said
the Island Class Is "not a good
multi-mission resource ... repairs
will be expensive ... and service life
fa expected to be 15 years" Instead
of 20 to 25.
A new design would most easily
get us the boat we really want."
another Internal document con­
cluded. In fact, a Coast Guard
consultant added, preliminary des gns for the Coast Guard's dream
patrol boat have received "higldy
favorable" comments. But the brass
agreed to take the Island Class boat
m o d el o rd e re d by C o n g r e s s .
Footnote: Bollinger Shipyard Vice
President Mark Stanley blamed crit­
icism of the boats on Coast Guard
engineers afraid of losing their Jobs,
and sa!d the Navy report citing
problems is faulty. He said that Peru
has used four Island Class boats for
ycnrs w“ hout major problems

�’ v '' - a

■ .*'/,• #,Y.*

i’r r*

r' &gt;.’•

i

•r -'i V '

r

r

r

r

«“ V ‘r-r?-*r v -r-r —r-r- •T'.\

SMltri HtraW, Santo*, Ft.

High Court Upholds Affirmative
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Supreme Court today upheld an
affirm ative action plan that
promoted one black Alabama
state trooper for each white In a
decision solidifying minority
gains and possibly signaling the
court has made up Its mind on
the volatile Issue.
The Justices — on a 5-4 vote
and led by Justice William
Brennan — rejected the Reagan
administration view that such
plans are unconstitutional and
continued a pattern of defeat set
last term for the administration’s
other view that affirmative ac­
tion plans discriminate against
whites.
"T h e United States maintains
that the race-conscious relief
ordered In this case violates the
Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the
C on stitu tion o f the U nited
States.’ * Brennan wrote.
"It Is now well established that
goverm ent bodies. Including
courts, may constitutionally
em ploy racial classifications
essential to remedy unlawful
treatment of racial or ethnic
groups subject to discrimina­
tion."
The ruling appears to end the
court’s struggling with the vola­
tile Issue of affirmative action.
It began with Its 1978 ruling In
Regents of California vs. Bakke,
where the majority , narrowly
Invalidated a medical school’s
action In setting aside a specific
number of slots for minorities.
T h e Is s u e w a s f u r t h e r
muddled In 1984. when the
Justices ruled In a case from
Memphis. Tenn.. called the
Stotts decision, that a federal
court could not order white
firefighters to be laid ofT before
blacks with less seniority.
However, last term. In two
opinions written by Brennan, the
courts most senior and liberal
member, the Justices found af­
firm ative action hiring and
promotion plans arc acceptable.
Today’s case, and the two last
year, make It clear that af­
firm ative action plans, even
those setting quotas and timeta­
bles. arc acceptable In cases
where there has been a clear
history of racial discrimination
and will remain acceptable at
least until the court’s makeup
changes.
“ B a s ic a lly the court has
shown It Is not wavering In Its
support of affirmative action."
said Ronald Ellis, of the NAACP
Legal Defense and Education
Fund. "T h e Justice Department
suggestion that somehow there
is still some question that af­
firmative action Is unappropriate
has hopefully been put to rest."
He added the court appears to
have made up Its mind.
"I think that’s the Inference
we can draw from this." Ellis
said. "There was some concern
that when you get to more
s p ecific numbers the court
would balk, now Its pretty clear
that remedies In appropriate
circumstances can be specific."
In reach ing the decision.
Brennan said the plan was
Justified In order to "eliminate
the effects o f ... ’long term. open,
and pervasive- discrimination,
including the absolute exclusion
of blacks from its upper ranks."
“ T h e race-conscious relief
im p o s e d h e re w a s a m p ly
Justified, and narrowly tailored
to serve ... legitimate and laud­
able purposes." the court said.
B re n n a n w a s J o in e d by
Justices Thurgood Marshall.
Harry Blackmun and Lewis
P o w e ll. J u s tic e Joh n Paul
S t e v e n s c o n c u rr e d In the
Judgement.
H o w e v e r , in o p p o s it io n .
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor
said the affirmative action plan
went too far.
"T h e one-for-one promotion
quota used in this case far
exceeded the percentage of
blacks In the trooper force, and
there Is no evidence in the
record that such an extreme
quota was necessary to eradicate
the effects fo the department's
delay” in Integrating the force,
she said.
O'Connor was Joined by the
Reagan administration's new
ap p oin tee. J u stice An ton in
Scalla. and Its new chief Justice.
W illia m R ehn qu lst. Justice
Byron White also dissented.
The White House has main­
tained that m inority hiring
quotas arc unconstitutional and
such relief can be granted to
only those who can prove they
have been aetual victims of
discrimination.
However. Its view has not
p r e v a i l e d .
In other action today, the
justices:
—Ruled 8-1 Florida’s refusal to
give unemployment benefits to a
woman fired for refusing to work
on her Sabbath violated the First
Amendment.
—In a California case, ruled
6-3 the stale may not apply Its
gambling laws to the Cabazon
and Morongo Band ol Mission
Indians, which earn all of their
Income bv holding hlgh-stakcs

Bingo games.
—Unanim ously upheld the
Pole Attachments Act of 1978.
which regulates rates utilities
can charge cable television com­
panies for access to their utility

poles.
The Alabama case began with
a class action suit In 1972, by
the NAACP against the Alabama
Department of Public Safety,
charging discrimination.

Thirteen years later. In August.
1985. the appeals court said the
"unfortunate effects of that un­
constitutional discrim ination
still persist."
Appealing to the Supreme

Court, the govern m ent said
lo w er cou rts reje c te d th eir

Court Sides With Altamonte
Springs Woman's Benefit Suit
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
Supreme Court ruled 8-1 Wed­
nesday the state of Florida must
give unemployment benefits to a
member of the Seventh Day
Adventist Church fired for re­
fusing to work on her Sabbath.
The justices. In an opinion by
Justice William Brennan, re­
versed the District Court of
Appeal of Florida, which had
affirmed the state unemploy­
ment office's denial of benefits to
Paula Hobble, o f Altam onte
Springs. Fla.
Hobble was dismissed from
her Job at Lawton and Co.
Jewelers when she refused to
work scheduled hours on Satur­
days.
Brennan said refusing her
unemployment benefits violated
the First Amendment guarantee
of freedom of religion.

"T h e state may not force an
em ployee to choose between,
following the precepts o f her
religion and forfeiting benefits ...
and abandoning one o f the
precepts of her religion In order
to accept work." Brennan wrote.
Hobble had been employed at
Lawton for 2 Vi years when. In
A p r il 1 984. sh e to ld h er
employer she was being baptized
In the Seventh Day Adventist
Church.
Because the church observes
the Sabbath on Saturday, she
said she would no longer be able
to work from sundown Friday to
sundown Saturday.
The next month. Hobble was
dismissed for misconduct and
told by the company manager
that he could not make an
exception to the rule forbidding
m anagem ent personnel from

taking Friday nights or Satur­
days off since those days are the
busiest.
T h e state U n em p lo y m en t
Appeals C om m ission denied
H obble’ s application for un­
employment compensation, find­
ing she had accepted working on
Saturdays as a condition of her
employment and was properly
discharged for misconduct.
But the court concluded the
commission’s action "asks us to
single out the religious convert
for differen t, less favorab le
treatment than that given an
Individual whose adherence to
h is or h e r fa ith p r e c e d e s
employment."
"T h e timing of Hobble's con­
version Is immaterial to our
determ ination that her free
e x e r c is e r ig h ts h a ve been
burdened." the court said.

Q u a lit y

reading o f the earlier Stotts
decision.

C A R P E T

HEAVY PA D D IN G
EXPERT IN S TA LL A TIO N
ALL AT LOW PRICES
ASK A B O U T O U H

90 D A Y S S A M E A S C A S H '
NO

P A Y M E N TS

U N T IL

M AY

0 7

Sem inole Centre &lt;W,il Mart Plaza)
Sanford
Ph 321 8939

New Hours:
lSlT O

t f r V 'f V

,

,*.«'?***

m

-

■
■

■m

wm m

m

*.r

W ith the new tax legislation,you can deduct
But your tax savings are just the half o f it. on-us. W hich could save you uptoS6S0.00v,:
the interest on a Barnett Home Equity Loan
Because if you open a Barnett Home Equity ^ So come in and open your Barnett Home
and lower your 1987 taxes. Something you Loan or CreditLine before A p ril 15th, you II E quityLoansoon.il you donl, next A pril 15th
won't be able to do with a lot o f other loans.
also be sheltered from closing costs # T h e y ’re it could be yi &gt;u that gets soaked.

W e P a y T h e C lo s in g C o s ts ,Y o u D e d u c t 1
T h e In te r e s t.
In Orange anti Seminole ( aunities, call 628-IX)AN (5026).
limiti-Jim.if v -raVrv n UufcJ in FlunLi ’ Mmuwil fuirJ on in8/23 SO&gt;un*y «/

« FLrkjjun UunJahOJoun* two

iuh»r»uut*nuuAJiorri.

Vvl
aifn.il Uankso/ Hursii. Inc All Him. It llinfa.uwmrmt.nu/ rW C

SW|,

&lt;\,*

�v,j*j.,"l(»' p
*
#*&gt;*'»-»■ \ *»/rk

0- ----■
----------

* A—Sanford H traM , Sanford, FI.

Thunday, Fab. 24, 1W

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Expectancy, a
nervous sense o f relief and a bit o f gallows
humor pervaded President Reagan’s White
House as today's deadline loomed for the
Tower Commission assessment of the Iran
arms-Contra aid scandal.
When a phone rang in the press ofTlce. a
receptionist announced Success magazine
was calling. "T e ll 'em they’ve got the wrong
place." a more senior press officer replied
without missing a beat.
Another spokesman, asked how the news
stafT was planning to cope with what shaped
up as an unpleasant afternoon, said he
expected "an easy d ay" with the media
k e e p in g Its s h a r p e s t fo c u s on th e
300-plus-page report characterizing the
president's conduct of the afTair.
“ We Just have to keep people from
breaking their arms and legs" when 1.000
copies of the report are laid down In the
press room, the aide said.
Reagan, described by chief spokesman
Marlin Fltzw ater as "v e r y high” and
"u p b e a t" w ith the deadline nearing,
planned to attend today's news conference
arranged by the Tower Commission to
introduce the three-man board he appointed
three months ago to review operations of his
National Security Council staff.
Aides said he then would begin reading
the most complete assessment to date of the
scandal to prepare for his public reaction —
which sources said is likely to come in a
nationally televised news conference Tues­
day night.

IN BRIEF
Shultz Leaves For China Whose
Leaders D eb ate Dem ocracy
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Secretary o f State George Shultz,
leaving the Iran arms controversy behind for a few days. Is
traveling to China where the leadership Is still grappling
With the debate over wider democracy.
Shultz, who leaves early today, will be flying to Alaska
when the Tower Commission issues its report on the Iran
arms-Contra aid affair.
Shultz has said he had only sporadic and fragmentary
Information about the arms sale to Iran and no knowledge
ubout the diversion of profits to the Contra rebels In
Nicaragua.
A senior official said the Chinese government extended
an Invitation for the trip last fall. The two governments
have an informal understanding for high-level exchanges
at least once a year.
The Shultz trip takes place against the background of the
Chinese leadership allowing unprecedented public criti­
cism of its policies by students and writers, and then a
sudden government crackdown on "bourgeois liber­
alization."

Confirm ation D elay Opposed
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The chairman of the Senate
intelligence Committee says the nation cannot afford the
panel to delay action on the nomination of Robert Gates to
head the CIA. a move suggested by other Senate leaders.
Sen. David Boren, D-Okla., said Wednesday he docs not
believe "It Is good for the country or for our national
security Interests" to have the post o f CIA director filled on
an interim basis for a "prolonged period of tim e."
Gates Is serving as the acting CIA director pending his
confirmation to replace the ailing William Casey, who
retired following brain-cancer surgery.
Boren Issued the statement In response to comments a
day earlier by the leaders o f the Senate select panel probing
the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal. Sens. Daniel Inouye,
D-Hawali. and Warren Rudman. R-N.H.. said they believe
the confirmation should be delayed until their inquiry is
completed late this summer.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A fed­
era l Judge, in te m p o ra rily
b lock in g th e In d ictm en t o f
ex-White House aide Michael
Deaver on perjury charges, has
agreed to decide if an Indepen­
dent prosecutor is constitu­
tionally able to lodge criminal
charges.
The abrupt and unexpected
decision by U.S. District Judge
Thom as Jackson, who cited
"substantial questions" about
the federal ethics law. not only
threatens the nine-month probe
of Deaver's lucrative private lob­
bying practice but also may pose
a major obstacle for Lawrence
Walsh, the special prosecutor In
th e Iran a r m s - C o n tr a a id
scandal, and at least two other
pending Inquiries.
T h a t Is b e c a u s e D e a v e r
employed Wednesday the same
defense tactic used a day earlier
by Lt. Col. Oliver North In the
Iran-Contra matter — challeng­
ing the constitutionality of the

W ASH ING TO N (UPI) — O fficials from the seven
Industrialized democracies, facing the delicacy of discuss­
ing terrorism amid the Iran arms scandal, arc postponing a
secret counter-terrorism session because word of it leaked
out.
The meeting was supposed to be held In Rome 10 days
ago without fanfare but II was quietly shelved after at least
one European ally objected to public disclosure of the
session and the meeting was "rescheduled." an American
official said.
A European diplomatic source said the meeting of
counter-terrorism officials from the United States. Britain,
Canada. France. Italy, West Germany and Japan Is now
scheduled for "within the m onth" In Rome.
But the source declined to be more specific, fearing that
rould force yet another cancellation. "W e don’t want a big
deal." he said.

Lost G u th r ie S ongs D is c o v e re d
PORTliATID, Ore. (UIMl — More than 40 years utter
woody Guthrie wrote 26 songs In one month — for about
S10 each — to promote Jobs on Columbia River dam
projects, five of the songs feared lost have been found and
soon will be released on an album.
inlvJC
s,n8cr- who died o f Huntington's chorea in
1967. was hired by the Bonneville Power Administration to
write a film score for a 1941 documentary promoting its
hydroelectric projects on the river.
Discovered by the agency’s Bill Murlin ns lyrics only, the
five songs were sent to Guthries longtime friend. Pete
Secgcr, who was able to match four of them with the music
he figured Guthrie had Intended. Sceger wrote the original
music for the fifth.

la w

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Former national security adviser
John Poindexter has been subpoenaed by a House
subcommittee to testify on government computer security,
but his lawyer Is refusing to say tr Poindexter will show up
k, T .
1} 0^ SC Governmenl Operations Subcommittee on
National Security, on a voice vote with no dissent, decided
to Issue subpoenas Wednesday after Poindexter and his
former aide Kenneth deGraffenreld refused committee
Invitations to appear.

'G r a d is o n s a id th e CBO
e s tim a te s cu rren t m o n th ly
Medicare premiums of $17.90
lor "Part B" doctor's coverage
would rise by $6.40 under the
administration plan, and asked
Bowen to respond.
"T h e $4.92 figure has been
checked and rc-chcckcd by our
actuaries." Bowen said, but he
added the cost was based on a
1986 estimate. "The $6.40 for
1988 may be accurate."
"T h e question of whether
54.92 or 56.40 is in the ballpark
is v e r y I m p o r t a n t . " sa id
Gradison.

i

by. w h i c h

Mi&gt;mi

.. «v-*»

*»■ - '

•••■

*' *

FREE SPIN A L EVALUATION
I SI

\ I

I M is

is

M O

f

WARNING SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES

v \ ___ ____

1. F re q u e n t H e a d a c h e s
L o w B ac k o r H ip P a in
D iz z in e s s o r L o ss o f S le e p
N u m b n e s s of H a n d s or F e e t
N e rv o u s n e s s
N o c k P a in o r S t if fn e s s
A rm a n d S h o u ld e r P a in
luluitwa Indudn. fnlvn Luljtu, FiutiM Ini. Short
lt | Tnl. Short Aim Tnt And Talk With Doctor.

ALL INSURANCE ASSIGNMENTS
ACCEPTED'
’ Subject To FtHcr Llmltrt Ask about our " M ik in g Chiropractic A ffo rd a b le " Program
- I m £ P A T IE M AN D A N * 0 » h £R p e r s o n RESPONSIBLE f OH PAYMENT H A S A RIGHT TO REFUSE TO
» A * C ANC EL PAYMENT OR BE REIMBURSED FOR p a y m e n t f o r ANY o t h e r SERVICE E IA M IN A
I i O N O R TREATMENT A H IC H IS PERFORMED AS A RESULT OF AND W IT H IN T J HOURS O F RESPON
PINO TO THE ADVERTISEMENT FOR Th e FREE SERVICE E IA M lN A T IO N O R TREATMENT

as White House aides.
"T h e president can't seem to keep his tale
straight." said Senate Democratic leader
Robert Byrd of West Virginia. "H e can't
remember what he said or when he said it."
The Rev. Jesse Jackson said after an
unrelated meeting on domestic issues of
concern to blacks that the crisis has "cast a
shadow over the White House.”
Reagan has canceled his usual weekend
trip to Camp David. Md.. to study the
document, talk to aides and advisers and
prepare his response. Fltzwater said Wed­
nesday. Word on the expected resignation of
chief of staff Donald Regan is expected
before long.
Still, one White House aide said on the eve
o f today's report: "T h e re 's an air of
expectancy. It's upbeat to the extent it will
all soon be over." *
Along those lines. Nancy Reagan appar­
ently felt positive enough to arrange a public
appearance as her husband awaited the
report. The first lady planned to attend a
musical drama about drug abuse at a
suburban Virginia school today.
Unlike other smaller crises, this one has
not damaged the civility and good humor of
a sometimes beleaguered White House press
office. One reason, though, may be that
much of the office has left, or is leaving, for
greener pastures.
By the end of this month, five press
officers will have left: Larry Speakes. Peter
Roussel. Denny Brlsley. Dale Petroskey and
Jeanne Wlnnick.

FRIDAY. FEB. 27

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.. Sanford Chamber of Commerce. 400 E.
First St. through April 15.
STANDING MEETINGS
Central Florida Kiwanls Club. 7:30 a.m..
Florida Federal Savings and Loan. State Road
436 at 434. Altamonte Springs.
Seminole Sunrise Kiwanls Club. 7 a.m.. Airport
Restaurant. Sanford.
Optimist Club of South Seminole. 7:30 a.m..
Holiday Inn. Wymore Road. Altamonte Springs.
Rebos AA. noon. Rebos Club. 130 Normandy
Road. Casselberry (closed). Clean Air A A for
non-smokers, first floor, same room, same place
and time.’
Wekiva AA (no smoking). 8 p.m. Wekiva
Presbyterian Church. SR 434, at Wekiva Springs
Road. Closed.
Longwood AA. 8 p.m.. Rolling Hills Moravian
Church. SR 434. Longwood. Alanon. same time
and place.
Tangtewood AA. 8 p.m., St. Richard’s Episcopal
Church. Lake Howell Road. Alanon, same time
and place.
Sanford AA, noon, open discussion: 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.

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.

Sanford Women’s AA. 1201 W. First St.. 2
p.m., closed.

regarding military ex-spouse laws. Call 628-2801
for Information on meeting place.
STANDING MEETINGS
East-West Sanford Kiwanls Club. 6 p.m..
Friendship Lodge. Seventh and Locust.
Families Together Parent Support Group, 7:30
p.m.. 900 Fox Valley Drive. Sweetwater Square.
Suite 206. Open discussion. For information call
774-3844.
International Training in Communication
Greater Seminole Club. 7:30 p.m.. Altamonte
Chapel Education Building on State Road 436.
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 668-6783.
Freedom House AA (women only). 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.

In d e p e n d e n t

counsels are appointed, the 1978
E th ics In G o v e rn m e n t A ct
approved in the wake of the
Watergate scandal.
The Judge, acting on a lawsuit
Deaver filed Just hours before a
grand Jury was asked to indict
him on five counts o f perjury,
issued a 10-day restraining order
preventing independent counsel
Whitney North Seym our Jr.
from proceeding with the case.
Justice Department officials
called Jackson's ruling "highly
unusual." not seen since civil
rights actions o f the 1961s.
The indictment of Deaver. a
veteran aide and close personal
friend of President Reagan and
the first lady, would mark the
first criminal charges brought by
a W atcrgate-style prosecutor
under the ethics law. Four other
such probes have cleared highranking government officials.

Panel Subpoenas Poindexter

AS

In response to a question Wednesday.
Fltzwater told reporters Reagan still believes
his intent was proper In the covert sales of
U.S. arms to Iran and that his effort to build
ties with Islamic "m oderates" did not
represent a deal to buy freedom for
Americans held by pro-Iranian captors In
Lebanon.
" T h e president has acted e n tire ly
appropriately throughout the whole thing."
Fltzwater said. "H e does not believe he
broke any laws or deceived the people."
Official visitors to the White House were
peppered with questions about the presi­
dent’s demeanor the day before the report
was handed down. Not all were as positive

Judge Blocks C O M IN G EVENTS
Deaver's
THURSDAY. PEB. 26
National Action for Former Military Wives. 6:30
Indictment
p.m. Presentations on new or proposed legislation

Terrorism M e e t Postponed

WASHINGTON (UPI) — Presi­
dent R ea ga n 's catastrop h ic
health insurance plan would
cost an additional $6.40 a month
for Mcdlcurc recipients, not
54.92 as the administration
estimated, the Congressional
Budget Office reports.
The administration, under a
plan drawn up by Health and
Human Services Secretary Otis
Bowen, proposes Increasing cov­
erage for Medicare recipients to
limit their out-of-pocket costs to
no more than $2,000 annually.
The increased coverage would
be paid for with the increase In
premiums.
Rep. Willis Gradison. R-Ohlo.
said Wednesday at a meeting of
tile House Ways and Means
Committee that the premium
would be higher than at first
thought.

mni

W h ite House W a it Causes M a n y M oods

NATION

C a ta s tro p h ic
In s u ra n c e
V e ry C o stly

—♦ '

SATURDAY. FEB. 28

PUBLIC INFORMATION SESSIONS
S E M IN O LE C O U N TY EXPR ESSW AY A U TH O R ITY
The Seminole County Expressway Authority will hold public information sessions on
March 3, 4, and 5 to provide information about the alternative routes being studied for
the Seminole County Expressway. These sessions will be held in an open-house setting
with maps and reports available for review by individuals. Authority staff and con­
sultants will be available to explain the study and the alternative alignments and to hold
informal discussions with residents and other interested citizens. Also, written and ver­
bal comments will be recorded. The schedule for these sessions is as follows:
Place

Date

Tim e

March 3

3 :0 0 -9 :0 0 p.m.

Winter Springs Municipal Building
1126 East State Road 434, Winter Springs

March 4

3:00 - 9:00 p.m.

Sanford City Hall
300 North Park Avenue, Sanford

March 5

3:00 - 9:00 p.m.

Sanford Civic Center
401 East Seminole Boulevard, Sanford

The map shown t 2low depicts the study corridor within which potential alignments have
been identified for the expressway extending from S.R. 426, near Dean Rd., to Interstate
4, near S.R. 46.
The same information will be presented at each session. However, at the March 5
information session, representatives conducting studies tor a Western Beltway which
extends from Interstate 4 west, around the Wekiva State Park, to the Florida Turnpike
will be available to discuss the potential alignments within Seminole County.
For additional information, please call: Seminole County Expressway Authority,
1101 East First Street, Santord, Florida 32771, (305) 321-1130, Extension 388.

LA K E M A R Y BLV D .
C H IR O P R A C T IC CLIN IC, IN C.
9 0 }

I

M a r jf

Lake

S u it e

3 2 2 -9 3 0 0

O lv d

U u yh cu d

10 1
C e n te r

T H O M A S F. Y A N D I L L . J R . O .C .

SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA

T O T A L IN S U R A N C E
S E R V IC E
REMEMBER
YOUR INDEPENDENT AGENT
SERVES YOU FIRST

T

MARYLAND CASUALTY
COMPANY

4 *

KARNS
INSURANCE AGENCY me.
413 W. First St.

Pti. 322-5762

William H. "Bill" Wight C.P.C.U.
President

Sanford

EXPRESSW AY CO RRID O R STUDY AREA

�- ( »/*-«.

1f i » « W ^ f e .
{
'i f
Mitfori HtraM

Ft

n,

TkwMiy

?A
* ''•* *

^CRTc-.

R a id e r s C o n f r o n t In d ia n R iv e r In S t a t e J u C o O
Junior Coltugu Statu Rutfcotbull Tournumunt
a t tho Univunlly Cantral FturMu
■ l:M p .m . — Chlpola v t. M iam i Dadu South
3 M p m, - South Florida vs. Gulf Coast
7 p.m. — Florida vs. Bravard
f p m. — Samlnola vs. Indian R Ivor

By 8am Cook
Herald Sports Editor
Sem inole C om m unity C ol­
lege’s Raiders realized a fiveyear quest of coach Bill Payne
last week when they won the
Mid-Florida Conference post­
season qualifying tournament to
earn a berth at the Junior
C o l l e g e S t a t e B a s k e t b a ll
Tournament.
Tonight at 9. the Raiders
would like to take the quest one
step further against Indian River
or Fort Pierce as the tournament
opens at the U n iversity o f

Central Florida gymnasium in
Orlando with four first-round
games.
M a r ia n n a C h l p o l a , th e
Panhandle champion, battles
Miami Dade South, the Southern
runner-up. at 1:30 p.m. Avon
Park South Florida, the Suncoast champ, takes on Panama
City Gulf Coast, the Panhandle
r u n n e r - u p . a t 3 :3 0 p .m .
Jacksonville's Florida Commu­
nity. the Mid-Florida champion
and ranked No. 1 In the state,
tack les Cocoa B revard, the
Suncoast runner-up, at 7 p.m.
The semifinals will be Friday
at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. with the
finale Saturday afternoon at
3:30. The Saturday starting time
was necessitated due to a UCFFlorida International game at
7:30 p.m.

Basketball
Seminole, which boasts the
tourney’s top record at 29-4.
would like nothing better than a
Saturday afternoon showdown
with nemesis FCC-J. which
handed the Raiders two of their
four losses. The pairing Is prob­
able since division teams are in
opposite brackets but Payne said
the Raiders will more than have
their hands full with Indian
River tonight.
“ Indian River is a lot like
Florida Community." Payne said
Wednesday afternoon. "T h e y
have a great bunch of athletes
and like to run-and-gun. They
are a very good transition team.”

Coach Mike Leatherwood. a
15-year veteran with the Pio­
neers, has posted a 294-157
record. 1RCC Is Just 17-12 this
year, but won 13 o f its last 18 to
gain a spot in the state's elite
eight. It finished 8-2 to win the
Southern.
Indian River revolves around
6-5, 185-pound all-stater David
Williams. The Miami freshman
forward averages 16.7 points,
8.3 rebounds and 6.4 assists per
game. He leads IRCC In points
and assists and is a close second
in boards.
"W illiam s kind of plays allarou n d ." Payne said. " W e ’ ll
start with Barry Dunning on him
and if he can't do the Job we'll
have to hunt around for some­
one else."
J o in in g W illiam s Is point

\

O iitr ld 4A-* Butkutbull Tournumunt
at Suminolu High School

Bn

team can encourage.
"Sometimes they try to do
things too rast." he said. "W e ’r*
hoping they get Into high geat
because they are more tumjover-oriented than us. They like
to throw a lot o f lobs and
challenge you 3-on-3."
The Raiders will counter w ill
a bigger frontline — 6-8 MFC
Player o f the Year Vance Hall
6-7 forward Claude Jackson anc
6-7 Dunning — although none o
the three Is noted for his bulk
Point guard Darrls Gallaghei
and shooting guard Malcotn
Houston, both all-confercnct
picks, complete the starting five.
Forward James Morris, stll
hobbled with a knee injury
ex-Lake H ow ell High guarc

See JUCO, Page 9A

Tribe's Spurt
Buries Howell

Sam
Cook i
siM V A D n
SANFORD
HERALD
SPORTS
EDITOR

guard Donnie Yarborough.' allconference 6-4 Vi forward An­
thony White (13.9 ppg, 4.8 apg).
6-3 forward Nathan Boyd (14.8
ppg. 6.7 rebounds), 6-4 Vi
Stanley Preston {8.2 ppg. 8.6
rpg). 6*4 Robert Jones (11.3
ppg). 5-8 Shaun Fitzmorrls (8.8)
and 6-6 Victor Delhi (5.4 ppg).
Fitzmorrls and Delhi are the
zone busters. Seventy-two per­
cent of Fitzmorrls’ efforts come
from the 3-polnt range.
"T h ey use six or seven guys
interchangeably." Payne said.
"T h ey will play a 1-3-1 zone, so
I'm not sure if the matchups will
amount to anything.**
P a y n e said Indian River,
which Is averaging 92 points
while allowing 60. does have a
tendency to play out o f control at
times, something he hopes his

Tonight*! gamut
7 p.m. — Daytona Busch Mainland v».
DuLand
1:30p.m-. — Lyman vs. LokoMory
Wadnatday't rut ulti
Sprues Cruuk 11, Lakt Brantluy U
Suminolu 71, Laku H o w *II44

O w n e rs Huddle,
Raines Expects
Contract 'Break*

i&amp; t

Tim Raines, who has been
b id in g h is t im e b e t w e e n
S Seminole High's baseball field
p a n d the Energy Source fitness
SSccnter. said W ednesday he
'' expects "something to break" in
the form of a contract this
Nvcckend.
| Raines, a 27-ycar-old who
spent the past six season as an
all-star outfielder with Montreal,
is one of baseball’s free-agent
. plums. His only problem is this
is not the year for free agents as
the owners try to keep a lid on
their spending.
The players maintain collusion
while the owners call it frugality.
Regardless. Raines Is still
wit liout a Job and he quipped
t Wednesday. "I might, have, to .
apply for unemployment If 'lt^
goes on much longer."
. *He received some encouraging '
news Wednesday when the San
Diego Union reported the Padres
were going to "reopen negotitions" with Raines with a more
lucrative offer than their original
tw o-year S2.2 m illion pact.
"1 would be happy with what I
made last year." Raines, who
earned S I.5 million plus incen­
tives, said. "T h e team and
length of contract are no longer
that important. I Just want to get
somewhere and play."
R ain es said the b aseball
owners meet today with Com­
missioner Peter Ueberrroth. "I
ixpect something to break after
that meeting." he said. "I may
be signed with somebody by
Friday."
The San Diego Union also
. reported that San Diego is the
only team courting Raines, but
the fo rm e r S e m in o le H igh
standout said that is not true.
Atlanta, the family's personal
preference, is also In the hunt.
"H o u s to n and the Dodgers
might be. too." Raines said. "1
know the fans and players in LA
t t are putting pressure on the
Dodgers. But I doubt if that will
mean anything."
Raines' agent. Tom Reich, is
understandably upset with the
owners. The dapper attorney has
Raines and ex-Detroit catcher
Lance Parrish in his stable but
has not been besieged with
offers. Raines led the N.L. with a
Seminole's W alter " T lp m a n " Hopson, right,
.344 average last year while
changes
position in m id-flight as he goes
Parrish is considered the top
catcher in the A.L.
Reich has said Ills plan is to
sign both players before the
spring training games begin
(March 5) and "then sue the
DALLAS (UPI) — Having dealt the sternest
owners for collusion."
punishment in its history, the NCAA now will
Raines. In the meantime, said
he is in excellent shape. "M y
wait to see if the decision to strip a university
of Its football program must be argued In court.
weight is right where I want it
The NCAA wiped out Southern Methodist
(185 pounds) and I have been
University's 1987 football season Wednesday
swinging the bat real well." he
and ordered other harsh sanctions because
said. "I feel that I will sign by
thousands of dollars were paid to cut rent and
this weekend. The teams want
former players.
you in ramp for spring training
SMU officials steadfastly said ihey would
and I've got to feel somebody
accept the punishment in hopes of building a
can use m e."
n t» t*
clean football program from the rubble of the
one that was all inti destroyed Wednesday.
Coach Mike Ferrell said Raines
The possibility of lawsuits exist, however,
has been "a big help" with his
from several sources — Including players now
Semlnoles' 3-0 diamond start by
left without a team to faculty members who
working with the players on
feel their Institution may suffer lost funding
their hitting.
because of the bad publicity surrounding the
Seminole's quick start is defi­
football scandals.
nitely drawing some attention.
An Issue in any potential lawsuit is that the
Sports Illustrated, which has a
NCAA look its action without naming a single
tendency to uncover more than
person responsible in the illegal doings. How
it covers this time of year, will be
can hundreds of Innocent bystanders be made
hi Sanford today.
to suffer, a lawsuit might claim, wilhout
No. th e ’ N otes u n beaten
anyone knowing who lias brought about the
opening has not drawn the
national spotlight. S I just wants
suffering.
The sanctions announced Wednesday in
to get some pictures of Raines
working out — and waiting.

By Sam Cook
Herald Sporta Editor

rm

fi

Xf y

'

1

Bill Klein has un old adage.
" I f you keep after them long
enough, you'll eventually get to
t h e m . ” th e s e c o n d - y e a r
Seminole coach said following
Wednesday night's District 4A-9
Basketball Tournament opener
against Lake Howell.
Seminole played hard and long
but not very well for 26 minutes
a g a in s t the upsturt S ilv e r
Hawks. W ith 5:40 to play.
.Sem inole held a precarious
54*44 lead. Howell sharpshooter
Steve Johnson then missed a
short Jumper.
Suddenly, the game grew too
* long for the Silver Hawks.
Seminole. u n lc^ U n g a relcn t-

B jtJ v

Dijit i

Hfc 1
w jp * 1

of the contest for a 71-44 victory
before 511 fans at Bill Fleming
Memorial Gymnasium.
"W e were playing well and
then we got tired and didn't take
care o f the basketball,” Lake
Howell coach Greg Robinson
said. "T h ey Just killed us with
personnel. If they play like that
(the flve-mlnutc surge). I don't
see anybody beating them."
Twentieth-ranked Seminole.
25-5. won Its ninth consecutive
and 19th of Its last 20. The
'Noles play the winner of to­
night's (8:30) Lake Mary-Lyman
gam e. Port O range Spruce
Creek. 22-5. eliminated Lake
Brantley. 61-54. in Wednesday's
first game. The Creek takes on
the winner of tonight's lirsl

Basketball
game between Daytona Bcaclk
Mainland and DeLand.
Klein said he expected Ills
Tribe to be somewhat flat sinco
It handled the Hawks by 4Ci
points Friday night In the seasonj
finale. "W e have some depth antf
I really expect everybody I put Inthere to play w ell," he said. "A;
lot of guys played hard tonight'
and at the end they played
well."
Lake Howell, playing Just one*
senior, had trouble containing,*
Seminole's 6-8 Craig Walker In;
the second quarter as the big;
Junior bounced o lf the bench foi;
eight points. W alker's spurt;
snapped a 15-15 tie und when;
Mike "S pu d" Edwurds. Waitet
"Tlptnan" Hopson and Freddie
Gadson combined for the last:
eight points, the 'Nolcs took a*
33-20 halftime lead.
" I didn’ t like not starting.
d.
was anxious to play hard. After:
that long absence. I was ready to
get on llie boards."
Hopson's hoop, meanwhile,
was a brilliant move. The 6-4
Jumping jack took a nifty fullspeed feed from Roderick Hen­
derson. switched direction of the
bail in mid-tlighi to avoid Aaron
Gammons, and banked home
llte layup.
The Hawks, who finished 5-16.
were not out. however. Alonzo
Robinson, sophomore Paul Rein.
Phil Clark and Johnson out
scored the ‘Noles 20-15 in the
third quarter to pull within
48-40. Johnson's dandy drive
down the lane resulted in a
three-point play witli 58 licks
See SPU R T. Page 9 A

C re e k G e ts Past Pats

_

_ _ _ ___ ______
Herald Photo By Louis Raimondo

around Lake Howell's Aaron Gammons for a
layup. Tribe spurted late for a victory.

SMU Officials To Accept Fate
addition to the canceling o f the 1987 SMU
season, include the loss of four 1988 games,
the playing of all seven ol the 1988 games on
the road, the loss of all scholarships this year
and a limit of 15 next year, no television
apperances until the 1989 season and no bowl
games until after the 1990 season.
“ The lemporarv loss of football will Ik - a
bitter outcome for som e," said Interim SMU
president Dr. William Stallcup. "But. as a
university, we accept it, knowing lhat. in our
recent dealings with the football program and
with the NCAA, we have done what Is right
and that we have conducted ourselves In a
manner befitting our university."
What SMU did In its latest round with the
NCAA was to locale every misdeed possible.
And to do that, SMU officials said, they had to
promise anonymity to people who could
provide them with the Information they
sought.
It was that issue lhat drew most of the
questions at a bizarre news conference Wed­
nesday — during which NCAA enforcement
director David Berst fainted.

By T im Horn
Special to the H erald
Although Port Orange Spruce
Creek won three times as many
games as Lake Brantley did this
season, the 16thranked Hawks
found all they could handle with
the determined Patriots Wed­
nesday night before earning a
61-54 victory in the opening
round of ihe D istrict 4A-9
Basketball Tournament before
7 1 fans at Seminole High's Bill
Fleming Memorial Gymnasium.
The No. 2 seeded Hawks,
plagued by turnovers and poor
shooting all night, held a slim
52-46 margin over Patriots with
Just over three minutes left
before a tenacious full-court
press opened the way for a 9-2
outburst, giving Spruce Creek
an Insurmountable 6 1-48 lead
with 1:34 to play.
The Hawks. 22 5. will play the
winner of tonight's Daytona
Beach Malnland-Deland contest
In the semifinals on Friday.
Creek coach Jim Romanlszyn
was not all that happy with his
squad's play, but said he said he
knew the Patriots. 7-16, would
pul forth a good effort.
"I was concerned about our
play all night." lie said. "W e
turned the bull over too much
and we can't expect to keep
winning If we do that. Hut good
teams win when they play bad
and we did that tonight."
They played us lough earlier
In the year though, so I didn't
expect it to be an easy game for
us. They're a very methodical
team, very patient."
Patriot coach Steve .lin ker fell
his team had trouble getting
started In the first half. "W e
seemed to be a step slow in the
first half and I don't know why."
he said. "Maybe we were saving

B a s k e t b a ll
our energy for some reason or
maybe It was just that big court
there (at Seminole), but we Just
weren’ t moving llie ball well and
we didn't execute.
"W e did play a little better In
the second hair though, but they
pressed well there in the end and
lhat hurt us."
Colby Williams led the Hawks
In scoring with 12 points, all
coming In the first half, and also
pulled down a game-high nine
rebounds. Center Lowell Lucas
had I 1 points, guard Corey Bell
scored It) coming off the bench.
Levon Dart hard had seven steals
and dished out five assists from
Ills point-guard spot, but also
committed 10 turnovers.
F o r w a r d B r e tt B e ll, th e
county's leading scorer, scored
14 for tin- Patriots and pointguard Joe NoHT added 13 ill the
losing effort.
Iinih teams were a little shaky
in the early going, which Spruce
Creek came out leading. 15-10.
at the end of the first period.
A combination ol good defense
by Lake Brantley and some cold
s h o o tin g by S p ru c e C reek
enabled the Patriots in close to
within 39-35 at tin- end of three
periods as NolIT actually outscored the Hawks in the quarter
hlmscll alone. 6-4. Bell tallied
the other two buckets for the
Patriots.
LAKE BRANTLEY (34) — Bell II. L d **W
1, Noltl 13. Shirley 4. Leva 4. PampllnO. While
4. Morse 2. Total! 20 14 24 54
SPRUCE CREEK (41) - Bell 10 Cooks a
W illiam ! 12. Darthard 5. Pough 2. Luca) II,
Sear)9. 5ml1h 2. B arr) 2, Totals- 24 13 2241
Halftime — Spruce Creek 25. Lake Brantley
25. Foul) — Lake Brantley 19, Spruce Creek
20 Fouled out — Shirley. Noltl, Sear)
Technical — none

5

�■

; * v - - ? : *i -F ^ a ^ B q e ^ E i ^

■A—Sanlord Herald, Sanford, FI.

&gt;

MPgMWM

a. .&lt;“ vj- &gt; .: &gt; -&gt; ;.

Thursday, Fab. 24,1997

L o w ly O ld J ig S till B e st A ll- A r o u n d Lu re
What Is the most versatile lure of
alUimea?
Such a question would likely stir
up lengthy debates among knowl­
edgeable anglers. No matter how long
or complicated arguments might be
for various lures, the answer to this
controversial question is amazingly
simple.
It is the lowly Jig. The most ancient
of all lures is still the best all-around
artificial for both fresh and saltwater
fishing.
No other hire will catch such a
variety of fish under totally different
fishing conditions. Jigs an* not only
deadly for bream and speckled perch.
They are used in hundreds of feet of
water to catch grouper, snapper, and
amberjack.
Saltwater anglers have long appre­
ciated the simple |ig. The majority of
tackle boxes contain at least a few of
these lures in different shapes and
colors.
Rarrlv do Jigs get the credit or the

use they deserve in bass fishing.
Current trends like Jig and pork frog
fishing and the flipping method have,
to some degree, stimulated Jig inter­
est.
It would behoove all anglers to
learn more about this deadly fishcatching lure.
With the Jig. an angler has the
option of fishing the entire water
column or focusing on one portion. It
ran be yo-yoed from the bottom to
the top. lingering In any zone, or
bounced along the bottom In short
hops.
Few anglers realize that all Jigs do
not exhibit the same movements in
the water. Head shape, coupled with
how the Icadhcad Is dressed, become
determining factors in how the Jig
moves through the water.
Lead-head shapes such as the spear
and arrow tend to be more erratic
than the rounded bullet head.
Countless designs are on the market
and each moves a little differently

of the big bass are being caught on wild shiners
fished near cover.
Dell Abernathy at Osteen Bridge Fish Camp said
that bass fishing has Improved a great deal Bass In
tha S I pound range ere being caught each day.
Speck lishlng Is also Improving, with a few specks
starting to bed, Jig the tllly pads or fish slightly
deeper water for the best results. Dell said that the
specks appear to be biting the best In the afternoon.
Shed ere still thick, lor anglers wanting some test
action
The action at Sebastian Inlet Is restricted to a few
seatrout Iron! 3 J pounds. Snook anglers ere still
anxious to rush the season with the opening ol snook
lishlng on M arch 1.
Captain Jack at Port Canaveral reports that
offshore bottom fishing It still good, with good
anglers scoring some huge catches In the hundreds
ol pounds. Most ot the grouper and snapper appear
to be congregated along the 77 fathom curve.
Trolling has been e little slow, but coble end other
gameflth should be making their annuel spring run
soon. Inside the Port, sheepsheed, flounder,
btuellsh. and e few weektlsh have been keeping
fishermen busy. Troul ere still scattered In the
Banana and Indian rivers. (Remember that there It
a closed season on redflsh In March and April.)
Fishing has been good at the Hew Smyrna lefties.
For steady action, tlsh a live shrimp on the bottom
of the north side of the jetties. Cast to the edge of
the rocks and work the shrimp beck slowly.
Sheepsheed. drum, flounder, end other assorted tlsh
will eagerly |ump on your belt. Blueflth ere still
roaming the jetty rocks end can be caught on about
any type ot artificial.

the Jig. It Is an Incredibly versatile
lure that will tempt an Impressive
variety of fish, both In fresh and
saltwater.
Mastery of this lure will not only
make you a better fisherman, but It
will also improve your catch.

Jim
Shupe
SANFORD
HERALD
FISHING
WRITER

0 mu
SHUPE’S SCOOP -

than the next.
Dressings on Jigs range from the
traditional bucktall (hair from the tail
of a deer) to artificial hair, feathers,
and nylon. Soft plastic worms, grubs,
and bait tails are often added to lead
head Jigs to make them appear more
realistic.
Jigs are made in an array of
weights ranging from a tiny fraction
of an ounce to a pound or more. The
basic rule of thumb Is to fish the
lightest Jig possible.
Given a choice of only one lure,
most veteran fishermen will choose

A great way
to catch bedding speckled perch Is to
use a light cane pole and a 3-4 foot
length of 10 pound monofilament
line. Tie a small white No-Alibi Jig to
the end of the line and then hook a
Missouri minnow through the lips.
Use your trolling motor for power,
and Jig the lure/mlnnow combination
into every likely nook and cranny.
Let the speck have the Jig and
minnow a second or two before
gently setting the hook.
Rick Rawlins « t Highland Park Fish Camp
reports that tha speck fishing Is good Either |!g the
lllty pad fields or troll la k e Woodruff with Hal Flits
lor the bast results. Bass fishing Is starting to peak,
with fish over I pounds being weighed In dally. Most

M a r tin a
S truggles
But W ins

SEMINOLE COUNTY STATE QUALIFIERS
1*2 — Dan Roth. Lake Brantley; Robert
rVnwrD Lehr Mary 10* — Scott Flores.
Lake Mery Its - Sheralton Mays. Seminole
Wayne Clayton Lake Mary UJ — Enrique
Carth* Lake Mary IM — David Flgler. Lake
Howell 11* — Rot Richard* Lake M ary. Jon
Hombecfc. Lake Brantley 14] — Chris Clna

Lake Howell 14* — Bill Richards. Lake
Mary IS* — Tracy Turner. Seminole; Tad
Roman. Lake Mary I7t — Troy Turner,
Seminole Henry Helm. Lake Howell, t l f —
Keith Denton. Seminole t!4 — none HWT —
J pmbo Smith. Lyman UNL — Troy Jackson.
Lake Mary

Confident Rams Seek
Best Finish; Turner's
Injury Hampers Tribe
By Chria F ilter
Herald Sporta W riter
With eight wrestlers quali­
fying. at least six of which coach
Doug Peters feels can place.
Lake Mary's Rams arc in posi­
tion lo come away with their
best finish ever in the Class 4A
State Wrestling Tournament.
For Seminole High to repeat its
perform ance o f a year ago.
though. Junior Tracy Turner
must he given the okay to
wrestle by his doctor.
W iille L a k e M a ry an d
Seminole, wit it Turner, have the
best team chances. Luke Howell.
Lake Urantley and Lyman all
have wrestlers competing In the
4 A S ta te T o u r n a m e n t b e g in n in g
F rid a y • a n d e o n lu d tn R S a t u r d a y

night at Lyman High School.
Friday's weigh-ins will be from
10.30 a.in. LintII noon followed
by the first round of wrestling at
2 p.tn. and the second round at
7. Weigh-ins Saturday will be
from 8-9 u.m. followed by semitinals at 10. tvrcstlebacks at
13:30. consolation round at 6
and (Inals at 8. Admission for
each session is S-L
"I think we're sitting pretty
good." Peters said. "T h is Is ihe
best group o f competitors we’ve
had since I've been here. Wc
can't Ik* any better prepared,
mentally or physically, and the
lough schedule we had will work
in our favor."
; Lake Mary's eight wrestlers in
(he tournament include Robert
pottle rn at 102 pounds. Scott
florcs at 109. Wayne Clayton at
) 16. Enrique Carbla at 123, Rob
Richards at 136. Hill Richards at
149, Tad Roman at 159 and
T ro y Jackson at unlim ited,
florea, Clayton, both Richards
brothers and Jackson were all
regional champions. Carbia. a
(tear miss, completes Peters'

W r e s t lin g
"6-shooter."
"Flores has a real good shot at
tiie semis and Clayton Is set up
fairly good and has really coine
on so he could score some big
points for us. too." Peters said.
"R ob (Richards) Is really confi­
dent he can do well and BUI
(Richards) has a legitimate shot
at the finals. Troy (Jackson) has
been there before and is confi­
dent he can do well."
Defending champion Miami
Soul bridge Is the favorite to
repeat while others who could
cuntend

arc

Clearwater

C ountryside. M erritt Island.
Lake Mary and always tough
Brandon.
"W c have six kids I think can
place and two or three I think
can do big things." Peters said.
" I f we can score a lot in the first
round, we can surprise some
people."
Seminole, seventh In the state
last season, q u a lifie d fou r
wrestlers Including Sheralton
Mays at 116, Tracy Turner at
159. Troy Turner ut 171 and
Keith Denton at 189.
Tracy Turner, a Junior, injured
a hand in the regional meet and
will Hud out today if he will be
able lo compete at state.
"W e think it might be some
kind o f fracture,*’ Sem inole
coach Glenn Maiolini said. "If
It's too severe, he won't be able
to wri-ulle. if he does, he'll still be
handicapped but I still think he
has an outside chance of plac­
ing."
Mays, a senior, was second in
the state at 109 pounds a year
ago hut has found the going a
little rougher at 11G.
"T o do as well will be a little

H«rald Photo by Lout* Halm undo

S anfo rd 's T ro y T u rn e r, re a r, puts the
squeeze on L a k e M a r y 's T ad R om an.
T u rn e r, twice a state runner-up, goes for all
tougher this year for Sheralton,"
Maiolini said. "But he still hasn’ t
hit his stride yet. He has to hit it
this week or it will be difficult for
him to reach finals."
Troy Turner is anxious for
another shot at u state title that
eluded hint because of an injury
last season. He goes into the
state meet with a 29-0 record
with the closest match being a
10-5 d e c is io n o v e r M iam i
Southrdlge’s Jeff Solomon In a
dual meet,
"T roy is feeling the best he's
felt In a long tim e." Maiolini
said. "1 really think he'll win it
this year. He’s not going to have
a cakewalk and he will have a
little pressure on him. but I
think he can handle it."
Denton Is a Seminole High
football standout with little

ihe h ardw are at 171 pounds in the state m eet
a t Lym an. Roman also qualified at 159.

wrestling experience who has
com e on strong In the late
season to qualify for his first
state meet.
"H e's a longshot to place."
Maiolini said of Denton. "H e's
real strong but still Inexperi­
enced. He was injured at region
when he was thrown off the mat
and into a wall and couldn't
continue the match. But he's
tough and will come back and
has the potential to get points for
us at state."
Maiolini said the Tribe’s team
place depends on whether Tracy
Turner will be able to wrestle.
" I f wc lose Tracy we’re nol
going to be able to do as well. Wc
probably won't get in the top 10.
if he wrestles and places, we can

do as well as last year (sixth
place)."
Lake Howell qualified three
wrestlers for slate Including
David Figlcr at 130. Chris Clna
at 142 and Henry Helm at 171.
Clna and Heim were second In
the region while Flgler won the
consolation round.
Lake Brantley's state qualifiers
are Dan Roth at 102 and Jon
Horn beck at 136 while host
L y m a n 's lo n e q u a lifie r is
heavyweight Jlmbo Smith. Roth
has a solid chance at placing al
102 and has slate tournament
exp erien ce w hile Hornbeck.
lourth at region. Is in his first
state meet. Smith is looking to
cap off a tremendous season by
placing at state In front of the
home crowd.

fa m p a Leto Rides Tradition
Into C lass 4A Fa vo rite's Rote
.'

C U it 4A SUt« Soccvr Tourrum tnt
at U k i M iry High School

•I
\

Friday'* game*

Soccer

7 p m — Tampa L«lo v i. Oranqe Pork
1pm
Lake M ary vs M iam i Killian

B y Chris Flster

s u i t Tourrum tnt Laadtri

Herald Sports W riter
j! Tradition, talent at every posi­
tion. coaching —&lt; you name it —
•Tampa Lcto has it. Overall
Excellence Is what makes the
•Falcons prohibitive favorites
•going Into the Class 4A Stale
jpoccer Tournament.
Leto. 19-0-1 and I lie topTanked team In the last state
jJmiIL opens play in its third stale
tournament Friday afternoon at
•2 against Orange Park at Lake
jjviarv High School. In Friday's
•second semifinal game. Miami
•Killian takes on host Lake Mary
•iit 8 p.tn.
j The Falcons, under roach Ray
(j)il'om po, were state champions
8n 1985 when they beat Lake
•Brantley in the (Inal, and lost in
jphe finals in six overtimes to St.
jpetejsburgSeminole In '82.
j! "O ur defense is not as big as
,ilie '85 team but a lot quicker
yimd more skilled," DIPompo
’said. "And we have a more
jiotcnl offensive attack than '85.
^’d rate this year’s team a little
■trouger."

Top g o ilic o rtrs
T J Blum. M iam i Killian..................... 31
Phil Grots, M iam i Killian.................... 7*
Erni* Broennle. Lake M a ry ................ 7a
Benny O'Connor. Orange Park............74
Pal Polt, Tampa Leto........................... 24
Scott Day, Orange Park...................... la
M ali Haidak, Orange P ark..................17
Alex Sancher, M iam i Killian................IS
Rick Broennle, Lake M ary. ................12
David Willoughby, Orange Park..........12
Jon Brooks. Lake M ary ................. .
11
Brian Aimerek. Orange P ark............. It
Coalkeepers/shuteuts
Jay Mlllson. Orange Park.................... 17
M iam i Killian (Jkeepers).....................is
Brell Phillips. Tampa L e to .................13
Pete M cNally. Lake M ary................... II

Am ong L e to ’s accom plish­
ments this season include win­
ning the Pizza Hut Tournament
with a 2-1 decision in penalty
kicks over Miami Killian and
knocking off unbeaten and sec­
ond-ranked St. Petersburg In the
sectional. The only blemish on
the Falcons' record Is a 1-1 tie
against Scffuer Arm wood.
" W e ’ ve goi great o v e ra ll
balance on this team." DIPompo
said. "A n ti an oth er o f our
strengths Is we played some of

tiie top teams In the state during
the regu lar season. H aving
played In the Pizza Hut and a
tough district has helped us a
great deal."
The Falcons' balance is re­
flected In the statistics as they
have scored 83 goals in 20
games and given up only six.
Twenty different players have
scored and goalkeeper Brett
Phillips has 13 shutouts.
Offensively. Pat Poll leads the
way with 24 goals and 11 assists
while Carlos Cubas and Chris
Luppens have seven each and
Brian Kennedy and Jon Miller
each have six
D efensively, DIPompo said
Rich Biondi. John Bluffstonc.
Kennedy and Steve Paulk are
the mainstays while Phillips has
had a brilliant career In the goal.
"H e (Phillips) has done a super
Job for us for three years.”
DIPompo said. "H e's played 61
games in ills career and lias a
record o f 55-4-2 with 34 shut­
outs."
Leto goes against an Orange
Park team with a '26-1 record
and 25-gamc winning streak.
The two have not met this
season but DIPompo said the
Falcons won't take the Warriors
lightly.

KEY BISCAYNE (UPI) - On a
day that featured some of the
biggest names in tennis playing
their first-round matches at the
Llpton International Players
C h a m p io n s h ip s , s p u n k y
Arantxa Sanchez o f Spain stole
the show.
The 15-year-old Sanchez, the
youngest player In the field,
used her aggressive, diving style
to give Martina Navratilova the
most severe test experienced by
any of the top seeds In action
Wednesday. Playing her first
tournament since losing to Hana
Mandlikova in the finals of the
Australian Open a month ago.
Navratilova defeated Sanchez
7-5.6-4.
The rest of the top seeds had
an easier time o f It In the
r a in - s o a k e d $ 1 .8 m i l li o n
tournament.
Second-seeded Chris Evert
L lo y d ro lle d o v e r J e n n ife r
Mundcl of South Africa 6-0. 6-1:
No. 4 men’s seed Yannick Noah
defeated Claudio Panatta 6-3.
6- 7 (3-7). 6-2. 6-3; Mandlikova.
the fourth seed, beat Helen
Kclesl 6-1. 7-5: and No. 6 seed
Jimmy Connors breezed past
Ben Tcslerman 6-1.6-1,6-3.
Other seeded players in action
W ed n esd ay Included No. 6
H elena Su kova, a 6-4. 6-3
winner over Jenny Byrne: fif­
th-seeded Pam Shrlver. who
defeated Alexia Dcchaume 6-0.
7- 5: No. 15 Catarina Llndqvlst,
who topped Patricia Hy 4-6, 7-6
(7 - 3 ), 6 -3 ; N o. 8 J o a k lrn
Nystrom. a 6-2, 6-3, 6-2 winner
over Robert Green; eleventhseeded Mikael Pcrnfors, a 6-7
(10-12). 6-3, 6-2. 0-6, 6-4 victor
over Marcel Freeman: and No. 8
seed Kathy Rinaldi, a 6-3. 6-4
winner over Ann Hcnrlcksson.
Evert Lloyd Is playing in her
second tou rn am en t a fte r a
five-month layoff because of a
knee injury, and was an upset
victim in Ihe third round of last
week’s Virginia Slims of Florida,
losing io Kate Gompert in three
sets. She said the layoff has not
affected the physical part o f the
game, but she has lost her
mental edge.

STRAW S RADIALS
Look At These Features:
• Stect Qehed Radial • Whitewall
• W orkmanship and Material Warranty
• Road Hazard Warranty
• All Season Tread Design
• Free Valve Stem Replacement
• Free Lifetime Rotation
• Free Mounting and Dismounting

DOG
RACING
NOW!

NIGHTLY 7:30 p.m.
Except Sunday, thru May 2nd

MtUnees Monday, Wednesday,
A Saturday1:00 p.m.

We Have The Size For Youl
P155/80RI3
P165r80R13
P t7 5 /B 0 n i3
Pt65/B0R13
P I85/75R I4
P195/75R14

OIL CHANGE,
FILTER, LUBE

*10.95

May tha exciting ft Ugh

paying "Fk;-6" - minimum
jackpot $5,000. Also two
"Double Quintal**" and the
“Superfecta”.
THURS. - FREE grand
stand admission for ladies

P205/75R14

P215/75RU
P205/75RI5
P215/75RI5
P22577SR15
P235/75R15

ROTATE, BALANCE &amp;
ALIGNMENT

Up to
5qts.

$

29.95

COMPLETE BRAKE JOB

Most Cars - Front or Rear

Replace Seals, Repack Bearings, Turn
Rotors or Drums, Replace Pads or
Shoes, Check Complete System.

* 4 4 .9 5

•ABOVE PRICES GOOD FOR MOST CARS*

AOK TIRE MART

Visit our two climate-controlled
clubhouses lor your fine dining
and entertainment pleasure I

MON.-FRI. 8-5:30, SAT. B-3

CLUBHOUSE RESV.: 8 3 1 -1 6 0 0
U 4 * ( * ,C * ,( I

SA N F0R 0-0R LA N D 0
KENNELCLUB
North ol Orlindo. Just oft Hwy. 17-92
101 Dog Trick Rosd, Longirood
Sorry, No 0n« Under I I

2 4 1 3 S. F R E N C H A V E .
VISA

S A N F O R D • 3 2 2 -7 4 8 0
ASK ABOUT OUR INSTANT CREDIT

•H O IC E

I

�ih
T k i n k y, Fefc. tt* H W -fA

M— ML « —Mnl, F t

i

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

KMfWMIO UPI/NIIAIOHIVICII

TV/RADIO

0 11-11 n f f ; P (M ) IMP; T (I M l 111.IP;
QaffBM (14111 IM P
I M —!/M.T:PLP)
1 DoniMaria
l l f f n a UM
1 PrncntJ'O
Iff Iff
I G ffffnA nfri
iff
o o n a if f; p t i n n t ■&gt; r ( i n i m N i
IP (il-4 1 ) UtAPP
A -ttM :ff-

mtvnm

Lady Raiders To Encounter
Chipola In Tourney O p en er
Seminole Community College's Lady Raiders enter the
state tournament today at 3 against a team with which
they are very unfamiliar. SCC. 17-8. will take on Chlpota
Community College. 16-7.
"W e don't know a thing about Chlppola," SCC assistant
Debbie Schcrr said. "It's one of the few teams we haven't
played or seen play."
Florida Community College, which has not lost to a
Florida school this season and has Sanford's Mona Benton
at third guard, is the tournament favorite with a 24-1
record. The Lady Stars are ranked No. 3 nationally.
Miami Dade South Community College. Indian River
Community College, Manatee Community College. Polk
Community College and Mlaml-Dade South Community
College fill out the rest of the tournament field.
The Lady Raiders are led by Pam Jackson In the scoring
department as she averages better than 20 points a game.
Paula White and Lisa Starks also contribute heavily to the
offensive attack.
— M ark M y th s

Rams H and 'Hounds First Loss
Tom Boysen and Brett Thorpe combined for three of
Lake Mary's four victories Wednesday as the Rams edged
Lyman's Greyhounds. 4-3, In prep tennis action at Lake
Mary.
Lake Mary improved to 5-1 with the win while Lyman
nowstandsat3-l.
At number three singles. Boysen outlasted Lyman's
Steve Huber. 9-7. and. at number four singles. Thorpe
thrashed Matt Albert, 8-1. Boysen and Thorpe later teamed
up for an 8-5 victor)- over Huber and Todd Helser at
number two doubles.
Lake Mary also got a singles victory from number five
player Dave Sharidan who thumped Helser, 8*1.
Lyman took the first two singles matches Wednesday as
number one player Eric Hochman downed Lake Mary's
Erin Weinman. 8-2 and Steve Westmoreland upended Mike
Renaud. 8-3. Hochman and Westmoreland also won
number one singles over Welnman-Renaud. 8-3.

A p o p ka Topples Sanford, 35-30
Apopka used the game-high 18 point effort of Victor
Smith to case past Sanford. 45-30. in the Florida Youth
Basketball Junior League District 4 Tournament Wed­
nesday night at the Salvation Army Gymnasium In
Sanford.
Sanford, hurt by 4-18 shooting from the foul line, was led
by Travis Perkins with 12 points as Demctry Beamon
chipped in seven.
In Wednesday's second game, the Orlando All-Stars
claimed a 55-50 victory over coach Mickey Norton's ICBA
Scmlnolcs. Marlow Poteat had 13 points and Andrew
Boatman 11 to lead Orlando while David Brooks had 18
points for ICBA and Ken Atkins had 10.
— M ark B lyth e

O ak Ridge Bombs H o w ell, 11-1
Orlando Oak Ridge used a combined two-hit pitching
performance from Neil Ellis and Greg Snuf to shackle Lake
Howell, 11-1, Wednesday In prep baseball at Oak Ridge
High.
The Silver Hawks. 3-4. went through three hurlers as
Oak Ridge pushed across seven first-inning runs.
Chris Norton and David Bauss each had singles for
Howell which returns to action Friday at home against
Orlando Bishop Moore.

U eberroth Bars Hoyt For Season
NEW YORK (UPI) — Teams willing to take a chance on
LaMarr Hoyt have to wait at least a year.
The American League’s 1983 Cy Young Award winner
Wednesday received the most severe penalty of Commis­
sioner Peter Ueberroth's 2 W-year tenure. Hoyt was
suspended for a full season by Ueberroth after being
Involved In three illegal drug Incidents during the past
year.

...Spurt
■
Continued from 7A

ileft.
J erry " S t ic k " P ark er,
n o n e t h e l e s s , s t a r t e d th e
S e m i n o te s ' e n g in e w ith a
breakway. two-handed stain fol­
lowing a steal 54 seconds into
1 1he fo u r th q u a r te r . A f t e r
Edwards found Andre "Sm ooth"
Whitney with a pass which led
to a 52-40 lead. Robinson called
; time out to regroup his Hawks.
It worked for two minutes as
Johnson and Randy Keller hit
back-to-back buckets around
another hoop by Parker to trim
the lead to 10 points.
Each team turned the ball over
twice before Seminole started to
click. With 6-10 Brad Baird. 6-5
Steve Hathaway and 6-2 Reggie

. . . J u

C

o

Continued from 7A
Efrem Brooks, forwards Hotly
Keller and Carl Hack worth along
with 6-6 Robert Williams com­
prise the second unit.
"Inside rebounding is their
s t r e n g t h . " P a y n e , w h o is
assisted by S an ford 's Dean
Smith, said. "W e haven't been
outre-bounded by many teams
but we will have to get on the
boards."
Which is no problem lor Hall.
D u n n in g a n d J a c k s o n .
Seminole, which averaged 97
points white allowing 81.6, outrebounded l tic opposition by
slightly more than 10 bounds
per game. Jackson, who turned
In a superb effort In the quali­
fying victory over Valencia,
nosed out Hall, 8.4-8.1 for the
season. Dunning pulled down
6.3 per game while Houston, a
6-0 leaper, chipped in 4.6.

"Cheese" Bellamy cleaning the
boards and Edwards. Henderson
and Whitney running the break,
the Scmtnoles blow the Hawks
out of the gym. Freddie Gadson
highlighted the run with his first
career slam.
Robinson said Edwards Im­
pressed him the most. "That
E d w a rd s is a su p er k id , "
Robinson said. "H e distributed
the ball real w ell and gets
everybody Involved In the of­
fense."
Edwards finished with nine
assists, four steals and 10 points.
W h itn ey handed out seven
assists and Henderson totaled
live. Parker had 13 points and
W a lk e r fin is h e d w ith 10.
Hathaway controlled the inside,
scoring eight points, snatching
nine rebounds and blocking six
shots. Hopson rejected five
shots.

Hall led the inside scorers with
17.9 p oin ts w h ile Jack son
chipped In 13.0. Dunning 8.7
and Morris 8.6.
While the frontline is impos­
ing. It was SCC's backcourt duo
of Gallagher and Houston which
separates the Raiders from the
competition. Gallagher, a 5-7
dynamo, averaged 14.1 points
and handed out 10.9 assists. The
tricky left-hander Is Immune to
pressing defenses. "He is the
best point guard In the state,
regardless of division." Payne
said.
Houston, m eanw hile, may
someday earn the same praise as
a shooting guard — If he does
not already. The 26-year-old Air
Force veteran filled It up al 20.9
ppg. Included w ere 132 3pointers by the exciting bomber.
"Just getting to state was
nice," Gallagher, an Orlando
Edgewater High product, said.
"But that Is not enough. We
want to win ihe whole thing."

For 4th Tim e

TeeatffcC* ffr**/J trC * Scltefftae

TV/RADIO:TarigariUm*

#

G o To Battle

TONIGHT’S SCHEDULE

1 » - V A A : » ja
I 'attRoyalty
ffff If f if f
1 SaanaA
o ff I f f

I f M - l VPN Miami * FtaAa V«*» IL)

ISkatem)

1p.m. - USA. F e r ff i« VanPwt.lt I LI
f p m. - t V H Outa at Narttt Cantina IU
It pm. - ( t f f t Sou**m Cat at UCLA i l l

BAIR ETBAIL: NIA STANDING!

DOGS
DOC R A C IM A M ro trr* O r t a *
WariiaiPay ttapATt P ru itt
Iff- V IA , B: J i l l
I CJ’lSaPt*
HOC I N I X
1 TwifJamM
i H HO
t PaanAlaaii
Iff
0 ( H I I4.pl; P tall n .N ; T 14111114 N
t t - V I . 0:10.14
1 LoatAFar
ITS a ff ] ■
I EM kar&amp; rl
a ff IM
4 SallitanJC
140
0 ( M l a i l : f (M l ff.N ; T II At) IMM;
00(41) MM
VP —V IA M: 11.41
1 Quit!Cvta
I t « I f f IIP
1 CriPanraPMea
I f f IB
] OMarWoman
Iff
QIWII4JP; P (H )4LM ; T IM 11ZHM
• a - v t C : ja n
7 ManattaHtpa
l l f f i f f HO
I Bnokiria
Iff Iff
1 CJ Haul ia
Iff
Q ( M l 1111; F ( M l 44 M. T I I H I HIM .
Svm DM (IMF) M M
H U -V IA A I I I I
) THumpar
Iff
Iff Iff
1 M A tfia r
iff Iff
t WrtpMFattu*
Iff
O il lIM P t P IM M M Pt TO M W 14I
tip - VIA C 11 41
I CatPFIat
I f f I f f 4»
I WrlgMDnfta
t« Iff
I Nan Da Jane
Iff
0 IM ) ILN ; F O i l tt 44; T IU 4 I I f f N
n a —v a I ; nos
1 Bladurp
MM l l f f I f f
4 OaanO
Iff Iff
7 BBlQneTon
Iff
0144) PI.IP; P 144) M iff; T (4411 X4I4M
ffk - V 1 A 0 :l1 H
2 DaillnMgh
If f Iff Iff
1 MinpatBronco
10f f l l f f
J Wtwa ifftiudga
)N
0 ( H I ff.H i I (M ) HAW; T 17 7 1) 44* N
*18-7/14, C.-ttM
7 Oaudwaiker
72 04 MO i f f
4 WngM Jupta
!P « 410
I ACBoctalLarl
IM
Q 141) HAM; P1141H IM ;
T 1141)

Mam
I f f * - V I I . TA; 1*01
I ES Ban(amm
B « I f f 410
1 All Tan
I f f IB
1 NoPhmJohn
iff
0 01)11 t li P ( H I l l f f ; T U S D M iff
u rn - v i a M i n
4 SJCoip
If f if f Iff
1 Sam i Hot Stuff
i f f HO
4 River Critic
Iff
0 (H ) 21.10; P 1411 l i f f ; T(AM ) IU.N;
PK V i (1417141. 4 at I paip It « a w i
IM M ; Carrya w 18.747 N

M I N : Slat* Junior Colffg* Basketball Tournament at
UCF: 7 p.m. — Florida CC vs. Bravard CC. t p.m. —
Seminole CC vs. Indian River CC

Herald Sports Editor

BOVS; District PA-f Tournament at Seminole High, First
Round: 7 p.m. — Daytona Baach Mainland vs. OaLand. 1:10
p.m. — Laka M ary vs. Lyman

BA8KBTBALL

M a la r ia l
A im -F7W8F A M IItffl.O aFttlaad
4 &lt;S pm - » X llA M 174). WW1F AM
llt f f l . Catiapt. Miami at FtariPa itata
I P p * — H UE!AM (IMP). Cattafi.
SamtarJ at Station
I IP pm. - PrMMAAM (M l. WWBFAM
(HX1, CM8 *4 Florida atVndarfclt

9 A 1K E T 9A LL

l l l t p r a C ia ltr a a c i
A * jf fk Okrtaff*
IIP L Pet. 0B
Soi*an
4] 14 Iff Pkiiadeffria
II 14 Jit Hi
Waffingffn
i t a 117 n
Non Tart
&lt;« i t in a »
No* Jorwy
II 41 141 ff
Central Dniuan
IM Dotr»t
11
M ln o fflt
10
OH 1
Atlanta
H
lit I
CNC40O
17
J it t
Indffni
17
Ml 10’&gt;
m ii
C tv tm d
n
Weittm Caetrrtact
M ffw tO m u o n
N L P(t. OB
la i f til Oahm
UtM
i i n V I 41
Howffn
It M ill I t
Denver
la H I f f U 'l
Sin Antony
7
i t la W 1
Stcramarto
to ii m tp
PlCtdt Divhaw
LA L it an
.up Portland
114 I I
M M
ii
Goldin Vita
474 11 1

AOrianJlSanaHoightill
Boni ng Croon u. Wail Michigan 71
Eattim Michigan ORMiami (0.) M
M e'juet-tH Forffiamal
Michigan as. Mmnttoti 70
Nabratkalf OkiatanaSt 77
N gtraD am tU O apulil
Toledo N. BaM SI N
WabathfS. EarihamU
w .t LaCre ff. WH. Wh.N 7!
W t EauClartif W4 Stouto*
* - l Stovent Pt 47 WH Othkoth U
WrigM Si 70. Ind Pw Ft Wayna M

m

ill

mn
ma

LA Clipcan

BoCon ta, Portland 111
0**roii I0A ClevoUnp 101
Do. 141 Iff. Sacramento '01
LA L a tin to. Phonic 11
T h o r iP iy ‘ 1 C im a i
(ART)m ai(lT)
InPianaalWaVunpton.7 ffp m
NonJenayalChicago I ffp m
PtuladripMaatS«tAnlon«l 10pm
Noutlon &lt;t Utah. 110 pm.
LA Clipper* l l Golden Stitt. 10 N p m
Otnvtr II Seattlo. 10 » p m
FrtPoy'tOtmol
Indiana l l No* Jortoy. night
Botton at Atlanta, night
Portland at Ootroit. night
Phi laPUphla at Dallai n.ght
CO'Pm S'a't at LA Lakert, night
IAIKETIALL: Wypnnday’i Callege le iv lh
f a il
Botton U n. Siena »
California IP a ) M. L x k Haven It
Cofey as Seta 71
Elmira II. Robot ty Wttlyan 77
Holtlrall. Te**on$l 74
Lallyeltt IV But knell ff
Long Ititnd *0. Wagner H
Maine H. Non Hampshire I t
NJ Tach7a Ml SI M ary'tU
N a jt r il l . Kent St U
Northetttyrn H. Vermont M
a d A rvtury 14. ManhattMviilo 71
Prov'danci IS. Seton Hall 71
R«ftrD. l e n t i l
R ulgrt t l George Wellington II
Sa'em SI ff, U Ne* England is
SI Francn INYJ17. Cant Conn S ill
St ThomatAavinaiM.Cabtinin

Imyfhe Dhrtliao
y Edmonton
» It
1 I t IPS UP
W nnipag
la «
I U IM IM
Ci gary
IS f f
1 71 I f f I f f
Lai Angata
IIP
7 U 141 I I I
Vancouver
If M
| f f H I 111
yrinckadptayath
WaPnetdiy t Rrioltt
No* J trte v l EAtantonl
NVRangart i Toronto?
HarttordA Bottom
Montrtai X Chicago 1 (OT)
T b o r id a y 'a Sarnia
(AN Timas 1ST)
OuabacatBoaNnl 8 p m
St. LouHftBwHaio 7 U p m
Vancpuvar at Dampit, 7 8 p m
PiTHbur* a&lt;NY Itlanpan I B p m.
PhiiadaipNa at Catgary. 1 8 p m
Wmipog at Laa Angata ff 8 p m
F rtfty 'i Oarntt
EPmonton f t Wnh.ngffn. nght

Stany Broo* ax Kmgi Point l l
Syrprita f f $t John a ll
MS
A labim iQ Tonntuatll
Conlro ff. S rttc ll M
C iem tonffG i Tach 77
C oHagtOtCTwtatak V onaoiil
E on 71. L*ns&gt;r R hyntll
Landar 11 Aden 71
lomtiena Si H W n t i p c V ta
V l l 71 AuAurn *7
Pit-Harff. Atlantic Chrittianff
SW Lou liana 7A Flprida AAM 71
Southtrn 101NW Lou&gt;t&lt;ene 71
virgm aff. W aktFw ntcl
Woforp f f Ctntrpl Wailayan 74

BASEBALL
BASEBALL: WadnotPayi Baaam

MumrlWekfForatt]
South F u r.p ft CtntralFtaitfa!
Control FUrffa at Tampa, ppp. rpn
Fta-da Southom U Pplm loach Allantic 2

ArkantatS* ll, PanAmer.canM
Houston l i Tana Chrittian u
TataaTachU-TaiatM
Writ
Col W Idaho 14 Southern Orygon 71
Colorado M Kwttal 8
Ceorgo Fo&gt; Hi. Wem«r Pacific 7J
Coniaga I i Portland Jl
Hay»ardSt B. Sonoma Si V HOT)
HumpotaSt si, UCDav tSI
Loyola BPoppordmo 71
Oregon Txh HI. N W Neiertno 71
San Franc,tep 71. Santa Cara M
SanD*goll, St MaryUCalit I f f
W ntan Oregon 17. Wtita n Bipt.it 7a

Alabama f f Samlord)
Auburn 11 Ala B rm ngM m l
Ciymtonl W Carol na I
Furman 1. Nenterryl
ALtvtfipplIaUnionRy 41
NC CharUttt A North Carolina 1
South Alabama 0. Aub Montgomery I
South Carolina f f Franclt Marion 1
Tmnetteell Tutculuml
Yardpbiit 11. Middle Tynn 1
W Kentucky 10 Dav dlipnom b)
Poikt V a w a J
Hid! School
CMandoOakR'dgtll LakaHooelM

HOCKEY
NOCRET: NHL STANDINGS

SOCCER

W a l t t C a « la r&gt; ic a
Patrick &amp; vine*

SOCCIB: M i ll STANDINGS

B IT

Philadelphia
17 II I
V U I
NT ItlanPari
NY Rangert
1? 17 I
Wllhingffn
I I 7! I
Pitnburgh
nnH
24 11 S
Ne* Jertey
Adamt OrviuM
M ifttad
O 24 « IS
MAfl'rail
21 24 • 47
001bn
» 27 i 41
24 X 1 14
Qurita
BuMjo
ff
22 It
CraiaAtll C w tatw a
N trm Oitwan
W l T Pll
&gt; tro .t
24 24 » 41
M nn«io&gt;4
74 II 7 SI
I t lo . i
22 27 10 M
O t*g o
» » 10 14
Tororb
» U 1 1)

CF
14]
701
144
211

6A
177
101
170
IJ7

224 210
210 271
HI
H4
III
102
HO

XI
XI
207
X)
727

CF
Iff
221
K)
270
111

CA
HI
ns
771
240
241

Eatlar* Chviutn
W
70
BaHimort
s
Cleveland
Daiiat
ii
H
M.nnetota
10
Chicago
7 74a* York
7
Wtitarn Orninn
Tacoma
11
17
Ian D ago
1)
Wth.la
14
Kama* City
a
l l Lou'i
7
Lo* Angata
llaamArfiwct
WtdMidiT i F ru it
Ka"iai City 4 Minneiota
P ffn d iy ’i Gamat
No gamat ichaduiad

L Ptt. SB
a HO m k

-

17
17
14
»

111
M0
S8
111

7
7&gt;
4)
U’ l

10
II
14
17
77
21

443 —
87 7
117 l l
417 1 ;
TOO 10 i
214 11

2

Barton's Hom er Ignites Howell Win
EVANS UPENDS BRANTLEY

By Chris Filter
Herald Sports Writer
A team with as much nifennlvr
firepower as Lake Howell's Lady
Silver Hawks doesn’t figure to
get shut out too often, but the
Lady Hawks found themselves
on the losing end of a 13-0 score
against Orlando Boone last
week.
The Lady Hawks' scoreless
streak continued Wednesday —
but only for two outs. Julie
Barton slammed a two-out home
run to right center In the top of
the first inning and Lake Howell
never looked back en route to a
5-1 victory over Mainland's Lady
Bucsat Daytona Beach.
After Barton's blast In the first.
Lake Howell pulled away with

LAKE HOWELL (44) - Gibson 0. Keller ].
Johnson I], Robinson 10. Rein A. Banka 0.
Gammons A, Buffington 0. YapoO. PeteraonO,
WeedenO. Clark 4. Totals: 704 11 44
SEMINOLE (71) — Whitney A, Parker 13.

A five-run fiflh inning paved
the way M Ortand e * ri» up­
ended Lake Brantley’s Lady Pa­
triots, 7*4. Wednesday afternoon
at Merrill Park In Altamonte
Springs.

S o ft b a ll

three runs In the fifth and added
another In (lie sixth. In the fiflh,
Susan Hayden drilled a one-out
Evans improved lo 1-1 while
single up (tie middle. Alicia
the
Lady Pntrlols now stand at
Dlnkelncker reached on a field­
I-1.
Lake Brantley returns to
er's choice and Rixja Millwood
action
today al Merrill Park
scorched a single (o drive in
against
Orlando
Boone.
H a y d e n . D ln k e ln c k e r then
Both teams scored two runs In
scored on Erin Hankins' groun-,
the first inning hul Brantley look
dout and Millwood also scored
a 3-2 lead In tile third and lield It
on an error on the play.
In the sixth. Leslie Burton. until the fateful fifth. The Lady
Patriots and Evans hud 13 hits
Jau don Jon as and T am m y
Lewis lilt consecutive singles to each but Brantley made five
load the bases and Barton scored errors compared to only one for
on Gtormi Llltrell's sacrifice ilv. tiie Lady Trojans.

Menderion 4, Hopson i, tow ards 10. Walker
17. Baird 0. Gadson a. Franklin 0. Hathaway
8. Bellamys. Lewi* 7. Total*: 31 9 1371.
H alllim e — Seminole 33. Lake Howell 70
Foul* — Lake Howell 11. Seminole 14 Fouled
out — none Technical — Parker (tackle) A

—511.

Special Coupon Savings
O n Nissan And Datsun Service
Cenuine Nissan Genuine Nisson
Tune*up Special
Front Broke
Reline
Included in this o lts r

• Air, fuel and emission filler
check
• Electronic ic o p e analysis
• Ins (ailm ent o l Qenulne Nlaaan
spark pluga
• Inspection ol Ignition wires, dis­
tributor cap, lotor. Delta, hoses
and PCV vafve

Note: Soma models may be
slightly hlghar.
Valve adjustm ent extra II
requlrad.
from

$19.95

Included In this o iler.
• Installation ot Qenulne Nlaaan
braka pads/ahoes
• Exam ination ol front brake
rotors/drum t, callpers/cyltndera.
connections end lines
• Inspection o l m a tte r cylinder
operation
• Brake fluid added as needed
• Adjustment of parking braka
• Road taat
Note: Packing of wheel bearing*;
rebuildlng/replacam ent of
callpera/wheal cyllndsra; r tiu rfacing of rotorirdrum a extra — If
required.
from

$19.95
■S?'

PRESENT THIS COUPON BY *115/87

PRESENT THIS COUPON BY 4/15/87

0UALITY SERVICE

Offer Expires 4/15/87

BAIRD-RAY NISSAN
L0NGW00D
SERVICE OPEN
7 A.M. *11 P.M. MON.-FRI.
•N IS S A N VEH IC LE S O N L Y *

OPEN7 A.M. to 11 P.M

831-1318

msm

j

Lake Mary and Lyman are
close enough to throw a blanket
over. The Rams hold a 2*1 edge
over the Greyhounds, but each
of the three contests has gone
down to the wire.
Another classic Is expected
tonight as the second night of
fir s t- r o u n d D is tr ic t 4 A -9
Basketball Tournament action
pairs Lyman and Lake Mary at
8:30 at Seminole High School.
F o u rte e n th -ra n k e d D ayton a
Beach Mainland and DcLand
battle at 7 p.m.
"Seeds four (Lyman) and five
(Lake Mary) should be evenly
matched and they arc." Lake
Mary coach Willie Richardson
said.
Richardson said his Rams
must control Lyman's big three
of point guard Robert Thomas,
swlngman Vince Florence and
forward Craig Radzak. "Thom as
secs the whole floor and he's
u n selfish ." Richardson said.
"Florence Is dangerous when
he's on and Radzak Is a good
shooter."
Shawn Hester, a strong rebounder, and cither Matt Lamb
or Rick Moulton com pete coach
Tom Lawrence's siar.lng. five.
J.J. Miller is the lop reserve.
Lyman, mcnnwitile. has lo be
c o n c e r n e d w ith 6-1 O sca r
Merthlc and 5-9 Terry "T h e Cat"
Miller. Merthle led the county In
rebounding with 10.2 per game
and came on strong the second
half. Miller Is a good pcnctrator
and wing shooter.
"W e go as Oscar goes." Rich­
ardson said. " I f he is in a good
mood and ready to play usually
the rest of the team Is too."
Mike Mandcvlllc. Mary’s zone
busier, along with Mail Napoli.
Eric Czcmlcjcwskl. 6-3 sopho­
m ore B ernard M itchell. 5-9
guard Cory Prom are ilu: rest ol
Ihe Rams' key parts. Mitchell is
quickly developing Into one n!
best young big men in the area.
The Rams have won 10 ol
their lost 14 games alter a 2-9
start. "I was ready to sill my
throat when we were 2-9."
Richardson said. "S in ce I've
settled on seven players we've
done a lot better."
While the Rams and Tlounds
battle locally. Oviedo coach Dale
Phillips takes , his .Lions to .84.
C lo u d

u m lR h i. t o r

(tie

D tn tn c i

3A-6 tournament. The Lions.
15-10. take on the host school al
8 p.m.
"W e ’ve beaten them twice tint
the second lime at (heir place we
iiad a rough lim e," Phillips said
"Si. Cloud has a real physical
team. We have lo slop Joe Wolf
(18 ppg)."
Phillips Isas received strong
play from Terry Campbell and
Robb Hughes down the stretch.
Both are averaging double fig­
ures over the past two weeks.
Dana Hill, a 6-6 center, along
with guards Garth Bolton and
Brian W ilso n c o m p le te the
starting cast.

�.

U A - h — rd Hm M, Ustsrd, FI.

-

.

THrsdsv, N&gt;. » , 1W

•

•

M arket Loses Power
NEW YORK (UPI) - Prices opened lower today
In active trading o f New York Stock Exchange
Issues as Investors anticipated the release of the
Tower Commission report on the Iran-Contra
scandal.
•
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which rose
2.96 Wednesday, was down 6.19 to 2220.05
shortly after the market opened.
Declines led advances 639-367 among the
1.450 issues crossing the New York Stock
Exchange tape.
Early turnover amounted to'about 14.230,000
shares.
The stock market ended narrowly higher In
active trading Wednesday as the Impending
release o f the Tower Commission report and a

Locol Interest
These quotations provided b y
m e m b e rs o f the N a tio n a l
A ssociation o f S ecurities Dealers
are representative Inter-dealer
prices as o f m ld -m o m ln g today.
In te r-d e a le r m a rk e ts change
th ro u g h o u t the day. Prices do
n ot Includ e re ta il m a rku p o r
m a rkdow n.

Bid
American Pioneer
Barnett Bank
First Union
Florida Power
A Light
Fla. Progress
HCA
Hughes Supply
Morrison's
NCR Corp
Plessey
Scotty's
Southeast Bank
SunTrust
Walt Disney World
Westlnghouse

Ask

7%
35V*
27%

8 Vi
35%
27%

33
41%
33 Vi
26%
25%
64
37
15
29%
24%
58%
64%

33%
41%
33%
26%
25%
64%
37%
15%
29%
24%
58%
64%

Gold And Silver
NEW YORK (UPI) - Foreign
and domestic gold A silver prices
quoted in dollars per troy ounce
today:
Gold

London
Previous close 405.75 up 4.00
Morning fixing 403.10 olT 2.65
Hong Kong
403.50 up 0.50

New York
Comex spot
gold open
404.20 up 1.10
Comex spot
silver open
5.470 up 0.002
(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.)

Dow Jones
Dow Jones Averages —
30 Indus
2216.25
20 Trans
931.44
15 Utils
218.39
65 Stock
846.12

10 a.rn.
orr 9.99
off 8.12
ofT 1.84
off 5.28

...Cuts
Continued from page 1A
and a m a i n t e n a n c e
worker/program leader ($7,889).
From the Countywide Trans­
portation Fund, here are the
positions that were terminated,
all from engineering:
• S u r v e y p a r ty c h ie f
($16,011); Instrument techni­
cian ($9,610): and rod and chain
worker ($7,082).
One new position was added In
that department: a senior signal
technician ($10,572).
From another fund. Fund 112.
a new position was added: bat­
talion chlef/paramedlc. $47,619.
From the Water and Sewer
Fund, two new positions were
added: utility construction In­
spector. $12,238; and mainte­
nance worker II. parks, $7,719.
And a position o f utilities man­
ager. w a te r and sew er, at
$27,689 was deleted.
From the fleet management
section, four positions were de­
leted : W e ld e r, at $17,169:
mechanic II at $15,824; equip­
ment service manager at $7,308:

two-month runup in prices conspired to keep
Investors on the sidelines.
"People are waiting for the Tower Commission
report, but we are also In the eighth week of an
advance; historically, the market undergoes a
pullback after such a climb," said Ralph Bloch,
senior vice president and chief market analyst at
Raymond. James &amp; Associates In St. Petersburg.
Bloch noted that over the last two days, the
market's leadership narrowed to the drug stocks
and several blue chip issues — Merck. General
Electric and Union Carbide.
Larry Wachtel. market analyst at PrudentlalBache Securities, downplayed the potential Im­
pact of the release of the Tower Commission
report.

D o lla r S lig h tly O ff;
G o ld Turns M ix e d
By United Press International
The U.S. dollar opened a
slightly lower In light trading on
major foreign currency markets
today. The price of gold was
mixed.
There was very little activity
on the foreign exchange markets
w here currency rates were
hardly tested. London traders
said.
The dollar was virtually at a
standstill with operators un­
willing to open new positions
ahead of Friday's U.S. trade
figures, one analyst said.
In earlier trading In the Far
East, the dollar closed slightly
lower against the Japanese yen.
at 153.17 yen. down 0.38 from
Wednesday's close of 153.55.
On the European markets in
Frankfurt, the dollar opened at
1.822 German marks down from
1.8248 and In Zurich, the dollar
opened at 1.5367 Swiss francs,
down from 1.5385 on Wednes­
day.
In Paris, the dollar opened at
6.07 French francs, down from
6.085 and In Amsterdam it was

2.058 Dutch guilders, down
from 2.0645.
The rate in Brussels was 38.19
Belgian, francs down from 38.25
on Wednesday.
In Milan, one dollar bought
1.295.75 lire, compared with
1.297 at close o f trading on
Wednesday and in London, the
pound opened at $1.5365 com­
pared with $1.5380.
Dealers In London said the
British pound sterling was a
fraction weaker because of lower
oil prices, but business was very
light.
In early New York trading, the
d o lla r w as s lig h t ly h ig h e r
against major foreign currencies
In moderate trading.
Gold also fell back, opening
$2.50 an ounce lower In Zurich
at $403.50 and $2 lower In
London at $403.75.
The morning fixing In London
was $403.10. olT $2.65 from
Wednesday’s close.
Silver opened 5 cents an ounce
lower In Zurich at $5.45 and was
unchanged In London at $5.51.

Durable G o o d s O rd e rs Plum m et
WASHINGTON (UPI) - New
orders for the nation's longerla s tin g n o n -d e fen s e g o o d s
plummeted a record 9.9 percent
In January, primarily because
manufacturers bought less ma­
chinery. the Com m erce De­
partment said today.
O v e r a ll, n ew o r d e r s fo r
m a n u fa c tu re d d u r a b le Hoods In
January fell 7.5 percent to n
seasonally adjusted total of
$102.1 billion — the largest drop
since May 1980's 8.2 percent
fall.

The advance monthly report
on durable goods Is known for Its
wild swings and necessary up­
dating. December's 7.7 percent
rise In non-defense capital goods
o rigin a lly was reported last
month as a 6.9 percent increase,
for example.
N e v e r t h e l e s s , th e f a c t
January's 9.9 percent decline in
non-defense capital goods Is the
biggest since the category first
was studied In 1968 means
manufacturers huve little con­
fidence the economy will grow.

and parts specialist at $7,950.
The library positions will be
filled eight weeks prior to the
opening of each branch. The
libraries will be open from 10

a.rn. to 9 p.m. Monday through
Thursday, and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Friday and Saturday.
The other position changes
will be effective April 1.

Gunter Announces
Legislative Goals
ORLANDO (UPI) — Insurance
Commissioner Bill Gunter said
today his priorities for the 1897
legislative session Include a ban
on prc-pald drunken driving
insurance and defeat for pro­
posed new taxes on the Insur­
ance Industry.
Gunter was to outline his
legislative package during a
speech to the Orlcndo Better
Business Bureau. In a prepared
text released by his office.
Gunter also endorsed a return to
mandatory auto Inspections,
tougher fire safety laws and
stlffer standards for health main­
tenance organizations.
The proposal* will be consid­
ered by the Legislature, which
begins Its regular session April

7.
Gunter welcomed Gov. Bob
Martinez' propositi to retain sales
tax exemptions on insurance
premiums.
But he said Martinez' plan to
double the tax that Insurance
com panies pay on premium
e a rn in g s w ould hurt firm s
headquartered In Florida and
Invite retaliation from other
state. Earnings under the tax
would Increase from $188 mil­
lion to $375 million.
" A tax Is a tax whatever label
It bears, and the clear message
my office has received Is that
people — Including the business
community — Just can't afford to
pay any more for their Insur­
ance." Gunter said.

J a m e s Coco D e a d A t 56
; NEW YORK (UPI) - James
Coco, the Emmy award-winning
Star of stage and screen and
Author o f a best-selling diet
book, died of a heart attack
Wednesday night at a Manhat­
tan hospital, officials said.
I Coco, 56, star of Broadway
|)lays and films such as "Man of
La Mancha" and "Last of the
Red Hot Lovers." died of a heart
attack at St. Vincent's Hospital
a t 1 1 :1 0 p . m . , h o s p i t a l
spokesman Paul Simonetti said.
Some family members and
friends apparently accompanied
Coco to the hospital about 8:30
p.m. and were there when he
died, hospital officials said.
"H e was brought In by am­
bulance after suffering a heart
attack." hospital spokeswoman
Barbara Franzese said.
Ccco. the son of a shoemaker,
was bom In New York's Little
Italy on March 21. 1930. He won
an Emmy for his perfoimance In
th e t e l e v i s i o n s h o w " S t
Elsewhere” and starred In the
highly regarded but unsuc­
cessful T V series "C aluccl's

Department" In 1974.
The once hefty actor wrote the
best-selling diet book " T h e
James Coco Diet" In 1984 with
co-author Marion Paone.
He made a guest appearance
Tuesday night on ABC-TV's
"W ho's the Boss."
It was In 1983 that Coco won
an Emmy for best supporting
actor In an episode of "St.
Elsewhere."
It took Coco more than 20
years to make good on his desire
to become a successful actor, but
eventually he starred in such
movies as "Junle Moon." "Such
Good Friends" and "The Wild
Party."
And In 1984. the oncc-hecty
uctor co-authored the b est­
selling book "T h e James Coco
D iet." His weight-loss book,
written with Marlon Paone. de­
s c rib e d his co m m o n -s e n s e
approach to dieting.
The sad-eyed actor with the
once globular physique of Jackie
Gleason.exploded into Broadway
stardom in 1969 in Nell Simon's
comedy hit "Last of the Red Hot

' p*~ wi* m * *■'

■

Lovers."
Coco won an Oble In 1959 for
his off-Broadway portrayal of a
humorless German scientist In
"T h e Moon In the Yellow River."
He won a second Oble In 1967 In
Murray Schisgal's "Fragm ents."
Later films Included "T h e
Cheap Detective." 1978. "Only
When I Laugh." 1981, and "The
M uppets Take M a n h a tta n ."
1984.
He played a supervisor In a
New York state employment
office In the highly regarded but
u n s u c c e s s fu l T V s e r ie s
"C alu ccl's Department." The
show was a situation comedy
that ran for a year starting
September 1973.
And from January to March
1976, lie starred In the TV series
"T h e Dumplings." which carried
a message that fat people could
be «»s lovable as anyone else. He
ran a lunch counter In New
York.
He also appeared on television
In "Mr. Success" and "Alice In
Wonderland."

Report: C IA Worked With South
Africa To Supply Arm s To Contras
transport company believed to
be involved In covert operations
for Pretoria, opened a U.S. office
several months after the 1985
trip and signed a lease agree­
ment with Southern Air Trans­
port Inc., a former CIA-operated
firm ..
T h e network said SA FA IR
supplied planes to Southern Air
that were later used to fly
weapons to the Contras.
In Cape Town. South Africa, a
State Department and In­
spokesman said Foreign Minister
te llig e n c e sources told the
Roelof "P ik " Botha "said he had
network Wednesday the CIA's
no knowledge o f the alleged
Latin American division chief,
South African complicity."
who reported directly to Casey,
In Johannesbu rg. S A F A IR
took a secret trip to South Africa
Managing Director Braam Loots
In early 1985 to solicit aid for the
denied the report, but said
Contras.
SAFAIR had a share in a U.S.
ABC said the plan was de­ company called Globe Air. which
scribed as a "vest-pocket opera­ leased planes to Southern Air.
tion" run by Casey, outside all
"Globe Air. us the lessor, has
normal channels. The U.S-South no say In what Southern Air
African connection occurred at a does with Its planes." Loots said.
time when Congress was debat­
In 1984, Casey took a secret
ing economic sanctions against trip to the French Riviera, where
the racially divided country.
he met with Saudi Arabian King
SAFAIR. a South African air Fahd and tried to convince him

WASHINGTON (UPI) - CIA
Director William Casey ran a
"vest-pocket operation" with the
South African government for
more than three years to provide
m i l i t a r y s u p p lie s to th e
Nicaraguan rebels. ABC News
reports.
The CIA has denied It sent any
military assltance to the Contras
during a time when Congress
banned such actions.

...Tower
Continued from page IA
Aug. 30. 1985, delivery of TOW anti-tank missiles
that appears to have triggered the release of
hostage Benjamin Weir.
However, the panel appeared to side with
fo rm e r n a tion al s e cu rity a d v is e r R ob ert
McFarlane against White House chief of staff
Donald Regan In finding "that It Is plausible to
conclude that he did approve them in advance."
On yet another pivotal question raised over the
last three months — whether proBts from the
arm s sales to Iran w ere d iverted to the
Nicaraguan rebel Contras, the commission com ­
plained about the absence o f a definitive paper
trail and a lack of cooperation from former
national security adviser John Poindexter, fired
NSC aide Oliver North and Israeli authorities.
"Notwithstanding." the report said, "there was
considerable evidence before the board of a
diversion to support the Contras. But the board
had no hard proof."
The report concluded that White House chief of
staff Donald Regan “ shares" In the responsibility
lor the runaway policies of the NSC.
"He. as much as anyone, should have Insisted
that an orderly process be observed." the report
said. It went on to conclude that Regan was
responsible for seeing plans were made for proper
disclosure of the NSC operation, and that he
failed.
"H e must bear primary responsibility for the
chaos that descended upon the W hile House
when such disclosure did occur." the report said.
When It cam e to uncovering the secret
diversion of funds to the Contras, the commission
concluded that NSC director John Poindexter,
who refused to testify before the board, "also
failed grcvously."
"Evidence indicates that Poindexter knew that
a diversion occurred, yet he did not take the steps
that were required given the gravity of that
propspect," the report said.
Poindexter was allowed to resign on Nov. 25.
when the diversion was first revealed.
CIA Director William Casey also must assume
some responsibility for not Investigating reports
that money went to the Contras, the report said.
"Evidence suggests that he received informa­
tion about the possible diversion of funds to the
Contras almost a month before the story broke,"
the report said. "He. too (along with Poindexter)
did not move promptly to raise the matter with
the president. His responsibility to do so was
clear."
.
The report faults Secretary of State George

...Mayfair
Continued from page 1A
position Is supported by volumi­
nous Infomatlon he submitted to
the city In October.
Colbert said his evaluation of
Daniel's position has Included
research Into "breach of con­
tract and remedies the city
would have If they are existing,
the possibility of going to court
for Injunctive relief and possible
code enforcement actions."
Colbert said he has also con­
ferred during the review with
city hall staff. Including City
M anager Frank Faison and
Building Official Gary Winn.

to provide covert aid to the
N icaraguan rebels. He also
pushed for aid to the rebels in
Angola and urged Fahd to pro­
vide oil to South Africa.
Casey made another secret
visit In March 1986 to South
Africa to strike a deal for South
African assistance to the Con­
tras. while high-level meetings
on the operation also were being
held in Washington, the network
said.
One month after Casey's visit
to South Africa, retired Air Force
MaJ. Gen. Richard Secord. his
deputy and a man described as
Lt. Col. Oliver North met with
Southern A ir pilots In San
Salvador, where they told them
a th ird c o u n try w ould fly
weapons to Nicaragua.
Officials told the network some
of those nationals were from
South Africa.
Casey, who underwent brain
surgery In December and later
resigned as CIA chief, was too
sick to comment on the ABC
report.

Shultz and Secretary of Defense Caspar Wein­
berger for closing their eyes to the Iran arms
affair once they lost their bitter battle with other
NSC members to scuttle the program.
"Secretary Shultz specifically requested to be
informed only as necessary to perform his Job."
the report said and Weinberger had access to
Intelligence details about the operation, but took
no action.
"Their obligation was to give the president
their full support and continued advice with
respect to the program." the report said. "Instead
they simply distanced themselves from the
program. They protected the record as to their
own positions. They were not energetic in
attempting to protect the president from the
consequences of his personal commitment to
freeing the hostages."
The commission found no evidence that anyone
within the administration other than North, as
mastermind of the scheme to send profits from
the Iran arms sales the Nicaraguan rebels, and
Poindexter, as his superior, was aware of the
diversion.
The report said It had "considerable evidence"
that profits from arms sales to Iran were diverted
to the Contras, but the money could not lx* traced
because Poindexter and North failed to appear
before the panel and Swiss bank accounts remain
sealed.
.
It said the Iranians were charged up to $20
million in excess of the Pentagon's bills for four of
the arms shipments, and "sizable sums" have yet
to be accounted for. gg-buo
Based on Interviews with dozens of witnesses —
Including Reagan and his three predecessors —
and a mountain of documents and computer
messages, the commission offered the most
comprehensive analysis yet of the worst crisis to
hit the Reagan presidency.
The White House had no Immediate comment
on the report. Reagan thanked the board
members during a brief appearance at a news
conference and made plans to respond to the
report In a televised address to the nation next
week.
White House spokesman Marlin Fltzwater said
Wednesday that Reagan fully expected the report
to meet his desire for a hard, objective look at the
affair and said. "H e does not believe he broke any
laws or deceived the people."
The report was critical of how the White House
responded to the revelation of the Iran Initiative.
Early on. the panel said. Reagan withheld details
of the operation "out of concern for the hostages
stllf'held in Lebanon and those Iranians who had
supported the Initiative."
"In doing so," the panel said, "he did not. we
believe, intend to mislead the American public or
cover up unlawful conduct.”

Other employees Involved in the
rev ie w arc Engineering and
(Manning Director Bill Simmons
and City Budget Analyst Juan
Perez.
Colbert said his firm's billing
also includes the time one of its
a tto r n e y s spent In O ran ge
County's law library looking "for
answers to questions” raised by
city commissioners and staff.
"W e 'v e had to do quite a hit of
legal research." Colbert said.
"A ll the information we sought
wasn’t available In our (firm's)
la w l i b r a r y o r S e m i n o l e
County's."
Daniels has operated Mayfair
since 1982. The course and
country club lie off County Road
46A. In the city’s west side.

...Robberies
Continued from page 1A
When she opened the cash
register the robber opened Ills
Jacket and showed a gun. He
demanded all the cash and
seemed very upset and was
yelling demands, the clerk told
sheriffs deputies. The clerk was
told to lie on the floor and the
robber took about S88 from the
cash register and fled, deputies
reported.
There were no reports of cither
victim having been Injured by
tlie robbers. Sheriffs deputies
have descriptions of suspects.
The two incidents are appar­
ently unrelated, deputies said.

AREA DEATHS
OLICE JOHNSON
Mr. Oltcc Johnson. 67. of 1228
Randolph St., Sanford, died
Tuesday at Florida Hospital Or­
lando. Born May 12. 1919 In
Grady County. Ga.. he moved to
Sanford from Wuycross. Ga.. In
194G. He was a retired employee
of Continental Foods. Sanford,
and a member of Lake Mary
Baptist Church.
Survivors include Ills wife,
Bonnie; son. Brian. Sanford:
three brothers. Carroll. Irving,
and Thcophllus, all of Cairo. Ga.:
three sisters. Myrtlee Varnes.
Eagle Lake. Vera Warren, Winter
H aven and J e s s ie A n g lin .
Pelham. Ga.
Brlsson Guardian Funeral
Home. Sanford.
T R IE S T IN A LUPINO
Mrs. Trtestina Lupino. 70. of
989 Orienta Ave.. Altamonte
Springs, died Tuesday at Life
Care Center. Altamonte Springs.
Born Aug. 26. 1916 in New York

City, she moved to Altamonte
Springs from Ormond Beach in
1986. She was a homemaker
and a member of the Assembly
of God.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e h er
husband. Peter; son. Kenneth.
Winter Springs; brother. Ralph
Rublno. H opew ell Junction.
N.Y.; sister. Mary lazzettl. Or­
m o n d B e a c h : fo u r g r a n d ­
children.
A ll Faiths Memorial Park.
Casselberry. In charge of ar­
rangements.
M A R Y J O Y M cAVO Y
Mrs. Mary Joy McAvoy. 58. of
858 Lake Marian Drive. Alta­
monte Springs, died Wednesday
at her residence. Born Sept. 8.
1928 in Santa Fe. N.M.. she
m oved to Altamonte Springs
from Miami in 1977. She was a
telephone company employee.
S u r v iv o r s In c lu d e h e r
husband. Edward: son. Daniel.
Altamonte Springs; two daugh­

ters. Kathleen Harris, Miami.
Regina Butcra. Long wood; three
sisters. Helen White, Betty Jo
Cline, both of Dumas. Texas,
and Alma Haller. Sarasota; six
grandchildren.
A ll Faiths Memorial Park.
Casselberry. In charge of ar­
rangements.

Funeral Notice
JOHNSON. OLICE

- Viewing lor Ollce Johnson, it. ol 1228
Randolph St., Sanford, who died Tuesday,
w ill be today I ] and I I p m at Brlsson
Funeral Home In charge Remains w ill be
sent to Cairo. Ga . Friday lor services and
Interment Brlsson Guardian Funeral Home
in charge

I CREMATION SPECIALISTS I

OAKLAWN
FUNERAL HOME &amp;
PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER
3 2 2 -4 2 0 3
E m t. 1 0 0 4
mfy faattal Hams Carnetatj Sammols Camaty

�*

«

&gt; ^

% (

«

«

«

^

4

4 l

^

I

1 «

1

1

4 * ^

«

«

*4 ^

I

% .

'

»

1 ’

*

»

4

|

,

,

• 4 *

4

«

«

«

4

4

4

4

1

4

4 4

44

4

I

4 •

4 ^

4

*4

\

^

PEOPLE
Sanford HaraM, Sanford, FI..

TYm radar. Fad. U , 1 * 7 -1 B

Grandm a's Birthday G reeting
Has M ore Sense Than Dollars
DEAR ABBTt On m y son's
16th birthday, he received a
b i r t h d a y c a r d f r o m h is
grandparents on his father’s
side. (His father and I are
divorced.) "G randm a Jon es"
added the following handwritten
message on the card: "Sorry.
B illy , no m o n ey th l 9 tim e
because we received no thankyou for the money we sent with
our rard last year. Lots of love.
Grandma and Grandpa Jones."
A b b y . a lth o u g h th e s e
grandparents are retired and
living on a fixed Income, they
arc far fro m p oor, and It
wouldn't have hurt them to have
enclosed a $10 bill. It would
have made the difference be­
tween my son feeling good or
bad on his birthday.
I wrote to my ex-mother-ln-law
and told her what I thought
about her birthday message to
Billy. I haven't heard from her
since, and I don't expect to.
W h at do y o u (a n d y o u r
r e a d e r s ) t h in k a b o u t th e
message a grandmother sent to
her gra n d so n on his 16th
birthday?
BURNED UP IN BUTTE
DEAR BURNED: I th in k
Grandma may have given Billy a
birthday gift that was far more
valuable than a $ 10 bill.
DEAR ABBT: I am a very
attractive 17-year-old girl. I am
also a romantic person, but my
relationships never last any
more than two weeks — maybe
three. I d on ’ t know w hat's
wrong. I am a very outgoing
person, but I’ve never had one
relationship that lasted. I'm still
a virgin. Maybe that’s my pro­
blem. Is It tm e nowadays you

DEAR CONCERNED: I think
you arc wise, and he Is foolish.
He should have the test not only
for your piece of mind, but for
his.

Abby

DEAR ABBT: Last year I was
diagnosed as having multiple
sclerosis and I recently began
using a cane. My question Is
this: How do I respond to people
I don't know very well (nor care
to) when they ask. "W h y the
cane?"
I don’t wish to discuss my
disability with people who arc
merely making small talk on the
sidewalk. If It Is someone I
dislike. I say. "Oh. this Is Just an
alTcctatlon." But I can't use this
response to people who are
genuine acquaintances, or arc
actually concerned.
What do you think?

have to have sex In order to
make a relationship last?
I started seeing a guy a couple
of weeks ago. but he Is very
pushy. He has too many hands
and I get worn out trying to
protect myself. He told me he
probably wouldn't be calling me
again. Could my virginity be
standing In the way of my
popularity?
I would like to have a good
relationship with a guy, but I'm
not ready to Include sex. Am I
weird or what?

MINNESOTAN
DEAR MINNESOTAN: Why

HURTING IN HARTFORD
DEAR HURTING: You arc not

not use the same response for all
weird and you are no dope. All Inquiries? T h ere is nothing
relationships do not Include sex wrong with saying. " I have
— m any long-standing rela­ multiple sclerosis." even to peo­
tionships are based on friendship ple who arc making small talk
and mutual Interest. If you arc on the sidewalk. It might shake
being made to feel that the price them up a bit.
of going out Is "putting out" —
you arc being blackmailed. Stick
DEAR ABBT: I thought you
with your principles.
might enjoy this excerpt from a
DEAR ABBT: My husband divorce complaint, filed on Sept.
and I were separated for several 16. 1797, In Fairfax County. Va.:
"George and Sibyl Tlllet for
months, during which time he
admitted that he had played the several years last past have lived
together more like dog and cat
field and had several affairs.
W e've decided lo give our than husband and wife and huve
marriage one more try. I've told at length acquired an incurable
him that, I will nol go to bed with aversion to each oth er..."
STILL GIGGLING IN VA.
him unless he has a test for
AIDS.
DEAR STILL GIGGLING:
He refuses, saying I am unrea­ Thanks for sharing. Tim e passes
sonable. What do you think?
— but the more things change,
CONCERNED the more they stay the same.

TONIGHT'S TV
THURSDAY
EVENING
0:00
_
(W ) MACNEJL
NEWSHOUR
( E (8) KNIGHT RIDER

L E H A tR

6:05
12) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

6:30
0 ® NBC NEWS
Ci)
CBS NEWS
® o ABC NEWS g
0 3 ( H I TOO CLOSE FOR COM­
FORT Henry » distraught when he
learns that Sara and her boyfriend
plan to live together

O

6:35
92) ANDY GRIFFITH

7:00
0 ® NFWLYWEO GAME
( D O PM MAGAZINE Behind the
scenes o l "M urder. She W rote";
stuntwomen
® O JE 0P A R 0Y
(D ili)B A R N E Y MILLER
CD (10) NATURE The first of a
three-part esploration of the con­
servation problem lacing Japan
profiles the fignt lo save the ma­
caque. a monkey indigenous to this
Asian country In stereo g
CD (8) WONDERFUL WORLO OF
DISNEY A series o l cartoons featur­
ing Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse
being frustrated and tricked by
1 heir rascally nephews

ffi O

THE COLBY3 Jason and
Francesca's wedding is interrupted
by shocking news that will affect
their lives. Monica tries to talk
Sable out ot marrying Zach g
CD(11) TRAPPER JOHN. M.O.
CD (t0 ) GREAT SPACE RACE
State-of-lR e-ari anim ation la used
«»»»

nr b p p w

7:30
0 ® ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
Interview with Willie Nelson, e re­
port on Hollywood's senes! men 'n
* O DATING GAME
O WHEEL OF FORTUNE
CD( I D BENSON

7:35
11) HONEYMOONERS

GP

8:00

0
COSBY SHOW Denise tries
lo be supportive of a friend who is
unmarried and pragnant In slareo

s&gt;

O

W12ARO The impoverished
teen-age parents of an infant are
hassled by a would-be baby broker
® O OUR WORLO Slones from
the summer of 1972 include the
Watergate break-in, the Munich
Summer Olympics, the Democratic
National Convention in Miami and
the founding ol Ms mag anna. also,
talks with George McGovern. Mark
Spitz and Gloria Stemem g
CD (11) HART TO HART
CD(10) WILD AMERICA The natural
balance between the predator and
its prey is illustrated in this portrait
o l the goshawk and the grouse g
Q ) (8) MOVIE Forced Vengeance '
11982) Chuck Norris. Mary Louise
Weller A karate e ip e rt uses his
skills* lo drive mobsters out ol a
Hong Kong gambling establish­
ment

8:05
H MOVIE Walking Tali" 1 1973)
Joe Don Baker. Elisabeth Hartman
Sheriff Buford Pusser wages s oneman campaign to clean up his Ten­
nessee town

L$5«e

included lunar mining operations, a

O ( £ NIGHT COURT C hristinas
boss iMichael Gross) is accused ol
aeiual harassment

10:00
O (3 ) L.A. LAW While Van Owen is
recovering from a shoulder iniury.
Ihe youth who assaulted her is put
on trial In slareo
CD O NEIL DUMONO .. HELLO
AGAIN Comic actress Carol Burnet:
and singer-songw nltr Stevie Won­
der join the popular anterlamer
Songs include "I'm A live" and
"Cherry. Cherry " In stereo (R|
® Q 20 / 20 Scheduled interview
with former first lady Betty Ford, a
look at the Broadway opening ol
"Le s M is e r a b le s 'g
CD(11) INN NEWS
CD (10) EXPLORE The rituals and
ancestors o l the inhabitants of
Celebes, ihe largest island m East
Indonesia (Part t of 2)
CD(8) MARY TYLER MOORE

10:30
0 3 (11) BOB NEWHART
CD (8) CAROL BURNETT
FRIENDS

ANO

10:35
1 2 MOVIE The Maltese Falcon"
(19411 Humphrey Bogart. Mary A lto r. Coloured version of John Hus­
ton s adaptation o l Ihe Dashieti
Hammett novel concerning San
Francisco pnvala eye Sam Spcde s
search lor a priceless, jewel-en­
crusted statue

11:00

i•

O ® ® O ® O news

LATE SHOW Host Joan
Rivers Scheduled Ralpn Nader.
Nell Carter In stereo
CD(10) MONTY PYTHON'S FLVINO
CIRCUS
CD (8) BARGAINS TONIGHT
(J o in e d in Progress!

11:30
0
®
TONIGHT SHOW
Johnny Carson In stereo
" O M 'V S 'H
O NIGHTLINE g

Host

O

12:30

O ®

6:00
O ® NBC NEWS
CD Q SALLY JESSY RAPHAEL
I 7 ) Q EYEWITNESS DAYBREAK
CD ( 1 1 ) 0 0 0 0 DA Yl
1 2 CNN NEWS
CD (8) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
SAVINGS (MON. WED-FRI)
CD(8)TOOTSOAY(TUE)

1 1982)

1:10

6:45

0 ® TOOAY

2:00
CD (11) DUKES OF HAZZARO

2:20

MOVIE "The W indow " (1949)
Bobby Driscoll. Arthur Kennedy

2:30

7:00

® O &lt; 1000 MORNING AMERICA
£ D (1 1 &gt; 0 I JOE
CD (10) SOUARE ONE TELEVISION

7:30
l ) l O m o r n in g p r o g r a m
CD (11) TRANSFORMERS
CD 110) SESAME STREET |R) g

12:30

WORDPLAY
(» ) O YOUNG ANO THE REST­
LESS
® O LOVING
CD (11) BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

0:30
ffl(11)FLIN TS TO N ES
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

0:35
1 2 BEWITCHEO

9:00
4' THE JUDOE
oD O NAHUE
® O OPRAH WINFREY
CD (1 0 g r e e n ACRES
CD (10) SESAME STREET (R )g
CD (8) SHOP-AT-HOME AND SAVE
IMON. WEO-FRl)
1 2 DOWN TO EARTH

9:30
O ® LOVE CONNECTION
( B (1 1) PETTICOAT JUNCTION

935
1 2 I LOVE LUCY (MON. TUE. THU.
FRI1

10:00
O ® SALE OF THE CENTURY
I f ) O HOUR MAGAZINE
® O TRUE CONFESSIONS
CD (11) FALL GUY
CD (10) CAPTAIN KANGAROO (R)

® DAYS OF OUR LIVES
® O ALL MY CHILDREN
CD ( H ) DICK VANDYKE
CD (10) WE RE COOKING NOW

1:05
12 MOVIE
1:30
( ! ) O AS THE WORLD TURNS
CD(11)F-TROOP
CD (10) FLORIDA HOME OROWN
(FRI)

O®

ANOTHER WORLD

(J] Q ONE LIFE TO LIVE
CD (11) ANDY GRIFFITH
CD (10) PAINTING CERAMICS (FRI)

2:30
( i ) Q CAPITOL
CD (11) m y LITTLE
FRIENDS
CD (10) SECRET CITY

PONY

N'

2:35
1 1 WOMANWATCH (FRI)

3:00

O '4 Sa n t a Ba r b a r a
( f j O GUIOING LIGHT
&lt;h O GENERAL HOSPITAL
C D (1 1 )S C 0 0 B Y D 0 0
CD ( 10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
CD (8) MID-DAY BARGAINS (MONWEO. FRI)

3:05
1 2 TOM A JERRY AND FRIENDS

3:30
CD (11) SMURFS' ADVENTURES
CD (1 0 )SESAME S TR E E T (R |g

4:00
0

4; MAGNUM. P I
I'll O TAXI
d j Q JEOPARDY
CD (11) THUNOERCATS g
CD (8) AMERICA'S BIGGEST BAR­
GAINS (MON-WED. FRI)

4:05
1 1 SCOOBY DOO

O

4:30

CD
THREE'S COMPANY
® O CARO SHARKS
ffi(1 1 )S lL V E R H A W K S g
CD (10) SOUARE ONE TELEVISION
9

O®

5:00

DIVORCE COURT
f U O M 'A 'S 'H
®
HOLLYWOOO SQUARES
CD (11) FACTS OF LIFE
CD (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)
CD (8) RAMBO

O

5:05
12 GILLIGAN S ISLAND
5:30

10:30

C D iniJE F F E R S O N S
CD (10) ART OF BEING HUMAN
(FRI)

11:00
SCRABBLE

IV . . .

. # . '9

• * *' 9

a

•e.eHfc’ rX.”

G arden O f The M onth

it*-'-*/. * % Tu\'

■i W

4

H#raM Ptoto by Tammy Vincent

_

The home and grounds of M r . and M rs . E.A
Carlson, 215 Tangerine D rive, was selected
by M rs . George Chapm an of the W ildflow er
C ircle of the Garden Club of Sanford fo r the

club's Garden of the Month award fo r.
February. Mrs. Chapman said the yard was!
chosen for neatness and colorful azaleas l
bordering the loggia.
I

D o u b le Ring R ite s U n ite
M a rcia
B ro ru p , D .R . M e d lin
Marcia Lynn Brorup and Douglas Randolph
Medlin were married Dec. 20. 1986. at the First
Baptist Church. DcLand. Dr. Robert Mulkey and
the Rev. Carl S. Whlddon performed the 6 p.m..
double ring ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
W. Brorup. 509 Satsuma Drive. Sanford. The
bridegroom’s parents arc Mr. and Mrs. James P.
Medlin Jr.. DeLand.
Given In marriage by her father, the bride chose
for her vows a formal lace gown with a sweeping
chupcl train. Her lace veil of Illusion was held by a
lacc and pearl headpiece. She carried a bouquet
o f red and white roses Interspersed with baby's
breath and cedar sprigs.
Deanna Brorup attended her sister as maid of
honor. She wore a tea-length teal satin gown with
a Chantilly lace overlay and carried a bouquet of

red and white roses, baby's breath and cedar
sprigs.
Bridesmaids were Debra Todd, the bride­
groom's sister: and Melodyc Brorup. sister of the &gt;
bride. Thctr gowns and flowers were Identical to
the honor attendant's.
Paul Medlin served his brother as best man.
Ushers were Carl Brorup Jr. and Pate Culpepper.
Groomsmen were Roy Todd and Beau Adams.
The reception was held In fellowship hall ol the
church. Assistants were Diana Potts. Donna
Brorup. Cindy Connolly. Laurie McCubbln and
Melanie Carroll.
Following a wedding trip to West Virginia, the
newlyweds are making their home In Jackson.
Tcnn. where the bridegroom Is a trust officer for
Jackson National Bank.

C h e e rle a d e rs V ie
For C h a m p io n s h ip
The country's top high school
cheerlcadlng squads compete at
Sea World of Florida on Feb. 28
and March 1 In the National
H ig h S c h o o l C h e e r le a d in g
Championship. More than 150
squads, chosen from 19 regional
finals competitions administered
by the Universal Cheerlcadlng
A s s o c ia tio n (U C A ). w ill be
J u d g c d o n t h e I r
two-and-a-half-minute routines.
O ly m p ic g y m n a s t K a th y
Johnson, slngcr/chorcographcr
Toni Basil and UCA President
Jeff Webb provide commentary
and color for the competition,
which will be taped and aired on
ESPN and PBS. Television soap
opera star Grant Show, who
portrays Rick Hyde on ABC's
"R yan's Hope" will address the
cheerleaders at the Champion­
ship Banquet. Friday. Feb. 27.
The 1.700 cheerleaders were
chosen from over 40 different
states and 600 schools na­
tionwide. Each school's squad Is
composed of up to 16 members.
Scoring Is based on gymnastics,
dancing and basic cheerlcadlng
skills. Four divisions will be
Judged In Orlando: varsity co-ed,
varsity all-girl. Junior varsity and

S h o w O p e n To
F lo rid a A rtis ts

Junior high.
Thousands of rehearsal hours
culminate Sunday afternoon.
March 1. when the to 10 varsity
squads participate In the final
competition. Last year's winner
was Bartlett High School from
Bartlett. Tenn.
The competition Is open to
spectators. Cheerleaders in un­
iform will receive a 50 percent
discount on Sea World ad­
mission on Feb. 28 and March 1.
Varsity contests take place at the
Sea World Theatre both after­
noons. Junior divisions compete
at the Atlantis Pavilion, on Sat­
urday.
For more Information call UCA
at 1-800-238-0286.

CD(8) I DREAM OF JEANNIE
5:35
1 2 SAFE AT HOME (FRI)

Entries are being accepted
for the First Annual Florida's
Suwannee Valley Regional
All Media Juried Art Com­
petition sponsored by the
Barnett Bank of Columbia
County and the Lake City
Community College Founda­
tion.
The exhibition Is open lo
all Florida artists. Artists
may submit three entries,
with an entry fee of $5.00 per
piece. Awards Include $300.
first; $200, second: $100,
third; $250. purchase award.
Deadline for entries Is
March 21. For Information,
write: Office of Cultural A f­
fairs. Lake City Community
College. Route 3, Box 7. Lake
City. 32055; or call (904)
752-1822. Ext. 340.

D ELTO IM A
C IN EM A

q FloydTheatresI
11 7507
.W
If!
i

NO M INATED FOR BEST
ACTRESS
NIGHTLY 7 :1 5 &amp; 9 :1 5

A

JANE
FONDA

JEFF
BRIDGES

fu°Es.THE MORNING
SEATS
AFTER ®
1^00

S A T - c S(JM- M A T

1-3-5 P.M.
Intaratata Plaza 574-9000

Tim e Changed For
Travel Club M eet
Lake Mary Group-Tour Travel
Club previously announced that
ihe next meeting Is scheduled
Friday. Feb. 27. at 7 p.m.. at the
C o m m u n it y I m p r o v e m e n t
Association building. 260 N.
Country Club Road. Lake Mary.
According to club sponsor
Daphne Baumbarh. the time of
the meeting has been chabgcd to
2.30 to 5 p.m. The public Is
Invited. For information, call
Mrs. Baumbnch, 323-5037.

u
&lt;*

“ Let T h e P ro fe ssio n a ls D o It ”

ECHOLS TREE SERVICE

I
&gt;
-I

LICENSED - FULLY INSURED - SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

• COMPLETE TREE SERVICE
• FREE ESTIMATES • STUMP GRINDING
• 24 HR. ANSWERING SERVICE
2405

G ra n d v ie w A v e n u e

S a n lo rd ,

FL 32771

PhnnP

Contact Pete or Terry Echols ' 1

323-2229

IF NO ANSWER

321-769 4

J
u
1
V

ll
i;
i
•1

tt
j

t

■B

1
t
1

4:35
1 2 FLINTSTONES

10:05

O C 3 BLOCKBUSTERS
® o SUPERIOR COURT
CD ( 10) WILD AMERICA (MON. FRI)
0 ®

2:00

O ® PEOPLE S COURT
CDO® Q N E W S

1 2 MOVIE

*i v . * .
I.

1:00

O

1 2 I DREAM OF JEANNIE

1:30
CD (11) BIZARRE Sketches a
Quest lor Fire" takeoff; com m it­
ting grandfather lo a funeral home,
the Bigots John Byner s ohysicai
auditions lo r "Tootsie "

® O NEWS

12:05
1 2 PERRY MASON

6:30
0 ® NEWS
11 0 CBS MORNING NEWS
CD (11) CENTURIONS
CD (10) FARM DAY
1 2 TOM t JERRY AND FRIENDS

9:05

12:35

MOVIE Love For Ransom
(1977) Jonn Oavidson. Richard
Lynch

12

12:00
O ® I D O ® O NEWS
CD (11) BEWITCHEO
CD &lt;10) ANNA KARENINA (FRI)
CD ( I) MID-DAY BAROAINS

TOOAY'S BUSINESS

CD 111) CNN NEWS
12 ANDY GRIFFITH

0

0 ( $ LATE NIGHT WITH 0A V I0
LETTERMAN In stereo
® O MOVIE Turn O l The Screw
(1974) Lynn Redgrave. Meg Jen­
kins
CD(11) HAWAII FIVE-0

(D. O

5:30

8:05

12:00

Montana Ball#
Jane Russell. Scott Brady

5:00

® 2'S COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
CD (11) CNN NEWS
( t t BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

CD (1 0 DENNIS THE MENACE

CD
NIGHT HEAT A woman from
O Bnen s past tries to kiJ him
®
NIGHTLIFE Host David
Brenner Scheduled actress Manlu
Henner In stereo
CD(11) ASK DR. RUTH Topic se iu al abuse o l children g
CD(8) NIGHT OWL FUN

12 MOVIE

AFTERNOON

♦

O

4 -4

Hotel. Orlando. Invites area
_
x»H rtrw w n w smi-shM&gt;v trtetf *"
*d
Ironalevel
1
good health by giving blood during a series of
and temperature check. Every unit of blood
special blood drives every Monday night In
donated at Central Florida Blood Bank undergoes !
March.
extensive testing lo ensure Ihe safety of the area's.^
Each blood donor who volunteers to give blood
blood supply.
between 5 p.m. and 9 p.m. at the hotel will
According to Barbara Stroupe. invitations to '
receive a designer T-shirt from Central Florida
this event have been sent to a variety of singles
Blood Bank, a complimentary drink ticket and
groups In Central Florida. “ Donating blood Is a
special hors d'oeuvres from Sparkles Lounge.
safe, easy way to contribute to the community."
They will also be registered for a free weekend for
Stroupe said.
two at the Radlsson Plaza Hotel to be given away
The Radlsson Plaza Hotel Orlando Is located at*
every Monday night.
60 S. Ivanhoe Blvd. For more Information, call
Before giving blood, each potential donor will
the Central Florida Blood Bank Main Office at
be asked to complete a brief medical question(305)849-6100.
u

O®

MORNING

•

11:30
MUM
fliw a M T iili1

8:00

8

O

4:40
® O MOVIE Dangerous Money
( 19461 Sidney Toler. Gloria Warren

• •

B lo o d D riv e O n F o r S in g le s

(ll)O A L L A S
LUCY SHOW

4:30

A.

8 RO-

0 6 (1 1 ) MA (JOE

12 GET SMART

*4

CD(11) ALICE
CD (10) EYES

4:00

CD(1 0)A M WEATHER

CD (11)

3 O PRICE IS RIGHT
FAME FORTUNE

8 O
MANCE

ON THE PRIZE:
AMERICA S CIVIL RIGHTS YEARS.
1954-10t3 (FRI)

9:30

9:00
0 (X 1CHEERS Sam and Diane are
invited to dme witn Frasier and his
iive-ingirlfnend In s te re o .g
CD O
SIMON i SIMON The
Simons stumble onlo an FBI m vtslg a llo n when they re asked lo steal
back top-secret American files Horn
the Yugoslavian consulate

3:00
O NIGHTWATCH
(1 D B J /L O B O
CD(8) NIGHT OWL FUN

00 $

8:30
0 &lt;D FAMILY TIES Ales tries lo
change me image of Jennifer s rock
'n' roll band in stereo g
CD (10) THIS OLD HOUSE Fmdmg
water, digging a well and how lo
lest water quality g

MOVIE Lost" 119831 San­
dra Dee. Don Stewart

Mars colony, and frse-floating cap­
sules housing a colony of 10.000 to
20.000 people

7:05
I X SANFORO A N 0 SON

2:40

® o

•Al*
* #:

�r

|fW

i

-

r

t

BLONDIE

r

• %

7&gt; - »aMere Herald, ieiHard, FI,

Thursday, Feb. 31, 1N7

by Chle Young

B U T WHO

C A u seo- .
A C C ID E N T

r \7

BEETLE BAILEY

by Mort WaNtor

THE BORN LOSER

by Art San »om

ARCHIE

by Bob Montana

EEK A MEEK

by Howlo Schnaldar

WHAT WJOOLD &lt;tO&gt; CPU- A
P B 5 0 U I ’M WOT M ARRIED
T O ...w a r LIVING W ITH...

AND WOT EVtKJ
PARTIOULARLV
CLOSE ID ?

F O R T U JA lt

Hormone Loss Can
Cause Irritation ’
DEAR DR. G OTT - I'm 70.
My gynecologist says that I have
vulvo-vaglnitis and that many
older women have this problem.
Sltz baths of baking soda and
cornstarch help a lot. b u t! have
to be consistent. On occasion. I
take Negram 500 for cystitis.
Would this cause the regular
flareups?
DEAR READER -— Irritation of
the lower reproductive tract can
be a resu lt o f m enopause.
V ulvo-vaglnitis results when
these sensitive tissues respond
to the decrease In the levels of
female hormone. Of course, older
women also can develop Infec*
t i o n s — b u t m a n y
postmenopausal women can de­
velop vu lvo-vagln itis simply
from lack of hormone.
In addition, the hormone defi­
ciency can cause an Irritation or
the urethra (bladder opening)
that resembles urinary infection
(causing frequency and bum-*
Ing).
Ask your doctor to prescribe
hormone cream that you can
apply to the affected area. This
often solves the problem and
makes the use of antibiotics,
such as Negram. unnecessary.
DEAR DR. GOTT — A woman
I know Is four months pregnant
and Is confined completely to
bed because she has an open
cervix. She said she developed
this because her mother took
drugs to prevent a miscarriage.
Is this possible? Also: Can't her
cervix be sutured?
DEAR READER - The drugs
that her mother took did not
cause this condition. An open
( I n c o m p e t e n t ) c e r v i x Is
dangerous In early pregnancy
because It can result In pre­
mature labor and harm to the
unborn baby. Bed rest Is the
traditional method of treatment;
sometimes drugs (to prevent
labor) arc used.
Because all drugs have sideeffects. obstetricians may prefer
to close the cervix with sutures
until the woman is at the end of
her p regnan cy. Your friend
probably should see a specialist
who Is trained in managing
high-risk pregnancy.
DEAR DR. GOTT - I am 71

and have been taking medicine
for 10 to 12 y ea rs for tic
douloureux. One doctor called It
the world's worst pain, and I
agree. If It lasted long. I'd
probably lose my mind. Drugs
don't help after a while. I'm now
taking Darvocet-N (100 m illi­
grams) four times a day. Is there
anything else that would help?
DEAR R E AD E R T ic

ACROSS
1 Beliefs
S Art lover
12 Tenneaae*
____ Ford
13 Old World

14 Oaggle
member*
IB Component
16 B e it* (comp,
w d.)

18 Aatronauf*
ferry
19 Vetch
20 Pagoda
22 Hebrew month
26 Emerald lala
28 Uneven
29 Head to ____
32 Aetna* Lailia
34 Number
35 Twlatad
30 Japan***
matropoli*
37 Swift aircraft
(abbr.)
38 Dark wood
40 Forceful blow
42 Italian family
43 The (Oar.)
44 Former nuclear
agency (abbr.)
47 Tropical cuckoo
49 Crier
52 Rare thing*
55 Eluda
57 Matured
58 Rubber aourc*

douloureux, or trigeminal neu­
ralgia. Is caused by breakdown
of, or pressure on, a nerve In the
face. The condition produces
sharp, stabbing attacks of pain
that Jast for hours or days.
Sometimes surgery is needed to
release the pressure on the
nerve.
Anawar to Prtviou* Punl*

4 Percolate
•lowly
5 Wide aho* tire
6 Ceeaer’a enemy
7 Cottonwood.

OEEDE EED
DDEED DDE
A N A
E E E D E E ED
□D O D E
dded
EED EED
□ CZOn E O EE
_C "c

D _o

*.g.
8 Mallet
9 Language auffix
10 Soft matal
11 Con luma
12 Ona’a aalf
17 Oat loat
21 Oarm
23 Scad*
24 Employ*
25 Seaaon of
faating
27 Gooey
28 Adam'*
grandaon
29 Bird call
30 Globe*
31 laland

R

o o n n n

d e e

□H O ED E p l
□D D E ODD EDED
E EC EED
_E^ _N _T DE
EED
D_ _o
EEEEE EED
0_ _D _S
EEDEE □
_s
A
E E E E E EED
48 Cat* hava
____ livaa
50 Skinny fish
51 Otdipu*
52 Building lot
53 12. Roman
54 Chooae
55 Billboard*

33 Eared aaal
39 Spruce up
41 Seaame teed
confection
43 Mince*
45 Fluah with
auccaa*
46 Oava up

59 Health

60 Small bam

DOWN
1 Actrai* Dunne
2 Sarcaitic grin

3 Abut*

(C) 1987 by NEA

1

W IN AT BRIDGE
By James Jacoby

by Hargreaves A Sallara

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Wamar Brothara

BUGS BUNNY

ELMEK COUL(7 0E C O V \E A REALLy
O K E A T 5HAKE5PEAPEAM A C 7D R &gt;

°UI A

T '

ftp s

mmmmm
FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thaves

WATCH WHAT HE
WH^N THP &lt;SUY ON
TH E COMM£/?&lt;ClAiTAUKT A^OUT THP tfANfcJr

.

•

c c o u n t

TvAAW S&gt;

2 - J-(a

by Jim Davis

GARFIELD
CAN I HAVE HALF OF THAI
P O U G H N U T .G A R F IE L P ?

°

being clever, after ruffing the
thlra diamond in dummy, you
play ace and queen o f hearts.
T h a i effectively kllla the up­
percut. but s om eth in g else
happens. After taking the king of
hearts, West leads a club. You
can take the ace and king In
dummy, but what next? When
you try to get back to your hand
by rulTlng a club. West makes
the 10 of hearts for the setting
trick.
We all see it now. of course.
After ruffing the third diamond
in dummy. South must cash the
A-K of clubs. Now he can play
ace and queen of hearts with
Impunity. West will have no way
of locking declarer Into dummy
to promote his heart 10. and
once again North will be re­
warded for ovcr-blddlng.

NORTH

♦ A Q 10
VB 7 4
» v i»

4 A K J IS

EAST

W EST
♦ K73
¥ K 10 3
♦ A KJ92
♦ Q7

♦ 96 5 2
*9 2
♦ 865
♦ 10 6 4 2
SOUTH
♦ J84
ya qj
♦ 743
♦ 93

G o Om P-'

°- ' " V

Vulnerable: N either
Dealer: West
Wm I
l NT
2♦
Pass
Pass

Norib
I)bl
Pass
3V
Pass

by T. K. Ryan
m

t o * w r c c u ir v o m K ,

IP«MAJMP1DD»KI£KEP’
o d r T P Y / o J ,ii\ )* iiR A F o F
TO O K M O O N C B K i

( N « * l America V d C 4 ‘«

1**?

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
Pass
2V
4V

Opening lead: ♦ K

HOROSCOPE
W h a t The D ay
W ill Bring...
YO U R B IR TH D A Y
F E B R U A R Y 27. 1987
Your financial position will
strengthen in the year ahead.
However, of equal or perhaps
even greater importance, several
of your non-material desires will
also be gratified.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Happy changes are In store for
you, especially where your social
life Is concerned, begin making
an effort to link up with new
groups. Get a Jump on life by
understanding the Influences
that are governing you In the
yea r ahead. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions today.
Mall $1 to Astro-Graph, d o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428,
Cleveland. OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
A R IE S (March 21-April 19)
Favorable changes that w ill
enhance your status are In the
offing. Something you've always
w an ted to do can now be
accomplished.

TAU R U S (April 20-May 20)
Valued relationships arc about to
become even more significant
than th ey are at p re s e n t.
Benefits will be derived through
these loving associates.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It's
time for you to start raising your
sights where your worldly ob­
jectives are concerned. Don't be
afraid to aim for goals that
you’ve never attempted.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Partnership arrangements Into
which you enter In this period
will have excellent chances for
success. It looks like you will
form more than one alliance.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Begin­
ning today, things should start
brightening up a bit pertaining
to your material requirements.
Something may occur that will
h e lp y o u g e n e r a t e m o r e
earnings.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Don't be disconcerted If things
haven't been going too well for
you recently In the romance
departm ent. Cupid Is busy
sharpening a quiver o f arrows
Just for you.

L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) You
arc entering a very productive
cycle where your Initiative and
know-how can be used lo reap a
bountiful harvest. Utilize your
special skills.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Your popularity Is about to take
a pronounced, upward swing.
Those with whom you're In­
v o lv e d w ill b e c o m e m o re
a p p re c ia tiv e of your noble
qualities.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Your financial prospects look
very encouraging for the next
few weeks. You should be able to
acquire several expensive things
you've denied yourself.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. *22-Jan.
19) If you’ ve been sitting on a
promising Idea for a new ven­
ture. start doing som ething
about It now. What you have
may be better than you realize.
A g U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You are now In an Interesting
cycle where old debts and ob­
ligations, possibly even those
you’ve thought of as uncollecti­
ble. will be repaid.

ANNIE
TUMBLEWEEDS

65

T V

—

p o U L o v f/ ? A

Talk about aggressive bidding!
Your left-hand opponent opens
one no-trump, allowing 10-1 a
p oin ts. W hen your partner
doubles, you're very happy to
pass sin ce you have eigh t
hlgh-card points of your own.
Then West bids two diamonds,
you (South) bid two hearts and
partner raises you to three. For
sure, you have to bid four,
although it’s hard to figure out
where North got ms raise to
three.
After West leads three rounds
of diamonds, it’s easy to see that
it would be a mistake to take a
heart finesse. West has the heart
king and would be able to play
an oth er diam ond. Doing so
would allow East to uppercut
with the 10 or nine of hearts. So,

.. THAT W AS GOOP THINKING r B* s
"PAPPY*/ I F STELLA HAN
FOUNP T H ’ LOCKET WITH
YESM V STUFF SHE WOULDN'T
OWE IT A S E C O N D
LOOKf

by Leonard Starr
„8 U T ft WAS IN
/MY P O C K E T WHEN
SHE ATTACKED'-

O H .S O
V 'H A P TO
G E T R iP

W H 'W H A T WILL
YOU DO WITH
E , UNCLE?

NOTHING .WHICH
\
YOU WILL NO
POUBT INTERPRET \

AS A WEAKNESS~\

�f i - i *.r* .

1 j* r«

Arms To Iran:

1

Legal Notice
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
FOR THE EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
OF FLORIDA.
IN ANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY
CASE NO. 88 4014
GENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISION
ALLIANCE MORTGAGE
COMPANY.
PLAIN TIFF,
vs.
RUBY MAG ID F /K /A RUBY I.
RAMEY.
DEFENDANTS
NOTICEOF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE
SERVICE-PROPERTY
TO

RUBY MAGID F /K /A RUBY I
RAMEY OFF HIGHWAY 184
ON SUGAR MTN RESORT HO
B A N N E R E L K , NORTH
CAROLINA 2860-1
II living. Including any un
known spouse ol M id Defend
ant(s) II any have remarried
and it any o r a ll o l la id
Defendanl(s) are dead. Ihelr
respective unknown heirs, de
vlsees, grantees, assignees,
creditor!, lienors, and trustees,
and all other persons clatming
by. through, under or against
the named Defendant!!), and
the aforementioned named Del
e n da nK s) and such ol the
aforementioned unknown De
fondants as may be Inlanls.
Incompetents or otherwise not
sui juris.
YOU A R E H E R E B Y
NOTIFIED that an action has
been commenced to foreclose a
mortgage on the following real
properly, lying and being siluat
ed In Seminole County. Florida,
more particularly described as
follows
C O N D O M IN IU M PARCEL
NO 49 E, HIODEN RIDGE
CONDOMINIUM. ACCORDING
TO THE DECLARATION OF
CONDOMINIUM THEREOF AS
R EC O R DED IN O F F IC IA L
RECORDS BOOK 1337, PAGE
625, PUBLIC RECORDS OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
F L O R I D A AND ANY
AMENDMENTS THERETO
more commonly known as 125
NORTH LAKE B LV D . UNIT
.49. ALTAMONTE SPRINGS.
FLORIDA 37701.
This action has been tiled
againsl you and you are re
qulred to serve a copy ol your
written delenses. It any. to It on
SHAPIRO. ROSE &amp; FISHMAN,
Attorneys, whose address is 550
North Reo Street. Suite 303.
Tampa, Florida, 33609 1013. on
or before March 23. 1907, and
file the original with the Clerk ol
this Court either belore service
on P la in tiffs attorney or Imme
diately thereafter, otherwise a
default w ill be entered against
you lor the rebel demanded In
the Complaint
WITNESS my hand and seal
ot this Court on the 16lh day ol
February. 1987,
(COURT SEAL!
D a vidN Berrien,CLERK
Circuit and County Courts
BY Jean Brlllent
Deputy Clerk
Publish February 19. 26. March
S. 12,1987
DEL ISA
N O T IC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E

Notice is hereby given mat I
am engaged In business at 1801
Lake Shore Circle. Longwood.

located the anticipated shipment
In a warehouse at McGuire Air
Force Base." Sayle wrote, "and a
Pentagon spokesman made the
frank admission the materiel
there was indeed Intended for
Iran. But. he said, the parts were
ones that had been signed over
to the Iran ian s b efo re the
hostage crisis began and were
stored at McGuire."
State Department spokesman
John Trattner, the story con­
tinued. "acknowledged that the
administration intended to re­
sume the shipment of military
parts once the hostages were
released."
The militants who seized the
U.S. Embassy Nov. 4. 1979, took
the hostages as ransom for the
return of Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavl to stand trial. The shah
had fled to the United States the
previous month as the Islamic
revolution of Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini gained strength.
The United States would not
give the seriously III shah Indefi­
nite haven, and he went to
Panama and then to Egypt,
where he died o f cancer July 27.
1980.
T h e Carter adm inistration
began negotiating with Kho­
meini's regime through Algerian
diplomats and offered to deliver
between #5 billion and $6 billion
of frozen Iranian assets In return
for the hostages. Arbitration by
an International panel would
handle other assets or claims In
dispute.
In fact. $8 billion In Iranian
assets held by the United States
were unfrozen after the hostages

*(tt

.....

uth ,1

NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged in business at 721
Galloway Cl.. Winter Springs.
Seminole County. Florida under
the Fictitious Name ot LABA
Associates, and that 1 intend to
register said name with the
Clerk o l the C irc u it Court,
Semloo'e Counly, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes.
To W it; Section 885 09 Florida
Statutes 1957,
!M Lesley Arles
Publish February 12. 19. 28 &amp;
March 5. 1987.
DEL 101
NOTICE OF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I
am engaged in business a* 1488
Seminola Blvd., Casselberry,
Seminole County. Florida under
the F ictitiou s Name ot A ir
Associates, and that I Intend to
register said name with the
Clerk ol the C irc u it Court,
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with Ihe Provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes.
T oW il: Section 885 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
i\l Lori A Heatherdate
Publish February 19, 28 8.
March 5. 12, 1987.
DEL 150
NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that we
are engaged in business al P O
Boa 2201. Lake Mary, Seminole
County. Florida 32748 under Ihe
Fictitious Name ot Made Ot
Wood, and that we intend to
register said name with the
Clerk ol the C irc u it Court,
Seminole County. Florida in
accordance with the Provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Statutes.
ToW il Section 885 09 Florida
Statutes 1957
I I I L. Allen Cooper
/ * / Ron Richards
Publish February 38 8, March
J. 12. 19. 1987.
DEL 208
NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given that I
am engaged In business at 2701
W est Sth S lre e l, S an ford,
Seminole County. Florida under
th e F i c t i t i o u s N a m e o f
Technlcon. and that I intend to
register said name with Ihe
Clerk ol Ihe C irc u ll Court.
Seminole County, Florida in
accordance with Ihe Provisions
ot the Fictitious Name Statutes.
To Wit Section 885 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
(CORPORATE SEAL)
THE I SEN COMPANY
)%: Amelia M Theisen
President 8. Secretary
Publish February 5, 12. 19. 26.
1987.
DEL 42

' *r*-r

( ’• / ' ‘Y ’ J \ f ■( - T 'l ' /

I N r - ' f V ' - ' - f N T ' T 1/

M U M HtraM, towM, f\.

legol Notice"

f f I- J'-V-

TMrMy, Nfc. U, HB7-IK

la—1 Notice

IIOW/O-H

were freed. Negotiations con­
tinue today for other sums.
Carter eventually signed a
secret presidential "fin d in g ”
that authorized the dispatch of a
CIA agent to Tehran "at high
risk to his life” to engineer the
successful escape of six Ameri­
cans who had hidden In the
Canadian Embassy. Sayle wrote.
CIA personnel also flew a light
plane Into the Iranian desert,
la n d in g b y m o o n lig h t , to
establish If the area could handle
larger cargo planes.
"Other CIA personnel went
repeatedly Into hostile Tehran to
survey what the military rescue
force would find on their arrival
and to purchase the trucks to
transport the raiding party to the
bcleagurcd em b assy." Sayle
wrote.
Congress, however, was told
none of this — and Carter's CIA
d ir e c t o r . A d m . S t a n s fle ld
Turner, recently recalled three
Instances In which lawmakers
were deliberately not told of
secret efforts to free the hostag­
es, Sayle wrote.
" I n these In s ta n c e s ," he
quoted Turner as saying, "the
Information was so lightly held
that had the full intelligence
committees of the Congress been
Informed, more people on Capi­
tol Hill would have known about
the operation than Inside the
C IA!"
S a y le c o n c lu d e d : " P r e s s
speculation of the time faded
Into history like a bad memory
after the ultimate release of the
hostages. ... How quickly we
forget."

mandate to review the role of the
NSC staff anti whether it was
used to Initiate and carry out
policy rather than to recommend
it In coordinating the covert sale
of U.S. arms to Iran and appar­
ent funncllng of money for the
Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
But several news accounts
leading up In today’s public
report said the panel took a
broad reading of that mandate
Into Its work and came up with a
report critical of not only uldes
but the president himself In
handling the affair.
1 ■.-.wrinpi s'—«»9W 4^toW W *9W Pf999*PH*—*99

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice
Seminole Counly, Florida under
the Fictitious Name ot Price
And Company, and that I Intend
to register said name with the
Clerk o l the C irc u it Court.
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
ot the Fictitious Name Statutes.
To Wit: Section 8A5 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/* / James F. Price III
Publish February 28 &amp; March
S. 12, 19, 1987
DEL 213

- f.

I T

L I GALA OVERT I SINO

Tow er Pow er U nforeseen
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi­
dent Reagan appoin ted the
three-man Tower Commission
Nov. 26 in what was seen at the
time us a low-key investigation
into what role his Nutional
Security Council staff may have
played In the Iran-Contra crisis.
But what the commission re­
veals three months later In Its
final report today could spark
fundamental changes In the way
Reagan's adm inistration and
future administrations Imple­
ment foreign policy.
The commission had as Us

'( 'P

U —I Motfcs

'How Quickly We Forget'
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
State Department acknowledges
secret meetings with Iranian
contacts and the CIA director
admits that on orders of the
president. Congress was left In
the dark about efforts to free
American hostages.
If It sounds familiar. It should.
But the crisis is not Ronald
Reagan's.
In this case, It belongs to
Jimmy Carter.
"Secret Iran Maneuvers: How
Q uickly W e F orget” is the
headline on the article written
by CIA veteran Edward Sayle for
the latest edition of Periscope, a
Journal of the Association of
Former Intelligence Officers.
Sayle. the editor of Periscope
and historian for the organiza­
tion. authored the piece as a
retrospective on the Iranian
hostage crisis and scandal en­
dured by President Carter years
before his successor stumbled
into a similar swamp.
Carter's case begun In secret
negotiations for the release of 52
A m erican hostages held by
Islamic militants In the U.S.
Embassy In Tehran. It followed
Ills disastrous covert air opera­
tion to free the hostages In which
eight U.S. Air Force and Marine
personnel were kilted In the
Iranian desert when two rescue
aircraft collided.
It ended, or at least saw its
goal achieved, only when the
hostages were freed Jan. 20.
1980. after 44-1 days in Tehran
— and after Reagan was sworn
in to succeed the president
whose envisioned second term
died In the cross fire,
"T h e fate of 52 American
hostages seized In Iran tugged at
the nation's heart strings." Sayle
wrote. "T h e nation recognized
and accepted that something
dramatic, be It diplomatic or
military, had to be done to break
the Impasse and bring the Amer­
ican prisoners home.
"President Carter carried the
burden of what appeared to be a
diminished and powerless pre­
sidency as a penalty for Innctlon."
The media reported that a
secret deal was In the works and
that the hostages would be
released In exchange for five
planeloads of m ilitary spare
parts.
"T h e press claimed to have
M ir

i -c r r

IN THE CIRCUIT
C O U R TIN AND
FOR SEMINOLE
COUNTY. FLORIDA
C IVIL DIVISION
CASE NO. 87 0492 CA 04 G
IN RE The Marriage of
H RAY SOUDER.
P e titio n e r/H u s b a n d .

and
ROBERTA J E A N SOUDER.
Respondent/Wite
NOTICEOF ACTION
TO.ROBERTA JEAN SOUDER
475 Purcell Avenue
Clnclnall, Ohio 45205
YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an
action lor Dissolution of Mar
rlage has been tiled against you
and you are required to serve a
copy ol your written defenses, it
any. to It on W illiam F. Slmonet,
P e titio n e r’s attorney, whose
address Is 400 North Fern Creek
Avenue. Orlando. Florida 32803
on or belore March 17, 1987, and
tile the original with the Clerk of
this Court either before service
ot Petitioner’s attorney or Im
m e d ia te ly t h e r e a lt e r ;
otherwise, a default w ill be
enlered againsl you lo r the
relief demanded In the Petition
Dated this 10th day ol Febru
a r y . 1987
DAVID N BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE COURT
By: Jane E Jasewlc
As Deputy Clerk
Publish February 12. 19. 26 &amp;
March5. 1987
DEL 109
IN T H E CIRCUIT
CO URTINANDFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIRCUITCIVILCASE NO.
84 201) CA 09 L
FLORIDA FEDERAL
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
P la in lllt.

vs.
JOSEPH C M E R K L E .e la l,
Defendants
NOTICEOF SALE
Notice is hereby given that,
pursuant to the Order or linal
judgment entered In this cause,
in Ihe Circuit Court ot Seminole
County, Florida. I w ill sell Ihe
property situated in Seminole
County, Florida, described as
LOT 24. BAY LAGOON UNIT
TWO. ACCORDING TO THE
P L A T T H E R E O F AS RE
CORDED IN PLAT BOOK 28.
PAGE 40, PUBLIC RECORDS
O F S E M IN O L E C O U N TY .
FLORIDA
TOGETHER WITH,
WITHOUT LIMITATION. THE
F O L L O W IN G S P E C I F IC
ITEMS OF PERSONAL PRO
P ER TY. TOGETHER W ITH
ANY AND ALL ADOITIONS
T H E R E T O OR R E P L A C E
M EN T S T H E R E O F :
R A N G E O V E N . DISPOSAL.
DISHWASHER, FAN HOOD
at public sale, to the highest and
best bidder, tor cash, at Ihe west
front door ot the courthouse In
Sanlord, Florida, al II 00 A M .
on March 19, 1987.
DATED this tath day ol Feb
ru a ry ,1987
(SEAL)
DAVID N BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE
CIRCUIT COURT
By Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish February 19. 26. 1987
DEL 157

NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that we
are engaged in business at 1307
L a n d ry C lr ., Lo ng w oo d,
Seminole County, Florida 32750
under the Fictitious Name ot
Passport Valet, and that we
Intend to register said name
with Ihe Clerk ol Ihe Circuit
Court. Seminole Counly. Florida
In accordance with the Pro
visions ol Ihe Fictitious Name
Statutes. T oW il: Section 885 09
Florida Statutes 1957
I I I Richard D Muculza
IM Judith M. Mucuti.s
IM John L Silver
I I I Michaela E , Silver
Publish February 28 &amp; March
5. 12. 19. 1987
DEL 213

INTHE CIRCUIT
COURTOF THE I8TH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN ANOFOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO.
84 1993 CA 09 L
A M ER IFIR ST
SAVINGS

FEDERAL

AND LOAN ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,
VS.

EDWARD KOCH, SR E T A L .
Defendants
NOTICEOF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
lhal on Ihe 18th day ol March.
1987. at II 00 a m at the West
Front Door of the Courthouse ot
SEMINOLE County, Florida, at
S a n fo rd . F lo r id a , the un
dersiqned Clerk will otter tor
sale to Ihe highest bidder for
cash Ihe following described
real property
Lot 22 In Block B of THE
S P R IN G S D E E R W O O D
ESTATES, Seminole County,
Florida, according to the Plat
thereot as recorded In Plat Book
18 Pages 75 and 78, Public
Records ol Seminole County,
Florida
Including specifically, but not
by way ol limitation, the follow
mg described equipment
Range Oven. Disposal, Dish
washer. Fan Hood. Compactor,
Central Heat 8. Air
TOGETHER with all Ihe Im
provements now or hereafter
erected on the property, and ait
Ihe easements, rig h ts , ap
purtenances. rents, royalties,
mineral, oil and gas rights and
profits, water, water rights and
water stock, and all natures now
or herealter a p a ri o l Ihe
p ro pe rty, including replace
men Is and additions thereto
This sale is made pursuant to
a Summary Final Judgement in
Foreclosure enlered in Civil
Action No 88 1992 CA 09 L now
pending in Ihe Circuit Court In
and lo r SEMINOLE County,
Florida
DATED this lath day ol Feb
ru a ry ,1987
(SEAL!
OAVION BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
BY Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish February 19. 26 1987
DEL 158

NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that the City of Sanford, Florida,
will receive sealed bid* up to
1:10 p m . Thursday. March 12.
I9t7, tor tfse following service:

TOILET IOUIPMENT
Specification! and the proper
Bid Forms are available, a t no
cost. In the Purchasing Office.
300 N. Park Avenue. Sanford.
Florida. (303 ) 3221181, Ext. 294.
The City of Sanford reserve*
the right to accept or rc |tc f any
or alt proposals, with or without
causa, to waive technicalities, or
to accept Ihe bid. which In Its
judgement, best serves the In­
terest ot the City.
Persons are advised that, II
they decide to appeal any de­
cision made concerning the
award of this proposal, they will
need a record ol the proceed­
ings. and lor such purpose, they
may need to ensure that a
verbatim record ol the proceed­
ings Is made, which record
Includes the testimony and evl
dance upon which appeal Is to be
based.
C ITY OF SANFORD
!M Walther Sheerin
Waller Shearln
Purchasing
Publish: February 28,1917
DEL-205

IN T H E C IRCUIT
COURT. IN AND FOR
SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLORIOA
CASE NO. 87-422-CA-94-K
IN RE: THE M A R R IA G E OF
JO ANN RAYMOND.
Wife/Petitioner,
and
RODERICK RAYMOND.
Husband/Raspondent
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO RODERICK RAYMOND
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D that an
action lor dissolution ot m ar­
riage has been tiled against you.
You are required to serve a copy
ol your written defenses. If any.
to the action on Petitioner's
a tto rn e y whose n a m e and
address Is Richard L. Mamele,
P .O . D r a w e r H , S a n fo rd .
F lo rid a 32771 on or beforo
March 20. 1987 and tile Ihe
original wilts the clerk ot this
Court, either belore service on
Petitioner's attorney or Imme­
diately therealter; otherwise a
lodgment will be enlared to the
relief demanded In the Petition
for Dissolution ol Marriage.
WITNESS my hand and Ihe
seal ol this Court on February 2,
1987

(SEAL)
O A VIO N B E R R IE N
As Clerk of the Court
By: Phyllis Forsythe
As Deputy Clark
Publish: February 5. t2. 19. 28.

1987
DEL 51
IN THE CIRCUIT
CO URTO FTHE
E IG H T E E N TH JU D IC IA L
C IRCUIT IN AND FOR
SEM INO LE COUNTY.
FLORIOA
CASE NO. I8-4!M-CA-Ia-L
JUDG E:
KENNETHM. LEFFLER
IN R E : F O R F E IT U R E OF
11.714 00 U N IT E D STATES
CURRENCY
N O T IC E O F F O R F E IT U R E
PRO CEEDING
SECOND PUB LICATIO N

7&lt;argnfcT gsri
Sorrento. FL 32778

Robert Lee Addison
7201 Dollar Way
Santcrd, FL 32771
and all others who claim an
Interest In the following pro
perty
a ) SI,714 00 United Slates
Currency
THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
S H E R IF F 'S D E P A R TM E N T
seized Ihe described properly on
Ihe 9lh day ot June. 1988. al or
near 2102 Soulwest Road. San
ford. Seminole County, Florida
32771.
On 4lh day ol December. 1986.
the Seminole County Sherlll's
Department tiled a Petition tor
Rule to Show Cause and tor
Final Order ol Forfeiture with
Ihe Clerk of the Circuit Court,
Seminole County Courthouse.
300 North Park Avenue. San
lord, Florida A copy ol said
Petition is on tile In the Clerk's
ullice and is available lor exam
inallon during regular business
hours
W HEREAS a p rlm a facie
showing has been made by the
Petilioner lhal there Is a proba
ble cause lor the issuance ol a
Rule to Show Cause,
YOU. the above indicated
potential claimants. Tony Jac
ques and Robert Lee Addison.
ARE HEREBY COMMANDED
to appear belore Ihe HONOR
ABLE KEN N ETH M. LEF
FLER in Chambers, Seminole
Counly Courthouse, Seminole
County. Sanlord, Florida, on the
tath day ot March. 1987. at 10 00
a m., tor Pre T rial to show
cause why Ihe above described
property should not be torleited
by this Court as Contraband,
pursuant to Sections 932.701 704.
Florida Statutes (1985). lo the
Seminole Counly Sheriffs De
parlment. as the agency which
seized said properly on 9th day
o t June. 1986, in Seminole
County. Florida, based upon
alleged felony violations which
occurred in Seminole County.
Florida
WHEREAS a prlma taele case
has been shown. It Is therefore
Ihe Order ot this Court that all
p o le n lla l Respondents who
claim an Interest In Ihe above
described property, shall within
twenty (201 days Irom service
but no later than seven (7&gt; days
belore the date set above, show
cause by tiling in this Court,
responsive pleadings as to why
this Court should not ent
's
Order lorleiling the said ,
perty to Ihe use ol. or sale by.
the Sheriff of Seminole County
YOU A R E F U R T H E R
COMMANDED lo serve a true
and correct copy ol such plead
ings within said time period
upon ANNE E RICHARDS
RUTBERG. Assistant State Al
lorney. Ottice ol Ihe State At
torney, 100 East First Street.
Sanlord. Florida 32771 Failure
lo lile and serve such pleadings
within said time period shall
result in the entry ol a Default
and a Final Ord-.»r ol Forfeiture
DATED this 2nd day ot Feb
ruary, 198/
NORMAN R WOLFINGER
STATE ATTORNEY
BY ANNE E
RICHARDS RUTBERG
ASSISTANT
STATE ATTORNEY
Ottice ol the Slate Attorney
100 East F irst Slreel
Sanford. Florida 32771
(305) 322 7534
Publish February 5. 12. 19. 26,
1987
DEL 48

NOTICE OP
FICTITIOUS NAMI
N olle* It herafey given m at we
are engaged in butlneea a f 3877
Orlando Sr., Sanford, Seminole
C o un ty, F lo rid a u n d er the
Fictitious N am e of Country
Comar Emporium Inc., and tlsal
we Intend to register said name
wilts the Clark of the Circuit
Court. Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with the Pro­
visions of the Fictitious Nemo
Statutes, To-Wit: Section 845 09
Florida Statutes 1957.
H i M aria A. Stevens

SOX
IM John Holloway

50\
Publish February 11, 19, M A
M archS, 1997.
DEL-107

NOTICEOF
FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice It hereby given thal I
am engaged In business at 130
E . E v e rg re e n , U n it I1 0 IC ,
Longwood. Seminole Counly.
F lo rid a under the Fictitious
Name at The Collector Stop, and
that I Intend to register Mid
name with the Clerk of the
Circull Court, Seminole County,
Florida In accordance with the
Provisions ol the Fictitious
Name Statutes. To-Wit: Section
•«S.09 Florida Statutes 1957.
JOANN'S JUNK ANO
JEM S. INC.
IM Arthur G. Bernard. Jr.
Publish Fabruery 19. 2* A
March S. 12.1N7.
DEL-151

ORDINANCE NO. 274
AN O RDINANCE OF THE
C I T Y OF L A K E M A R Y ,
FLO RIDA, PR O V ID IN G FOR
THE A B A N D O N M E N T,
CLOSING. AND VACATING OF
A P O R T IO N OF TH E
R I G H T OF W A Y O F SUN
D R IV E , A PUBLIC STREET
AND R IG H T -O F -W A Y
LOCATED IN THE C IT Y OF
LAKE M ARY. FLO RIDA, ANO
MORE PA R TICULARLY DE
S C R IB E D H E R E I N . PRO
V ID IN G FOR S E V E R A B ILIT Y
AND E F F E C T IV E DATE
W HEREAS. Ihe City Com­
mission ol the City of Lake
M ary, Florida, has determined
th a t p u b lic s a fe ly w ill be
enhanced by the abandonment
and vacating ol portions at Sun
Drive: end
W HEREAS. Ihe City Com­
mission ol Ihe City of Lake
M ary. Florida, has determined
thal the abandonment ol Ihe
within described portions ol Sun
Drive and Its public rights ot
way It In Ihe bast Interest ol the
City and the public, and that
there is no detriment lo the
public In such abandonment;
NOW. T H E R E F O R E . Ihe CUy
Commission ot the City of Lake
M ary. Florida, hereby ordains:
I. Thai the following described
portion of Sun Drive and the
right ol way herein described
be. and the tarns are hereby
abandoned, closed, and vacated,
end thal all right In and to the
same on beha 11 ol the City and
the public, be and the same Is
hereby disclaimed:
A part of Section 7, Township
20 S o u th , Renge_ 30 E a s t,
Seminole Count
com er ol the Southeast

of

said Section 7; thence N. 90* 00'
00" E „ along the South line ol
said Section 7, also being Ihe
c e n t e r lin e o l L a k e M a ry
Boulevard, 317 34 leel; (hence
N 00* OF 06 " E . 40 00 leet lo Ihe
Northerly Right ol Way line of
Lake M ary Boulevard, thence
continue N 00* Of 06" 6 . 25 59
f e e t l o r th e P O I N T O F
BEO IN N IN O . being a point on
the Southerly Right ol Way line
of Sun Drive, a SO fool wide
Right ol Way as now laid out
and used; thence along said
Southerly Right ol Way line the
following two (21 courses and
d ista n ce s; Iro m a tangent
bearing of S 48* 26' 21" W . run
Southwesterly 29.74 teet along
the arc ot said Right ol Way
c u r v e , b e in g c o n c a v e
Southeasterly and having a ra
dlus ol 548 69 leet through a
central angle ol 03* 06’ 21" to a
point ol reverse curvature ot a
curve, concave Northwesterly
having a radius ol 243 00 leel
and a chord bearing ol S. 46* 13'
4 5 ' ’ W. : t h e n c e r u n
Southwesterly 7 61 leet along the
arc of said Right ot Way curve
through a central angle ol 01* 47'
30" lo a point on Ihe aloremen
honed Northerly Right ot Way
line ol Lake M ary Boulevard;
thence N 90* 00' 00" W.. 90 88
teet along said Northerly Right
ot Way line to the Intersection ot
the Northerly Right ot Way line
ol said Lake Mary Boulevard
with said Northerly Rlghl ol
Way line ol Sun Drive; thence
along said Northerly Right ot
Way line ot Sun D rive the
following two 12) courses and
distances, from a tangent bear
Inq ol N 67* 14' 46" E , run
Northeasterly 74 04 leet along
the arc ol said Right ol Way
curve through a central angle ol
21* 56’ 48" to a point ot reverse
curvature ol a curve, having a
radius ol 598 69 leel. Ihence run
Northeasterly 75 48 leet along
Ihe arc ol said Right of Way
curve, through a central angle
ol 07* 13' 24" to a point on said
curve; Ihence departing said
Right ot Way run S 00* 01’ 04"
W . 64 78 leel lo Ihe POINT OF
B E G IN N IN G

2 Severabilily. It any pro
vision ot this Ordinance or Ihe
a p p lic a tio n th e re o t to any
person or circumstance Is held
invalid, the Invalidity shall not
a lle c t o th e r p ro v is io n s or
applications ol the Ordinance
w h ich can be given e tle ct
without Ihe Invalid provision or
application, and lo this end Ihe
provisions ol this Ordinance are
declared severable
3. Conflicts All Ordinance or
parts ol Ordinances in conflict
with this Ordinance are hereby
amended or repealed so as to
conform with the provisions of
this Ordinance
4 Effective Dale ol Passage
This Ordinance shall take ellect
Immediately upon passage and
adoption
PASSEO AND ADOPTED this
19th day ot February, 1987
FIRST READING December
18. 1988
SECOND READING Febru
ary 19, 1987
C IT Y OF L A K E M A R Y .
FLORIDA
IM Richard A Fess
MAYOR. RICHARD A FESS
ATTEST
/ * / Carol A Ed wards
C IT Y CLERK. CAROL A
EDWARDSPublish February 24. 1987
DEL 206

IN TUB CIRCUIT COURT
FOR U M IN O Lf COUNTY,
FLORIOA
PROBATI DIVISION
File Nwmftor 97-lifr-CP

IN RE; ESTATE OF
GERTRUDE M. SAVE Y.

NOTICEOF
ADMINISTRATION
The adm inistration of the
• s lo t # o f G E R T R U O E M .
SAVE Y. deceased. File Number
97-114 CP, Is pending In the
C irc u it C o urt lo r Sem inole
C o u n ty . F lo r i d a , P r o b a te
Division, too address ol which It
Seminole Counly CourthouM,
Sanford, F lo rid a 32771. The
names and addresses of the
personal representative and the
personal representative's a t­
torney are set forth below
A ll Interested persons are
required to file with this court.
W IT H IN T H R E E MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATIO N OF
THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims
againsl Ihe estate and (2) any
o bjectio n by an Interested
person to whom this notice was
mailed thal challenges the valid
Ity of the w ill. Ihe qualifications
of the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ol the
court.
ALL CLAIMS ANO OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication ot this Notice has
begun on February 24, 1997,
Personal Representative:
DIANA SAVEY JOHNSON
7320 Hunlerflald Rd.
Maitland. Florida 327SI
Attorney lor
Personal Representative:
L.W. CARROLL. JR.,
ESQUIRE
LAWRENCE W. CARROLL.
J R ..P .A .
5200 S U.S. Highway 17 92
P.O. Box 39
Casselberry. Florida 32707
Telephone: (3051 260 5548
Publish: February 76 A March
5, 1997
DEL 209

IN TH E C IRCUIT
CO URTO FTHE
E IG H T E E N T H JUDICIAL
C IRCUIT IN A N D F O R
SEM INO LE COUNTY,
FLORIOA
CASE NO. M 4537-CA-14-L
JUDO E:
K EN N ETH M .L E F F L E R

IN R E : FORFEITURE OF A
1992 TOYOTA PICK UP
TRUCK, VEHICLE INDEN
TIFICATION NUMBER
JT4RN44S0C 0064331.14 000 00
UNITED STATES CURRENCY
and ONE TWENTY DOLLAR
CITICORPTRAVELERS
CHECK
NO TIC EO F F O R F E IT U R E
PR O LEEDINO
SECOND PUBLICATION

TO: Daniel W. Houser
c/o / Richard Rhodes. Esquire
126 East Jelferson Slreel
Orlando. FL 32801
Peter Cannluaro
649 Little Weklva
Altamonte Springs, FL 32714
Paul Ayala
c/o Angel Ayala
113 Balsawood Court
Alternant* Springs. F L 32714

a 1 One 1902 Toyota Pick Up
Truck. Vehicle Identification
Number JT4RN44S0C0O6433I
b ) 18.000 00 United Stales
Currency
c . ) O ne T w e n ty D o lla r
Citicorp Travelers Check
THF SFMINOLE COUNTY
S H E R IF F S D E P A R TM E N T
seized the described property on
the 24th day of June, 1986, at or
near Ihe parking lot ol Ihe First
Union Bank In Gooding’s Plaza.
Montgomery Road. Allamonle
S prings, S em inole C ounty.
Florida 32714
On 4th day ol December. 1986,
the Seminole Counly SherlH’s
Department tiled a Petition tor
Rule lo Show Cause and for
Final Order ol Forfeiture with
Ihe C lfrk ol Ihe Circuit Court,
5eminole County Courthouse.
300 North Park Avenue. San
lord. Florida A copy ol said
Pelltlon Is on Ills In Ihe Clerk's
office and Is available tor exam
Inallon during regular business
hours
W H E R E A S a p rlm a tacle
showing has been made by Ihe
Petilioner lhal there Is a proba
ble cause lor the issuance ol a
Rule to Show Cause.

YOU, the above Indicated
potential claimants. Daniel W
Houser. Peter Cannlzzarro, and
Paul Ayala. ARE HEREBY
COMMANDED lo appear belore
the HONORABLE KENNETH
M LE F F LE R In Chambers.
Seminole County Courthouse.
Sem inole C o un ly, S anlord,
Florida, on the 18th day ol
March. 1987, at 10 00 a m., lor
Pre Trial lo show cause why Ihe
above described properly should
not be forleiled by this Court as
Contraband, pursuant to Sec
tlons 937 701 704. Florida Slat
ules 11985). to Ihe Seminole
County Sherlll's Department, as
Ihe agency which seized said
properly on 24th day ol June,
1986, In S em ino le C o u n ly,
Florida, based upon alleged
lelony violations which occurred
In Seminole Counly. F lorlda
WHEREAS a prlma tacie case
has been shown. II Is therefore
Ihe Order ol this Court that dll
p o te n tia l Respondents who
claim an interest in Ihe above
described properly, shall within
twenty 170) days Irom service
bul no later than seven (7) days
belore Ihe date set above, show
cause by tiling In this Court,
responsive pleadings as to why
this Court should not enter Its
Order lorlelting Ihe said pro
perty to Ihe use ot. or sale by,
the Sherltl ol Seminole Counly
YOU A R E F U R T H E R
COMMANDED lo serve a true
and correct copy ol such plead
Ings within said lime period
upon ANNE E RICHARDS
RUTBERG. Assistant Stale Al
lorney. O lllce ot the Stale At
torney, 100 East First Street,
Sanlord. Florida 32771 Failure
to lile and serve such pleadings
within said time period shall
result In the entry ol a Default
and a Final Order ot Forfeiture
DATED this 2nd day ol Feb
ruary, 1987
NORMAN R WOLFINGER
STATE ATTORNEY
BY ANNE £
RICHARDS RUTBERG
ASSISTANT
STATE ATTORNEY
Ollice ol the State Attorney
100 East F irst Street
Sanlord. Florida 32771
(3051 372 7534
Publish February 5. 13, 19. 74,
1987
DEL 47

CITY OP lANPOBD,
FLORIDA
NOTICK OF A PUBLIC
HEARING TO CONSIOCR THE
ADOPTION OF AN ORDI­
NANCE BY THE CITY OF
SANFORD, FLORIDA.
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will

bo hold

In

too Commission Room af toe
City H all In too City of Sanford,
Florida, at 7 :M o'clock p.m . on
March 9, 1992, to consider toe
adoption of on ordinance by too
City of Sontord, Florida, title ot
which 1s as follows:
O RDINANCE NO. I I M
AN O R D IN A N C E O F THE
C IT Y OF S A N FO R D .
FLO RIDA, ESTABLISHING A
S IX M O N T H M O R A T O R IU M
ON A LL TRANSPORTATIO N
I M P A C T F E E S ;
E S T A B L IS H IN G A T R A N S ­
P O R T A T IO N IM P A C T F E E
S T U D Y ; P R O V ID IN G FO R
S E V E R A B IL IT Y , CONFLICTS
ANO E F F E C T IV E A N D T E R ­
M IN A T IO N D A T E .
A copy shell bo available al
the Office of too City Clerk tor
ell persons desiring to examine
the same.
All parties In Interest and
cl Miens shall have an opportuni­
ty to be heard a t said hearing.
By order of too City Com­
mission of the City of Sanford,
Florida.
*
ADVIC E TO TH E PU B LIC : If
a parson decides to appeal a
decision made with respect to
any m atter considered a l toe
above meeting or hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record of
the proceedings, Including Ihe
testimony and evidence, which ,
record Is not provided by toe ;
City ol Sanlord. ( F S 294 OKU)
IM H. N. T am m , Jr.
H. N Tam m . Jr.
City Clark
Publish: February 2S. 1997
DEL 714_______________________
N O T IC E O F

FICTITIOUS NAME
Notice Is hereby given thal I
am engaged In business at 439
Eldar Cf„ Altamonte Springs,
Seminola County, Florida 32714
under toe Fictitious Name of
Kenmer Advertising, and that I ,
intend lo register said name
wllh the Clerk ot the Circuit
Court, Seminole County. Florida
In accordance with the Pro­
visions ol the Fictitious Name
Stalutes. To-Wit: Section 945.09
Florida Statutes 1957.
I t / M . Ann Oaks
Publish February 19, 74 A
March 5,17. !907.
DEL-152
IN T H E C IR C U IT
CO URTO FTHE
E IG H T E E N T H
J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
SE M IN O LE COUNTY,
F LO R ID A
C IV IL ACTION NO.:
14-2554-CA 09-E
A LLIA N C E MORTGAGE
COMPANY.
Plainlllt,
vs.
PE TE R D. W A G N E R .e ta l.,
Defendants.
NO TIC E OF ACTION
TO: Peter D. Wagner
R ES ID EN C E : Unknown
LAST K N O W N A D D R E S S :
11314 JollyvlItoRd..

Canyon Croak
Apartments

on the following described pro­
p e r ty lo c a te d In S em ino le

County. Florida
Lot 14. Block 5. RESUB
DIVISION OF BLOCK 5. and
T ra ct " A " o l NORTH OR
LANOO SECOND ADDITION,
according lo Ihe plat thereof as
recorded In Plat Book IJ, Page
74. ol the Public Records of
Seminole County. Florida
has been filed against you and
you are required lo serve a copy
ol your written defenses, if any,
to It on Grace Anne Glavfn,
Esquire. P la ln tlll's attorney,
whose address It 1079 W Morse
Blvd.. Ste B. W inter Park,
Florida, on or before the 74th
day ol March, 1987 and tile Ihe
original w llh the Clerk of this
Court either before service on
P la in tiff* attorney or Immedi
a lily therealter; otherwise a
default w ill be entered against
you lor Ihe rebel demanded In
the Complain! or Pell lion
WITNESS m y hand and teal
of this Court on Ihe I7lh day ot
February. 1997.
(COURTSEAL)
DAVID N BERRIEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
BY Phyllis Forsythe
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 19. 26. March
5. 12, 1987
DEL 153
INTHE CIRCUIT
COURTOF THE
EIGHTEENTH
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
SEMINOLE COUNTY,
FLORIOA
C IV IL ACTION NO.:
18 0231 CA 09 P
SHADOW LAW N SAVINGS
ANO
LOAN ASSOCIATION.
P lalnlilf.
vs
ROBERTF M IL L E R .e t a l,
Delendants
NOTICEOF ACTION
TO Peter D Wagner
RESIDENCE: Unknown
LAST KNO W N AD D R E S S :
Canyon Creek Apartments
11316 JollyvIlleR d ,
Austin, Texas
YOU ARE NO TIFIED thal an
action to foreclose a mortgage
on the following described pro
p e rly lo c a te d In Sem inole
Counly, Florida.
Lol 710 SPRING OAKS UNIT
4, according lo the Plat thereof
as recorded In Plal Book 17.
Pages 95 and 98. ot Ihe Public
Records ol Seminole County,
Florida
has been filed againsl you and
you are required to serve a copy
ol your written defenses. It any,
lo It on Grace Anne Glavln.
Esquire, P la ln tlll's a llorn ey,
whose address is P O Box 1177,
Winter Park, Florida, on or
belore the 24th day ol March.
1987 and lile the original wllh
Ihe Clerk ot this Court either
belore service on P la in lllt'!
attorney or Immediately there
alter: otherwise a default w ill
be entered against you lor the
rellel demanded In Ihe Com
plaint or Petition
WITNESS my hand and seal
ol this Court on Ihe 17th day ol
February, 1987
(COURT SEAL)
DAVID N BERR IEN
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT
COURT
HY Phyllis Forsythe
As Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 19, 26. March
5. 17. 1987
DEL 154

�r

W

4*-S afrto rd H iriK l. U nfonl, Ft,

C O L L E C T IV E F E D E R A L
SAVINGS
A LOAN ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,
v».

BRIAN DAVID RISTand KIM
M ARIE JACOBS RIST. hit
wile, at a l„
Defendant!*).
N O TIC E O F SALE

lima

PURSUANT TO C H APTER 45
N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
auriuant to a Final Judgment of
Foreclosure dated February 11,
1517, e n te re d In C ase No.
U 2 M 3 C A 0 5 L of tfia Circuit
Court of the ll t h Judlclcal
C ircu it In and for Seminole
County, Florida wherein COL­
L E C T IV E F E D E R A L SAVINGS
A LOAN ASSOCIATION. Plain
tiff, and BRIAN D A V ID RIST
and K IM M A R IE JACOBS RIST
and L IN D A R. W ILLIAM SO N,
are Defendant!,
I w ill M il to the highest bidder
lor cath at the west front door of
the S e m ln o l* County CourthouM. X I N. Park Avenue.
Sanford. Florida, at 11:00 a m ,
on the 74th day of M arch. 1517,
the following deter I bed property
as t e t forth In said F in a l
Judgement, to wit:
LOT 5. BLOCK 4. NORTH
O R L A N D O R A N C H E S SEC
TIO N 5. ACCORDING TO THE
P L A T T H E R E O F AS RE
CORDED IN PLAT BOOK 11,
P A G E S 11 A 17 O F T H E
P U B L I C R E C O R D S OF
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y .
FLO RIDA
D A T E D Ihl* 73rd day of Feb
ru a ry ,1517.
(CIR C U IT COURT SEAL)
O A V ID N . B E R R IE N
CLERK OF THE C IR C U IT
COURT
BY: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publlah: February 74. M arch 5.

ite;

IN TH E C IR C U IT
CO URTO F TH E IIT H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D FOR
SE M IN O LE COUNTY,
FLO RIDA
C IV IL ACTION NO.
a*-lf*7-CA-0*-L
A M E R IF IR S T F E D E R A L
SAVINGS AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION.
Plaintiff,
VI.

CHRISTOPHER J. H A L E Y .
E T A L ..
Defendants.
NO TICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that on the llth day of March,
i n ; , at I I OO a m at the West
Front Door ot the CourthouM of
SEM INO LE County, Florida, at
S a n fo rd , F lo r id a , the un
derslgned Clerk will offer tor
sale to the highest bidder for
cath Ihe following described
real property:
C ondom inium U n it 101 D,
D E S T IN Y S P R IN G , a Con
dominium, and an undivided
.004157 Interest In the land,
common elements and common
expenses appurtenant to said
unit, ell In eccaxaence w it* end

to IHO 4MB&gt;&lt;M|—i I ol. |

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT
F O R T H ! E IG H T E E N TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
OF FLO R ID A . IN AND
FOR SE M IN O LE COUNTY
CASE NO. M -HtTCA-49-L
O E N E R A L JURISDICTIO N
D IV IS IO N
F E D E R A L HOME LOAN
M ORTGAGE CORPORATION,
P L A IN T IF F ,
v*.
M ARK S. CHEESE M AN, a
single person, SHERI J.
C H E E SE M A N, * si ng le person,
DEFENDANTS.
NO TIC E OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IVE N
pursuant to an Order or Final
Judgment of Foreclosure dated
February 73, 15*7, entered In
Civil Case No. (4-32*2 CA 0 9 L of
the Circuit Court ol the Eigh­
teenth Judicial Circuit In and for
Seminole
County.
Florida,
wherein
FEDERAL
HOME
LOAN
MORTGAGE
COR
PO RATION, plalntllt(s), and
M ARK S. CHEESEM AN. a
single
person,
SHERI
J.
CHEESE M A N . a single person,,
are defendanttsl, I will sell to
the highest and best bidder for
cash, at the west front door ot
the Seminole County Court
houM, Sanford, at 11:00 o'clock
to 7 :00 o'clock, on the 74th day of
March, 15(7, the following de­
scribed property as set forth In
said Final Judgment, to wit:
Lot 147, D E E R RUN U N IT 9B,
according to the map or plat
thereof as recorded In Plat Book
7*. Pages 41 and 47. In the Public
Records of Seminole County,
Florida
DA TED at Sanford, Florida,
this 73rd day of February. 19(7.
(C IR C U IT COURT SEAL)
David N. Berrien
CLERK OF THE
C IR C U IT COURT
Seminole County, Florida
BY: Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 74. March 5,
19(7
DEL-717

C IT Y OF
LAKE M A R Y . FLO R ID A
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC M IA R IN O
TO WHOM IT M A Y CO N C E R N :
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by' the City Commission of the
City of Lake M ary, Florida, that
M id Commission shall meet as
an E q u allin g Board on March
5. 19*7. at 7:30 P. M ., or as soon
thereafter as potslbla, at Laka
M a ry C ity H a ll, IS * N orth
Country Club Road. Laka M ary,
Florida, to haar and to consldar
any and all complaints as to tha
spatial assessments to be made
lor tha drainage Improvements
ot Evansdala Road, and shall
a d | u i f a n d e q u a l l t e s a id
assessments on a basis of justice
and right. Said meeting shall be
open to property owners to be
assessed, and any other parsons
Interested therein, and said
persons will be heard as to tha
propriety and adv lM b llity ol
making such Improvements, as
to tha cost thereof, as to tha
manner ol payment theralor.
and as to tha amount thereof to
be assessed against each pro
p a r t y so I m p r o v e d a n d
benefited.
Tha Commission will consldar
the a s s essm en ts d u rin g a
workshop to be held on March 7.
19*7, at 7 :X P. M ., or as soon
thereafter as possible, at Laka
M ary City Hall
PERSONS A R E A O V I S E D
THAT IF T H E Y D EC ID E TO
APPEAL ANY DECISION
M A D E AT T H IS M E E T IN G
TH E Y W IL L N E E D A RECORD
OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND
FOR SUCH PURPOSE TH E Y
N E E D TO ENSURE THAT A
V E R B A T IM RECORD OF THE
P R O C E E D I N G S IS M A D E
W HICH INCLUDES THE TES
TfM O NY AND EVIDENCE
UPON WHICH TH E APPEAL
IS TO BE BASED. PER SEC
T IO N 7*3.0)05 F L O R I D A
STATUTES
C ITY OF
LAKE M A R Y. F LO R ID A
Carol A. Edwards. City Clark
Publish: February 19. 76. 19*7
DEL-149

and lu c h a l IXx

aforementioned unknown De
fendants as may be Intents,
Incompetents or otherwise not
sul | uris.
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D that an action has
been commenced to foreclose a
mortgage on Ihe following real
property, lying and being situat­
ed In Seminole County, Florida,
more particularly described as
follows:
Lot 10, Block X . SANLANDO,
TH E SUBURB B E A U T IF U L .
SANFORD SECTION, accord
Ing to the plat In Plat Book 3.
Page 44 Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida,
more commonly known as 1440
North Street, Altam onte
Springs. Florida 37701.
This action has been died
against you and you are re
qulred to serve a copy ol your
w rllten defenses, if any. to it on
SHAPIRO. ROSE A FISHMAN,
Attorneys, whose address Is SS0
North Reo Street, Suite 303.
Tampa. Florida. 33609 10t3, on
or before March 73, 19*7, and
III* Ihe original with Ihe Clerk of
this Court either before service
on P lain tiffs attorney or Imme
dlately thereafter: otherwise a
default will be entered against
you for the relief demanded In
the Complaint.
WITNESS my hand and seal
of this Court on the 16th day of
February. 19(7
(CO URTSEAL)
David N. Berrien. CLERK
Circuit and County Courts
BY: Jean Brlllent
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 19,16. March
5, 17, 19, 19*7
DEL 155

I N C L U D I N G

SPEC IFIC A LLY, BUT NOT BY
WAY OF L IM IT A T IO N , THE
FOLLOW ING E Q U IP M E N T
FAN/HO O D
DISPOSAL
DISHWASHER
R A N G E /O V E N
CENTRALHEATAAIR
TOGETHER with all the Im
provements now or hereafter
erected on the property, and all
the e a s em e n ts , rig h ts , ap
purlenances, rents, royalties,
mineral, oil and gas rights and
profits, water, w ater rights and
water slock, and all fixtures now
or h e re a fte r a p art of the
pro perty, Including replace
ments and additions thereto.
This sale Is made pursuant to
a Summary Final Judgement in
Foreclosure entered In Civil
Action No (4 3747 CA 09 L now
pending In the Circuit Court In
and lor S E M IN O L E County,
Florida
D A T E D this 14th day ot Feb
ruary. 1947.
(SEAL)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
CLER K OF THE
C IR C U IT COURT
B Y . Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 19,74. 19*7
DEL 159

C ELEB R ITY CIPHER
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms ere creeled Irom quotations by famous
people, peat and present Fach letter m the cipher stands tor
another Today a clue J equa/s S

“ NTZUOSJ

Wl

EKBRQZUO

JKWVRQ

SKTS

I UG

NUWNRU

IBOQ

SKUBZ

UOEKTOSBOC
O W /’

—

L WV O C
ZUTRBYU
...

EKBRQZUO
TJ

TJ

S K UL

HTZHTZT

GTRSUZJ.

P R E V IO U S S O L U T IO N : "B e fo re I w ent Into analysis, I
to ld e v e ry o n e lies — but w hen you spend all that money,
you tell th e tru th ." — J a n e Fonda.

BLOOM COUNTY
MKier r..
m / w anxiety
P M tirs
AU- THAT H
aoser. pap...
tm e

in

mere f.

/

u

r

V I

IN TH E C IR C U IT
COURT OF TH E
E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN AND FOR
SEM INO LE COUNTY
FLO RIDA
CASE NO. *6-4744-CA-09-0
FIRST UNION N A TIO NAL
BANK OF FLO RIDA f/k /a
ATLANTIC NATIO NAL
BANK OF FLO RIDA.
Plaintiff.
vs.
VICTOR W AYNE DU N LA P
and BETTY A. DUNLAP,
his wile,
Defendants.
NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that on Ihe 31sl day ol M arch.
19*7. at 1100 a m. at the West
Iron! door of Ihe Courthouse ot
S em ino le C o un ty, S an fo rd ,
Florida, the undersigned Clerk
will oiler tor sale the following
described real property:
,
Lot 73. Block H. W IN T E R
WOODS SUB DIVISIO N U N IT 7.
according to Ihe plat thereof
recorded In Plat Book 15. Page
43, Public Records of Seminole
County, Florida
The t l w t u l d tale w ill be

punuant u&gt; a tu m m x r)

Final judgment entered In Civil
No 44 4744 now pending In Ihe
Circuit Court of the llth Judicial
Circuit In and for Seminole
County. Florida.
DATEO this 73rd day of Feb­
ruary. m i.
(SEAL)
D A V ID N . B E R R IE N
Clark ol tha Circuit Court
By: Phyllis Forsylha
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 74, March J,
19*7
D EL 715
IN THE C IR C U IT COURT
FOR SE M IN O LE COUNTY.
FLO RIDA
PROBATE D IV IS IO N
File Number 17-107 CP
Division PROBATE
I N R E : ESTAT EOF
SARAH K . B E I L E R ,
Deceased
NOTICE OF
A D M IN ISTR A TIO N
The adm inistration ot Ihe
estate at SARAH K BEI L ER,
deceased, F ile N um ber
*7 107 CP, Is pending In the
C irc u it Court lo r Sem inole
County, F lo ri d a , Probate
Division. Ihe address ol which Is
Seminole County Courthouse,
Santord, F lo rid a 37771. The
names and addresses ol Ihe
personal representative and the
personal representative's at
lorney are sal forth below
All Interested persons are
required to tile with this court.
W IT H IN TH REE MONTHS OF
THE FIRST PUB LICATIO N OF
THIS NOTICE: ( I I all claims
against Ihe estate and 17) any
obj ecti on by an in te re s te d
person on whom this notice was
served that challenges Ihe valid
Ify of Ihe will, the qualifications
ol Ihe personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction ol the
court,
ALL CLAIMS AND OBJEC
TIONS NOT SO F I L E D W ILL
BE FOREVER BARRED
Publication ol this Notice was
begun on February 74, 19*7.
Personal Representative:
WALDO PAUL
3*5 Lawa Lane
Oviedo. F L 37745
Attorney for
Personal Representative;
ROBERT K McINTOSH.
ESQUIRE of
s t e n s t r o m , M cIn t o s h .
JULIAN . COLBERT
A W H IG H A M , P A
P.O Bo* 1X0
Sanford. FL 32772 1330
Telephone: iX5&gt; 377 7171
A *34 5)19
Publish February 74 a March
5, 19*7
DEL 210

RESOLUTION NO. 155
A R E S O LU T IO N OF THE
C IT Y OF LA K E M A R Y .
FLO RIDA. PR O V ID IN G FOR
SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS FOR
DRAINAG E IM PRO VEM ENTS
ASSOCIATED W IT H PAVING
T H A T P O R T I O N OF
E V A N S O A L E ROAD B E ­
T W E E N C O U N T R Y CLUB
ROAD AND P IN E T R E E ROAD
IN T H E C I T Y O F L A K E
M A R Y . FLO RIDA. PURSUANT
TO C H APTER 170 OF THE
F L O R I D A S T A T U TE S ; DE
SIG N A TIN G THE PRO­
P E R T IE S S P E C IA L LY
B E N E F I T E D A N D TO BE
A SS ES SED : D E S IG N A T IN G
THE TOTAL E S T IM A T E D
COST O F T H E I M P R O V E ­
M E N T AND THE AMOUNT TO
BE ASSESSED; PRO VIDING
FOR C O N F L IC T S AND AN
E F F E C T IV E DATE.
W HEREAS, the City of Lake
M ary, Florida, has determined
If to be In the best Interest ot the
City to Improve, grade, con­
struct. pave and drain that
portion of Evansdale Road from
Ifs Interseclon with Country
Club Road on the west to Its
Intersection with Pine tree Road
on the east. In the City of Lake
M ary. Florida; and
W HEREAS, the City has been
made aware of the necessity ol
said Improvement; and
W HEREAS, ihe City desires
fo defray a part of the total
expense of said public Im ­
provement by assessing Ihe
properties specially benefited
thereby for fhe cost of Ihe
d rainag e Im provem ents
associated with said public Im
p ro v e m e n t, not to a x c e t d
Thirty-Five Thousand Dollars
(535.000 M l, pursuant to Chapter
170 ol the F lor Ida Statutes: and
W HEREAS, all Improvements
are to be done In compliance
with the plans, specifications
and estimates which have been
approved by Ihe Clly Com
mission ol the City ot Lake
M ary, Florida, which are on file
with the City Clerk, and which
constitute the plans, speclllca
lions, and estimates (or all
work.
NOW T H E R E F O R E . BE IT
R E S O L V E D BY T H E C I T Y
COMMISSION OF THE C IT Y
OF LAKE M A R Y, FLORIDA.
AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION I. That there shall
be a public Improvement con­
sisting ol the Improving, grad
Ing, constructing, paving and
d ra in in g ot that portion ol
E v a n s d a l e Ro a d b e t w e e n
Country Club Road and Pinetree
Road In the City ol Lake M ary,
Florida.
SECTION II. That there shall
be an assessment on Ihe pro­
perties specially benefited by
said p ub l i c I m p r o v e m e n t
pursuant to fhe terms of Chapter
170 ol the Florida Statutes lor
Ihe cost ol drainage Improve
ment s o nly, not to exceed
Thirty Five Thousand Dollars
(335.000 001. associated w ith
said public Improvement to de
fray Ihe expense (hereof.
SECTION II I . That the lands
upon which Ihe assessment shall
be levied are all of the lots and
lands adjoining and contiguous
or bounding and abutting upon
such improvements or specially
benefited thereby and further
designated by Ihe assessment
plan hereinafter provided tor
S E C T I O N I V . T ha t Ihe
assessment to each property
Indenlllled In Section III herein
shall b * that amount equal to tha
tola! ca«t of its* Rralnt*9 * tm
pro vem ents. not to exceed
Thirty Five Thousand Dollars
(535.000 001. divided by Ihe toal
number ol properties Identified
In Section I I I herein.
S E C T I O N V. T h a t the
assessments provided for herein
shall be payable In fen (10)
equal yearly Installments and
shall bear Interest at the rate of
eight ( • ) percent per annum
from the date of acceptance of
the Improvements provided tor
herein; however, said assess
ments may be paid wllhoul
Interest at any tim e within
thirty (M l days alter the Im ­
provement Is completed and the
resolution approving same has
been adopted by Ihe City Com
mission ot Ihe City ot Lake
M ary, Florida
SECTION V I That Ihe total
estimated cost of Ihe Improving,
grading, construction, paving
and draining provided lor herein
Is Three Hundred and One
Thousand Nine Hundred
Forty One and 45/lOOths Dollars
(5301.941 45)
SECTION V II Thai that par
lion ol Ihe total estimated costs
described In Section VI herein,
which Is to be assessed to the
properties Identified In Section
III herein, l i estimated to be and
Is not to exceed Thirty Five
Thousand Dollars ($35.000 00)
and Is lor drainage improve
ments only.
SECTION V I I I Thai there
shall be on tile with Ihe City
Clerk ol Ihe City ol Lake M ary,
Florida, an assessment plat
showing the lots and lands lo be
assessed, w i t h pl ans and
specifications and an estimate
of the cost ol Ihe proposed
Improvement which shall be
open lo the inspection ot Ihe
public.
SECTION IX. That this Reso
lutlon shall remain In force until
supplemented, amended, re
pealed or otherw'se altered
SECTION X That all resolu­
tions or parts ol resolutions In
conflict with this resolution are
hereby repealed
SECTION X I That this Reso
lulion shall lake immediate el
lect upon Its passage and ap
proval
PASSED AND AOOPTED this
19th day ol February. 19*7.
CI TY OF
LAKE M ARY. FLORIDA
By: Richard A Fess. Mayor
ATTEST
CAROL A EDWAROS,
CI T Y CLERK
Publish February 24, March 5.
1987
DEL 207

my,
how m y

'0 ' r

0 0 r

t 'l^ V

by Berke Breathed

■m rte 6on &amp; fwvocAnve!
m w M cvr
t
MAS m
0€ TKYNTY 7-

w w fern
NOW.

* * *

legal Notice
legal Notice

l. n d in lt

|

dltlons. restrictions terms and
other provisions ol the Declare
lion of Condominium of D E ­
S T I N Y S P R I N G S , a Con
dominium a t recorded in Of
tid a l Records Book 1X7, Page
1150, and as amended In Official
Records Book 1340, Page 1447,
all of the Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida.

V

Thursday, Fob. U , 1WT

IN TH E C IRCUIT COURT
FOR T H E E IG H T E E N TH
JU D IC IA L CIRCUIT
OF FLO RIDA.
IN A N D F O R
SEM INO LE COUNTY
CASE NO. 44-17(4
O ENERAL JURISDICTION
DIVISIO N
F ED ER A L HOME
M ORTGAGE CORPORATION.
P L A IN T IF F ,
vs.
JOSE M E N A and ,----------SPOUSE, IF M A R R IE D .
DEFENDANTS.
NOTICE OF ACTION
CONSTRUCTIVE
SERVICE-PRO PERTY
TO JOSE M EN A
------------SPOUSE.
IF M A R R IE D
Residence Unknown. If living.
Including any unknown spouse
of Ihe said Defendants. If either
has rem arried and It either or
bolh ot said Defendants are
dead, their respective unknown
h e ir s , d ev i s e e s , g ra n te e s ,
assignees, creditors, lienors,
and Irustees. and all other
persons claiming by. through,
under or against the named
0 1 1 a n d a n t ( s ) ; and Ihe
aforementioned named Defend
a n t ( s ) a n d s u c h ot t h e
aforementioned unknown Do-

DEL 714

* * '*

legol Notice

Itgol Notice
IN T N I C IR C U IT
CO UNT O F T H I
1(T H J U D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN A N D NON
S E M IN O L E CO UNTY
F LO R ID A
CASE NO. M - I M ^ C A ^ L

j, *\ *

'

71— H elp W anted

CLASSIFIED A D S
Seminole

Orlando • Winter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
•:30 AM. - 5:30 P.M.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
SATURDAY 0 ■Nmr

RATES

1 Ur m ................... 72C r Rrr

u n u p c

CNAt Imm ediate full tim e posi­
tions. 3 3 or 3-11 shifts. Good
benefits A atmosphere. Apply
Debory M anor. 40 N. Hwy.
17 93. DeBary 440-4434..... EOE
CRT CLERK; Data Input, typ­
ing B filing. Send resume' to:
Amarlcan Pioneer Title In­
surance Co., P.O. Box 19M.
Santord. F L. 33773 19X

J C in ilC V U V I DM 91 w v ■ HRV
I M I l i l l l V I DM 99 3MV ■ M M

10 CBRI ICRttft tta w S0C I I rr

DAILY WORK/DAILY PAT

V t fllT tC l VUII91 AVIHBMV9

N E E D M E N 4 W O M EN NOWf

3 Urns

LABOR
DEADLINES
N oon The D ay B efore Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
M o nd ay - 9:00 A .M . Saturday
NOTE In the event ot the publishing ot errors in advertisements. &gt;he*S«n
lord Herald shall publish the advertisement, after It hat been corrected at
no cost to the advertiser but such Insertions shall number no more then one
0)

12—Legal Services
SOCIAL SECURITY Disability
F ree Advice No Charge Unless
We W l n t W a rd W h ite A
Associates..............305-121-1)19

17—Cemetery and
Crypts
2 C E M E T E R Y LOTS- Oaklawn
Prk. Garden ol Devotion. S IX
each. 372 373* leave messaoe

21—Personals
A LOVER'S KNOT
W EDDING S BY DOT
Notary Public________ 333-3145
A L L ALO NET Call Bringing
People Together. Sanford's
most respected dating service
since 1977. Men over X (45%
discount)..............t-(00-973-4477

CRISIS PREGNANCY CENTER
ABORTION COUNSELING
F R E E Pregnancy Tests. Con­
fid e n tia l, In d ividu al
assistance. Call tor appl. Eve.
■Hrs Available.............. MI-7495.
WHO K IL L E D M IG U E L OSTOST See "A Shot In the
D a rk " , DeBary F ire H e ll,
March 4,7, A (

23— Lost &amp; Found
FOUND
RC Sailboat
Identify..............................377 973*
FOU NDI Puppy. Hidden Lake
area. Must Identify.
C all................................. 377 4115

25—Special Notices
BECOME ANOTARY
For Detail*: 1 (00 432 4154
Florida Notary Association
HEADACHE A M USCLE PA IN
R E L I E F through massage
therapy, by appt.......... 345 (549

27— N u rse ry &amp;
C h ild C a m
B A B Y S I T T I N G done In my
home. Lk Monroe area. 530wk
Noweekends/nlqht*. 373 0752
C H ILD CARE, M y clean, loving
home, 2 blks. from, but not
associated with. Paola Woods
Daycare. Playmate wanted 1
lo 5 days a week for 5 yr. old,
but will fake Infant...... 377-3X7
FOR Q U A L I T Y C ARE A
N U R T U R IN G of your child's
development call Ellen af
IMS) 313 (474________________
I W IL L DO C H ILD CARE in my
home. References provided.
Call for details..............373 4739
I WI L L DO B A BYSITTING In
my home. Country Club area.
Infants to toddlers....... 321-7349

Legal Notice
I N T H E CIR C U IT
COURTOFTHE
E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
CIRCUIT,INANDFOR
SEM INO LE COUNTY
FLO R ID A .
C IV IL CASE NO. (7-443-CA-11-L
ENR IQ UE M O RALESand
AURORA G. MORALES, his
wife
Plaintiffs
vs.
ROBUSTIANO RIANO and
D E L IA RIANO. hls wife
Defendants
NOTICE TO SUIT
TOQUIETTITLE
TO
ROBUSTIANO RIANO
AND DEL I A RIANO. WHOSE
LAST KNOWN R E S I DE N C E
A ND M A I L I N G ADDRESS.
AF T E R D IL IG E N T SEARCH
AND IN Q U IR I IS
1)4 s’ Street, Union City, New
Jersey 07087 and to all unkown
spouses ol said above named
natural Defendants:
and to all parlies claiming
interest by. through, under or
against the above named natu
ral Defendants not know lo be
dead or alive;
and to all others claiming to
have any right, title and Interest
In and to the following described
property;
and to all other to whom It
May Concern:
YOU ARE H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D , that a Petition to
Q u i e t T i t l e on L o t 4 9 ,
LONGDALE, according to Ihe
Plat thereof, as recorded In Plat
Book 13. Page 4*. ol Ihe Public
Records ot Seminole County,
Florida, has been filed against
you by Enrique Morales and
Aurora G Morales, his wife, and
you are required to serve a copy
ot your Answer or other plead
Ing to the Petition on Petl
(lon ers' at t orney, A rm and o
Payas. I0t4 E Robinson St ,
Orlando. Florida 32*01, and lo
tile your original Answer or
other pleading in this causa with
Ihe Office of the Clerk ol the
Circuit Court on or before toth
day March. 19*7. It you tall to do
so a default w ill be l aken
against you tor the relief de
manded In the Petition for Quiet
Title
Dated this 3rd day ol Febru
ary, 1987, at Santord. Seminole
County, Florida.
(SEAL)
□ A V I O N BER RI EN
Clerk of Circuit Court
By Phyllis Forsythe
Deputy Clerk
Publish: February 5, 12, 19, 24.
19*7
DEL X

55—Business
Opportunities
EX TR A TO F U LL Income from
your home operated business.
training provided. 371-4194
INVESTOR N E E D E D . (57,000):
percentage ol business + In­
terest. Silent partner, short
term. Great returns. 373 4747
• O P P O R TU N ITY KNOCKS e
N E W H O M E S s t a r t i n g at
SI9.3X. See our quality built,
energy altlcient homes. Build­
ers dealership available. Un­
limited Income potential.
Call K irk at Wausau Homes Inc.
................ 1 (1347*9390.................

63—Mortgages
Bought ft Sold
W E B U Y l i t a n d In d
M ORTO AO ES Nation wide.
C all: Ray L tgg Lie. M tg
Bi « # r , 940 Douglas Ave.,
Altamonte..................... 774-7753

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

Employment
323-5176
7 N W . 75th SI.
ADO TO YOUR INCOME
Sell Avon Now I
3730439..........o r .......... 373 0 * 4
A R M E D A UN A R M ED Security
G uard*. License preferred.
Maxim um Security.....373 X11
ASSEMBLY WORK at home,
plus many others. Earn good
wages In spare time. For
Information 504 4410091 ext.

1449. 7days.......... CALL NOWI
ASSISTANT PLANT MANAG­
ER wanted (or rapidly grow­
ing Boys Sportswear Shop.
Must be experience In all
phases of garment construc­
ti on and pr i c i ng . Sal ar y
comansurate with experience.
Apply In person only: San Del
Manufacturing, 7240 Old Lake
M ary Rd., Santord...... 3211410
S H IP P IN G /R E C E IV IN G

No experience necessary. Per
manent position. Never a feel

TEMP PERM_____ 260-5100
C A N V A S * * * * earn SS to S7 h r.
plus bonuses going door to
door m aking appointm ents.
Will train..............Call: 16054x1
CASHI ER: Full time. Equal
Opportunity Employer. Apply
at: Little Food Town, 710 Lake
M ary Blvd..................... 33100**

legal Notice
NOTICE
The St. Johns River Water
Management District has re­
c e i v e d an a p p l i c a t i o n lo r
Stormwater Discharge;
OR. ROBERT SINDLER.6644
SWAIN RD, SORRENTO, FL
37776, A p p l i c a t i o n
147 117 0178AN, on 7/2/87. The
pro|ect is located In Seminole
Counly, Section 16. Township 21
South, Range I I East. The
a p p l i c a t i o n Is l or a
S T O R M W A T E R SY ST EM lo
serve .275 acres to be known as
V E T C L I N I C F OR OR.
SINO LER. The receiving water
bodies are LAKE JESSUP 4.
BEAR CREEK
LEXINGTO.4 DEVELO P
M E N T C O R P . 1130 S SEMORAN
BLVD. SUITE IE . ORLANDO,
FL 37(07 . A p p lic a tio n
«4? II7 0I29AN. on 2/4/(7. The
project Is located In Seminole
County, Section 31. Township 71
South, Range 37 East. The
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 ST EM to
serve 19 0 acres to be known as
ALOMA BEND TRACT IV The
receiving water body Is BAP
TISMAL LAKE.
L Y N N DAVIS, P O
BOX
19747, ORLANDO. FL 37*14,
Application 447 II7 0I27AN. on
2/7/17. The project It located In
Seminole County. Section 14,
Township 21 South, Range 31
East. The application is for a
S T O R M W A T E R SY S T E M to
serve 1.25 acres to be known as
DAVI S IN D U S TR IA L PARK
The receiving water body Is
L IT T L E ECONLOCKHAT
CHEE RI VER
Action will be taken on the
above listed appl l cat l on( s)
within X days ol receipt ot the
application Should you be inter
ested in any of the listed
applications, you should contact
Ihe St. Johns River Water Man
agemenl District at P.O. Box
1479. Palatka, Florida 3207*
1479, or In person at Its ofllce on
S t a t e H i g h w a y 100 We s t .
Palatka. Florida. 904/X(*321.
W r i t t e n o b j e c t i o n to t he
application may be made, but
should be received no later than
14 days I r o m the dal e ol
publication Written objections
should Identity the ob|ector by
name and address, and fully
describe Ihe objection lo the
application Filing a written
objection does not entitle you to
a Chapter IX . Florida Slalutes.
Administrative Hearing. Only
those persons whose substantial
Interests are effected by the
application and who file a pell
lion meeting the requirements
ot Section 2 *5 X1, F.A.C., may
obtain an Administrative Hear
Ing All' timely Itted written
objections will be presented to
Ihe Board for Its conslderalion
In Its d e l i b e r a t i o n on the
application prior to Ihe Board
taking action on the application.
DanniseT Kemp, Director
Division ol Records
SI. Johns River Water
Management District
Publish February 24, 19*7
DEL 211

FORCE

•m i a a

tx i w

! NO ^ F E E !
Report ready for work at 4 AM407 W. 1st. St..................Santord

32M590
D IE T A R Y A ID E , Full time.
117. Food prep. A cleaning.
Lakevlew Nursing Cirt. 919 E.
2nd St.. Santord 333-43(3
E X P E R I E N C E D R o o la ri A
helpers. Own tools A transpor­
tation. Call.................... 331-3555
EX P E R IE N C E TRUCK A
HEA VY equipment mechanic.
C all:...............................(34-17M
HAIR STYLIST, Excellent pay.
m ust be 100% m o tiva te d .
Call..................................3 2 I4H 4
IF YOU LOVE TH E E L D E R L Y
and don't mind contusion, I
need you to care lor my
parents Irom 3pm to 10pm.
Call XI-4437 Irom 9am to 1pm
IM M E D IA T E O P E N IN G : One
of Florida's oldest past control
companies Is looking lor an
Individual to ba route techni­
cian. Apply In person with
resume' at Spencer Pest Con
trot, 3543 Park D r„ Santord
LANDSCAPERS A Lawn Main
lenance personnel needed.
Exp. A driver's license re­
quired. Pay equal to proven
experience.................. 377-1113
L A N D S C A P E M a in te n a n c e :
Experienced, over 31 yrs. old.
drivers license. No calls attar
Sms................................ 31) 2934
LPN- needed lor busy Dr. ole.
Pert time. 9-5 Mon.. 9-t Tues.
Must be able to draw blood. A
start I.V . A type. Starting
salary 54.X hr. Call M rs.
Thomas T ues. or Wed..373-77X
M A C H IN E SHOP O ENERAL.
Exp Individual capable ol the
following: Light sheet metal,
lathe, m ill, hell-arc, torch
welding, other related
m echanical apparatus. All
manual operations, no CNC.
F lor Ida e lec Iron Ics. 311 -3*00
M A IN TE N A N C E M A N needed
lor apartment complex. Exp.
In all phases ol maintenance A
a ir condition. C a ll:...... 331 6220
M ANAG ER N E E D E D . General
N utrition Center. Benefits.
C a ll: 305 (94-9140 ask lor
C harllt or Kitty tor Interview.
M E D I C A L T ra n s c rlp tio n is t.
Part time. Dr. office. Wed.
morning. Starting salary 56.X
hour. Must have experience.
Call M rs. Thomas. Tuesday or
Wednesday.................... 333 73X
M Y S T E R Y CUSTOMER
WANTED
Undercover p lita consumer lo
evaluate delivery, service, A
pr oduct once e v e r y lo u r
weeks. Must live within the
delivery area ol our Domino's
P in a l i o n located • • •••■
French A v e ., Sanford. To
become a mystery customer
and receive a monthly rebate,
please call toll (re« Thursday
February 26th af I *00 511 3674
Domino's P in a Inc.
NANNY T Y P E to c a r* for 1
children. Light housekeeping.
Auto A references...... ,373 *640
NEW CONSTRUCTION
C LE A N IN G
C allt................................130 01(1

NOWHIRING
Experienced Sewing Machine
O p e r a t o r s w a nt e d on all
operations. We offer paid holi
days, paid vacation, health
care plan, and modern air
conditioned plant. Piece work
rates. W ill train qualified
applicants. San-Det
Manufacturing. 3740 Old Lake
M ary Rd., Santord...... 321 3810
NURSE AI DE: All shifts. e»pe
rienced or cert i fi ed only.
Ap p l y L a k e v l e w Nur si ng
Center, 919 E . 2nd St., Santord
NURSE AI DE: 3 11 shift, full
time. Friendly almoshpere
Better Living Center
699 5003........... E O E /M /F /V /H

NURSES, RIDES,
COMPANIONS
HAPPY NEW YEAR. We need
you now. New benefits In­
cluding group Insurance and
vacation. Free CEU'S. Dally
pay. Stall A private duty.
M EO IC A L PERSONNEL POOL
Call: 740-52*4

Medical
Personnel
-Pool.
ORDERLY- Completion ol acute
care nurse's aide training
course or equivalent hospital
exp 7 3 A 3 11 shift. Must be
cerillled. Apply: W. Volusia
M em orial Hospital. 701 W
Plymouth Ave., Deland, Fla
PAINT SEALANT
TE C H N IC IA N
EARN UP TO 513.50 HR. No
experience necessary. For full
or p ar t positions call
............... 1 *13 146 7151................
PHONE SALES: We need 3
more smiling voices. All shift*
open.........311 6847 10am to 4pm
PHYSICIAN'S O FF IC E looking
tor part lim e medical assis­
tant, X -ra y experience
helplul. Santord area Send
resume' to:
Box 247, e/o
Sanford H erald , P O. Box
1657, Santord, FL. 37777 1657
PRE-SCHOOL teacher needed
Special person lor a special
opportunity. It you are career
oriented, have a chauffers
license, over 25 yr*. old, have
classroom exp., able to com
munlcate easily &amp; function as
part ol a team, w * would like
to hear from you. All reply*
confidential. This Is a growth
position tor the right person.
Send resume'to: Box 149 c/o
Sanford H erald, P.O. Box
1457, Santord. FL. 11771-1637
PUBLIC RELATIONS REP. tor
Club Sunshine Line Inc. Boat
rental A memberships located
at Monroe Harbour A Marina
In Sanford For appointment
call........................... 904 775 2027
R ESPO NSIBLE DRI VER
needed. F l o r i d a d r i v e r ' s
license required . Call 377 5000
RE T I RE D PERSON to patrol
apartment complex property.
30 hrs per week In exchange
lor rent A utilities........321 4220

71—

H alp W anted

RN N E E D E D . Full time. Expe­
rience es Charge Nurse and
geriatric* helpful. Apply De­
Bary Manor, 40 N. Hwy 17 97.
44*4474............................... EOE
SALESPERSONS
....are made not bom I Have fun
while training- Advancement
...alert now! C all:.......34*5073
S E C R E T A R Y Knowledge ol
building trade helpful. Busy
oHIce. Cal):................. 333-1440
SE CRETANYi Typing and all
general office duties. Santord
office. Call 904-775-1033 for
appointment________________
SE RVICE STATION Manager A
assistant manager. M u lt have
local references. Apply at;
Highway Oil Co.
7425 French Ave............. Santord
S H IP P IN G /R E C E IV IN G LEAD
P E R S O N . Q u a lifie d c a n ­
didates should have forklift
capabilities and good basic
math skills. Must be a detail
oriented individual, direct
others, end have shipping end
receiving work exp. Company
benefits. Send resume’ to Box
3371, Sentord 33773 3371
S H IP P IN G /R E C E IV IN G
Shipping A R eceivin g
Supervisor required tor a local
m etal manufacturing plant.
Warehouse A related duties,
experience needed lor this
position. Send resume' A sala­
ry requirements to:
Box I X Atten; Personnel, c/o
Sentord H erald, P.O. Bex
1457. Santord, FL. 33773-1457
WORKERS N E E D E D I II you
need steady work paid dally,
Call Sam alter 3 pm..... 333-7554

73—Employment
Wanted
B O O K K E E P IN G - M y home,
W in te r Springs Longwood
area. Exp'd. C all:....... 495-4)35
HOUSECLEANINO 3 day* a wk
Own car. distance no prob.
Reasonable. No child car*.

^Cleanlnj^ronlnj^^J^W^

91—Apartments/
House to Share
F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to
share 3 b d rm . 3 bath house.
333 4345..........o r.......... 333 4440
3 BDRM ., 3 bath In very nice
n e ig h b o rh o o d , k i t c h e n A
laundry privileges. Prefer
female. 331 0 4 1 *..or...374 9419

93—Rooms for Rent
L O N O W O O O , Room w i t h
private bath. Laketront home.
M ature 545 w k............... 747 3949
e REASONABLE RATES
e M A I D SERVI CE
e PRI V ATE ENTRANCE
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Els* When You Can Live In

a h e

H i Ik m c

323-4507
SANFORD: Room (or rent. 160
week + 560 dep. Privileges
Call 333 6137..... o r...... 767 *745
SANFORD: Furnished rooms A
kitchenette 555, 565 weekly A
up. Walk to town, park and
lake. Call 645 40X or..33l 6943

r r —A partm ents

Furnished / Rent
A TTRACTIVE I bdrm., nicely
turn.. 5100 wk Includes util.
Sec, dep 5700....... Call:331 6947
Furnt Apts, ter Senior Cltilens
I t * Palmetto Ave.
J. Cowan. No Phone Calls
N EW LY R E M O D E L E D , small 3
bdrm. furnished apl. Adults
only. References. 195 week +
dep. C a ll:...................... 331 3190
SANFORD- Huge 2 bdrm com
p l e t e p r i v a c y , c l o s e lo
downtown. Looking for family
with 2 children 5100 week +
S IX sec. C all:............... 373 7769
1 BDRM. apartment. 5100 wk.
utilities Included, plus sec.
321 6114.....or..... 373 4*7* eves
4 ROOMS, Private. 590 week or
1295 month + S IX dep Pets
ok C a ll:......................... 3310*21

99—Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
ALTA M O N TE : Reduced lo 5395
Irom 54X. 2 bdrm., IV* bath
townhouse, pool, club. 339 067(
BAMBOO COVE APTS.
Ask about our move In special I
100 E. Airport BI..............373 64*1
e E F F I C . ! A7 BDRM. APTS,
e FURN. A UNFURN.
• PAYWEEKLY
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

(Tije H illa g c
_ ___

323-4507

EFFICIENCIES- I A 7
bedrooms. Cal l
Southern
Rentals atter 4 pm .......337 1469

GROVEVIEWVILLAS
2000 Lake M ary Blvd.
DON'T RENT ...Until you see
Santord'* most spacious 7
bdrm., 2 bath apis........371 01*4

LUSH LANDSCAPING
Surrounds these single story,
energy efficient, 1 A 2 br. apt*.
SANFORDCOURTAPTS.
1301 S. SANFORD AVE
32) 1301 ext. 110
MARI NERS VILLAG E
Special 1 bdrm......
2 bdrm *..................
C all..........................
R IDG E WOOD A RMS A PTS.
Ask about our move In special I
7500 Ridgewood Ave....... 313-6470
SANDLEWOOD. I bdrm. I bath.
downstairs. 5300 Mo , 5200
- d* P - C all....................... 327 5*19

AIRLINE/TRAVEL SCHOOL

Train To Be A
•ravel Agenl • loui Guide
Aujine Reseivalionisl
5 tart locally, full llme/pxrl
time. Train on live airline com­
puters. Home study snd resi­
dent training. Financial aid
available. Job placement
aaalatance. National headquarltrs. L.H.P..FL.
A .C - T . T r a v e l S c h o o l

IcTiTTSiLV-MiliL ■
Accredited member N H SC

�n
99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
SA N FO R D Historic Ototrlct.
Newly renovated A decorated
1 bd.i 1 bath unit* In charming
a ld e r hom e a c r o ie fro m
playground. Must Seel 1350
M l NW Alhaoed FtolHps Inc.
SANFORD: 1J11-A Pine Ave. I
bdrm., I bath, adults only, no
pets SiO wk or sjjj mo. + sec.
d tp .........................U tO O U days
317- I0S7 or 3&gt;7M 9 nlflhts
S H IN A N D O A H V I I L A Q I

141— H o iM tF o rSa l©

ACCEPT OUR F IV E % listing
contract A see your home
advertised at no cost to You.
FIR ST REA LTY INC...

SANFORD, S30M (town. 3 bdrm..
IV* bath, coty horn* In gr*at
cond., screen perch, fenced
yard, w /d &gt;tay. dlshwaihar.
tprlnklar ly ite m , cant. air.
Arch A Assoc, S42-3M0..S5tJBQ

AFFOROAELE Watorfronf
Prop erty- C uitom built, 2
bdrm., 2 bath. C a ll:.....323-S13S
RY OW NER, ipacloui home,
2/2, living room, dining room,
kitchen, porch A carport on
large shady lot. 323-1031,1-7.

it it $199 it it

»'

*'H 1“ '

n

a» at i .' i r»

LAKE M A R Y , 2 bedroom.. 1
bath, S IM Month. 1300 deposit.
Call................................. 311 59M
LK M A R Y , Hidden Lake. 2 bd ,
2 bath. 1 car garage, amenl1les. &gt;450 mo. + sec...... 321*364
M O VE R IG H T IN- 1 bedroom
homes I Clean) New carpet.
Only &gt;450 mo..................3213151
SANFORD. 3 bdrm.. I h bath, 2
story, lanced back yard. 1375
mo. plus security........ 321 6810
SANFORD. 4 bdrm., 2V* bath
home. Near downtown. Two
story, fireplaces. SS30 mo. plus
sec........322 M 10 .309 Park Ave
SANFORD- 3 br., I be, large
1
yard with fruit trees, carport.
! ! &gt;400 per mo. + sec. 321-5990
i SANFORD, 3 bedroom, 1 bath.
S 3 I 5 M o n t h , &gt;300. D a p .
;. Call................................. 321 59S«
S A N FO R D - Rsnt or Buy. 3
b ed ro om , 1 bath. Phone:
; 130-5473........................evenings
SANFORD- 2 br, dining rm , a/c,
appls, screened porch. &gt;315
m ot- 1st A last. Special price
- lor senior cltliens.........321 0495
S A N F O R D 3 bedroom. I bath
Available on March 7.
C all:...............................&gt;30 0122
SUNLAND Estates (or qualified
tenant. 3/1, children ok, no
pets. 1st -t- sec. 323 4441

107—Mobile
Hom es/Rent

F U R N IS H E D Mobile Home lor
rent, near 14 and SR 44. Call
323 &gt;090 tor more Information

117—Commercial
Rentals
M IN D U S TR IA L PARK: 3300 to
10.000 sq. f t . , . 1st month's rent
lre *i C a M ^ ^ ;_ a ^ 3 2 L 2 4 4 5

121—Condominium
Rentals

COMFORTABLE HOMEI 4
bdrm., I',* bath, fenced yard,
spilt br plan, fam ily oriented
neighborhood, priced right!

........................... X.OOO

ii \m , hi \i n

EXCEPTIONALLY NICEI 3
bdrm.. 2 bath mobile homo,
double root and door In I9S4.
paddla tans, lots of storage,
dining room, ta t In kitchen.
.......................................... &gt;40.250

in; \ i ion
WE N E E D LISTINGS
FHA BUYERS A INVESTORS
CHECK THIS HO M EI S1350
down A only 1345 per mo.
P .l.T .I. plus minimal closing
coslsl 3 bdrm ., 1V&gt; b alh l
Fenced Y erdl Corner loti
Many trees!................... &gt;43.500
EX TRA NICE CUSTOM B U ILT
H O M EI Almost new. 3/2 spill
plen, fireplace, garage, CHA,
heat pump, good f*rms.tsa,900

323-5774

321-7823.... -Em. 323-0809
bath, fam ily room, corner lot,
dbl garage, private lawn,
screenad pool. Raduced to
174.000
.........Call Anytime)
Alan B. Johnson, Re/Max
Unlimited, 123-4102 or 144-2000
NEATACLEANASAPIN

SANFORD: 2 bdrm., 2 bath,
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer, sec. 1425 Mo
Landarama Fla.. Inc, 322 1734

141— Homes For Sale

BATEMAN REALTY
Lie. Real Estate Broker
2444 Sanford Ave.

321-0759.............. 321-2257
After hours 322-744j

I^Attvvood
^ 7 1Group,

767-0606
BINGO I
The winner ol this custom 3
bdrm. spilt pain home Is a
true fortune Under. Double
stone fireplace separates the
formal living room and sunk
en fam ily room, large eat In
kitchen with trench doors are
only a lew ol the bonuses
Call Linda Keeling.
Realtor/Assoclate
OWN YOUR OWN TARAI
This historic spacious home can
be turned Into your own pal
ace. Owner Is very motivated
and It even has an Income
producing apartment
Call M ary Burkhart,
Realtor/Assoclate

REALTOR__________ 313-7491
NEW- 3/2, close to schools &amp;
s h o p p in g . M a n y e x tra s .
152,500 Sellers w ill help with
financing. Qualified buyer.
&gt;4,000down. C all: .......629 &gt;541
OSTEEN: 3 bd , 2 ba, cen. h/a.
garage, fenced backyard.
54000 dn. Move In........311 4298
OSTEEN AREA- Handyman's
Special. 14.000 down and no
qualifying. Mobile home on 7
acres 532.000 Call: EGGAR'S

VALUE IN TH E PR O P E R T Y I 2
bdrm., 1 bath home near new
hospital, excellent potential
lor ofllca complex, approx. I
acre!............................. &gt;250,000

A REYNOLOS REALTY INC.

lor details.......... 442-4441.........
Ceram le*t&gt;i^»T^~iv th r o w n !
Ig lot. 321 0145.....o r.....M l-7074

Call toll Tree 1-800-323-3720
2545 PARK AVE ............Sanford
901 Lk. Mary Blvd........ Lk. Mary

LET'S TRADE!
YOUR HOME
FOR ONE OF OURS
YOUR PLANOROURS
OUR LANDOR YOURS
CALL BOB SANDER NOW
TO SEE IF YOU QUALIFY

STEN8TROM

C oM im m i SmionavrCoerounoH

2559 Park Drive
(305)321-0140
WINTER SPRINGS. 3 bd 2 bath
double garage, new root, large
fenced lot. sprinklers, deck,
fans, screened porch, shed,
walk lo school. M otivated
572,000................327 JV4I eves

8UITOR5

STEMPER

149—Commercial
Property / Sale

(TALKING HOUSE)

APPRAISALS ANDSALES
BOB M. BALL. JR. P.A..C.S.M.
REALTOR......................223 4111
Florida Virginia Maryland
CASSELBERRY: 1 acre toned
PR I 185.000 W. M aliciowskl
Realtor........................ 322 7983
COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL
* 2.74 seres. 17 92. overlooks Lk
Monroe, Zoned Hlghrlse SC 3 ■
* 1,12 Acres: W Hwy 44. Zoned
A I .............................. 538.500
* INDUSTRIAL: Zoned Rl 1: 10
acre. 14.5 acre, 18 acre. 28
a c re ..............522,000 per acre
C o n ta c t: H O L L A N L A N G .
Associate INTELeVEST
&lt;3051 345-4454

Visit 7401 Palmetto Ave.
Tune your AM radio lo 1120
and hear the details on this
house P rice :................ 552.500
CALL ANYTIME
REALTOR......................327 4991

Insulate safely for CertaHtada
year-round comfort &amp;
lifetime economy/
FOR FREE ESTIM ATE
CALL

i2r

STUM P

rra w F w ts t
PFOOUCTSmOOMM
( pw

151— Investment
Property / Sale

ENERGY SAVINGS SYSTEMS
(3 0 5 ) 8 3 0 -4 0 3 5

OSTEEN- 2 rentals, 4 bdrm., 2
bath &amp; 2 bdrm , I bath on I
acre................................. S69.S00

Wallace Cress Realty, Inc.
321 0377

Like everything else in Deltona —

D e lt o n a

P la z a

i.

Now 116,000 square feet of retail and office space
in the center of the “ boom".
Join the newly expanded Winn-Dixie
Off 1-4, Exit 53, 2 miles north on Deltona Boulevard

Occupancy — Spring 1987
In Deltona, call

5 7 4 -9 7 2 0

or call collect

(305) 948-5684

R &amp; R R ealty O M a n a g e m e n t C o tp Lie R E. B ro k e t

EQUIPMENT AUCTION
SATURDAY FEB 28th, 10AM
Doiors, rubber tired loaders,
loader backhoes. excavators,
brush chipper compressor,
mud pumps, w ell d r ille r,
crane truck, bucket truck,
single A tandem axle chasii
cabs tractor units A dump
trucks, busses, farm tractors,
forklifts, rollers, tag-e-long A
drop deck trailers, cement
mixers, concrete saws.
M ANY MORE ITEMS
ARRI VI NG OA1LY
SALE CONDUCTED BY
DAYTONA
AUTO AUCTION, INC.
HWY 92 DAYTONA BEACH, FL
904-133 *311

F t 0X104 (NC .*44170*9

K E Y E S f t IN TH E SOUTH

411 mil HMD
1(1 (NO*
in nisi n r s i i

STENSTROM
REALTY, INC.
REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader
NICE B U ILD IN O LOTSI Each

lot Is 94 X 140, located in quiet
area. Ideal for single family
residence. &gt;9,000 each. Call
Nancy Butler,
Real lor/Assoc! ale
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING
LOTI 1/2 acre In Lake Mary,

lo r someome who pretars
rural living with city conve
nience. &gt;17.000. Call Frank or
Lisa Wickers.
R e alto r/A iioclatei
150 It. water
frontage on t / 1 acre parcel.
M yrtle Lake sub division, only
la ke lro n l parcel available.
&gt;25.000. Call Frank or Lisa
Wickers. Realtor/Assoclales

w i m v A ^ l v i V t V t At e s T »
acres In lovely area and great

Re

located last week. Wants sold.
E x tra nice 3 bdrm ., new
carpel &amp; paint, central heal A
air. Less than 57.000 down
Seller pays closing costs.
149,900 Don't miss outl Call
now I
BECKY COURSON.
RE/M AX 200 n. realty Inc.
429 4310......... or..........1219410
POOL HOME WITH SPANISH
FLAIR 3/2, t- bonus room,
extensively Hied, screen pool,
4 ad|acenl lots available
189.000 Call
EGGAR'S A
REYNOLOS REALTY INC.
tor details........ 641 4441........
SAN LANTA. Sanford's newest
single fam ily development.
Construe, by McKee Oevel
opment 57 nicely treed lots.
14) 2 &amp; 3 br models. FHA/VA
Financing starling In low 50‘s
Joanne Prince REMAX 200 n.
realty Inc. 31l 7l45.or.42f 4330
SANFORD' 3 bdrm., 1 bath
1317 Douglas, owner financing
or FHA. 535,900
345 7112
SANFORD Large fam ily home,
q u ie t n e ig hbo rho od . 4/7,
C /H /A 2005 H ibiscus Ct.
C all:.............................323 0890

fa te s

LAKEFRONTI

CALL ANY TIME

WE BLOW FLAT ROOFS!

©

COMMERCIAL ZONINOI 4
b d rm ., 2 bath house,
hardwood Doors, tila in fam ily
room, central H/A , Inslda util­
ity w/washer................... 159,000

ENDLESS PO SSIBILITIES! 4
bdrm., 7 bath home on S -f
acres, pool, Income producing
fernery business, large family
room, central H/A, and the
list goes on I ..................&gt;247.000

195—Machinery /Tools
PUBLIC

OSTEEN- Just under one acre In
Farmfon hunting area. Re
duced to 17.000. Call: M A R TI
SENSAKOVIC............. 323 3200
322 2217 eves.

RI VER PR O P E R T Y I 3 bdrm „ 7
bath home over ItOO sq. It., 5
+ acres, fireplace, fam ily
room overlooking river, en|oy
fishing, skiing, boating and
m o re .............................SI97.500

CALL BART

DESPERATE!

153—AcreageLots/Sale

location to build a home
P artially cleared, owner will
c o n s id e r y o u r t e r m s ,
w /subitantia! down payment.
555.500. Call Rhonda Gorlmey
Realtor/Assoclate
ZONED AGRICULTURAL! 10
+ or
acres, oak, pine and
palm trees, bring your mobile
home and horses, close lo
boating and fishing, build now
or invest In the future. 541.000.
Call Red Morgan.
Broker/Salesman
* GENEVA OSCEOLA RD.e
ZONED FOR MOBILES!
3 Acre Country tracts.
Wall tria d on paved Rd,
20% Down. 10 Yrs.4112%1
From &gt;18,3001

199—Pets &amp; Supplies
M I X E D B R E E D DOG needs
home In country A another
dog to paly with Excellent
health. Spayed, medium sited,
II mos. old, short haired, good
tempered.' Will give to good
people. Call Mrs. Glider at
904 773-4402. Orange City
PRECI OUS PET, Grooming,
c lipping, bathing. Flea
treatments. Pick up A de
l i v e r y , discounts a v a il.

^££olnlmenti__&gt;&gt;&gt;____^^

201—Horses
HORSE BOARDING.

Q u ie t c o u n try s e ttin g In
Geneva. Call
349 3937
QUARTER HORSES- AQHA.
Bay Mare, Palamino Mare.
B o th b e a u lte s /p le a s u r e
horses Also. 1 Bay Colt. A ll
priced to sell................373 4414

203— Livestock and
Poultry
FOR SALE
3 Types of Bantams
C all:.............................. 327 0074

213—Auctions

USED CMS

BRIDGES AND SON ~
Auction every Thursday 7 PM

USEDCARS

Hwy 44

BOAT REPAIR A Refinishing.
A ll types of fiberglass repair
A custom painting 20yr exp
Free est. 321 5444 or 323 4138
SAILBOAT 30 II flrberglass.
diesel, live aboard, loaded.
528.000/obo. trade 323 2440

USED CARS
.321-2111
VW SUPER BK E TLE:'73. New
p a in t, ex c elle n t condition.

.*11-211*
CHRYSLER SIN A V E ,'S I
94*Money Daum..iivvs

USED CAES
.................... ......*211113
OATSUN 2SSZX- ‘7*. On* owner.
5llv*r-blue. auto., all olac.
Proof of maintenance papers.
Rear A Ini. wlpars. orthopedic
seals, tinted windows. &gt;4.500/
OBO. l »59 934).- or....574172*
DATSUN ItS S W -19*1
Good condition
C all;...............................122 0343
DATSUN SPORT CPE.'SI
Reduced, No Money Dew"..12995

A IR L IN E TIC KETS TO Houston
on 3/2/17. non stop flight, re­
turn 3/1/17, non stop flight.
Cost S I3I round trip. Call
354 334) or 323 5H9 eves
Brown Rtver Reck Patio Slonas
Grease Traps Sand Dry Walls
Ready M ix Concrete
Miracle Concrete Co.
322-S7S1....................109 Elm Ave.
E V E R Y T H IN G M UST GO
12 Y R . O LD PINTO, 14 hands
w / t a c k , s a d d l e . A n ew
weather blanker. 5400
CADILLAC- ‘76. runs good, need
body work............................. 5400
HYSTER forklift w/sldo to sldo
control, propane fuel....... 11000
MUSTANG- '48, 302. 3 sp. needs
paint a Interior work. Runs
good.......................... SI200/OBO
I I F T. CAB over boat A trailer.
Need cleaning..................... 5300
SNAPPER 22 IN. riding mower,
needs bat t er y A tune-up,
eleclrlc start........................ *75
S FT. SLATE TOP Pool Table,
all balls A sticks..................1200
CHEVY &gt;4 Ton Pick Up- '74.
needs motor......................... $150
JOHNSON BOAT Motor. 10 HP.
needs points A condensor. . *50
Call &gt;34 1954 ask tor Dale Sr.

USED CARS
Santord........................... .111-211*
DOOGE SW INGER- '49, Slant 6
en g in e . Runs. &gt;250. C a ll
K ris:............................. 17124*7
DODGE- 1979. 2 door, perfect.
&gt;1750. Only 52.000 miles. Call
after 3:30 pm............... 321 4401
FORD L T D ‘71. first &gt;500. Runs
Good e x te rio r A in te rio r.
C all:....................... 904 789 5291.
F O R D L T D - '10, 4 doo r,
excellent condition. &gt;7,400.
C ell: ............ 371 15*9a lte r4 30

FORD LTD BRM., '75
Reduced. No Monty Down..11995
- u i T T j j &gt;'3 u

233—Auto Parts
/ Accessories
F I V E 7.50x1* eight Ply Truck
T i r o * . Good sound lira s .
C a ll:..............................122 54)7
GOOD USEDM OTO RS
and transmissions
C a ll:..................................321 2254

235— T r u c k s /
B u se s/V a n s
CHEVY ST E P SIDE. 1943
&gt;750 or best otter
Call......................................321 2*15
C H E VY Cuitom v a n .'It. auto,
a ir, crulia, stereo, m urali.
etc. Verycleen............ 322- 14IS
OATSUN P IC K U P : *2. 47,000
m l., air, 5 sp., good interior.
As Is 57000 2542 Park Dr.,
Sanford..............No phont calls
DODQE: 19*0, 4 wh d rlv * pick
up. exc. cond., 33,000orlg. ml.,
44500FIH M I..................323 5400
M AZDA P /U , ’*4
Reduced, No Money Oown„M991

USE0CARS
Santord..............................121-1113

238—Vehicles
Wanted

USED CARS
Sanlord..
.121-2123
FORD M U S T A N D '69 Not orlg.
motor. 429 A C 4 auto . body A
Intr. good cond. Needs brake,
transmission. &gt;2200 322 3419
HONDA ACCORD L X ,'M
Reducsd^NoMsney Down..&gt;2995

W E PAY TOP S* lor wrecked
cari/lru cks. We Sell guaran­
teed used parts AA AUTO
SALVAOE ol DeBary..40-4401

241—Recreational
Vehicles / Campers

777777a

LAMPS, TV, sewing mach.,
melaldetector, A mlsc. Items
Cheepl 311 4194, leave message

USED CARS
Sanford..
. 321-1123
HONDA ACCORD LX, ' l l 5 sp
Reduced. No Money Down..54995

POOL: l i l t . ABOVE GROUND
In good condition. &gt;500
C all............. &gt;31 0271 alter 5PM
.TEAK dining rm. table A chairs
&gt;450 TRSIO color computer
w /m any extras. &gt;450...323 2344

USED CARS
Santord..............................321-2113
M ERCURYCO UO AR
'76, Ilrtlt4 0 0 .
C oll:.........................904 7*9 5291

THOMAS ORGAN Model 1300.
Clean, lully equipped, best
oiler. Must Sell........... 122 1475
U T IL IT Y T R A ILE R - 1x6 heavy
d u ly , d o lly , m ags, ram p.
C a ll:............................. 323 1542
J a c c u il w hirls

M ERCURY C A P R IC E .’l l
Reduced. No Money Down..51995

H I-LO Travel Trailer: '42. 21 It.
&gt;7,700 Exc. cond Bab Owen
Travel T ra ile ri 131 N. Adelle
Ave., Poland................734 5450
SEE THE N EW HI LO T RAV­
EL T RAI LERS al Bob Owen
Travel Trailers 131 N Adelle
Ave.. Oeland............... 734 5050

BUY HERE
n

It

b

.121 1122
PONTIAC S U N B IR D .'U
Reduced, No Money Down..*1995

231- C a r s
BMW 1101, '81
Reduced. Ne Money Down.,54791

USED CARS

BUICK CENTURY: 74, good
cond , new paint, good Interl
or 5800 or best otter 323 5908
BUICK SKYHAWK, '8*
Reduced, NoMonev Down..52995

7 7 7 7 7 ^ ^ ^ 3 *1

7777:
USEDCARS
Sanlord............................. 321 3171
PONTIAC F IE R O .'M
Reduced. No Money Down..&gt;5995

Santord............................I l l 2113

r n

^

-

i e •*— e 4 U

USED CARS

7777T 3n ^^ ^*l

USED CARS

"

GOOD CREDIT BAD CREDIT
NO CREDIT
NO INTEREST

PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, '12
Reduced, No Money Down..33*95

Santord.............................. 121-1113

\r

• * 4

LOW
DOWN PAYMENT

Sanford..............................311-1131

~777777*

USED CARS
215—Boats and
Accessories

USED CARS

223—Miscellaneous

................. 373 2801

.321-2122
TOYOTA CAROLLA,
Reduced, Ne Money Down..82995

Santord..............................*211111
CHEVY Z1B. IS

W E BUY Good. doan. usad
appliances. Working or not.

WE BUY ESTATES!

USED CARS

CNEVY M O NTE CAELO, 'S4
Maeau IreWlI,.aaeea
HOTVWPI ||e
IW N9BWT
8W7TJ

J U N K A W R E C K E D CARSRunning or not. top prices
paid. Free pick up. 32I-22S4
R E C O R D S W A N T E D . Cash
paid for 4S R PM or L P ’S from
tha 50's A 40 s «4f 4319. Bob

313 1150........... o r............ 211-7047

....— .............. 121-2123
PONTIAC OP L B ,-to

C N B V Y M O NZA: 'M , 2 d r.
hatchb ack, PS, P S . a u to
front. A air. Salo Prlc# MVS
for quick sal*.....Call : W - 1470,

SIS Aluminum Cant..I
Nan-Ferrous Metals........... Glass
KOKOMO.........................221-1IW

7PM . REAR OF BOBS USED
F U R N IT U R E ............... 241417-92
WE BUY HOUSEHOLDS

PONTIAC O/P.'SB

.*211113

219—Wanted to Buy

P IN E ACRESI 3 bdrm. 2 bath
h o m t . p o o l , &gt;t o no I p l . ,
screened porch, some m ir­
rored walls. '15' root. 1 year
home w arranty!.............&gt;51.500

SUBMIT ALL O FFERSI 3
bdrm, 2 bath home, cathedral
ceilings, out door breakfast
courtyard, split plan, cent.
H / A I ................................ *79,000

tti-im

Bed Credit?
No Credit?
W E FIN ANCE
M a l k i n ................. d r i v e o u t
NATIO NAL AUTO SALES
Sanford Ave A 12th St... J2t-4075

C A D IL L A C 'S !

Y A R D SALK- Frl. only, all day.
5442 Orango Blvd. Hospital
bad. kttchan cabihat,. dining
table, cadar wardrobe, etc.

DESIRABLE AREAI 3 bdrm, 2
bath home, new carpet, pad
die Ians, work shop, breakfast
bar. dining room, screened
porch, central H /A 4 moral
.......................................... &gt;45.000

LOVELY POOL HOME. 3 bd , 2

BUICK IL IC T R A .'S e

L O C H A R B O R , When
o
Grandma marries a Grandpa
th a n I t 3 -f ot everything
Including turn., appliances,
crystal, llnons. collectables A
much more, n o Vlnawood Dr.
aH d4-A Sat.A Sun.A 4_______
RUAAMAOE A BAKE SALCF rl A Sat. S: JO am to 4:30 pm.
Fob. 27 A 20. Sit SR 434.
Winter Springs. To benefit The
G rove Counseling Canter.
327-1404.......... or.......... 327-1745
SAT. ONLY. 119 W. 1st SI. 2
vacuum cleaners. 4 small
• l ac. h e a t e r s . C o m p l a t a
Beauty step equipment

m
® t*B» BvM«A ma

$$1—Car*

2 2 1 -C a rt

Y A R D SALK, Moving. Thurs.
F rl., A Sat. AS. 5091* Wylly
Avo. Sanford
_________

CASSELBERRY: Lakatront, t
acre on Lake Triplett. S49.000
Call:331-9273 leave message
OCALA N A TIO NAL FOREST
High and dry wooded lots
Mobile home, cabin, camping
O. K. - Hunt i ng and fishing.
&gt;5.450 w / 1150 dn., 143.71
monthly...... (904) 234 *579days
o r................1904) 422 14M eves.

DELTONA LAKESI 3 bdrm, 1
bath home, sunken living
room, fam ily room 4 dining
room combo, eat In kitchen,
do your own d e c o ra tin g !
.......................................... &gt;40.000

2404 HWY. 17-92

OWNER

{ c e g tM O &gt; ita T 4 &lt; e fc

WE LIST A N D S E L L
M O REFRO FER TYTHAN
ANYONE IN NORTH
SEM IN O LEC O U N TY

REAL ESTATE

,

she

fcE£»snEN T o ftG b HE* WiTTfcW
A N b lo o K OFF
A BAT*

REALTORS

D E L T O N A - Close to Osteen
school A 1-4. 1 bdrm., 2 bath,
screen porch. Assumable mtg.
Owner/Realtor........... 323 1072

RIDGEW OOD ACRES- Deluxe
Duplexes. 2 bdrm. Families
u w ic o m e ^ a l^ a m l^ n M T I^

T ftit

J

F U R N IT U R I. Weight set. mis
cetlanaous items. Sat. only • to
4, t o ll W .Jrd, Sanford

Sanfwd's Saks Ltatftr

3 bdrm., 1*.* bath, central h/a,
fenced yord, storage, alley
access. Ready to move In.
Only .......................... 553.900

105—DuplexT rip le x / Rent

K&gt; Scot* A* i T tW C b cHUte

REALTY, INC.

______ 3224671______

• * * IN DELTONA • • •
* a HOMES FOR R E N T * *
_______ * » 174-14*4 * »

217— O a r a f t Sale s

STENSTROM

Ash about move In special)
Call............................................. 333 WM
I bdrm., t bath........................ U35 mo
1 bdrm., tvs bath..............1300 mo
JU N E P O R IIO REALTY, INC
• Central Heat A Air
• Pool A Laundry
K E E P Y O U R HORSES AT
F R A N K L IN ARMS
HOM E at this country log
1110 Florida Ave.
homo w ith 5 acres. Only
_________ m-usa_________
179.900. C all:..... CHARLOTTE
I3 0 t M O VC IN SPECIAL
CROSLYN.................... 321 9071
ADULTS, POOL. LAKE
LAKE J E N N IE A RTS. ■■.3234743

103—Houses
Unfurnished / Rent

laetKTd HtraM, leaterd, « . Ttksndw, Hfc. U, I9 P -8 B

WIT 'N* CAHLYLB ®ky tarry Wrifht

141— Hem ts For Solo

3219 S HWY 17 92
SANFORD 3232123

USEDCARS
Sanlord............................. 321 1111

’

CONSULT OUR

CALL ANY TIME

322-2420
321-2720

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Call toll free 1-800-323-3720
To

2545 PARK AVE.............Sanlord
901 Lk. Mary Blvd........ Lk. Mary

L is t Y o u r B u s i n e s s . . .

D ia l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 o r 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

157—Mobile
Homes / Sale
FAMILY SPACES AVAILABLE
Carriage Cove Mobile Home
Park Come see us! II
Gregory Mobiles Homes.323 3200
FLEETWOOD: 1914 14 X 40, 2
bdrm . central air, lake over
payments 5l95 33mo
Call
3221185
or
322 J433
RE PO
SANFORD Carriage Cove '81
S k y lin e . 24x48 A s k in g
114,900'OBO Call Richard G
Kessler
322 1242 ex 531

181—Appliances
/ Furniture
ALTERNATIVE T.V. AAPPL.
2954 Hwy. 17 92
__________ 321 5000_______
BEDS. CHAIRS, Iree/er (18 cu
II I. A chest See a t 111
Chapman Ave or call 322 0307
LARRY'S MART. 2 IS Sanlord
Ave New/Used turn A appl
Buy/Sell/Trade 322 4132
TWIN BEDS, Dresser, chest. 2
night stands, convection oven.
525 each.......323 1838 alter 3pm
WE BUY Good, clean, used
appliances Working or not
Call
322 4304 alter 5pm

183—Television /
Radio / Stereo
19 INCH COLOR TV
Good picture
540
C a ll:......................... 322 0420

193—Lawn &amp; Garden
CUSTOM GARDEN TILLING
The Troy Blit* way. Free est
S a t lf a c tio n g u a ra n te e d
Gardens, flower beds, lawns
322 1327 aft 4 or w eekends

s b- '

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service

Carpet/Floor
Coverings

HUBERTPEARCE
Exp. IncemeTax Service
313 0009 lor appt.

FLOORING All types Wood
Install, sand, retlnlsh, stain,
wax. Tile, terracotta, le rrai
70. linollum, etc. Clean, polish.
seal, wax Lic/Bond 747 8304

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B E. LINK CONST.
Remodeling........ .305 322 7029
Financing..........LIc.tCRCOCKMM

Appliance Repair
ONE CALL GETS BEST REPAIRS OF ALL. Any kitchen
4 laundry appl 90 day guar
antee on repairs.....
788 0295

Blinds &amp; Drapes
DRAPES/TOP TREATMENTS
DUST R U F F LE S /P ILL O W
SHAMS BY DIANE.....323 1244

Bookkeeping
BOOKKEEPING 8. Secretarial
Services at reasonable rales.
Days. 321 3405. Eves , 448 8719

Carpentry
A LL TYPES Ot C arpentry.
Remodeling jl home repairs
Call Richard Gross 321 5972
RICHARDS CARPENTRY
18 yrs InCentral Florida
C all................................. 323 5787

Unlbad
W ay

Cleaning Service
APT.

HOUSES, 4 OFFICES.

References.

Day or night.

C a ll..............................499 9175
HOME CLEANING with quality
and care Windows loo Call
448 4)00........o r ..........322 0070
H O U S E C L E A N IN G
F a s t,
th o ro u g h , and r e lia b le
Call ............................ 323 7582

Landscaping

Paper Hanging

BOGUES1 Expl Professional I
Lawn 8l Garden Malnt 4 chain
saw w ork, m ulch, Spring
clean upl Free Estl 323 8387
KING 4 EBBS Landscaping 4
Lawn care Clean up 530 8. up.
Hauling, culling, trim m ing
C all: .............................. 345 4441
SEMINOLE LANDSCAPING

PAPER HANGING 4 PAINT
ING (In te rio r
E xte rio r).
Res 4 comm 33 years exp.
Free Estimates Call: Roy
Taylor at............... ...... 321 4023

322-8133
Lawn Service

ELECTRICAL OR PLUMBING
problems? Call Ray. very
reasonable................. 3239258

BARRIER'S Landscaping!
Irrig ., Lawn Care. Res &amp;
Comm, 371 7844, FREE ESTI
GEORGE'S LAWN CARE
Reasonable prices
Call now to reserve service
Free est..........................323 7582
"SUNNYS” . Mow, edge, trim ,
planting, mulching. SPRING
Spec Free est 322 7829

Home Improvement

Masonry

CARPENTRY BY EDDAVIS
REMODELING/RE NOVATION
Large And Small Jobs Welcome
Santord Res. 18 yrs. 321-0442
COMPLETE HOME REPAIR
Door.......window....... cabinets
Call Russell at 774 4384
P L U M B IN G , E l e c t r i c a l ,
carpentry Free estimates
Call Bo
323 4215

Concrete Slabs, drives, pallos &amp;
walks, 2S yr exp Lilelong
res . Lie a. Ins. 349 9758 at! 5

Handy Man

Landclearing
BACK HOE. Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing
Call 322 1804
or
322 93)3
BUSH HOG.Box Blading. Dis
clng 4 Tractor Roto Tilling
C all................................322 2597
TH O R N E L A N D C L E A R IN G
Loader and truck work/vepllc
tank sand Free est 327 3433

Moving &amp; Hauling
''JU NK TOTHE DUMP"
Appliances, tree lim bs, etc.
Call
321 425:

Nursing Care
OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakeview Nursing Center
919 E. Second St., Sanlord
372 4737

Painting
ALAN'S PAINTING 4 Paper
Hanging. Interior 4 exterior.
No iob loo small Lie. 371 3072

Roofing
COMPLETE ROOFING or all
types ol rooting repairs Lie 4
Insured................ Call:321 4231
RE ROOF your home now In
tim e lor spring rains 20%
discount tor a limited lime
Slate Lie. *C0CC 0337I0CC
C a ll.............................. 321 3555

Secretarial Service
Custom Typing BookkeepingNotary Public. Call: D.J. En­
terprises (305) 3217492-

Sewer/SepticTank
HOWARD S SEPTIC SERVICE
Repair Lines 4 Clean Tanks
Free Estimates
322 0259

Sewing M achines/
Vacuum Cleaners
AUTHORIZED ELECTROLUX
Sales 4 Services Vacuums 4
shampooers S ervicing alt
makes Ken Echols
322 2073

Tree Service
A L L T R E E S E R V IC E tFirew ood W oodsplllter lor
hire Call A lte r * P.M.323 9088
ECHOLS TREE SERVICE
Free Estimates! Low Prices!
Lie...Ins...Stump Grinding.Tool
373 2229 day or nite
" L ei the Protessionalsdo I t " .
STUMP GRINDING- ~
I nsured
F ree E si Imates
Call
........................ 774-7508

�r 'K

4B-Sanferd HtraM , Santord, PI.

► ,

v

' r ' r ' r ' r f ^

v

' r ' *■ **" 0

r ' r r ' r r r r

V

^ r

•*’ » ' &gt; ' » '

0~ 0

0

0

*

0

0 *

0

0

r

* r r

*■

Thursday, Pah. 24,1917

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
Syr/o Denies Report Its
Troops Hold Four Hostages
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — The chief of Syrian military
Intelligence In Lebanon today denied an NBC report that
three Americans and an Indian national kidnapped from a
Beirut college were In Syrian army custody, radio reports
said.
NBC Nightly News, citing Middle East and Western
Intelligence sources, said Wednesday the four hostages
taken on Jan. 24 at Beirut University College were handed
over to Col. Amir Taleh. a senior Syrian Intelligence ofTIcer.
The four were given to the Syrians to keep them from
Hezbollah, a pro-Iranian extremist group believed to have
kidnapped other Western hostages in Lebanon, the report
said.
Brig. Gen. Ghazl Kenaan. chief of Syrian military
intelligence In Lebanon, denied the NBC report and refused
to comment on It. according to two radio stations — the
Voice of the Nation, a Moslem station, and Voice of Free
Lebanon, run by the Christian Lebanese Forces militia.

Soviets Test Underground N uke
MOSCOW (UPI) — The Soviet Union broke Its 18-month
moratorium on nuclear tests today with an underground
blast In Central Asia, and a military spokesman blamed the
resumption of testing on the United States.
The blast, with a yield of less than 20 kllotons. or 20.000
tons of TNT. was carried out shortly after 8 a.m. at the
mnln military test site at Semlpalatlnsk. about 1.800 miles
southeast of Moscow, the Tass news agency reported.
MaJ. Gen. Gcly Botncnln. a spokesman for the Ministry of
Defense, told a news conference the U.S. refusal to Join the
moratorium forced the Soviet Union to resume testing after
an 18-month hiatus.

Johnnie Ray Haddock, superintendent of the city of Sanford
refuse collection division, accepts the G reater Seminole
County C ham ber ot Com m erce Public Servant of the Y e a r
A w ard from 1987 Cham ber president Sharyn Dickerson at
the Annual Com m unity Service Recognition Aw ards Banquet
Tuesday at the Sheraton-M altland.

Chamber Presents Annual Awards

Syrians, Lebonese Fortify Sites
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI) — Syrian troops and Lebanese
army units, shaken by a car bomb explosion near a Syrian
checkpoint that wounded 17 civilians, today fortified their
positions in west Beirut.
The car bombing rocked a Syrian-controlled area on the
road to Beirut International Airport late Wednesday a few
hours after 5.000 militiamen of the pro-Iranian Hezbollah
buried 22 comrades killed by Syrian troops Tuesday.
The blast, caused by about 165 pounds o f explosives in a
Fiat sedan, set fires and caused heuvy damage outside the
Palestinian refugee camp of BurJ Al Barajneh. No one
claimed responsibility.
Hospital officials said 17 people were Injured in the car
bomb, which exploded 100 yards from a newly constructed
Syrian checkpoint. There were no reports of Syrian
casualties. •
Military sources said 7.000 Syrian troops that entered
west Beirut Sunday were ordered today to consolidate their
positions. Lebanese army units that moved onto the Green
Line battle zone that divides the city into Christian and
Moslem sectors, also were ordered to dig In.

I FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

By Genie Llndberg
Herald Staff Writer
A Sanford city employee. Johnnie Ray
Haddock, superintendent of the refuse
collection division of the Public Works
Department, was named Public Servant of
the Year by the Greater Seminole County
Chamber of Commerce.
The award was among many presented at
the annual Community Service Recognition
A w a r d s B a n q u e t T u e s d a y a t th e
Sheraton-Maltland Hotel.
Recipient of the Helen Kcyscr Distin­
guished Citizens Award was Dr. Benjamin
Newman. Altamonte family physician and
Emergency Medical Services Director for
Seminole County. Named Student of the
Year was Seminole High School senior Beth
Brook and named teacher of the Year was
Cynthls Secor. Their stories appeared In
Wednesday’s Herald.
The Public Safety Officer of the Year
Award was presented to Trooper J.L. Smith,
a Trooper II. Homicide Investigator who has
been with the Florida Highway Patrol since
1965. He was also named the Outstanding
Law Enforcement Officer of the Year &lt;n 1986
by the Klwanls.

t ncommon concern for his employees. He
trains them well and advises them of their
opportunities to promote from a pickup man
to truck driver or other opportunities that
may be available In other departments."
H a d d o c k o b s e r v e d an d id e n t ifie d
employees who showed a desire to perform
well and reviewed their background and
training. Many of the employees In the
refuse division start work without a high
school diploma but show concern for their
Job and a desire to Improve, Mrs. Smith said.
"Am ong this group. Johnnie developed an
interest in having them obtain their high
school diploma through the G.E.D. process.
He Investigated the resources available at
Seminole Community College and worked
out a progrant wherein the college could
support, both In a group and on an
individual basis, those individuals willing to
pursue their G.E.D.. and the program Is now
underway." Mrs. Smith said. "T h e G.E.D.
becomes critical as the Individuals aspire to
higher-paying positions In the city work
force or elsewhere.” she added.
The Chamber's Committee Member of the
Year Award was presented to Ken Medlln of
AT&amp; T for his work on the Chamber's

T h e P ublic S erv a n t or the Y e a r a w a rd wan

liuHmtrlul D evelopm ent Com m ittee a n d the

presented to Haddock by Sanford Mayor
Beitye Smith who said she was "very, very
proud" to present it.
She said, "not only Is Johnnie a hard
taskmaster requiring a degree of excellence
In the refuse pickup area, but he displays an

Chamber’s Chairman o f the Year Award was
presented to Frank Sehmldt. an architect at
Environmental Quality Assurance and a
state-certified general contractor. He Is also
a member of the Chamber's Board of
Directors.

Trooper J. L. Smith of the Florida
H ig h w a y P a tro l shows the Pu blic
Safety O ffic er of the Y e a r A w ard
presented to him T u e s d a y -

.

MIAMI (UPI) — The FBI Is investigating contract awards
made in Illinois to a friend’s computer firm by Florida’s
new secretary of Health and Rehabilitative Services.
Gregory Colcr. a published report says.
FBI Agent Steve Nash confirms he made one Interview
about Coler. but refused to say whether there is a
full-blown investigation. The M iam i Herald said.
A former employee of Colcr’s during his seven years as
an Illinois state official and another source who were
interviewed within the past week by Nash told The Herald
the questions focused on a friend. Albany-based computer
consultant Al DlBernardo.
The Herald said after moving from New York to Illinois In
1979. Coler quickly started awarding work to DlBernardo.
and during Coler’s seven years in Illinois his friend’s firms
won more than S I.5 million of work with agencies Colcr
headed.

Smuggler Catching Im proved
MIAMI (UPI) — Recent agreements between the United
States and the Bahamas have improved cooperation
between law enforcers of both countries In finding drug
smugglers, according to U.S. Customs.
An agent said Wednesday that In two separate Incidents
this week. Customs aircraft and radar tracked drug
smugglers to the Bahamas, enabling local authorities to
arrest seven suspects and confiscate more than S22 million
in cocaine and marijuana.
"W e ’re doing pretty good over there and we’ve got
agreements with the Bahamian government. We can carry
their enforcement people on our aircraft and that way they
can exercise their authority on their territory." said
Customs spokesman Clif Stallings.

Strokes: Third Largest K iller
TAMPA (UPI) — Deaths from stroke have declined for the
past 15 years, but the disorder is the third largest cause of
death in the United States and a major cause of disability,
the American Heart Association reported today.
Mortality from stroke has dropped nearly 6 percent a
year since 1973. but It kills more than 150.000 Americans
annually and costs $12.8 billion In health care, the
association said.
.
Only heart disease and cancer claim more victims, the
assoclaton said in an annual update. "1987 Stroke Facts."
released In conjunction with a two-day conference on
stroke.
However, in 1950 the death rate from stroke was 88.8
per 100,000 population, while In 1983 it was 35 per
100,000, the association said. Surgery, new drugs and
quicker response to warning signs arc all credited for the
mortality reduction.

Chiles Oils His W alking Shoes
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — Sen. Lawton Chiles has pledged
to accept no campaign contribution of more than $100
when he seeks a fourth term next year and forsake all
contributions by political action committees.
Chiles said his duties as Senate Budget chairman would
force him to limit another tradition — his walking
campaign from one end of the state to the other. The
gimmick earned Chiles the nickname "W alkin’ Lawton"
during his first Senate bid In 1970.
He planned limited walking tours on weekends and
recesses, however.

Ronnie Recovering With Reagan's Photo At Bedside
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Doctors
at Children's Hospital say the
liver they transplanted Into
7-year-old liver Ronnie DcSillers
was a "perfect fit." but he will be
kept under Intensive care for the
next week to guard against
infection or rejection of the
organ.
The Fort Lauderdale. Fla., boy
was in critical but stable condi­
tion Wednesday in the hospital's
Intensive care unit, where his
treasured photograph of Presl-,
dent Reagan sat on a shelf
nearby, a hospital spokeswoman
said.
The president donated $1,000
toward the cost of the Ronnie's
surgery.

The 12-hour operation was
w ith ou t c o m p lic a tio n s and
ended at 6:50 a.m. Tuesday, said
spokeswoman Sue Cardlllo.
She said doctors called the
boy’s new liver a "perfect fit."
However, doctors will keep a
close watch on the boy because
" i f infection or malfunction Is
going to occur. It more than
likely is going to occur during
the 72-hour period (following the
transplant)." Cardlllo said.
The boy had brought the
president's photo with him Into
the operating room, saying he
did not want to leave "Ronald”
behind.
A fter the operation, wellwishers Hooded the hospital's

N A S A T rie s A g a in
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) S a fe ty - c o n s c io u s N A S A
en gin eers prepared a Delta
rock et for a tw ic e -d e la y e d
blastoff lute today, weather
permitting, to carry a costly
hurricane-tracking satellite Into
orbit.
L a u n c h

t e n tativ e ly

was

scheduled for 6:05 p.m. EST. 48
hours behind schedule, but
NASA officials cautioned that
threatening weather remained a
possibility.
A launch try W ed n esd ay
scheduled for the same time
ended in frustration when space
agency managers decided not to
risk continuing the $55 million
s a t e llit e to flig h t th ro u gh
dangerous scissors-like winds
over the Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station.
Even though more cloud cover
and rain was expected in the
area today, engineers said' the
wind shear that occurred Wed­
nesday was "a fluke" and that
more o f the sam e was not
expected.
It was the second frustrating
delay in a row for a satellite that
Is crucial to improving forecast­
ers’ ability to chart hurricanes
and other dangerous storms that
threaten the United States.
Blastoff originally was sched­
uled for 6:05 p.m. Tuesday but a

minor fuel leak in the satellite's
$40 million Delta booster pro­
mpted the first of the two
24-hour delays.
On board is the GOES-7
"G e o s ta tio n a ry O perational
Environmental Satellite" that is
bound for an orbit 22.300 miles
above the equator to Join a sister
spacecraft already in space
monitoring weather patterns in
the Western Hemisphere.
Only GOES-6 Is currently fully
operational in orbit because a
GOES launched last May was
destroyed when Its Delta booster
malfunctioned 7 1 seconds after
launch.
But the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration's
satellite system Is designed for
two such spacecraft, one sta­
tioned over the Pacific Ocean
an d the o th e r o v e r South
America to provide complete
hemispheric coverage, including
views of the hurricane-spawning
grounds o f the eastern Atlantic.
With the May Delta failure and
tile malfunction of GOES-5 in
July 1984. GOES-6 has been
forced to do the Job of two
satellites with a corresponding
decrease in coverage.
Forecasters are eager to gel
GOES-7 into orbit, checked out
and operating by June 1 when
hurricane season starts.

switchboard with calls of con­
cern about the boy. A White
House spokesman telephoned to
tell Ronnie's family "they (at the
White House) were aware the
operation had taken place, and
Ronnie was in all their thoughts
and prayers." Cardlllo said.
Ronnie’s mother. Marla De­
Sillers. 31. was optimistic about
her son’s chances of recovery.
Cardlllo said.
"She saw Ronnie for the first
time this morning, and that was
a little difficult for her. She said
that In no way can you prepare a
parent for seeing their child In
the Intensive care unit." Cardlllo
said.
"H e will be In the ICU (In­
tensive care unit) for about

seven days, barring complica­
tions." said Dr. Carlos Esquivel.
Transplant patien ts usually
remain hospitalized for about
four weeks following surgery.
Esquivel, who Is a tranplant
surgeon at the hospital but did
not p articip a te in R on n ie's
operation, said the boy re­
sponded to commands with his
eyes after he regained con­
sciousness.
Reagan was one of many
people around the nation who
responded to pleas from the
boy's Tamlly for donations to
help pay for a transplant. Con­
tributions quickly swelled to
$ 4 0 0 ,0 0 0 a lte r m o n e y his
classmates had raised was re­
ported stolen.

Form er A tto rn ey G e n e ra l M u g g ed
MIAMI (UPI) — Former state
attorney general Robert Shevln
was robbed and beaten by
three assailants In the drive­
way of his home Wednesday
night and was hospitalized in
stable condition today.
The attackers broke his ribs
and knocked several teeth
loose, said Carol Lassiter,
spokeswoman at Doctors' Hos­
pital in Coral Gables. Shevln.
53. also was treated for multi­
ple truutna and head and face

lacerations.
Shevln was attacked as In­
got out of lits gray Lincoln
Tow n Car in the circu la r
driveway of his home. He will
be hospitalized at least three
days, said hls brother and law
partner Jerry Shevln.
Shevln told paramedics he
saw at least three "shadows"
Jump from behind him. Hatch
said. They beat him with their
fists and robbed him.

n n fT O T m ~ m T rm T fry rg T frrrir

SPAG HETTI
SUPPER
Friday, February 2 7
5 : 0 0 - 8 : 0 0 p.m .
$ 2 .0 0 C hildren under 10 — $ 4 .0 0 A d u lts
F E L L O W S H IP H A L L

Jfi'rst © niteb Jffletfjotrtet C fjurdj

JU L £ _ S JU U U :_ i.t.8 -g . g.A S J U U L S J U L g J t

Report Says HRS C hief
Is Being Investigated

Cynthia Secor, Rock Lake M iddle School English teacher,
accepts the G re ate r Seminole County C ham ber of C om m erce
Teacher of the Y e ar A w ard Tuesday. She Is congratulated by
Rock Lake principal Sal M an fre, left, and assistant principal
Bill Evans.

c

S p o n s o re d by Y ou th G rou p

{
c

P ro c e e d s to g o to send
Y o u th M is sio n W ork T e a m T o T e n n e s s e e
I^8JU LgJJLgJLgJLJU LgJLgJLgJLgXgJt.gJLg-g-gJLgJLgXgJLflJLgJLgJLJLgJUiJLgJi

�h

S potlight

On

Progress

• Libraries

Health

Lifestyles

1t o n * ? ,

ft* ,

u, M U — 1

M e d ic in e :
Health Care Providers
Keep Up With Growth
By Kathy Tyrity
Herald Staff Writer
As Seminole County has grown, the medical
services It provides have also grown. You can get
anything from invisible braces to laser beam eye
surgery in the county. The Herald touched base
with a number of hospitals and clinics and found
out such interesting things as aspirin can cause
hearing loss.
Everything from outpatient care to walk-in
clinics is available in Seminole County, and here
are some of those health care providers:

•

Central Florida Regional Hospital,

located at Highway 17-92 facing Lake Monroe In
Sanford is a 226-bed facility owned by Hospital
Corporation of America. Hospital spokesman
Kay Bartholomew said the most exciting thing
right now is the groundbreaking planned for late
March for a new Cardiac Catheterization Labora­
tory to be built on the southeast side of the
hospital.
The hospital, which was opened In 1982. has a
medical staff of about 90. representing all the
major specialties, and a professional nursing stafT
of more than 300.
In the past year, the hospital has expanded Its
nursery, added one labor room and a “ birthing
room ," which Is available for mothers wanting
the birthing experience all in one room. It also
opened a Cardiac Rehabilitation Unit and doctors
inserted a new type of pacemaker In a woman In
her late 80s. Last year also heralded the start of
the Sports Medicine Workshop in conjunction
with the Golden Age Games and the hospital
maintained a 90 percent success rate with its
Smoking Cessation course. Mrs. Bartholomew
said.
The hospital also offers courses in stress
management, weight control, parenting and
prenatal care (free), and free exercise classes for
mothers and Infants. The "Manda Panda"
program of tips for new parents and the diabetes
course are also free.
The hospital is also very Involved In education
with the schools and the auxiliary helps with
employee scholarships through gift shop sales
and vending goods.
__

Ruth Bartalson,
F lo rid a Ri

Dr. Juan Ravella, in Central
______ ___
ollaen Ham wlth husband M a rk Hammond. The birthing room
allows the expectant mother to remain In one room for the
entire labor-delivery. The Hammonds, of Deltona, had a
baby boy five to six hours after this photo was taken. Brian
Patrick Hammond weighed In at 6 pounds, 10 ounces. Below,
Dr. Howard Sakowitz of the Lakeview Eye Clinic uses the
Yag laser to remove a "secondary cataract" in patient M a ry
Anderson.

ulcer treatment process and ta utilising a sonic
machine to shatter kidney stones, eliminating the
need for major surgery In many cases. The
emergency room Is open and staffed 24 hours a
day.
• Florida Hospltal-Altamonte Springs,
located at 601 State Road 436 In Altamonte
Springs, was established in 1973 as a satellite of
Florida Hospital Medical Center. Orlando. This
220-bed facility offers the latest In outpatient
diagnostic and outpatient surgical services:
surgical specialties in microsurgery from limb
replantation, neurosurgery, orthopedics, plastic
and reconstructive surgery, general surgery,
urology and colorectal surgery.
FHAS also boasts a Level III Trauma and
Emergency Care Center, cardiology services,
ancillary support from laboratory services, physl-

_

H«r»M Photo* by Tommy Vlntont

Bee KEEP, page 2
s it ’

&lt;

»

'&lt; ' v. r
•» •

, \r
:r.»vT ’* /

Replacement Libraries, Branches On The Way
$7 M illio n Bond Issu e From 1982 Fin a lly Com ing To Fruition
By Diane Petryk
Herald News Editor
S e m in o le C o u n ty 's lon gawaited replacement libraries
and extra branch facilties are on
their way.
For awhile It seemed no con­
struction would materialize aft-r
voters passed a $7 million bond
issue In October 1982 to con­
struct and stock a new main
library in Casselberry, a new
Sanford branch and three other
new branch facilities.
It seemed that way only due to
the painstaking planning that
library and county staff un­
dertook. according to Seminole
County Director o f Libraries
Jean F. Rhein.
But ground was finally broken
for the Sanford and Oviedo
branch libraries in November.
Those libraries will be located at
150 N. Palmetto at Commercial
S treet in Sanford and 310
Division Street at State Road 426
in Oviedo. They arc scheduled to
open in August, sooner than the
October openings expected in
mid-1986. Furnishings for the
facilities arc scheduled to be
ordered in March and construc­
tion is expected to be completed
In June. If . that goes as sched­
uled. Ms. Rhein said moving in
will begin In July In preparation
for an the August opening.
The main library replacement
in Casselberry, scheduled to be
completed in February 1988.
w ill be located behind the
exlsiting facility in Seminole
Plaza at 215 N. Oxford Road.

Sanford Prototype
The Sanford branch, prototype
for the other three branches, was
further delayed two months due
to a hassle with the c ity ’ s
Historic Preservation Board. The
board rejected the library design
as being too modern. Hut the
board was later overruled by the
Sanford City Commission.
But after those hurdles were
cleared, and the difficulty of
finding a suitable site for a
branch in extensively developed
Forest City overcome, comple­
tion of all the libraries is in sight.
In January, the Sem inole
County Commission set the
hours for the new libraries, to be
the same at all branches. They
will be open from 10 a.m. to 9
p.m. Monday through Thursday
and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays
and Saturdays.
Securing approval of such
"qu ality level library service
hours” was getting over the
b ig g e s t hu rdle for the
eight-year-old library system
since the bond Issue. Ms. Rhein
said.
"In approving those hours the
commission took a major step in
showing Its support for the
library system." she said.
She added that the co m ­
mission has supported the goal
having at least one book per
Seminole County resident. The
system holds .67 books per
capita for today’s 240.000 popu­
lation.
Funding for the extra staff
needed to operate more libraries

Tentatively scheduled to open
in March and April 1988 are the
Lake M ary b ran ch at 580
G r e e n w a y B lv d . b e t w e e n
Greenwood Lakes Middle School
and Lake Mary High School, and
the Forest City branch at 245
Hunt Club Blvd. N., (Longwood
mailing address).
Some of the extensive plann­
ing has gone into the design of
the new buildings — a two-story
plan for the 50,000-square-foot
Casselberry facility and a ones t o r y p l a n for the
12.000-square-foot branches.
Ms. Rhein und her staiT has
worked on specifications for In­
terior spaces taking Into consid­
eration such things as traffic
patterns, noise levels and com­
munity needs. Site acquisition,
staffin g plans and program
needs have been carefully looked
at. she said.
" I t ’s hard for the general
public to understand because
they don't see the libraries open.
Ms. Rhein said in mld-1986.
"I'm as anxious to open them as
anyone. But we need to do it
properly. W e’ve waited this long.
I’ d rather wait another few
months and have it done right."
Beyond time needed for plan­
ning. the libraries were delayed
a year from expectations due to
neglected legal notice of the
bond issue referendum before
the election. Special election
validation had to be sought from
the state legislature, which took
time but was ultimately ob­
tained.

■■ I r • I

...................... -

« vrc-N n .’5,J*
.

■.. U ilu

longer hours and for purchase of
new books and other library
m a teria ls w ill be from the
county’s general fund. Ms. Rhein
said.
The five libraries are designed
to serve the needs of Seminole
County residents for the next 20
years, Ms. Rhein said, with the
possible addition of a branch In
the Tuskawllla area.
The county's goal is to have a
library within three to five miles
of every Seminole County resi­
dent and. by 1995. one library
book per capita. According to an
April 1986 estimate of the East
Central Florida Regional Plann­
in g C ou n cil, the county Is
expected to have a population of
279.000 by 1990.
Although Orange County has
more books per person, nearly
1.5 per capita, according to Ms.
Rhein. Seminole has "one of the
best medium-size collections In
the state, based on content."
(Seminole County was part of
the O ra n ge-O sceola lib ra ry
system until It broke away in
1978.)
"O f course, no library ever has
enough books," she said, "but
Seminole's circulation rate Is
astron om ica l (about 50,000
books per month at Casselberry,
17.00
at Sanford)."
S e m i n o l e ’ s C a s s e lb e r r y
branch, despite negative factors
such as limited seating, poor
lig h tin g and g en era l u n at­
tractiveness. has been known to
have more walk-in customers on
a Saturday than the main Or­

lando library, she said.
She attributes this to the
library system's aim to respond
to the needs of the citizens.
"W e have books that are
needed, not Just books." she
said. " I t ’s a very dynamic library
system ."
In the eight years since the
system broke away from Or­
ange-Osceola. It has replaced
about 80 percent of Its collec­
tion, always keeping In mind
user needs and interests.
The library will buy a book If a
patron requests It and it fits the
library’s general requirements."
" I f som eone came In and
wanted a book on the develop­
ment of the Tse Tse fly In Africa
in 1901, obviously we’re not
going to buy that book.” she
said. "But if they want a book on
g a r d e n in g by a rep u ta b le,
well-known author, w e’ ll re­
spond to that request."
There’s another reason the
library may have days where it
secs m ore patrons than the
much larger Orlando branch:
proximity.
"People don’t like to travel
more than a few miles to a
library.” Ms. Rhein said. "Main
branches are usually inaccessi­
ble to a majority of users."
In S e m in o le , the brunch
llbrarlres are designed to be
more than Just satellites of the
main branch. Each will offer a
full range of library services.
Even within Seminole, the
density of population makes it
unreasonable to have one large
.

main branch serving the entire
county. Ms. Rhein said. And If
Seminole had stayed with the
Orange-Osceola system , the
m ain branch w o u ld be in
downtown Orlando.
"T h e Orange County system
tends to focus on the main
branch." she said. "Ours will
h ave m ore c o m p r e h e n s iv e
branch collections and more
localized service."
Automation
The systems’ entire collection
will be readily available to all
patrons, regardless of at which
branch they are housed. A
totally automated processing
und cataloging operation will
make this possible.
"That Is what will make us a
true system, not Just a collection
of branches." Ms. Rhein said.
The card catalog as it is known
will cease to exist under the
automated system, a fact that
brought gasps of horror from
"everyone In the room” when
the subject was first broached at
a county com m ission work
session. Ms. Rhein recalled..
"W hen I presented a proposal
for obtaining a S I 20.000 federal
gran t fund s e ttin g up the
automated system," she said.
"Commissioner BUI Klrchhoff
took a look at the proposal, said
'You’re going to do away with
the card catalog? No way!' and
threw the plan on the table.
Everyone seemed to think it
would be horrible.
"But we got an example of the
See BRANCHES, page 8

�I

*

Health
2—Sanford Herald A Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

...K e e p
Continued from page 1
cal therapy and respiratory therapy and an
1 1-bed pediatrics unit.
Florida Hospltal-Altamonte offers a designated
Eating Disorders Unit In Central Florida for long
term and outpatient care o f anorexia, bulimia and
other eating disorders.
In April of 1986 the hospital’s cancer center
opened and Is now of capacity, according to
hospital spokeswoman Barbara Grossman. A
physicians office building is also opening this
month. A 74-bed tower Is also scheduled to be
complete In two years and will Include a
community education center and offices. A
maternity unit will go In the fourth floor and
opens this spring. Ms. Grossman said.
Florida Hospltal-Altamonte Springs is owned
and operated by the Seventh-day Adventist
Church and In conjunction with two other area
facilities In the group operates with an annual
budget or$300 million and has an annual payroll
o f more than 990 million.

• South Seminole Community Hospital,
located at 555 W. Sanlando Springs Drive, on
State Road 434. Longwood. is a 126-bed facility,
part of the South Seminole Medical Center, which
includes physicians' offices and West Lake
Hospital, a psychiatric facility.
The medical center is owned and operated by
Hospital Corporation of America. The hospital
has a staff o f about 300 physicians In 30 medical
and surgical specialties.
SSCH is a full-service hospital offering both
medical and surgical services and with an

Thursday, Feb. 3«, 1N7

emergency room open around the clock.
The hospital has two special care units. The
Intensive Care/Coronary Care Unit allows critical
patients to be watched continuously and
monitored closely at all times. The Progressive
Care Unit Is a step down from intensive care,
allowing 24-hour monitoring In a private room.
A full range of diagnostic services are available
from stress testing to laboratory and EKGs. But
what the hospital would like to emphasize this
year Is improvements In outpatient care. A new
registration area Just for outpatients has been
opened at the cast end of the hospital making for
less time In admitting. Services available to
outpatients Include physical and respiratory
t h e r a p y , d ia g n o s t ic p ro c e d u r e s , b lo o d
transfusions and dietary counseling. There is also
an outpatient surgery department allowing sur­
gical patients to go home the same day or their
surgery.
Under construction Is a new medical office
building o f 65.442 square lect to be completed In
July. A new Nuclear Cardiology unit has also
been opened which offers a complete method of
heart study.
This year's community education program at
SSCH will Include programs on cancer, eating
disorders, diet, sports medicine, arthritis, os­
teoporosis. and CPR. Call the education depart­
ment at 767-5892 for more Information.

• Seminole Community Mental Health
Center, Suite 1721 at Crane's Roost Office Park.
417 Whooping Loop. Altamonte Springs, has a
new facility in Sanford that combines day
treatment, outpatient and after care, nursing and
administration. The facility Is at 2462 Park Ave..
Sanford. Minimum fee Is $5.

• Mental Health Care — W est Lake
Hospital, located at 589 W. State Road 434.
Longwood. Is an 80-bcd psychiatric facility. West
Lake Is owned and operated by Hospital Corpora­
tion o f America and Is fully accredited by the
Joint Commission on Accreditation o f Hospitals.
It Is also a member of the National Association of
Private Psychiatric Hospitals.
WLH Is a full-service private facility with
separate units tor children, adolescents, adults
and seniors. Services Include evaluations and
programs geared to each age group in psychiatry,
chemical dependency and chemical abuse.
Individual and group therapy is available and
there are aftercare programs to aid In reintegra­
tion Into the community. The Admissions Office
Is open 24 hours a day.
West Lake Hospital's services are covered by
most health insurance plans. The Hospital also
offers free outreach programs to the community
on issues related to mental health. These arc
given in a number o f seminars each year.
In addition to the services listed above, there
are about a dozen nursing homes and convales­
cent centers that serve Seminole County resi­
dents.
• Help For Hearing Lost — There arc
several clinics and private physicians treating
hearing disorders in Seminole County.
There is a group for hard-of-hearing people
called "S H H H " (Self Help for the Hard o f Hearing)
who get together monthly at Florida HospltalAltamonte. hear professional speakers and share
Information on help they’ve received.
They recommend such things as making sure
you get a 30-day trial period on hearing aides
with 95 percent o f your money back If dis­

satisfied. They also recommend calling the
toll-free Department of Professional Regulation at
1-800-851-1204 to check out a clinic or doctor.
Contact Philip Susman at 830-9933 In Altamonte
Springs or the president. Sidney Hoffman, at
1-297-1228.
Dr. Nallan Chari, audiologist, who owns the
Altamonte Hearing Clinic, gave some technical
background and advice for hearing loss.
He said there are three types o f hearing
disorders: conductive loss, sensory-neuro loss
(nerve deafness) and a mixed loss.
With a conductive hearing loss, he said many
times it can be brought back to normal by a
surgical procedure. On the other hand, there is
little that can be done with nerve deafness,
depending upon the origin: this type Is common
with aging. And for mixed loss, he said many can
be helped out often not brought back to normal
limits.
Regardless of the type of hearing loss, he felt
most everyone could be helped by hearing aids.
But It works best with conductive loss.
Permanent hearing loss, he said, can be caused
by a head Injury, disease such as diabetes, side
effects o f medication (antibiotics such as the
myclne group), too much aspirin, aging, etc. A
warning sign that hearing loss may be imminent
due to drugs or noise, he said, will be a ‘ 'ringing
In the ears."
He also talked about recent advances In hearing
aids and rehabilitation. He classified the aids and
implants as follows: non-electronlc. acoustical
aids (the latest kind) that require no batteries:
electronic aids that need a power source: and

See KEEP, pages

Mental Health
Day Program
Center Moves
The S em in ole Com m unity
Mental Health C enter's day
treatment program has a new
home at Park Avc. and 25th St.
in Sanford.
SCMHC spokesman Cheryl
Werfey said this move, which
consolidates the services offered
at two former First Street loca­
tions. Is a plus for Sanford
residents.
Service at the new location
includes the opportunity for
those with mental or emotional
problems to meet with care
p r o v i d e r s d a l l y a n d to
participate in craft, exercise and
educational programs.
It gets them out of the house
and away from the televisions,
Ms. Werley said.
The participants may be sufle rtn g tram dcp ieM ton . or they

may have been or are currently
in therapy programs and need to
maintain this type of contact
with mental health officials, she
•said.
T h e S em in ole C om m unity
Mental Health Center also has
other facilities, with other func­
tions.
Some mental health offices are
still maintained at Crane's Roost
In Altamonte Springs, and facili­
ties for alcohol programs and
crisis stability arc at 300 Bay
Avc. In Sanford.
Clients for SCMHC programs,
which In addition to the ones
already mentioned. Include In
short term service: crisis In­
t e r v e n t io n fo r p e rs o n s In
e m e rg e n c y need o f m ental
health care, family counseling,
school outreach — promoting
self esteem and resistance of
peer pressure, summer activities
for children, a child abuse pre­
vention program and outpatient
services.
Most short term care receivers.
Ms. Werley said, have contact
with the SCMHC for about three
months.
Long term outpatient care
may last a lifetime, she said.
T h a t in c lu d e s
c o n tin u e d
monitoring and assistance to
those who have been released
from mental institutions, or who
have sought m ental health
assistance on numerous oc­
casions. Even If these persons do
not seek mental health care.
SCHMC workers arc mandated
by the state to monitor them and
to encourage them to come In
and participate In the center's
activities. Ms. Werley said.
The day treatment program,
which Is offered at the new
Sanford unit and only for the
elderly at the Casselberry Senior
Citizens Center, serves both
y o u n g a d u lts w ith ch ron ic
mental health problems and the
elderly who are often coping
with loneliness, depression or
grief. Ms. Werley said.
The Bay Avenue facility is
geared to deal with acutely
disturbed patients, even those
Who must be restrained. Fre­
quently persons who have been
taken Into police custody under
the Baker or Myers Acts, unless
they need medical attention, are
admitted to that facility Ms.
Werley said.
The Baker Act allows for
officials to hospitalize persons
who apparently present a threat
to themselves or others and the
Myers Act covers alcohol users
in the same way. If such patients
also need medical care they
m u st be a d m it t e d to th e
psychiatric unit of Florida Hosplta i-A lta m o n tc S p rin g s. Ms.
See MOVE, page 6

w.

S R 4 6 A O regan A ve. Sanford

OPEN DAILY
1 PM Til 5 PM
Fo r In fo rm a tio n
Call

2, 3 &amp; 4 Bedroom Homes With
2 Baths - G.E. Kitchens
Cathedral Ceilings - Fireplace
Double Car Garages

322-3103
Priced From

6)

* 7 0 ’s

to 99

0 ’s

h o e m a k e r
CONSTRUCTION/
SINCE 1956
C O M M E R C IA L - R ESID EN T IA L

» 2701 W. 25th St.
Sanford

(S

�" 1

Health
g a j g i Htreld ft HeraM Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

...Keep
C ontinu ed fro m page a
Implants for middle ear and the cochlea.
Among the electronic aids, he said, the newest
is the canal hearing aid that can be rechargeable.
Advances have to do with the microphones and
equipment.
Middle ear implants are used in cases where the
patient can't wear a regular aid for conductive
loss, he said, because of infection or some other
reason. But he said these types of Implants arc
still experimental.
Finally, the cochlear implant is now used for
the profound nerve deafness. With this Implant,
patients are able to hear environmental sounds
but do not have full recognition of speech. Work
on this recent advance continues.
• Advances in Eye Care — Ophthalmologist
Dr. Howard Sakowitz. who with Dr. Jon Day runs
Lakeview Eye Clinic In Sanford and Deltona,
explained some of the recent advances In eye
care.
One of the most common problems as people
grow older Is the development of cataracts.
Sakowitz said approximately 93 percent of all
c a ta ra c t su rge ry Is n ow d on e w ith Intraocular/lens Implants. In this procedure, the
normal eye lens is replaced with a man-made
lens. Researchers have developed a new foldable
lens so that a smaller Incision can be made,
lessening the chance of complications. This
procedure Is done as an outpatient service and
the patient is home In a few hours.
Another advancement that helps with several
surgeries including post-cataract surgery is the
Yag laser which is available at Central Florida
Regional Hospital. Sakowitz said In 20-50 percent
of cataract procedures there is an opacity that
develops in the remaining eye membrane causing
vision problems. T h is is som etim es called
"secondary cataract" and can be corrected
painlessly with a few seconds in front of the Yag
laser.
The Argon laser is used In treatment o f diabetic
complications: it can seal leakages of blood
vessels associated with diabetes. Sakowitz said
this can be done in the office and is virtually
painless. But early treatment provides the best
results.
For some, surgery can eliminate the need to
wear glasses.
Surgery for nearsightedness, or myopia, is
known as radial keratotomy and was developed
by Russian ophthalmologist Dr. Svyatoslav
Fyodorov more than 10 years ago. Radial
keratotomy or RK surgery Is performed at the
Neumann Eye Institute In DcLand. 801 Stone St.,
and at the Florida Eye Clinic, 160 Boston Ave.,
Altamonte Springs.
The surgery Involves m aking computercalibrated radial incisions In the cornea, flat­
tening Its curvature and correcting refraction.
Dr. Albert C. Neumann performed the first
radial keratotomy in central Florida in DeLand
about six years ago. He learned the procedure

Thursday, Fat. U . Ifo 7 -1

from Fyodorov, who assisted in the operation.
The original Russian method of RK is used at the
Neumann Institute. The Altamonte Springs clinic
uses a slight variation of the procedure.
According to Neumann, who has performed
more than a thousand radial keratotomles, the
procedure has proved safe and effective.
Sakowitz says he prefers a new procedure for
nearsightedness called eplkeratophakla. In this
procedure, donor corneal tissue is sewn to the

Rocont concorn th a t staring
Into com putar torm ina! sermons
a ll day m ight bo hazardous
aro unfoundod
front surface ol the eye to act as a "livin g contact
lens.” Although the results are somewhat
unpredictable, the process Is reversible and there
is no actual scarring, Sakowitz said.
Glaucoma, another major eye disorder under
research, can now be treated quite successfully.
Sakowitz said. " I f it Is detected early, there
should be no loss of vision." he said. "But vision
once lost through glaucoma never returns."
Recent concern that staring Into computer
termihal screens all day might be hazardous to
eyesight, he said, are unfounded. He said it might
cause overstrain and fatigue, "but there Is no
extraordinary risk."
• O rth o d o n tic s — Another recent medical
advance seen In Seminole County Is the advent of
"invisible braces."
^
Dr. John Smith, 2509 S. Park Drive, with his
partner Dr. Richard Dunn, are among those
offering the service. Smith said that in this
process the metal brace is Installed In the back
side or "lingual" (tongue) side of the teeth.
Patients with lingual braces look as if they have
no braces.
Of course, the cost is about 30 percent more
than regular braces, Smith said, because the
procedure takes longer in the office. S &gt; far, he has
been offering It mainly to adults.
Elsewhere, "clear plastic" braces arc available,
but he docs not use them.
Another type of cosmetic braces is the half-size
"mini-brackets," he said. And he offers these to
virtually all his patients. These are glued to the
outside of the teeth but are much less noticeable
than the standard kind because of their size.
They are offered at the same price as standard
braces, Smith said.

• Medical clinics of all types arc available in
Seminole County. They are listed beginning on
Page 319 of the 1987 Donnelley Phone Book. One
example of the proliferating walk-in clinics is the
Humana McdFIrst Physician Care clinic at 2650
W. S.R. 434 In Longwood.
Other clinics are available In this county for
everything from acupuncturc/paln control, to
smoking cessation, to Infertility and Impotence.

niitrrmtiviii
HIGH U T IL IT Y
eem MAKE THE %
FRIGHT CHOICE %

BILLS?

80809280808080808080801885858585838585

RHEEM

%

CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING

MllflllliyiTIIIIITIIiaill!^?"1™1^ ' ! ^

No Matter How Large Or
Small, RHEEM Has A
System That Fits Your
Home Cooling And
_
Heating Needs

WE
MAKE HOUSE CALLS i
Before You Invest In That Central g
Heating And Air C onditioning
System, Let Us Answer Your
Questions And Help
Determine Your
Needs At No Extra
Cost
To You..
______
—

m
g
g
§

High Energy Costs
Got You Down?
Fight Back With A RHEEM

New Day Heat Pu
__ __ ,
FKSXftJFWBC
PRODUCTS PROGRAM

&lt;2rftP
te n tim

o tf

L —— " g " !

i

*&gt;«■U M B
QUALITY FEATU RES THAT
HELP YOU M A K E THE
RIGHT C H O IC E
1.
Top M o u n ted C o n tro l Box 5.
2. W rap A-Round O utdo or Coil
3. High Q uality C opper Tubing
6.
4. Durable Long Lasting
7.
C om pressor
8.

A Fan T h a t’s M o u n te d
To Blow U pw ard A w ay
From Bushes &amp; Shurbs
G alvanized S tee l C ab in et
P rotective R eset C o n tro ls
P rogram m able S etb a c k
Therm o stat

S A N F O R D
HEATING AND AIR CONDITIONING
Since 1965
2069 S. Sanford Ave.

mu __

8384858585858585858585858585858584858585838585858485

Sanford

x S s S * * 1*

FREE
ESTIMATE

NO O BLIGATIO N
CALL

m lo o
^

^

aa

3 / 2 - 6 3 9 0

%

mtl0r

%l

SUP-EER

HI-EFFICIENCY
fA IR CONDITIONING
Here’s What Ma^es^T^Difference

CONDENSING COIL
An efficient 4 sided coil that has more heating/cooling
surface than previous Rheem units, allow ing more air
to be pulled over the coil. Result: lower fan speeds, and
energy consumption, quieter operation.

i: : : : : utiss

�Health
&lt;—SeeM ri HoraM a HoraM Mvortlsor, Sanford, FI.

ThuruUy, Fob, 14, 1M7

Variety Of Medical Services
Offered Low Income Families

W HEN

YOU

NEED

By Kathy Tyrtty
Herald Staff Writer

m aternity services, pre-natal funds.
clinics, lab testing, hospital
There is a 24-hour emergency
Health care services for those newborn delivery services, a mental health hotline available
who have limited or Inability to dental program, nurse o f the to county residents through the
pay are offered in Seminole d ay, n u tr itio n a l p ro gra m s, center at 831-2411.
County through at least four school health programs, an edu­
Basically, the center is geared
organizations.
cation program, and new last to deal with acute or chronic
T hey arc: HRS at 339-8200; year, a cardiovascular program.
mental health problems but has
Sem inole County Health and
There is a $5 fee for clinics or an array of other programs as
Human Services Department at services except family planning well. A full array o f services or
3 2 2 - 2 7 2 4 ; C en tra l F lo rid a which has a sliding scale fee referral to services for all aspects
Community Clinic at 322-8645, system. A maximum of 87 per of mental health probelms is
a n d S e m in o le C o m m u n ity
family will be charged, but there available.
Mental Health Center. Inc. at is a $ 15 fee for X-rays.
In the schools, the center has
323- 2036. Their services and
The Environm ental Health several outreach programs de­
locations are as follows:
Services division o f the de­ signed to keep students from
• H e a l t h and Repartment tests water and air getting into drugs or falling short
habllitatlve Services — a de­ s a m p le s , r e s ta u r a n t fo o d , In self-esteem.
partment of the state of Florida oversees septic tank service and
It has a Tyke Program that is a
HRS, located at 10714 N. Oak the operation o f nursing homes, free parenting p rogram for
Ave.. Sanford, and 420 Live Oak ambulance service, trailer parks, young, first-tim e parents. It
Blvd. In Casselberry, offers A g­ hospitals, schools, child care demonstrates child-abuse# pre­
ing and Adult Services, pro­ centers, pest control, public vention and has a dozen trained
grams for people age 60 or older s w im m in g p ools and other volunteers who ofTer support and
and disabled adults of any age; services.
advice to the young parents. It
C h ild ren 's Medical Services,
The Health Department Is also offers a six-week nutrition
medical care for children of the open weekdays from 8 a.m. to 5 and child care class that shows
county: Children. Youth and p.m.
the difference b etw een d is­
Families services, help for fami­
• S e m in o le C om m u nity ciplining and punishing a child.
lies with problems affecting their Mental Health Center, Inc. —
In addition, the center Is
c h i l d r e n ; D e v e lo p m e n t a l
With a main office at Suite 1721, planning to Join with two other
Services — help for people who Crane’s Roost Office Park. 417 hospitals to do a Community
have mental retardation or other W h op p in g Loop. A lta m on te
Education Scries on mental
developmental disabilities; Eco­ Springs (323-2036). the Mental health and or drugs and teenage
nomic Services, financial help Health Center also has a new suicide. For more Information,
for eligible people; Health, public facility at 2462 Park Ave. In you can call Cheryl in the public
health services, particularly Sanford. It also has Crossroad relations departm ent at the
through county health units; Alcohol Rehabilitation at 321- above number.
Medicaid, payment for medical 4374.
The Sanford center Is the
care and treatm ent; Mental
Fees are based on a sliding combination of what used to be
Health, treatment for emotional scale with a minimum cost of $5 two offices at other locations.
problems and mental Illness; per visit, and the services arc The new center combines space
and Vocational Rehabilitation, available to all residents of for day treatment, outpatient
training and therapy for people Seminole County. No one Is and after care services, nurses,
with handicaps.
refused help because of a lack of and administrative offices.
Another program the HRS
offers Is called AFDC-Mcdlcally
Needy. This program is for single
BLLIOTT/HALL. INC.
parents, couples with children or
po h o r r i«« Bom aaoa
expect expectant mothers both
L«kt Mary. Florida 33746
single and married, whose in­
com e or assets exceed the
standards for categorical AFDC
O F F E R IN G :
o r PM A ( P u b l i c M e d ic a l
O SINGLE FAMILY
» CONSULTATION
Assistance).
a DUPLEXES
O ENERGY CONSERVATION
This program Is designed to
O TOWN HOUSES
□ SOLAR TECHNIQUES
a CUSTOM/STOCS PLANS
□ A001TIONS/RENOVATIONS
provide Medlcaide coverage to
with timely, personalized service. . .
the above Individuals In the
absence o f other medical insur­
ance or In addition to other
medical Insurance. There Is no

Sheds America has been giv­
ing people the room they need
to grow since 1 9 8 0 . Progress
and expansion create storage
needs, and we can help.
Our
q u a lity
wood
&amp;
alum inum storage buildings
provide you with the extra
space you need. We offer sheds
in a wide variety of attractive
styles and sizes, as well as
gazebos and greenhouses.
S o, if you find yourself
''growing out of your room ",
come and see us. We'll show
you why our quality buildings
give you the most for your
m oney.

The Storage Experts 699-9340

Hwy, 17-92

A ccustom home designs

In c o m e - U in lt o n w h o c a n b e
e m o U e d tn the p ro g ra m . H o w e v ­

er, certain clients must meet a
"share of the cost" (deductible)
each month before Medicaid
coverage Is authorized. Others
with very low Income can re­
ceive full coverage every month.
• Central Florida Commu­
nity Clinic, Inc. (4C) — A l­
though not a free clinic, sliding
scale fees are based on the
patient's ability to pay. It Is
mainly federally funded and its
olflccs are located at: 2472 S.
Park Ave., Sanford (322-8645);
and 98 Division St.. Oviedo
(365-3022). The Oviedo cllntc,
however, will close from April
due to requirements of federal
funding.
The clinic's services include:
medical diagnosis and treat­
ment: family planning and pre­
n a ta l c a r e ; o b s t e t r ic and
gynecological care; physical ex­
am in ation s; im m unizations;
t u b e r c u lo s is and d ia b e te s
screening; hypertension and
pesticide screening: pediatric
care; nutritional guidance; pa­
tient referral and follow-up for
special care; laboratory testing;
social services; health education
classes (fo r w eight control,
diabetes and hypertension con­
trol family planning, prenatal
and postnatal care. Lamaze.
etc.).
It Is a non-profit health organi­
zation and has a staff of pediatri­
cians. Internists and family
practitioners.
• Seminole County Health
and Human Services Dept. —
With a Sanford Clinic at 240 W.
Airport Blvd. (322-2724), and a
Longw ood Clinic at 174 W.
Church Ave. (831-4117). the
health department offers a wide
variety o f services from Im­
m u n iza tio n s to d e live ry o f
newborns.
Free to people who certify that
they are unable to pay, the
department offers the following
services: immunizations; testing
and treatm en t for sexually
transm itted diseases, fam ily
p la n n in g , p ed ia tric clin ics,
children's clinics. X-ray pro­
grams. Medicaid screening, a
pharmacy. TB and pre-marltal
blood teats, blood pressure
c h e c k s, p regn an cy testin g.

I
C U ST O M
B U IL T

homes

from
f h a

i r ~

: n

n

/v a

n

Volum e Ceilings Throughout
Mini Blinds &amp; Verticals
French Doors (Dining Room )
Pass-Through Kitchen Window
Screen Porch (1 9 6 sq. ft.)

•
•
•
•

2 Car Garage
Heat Pump
Fully Sodded Lot
*523.25/m o.*

• P iln c lp *! &amp; I n i t c i M t b*»cd on
m o ctg o g* o l 1 6 8 ,0 4 0 . Down p o y
m e n t 4 2 ,9 3 0 . FH A E V .% 3 0 Yr.
( L e d . P ile * l u b jt c t to th o n g *.

SIX OTHER FLOOR
PLANS TO CHOOSE FROM

Phone

17‘9 2 To Longwood
Llncoln-Mercury, Then
North on C-427 2 .5 Ml
To Sanford Place.

UnlbedWhy

\

mm

SANFORD PLAC1

Broker

CO-OP 3%

�Is your
IRA in
retirement?

Anyone can give you an IR A . But are
they givin g you ways to make every dollar
work to its full capacity? We do. And we’ll
custom-design your IR A with any or all o f
these options.
M O N E Y M A R K E T IR A : A highyielding account for the short-term investment
o f your funds. The interest rate changes with
current market rates. Your funds are never
locked up in this account, and additional
deposits can be made at any time. A m ini­
mum deposit o f $100 qualifies you for money
market rates.
1 8 -M O N T H V A R IA B L E R A T E IR A :
Extremely high rate ( a full 1% above our 6month C D rate with an 8% per annum
minimum) that is subject to weekly changes.

Funds are in this account for an 18-month
period, and additional deposits can be made at
any time. $100 m inim um .
F IX E D -R A T E T IM E D E P O S IT
A C C O U N T S : Lock some or all o f your funds
into various high rates for differing lengths o f
time with maturities from 3 to 60 months.
$1,000 minimum.
S E L F -D IR E C T E D IR A : A combination
M O N E Y M A R K E T IR A and D IS C O U N T
B R O K E R A G E S E R V IC E to buy and sell
stocks and bonds at your discretion, and at
commission discounts o f up to 70% less than
full-cost brokers.
Put your IR A fund to work at full
capacity. Visit any Atlantic Bank or call our
toll-free financial hotline, 1-800-342-2705.

F i r s t U n io n N a t i o n a l B a n k o f F l o r i d a • B r a n c h O f f i c e s S t a t e w i d e

Member fdic

�Health

fjjp jly Medical Cure

General Medical C a re

Drive Medical Center just north of Seminole
Centre on U.S. Highway 17-92. The clinic 1$
open seven days a week 7 a.m . to 7 p.m. with
a licensed physician alw ays on duty.
Mastercard and Visa are accepted.

Highway 17-92 just south of State Road 434,
and in Altamonte Springs at 440 W. State
Road 436, a half m ile west of lnferstate-4.
Centra Care Clinics are open 8 a.m . to 8 p.m.
In Sanford, one walk-ln clinic is the Orlando

clinics are open from early morning to late
evening and o ffe r m in o r e m erg e n c y ,
diagnostic and routine services. Centra
Care, pictured above, has two Seminole
County locations, In Longwood at 855 S. U.S.

Dozens of walk-ln clinics have sprung up In
Seminole County to serve the needs of
patients faced with emergencies, or those
unable to make appointments during trad i­
tional doctors' office hours. Generally the

•

•

•

Move

Continued from page 3
Werley said.
The annual 2.000 client load
for the SCMHC facilities Is
divided about equally between
n orth and south Sem inole
County. Ms. Werley said. How­
ever. she said. Sanford. Oviedo
or G en eva residents would
perhaps be more likely to seek
such services through the non­
profit. private SCMHC facilities
rather than through private,
p r o fit-m a k in g h o spitals or
private psychiatrists, she said.
Economics Is the factor here,
sne said. The SCMHC. which Is a
private corporation, operating
under the approval and rules of
the state department of Health
a n d R e h a b ilita tiv e S e rv ic e s, h a s
a M ld tn d s c a le tee ra n ^ e . T h e

minimum cost for a service Is
85. Ms. Werley said, and that
buys about $60 worth of care.
Most of the funds for SCMHC

S o m ln o le C o u n ty
p r o v id e s s o m e fu n d s
to c o n t r ib u te to
S C H M C 's a n n u a l
b u d g e t o f $ 4 0 0 ,0 0 0 ,
b u t th e b u lk
c o m e s t h r o u g h H R S ..

are p ro v id e d through HRS
grants of monies that arc given
to the state by the federal
government. Ms. Werley said.
Most communities have such
facilities and additional funds
come from local grants and fees,
she said.
Sem inole County provides
some funds to contribute to

r WE ^
STOCK
NEW &amp;
USED
PARTS
r All W ork \
Guaranteed
•

Honest Work
SCHMC’s annual $400,000 a
year budget, but the bulk comes
through HRS. which "contracts
w i t h ” SC M H C 's to provide
mental health care to the com­
munity.
A ccord in g to 1984 to *85
s t a t i s t i c s . 62 p e r c e n t o f
SCMHC's mental health clients
w e re w o m e n , w h tte

SCMHC h a s b e e n
g r e e t e d in th e
S a n fo rd c o m m u n ity
a n d ...th e re h a v e
b e e n n o o b /a c tlo n s
to it s lo c a tio n

VOLKSHOP
Specializing In
VO LKSW AG EN • DATSUN
TO YO TA
• TUNE-UPS
• BRAKES
• MAJOR OVERHAULS
• MUFFLERS
• PARTS

MARVIN WRIGHT
----OWNER

Fair Prices
214 S. Palmetto Ave. Sanford

p e r c e n t o&lt;

those who sought treatment for
alcoholism were men. Of those
w h o s oug ht a lc o h o l abuse
treatment 95 percent were white
and only 5 percent were black.
Blacks represent 26 percent of
the mental health caseload.
S l x t y - f l v c p e rc e n t o f the
mental health clients and 82
percent o f the alcohol treatment
participants had an annual in­
com e of less than $10,000.
Statistics show that those same
percentages of care receivers
were listed as unemployed.
Half of those who received
mental health care were between
the ages of 25 and 54 and 72
percent o f those In alcohol
treatment were In that same age
range.
Although the SCMHC offers
treatment for alcohol abuse,
none is offered for other sub­
stance abuse. Seminole County
has no drug abuse treatment

There Is a psychiatrist on call
24 hours a day and nurses on
duly round the clock at the
crisis unit. They day treatment
program Is scheduled during
week days and SCMHC also
operates a couple of supervised
rental apartments for persons
who can live on their own. but
who need to be checked on.
In th o se c h e c k s I t ’ s d e ­
termined If the clients are having
problems running their house­
hold and If they are, they are
assisted. Ms. Werley said.
Each of these apartments Is
home to three clients who have
Jobs and support themselves.
SCMHC has been welcomed
Into the Sanford community and
Ms. Werley said there have been
no objections to the location of
its facilities here.
A major problem faced by
clients, she said. Is the lack of
public transportation to bring
them In for services.

SUPER SALE
M K f 'H '

VN

Chip Gregory with his trophy winning 1961 VoHuwagm.

ON ALL

G.E. DISH WASHERS

-d S &amp; ------- W -------

IN STOCK

BUYS

S A V E A TREE
R E C Y C L E N E WS P A P E R

A LU M IN U M
GOLD
S IL V E R
CO PPER
BRASS
I FAD

N E W SP A P E R
G LA SS BOTTLES
and J A R S

Bring All Your Recyclables

U n k in g AU
Major Brands

F IN A N C IN G A V A IL A B L E •

w.

(

HOME APPLIANCE

PH. 322-3883 1700 W. First S t, Sanford

305-323-1100
918 W. FIRST STREET
SANFORD

�■

—*

•r

'

• .

...

. ...

•• •

r.,v, ...

-

v#

♦•

•

*»

•*** V V j

•••■•*

si

“ 1 •

-h &amp; •: SsAivJjJr.-g
•
. . i • • ‘&gt; _ • •
, r. »
i- • •
__________ ____ ________ __________________________________

■_________________________________________________________________

4 '•■

s

I

,y&gt;

■

„ 5 m

■ I
iH

k

r

S U N N IL A N D

CORPORATION
■?*

• tfc

-w

■

: •••«, • ■*+?•

...t ,

*

.r-.y. t 1

4,4 ’ •

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ----------------------- ....................—
V.uf f
uft irrlWr'-r

ROOFING SUPPLIES
BUILDING MATERIALS
• GARDEN SUPPLIES
• FERTILIZERS
• CHEMICALS

LEE P. M OORE
President &amp; G e n e ra l M anager
322-2421
Hwy. 17-92 &amp; SR 419
Sanford

* «*. ‘i

■
i

�W G jwrrtli* j

» -I« M

t

Thursday, Fab. 2 4 ,1M7

&lt; Herald $ Herald A4vertl»er, Sanferd, FI.

...Branches
Continued from p a| « I
n e w s y s t e m , w h i c h Is on
microfilm, and set It up In my
office. People came In to try It
out and when they left they said.
'W ell, that seems okay.*"
She explained that the com­
b in ed c o lle c tio n o f a ll the
libraries will be Included In the
Information on microfilm In each
library. Author, title and subject
listings will .be accessible at the
push of a button. The microfilm
will already be In the machine
and patrons will not have to
handle It. Information will In­
clude what libraries have the
book, so If a Sanford patron
needs a book held at Oviedo, for
Instance, he can go there to pick
It up or have It delivered to
Sanford. Ms. Rhein envisions
one delivery per day between the
libraries once all arc open. "A ll
the books will be available to
anyone In the county at any
tim e." she said.
The system will also make use
of standardized cataloging con­
forming with that of an intcrllbrary database. This will
eliminate arbitrary cataloging on
the part of Individual librarians.
"This means when wc get a
book we plug the title Into the
computer and It gives back all
the cataloging data. Wc don't sit
around and type cards for every
book and every library.”
The standardized cataloging
was a condition of the grant,
which Is Intended to facilitate
interllbrary loans.
"W c can’t buy every book
published but we have people
who want every book." Ms.
Rhein said. "W ith the computer
hookup. If we don't have a book
we can find u library that does
and borrow It for our client."
The new Seminole County
libraries will have other ameni­
ties.
Amenities
T H e s i mp l e i nc l us i o n o f
automatic doors will make It a
lot easier for patrons entering or
leaving with an armful of books.
Each library will have an
auditorium, which will house
various library programs and be
available for public use when the

library Is closed. The library
floorplans have been designed to
allow access to the auditoriums
by key while book areas remain
closed off.
The libraries will have almost
e nt ir e ly new furnishings,
"plenty of reading tables." addi­
tional microfilm reading
m a c h i n e s and c h i l d r e n ' s
divisions staffed by children’s
librarians, set apart from the
adult areas of the libraries.
Chairs will be comfortable, but
few will be falling asleep In their
seats. "W e don't want it too
comfortable." Ms. Rhein said.
She said she plans to hire a
children's program coordinator
to supervise children's programs
for all branches so each librarian
does not have to take care of
organization details.
"W hen they do that, they're
not helping you."
Unlike university libraries,
where students arc expected to
know how to find a book or other
resource, public libraries serve a
wide variety of patrons, she said.
"T h ey don't want to learn how
to use a card catalog, they just
want a book.
"Pu blic libraries need staff
because they frequently are do­
ing most of the work (for the
patron)."
A librarian's life In Seminole
County Is not one of quiet hours
checking out books for smiling
patrons with the occasional
necessity of a polite request for
quiet.
"T h e general public can be
h o s t i l e . " Ms. Rhe i n sai d.
"T h ere’s a great diversity, some
are nice, some arc not always
pleasant."
W h i l e It a p p e a r s t h r e e q u a r t e r s o f t he u s e r s In
Casselberry arc disgruntled over
the poor facility, she said. San­
ford users tend to be much more
understanding.
"People In Sanford are lovely.
They don’t care what anything
l o o k s l i k e . T h e y ’ re v e r y
appreciative of the staff."
But volunteers, used when
budget cutbacks left the libraries
short of staff, generally couldn't
cope with the demands of the
public. Ms. Rhein said.
Volunteers arc now used In
n o n - p u b l i c ar eas such as

technical services.
T h e new l i b ra ri e s will
necessitate hiring additional
stafT. but exact needs are not yet
known. Ms. Rhein said It will
depend partly on how many
hours the county decides to open
the libraries each week and the
number o f evening and weekend
hours. A minimum opening for
any branch, however, would be
35 hours per week. It is not
expected that each library will
have the same hours because
each locale’s needs may be
different.
The equivalent of 36 full time
staff are now employed to serve
the Casselberry and Sanford
branches.
In addition to a children's
coordinator. Ms. Rhein said she
would like to have an adult
services coordinator to ensure
that no Individual librarian
stocks books with a too heavy
emphasis In one area at the
expense of others.
"T h is can be a problem with
librarians." Ms. Rhein said, "butt
In eight years with Seminole
County I haven’t had the pro­
blem too much."
Video cassettes will continue
to be offered, "but not to the
detriment of the book collection
or the one book-per-caplta goal."
Ms. Rhein said the Seminole
C ounty lib ra ry system was
e s ta b lis h e d by the c ount y
commission to provide Informa­
tion. education and recreation.
"Video cassettes fall within the
purpose of recreation." she said.
An immensely popular service,
o ffe r e d at the C a s se lb e rry
branch, the video cassette pro­
gram was In Jeopardy due to
thefts of cassettes, but a beefed
up security program Is designed
to combat that.
Greater Control
In fact, the automated system
o f cataloging and record keeping
will help the library keep greater
control on Its collections. Should
a patron who has overdue books
at home wish to check out more

books, the computer system will
point that out to the librarian or
clerk. No new checkouts will be
permitted for that person until
the overdue books are returned
and fines paid. This Is a control
that would be Impossible with
non-automated checkouts and
record keeping.
The library system has a 5
percent loss rate which Is neither
good nor bad. but typical, Ms.
Rhein said. "But with a circula­

tion control system we'll lose far
fewer." she said.
The libraries, including
bookmobile, collected $15,000 In
fines last year. This Is expected
to Increase with the tighter,
automated system.
Ms. Rhein pinted out that, by
state law. library records cannot
be turned over to collection
agencies In order to secure
payment of fines or recover the
cost of lost or stolen library

materials — or used for any
outside purpose. That means the
lib ra ries' on ly safegu ard is
tighter control.
A s In O r a n g e C o u n t y .
Seminole County library patrons
will be able to participate In
books-by-mail. a program where
books may be selected by mall or
over the phone and received and
returned via the mall.
Other services Include large

Sec BRANCHES, page 9

‘ROMANCE,
SANFO RD

W E

JOIN US FOR SATURDAY BREAKFAST, A DAY OR 2-DAY
CRUISE, OR A MOONLIGHT DINNER - DANCE.
CALL 321-5091
MONROE HARBOUR MARINA

TO A LIFETIME OF ENTERTAINMENT

Directors

M iria m W rig h t — V ale rie Weld

"For The Very Best In Dance Training”
C$c/zo o l o f ^ D a n c e S h irts

a *

CALL 3 2 3 -1 9 0 0
2 5 6 0 E lm A ve .
Sanford

A . J . L O S S IN O

# 0 ^

AO

TVJOtS

\\

TRANSFER &amp; STORAGE INC.
Starting Our 71" Year

“ We D e liv e r The G oods”
R E S ID E N T IA L • C O M M E R C IA L • O F F IC E M O V E S
LO C A L &amp; S T A T E W ID E M O V E S
P A C K IN G M A T E R IA L S A V A ILA B LE

LONG D IST A N C E
AND

$5.00 OFF
ALL
MEMBERSHIPS

O VER S E A S
A L L IE D

Exp. 3- 12-87

VCR &amp; 3 MOVIES
FOR 3 DAYS
ONLY $

19.95

Exp. 3 - 12-87

FREE

A N N U A L M EM B E R SH IP TO
A N Y O N E W HO IS A MEMBER
O F A N O T H E R CLUB.
1 Y EA R M E M B E R SH IP
With P roof O f Purchase O f
Your NEW VCR

Exp. 3 - 12-87

The Careful
Movers

A G E N T S F O R : A L L IE D V A N L IN E S IN C .

2491 S. Airport Blvd., Sanford

ICC-MC 15739

• P R O F E S S IO N A L D R IV E R S &amp; PA CK ER S

FREE E S T I M A T E S

307 S. PINE AVE.

(Airport Blvd. &amp; 25th Street. New Winn Dixie Plaza)
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Mon.-Sat. 9-9, Sun. 1-9

3 2 3 -1 2 8 4

322-3572

V

M O V IE A D V E N T U R E S I I

SANFORD

�•••Bronchos

the (lrst story of the building
now and add the second when
needed. T w o o f the branch
libraries were to be 3,000 square
feet less than the 12,000 square
feet now planned.
That’s because of year's delay
in spending bond issue funds
earned about $1 m illion In
Interest. It was decided to build
the entire Casselberry library
and Increase the size of what
were to be 9,000-square-foot
branches in Sanford and Lake
Mary.
Savings were also found when
It was determined that the San­
ford branch, Increased to 12,000
square feet, could serve as a
prototype for the other three
branches without the redesign
that would have bee necessary if
the Forest City and Oviedo
branches "/ere to be larger.
S e m i n o l e C o u n t y ’ s book
selection philosophy "is heavily
geared to freedom to read with
no censorship," Ms. Rhein said.
If patrons find a book objec­
tionable. however, there are
forms available at both branches
for making the objection known.
In that event a committee looks
into the complaint.
"1 don’ t think we've ever taken
anything off the shelf," she said.
"A n d that’s not because we
don’t buy controversial material.
"In fact, very few peole com­
p l a i n a b o u t m a t e r i a l s In
Seminole County," she said.
"T h at's refreshing."
Most people, she said, realize
while they may not like some­
thing. someone else might.”
As stated In the material
selection policy approved by the
county commission on Feb. 5,
1985."Wlthln the limitations of
financial resources and physical
space, the library is committed
to provide a collection which
spans all areas of knowledge and
Is responsive to the needs re­
quests o f the entire community.
The collection shall be charac­
terized by breadth, since it
represents most areas of knowl­
edge. and by depth In those
areas In which particular em­
phasis is necessary to serve the
needs of this community."
Subscribing to the American
Library Association’ s Library
Bill of Rights adopted in 1980,
the Seminole policy accepts the
doctrine that. "Libraries should
provide material and informa­
tion presenting all points of view
on current, ana historical Issues.
Materials should not be pro­
scribed or removed because of
partisan or doctrinal disapprov­
al.
"Libraries should challenge
censorship In the fulfillment of
their responsibility to provide
information and enlightenment

print books, records, foreign
language books.
As with hours, each library's
collections will vary as to need.
"S a n fo rd needs large print
books. Oviedo needs children’s
books" and so forth. Ms. Rhein
said.
Although library usage in
S e m i n o l e Is a l r e a d y
"astronomical for the size of the
system," Ms. Rhein is bracing
for Increased usage as the new
facilities open. Part of this is
based on increasing population,
part because she expects more
people to want to use the-newer,
nicer facilities.
After a recent renovation at
the Sanford branch, she recalled,
there was a 10 percent increase
In usage.
The Casselberry library is
Issuing about 1,000 new library
cards per month and renewing
about 800. Sanford signs up
more than 250 and reregisters
about 200. While some library
cards are withdrawn because
they have not been renewed, the
overall trend is toward more
library users. As of June, the
Casselberry branch had 47,000
cardholders, Sanford 26.000.
With 3,852 who signed up at the
b o o k m o b i l e and 250
books-by-mall registrants, the
total system has more than
67.000 cardholders.
Figures for June show 60,645
items were checked out of the
Casselberry branch and 17.555
from the Sanford branch during
25 open days.
Although the Sanford library
does a brisk business, the
system’s bookmobile checks out
more books on most days.
When the bookmobile appears
at Goodings Plaza at State Road
434 and Montgomery Road, two
to three staiT must go along Just
to give a hand with crowd
control.
The library system's circula­
tion figures usually outdistance
those of counties of similar size.
For Instance, c on sid e r
Spartanburg. S.C.. Ms. Rhein
said. Serving a population of
203.000 with one main library
and seven branches, the library,
with 270.000 volumes, showed
an annual circulation of 656,000
items. By contrast. Seminole
County, with a population of
240,000. circulated close to one
million items in the same year
from a collection o f 151,000
volumes. Similar comparisons
coul d be m ade wi th many
c o u n t y l i b r a r y s y s t e m s In
Florida as well. Ms. Rhein said.
Keeping the collection up-todate Is one o f the challenges, Ms.
" A person’s right to use a
Rhein said. And the checkout
rate may be a reflection of how library should not be denied or
wel l the l i br ar y me e t s its abridged because of origin, age,
background or views."
public's needs.
The library system accepts
"T h e old philosophy of ’ never
throw a book away' has gone by gifts with the understanding that
the wayside. Books do get out­ the same standards of selection
dated and if they haven’t been apply as with materials acquired
checked out In years, they’ve got by purchase.
The problem with gifts. Ms.
to go to make room for new
Rhein said, is that you get what
volumes.
That doesn't mean the system people have to give, not neces­
hasn’t been planned with room sarily what library patrons want
or need.
togrow.
Today’s needs, she said, are
The main Casselberry branch,
largely
for how-to books, like
with Its two-story design. Is
how
to
repair your car. and
expected to accommodate the
next 20 years of library growth sports "how-tos" such as how to
with additional shelving being play tennis. Of course children’s
books are always needed.
the only need.
" A child can sit down and go
"There's lots of space." Ms.
through 12 children's books In
Rhein said.
In fact, commissioners had' two years." she said. "They're
originally planned to build Just insatiable" and that prevents

almost everyone from fulfilling a
child's reading needs through
purchases alone.
"Even an easy picture book
can cost $12.95. And what if the
child gets half way through a
book and doesn’t like it?"
Adults still buy books, she
said, but with paperbacks cost­
ing what hardcovers used to.
they may be more selective and
only buy what they want to
keep. Also, it's hard to find
large-print books In stores, so
the lib rary becom es a very
important resource for the el­
derly. especially those living on
fixed incomes.
But it's a resource that doesn’t
come cheap.
" L i b r a r i e s c o s t a lo t o f
m oney," she said. "S o It’s all up
the the political entity that funds
them."
She admits Seminole has had
"h igh -level philosophy" with
"low-level funding."
But after the bond Issue reve­
nue is used up. she hopes the
county will have identified addi­
tional sources o f funds. Raising
fines and utilizing growth Im­
pact fees for library service
"m ay be an enormous help."
In the meantime, the "bad
Image” the system has with a
majority of county residents, she
feels, Is soon to be erased.

■ *T • •' ‘

'-f ■'

f.
'

Mk
An architect's rendering shows design for
the 12,000-square-foot Sanford branch
lib ra ry under construction at 150 N.
Palm etto Ave., downtown. The library,
expected to open In late August, will serve
as a prototype for the three other new

branch libraries to be built In Lake M a ry ,
Forest City and Oviedo. The Casselberry
main branch, scheduled for February, 1988
completion, w ill be a 50,000-square-foot,
two-story facility to be built at 215 N. Oxford
Road, replacing the Seminole Plaza facility.

All our listeners, and
advertisers for a successful
past year.

Airport Industries And Businesses
Together We Are Now One Of The
Greatest General Aviation And Industrial
Airports In The Southeast.

1400 A

ISANFORDI
R E G IO N A L
A IR P O R T

H

a n f o r d a ir p o r t a u t h o r it y
p . o . BOX 8 1 8
SANFORD. FLORIDA 32771

★ OFFICERS *

★ MEMBERS ★
JOHN MERCER
SHIRLEY SCHIIKE
DON KNIOHT
J.A. d.OANAHL
W.C. HUTCHISON ATTORNEY

305-322-7771

A K SHOEMAKER Chairmtn
W. SCOTT BURNS-Vk* Chilrmin
H J SCHUMACHER S*c | l u l l
J S "Rad" CLEVELAND Dtraclor Ailillon
M. LAZENBY. P E. A lt! Airport Mgr

M

We’re Good For Your Ears

�r

'¥» "P

▼

Lifestyles
1»— SsiHsrd Herald a Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI

Tlwnday, Ps». it, IW

Services Available For Area Senior Citizens
There arc many services available to senior
citizens In the county, most o f which are
sponsored by the Federation of Senior Citizens
Clubs of Seminole County.
The federation Is a tax-exempt. Incorporated
entity supported under an agreement with the
Area Agency on Aging through funds provided by
the Older Americans Act of 1865, as amended.
Other funding comes from the United Way and
Seminole County.
No specific charges are made for the services,
but participants are encouraged to make dona­
tions according to their ability so that the services
for senior citizens can be expanded.
The Federation is located at 837 Magnolia
Drive. Altamonte Springs, with office hours 8:30

a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.
A monthly newsletter providing information for
seniors, TIPS, Is published by the Federation.
The program Is for those 60 years or older.
Anyone may join. Services for those In financial
need. Call 831-1631.

Employment Service
Seniors look in g for Jobs and em ployers
searching for seniors to work for them should
contact the Federation at 831-1631. Counselors
are available to help seniors find full-time or
part-time employment. Job training and devel­
opment are available through Seminole Commu­
nity College.

Transportation
Vans are available for seniors 60 and over,
Including those in wheelchairs and people with
walkers. Vans pick up clients at their Seminole
County homes and deliver them to any destina­
tion in the county — such as doctors’ offices,
hospitals, shopping centers and meal sites.
Wheelchair van service Is available. Reserva­
tions should be made a week In advance for
doctor or hospital appointments. Other reserva­
tions should be made the day preceding the trip.
Call 831-1631. There Is no charge, but donations
arc accepted.

Respite Care
Respite Care Is offered with volunteers coming
in to care for elderly patients giving the primary

care giver a short break. The Retired Senior
Volunteer Program will help find volunteers who
will be trained by Central Florida Regional
Hospital. Sanford, beginning March 17. To get on
the waiting list call 831-1631. The RSVP office Is
at 670 W. State 434 in Winter Springs.

iamity Care
Community Care for the Elderly provided by
Visiting Nurse Association at Messiah Lutheran
Church. Highway 17-92. Casselberry, through a
state-funded program. Call 831-1631.

Long-Ts
Long-Term Care Ombudsman Committee Is a

8 m SENIORS, page 11

F ra te rn a l O rg a n iz a tio n s
P le n tifu l In S e m in o le C o u n ty
Service, fraternal and pro­ G I O N A L H O S P I T A L A U X ­ SERVATION SOCIETY. Tommy
ILIARY. Mildred Haen, presi­ Peterson, president. 520 E. First
fessional organizations abound
in Seminole County, as evi­ dent, 1401 W. Seminole Blvd., Street. Sanford (Henry Shelton
Sanford M em orial Museumdenced by the following list Sanford.
DAUGHTERS OF AMERICAN Library).
provided by the Greater Sanford
JAYCEES. Karen Bracken,
R E V O LU T IO N . Elisabeth R.
Chamber of Commerce:
A.A.R.P. (American Associa­ Boyd, president. 220 Forest acting president, P.O. Box 1543,
Drive. Sanford.
Sanford.
tion Retired Persons), Mrs. G.L.
J U N IO R W O M AN S CLUB.
DAUGHTERS OF THE CON­
(Tex) Powell, president. 2836
F E D E R A C Y , M rs. C h a r l e s Beth Freeman, president. P.O.
Gale Place. Sanford.
A LL SOULS HOME &amp; SCHOOL - Hobson, president, 550 Lake Box 2618, Sanford.
K A P P A SIGMA OMEGA
ASSOCIATION. Mrs. Nina Hef- Bingham. Lake Mary.
C
H
APTER. ALPHA KAPPA
DEMOCRATIC
EXECUTIVE
fernan, president, 810 Oak
COMMITTEE. David McIntosh, A L P H A S O C I E T Y . Me r i a n
Avenue. Sanford.
AMARANTH. Sharon Hinson, c h a i r m a n , P . O . B o x 3 9 , Johnson, president, P.O. Box
1628, Sanford.
Casselberry.
royal matron. 2318 Helen Drive,
KIW ANIS CLUB OF EASTD
E
M
O
C
R
A
T
I
C
W
O
M
E
N
S
Deltona.
CLUB. Kathleen Reynolds, 906 W E S T S A N F O R D . W i l l i e
AM ERIC AN DIABETES
Merkerson, president, P.O. Box
ASSO C IATIO N. Benny A le x ­ French Ave., Sanford.
DISABLED AMERICAN VET­ 63. Sanford.
ander, president. P.0. Box 2563.
K I W A N I S CLUB OF S A N ­
ERANS, Bob Daugherty, com­
Sanford.
mander, 119 Hidden Lake Drive. FORD. Dr. Rick Dunn, president.
A M E R I C A N HEART
P.O. Box 1449. Sanford.
AS SO C IA TIO N (MEMORIALS Sanford.
K N IG H TS OF COLUMBUS.
EASTERN STAR. Vassle La
AND BEQUESTS) C EN TR AL
FLORIDA CHAPTER. P.O. Box Fay Faucher, worthy matron, Colin Sayer, grand knight. 2504
Oak Ave.. Sanford.
820 Alex Lane, Deltona.
6665. Orlando 32853.
LAKE MARY ROTARY CLUB.
E L K S LODGE. R obert M.
AMERICAN INDIAN. United
Tuscola Cherokee Tribe. H.A. Morris, exalted ruler. 1006 E. Don Reynolds, president, P.O.
Box 557, Lake Mary.
Rhoden, chief, P.O. Box S. Second St., Sanford.
LAKE MARY WOMANS CLUB.
FE D E R ATIO N OF SENIOR
Geneva.
AM ERIC AN LEGION A U X ­ CITIZENS CLUBS. Bill Goddard, PUa Hughes, president, P.O. Box
ILIARY, Klara Stabile, president, president. P.O. Box 1332. Alta­ 691, Lake Mary.
monte Springs.
LE AG UE O F W O M E N
2532 Dakota Trail, Fern Park.
V O T E R S OF S E M IN O L E
FLEET RESERVE BRANCH
AM ERICAN LEGION POST
*53, Kermlt Roberts, command­ 147, Dan A. Johnson, president. COUNTY. Ginger Bowman, pres­
ident. P.O. Box 1004, Altamonte
P.O. Box 4 6 1. Sanford.
er, 3506 Orlando Drive, Sanford.
FLEET RESERVE WOMEN’S Springs.
AMERICAN RED CROSS. 705
LIONS CLUB OF SANFORD.
AU X ILIA R Y. Margaret Miller,
W. SR 434. Suite C. Longwood.
Phillip Co*tonc. president. P.O.
president. 206 Laurel Drive,
\ K N Z L O B V .K C H H E .K D V E T E R ­
Stmtord.
A N S O F W O R L D W K R \\. S a m
B ox 2 b ^ 2 . S a n f o r d : S i g h t
Shlro. president, 160 Mill Run
FRIENDS OF THE ST. JOHNS Chairman: Stan Rockcy.
Drive. Lake Mary.
RIVER. Daryl McLain, president,
L O Y A L O R D E R OF T H E
AUDUBON SOCIETY. G.E. 311 W. First St., Sanford.
MOOSE. Tex Moyer, governor.
F r i e n d , p r e s i d e nt , 57 W.
FRIENDS OF THE SEMINOLE 2660 S. Palmetto Ave., Sanford.
Hlghbanks. DcBary.
COUNTY LIBRARY. Mrs. Pat
MASONIC LODGE. P. Mark
B E T A SIGM A PHI. J oy ce Herring, 707 Tropic Hill. Alta­ Whitley, worshipful master. P.O.
Sammet, president, P.O. Box monte Springs.
Box 1662. Sanford.
4114, Sanford.
FRIENDS OF THE WEKIVA
O PTIM IST CLUB OF S A N ­
CANCER MEMORIALS AND RIVER. INC.. Patricia Harden,
FORD. Ken Hicks, president. 204
BEQUESTS, Delbert Abney, president. 5400 Andrus Ave.,
Melissa Court. Sanford.
president, P.O. Box 1697, San­ Orlando.
ORDER OF T H E P UR P L E
ford.
GAINES MORGAN AMVETS.
HEART, James V. Stowcll Jr.,
CANCER SOCIETY. Kathy Jam es M elton, com m ander.
commander. 4610 Edgewatcr
Colvin, president. P.O. Box 95. 2758 Bungalow Blvd.. Sanford.
Drive. Orlando.
Sanford.
GAME AND FRESH WATER
OVER 50 CLUB. Irving Fried,
CENTRAL FLORIDA HEART FISH COMMISSION, Dayton
president. 519 E. First St.. Bram
ASSO CIATIO N. Dr. Raul J. Hudson Jr., game warden. 2563
Towers, Sanford.
Herrada, president. 2177 E. Palmetto Ave., Sanford.
PANKHURST. (organization of
Michigan St.. Orlando.
GENERAL HENRY SHELTON
p ro fe s s io n a l w o m e n ) J o y c e
C E N T R A L F LORI DA R E ­ SANFORD HISTORICAL PRE­
Bee FRATERNAL, page 12

S an ford O rig in a l
S u rf &amp; S k a te S ho p
Full Line Of
Ladies’, Men’s &amp; Boys’
Casualwear.
E -Z Layaw ay Plan

catchff Inc
We Also

Carry
Breakaway &amp; Spectrum
Surfboards
1

AT
CENTER MALL
2727 ORLANDO DR.

STORE HOURS:

322-0408

M.-Thur. 12-7
Frl. 10-9
Set. 10-7
Sun. 1-5

W e lik e
things
66
just sew ”

Or rather “ just so.” As a manufacturer of boy’s
activewear, we take great pride in the quality
garments we produce. The source of our pride
stems from our employees.

COMPLETE AUTO INTERIORS CUSTOM BUILT

It is through their effort that we are now enter­
ing our 5th year of successful operation.

WE S P E C IA L IZ E IN
•
•
•
•
•

We, in turn do our best to provide a work en­
vironment that allows our people to not only be
productive, but to enjoy their jobs.

BOAT TO PS • C O N V E R T IB LE T O P S
V IN YL TO PS • LA N D A U R O O F S
AUTO G LASS O F A L L T Y P E S
SE AT COVERS • C A R P E T S
BURNED IN TE R IO R S

If you would like to join our team and are ex­
perienced in this industry, please contact us. We
welcome your interest.

CONDITIONAL G U A R A N T E E
INSURANCE WORK - INSTALLATIONS
All of our glass replacements are
replaced with Original Brand Names.

AUTO GLASS &amp; SEAT
,*"t* COVER CO

M l* .,

*"■

•

n . S22-MJ

LEWIS CHILDERS
^ O

W

N

E R

^

SAN-DEL MANUFACTURING
2240 Old Lake Mary Rd., Sanford
321-3810

�*»■ "

‘T

t

t

'v

v

fl

t * r t~ * — 1~
d • i r - i' »w• • . %
r-r •;

of Columbus. 2504 S. Oak Ave. — 322-9108.
• Lake Mary — Lakeylew Baptist Church. 126
E. Lakevlew — 321-0210.

...Seniors
10
voice for residents of adult congregate living
facilities and adult foster care homes. To help
them resolve problems and complaints call toll
free. 1-800-342-0825. To report abuse or neglect
of residents, call toll free 1-800-342-9152.

• Forest City — First Baptist Church of Forest
City. 721 W. Lake Brantley Road. Forest City —
869-1278.
They are open Monday through Friday from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. Call The Federation of Senior
Citizens Clubs o f Seminole County at 831-1631
and make arrangements for an Interview.

Congregate Meals
Congregate meals are available to those 60 or
older at seven meal sites In the county to provide
social, as well as physical nutrition.
Meal sites are located at the following places:
• Altamonte Springs — Williams Chapel.
|comer of Williams &amp; Marker — 831-9181.
• Casselberry — Senior Center. 200 N. Lake
|Triplet Drive — 695-0821.
• O viedo — Grant Chapel. 387 Franklin St. —
1365-6039.
• Sanford — St. Paul’s Missionary Baptist
I Church. 813 Pine Ave. — 323-1601 and Knights

Meals On Wheels
A full, nutritious meal with fruit Juice, a roll and
milk Is delivered by Meals on Wheels volunteers
to homebound seniors In Seminole County who
are unable to provide meals for themselves.
The noon meal Is delivered every day Monday
through Friday and food supplies are provided for
the weekends. There Is no charge, but donations
or food stamps are accepted to help buy meals for
other needy people. T o make arrangements, call
The Federation o f Senior Citizen Clubs of
Seminole County at 831 •1631 for an interview.

Information regarding all senior citizen services
supplied by the Federation and other agencies Ih
Seminole County Is Immediately available by
calling 831-1631. If the service Is not provided by
the Federation, referral will be made to the proper
agency.

Homsmaker Services
Homemaker services are available for cleaning
bathrooms, vacuuming rugs, mopping, making
beds, shopping and washing laundry for senior
citizens who are unable to maintain their own
living quarters because for physical or emotional
reasons they are not able to do these tasks, and
they could not remain In their own homes
without this assistance. For arrangements, call
831-1631 and ask for the supervisor of In-home
services.

Legal Services
Legal assistance is available to Seminole
County seniors In areas such as Government

Benefits and Entitlements. Protective Services
Including Guardianships and Power of Attorney.
Consumer Services and Landlord/Tenant. In­
cluding evictions.
Other services and Information services for
seniors In Seminole County Include:

• Adult Abuse Hotline — 1-800-342-9152 (24
hrs.)

•

Adult Day Care Centers — Seminole

County — 322-1661:339-8200.

a Alsheimers Support Group — 843-3230.
• Footer Grand parent Progress — Orange/Semlnole Counties — 298-4180.

•

M edicare In fo rm a tio n

H o tlin e

—

1-800-342-7586.

• Orange Connty C ltlaen o A d v iso ry
Council on Aging - 422-4861
a Retired Senior Volunteor Program
(R S V P )- 327-2151.
a Social Security - 322-2711 .
a Widowed Persons Service Information
and Referral - 894-1441.

Sanford's Black Community Makes Progress
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff Writer
B l a c k p r o g r e s s Is o f t e n
m e a s u r e d by I n d i v i d u a l
achievement, but as a segment
of the Sanford population, blacks
have progressed In terms of
being embraced within the city,
not separate and equal nor
separate and unequal. Just citi­
zens receiving what other citi­
zens arc receiving.
In the political area, progress
Is symbolized by the city’s first
black commissioner.
‘ ‘W c’vc come a good ways and
here’s a good ways to go.” said
ommlssloncr Bob Thomas,
homas.
Thom as said the progress
lacks have seen In the city is
aklng many forms. The most
otablc one Is In city services,
specially the police department.
"F o r the first time In my
Ifetlmc, and I have lived here all
y life. I have heard some
osltlvc statements from the
lack community" relative to
he operation of the police de*3
rtment.
"It Is Just a different attitude
altogether." he said,
i Thomas said the positive at­
titude shown by the police is one
of being more polite and re­
sponsive to members of the
- black community. He said the
“^attitude Is also working Its way
through departments that pro­
vide other city services.
, Thomas said other examples
Of progress are the paving of
loads in the black community,
some in disrepair for years.
I "That was unheard of until
recently.” he said.
? But he said perhaps the
greatest progress the black
community has experienced In
, recent years Is its inclusion In
'ithc affairs of the city —
no
.•longer considered a separate
entity but part of the whole.
JK "T h e black community is not
£ aside, but Is part of this growing
\ city." said Thomas. He said the
“ c‘ black community is beginning to
r e c e i v e c o n s i d e r a t i o n and
services along with the rest of
the city’s citizens.
He said he would like to see
more black representation In the
city government. He also wants
to see grants to help provide
more low-cost homes so families
can m ove out of the ci ty’s
housing, which he called a
"boiling pot.” an area where
problems can grow.
But foremost on Thomas’ list
of progressive things to do Is get
a pool for the city’s youth.
He said he wants to be wat­
ching a prestigious sporting
event som eday and have a
swim m er identified as being
from Sanford. Florida.

"M any or our young people are
not realizing their potential." he
said. “ A child should not grow
up not learning to swim.”
He said the city once had two
pools, but let them go to ruin
after integration became law.
"W e could use those facilities
now,” he said.
But he said. "This city still has
a chance to be a model city for a
city of Its size.”

Blacks In Business
Just as city services are being
ofTercd to members of the black
c o mmu n i t y there are more
members of the black communi­
ty needing city services.
Changes In recent years have
produced more Jobs, with more
blacks owning homes and hav­
ing discretionary Income. That
has also prompted the rise of
more black businessmen.
"There were a lot of people
who wanted to do a lot of things
before, but didn’ t have enough
m oney," said Herbert Cherry, a
black businessman and develop­
er In Sanford.
He said the economic rise of
the black community and busi­
nessmen Is something like an
upward spiral, more people have
Jobs and diversified vocations,
thus more money, and they buy
better things and have higher
expectations.
FVftm IT business standpoint?*
lie said, it Is easier go get loans
now. especially If the business Is
solid.
He said the economic rise of
blacks and their Interest in
community affairs through vot­
ing has also changed the elector­
ate and the posture of all can­
didates.
"It makes them more con­
scious of support, and of what
they said." he said.
He said the Increasing finan­
cial abilities of the black com­
munity also promotes the striv­
ing for higher education.
"P e o p le were always con­
cerned about education, but now
it’s higher education." he said.
"T h is Is something most parents
want for their kids."
There have been educational
a d v a n c e me n t s , said Ve l ma
Williams, of Seminole Commu­
nity College, but there are dis­
tances to travel, she said.
In terms of equal access. Dr.
Williams said, there is no ques­
tion that blacks have made
progress In recent years. Black
students now have opportunities
to go to new schools outfitted
with quality material and re­
sources. Black students also
have access to better-educated
teachers, she said.
But. unlike the betterment
Thomas referred to with the
black community being brought

RETAIL N U R SERY • CO N TRACT LANDSCAPING

SHADE TREES
Drake Elm
Red Maple
Sycamore

• Crepe Myrtle
•Slash Pine
• Holly
'and many others

HOURS:
MON.-SAT.

9:00-5:30

25%
OFF

5’ to 8
H e ig h t

Street
LAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER
2400 WEST 25'f STREET
SANFORD, FL. • 321-2525
" g ro w in g w i t h t h e t i m e s "

Into the life of the city, students,
she said, are hampered by an
educational system that has
lower standards than before.
She said there is a significant
n u m b e r o f b l a c k st udent s
finishing the third grade who
cannot read well or cipher. That
was not a problem In the past,
she said, nor were small dis­
cipline problem s allowed to
become large problems.
Dr. Williams said, while these

problems also affect other stu­
dents. though not In the same
proportion, there is also the
problem of lack of black role
models and club Involvement.
She said there may be fewer black
teachers now than during the
time o f segregated schools and
that black students may have
participated In m ort extracur­
ricular activities In the past.
She said there are too few
bl ac k pr i n c i p a l s and head

S A IL IN G

coaches and blacks In other
Thelma Mike, administrator of
positions o f leadership in the the Good Samaritan Home In
educational system today. De­ Sanford, said fnore blacks are
spite those problems, she said receiving b etter health care
there has been progress and earlier than they would have In
there Is more opportunity, such the past.
as the establishing o f SCC and
I l l ness Is d i a g n o s e d and
the training It provides to meet treated sooner, she said. The
students' needs.
Home, started by her mother 40
Just as the financial and years ago. p ro v id e s ’ T ood.
political aspects of the black shelter and loving care to the
community have progressed, so
See BLACKS, page 13
too has health care.

S T R O L L IN G

W IN D

S U R F IN G

Come home to a vacation .

.

Sailpointe, the newest adult community in old historic Sanford,
offers a lifestyle you’ve been dreaming a b o u t. .. It’s designed
for people who love sailing, skiing and 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
Sailpointe 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
H

B

B

M

401 West Seminole Boulevard
Sanford, Florida 32771

322-1051
Professionally managed by U.S. Shelter Corp., Broker

�Lifestyles
11—Sanford Herald ft Herald Advertiser. Sanford. FI.

...Fraternal
Continued from psfe 10
Sims, president. P.O. Box 703.
Altamonte Springs.
PRECEPTOR BETA LAMBDA.
Vicky Hall, president. 310 Moss
Road. Winter Springs.
R E PU B LIC A N EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE. Ray Valdes, pres­
ident. P.O. Box 1643, Altamonte
Springs.
ROTARACT CLUB OF SAN­
FORD. Nicky Whitehead, presi­
dent. 212 Coachman Court.
Sanford.
ROTARY CLUB OF SANFORD.
Ralph Larson, president. P.O.
Box 2214, Sanford.
ROTARY CLUB OF SANFORD

Thursday, Fed, U. 1M7

— BREAKFAST. Jim Jemlgan,
president. P.O. Box 1652. San­
ford.
SANFORD H IS T O R IC A L
WATERFRONT ASSOCIATION,
( mer c hant ' s g ro u p ) M a rg ie
Belne. president, Olde Tym es
Connection. 108 Magnolia Mall,
Sanford.
SANFORD
DAYBREAKERS
(TOASTMASTERS). Larry Blair,
president, P.O. Box 1567. San­
ford.
SANFORD M IN IS T E R I A L
ASSOCIATION. Rev. Richard
Danlelak. president. First Pre­
sbyterian Church. 301 S. Oak
Avenue. Sanford.
S A N F O R D P L A Z A
MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION,

J u d y G lllis. president. J.C.
Penney Department Store, 1180
State St.. Sanford.
SANFORD-SEM INOLE A R T
ASSOCIATION. Robert Kunkler.
president, 805 Diane Circle.
Casselberry.
SANFORD SENIOR CITIZEN
CLUB. Lucille CarToll. president.
132 Charles Street. Longwood.
S A N F O R D W O M A N 'S REPU B LIC AN CLUB, Geraldine
Keeth, president. 205 Crystal
View South. Sanford.
SEMINOLE COMMUNITY
C O NC ER T ASSOC.. Annette
Wing, president. 113 N. Scott
Ave.. Sanford.
SE M IN O LE C O U N T Y BAR
ASSOCIATION. Robert Fisher.

president. 608 E. Altamonte
Drive. Suite 203. Altamonte
Springs.
SEMINOLE COUNTY BOARD
OF REALTORS. Maureen Golmont. president. Realfax Realty,
1 8 4 3 SR 4 3 4 . S u i t e 301.
Longwood.
SEMINOLE COUNTY FEDER­
ATION OF WOMENS CLUBS.
Joan Zoltek. President. 547
C l e m s o n Dr i ve . A l t a mo n t e
SEMINOLE COUNTY HISTOR­
IC A L COMM ISSION. Bonner
Carter. 300 Lake Mary Blvd.,
Sanford.
SEMINOLE COUNTY MEDI­
C AL SOCIETY. Dr. Robert A.
Gay. president, P.O. Box 2273,

Sanford.
SEMINOLE REBEKAHS.
Martha Manning, noble grand,
P.O. Box 883. Sanford.
SHRINE CLUB, James Price,
president. P.O. Box 2301, San­
ford.
S.I.S.T.E.R.. (Sanford's Inter­
ested Sarahs To Encourage Re­
juvenation) Beth Welebob, pres­
ident. P.O. Box 2201, Sanford.
SUNRISE KIWANIS CLUB. Kit
Carson, president. 117 E. Col­
eman Circle. Sanford.
SUNRISE TOASTM ASTERS.
Nancy Edwards, president, 1401
W. S em in ole Blvd., Sanford
(Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal).
UNITED W A Y OF SEMINOLE

COUNTY. Bob Walko. executive
d ire c to r. 1250 S. Hi g h wa y
17/92, Longwood.
V E T E R A N S O F FO RE IG N
WARS, Jerry Hester, command­
er. 1838 Coolidge Ave., Sanford.
V F W A U X I L I A R Y . Ruthla
Hester, president. 1838 Coolidge
Ave.. Sanford.
W O M A N ’S CLUB OF SAN­
FORD. Bettye Smith, president.
P.O. Box 270, Sanford.
I.O .O .F . ( I N D E P E N D E N T
O RDER OF O D D FELLO W S),
Sanford Lodge 27. Robert M.
Morris, noble grand, 10714 S.
Magnolia Avenue, Sanford.
R.S.V.P. (Retired Senior Vol­
unteer Program). Joan Madison,
director. 673 W. SR 434. Winter
Springs, FL 32708.

Children's Theater Joins Arts, Entertainment Attractions
Involvement with the arts is
on the increase In Seminole
County with the addition last
year o f a children’s theater
group and a second dance
company for Sanford.
The Clubhouse Kids children's
t h e a t e r s t u d y g r o u p and
performing troupe of youngsters
2 years to 18 years old came to
Lake Mary In 1986, with the
move o f founder Yvonne Cum­
mings from DeLand.
The youngsters, under direc­
tion of Mrs. Cummings and her
assistants, train In acting, voice
and dance and then appear in
Mrs. C u m m i n g s ’ o r i g i n a l
musical-dramas, such as "The

Little Shepherd Boy" aired on an
Or l ando t e l e v i s i o n s t at i o n
Christmas Eve. A portion of the
funds earned by the non-profit
group are earmarked for missing
children's projects. For informa­
tion call 767-4082.
Joining Sanford's Ballet Guild
on the dance scene is a new
Sanford troupe. Dance Central
Florida, which held auditions in
tap. ballet. Jazz and modem
dance in November. Information
on Dance Central Florida Is
available through arti sti c
director Betty Vaccaro. 3214299.
The Ballet Guild of SanfordScmlnolc. which has been on the

cultural front almost two de­
cades. with a reputation that
e x t e n d s t h r o u g h o u t t he
Southeast- schedules six perfor­
mance a year. Information on
the Ballet Guild is available
through the School of Dance
Arts. 323-1900.
In addition to the Clubhouse
Kids, other actors take to the
boards as part of the Seminole
On Stage theater company, a
non-profit group som etim es
stages productions at the Enzian
Theater on U.S. Highway 17-92
in Maitland.
Seminole Community College
Is also the scene of performances
by local actors. The college also
boasts an art gallery with free
shows that change on a monthly

basis. There Is also a 350-seat
concert hall at SCC and five
choral groups and a community
band affiliated with the college.
I nf or mat i on Is avai l abl e at
323-1450.
Other live performances are
staged through the Seminole
Mutual Concert Association, a
cultural group that annually
offers for donations membership
for attendance at four to six
professional productions each
year . T h e pr o d uc t i o n s arc
dramas or musicals.
There are typically two major
arts and crafts shows held in
Sanford each year, with the
dates and the names o f the show
varying from year to year. One of
these shows Is typically set for

the fall.
Throughout the year there are
many community arts and crafts
fairs scheduled each year in­
cluding a spring "Day in the
Past.’ * historical showcase at
SCC.
And despite efforts to move the
Central Florida Zoological Park
from Sanford to Orange County
under a tax plan nixed by
Orange County voters in 1986,
the zoo remains a popular at­
traction in Sanford.
The non-profit zoo. which en­
tertains about 20.000 guests
each year,.Is home to hundreds
of wild and exotic animals in­
cluding alligators, crocodiles,
lions, tigers, snakes, gazelles,
baboons and more.

The zoo is located on U.S'.
Hi g h wa y 17-92 a lo n g L a k *
Monroe. Just west o f Sanford.
Admission fees are: Children 2
and under, free; ages 3 to 13.
$1.50: 13 through 59. $3.50 and
over 60. $2. To plan a visit to the
zoo call 323-6471.
From con cert earnings In
Longwood in November singer
Roberta Flack brought over
$78,000 to the zoo along with
about $35,000 donated by Or­
ange County elementary school
children.
Because o f financial difficulties
in 1986 after 19 years of service
in the arts to Seminole. Orange
and Osceola counties, the Arts
Council o f Greater Orlando was
dissolved.

J***■*?--=5

Naming

-

The Cubs

•

,V| ‘Ji

Elizabeth M agruder holds
two serval cubs, of three
b o rn S e p t. 22 a t th e
Central Florida Zoo. M rs.
M agruder bid on chances
to nam e the cubs and won
the right to nam e two of
the African cats. They are
Zippy and Shredney. Or
Shredney and Zippy...
Hm i M Ptwloby Tommy Vincent

said. But he has seen an attitude
change In the people.
"I make a point to look at
other Christian Involvement,"
Continued from page 11
said Hagen.
poor, homeless and aged." she
" I think people arc a little
said.
more serious about being Chris­
"All persons are given the tians," he said. "There's also a
same tender loving care,
re­ greater Interest In Christian edu­
gardless of who they are." she cation." he said.
said.
He said black and white minis­
Another area of progress is in terial groups are also working
religious faith, said the Rev. together, another measure of
James Hagln of Sanford.
progress.
"I do see some total commit­
He said there have been a lot
ment. more Bible study. I do see of attitude changes In Sanford,
some charges in the disciples of which, he said, have allowed
Christ." Hagln said.
such an event as the Martin
He said that while there are Luther King celebration to be
more black churches, that may held In Sanford In January.
or may not be a measure of
"Such a thing would have
progress.
been unheard of a few years
"They are Just buildings." he ago,” he said.

...Blacks

WE CAN SAVE
YOU M ONEY ON
COMPUTER AND
OFFICE SUPPLIES

n fo r d ’s
u u l L a rg e s v
le o

S to re

&lt; OVR 4* yEAB!
WE SALUTE THE PROGRESS
IN SANFORD
W ATCH US GROW
TOGETHER!

s e l e c t io n

IN

c

E^

s

m

/m

u

Tb

l e

LARG e s T

VH S OR

Promlse Voi

’Witc/toSufafdty
320 E. Commercial St.
Downtown Sanford
323-5815
L in d a Jo h n s o n • O w n e r

I

�"'T' 'V T 1

■-«y-—

^ ' r 't

A n c ie n t Tradition W ith A M o d e rn Touch

This Paperwork Can Be Exciting
B j Susan Lodea
Many artists create designs on
paper, but some, such as San­
ford's Joan Zimmerman, create
paper as a part of their art.
F ollow in g ancient tradition
and recipes, but with a modem
twist. Mrs. Zimmerman throws
used rag-stock paper Into her
blender, whips it up. drains off
the water and pours the slush
out on a screen to dry with a
new '■recycled" sheet of paper.
She might also use the same
process to make paper from
onion or garlic skin, or any
number o f forms of plants and
bark. The plants have natural
cellulose, which causes the mix
to bind togeth er when dry,
making a paper sheet, Mrs.
Zimmerman said. She may also
throw in a bit of human hair or
rag-stock paper to strengthen
her plant-base created paper.
From that process, which Mrs.
Zimmerman said she finds to be
very relaxing, she ends up with
stockpiles of paper In various
sizes, textures and colors. She
tears those sheets and works
that paper into the designs of her
mixed-media creations.
In some of her works bits of
Sunday newspaper comics char­
acters peep out. "You can see
the little faces," she noted In
looking at her "Secrets of the
Hearts."
That piece, which also con­
tains some of her own hair and
in some sections reflects her own
skin tones, mixed Into a multiheart design, "reflects our being
together and sharing ideas, our
secrets." she said, of herself and
an artist friend.

"Most o f m y work Is like a
painting." she said of her de­
signs. Some o f the pieces have
dried flowers, tassels, or even
small drawings added.
Mrs. Zim m erm an said she
became Interested in paper
when she and her husband Jack
lived In Japan for three years.
While there, she studied paint­
ing. but she didn't get involving
in making paper until she re­
turned to America and took a
half-day workshop while living
In Lynchburg, Va.
Since m oving to Sanford about
four years ago. Mrs. Zimmerman
said she has filled her large
home with stacks and stacks of
self-made paper. Her husband,
she said, wouldn't dare throw
away a sheet o f paper he found
lying on the floor.
In addition to making sheets of
paper, to be torn and incorpo­
rated Into designs. Mrs. Zim ­
merman said she can also mold
partially-dried paper Into various
forms to c r e a t e th reedimensional works.
As her skill has Increased, Mrs.
Zimmerman said. It has become
a matter o f her choosing to make
specific pieces of paper to fit a
particular design, or creating a
piece of paper, which itself can
inspire a complete work.
"When I first started I made
many sheets of paper. I would
look at the paper and It would
suggest som ething to me. I
might see a little bird In it or a
shell or something. It would
remind m e of water, o f said, or
something and that would stim­
ulate me.
"More and more I'm working
on designing the piece before I

start." she said, pointing out
companion pieces, one of an
old-time folding fan and the
other a hand paddlefan design
with tassels added to create a
smile and braids for a woman In
the design.
She Is beginning to branch out
and has plans to begin painting
onto her paper designs. Mrs.
Zimmerman Is also working on
Jewelry made o f a m ix of her
paper and copper, which she
oxidizes, to light-weight cre­
ations.
She is experim enting with
various plant forms, some of
which must be cooked and
others that need to be treated
with lye. whi l e som e need
nothing more than a few swirls
In the blender to make them into
paper-yielding mush.
Mrs.1Zimmerman has books

with recipes for paper and others
Interested In this art can study
the craft through such books,
she said. Sometimes, on request,
she holds workshops, but mainly
her work with paper Is her
persona] creative outlet.
"F ve been a creative artist all
m y life, but not In the visual
arts," she said. "T h e pfanl as a
child. Singing, dancing theater. I
was so Into all of those things
and In writing. Then later on I
studied pottery. Then when I
was 3 0 ,1 started studying paint­
ing.
"I think the growth goes back
to your childhood. I think from
every art experience you have it
causes som ethin g to c o m e
together In creative ideas."
And for Mrs. Zimmerman's
creativity Is focused on paper,
which Is her passion.

Every delivery
is special.

Joan Zimmerman
...The Paperlady

"SB
“ Where Your Friends Are”

STATE LICENSED AND APPROVED

"ASK ABOUT OUR LOW RATES"
(30S)

322-6707

919 EAST SECOND ST.
SANFORD

W ith so many deliveries, how can a hospital
really make every one o f them special? Call your
HCA-afifiliated hospital and w ell show you! W e
work closely with you and your obstetrician and
whenever possible, we give you choices so that
you’re really involved in planning the birth o f
your baby.
W e know having yntr baby your way is impor­
tant to you. So is “ peace o f mind." You’ll rest easy
knowing that if you or your baby should require
special medical treatment, the full resources o f the
hospital are standing by...just in case. It’s all part
o f the loving care and attention we give every
family we serve.
Ask your obstetrician about the maternity de-

partment at your nearby HCA-afifiliated hospital,
W e ll make the delivery as special as your baby.

H CA.
We care for A m erica.
We care for you.
For more information. Fmd out more about our special
deliveries. Call the number Wow or till out and return this
coupon.
N am e

S tre e t

C ity

S ta te

U ^ A
Central Florida
n i ^ ^ P ^ R e g i o n a l Hospital
14 01 West Sem inole B lvd., Sanford, FL 3 2 7 7 1
3 2 1 - 4 5 0 0 or 6 6 8 - 4 4 4 1 , E x t. 7 9 4

Z«p

�M p

. - ■ » —,- * &gt; »

v

j

'| i » &gt; ■

■« ■ *

p i1

'i

i

r

t

Lifestyles
1*~8emsc&lt; Here HI 4 NeraM A dvtrliM r, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Fat. 3 0 ,1M7

A Symphony O f Sound And Movements

There's No Tool Like An Old Tool
■y Susan Lodes
Longwood's Bob Kopec can get
downright poetic about planes,
tools for smoothing and shaping
wood.
And woodworker Kopec's love
o f tools doesn't stop with planes,
which he said some call the
violin s o f the w oodw orker's
orchestra. He collects, restores
and uses an array o f old tools to
add authentic touches to the
reproduction period pieces of
furniture he makes and also to
repair antique furniture.
" A lo t o f th e a p p e a l o f
woodworking is In the feel, the
smell and the sounds." he said.
"A n d a plane that is properly
tuned, working right. Just slides
through the wood and takes a
beaut i f ul s ha v i n g off. And
there's a certain swishing sound
that goes with It.
"W hen one planes a board or
makes a molding with a properly
tuned plane, there's a certain
symphony of sound and mov­
ements. There's a lot of feeling to
It. There's a lot o f emotion. It's a
swish, swish and the movements
are almost like a little dance that
as an old fashioned cabinet
maker would go through.
"A n y cabinet maker who has a
feel for what he Is doing, some­
one who designs funlture and
makes It themselves. I’m sure
there’s a lot of themself In the
finished pieces.
"F or Instance, if you were
woodworking with a plane your
grandfather had made some­
thing with, can you see that
when your hands are on that
plane, playing the symphony,
that somehow your hands are on
his hands?
"You can feel these things.
You can see the age In a tool and
you can feel It In the patina of a
well worn, well used tool, not
one that Just sat on the shelf.
When you use an old tool you
can almost feel somebody else
there with you.
“ Many ant i que tools are
handmade. The craftsmen made
their own tools to do a certain
Job. And craftsmen always like
to put their names on things.
When you get a fine old tool and
Vl has somebody's name on It
you wonder who It Is. A lot of
times you can research back and
learn who that person was.
"Even with commercial tools
you become a little Involved.
You find out about the history of
the company and where It was
and who might have had the
tools." Kopec said.
Antiques collector and dealer
Henry Lentrup, 73. of Winter
Park, said in recent years the
Stanley Tool Co., which has
been In business since 1870.
wasw the focus of a lot of Interest
by collectors.
Some of that I nterest in

S t a nl e y to o ls has s la ck ed .
Lentrup said, but the Interest In
old tools remains strong, with
tools ranging In price from one
dollar Into the thousands.
"They're decorative. T hey’re
useful. Think about the history
of these tools." Lentrup said.
"T h ey demonstrate our history.
In fact, they are the tools that
built our country.”
Lentrup appreciates the quali­
ty of workmanship and the way
they perform their duty.
Kopec, who has filled his home
with handcrafted Queen Anne
and Chippendale reproductions
and who has also made four or
five housefuls of furniture In
styles from American pilgrim
days to modern self-designs, said
there're no tools like old tools.

However, in the marketplace
o f flea markets and antique
dealers, the craftsmen compete
for the tools with collectors who
want them as decorative Items
and for sentimental value.
"Probably the vast majority of
good, antique tools are In the
possession of people who have
t hem as keepsakes, f ami l y
heirlooms." he said. "T h ey don't
use them other than to put them
on the shlf and say. ‘ My grandfa­
ther owned this."*
He too prizes, but uses, tools
handed down from his grandfa­
ther. "No. he wasn’t a carpenter,
and neither was my father."
Kopec said. "But it was a way of
life. When my grandfather was
alive, using tools on the farm
was a way of life. They repaired
their own farm vehicles. They
At 40. Kopec, who has been a built things on the farm for
woodworker for about 20 years, themselves.
said they don't make tools like
"A ll the farmers had tools. All
they used to. As styles and farmers knew how to use tools.
lifestyles have changed, and The kids knew how to use tools
with speedy production and mainly because they simply had
plastic replacing handcarvings to make everything themselves.
and wood, the tools needed for They may not have had the
old-time quality tools have been quality that we would want to
set aside.
have In our livlngrooms. but
nevertheless
they had the tools."
But now. with an upsurge ol
And some of the tools they had
Interest in craftsmanship, which
can only be achieved to a great live on today, called back to duty
degree with the old specialized by craftsmen or holding a place
tools, woodworkers are snapping in the hearts of collectors who
have an eye on the past.
up the old tools.

Someofthefinest
physicianssetourstandards.
All hospitals have much In common. Operating rooms. Recovery rooms. Sophisticated
diagnostic and monitoring equipment, and more.
What sets South Seminole Community Hospital apart is the people, the skilled,
dedicated physicians who establish and maintain our hospital’s exceptionally high
standards of health care.
Working with the most modern medical technology, these physicians work toward a
single goal: to return each Individual patient to good health.
Hospitals reflect the quality of their physicians. And at South Seminole Community
Hospital, we’re fortunate in having some of the very finest in our community.

C all to d ay fo r a ffraa physician roforral 767-5830

South Seminole Community Hospital

555 W. State Road 434
Longwood, FL 32750

*............

(305)7671200

...B ob Kopoc

DO YOG
NEED A
PAL?
When som eone you know needs help, we have th e answ er.
H o w e ll P la c e presents PA L, “ Personalized A ssistance W ith
L ivin g ” , your answ er to m eetin g the needs of the people you love.
A t H o w e ll P la c e our resid en ts have their own p rivate a p artm en ts, delicious m eals, h o u sekeep ­
ing, tra n s p o rta tio n and m any other services provided to them for a m onthly service fee — R ent,
pure and sim p le, N O E N D O W M E N T S .
P A L is a special service which includes assistance by C ertified N urses A ides, or N u rses who are
available 2 4 hours a day to ta ke care of personal needs. H o w e ll P la c e p ro v id e s proper care in
the righ t en v iro n m e n t. C onsider the a ltern ative s, com e in and see us today.

Visit Howell Place Today And See For Yourself...It’s Great
NO ENDOWMENT OR ENTRY FEES! • NO ASSIGNMENTS OF ASSETS
For dinner reservations, please call 323-7306.
SAN FO RD
200 W. A IR P O R T BLVD .
Sanford FL 32771

SEND FOR FRE e I r O C H U r" " '
or CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-551-7368
NAME

305-323-7306

TAVARES
HOWELL PLACE
U M 0 R AUCMCAN COMMUNITIES

1111 C A R O L IN E ST.
Tavares, F L 32778

904-343-6464

ADDRESS
CITY
PHONE

ZIP

�’ »"&gt; # , 9 t

r

r

*

f

r v V

■

»

Muster A r t A n d Patience To A ssem ble A rm y

Parade Of The Little Lead Soldiers
By Satan Loden
Skip Watts doesn't Just think
small; he thinks teenie-weenie
with the collector's metal figures
he makes with metal casting.
Watts has toy soldiers that
would fit, except for their height
of about 1.5 inches, into the
world armies o f the past. The
most popular are painted In the
colors o f the American War
Between the States.
Although he also casta Samas,
snowmen, unicorns, cowboys.
Indians and weapons. Watts. 60,
favors soldiers in this metal mix
craft. He said the World War I
doughboys he creates are the
sam e as th ose ma d e wi t h
moldings used when he was a
boy in the 1920s.
"You used to be able to get the
whole kit with the melting pot. a
couple o f bars of lead and the
mold. And a kid would do that.
But. o f course, the government
took it off the market because of
the danger with hot lead." he
said.
Today this is a craft for adults.
But Watts said not too many
grow nups are interested in
making the figures, although a
lot collect them.
With his work on display In
Longwood, he said he is only one
of three casters he has seen in
crafts shows. As for the molds.
"There's only one place in the
country that has quality molds.
That's a mail order place in
Longwood called Castings. They
advertise in m agazin es," he
said
And one of those mqgazine ads

caught his eye about five years
ago, . after his brother-in-law
suggested this might be a good
hobby for Watts, who until then
had done some woodworking.
As a te le p h o n e co m p a n y
employee. Watts, who is retired,
said it's ironic that he began his
career as a splicer's helper and
worked with hot lead. He said he
isn't afraid o f the molten metal,
which with improper exposure
can poison. "I take precautions.
The most dangerous part about
it is the fumes, so you have to
work In a well-ventilated place. I
don't stand around the pot
smelting it."
The lead is mixed with tin and
other metals to lower its melting
point, so it won't melt the metal
or silicone mold as the casting is
poured.
Even with that precaution,
Watts said, making the tiny
metal castings Is tricky business.
"You get about one out of 10."
he safd. The others, in which
portions are mlsformed, can be
r e m e l t e d and r e c a s t . T h e
greatest care Is taken not to melt
the molds with a too-hot casting
mix. The molds costs start at
about 911, he said, and some
can be used only once.
T o practice his craft takes
patience, Watts said, because,
with care, he can only produce
on figure per day.
The metal Is mixed and melted
in a metal pot and the casting
poured. The figure cools and
hardens and then Is removed
from the mold.
The edges of the figures that

are marked with metal overflow
from the seams o f the mold and
have to be "flashed." Watts said.
That means he takes a file, a
drill or whatever tool is neces­
sary to smooth and clean the
figure Into a true shapde, with
no excess metal on the edges.
Some casters don't bother with
flashing, he said, and they end
up with a less-than-perfect pro­
duct.
But Watts Is a perfectionist
who. with great care and after
extensive research, paints his
figures to be true to the colors
worn by the armies they repre­
sent.
Before the figures can be
painted they have to be cleaned
with vinegar to remove grease
and residue from the lead filings.
Then they are rinsed and dried.
The surface Is primed and
then with tiny brushes Watts
colors his toys.
His quest for authenticity is

vigilant and he said some who
see his work can't believe their
eyes because. In the case of
American Civil War soldiers, the
colors used aren't Just blue and
grey, especially for the Rebels.
Some soldiers. Watts said,
wore butternut brown uniforms
with the material having been
dyed from a mix of nutshells and
rust. Some Civil Warriors had a
mix of colors in their dress,
wearing grey coats and brown
pants, he said. Others, he said,
wore all brown uniforms.
"T h e American Civil War was
the most interesting war In the
world, I guess." he said. "People
seem to go for it more than
anything and the uniforms, they
like the uniforms."
And in his reproduction of
these Yankees and Rebels. Watts
tries to give people what they
want as accurately as he can.
using a painstaking process.
For him it's a labor of love.

A few little reasons
to choose
Florida Hospital/
Altamonte
T
iny hands and wrinkled feet.
That chubby little face.

W e're m aking baby’s home­
coming 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 birth
ing unit continues the tradition
established at Florida Hospital/Orlando,
one of the most progressive familycentered maternity programs in the state.
Those tiny hands and wrinkled feet.
There may be bigger reasons to choose
Florida Hospital/Altamonte. But prob­
ably no better reasons.

Florida Hospital/Allamonle
A fuli-service, comprehensive
hospital serving Seminole. South
Volusia and North Orange counties,
Florida Hospital/Altam onte continues
to grow w ith the community. Services
now available include:
• Center for Women's Medicine, offer­
ing breast and osteoporosis screen­
ing and education services
• Pediatric Medicine
• Level III Trauma and Emergency
Department
• The Cancer Treatment Center, offer­
ing Central Florida’s most powerful
cancer-fighting radiation equipment
• Eating Disorders Unit
• Microsurgery for lim b replantation
• Orthopedic Surgery
• Cardiac Diagnostic Services,
including nuclear "first-pass" studies
• Pulmonary Rehabilitation Program
• Outpatient Surgery and Testing
• Neurosurgery

S te v e Letchworth

R .P .H .

Proudly we served you in 1986.
Looking forward on serving you
in all your pharmacy needs in 1987.
S to re H ours for Your Convenience
A re: 8 : 3 0 - 6 : 3 0 M o n .-F ri. - 8 : 3 0 - 2 :0 0 S a t.
2 9 27H O R LA N D O .DR. SA N FO R D

321-8860

Located in the Center Mall Across from Zayre Plaza

• Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
• Physical Therapy
• Home Health Services
• Ophthalmology Services

FLORIDA HOSPITAL

Altamonte

601 E. Altam onte Drive
Just east of Altam onte Mall on Hwy. 436
(305)830-4321

h

�» .I

■v

IB fe ^ fc «
/v ■-&gt;-

v iiv w - .i^ s a ?

_______ -

•i

_______________ v

�•Education

T h e

G o a l:

E x c e lle n c e

Crooms School of Choice was
set up to offer alternative educa­
tion for troubled or disinterested
Excellence in education Is the
students. Any student consid­
stated common goal of teachers,
administrators and adjunct staiT erin g d rop pin g out of high
school is encouraged to attend
of Seminole County schools.
C ro o m s w h e re c la s s es are
Results in aggregate academic
smaller, more counseling Is of­
achievement, individual student
fered and where there is less
and teacher performance and
pressure.
citizen involvement demonstrate
For the preschoolers who may
that the goal is not a hollow
phrase, but a blueprint for ac­ be disadvantaged.' the school
board permitted the district to
tion.
take o v e r op eration o f the
Along with an expanding
student population — 42.000 fed erally-fu n d ed Head Start
program.
now. 51.000 expected by 1991.
Head Start alms to counter
more than half the increase In
d is a d v a n ta g e s o f econ om ic
grades kindergarten through
third — arc continued efforts to hardship and its complication
and give each student an equal
expand curriculum offerings.
chance at education.
C o m p u te r and la n g u a g e
It has been found that pre­
classes have been introduced at
the elementary school level; a schoolers who have not received
adequate medical attention or
wide array o f electives and
have been denied a receptive
required courses In m iddle
learning environment are at an
school and honors, advanced
immediate disadvantage when
p lacem en t and ex c e p tio n a l
they enter school. Upon entering
vocatio n al courses In high
the Head Start program, each
schools.
New In 1986 was TAPP (the child is given a thorough medi­
Teen-Age Parent Program). It's cal examination and Is fully
goal is to provide an environ­ Immunized. The preschooler Is
ment where pregnant students also screened for speech, hearing
can continue their education and vision and laguage skills pro­
receive guidance and instruction blem s. D iagnostic tests, ad­
for coping with the situations ministered at the beginning and
they face as pregnant teenagers end of the program chart the
child's progress. Through this
or young parents.
In conjunction* with the re­ program coordinators follow-up
quired academic curriculum. on any diagnostic findings,
TAPP Instructs the students in coordinating between family
childbirth, child care and devel­ members, the medical commu­
nity and social resources.
opment and nutrition.
Head Start operates out of
The program is located on the
Midway
Elementary Roscnwald
campus of the Crooms School of
Exceptional
Education Center
Choice.
Because the expense of day and Crooms School of Choice.
The staff for all locations is
care is often out of reach for
c
o
m p r is e d o f 22 p e r s o n s
most of the students, the TAPP
program is applying for a grant employed as teachers, teacher
cans center on assistants, coordinators and
administrative personnel.
the campus b o m e students
G e n e ra lly , th e state D epartdropping out of school is truly
prevented, not Just delayed.
See GOAL, page 18

In

E d u c a t io n

By Diane Petryk
Herald Neva Editor

D e n n y
o p e ra te

D a v is ' e ig h th - g r a d e
a

s tu d e n ts

c o m p u te r p ro g ra m

la th e

a t
in

G re e n w o o d
th e

L a k e s

In d u s tr ia l A r ts

E le m e n ta r y
C la s s r o o m

Sanfordites G et Around: By Plane, Bus, Train
The waterways that were the
foundation for the settlement of
S em in ole C ounty arc today
primarily used for pleasure. For
getting around, residents have
tu rn ed to lan d-b ou n d and
airborne means of transporta­
tion.
Private planes may land at the
Sanford Municipal Airport, the
F ly in g S e m in o le Ranch In

Oviedo and at Orlando Executive
Airport (Herndon) in Orlando.

Orlando International
Airport is about 35 miles from
Sanford and may be reached by
traveling southeast on State
Road 436 as far as one can travel
on that highway before running
Into the airport.
T h e S a n f o r d Muni ci pal
Airport, located in southcajt

Sanford, accommodates general
a v ia t io n , p r iv a t e a ir c r a ft ,
helicopters and charter service.
O p eration at the Sanford
Airport is overseen by the San­
ford Airport Authority at 2735
Mcllonville Avc.. phone 322­
7771. The city of Sanford ac­
quired the airport, a former U.S.
Naval Air Station, at no cost in
1969 from the federal govern­

ment after the base was closed.
The airport authority func­
tions through revenue It gener­
ates.
It Is anticipated that the San­
ford Airport, because of Its
8,000-foot runway, will be des­
ignated as a carrier airport when
th e O r la n d o In t e r n a tio n a l
Airport becomes overcrowded.
Plans arc in the works for a new

control tower and another big
hangar.
The airport, which Is home to
an industrial park with 300
acres of the 1.685 acre property
reserved for light industry and
aviation-oriented activities, is
Ideally suited for cargo opera­
tions. About 150 businesses and
the Seminole County Sheriff's
Department are operating In the

airport's industrial park.
Bus service is provided by
Tri-County Transit from Sanford
to Orlando, connecting at the
Seminole Plaza every two hours.
The bus also makes regularly
scheduled stops throughout the
county, linking the cities. The
basic fare is 75 cents. For
timetables and route maps con-

See TRAVEL, page 23

School Bond Issue Cash Well Spent
To Bring All Schools Up To Acceptable Standards
Building a new home has
caused many a marriage to
dissolve due to the many de­
cisions the two partners must
m a k e , s a y s S c h o o l Board
spokesman Karen Coleman. In
light of that, consider what the
school board is doing with its
recently approved $105 million
bond issue.
"W e 'r e effectively building
more than a thousand $100,000
homes." she said, “ with the
Input of teachers, principals,
district administrators, school
b o a rd m e m b e r s , p a r e n ts ,
architects and contractors.”
In October 1985. Seminole
County voters approved the
bond Issue for the purpose of
bringing all schools within the
county up to state standards.
Of the 42 county schools all
but the two newest. Hamilton
E lem en tary and Greenwood
Lakes Middle, will benefit from
remodeling and/or expansion.
The funds will also go to build
one new elem entary school,
purchase a site for a future high
school and build a transporta­
tion service center.
Of the bond money and ap­
proximately $15 million in in­
terest it will earn, the largest
chunk, about $8.5 million, will
g o f o r i m p r o v e m e n t s at
Seminole High School.
That school is slated to receive
site Improvements, renovation,
remodeling and new construc­
tion.
The new construction is de­
signed to increase the school's

I

ucation facility, four resource
capacity from 1,761 to 2.148. It o n d a r y c l a s s r o o m s , an
is to Include an exceptional auditorium, food service, excep­ rooms, lockers, landscaping,
paving, covered walks, bus
education suite, five science tional education suite; drainage.
ramps; $3.4 million.
labs, a home economics child Irrigation, landscaping, paving,
• Lakeview — exceptional
care fa c ility , four resource covered walks and bus ramps;
rooms, a multipurpose room, from 2.014 to 2.174; $7.5 mil­ education suite, guidance facili­
ty, drainage, carpeting and other
expanded administration offices, lion.
• Lake Mary — a covered interior renovation; from 1.261
two clerical teaching labs, an
electronics lab. Independent outside work area for vocational to 1,288: $1.2 million.
• M llw ee — four resource
Electrician lab. work experience p r o g r a m s , f e n c in g , p a n ic
lab. accounting and computer hardware, water meter; decrease rooms, exceptional education
from 2.237 to 2.152; $2.3 mil­ suite, drainage, pavin g, re­
la b a n d t h r e e s e c o n d a r y
lion.
roofing and interior renovation:
classrooms.
• Lyman — expanded physi­ from 760 to 787; $1.6 million.
Site improvements will involve
• Rock Lake — food service,
drainage, fencing, landscaping, cal education dressing rooms,
paving, covered walks and bus four resource rooms, drainage, exception al education suite,
ramps and development of a fencing, paving: decrease from drainage, panic hardware, te2.273 to 2.156: $3 million.
modeling; from 1.346 to 1.472:
playground.
• Oviedo — additions, panic $1.6mllllon.
Follow in g is a list of the
• Sanford — physical educa­
schools in the county and what hardware: from 1.152 to 2.154;
tion facility, exceptional educa­
they are slated to receive in $6.5 million.
physical Improvements, capacity
• Seminole — an exceptional tion suite, music suite, art suite,
increase or decrease and the education suite, five science business education facility, aca­
amount to be spent. In those labs, a home economics child demic planning area, paving,
cases where panic hardware is care fa c ility , four resource
renovation of heat and air con­
designated, that indicates In­ rooms, a multipurpose room, ditioning: from 672 to 1.017;
stalling equipment on exit doors expanded administration offices, $5.3 million.
• South Sem inole — media
so they can be opened from the tw o c le r ic a l OCC labs, an
electronics lab. Independent center, teacher planning area,
inside even when they are
locked..
Electricians lab. work experience paving, renovation: from 978 to
lab. accounting and computer 1,059: $1 million.
• Teagu e — food service,
la b a n d t h r e e s e c o n d a r y
HIGH SCHOOLS
classrooms. Site Improvements gymnasium, irrigation, covered
will Involve drainage, fencing, walks, bus ramps, carpet and
• Lake B ran tley — five
paving; Increase from 1,761 to other interior renovation; no
scien ce labs, six secondary
2.148: $8.5 million.
change in 1.089 capacity: S2.3
c la s s r o o m s , fo o d s e r v ic e ,
expanded administration space,
million.
MIDDLE SCHOOLS
an auditorium, facilities renova­
• T u sk aw llla — gymnasium,
roof amphitheater. f&lt;x&gt;d service,
tion and drainage, fencing, pav­
ing. capacity decrease from
• J a c k s o n - H e i g h t s — drainage, paving, carpet, other
2.180 to 2.157; cost $7.9 million.
expanded food service facility, a renovation: no change in 1.098
• L a k e H o w e ll — fou r
guidance suite, textbook storage capacity: $2.3 million.
• G reenw ood L akes — none.
science labs, science storage,
room, exceptional education
See BOND, page 18
agricultural storage, five sec­ suite, business lab. physical ed­

T e a c h e r O f The Y e a r
Superintendent of Schools Robert Hughes, left, presents the
"new s" to Lym an High School carpentry teacher Richard J.
Johnson that he has been selected the county's Teacher of
the Y e ar for 1986. Johnson's w ife Rachel was on hand for the
ceremony which took Johnson by surprise. Hughes said
Johnson is "an excellent representative of education's
progress toward the goal of preparing students to become
productive citizens." He also lauded Johnson for his "unique
ability to ... instill a belief in each student that he or she has
the worth and ab ility to m aster skills." Johnson received
$500 from the Florida D epartm ent of Education and an
additional $500 aw ard from Red Lobster Inns of A m erica.

�r

Education
*1»—Santonl N r ■W * HaraM Advcrtiiar, Santord, FI.

...Goal
Continued from pace 17
n ic n t o l H e a lt h an d R e ­
h a b ilita tiv e Services, social
services and the medical and
judicial communities refer fami­
lies to Head Start. A committee
d e te r m in e s w h ich ch ild ren
should be admitted to the pro­
gram.

Thwndav, Fab. U, 1*17

needed in a variety of fletds.
Vocational Instruction con­
tinues at the high school level in
seven major areas: agribusiness,
business education, diversified
occupations, health occupations,
home economics, Industrial arts
and Industrial education. In­
c lu d in g d ra ft in g , auto
m ech a n ics, e le c tro n ic s and
more.

Student Achievement
Gifted Students
T o encourage gifted students
to pursue their academic and
artistic capabilities to their up­
permost limits, the Seminole
County school system offers a
gifted program In all middle
schools and most high schools.
For students not necessarily
c o l l e g e - b o u n d . S e m in o le
C ou n ty’s vocational program
m ay be the key to success.
Sem inole schools offer a wide
range o f courses designed to
prepare students for entry Into
the Job market.
Middle schools offer explorato­
ry courses that Introduce stu­
dents to the skills and aptitudes

...Bond
Continued from page 17
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
Altamonte — four Interm ed ia te classroom s,
multipurpose room/stage. five
resource rooms, physical cducatlon fa c ility , teacher
lounge/dlning area, art suite,
m u s ic s u ite , food s e rv ic e ,
drainage, covered walks, bus
ramps. Interior renovation; from
676 to 784: $1.8 million.
• Bear Lake — three kin­
d e rg a r te n classroom s, four
primary classrooms, art suite,
music suite, physical education
facility, exceptional education
suite, expanded administration
area, covered walks and bus
ramps, interior renovation; from
536 to 731; $1.8 million.
• Casselberry — one kin­
d e r g a r t e n c la s s r o o m , six
primary classrooms, exceptional
education suite, physical educa­
tion. art suite, music suite,
expanded administration area,
five resource rooms, paving,
covered walks, bus ramps, re­

•

The Seminole County school
system Is proud of the Individual
achievement of Its students and
teachers, said dlstlct spokesman
Karen Coleman.
A few examples of the varied
achievements stemming from
the 1985*86 school year:
• Chrle Cemmack. Oviedo
High senior, was a finalist In the
S c h o la s tic P u b lish in g C om ­
pany’s nationwide poetry con­
test.

•

Kenneth

Eckstein,

Seminole High School, selected
Outstanding Page for the Nation
after serving as a Congressional
Page during the 1985-86 school
year.

roofing and other interior re­
novation: 565 to 789; $2.2 mil­
lion.
• Eastbrook — three kin­
d e rg a r te n c la s s ro o m s , tw o
primary classrooms, exceptional
education suite, art suite, music
suite, physical education facility,
food s e rv ic e , fiv e resou rce
rooms, guidance area, drainage,
fencing, paving, covered walks
and bus ramps, renovation of
heating/air conditioning and
other Interior items; from 6 7 1 to
800: $2.2 million.
• English Estates — three
kindergarten classrooms, art
suite, music suite, physical edu­
cation facility, exceptional edu­
c a tio n s u ite , tw o p rim a ry
c la s s r o o m s , e x p a n d e d a d ­
ministration area, renovations;
from 646 to 759: $ 1.4 million
• Forest City — five kin­
dergarten classrooms, five re­
source rooms, exceptional edu­
cation suite, food service, art
suite, music suite, physical edu­
cation facility. Irrigation, re­
novation: from 660 to 797: $1.9
million.
• G e n e v a — fo u r k i n ­
d e rg a rte n c la s s r o o m * . 13

• Kristen Pawlowskl, Lake
Mary High Junior, was selected
to display her water color paint­
ing In the Capitol in Washington.
D.C.
• Andrea Johnson. Lake
Mary High senior, was the dis­
trict P.R.I.D.E. Award-winner In
writing.
• Seniors Chris Borglnm of
Lake Brantley. Julie Rawls.
L ak e H o w e ll a n d A n d r e a
Johnson, Lake Mary, Craig
Madraso o f L y m a n , Chris
Cammack o f Oviedo and Ronald
Cross of Seminole High were the
1985-86 winners In the school
P.R.I.D.E. writing contest.
• Bill Hapluk and Jason
Bray, both of Lake Brantley,
were respectively elected Presi­
dent of the Seminole County
Student Government Associa­
tion and State Governor of the
Youth Legislature.

.•

Mar vi n Johns on Jr.,

Seminole High, was the recipient
of the State of Florida UCF
Center of Excellence Award In
Science.

•

Jerrold

V.

Hauck,

Seminole High, was recipient of

primary classrooms, four Inter­
mediate classroom s, five re­
source rooms, exceptional edu­
cation suite, art suite, music
suite, physical education, media
facility, adm inistration area,
food service, rc-rooflng. acquire
five acres: from 206 to 783: $4.2
million.
• Goldsboro — a new ad­
ministration wing, drainage,
paving, heating/air conditioning,
lighting, other interior renova­
tion, rc-rooflng; no capacity
change; $2.9 million.
• Hamilton — none. Capaci­
ty 792.

• Hopper Exceptional Edu­
cation Center. — renovation:
no change In capacity ol 282;
$12,386.
• Idyllwllde — three Inter­
m ediate c la ssro o m s, m usic
suite, food service, live resource
rooms, physical education facili­
ty. paving, covered walks/bus
ramps, carpet, interior renova­
tion: from 636 to 751; $1.2
million.
• Keeth — irrigation, covered
walks and bus ramps; no change
in 763 capacity $13,082.

the State of Florlda/UCF Center
o f E x c e lle n c e A w a r d in
Mathematics.
• Pam Loy an d Bu s a n
Jackson, both of Lake Brantley,
were respectively elected Na­
tional President o f the Future
Business Leaders o f America
and Florida Scholastic Press
Association Vice Chairman.
a Along with a number of
other middle school achievers.
Dallas Taylor, 7th grader at
Milwee Middle School, scored
higher than 1.000 on the SA T
exam and received a Talent
Identification Program Scholar
Award at Duke University.
• Tracy Pajak o f Milwee was
the recipient of the Seminole
County Vocational Home Eco­
nomics Award.
• Stephen D lc k lso n o f
Lakeview Middle School was the
recipient of a "Future Scientist"
Award.
o Mary Freeman of Rock
Lake Middle School won the
Longwood Juvenile of the Year
Award.
• Eric Kryc of Rock Lake
won a $100 U.S. Savings Bond

fro m th e F lo rid a B an k ers
Association for his winning
essay on the Statue of Liberty.
• Tanya Parker of
Tuskawilla Middle School won
first place for her essay in the
Mother o f the Year contest.
• Mike Spring. Forest City
Elementary Spelling Bee winner,
was a finalist in the District
Spelling Bee.

• Erin Brown of Lake Mary
E le m e n ta r y e x h ib it e d her
artwork In the State Art Show In
Tallahassee.
• Along with other students
from throughout the district.
Brett Douma and Melissa Roberts o f Geneva Elementary
p a r t ic ip a t e d In S e m in o le
County’s first Young Author’s
Conference.
• Participating with other
S e m in o le County students.
U rsu la Tadav and Robert
Bedfor o f English Estates Ele­
mentary displayed their art at
the Rollins College Cornell Fine
Arts Centcr/Museum as part of
the Orange/Semlnole County
Public Schools Art Exhibit.

administrative suite, guidance to 784; $1.5.
• M i d w a y — f i v e k in ­
area, multipurpose room, five
kindergarten classrooms, four dergarten classrooms and teach­
primary classrooms, five re­ er planning area, three primary
source rooms, physical educa­ classrooms, exceptional educa­
tion facility, drainage. Irrigation, tion suite, art suite, music suite,
paving, heating/air conditioning p h y sica l education fa cility,
and other renovation: from 655 expanded administration area,
expanded food service area,
to 805; $1.85 million.
• Lake Orlenta — physical teacher lounge/dlning. drainage,
education facility, three primary fencing, paving, covered walks
classrooms, one kindergarten and bus ramps, rc-rooflng and
classroom, exceptional educa­ other renovation; from 452 to
tion suite, five resource rooms, 462; $2.4 million.
• Pine Crest — five kin­
music suite, art suite, food
service, teacher lounge/dlning, dergarten classrooms, expanded
small Intermediate classroom, administration area, expanded
carpet, other renovation; from media area, exceptional educa­
tion suite, guidance area, music
640 to 792; $1.9 million.
• Lawton — exceptional edu­ suite, physical education facility,
cation suite, five resource rooms, covered walks and bus ramps;
physical education facility, ac­ from 713 to 795: $2 million.
• Red Bug — fiv e k in ­
quire four acres, re-roofing and
other renovation; from 760 to d e rg a r te n classro om s, one
792; $1.1 million.
p r im a r y c la s s r o o m , EMU
• Longwood — media center classroom, SLD classroom, art
expansion, music suite, excep­ suite, music suite, food service,
tional education suite, one kin­ physical
education facility,
d e rg a r te n c la s s r o o m , tw o paving, panic hardware: from
primary classrooms, physical 635 to 797: $1.55 million.
• Rosenwald Ex. Child Ctr.
ed u cation fa c ility , te a c h e r
lounge/dlning. paving, re-rooflng — five PMH classrooms, four
anti oilier renovation; from 705 TMH classrooms, media center.

Your
SuCCess
is our
SuCCess

Teacher Achievement
Seminole County boasts 2.067
classroom teachers. According
to the district’s annual report, it
is the goal of these teachers to
help each child develop a love of
learning and to provide an
environment conducive to students* pursuit of knowledge,
creativity, leadership and citi­
zenship. S em in o le teachers
made the follow ing achieve­
ments In 1985-86:
• Marla Oerrlty or Rock
Lake Middle School represented
her school as Teacher of the Year
and was the recipient of the
1986 Presidential Award for
E x c e lle n c e in S c ie n c e and
Mathematics teaching.
• Karen Glllett of Geneva
Elementary was Teacher of the
Year for Geneva and Seminole
County’s Guidance Counselor of
the Year.
• Carol Elliott o f Rock Lake
was appointed Historian for the
F lo rid a C ou n cil fo r Social
Studies.

•

Elisabeth

Collins

represented Forest City Elemen*

See GOAL, page 19

resource room, drainage, paving,
playground development: from
107 to 172; $1.1 million.
• Sabal Point — one kin­
d ergarten classro om , three
primary classrooms, small in­
termediate classroom, excep­
tional education suite, food
service, music suite, art suite,
p h ysical ed u cation facility,
landscaping, covered walks/bus
ramps, panic hardware: from
640 to 792; $1.6 million.
• Spring Lake — four kin­
d e rg a rte n c la s s ro o m s, one
primary classroom, small Inter­
mediate classroom, exceptional
education suite, art suite, music
suite, five resource rooms, phys­
ical education facility, irrigation,
paving, carpet, panic hardware
and other renovation: from 619
to 796: $1.7 million.
• S terlin g Park — five kin­
dergarten classrooms, five re­
source rooms, three ESE re­
source rooms, music suite, art
suite, food service, physical edu­
cation facility. Irrigation, panic
hardware: from 676 to 801: $1.7
million.
•

W s

k

i

—

flv#

See BOND, page 20

^ SCC students continue to rank at the
top on state wide tests
^ SCC graduates gain easy admission
to four-year universities and they're do­
ing well
^ SCC graduates are returning home to
fill key business positions and participate
in the growth and change in Seminole
County

SCC received the largest single allocation of construction monins for
community colleges from the 1986 Legislature. These funds are
being used to construct a new adult and continuing education
facility. This 66,000 square foot facility will house the Adult
High school, English Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL),
Genoral Education Diploma (GED), Community Instructional
Services (CIS), Migrant, and Leisure Time programs. In
addition, this 6.6 million dollar facility will house
Seminole County's own state-of-the-art planetarium
which will serve both educational and recreational
purposes. Shows are planned for school age
children, the general public and advanced
studies students.

^ Enrollment has increased by 14% this year
^ SCC is reaching out to the community and
forming innovative partnerships with business

SCC s new adult and continuing education
facility will house 15 labs including ceramics,
photography, science and computers, as part of
the basic high school program. Thirty classrooms
are included in the two-story structure, as well as,
a seminar room for public forums. This new facility
will face the SCC campus and replace the portables
presently in use. SCC’s adult program enjoys one of the
highest success rates in the state.

^ SCC is on the move
A n E qual A c c o s a .'E q u jl O p p o r tu n ity C o m m u n ity C o llege

It in -

�I

...G o al
Continued from page 18
tary as Teacher o f the Year and
District Elementary Teacher of
the. Year.
• Jon Fensch of Lawton
Elementary participated In a
teacher exchange program amd
spent two weeks teaching and
teaming at Chapman ELcmentary In the Kenal Peninsula of
Alaska.
o Kny Buckner of Lyman
High School was selected to be
honored at the Third Annual
Central Florida Awards Program
for Excellence In Economic Edu­
cation.
• Potty Klmbel, second
grade teacher at Wclflva Ele­
mentary, was named the 1986
Recipient of the "Celebrate Lit­
eracy" Award for outstanding
local achievement in promoting
literacy.

•

Ri char d J. Johnson,

carpentry teacher at Lyman
H ig h S c h o o l w as s e le c te d
Seminole County’s Teacher of
the Year.

«

Group Achievements
• Jackson Heights Middle
School was selected as one of
•Florida representatives In the
N ation al Elem entary School
Recognition Program and was
later named National Model of
E x c e lle n c e . S c h o o l r e p r e ­
sentatives participated in a reeo g n l t i o n p r o g r a m In
Washington, D.C.. In September.
, • T h e Lake Howell High
School band was selected as
F lo r id a 's r e p re s e n ta tiv e to
m arch in the 1985 M acy's
Thanksgiving parade.
• Responding to the Jan. 28,
1986, Challenger shuttle trage­
dy. Seminole County students
mailed 5,000 cards and letters to
Concord High School in New
Hampshire, the school where
space-teacher Cljrlsta McAullffc
taught. Additionally, more than
$2,900 has been raised to fund a
perm anent m em orial to the
shuttle crew. This "Reach for
the Stars Memorial Display" will
become part of the Student
Museum.

On The American College Test tied for third place In the state
outstanding service dedicated to of Seminole's 42 schools, with
(ACT)
Seminole students scored among fifth graders tested, tied
helping learning-disabled stu­ membership increasing by more
an
average
of 20.3 compared to for fourth place In the state
than
1,000
over
last
year.
dents at Woodlands Elementary.
among eighth graders tested and
the national average of 18.6.
The PTA presented programs
In other areas o f citizen in­
On both tests Seminole stu­ tied for second place In the state
volvem ent, citizens w ork as on drug abuse, latchkey children
d e n t s e x c e e d e d n a t i o n a l among 10th graders tested.
members of advisory com m it­ and the efforts o f M.A.D.D.
averages for the fifth consecutive
Students must pars both sec­
tees, the PTA. and athletic and ( M o t h e r s A g a i n s t D r u n k
tions o f the SSAT to receive a
year.
music booster clubs.
Drivers).
Sem inole County also ad ­ high school diploma. Students
Another citizen help group Is
Local school advisory com ­
m inisters the State Student who do not pass are awarded a
mittees at each school are made Involved in the Business and
Assessment Test (SSAT) to stu­ certificate o f Completion In lieu
up of people who are dedicated E d u c a t i o n P a r t n e r s I n
dents In third, fifth, eighth and o f a d ip lo m a . D u rin g the
to public education, parents, Excellence Program in which
1985-86 school year, 99.5 per­
10th g r a d e s , d e s ig n e d to
administrators and others, all area businesses contribute to the
measure performance o f state- ce n t o f S e m in o le students
working together to advise prin­ educational process by sharing
determ ined skills, the S S A T earned a diploma.
cipals in such areas as school In programs and projects with
Part of this academic success
helps to Identify student educa­
the schools.
an nual re p o rts , b u d g e ts ,
might
be attributed to atten­
tional
needs
and
indicates
where
enrichment programs, growth
program improvements might dance. Seminole County schools
Academic Record
challenges and school needs.
boast a 95.3 percent attendance
Seminole Schools are proud of be necessary.
There is also a county-wide
rate am ong students. School
Part
II
of
the
SSAT
measures
School Advisory Council. This their academic performance re­
the students’ ability to apply officials attribute this "outstand­
group helps foster communica­ cord. Mrs. Coleman said. A
tion among the Individual school common measure o f this Is academic skills and knowledge ing” rate to "the motivation of
our students, the exceptional
to solylng real-life problems.
advisory groups. It w as In ­ students’ performance on the
teachers and programs In our
Sem inole County students'
strum ental in 1986 in the Scholastic Aptitude Test, a na­
passage of the $105 million bond tional college entrance exam. scores on the SSAT and SSAT schools, supportive parents and
parent groups and a well-defined
Part II ranked con sisten tly
Issue to pay for additions and Sem inole seniors rep eated ly
and
fair attendance policy.”
higher
than
those
of
students
in
renovations that wilt help bring exceed state, regional and na­
neighboring counties, school
tional averages on the SAT,
40 of Seminole County's 42
district records show. And In
Personnel
schools up to minimum state school board reports show.
Citizen Involvement
Seminole County schools de­
standards, build a new elemen­
In 1986, the 1,139 Seminole every Instance, students' scores
surpassed the state average for pend on the talent and dedica­
In 1986. more than 3,000 tary school, purchase a site for a students who took the S A T
tion o f 4.243 employees. About
volu n teers helped Sem inole new high school and build a scored an average o f 931, thir­ th e percentage o f stu d en ts
2,256 teachers and counselors
students in the classroom or transportation services center.
teen points higher than in 1985. mastering all skills.
provided special programs. Un­
Moreover. In 1986. Seminole guide the academic progress and
The Parent-Teachers Associa­ Moreover, the score was seven
plan curriculum for students;
der the direction of Dede Schaf- tion promotes the safety and
points higher than the average C ounty students taking the
fner, volunteers gave more than welfare of all children. More than
score across the nation and 29 SSAT tied for fourth place In the
See G O AL, page 20
state among third graders tested.
176,000 hours of their time and 13,000 people Joined PTAs In 34 points above the Florida average.
presented more than 2.227 pro­
grams. In recognition of this
dedication, the district's Divi­
dends program has been the
recipient of the prestigious Na­
tional Apple Tree Award for top
p a r e n ta l I n v o lv e m e n t and
enrichment o f Its schools.
Dividend volunteers donated
more than $1.75 million worth
of services in 1986. Thirty-one
schools earned the Golden Apple
Award given annually by the
Florida Department o f Education
T h e teachers, adm inistrators, staff a n d S ch ool Board o f Sem inole C ou n ty's s ch oo l system b elieve
for outstanding school volunteer
th at sch ools m ake a difference In in d iv id u a ls ’ lives, in the life o f the com m u n ity , and in the future
programs.
o f th e nation. Public education Is the m o s t o p tim is tic o f endeavors. Its corn erston e Is the b e lief that
More than 225 D ividends
e a ch person can learn, and that w e h a v e the a b ility, indeed the res p o n s ib ility, to help each person
served more than 200 hours
b e co m e an inform ed participant in o u r society.
each In their respective schools.
Approximately 764 volunteers
T o g e th e r, citizen s throughout S em in o le C ou n ty h a ve w orked together to add ress that respon sibili­
helped listen to 51,466 "book
ty.
T each ers, support staff, adm inistrators, bu siness leaders and other interested c itize n s have helped
chats" in 10 schools as part of
m
a
k e ou r school system a m odel o f ed u cation al excellen ce for our 42.000 students.
Seminole County’s reading in­
centive program.
D ividend Veda Blake was
chosen as Seminole County's
Dividend of the Year for her

• The Lake Brantley High
School newspaper. The Brantley
Banner, was selected as a first
place winner In a national Judg­
ing by the American Scholastic
Press Association.
• S em in ole C ounty's bus
drivers won the second place
award at the Florida School Bus
Drivers’ Road-e-o. Bonnie Selph,
Sem inole County school bus
driver, was named top driver In
the state.
• Bob McGrath, host of Sesa­
me Street, visited and enter­
tained three Seminole County
elementary schools' pupils as
part of the Reading Incentive
Program sponsored by Friendly
Restaurants.
• Sem inole County's food
service em ployees served an
average of 24,913 meals per
school day.
Participation In the school
lunch program increased, re­
quiring no subsidy from the
school district's budget.

|

We M ak
A D iffe re n c e

A "■ We H a n d le D e lic a te
M attel* With D ig n ity ...
O ur re p u ta tio n is based on
understanding and concern in
a tim e of need. We co m p ly
w ith special wishes w ith o u t
financial burden.
A ll F aith s

M E E T IN G T H E N E E D O F
E V E I t 1' F A M I L Y

• Pre-Meed Planning • Local Burial
• O u t O f S ta te T ra n s fe r • C rem atio n
• Burial In A ll M ilita ry C em eteries

PH. 834-8550

G IG G ram k ow -G ain es
Funeral Hom e
LOCALLY OWNED &amp; OPERATED

150 DOG T R A C K RD . - LO NG W O O D

W SLdt
te fr

BLAIR AGENCY

+*■

A
Specialists In
Automobile Insurance
SR 22’s Filed
Good Rates For Young Drivers
Reasonable Down Payment

323-7710
323-3060
2510 S O U T H O A K A V E .
SANFORD.

T h e Sch ool B o ard
of
S e m in o le C o u n ty
F o r m o r e in f o r m a t io n a b o u t o u r
s c h o o l s y s te m , c a ll th e C o m m u n it y
R e la t io n s D e p a r t m e n t a t 3 2 2 - 1 2 5 2 .

/ a

�Education
••.G o a l.

o f the dedication to excellence
among Seminole County teach­
ers was 1986 Teacher of the
Year Richard J. Johnson.

Continued from page 10
184 administrators manage the
schools and plan their budgets;
164 I n s t r u c t io n a l s u p p o rt
personnel aid teachers; 1.639
support and service employees
m an s c h o o l b u ild in g s and
grounds, serve meals and drive
school buses.
’ ’ T o g e t h e r t h e s e 4 .2 4 3
e m p l o y e e s e n d e a v o r fo r
excellence In our schools," says
the districts annual report for
1986.
Of the teachers. 1.320 hold
b a c h e lo r d egrees, 879 hold
master degrees. 47 have ob­
tained specialist degrees, and 10
have doctorates. The average
number of years’ teaching expe­
rience among them is 9.9.
In 1986 teachers spent 82.829
hours in seminars, workshops
and conferences to upgrade their
professional skills.

Top Teacher
Recognized as a top example

...Bond
Continued from page 18
d e rg a rte n classro om s: food
service; teachers loungc/dinlng.
physical education facility, fire
alarms; from 704 to 810; SI
million.
• W ilson — five kindergarten
c l a s s r o o m s , s ix p r im a r y
classrooms, eight Intermediate
classrooms, exceptional educa­
tion suite, student personnel
area, teachers’ loungc/dinlng.
central receiving facility, ad­
ministrative suite, small Inter­
mediate classroom, art suite,
music suite, food service, media
c e n te r, m u ltlpu rposc/stage.
physical educatlqp facility, pav­
ing. heating and air conditioning
and other renovation; from 225
to 792: $4 million.

Johnson teaches carpentry at
Lyman High School. In a letter of
recommendation for Johnson.
Lyman Principal Carlton Henley
wrote:
"T h e learning experience Mr.
Johnson provides for his stu­
dents Is unparalleled. He has the
unique ability to command re­
spect and instill a belief in each
student that he or she has the
worth and ability to master
skills."
J o h n s o n ’ s c la ssro om was
called a model for learning,
productivity, sclf-prldc and pride
In one's work.
Johnson grew up in Winter
Haven, performing usual home
repairs and attending Industrial
education classes In Junior and
senior high school. At Tuskcgce
Institute he earned his Bachelor
of Science degree while acting as
assistant to one of his professors.
After graduating he entered
private industry, but was drawn

to teaching.
J o h n s o n h a s 25 y e a r s ’
teaching experience, more than
11 of that at Lyman.
" I fe e l m y g r e a t e s t a c ­
complishment In education,"
Johnson wrote, "has been my
ability to teach students to
develop self-dlscipllne; lo con­
tinue and complete their educa­
tion: to learn to work together
toward a common goal; and to
Instill In the students the Im­
portance of developing pride In
their work."
In addition to his exceptional
classroom Instruction. Johnson
remains an active participant In
school and community projects.
He has participated In numerous
In-service seminars earning 149
In-service points. He developed a
course outline for low perfor­
mance students and those con­
tem platin g d rop pin g out o f
school.
U n d e r h is s u p e r v i s i o n .
J o h n s o n ’ s s tu d e n ts h a ve
participated In the construction
of portable classroom buildings
and mumcrous campus building
Improvements, saving the school

district thousands of dollars with
their practical application o f
skills learned In his classes.
Superintendent o f Schools
Robert Hughes’ said Johnson is
"an excellent representative of
education’s progress toward the
goal of preparing students to be
productive citizens."
Johnson was awarded $500
from the Florida Department of
Education and received an addi­
tional $500 award of recognition
from R ed L o b s te r Inns o f
America.

Further Information about the
Seminole County school district
or any of Its programs may be
obtained by calling the county
office at 322-1252. The following
specific offices may be reached
at that number and the following
extensions: School assignment,
ext. 205; exceptional education,
ext. 284; vocational education,
etx. 240; management Informat l o n s e r v i c e s , e x t . 33 1;
personnel, ext. 212; stafT devel­
opment. ext. 329; testing In­

formation. ext. 325, curriculum
coordinators, ext, 303, 275. or
321; public information, ext.
364,342. or 330.
In addition. Information may
be obtained on career education
at 365.5611: migrant education
at 322-4415; foreign student
registration, 260-8380; the
Environmental Center, 3210452; food service, 323-4220;
the Student Museum, 322-1942;
transportation. 831-3868; Divi­
dends (school volunteers) 834*
8211.

Tru Dimensions
Printing
See Us For A L L Your Printing Needst
Quality - Selection - Affordable Prices

expanded media center, paving, room." said Mrs. Coleman.
c o v e r e d w alks/bu s ram ps,
"M a k e no m is t a k e ." she
carpet, heating and alrcondl- added.
"W e 'r e not making
Honing and other renovation: Cadillacs of all the schools.
from 683 to 796; $1.1 million.
Wc'rc Just bringing all of them
The capital Im provem ents up to minim um state stan­
may in some cases be modified dards."
To date, architects have been
at the request of Individual
school administrators, teachers hired for projects at Geneva.
C a s s e l b e r r y . W ils o n a n d
and parents.
"For Instance, they may de­ Woodlands clcm cntarles and
cide they need a computer lab construction plans are ready to
more than a home cc. child care go out for bids. —Diane Petryk

IT !

• Wedding Invitations
&amp; announcements

• Tickets, door hangers
flyers

• Raised &amp; embossed
stationery

• Typesetting, artwork
&amp; bindery

• Books &amp; booklets

• Advertising specialties

TRU-DIMENSIONS PRINTING

10%

O FF

Wedding Invitations &amp;
Announcements with this ad

• W inter Springe — five
kindergarten classrooms, music
suite, art suite, exceptional edu­
cation suite, food service, teach­
er loungc/dinlng. physical cdu- .
cation, five resource rooms, fenc­
ing, panic hardware; from 650 to
797; $1.9 million.

1 6 2 4 N . S .R . 4 2 7 (B ayw ood Business C tr.)
Longw ood, FL

339-6062

• Woodlands — five kin­
dergarten classrooms, music
suite, art suite, expanded kitch­
en, expanded administration
area, physical education facility.

Need Not Be Expensive - Choose From 200 Fashon Frames
★ Your Doctor's Prescriptions Filled * Glasses Duplicated
★ Tints &amp; Photo Grey Available * FREE Adjustments

BUDGET €l riCAl
SE R V IN G SANFO RD SINCE 1979

2 5 4 4

U n ib e d W

S. French Ave. (Hwy.
Sanford

-

1 7 9 2

)

MON.. TUES., THORS., FRl. 9-5
WED., SAT. 9-1
CLOSED LAST SAT OF EACH MONTH

a y

P H O N E 3 2 3 -8 0 8 0

D o your troubles
come in bunches?
N ever fear.

W IL L IA M L. GRAM KO W
L.F.D.

Serving The Area
Since 1956
In d iv id u a l

You can set them
right in a hurry. By
making sure you’re
covered through an
independent insurance
agent.
W e ’re experts on
trouble. And we’re
available day and
night to give you pro­
fessional service and
help you with your
claims.

K AR N S
IN S U R A N C E
A

6 E N

6 Y

inc

Serving Sanford Since 1949
“ Where Quality Sells &amp; Service Tells ’ ’
413 W . First S treet
San ford, Florida Dial 322-5762

A t t e n t io n ...

U n d e r s t a n d in g
Y ou h ave the right to e xp ect consideration , concern
an d care. And It's our tradition to p ro vid e them . W c
g iv e thoughtful respect to a fa m ily ’s e v e ry wish.

G ra m k o w

JA M ES E. SC H U IT EM AN
L.F.D.

If we can’t
help you, nobody
can.

funeral ho m e
3 2 2 -3 2 1 3
130 W. A irport Blvd.
Sanford

William H. “Bill” Wight C.P.C.U.
President

Robert E. “ Bob” Karns
Vice President

�fa r*

PHONC 323•BBSfi

e

S U M M II

B &amp; L AIR-CONDITIONING
&amp; HEATING SERVICE, INC.
• TATI CIHTlPtaO

St ruing Stminolt County
ROBERT L. D O N A LD SO N

U * H (MIT)

r o t r oeeica

bo*

•••

l.HI MART. FLORIDA »»»«•

d e f i- 'f f c u t d e d

and

%c.
208 NORTH COUNTRY CLUB ROAD
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA 32748
ETTIE JANE KEOQH
PRESIDENT

RICHARD KEOQH
322-8035

B U B * MOT OB C O LD
R IB ■ ¥■ B T I A K
■ FAG HG TYI • L A IA O M A . A N T IP A S T O * C H IU
B A N -S -Q R IB S • H A M B U R G !* . T O ! B ID S A LA O
P I Z I A S • P IZ Z A BR S A O • GARLIC B R IA O

s ta v e ic e ca tA M
- aundaas, floats, shakas, cones

soft

( f y c S e v tftfo
2 3 7 N. CO U N TR Y C LU B R O AD
L A K S M A R Y . F L O R ID A 3 3 7 -4 6
R O SS SELO C K

Lake Mary Is Located Between Sanford And Orlando In The Heart
Of Seminole County. It Is Easily Accessible From 17-92 And I-4. It
Currently Boasts A Population Of Approximately 4,100. Lake Mary
City Limits Encompasses A Total Of 9 Square Miles, Has Two
Beaches, Eight City Parks Which Include A “Tot Lot*’ With
Playground Equipment And 3 Parks Equipped With Picnic Tables,
And Has Been Incorporated Since 1973. The Community Center Is
Completed And Available For Use By The Community.
There Are Various Active Clubs And Organizations In Lake Mary.
Because Of Our Central Location, Shopping Plazas And Malls Are
Easily Within Our Reach. Close By Are Magnolia Square, Driftwood
Village, The New Shoppes Of Lake Mary, Sanford Plaza, Longwood
Village, Seminole Plaza, Altamonte Mall And Interstate Mall To Name
A Few. Lake Mary Also Has Two Banks, Many Businesses And
Several Major Industries. Cardinal Oaks, The Crossings, Groveview
Village, Country Downs, And Others Still In The Planning Stages,
Offer Housing Possibilities.

First Presbyterian Church
Of Lake Mary
128 WILBUR AVE.
A.F. Stevens, Pastor
John H. Jackson, Assoc. Pastor
Sunday W orship
11:00
C hoir Practice
Wed.
Youth C hoir
Thurs.
Youth Group
Sun. eve 6:00
Church School
Sun.

caU - - 3 2 2 - 2 6 3 3

F IN IS S S L O C X

W HO LBSALS

R B T A IL

321-1021

L A N D S C A P IN G

B u s in e s s in l a m b
1 B T A B U S H S O IN IS 3 S

O A . S M IT H
1 1 1 .S T B S

mart

L A K IV IS W AVENUE
L A K E M A R Y . PL.

o u le e a r J

A ffa ir

CD&gt;e

(4U7)

2S4 W LAKE M ARY BLVD
LAKE M ARY. FL 12746

BONDED

120 East Lake Mary Blvd., Leasing Office
Lake Mary, Florida 32746

KEVIN S LOCK &amp; SAFE

C H IL D

C A R E

LOCK C SAFE W O R K

3 2 2 -0 7 8 7

• QUALITY CARE
• FULL OR PART DAY
• BEFORE AFTER SCHOOL
PROGRAM C TRANSPORTATION
• CERTIFIED TEACHERS
» STATE IC1NSED - I 1 8 - 7
6 :0 0 AM — 6 :0 0 PM

I

Lake Mery, on 46A
at Rinehart Rd,,
Since 1934

322-1950

549 W. LAKE MARY BLVD., LAKE MARY

ne-ROOFING C REPAIRS
W O R K H A N D - N A IL E D • N O W O R K R O O F
A L L W O R K M A N S H IP G U A R A N T E E D

OVRRS

L IB E R A T O R E R O O F I N G , IN C .
S u r e CCDflf ICAttON No C C 3 6 9 6 8
L IC E N S E D - B O N D E D - IN S U R E D
18 Y E A R S E X P E R IE N C E

F R A N K L IB E R A T O R S
OW NER

RESIDENT CENTRAL
FLORIDA as YEARS

T e a B IG T R E S C R O S S IN G
s u it e
io a
L O N G W O O D . F L O R IO A 3 3 7 B O

Lake Mary Com m unity Bldg.
260 N. Country Club Road
Lake Mary, Fla.

SUNDAY SCHOOL G MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE
9:30 A.M.

PASTOR PAUL HOYER
(305) 3 2 2 -2 5 5 2
3 2 1 -7 7 9 7

LAX* MAKV nom O A

FRAN NEVILLE -OWWR

305-322-1162

OFFERING:
CONSULTATION
ENERGY CONSERVATION
SOLAR TECHNIQUES
ADDITIONS RENOVATIONS

with tim ely, personalized service...

custom home designs

U tic .

Family Hair Care

Of Lake Mary

.M O .I
3 2 3 -5 5 9 5

ELLIOTT/HALL. INC.
Post Office Box 3503
Lake Mary, Florida 32746

A n tA c n /it J

HolylkCross Lutheran Church
760 Sun Drive
Lake Mary, FL 3 2 7 4 6

LAKE MARY, fLORCA S M B

Tpke'Rtary* F l ~32746*_ 7 ;'

323-3200

(109) J 2 J -4 2 IJ

L o cated o lf 1 4 In

Lake Mary Lawn and Garden Equipment
lia HIT C«Itr«L LAK* AvtNUI

C SINGLE FAMILY
DUPLEXES
TOWNHOUSES
CUSTOM/STOCK PLANS

s

REV. ROBERT M. ANDERSON
VICAR

CREATOR

, j L ‘, a — -

e

FLORIDA INC.,REALTORS

OAKLAWN MEMORIAL PARK
* full Service At O n e L o c a tio n "

1ALB« * P48T1 R6P4 Id *

:

t

St. Peters Episopal Church

CUSTOM PERNS. CUTS, COLORS
MAMOJRES S SCULPTURED NAAS

H in g - l o

a

F u m r a l H o m e • C em etery • F lo ris t S h o p

• EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS FOR 1 9 YEAR OLDS

’ AUetfi flJaisstijCisg is ns l A»I

233 N. COUNTRY CLUB RO.
LAKE MARY. FI 32748

3 2 3 -4 1 2 0
M O B ILE SE R VIC E

K EV IN GREENE

d te utaO te}

R IC K &amp; L IN D A T E E T E R

U.5.N. Rsl.

«va• i«caa

TORO • HAHN - BOBCAT - ROPER
ECHO - POWER TRIM . MC LANE

165 H COUNTRY CLUB ROM)

0 . R. McBRAYER

L IC E N S E D

M A lT fS
m L O C K i n IT

LAKE MARY BLVD. TO 7TH ST.

322*7691

S E M IN O L E TV

# 1 In Th e S o u th

P.O. BOX 458
165 N. COUNTRY CLUB ROAD
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA 32746

• PHE-KINDERGARTEN
3 3 1 • Lair

TV BALKS * SlftVICI

BUSINESS FOAMS • BUSINESS CAADS - LETTERHEADS
WEDDINQ INVITATIONS - SOCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

• INFANTS THRU 11
n g n e rt

(305) 323-8010

lOO N. C O U N T R Y CLUB R OAD
LA KE M A R Y . FLORIDA 3 2 7 4 0

The Richard Roberts Group, Inc.
Licensed Real Estate Broker

A

774-fKWUG

L A K E M A R Y TV

Naomi W allace
JeeU eb ert
Fran Nevillo
Joe Vaughar
Gina Venings

Rev. Bob Anderson
D elores lash
Buzz Petsos
Bud Rsihl
Rose Seiock

E a c h O ffic e n In d e p e n d e n t s O w n e d a n d O p e ra te d

S IM IN O L E

Call 774-5945

DIRECTORS

Commercial Printers
(305) 322.7351

(305) 323-2165

S la t* Lie * C P C 02U I8

Specializing In
PROFESSIONAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

INK SPOT, INC.

SUSAN E. WARREN
Lie. Real Estate Associate
Property Manager / Leasing Agent
FOR LEASING INFO CALL

P.O. BOX 3711
525 W. LAKE MARY BLVD.
LAKE MARY, FL 32746

Jonnia L. Butler

f

Zhe Shoppes at take M ary

THOMAS Q. ROSSER
305-321-5111

A rthur “ S u n ” Petsos, President
Fran N evlik, Vice President
Rose Seiock, Secretary
Karen Seel, Treasurer

JUNE C. PORZIG
Broker

OF CENTRAL FLORIDA, INC.

235 North Country Club Road
Lake Mary, Florida 32746
305/323-2959

OFFICERS

J U N E PORZIG REALTY. INC.
The Shoppes at Lake Mary
120 East Lake Mary Boulevard. Suite 116
Lake Mary, Florida 32746
Business
322-8678
______ (305)
305) 3_
Residence (305) 322-932)

C ry s ta l Lake N ursery
o lo sst

[1

&amp; *?2I

P L A N T S • T R IB S - S H R U BS
7 0 .0 0 0 PLANTS

a.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
p.m.
9:45a.m.

Energy Property
Monogement Services, Inc.

Redlon Nursery

D riftw ood Village
S uite 305
549 W. Lake Mary B lvd
Lake Mary. FL 32746

(305) 3 2 3 -6 5 2 2

Is Your Homs Protected?
( K1S) 1219061
HOFFOWFR’S

DAVID A. VARBLOW
FORMERLY

C a t lu ! G a rd e n t ■ llo n s a t'i
P re -R o n t.il P la n t! and l( |m p m e n l
F lo w e rin g P la n t!

420 S C o u n tr y C l u b R d
t a k e M a ry , FL 1 2 7 4 6

VARB L O W S
LOCKS A KEYS

LAKE MARY LOCKSMITH
Locksm ilh
209 N Country Club Road
Lake Mary, FL 32746

FOR IN FO RM A T IO N ABOUT LA KE MARY, PLEASE W RITE TO:
LAKE MARY C H A M B E R OF C O M M E R C E P.O. BOX 817, LAKE MARY, FL. 32746
THIS PAGE IS SPONSORED BY THE ABOVE COMMUNITY MINDED BUSINESSES

DAVE VARBLOW
(305) 321-3232
Eva. 321-6414

�Trrr»

m w

*‘

»* •

V

Education
23—Sanford Herald A Mtrold Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Tfwmday, Fob. 34,1M7

S e m in o le C o m m u n ity C o lle g e M irro rs C o u n ty's G ro w th
By Kathy Tyrity
Herald Staff Writer
If growth can be seen anywhere In the county. It can be
seen at Seminole Community
College, according to Dr. Jim
Sawyer, vice president of student and Information services,
The school has a new southcounty campus and a new $6
million adult high school underway.
,™ fIk« T 5

So sure are school officials that
two-year degrees are the thing of
the future that they have put a
full-force effort Into reaching as
many students as possible.
"T h e main thing this year has
been the concept of the new
instructional center at U.S. 436
and Hunt Club Boulevard (near
Apopka), to be called the ‘SCC
S o u th w e s t In s tr u c tio n a l
Center,’ " Sawyer said. Reglstratlon there began Jan. 12. and
Sawyer

enrollment figures which dipped
a few years ago but are
making a c o m e b ^ _ F a li ngures
were up 14 percen
previous year and so far Winter
figures are up 6 percent over last
winter, he said.
“ This has been the year that
puts us to our high of four years
a g o ,* ’ S a w y e r said o f the
enrollment figures.

M id

the focu, them I,

JJj™
"^ c n ^ s

e s p e e f a M ? th e
S£ den ts will be
taking such courses there as
mlcroBproce98lng&gt; tax account.
J
Mtenu5nt. leisure-type
courses, dance and fitness. C re£
It and non-credit courses are
available In the five classrooms,
and you may register there for
cither campus.

h u lm anitlcs'r

“ We anticipate teaching at the
new campus six days a week
and five nights." Sawyer said.
He added he would be happy if
the new cam pu s Increased
enrollment by 500 students be­
tween now and the end o f the
fiscal year (April 30).

students as well as youth Tram
the public school system. It w ill
have a star machine and pro*
duce all the constellations. Saw ­
yer said he Is hopeful this
astronomy addition will attract
Interest from the general com ­
munity. It Is the first planetari­

um to be built In Seminole
County, he said.
Always trying to work closer
with business, he Is equally
proud o f some new develop­
ments In that area.
CM. he said, has Just identified
SCC as Its training center for the

southeast. And Mercury Marine
has chosen SCC to be a training
center for all dealers In the
Southeast, he added.
"W e're excited about that."
Sawyer said. "It should Increase
Interest In our vocational pro­
gram s."

Another achievement he Is
proud of Is the new Adult And
Continuing Education Center for
which ground was broken Jan.
15. It will serve as a regular
adult high school and also offer
leisure programs. It will also
have many classes In English for
foreign people. It will have a
total of 30 classrooms.
Sawyer said an amazing thing
at Seminole Community College
Is that they now have as many
Orientals and Aslans enrolled as
blacks, and so the need for
English classes Is Increasing.
The Adult Ed Center will also
have a planetarium to serve SCC

Like The Moon And The Stars
Our Product Shines At Night
WE MANUFACTURE MEN'S
and BOY'S

Slum berite Ii
Since 1953
Jerry Farella - Owner
402 P e c a n A v e . - S a n fo rd
H * r.W Pttofo by Tommy Vincont

Thousands of students, young and old, over th e'years have
taken advantage of Seminole Com m unity Collage's ideal
location In Sanford. Above, they line up to register for their
classes. The school has a variety of general education
courses offered for students wanting an Associate degree and
who m ay find It m ore convenient with less pressure to begin
a long college career a t the com m unity college level. SCC
students who successfully complete their education there go
on to four-year colleges and universities which recognize the
college's fine academ ic program s as having prepared
students well.

W hen Y o u T h in k O f In s u r a n c e T h ln l
T O N Y R U S S I IN S U R A N C E

O AKLAW N
F u n eral H om e

^

^

M e m o r ia l P a r k
322-4263

"FULL SERVICE AT ONE LOCATION"

Serving the needs o f the Sanford
Lake Mary Community. Providing
Strength and Dignity when you
need it m ost.

TOUT RUSSI

KIM BURKS

CHARLOTTE LEGGETTE

DCBRA STACY

We’r e ................. Working For You
O ur Entire T ea m , W o rk s T o S e rv e Y O U —
A n alyzin g Your Insurance N eeds, Planning C arefu lly,
S e le c tin g The Proper C o ve ra g e, G ettin g The B est
Rates F or Your R equirem ents W ith One O f The M any
C om panies W e Represent.

F o r C o m p le te
In s u ra n c e S e rv ic e ,
C o n ta c t U s A n d L e t
O u r T e a m W o rk F o r
Y o u r T o t a l P ro te c tio n
It D o s e n 't C o s t M ore
T o D e a l W ith
\
T h e B est
&gt;
f

LARRY MILLER
L.F.D.

ALBERT ISSACS
President

'C R A M E R ST IFF
Park Director

The Only Funeral Home/Cemetery
Combination In Seminole County
Located off 1-4 In Lake Mary, Florida
on 46A at Rinehart Road. Since 1954.

TONY R U S S I
IN S U R A N C E
Since 1968

P h on e

3 2 2 -0 2 8 5

2 5 7 5 S . F re n ch A v e .
S a n fo rd

�H*r»W photos by Tommy Vincotrt

Sanford A m trak Station where trains run regularly Greyhound Bus station a t 120 S. Park Ave., Sanford
trains leaving Sanford at about
7:20 a.m. and at about noon,
with arrival in W inter Park
within about 25 minutes.
Continued from page 17
Return trips from Winter Park
tact the transportation authority are scheduled for about 3 p.m.
and 10:20 p.m. Many take the
ofTlcc ut 628-2897 or 841 -8240.
Seminole County Is served by trip in Winter Park for a taste of
two Interstate bus lines and 37 the train rides of the past and as
trucking firms. Nationwide bus an easy entry to the Winter Park
service und Information Is avail­ Art Festival.
able through Greyhound Bus
The Sanford train station is
Lines. 120 S. Park Ave.. Sanford. located at 600 Persimmon Ave..
322-1421 and Trallways Bus and the Winter Park station Is on
Systems, 1002 S. French Ave.. Morse Boulevard, downtown In
that city. Although the Orlando
Sanford. 322-4520.
A m t r a k p a s s e n g e r tra in station Is also - downtown, on
service including Auto Train Sllgh Boulevard. It Is about a
which oilers a travel package mile from the center of the city,
from Florida to the Washington. and a bit less convenient for
D.C., area for passengers and those who might like to travel by
their cars. Is located In Sanford. train and then walk to a shop­
Amtrak trains can also be ac­ ping district.
Scheduling and rate informa­
cessed In Winter Park. Auto
tion Is available at 323-4800. An
Train ends Its run at Sanford.
Amtrak also makes two dally adult traveling to Winter Park or
roundtrlps between Sanford. Orlando from Sanford can make
W in te r P ark and O rlando, w ith
the round trip, returning within
30 days for $8 If the return' Is
made after 30 days the rate is
S10 for the roundtrlp. There arc
special family rates.
Taxi scrvlvcc for Seminole
County Is available through
C o u r te s y T a x i. 3 2 2 -5 1 2 5 :
Safe-Way Cabs. 322-1222: Trop­
ical Taxi. 321-1150: and Yellow
Cab at 425-3111.
The Port of Sanford has
direct access to the St. Johns
River, a federally controlled Intracoastal waterway.
Seminole Countlans generally
spurn com m ercial modes of
transportation In favor of the
automobile, with Interstate 4.
State Roads 434 and 436 and

...Travel
INSURANCE
AUTO

COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE!
BUSINESS AND PERSONAL
OFFICES

r :

IT

114 N. PARK AV

SANFORD FLA
MbsM *0w»•»%»

RETAIL HUSINESSES

BOAT

IN S U R E W IT H C O N F ID E N C E ! ..

322-0331

APARTMENTS A CONDOS

N vU *.

OFFICE HRS 9-5

“ S IN C E 1918

•»

- J

iM

MON — I

The Legends of Time
The Timeless Legends
Clocks have always been a popular household item but the
last twenty-five years have seen a phenomenal Increase In
the number of Grandfather clocks being sold.
All leading clock manufacturers In the United States such
as Sllgh. Seth Thomas. Howard Miller. Ridgeway, ect. import
the same high quality precision clock movements from West
Germany. The only difference Is l.t quality of design,
cabinetry, and finish. Engineered and designed to fit any
decor from period to contemporary, a clock Is a beautiful,,
functional piece o f furniture which will be a cherished
heirloom for future generations.
Your clock should come from a reputable dealer who can
be counted on for service after the sale. One such ts
Christensen's Clockworks.
A wide variety o f grandfather, wall, and mantel clocks Is
available at Christensen's Clockworks with personal delivery
and set up of floor clocks anywhere In central Florida at no
extra charge.
Christensen s Clockworks was established In 1984 by Eric
Christensen after having served a ten year apprenticeship In
clockmaking. Bud Rupert Joined the firm In 1985 after retir­
ing from Jacobson's In Longwood as manager of their fur­
niture and clock departments. Eric and Bud have a combin­
ed total of over 25 years clock repair experience, perform their
own service, and offer extended warranty periods over and
above those offered by the clock manufacturers. A full ser­
vice clockshop. Christensen's Clockworks Is capable of ex­
tensive clock repair and restoration Including house calls for
ailing grandfather clocks.

U.S. Highway 17-92 serving as
major traffic arteries.
The car Is king, with about
300.000 vehicles registered in
the county, and monies from a
slx-cent per gallon gasoline tax
are earmarked for expansion and
Improvement of the roadways.
T h e F lorida D epartm ent o f
Transportation and the county's
general fund will also fund part
of the roadwork.
About $10 million In road
Improvements were made In
1986, but the overall cost ol the
work anticipated In a five-year
plan is about $50 million.
Under the plan, major work
was com p leted In 1986 on
Oxford and Lake of the Woods
roads. East Lake Brantley and
Wcklva Springs roads, and East
Lake and Tuskaw llla roads.
Under construction arc revamps
of Maitland Avenue. Tangerine.
Dike und Howell Branch roads
and Winter Springs Boulevard at
Tuskawllla Road. W ym ore and
Lake Brantley roads arc also
under construction.
Plans arc being finalized for
work on County Road 427.
Sanford Avenue. Lake Mary.
Boulevard, State Road 434.
M arkham W o o d s and E.E.
Williamson Roads, as well as
Red Bug Lake Road from State
Road 436 to Autumn Glen. Work
on Dodd Road Is on hold,
because of a funding problem.
P la n s for the East W est
Expressway from Orlando Into
Seminole County to tie Into
Interstate 4 have not been com­
pleted und a route has not been
finalized.
—Susan Loden

p U lM B IN C
Some Things You Shouldn’t Do Yourself

LET THE EXPERTS DO IT
• A L T E R A T IO N S
L • N E W C O N S T R U C T IO N
=E • CU STO M W O RK
=
S

• R E P A IR S
• BATHROOM

=

A N D K IT C H E N

=

R E M O D E L IN G
LA TE S T STYLES
IN F IX T U R E S

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
INDUSTRIAL

P H O N E 322-3170
FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS

C h risten sen ^
[C lockw ork?
*
4 3 0

Sales &amp; Service

S a v a g e

C t.

L o n g w o o d

A L P O R Z IG
P L U M B IN G I N C ^
7 0 5 S. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD

CALL NOW
TO PLACE YOUR ADS

331-5560

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

For Fast Personal Service

�. .

►
m * i■*■»"*■■* i

T h e r e 's

a d e lic a te

b a la n c e

a p e r io d

,

t

in d u s t r ie s , w e 'll r e s o lv e
e n v ir o n m e n ta l p r o b ­

o f g r o w th
le m s

s u c h

.

d u r­
a n y

in g

.

th a t
n e w

m u s t b e p re s e rv e d

.

a s M id - F lo r id a

th a t m a y

o c c u r.

is
W e k n o w

th a t e n v ir o n ­

e x p e r ie n c in g . G r o w t h
m e n t a l p r o te c tio n
c a n

b e

is

m a n a g e d ,
n e c e s s a ry

h a rn e s s e d

to

w o r k

to

m

a in ­

to
ta in

o u r q u a lity

o f

e v e r y o n e 's b e n e f i t .
life . B u t w e
P r e s e r v in g

th e

a ls o

d e li­
r e a liz e

th a t e n v i­

c a te b a la n c e .
r o n m e n ta l p e rfe c ­

It takes pla n n in g
and control

tio n

id e a l t h a t is

D e v e lo p m e n t

a g ro u p
F lo r id a

a lly
is

B y

in d u s
a n d

im p o s s ib le .

c a re fu l p la n n in g

c o n tin u in g

c o n t r o l,

in d u s t r ia l g r o w t h

a b o u t th e

b e

a n d

b a la n c e d

c a n

w ith

e n v ir o n m e n ta l

p r o s p e r ity o f

p r o te c tio n .

C e n tra l F lo r id a
a n d

v ir t u ­

b u s in e s s

tr ie s c o n c e r n e d

—

is a n

A n eye to the
future

o f M id -

p e o p le a n d

g ro w th

a n y

c o m m u n ity

T h e In d u s tr ia l

C o m m is s io n

in

W e re

c o m m itte d

o u r

b a la n c e d

o f life .

to

a

a n d

C a re fu l p la n n in g
s o lic ita tio n

a p p ro a c h

o f c le a n ,

in d u s t r y f o r o u r a r e a
o u r c o m m itm e n t to
h e a lth y

p la c e

to

d e v e lo p m e n t a n d

s u p p o rts
k e e p

liv e

a n d

M id - F lo r id a

■m e n t a l p r o t e c t i o n

a

W e s e e k a

w o rk .

b lo s s o m s

A healthy e c o n o m y benefits every o n e
a t it s
A

h e a lth y

id e n t s , le s s

e c o n o m y

in fla tio n

th a t e x te n d s
A

h e a lth y

to

e v e ry

in d u s t r ie s s u p p ly in g

m u n ity

a n d

b e n e fitin g
is

d e p e n d s o n

u s

o f liv in g

in

n e w c o m e r

o f n e w jo b s
in to

e a c h

o u r c o m ­

c o u n tle s s

n o t w ith o u t

o th e r

it s p r o b le m s ,

th e

ta x

th e

M id - F lo r id a .

w h e re

in d u s t r y

e n v ir o n m e n t, n o t

d o lla r s g e n e r a te d

Pla n n in g helps u s keep our balance
b a la n c e . A

b y

c le a n

to

b a la n c e

a n d p ro g re s s

a n d

o f c le a n , d e s ir a b le
s it e p l a n n i n g

a n d

m a in ta in in g

o f in d u s t r y

q u a lity

o f life .

th e

a n d

d e lic a te

e n v ir o n m e n t

T h e s o lic ita tio n

in d u s tr y , c o u p le d

w ith

p r e p a r a t io n , r e a f f ir m s

c a re fu l
th a t

c o m m it m e n t . O u r in d u s t r ia l d e v e lo p m e n t m u s t
b e b a la n c e d

blew industry ca n b e the a n sw er
T h ro u g h

w ith in

e n v ir o n -

e x p e n s e .

W e re c o m m itte d

o f o u r liv e s .

o f d o lla r s

c lim a te

in

in d u s tr ia l

fo r a ll o u r re s ­

b e tte r q u a lity

h u n d re d s

m illio n s

w a y s . B u t g r o w th

a

a re a

e c o n o m y

y e a r, p u m p in g

m e a n s jo b s

a n d

to

p ro g re s s

in

to

m e e t th e

n e e d s

M id - F lo r id a . A n d

Industrial
Development Commission
0/ Mid-Florida, Inc.
P.O. Box 2144, Orlando, FL 32802
Seruing Orange and Seminole Counties

o f b o th

p la n n in g

life
is

a n d

th e

k e y .

•

•

-

�Spotlight On Progress Seminole

911
T u rn

A

K ey
In

Law

E n fo rc e m e n t
By Busan Loden
Herald Staff Writer
It was a major switch for law
enforcement agencies and public
safety officials when the 911
emergency telephone system,
through which all calls for help
are channeled, went on line In
Seminole County In late October
1986.
To help man that system 10
new dispatchers were added to
the stall of Seminole County
SherlfTJohn Polk.
Another big shift for some of
the same agencies will the the
completion of an 800 megahertz
radio and microwave system,
expected to be on line at the
sheriff s department this year.
The $5.5 million system will
Increase radio transmission clar­
ity and channel availability for
the sheriff and the county public
safety departments assigned to
the system.
Police agencies as well as fire
departments have been Invited
to link into this radio stystem.
Altamonte Springs. Casselberry.
Oviedo and Sanford police have
expressed interest In upgrading
their radio com m u nications
systems with such a tie-in.
Longwood police calls are al­
ready dispatched through the
sheriffs department and will
automatically be included.
Seminole County Is served by
the Seminole County Sheriffs
Department, with a staff o f 365.

Including 158 sworn officers.
That department operates with
an annual budget about Just
over $13 million.
Those changes In the com ­
munication networks mark the
biggest shifts for the sheriffs
department, while the depart­
ment's public services remained
basically the same.
Like area police agencies,
sheriffs deputies also participate
In Neighborhood Watch pro­
grams. The sheriff provides 78
school crossing guards, not
c o u n t e d In t h e
overall
employment figure. The sheriff
also has assigned several depu­
ties to duty In area middle
schools as school resource of­
ficers.
New In 1986 was a $40,000
especially equipped truck for the
SW AT (Special Weapons and
Tactics) team. And for the first
y e a r e v e r three A lta m o n te
Springs policem en and tw o
Sanford police officers Joined
sheriffs deputies and Longwood
police to supply manpower for
the 11-year-old; 15-man, SW A T
team.
Coming In 1986 patrol depu­
ties will work under the "Indian­
apolis Plan." meaning they will
be able to take their patrol cars
home with them at night.
The sheriffs department also
oversees the Seminole County
See KEY,

26

Horokl Photo by Tommy Vlnctnt

The Seminole County Sheriff's Departm ent Dispatcher, Janita
"P in k y " H arper uses 911 System a t Communication Center

1987 S h o u ld S e e S e v e ra l M a jo r P ro jec ts C o m p le te d
By Kathy Tyrlty
Herald Staff W riter
In 1987, Sem inole County
should sec the fruits of much
labor on the part of county
commissioners and officials, said
C ou n ty A d m in is tr a to r Ken
Hooper.
Here are the areas In which
you can look for "concrete”
results In the months ahead,
according to Hooper.
• Maitland Avenue is under
construction. This thoroughfare
will be widened to four lanes all
the way from Orange County to
State Road 436. and will be
completed in 1987.
• Road Programs — The
county commission has directed
that the county enter Into bon­
ding for local option gas tax for
m ajor c on stru ctio n , m ain ly
widening, of: Red Bug. Lake
Mary Boulevard, segments of
State Road 427. and right of way
for expansion of these 10 pro­
jects to be partially funded by
developers' impact fees: Red Bug
Lake Road, from Eagle Circle to
Dodd Road: Red Bug Lake Road
from Dodd Road to Tuskawilla
Road; County Road 427 from
S.R. 436 to 434: County Road
425 from Lake Mary Blvd. Ext.
to Airport Blvd.: Lake Mary Blvd.
from 1-4 to Rinehart Road: laike
Mary Blvd. from U.S. Highway
17-92 to Sanford Ave.: Lake
Mary B lvd . from M arkham

Woods Road to 1-4 (Collector):
Lake Mary Blvd. from Country
Club Road to U.S. Highway
17-92: and Red Bug Lake Road
from Tuskawilla Road to S.R.
426 (Collector).
• New Expressway — The
Seminole County Expressway
Authority received grants from
the F lorid a D ep artm en t o f
Transportation to do an align­
ment and right-of-way study for
a new expressway to go through
Seminole County from State
Road 426 north lo Interstatc-4.
This study Is lo be completed by
July 1987. The funding covers
preliminary engineering for the
segment up to Lake Jeaup "and
p robably across the lak e.*’
Hooper said.
• W ater and Sewer — The
c o u n ty has p e r m itte d th e
expansion on Iron Bridge Re­
gional Plant and will receive 7
million gallons of new sewer
capacity. Construction should be
completed in 18 months.
The county has also completed
its p lan fo r e x p a n s io n o f
G reen w oo d Lakes S ew a ge
Treatment Plant to be under
construction by April or May.
The plant, with capacity of 1.5
million gallons per day. will be
increased to 3.5 million gallons
per day.
At Yankee Lake Regional Sew­
age Treatment Plant, the county
has completed engineering plans

and Is submitting for permits,
with construction to be com­
pleted by the end of 1987. Phase
one is for 5 million gallons with
ultimate sizing up to 40 million
gallons. Hooper said plans arc
now In place to handle sewage
capacity through the year 2005.
The board has also authorized
water and sewer revenue bonds
(up to $40 million) to fund
construction and expansion of
these sewer plants.
In other achievements In the
past year the county:

sales tax on the bonded portion.
Various police departments In
the county plan to use the
communications system.

• Approved construction
contracts for libraries —
The county approved contracts
for new libraries in Sanford and
Oviedo, and plans arc to contract
th e o t h e r t h r e e s i t e s
(Casselberry, Lake Mary and
F orest C ity ) by A p ril. The
county's five new libraries were
funded under a $7.5 million
bond issue passed three years
• Completed Installing the ago.
911 emergency system —
• Authorised four Impact
— The county came on line with fees — The board authorized
its Enhanced-911 System In preparation of four impact fees:
October at a cost of $700,000 in transportation: parks; libraries
capital funding which was met and fire. New development will
by an !8-mouth surcharge of be assessed to pay for these
50-cents per line (PER LINE OF services. Studies were done and
W HAT? ) per mouth. Mainte­ the county Is In the process of
nance of the system is expected reviewing these. Hooper said he
to cost $300,000 per year, which expects all the impact fee ordi­
will come out of the county's nances will be adopted within
two months.
general fund.
• Approved purchase of a
• "P riv a tis e d " services to
county-wide communication save money — In 1986, the
system — The county approved county entered Into privatization
purchase of an 880-megahertz of various functions of county
trunking system to serve all government including security,
types of communications needs c le a n in g , h e a tin g and air— police, fire, dispatch, roads, conditioner repair, vehicle main­
refuse, etc. This will replace the tenance (of heavy equipment)
m ic r o w a v e s y s te m and Is and leasing of heavy equipment.
expected to lie on line by July.
Continued on page 29
Funding will be by a $5.5 million

SC C B e g in s N ew
N u rsin g P rogram
By Kathy Tyrlty
Herald Staff Writer
High school graduates who
want to become nurses now
can plan on going to Seminole
Community College for all of
their training, whether they
want to be licensed practical
nurses or registered nurses.
In the past. SCC offered RN
associate degree training only
to those who already had their
LPN certificate, but a grass­
roots effort by area hospitals
which faced severe nursing
shortages yielded a 8210,000'
grant that made the complete
course available. You can now
get your two-year RN training
at SCC with no other nursing
background.
The LPN course takes 11
months: the RN associate de­
gree program takes a total of
two years, and to upgrade from
LPN to RN with an associate
degree, will take 11 months.
Gloria Pickar. director of
vocation al curriculum and
special projects at SCC. said
the expanded nursing program
will be a "point of Information"
on tonight's board of trustees'
agenda.
In all. the nursing program
will be expanded from a total of
50 students a year to 102

students — and 30 of those will
be beginners. Ms. Pickar said
recruitm ent efforts w ill be
started shortly In area high
schools, and the first class
under the expanded program
can begin in August.
Anyone Interested in being a
nurse or upgrading to RN is
asked to call SCC Nursing
Education Office at 323-1450.
The Florida State Board of
Nursing approved the program
Friday, shortly after the hospi­
tals agreed upon the grant.
Hospitals participating are:
Central Florida Regional Hospi­
tal: the three Florida Hospitals
including Florida HospltalAltam onte; South Seminole
Community Hospital and West
Lake Hospital In Longwood.
"T h e opportunities today for
nurses arc greater than they
have ever been." Ms. Pickar
said. "Nurses work not only In
hospitals but in community
clinics and in home health
c a r e . But u n fo r t u n a t e ly ,
women arc choosing some of
the other fields of interest,
when nursing Is still a won­
derful opportunity.”
N u rs e s can m ak e g o o d
money ns LPNs. RNs and even
go a step further and become
Continued on page 26

N e w c o m e r s To S e m in o le W ill Find A b u n d a n c e O f C h u rc h e s
•

Herald Photo by Tommy Vincent

The Rev. John Bluett, pastor of St. Stephen's
Catholic Church, W inter Springs, ponders

church
A p ril.

construction

com pletion

set

for

By Jane Casselberry
Herald Religion Editor
With the population of the area growing, new
churches are springing up to help meet the
spiritual needs of the newcomers. New congrega­
tions are forming by a variety of denominational
and non-denomlnatlonal groups, new facilities
are being built, and older churches are expand­
ing. renovating and some even relocating to keep
up with the changing times.
One of Central Florida’s biggest and newest
Catholic churches is St. Stephen's Catholic
Church in Winter Springs.due for completion in
April. The 20.000- square-fool edifice will include
a 1.200-seat sanctuary, office building and
roughed-ln chapel, sacristy and choir room. The
sanctuary will feature a 14-foot stained glass rose
window
titled “ Gift of the Spirit."
The three-year-old parish, which includes 650
families, hopes to be worshipping in the new
church by Easter. The new church building is
located at 575 TuskawtUa Road close to the Kceth
Elementary School where the pastor, the Rev.

%

John Bluett, holds Mass temporarily. The parish
extends from Moss Road on the west to the
Oviedo area on the cast and from State Road 434
to Red Bug Lake County Bark.
Among other growing churches in the county:
• First Baptist Church of Oviedo, which
dedicated its new 30.150-square-foot worship
and educational center on Sept. 7. The building
was designed by Ed Thomas. Orlando architect,
and built by McCully Construction Co.. Orlando.
The church was organized in Oviedo in 1869 by a
small group of pioneers who met in homes, brush
arbors or under shade trees as weather permitted.
The new center is located directly east of the
220-seat 1926 sanctuary and seats 900 persons.
• Ascension Lutheran Church in Casselberry,
which has 980 members. It dedicated an addition
Oct. 12. Groundbreaking for the new building
was held Oct. 17. 1985. the church's 25th
anniversary. The $702,000 expansion included a
4 .2 0 0 -s q u a re -fo o t fe llo w s h ip h all, seven
classrooms, nursery, choir room and offices.
See NEW CHURCHES, page 30

�r

Public Safety
U — Sanford Herald * Hereld Advertiser, Sanford, PI.

Thursday, Fofc. as,1W7

Continued from page a8

,$5-if

Er 1
""Hy:: Vfek 1 » i 1 **
mS&amp;i\ J i i i . A
| | 2£L
1* : 1
V fW
l' »

t

ft ; I*
; tj
11
■, !

«i
*
1 •
.

NartM M at* by Tammy Vlncant

Sanford Police D epartm ent O fficer Donna Cam eron opened a
new ch ap ter In the city's public safety efforts by becoming
the firs t m em b er of the mounted patrol. O ffic e r Cameron
patrols In the downtown area and In Ft. M ellon P a rk . She Is
m ounted on her own horse, Traveling A rapaho, nicknam ed
" R a p p y ." The horse is a 10-year-old Appaloosa gelding.

Jail, which was renovated and
expanded In a 1986 project,
which continued Into this year at
a cost of$13.5 million.

Sanford
The Sanford Police Depart­
ment operates with a budget o f
almost $3 million and 69 sworn
officers and 17 civilians. Chief
Steve Harriett said his staff1will
keep pace with the city's growth
this year, with officers added as
needed.
He has assigned one officer to
work at Lakevlew Middle School
and plans to assign two more to
s im ila r duty In oth er c ity
schools.
In 1986 a K-9 unit with a
single dog was added and there
will be another dog added this
year. A single-officer mounted
patrol was developed In De­
cember 1986 and one or two
other officers and horses are
expected to be added to that
patrol.
This year, Harriett said, the
department's drug enforcement
division will be expanded, with
more officers being assigned to
that duty.

dynamic change possible in his
department. By April 1. he said,
his 14 sworn officers, who also
w ork w ith a sta ff of seven
civilians and a $600,000 budget,
will be trained as "order main­
tenance police." That means
Lake Mary police will be trained
not only to .perform traditional
police duties, but will also be
trained to provide emergency
m edical and Are protections
services.
Lauderdale said this Is a
"p ro a c tiv e " approach to law
enforcement and emphasis is on
crime prevention, with citizen
In v o lv e m e n t, o v e r law e n ­
forcement. This type of service
will cut costs and avoid dupllca-

tlon or services. Lauderdale said
it will cut back on the Are
departm ent and ambulances
responding to scenes where they
are not needed.

Winter Spring*
The Winter Springs Police
Department, with 24 sworn of­
f ic er s and n in e c i v i li a n
employees, operates with an
annual budget of Just under
$900,000.
A priority within that de­
partm ent this yea r w ill be
computerization o f the dispatch
and records departments. Like
all other area police, the Winter
Springs department linked into
the 911 emergency system In

1986 and ts computerizing its
own operation s fo r greater
compatabillty with that system.
Three new officer positions have
been budgeted for 1987.
There were no major changes
for the Altamonte Springs Police
Department in 1986 and no big
plans for 1987. In the past year
three of the department's 70
sworn officers were assigned to
v o l u n t e e r d u t y w it h th e
Seminole County SW AT team.
The Altamonte Springs Police
Departm ent has an annual
budget of Just over $3 million
and employs 28 civilians. Three

Continued on page 3 1 ,

Lake Mary
L a k e M ary P o lic e C h ie f
Charles Lauderdale, who Joined
that force In June 1986, said he
is initiating the greatest, most

Courts, SAO Get Facelift
Security B eefed Up, Efficiency S tream lined
T h e crim in a l is con victed
sooner and packed off to a better
Jail than a year d&amp;o in Seminole
County thanks to renovation at
the county courthouse, the state
attorney’s office and the county
Jail.
The renovations at the court­
house cost $2.3 million and
a d d e d new c o u rtro o m s ,
s tr e a m lin e d e ffic ie n c y and
beefed-up security. The renova­
tion was done in sections with
department personnel moving
from noor to floor as their
departments were being worked
on.
Other offices were moved next
door to the county annex, once
the coun ty Jail. The annex
houses criminal records, court
clerks, the law library and the
Public Defender's Office, which
used to be In Sanford City Hall.
During the renovations, the
county's finance and records
offices moved to the County
Services Building, also In San­
ford.
T o go along with more court­
rooms to handle more cases, a
new circuit Judge's position was
added to the district of Semlno'e

and Brevard counties. That
Judge. Larry V. Johnston, took
office Jan. 5 and was scheduled
to spend about 25 percent of his
time In Sanford hearing cases
from Seminole County.
About 55,000 traffic cases arc
routed through the courthouse
every year.
The number of civil suits Aled
total 2,500 and there Is a similar
number of criminal cases Aled.
About 89.000 documents arc
recorded yearly, including 2.000
marriage' licenses, according to
the clerk of court.
Security was increased at the
courthouse to decrease the
chances of an armed person
getting In the courthouse and
attacking people, as happened in
Orange County In 1985.
The State Attorney's Office
m oved from the courthouse
annex to the Roumlilat Building
on First Street and Park Avenue
In Sanford. That building now
houses the felony and Juvenile
divisions of the office as well as
support services, An open house
was held in December.
Costs of expansion at the Jail
topped $13.5 million, and funds

were raised by a onc-cent sales
tax for a year and a $1 million
federal grant. Plans call for an
expansion from 212 beds to 840
beds. The new portion, com ­
pleted In January, will house all
the prisoners until renovation o f
the older part, opened in 1980. is
complete later this year, ac­
cording to the architect.
The Jail, when encompassing
both buildings, should serve the
county until about the year

3000. tteuim lntitralor utd.

SINCE 1945

—Deane Jordan

a a
Continued from page 28
nurse practitioners, she added.
The nurse practitioner requires
a bachelor's degreee first, how­
ever. and that program is
available at the University of
Florida.
Since nurses often take jobs
in the area where they received
their training. Ms. Plckar said,
the new SCC program should
greatly enhance the area hospi­
tals' nursing staffs. Nurses can
expect to make about $20,000
a year to start, she added.

115 W. FIRST STREET, HISTORIC DOWNTOWN SANFORD
All the right parts in all the right places:

Q u a lity G la s s
&amp; M ir r o r W o rk
F o r Y our H om e
Complete Line Of

H IC H A M S

“3 8 Years Experience
And Service In Sanford
And Seminole County“

In terior a n d Exterior
PnintH &amp; Supplies

glass &amp; paint
31* S. FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD, FL

S 1M I M
Hours M o rv F rt 8-5 Sat. 8.30-12

Come and visit our new­
ly expanded Longwood
sto re. Thanks Seminole
County fo r helping us
grow!

HWY. 17-92
LONGWOOD
695-0991 ,

i t *

V.:CS A V ErM ,Vi

0
0
nw

Toward purchase of
complete scuba course
0R
OFF any purchase of
*50 or more. (E«t. s«ic item&gt;i
•*» UM,

LlM, | ... ^ 1 , , ,

f 937 W. SR 436
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
862-5489

�%

# «

9

• v * f

,

v

,

* •

r

0

r *»*#

9

i

»

9

$ ■* - r - r - f

# f

T

r

r

r

r

r

r

r r r

r r f ^

r r

Public Safety
Thursday, Fab. sa, m ? -2 7

Sanferd HeraW A HaraM Advertiser,

Through 911 Emergency System

Those In N eed O f Help Can G et It
Sem inole County Joined a
g ro w in g num ber of
o f Florida
counties in providing a com*
puter-asslstcd em ergency re­
sponse "911'* telephone system
on Oct. 21.
Many of Florida's 67 counties
are Investigating. Implementing
o r h a v e im p le m e n te d the
system.
It took about 18 months to
prepare for the start-up of the
system, according to county 911
coordinator Roanne Rubin, but
she says the efforts have been
well spent.
County residents can simply
dial three digits. 9-1-1, to call for
emergency fire, police, or medi­
cal help. T h at saves tim e,
because callers don't have to
remember or take lime to dial a
seven-digit emergency phone
number. In fact, a caller doesn't
need to know where they are or
even be able to speak to get fast
response.
Those features of the system
can be' life-saving, according to
Ms. Rubin.
At nine different answering
points across the county, trained
911 operators pick up the phone
when 9 1 1 is dialed and dispatch
needed em ergency personnel
from their location, or Instantly
t r a n s f e r t h e c a l l to th e
emergency service department
that serves the caller.
911 answ ering points are
located In the Seminole County
Fire Department and Public
Safety Department, the Sanford
Police and Fire departments, and
the police departments of Alta­
m onte Springs. Casselberry,
Winter Springs. ■Lake Mary and
Oviedo.
The computer-enhanced 911
system provides 911 operators
with the address and phone
number of callers on a read-out
screen, as well as taped instant
replay and Instant transfer.
Rubin said that if a caller Is
suffering a heart attack or other
aliment and is unable to speak
after dialing 911, the call is
a s an u n k n g w ^
emergency, and law enforce­

ment Is dispatched Immediately
to investigate.
She said every 911 call is
treated as an emergency situa­
tion. There have been a few
p rob lem s w ith prank calls,
mostly from children, but what
kids don’ t realize, she said, is
that the 911 operator has both
their address and phone number
on the screen.

911 operators have called back
homes from which false calls
from children have originated
and asked parents to warn
children about m aking false
calls. In other cases, law en­
forcem ent agrncies have re­
sponded to calls placed by
children at play, usually shock­
ing unsuspecting parents.
She says there have been some

telephone system troubles that
are being resolved.
"S tran ge things have hap­
pened. When a few calls have
be$n transferred, they've been
disconnected. We don’t know
why. but Southern Bell has gone
to AT&amp; T to try and find the
problem ," Ms. Rubin said.
She noted that because of the
s y s te m 's In stan t call back

feature, only seconds were lost
in responding to the calls.
SHe also said that United
T e le p h o n e C o m p a n y
an d
Southern Bell are providing
lists o f names and addresses
attached to phone numbers to
expedite providing help.
."When we’re responding to a
call, we'd like to know the actual
name o f a person or business.

L e t u s e n t e r t a in

Fast
W e’d rather know a call Is
coming from a liquor store than
the name of the parent company
or owner," she said.
Since the system came on-line,
one of the major chores Is to
keep updating the computerized
information. New subdivisions
and construction mean more
phone numbers, names and

Continued on page 3 1

y o u

a t t h e
C e n tr a l
-

,' H?$»bUTO---rs

F lo r id a
Weekends at the Central Florida Zoo of­
fer the visitor unique pachyderm rldea
high atop Maude the elephant with
souvenir photos available. Pony rides are
on the agenda for the smaller zoo-goers.
Volunteer docents are present throughout
the Zoo with surprise "critters" for you to
ask questions about, touch and
photograph. Weekend animal feeding
schedules are announced during the day
so that you may experience the awesome
Bengal Tiger or African Lion dining as he

Open 9-5
Dally

z o o !

would in the wild. Staff personnel are pre­
sent during feeding to answer your ques­
tions and to provide a brief biography of
the animal entrusted to their care.

VOC

1wanc t0 becom e a m e m b e r o f the central Florida zoological society. Sign m e
■
up at th e level Indicated b e lo w — and rush m y official m em bership card. All
m em bers have unlim ited Free Adm ission to the Central Florida Zoo and w ill be kept
info rm ed o f the latest plans and activities th ro u g h o u r newsletter s p o t s 'Nr s t r ip e s
M E M B E R S H IP LEVELS*
c a ii

Hwy. 17-92 N. at h4
EASTER EGG HUNT
YOUNG ARTISTS DAY
RIVERSHIP ROMANCE
MOTHER’S DAY AT ZOO
FATHER’S OAY AT ZOO
WILD WEST AUCTION

APRIL
MAY
MAY
MAY
JUNE
OCT.

memberships and donations are tax deductible)

NON-VOTING

FI

U P C O M IN G B V B N T S

Become a Member!

-•-v

Make a day of It at the Zoo — a clean,
well-maintained facility, situated In natural
wooded surroundings with an atmosphere
made for relaxation. No need to hurry —
Just take a leisurely walk on the “wild"
side with the animals at the Central
Florida Zoo.

VOTMG

□
□
r:
□

Family (1 yn .
$25
Active voting rt yr.)
individual ti yr)
Sis
□ Five Years
Senior (Age 60 +1(1 yr.)
: 510 □ Lifetime
Student (1 yr.)
$10 p Gold Card
(Corporate Membership are available Please tnouirei
Please make checks payable to Central Florida 200, or charge to: visa

II
2
17
10
21
24

m astercard .

Exp Date

Card Number

.(required for charge)

Signature __

323-4450

550
5200
51,000
$5,000

NAME
A00RESS

RO BOX 509
LAKE MONROE, FLORIDA 52747

STATE

CITY ___

ZIP.

t .... -cua-anG m at wttivctMchU)&gt;c*nirai Florida zoo * PO Box 309 • lake Monroe Florida 32747 ‘ Phone 1305) 323-4450

C O U R TE S Y PONTIAC W WE SELL EXCITEMENT
ALL
P

O

N

T

I A

C

A

N

N

O

U

N

C

E

N E W 1 9 8 7 P O N T IA C BONNEVILLE

UPT° $ 9 5 Q

?

P R IC E R O L L B A C K

6 YEAR 60,000 MILE
FACTORY WARRANTY
1

9

8

7

P

R

I

C

E

R

O

NEW 1987
S U N B IR D

'•e , °

L

L

B

A

C

K

S

ALL C A R S IN C L U D E
P O N T IA C N E W 6 YEAR
6 0 ,0 0 0 M ILE F A C T O R Y
W ARRANTY

*950

P R IC E R O L L B A C K

6 YEAR 60,000 MILE
FACTORY WARRANTY

$850

6000
PRICE R O L L B A C K

NEW 1 9 8 7
UP TO

6 YEAR 60,000 MILE
FACTORY WARRANTY

N E W 1 9 8 7 S U N B IR D S /E
PRICE ROLLBACK

*950

6 YEAR 60,000 MILE
FACTORY WARRANTY

N E W 1 9 8 7 FIERO
UP TO
PRICE
RO LLBACK

*800

6 YEAR 60,000 MILE
FACTORY WARRANTY

NEW 1987
G R A N D A M D O in P

N E W 1 9 8 7 FIREBIRD
u p t o

$

OUU
o

n

n

P R ,C E

ROLLBACK

UP TO

6 YEAR 60,000 MILE
FACTORY WARRANTY

*770

ROLLBACK

6 YEAR 60,000 MILE
FACTORY WARRANTY

Y O U R 7 T 0 1 1 S U P E R S T O R E SM

C O U R T E S Y ?
650 N. HWY. 1 7-92 PONTIAC
ROLLBACKS VARY DEPENDING O N OPTION G ROU PIN G

L0N9W000

mile North
ofS .R .434
r/2

767-

�.*

IT

■ v + i- s - i

Government
M-Sen«ord HereM 4 HeraM Atverttser, Sanfert, FI.

Thursday, Fefc. U, 1H7

Sanford Mayor, Commissioners Reflect On First 2 Years
will not compromise Itself to
"W e're going to be careful not
The progressive posture San­
Faison has added pew de­ still working on bettering our his allegation that many were
bring
development
Into
the
city.
SANFORD, page 21
not up to code has been borne
ford city officials adopted two p a rtm e n ts to the c ity and
relationship with the county.”
out
by
the
surveys.
Code
com­
T
e
n
s
io
n
s
w
ith
S
e
m
in
o
le
years ago has produced positive expanded others, "all with top
results and continues canylng notch staff." Mrs. Smith said.
County over the wastewater pliance is now being moved on
parcel are not allayed by the by the property owners, at times
the city towards a successful
Much o f commlsloners' and
future, according to the three staffs' preoccupation during the city's continuing to expand Its with prodding (him the city's r
m
m
m
tax base by acquiring county code enforcement board.
city commissioners who came in last two years has been with
land through annexation. The
on that wind o f change.
t r y in g to s o lv e th e c i t y 's
Mrs. Smith, meanwhile, has
land acquisitions are through taken the lead In sweeping drug
Seated in the 1984 election
wastewater management woes.
were the city ’s first woman
A state order to cease disposing voluntary petitions submitted to education efforts for city resi­
mayor. Bettye Smith. Its first effluent in Lake Monroe led the Sanford by county property
dents. "I'm very proud o f what's
black commissioner. Bob Thom ­ city into an unsuccessful lawsuit owners. The county has filed
been done," she said. " I know
as. and Joh n M ercer, w h o against Seminole County over a suits with Sanford In attempt to
our efforts have led to much
quickly established himself as parcel both governments wanted reacquire some of these parcels.
more awareness on the part o f
the commission’s most candid for their wastewater manage­
the general public."
" I hope the future will show
member. Mercer agrees he's
ment programs.
Commissioners sponsored and
we can coopertate with the
• " ’o u ts p o k en ," and says his
funded a number o f drug pre­
After loss of the suit, Sanford county and they with us." said
com m en ts com e o n ly a fte r
turned towards parcels It already Mercer, who secs "the big fight"
vention programs during the last
’ studying the means to smoothen
owns as sites for development of as being over annexations.
year and authorized a man­
; rough edges he perceives In effluent disposal systems.
"T h e county loses water and datory drug testing program for
Sanford.
The city racked up close to utility rates and Impact fees, all c ity Job ap p lican ts and
UP TO
I The three commissioners re­ $200,000 In legal fees before that's why they don't want us employees suspected o f sub­
placed longtime officials, and
stance abuse.
giving up the “ Yankee Lake” doing It. But it should be noted
Today's hosts sre the best value ever...
one of their first moves was
land embragllo with the county.
Mayor Smith also said she is
the people want to come into
hiring a new city manager, to
"W e Just had a little problem Sanford. W e've shown those
"comfortable and confident” In• Drifter • Traveler • Lucky Strike
with the suit." Thomas said, who live around the city (In her position at the commission's
. succeed a retiring administrator
• Arkansas Boat Co.
"b u t we came out sm elling unincorporated Seminole) that helm. She term s herself " a
’ who held the spot 26 years.
pretty good. I'm satisfied we're wc support annexation and I strong leader.” and "one who
M ayor S m ith , T h o m a s and
on our way (toward meeting the think their wanting to be part of can be flexible, take changes and
Mercer now find them selves
Trailers By:
state order)."
welcoming two new colleauges
the city is evidence that staff and make them work."
to the five member commission,
Thomas' Indicated he felt the commissioners are doing a good
She said b ein g a w om an
Shore Land’r
following December’s District 3
city's legal fees paled when Job. People like what they sec supplied perhaps "a softer touch
Ram-Lin
fitlfor In Uw Long Runl
and 4 elections.
compared to the cost savings going on in Sanford and want to to managing the commission,
1
Sanford came In with because of be a part of it."
T h e three c o m m is s io n e rs
and this has helped make things
UUCKMtUfM* ACCESSORIES
suit-related delays. The litigation
speak like seasoned veterans on
M ercer ack n ow led ges he's work more smoothly amidst a lot
FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
stalled a waste program bond "outspoken" when it comes to of changes."
events and issues, and with
Issue and the subsequent issue, municipal concerns, but adds
•'pride when discussing their last
Thomas, cites a "v e ry posi­
for the program at city-owned his comments come only after tive" working relationship be­
SEMINOLE COUNTY'S
’ .two years of accomplishment.
ONLY MARINER DEALERSHIP
'.They lay heavy credit for suc­ properties, came In with re­ "studying the issues."
tween the city's commissioners
NOW OFFERS 2 to 200 HP
cessful efforts with their citizen
payment rates several hundred
He said, " I f the city com ­ during the last two years and
MARINER ENGINES IN STOCK
advisory boards and city staff.
thousand dollars lower than mission didn't have someone said said growth management
They also envision implementa­ those the city would have in­ who didn’ t nit pick, some things has been a major challenge. He
STtVti
curred for the Yankee Lake
tion and expansion of goals set
wouldn't get done and other stresses "clean industry" for
issue, according to city bond things would have passed that Sanford and says econom ic
during the preceedlng two years.
With staff and voluntary citi­ counsel.
benefits through Jobs for citizens 1
shouldn't have."
511 CAST 25TH ST. SAMFOM# FLA.
zen assistance, Sanford channels
Mrs. Smith ruefully recalls the
Mercer called for city staff to are "the most important thing"
&gt;23-8373
growth in positive directions
Y an k ee Lake land dispute,
inspect every multl-fairily dwell­ It can engender.
w h ile im p r o v in g e x i s t i n g
which engendered bad feelings ing in downtown Sanford and
Thomas adds the commission
services and attributes, the three
with the county. She said these
commissioners say.
tensions come to mind If she
considers any areas the present
"W e came In with hopes o f
city administration may have
changing things," Thomas said.
m V*
m m m
fallen short during the last two
"The city had been run the same
years.
way for the last 30. 40 or 50
vears ' have to sav I'm pleased
Mrs Smith adds, however. "I
with what's been done In the last
want to'take full responsibility"
two years and and what's being
for the possible problems. "I
planned to continue bettering
think I could have, should have
the quality of life for our citizens.
known to have more wisdom to
W
M
P
B
&amp;
m
X
talk to the county before this got
Staff, especially (city manager)
Frank Faison, and our citizen
as far as It did."
hoards have been a very Integral
She terms the failure to com­
part of these efforts."
municate with county officials
Mercer said. "As far as I'm
"Inadvertant" on her part and
Concerned, the best thing we’ve
"a mistake of the heart."
done tn the last two years Is hire
Overall. Mrs. Smith says she's
‘ Frank Faison . H e 's a pro"terribly proud of our record. I
' lessloual engineer and a terrific
see great things for Sanford. And
■.administrator."
in spite of Yankee Lake, we are

fir*

20 %

O ff

ElfSSBSS!

i

AHOY MARINE

W h a t YO U W a n t!
r/ N E W \

' 1987
^CUSTOM
\V A N S '

• 3/8 in. plywood sub floor w/carpet pad &amp; plush carpet.
» H igh density fiberglass Insulation in w alls &amp; ceilings
* D urable nylon upholstered fabric
►H E H R sliding w indow s w ith screens &amp; m ini blinds
* C ap tain ’s chairs on swivel base
• Sofa beds
• Drink trays &amp; snack tables
1 A ircraft type overhead lighting
&gt; 40 chan n el d ig ital CB
* A M /F M S tereo/C assette
1 M atch in g alum , ladder/roof rack
1C u sto m running boards
’ Styled W heels/upgraded radlals
1 Fu ll custom exterior
1G raphic paint
Durable acrylics finish
2 yr. w arranty on w orkm anship &amp; m aterials

High Tops
Low Tops

Come and
Tour Our

Minr Vans

Factory
SANFORD 629-4661

i

I$

�, &gt;v &gt; M

t

# #'
/ •

Y i r \ y-, r

a~t — r

r / / O 1
T7 t r r

r r ir r r

t •

r r*~ rr*

nwraftay, Faft.* . 19S7-W

Sanford Herald ft Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

...Sanford
Continned from page 28
to allow Just anything to put Its
roots down." he said. "W e don’t
want anything that’s going to
pollute our air and water.
"Annexations are going to
provide land for commercial
development, but I also want to
see development of housing for
low and moderate income peo­
ple." Thomas said.
Although the city’s first black
commissioner. Thomas said he
concentrates on ’ ’serving as a
model for all of Sanford."
" I t ’s important to go beyond a
person's color, and focus on
their abllltes. their caring.” he
said. “ I give my best and try to
make whatever contibutlons I
can to enhance the city in its
entirety. And I’m satisfied with
the Job I'm doing: I don't have
any trouble sleeping at night.”
Thomas spearheaded forma­
tion of the city’s Human Rela­
tions Advisory Board, an Inter­
racial group that formulates
plans to promote equality among
all city residents.
Thom as said although the
board's formation last year rep­

...County
Continued from page 25
Hooper said this process resulted
in cost savings of approximately
8900.000 in either staiT or con­
tract services. It reduced the
payroll by 40-50 positions.
• Implemented a Capital
Im provem ent Fund — The
county commission Im ­
plemented a Capital Improve­
m ent Fund during the last
budget process. That fund was
created to fund deficits that exist
in programs. There is $1.7
million in the fund, and the first
year's projects will include a
new fire station in the Red Bug
Rt. 426 area. Other projects will
Include enhancement to major
county parks and purchase of
new books for the libraries.
• Initiated an update of the
C om prehenaive Plan —
Seminole County was the first
county in the state to adopt a
comprehensive plan, but now
rihe .legislature is . requiring, a
financial feasibility plan to go
along with It — In order to get
approval for things such as
Im pact fees. H ooper thinks
Seminole County will also be the

resented a "m ajor step In the run from Third Street "to 13th,
right direction, he still feels or maybe even 20th."
"there’s work to be done” on the
This expansion will be consid­
part o f all city residents.
ered by residents of that area,
Thom as said he envisions commissioners and Sanford His­
"when Sunday mornings will toric Preservation Board mem­
not put this city In the continu­ bers in upcoming months.
ing state of being segregated. I’d
like to see the day come when
Lake Mary, "C ity of Lakes."
we can worship together: visit has a population o f approximate­
each others’ congregations."
ly 4,400 with 2,041 registered
This can be accomplished " if v o t e r s .
I t h a s a
the ministers of our churches jnayor/commlsslon form o f gov­
w ill constantly say to their ernment and elections are held
c o n g r e g a t io n s . ‘ W e ’ re a ll the date o f the state’s first
brothers and sisters: God made primary — Tuesday after the
all of us.’ It Just so happens some first M onday in N ovem b er.
of us are white, black, yellow: Commissioners are paid $290 a
whatever. If we learn to worship month and the mayor receives
together, we'll learn to respect 8345 a month. The city manager
each other for what we are."
Is a full-time city employee who
Commissioners all indicated earns 829,433 a year. T h e
the next two years will see mayor is elected for a three-year
continued effo rt toward ac­ term and is presently Dick Fess.
complishment. In addition to the Commissioners serve a two-year
wastewater program and growth term. They are Ken King. Buzz
management, road repair, and Petsos. Paul Trem el. Charlie
the city's appearance arc top Webster and -John Percy. The
concerns.
city hired a new city manager.
Mercer also supports expand­ Bob Norris, who started working
ing the city's downtown historic for the city on Jan. 5.1987. Lake
district from Its commercial zone Mary has police protection, a
out Into the adjacent residential volunteer fire department and
area.
18 trained emergency medical
Mercer said he feels the resi­ technicians (EMT).
Major ac­
dential historic district should complishments in 1986 Included
first to get approval of a financial
feasibility plan to go along with
the comp plan.
Last year, the county initiated
the process of updating the
Comprehensive Plan and that
process will be completed by the
end of ’87.
The county operates as a
non-charter function at the
pleasure of state government
under guidelines provided by the
state constitution with certain
"home-rule" privileges.
Its officials arc: County Com­
m ission C hairm an Fred W.
Strectman Jr., who s-rves from
District 3 (part of Altamonte.
Sweetwater. Forest City) until
Ills term expires In 1988; Vice
Chairman Bill Klrchhoff. District
5 (Sanford area), with term to
e x p i r e In 1 9 8 8 ; B a r b a r a
Christen sen . District 1
(Ovlcdo/Chuluota. Casselberry)
term to 1988: Bob Sturm. Dis­
trict 2 (Lake Mary/Longwood.
part o f Winter Springs) to 1990:
and Sandra Glenn. District 4
(most of Altamonte Springs) to

Public Safety: Larry Sellers.
Public Works; Jerry McCollum.
Engineering. Herb Hardin, Land
M a n a g e m e n t : T o n y VanD erw orp . P la n n in g . J o A n n
Blackm on. Purchasing. Lois
Martin. Personnel. Nikki Clayton
Is the county attorney.
In addition, James Wilson is
head of the Roads Division;
Steve Decker. Traffic engineer:
Joel Dean. In charge of the
building perm it departm ent;
B arry H astin gs, d irecto r o f
com puter services; RoscAnn
Hunter, directs the fleet man­
a g e m e n t o f f ic e : R lc H o lt ,
manages facilities maintenance;
and Penny Fleming, directs the
o ffic e o f m a n a g e m e n t nnd
budget.

the building of Lake Mary’s own
water plant, completion o f a
basketball court along Country
Club Road and the formation o f a
c o m m u n it y I m p r o v e m e n t
association.

Altamonte Springs
Altamonte Springs has a popu­
lation o f about 30.000 with
11.084 registered voters. It has a
city manager form o f govern­

ment with an elected mayor and
commissioners. Elections are
held the first Tuesday after the
first Monday in November. The
mayor is elected for a three-year
term and Is presently Mayor
Raymond Ambrose. He is paid
84.800 a year. Commissioners
are elected to two-year terms
which are staggered and are paid
83.600 a year. The commission­

,

ers are J. Dudley Bates. D. Lee
Constantine. Edward Tlten and
Eddie Rose. The city manager is
Phillip Penland and he earns
858.398 a year. M ajor ac ­
complishments in 1986 Include
the adoption o f their com­
prehensive land-use plan known
as City Plan 2000. establishment
of an Impact fee ordinance and

Coatiaasd om page 31

W e k iv a
R iv e r H a v e n
FishAnd Relax On The
'.Wild &amp; Scenic Wekiva River

W E K IV A
R IV E R H A V E N
Is located on the
beautiful faring fed
Wekiva River 9 miles
west of Sanford on
Hwy. 46 East of
Wekiva River Bridge
on Wekiva Park
Drive. Sanford

• BAIT • TACKLE • PICNIC AREA • SNACKS
• COLD DRINKS • HOT SANDWICHES

F O R IN F O R M A T IO N O R
B O A T R E S E R V A T IO N S

322-1909

‘HbepartmenTheads are? Jaiftes^
Bible. Environmental Services:
Dr. Jorge Deju. Health and
Human Services: Jean Rhein.
Library Services: Gary Kaiser,

OF SEMINOLE COUNTY
T,

B ig

Enough T o S e rv e Y o u ...
S m a ll E nough T o K now

l

You.

Left to right M .rqurette Sullivan. Jerry Sullivan and Lee Cummings cofounder of Lee’* Famous Recipe.

*

THANKS
FOR MAKING US FAMOUS

X
x
x
X

KEN RUMMEL CHEVROLET

W e are happy again this year to thank our good and
loyal customers for your support o f Famous Recipe.

X
X

Sanford Famous Recipe Fried Chicken again

x

placed very high in the national standings for all
Famous Recipe units.

X
X
X

In tr o d u c in g T h ese E x c itin g N e w 1 9 8 8 ’s!

Jerry Sullivan and Lee Cummings were raised
together in Henryville Indiana, also Col. Sanders
hometown, and have been active in Famous Recipe
together since 1968.

X
X
X
X

.V

r

Lee's recipes have made country chicken famous.

X
X

Thanks for allowing

X

SANFO R D .

x

us to

make

you

r W

—

^

P

famous

!
f

x
X

x
x

1 0 8 8 C o rs ic a 4-D oor Sedan

1 0 8 8 B e re tta Coupe

f "famous “R ecipe,
^

X

COUNTRYCHOCW

X

x

x

A T a s te O f T h e C o u n try

X

X

1905 FRENCH AVE.
HWY. 17-W Sanford
v y i

61 N. HWY. 17-92
Casselberry

ij u l C T 'd d c x x x x_xx y x s c e

SANE.O R b H
HWY. 17-92

p

E ™

321-7800

1

«\a*

�Religion
New Churches
C o n tin u e d fro m page 3 5
Existing facilities were repainted and reroofed.
The buildings were designed by Davis and
Associates of Orlando and built by .McCrec
Construction Co., Orlando, which built the
church sanctuary In 1974. The Rev. Gerald
Seaman is church pastor. The new facility
features a 24-square-foot oil painting by Robbie
Feldman, a church member, and depicts Jesus'
ascension Into heaven.
•; • St. Augustine Catholic Church. Casselberry.
Which broke ground on Jan. 4. 1986 for Its
$500,000 parish center. The 10.000-square-foot
dentcr was dedicated Aug. 24. 1986 and is used
fbr meetings, dinners and social gatherings to
accom modate the growing parish o f 1.500
families. The old center was renovated and Is
dsed for classrooms. The Rev. Dennis Harten.
OSA. is the latest Augustlnian priest to serve the
parish since it started In 1969.
! • Holy Cross Lutheran Church of Lake Mary,
ttrhlch has scheduled dedication o f facilities for
March 8. Groundbreaking ceremonies were held
March 23. 1986 on the northside of Lake Mary
boulevard east o f Interstate 4 for the first phase of
Construction^ a 5,000-square-foot facility Includihg classrooms and sanctuary area costing
Between $250,000 and $300,000. The sanctuary
4dll seat between 180 and 200 persons. Two more
phases are planned for the future. The church has
160 members and Is affiliated with the Missouri
Synod with ties to St. Luke's Lutheran Church.
Oviedo. Pastor Paul Hoycr began conducting
services in Driftwood Village Shopping Center In
December 1983, where services are held each
$unday at 6 a.m. and 10 a.m.
• • Markham Woods Presbyterian Mission at
$210 Markham Woods Road, which was orga­
nized as the 71st Presbyterian church of the
Central Florida Presbytery on April 20. 1986. The
ghurch has had preliminary designs and a
0-year master plan drawn up for a building
rogram by American Building Consultants of
Atlanta and will launch a two-month. $250,000
fundraising campaign this February. The first of
three phases will include a sanctuary and
Classrooms and is expected to cost approximately
$738,000. The mission held Its first service on
July 21. 1985 in a house located on the property.
There were 144 members and an average
attendance of 120 at services held in a temporary
sanctuary in an 1.800-squarc-foot mobile home.
Dr. Don T. DeBevolse. pastor, said he hopes
construction will be underway by early summer.
! • Grace United Klcthodlst Church, which took
4 big step on May 1 when Its facilities at 118 W.
Airport Blvd., Sanford, were sold in order for the
Congregation to relocate to a five-acre building
iite on Country Club Road in Lake Mary. The
facilities were sold to Page Schools for $577,500.
Services were held there until June 8 when the
sanctuary was decommissioned by the Rev.

i

Tommy Parsons, who became Grace's first pastor
in 1959. Since then services have been held at
Idyllwilde Elementary School. Construction on
the new $750,000 facility began Jan. 26. Due for
completion by Sept. 1. It will include a sanctuary,
fellowship hall, education building and ofTIces.
Pastor of the 300-member church Is the Rev.
William J. Boyer.
• First Assembly of God of Sanford on West
27th Street, which not only got new and larger
facilities at a new location this year, but a new
name as well. When it relocated to the comer of
Kennel Road and West State Road 46. the church
became known as New Life Assembly. Dedicated
in February, the sanctuary seats 650. The pastor
is the Rev. David Bohannon. First Assembly sold
its old buildings to Maranatha Pentecostal
Church now known as Maranatha New Life
Center. An education and administration building
was also added last year. The church, which
observed its 51st anniversary in May, operates
the New Life Christian School for grades one
through 12.
• Wcklva Assembly of God. which held its first
worship service for Its three-year-old congrega­
tion in Its new church facilities at 1675 Dixon
Road, Longwood, on Easter Sunday. 1966. They
formerly held services In the Seventh-day Adven­
tist Church on Longwood-Markham Woods Road.
There arc more than 500 members. The new
b u ild in g In clu d es a 7 0 0-seat san ctu ary,
classrooms, offices and fellowship hall. The senior
pastor is Ron Johnson.
• Catholic Church o f the Nativity. Lake Mary,
which celebrated Its 25th anniversary on Dec. 21,
1986 with the dedication o f its new parish center
by Bishop Thomas J. Grady. The center is to
accommodate the social and educational needs of
the parish. The Rev. James Seibert, CPPS. Is
pastor.
• Lake Mary Evangelical Free Church, which
was established and held its first service Oct. 5.
1986 in the fellowship hall o f Markham Woods
Seventh-day Adventist Church on Markham
Woods Road. Longwood.
• First Baptist Church of Altamonte Springs,
8 8 7 E. A l t a m o n t e D r i v e , w h i c h h e l d
groundbreaking ceremonies for the first phase of
building expansion on Oct. 5. 1986. The
20.000-square-foot, two-story educational build­
ing Is due for completion by April 1. according to
the pastor, the Rev. Jerry Kennedy. It will cost
between $850,000 and $900,000.
&gt;
• All Souls Catholic Church. Sanford, which
marked its 75th anniversary as a parish with a
celebration on Nov. 2 with Bishop Thomas J.
Grady as main celebrant.
• The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. Park Avenue, Sanford, which dedicated Its
enlarged and remodeled building May 4. 1986.
Participating in the dedication were the three
wards from Sanford. Casselberry and Longwood.
which use the building. Each ward numbers 400
members.
• Our Lady of the Lakes Catholic Church.
DeBary. which dedicated Its newly expanded

facilities In January with Bishop Thomas J.
Grady officiating. The church was enlarged to
seat nearly 900 persons. Cost of the renovation
was $750,000. The front wing of the church was
rebuilt and enlarged to Include a larger sacristy, a
religious articles store, bride's room, and a

lighting control room. The main nave measuri
68 feet by 114 feet. The front of the building ws
redone and tripled In size. A fountain with
statue of the Blessed Mother and carillons we
added, parking lot expanded and grounc

Continued on page 31

Cardinal...
setting the
standards
. for others
L to follow.
Rental Apartments
Knights Inn Motels
Single Family Homes
Cardinal Villages
Condominiums
Commercial Offices
INDUSTRIES INCORPORATED

3701 S. Sanford Avenue
Sanford, Florida 32771
305/321-0220

r About

THE MAGIC OF COBIA

Burns &amp; Sons
Sam Burns, a C ertified Residential
contractor, has b e e a s s o c ia te d with
the aluminum industry sin ce 1958.

Cobin i? the Official Boar
of Walt
7
Disney W orld And no wonder
Everything about Walt Disney W orld
is geared to first-quality family enter tainment. so Cobia Boats w ere a
natural to becom e a part of the
-magic Cobia |oms an elite group of
world-class corporations such as
Coca-Cola Corripany, Kodak. Eastern
Airlines. General M otors. General
Electric. American Express and
many others
What does it take to becom e an
important member of the world s
fifth largest navy' The kind of design,
craftsmanship, attention to detail,
quality construction and built-in fun
and safety that have always been
associated with Cobia Boats
Every Cobia is built to withstand a
demanding 36S-day-n-ycnr schedule at Walt Disney W orld You'll find
them patrolling, pulling skiers or
cruising Seven Seas Lagoon and Bay
Lake O ther Cobia Boats perform the
daily demanding work and mainte­
nance required by The W o r ld ’s
Number O ne Tourist Destination
Experience the magic of,a Cobia
Whether it’s cruising, skfing, fishing
or any other kind o f family boating
enjoyment. Cobia is the choice of
thousands, and the Official ijjoat of
Walt Disney W orld

Through the years the business has g ro w n in
staff, cap ab ility, service a n d facilities.
Sam's tw o sons. Keith a n d Kris, h a v e a
keen interest in p e o p le from tw o Florida
locations — L o n g w o o d a n d W est Palm B each.
The substantial growth e x p e rie n c e d by Bums a n d sons
is the result of d e p e n d a b le service a n d a 20 y e a r
g u a ra n te e o ffe re d for leaks a n d d e fe c ts .
You c a n d e p e n d on premium quality service from
Burns craftsm en. It's better with Burns.

• Utility Rooms
• Carports
• Patio Covers
• Screen Enclosures
• Gutters a n d Downspouts

• Siding a n d Soffit
• Vinyl Rooms
• Glass Rooms
• Burns Roof-Over

THE O F F I C I A L B O A T OF

Complete Aluminum Service

S i l v e r L a k e D r iv e
Ph. 3 2 2 - 3 5 4 0
S a n fo rd

^

Financing Available

744 Industry Road, Longwood, FL 32750
Phone: 831-6522
Stale Certified Contractor

Toll Free: 1-800-43:
CRC012929

9

�f * i i * "

r

.r

t v
tfcffcS

?£{&lt;.;

,

' •■•

TTwradfcr&gt; Fad, jfc w g - i u

laniard HaraM A HaraM Mvartiaar, laniard* FI.

..Sanford
Cootinned from page 30
inatallalion of computerized
building permitting which Is the
rst of Its kind on a mlcroDmputer In the southeastern
Jnited States. The city also
broke ground and began work
on an expanded waste water
'treatment plant from 7.5 million
Ito 12.5 million gallons. There
lare police and fire departments
land paramedics. New services in
11986 Include an in-house quality
lim p r o v e m e n t p ro g r a m fo r
I employees, completion of Merrill
I Park at 985 Merrill Park Drive
|and a softball complex.
W in te r S p r in g s
Winter Springs has a popula­
tion of about 19.600 with 7.041
registered voters. It has a city
manager form o f government
with an elected m ayor and
[ commissioners. They are elected
to three-year terms and are not
salaried but receive expense
reimbursements. Elections are
held the first Tuesday after the
first Monday in November. The
mayor Is John V. Torcaso and
the commissioners are Cindy
K aehler, A rth u r H offm an n .
Philip A. Kulbes. William A.
Jacobs and Martin Trencher.
The city manager Is Richard
Rozansky and his salary is
$45,900 a y e a r. M ajor a c ­
complishments in 1966 Include
the completion of 9.2 miles of
street resurfacing and other
transportation improvements at
a cost o f 886,000 and the
complete renovation of the old
city hall at Sunshine Park. 400
N. E d g e m o n A v c . , i n t o a
clvic/recreatlon building. Other
a c c o m p lish m e n ts w e re the
complete renovation of fire sta­
tion *1 which used to be a
combined flre/pollce station and
the Initiation of a CADD map­
ping s ys t e m w h i c h c o m ­
puterized the c it y 's mapping
system. The city also received

...Help
, Continued fro m page 27

approval to do a major water and
sewer study to take into account
future requirements for the en­
tire city and approval from the
state for a grant of $500,000
plus for Improvements to cityowned Winter Springs Water
and Sewer Co. There Is police
an d f i r e p r o t e c t i o n and
paramedics In the city and a
summer recreation program for
children that is sponsored by the
public works department.
O veido
The city o f Oviedo has a
p op u lation o f 4,839 and a
mayor/councll form of govern­
ment. Elections are held on the
first Tuesday after Labor Day in
September. Terms are for two
yea rs. T h e m ayor receives
81,800 a year and council
members are paid $1,200. The
mayor serves as the chief ad­
ministrative officer and does not
have a vote on the council. The
city has advertised for applicants
for the position of city manager,
which it hopes to fill by March.
The mayor is Robert W. Whit­
tier and chairman of the council
Is Jane Dees. Other council
members Include E.P. Bruce.
Judith Spout, Gary Gotwalt and
Thomas O'Hanlon.
The city has police and fire
protection and a rescue van.
Paramedics are being hired.
Sweetwater Park has picnic facil­
ities, playground and a tennis
court.
Oviedo increased In size this
year from 6.2 square miles to
10.5 square miles through the
annexation of two large un­
developed parcels to the east of
the city. One of them, the 1.545
acre Twin Rivers Planned Unit
Development, is scheduled to get
underway this year. The other
piece encompasses 1,043 acres.
Longwood
Long wood, a city of approxi­
mately 12,632 Inhabitants, has a
five-member city commission
with mayor and deputy mayor
elected by the commissioners

hours and late afternoon.
"People wake up and discover
something has happened in the
morning, and In the afternoon,
there are traffic accidents or

from am ong their ranks. Com­
missioners are elected citywide
for two-year terms from the
district In which they live. They
receive an annual salary of
$4,200. There are 4,730 regis­
tered voters.
A modem fast growing com­
munity, it has managed to pre­
serve the charm of its past in
Longwood Historical District.
Elected m ayor at the organiza­
tional m eeting on Jan. 5 was
Harold "E d ” Myers, District 4.
June Lormann. District 2. was
r e - e le c t e d d e p u t y m a y o r .
Lynctte Dennis, District 3, and
David Gunter. District 5, were
elected In December and sworn
in prior to the meeting. Harvey
Smerllson is commissioner from
District 1.
Voters approved 19 charter
amendments which will become
effective In 1989. Among the
changes will be changing the
election date from December to
November to coincide with the
county election. Commissioners
will be sworn in within 15 days
after the election and run-ofT
elections w ill be elim inated
except in the case of a tie.
Longwood hired Ron Waller as
its first professional city ad­
ministrator and Ann Colby as its
first fpll-time city attorney in
1986.
Other major accomplishments
this year Included construction
of a new $1.1 million police
station, a paving program and
steps to alleviate sewer problems
by contracting with Seminole
County to hook into the county
sewer system. A new telephone
system Is being Installed for the
city.
The city provides police pro­
tection, fire p rotection and
emergency medical service, a
city cemetery, city water and in
some areas, sewage service.
There is a year-round parks and
rec re a tio n p rogram wi th a
summer recreation session for
children. A community building
is available to groups for meet­
ings. Reiter Park offers tennis
courts, playground and other
facilities.
C asselberry
The city o f Casselberry has a
population o f 17,500 and 6,640
registered voters. The mayor
and members of the city council
are elected at-large on the first
T u esday fo llo w in g the first

on the council. He is paid an
an n u al salary o f $ 3 0 ,0 0 0 .
Council members receive an
annual salary of $3,500. They
include A! Harmon, chairman;
Frank Schutte. vice chairman;
Tom Embree, Andrea Dennison,
and Phyliss Sheppard.
The city has a Senior Citizen
Multipurpose Center at Secret
Lake Park that provides con­
gregate meals, many services
and activities for senior citizens.

an d f i r e p r o t e c t i o n , t w o
emergency rescue units, city
water and sewer service. and&gt;
Casselberry is the only city in
the county to have its own
animal control department.
A m o n g this y e a r 's a c ­
complishments were improve-,
ments at Secret Lake and the
signing of a “ first response"
agreement with the county for
fire and emergency service.

The city's tw o main parks are
S ecret Lake and W ir z .' The
former has ball fields, tennis
c o u rts , r a c q u e tb a ll cou rts,
playground, basketball, horse­
shoes and picnic facilities. Wirz
o ffe r s a r e c r e a tio n c e n ter,
sw im m ing pool and softball
diamonds. The Parks and Recre­
a tio n D ep artm en t sponsors
year-round classes and activities
for all ages.
Other services Included police

G

O

O

D

Y

E

A

R

A

R

TIRES...
G

O

O

D

Y

E

Service...
For More
Good Years In
Your Car
• BRAKES

•
•
•
•

• BELTS A HOSES
• A IR C O N D ITIO N IN G
• TIR ES A BATTERIES

• ALIGNM ENT A FRONT-END
WORK
• SHOCKS
• U-JOINTS

TUNE UP A EN G IN E W ORK
STARTERS A ALTERNATORS
EXHAUST
TRANSM ISSIO N SERVICE

We Are A Full Service Auto Repair Shop

s o m eth i n g - h a p p e n s * * - t - h o m e -

...Key
Continued from page 26
officers are expected lo be added
to the force In 1987.
O viedo
Oviedo’s 19 sworn police of­
ficers are supported by about six
part-time officers and eight civil­
ian employees. The department,
with a budget o f Just over
8710.000 is in the process fo
computerizing its records and
dispatch departments.
The emphasis is on crime
prevention with a police com­
mitment lo Neighborhood and
Business Watch programs, as
well as anti-drug programs.
In 1986 a second officer was
assigned to duty In a city school
as a resource officer. Another
may be assigned to that duty in
1987.

M

M

M

H M

H H H M

I

...Church
Continued from page 30
beautified.
• First Presbyterian Church of
DeBary. 267 Highbanks Road,
which broke ground lor Its
8500,000 building expansion
program March 23. The addition
included enlarging the sanctu­
ary, new Sunday school rooms
and new choir rooms.
In addition, on Dec. 2. 1986.
the Central Florida Presbytery
approved a merger voted by the

w h lle th e y w ere at w ork.
Weekend peak hours arc longer,
but It slows down when people
go to bed." Ms. Rubin said.
She added that during Nov­
ember. the Seminole County
Sheriffs Department answering
location got 3,339 calls to 911,
with 462 of them transferred to
the public safety department for
fire runs.
She said peak days for calls to
that location, which dispatches
for all unincorporated areas of
Seminole County and the city of
Longwood. are every Friday,
when calls average about 150
She said more domestic-type
problems are reported on holi­
days when families are together
and "It's so quiet you can hear a
pin drop" in the dispatching
room on Sunday afternoons
when there is a football game of
Interest on television.

Longwood
In late February the Longwood
police were lo move Into a new
police station, which has two
h o l d i n g Jail c e l l s . T h e
1 0 ,0 0 0 -squ are-foot station,
which cosl over $762,000, will
headquarter 31 sworn officers
supported by five part-time of­
ficers.
The new police station, at 235
W. Church St., will also have a
kennel for police dogs.
Also anticipated in 1987 is the
automation of the department's
records keeping.
C asselberry
Casselberry pollcp. with a
budget of over 81 million and a
staff of 39 sworn officers and 21
civilians, initiated a three-of­
ficer m otorcycle patrol and
further developed its police dog
unit in 1986.
A commitment has been made
to community relations, working
within
the schools and drug
education programs.

congregations of 135-member
First Presbyterian Church of
Lake Mary and 46-member Cov­
enant Prcbyterian Church last
year. The two groups began
worshipping together Jan. 4 at
First Presbyterian at 128 Wilbur
Ave. Covenant was located on
Highway 17-92 at Lake Mary
Boulevard. The new church is
known as First Presbyterian
Church of Lake Mary and lias
177 members. The Rev. A.F.
Stevens Is pastor and the Rev.
John Jackson, former pastor of
Covenant. Is associate.

m a y o r/ c lty m a n a g e r O w en
Sheppard is the city's chief
executive officer, but has no vote

Owned And Operated

555 WEST FIRST STREET, SANFORD

B y Cathy A Ken Ctouae

322-2821

(l.-Frl.
Sal.

O ve r 5 A c re s
O f Used
11T M 1 T ”
i m t f t r i
i m 1

LA.

■ a i r u
■ I ' n

l

i

t

I I I

l

i

T

i

l

*

i

1AO

addresses to be placed on file.
At the end of 1986, she said
115,000 phones were attached
to the 911 system. She said
about 780 addresses are known
to be in error or haven't been
made available, but she said she
will pursue obtaining that lmformation.
The start-up costs o f the
system for equipment around
the county is being paid by a
50-cent fee attached to custom­
ers' phone bills. The fee will
expire in October 1987 after 18
months. Funding to operate the
system comes from Seminole
County. Start-up and first year
costs for the telephone system
are estim ated to be abou t
8780,000, spent on purchasing
equipment and paying about
two dozen trained 911 operators.
Ms. Rubin said peak hours for
911 calls arc In the morning

&gt;

I 'i . 'J I ? '

LATE MODEL
EN G INES
&amp; TR A N S M ITIO N S
AVAILABLE!

NEW &amp; U S E D
B A T T E R IE S
$ o n o o
mm \ J

And Up

SA N FO R D
AUTO
L o c a te d O ne M ile
S o u th O f SR 46
On A irp o rt Blvd.
S a n fo rd , Fla.

SALVAGE
OPEN
M O N D A Y -SA T U R D A Y

S A N F O R D 321-3371
1-800-334-2041

J *

I&lt;

�K E N N E L

C L U B

CLUBHOUSE RESERVATIONS: 831-1600

(EXCEPT SUNDAY)

Matinees Mon., Wed., &amp; Sat. 1:00 p.m

K E N N E L CLUB

�Seminole County

Growth

Sanford Port:
Its Best Year
,

I

*

Business Good A t Industrial Park
By Diane Petryk
Herald News Editor
While The Port o f Sanford Is
not quite ready to hang out the
"no vacancy’ sign, the time for it
may soon be at hand, says Port
Administrator Dennis Dolgner.
And. after three straight years
of not needing financial support
from the county. It may soon be
In a position to return a surplus
to the county's general fund.
The port, created by a special
Act o f the legislature In 1965
and opened In 1971. was taxsupported for its first 11 years.
Dut that was always with the
Idea the public agency would
become self-supporting. Dolgner
said.
Dolgner. who has been port
administrator for 8 years, said
although the port didn't see the
15 to 20 percent Increase In
dollar draw he predicted In
1985. the past year has been the

best In the port's history. He
predicts a five percent revenue
Increase In 1987. The port has a
budget of $577,647 for 1986-87.
The port, on the St. Johns
River. Is actually a 120-acre
Industrial park which Includes
Hidden Harbour Marina, with Its
191 slips occupied by yachts,
houseboats, sailboats.
Hidden Harbour Marina Is
managed by Florida Sun In­
ternational. Orlando.
The port also Includes 15
storage tanks that provide 3.5
million gallons capacity for pe­
troleum or other liquids.
Thoughts that it would be
exclusively a docking facility
ended with the cancelation of
the long-planned cross-Florida
barge canal by the Nixon ad­
ministration. Under the canal
plan, the port would have had
access to Mississippi River and

See PORT, page 34

H «r*M Photo by Tommy Vlncont

This Is The New Docking Area At The Sanford Port Authority's Marina

N ew Shopping Centers Lure Business, Residents
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer
New shopping centers continue to lure develop­
ers. retailers and residents to Seminole County.
The county's newest and largest addition
opened last year near Cusselberry. The $8.5
million. 259.690 square foot Lake Howell Square,
off State Road 436 and Lake Howell Road,
features extensive landscaping, 55 stores and
m tunrania and a multl-plex theatre on its 35
a cre s.

The Richland Properties' brick shopping center
Is anchored by a 81,922 square foot Wal-Mart and
walkways, courtyards with wrought Iron lamps
and benches, and a pylon clock tower. Howell
Square tenants Include a 24,245 square foot
United Artist movie theater, a Frank's Nursery,
and Friendly's. R.J. O'Toole’s. Red Robin and
Casa Luplta restaurants.
Finished In December was the 97,395 square
foot Red Willow Plaza, on 40 acres off the
northeast corner of Red Bug and Tuskawllla
roads. The complex Is anchored by a 35.000
square foot Winn Dixie and Includes an Eckerd
Drug store, a bank and six retail shops.
Presently under construction In unincorporated
Seminole County arc two shopping complexes off
Lake Mary Boulevard. The roughly 360.000
square foot Lake Mary Center o ff Lake Emma
Road Is slated to feature an 83,000 square foot
Albertson's supermarket as Its anchor and 25
assorted retail shops. The 117.612 square foot
Lake Mary Village, on an 18.5 acre parcel olT Lake
Mary Boulevard and Rinehart roads, will be
anchored by a Publix supermarket.
Set to begin construction this year Is the 49.150
square foot Shoppes at Interlachen. at the
southeast corner of Lake Howell and Howell
Branch roads. A retail-office complex will be
developed on the site's 5.5 acres.
S a in s Casselberry Plaza will be built on a 21
acre site off the southeast comer of Stnte Road
436 and Fern Park Boulevard. The 191.378

square foot complex will features a 106.728
square foot Sam’s Wholesale Club outlet and a
Bob Hvan's restaurant.
T h e 117.105 square foot Shoppes at Heathrow
Is still going through county site plan reviews, for
buildings that will not exceed 35 feet. Plans call
for the shoppes to be located on a 12 acre parcel
off Lake Mary Boulevard, west of Jnterstatc-4.
Expected to be finished this spring In Sanford Is
the 14.000 square foot One Harbour Place, a $1.2
million retail complex on martna tale. Just of!
Lake Monroe. Harbour Place will be geared
toward!) the activity oriented, according to
developer John Smith. Its outlets will feature
diving equipment, swim suits, and leisure wear.
A wellness center will also be among Harbour
Place’s tenants.
Three other shopping areas In Sanford should
be finished before the year Is out, building
officials stay. The largest of these centers, the
95.600 square foot Sanford Town Square, will be
anchored by a 44.000 square foot Winn Dixie.
This complex lies off French Avenue, next to
Sanford Middle School, and will have a 3.600
square foot bank on an out parcel, a 4.000 square
foot restaurant and 31 retail shops.
Sanford's Reflections of Hidden Lakes. 500
Lake Mary Blvd., Is planned as a combination
retall/offlce complex. A 50.000 square foot three
story office building will be situated behind a
37.200 square foot retail center containing 20
stores.
Sanford's third new center will be the 60.000
square foot Rlverboat Plaza, at the corner of
Airport Boulevard and 25th Street. The center
will contain 22 stores. Including a 14.000 square
foot anchor building, the tenant for which has yet
to be named.
Rlvcrboat's 21 other shops will range In size
from 3,500 to 2,000 square feet.
Planned this year in Altamonte Springs Is the
20.444 square foot Altamonte Promenade, on
west SR 436. The complex will contain five

shops, including a seafood restaurant.
The 1,280,000 square foot Altamonte Mall
continues to remain Seminole County's largest
shopping complex. Billed ns a "regional" center,
the mall lies off State Road 436, near the
Intcrstate-4 exit. A number of restaurants and
banks are Interspersed among Its 165 shops.

which feature an almost limitless array of retail
offerings.
Altamonte Springs also boasts the 325.000
square foot Interstate Mall. Seminole's second
largest shopping complex. This mall, also on SR
436, features 35 stores and six movie theaters.

See NEW SHOPPINO. page 35

H*rald Photo by Tommy Vincont

Sanford Town Square on French Avenue in Sanford is one of three
new shopping centers coming in city

SIB's G oal For D o w n to w n S anford:
Just Make It A Pleasurable Place To Be In
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer

I

-L-1 ^ f i n
• ‘ — •
f
•:
This palm tree graces the entrance to the m arina as p art of
Horold Photo by Tommy Vlncont
SIB's beautification plan

Sanford Isn't Disney World,
but could take a lesson about
appearance from the fantasy
lahd's founder, according to Sara
Jacobson, former chairman of
the city's Scenic Improvement
Board.
"W alt Disney perhaps put It
best." she said. "'M ake a place
pleasurable to be In. and people
will find pleasure being there.'
Thai's exactly what the SIB Is
trying to do In Sanford: create a
positive visual Image in order to
attract the positive aspects of
growth and provide for economic
expansion."
The advisory body, formed by
city com m issioners In early
1985. refers to Its efforts as
" 'v is u a l Im p ro v e m e n t.’ not
beautification." according to Ms.
Jacobson, who
been at the
board’* b**lm since Its Inception.
M s. J a c o b s o n s e r v e d as
chairman until January when
Ray Priest, board member, was
voted In as ch airm an . Ms.
Jacobson continues to serve on
the board.

"W e're not cosmetic surgeons,
w e ’ re t r y i n g to b u i l d an
environmental character that
w ill m otivate new Industry,
commerce and residents "
said
Ms. Jacobson.
The SIB’s bottom line philoso­
phy "Is economic expansion
through a new Image.” and SIB
efforts promote visual improve­
ment. eradicate eyesores and
upgrade existing attributes, she
said.
The SIB works toward Its ends
with city staffers and commis­
s i o n e r s , a c c o r d i n g to Its
establishing ordinance.
Board members’ first project
was developing a "m aster plan"
to identify problems with the
city's appearance and recom­
mend solutions. Ms. Jacobson
said.
,
S p r in g b o a r d in g from the
master plan, SIB efforts have
re-landscaped city hall grounds,
produced a tree survey t" d**vHop a city-wide preservation and
planting program and enhanced
the appearance o f Sem inole
Boulevard, along Lake Monroe,
and the entrance to marina Isle.
SIB projects are proposed to

SIB members also approach or
Sanford com m issioners and.
w i t h t h e i r a p p r o v a l . I m ­ arc approached by private and
p lem en ted by city grounds public concerns, and make rec­
maintenance crews. Four of the ommendations for site upgrades
maintenance crews' 10 mem­ or plant materials for their site
bers have college degrees related development plans, she said.
Members also survey the city
to horticulture. Ms. Jacobson
"for eyesores on private and
said.
The SIB has nine members, public properties” and turn
some of whom exercise their eye these citings over the city's
code enforcement olflcer. she
for appearance professionally.
Board
member
Priest
Is said. "A s a result, the area no
Cardinal Industries' director of longer appears as unkempt as it
site planning: Al Besscssen Is an used to. You don't sec refrigera­
u r b a n h o r t l c u l t u r a l l s t for tors. Junk cars and piles of debris
Seminole County, and Danny like you once did."
In the offing are plans la
Floyd operates a local nursery.
In addition to Ms. Jacobson, the provide city residents with a!
board's other members arc vice "garden and lawn counseling
c h a i r m a n J u d y W I m b I s h . service." Ms. Jacobson said. The
J u a n n y M ercer. Ruth Lee. service would be provided on a
Lurleen Sweeting, and Virginia voluntary basis by SIB mem­
bers. who would refer residents
Longwell.
to "resource agencies and pro­
SIB members have reviewed vide them with access to the
"every city owned site, every
board's own landscape and hor­
park and hulldfm* throughout ticultural experts " she *«iiH
Sanford." and prompted their
A day-long "tra d e s h o w ."
rehabilitation and Improvement featuring local nursery owners
through plantings and regular and
horticulturists
is also
m aintenance program s con ­ planned. It will probably be held
ducted by ci ty crew s. Ms.
S ee S IB , p a g e 3 4
Jacobson said.

)
1

�Business
M-Sstrtertf MwaKI $ H r aid AdvtrfHr, Sanford, Fb________ Thursday, Fob. U, 1M7

• • « v l D

C o n tin u ed from pogo a s
this spring at either the Sanford
C ivic Center or Chamber of
C o m m e r c e b u i l d i n g . M s.
Jacobson said.
The SIB also hopes to begin
offering gardening tips via a
local radio station, and giving

awards “ for m ost Im proved
sites.'* she said.
SIB members are appointed by
city com m issioners. Original
appointees were given staggered
terms of one. two and three
years and subsequent appoin­
tees are to be named for three
year terms.
Ci t y C o m m is s io n e r J oh n
Mercer, husband of SIB member

Juanny Mercer, planted the seed
tar the SIB's Inception when he
found a city ordinance calling tar
a beautification advisory body.
Thc SIB held Its ftrst meeting in
February. 1985.
The board’s first move was an
overall evaluation of Sanford,
which produced the "master
plan." Ms. Jacobson said. "W e
felt there there was a basic
^

problem; the city was not at­
trading Its fair share o f growth.”
„
, „
n.Sa^ ord s socio-economic pronie . . was
™ encouraging
?"?• shc 93 d- W e have a very
^Igb percentage o f low Income
population with a resulting low
tax base. Because o f this the city
can,t provide services and convenlcnces that are the type you
want in a community. What you
end up with Is a preponderance
o f slum districting."
She said Sanford lacked "a
visual appearance o f pride.

Things appeared unkempt and
rundown, so therefore, the im­
age building program was devel­
oped through our ‘master plan."’
"Our feeling is Sanford is a
pleasant city to live in arid we're
trying to make it appear plea­
surable to others so that they too
will want to make it the ir home.
We feel we can accomplish this
through our master plan for
scenic Improvement. The visual
Improvement program Is. in the
long run. a plan to help create
economic expansion.”

Ms. Jacobson view s the SIB as
"the only city advisory body
that's self-initiating." and said
as a result, " w e create our
problems."
She said the SIB "has made
remarkable progress for a group
of volunteers that has operated
for such a short period o f time. I
think ou r p ro gra m Is well
th o u g h t ou t. and well
orchestrated. We have a lot of
accomplishments behind us and
a lot more projected in the
future."

“Your Complete Dry Cleaners”

LA U N D R Y &amp; DRY C LE A N IN G S E R V IC E
• A LT E R A TIO N S • M O N O G R A M M IN G
L IN E N &amp; U N IFO R M RENTAL S E R V IC E
• RESTAURANTS • MOTELS &amp; HOTELS •WEDDINGS • SPECIAL EVENTS

Magnolia M a ll In Downtown Sanford A New Face For The
Downtown Section
Port revenues are controlled
by a seven-member board of
directors. Members are Wendell
Agee, businessman; W allace
Continued from page 33
Schoettelkotte. businessman.
Gulf of Mexico commerce, as C l a i r e P a ul , r e t i r e d b u s i ­
nesswoman. Jim Rowe, busi­
well as that from the Atlantic
Ocean via the St. Johns River nessm an, D avid P. L an ier,
from Jacksonville. When the ce rtifie d public accountant.
Larry Strlckler, Southern Bell
canal d id n ’ t com e to pass.
m a n a g e r, an d a S e m i n o l e
D olgner explained, the port
C ou n ty C o m m is s io n er (on e
needed other means of revenue
county com missioner always
and began to develop as an
serves on the port board).
Industrial park.
The board has the option of
The port opened with a $1.6
using
any port profits for port
million investment. At that time
there was 20.000 square feet of development or returning sur­
pluses to the county. This com­
t e n a n t s p a c e . T o d a y t hat
in g y e a r , D o l g n e r fo r s e e s
n u m b e r has i n c r e a s e d to
e
x p e n d i t u r e to c o r r e c t a
276.000 square feet and all but
8.000 of It is occupied. Tenants rainwater drainage problem.
Such work may preclude any
include warehousing concerns,
revenue rebate to the county this
manufacturers, cabinet makers,
year,
but in the near future it
boat and recreational vehicle
.repair Bhops, a golf cart distribu­ may be possible, he said.
The port’s 23 tenants. Includ­
t o r and a retail outlet for log
ing Hidden Harbour Marina, pay
tiom es.

rent of approximately $475,000
a year, Dolgner said.
One of the port's most wellknown dock users was the river
cruise ship Star of Sanford. After
a successful career docked at the
Sanford Marina downtown, dis­
agreements with the city over
alleged damage to the dock there
prompted a move. The Star of
Sanford’s owners. Star Line.
Inc., signed a five-year docking
a g r e e m e n t w i t h t he P or t
Authority. But strong competi­
tion forced it to haul up anchor
in less than a year and return to
its home state of Michigan. In
breaking Its contract, the ship’s
firm paid a $6,000 penalty, but
the contract loss cost the port
between $10,000 and $12,000.
Dolgner said.
But. he added, the settlement
was a good deal because the ship
waa^ -going , t o . leave anyway,
whether or not the port agreed to

L DEVELOPMENT CO. J
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

Size us up, and
you’ll find
opportunity never
looked so good.
W e’re Stromberg-Carlson. Not the largest company in
telecommunications today. But, very possibly, the best.
For close to 100 years, we’ve put our expertise behind the latest
telephone equipm ent and telecommunications systems. Because
we’re not the biggest in our field, far-thinking engineers and
technicians enjoy greater visibility, and the opportunity to make
more of an impact.

A Com plete Line O f B uildings T o M eet Y o u r Needs
• COMMERCIAL
• INDUSTRIAL
• RESIDENTIAL • CUSTOM
• STORAGE
• AGRICULTURAL

•
•
•
•
•

RESIDENTIAL
VACATION HOMES
COMPLETE DESIGN SERVICE
U N O UTILIZATION PLANNING
SITE PLANNING A APPROVALS

But, don’t let our size fool you. Stromberg-Carlson is a subsidiary
of international telecommunications giant, Plessey. And that
allows us to combine some of the world’s most advanced research
and product technology with the proven performance of our own
DCO switching system. And provide innovative solutions to the
many challenges facing tomorrow’s telephone operating
companies.
You can get involved in lightwave technology, digital switching
networking and more. You can enjoy substantial Tewards. O f *
course, there is one small thing you’ll have to give up when you
work with a company our size. The illusion that bigger always
m AO ne

McKee Development Co
Developers of Sanford Commerce Park
1604 Airport Blvd.

323-1150

*

Stromberg-Carlson
A PLtSSEY TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMPANY

Not Bigger. Just Better.

Sanford

�Abundance O f Homes In Seminole
County Make For Buyer's Market
i

-r’ ■

By Kathy Tyrtty
Herald Staff Writer
People are moving Into the Sanford area at
the rate of eight per day. according to the
East-Central Florida Regional Planning
Council, and they are rinding homes
affordable and plentiful in Seminole County,
partially due to a "g lu t" at the present time.
The city Is growing at about 2.800 people
per year — about 10 percent of the 28.000
population — according to planning council
figures maintained by the Greater Sanford
Chamber o f Commerce, said Executive
Director Dave Farr.
"Most o f these people are young — in their
mid to late 30s to early 40s — fairly recently
wedded, with one child," Farr said.
"Both of them work and together they
make in the $35,000 range. They arc
‘quasi-professional’ In that they are salary
and not hourly, and many are involved In
the electronics, financial and Insurance
industries."
These people, he said, are generally
coming from larger metropolitan areas —
and the homes they are choosing are
single-family ones. Most of these new folks
arc moving Into the South and Western part
o f the city with easy access to Interstate 4
and Job opportunities in Orlando, he added.
"Patio homes,” on the smaller lots where
the house covers most of It. are also selling
well, like the single-family ones, but there is
somewhat of a glut In condominiums and
townhouses. said Maureen Golmont. presi­

»

dent of the Seminole County Board of
Realtors.
A second set of newcomers to Seminole
County. Farr said, are the retirees, but they
are outnum bered by the you n g pro­
fessionals. Both these groups are choosing
single-family homes.
John Butner. broker-salesm an w ith
Stenstrom Realty, explained what he saw as
a "buyer’s market” in Scmlnote County.
’ ’There are more homes for sale In
Seminole County than there arc buyers for
them ," he said. " I t ’s definitely a buyer’s
market and you can get some really good
deals out there. There’s a good selection of
resale and new homes."
‘ He said if you are looking for a singlefamily home, you can probably find a nice
one — three bedroom, two bath, approxi­
mately 1.300-1,400 square feet — priced
from the upper $50.OOOs to $60,000. and
up. Regardless of where you buy, he said,
"land Is still a good value in Seminole
County and Just about anywhere.”
"You can spend $40,000 in Seminole
County or over a million in Heathrow,” he
said.
Ms. Golmont of the Board of Realtors said
the new home market seems to be most
active right now — "Things are selling a
little faster than on the resale market." And
the average price of those new homes Is
$78,000 for a three-bedroom, two-bath.
She went as far as to say there was a
"glu t” on sales of all homes in 1986. so
anyone with the money. "Gel out there."

...N ew Shopping
Continued from page 33
Variety is also the keyword for Flea World,
which lies Just south of Sanford. olTU.S. Highway
17-92. The 104 acre complex has 1,2000 dealer
booths and a parking area for 3.000 cars.
Within the city of Lake Mary, completed
centers are Driftwood, a 45.000 square foot
project with about 20 shops, and the Shoppes at-

"W e (the Realtors) were pretty busy in
1986. but there are just so many homes on
the market. There was really a glut." Ms.
Golmont said.
She said she feels much o f the growth in
Seminole County will be to the north — In
Sanford. Lake Mary and points north.
If you want to buy a condo or townhouse,
the experts said you will find even more
availability at bargain prices. "Y ou can buy
a one-bedroom, one-bath In Sanford for the
high $20,OOOs,” Butner said. “ Or you can
spend $120,000-$130.000 for a condo In
Heathrow."
If you are on the selling end o f property In
Seminole County. Butner said, "price it
right and It will sell.”
"Things are turning over In average time
right now." he said. "It takes a little more
time to sell something on the east end o f the
county, but it will sell."
The type of home, he said, is not as
Important in resale as the location. "N o
matter what it Is, the location w ill sell it,” he
said.
A cco rd in g to Dataman In form a tion
S e r v i c e s , an A t l a n t a - b a s e d r e a l
estate/mortgage database firm. 6.418 homes
were sold In Seminole County from January
through November 1985. Their combined
value was $581,044,000 with the average
price per home being $90,533. The best
month for sales was August, with almost
1,000 sold, and the worst month was
February with 352 sold.

New homes in Seminole County range from sim ple design to
gracious splendor

Clubs O ffe r Friendship
Smith, president. 885 E. 20th
Street. Sanford.
GREATER ORLANDO
MOTHERS OF TW IN S CLUB.
Mary Ellen Ramsey, president.
7285 Abbey Lane. Winter Park.

Leisure clubs in Sem inole
County provide enjoyment for a
variety of Interests, as shown by
these listed with the Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce:
A N T I Q U E A N D C L A S S IC
A U T O M O B I L E C L U B OF
SEMINOLE COUNTY. Art DeGarm o. president, 279 Luis
Lane. DeBary
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A D E ­
PRESSION ERA GLASS CLUB.
Bret Kciffcr. president. P.O. Box
1032. Altamonte Springs.
CORVETTE CLUB. Barbara
Mayo, president. P.O. Box 773.
Lake Mary
G A R D E N C LU B OF S A N ­
FORD. INC., Mrs. Henry B.
T a y lor, president. P.O. Box
2990. Sanford.
IXORA GARDEN CLUB. Vida

PILOT CLUB OF SANFORD.
Ruth Gaines, president. 708 Oak:
Avenue. Sanford
SANFORD DUPLICATE
BRIDGE CLUB. Helen Ernest
and Laney Berryhlll. P.O. Box
447, Sanford.
SANFORD TO U R IST &amp;
SHUFFLEBOARD CLUB. Karl H.
Berg, president. 1025 Second
Place, Longwood.
•
SEM INOLE C O U N T Y GUN
AND ARCHERY CLUB. William
H. Wight, president, P.O. Drawer
I. Sanford.

Lake Mary, a 48,000 square foot retail complex
with roughly 15 stores. Driftwood is located on
Lake Mary Boulevard, between Longwood-Lake
Mary and Rhlnehart roads. The Shoppes lies at
Lake Mary Boulevard and Country Club Road.
No new shopping center construction is pres­
ently underway. Lake Mary building officials say.
Building officials with the cities of Casselberry
and Longwood reported no new shopping center
construction In 1986 say they've not received any
proposals for this year.

■ ’i p ** u

MONEY SOURCE

V &lt;■

M N O U 'I S T A M M M A S S
CLASSES S TA R T SO O N

WE DESIGN THE LOAN TO SU IT YOUR NEEDS
Ftst Fmftssmtl
tnd Confidtntitl Strict.

1st tnd 2nd Mortgttt

funhtu of [listing

Rtsidtntitl tnd
Committal

buns

Modgitn.

r lK L U m i

B a rry B a rk s

Qlb Edmonds

SEMINOLEMONEYTREE, INC.
§49 W. Uka Mary «&gt;d. Suit. 202
Driftwaad VUlaft • Lak« Mary, F I

323-8990

CUSTOM WINDOWS A PANCIS - FNEE ESTIMATES

rritoMiHim

WNtFM)
Ir ti Mary I N

ftlOf*HOW
'%

3220197

105 PM Mf
IM eu t i t

LA K E M ARY TR A V E L
WE WANT YOU TO GO AWAY...

After you've called others . . .
Call us for the Best Deal G Best Service.

Karen Beal
Branch Manager

We'll do your A ir • Hotel • Cruise • Bus or Incentive

L A K E M ARY TR A VE L

Sun Bank, N.A.
Lake Mary OMIce
549 W. Lake Mary Blvd.
Lake Mary, Florida 32746

(305) 331-2352
(305) 323-1776

For people with a past.
Not just any past will do either.
You haw to have fifty-five years or more of one.
You had to be here before the baby boomers
were. You have to be wiser than yuppies. You
had to be a teen before the rock ’n roll fifties.
Okay so far?
Then this could be your golden opportunity.
An opportunity to earn free checking and
If you’re 55 or better, you’re eligible for:
Discounts on travel all over the world
Specially designed travel opportunities
Free checking and free checks*
Free medical emergency card
Free direct deposit
Discounted safe deposit box
Discounted VISA and MasterCard
Discounted loan interest rate
•You receive free checking with a minimum
balance of $2,500 in any combination of regular

D riftwood Village
549 W. Lk. Mary Blvd.

Ib lijlu jG o d

other bank services right here in Seminole County.
An opportunity to earn discounts on travel all
over the world.
So stop by Florida National Bank
in Seminole County and ask about Golden
Opportunities. That’s the name of the program, too.
It’s for people who’ve been there.
A ticket to the future that’s based on your past.

D r ift w o o d V illa g e
F lo r is t
549 W. Lake Mary Blvd.
Lake mary, FL 32746

(305) 323-2757
P lo w e re a d d b e a u ty and elegance

323-0271

V illa g e .

J. MICHAEL VELT. R Ph
MS W. LARE MARY BOULEVARD
LAKE MART. FLORIDA U r t *

P ltG A m a a f
RICHARD Q. RUVEl, R.Ph.

D U A IiC .

A ll third party payment plan* accaptad including PCS,
PAID, AETNA, Health O ptions,, HMO Florida,
Workman's Compensation.
" P r o f e e e l o a * ! S e rv ic e A t C o m p e t i t i v e P r ic e s '*
Up to 60% savings on generic drugs
Computerized patient profilaa and insurance receipte
V IS A ’

UNBELIEVABLE
EARLYBIRD
DINNERS
4 - 6 P.M.

' CHRISTO’S
C H R ISTO 'SN
005) 513-5425
549W L ik iM a y B U i
DrilUoul Village

★

Eight Entree Selections

★

Includes: Choice o f Potato o r Rice P ilof Soup
o r Salad and Home Baked Bread.

only $4.95
Draft Beet and Wine Available

Breakfast
E x p e c t m o il' f r o m us.

O A l'O ld U

Free Delivery

savings, a Florida Gold account or a CD. A
minimum balance of $5,000 in any combination of
these accounts earns you free NOW PLUS check­
ing. For these and additional benefits, ask about
Golden Opportunities at Florida National Bank.

OPPORTUNITIES

01 CO

m U N L .

•

Lunch

•

Wallcovering
Custom Drapery

C ustom Blinds
Custom Bedspreads

WALL FASHIONS UNLIMITED
Y our Full Service H o m e D e c o r C e n te r
All In Stock Wallpaper 7.99 D/R
ELLEN SCHIRMER

Suile D C

322 6742

D inner

SM

Sanford Office: 101 E. 25th St., Sanford, FL 32771 (305) 321-6890
15 convenient offices serving you in Seminole and Orange Counties

M em b e r FD1C

&lt;\»*r

�' A * ’•4

t*-*-*-***—» ** * *** |.-••»**^|-

l,r* ™

**' ’▼*'* W-§f»'f •(• **■*»*-,. #~—|, * I »-* - ‘• ^ (

,y » •'*' * ■ '*• ,

-*h-

f

Growth
' j * - U n f r &lt; Bw aM $ Herald Advertiser* Sanford* FI.

Thursday, Feb. 3*, 1M7

North End O f County Experiencing Rapid Growth
i'

H e ra ld S ta ff W rite r

5 Growth In Seminole County Is shifting slightly
£from the south end o f the county to the
£Sanford-Lake Mary area as developers look for
Jjroore open spaces as lots In south county
' ,.a t*°.n9 become scarce and expensive.
?- "W e 'v e had a number o f significant projects
;'elther started or completed this year," said
^Sanford city planner Jay Marder.
i» Year-end data suggests the growth has shifted
'fro m commercial-industrial to multi-family con­
s tru c tio n In Sanford.
*, The largest new construction finished was the
SSeminole Centre, a shopping plaza 300,000
* square-feet large on U.S. Highway 17-92. south of
t Airport Boulevard. A Winn-Dixie shopping center
£ls being built near the Farmers' Market on 17-92
ja n d a 100,000 square-foot commercial developj*ment called the Reflection at Hidden Lakes off
r Lake Mary Boulevard, he said.
/ He said 176 additional units are being planned
‘ ■for G ran d view Apartm ents on Lake Mary
Boulevard and a 1,500 unit development —
General Sanford Estates — just outside the city at
Old Lake Mary Road and Airport Boulevard. He
said 228 apartments are being built at the
P ln e w o o d T r a i l s a p a rtm e n ts on A irp o rt
Boulevard, west of 17-92 and a 200 home.
100-acre development Is planned nearby also on
Airport Boulevard.
A 256-unit lakefront apartment complex Is
planned west o f Central Florida Regional Hospital
on Seminole Boulevard and will be the same size
as Sail Pointe Apartments also on Seminole
Boulevard.
Other construction ongoing, he said, includes a
new library In Sanford and expansion Is planned
at Cardinal Industries on Sanford Avenue and at
Carriage Cove Mobile Homes on State Road 427.
In Sanford, according to records, the number of
residential permits exceeded those Issued in 1985
but failed to match those issued In 1984.
Commercial and industrial growth continued at
about the same level In 1986 as In 1985.
A total o f 1,758 permits were Issued for
commercial industrial, residential and apartment
construction. Total value of the permits was
$31,893,735, a recovery over 1985 when the total
value was $25,983,577. In 1984 the total was
$48,778,915.
The total value of 145 residential permits
Issued as of December 1986 was $5,152,299. In
1985, the number of single-family residential
permits was less at 102 but the permits were

valued more at $8,326,108. Neither year topped
such building In 1984, when 384 permits were
Issued with a value o f $ 13,272,451.
Multi-family dwellings growth by dollar value
was up for a second year In a row In Sanford
though only four perm its Issued In 1986
compared with 21 permits In 1985.
Again,
neither year matched multi-family construction
In 1984. The four multi-family permits in 1986
were valued at $8,504,926. The 21 permits in
1985 totaled $5,467,668. In 1984, 16 such
permits were valued at $29,319,390.
Commercial and Industrial permits In 1986
totaled 29 and were valued at $12,325,352. In
1985. 18 such p e rm its w e re v a lu e d at
$12,722,487 and 1984, 25 permits were issued
for a value of $6.187,074.
Lake Mary Is also experiencing steady growth
with a significant boon in commercial construc­
tion In 1986. In 1987. however, the emphasis
Is expected to run towards residential, said
Stanley Welling, building official for that city.
He said the city has three subdivisions
underway totaling 550 tots and perhaps twice as
many will be available for building in 1987. he
said.
During 1986. several commercial building
permits were Issued and a new television
broadcast station started operating.
C o m m e r c i a l e n d e a v o r s a c c o u n t e d for
$8,122,100 worth o f construction in the city in
1986. That figure out-distances 1985 and 1985,
which were $1,421,500 and $1,488,500 respec­
tively.
Single fam ily residence construction also
picked up In Lake Mary In 1986 totaling
$9,566,375 as compared to $7,521,199 In 1985
and $7,710,482 In 1984. Multi-family construc­
tion was up but constituted only a small slice of
the new construction pie. Tw o permits for such
dwellings were Issued In the city In 1986 for a
value of $385,000. One permit was Issued In
1985, and 1984. for respective values of $65,000
and $70,000.
In Casselberry, commercial and Industrial
growth dropped for the third year in a row though
1986 figures are based on growth from January
to November.
Casselberry city planner Barry ‘ Campbell said
there have been no large developments In the city
during the past year or in 1985. He said the city
does not have available the open land that
outlying cities In the county have. That however,
docs not rule out development, he said.
He said there are some undeveloped tracts In

the city and redevelopment Is also a possibility,
he said, that Is taking a shopping center, such as
Seminole Plaza, and renovating It. He said
development has been affected In the city by

almost non-existent reserve sewage capacity,
though steps are under way to correct that, he
said.

See *APID , page 37

You build your life around people
you can depend o n ...

There are Florida Pow er people on the other side o f your
electric switch. A nd over 99% o f the tim e, they
give you the power you need.

Florida
Power

Think about it.

Jewett Orthopaedic Clinic

That’s almost always.

ttxjr E n e r g y

N e ig h b o r

NOW SERVING SEMINOLE COUNTY
9

We’re proud to be a part of the Seminole County
medical community.
South Seminole Medical Plaza
521 West State Road 434,
Suite 200
Longwood, Florida 32750
Next to South Seminole
Community Hospital

(305) 767-9610
1-800-432-6635
SSCHI

★ JOC

W e A re M ost A p p reciativ e O f Y ou r T ru st In
W
'

U

a o h

-

S ic /te U

k n q e n

T H o x te ta s u f.

* )h

c

:

Dedicated To The People O f Sanford/Seminole County
It Is Our Purpose To Give Thoughtful Service And
In So Doing, If We Have Helped To Lighten Your
Burden, Our Aim Has Been Accomplished.
We Sincerely Hope Our Service Has Been
Deserving O f Your Confidence.

434

WHEN YOG NEED SYMPATHY . . .

1-4

Celebrating 50 Years of Orthopaedic Leadership

Because We Understand The Effects O f Bereavement
We Make Every Effort To Provide Thoughtful
Assistance in Every Way Possible With
Dignity At Ail Times

“What Is Important Is
The Peace Of Knowing
We Care For Your
Loved One’’
PRE-ARRANGEMENT PLANS ARE AVAILABLE ■ALSO
TALK TO US ABOUT CREMATION SERVICES AND FAMILY PLOTS
EUNICE I. WILSON • DIRECTRESS
BERNARD D. MITCHELL • DIRECTOR
LINDIE D. STEWART NOTARY &amp; EXECUTIVE SECRETARY

MORTUARY
S e rv in g S a n fo rd a n d S e m in o le C o u n ty
SIN C E 1955

2 4 H O U R S E R V IC E
C A L L 3 2 2 -5 2 1 2

EUNICE I. WILSON
FUNERAL DIRECTRESS

1 1 1 0 P IN E A V E N U E - S A N F O R D

V

.

SVC

m

�*

***’■•—

•r r ** "/ *

Growth
\

...Rapid
C M t ln t d from page 36
In 1986, p e rm its Issu ed
num bered e ig h t, valu ed at
$2,094,000. In 1985, there were
12 permits totaling $7,457,094.
And In 1984, 22 permits for
Industrial and commercial build­
ing were valued at $ 13,287.080.
Single- and multi-family hous­
ing in Casselberry also dropped
below 1985 levels with singlefamily residence construction
dropping for a third year.
Single-family home construc­
tion was valued at $1,842,506 in
1986 in Casselberry. In 1985 the
figure was $1,982,692 and In
1984 It was $2,471,951. Multifa m ily uni ts d ropped from
$ 9 . 9 6 1 . 8 6 6 In 1 9 8 5 to
$2,255,626. The 1986 figure,
however, Is similar to the 1984
figure of $2.445,180.
Growth also slowed slightly in
Longwood In 1986, based on 11
months of data at year’s end.
Chris Nagle, city planner, said
construction was off a little
because there was a four-month
halt In acceptance of building
applications to the staff could
catch up on applications and
review the city's comprehensive
plan.
He said the city Is fairly
“ saturated" with commercial
developm ent and growth In
1987 will probably be residen­
tial. He predicted, however, that
all grow th will be " p r e t t y
steady."
Longwood's commercial dev­
elop m en t in 1986
totaled
$12,722,721, down from
$15,313,919 In 1985. In 1984.
the city had $15,120,506 worth
of commercial development.
Single-family residential con­
struction also dropped off: 81
hom es In 1986 v a l u e d at
$6,086,796 compared to 118
such homes In 1985 valued at
$8,208,376. In 1984, new
single-family housing construc­
tion In Longwood was valued at
$7,773,275.
Multi-family housing in the
city, Including attached singlefamily units. Increased signifi­
cantly from 1985 but was far
below the 1984 figure. Multifamily structures In 1986 were
valued at $3,067,979, whereas
the figure was $1,126,215 In
1985 and $13,800,896 in 1984.
In Seminole County, singlefamily residential construction

has been steadily increasing and
outdistancing multi-family hous­
ing. Commercial development Is
apparently Increasing though
recent figures were not readily
available.
In 1986 single-fam ily con­
struction totalled $213,736,732.
In 1 9 8 5 t h e f i g u r e w a s
$169,704,310. The prior year it
was $120,827,544. Multi-family
housing was less than half that.
County officials agree that
commercial development Is on
the Increase, mainly along major
roadways such as U.S. Highway
17-92 and State Road 436.
Glnny Markley. of the county’s
land management department,
said commercial development In
the county is steady and appears
to be a little concentrated In the
southwest portion.
In 1985, 1,708 single-family
permits were issued by the
cou n ty for a va lu e of
$145,199,446. In 1984, 2,465
such permits were issued for a
value of $164,176,860. All other
new construction in 1985 was
worth $170,386,748 with 2.836
permits. In 1984, the value of
2.337 permits was $49.119,680.
In Altamonte Springs, "growth
Is tied to what the roads can
carry." said Alice Gllmartin,
acting deputy planning director.
That city experienced much
growth in 1986. as measured
from September 1985. to Sep­
tember 1986. the latest complied
figures available. That growth
was far more than In 1984-1985,
and more than 1983-1984. Total
value of permits Issued as of
September 1986 for the previous
y e a r was $ 8 5 ,3 4 8 ,8 0 9 , In
1984-85, It was $55,077,202 and
in 1983-84 It was $79,977,577.
M s. G l l m a r t i n s a i d a
moratorium on zone and site
plans In late 1985 and early
1986 may have caused a drop­
ping off of construction for a few
months. The moratorium was
i mpl e me nt e d whi l e a c o m ­
prehensive plan was adopted by
the city, she said.
She said the city has experi­
enced a significant Increase In
multi-family construction
basically because It Is getting too
expensive In the city to build
single-family dwellings. She said
she expects the boon In 1987 to
be in the area of commercial
growth.
She said Altamonte Springs
bus a lot of room to expand. One
upcoming project she expects to
go in In 1987 Is a 550,000-

UCF Reports Rapid Growth
As Seminole County’s popula­
tion grows, so too does the
number of people wanting a
four-year degree from the Uni­
versity of Central Florida, just
south of Seminole County and
east of Orlando.
At least 16 percent of the
16.500 full and part-time stu­
dents attending UCF arc com­
muters from Seminole County,
said Dean McFall, director of
public ulTairs at the university.
That percentage does not In­
clude any resident students from
Seminole County or those born
and raised In Seminole County
but living off-campus In private

apartments, he said.
The university, which began
scheduling classes in 1968 with
1.500 students, offers under­
graduate degrees in 78 subjects,
master's degrees In 48 subjects,
five specialist degrees, a level
between master’s and doctrate.
and doctorates In 12 subjects.
The university consists of five
colleges, that of arts and science,
business administration, educa­
tion. engineering, and health.
The doctoral degrees arc offered
In the areas of computers, busi­
ness. engineering and education.
McFall said.
See UCF. page 38

It Takes More Than A Good Secretary.
To Run An Efficient Office

YOU N EED

P(MeU'&amp;
★ FILES ★
★ TYPEWRITERS ★
★ OFFICE FURNITURE *
★ CALCULATORS ★
★ MUCH, ★
★ MUCH, *
★ MORE ★

square-foot mall on the north
side of State Road 436 between
the Altam onte Mall and In­
terstate Mall.
Similar data was not readily
available from the cities o f
Winter Springs and Oviedo.
Dob Powell, land development
coordinator for Winter Springs,
however, said most of the devel­
opment In the city was residen­
tial with sporadic commercial
building.
"W in te r Springs Is pretty
much a bedroom community."
he said. He said Winter Springs
should see continued residential
development In 1987 but there
could be changes down the road.
A study Is to be conducted In
1987 concerning the possible
widening o f State Roads 419 and
434 from where they Intersect
cast of the city to Tuscawlila
Road, two miles away. If that
area Is made Into a four-lane
road, he said. It would connect
two separate sections of the city
and probably spur more com­

mercial growth.
"W inter Springs has tremen­
dous potential for growth," he
said.
O v ie d o Is h a v i n g s te a d y
growth as measured by single­
family permits Issued.
"W e're issuing about 50 p e t
month." said city planner Randy
Cohen. The values range from
$60,000 to $105,000, he said.
In the past year the city grew
from 6.2 square miles to 10,4
square miles with the annexa­
tion o f a 1,545-acre tract known
as Twin River. It is expected
over 3,000 units will be built In
that area. The city also annexed
a 1,043-acre tract, he said,
which put the city line almost to
Chuluota, he said.
Large com m ercial develop­
ment has been limited to a
159,000 -square-foot shopping
center under construction on
State Road 434, he said. His
prediction for 1987 Is more
growth through single-family
residences.

THE SPIRIT OF
s

m

• Motorcraft Parts
&amp; Accessories
• Goodyear Belts &amp;
Hoses With Lifetime
Warranty
• Overnight Avail­
ability
• Special Orders
• Free Delivery

'p a m tty

117 Magnolia Ave., Downtown Sanford

322-5842

O fu n a U d

210 S. FRENCH AVE.
SANFORD

32M IW

SB,

EMINOLE F
A. tORD

Used Cars
1976 Ford G ranada
Stock No. 6T1006B...................

1980 Lincoln Mark VI
Stock No. 6T029-A...................

1980 Ford Mustang
Stock No. C 4 6 1 3 A ...................

1980 Honda Accord
Stock No. 7C239P 4 Dr.............

1982 Datsun D210
Stock No. 7T323A................... .

1976 Ford Pinto
Stock No. 7T060C...................

1968 Ply. Barracuda
Stock No. C 4 5 9 7 -C .................

1981 Ply. Horizon TC3

995
*5495
*1595
*2995
*1595
* 695
*1995

$

Stock No. C 4 6 1 6 A .....................

1982 Ford Escort Wgn.
Stock No. C4621

1980 Monte Carlo
Stock No. 6T642-B

1972 Pontiac Catalina
Stock No. 7T1554 .....................

1978 Ford T-BIrd
Stock No. 7T173-B.....................
Stock No. C4580 .....................

1979 Lincoln Town Car
Stock No. MT002 4 Dr

1978 Olds. Cutlass

695
*1595
*5995

$

1981 Chry. LeBaron

*1695

Stock No. 7 C 0 0 4 A .............

THE SPIRIT OF

E M JN O LE
SEE IT IN OUR

Lifetim e Service Guarantee
Nobody really gives free car repairs, of
course. But we give you the next best
thing-our/m* Lifetime Service Guarantee.
Here's how it works. If we repair your Ford,
Mercury, Lincoln, or Ford licht truck, you
pity us only once. And if that covered part
ever fails or wears out, we guarantee to fix
it or replace it again free. Free parts. Free
labor. It covers thousands of parts and lasts
as long as you own your vehicle- no matter
where you bought it or when. So

the next time your car needs repair, bring it
to us. And get our free Lifetime Service
Guarantee. Its the next best thing to free
car repairs.
Ask Us For A Free Copy Of The Guarantee.

LIFETIME
SERVICE
GUARANTEE

WE FIX CARS FOR KEEPS.
M O T O R C R A F T O IL
and O IL FILTER S P E C IA L

A U T O M A T IC T R A N S M IS S IO N
S E R V IC E

Includes up to 3 quarts at Molorcratt oil. Molorcralt oil Inter
end installation Additional oil and Inters eatra It required

T O T A L S PE C IA L PRIC E A S 0 € S C R IB E D

T

“ W

Powetl'd'
CUice Scififdcf,

O um uL &amp;

SEE FT IN OUR

SERVING CENTRAL FLORIDA

1945

l

L1

T

W

/ ie r e

j t

TO TAL SPE C IA L P RIC E - P A R T S an d LABOR

$

$ 4 0 9 5

gAPLCE

„ £

THE SPIRIT O F AMERICA

Include! bend adjustment end screen cleaning it necessary,
adjustment of manual and inrollle linkage. Includes
replacement ot fluid and gasket Ford built vehicles only

• SALES • SERVICE • REPAIRS

C&amp;B
DISCOUNT
AUTO
PARTS
►

**

Ttwradoy, F it, U, 1*7-17

Sanford HoraM A Horald Advertiser# Sanford# FI.

,

E .vpa. 3 / 3 1 / 8 7

f/ r e a t S &gt; e a f

i

0 5 0

1

f f la f t jb e n v u /

SEMINOLE FORD

SANFORD*FL* 322031
H*y. 17-92 at tako Mary B:*d.

fc’ x / w . 3 / 3 1 / 8 7

Q iliW P G 4 4 -S 9 1 S

’’

I

�Growth
3B Sanford Herald A HaraM A d w rtl—r , Sanford. FI.___________ Thursday, Fab, at, 1W7

w &lt;

As Well As Inventory

Merchants' Group
Stresses Attractions
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff Writer
S a n fo rd 's downtown
merchants are focusing their
promotional efforts on the city's
attributes as well us their wares,
a c c o r d i n g to d o w n t o w n
merchants association president
Margie Belne.
Mrs. Heine said the group
plans continued concentration
"on providing what's best for
ourselves as business people und
*tie city as a whole. Wc feel our
plans will compliment Sanford
l»v drawing positive attention to
It."
In 1 9 8 6 t h e g r o u p
reorganized, putting Mrs. Belne
at the helm, rc-evaluatcd Itself,
and expanded Its membership
from about 15 to 42 businesses,
she said.
The group also changed Its
name from the S a n fo r d
Downtown Business Association
to th e Su nf o r d Hi s t o r i c a l
W a te rfro n t As s oc i at i on, to
promote and capitalize on the
city's attributes.
Although certainly ambitious
undertakings. Mrs. Belne In­
dicates the association has only
been laying groundwork for ad­
ditional endeavors.
"There's still a lot more to be
d on e, a lot mo r e ' p ul l i ng
together,"’ she said. "W c want to
become a really organized group
that works well with each other
and does what's best for the city

...UCF
Continued from psge 37
UCF was initially designed In
1963 to become the M.I.T. of the
south, McFall said, a move In
keeping with the growing space
age and the expected need for
technical expertise. At the time
the university was known as

as a whole."
Mrs. Beinc, who operates Oldc
Tymes Connection, an antique
store, on First Street, said the
group's name change Is being
accompanied with a sweeping
campaign to lure local and out of
town visitors to Sanford's "core
business district."
Plans call for "rack cards" to
be placed In tourist spots, like
hotels and area Chambers of
C o m m e r c e , to a d v e r t i s e
downtown Sanford. Also being
developed Is.a map designating
the downtown area's businesses
and offerings.
Additionally, the merchants
will I k * sponsoring more outdoor
activities In the First Street area
and using the association's
budget to benefit area charities.
Mrs. Belne said.
As follow-up to November's
successful cruise night-sock hop
on First Street, downtown San­
ford may soon be the setting for
a "Western night." featuring
square and clog dancing, a "B ig
Band night.” offering dance and
song in a 1940s atmosphere, a
farm ers' bazaar, local high
school band performances and a
children's art show, Mrs. Bclnc
said.
Planning is being spearheaded
"b v a marvelous blend of Ideas
a nd enthusiasm from
estab lish ed me r c hant s and
newer businesses." Mrs. Belne
said.
Florida Technical University.
The assassination of President
John F. Kennedy and succession
of Lyndon Johnson to the pre­
sidency. however, saw the move
of many space-related support
facilities to Texas. McFall said.
In 1979 the university changed
Its name to reflect the growth
dynamics o f central Florida,
which was away from space age
technology, he said.

ix Cham bers Serve A re a
Six chambers of commerce
s e r v e t h e c o m m u n i t y In
Seminole County gi vi ng In­
formation on services and field­
ing complaints.
Those cham bers arc: The
Greater Se mi no l e County
Chamber of Commerce, serving
A l t a m o n t e S p r i n g s and
Casselberry: the Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce serving
Sanford and the surrounding
area; the L o n gw ood -W ln ter
Springs Chamber of Commerce;
the Lake Mary Cham ber of
Commerce serving Lake Mary:
The Oviedo Chamber of Com­
merce. serving that area: and.
the Maitland-South Seminole
Chamber of Commerce serving
south Sem inole County and
Njlaltland.
The chambers provide a vari­
ety of Information on their areas
to residents Including business
persons, to visitors and to
potential residents. In some
cases, they sponsor or c o ­
sponsor community events and
functions.
• T h e Greater Sanford
Camber of Commerce. Is located
at 100 E. First St.. Sanford:
phone Is 322-2212. Like all sister
chambers, it Is open weekdays.
It boasts about 1.300 members.
Meetings times and locations
vary. For Information, call the
chamber.
• The Lake Mary Chamber of
Commerce with 250 members Is
located at 165 N. Country Club

Hoad. Lake Mary: phone 3221213. Breakfast meetings are
held the first Wednesday of the
month at the Community Im­
provement Association building.
260 N. Country Club Drive.

CUSTOM FRAMING

G L A S S A N D F A IN T
C O ttffc N Y , IN C .

QUALITY PAINTS
FOR YOUR HOME

SINCE 1945
2 1 0 M A G N O L IA A V E .
DOW NTOW N SANFO RD

• m Beniamin

Association members serve on
newly-formed committees. In­
cluding budget, advertising, and
activities. Also, the Christmas
committee continues handling
traditional bedecking of the First
Street area during the holidays.

M o o re i

P A IN TS

322-4622

The “ core downtown area" Is
bounded by Sanford and French
avenues, the waterfront and
Third Street. Mrs. Bclnc said.
She adds, however, that as the
city grows, so too will the
boundaries of its downtown
merchants’ district.

W

M

’’Because Sanford Is growing,
our group is as well, and we plan
to keep getting better and bet­
ter.” Mrs. Bclnc said. ’ ’W e’ll
have more businesses to draw on
for memberships and our efforts
will certainly expand."
In a n t i c i p a t i o n o f t h e
expansion, the group's 1987
budget will contain funds for
ambitious promotion and a sepa­
rate line Item for local charities,
like the Salvation Army, she
said. "W e feci It’s important to
do things for the community as a
group: to benefit Sanford as a
whole, not Just ourselves.”

S em in o le C o u n ty O ffic e s

The promotion will also assist
Sanford's "getting the recogni­
tion it deserves." Mrs. Belne
said. "Our efforts consider the
city’s needs and are planned to
compliment and enhance Its
attributes."

in
inK
The bright way to bank.

The campus, comprised Ini­
tially of two academic buildings,
has more than 50 buildings and
a residential student population
of about 1,000 students. About
half the total student population
goes to school part-time. About
3,000 students live near the
campus in private housing.
McFall said.
The growth of the university
has been "frantic," he added.
" I f Orlando grew as fast as
UCF h a s. It w ould h ave a
population of five million instead
of one million." he said.
—Deane Jordan

We A re P ro u d T o B e A P a r t O f
Sem inole C o u n ty ’s G row th

For that special day...

K A D E R JEW ELERS IN C .

• T h e G reater S e m in o le
County Chamber of Commerce
serving Altamonte Springs and
Casselberry, has more than
1.550 members and has a gen­
eral luncheon meeting set for the
last Friday of the month at
varying locations. For Informa­
tion call the chamber at 8344404. or visit at 291 Maitland
Ave.. Altamonte Springs.

has the perfect gift for you!

DIAMONDS - RINGS - WATCHES - CHAINS - BRACELETS - CHARMS
EARRINGS - STERLING SILVER - HAND CUT C RYSTAL

• The Longwood-Wlnter
Springs Chamber of Commerce,
located at 150 Southeast Lake
St.. Longwood. phone 831-9991.
has about 350 members and
holds general luncheon meetings
on the fourth Monday of the
month at the Quality inn North,
on State Hoad 434 In Longwood.’
• The Oviedo Chamber of
Commerce can be reached at
Box 1236, Oviedo, phone 3656500. It has almost 200 mem­
b ers and me e t s the thi rd
Thursday ol the month at the
T o wn House Restaurant in
Oviedo.
• T h e M a 111a n d - S o u t h
Seminole Chamber of Commerce
has 450 members and meets at
varying times and places. They
can be reached at 110 N.
Maitland Ave.. Maitland, or by
phoning 644-0741.

JANUAPy
T *
6

7

T

F,

l

2

J tV r i

7 pa i f Z3 ?&lt;

» 30 3,

'F eb . 14th
St. Valentines
Day
March 17th
St. Patrick’ s Day
April 19th
Easter
May 10th
M other’s Day
AUGUST
T VV T

Employment Is Up
In Seminole County
E m p l o y m e n t j u m p e d in 300.
5. Harper Mechanical Corp.
Sem inole County by 18.000
workers in 1986. from 120.000 Sanford. 300.
6. Cobla Boats. Sanford. 298.
to 138.000. according to state
7. Sprague Electric. Altamonte
labor statistics.
In Seminole County, the larg­ Springs-Longwood. 297.
8 . Emerson Electric.
est employer, also located in
Sanford, was the S em in ole Casselberry. 285.
9. Brown-Bovari. Sanford. 202.
County School Board with 5.022
10. W a t e r B o n n e t .
employees as or late 1986.
Casselberry. 186.
Also in Sanford was K mart
11. Continental Circuits Inc.
with 1.560 employees. StromLongwood. 170.
berg-Carlson with 1.400 and
12. Sunnlland. Sanford. 132.
Seminole County government
13. Continental Testing Labs
with 848, down from 913 in
1985.
Inc.. Fern Park. 129.
14. Uni ted T e c h n o lo g ie s ,
In Seminole County, the major
manufacturers arc:
.ongwood. 128.
1. Strombcrg-Carlson. Lake
15. Simplimatie Engineering.
Mary. 1.600 employees:
Sanford. 100.
2. Cardinal Industries. San16. Penn Al umi num lilt..
lord. 550.
Sanford. 100.
3. NCR. Lake Mary. 450.
17. Callbron Corporation. Lake
Mary. 75.
—Deane Jordan
4. Harcar Aluminum, Sanford.

J

M e m b e r F.D .I.C .

June 2 1 st
Father’s Day
August 2nd
Friendship Day

SEpTEMaeq

' \ T S' J * s
l ’ &lt; 15 ,8 /° " ||

K ad er Jew elers, your local jew eler who has
grown with you and your fam ily, for the past
8 8 years and who has been part of these
S p e c ia l D a y s for generations. W e look fo r­
w ard to the next generations in offering you
caring service, quality, and value.
C o m e by
tradition!

X

o

d

today

t n

and

.

experience

( k

m

oeroBEn
r w r

as|“ «s

O ctob er 16th
B oss’ s Day

novembe*

DECEMBEfl
'

l

*

T

f

1 * 3 J

8 9 10 n

fam ily

k

Hk-M
u

U

Septem ber 13 th
Grand Parent’ s
Day

.

112 South Park Ave. Downtown Sanford
322-2363

*/c*N

gem

O ctob er 25th
M other-In-Law’ s
Day
Decem ber 25th
Christmas
Birthdays
Anniversaries
Engagem ents
Weddings
Christenings
Retirem ents

�iC

Choose from am ong these pick*of-the
season beauties from our spring and
sum m er collection of nam e brand
fashions.

35 Years And Still Growing With Sanford!
We’re your complete lady’s apparel storefeaturing name brands of everything a lady
needs to wear.
Style plus quality

D R E S S E S • S P O R T S W E A R • L IN G E R IE
• A C C E S S O R IE S
And A ll Pleasantly Priced

Come See For Yourself!

“ THE OLDEST &amp; FINEST

FOR 35 YEARS

2 1 8 E . 1st S T .
H IS T O R IC D O W N T O W N
SANFORD
M O N .-S A T . 9 :0 0 -5 :3 0

�■1

Employment
Thursday, Feb. U, 1M7

40— Sanford Herald A Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

,

County's Labor Market
The labor market In Seminole
C ounty has rem ained fairly
steady during 1986 with a rise In
construction related Jobs, ac­
cording to labor department
estimates.
Most of the Jobs In the county
are service orientated, said Rob­
ert Monroe, a labor analyst with
the state.
Latest statistics show that
about 138.000 were employed In
the county In 1986. up 18.000
front 120.000 In 1985. Monroe
said. A breakdown o f what
Industries they were employed
In was not available but con­
struction was estimated to be
employing more this year than
last, according to Monroe.
The unemployment rate for
the county nt the end of 1986
was about 4.9 percent, up from
4.3 percent
In 1985
and
near 5 percent In 1984. The
national unemployment average
In 1986 near the end of the year
was 7 percent. Monroe said.

43 percent of the county's work
force and 89 percent of them
white.
Previous extrapolations from
employment data Indicated that
most workers were employed In
malls, stores and shops, with
manufacturing being limited In
the county and construction
Increasing.
M onroe said Sanford and
Altam onte Springs were the
centers of employment.
Farm workers, he said, ac­
count for a very small portion of
the work force, he said.
T h e a v e ra g e em p lo ym en t
growth rate in the county In
1986 Increased 6.9 percent over
1985. he said.

y Labor Depart
d
a
te
S

A ve.. Fern Park, telephon e
331-0100. The agencies are open
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
T h ere are various private
employment agencies In busi­

ness In Seminole County but
state e m p l o y m e n t agency
personnel say caution should be
used lir choosing one of those
agen cies because, although

many are reputable and have
long standing in the community,
there Is a great turnover of
ownership In the business and
new owners may operate dif­

ferently.
Q u e s tio n s a b ou t s p e c ific
employment agencies may be
made at the state agency or at
local chambers of commerce.

Don Gorman, Supervisor
Jim Laonard

Job Service of Florida, the
state's em ploym ent agency,
provides free Job Information,
job finding assistance, veterans
Job services. Job counseling and
other Job services such as test­
ing.

PERSO N NEL

Job Service maintains two
ofTlccs In Seminole County. They
arc located at 2460 Park Ave..
Suite 101, Sanford, telephone
322-7322. and at 2706 Wells

Although there Is no demo­
graphic profile of the typical
worker in the county, a 1980
census showed that women were

O V

p/8 *c 0^ W
Co* V 6

CP
S '*
Thompson

Your Complete Home Owned &amp; Home Operated
Pest Control Company Since 1974
• Pest C ontrol
Residential - Com m ercial
• Lawn S praying
•

S e n io r S h u ttle
W innie Payne, center in van, president of the Federation of
Senior Citizens Clubs in Seminole County, is escorted from
the new van purchased by city of Sanford to transport senior
citizens. Assisting, from left, are Ruth Hester, d river; Bob
Thomas, city com m issioner; and Dave F a rr, executive
director of the G reater Sanford Cham ber of Commerce.

S a v in g

J im Rowe - O w n er
Jessie S m ith - M g r.

2626 Iroquois Ave.

Sanford

T h e

( in c lu d in g
lo t a n d a ll
c lo s in g
c o s ts )

MARONDA H O M ES
M ODEL CENTER
C a rib b e a n St
D e lto n a
Exit

D r e a m

$ 3 9 , 9 0 0

u m m in g b ird St

D E LT O N A

.

3 2 2 -2 0 7 0

A m e r ic a n

Single Family Homes
Priced From
$38,900 To $69,700

• Te rm ite Inspections
• Te rm ite Tre a tm en ts
• Fum iga tion s

b d rm

g re a t
ro o m

m 8 tr
b d rm

2 0 °. 13° (y d c H )

b d rm

D irk s e n Dr

”

FHA/VA financing
with low or no
down payment
M o d e ls O p e n :
D a ily 1 0 -6 • S u n d a y 1 2 -6
C all:
6 2 8 - 2 1 6 2 fro m O r la n d o
5 7 4 - 6 6 3 4 fro m D e lto n a

n

The Liberty

DIRECTIONS: From Interstate 4 use
Deltona exit to main entrance. Follow
Deltona Blvd. '/j mile past Deltona Inn to
Maronda Homes Model Complex on right.

M

a r o n d a

H

o m

fr o n t » &lt; i d o I ail a n d
w in d o w lo c a tio n m a y
v a r y w ith e le v a tio n

g a ra g e
i i
10■ to

N

• Prices and
terms subject lo change
without notice or obligation

o
M

W
a

o

n

d

r o n

i s

D

e

r g

e s t

l t o

d
n

e

r

a
a

’s

e s
l a

b

u

i l d

e r !

�.

*

Leisure ]
Sanford Horald ft Herald Advertiser. Sanford, F I.________ Thursday, Fob. IS, 1M7-41

H*r»W Ptwtot by D ta rn Jordan

B u o y a n t B a lle t

Captured u n d erw ater by a H anam ex 135 am phibian cam era is
Bernadlne Crookshank, 64, of M ia m i, who participated in the 11th
annual Golden Age G am es In Sanford. She perform ed her routine at

Lym an High School pool Nov. 11. Left, she slides head first towards the
pool bottom . M id d le, she pushes her w ay upward, w ith her toes
appearing on the surface, and, rig ht, bends to spin over and surface.

Canoeist, 93,
Undaunted By
High Winds

For Fun, Friendships

G am es G ives Seniors

By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W riter
After 93 years of buffeting by
life. Peg was not about to let a
strong breeze across her canoe’s
bow knock her out of a sprint In
San ford’ s 1 1th G olden Age
Games In November.
Though the canoe was turning
like a weather-vane. Peg twirled
around In It and paddled from
the front. Ignoring two other
canoes of rescuers. She met a
round of applause from other
Golden Age Games participants
and s p e c t a t o r s w h e n she
finished.
Margaret " P e g ” Richards.
Enterprise, was pleased to learn
she wasn’t timed during her
windy outing and gladly paddled

Golden Opportunity
By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff W riter
Competition for Sanford’s an­
nual Golden Age Games grows
keener every year and so do the
warm friendships that develop
between participants. The 13th
annual athletic competition for
seniors will be held this year
Nov. 9-14.
Men and women 55 years of
age and older arc eligible to
compete.
Co-sponsored by the Greater
Sanford Chamber of Commerce
und

Pont

Cereals,

the

1986

Games attracted thousands of
entries from across the United
States, as well as from Canada
and other countries.
The honorary chairman of
last year’s games was new San­
ford resident Betty Robinson
Schwartz. 74. winner of gold
medals as a member of the U.S.
Olympic Team In 1928 and 1936
Olympics. She Is the latest In a
long line of sports greats such as
Buster Crabbc. Bob Mathias.
Jack Kelly and Jack Bllltngham
to serve as honorary chairman.
What started as a dozen events
and 289 participants has grown
to 43 events with more than
4,000 participants last year.
Quality of competition has also

grown, with the not Infrequent
participation of former Olympic
medal winners and world and
national champions.
The Games have gained na­
tional sponsorship and stature
with television and newspaper
and magazine coverage.
One of the first athletic gather­
ings for senior citizens, the
Golden Age Games Inspired sim­
ilar competitions In many cities
across the nation.
Sanford's Games has been
selected by the U.S. National
Senior Olympics Committee os a
regional qualifying event for the

U.S. National Senior Olympics.
Winners In equivalent events In
the 1986 Sanford Games were
declared eligible to compete In
the first National Senior Olym­
pics to be held In St. Louis. Mo.,
June 27 to July 2.
More than 30 Golden Age
Games events include swim ­
ming. golf, bowling, triathlon,
de cat hl on, ml n l - m a r a t h o n ,
basketball, shuffleboard. track
and field, billiards, synchronized
swimming, bicycle racing, ar­
chery. horseshoes and dancing.
There are also less strenuous
competitions such as bridge,
knitting, hobby show, photo­
graphy. talent show, dominoes.

crlbbagc and table tennis. A
midweek dinner-dance Is the
social event of the week.
Sites for the events are not
only In downtown Sanford, but
In several other locations around
the county such as the Lyman
High School swimming pool.
Longwood; the Parnell Pool,
Altam onte Springs; and the
Bayhrad Racquet Club. Howell
Place senior apartment complex
and Mayfair Country Club, all In
Sanford.
A Games executive committee,
headed by General Chairman

the course again, turning in a
time of 2:52 minutes. She picked
up the gold medal In her age
bracket for the canoe sprint,
although she was the only
entrant.

Jim Jernlgan, Sanford Parks
and R ecreation Departm ent
director. Is made up of repre­
sentatives from the various
businesses and organizations
which sponsor Individual events.
Th e c o m m i t t e e meets
throughout the year to make
sure everything runs smoothly
and the Games continue to
Improve. The committee will be
looking at the possibility of
adding more events this year.
Entry blanks, schedules or
further Information may be ob­
t a i n e d by c o n t a c t i n g the
chamber office at P.O. Drawer
CC. Sanford. 32772-0868.

_

. . . . .

M a rg a re t " P e g " Richards, 93, of E nterprise, fights strong
winds to control her canoe, but spurned rescuers and finished
the race.

’ ’ I really wanted to do It
again." she said after her second
run. She said she often paddles
on Lake Monroe, but only when
It's mirror smooth.
"Last year I did canoeing (inthe Games) and the year before I
did canoeing." she said.
The canoe sprint and then an
obstacle canoe race were set up
on a small Lake at the Sanford
Lantungs apartment complex,
See CANOEIST, page 4 4

Outdoor Sports A n d Recreation Easily Accessible
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W riter
Heading outdoors for fun and
recreation Is a snap In Seminole
County and surrounding areas.
T yp ical outdoor recreation
locally Includes fishing, canoe­
ing. water skiing, hiking, camp­
ing and swimming.
S e m i n o l e Is b o un d e d by
w a t e r w a y s on al l but Its
southern border. The VVeklva
and St. Johns Rivers, and lakes
Jcsup and Monroe form most of
Its boundrlcs and fishermen
generally angle for bass and
speckled perch. If the fisherman
lives In the county and Is using
live bait and no reel, a fishing
license Is not needed.
Canoeing Is popular along the
Wekiva River. Canoes can be
rented at Katies’ VVeklva River
Landing on State Road 46 by the

hour or for the day. They also
offer canoe runs of 6 to 19 miles.
VVeklva Falls, located on the
river but on the Lake County
side off State Road 46, also rents
canoes by the hour or day and
offers river boat rides. Canoes
are also available at VVeklva
Spring State Park near Apopka.
The 6.400-acre state park rents
canoes by the hour or day. There
are also nature trails, picnic sites
and camp sites.
The park Is open seven days a
week and swimming Is allowed
In the large kidney-shaped spr­
ing as well as snorkling. Scuba
diving Is not permitted. For more
Information on the state park,
call 889-3140.
Water skiing instruction Is
part o f the c u r r i c u l u m at
Seminole Community College In
Sanford, and Is also offered by

some ski supply stores.
A placid way to spend some
time In Seminole County Is
floating down the St. Johns In a
houseboat. They can be rented
for a day or week or more from
Suns hi ne Li ne o f DeLand,
904-736-9422. Another way to
trek via river Is by taking an
excursion trip on the Romance,
a river boat out of the Sanford
Marina offering lunch, dinner
and overnight cruises.
T h e ship sails for lunch
Tuesday through Thursday at
11 a.m. to 2 p.m.. cost $23.
Friday It offers a 5-hour lunch
cruise starting at 11 a.m. for
$34. Friday and Saturday night,
dinner cruises cost $37.50 and
start at 7:30 p.m. A two-day
S u n d a y t h r o u g h Monday.
180-mlle cruise Is also available
for $199.50 per person. For

reservations or questions, call
321-5091.
If dining near the water from
shore Is your preferred night out.
there are several places In
Seminole County to go. The
Wekiva Marina Restaurant on
Mi a mi S p r i n g s Ro a d ne ar
Longwood features catfish and
hushpupples. In Sanford, the
Holiday Inn has two dining areas
overlooking Lake Monroe, the
Sanford Landing restaurant at
the Inn, and nearby Fitzgerald’s
lounge. A sandwich shop. Dock
and Shop, also overlooks the
lake at the marina.
Those who like to camp out.
but not loo far from civilization,
can pitch tents at Katies' VVeklva
River Landing. Wekiva Falls, the
Town and Country Recreation
Park. Sanford, or Twelve Oaks
Recreation Park on SR 46 west

Herald Photo* by Tom my Vlncont

A rch ery was
competitors

a

hit

among

some

Golden Age

Games
Competition was keen among Games bike racers.

of Sanford.
’ ’ Prim itive” camp sites arc
avallabe at Seminole County’s
Mullet Lake Park, eight miles
east o f Sanford o ff SR 46.
Improved sites are also available
at Lake Mills Park on Third
Street. Chuluota. More Informa­
tion about them can be obtained
from the county's recreation
department at 323-4330.
For those who prefer a clothed
and brief winter fling, a trip to

Blue Springs State Park, north of
Sanford In Orange City, to see
the manatees Is In order. The
manatees live In the 72-degrce
warm water during the cooler
winter months and. in spring,
move back Into the St. Johns
River. Swimming at the park Is
closed until March 15 but there
are several observation points
along the springs run to see the
aquatic winter Inhabitants.

Licenses Needed For
V a rie ty Of Activities
Drivers must be licensed by
the state within 30 days of
becoming a Florida resident,
accepting a Job or enrolling a
child In school.
T h e Division of Dr i ver ’s
License offices are located at:
• 2587 S. Sanford Ave.. San­
ford. open 7 a.m. to 6 p.m..
Tuesday through Friday. For
appoi nt ment c a ll .323-9157.
Walk-ins accepted on a first
come, first served basis. For a
road test be there at 7 a.m. if you
don’ t have an appointment.
• Interstate Mall. State Road
436. Altamonte Springs, open 7
a.m. to 6 p.m.. Monday through
Friday. For appointment call
831 1474. Walk-ins must wail In
line. No oral or road tests given
after 4 p.m.
Licenses are issued for four
years. You must be at least 16
years old to apply for a license,
but learner's permits may be
obtained at 15. If you have a
valid license from another stale,
you will be required to lake u

written examination, plus hear­
ing and vision tests.
If you do not have a license or
It has been expired for more
than 90 days, you must produce
a letter of clearance from the last
state In which you resided and
held a valid license.
For the standard operator’s
license the fee for a first time
driver or oul-of-state applicant Is
$19; S15 for Florida residents
unless renewal is late in which
case the charge Is $16. The
chauffer’s license fee Is $15 If
c h a n g i n g f rom a stan d a rd
Florida operator's license or $19
for first time getting a Florida '
license. There Is no charge for
written exams or road tests.
You h a v e 10 d a y s af t e r
enrolling children in school, fil­
ing h o m estea d e x e m p t i o n ,
securing a Job. or registering to
vote to secure Florida vehicle
registration tags.
They are available at the
registration offices in the Sand
See LICENSES, page 5 0

.

�Leisure
I

Thursday, Feb. 24, 1H 7

&lt;2— SetHeri Herald A Herald Advertiser, Sanford, F I.

Got An Itch To Place A Bet ? Try Seminole
Herald Sports Editor
Central Florida — Longwood.
Casselberry and Fern Park In
particular — la a mecca for the
bettor who would like to try to
enhance his Income.
There are three parimutuel
establishments within five miles
of each other.
Both
L o n g w o o d 's Sanford-Orlando
Kennel Club and Casselberry's
S e m in o le G rey h o u n d s Park
along with Fem Park's Orlando-Sem lnole Jal-Alal Fronton
operate their seasons at different
times o f the year and there is

very little overlap. It gives the
tourist — and the yearlong
resident — an attractive way to
spend a day or evening In a
friendly, festive and possibly
rewarding atmosphere.

Longwood
In Longwood, the "Grandfa­
ther of Greyhound R acin g."
79-year-old Jerry Collins, began
the 52nd season at the Sanfo rd -O rla n d o Ke nne l Cl ub,
located on Dog Track Road Just
ofT U.S. 17-92. The SOKC season
runs from Dec. 26 through May

2.

Collins Is one o f the most

respected parimutuel veterans In
the United States and he said the
SOKC has been giving Central
Florida the best greyhound rac­
ing in the U.S. for a long time.
The Sanford-Orlando track has
13 races Monday through Satur­
day at 7:30 p.m. Every Monday.
Wednesday and Saturday there
are matinees beginning at 1 p.m.
Collins also admits ladles free on
Thursday night.

Seminole" opens May 4 and
closes Sept. 1. Sem inole Is
located on Semlnola Boulevard.
For p atron s tr a v e lin g U.S.
Highway 17-92. travel east on
Semlnola and It deadends at the
park.
Seminole has 13 evening per­
formances every night at 7:30
except Sunday. Matinees are

Parimutuels

Monday. Wednesday and Satur­
day at 1 p.m.

Fern Park
In Fern Park, the OrlandoSeminole Jal-Alal Fronton runs
from Oct. 27 through Dec. 29.
Jal Alai, a block south of the
17-92 and State Road 436 In­
tersection. also has evening per­
formances every night except

Sunday at 7. Matinees begin at
noon on Monday. Wednesday
and Saturday. There are 13
matches per night.
Jal-Alal. a game which origi­
nated In the Basque region of
South America. Is similar to a
larger version of handball. A
cesta (basket-like glove) Is worn

8«e PARIMUTUELS, page 43

Casselberry
In C a s s e l b e r r y , t h e
Casselberry Greyhound Park has
been purchased by the Delaware
North Compani es. " S u p e r

Feeling stiff, lifeless, and unattractive
with your old wardrobe
Th en put life back
Into yo u r wardrobe,
w ith quality men*s
fashions &amp; accessories
for e ve ry season.

A M ER IC A
W O RKIN G
AN D

S U IT S
SPO RT COATS
SLACKS
S H IR T S
T IE S
B ELTS
W ALLETS

COLOGNES
SW EATERS
JACKETS
JEANS
C A S U A L W EAR
S W IM W EAR
SHORTS

From

Where We Put Life
Beck Into Your
Wardrobe/

American Goods
Good For America
0?&lt;vi
Tifat-'THaftt
Y o u r p atronage is very m uch appreciated. S atis fie d cu sto m e rs are O u r
M o st V alu ed A sset, and we would w e lco m e yo ur co m m e n ts or
su g g estio n s .
P lea se feel free to co n ta ct any W al-M art A sso icate, A s s ista n t M a n ag er
o r M y s e lf w h ile you are In our store.
^

STORE MANAGER

S EM IN O LE C E N TR E
H W Y. 17-92
SANFORD
Store
Hours:

W.i&lt; M i i r l

I :&gt;r t ii

W.»l M.ir t S o i l s lor l o s s

• W . i l W .ir l S o i l s lo r L o s s

M-SaL 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Sunday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
lo r L e s s • W . i l M p t S o i l

SEMINOLE CENTRE

�1W7-4J

From Term
Tennis courts and golf courses Saba| Point Co unt r y Club,
abound In Seminole County for L o n g w o o d , 7 8 8 - 0 5 9 0 ;
the tennis and golf lover as well T u s c a w l l l a C o u n t r y Cl ub.
as Little League programs for Winter Springs. 365-6556. and
the youngsters and an Indoor the Sweetwater Country Club,
soccer field.
west Seminole County. 886Tennis courts, available at 3368, Heathrow Country Club
many city recreation areas, arc off Lake Mary Boulevard near
also offered by several clubs In Interstate 4.321-1030.
the area.
Golf courses include: Mayfair
Public tennis courts are avail­ Country Club Golf Course, San­
able at the following parks,
ford. 322-2531. 18 hole par 71.
sunrise to sunset or laler If E l e c t r i c C a r t s a v a i l a b l e ;
lighted: Eastmonte Recreation Casselberry Golf and Country
C en ter. S. L on gw ood A vc.,
Club. Casselberry. 699-9310, 18
Altamonte Springs: Ft. Mellon holes par 71, electric carts avail­
Park,
Sem inole Boulevard, able. reduced rates after 2 p.m.:
Sanford; Railroad Park, 8lh and D e e r R u n C o u n t r y C l u b .
Poplar. Sanford; Randall Chase C a s s e l b e r r y , s e m i - p r i v a t e .
Park. Celery and Mellonvlllc,
699-9592, 18 holes, par 71.
Sanford; Red Bug Lake Park. electric carts available; Sabal
S t a t e Road 426. east o f
Point Country Club. Longwood.
C asselberry; and Sanlando sem i-p riva te. 869-4622. 18
Park. ofT Douglas Road. In Alta­ holes, par 72, electric carts
monte Springs.
available; Seminole Golf Club.
L o n g w o o d . 7 8 8-9 6 6 7 , ni ne
The private clubs Include
Bayhead Racquet Club. In Lake holes, par 36; S w e e t w a t e r
Mary. 323-7363. Club at the C o u n t y C l u b . L o n g w o o d .
Crossings. Sanford. 322-7181. private; Winter Springs G olf

Course. Winter Springs. 699-.
1833, 18 holes, par 71, electric
ca rts a v a ila b le ; Tus c a wl l l a
Count r y C lhb G o lf Course,
Winter Springs, semi-private.
365-3259. 18 holes, par 72.
electric carts available: Wcklva
Golf Club. Longwood. 862-5113;
18 holes, par 72; Rolling Hills
Golf Course. Longwood. private;

Sanford Airport G olf Drtvlnj
Range, Sanford. 322-1853, I
a.m. to dark, lighting after dark
If there are hitters; Heathrow,
private. 321-1030; The Swallows
at Glen Abbey G olf Course,
668-4209. DeBary. semi-private,
18 holes, 72 par. electric carts
available; and, Deltona Hills Golf
and Country Club, Deltona,

semi-private. 1-904-789-4911.
18 holes and 72 par. electric
carta available.
Three cities have Little League
programs run through their rec­
reation department. They are
AltAmonte Springs, at 862-0092,
Casselberry, 831-3551, extentlon 260, and Longwood. at
2604)392.

The Indoor soccer field, pri­
vately owned, but open to the
public. Is at American Soccer
Center, State Road 419. Just
south of Sanford. 323-9644.
Hours are Monday through
Friday 11 a.m. to midnight or 1
a.m. depending up game sched­
ules, Saturday 8 a.m. to 10 or 11
p.m. Sunday 1 p.m. to 10 or 11.

in bloom

There's Plenty For Lovers
O f Professional Sports, Too
By Deane Jordan
Herald Staff W riter
If organized sports is your
w eeken d pastim e. Sem inole
County and central Florida has
fun In store for you.
For the football lover, there are
two professional teams and sev­
eral college teams to root for. On
the pro side there are the Miami
Dolphins and the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers. On the college scene
the cheers can go for the Univer­
sity of Central Florida Knights,
the University o f Florida Gators,
the Florida A&amp;M Panthers, the
Florida State U n iversity
Seminolcs and the University of
Miami Hurricanes.
There arc three professional
baseball farm teams and two
s uc h b a s k e t b a l l t e a m s In
Florida.
In baseball. In there pitching
are the Osceola Astros, a class A
league based In Kissimmee, the
Orlando Twins, a class AA team
In Orlando and the Tam pa
Tarpons, another class A team in
Tampa. The basketball teams
are the Sarasota Stingers and
the Tampa Thrillers.

Soccer also gets a big kick In
Florida with the Tampa Bay
Rowdies, a well-established In­
door soccer team.
Along with professional sports,
another popular pastime Is car
racing. Top of the car racing list
is the Daytona Beach 500,
though other races are held
throughout the year Including
the Winston Cup series, the
Annual Paul Revere 250, the
Annual Pepsi Firecracker 400.
the Pro-Am motorcycle race, and
others. Sebring Speedway, a
second professional track In
Florida, annually hosts the
Sebring 12-hour race.
Sports that Include a bet or
two include Jai alal. dog racing
and horse racing. There Is one
Jal alal fronton In Seminole
County, the Orlando-Semlnole
Jal Alal Fronton, on U.S. 17-92
In Fern Park.and two dog racing
parks. S em inole G reyhound
Park In Casselberry and the
Sanford-Orlando Kennel Club In
Longwood. For those who enjoy
horse racing, the trotters hit the
gates at the Ben White Raceway
on Lee Road in north Orange
County.

CONN G
1

B outique fashions &amp; accessories,
M erle Norm an Cosmetics, nail care,
tanning salon, everything you need
for th at total springtim e look!

S e m in o le C e n tre

S a n fo rd • 3 2 3 -2 6 3 1

...Parimutuels
Continued from page 42
by the players on one hand. A
pelota (similar in size to a tennis
ball, but rock hard) Is used lo
bank and volley off the high wall
at the end of the court. Doubles
and singles arc played and
games last until seven points are
scored.
All three parimutuel facilities
have win-place-show, qulnlela,
pcrfecta and trlfecta betting.
There Is also a Pick 6 (correct
winners In sequence} at each
track along with variations of the
B ig Q and d a l l y d o u b l e s .
Advance betting is also available
as are programs at business
e s t a b l i s h m e n t s t hr o ug hout
Central Florida.
Here’s a breakdown of Hie
b e t t i n g s y s t e m f or t he
greyhound parks. For Jal-Alai,
substitute the player for the
greyhound.
W in — the first dog to cross
the finish line wins. If you bet to
win. you collect a payoff only if
your selection finishes first.
Place — The second dog to
cross the finish line places. If
you bet to place, you collect a
payoff If your selection finishes
Cither first or second.
Show — The third dog to cross
the finish line shows. If you bet
to show, you collect a payolT If
your selection finishes either
first, second or third.
Dally Double — This popular
Wager combines the winners of
the first and second races of the
program. You must pick the
winner of both races. Tickets
must be purchased before the
closing o f the first race.
Qulnlela — The first two dogs
to cross the finish line produce
the qulnlela. In a qulnlela bet.
you select two dogs. You win If
your selections finish first and
second In either order.
Trlfecta — The first three to
cross the finish line produce the
trlfecta. In a trlfecta bet. you
select three dogs. You win if
your selections run first, second
and third in the exact order you
pick them.
Perfects — The first two dogs
to cross the finish line In the
exact order o f finish is the
pcrfecta. In a pcrfecta bet. you
select two dogs. You win if your
selections run first and second in
that exact order.
See P A R I T M U T U E L S , 44

9

4

Now You Can Buy Them
For Less...
A t W illiam H o w a rd ’s Jew elers we know
yo ur purchase is im p o rta n t, and should be
carefully chosen. T h a t Is why we buy only
q u ality gold, diam onds and g em stoh es. You
can be certain th at when you buy jew elry from
us, you are receiving the q u ality you expect
a t prices th a t w ill please you.
W e In vite you to shop and c o m p are...T h e n
vis it us. W e th in k y o u ’ll be happy w ith our
q u a lity , selectio n , service &amp; prices.

W illia m H o w a r d ’s
S e m in o le C en tre - S an ford

3 2 1-3 14 0

�• *

Leisure

0

;

«

Thursday, Fab. 26, 1 * 7

Sanford Dental Centre

.Canoeist
Continued from page 41
west o i downtown off State' Road

Golden Age G am ers enjoyed the gentler pastimes, too. H ere the dance com petition
brings tw irls and sw irls.

The sprint involved canoeing
about 200 feet, turning around a
buoy Just beyond a protected
point and paddling back.
A strong southwest breeze
caught canoeists as they cleared
the point and pushed the crafts
about.
Mrs. Richards was the first
canoeist out and caught a strong
gust. With her weight in the
back end of the canoe the lighter
front end spun around.
Undaunted, Mrs. Richards
turned herself around and began
pa d d l i ng ag ai n, us i ng t he
wind-pushed light end of the
canoe to catch the wind, thus
keeping her heavier end Into it.
She rounded the buoy and
made It back, not needing people
who went to ‘‘rescue" her from
the breeze.
"I started canoeing when I was
about 15." said Mrs. Richards, a
great-grandmother who came
with her husband James to
Enterprise from Chicago in
1953.

SMILING FACES

FRIENDLY SURROUNDINGS

Parimutuels
Continued from page 43
Boxing — This means that

“f ^ a U m

e v U i

Hallmark has awarded the
"Gold Crown" on the basis of
our extensive card and gift line
as well as our personalized ser­
vice. When you care enough to
send the very best...

SEMINOLE CENTRE

SANFORD

you select any number of dogs
(three or more) in your bet. In a
quinlela box. If any two selec­
tions flhlsh one, two in any
order, you win. In a trifecta box,
If any three selections finish one,
two three In any order, you win.
In a perfect box. If any two
selections finish one, two in any
order you win. When boxing
numbers, the payofT is half of the
total winning purse.
Wheeling — This picking a
KEY dog, which you choose to
finish first or second or third
with any other possible combi­
nation of dogs. A 91 trifecta
wheels in an eight-dog race costs
$42. with 42 different combina­
tions to produce a winning pay
off — all with Just one ticket.
Pick 6 — Exact order o f finish
for six consecutive races.
S u p e r f e c t u — T o w in
supcrfecta. pick first four dogs in
exact order.

MODERN TECHNOLOGY
The d en tists and sta ff of Sanford Dental Centre are w aiting
to assist you with your dental needs.
F or co m fo rtab le d e n tis try at m odest fees ca ll for an
appointm ent today.
CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT

3 2 1 -3 8 2 0

Mon Fr. t».m. 1o«p m , S»l 9 im lo 1p m
E M E R G E N C IE S W E LC O M E

SanfordGenera/
Dental Centre
D c a t la t r y

_____

Seminole Centre (Next To Publix)
3607 Orlando Dr. Hwy. 17-92
Sanford. FL 32771
Peter D. Weisbruch. D.D.S .P.A.
Jom et 0 Williamson. D P S.

SEAFOOD
or welcoming us so warmly into your com m unity one
short year ago.
For being good neighbors right from the beginning.
For showing your appreciation for our hamburger and
chicken sandwiches, our salad bar, our chili, our taco salad
and other menu delights.
For helping us share in your remarkable year of growth
and progress.
Thank you, Sanford.

F

AND THAT’S NOT ALL!
We’re also offering you our heartiest Big Classic sandwich
at a special discount.

PRODUCE
HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY

FLORAL
DANISH BAKERY

I t’s the little things th at

FREE BIG CLASSIC
when you buy a
Big Classic
"ease present coupon
.vhan ordering Not good
wth any other offer or
discount. Cheese and tax
extra Good only at Sanlord
Wendy's at Seminole Center
Expires March t5. 1987

Iv iT ik m

BIG CLASSIC, REGULAR *
FRIES AND MEDIUM i
SOFT DRINK JUST $2.69. ■
Please present coupon
when ordering Not good
with any other offer or
discount Cheese bacon
and tax extra Good only
at Sanford Wendy sat
Seminole Center
Expires March IS 1987

makedifference

. Seminole Centre
Publix &amp; Danish Bakery
3609 Oilando Drive, Sanford

�Leisure
Ssnford Herald ft Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Fab. 3*. 1*7—43

YMCA Opens New Facility N ear Lake M ary
CHINA
CRYSTAL
FLATWARE &amp;
ACCESSORIES

Seminole County Y M C A has
opened this new $500,000 fa ­
c i li t y on L o n g w o o d -L a k e
M a ry Road com plete w ith a
m ulti-purpose room, offices,
locker rooms and a junior
O ly m p ic -s ize d outdoor
sw im m ing pool. M an y new
program s a re being offered
for a ll ages.

Ph. 321-0780
228 E. First St.
Downtown Sanford
N e lli e A B o y d C o l e m a n - O w n e n

By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
The Seminole County Branch
of the YMCA moved Into a new
$ 5 0 0 ,0 0 0 f a c i l i t y at 6 5 5
Longwood-Lake Mary Road Dec.
15.
T h e b u i l d i n g I nc l ude s a
multi-purpose room, offices,
locker rooms and an outdoor
Junior Olympic-slze swimming
pool.
The *Y‘ was to begin running
programs out of the new site —
near Lake Mary High School and
G r e e n w o o d Lakes Middle
S c h o o l— the first w eek In
January.
There are planned to be activi­
ties for all ages from Infants
through older adults. Some of
the programs to be offered In-

elude karate, aerobics.
Jazzerclse. Sllmnastlcs, tumbl­
ing and gymnastics. More arts
will be Introduced Into the pro­
gram now that facilities are
available, such as ballet for
children and guitar lessons.
Bridge and activities for mothers
with infants are also planned.
The *Y' will continue to run
programs throughout the com­
munity In borrowed or leased
facilities. Basketball, volleyball,
soccer, baseball, track, and
chcerlcadlng are offered. The
aquatics program and life-saving
classes will be offered In the
spring.
T h e Sem inole Branch has
been operating out of a th-eebedroom house on Palm Springs
Road. Forest City, since 1972.
’Y ’ programs began In Seminole

In 1964, but It was 1971 when
the flraf full-time director for
Seminole was hired. In 1973 the
branch was officially chartered
and the five acres purchased
next to Lake Brantley High
School. Plans to build at that
location fell through when resi­
dents of the area protested to the
Seminole County Commission.
The Lake Mary location was
chosen because It Is central and
part of the next big growth area
In the county. It will be within
10 minutes driving time for
Sanford residents as well as
being convenient to Longwood.
Winter Springs and Lake Mary.
The 7.7-acre site was purchased
from The Crossings Ltd. for
$47,000. The other property was
sold to Seminole County School
Board for $225,000.

Put your best foot forward in' Naturalized
smartly tailored career pump.
Beautiful styling and a perfect Tit
make it a foolproof choice for
any working wardrobe
PAGEANT

Available in the
latest spring
colors.
A

County Offers Hunting, Fishing
If the rod or gun plays an
Important part in your Interests,
then Seminole County and sur­
rounding areas arc the places to
hunt and fish.
Natural bodies of water form
i m p o r t a n t b o u n d a r i e s f or
• Seminole County, Including Its
• north, cast and west borders.
•

The Weklvn River Is the west

boundary, the St. Johns River
and Lake Monroe He on the
north side, and the St. Johns.
Lake Jesup, Lake Harney and
Puzzle Lake, com prise east
boundaries of the county, all
approachable from State Road
46 which crosses the county.
• The city of Sanford Is built along
- the banks of Lake Monroe.
Several lakes are within the
county’s borders and many are
known for good fishing. In San­
ford there Is Lake Jennie, off
U.S. Highway 17-92, Reservoir

Lake near Lake Jennie, and
L a k e G o l d e n on A i r p o r t
Boulevard, to name Just three.
Long Lake In Oviedo on State
Road 419 has a good reputation
among anglers, as well as Lake
Lotus ofT State Road 431 in
Altamonte Springs and Buck
Lake In Seminole W o o d s o ff
State Road 426 In Geneva.

Bass striped, largemouth and
sunshine, and speckled perch
arc the main fishing fair along
with bream and catfish.
Hunters are more limited In
their choices than fishermen as
to where and when to search for
game. The woods along the
Wcklva River and St. Johns arc
home for deer and squirrel and
the marshes o f the St. Johns
r i ver arc re s tin g spots for
thousands of migrating ducks
and snipe. Dove and quail can

also be lound In Helds and
oran ge g ro ves in Se mi no l e
County. A large game preserve
lies Just outside the county near
Osteen.
Hunting season begins for
most game In November and
runs through January. Game
Includes hog. bear. deer, quail,
dove, turkey and aquirrel. Hun­
ting licenses ns well as fishing
licenses ure available at the
county courthouse In Sanford
and branch offices at State Road
436 and U.S. Highway 17-92
and 19 Sand Lake Road. Alta­
monte Springs. Fishing licenses
can also be obtained at fish
camps, bait shops and sporting
good stores.

Naturalized
208 E. FIRST STREET,
HISTORIC DOWNTOWN
SANFORD

Resident hunting licenses cost
$12. non-resident of Florida.
$51. Resident fishing licenses
cost $8 and non-resident $26.

Blooming and Growing with you
Seminole County
*«MFOAD FLOUMB SHOP

:rse

TRAVEL AG EN CY

SINCE 1956

Full Service Travel Agency
Specialists In Vacation &amp; Business Travel.
Over 14 Years In The Orlando Area
Come Visit O ur New Location In The

Sanford
Flower Shop

II H A T H R O W B U S IN E S S C E N T E R
250 International Parkway
Heathrow, FL 327 46
Suite - 1 5 0

( 305)

321-1680

Office Hours: Mon fri. 8 30-5 30

GET FRESH
AT SOBIK’S

^

Tfelefloia
Let Our Friendly Floral Team
Help You With Your Floral Ar­
rangements For Every Occassion.

At Sobik's w e're p roud o f o u r re p u ta tio n fo r fresh food; w ell p re ­
pared. served quickly, w ith good value. Sohik's has a long menu
list inclu ding salads and spaghetti. Parly Subs and P arty Platters.
Every ilem is available fo r take out if you w ish.
Enjoy g o o d e a tin g at 3 0 S o b ik 's
in c e n tra l F lo rid a . T h e re a re tw o
S o b ik ’s In S a n fo rd , on F re n c h Avo
and A irp o rt B lvd.

209 East Commercial St.
Downtown Sanford, FL

• WEDDINGS • ANNIVERSARIES
• FUNERALS • HOLIDAYS
• BIRTHDAYS • EXTRA SPECIAL
DAYS
And For That Special House
Plant or Blooming Flower
For Home or Office. Stop By
And See Our New Garden Area.

322-1822

�.

Private Schools
Kindergarten-High School, Private Schools Have It
By Genie Ltndberg
Herald Staff Writer
T h e r e are m ore than 20
p rivate schools In Sem inole
C o u n ty , ra n g in g from k i n­
dergarten through high school.
Most of them are sponsored by
churches, but there Is no dis­
c r i m i n a t i o n in e n r o l l m e n t
because of race or religion.
There is only one boarding
school—Forest Lake Academy In
Forest City. They come In all
sizes and range from $700 to
$5,435 In tuition. Some have a
college prep curriculum, and
several are large enough to offer
extras such as Interscholosttc
sports and band.
T h e re are six In Sanford;
three, Longwood; three. Forest
City; three. Altamonte Springs;
one Oviedo; one Winter Springs;
tw o . Wi n t e r Park; one.
Casselberry and one in Lake
Mary.

• Trinity Preparatory
School, 4001 W. State Road 426,
Winter Park. Enrollment: 478
with 1-15 teacher-student ratio,
college prep curriculum grades
6-12. Religious-oriented, but
open to all faiths and races.
Intcrscholastlc sports league.
Tuition: 86-87 term, $4,000.
671-4140.

•

Forest Lake Academy,

sponsored by Florida Seventh-

day Adventist Church. State
Road 436. Forest City. Enroll­
ment: 400 students In grades
9-12. Accredited high school,
band and Intramural sports.
Tuition: $5,095-65.435 for stu­
dents who live on campus (in­
cludes room and board) and
$2,695-62.985 for students who
live at home or ofT campus.
862-8411.

• Al t a m o n te Christian
School, 601 Palm Springs Drive,
Altamonte Springs. Enrollment:
320, grades K4-12 with tradi­
t i onal c la s s ro o m s . C la sses
limited to 30 students In grades
1-12: K-4. 18: K-5. 25. Combina­
tion o f A Beka. Bob Jones and
traditional curriculum. Band
and Intcrscholastlc sports of­
fered. Tuition: Kindergarten
$1,000; grades 1-6 $1,300;
grades 7-12 $1,400. Enrollment
and book fees extra. 831 -0950.

• A ll Souls Catholic School,
810 S. Oak A v e ., Sanford.
E n r o l l m e n t : 2 2 5 In p r e kindergarten through eighth
grade. Regular academic curric­
ulum plus religion are taught.
Interscholastic sports, band of­
fered. Tuition: $900 for church
members and special rates for
two or more children; nonsupportive rate, $1,300 with
special rates for two or more
c hi l dr en. A v e r a g e teach cr-

student ratio 1-22.630-0660.

• Liberty Christian School,
2626 S. Palmetto Ave.. Sanford,
g ra d e s K- 12 wi t h a v e r a g e
enrollment of 114. A Beka and
Accelerated Christian Education
c ur r i c ul um. In te r s c h o la s tic
sports. Teacher-student ratio
1-16. Annual tuition: $900.
323-1583.

• St. L u k e 's L u t h er a n
School, State Road 426. Oviedo,
enrollment of 230 In grades
K5-8; 15 teachers. Traditional
classrooms and curriculum with
c o m p ut e rs , band and I n ­
tcrscholastlc sports offered. Max­
imum class size through 4th
grade. 25: through 8th. 30.
Tui t i on: $1 ,4 7 5 base rate.
365-3228.

• Sweetwater Episcopal
Academy, 251 E. Lake Brantley
Drive, Longwood. Enrollment:
1 6 0 In g r a d e s K - 8 . I n ­
terdenominational co-ed school,
tea ch er-stu d en t ra tio 1-20.
traditional curriculum In selfc ont ai ne d c la s s ro o m s wi t h
com puter labs, Spanish. In­
terscholastic sports and music.
Tuition: K-82.250. 1-5. $2,750.
6-8. $2.800.862-1882.

ford. Enrollment: 40 In grades
1*8 with teacher-student ratio
1-16. Adventist curriculum simi­
lar to public school. Tuition:
$700 plus re g is tra tio n Tec.
322-8621.

Class size limited to 15. Tuition:
1-5. $2,750: 6-8. $3,250; 9-12.
$3,750. 321-3030.

• Covenant Christian
School, 4800 Howell Branch
Road. Winter Park (southeast
Seminole County). Enrollment:
175 In grades K4-8. 12 full-time
teachers, traditional classrooms.
A Beka curriculum, music pro­
gram . Intcrscholastlc sports.
678-9801.

• N o rth e ld e C h r is t ia n
School. 175 Florida Haven
D
r
i
v
e
.
Altamonte Springs. Enrollment:
115 In grades pre-K through 12.
A Beka/Bob Jones curriculum
plus vocational subjects with
emphasis on academics. Chris­
tian teaching and patriotism.
Teacher-student ratio 1-12. Tu­
i t i on: K -S 8 5 0 ; g ra d e s 1-8.
$1.050.339-1231.

• S t. M ary M agdalen
Catholic School, 869 Maitland
Ave.. Alta monte Springs.
Enrollment: 555 In grades K-8.
traditional classrooms (class size
limited) and curriculum plus
religious Instruction. Band and
Intcrscholastlc sports. Tuition:
$980 for one child supporting
church member: family rate for
two or more; non member.
$2,000 per child. 339-7301.

• New Life C h ristian
School, 100 Kennel Road ofTW.
SR 46. Sanford. Enrollment: 125
In grades pre-K-12. A Beka
curriculum with full sports pro­
gram. Tuition: $1,150: local
church members. $1,050; active
members of First Assembly of

• Seventh-day Adventist
School, 700 S. Elm Ave.. San­

God. $1.000.322-9142.

• Pathw ay Christian
School. 220 E. Wlldmere Ave..
Longwood. Enrollment: 100 in
g ra d e s K-10 wi t h teach erstudent ratio 1-16 to 19. ACE
and Beka curriculum. Annual
tuition: $1.000.830-0660.

o Seminole Trinity School.
801 W. 22nd St.. Sanford.
Enrollment: 80 with students in
K4-10 with teacher-student ratio
1-10. A Beka curriculum. Annu­
al tuition: $1.000.322-3942.

• Forest Lake Elementary
Education Center. 2801 Sand
Lake Road. Lon gw ood .
s p o n s o re d by S e v e n th -d a y
Adventist churches. Enrollment:
400 In grades K-8 with teacherstudent ratio 1-25. Adventist
curriculum plus band, orchestra
and chorus. Open to all but
preference given to Adventist
c hur c h m em b e rs . T u i t i o n :

See P R IV A T E , page 4 9

L JL

• Loch Lowe Preparatory
School. P.O. Box 786. Lake

~

Clothier

Mary. 32746, non-sectarian
co-ed c o l l e g e p rep s c h o o l.
Enrollment: 90 In grades 6-12.

Not your ordinary suit, slack, shirt, tie
Men’s shop...
We oiler you all ,h^ £ ® rs wardrobe...
• Cologne
• Cuff Links
• Wallets
« Key Cases
• Suspenders
• Belts
• Socks
• P.J’s
• Robes
• Shoes
• Underware

irst Street Clothier
204 E. 1st Street
H istoric D o w n to w n Sanford

FIND OUT WHAT TODAY’S
WOMAN WILL BE WEARING
[TOMORROW...

O

O

I

A

Q

O

I

1

XA

H ours
M o n.-Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9-5:30, Fri. 9-7

MirmHtr

Sanford Plaza
VISA

MASTERCARD

AMERICAN EXPRESS

TH E SPIR1TOFAMER1CA

Central Aluminum
ESTABUSHED IN 1972

The Employees O f Gregory Lumber True Value
Hardware Wish You A Very Prosperous 1987.

Ralph Smith

Edith Smith

John Kirkgard

Pool
Enclosures
Screen
Patios

Vinyl
Windows
Awnings

Left to right front row Lee Davis, Dan Marxmlller, Virginia Thompson, Dick Gomb,
Jim Terwilleger, Alvin Kilpatrick Assistant Manager, Tommy Landress. Second row
• Harrison Clark-Yard Forman, Fred Behren, Bobby Newman, Linda Gregory-Office
Manager, Connie Bush, Anne Grleme. Third row • Pat Perry, Gene Gregory Jr., Carl
Hall, Steve Crews, Bob Baker, Fred Fontaine, Gene Gregory • Manager. Not available
for photo • Travis Gregory, Barry Smith, Jackie Taktikian.

7/uuJ/a£u£
CIMTIN
Mike Shelton

305 323-6010

701 Cornwall Rd.
Off S. Sanford Ave.

E lm er Sm ith

■v Your Hardware Store of Frist Choice

Phone 322-0500
OPEN MON. FRI. 7:30-5:30 SAT. 7:30-4 CLOSED SUN.

904 775-4751

500 S. MAPLE AVE. - SANFORD
1 Block West of 17-92

�cr,-*?/;*;:

/« ' f

4 • • *-»

~r?.r:

Tfwwtdoy. NA. M» 1W7— 47

Sanford HoroM A MoroM A d v r litr. Sanford, FI.

Sanford, Area Museums Offer A Visit Into The Past
By Diane Petryk
Herald Newt Editor
Three museums in Sanford
offer an escape to the past —
‘when the only sound along the
St. J o h n s was the I ndi an
;canoe!st's paddle slicing the
‘water, or when Sanford sounds
Included the whistle of a steam
locom otive backing into the
downtown station or the blast of
•the riverboat signaling arrival or
departure.
The three museums are: The
General Henry Shelton Sanford
Museum-Library, housing cityfounder Henry Sanford's books,
art. furnishings, papers and
memorabilia as well as one-time
exhibits; the Seminole County
Museum, housing historic Items
of local Interest, and the Student
Museum, housing Native Ameri­
can and pioneering exhibits and
local historic photographs.
What Is Sanford was once the
uninhabited south shoreline of
Lake Monroe. Before 1836. few
white explorers had traversed
this part of Central Florida. But
In 1837 a band of 500 Seminole
Indians attacked a detachment
o f United States troops
bivouacked along Lake Monroe,
east of what became Sanford's
downtown. Fort Mellon, con­
structed on the site of the battle
shortly aterward. was named Tor
Capt. Charles Mellon who was
killed in the engagement.
Before the clashes with Indi­
ans subsided, families began to
m igrate to the Fort Mellon
v i c i n i t y . T h e i r s e t t l e me n t
became known as Mcllonville.
Shortly before the Civil War.
com m ercial steamship travel
was initiated on the St. Johns
River. Mcllonville became a dis­
tribution point for all goods
essential for the growth o f
Central Florida. Settlers from all
parts of the interior came to
Mellonvllle to buy provisions and
trade their produce.
In 1870, Henry Sanford, a New
Englander who had served un­
der the Lincoln administration
as Minister to Belgium and
directed the U.S. Secret Service
In Europe during the Civil War.

purchased about 12,000 acres
Just west o f Mellonvllle and
platted the town of Sanford. In
th e n e x t d e c a d e , s t o r e s ,
churches and sch ools were
established. Sanford e x p e ri­
mented with growing citrus and
the Industry exp an d ed . He
brought over a colony of Swedes
to settle and run local farms. In
1880, former President Ulysses
S. Grant came to Sanford to turn
the first shovelful of dirt at the
groundbreaking for the railroad
t hat e v e n t u a l l y r an f r o m
Jacksonville to Sanford. The
shovel he used In that historic
ceremony is housed at the Gen­
eral Sanford Museum.
With rail and ever-grcwlng
w ater connections wi th the
north (the St. Johns, which flows
north, has its outlet to the sea at
Jacksonville) Sanford became
the gateway to Central Florida.
But the citrus Industry re­
ceived a serious blow In the
back-to-back freezes o f De­
cem ber 1894 and February
1895. In the first freeze, fruit
was lost but It appeared the trees
would recover. The next year
c o mp l e t e d the d e va sta tio n .
Many farmers left the area, but
some stayed on and harnessed
artesian wells prevalent In the
area facilitating expansion of
commercial agriculture. By the
first decade of the 20th Century,
Sanford was one of the largest
vegetable shipping centers In the
world and Its celery production
earned It the name "C elery
City."
Today. Sanford bustles with a
variety of economic activity gen­
erated by industry and com­
merce as well as agriculture and
accompanied by the business
generated by county-seat activi­
ty and Seminole Community
College.
But Vlctorlan-era and early
20th-Century style homes along
the tree-shaded avenues and
boulevards of Sanford's streets
can quickly transport one back
to a slower-paced, quieter time.
To preserve this feeling. In
1985, the downtown commercial
district was declared a "historic

district" by city ordinance. It
contains about 30 buildings in
24 square blocks bounded by
Third Street to the south. Myrtle
Avenue to the west. Sanford
Avenue to the east and Fulton
and Commercial avenues to the
north. The ordinance requires
building owners to seek approval
from the city's Historic Pre­
servation Board before altering
the exterior of the structures.
Plans are in the works to
expand the Historic District to
the adjacent residential area —
roughly an 80-square-block area.
Homeowners would also be re­
stricted In alterations they could
make to their residences.
Such an expansion o f the
Historic District would "visually
Improve” the neighborhoods,
said Historic Preservation Board
Chairman Jerry Mills. He said It
would also enhance the city,
overall, and be beneficial for
business Interests, as well.
To take advantage of Sanford's
historic appearance, "M agical
History Tours" of the town are
offered free to groups of 10 or
more by guides from the Student
Museum, 301 W. Seventh St.
Guides ofTer facts and tidbits
about local historical
architecture along the way.
Here arc other facts about the
three museums:
• The General Henry Shelton
Sanf ord Museum- Li br ar y is
located in Fort Mellon Park. 520
E. First St.. Sanford, and Is open
2 p.m . to 5 p.m. Sunday,
W ednesday, T h u rsday, and
Friday. The center library por­
tion of the building, built in
1957. Is a replica of Sanford's
study In his family home in
Derby, Conn., and includes
about 5,000 of his books, some
of which have been rebound.
Books -may be read at the
museum but none m ay be
checked out.
East and west wings were
added to the library in 1974. The
west wing houses rare portraits
of the Sanford family. Sanford's
appoi ntment as M inister to
Belgium signed by President
Lincoln, objects of art and an­

tique furniture. The east wing
houses changing exhibits on
topics, people and countries of
Interest. It also stores microfilm
copies of Sanford's letters and
personal and official papers —
approximately 50,000 items In
all.
According to memoirs o f one
o f Sanford’s daughters. Sanford
hoped such a library would be
built and that It would be of
lasting and active use to the
community.
Mildred M. Caskey, curator,
said the museum this year
added craft and painting classes
In keeping with those wishes of
the city’s founder.
With the Idea that many peo­
ple have an antique chair or two
relegated to the attic or garage
because s om e o n e stepped
through the aged cane seat, a
class In caning was planned to
begin this month. Twelve had
signed up at press time for that
class that will be given free
except for materials’ costs.
The Museum's Historical Pre­
servation Society is a club which
prom otes the museum with
fundraising activities and has
started a gift shop within the
building.
Admission to the museum is
free. The facility is supported by
the city and private donations.
Tours for youth groups are
offered with appointment. The
phone number is (305) 3210710.
• T h e S e m i n o l e Count y
Museum is located at 4318 U.S.

Highway

17-92

at

Bush

Boulevard, In the former AgrlCcnter/County Home building.
Its hours arc 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Monday through Friday and
newly established hours of 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays and 1
p.m. to 4 p.m. Sundays, ac­
cording to Museum Secretary
Julie Scott.
The museum, established in
the old county home In .1983.
preserves the home's caretaker's
quarters. Exhibits Include a typ­
ical turn-of-the century living
room, kitchen, historical school
Items maintained by local retired

teachers, and farm and railroad
Items from the past. Them are
also exhibits on the local chap­
ters of the Daughters of the
American Revolution and United
Daughters of the Confederacy
and volunteer fire departments.
But the collection will never be
complete.
"W e ’re always interested In
adding new things If people want
to share." Ms. Scott said. "They
can donate them or Just lend
them for awhile.”
She added that the museum Is
i n t e r e s t e d In s e e i n g ol d
yearbooks and pictures from the
local area and will gladly make
copies for the museum's use If
people will bring them in.
The museum Is supported by
Seminole County and private
donations. A 10-mcmber Histor­
ical C om m ission directs Its
operation. Curator is Lorraine
Whiting. Phone. 321-2489.
• The Student Museum and
Center for the Social Studies.
S a n fo rd 's n ew e s t mus eum,
opened by the Seminole County
School Board in 1984, is housed
In the former Sanford Grammar
School, which opened as a high
school In 1902. The first gradu­
ates were four girls who received
diplomas In 1907. The building
was renamed the Maraget K.
Reynolds building.
The museum is located at 301
W. Seventh St., with the school's
old playground, now a park, its
front yard.
Although Seminole County's
43 schools make use of the
museum with class visits, the
public Is Invited during all open
hours. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday, whether or not
students are there.
"Many times members of the
public enjoy hearing what the
teacher is telling the students."
said Leslie Blau, dean of the
museum. Parties of five or more
should call ahead, however, she
said. The phone number Is
322-1902.
The museum includes a Native
American room with typical In­
dian hill and canoe and other
Indian artifacts, a re-created

turn-of-the-century classroom
and murals depicting the peo­
ples of Florida.
New this year. Mrs.- Blau said,
is the pioneering exhibit. It
i n c l u d e s a f r o n t i e r c a b i n,
buckboard wagon, trading post
and "hands-on” tools and Items
from the lifestyle of the period.
Also at the museum is a
comprehensive collection of old
Sanford photographs.
"T h e public may obtain copies
of any of these old pictures
because negatives are kept on
hand." Mrs. Blau said.
Also at the museum, on loan
f r o m the Ge n e r a l S a n f o r d
Mus e um, is an e xh i bi t on
Seminole County-native Gen.
J.C. Hutchison, who was present
as the Japanese surrendered in
World War II. and an authentic
Timucuan Indian canoe dated
back to 880 A.D.
Located outside of Seminole
County but within easy driving
d i s t anc e arc the f o l l o w i n g
museums:
• The DcLand Museum —
DeLand. Housed in the 1892
Taylor family mansion, this col­
lection Includes 19th and 20th
C e n t u r y fine arts. PreColombian, African, and Pacific
Island art Is also included, as arc
International dolls and South­
western Indian ceramics. Phone
(9041734-4371.
• Fort Christmas Museum —j
Christmas. Fla. Replica of an;
1837 fort featuring exhibits on;
the Seminole Indian Wars and;
Florida pioneers. Phone (305);
568-4149.
• John Young Science Center;
— Orlando. Many participatory;
exhibits dealing iVlth physical;
and life sciences. Planetarium;
and observatorv. Phone (305),
896-7151.
• Kennedy Space. Center;
muschm — Merritt Island. Ex-i
hlhits. movies, demonstrations
and l e c t u r e s r e l a t i n g to
astronomy, exploration of space
and manned space missions.'
Adm ission free. Charges for
two-hour bus tours of Cape
Canaveral and the Kennedy1

See M USEUM S, page 49

]
SEW\NOLE ^ J !I I S s S K - y
For Making Our

Enjoy Our Tanning Bads For
The Year Round Tan!

a

1 9 8 7 's

O * SANTORO

HOTTEST
HEALTH CLUB

IN C L U D E S

OPEN 6 DAYS
HOURS:
6 a.m. - 9 p.m. M, W, F
8 a.m. • 9 p.m. T - Th.
Sat. 9-6

C

U

S

★ Men’s Exerdse Floor

★ Certified instructors

★ Sepaiale Ladies Exercise Floor

★ Tanning Beds ★ Nursery

★ Nautilus, Paramount,
CamStar and Universal
Equipment

k Steam Room k Sauna
★ Personalized Training with
Individualized Programs

★ Lifecycles and Schwinn
Exercise Bikes

★ Mens and Ladies Locker
Rooms

★ Coed Aerobic Room, 10
Classes Daily

A: Diet &amp; Nutrition Counseling
★ Open 6 Days

lC

Z

-

OF SANFORD

CALL TODAY 321-4722
Workout with the pros! Tim Raines 1 9 8 6 National League Batting Champ!

2453 AIRPORT BLVD. &amp; 25th ST., SANFORD

�. ■• . ^ ■■v ,

ryr

_ .^ *

, / jSQ D v?.:;

.&gt;.;. u s ^ y * v V

r*

**:

*• ,

-

--

.-*»

r.*» ■#*

,

Newcomers’ Guide
&lt; • -Sanford Here Id « Herald Advertiser, Sanford, FI.

Ttwraday, Feb. u, 1W7

Animal Control, Humane Society Give Tips On Pet Care
An estimated 10,000 cases
Involving dogs were processed in
1986 by two Seminole County
groups In charge of caring for
neglected animats, prompting
officials from both agencies to
Issue a pica to pet owners to
accept the responsibilities that
accompany pet ownership.
Sem inole C ounty's Anim al
Control Division, an agency of

Seminole County government,
and the Humane Society of
Sem inole County, a private
not-for-profit organization
funded by contributions, say the
number one reason pets end up
in their custody is because they
are found running loose. Often
when a stray or lost animal Is
found. It Is also unlicensed,
making it almost Impossible to

locate the owner.
Spokesmen for both animal
groups say beyond licensing and
fenclng-in their dogs, animals
s h o u ld al so be s p a y e d o r
neutered, and have annual up­
dates o f rabies shots and health
checkups.
While both groups try to locate
owners of animals and offer for
adoption those which are not

reclaimed, those not claimed
and not adopted are usually
killed.
Employees and volunteers at
both facilities, which are located
n e a r F l e a W o r l d on U .S .
Highway 17-92, try to set an
example for the public by adop­
ting animals. Most workers have
at least one pet. and others have
up to a half-dozen animals.

Humane Society office building
features a "w all of sham e," filled
with photos o f local abuse cases,
a g ra p h ic re m in d e r o f the
agonizing fates o f animals which
do not get proper care.
The case o f Monroe the dog
focused community attention on
animal neglect, and the Jobs of
the animal care facilities In

which would otherwise have
been put to death.
Anim al cruelty cases con­
stitute a smaller, but more
painful way through which the
agencies acquire animals. Dogs
tied or chained for extended
periods slice their necks trying
to escape their bonds. Cats have
been found dead hung from trees
w i t h s h o e la c e s , an d the

See ANIMAL, page 4 9

Sanford’s Legend

Down Town

In 1870. General Henry S. Sanford encourag­
ed the Industrious English and Swedish to help
develop this citrus farming town. The rail In­
dustry, Lake Monroe, and paddle-wheels
travelling the northward flowing St. Johns
River played major roles In the General's plan.
By 1887. misfortune struck; fire, dreaded
yellow fever, and freezes drastically reduced the
population and citrus crops. Now the Seminole
County seat, Sanford has recovered by becom­
ing the celery capital of the nation and Is known
for Its superb produce, Victorian architecture,
picturesque waterfront, and historic downtown.

And Experience Worth Remembering . . .
Come by boat, train, or car to Sanford and
breathe clean, warm air while enjoying
breakfast at a sidewalk cafe. Enjoy the mild
climate year-round, while you stroll First Street,
visiting colorful, unique shops with antiques,
books, children's gifts, the latest fashions,
flower shops, gourmet foods. Jewelry, novelties,
office and painting supplies, crystal and china,
and many other fine gift or practical items. Pick
up a picnic and relax in the park, watching
boats on the lake, children playing, or trees
bending In a breeze accented by a colorful flurry
of native birds. Or. go fishing for the abundance

Shops

of bass, blue-gill, catfish, and perch In beautiful
Lake Monroe or up the St. Johns River. Spend
a lazy afternoon boating, flying kites, watching
the antics of the zoo animals, visiting a
historical museum, reading In the county
library, or Just enjoying the scenic waterfront
and charming downtown area. Finally, round
ofT the day at an entertaining supper club
followed by an evening stroll and an ice cream
cone — or a starlit cruise on a rtverboat! There
is so much to do you might find you'll want to
stay overnight in our comfortable lakeside Inn.
Come see for yourself: a visit to Sanford la

&gt;=55f=?

M fc l

4m

f

i

l

l

i s

.

^Dining

like coming home.
Today, Sanford Is sprinkled with a blend of
some of Florida’s oldest shops and those of new
entrepreneurs making their mark. Many ser­
vices are also available, from banking or legal
needs, to travel agencies and car washes. Our
friendly townspeople will welcome you and give
you the old-fashioned attention that makes a
visit here such a pleasure. This enchanting mix
of old and new is part of the charm of tree-lined
avenues, historic brick buildings, and colorful
awnings set like a Jewel amid the amber-hued
waters of Lake Monroe. A visit to Sanford Is
truly an experience worth remembering.

WATERFRONT
River Cruises Lakeside Inn

•

ABBA TOURS, INC.
"Travel Agents for airlines, crulsee, and lours."

101 W . F IR S T S T R E E T

323-4112

GERALD GROSS
&amp; ASSOCIATES
202 E. FIRST STREET
322-6500

-

McROBERT'S TIRE

SANFORD AUTO PARTS

405 W. FIRST STREET

115 W. FIRST STREET

322-0651

322-5651

BALLOON M A G IC

GIFTS BY NAN

MICRO SUPPLY SEMINOLE

TOUCHTON REXALL DRUGS

110 E. FIRST STREET

228 E. FIRST STREET

320 E. COMMERCIAL ST.

121 E. FIRST STREET

323-0400

321-0780

323-5815

322-2482

COLONIAL ROOM

JIM S COMPLETE
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE

115 E. FIRST STREET
323-2999

201 N. MAPLE AVENUE
323-9090

OLDE TYMES CONNECTION
108 MAGNOLIA AVENUE
321-7157

VOLTOLINE BUSINESS
EQUIPMENT
200 S. PARK AVENUE
323-7022

FIRST ST. CLOTHIER

KADERS JEWELRY

RIVERSHIP ROMANCE

WEE KIDDS FASHIONS

204 E. FIRST STREET

112 S. PARK AVENUE

433 N. PALMETTO AVENUE

307 E. FIRST STREET

321-3211

322-2363

321-5091

321-3424

KATHY S BOOKS &amp;
BABY SHOP

RO JAY'S

SOUP TO NUTS

218 E. FIRST STREET

205 E. FIRST STREET

322-3524

321-1172

Freedom
201 N. PARK AVENUE

“ BUY, SELL, TRADE"

107 MAGNOLIA AVENUE
323-8377

323-4231

FREELAND &amp; CO.
BOOKSHOP
203 E. FIRST STREET
323-2860

w.

KNIGHTS'S SHOE STORE

SAILPOINTE APARTMENTS

208 E. FIRST STREET

401 W. SEMINOLE BOULEVARD

322-0204

322-1051

THANK YOU
FOR
SHOPPING DOWNTOWN

�Stnfertf H m M * MtrsM M v trtlM r, Santor*. FL

Thscsitv, N S . U. \ Ht - +

Here's A List Of Agencies That Help The Handicapped
There are m a n y age ncies
geared to meet special needs of
Sem inole C o u n t y 's
youths,
substance abusers, the 111, el­
derly and handicapped. But It’s
not always easy to pinpoint the
proper source of aid.
For example, a person In a
drug-abuse crisis would appar­
ently be better served to report
their drug crisis to Sanford
police or to go to a hospital
Jpmergency room than to try to
&gt;nake contact with agencies that
&gt;irc open only during routine
justness hours.
J Sanford Police C hief Steve
Harriett said that giving aid to a
person In a drug crisis, who
balled police for help, would be a
briorlty over m aking an arrest In
euch a case. The police phone
inumber Is: 323-3030, or 911.
! Other substance abuse help,
crisis Intervention and aid with
o t h e r p r o b le m s Is o ffe re d
jthrough the following agencies:
; • Center For D rug Free Living
In Orlando (formerly Thee Door):
•423-6611.
j • We Care: 628-1227, avalljable 24 hours to talk with the
troubled.
| • T h e G ro v e C o u n s e lin g
•Centers In Oviedo and Winter
Springs: 327-1765 for substance
pbuslng youths.

• Crossroads: 321-4375 drug
counseling and referral.
• S e m in o le C o m m u n it y
Mental Health Center: 321-4357
for emotional and parental pro­
blems, substance abusc'and the
elderly and handicapped.
• Straight. Inc., a private
su b sta n c e ab u se treatm ent
service: 628-3130.
• National Drug Information
Hotline: 1-800*241-9746, with
Information on effects of various
drugs.
• Teen Hotline Winter Park:
644-2027.
• N a rc o tic s A n o n y m o u s :
8 4 9 -7 7 7 0 w ith 2 4 -h o u r a n ­
swering service.
• M A D D (Mothers Against
D runk Drivers): 422-6233.
• Alcoholics Anonym ous &amp; A1
Anon: 647-3333.
• Detoxification Unit Orlando:
422-4357.
• G a m b le rs A n o n y m o u s :
236-93^8.
• O vcrcatcrs A no n ym o u s:
628-1227.
• E m o tio n s A n o n y m o u s :
273-7697 for the depressed.
• P a re n ts A n o n y m o u s:
422-1521 for family problems.
• Families Together: 7743844 family drug problems.
• Child Abuse Hotline: 3235521.

• American Cancer Society:
322-0849.
• Orlando Rescue Mission:
422-4855 emergency housing.
• S p o u s e A b u s e , In c . ,

..Museums

dian artifacts. Pleistocene fossils
and sculpture garden. Phone
(904)255-0285.
• Orange County Historical
Museum — Orlando. Exhibits
fe a tu rin g fu rn itu re . In d ia n
artifacts and fort replicas. An
1880 blacksmith shop, parlor
and country store arc Included
as Is a hot-type new spaper
composing room.
• DeBary Hall — Restored
19th Century mansion built by
German-born Baron Frederick

DeBary. Period furnishings and
a p p lia n c e s , art c o lle c tio n .
Guided tours. Open 9 a.m. to 2
p.m. Phone (305) 322-5286.
A rt c e n t e rs in a n d n ear
Seminole County include:
• Seminole Com m unity Col­
lege Art Gallery —■ Sanford.
Hours Monday through T hu rs­
day 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Friday
10 a.m. to noon. Open evenings
when there are musical or theat­
rical productions in the Fine Arts
center.

• Victory Baptist Christian
School. 4621 Hester Avc. S a n ­

B u g Road, C asselberry.
Enrollment: 52 In grades 1-8
with teacher-student ratio 1-8.
Full curriculum and remediation
for learning disabled and un ­
derachievers with the goal of
m a i n s t r e a m i n g to r e g u l a r
school. Tuition: $3,150. 6999502.

r

1 C on tin u ed fro m

page 47

Bpacc Center and adm ission to
the IM A X theatre. Phone (305)
&lt;452-2121.

I

• M u se u m of A rts and
Sciences — Daytona Beach. C on­
temporary paintings, prints, and
photos by top Florida artists.
Cuban paintings, Tlm ucuan In ­

...Private

C on tin u ed fro m p a g e 4 6

$1,630. 862-7688.
•

PACE

P riv a te

School,

3221 Sand Lake Road.
Longwood. Enrollment: 120 with
te a c h e r -s t u d e n t r a t io 1-9.
^earning disabled students with
curriculum adapted to the needs
of students with an art. p h ysi­
cal-education and intram ural
p ro g ra m . T u it io n : $ 4 ,1 2 5 .
869-8882.

ford. Enrollment: 45 In grades
K-9 with Beka curriculum. T u ­
ition. 1985-86: K- $504; Elemen­
tary. $657: Junior high. $801.
322-0282.
• R a n c h la n d C h r is t ia n
School, 290 E. Bahama Road.

Winter Springs. Enrollment: 160
in grades K4-6. A Beka curricu­
lum with teacher-student ratio
1-16. Tuition. 1985*86, K-S750;

1-6. $1,050. 695-0605.
• Harbor School, 3955 Red

...Animal

was rescued from, attracted new
attention to the county animal
shelters. Although his handicaps
and scars made his possibilities
Continued from page 4 8
of being adopted less likely. It
November.
took only eight days for Gladys
Monroe, a blind, deaf, and
Shirley of Longwood to take the
coat-scarred 30-pound m ixed
breed retriever, was found near dog home.
A series of Herald articles on
death In the waters of Lake
the dog created widespread
Monroe east of the Sanford
com m unity interest, and the
Marina breakwall. Officials say
Hum ane Society telephone rang
’he had cither been dumped In
often
w ith in q u ir ie s ab out
the lake, or fell in. W hen he was
fo u n d by a Sanford Herald * M o n ro e 's health and plight.
reporter, he could barely keep Barbara Woodall and Cheryl
Turner said some of the callers
his head above water.
were in tears talking about the
The county Anim al Control
division rescued him and placed animal. Adoptions at the facility
r e p o rt e d ly In c re a se d a fte r
him in the care of the Humane
M onroe's story was told.
Society. After a veterinarian
Monroe was the seventh dog
checkup. It was determined the
found In the lake In 1986. Other
dog was deaf and blind. The
scars on his coat were de­ dogs have been rescued while
termined to be from an old alligators watched from nearby,
injury, possibly the result of according to Anim al Control
division officials.
being hit by a car.
According to most recent fig­
Monroe, named for the lake he

• A d u lt A b u s e H o tlin e :
1-800-342*9152.
• C h ild A b u s e R e g iste r:
1-800-342-9152.
• A dam W alsh Child Re­
source Center: 4 23-2326 for
m issing children Information.
• C o m m u n ity Coordinated
Child Care: 628-3020.
• Headstart: 322-1252 pre­
school program for needy.
• United Way: 322-5050.
• Big Brothcrs/Blg Sisters of
Central Florida: 422-3197 Or­
lando.
• Boy Scourt of America:
896-4801.
• Girl Scouts, Citrus Council:
645-1020.
• S c a g r a v c H o u se , Inc.:
425-4491 for emotionally dis­
turbed youngsters.
• Sex Addicts Anonymous:
(612)339-0217.
• Y.M.C.A.: 862-0444.
• Herpes: Central Florida
Help: 236-3031.

Apopka: 886-2856: Police 911.
• Health Department: 3232724.
• Hospice of Central Fla.. Inc.:
647-2523, for the terminally 111.
• Rape Victim's Services:
322-5115 ext. 126.
• Central Florida Community
Health Clinic: 322-8645. low
cost for needy Including prenatal
care.
• Veterans' services: 3231171.
• A m e ric a n Red C ro ss:
831-3000.
• D ia b e te s A s so c ia tio n :

Office Hours:
M-F 8-5:30
Sat. 10-1 PM

323-4650

Citizens' Dispute Settle­
894-6729.
• Heart Association: 843* ment Program: 322-7534 ext.
125.
1330.
• Lawyer Referral Service:
• L u n g A ssociation: 898- .
834-0530.
3401.
• Seminole County Legal Aid
• C y stic F ib ro sis Center:
Society: 834*1660.
841-5143.
• Poison Control:
• Kidney Foundation: 8941-800-282-3171.
7325.
• Food S ta m p H o tlin e:
• Leukem ia Society: 894*
1-800-342-9274.
0733.
• Florida Department of
• March of Dimes: 849-0790.
• Multiple Sclerosis Society: H ealth and R e h a b ilita tiv e
Service: 322-1661. special
896-3878.
services for children, elderly and
• M uscular D ystrophy
handicapped:
Association: 677-6665.

SUN TRAVEL
AGENCY

"your full service”
TRAVEL AGENCY SINCE

»7o

2311 S. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FL 32771

• Sanford H ousing Authority:
3 2 3 -3 150 subsidized housing.
• Alzheim er’s Support Group:
678-3334.

The sun is always shinning at SUN TRAVEL. Cindy, Kathy,
Joyce, or Miriam at your service to cater to all your travel needs.

• B e a r L a k e C h ris t ia n
School, 1251 Bear Lake Road.
Forest City. Enrollment: 43 In
grades 2-8 with tcachcr-stiidcnt

ratio 1-5. A C E curriculum. T u ­
ition: $800. 869-0198.
u r e s . the A n im a l C o n t r o l
D ivision handled 8,662 dogs
during the 1985-86 fiscal year
which ended in September. The
Hum ane Society handled more
than 1.000 dogs and hundreds of
cats in 1986. in addition to other
types of pets.
A n im a ls b e ing offered for
adoption at the county Animal
Control Division can be visited at
their B ush Boulevard building in
the county "F iv e Points" com ­
plex on 17-92. Anim al Control
liours are from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday
and
Saturdays from 8 a.m. until 4:30
p.m. Their phone number Is
323-2500.
The Hum ane Society shelter is
located at the intersection of
17-92 and Old Home Road. The
shelter hours arc 10 a.m. until 4
p.m. Monday through Friday,
and 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Satur­
d a ys. T h e H u m a n e So ciety
phone num ber is 323-8685.

NCR CORPORATION

We’re Growing With Your Business.

• Manufacturing Systems
• Power Systems

Featuring Complete
Line Of Business
Furniture &amp;
Accessories

&lt;

S u * e e /ie //

A PART OF SEMINOLE COUNTY
FOR OVER ELEVEN YEARS

i*

c iY /a to /
222 M A G N O L IA A V E .
H ISTO RIC DOW NTOW N S A N F O R D

3 2 3 -3 5 9 8

N

�f— • •

Newcomers’ Guide
JQ—Sanford Herstd a Htrald A dvtrtlw r. Sanford. FI.

Thursday, M e. I k, 1W7

^

•*
a"i

Postal Service Plans To Keep Pace With Growth I
By Jene C asselberry
H erald S taff W riter

There arc nine post offices
serving Sem inole County plus a
num ber of contract stations and
branches and they are feeling
-the results of the growth here.
New postal facilities arc planned
in several cities.
Longw ood's 3.400-square-foot
post office at 101 W. Church
Avc. will become a postal station
when the new 19,000 squarefoot post office is completed
sometime between Feb. 15 and
M ay 30.
The new post office being built
by the U.S. Postal Service at 9 20
VVeklva Sp rin gs Road will serve
patrons west of Interstate 4.
replacing a warehouse from
which the delivery operation for
that area is now being run,
according to Postmaster Jean
Wells. The Zip Code for the area
east of 1-4 is 32750 and the area
west of 1-4 Is 32779. Longwood

. . . L ic e n s e s
Continued from page 41

Lake Center. State Road 434,
Altamonte Springs. Seminole
County Services Building. 1101
E. Fir st St.. S a n fo rd , and
Seminole Plaza. Casselberry. 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday.
Regisi rat Ions arc Issued for
one year, and license tags expire
at m idnight on the ow ner's
birthday. Newcom ers to the
state must have the vehicle's
id e nt if ic a t io n n u m b e r and
o d o m e t e r r e a d i n g verified
th ro ugh a law enforcem ent
agency, a car dealer or a Florida
notary. Proof of vehicle Insur­
ance and driver's license must
be shown at time of registration.
The cost of the license depends
on the weight of the vehicle. For
an additional fee. Challenger
Memorial plates are available for
live years beginning Jan. 5 of
this year as long as they last.
The surcharge goes to help build
a memorial to the Challenger
astronauts at Kennedy Space
Center.
Marriage Licenses

Marriage Licenses are avail­
able In Room 4 0 0 on th e fourth
floor of the Seminole County
C o u r t h o u s e on North P ark
Avenue. Sanford, or at the
county annex In Palm Springs
Plaza. State Road 436. Alta­
monte Sp rin gs (831-5722). 8
a.m. to 5 p.m...Monday through
Friday. The fee Is $35 in cash
and both applicants must be
jpresent. A driver's license and
ifinal Judgement if either of the
two parties has been divorced
are also required. The blood test
and three-day waiting period are
no longer required.

also has a small contract station
at Sp rin gs Plaza. Stam ps arc
available at all Albertson camera
counters. Hours are 8:30 a.m. to
5 p.m. Monday through Friday
a n d 8 :3 0 a.m. to noon on
Saturday.
A site for the new
325.000-squarc-foot Lake Mary
Post Office has been purchased
on West Lake Mary Boulevard to
replace the office at 159 E.
W ilbur Avenue, which is being
outgrown because of the rapid
growth in the Lake Mary area,
according to Postmaster Naomi
Wallace. She said deliveries have
Increased 14 percent since the
same 12-wcek time period last
year. The Zip Code is 32746.
There is one contract branch
located at Heathrow, outside the
city limits. Hours are 8:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri­
day and 8:30 a.m. to noon on
Saturday.
The Postal Service Is planning

to acquire a suitable site upon
which to build and lease a new
4.440-squarc-foot main post of­
fice building for Lake Monroe,
according to Postmaster Robert
Mann. Deadline for submitting
site offerings was Oct. 3. After a
suitable sile Is chosen, the Postal
Service will call for construction
bids for a new building to be
built with private funds and
leased to the Postal Service for a
long term period. The Zip Code
for Lake Monroe Post Office,
which has postal boxes, but no
deliver)’ service, is 32747.
Relandscaping and renovation
of the lobby areas are scheduled
for this year at Sanford Post
Office located at 2 2 1 N. Palmetto
Avc. Postmaster Donald Moore
resigned in January and the
officer In charge until a new
postmaster is named is Robert
Kelly.
M oore's contract station at
Medco. d ru g sto re h a s been

also be purchased from County count in March. Hills become
Anim al Control Services. 4300 delinquent after April I.
S. Orlando Drive, Sanford. (Five
Homestead Exemption
Points) with proof of Inoculation.
Florida homeowners arc given
License fees are $3 for steril­
ized anim als and $5 for un- a property lax exemption of
stcrillzed animals. Pet licenses $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 . A p p l i c a t i o n s for
are good for 12 m onths from the exemptions must be made be­
tween Jan. 1 and March 1 of
date of issue.
each year. Applicants have to be
living in the home on Jan. 1 to
Property Taxes
Property tax bills are mailed be eligible. First time applicants
out the first week In November mus t provide the Pro perty
each year. A 4 percent discount Appraiser's office with deed in­
Is offered for bills paid by the formation. d r i v e r ' s li ce n se
end of November. 3 percent In number, proof of voter registra­
December. 2 percent In January. tion or declaration of domicile. If
1 percent in February, no dis­ a new home Is completed after

closed, but a new site south of
25th Street was being sought.
Moore had served in the post
since February. 1986. A postal
station is planned south of 25th
Street by Feb. 1 and future plans
call for a branch office. Hours are
8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday and 8:30 a.m. to
noon on Saturday. The Zip
Codes are 32771 and 32772.
C a s s e l b e r r y P o s t O ffice ,
l o c a t e d at 1 0 9 L i v e O a k
Boulevard, also handles mail for
Winter Springs and Fern Park.
Sue Jones is officer in charge.
The Zip Code for Casselberry is
32707: Winter Springs. 32708
and Fern Park. 32730. The Fern
Park office Is located at 130
Fcm wood Boulevard and there
arc two contract post offices for
Winter Sp rings — one at Wllla
Sp rin gs Shopping Center, Red
B u g Road and Tuskawllla Road,
and the other at Barston’s Card
Shop on State Road 434.
the deadline, you will pay taxes
on only the vacant land for the
remainder of the year. If you buy
a used home and the previous
owner had claimed homestead,
y o u w ou ld not receive the
benefit of the exemption, but
would have to reapply.
Additional exemptions arc: 1)
$ 5 0 0 w id o w 's exem ption —
w idow m ust b rin g In death
certificate In person: 2) $500
disability exemption — m ust
apply In person; 3) $500 for
blind persons; 4) total exemption
for service connected total and
permanent disability certified by
the Veteran's Administration 5)

A new post office for Winter

Sp rin gs is proposed for State
R o a d 4 3 4 near the W in ter
Sp rin gs City Hall In about two
years. Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 5
p.m. M onday through Friday
and 8:30 to noon on Saturday.
Altamonte Sp rin gs will have a
new post office on Montgomery
Road by April 1. The present
post office located at 201 N.
Longw ood Ave. will then be
branch ofllce. but both will be
full-service operations, according
to Charlie Vick, superintendent
of postal operations. Altamonte
also has two contract stations —
one is the Forest City Post Office
and the other Is at Shopper’s
D ru g Mart in the Altamonte
Mall. There is also a self-service
postal unit in the mall parking
lot. The Zip Code cast of 1-4 is
32701 and west of 1-4 is 32714.
P ostm aste r is Alice W ilson.
H ours are 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
M o n d a y through Friday and
exemption for quadriplegics —
documentation from two doctors
needed. For further information
call the County Appraiser's of­
fice at 323-4330.
Occupational Licenses

O c c u p a tio n a l licenses arc
available at the Seminole County
Services Building at 1101 E.
First St., Sanford, and branch
office s at S e m i n o l e Plaza.
Casselberry, and Sa n d Lake
Center, Altamonte Springs. The
fee depends on the type of
b u sin e ss you want to open.
Licenses for sales oriented busi­
nesses arc $22.50: for service

8:30 a.m. to noon on Saturday.
Oviedo Post Office is located at
145 Geneva Drive. The Zip Code
32765) and has a contract sta­
tion and two routes In Chuluota
with the Z ip C o d e 3 2 7 6 6 .'.'
Postmaster Scott Perry said the
post office has experienced 25 td.'
30 percent grow th w ith the
addition of 1500 new patrons.*
but anticipates it will be another
year or so before a new b u ild in g '1
Is considered. H ours are 8:30
a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through*
Friday and 8:30 a.m. to noon on
Saturday.
Geneva Post Office Is located1’
on P ine Street. P o stm a ste r
Eilcne Bowen said her office does
not have delivery, but only lock
boxes. The com m unity Is grow­
ing and she said she Is renting
boxes every day. The Zip Code is
32732. Hours are 8:30 a.m. to'
noon and 2-5 p.m.. M o n d a y ^
through Friday and 8:30 a.m. to 5
noon, Saturday.
3
oriented businesses, $16.50 (for
first five employees) and up: for
contractors. $13.50 (for I - 10
employees) and up: mortgage
com panies. $56.25; p ro ­
fessionals, $22.50; palm readers.
$225: vending machines. $4.50:
restaurant. $22.50 (seating for
1-30) and up: amusement de­
vices. $11.25: and miscellaneous
businesses, such as banks, lim ­
ousine services and promotion
companies. $225.
Applicants m ust (HI out a form
w hich requests the bu siness
name, a d dre ss, telephone
number and sim ilar information
S e e L IC E N S E S , p a g e 52

L u n a ' s ...

A People Business

Fishing, Hunting Licenses

Out of county, non-state resi­
d e n ts and those who attach a
.mechanical reel to their cane
jpole or man-made rod must have
'a license to fish if they arc
between the age of 16 and 65.
»Thosc over 65 can obtain a
'senior citizen's license without
{[paying the $8 resident's fee.
jOut-of-state fishermen can be
.'licensed lor one year for $26. or
10 days for $11.
The fishing licensing year
ends June 30 each year, but a
resident's license is good for one
.year Irom the date of issue. A
• Florida d river's license or a
voter's registration m ust be
shown to prove Florida re­
sidency when applying for a
Florida fishing license.
Licenses are available at the
Seminole County Services Build;.'lng at 1101 E. First St.. Sanford,
carnl at m any fishing supply
.{shops throughout the county.
•{The fishing supply shops add a
tj50-ccnl service charge onto the
Jfee.
State h u n tin g licenses are
{available through the county tax
■ 'collector's office at the county
{services building and at some
•{sporting g o o d s d e a le r s
■ {throughout the county. The
•{licenses expire June 30 each
•{year and proof of residency is
•required to obtain one.
Florida residents can buy a
■ {one-year hunting license for $12.
{Non-residents may obtain a on{e-year license for $51.
; Hunting and fishing licenses
{are also available at satellite
{offices at Sand Lake Center.
{Altam onte S p rin g s, and
{Seminole Plaza on U.S. Hlghwuy
{ 17-92. Casselberry.
f

Pet Licenses

T o ow n a d o g or cat in
Seminole County, you must also
{obtain a license as well as have
'the pet inoculated for rabies. Pet
{licenses are available from
'veterinarians at the time of
Inoculation and are good for one
year from thal date. They can

V c

z.

We recognize that retailing is a business of peo­
ple...people shopping, people browsing, people work­
ing. Our stores provtde you, our customers, with some
of the most unique and exciting merchandise In the
world. We are committed to offering you brand name,
quality items at discount prices. It is our continual goal
to meet your needs not only with our merchandise, but
with friendly store environment and personalized
customer service.
We would like to take this opportunity to express
our gratitude to you, the people of this communi­
ty ...o u r cu sto m ers, friends and dedicated
employees...for making Luria's one of the nations
leading specialty retailers.

1

I
1

27
AlTAOONTf flPKHMU |

Luria's

L u r il

Sem inole C entre, Sanford
M arket S quare Shopping C enter, C asselberry
B rantley S quare Shopping C enter, A ltam onte S prings

J

�Cities List Their Recreation Department Schedules
Sanford Recreation
Department Activities
Phone: 322-9161
Spring and Sommer
Pec Wee Baseball, 7-9-yearDlds

Little Major League Baseball,
10 -12-year-olds

Junior Major League Baseball,
13-14-year-olds
G irls' L a ssie Softball.
EM 2-y car-olds
[ G irls' J u n io r Softball,
13*15-year*old9
I Men’s Softball, adults
t Sum m er P la ygro u n d ,
12-year-olds:
I 0 Arts &amp; Crafts
. # Tennis Lessons
I Adult Volleyball
Fall and Winter
Adult Basketball. 16 and up
j Junior T enn is Tournament.
8 and u n d e r (If sufficien t

number of participants)
J u n io r Boys Baskeiball,
10- 12&gt;year-olds
Intermediate Boys Basketball.
13-15-year-olds
B o y s' Junior Flag Football,
10-12-year-olds
B o y s' Midget Flag Football.
79-year-olds
Punt. Pass and Kick Contest.
812-year-olds
M ens' Softball
San ta's Calling. 4-7-year-olds
Halloween Haunted House. 14
and under
After School Programs {dally
during school term. 3 p.m.-5:30
p.m. at Idyllwlldc and Hamilton
Elementary schools)
Intermural sports at Lakevlew
Middle School, 4 p.m.-6 p.m.
Wednesdays and Fridays during
school term (variety of sports,
such as basketball, volleyball.

softball)
Sports at Croom s (open gym,
basketball, votleybatl) seven
days a week, weekdays 4 p.m.-9
p.m., Saturdays 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
and Sun d ays 2 p.m.-6 p.m., 13
and up
W estslde and Youth W ing
C e n t e r s are op en d a lly
weekdays. 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.
(Westmonte) and 3 p.m.-5 p.m.
(Youth Wing, hours possible to
expand soon).
Casselberry Recreation
Department Activities
Phone: 831-3531
Senior Center Activities
Line Dancing
Kitchen Band
H obbycraft (arts and class
lessons)
Square Dancing (beginner and
Intermediate lessons)
Art (watercolor and oil In-

struettons)
Sew ing (lessons and pattern
making)
Y o g a (quiet exercise and
breathing lessons)
Gentle Exercise for Seniors
Contract Bridge (beg. and Int.)
Employment Assistance
C asselberry Param edics
weekly visits
Sa tu rd a y Ev e n in g D ances
(first and third Saturday each
month)
Blood Pressure Testing
Guest Speakers (social securi­
ty. legal matters, housing)
Senior Center Activities *
Sponsored By Outside Groups
Klwanis Club — Friday Even­
ing bingo
Sweet Adelines Vocal Group
Nordlne Round Dance Lessons
A A R P Meeting
N A R F E Meeting
P A R Activities

bler Kiddle '/« mile run (Thanks­
givin g Day)
Annual Childrens Christmas
Party
Fun Dog Show
Little M iss &amp; Little Mister
Casselberry Contest with Special
People Jaycees
Purr-Feet Kitty Contest
Outdoor Concerts
O utd oor Craft Fairs
(Oktoberfest. Christmas)
Easter Egg Hunt
S u m m e r Y o u th Recreation
Program
July 4 Independence Day Cel­
ebration (tentative)
• Activity calenders are avail­
able by calling or visiting the
C a s s e l b e r r y Recreation D e ­
partment. Casselberry City Hall.
95 Lake Triplet Drive.
See CITIES, page 52

!W

WE
BUY
MORTGAGES...

4S&amp;K t'j&amp;K

i

ENGINEERING SERVICES
and

DEVELOPMENT SPECIALISTS
lo ve S c u tfio n d

We also make 1st and 2nd mortgage loans
on Residential or Commercial Real Estate
up to $100,000.

,

Personal loans are available including
Revolving Credit Line.

Ouk
m

■

£ i
m

Ceramics Instruction
Baby and Youth Sw im m ing
Instructions (summer)
Japanese Bunka Embroidery
Classes
Baton Lessons (beg. and int.)
Archery Instructions
Dog Obedience with Seminole
Dog Fanciers Assoc. !nc.
T e n n i s In s tr u c t io n (adult
beginner and youth beginner)
M ens' Softball League (fall,
winter and spring leagues)
(S p rin g ) W o m e n s So ftb a ll
League (tentative)
Little League Baseball (Minors
and Majors)
Little League Baseball Ju niors
(age 13)
T-Ball League (boys and girls
5-8 years)
P A R Special Events
Halloween Childrens Parade
Halloween Teen Dance
Turkey Trol 5 K Race &amp; Gob­

'% e *$ te t

'.

13 -Ti"' ;'**■-*,
■

Mack Lazenby
Kim Townsend
16 YEARS LOCAL EXPERIENCE

Site Plans Master Plans
Residential Subdivisions
indusiiiai Developements
Rezoning Representation
St. Johns &amp; D E R Permits
-

’

• Lfy&gt;

m

•.

'

(3 0 5 ) 3 2 3 - 5 4 1 5

4W -

‘31 , i -I ■

i

PERKINS
LANDSCAPING
&amp; FENCE

c&amp; s
Family Credit Services, Inc.
Park S q u are Shopping C enter, SR 4 3 6
Longwood

" S E C U R IT Y • B E A U T Y • P R IV A C Y "

831-3400

OUTDOOR ETC
OF SEMINOLE. INC.

Residential &amp; Commercial

LANDSCAPING &amp; DESIGN
&amp;

^

-a

&amp; K°

«2&gt;n

sikksns
CAR R E FIN IS H E S

LAW N M A IN T E N A N C E
SCREEN EN CLO SU RES
FREE COURTEOUS
ESTIMATES
DEPENDABLE &amp;
PROFESSIONAL

Prompt, Expert
Installation
• Trees • Irrigation • Plants
See Us For All O l Your
Outdoor NeedsI

EQUIPMENT &amp; SERVICE
ONE TIME

L o n g Lasting A l u m i n u m M a in te n a n c e F r e e !.

OR YEAR ROUND

FRAM E IT
WITH A
FENCE . . .
Give your exciting Sikkem finish
all the care it deserves.

• MULCH
• CUSTOM FENCE
• CYPRESS &amp; PRESSURE
TREATED WOOD
• VINYL COATEO FENCE
• 00G HOUSES
• LATTICE FENCE
• IRRIGATION SYSTFMS

R E SID E N T IA L
&amp;
C O M M E R C IA L

All yotj have to do is wash regularly with a
good car shampoo Dry with a chamois or
soft cloth

See Us For A ll O f Your
Outdoor N e e d s !

You do not have to use any type ot wax
or buffing compound on your car. It is
unnecessary. The Sikkens finish will
continue to shine like new for years with
regular care.

U C E N SEO -

BONDED -

IN S U R E D

—

■

E x p e rt Repairs For Your A utom obile To E xact
F a c to ry Specs Using The "C a r-o -lin e r”

u

* if
j
1:
J
{

Sem inole P a in t &amp; B o d y
323-5163

2540 S. Myrtle Ave.
Sanford
24 Hour Towing

—f =

HWY. 17 92 &amp; L A K E M A R Y B LV D . (At The Blinkinq Liqht)

Seminole • 322-8060

834-0077

*

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

Volusia - 668-5909

r \ « i

m

�wa r ' l l i

-*-v

■ n - ’-

Recreation

1 WATCHES PEARLS
ENGRAVING

SI—fu fsrd HeraM $ HsrsM Mvartisar, Sanford, FI.

...Cities
*

Cootlieed from p «
SI
Altamonte Springs
Activities

[&gt; 8 6 3 - 0 0 0 0
Tennis Courts Available
Eastmonte Park — Three (3)
a s p h a lt c o u rts at S o u th
Longwood Avenue
Westmonte Park — Four (4)
asphalt courts at 624 Bills Lane
AH courts are lighted with
metal halide fixtures
• Court Hours:, M onday
through Saturday 8 a.m.-10
p.m.. Sunday 8 a.m.-dark.

Racquetball Courts
Avsllsble
Eastmonte Park — Four (4)
4-wall courts, two (2) 3-wall
courts
All courts at the Eastmonte
Center are lighted
O Court H ours: M onday
through Saturday B a.m.-10
p.m.. Sunday 8 a.m.-dark
Both centers are open every
day of the year.

Membership
A ll p e rs o n s w is h i n g to
participate In any specialized
tennis or racquetball programs
such as lessons, youth teams,
adult teams, women's days or
the purchase of an annual,
bi-annual or quarterly tennis or
racquetball program fee must
possess a valid recreation
membership.

Recreational Swimming
April 18 to June 7
Aug. 29 to Oct. 4
The Westmonte pool will be
open to the public from 12 noon
to 6 p.m. on Saturday and
Sunday.
June 8 to Aug. 23
The Westmonte pool will be
open to the public seven days a
week from 12 noon to 6 p.m.
Pool will be open May 25
(Memorial Day)
Dally Admission fees (per ad­
mission):
Children (16and under).........50
Adults (17 and over)...............75

Thursday, Fob. it, in ?

Lessons will be available at the
Eastmonte Center for Infants
who are at least 6 months old.
Instructions will last 10 minutes
per day. five days a week and
will Involve teaching the child
breathing and floating tech­
n iqu es and short-distance
swimming while fully clothed.
Classes are taught by certified
Infant Swimming Research in­
structors.
All classes except Infants will
consist of 10 lessons. Each
lesson will be approximately one
hour In length.
Alt swim classes will take
place during the morning hours
prior to 12 noon.
All successful participants
(exclud in g Infants) will be
awarded appropriate Red Cross
Certificates or patches.
T h e r a p e u t ic S w im

April 27 to June 15:
Wed., Frl., 11 a.m.*l p.m.
May-Sept.: Saturdays
a.m.-12noo.n
June 18-Aug. 2: Mon..
Frl.. 6 p.m.-7:30 p.m.
Aug. 24-Scpt.27: Mon.,
Frl.. 11 a.m.-l p.m.

Mon..

Adalt Swim Night
This swim will be for adults
and senior, citizens only. This
swim will take place every
Wednesday evening from 6-7:30
p.m. throughout the summer
swim season (April 22 to Sept.
30)

Special Youth Aquatics
Free Swim
There will be a dally morning
swim during the spring, summer
and early fall months. There will
he qualified adapted aquatics
Instructors on hand for this
activity. Call for additional Infoi matlon on starting times and
dates.

Wed..
Wed..

page

BO

about the owner or company
president. A driver's license and
social security card should be
presented. Anyone may receive

a.m. throughout the summer
swim season (April 22 to Sept.
30). The Mother-Tot Swim will
be limited to the wading pool.
For the s k ille d , m a tu re
swimmers who wish to educate
themselves In general lifesaving
techniques. Persons completing
this class will be certified by the
R ed C r o s s a s q u a l i f i e d
lifeguards.
City Residents................$10.00
Non -Residents................ $20.00
Cost of books will be In
addition to registration fees.
For further Information on the
Aquatics program , contact:
Altamonte Springs Rec. Dept.
Westmonte Park. 624 Bills Lane.
Altamonte Springs, FL 32701
(862-0090)

b4

e
e
e
e

•L ib ra rie s

Health Cere freW r^r*

Keep Up With Grewth
____ _
t*m*
_ (-r,

rw&gt;.v»^

mWIHSW

ITAjJAHSAUSAG!
I La. I

l w r i ’** ."Tlfr . *I t .
• WW *

wV h * -

Classes will be available on the
following levels:
• Infants — (6 months and
up; Eastmonte only)
• Preschool — (ages three and
up)
Beginner
Advanced Beginner
Intermediate
Swimmer

S *m ln o l» County 1986-'87

Medicine:

,W

Swimming Lessons

'

19 HWY. 17-92, DefUry tAcnm rmm Po« omm
1 4 1 1 4 1 8 IH B
Howl SF 1:30-5:30 SAT. 10-5 PM

H e a lth

•L ife s ty le *

1

DELI COMBINATION

MEATBALL &amp; CHEESE

- r jS R a tfJ S

BEEF

I M-me*»*•* h*1

. —

•«1 M •**'**

I S

menu Rstmetumno salads and spaghetti. Party Subs and
Party Platters. Every Item is available for take-out If you
wish.
Enjoy good sating at 30 Soblk’s
In csntral Florida. Thsrs art two
Soblk’s In Sanford, on Frsnch Avo.
and Airport Blvd.

—v.l

.__ , _

BAR-B-0

The list goes on. but you get the Idea) Soblk’s has a long

lm

** *

I rmV!»

m m i [EATHALL

1 0 H lM itM P ram D ow ntow n Sm 4* 4

Cindy (Dalocke
Owner

S p o tlig h t O n Pr og

i —n

SSI

10% O F F A n y t h in g I n T h e S ta r e
W h h T h is A d
B a s in

A Special Edition

a business licence; however,
they should check with the
coun ty's land m anagement
division to make sure the busi­
ness is in an area zoned for that
business. If a business Is located
within the city limits it must
have both a county and city
occupational license.

MORE THAN JUST
A PRETTY BUN!

TURKEY

Being the new owner sice Nov. *86. Lots of positive changes
for the shopper that loves convenience. Come check out our
affordable prices, on our quality merchandise.

P R O G R E S S ‘ 87

Season Passes
City Residents:
Family........................... $35.00
Single............................ ...$25.00
Non-Residents;
Family
..,$50.00
............. Single...............$35.00
A ll p e rs o n s w is h i n g to
purchase a season pass or
participate In any specialized
aquatics activity must possess a
valid recreation membership

L it t le S t a ff
C o n s ig n m e n t S h o p

The Sanford Herald is being read by more and more
people everyday. Here’s just one of the many
reasons —

This swim will be for mothers
with small children who are
timid In the water. This swim
will take place every Wednesday
morning between from 9:30-11

CRAB SAIAD

2 0 4 8 . PARK AVBNU*
PH O N E 3 2 2 - 6 8 0 9
SA N F O R D _______________

A dvanced L ifesa v in g C laes

Mother-Tot Swim

10;30

...L ic e n s e s
Continued from

Twinge* in the Hlagea
In-the-water exercise program
for adults with arthritis and
other disabling ailments:
April 27-Jtine 5: Mon.. Wed.,
Fri., 11 a.m.-l p.m.
June 18-Aug. 2: Mon., Wed.,
6-7 p.m.

tfw a &amp; k e ? Q tM fd v tA
“See Us Then Com pare“

J I
I

r - ^ S

t S

'4«&gt;«***'*'* I

1 ^ ™
—
1a - s s K S S S s a s
—• v r r r

"Zm »•

■

J., --I - '■'*

......
_JL. (,■
«« wo
Z* M W * — r—w**«”’
m-*»
± r Tl-SLTr-*4
Csw*fi*

Infant Swimming Lessons

Madame
Katherine

An Excellent Gift Idea
This section provides you with a comprehensive look at Seminole County. You’ll read
about lifestyles, health, libraries, education, government, leisure, sports and the growth
in Seminole County. This is an excellent gift idea to send your friends and relatives.
Let everyone know what a great community you live in, send them a copy of this year’s
Progress Edition.

-CLIP AND M A IL ^
|

MAIL C O U P O N
T O THE:

I

VOTED BEST PSYCHIC READER &amp; ADVISOR
IN CENTRAL FLORIDA • 1984
Tell you past, present, &amp; future...reunites the separated...asks no questlons...helps you find the right employment...5 0 years experience.

LONGWOOD
Between Dog Track Rd. &amp; SR 434 on Hwy. 17-92
Call for Appointment 693-700S

I
I
!

ADDRESS

j

AFT. NUMftER.

I
I

STATE

Sanford Horald
P.O. Box 1657
Sanford. FL 32772-1657

NAME.

.CITY.
ZIP CODE

IndoM H .60 lor aoch Progrou (ditton and wo will man onywhara In tho U.S.A. and Canada. Offor ok— — — — — — — —
_

Call 322-2611 to start your subscription today!

§ a n ib rd H e ra ld
" Y o u r lo c a l n e w s p a p e r s in c e 1 9 0 8 "

3 0 0 N orth French Ave.

Sanford, Florida

�S ////

V

r

I

B y J iM C u N lb m y
Herald Staff Writer

r Even with the pressures of
levelopment on agricultural
snds In Seminole County, the
iverall agribusiness here Is still
I$187 mllllon-a-year Industry.
Thi s Includes related Inustrles that supply farmers and
anchers with such things as
red. fertilizer and equipment.
The county’s total 1985-86
n-farm value In agricultural
roducts was $77,975,000, aco r d l n g to Bill L l ewe l y n.
iultl-county extension agent In
b a r g e of v e g e t a b l e s for
Cmlnole. Orange. Volusia, and
Irevard.
The growing of ornamentals In
iemlnole County accounted for
&gt;oth the most acreage and
Ughest revenue of any crop In
he 1985*86 year. He said there
re 5.600 acres devoted to
rowing ornamentals and flowrs In fields and greenhouses, an
ncrcase since the last annual
eport and the revenue from
&gt;rnamentals Is near the $61
nllllon mark, as compared to
118 million In sales the previous
rear.
Llewelyn estimates there are
1.000 acres In the county used
or growing vegetables. He said
his Is hard to determine exactly
&gt;ccausc there are 5.085 acres In
larvcsted crops, with more than
&gt;nc crop planted on the same
armland each year.
The value of the vegetable
:rops In the county totaled
512.814.000 for the year as
bompared to $15.6 million the
previous year.
: "Cabbage Is down In populari­
ty." Llewelyn said, "and this will
bring a dramatic change In the
tvay farmers plant In Seminole.
There was less planted this fall
imd will be less next spring.

Important

W e're still In the vegetable
Industry, but the trend Is toward
more diversification with more
varieties of vegetables such as
green beans, field peas, cucum­
bers. onions, eggplant and
peppers.'*
Celery, which once totaled
7.000 acres, making Sanford the
celery capital of the world, la still
grown on about 300 acres In the
Oviedo area.
Trying to make a comeback,
the citrus crop In the county was
valued at $1,610,000, up from
$400,000 last year. Llewelyn
said there are only an estimated
1.000 acres of citrus left In the
county after the devastating
freezes of the past few years and
the demands of development for
more land especially In the
South and West parts of the
county. Citrus groves amounted
to 2.400 acres prior to the freeze.
He said citrVis trees that didn’t
freeze completely are responding
well to good treatment.
The mild weather so far this
fall and winter have been a
mixed blessing for farmers and
grove owners, Llewelyn said. "It*
has hardly been cool enough to
color the fruit and the Insects
and disease problems Jm v £ been
worse because of^ the warmer
weather. A plus Is the warm
weather has hastened the matu­
rity of some crops, but some
other crops like cold weather
and the warm weather #has
caused premature seeding.
Sod. hay, honey and forestry
lumped together were valued at
$1,271,790.
"It looks like a good year for
farmers and hopefully we won't
get a freeze like we did In the
past," Llewelyn said.
He said that the beef cattle
industry In Seminole was valued
at $1,256,000 as compared to

,11 IS I I If &gt;A I \ K SI |&lt;&gt;( I I ) Y&lt; &gt;1
11AVI ! ( ) ( ; ( ) i n m \&lt; 11
Y( )t IK lit IS IN I S.S
H A N K ! .K?

$823,000 last year. Other live­
stock. Including horses, pigs,
rabbits and goats, brought in
$782,000, according to the
agent, who said there are no
longer any poultry farms In the
county. T his com pares to
$520,000 last year.
The horse Industry Is boom­
ing. he added. There are some
farms breeding and growing
horses In the county, but It Is
hard to estimate the number of
acres Involved because there are
so many Individual horse owners
who have from a half acre Up to
5 acres pasture.
The center Is located at the
count y' s c o m p le x io n U.S.
Highway 17-92 north of Five
Points. The phone number Is
323-2500.
c

^ Tired Of The 1
Megabank Mentality?

r

The State Farmers Market,
located on Prench Avenue. San­
ford. had an estimated 1985-86
market Income of $110,000.
Sair. pfashear of Lake Mary took
^ver on May 16. replacing
armer director Wendell Moore,
who was transferred to Bonlfay
St at e F a r m e r s Ma r k e t In
Northwest Florida. The market
serves as a distribution center
and Brashear oversees as busi­
ness dealings of producers and
brokers who rent space at the
market. He began teaching In
the area In 1968 and taught
horticulture at Seminole Com­
munity College.

S

The state l e g is la t u r e
appropriated money and a new
roof was put on the Farmers
Market. Most of the 19 tenants at
the market are brokers who rent
office space and line up trucks to
haul crops. There a couple of
fanner tenants, including one
who operates a packing plant for
cucumbers. Brashear said a fer­
tilizer company Is Interested In
relocating here.

of Orlando
BANKING HOURS:
Lobby
Monday - Thursday,
9 •4: Friday. 9 •6

Orivo-ln Tellers
Monday - Friday. 8 - 6;
Saturday. 9 - 12 a.m.

OTHER LOCATIONS:
Liberty National Bank •502 N. Hwy. 17-92
P.0. Box 9400 •Longwood. FL 32750
Liberty National Bank •520 W. Hwy. 436
Altamonte Springs. FL 32714

At Liberty National Bank, We have always pro­
vided you with a solid, stable alternative to
"Megabank Mentality." Liberty Bank believes that
businessmen shouldn't have to suffer through the
excuses and policy problems created by an avalanche
of acquisitions, mergers and out-of-state banking
interests gobbling up Florida.
We've always made our policies and decisions
locally Wte’re a proud independent bank... home­
grown and home-owned! Liberty Bank has never
been In transition... we're established. We're continu­
ing our tradition of providing you with full-service
banking, and we're reinvesting our capital where it
belongs... back into our own community
Liberty National Bank offers you more than a
handshake. We provide our; clients with a stay-in­
touch business banking specialist, who knows the
Central Florida business and financial climate... like
a native.
Liberty National Bank has expanded its services to
a location near you. We’re reaching out for your sup­
port. Come on In and see firsthand what attentive,
full-service commercial banking can mean for you on
a daily basis. Isn't It time you had a refreshing alter­
native to the "Megabank Mentality?'
Set up an appointment today..call Tom at 894-1776.
THOMAS H. SESSIONS
Executive Vice President

DRIVE
c o t OM AL PROMENADE

♦-DO W N TO W N

4301 E. Colonial Drive

,r
- :
-■'A : C J
■ J k

1.; ’■......

V
'

T

Tom will manage our newest lullservice facility His 16 years ol in
deplh banking experience «»s a
former National Bank Examiner, a
Commercial Lending Officer and
a Bank President will be an asset to
any business client. Tom is also a
former small business owner

Loch Low e
Preparatory School
Loch L u w r I' repn ru to ry School Is a non-sectarian, co -cd u catlo nal college
p re p a ra to ry school for stu d en ts In grades one th ro u g h tw e lv e . Classes
lim ite d to 15 stu d en ts.
T h e school p rep ares stu d en ts for college an d ca re e r, w ith e m p h a s is on
Indlvlduaflzed Instruction. New program s for gifted 1-8. C all (30 5) 3 2 1 -3 0 3 0
for m o re In fo rm a tio n .
L o c h L o w e P re p . A n n o u n c e s I t s N e w
B U M M ER D A T C A M P POR 1 9 8 7
f o r b o y s e n d g ir ls - a g e s 5 2 F o u r W e e k S e s s io n s
J u n e 1 9 to J u l y 1 0
J u l y 1 3 ti

• Water Sports
• Drama 6 Music
• Arts G Crafts

• Swimming
• Computers
• Science G Nature Study
• And More

Soccer Clinic
Tutoring
All Sports

L o th L o w * la lo c a t'd on &lt; a c tn lc tarenty-flva a t r * laoodad c a m p u i lu
l « k t L o th L o o t. T ra n sp o rta tio n L lunch a rt available.

For more information, call (305) 321-3030 or write
Camp Director

LOCH LOWE PREPARATORY SCHOOL
P.0. BOX 786, LAKE MARY, FL 32746

Decorating Den’s Showroom features a beautiful selec­
tion of top quality coordinated samples to choose
from . All our products are guaranteed.

You Can Make Your Decorating
Dreams Come True...
W ith Philips Decorating Den
from the sim plest design in window treatm en ts to
com plete room coordination,

“The Colorful Store...That Comes To Your Door"

p h i l i p s s ; so“at,mo
IN BUSINESS SIN CE 1951

319 W. 13th ST. • 322-3315 or 322-7642 • SANFORD

Sanford Plaza

�^ v y :

M -fa itfiN H f iM 4 HwaM M v trth a r, Sanfwtf, FI.

S a n li

v i A' v ^ r " »

t •; v

H e r a ld

Tlw n &lt; n f,

•

^

T {

I’lT s e n is

OAKLAWN MEMORIAL PARK
OAKLAWN FUNERAL HOME
The cemetery, located at the
corner ol 46A and Rinehart
Road just minutes front 1-4, In
Lake M a ry, it a r f a d w ith
burial* In IM I. changing tha
nam a fro m L a k a v la w to
Oak lawn Memorial In I f 54.
Oak lawn Funaral Home i i a
vital addition to tha concept ol
complete service In one con
vanlent location •• In fu ll
accord with tha customs and
prafaranct* or tha Individual
and fam ily •• a be au tifu l
chapel and attractive state­
room*. both traditional and
contemporary. A ll funeral and
burial arrangements can now
b* mads In on* location, and
with everything under one
local owner, costs ara lower. A
sim p le m ethod of casket
selection Is offered which Is
less contusing, allowing the
informed family to make Its
decision based on more than
|ust emotion, and our plan
provides the opportunity to
pro arrange everything ahead
removing the burden from the
fa m ily . A (lo w er shop Is
located in the front lobby. M r
Larry Miller with 20 years
experience Is the Funeral
Director, and M r. Cramer
Still Is Ihe Park Director. Ms.
Shirley Bennett Is Office M an­
ager and Mr. Ron Wheeler Is
Operations Manager Oaklawn
Memorial Park and Funeral
Home otters a full range of
services Including cremation,
ground bu ria l, mausoleum
en tom bm ent, and a new
Columbarium In Ihe "Garden
o l Mem ories" featuring a
granite with carved praying
hands on tha root. Oaklawn
serves all of Central Florida
and Is the o n ly F u n e ra l
Homa/Cementary com bina­
tion In Seminole County.

1884
SUNNILAMO CORPORATION
On May 14. 1SS4, two brothers
t r a m c a .r e s a n r a w n .e a .
n u n t f w m wmw company in
Florida. Chase and Company
began operation under the
leadership ol S. O. Chase. Sr.
and Josh C. Chase, who were
pioneers In the development ol
Florida citrus Industry and
v e g e ta b le p ro d u c tio n In
Central Florida. The business
was ol a general nature at
f ir s t , ge ne ral In s u ra n c e
agents, fe rtiliz e r m a te ria l
sales and shippers ol citrus
commodities. In the ea rly
1900's they became Interested
In truck farming and citrus
p r o d u c tio n T h e C h a s e
brothers had a knack o l
selecting good people lo make
the company prosper. From
1910 through 1930, Ihe com­
pany pioneered Ihe develop
men! ot sweet corn production
In Florida. During the war
yaars ol the 1940‘s and early
part of the 1950's Ihe company
Invested In the Zellwood and
Bella Glade areas lor celery
and sugar cane production.
The 1900‘s saw the moving of
Iruck farming lo alher areas
of the state and Ihe company
ceased truck farm ing and
concentrated on building m i
l e r l a l a n d I * r 11111 e r
manufacturing In the latter
part ol 1979, Chase and Com
pany was p u rc h a s e d by
Reichhold Lid. ol Toronto.
Canada and changed tha
name to Sunnlland Corpora­
tion. The Canadian firm re
talned Lee P. Moore as their
general manager and presi­
dent. Sunnlland Corporation
w as p u rc h a s e d Iro m
Reichhold. Lid in March of
1981 by Lee P. Moore. The
company now has building
material warehouses located
throughoul Ihe slate and the
te rltllie r and chtm lcal plant
at 5 Points distributes Sun
nlland fertilizer and chemicals
over the entire state.

1908
SANFOROHERALD
The Sanford Herald. 300 N.
French Avenue. Sanford. Is
Seminole County's only local
dally and Sunday newspaper
has been published (or 79
consecutive years. The San
ford Herald also publishes the
Herald Advertiser, and Money
Saver, a tabloid site Shoppers
Guide. Both are weekly e d i­
tions which are circulated
th ro u g h o u l Sem inole and
South Volusia counties. Adver­
tisers purchase space In these
papers through a combination
buy with the Sanford Herald
to reach a combined total ot
41.000 homes In Seminole and
Volusia counties. The H e ra ld 'i
plant, situated on a beautifully
la n d sca p e d lo t n e a r th e
Lakelront has become a San
lord landmark. The Herald's
printing facility is a modern,
com puterised, photo o tls e t
operation. The Paper has Its
own color presses and color
separation unit adding living
color photos lo the dally and
juiHj.tr paper. i in newspaper
Is published Monday through
Friday and on Sunday The
Herald Is politically indepen
dent and reports the news ot
the county, slate, national and
world with professional com­
petence

PHILIPS DECORATINO
DENANDCLEANERS
Philips Decorating Den end
Cleaners. I t * West 13th Street.
Sanford, Florida. This firm
was opened as Royat Cleaners
In 1*17. M r. Whlddon changed
Its name to Colonial Claanars.
M r. W. M. Philips has ownad
tha buslnesi since 19SI. They
moved Into their present loca
Hon In 1984. They take pride In
having the first end only lu r
storage vau lt In Seminole
County. For your drapery
cleaning they specialise In
Adlusta drape finishing, guara n te e d p a r t e d p le a ts ,
hemlines end square comers.
They otter e total decorating
sarvlca directed toward a
beautiful Interior lo r your
home, featuring a complete
lin e o l custom dreperles.
c o o rd in a tin g bedspreads,
woven woods, d e co ra tive
shades and Venetian blinds.
W in d o w d e s ig n s , a re a
speciality at Decorating Den
along w ith c a rp a l, v in y l
flooring custom furniture and
wall covering. Philips Is a
q u a lit y D ry C le a n e r o t
Seminole County. M r. Philips'
fam ily Is on* ol the oldest In
Sanford and dates back to
1170. A salute to this pioneer
fir m that has grown and
progressed with the times.

1919
SANFORD DRY CLEANERS
INCORPORATED
Sanford Dry Cleaners Inc.. 113
5 o u th P a lm e tto Avenue,
opened lor business In 1*19,
and was purchasad In I960 by
Marge and Jerry Jernigan.
The Jernigan* have since
purchased and Incorporated
Into Sanlord Dry Cleaner*
several local laundries and
dry cleaners. Including the
Deluxe Laundry. In 1976, the
Jernigan* purchased the old
Sanford F ir* Station at 107
South Palmetto Avenue and
Installed a number ol pieces ot
the latest laundry processing
equipment. In August. 1977,
the J e rn ig a n '* son, Ron,
m m * t m m * Dry Cleaners
as manager. In December,
1981. a ma|or renovation was
complatad. This renovation
not only Includad tha Installa­
tion ol several places at new
equipment, but also won tha
C h a m b e r o l C o m m e rc e
beautification award for Ihe
appearance of the outside ol
th e ' bu ild in g. Sanford Dry
Cleaners’ highly skilled Alter­
a tio n s D e pa rtm e nt otters
c o m p le te a lte r a tio n and
tailoring services lor men's
and ladies' garments and a
wide variety ol monogrammlng. Sanford Dry Cleaners
Fam ily Services Department
otters the following services;
complete laundry and dry
cleaning service, home pickup
and delivery, draperies takan
down, cleaned, rehung (tree
estimates), and act as agents
tor LaBelle Furs ol Orlando.
Santord Dry Cleanars’ Com
mercial Department has two
divisions. The Linen Rental
Division otters complets linen
rental service serving some ol
the lines! restaurants and
motels in Central Florida. In
addition, w* sarv* Individuals
who may need special linen
lor parties or weddings. The
Uniform Rental Division of­
fers not only a complete line ol
uniforms but also everything
to keep your oltice or shop
clean, from shop towels to
d u st m ops. S a n lo rd D ry
Cleaners also represents two
lin e Tuxedo rental firm *.
Com* see us before you go to
O rla n d o lo r you r tuxedo
needs. Sanford Dry Cleaners
is open six days a week, 7:30
• m to S: 30 p m......... .3111700

1921
M AYFAIR COUNTRY CLUB
Country Club Road has been a
Sanford landmark since 1921.
Since June 1981 the owner has
been M r. and M r*. Jack
Daniels. There Is a practice
range, putting green. Swim
mlng Pool. Clubhouse. Bar.
and Pro Shop. They cater
parties, large and small. Mr.
Bill Addison Is the Head Pro­
fessional M r. Rudy Seller Is
employed as General Manag­
er. M r Daniel* has been a
lo n g tim e r e s id e n t o l
Longwood. This club boasts
o n * ot the lo v e lie s t g o lf
courses In Central Florida,
beautifully landscaped, and II
attracts goiters from all over
the country. Ihe M AYFAIR
OPEN Is held her* every year,
as well as various other popu­
la r tournaments. The M ayfair
Country Club Is truly an out
standing asset to the area and
we take this space to Invite
you out to see It. golfer or noil

1928
FIRST UNION NATIONAL
BANKOF FLORIDA
SANFORD OFFICE
The F irs t Union National
Bank ol Florida. Sanlord Ot
flee is located at 101 East
F irst Street. Sanford "C ltv'e
Newest Bank Has Had Rapid
Growth ” This headline ap
peered In Ihe Santord Herald
on May 16. 1911 alter only S
months ol Ihe opening ot Ihe
than Sanlord Atlantic National
bank. A group ol local busl
i.eum en of the Chamber of

f\■'

**T ^ rr

We salute these
leading business firms
who have served Central
Florida over the years...
tocisy* ••and into tomorrow.
We proudly welcome them
to our H ONOR RO LL.

HONOR ROLL
1917

* r * r “ T*

M« 1987

PROGRESS
1881

^4 ^ * 4 ' f? 4 J

C o m m e rc e c o n v in c e d
Edward. W. Lane Sr.. Presi­
dent of Atlantic National Bank
ol Jacksonville to enter the
Santord m arket. The benk
was f ir s t lo ca te d a t Iho
southeast corner of Magnolia
and First Street. It was later
moved to their present loca­
tion In tha early 1930'*. A t that
time Atlantic employed only 6
persons and was tha only bank
In Santord which could boost
of the tact that It did not go
broka Ilk * many ot Its predecassors. In order to serve
their customers better First
Union has gone through sev­
eral changes throughout the
years, all the while growing
and expanding their services
to meet the needs of Ihe
community. For over 25 years
(he bank has had drlve-ln
facilities and In 1974 a 5 Ian*
motor bank was opened at
1601 South French Avenue.
Lest year tha old Atlantic
National Bank acquired the
First Bankers group ot banks
and almost simultaneously the
Charlotte. NC based F irs t
Union National Bank acquired
Atlantic. This Increased the
number ol First Union banks
In Florida to 100 convenient
locations lor you. First Un­
ion's statewide consolidation
Is leadership In personal
service. And leadership Is the
reason your personal bank I*
going to be First In Florida.

1939
CRYSTAL LAKE NURSERY
Crystal Lake Nursery, 240
L a k e v le w A v e n u e . L a ke
Mary, was established In 1939
by M r. and Mrs. E. W. Smith
and son, Don. Don and h ti wlfa
Shirley, now head this thriving
business at the same quality
and dependability that has
been the fam ily trademark for
over 40 years. Crystal Lake
Nursary features Ihe very
finest In a ll typas o l o r­
namental plants, fru it trees
and specialties in personal
service landscaping. M r. and
Mrs. Smith reslda In Lake
Mary. They also have a son.
Donnie, daughter In law, Kim,
and 2 grandsons, Brant, and
Matthew who live In Pun la
Garda, aad daughter Piper,
who lives In Sanford with her
husband Dirk Nebergall and 2
daughters; Dana and Stacy.
No m a t t e r w h a t y o u r
landscaping need may be. you
can depend on the Smiths at
Crystal Lake Nursery for their
prompt and courteous service
serving Seminole and the
suroundlng co u n tie s. The
oldest business In Lake M ary.

1945
SANFORD AUTO PARTS.

INC.
Sanlord Aulo Parts, Inc., 115
W. First Street. Downtown
Sanlord. was founded by F. D.
Scott In 1945. Sanford Auto
Parts was originally located In
Ihe Welaka Building and was
called Orlando Parts &amp; Gear,
It was renamed by M r. Scott
In 1945 lo Sanlord Auto Parts
when he became a NAPA
|obber. When the old Princess
Theater across the slreeet
cam* up for sal* M r. Scott
purchased It and moved In.
Sanlord Auto parts has been
at 115 West F irst Street ever
since. Ralph Larson joined the
bu sin ess as m a n a g e r In
August 1971 alter 20 years In
the United States A ir Force.
He purchased the company In
July 1973 when M r. Scolt
retired. Ralph and his wife.
Anne, have lour childre n:
Scolt, Eric. Kathleen, and
Lincoln. Scott Is now Vice
President ot the Company.
S a n lo rd A u to P a rts has
become known as "Y o ur one
s to p s t o r e In H i s t o r i c
Downtown Sanlord.” for your
autom otive and In d u s tria l
needs.

1945
THE BIKE AMOWER
CENTER ol SANFORD
906 French A v *.. Sanford
since 1945 when It was know as
W illia m s Sport and F lx lt
Shop. This business has been a
reliable name In the area. B ill
and K a th le e n R e y n o ld s
purchased the shop In 1960 and
changed the name to Ttw Bike
A Mower Center ot Santord.
The lock A sat* business Is so
much a part ol this shop that
they ooerate this phase ol the
business under the name ol
Reynolds Lock A Sat*. Bill Isa
lic e n s e d r e g is te r e d and
bonded locksmith and is a
member ot ALOA. Inc. and
Central Fla. Locksmith Assoc.
ICFLA). Thay attend at least
one convention and/or semi­
nar each year In order to
update their knowledge on the
la te s t Im p ro v e m e n ts and
technology In the lock, key
and sate business so to give
th e ir custo m e rs Ihe best
s e r v ic e p o s s ib le . T h e y
s p e c ia llie In o rg in a l key
blanks and feature m ajor
safes. Weller A Kwlkret door
locks, and dead bolt locks.
Their service truck Is a rolling
locksmith shop on wheels. The
Bike A Mower Cmntmr
repairs on any make ol b icy­
cle or adult 3 wheelers. They
have all types ot accessories
such as mag wheels, pads,
re p la c e m e n t w heels, Dla
Comp and Shlm an pa rts,
grips, sprockets, etc. They are
authorlied service dealers tor

Briggs A Stratton, Lawson,
and Tecumseh small angina
parts. Thay a lio have mower
and adger blades. Bill and
K a th la a n a ra n a llv t s at
Alabama and were hare dur­
ing his Navy days and sue
cumbed to tha saranlty of
Laka Monro* to make Sanlord
their permanent home. II you
have * problem with your
m ow er, b icycle , locks or
safos. call B ill A Kathlaan
R e y n o ld s f o r t h o ir p r o ­
fessional sarvlca. They believe
their customers are their most
va lu a b le assets and they
strive to make everyone a
satistlfied customer.

1945
SENKARIK GLASS AND
PAINT COMPANY
Scnkarlk Glass and Paint
Company, 210 Magnolia Av*.,
Sanford, was founded by tha
lata John Senkarlk In 1*45 and
started as a one man opera­
tion, his only helper being his
wlfa. This firm manufacturers
a complete line ol paints
u n d e r the la b e l of PEN
PAINTS. Their plant, PEN
PAINTS INC.. Is located at
Five Points. They ere also tha
D is trib u to r and carry tha
complete line o l Ben|amln
Moore paints. Wa also stock
paint sundries end supplies lor
the Homeowner and Con­
tractor. Thay carry a com­
plete line of a ll types of
m irro rs and thay Install every
type of glass anywhere. Thay
do custom framing and can
v ir t u a lly fra m e an ythin g
( C e r t i f i c a t e s , N e e d le ­
w ork,Fam ily treasures, etc.}
A ll work Is don* In the shop.
You can purchase mat board
In approximately 100 colors
Including black and white.
Thay stock over 500 finished
wood moldings. Area artists
p u rc h a s e I h a lr s u p p lie s
here a c ry lic , oils, brushes,
canvas, boards, a rt setseverything for tha artist. This
company began Its operation
at 114 W. Second SI. end
moved to their present loca­
tion In I960. For 41 years
SENKARIK Glass and Paint
has grown and progressed
with Santord and Its cltliens
are proud of this most r#puta­
ble llrm .

1946
MEL'S GULF
M el's G ulf sterted on 101
South French Ave. In 1946 and
moved to 2518 French Avenue
In 1957 and was thara (or 24 'Y
yaars. Now thay ara back at
101 French with lu ll servica
station, lube, oil, tun* up. road
service, also a car wash. Thay
now have diesel (or autos, and
an a ir conditioned walling
room. Mel and his daughtar
Susan, welcome you to visit
them.

1946
KARNS INSURANCE
AOENCY, INC.
Karns Insurance Agency, Inc.,
413 West First Street, Santord,
founded in 1946 by Robert E.
“ Bob" Karns. The llrm was
o r ig in a lly lo cated In the
Edwards Building, then the
Meisch Building, then Kirk
Plata and to their beautllul
new location since July 1, 1983
with private parking lor the
convenience ot their custom
ers The coffee's always on I
Karns Insurance Agency Inc.
has always stood lor pro
fesslonalism In Ihe Insurance
Held, where you w ill receive
personal attention by your
name, not a policy number.
A i l lin e s o l P r o p e r t y ,
L la b t lllt y , Bonds, L ife ,
Health. Group Insurance ara
handled with expertise and
with tha Interests ot tha cus
tomer In mind. Surveys ol
Insurance needi using current
Risk Management techniques
are Ire * and yeu may c*
surprised to find nol all an
swars involve Insurance! Bob
Karns and his lovely wile
Dottle welcomed Bill Wight, a
Sanford native, to the agency
In 1977. He and his wile, Chris
reside currently In Winter
Springs. In January. 1984 Bill
was elected President ot Ihe
Agency to allow Bob and
Dottle io pursue their life- long
desire lo travel. In January
1987, Karns Insurance became
an ISU Franchise. Insurance
Services Unlimited will enable
Karns Insurance Agency to
broaden service to Its custom­
ers by ottering a broader
rang* ol products and sarvlcas
to tha Central Florida area.

1947
W ILSONMAIER
FURNITURE CO., INC.
Wilson Maler Furniture Co.,
T il East First Sire*!, Santoro
Is celebrating Its fortieth year
In business In downtown San
lord The lam lly business was
founded by Mr A. L. Wilson,
who served Ihe City ot Sanlord
three limes as mayor and
served thirteen years on the
city commission. He died on
&lt;** mV jr* t i«U «sitmJii
w a i general manager of the
business until August 1984
when he accepted a position
on the pastoral stall at Calva
ry Assembly Church In Winter
Park, FL. Fred's wile, Sandra
and Ihelr sons, M alt and Tim
ara now working together In

the business. This lu rn ltu r*
company offers a salection o l
many stylas of furniture for
the home. They speciallie In
courteous service, fa ir d ia l­
ing, convenient Installm ent
payments and fra * sal up and
delivery. It Is the pleasure of
this staff to sarv* our custom­
ers and be of help In any way
wacan.

1951
LARRY'S MART
La rry’s M a rt, 215 South San­
ford Avenue, opened at 321
East F irst Straat In June 1951
with M r. and Mrs. Lawrence
Plvec. as owners. Over the
years, the business outgrew
the building and was moved to
their present location In I960.
Larry's M a rt buys a single
Item or entire housefuls. Since
Larry's death In 1977, his wife
a n d s o n s , G a o rg e a n d
Raymond decided to continue
operating this successful fa m i­
ly business. Excellent used
furniture reasonably priced Is
available. Antiques, and col­
lectibles. reflnlshed or do It
yourself can be found. They
carry and service karosene
healers w ith accessories, to
help customers combat heat­
ing cost. Even the bookworm
Is welcome In the large book
exchange. Many customers
deal with the store because ol
the aver changing variety ol
merchandise.

1951
VISITING NURSE ASSOC.
The Visiting Nurse Assocla
Hon Is a licensed, n o n p ro fit
home health care provider,
serving the Central Florida
area for over 15 years. VNA Is
the only local home health
agency selected for funding by
the United Way.
At a tim e when Individual
health care is Increasingly
expensive, home care visits
can be an efficient and hu­
m anitarian alternative to hosp lla llia llo n . W ith your physi­
cia n 's a p pro val, VNA can
provide many skilled services
lo r patients at home. These
Include Skilled Nursing, Phys­
ic a l, Speech, O ccupational
T h e ra p ie s , E n te ro s to m a l
Therapy. Psychiatric Nursing.
In tra v e n o u s T h e ra p y ,
Diabetic Teaching, Pediatric
N u rs in g . M e d ic a l S o cia l
Worker, Home Health Aides,
P riva te D uty Services (24
h o ur/7d ays/w e ek) and Ihe
Community Cara for Ihe E l­
d e r ly P r o g r a m s . E a c h
member ol Ihe VNA team Is
dedicated to providing quality
home health care to our pa
tien ts, and supportive In­
struction to their families.
As part ol our community
approach to health care, VNA
nurses w ill arrange to set up
blood pressure or wellness
clinics (or rellrem ent homes,
businesses, church groups,
clubs, and other organlta
lions. Our goal is lo promote
and maintain good health In
the community, and lo provide
comprehensive and skilled
care In the event ol Illness or
disability.
Visiting Nurse Association
now has two offices to belter
serve Seminole County. We
encourage you to call either
office (LONGWOOD
831
0415, SANFORD - 311 4773)
for any questions regarding
home care and VNA services.

1955
NIX BEDDING A
UPHOLSTERING CO.
Nix Bedding A Upholstery Co.,
709 Celery Avenue, Sanford,
was established by Bertha and
the late M r. S. Nix In 1955 and
was lirst located at 1301 San
lo r d A v e n u e . T h is llr m
employs tlve. one ot whom is
Ihelr daughter, Mrs. K illy
Corley. N ix 's are perlec
tionlsts at reupholstering your
old furniture so you can enjoy
II lor many more years, and
the cost Is very reasonable.
Custom draperies Is an added
feature ot th is very pro
lessional company. Karen
Corley, granddaughter and
daughter, oilers her expert
decorating advice to all who
desire help coordinating their
rooms. She w ill be happy to
help you choose Ihe right style
in d ra p e ry , b e d s p re a d s ,
woven woods, vertical, mini
blinds and all stylet ol window
tr:alm ents. They also have a
la rg e s e le c tio n o f used
furniture for sal*. Mrs. Nix is
a native at Sanlord and enjoys
serving her customers and
many friends W* attribute
her success with her custom
e r 'i satisfaction utmost In
mind always. Nix features
Ire* estimates, pick up and
delivery without obligation of
extra charge Remember, It
you need expert upholstery at
reasonable- prices be SURE
TO CALL NIX UPHOLSTERY
COMPANY AT 311 I t 17

1956
GRAMKOW FUNERAL HOME
Cfeniftuw t-unerai Home at
130 West A irport Boulevard.
Sanlord. was founded July
1956 by M r W Lockard and
M r W L Gramkuw . M r.
G ra m k o w b o u g h l M r.
Lockard’s interest In the bu ll
ness In January 1958 and has
operaled It since II has

always been a policy of the
firm to furnish ftse best possi­
ble funaral services regardl e s s ol f i n a n c i a l
clrcum stancts. Thay serva
fam ilies of a ll religions and
take care ol burial* outsldo of
F lo r id a as w a ll. M r .
G ra m k o w , and M r. J im
Schulteman, who | olned the
firm In October ol 1984, are
Licensed Funeral Directors.
Gramkow Funeral Horn# Is
very spacious and affords tha
best service anywhere. M r.
Gramkow Is a member ol
Downtown Klwanls Club, and
the S a n fo rd C h am b ar o f
Commerce. M r. Schulteman Is
a m em ber ot the Sunrise
Klwanls Club, and both ara
m e m b e rs o l th * F lo rid a
Funeral Directors Association
as w e ll as the N a tio n a l
Funeral Directors Associa­
tion. These men a rt reliable
and they take th* time to
make sure you are satisfied
w it h I h e lr p r o fe s s io n a l
service. Now In their 3t*t year
ot sarvlca to this community,
G ram ktw Funeral Home still
assures you that your needs
w ill be fulfilled expertly and
understanding^.

1956
SANFORD FLOWER SHOP
Sanlord Flower Shop, 109 E.
Commercial, openvd at 200 N.
Park In 1956. Six years later
th e h a t o u tg ro w n I h e lr
quarters and moved to 324 E.
1st St. Still seeking a larger
building, Sanlord Flower Shop
moved to their present loca­
tion In the late 60's.
Th*
flo w e r shop Is owned by
Charlotte Donahoe Gustavson,
who. with her late husband,
Frank Donahoe came here
Irom Front Royal, VA I I
years ago. Frank died In 1983,
but his policy ot fast, friendly
service is still In eltecf. Their
son, Tim Donahoe and daugh­
ter K it Thompson are design­
ers and are now managing the
shop. Tim won "Designer ot
the Y ear" for Central Fla. In
1986 and won 3rd place "D e ­
signer ot the Year" lor the
Slate at Florida In 1986. He is
also a well known panel d*
s ig n e r ta r d e sig n sho w *
around the state and Is now
trying out lor acceptance Into
Ihe presllgous American In­
stitute ot Florial Designers.
The creative stall Includes
Dianne Magner. Bookkeeper;
Belxy Harkness &amp; Jim Harkness, designers and Elm er
Smith deliveryman. Because
o l their volm* ol business,
Sanlord Flower Shop or* able
to furnish the freshest (lower*
available. They are members
ot FTD. Teleflora and other
wire services to handle your
out ot town flower needs. They
have been In the FTD Top
1.000 out of 20,000 florists
Nationwide for I years In a

1956
SHOEMAKER
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
INCORPORATED
A.K. Shoemaker, Jr. Presi­
dent, has been In Ihe con­
struction business since 1956.
Ot the 31 years ol business, the
fo llo w in g employees have
been with the company be­
tween 27 A 31 years: Kay
Shoemaker. 1956; Cecongle
Johnson, 1956; Mcklnley H a r­
rison, 1958; George Fuhrmann
J r., I960; James Downer,
I960, and Patricia A. Scolt,
I960 His experience Is easily
seen in the quality ol homes
and com m ercial buildings
completed by his firm . In th*
past. "K a y ” developed such
a re a s as R a ven a P a rk ,
Idyllwllde. Uppland Park, and
M ayfair Villas He is pres
ently building a new reslden
t i a l c o m m u n ity n a m e d
"Kaywood," whichhas3and4
bedroom homes and 2 and 3
bedroom Villas. The homes
and villas w ill only contain the
finest and most careful con­
struction. This past year his
llrm has been busy with sev­
e r a l p r o je c t s such a s :
Seminole County Concrete.
F irst Federal Orange City,
Deltona Inn, Dunbar Restau­
rant, and Tuskawllla Pro
fesslonal Building. Members
ot the Shoemaker Construe
lion stall are as follows: A.K.
Shoemaker, Jr., President;
W illiam S. Brumley. Jr., Ex­
e c u tiv e V ice P re s id e n t;
P a tric ia A. Scott, Secre­
tary Treasurer; Margaret A.
Grant. Administrative Assis­
tant; Tammy L. Shoemaker,
A d m in is tra tiv e A ssistan t;
G e o rg * F u h rm a n n , J r . ,
S u p e rv is o r, J im G r lllis .
Supervisor. Jay Welsbrod,
S u p e rviso r; James G ray,
Supervisor. Shoemaker Con
slruction Is equipped to assist
their customers In planning,
w o rkin g drawings, p e rm it
drawings and Interior selec
Hans on homes or commercial
buildings

1957
STENSTROMREALTY
Stenslrom Realty Inc. was
founded on t-eoruary 7, tvs/,
by Herbert Slenstrom, Real
tor Owner ot the llrm . They
Im m e d ia te ly e s ta b lis h e d
themselves as Sanlord'! and
North Seminole County's sales
le a d e rs , p ro v id in g th e ir
clients a lu ll service "one
stop" Real Estate otllce. In

addition to both now end
resale homes, as w ell as
c u s to m b u ilt h o m o s ,
S ta n s tro m R e a lty is recognlzad throughout Central
Florida as a leader In Com­
m e rcia l, in d u stria l, A In ­
vestment sales. Also their
services Included rentals, ap­
praisals and land planning.
Stanstrom Realty Is a member
of both the Orlando- Winter
Park and Seminole County
Board o l Roeltors, and a
member o f th* West Volusia
County Board ot Realtors end
M u ltip le L is tin g Services.
Stenslrom Roalty Is also a
member o l th* Electronic
Realty Associates, Inc., the
fastest growing m ultiple list­
ing end photo-wiring services
In the country, with over 3.000
o tllce * and 30.000 -Realtor
Associates Nationwide. As an
E RA member, they otter both
the Seller and Buyer home
w arranty programs, available
only to E R A o lllc a * Na­
tionwide. In addition lo Ihelr
home office located at 2565
Park Drive, Santord. Florida,
(322-2420). thay have opened a
branch office at tha Freedom
Building, 901 W. Lake Mary
Blvd. Laka M ary, Florida.
1321-2720). 5t*nstrom Really
has an adm inistrative staff ot
six supported by twenty professlonelly trained Realtor
Associates.

1960
JOHN SAULSAGENCY
The John Sauls Agancy, 110 E.
Com m ercial Ave., Suite 3,
Santord. established In I960 by
John Sauls and his wife,
Clara. They speciallie In real
estate sales, appraising and
Investments. The Saulses have
one son, John Jr., who Is the
band director of Tuskawllla
School and who lives In San
ford with his daughter, Berll
and son, E rik. M r. Sauls
moved here 49 years ago Irom
South Carolina and Mrs. Sauls
Is a native o l Sanlord. Mr.
Sauls states that the Lord
Jesus Christ is due all the
glory ol the success ol the
agency.

1960
THE RICH PLAN
A Division of Rich-United
Corp. The Rich Plan was
slarted In I960 by Keith J.
Bauder and was known as
Bauder Associates. Inc. In 1977
the business was purchased by
W.E. "D u k e " Adamson, who
Is currently President and
C h a irm a n o t th * B oard.
Adamson changed the name ot
the repldly growing company
and today we know It as The
Rich P lan, a d ivisio n of
Rich United Corp. The Rich
Plan now has newly renovated
plant facilities at 401 W. Uth
St. The Rich Plan services all
principal Florida cities, and Is
a direct to-the home service
which otters Its more than
40,000 customers tha ultimate
In quality, convenience and
service*. Rich Plan features
natural beef Irom Ihe midwest
which Is aged at the Santord
plant, then trim m ed ol all
excess bone and tat, vacuum
wrapped, then blast (roien at
60 degrees below itr o . Add!
tlonally, the Rich Plan pro­
vides th* lines! fish, poultry,
grade-A fancy trulls, vegeta
bles and juices that money
can buy. A ll this, delivered
direct to your home and put
away In your own (reeier, Is
guaranteed In writing by one
ot the most comprehensive
customer service programs
ottered by the Iroien lood
Industry. White the emphasis
at Rich Plan Is on the quality
of Ihe food and th* service
provided, they also make
available to their customers
top ot the line Ireeiers, and
microwave ovens. The Rich
P la n lo o k s f o r w a r d to
welcoming you lo Ihe Rich
Plan la m lly very soon, so that
you too can enjoy the finest
lood In America, and expertenee unparalleled convenience
and service.

1961
SOUTHERN LINE
CLEANING, INC.
Southern Lin* Cleaning, Inc.
was founded on November 27,
1961. M r. E. Phillip Daniels Is
President. Physical locallon Is
2720 W. F irst St., Sanlord. Fla.
since July, 1979. Prior to that
lim e Ihe company was located
a t 250 L y m a n R o a d ,
C a s s e lb e r r y , F l o r i d a .
Southern Line Is a sewer
service company performing
cleaning, television Inspec
Hon, Internal sealing ot sewer
lines, sllpllnlng. EPA Studies
under P ublic Law 92 500.
manhole restoration, water
line cleaning and s im ila r
services with respect to gas,
fuel and oil lines.

1963
GREEN BROTHERS
ROOFING
Green Brothers Rooting ot
t-n.&lt;,ord was established and
organlied in November ol 1963
by Roosevelt Green, and In
corporated In September ol
1975. G rten Brothers Roofing
has been doing business In the
Central Florida area for over
I I years. Roosevelt Green.
President of Green Brothers

Rooting, has over 31 year* ol
roofing experience. He has on
his s ta ff, o fllc a manager
Ronald Green and secretary
Felicia Green. Th* owner,
Roosevelt Green, was born In
Sanford. Ho Is a Korean War
veteran. Ha worked lo r other
rooting firm s for 10 years, was
President ot Local 254 Roofers
Union, served on the City of
S a n lo r d C o n s t r u c t i o n
Examining Board lor a years,
and Is presantly a member of
the board. Their motto ’’No
job too largo or too sm all",
They do all types ol rooting,
residential and commercial,
new rooting, re rooting, re
pairs, b u lltu p , rotten wood
repair, shingles, III* rooting,
ce d a r shakes, a lu m in u m
shakes, and gravel. Other
service* are tree estimates
and root Inspections. Th* ol
He* and warehouse Is located
on Beardall Avenue, 1 block
north ot East Hwy. aa. the
same location since 1973.The
owners roots are hero In
Santord and he and his exp*
rlenced staff look forward to
serving you.

1964
COBIA BOAT COMPANY
Coble Boat Company located
at 100 Silver Lake Road.
Sanford, has been a part of the
area Industry since January
1964. Harold Salama was the
firs t owner ol Cofala. He sold
the business to Ashland Oil
Company, who In turn sold II
to M r. Geoffrey Etherlngton In
March, 1973. M r. Ed Alchley
has been President and Gen
eral Manager ot Coble since
February. 1974. He has been
associated with Cobla for 19
years and lived In Tennessee
prior to moving to the Orlando
area. Cobla originally had
about 60 employees; now
C o b la Is th e lo u r c e o l
employment for over 300.
Cobla purchased Robalo Boats
from AMF Corp. In Nov­
ember, 1981. Robalo was at
that tim e located at tha
Airport, and since has been
relocated to the Cobla facility
at 100 Silver Lake Road. Cobia
Boat I* now the olflclal boat ol
W alt Disney W orld. Upon
approaching their 23nd year
anniversary here In Sanlord
we salute Cobla lor th e ltp e rr
In Ihe Industry e'wwth and
economy ot The entire area.

1964
NCR ENGINEERING
ANOMANUFACTURINGORLANDO
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA
This facility was originally
opened in October 1964 as
Scolt Electronics Corporation
in Orlando. The product line
Included high and low voltage
power supplies and associated
m agnetic components for
electronic systems.
E C I o l S t. P e te r s b u r g
purchased Scott Electronics In
1969. The following year. NCR
Corporation boughl ECI. In
J a n u a r y 1975, S c o ll
Electronics became a Bust
ness Unit ol NCR Corporation
and was renamed Engineering
&amp; M a n u fa ctu rin g O rlando.
The organiiatlon was moved
at that lime to a new building
and current location at 3200
Lake Emma Rd.. Lake Mary.
In 1981, Ihe NCR Data Palhing
Systems o rg a n iia tlo n was
m oved tro m S u n n y v a le .
California, to this facility and
merged with the E &amp; M
Orlando organiiatlon. As a
result ol this consolidation, Ihe
facility charter was expanded
to Include Source Data Col
lection Systems.
The Power Systems organiia
tlon t l E 4 M Orlando is
responsible lor the design,
development, manufacture,
and marketing ol switching
power supply products. In addition lo the development &amp;
manufacture ol power supply
products, the unit handles
direct sales to NCR plants
and, through a nationwide
network ol Independent sales
re p re se n ta tive s, p ro vid e s
power supply products to
O r i g i n a l E q u ip m e n t
M anufactures (OEM) cus
lomers.
The Source Data Collection
Systems organiiatlon at E A
M Orlando Is responsible for
the design, development, and
manufacture ol data collection
products. These systems In
dude shop flcnr data collec
tlon terminals and systems,
m a n u f a c t u r in g c o n t r o l
systems, time and attendance
reporting, and management
information systems.
This lacility Is an Engineering
and Manufacturing Business
U nll of NCR Corporation,
under th* direction ol Leslie
D. Sisson, General Manager
This September ot 1986, the
Corporation announced the
assignment and move ol Ihe
charier for m anufacturing
systems product development
to the E &amp; M Orlando Systems
Engineering Business Unit. As
a result ot this change, Ihe
General Purpose System*
Software Development orga
nliatlon. previously located In
Dayton, Ohio, was moved to
Ihe E A M Orlando lacility.

1965
SCHOOLOFOANCEARTS
The Rye sisters, M iriam A
Valerie opened the School ot
Dance Arts In 1965. on re

�’"W
—
-

■

i

late
leading business firms
/

r

•.

V

;•

'• ‘

who have served Central
Florida over the years,
today ...and into tomorrow.
We proudly welcome them
to oar HONOR R O LL.
» •••

furnlng Irom New York City;
where they both danced pro­
visio n a l ly, It was noted that
Sanford was In need o l a
quality dance school for both
{hlldren and adults. Some
1,000 students have studied et
the School of Oance Arts over
the past 13 years. The studio
Was started In a rented build­
ing on 37th St. In 19*5, however
In 1*7) School ot Dane* Arts
found a beautiful new home In
ft's present location at 2540
Elm Ave. It features triple
dancing rooms. Valerie Rye
Weld and M iriam Rye Wright
teach Monday thru Friday. An
enrollment ol 300 Is typical for
any given year. Many ol tholr
dancers have gone on to suc­
ceed In the dance Held as
professional dancers or teach­
ers. While others have used
the dlclpllne they acquired as
dancers lo achieve other
Worthwhile goals. In 1*48,
M iriam and Valerie, with
some dedicated community
help established The Ballet
Guild of Sanlord-Semlnole,
which Is celebrating It's 1*1h
.performing season this year.
The Ballet Guild Is a non
profit,civic. Ballet Company
•made up ot dancers who are
selected annually In a county
Wide audition. The* School of
Qance A rts otters graded
classes In ballet, tap, end |azz
for children, teens and adults
(rom the beginner level thru
professional.

1965
SANFORDHEATINGAND
AIR CONDITIONING
340* S. Sanford Avenue, Senlord. has been In business lor
22 years. It Is owned and
operated by B ill and Betty
Jack. Sanlord Heating and A ir
otters a complete line ol com­
bination healing and cooling
systems for residential, com­
mercial and Industrial offices.
They also service ell makes of
c o o lln g /h e a tln g system s.
Specialties of Sanlord Heating
and A ir include energy e lli
cienl systems, all types ot
sheet m etal w o rk, w ater
coated'heat pump, and waste
heat recovery. Bill and Betty
Jack have lived In the area for
28 years and have 2 children
ano a orandchlldren. The
Jack's have a iM y ,i*n4inx
commitment lo Sanlord and
'Welcome you to call upon
them lor their expert services.
332 *390

1969
DICK JOYCE
WELL DRILLINO INC.
Dick Joyce Well D rilling Inc.,
located on E. Hwy. 44 and
Junction 415 £ 44, Sanford, Is
owned and operated by DICK
JOYCE. Operations began In
1*4*. DICK and his wife JOY,
both Florida natives, ere the
parents of eight children. D ril­
ling a good, long-producing
water w ell Is a job that
requires a lot of know-how end
•xperlenca and DICK JOYCE
Is just the men to do It. He has
late model equipment, and
w all trained assistants to
assure you ol the best et the
least expense. He otters you
'round the clock service. It
you need a new well, whether
It's a 2" o r a 30” or || your
present well needs some
repair, call DICK JOYCE
W ELL D RILLING INC.
333 4410. the
best in the
business anywhere.

1970
LAKEVIEW NURSING
CENTER
Lakevlew Nursing Center is
located at *1* East Second St.
In Sanlord. M rs. V irg in ia
Mlchalowskl and Miss Susan
C a s t r la n n l a re th e ad
m ln ls tr a tlv e d ire c to rs ol
S em inole's fin e st nursing
center. The spacious grounds
and bright, cheery Interior
lend themselves to a home like
atmosphere. You may have
your choice ot rooms ranging
(rom private, semi-private, or
three bed. The varied activity
program offers among other
things, m ovies, ceram ics,
hand crafts, bingo and shut
fleboard, Many of Ihe Hems,
for the Annual Christmas
Bazaar ere made throughout
the year by Ihe residents.
Skilled Nursing care Is offered
w ith twenty-four hour a day
care by trained Nurses and
staff. Physio Therapy Is also
available. Lakevlew Nursing
Center Is proud of the (act that
they have been able to main
tain lower rates than any
other Nursing Home In the
Area
Remember "Love is
Ageless!” V isit the Nursing
Home today and often. You
are always welcome!

1971
1968
MEDICAL PERSONNEL POOL
M E D IC A L P E R S O N N E L
POOL. N o rth A m e ric a 's
reading and most complete
home nursing service, opened
th Orlando In August ol 1*48.
Their growth has been phe
nomenal and Ihelr strength of
over 240 otllces internationally
is further enhanced by being a
subsidiary ol H 8, R Block Inc.
th e ir main office is now
located on Hwy. 17 92 In
M a itla n d . T h e ir licensed
Nurses and Home Health
Aides are under the pro
fesslonal direction ol a Nurs­
ing Manager, D irector ol
Nursing, and Home Care
Supervisors. Their consult*
lion and supervisory visits are
of no cost lo the patient or
their family. The thousands ol
Nursing Care hours provided
to Ihe residents ol Seminole,
Orange, and Osceola Counties
Over the past I* years have
e sta b lish e d them as the
number one nursing service to
call a t.......................... 740-1214

1969
KNIGHTS SHOE STORE
Knight Shoe Store located at
308 East F irst St. downtown
S a n lo rd , Is ow ne d and
operated by Knights Shoe
Stores Inc. a fam ily owned
corporation which features the
best and most complete linn ot
name brand shoes for men,
women, and children In San
lord Such as Allen Edmonds.
Freeman, and Hush Puppies
lor men For the sophisticated
lady there are Nalurallzers.
Penal|o, Hush Puppies, Old
Maine Trotters, and many
more Knight's Shoe Store
lakes pride In liltin g Childrens
Shoes, Including orthopedic
footwear They guarantee that
the shoes are fitted correctly.
Some brands include Red
Goose, Child Life, athletic
footwear by Nike and Pro
Keds. A lso a v a ila b le at
Knights Shoe Store are ladies
beautiful leather handbags by
Borelll, Burlington, Toni, JR
Quality hosiery and shoe care
products are sold there, too
Attention to proper fit and
good looks are foremost al
Knights The well trained fit
ting stall are Mary Eddleton.
Margaret Tlndel. and Don &amp;
Margaret Knight owners Mr
Knight is active many com
munlly sevlce groups Knight
Shoe Stores Inc. also owns and
operates Ihe Shoe Parade, 137
f i Woodland Blvd. Defand.
Gregory Knight manages this
store and otters the same high
quality footwear We suggest
that when your tamlly needs
quality footwear, visit Knight
Shoe Store Downtown Sanlord
and Shoe Parade downtown
Deland. You'll be glad you
did!

CENTRAL ALUMINUM
SCREEN SERVICE
Central Aluminum Is located al
701 Cornwall Road. Sanlord, and
was established In 1*71. First
located on Palmetto Ave.,
downtown Sanlord. they later
moved to their present location
shortly alter. Owners ot Central
Aluminum are Elmer and wife
Carol Ann 'Smith who are both
natives ol Sanlord and are very
proud ol their companies new
grownlng
pains
and
new
changes. Central Aluminum w ill
help with a patio root and screen
room.
Swimming
pool
enclosures and window awnings,
which
they
manufacture
themselves, are a must lor
Florida living. Free estimates
and custom designs are among
some ot the services ottered
Central Aluminum can color
coordinate the window awnings
lo match Ihe exterior ot your
home.
The
main
concern
Central Aluminum has is pro
vldlng the highest professional
work and quality product that Is
available on the market today
The 15.000 square feel ol
assembly line Inables Central
Aluminum to build each |ob to
the customers design to tit their
home It there Is a call lor a
commerlcal heavy duty aluml
num root tor loading docks or
covers for boats and cars, give
Central Aluminum a call to see
about Ihe many different kinds
ot aluminum avallible

1971
14 INDUSTRIAL PARK
"S ltll going strong.” says Jim
Hickman, manager ol I 4 In
dustrlal Park, the 185 acre
Park d ire c tly an Ihe In
lerslale The Park Is about 14
years old and has a diversity
ol companies such as Brown
B o v e r l, R a v e n s M e ta l,
Antronlcs, Flo Rite. Fla. XRay, etc. There are approxl
mateiy 400 employees and 30
companies occupying space
Section III Is complete with 7
lots sold Irom the section.
Section IV is now complete
with * smaller lots available
The sewer capacity has been
approved for an additional
35.000 gpd with anolher 35.000
gpd up for approval. Recently
completed new buildings are
owned by Mathews &amp; Assoc
and Pretty Punch Just com
pleled Is a 34,300 sq It build
Ing that is available lor lots as
little at 3.700 sq ft I 4 Indus
trial Park Is the only Park on
Ihe Interstate and the only one
In North Seminole County The
developers with Seminole In
dustrlal Park on 17 93 al Ihe
south end ol Ihe County and
that Park has newly approved
Industrial zoning for a to acre
addition which Is greatly
needed. There Is now a new
34.000 sq It. building ready lor
use The ever quickening ac
tlvlty ot the Park is very

•■citing to the Hickman* alt«r
th» beginning slow years. It I*
good (or the County with now
em ploym ent and aver In­
creasing tax bo**.

1971
PLEASANT HAVEN
PETCEMETERY
Wa* established In 1*71 by
Alice and Warren Mewet. The
property It located at 1370
E .E. W illiam son Road In
Longwood. It Is an Ideal spot
as a final resting place tor a
devoted pet, The Mewes, a
fam ily of pet lovers, opened
the cemetery because pets
deserve to be honored even at
death. ChooChoo Elwees, a
Chihuahua, was the firs t
burial In 1*71. Since then there
have been more than 3000
burials which Include dogs,
ca ts, b ird s, guinea pigs,
tu rtle s , ham sters and an
ocelot. For someone looking
for a place to put that friend.
Pleasant Haven Pet Cemetery
Is iust the spot. Prices are
moderate and In line with the
service which Includes pickup,
caske t. In te rm e n t and a
marker. The Mewes fam ily
welcome* the opportunity to
show you the cemetery and to
discuss your particular needs.

We sell and service prim e
movers in Industrial Applica­
tion, such as power units for
Irrigation and dewatering. In
the Trucking and Bus In­
dustry, we supply the engine
end the world renown Allison
Automatic Transmission. In
Marina Markat, we supply
main propulsion anginas and
gaars, a* well * * auxiliary
anginas and prim a power gen­
erator sats. Wa at Coastal
Power Products, are one ol
the few engine houses In the
state of Florida that custom
b u ild g e n e ra to r sats to
s p e c ific a tio n s fo r p rim e
peeking, end standby power.
We ere capable of building
generator sets ranging (rom
live through 3000KW. We have
• lu ll sales sta ll trained to
handle any diasal power
application. Our markat Is Ihe
world. We ere a prim a con­
tractor lor the U.S. Govern­
ment. To keep our personnel
line tuned, we have e training
school at our Tampa facility.
Wa have dealers located
throughout the state ot Florida
and southern Georgia. Coastal
Power Products is a fast
growing, aggressiva, sales
and service oriented organize
lion, professionally eompe
lent, both Internally and on
lha road. Wa co n tin u a lly
strive to Increase penetration
In our field ot Ihe market.
WE PROVIDETHE POWERI

1971
BLITZ CLEAN
1714 Park Avenue, Sanlord, Is
owned and operated by Ralph
'a n d Nancy Dukes. They have
been serving all of Seminole
County lor the past 14 years.
When B lilt Clean llrs l opened
up. It was located at 150
Douglas Avenue, Sanford for 5
ye a rs. O p e ra tin g w ith 4
cleaning crews. Blit* Clean
speclallies In com m erlcal
accounts (l.e. office cleaning).
The services provided are
carpet and floor cleaning,
windows, etc. Ralph and
Nancy Dukes Invite you to call
on I hem tor a ll your office
cleaning needs. 331 *712

1972
BRAM TOWERS
IS located at 31* E. 1st Street,
Sanford. This rental apartment
complex has 154 units and
boasts a beauty parlor and
laundry I acuities. Sponsored by
All Saints Episcopal Church and
Holy Cross Episcopal Church,
this complex opened It’s doors In
August ol 1*77. Though this Is
exclusively an aprtment build
Ing for the elderly, there Is no
end to the activities that go on
here. There Is Bingo on each and
every Monday night Movies are
shown once a week. You'll
always find a game of cards
going on for those ol you who
love to play bridge and canasta.
Arlene Boyd is manager cf
Bram Towers Ms Boyd finds
the Sanford area quite agree*
bte and enjoys meeting new
comers to the area Located
close to Lake Monroe and the
Downtown Sanford shopping
district Bram Towers allords
you an Ideal location In which to
live at a price you can atlord
The pleasant people at Bram
Tower invite you to visit them
today. It may be lust the place
you've been looking lor Call
333 4430

1972
BOWL AMERICA
Bowl America, located at ISO
A irport Boulevard. Sanlord
opened its doors IS years ago.
Bowl America Inc owns this
e n te rta in m e n t en terprise.
Roger Quick manages It along
with Max Smith, assistant
manager. Over 3.000 bowlers
utilize the facilities at Bowl
America and presently there
are 38 leagues for men,
women, and children, Includ
Ing a mixed league The
leagues are sponsored by area
businesses and Roger Quick
Informs us that he’ll have a
bowling party for any new
b u s in e s s in t e r e s t e d in
sponsoring a league. Bowl
America conducts lessons tor
beginners, and at graduation,
they receive a tree bowling
ball. Bowl America features a
fine re s ta u ra n t w hich is
opened dally (rom 9 a m until
midnight, and Its very own
Trophy Lounge lor tired bowl
ers to unwind In, which Is open
from II a m. to 3 a m. For the
finest In area entertainment
we re c o m m e n d BOW L
AMERICA, located at 180
A irport Boulevard. Sanford

1972
COASTAL POWER PRODUCTS
INC.
C o astal P ow er P rod ucts
started operation In 1*72 The
fa cility is located at 1500
Oolgner Place. Port ol San
lord Tom Palmer, who has
been with the company since
1*73 moved to this area In 1991
to become manager ol this
o p era tion Coastal Power
P ro d u c ls I* an "E n g in e
House” We are distributors o!
products tor Detroit Diesel
Allison, a Division ot CMC.
and MWM Diesel Company

1972
SANFORDCHILD CARE, INC.
Sanford Child Care got Its
start 15 years ago because of a
need (or nurturing, quality
care ol children whose parents
work The organization Is
owned by M ary Mize. The first
center was A Child's World
and cared for children ages
3-5. Sanford Early Childhood
Center was soon added to
provide cere for infants. San
ford Child Development end
Happy Acres became pert of
the corporation, and we now
otter care tor children ages 4
weeks to 10 years. Including
transporatlon to and from
local elementary school! Ed
ucatlonat curricula for infants
through Klngergarten are part
ot the daily program, along
with special activities for the
school age children. All day
Summer Camp, featuring field
trips and special activities. Is
also available for the older
children. N utritious meals.
In c lu d in g b re a k fa s t, are
served dally. Our Cold Seal of
Excellence Awards show that
o u r p r o g r a m s p ro m o te
nurturing care and the cele
brallonof childhood.

and also offers Installation of
heat 4 a ir units and water
softner*. For the repair side ol
the business. Rucker Plumb­
ing otters 34 hour emergency
s e rv ic e . The F re e m a n 's
service 7 counties a ll over
Central Florida doing residen­
tia l 4 commerlcal Installation
a n d r e p a irs . P r im a r ily ,
Rucker P lu m bin g tocuses
their attention on new con­
struction end only some repair
work. They have 3 Installation
crews and 3 repairmen. A l
present, the Freeman’s have
been commissioned through a
builder to do commercial lobs
w o rk in g on now homes.
R u c k ir Q u a lity Plum bing
H e a t 4 A ir has v a ry
s a tis fa c to rily served our
community since 1*73 end ere
truely an asset to the Installa­
tion 4 repair business. Call
them for either need. 3331400
or 3331410

1975
' “ GIFTS BY NAN"
"G ilts S y Nan” has been In
business since 1*75 at Its
present location, 338 E. First
Street, Sanlord. Florida. It
features all me|or lines of
china, crystal, and stainless.
We have a bridal registry.
C hina, c ry s ta l, fla tw a re ,
h o llo w a r e . c o lle c t ib le s .
Lim ited Editions, paintings,
llgurlnes, linens, cards and
many other unique gilts lor all
occasions make this gift shop
a brower’s delight. Personal
ized a tte n tio n by kn o w l­
edgeable personnel with free
g ilt wrap and tree delivery in
the local area makes shopping
a genuine pleasure al "G ifts
by Nan".

1975
CENTRAL FLORIDAZOO
The Central Florida Zoo Is
located along the shores ot
beeutllul Lake Monroe near

the junction ot Highway U.S.
17*3 and E xit *57 on Inter*tate4. The Central Florida
Zoo attars visitors an enjoyabla day ot relaxation and
recreation. The too provides
Ihe ra re o p p o r tu n ity to
glimpse at over 500 wild 4
e x o tic a n im a ls a x h lb lte d
throughout natural surroun­
dings. Exhibits Includa a mix
tura ol hative North American
animals .ind a wide variety ot
species from throughout the
w orld. Leopards, baboons,
lions, tigers, elephants, a hip­
popotamus. exotic birds, end
rare hooted animals are but a
lew ot .the many animals
exhibited a t eye level. The
c h ild r e n 's zoo c o n ta in s
domestic animals which may
be touched and ted. The Zoo's
Reptile fa cility exhibits over
50 s p e c im e n s In c lu d in g
alligators, crocodiles, lizards,
and both venomous and non
venomous snakes.
Weekends at the C entral
Florida Zoo otter the visitor
unique elephant rides with
souvenir photos. Pony rides
are on Ihe agenda tor the
smeller zoo-goers. Volunteer
D ocents are p re se n t
th rou gh ou t the Zoo w ith
"c ritte rs '' lo touch, photo­
gra ph and ask questions
about. Weekend animal feed­
ing schedules are announced
during the day tor the visitor
lo observe the hlppoptamu*.
otters, primates, and felines
as they dine. A wide variety ol
hot and cold menu Items along
w llh wild and exotic g ills are
available in the Zoo's con
cession stand and g ilt shop.
The Zoo Is a wholly sell
s u s t a i n e d ( r e c e i v e s no
municipal, state, or federal
support), not-for-profit, public
service organization.
The
m odest a d m is s io n costs,
membership tees, combined
w llh donations and contribu
lions pay the entire cost ot
operating Ihe three quarter of
a m illion dollar a year facility.
The costs are lo maintain,
operate end expand the cur­
rent zoo. The Central Florida
Zoo provides hours of pleasure
tor the most reasonable price
to be found among Central
Florida attractions

RUCKER QUALITY
PLUMBING HEAT &amp; AIR
Located at 341* S French
Avenue. Sanlord 15 years ago
Delbert Rucker started this
business. Jim and Barbara
Freeman bought the business
4 years ago Irom M r Rucker
retaining the name They are
prim arily a plumbing business

1978
JKL ENTERPRISES
ot SANFORD, INC.
JKL Enterprises ol Sanlord.
Inc NOW LOCATED AT 2t0-B
S. FRENCH AVE SANFORD,
carries lu ll Inventories of con­
tinuous labels, cards, paper,
l o r m s , p lu s r ib b o n s ,
prlntwheels and other com
puter printer needs. Newest
addition lo the line is denial
and medical Insurance claim
lorms. Serves all size com
puter facilities throughout the
State ot Florida. Owner 4
operator Is Joanne Larson.
Hours are 1:30 to 4:45- Mon. to
F rl. Call..............(» 5 ) 323 441*

LOVELAND'S RIFINISHINO
L o ve la n d 's R e tln lsh ln g I t
owned and operated by Bob
Loveland He has bean In tha
retlnlshlng business tor eight
years, and In Sanford since
1*7*. Loveland's Retlnlshlng Is
located e t SO* W. 13th St. The
s p e c ia litie s a re com p le te
fu rn itu re retlnlshlng. hand
stripping. In home touch-up
and repairs; from scratches to
having an antique piece com
pletely restored. Loveland's
treats your furnitu re w ith
"Tender Loving Care." In
home touch-ups. Insurance
and moving claims, along with
pick up and delivery are
available. Just call 322 74*4 It
you havo any quastlons.
Loveland's Retlnlshlng asks
that you call, or corn* by. and
let them help you w ith your
furniture needs.

1984
SA N FOR D AUTO SA L VAO E
Sanlord Auto Salvage was
opened In November, 1*04 by
D a v id R a d w ln a . Wa a ra
located at 101 Albright Road In
Sanford and cover a five acre
area. David hat over 30 years
experience In Ihe auto repair
business end through Intur
ance Salvage Contracts, cov
• r t Ihe entire state o l Florida.
For your convenience. Sen
lord Aute Salvage Is open tlx
days a week. We buy and tall
used auto parts and also stock
new sheet metal. If you need
parts we don't have In stock,
we prdvlde a hot-line service
lo contact other salvage yards
throughout the stele. We de
liver parts to body shops In
Central Florida and UPS de
liveries are made outside our
delivery area. Betides David
and his wife. Die, Sanlord
Auto Selvage hat a .s ta ff of
eight lu ll tim e end ‘two pert
tim e em ployees who ere
always happy to assist with
your auto parts needs. The
local phone number Is 331 3371
4 watts line Is &lt;100-334 3*41

Complete Sports Coverage
S P O R TS ,

N am es jtaines
I

1972

AAA EMPLOYMENT
700 W. 35th St., Sanford,
opened In January 3*74. The
organization has been In busi­
ness for over 3* years In
Florida and In Sanford for It
years. Carol Quetschenbach
and Louise Oliver |olntly own
the Sanford office. Pat Mc­
Cabe, manager, has been with
the company lor S years end
together with her manager
trainee. Elizabeth Plxler, they
ere working herd to provide
you with even better service In
the Sanford area.
AAA EMPLOYMENT Is a
LOW FEE private employ­
m e n t a g e n c y , u n it in g
employer and employee In Ihe
perfect job w llh NO CHARGE
to the employer. For the first
time In Its history, Sanford
has a private employment
agency w llh experienced
personnel who care about
each Individual job seekers
needs and are competent In
uniting employee 4 employer.
So, If you are an employer In
need ol help or an individual
In need ot work, leel confident
on dalllng AAA EMPLOY­
MENT al 373 5174. Answering
Ihe phone w ill be people expe
rienced in finding the solution
to your needs. Let AAA
EMPLOYMENT helpyoul

T h e Sanford H erald is being read by m ore and m ore
people everyday. H ere’s just one o f the m any
reasons —

1972
FAMOUS RECIPE
Located at 1*05 S. French
Avenue. Sanford This (ran
chlse Is owned and managed
by Jerry and Margaret Sul
llvan. Famous Recipe first
opened Its doors In Sanlord
May 3, 1973. A lter only eight
months ol operation, the San
ford restaurant was ranked
4th In a chain of 110 stores
throughout the Southeast. In
1*73, 1*74, &amp; 1975 Ih ll tine
eating emporium was ranked
among the top ten stores
because of Its consistent quail
fy ol food and rising sales
Another Famous Recipe Is
located on 17 *3 In Casselberry
where the menu Includes good
old Famous Recipe Honey
Dipped Fried Chicken. Their
daughter, Carla, is MISS
FAMOUS Ol the Sullivan
Famous stores and also works
In both the Sanlord and
C a s s e lb e rry s to re s . Lee
Cummings, the co founder ol
Famous Recipe Fried Chicken
Is truely one of the most
exciting personalities In this
highly competitive last lood
chicken business Lee. who Is
Col Sanders nephew, spent
his e a rly years traveling
across the country selling
spices and pressure cookers to
tam lly restaurants with his
uncle. Col. Harlen Sanders
founder ot Kentucky Fried
Chicken. Famous Recipe ol
Sanlord enjoyed Lee's visit
here February 4 ot this year.
The Sullivans will be changing
the name to "Lee's Famous
Country Chicken” within the
n \&lt;t few months, Nothing but
the name w ill change The
Sullivans have been chosen
and l i s t e d in ‘ ‘ The
Personalities ot the South.”
lor Awards achieved in con
trlbullon to their Nation Jerry
and Margaret Sullivan are
proud ot their business and
they point to their line staff as
the reason tor their growing
success They invite you to
visit them at either store for
quality food and service with
pleasant smiling laces. The
say "Come Visit U st"

1979

1976

Award*

_

rT'.t - -r. JTT? sJj s VKSStSIS 1

In te n s e
Lody R om s
R out Creok&lt;

SPO HTS
O n e m o r e re a s o n lo re a d th e S a n f o r d H c r .d d
W h e th e r II b o u n c e s lex a lly o r n a tio n a lly H ie S a n f o n l H e r a l d '» s p o rts
Pa Rr s h a v e It c o v e re d . W e n o t o n ly c o v e r II. w e p ic k It u p a n d r u n w it h
It e v e ry d a y w it h in d e p th c o v e ra g e o l th e lo c a l h ig h s c h o o l s p o rts a n d
c o m p le te r o u n d u p s o f th e n a tio n a l I r a n is H ead th e H e r a ld s s p o rts
p a g es to d a y a n d e v e ry d a y .

Call 322-2611 to start your subscription today!

SanfbrdHerald
"Your local newspaper since 1908“
3 00 North French Ave.

Sanford, Florida

�t -t v

»■V S’S *

•• t

OFFICERS
W.E. “Duke” Adamson
PRESIDENT

Jack Green
VICE PRESIDENT

Jim Tesar
TREASURER

Dave Farr

c e n ic

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

DIRECTORS 1987

S a n fo rd 's Location O n T h e B eautiful S t. Johns R iver
A t Lake M o n ro e Is B eauty U nsurpassed
In C en tra l Flo rid a.

c tiv e

John Carli
J.S. "Red” Cleveland
Karen Coleman
Jack Greene
Art Grindle
John C. Horner
Jim Jernigan
Daryl McLain
Dr. Earl S. Weldon
Martha Yancey
Wayne Albert
Vic Arnett
Lee P. Moore
Brent Carli
James R. Dycus

i JF3I

1

| ■ 1 «B

Z O

A c tiv e E con om ic D evelo p m en t Is T h e
By W ord In A c tiv e S an fo rd .

W a l t e r G ie lo w

Howard H. Hodges
____Tony Russ!
*------- \
Janice Springfield
Edward “Ned” Yancey
William E. “Duke” Adamson
Wendell Agee
W. Scott Burns
Mack N. Cleveland, Jr.
Shirley Schilke
Kenneth McIntosh
Howard McNulty
John Mercer
Sheila Roberts
W. Garnett White

N ew H o m es , Roads, And S hopping
Experiences Fo r A ll T astes A re
S pring ing Up A ll O ver S anford.

n e n d ly
T h e A ttitu d e O f A ll O u r C itizens
R eflect The Friendly C ity M o tto O f
O u r C o m m u n ity .

APPOINTED
DIRECTORS

S anford Is Proud O f Its H e rita g e B oth
In Its S tru c tu re s And Its R esidents.

Kay Bartholomew
Thelma Mike
Dora Lee Russell
Gerald Gross
Jeno Paulucci

e c r e a tio n
A Full Program O f A c tiv itie s A re A vailab le
F ro m T o t Parks To The S en io r Golden
k A ge G am es.

!o w n t o w n

Home Of
Golden A ge Games

O nce A gain O u r D ow ntow n Is An E xcitin g
Place T o S lio p , W o rk And “ J u s t B e ".

FOR INFORMATION CONCERNING CHAMBER MEMBERSHIP
OR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE

CONTACT

‘

T h e G re a te r S a n fo rd C h a m b e r o f C o m m e rc e
Industrial A c tio n C o m m ittee
P o. D ra w e r C C , S a n fo rd , F L 3 2 7 7 1
P h on e ( 3 0 5 ) 3 2 2 -2 2 1 2

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222091">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, February 26, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222092">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222093">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on February 26, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222094">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222095">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, February 26, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222096">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222097">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222098">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222099">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="22244" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="21848">
        <src>https://richesmi.cah.ucf.edu/sanford_herald/files/original/13dfb1be4d5bd8293b40115e5df0ebad.pdf</src>
        <authentication>3cf406fcedb7b6afea2b8079ed02add1</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="52">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="222120">
                    <text>thm U, they
h f o i th in g *

Price

Sanford, Florida — Sunday, February 1, 1987.

79th Year, No. 138

50 Cents

Officials To To u r City
By Karen Talley
Herald Staff W riter
Municipal projects and parklands are
among the points of Interest Sanford
commissioners will view and discuss
from a 25 passenger bus during a two
hour tour of the city Monday.
T h e road trip, planned by City
Manager Frank Faison, begins at San­
ford city hall at 4:15 p.m. Faison will be
on board along with heads of the city's
eight departments and members of the
press.

Monies from commissioners' travel
fund will cover the buses' S I75 rental
fee. Faison said.
With two new city commissioners
and a host o f projects going on
throughout the city, Monday's road trip
Is both appropriate and timely. Faisorr
said.
Benefits are not. however, confined to
the two commissioners who took office
In January, according to Faison. He
said all five commissioners and the

administrative staffers are expected to
gain.
"Our discussion of plans and projects
— the city’s progress — Is ongoing.”
Faison said. "I think It going to be
beneficial for everyone to tie the visual
to the verbal.”
Represented Monday will be the
c i t y 's fir e , p o lic e , fin a n c e , a d ­
ministrative services, public works,
utilities, parks and recreation, and
planning and engineering departments.
Bee TOUR, page 7A

Malpractice Insurance Too High, She Says

Doctor Quits Delivering Babies
By Busan Loden
Herald Staff W riter
Delivering babies, some obstetricians
say. Is becoming a luxury beyond their
ability or willingness to pay as whop­
ping’ malpractice Insurance fees are
Imposed.
Dr. Udlta Jahaglrdar. who has
practiced obstetrics and gynecology In
Sanford for three years, balked at a
$60,000 malpractice Insurance charge
and won't deliver babies after June.
Sanford's Dr. Willie Newman, who
came back to his hometown with a
special Interest In providing medical
care for the needy. Just paid a $72,000
malpractice Insurance bill to allow hint
to continue delivering babies. But he.
too. may have to give It up.
Newman said If he stops delivering
babies his malpractice insunince rute
would drop to around $ 10,000 u year
for $3 million dollars In coverage for
gynecological services only. If he had
never delivered any babies Ills Insur­
ance rate for gynecological services
would be around $25,000 a year, uftcr
three years of practice and with no
suits filed ugalnst him.
Dr. Jahaglrdar. who said she delivers
up to 12 babies a month, said that
when she began her Sanford practice
her malpractice insurance rates were
$8,000 a year. She has never been

dicate that the typical physlcan Invests
30 percent or more of his or her gross
Income In malpractice Insurance pre­
miums. And In a community the size of
Sanford, she said, physicians earn less
than what Is considered average na­
tionwide. But premium rates aren't
based on earnings, so the malpractice
* fee In some cases are over 30 percent of
the doctor's gross.
Dr. Jahaglrdar said her only option to
meet this financial burden would be to
deliver at least 20 babies a month. And
that would, she said. Just cover the cost
of her Insurance, with her other
New m an
J a h a g lrd a r
expenses being covered by her general
gynecology practice.
sued, but her Insurance rates have
That’s not the way she wants to
soared to the $60,000 a ycur. That's an
operate. With such a case load she said
Increase of almost 800 percent. It’s a
price she says she can't afford to pay
she would not be able to give each
and her patients couldn't afford to
patient the Individual attention that
absorb if tagged to their bills. She
they dc»crv«. And working itlet'S, she
charges $1,150 for each delivery with
said, she wouldn't have time to handle
such a case load.
prenatal care.
So. she says, until there Is u sweeping
Additional funds are earned front her
change In the medical Insurance game,
gynecology services. She, as an In­
she won't be delivering babies. That Is
dependent physician, pays expenses of
despite the fact It's as aspect of her
operating and supplying h e r . office
profession that she loves. The opportu­
staffed by three employees. In addition
to other business and education related
nity to deliver babies was the reason
expenses.
she chose her specialty she said, as she
Without discussing specifics of her
enjoys It.
G overnor Bob Martinez has been
financial situation. Dr. Jahaglrdar said
that reports In medical Journals in­
Bee DOCTOR, page 4A

Holding Their Interest

i

Weklva Elementary School first graders, from left, Chad Hall, Jay Allen,
Andrea Trisdale and April Hudlett, are absorbed In the film "Red
Balloon" Thursday in the school's media center. The students donned
their sleepwear for a "Pajam a Day" study of bedtime stories.

J u a n H as 2nd O p e r a t io n
Prom S ta ff and W ire R eports
A 1 3 -y r i.r -o ld A lt a m o n te S p r in g s
boy whose left leg has grown almost
three Inches after a revolutionary
leg-lengthening operation underwent a
similar operation Saturday on Ills right
leg. more than four months ahead of
schedule.
•
Doctors at Orlando Regional Medical
Center said Friday 3-foot-8-lnch high
Juan Garcia. 13. was to remain at the
Florida Elks Childrens' Hospital near
Umatilla for four to six months of
physical therapy alter his left leg was

operated on Dec. 3.
Juan, who has nchondrnplasln. or
stunded growth of long bones result­
ing In dwarfism, was the first dwarf In
the United States to undergo the
pioneering leg-lcnghtcnlug procedure,
said hospital spokesman Joe Brown.
"Ills growth 1ms been going so well,
he has gotten nearly three inches of
growth on his left leg.'* said Brown.
"Because the bone Is healing and
because Juan wanted It. they decided
to go ahead with the right leg."
See JUAN, page 7A

Winter Springs Greets
West German Mayor

New Homes On W ay

By Jane Casselberry
Herald Staff Writer
A West German mayor visiting
family In Winter Springs said he
thinks his country should turn
o v e r h ija c k in g s u s p ec t
Mohammad All Hamadel for
extradition to the United States
and prosecution In the 1085
T W A hijacking. He said 90
percent of his countrymen feel
the same way.
Mayor J osef Gobel of the
ancient city of Cochrm said with
the abduction o f two West
Germans In l.-hanon his gov­
ernment has a "b ig problem.”
But. he said, although under­
ground terrorist groups staged
killings and bombings In Berlin
and Munich, the likelihood of
getting killed by a terrorist Is a
lot less than being hit by an
automobile. And. he said, small
town's like his are less likely to
be slngled-out.
Gobel received an unexpected
welcome when he and his wife.
Ellen, arrived at Orlando In­
ternational A irport Tuesday
night.
He was met by a delegation of
a r e a o f f i c i a l s In c lu d in g

B e n n ie M ae S m it h an d
Ernestine Hogan will be moving
Into newly built homes by late
spring, courtesy of the city of
Sanford. The women's dilapi­
dated residences are being re­
placed thanks to funding from
the city's $650,000 community
development block grant.

Longwood Mayor Ed Myers, who
presented Gobel with the key to
the city. Lake Mary Mayor Dick
Fess. O vied o M ayor Robert
Whittier. Miss Seminole Jodie
Strickland. Bob Lewis, executive
director of the Greater Seminole
C ham ber o f Com m erce and
former Longwood Commissioner
Perry Faulkner, who organized
the welcome. Orlando Mayor Bill
Frederick sent representatives
from the Airport Authority to
usslst the v is ito rs through
customs.
Gobel. who was the guest of
honor Friday at the Greater
Seminole Chamber of Commerce
lu n c h e o n at th e M aitlan d
Sheraton, said fear of highJacklngs and acts of terrorism in
his country hurt tourism in West
Germany last year.
This is the third time Gobel
has visited his daughter. Marta,
her husband Army recruiter.
Sgt. Melvin Mitchell, and their
son. but the first time he had
received such an official wel­
come. He said everytlmc he
comes here he Is amazed at the
growth since he was here last.
See M AYO R , page 7A

TO D A Y
Calendar........... ...6A Nation............ ...... 7A
Classifieds.... 6B-10B Opinion.......... ..... 3D
Comics.............. ...6C People........... .. 1C-3C
Coming Events.. ...6A Religion......... ..... 5C
Crossword......... ...6C School Menus........ 5A
Dear Abby......... ...3C Sports............ .IB SB
Deaths............... ... 7A Television...... ...... 7C
Editorial............ ..2D Viewpoint...... .ID 4D
Florida.............. ...7A Weather......... ..... 2A
Hospital................ 7A World.............
•

Insido

• Roadwork in Seminole County might
affect your driving plans, map 6A.

Block G r a n t 'G o d s e n d 1F o r S a n fo rd R esidents

Herald PtMtoby Jane Cattelberry

M a yor of Cochem , West
Germany, Josef Gobel, dis­
plays key to city received
from Longwood Mayor Ed
M ye rs. W ith him is his
daughter, Maria Mitchell of
Winter Springs.

Mrs. Smith. 6 8 , and Mrs.
Hogan. 54. will be given deeds to
$23,000 two-bedroom homes
once the work Is complete.
They are am ong the first
homeowners hrneflttlng from
Sanford's $650,000 program to
improve living conditions in the
Georgetown community.
Repairs arc planned at 81
homes and nine irrepalrable
structures will be demolished
during the next year. The pro­
perties all lie between Hickory
and Bay avenues and Seventh
and 1 1th streets.
Mrs. Smith is staying In her
home at 706 Orange Ave. while
the city builds a new one on the
adjacent lot she owns. She and
her friend, Eugene Burns. 78.
will live In the new home, she
said.

Htrald Photo by Tom m y Vlnctnl

Construction begins on Bennie Mae Smith's home on lol next
to her present house at 706 Orange Ave.
The new 912-square-foot resi­
dence should he finished in
about 60 days and her dilapi­
dated home will then come
down, according to the city's
construction schedule.
Mrs. Hogan's 1011 Locust
Ave. home has already been
d e m o lish ed . It cam e down
Monday and she’s renting Just
across the street, at 1016 Locust,
while her new home is built.
T h e c ity Is p a y in g Mrs.

Hogan's rent and will assist the
women's move Into their new
homes. In accordance with grant
contract terms.
Mrs. Smith culls Sanford's
program " a godsend."
"It's especially good for old
people." she said. "I can't work.
I'm losing my eyesight. This
house is no good, but there Isn't
anything I can do by myself.
Mrs Smith said she's lived in
See HOMES, page 7A

Longwood To Hear Report On Sewer Alternatives
An Interim report prepared by the city's
uudlttng firm on the financial feasibility of
Longwood hooking up to Seminole County's
sewer system compared to the cost of building Its
own plant and what rate Increases would be
required for each will be presented to the
Longwood City Commission Monday at Its
meeting beginning at 7:30 p.m.
Ronald R. Shuck of Kane and Shuck. Certified
Public Accountants, of Winter Park, will present
the report which is supposed to be finalized by
Feb. 16. according to City Clerk Don Terry. The
commission voted at the Jan. 19 meeting to have
the study done after city staff members failed to
agree on whether to recommend the city go with
th e c o u n ty or b u ild Its o w n 6 0 0 .0 0 0
gallons-per-day facility.
The city has a contract with Seminole bounty.

but It Is pending approval of Sun Bank, which
had originally agreed to loan the city $2.5 million
to construct the Grant Street treatment plant.
The bank and the bonding company wanted
assurance there would be revenue enough to
meet the debt.
In an effort to make the deal with the county
more palatable to the bank, the commission is
considering an ordinance that will Increase
Development Assistance Fees for new sewer
hookups to "$5.50 plus the sewer capacity charge
to the city of Longwood from Seminole County.”
Public hearing on the ordinance was tabled on
Jan. 19 and Is scheduled to be on the agenda
Monday night.
Terry said the apparent high bidder on the
Grant Street plant has extended his deadline for
the city's acceptance of the construction bid from

the Jan. 22 deadline to Feb. 19 at the request ol
City Engineer Chuck Hasslcr.
City Administrator Ron Waller will recommend
the city's contract with the consulting engineer­
ing firm of Dyer Riddle Mills and Precourt dated
March 11. 1985 be terminated. In a memo to the
commissioners Waller said the city has reached
the point where it Is feasible for the lu-house staff
to perform all Its engineering service.
Dyer. Riddle has reviewed site plans, designed
and Inspected the $200,000 Columbus Harbour
Force Main project, and designed and reviewed
bids on the Giant Street Sewage Treatment Plant.
"DRMP has done an excellent Job ol assisting us
In reviewing site plans submitted by developers."
Waller said. "However, because of our augmented
staff and experience, we have not sent any new
See LONGWOOD. page 7 A

�r
1A—Santo* HaraM, Santo*, PI.

Snwiay, P t». 1, 1W7

POLICE
IN BRIEF
7-Eleven Burglary Suspects
Arrested Soon After Break-In
A 3Mi-foot hole was found punched In the wall of the
7-Eteven at Shepard Road and U.S. Highway 17-92. Winter
Springs, when a clerk arrived at the store at about 1:30
a.m. Thursday.
Winter Springs police were called to the scene and It was
determined that several video tapes had been stolen along
with some change from a cash drawer.
Police found diamond-patterned foot prints both Inside
the store and out and a police dog was brought to the scene
to run a track.
While police were following that trail a Seminole County
sheriffs deputy had stopped a vehicle on County Road 427
at Marker Street. In that car were tw o men and several
Video tapes with 7-Eleven labels, a police report said.
The two men were both wearing shoes with diamond
patterned soles. They were surrendered to Winter Springs
police and at 5:56 a.m. charged with burglary, grand theft
and criminal mischief. Ronald Douglas Johnson. 28. of
Plymouth, and Marvin Darnell Reed. 29, of Apopka, have
been charged In the case and were being held in lieu of
$ 1,000 bond each.

Ex-School Teacher Clalmt Violations O f Rights

Gordon Mulls Suit Against Sheriff
Suing the sheriffs department Is "in the
ofllng" for a former Lake Mary teacher who
won’t be prosecuted on drug charges after a
two-year legal wrangle, the teacher's at­
torney said Friday.
The Florida Supreme Court refused to
hear an appeal filed by the Seminole
Brevard State Attorney's office In the case
against Wilson Gordon Jr.. 39, of Sanford
and Altamonte Springs.
" I think it's about time Justice has been
served," said Gordon. "It Is about time the
law found out what the law Is about,” he
said.
''T h e y violated m y fifth and sixth
amendment rights. And, I don't know why
the State Attorney’s office had such a big
vendetta against m e." he said.
Gordon said he is considering suing but
the question Is who.
"There's a lot of people who have done a
lot of things," he said. Gordon said his
attorney. Chris Ray o f Sanford. Is re­
searching the Issue.
The high court made its decision public

Driver Cited In Drug Charge
A man with a suspended driver's license car was stopped
by Sanford police on Ninth Street In Sanford at about 10:40
p.m. and he was arrested for driving with a suspended
license.
In searching the suspect police reported finding cocaine
in the suspect'sjacket pocket.
Charges o f possession of a controlled substance was
added against James William Stephens, 27. o f 106
Avocado Ave.. Sanford. He was being held In lieu o f $500
bond.

Sanford firefighters have re­
sponded to the following calls,
details based on fire department
reports:
FRIDAY
—9:10 a,m.. 122 Oak Court,
fatllity. An 80-year-old woman
was found dead o f natural
causes.
— 1:05 p.m., 1400 W. First
Street, car accident. S y lv ia
Waters. 74. of Deltona, reported
knee pain. She was transported

to the hospital.
— 1 :2 7 p.m ., 135 Plnecrcst
Drive, rescue. A 68-year-old man
reported dizziness. He was
assisted Into a car for transport
lo his doctor.
—2:10 p.m.. 904 Persimmon
Ave.. rescue. A 17-year-old boy
was bitten on his left leg by a
dog. Firemen applied a small
bandage to the Injury and
advised the youth to see c
doctor.

Burglaries A nd Thefts Reported
A 1983 two-door, orange Mercury Lynx, Florida tag
528CZJ, was stolen from 2260 Old Lake Mary Rd..
Sanford, at approximately 11:30 p.m. Wednesday, ac­
cording to Jeff EM 111. 23. the car's owner, or 18® CryMat
Lake. Lake Mary. Estlll told police he left hl3 keys In the
Ignition. The car was recovered at approximately 11:50 at
Pecan Ave. and 4th St. Nothing had been removed from the
car but the trunk key was missing and the clutch broken.
Estlll did not want to have the car towed and was udvlsed
by police they would not be responsible for the car.
A $360 video recorder. $60 and a bank and a .22-callber
revolver were stolen along with other Items from the home
of Thomas C. Marsh. 42. of 364 W. Hornbeam Drive,
Longwood. Wednesday, a sheriffs report said.
J. M. Wylam, 50. of 366 W. Hornbeam Drive, Longwood.
reported that a compact disc player was among about
$1,000 worth of items stolen from that home Wednesday, a
sheriff s report said.
Jewelry with a combined value of about $1,600 was
stolen from the home of Patricia A. Triblcy. 31, of 4093
Crossroad Place. Casselberry, Tuesday or Wednesday,
deputies reported.
Warren Edward Wallace. 30. of Casselberry, reported to
sheriffs deputies that Fern Park Station, 140 Femwood
Blvd., Fern Park, his workplace, was burglarized Wed­
nesday or Thursday and tools, a radio, a tape recorder and
other Items with a combined value o f more than $600
stolen.

fiousing Authority Permits
, Alarm Inspection
;I Minutes before the issue was
&lt;o be presented to a Judge late
Wednesday the Sanford Housing
^Authority g a v e p riv a te In ­
vestigators permission to enter
jin apartment gutted by a fatal
j&amp;ay-after-Christmus lire.
j! Lee Antwon Bradley. 3. died In
[the Dec. 26 blaze and his
♦parents. Karen and Lee Bradley.
j6f 69 Lake Monroe Terrace, have
jfiled suit against the authority,
[the city o f Sanford and Interstate
jFlre and Casualty Company of
HChlcago, the authority's insurer.
V «Jlm Provescher. attorney for
Jlhe Bradleys, filed the suit ask;£ng ** Judge to allow his private
{jtnvestlgators into the apartment

i
J t U i P S 481-280)

Sunday, February I, 1987
Vol. 79, No. 138
Published Daily and Sunday, eactpl
Saturday by Th * Sanford Harald,
Inc. 300 N. F re n c h A ve .. Sanlord,
F la . 32/71.
Second C la st Postage Paid at Sanlord.
F lo rid a 32/71
H o m e D e liv e ry : AAonth.Vt.7J; ) Months.
J M .1 J ; t M onths, SJ7.00; Y e a r.
JJI.OO. By M a il: Month. 54.75; J
M onths. 520 25; t Month*. 537.00;
Y e a r. *49.00
•
Phone (10J) 372 2*1 1.

to check u and m e sinoKe alarm.

P r o v e n c h e r s a id his I n ­
vestigators wanted to look at the
alarm because there are reports
that It was not sounding at the
time of the fire. He also said he
wants to look at the authorities
maintenance records to perhaps
determ in e w hen the smoke
alarm was last Inspected. The
approval to enter the apartment
was given by attoney Ned Julian
J r . , w h o r e p r e s e n t s th e
authority, said Elliott Smith, the
authority's executive director.
The boy died o f smoke inhala­
tion shortly after the 6 a.m. fire
t h a t b r o k e o u t n e a r th e
Christmas tree. Firefighters have
determined the fire was ac­
cidental but ruled the cause is
not known.
Brandon Lee Bradley. 2, was
also injured In the blaze and was
found In a second story closet
after the fire. He was treated at
Shands Teaching Hospital in
Gainesville and has recovered.
Lee Bradley received cuts on
his arm from window glass as he
tried lo rescue his son and Karen
Bradley Jumped from a second
floor window with a 10-month
old daughter In her arms. They
were treated and released after
the fire,
A c c o r d in g to in s p e c tio n
paperw ork ob tain ed by the
Sanford Herald, smoke detectors
a r e n ot In c lu d e d on th e
aulhorlty's apartment check list.

Gordon’s admission that he did the deed
was enough Justification, however, for the
Seminole County School Board to fire him
from his teaching position.
" I think that the possibility (of getting his
teaching Job back! Is pretty remote.” said
Ray. Gordon is currently working for a
restaurant in Sanford, he said.
Gordon was "relieved" to find out the
issue Is closed, Ray said.
" I thought we could win and Gordon kept
his confidence in m e." It was Ray's first case
that went before the Florida Supreme Court.
William Cato, prosecutor on the case, was
in court and unavailable for comment.
—Deane Jordan

The Salvation Army will dis­
tribute U.S.D.A. commodity food
at the following dates and times:
Wednesday. February 4. at the
Salvation Army. 700 West 24th
Street. Sanford, from 9:00 A.M.
to 3:00 P.M.
Thursday. February 5. at
Altamonte Chapel, 825 Hwy
436, Altamonte Springs, from
9:30 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.
F r id a y
F e b r u a r y 6 . at

Chuluota Community Hal. East
&amp; 7th Street, from 10:00 A.M. to
12:00 P.M.
Recipients must have a cur­
rent certification In order to
receive commodities. For Febru­
ary distribution, there will not be
an y r e - c e r t iflc a t lo n a fte r
Thursday. January 29. No One
will be certified at the location
for distribution.

WEATHER
N a tio n T e m p e r a t u r e s
City A Forecast
Albuquerque cy
Anchorage cy
Asheville w
Atlanta ty
Billing* pc
Birmingham ly
Boston in
Brownsville Tax.pc
Buffalo sn
Burlington Vt. in
Charlaston S.C. sy
Charlotte N .C .w
Chicago sy
Cincinnati pc
Cleveland in . r w a u a .. ■«,
Columbus pc
Dallas pc
Denvercy
D ei Moines pc
•Oetreltpc
Duluth pc
E l Pasory
Evansville sy
Hartford sn
Honolulu pc
Houston pc
Indianapolis pc
Jackson Miss, sy
Jacksonville sy
Kansas City pc
Las Vegas sy
LlttlaRockpc
Los Angeles sy
Louisville pc
Memphis sy
Miami Beach pc
Milwaukee sy
Minneapolis pc
Nashville pc
New Orleans sy
New York cy
Oklahoma City pc
Omaha cy
Philadelphia pc
Phoenix pc
Pittsburgh sn
Portland Me. in
Portland Ore. r
Providence sn
Richmond pc
St. Louis sy
San Francisco pc
Washington pc

HI

Lo

55 *0

23 19
St 29
a Jt

p«p

F o r C e n fr a l F lo r id a
....

so 30 ....
64 31
3t 32
79 40
3t 25
21 25
41 t7
43 34
34 21
42 31
37 21
42 30
49 39
54 29
40 21
54 29
27 07
72 40
44 29
24 24
12 74
70 50
34 30
47 34
75 50
50 30
42 42
44 40
43 49
44 34
42 30
74 43
34 19
31 09
59 35
73 38
38 34
40 37
50 34
37 29
74 53
40 27
33 25
S3 40
34 31
53 34
44 25
58 47
42 35

....
1.30
....
.36

.11

.01
.13 itf.

.02

.07

Sony

Highs

LZLj
h2

Ptly Cldy

Ptly Cldy

74

Sunny

Ptly Cldy

i s I£2

1
3E l
60

55

58

'

Lows

Mon

50

47

48

48

Tuts.

W td.

Thurs.

F rl.

.55

Source: National Weather Service

.01

Storm Moves
Into Canada

By United Press
International
Snow
ami freezing rain that
.04
snarled traffic, delayed flights
.19
16
and knocked out power took a
43
parting shot at the Northeast
40
today before heading Into
54
Canada.
Heavy snow was falling early
04
to
d a y o v e r parts o f N ew
..
England. Between 4-8 Inches
pc partly cloudy
were expected across parts of
COOES
r rain
c clear
s
o u th e rn M a s s a c h u s e tts .
sh showers
cl clearing
Connecticut,
southern Maine
sm
smoke
cy cloudy
in snow
and southern New Hampshire.
t fair
sy sunny
ty toggy
"T h e storm should be wind­
Is-thunderstorms
hr hare
ing
down In the next 12
w
windy
m musing
hours.” Bill Barlow of the
National Weather Service said
F lo rid a T e m p e r a t u r e s
early today. "It will be moving
Into
Scotia and New
Brunswick by this evening."
M IA M I (U P I) — Florida 24 hour tempera
lures and rainfall at I a m . E D T today:
Snow was also falling from
City:
Hi 1Lo Rain
the
c e n tra l A p p a la c h ia n s
Apalachicola
74 SI 000
through Pennsylvania and
Croslvlew
78 57 000
Daytona Beach
77 53 0.00
eastern Ohio early today. About
Fort Lauderdale
74 43 000
1-3 Inches were forecast for the
Fori Myers
76 40 0.00
area, the weather service said.
Gainesville
73 47 000
Jacksonville
75 50 0 tr
Winter storm warnings were
Key West
78 59 000
In
efTect early today for parts of
Lakeland
78 49 000
Massachusetts and much of
Miami
79 58 000
Orlando
71 Si 0.00
New Hampshire and Maine.
Pensacola
73 S3 0.00
Travelers' advisories were In
Sarasota Bradenton
74 61 0.00
e f f e c t fo r s o u t h e a s t e r n
Tallahassee
72 44 0 10
Tampa
73 54 001
Massachusetts. Vermont, and
Vero Beach
77 55 000
much of Rhode Island and
West Palm Beach
78 S4 000
Connecticut.
Snow, heavy at times, fell
Moon Phase*
from eastern New York state
across much of New England
Friday.
"T h is has been one of the
worst winters 1 have ever spent
In New England. I'm moving
First
Full
Last
Haw
home to Florida." said Robin
Feb. S
Feb. 12
Feb. 21
Feb. 27
Sparr. 23. a legal secretary in
Boston. "I'm sick of snow."
Friday's storm marked the
B e a ch C o n d it io n s
third snowfall In the East in
nine days, following back-toD aytona Beach: Waves arc back blizzards that shut down
flat with plenty o f driving room. a large section of the region
Winds arc out of the noithwcst surrounding the nation's capi­
at 7-8 knots. The water tempera­ tal.
ture: 59 degrees. N ew Sm yrna
But at least one Northeast
Beach: Waves are 1-2 feet and
seml-choppy. Winds are out of resident was pleased rather
the north at 10-15 rnph. The
than perturbed by the latest
current is moving slightly south.
Sunscreen factor: 12.

30©

Lo ca l R e p o rt

Five-Day Forecast

Driving Under Influence Arrest
The following person has been arrested In Seminole
County on a charge of driving under the Influence:
—Donald Richard Llewllyn, 54. of New Smyrna Beach, was
arrested at 12:42 a.m. Wednesday after his car was seen
weaving on Slate Road 436, Altamonte Springs.

not December 1984. The meeting with
deputies after the video-taping was not an
arrest. Lefller ruled, thus Gordon could be
prosecuted, th e 5th DCA dlagreed with
Lefller thus blocking Gordon's prosecution.
The state appealed the case and the Florida
Supreme Court by not reviewing the case
upheld the lower court ruling.

Salvation A rm y Sets
Food Distribution

FIRE CALLS

Woman Reports Date Rape
A 25-year-old Sanford woman told Seminole County
sheriffs deputies on Wednesday she was raped at about
4:30 p.m. Jan. 23 by a man she knows, whom she Invited
In at Crabman’s, 2104 Sipes Ave., Sanford.
The woman told deputies the man tried to rip her clothes
o(T. They struggled for awhile and then he raped her. The
woman didn't appear Injured and said the man was not
armed. The woman said her boyfriend insisted she report
the alleged attack. Deputies have the name of a suspect.

Tuesday.
"it was the court of last resort," for the
state, said Ray. The state can't appeal the
decision, he said.
"I would say that (suing) Is In the ofllng."
said Ray. He said that decision would be up
to Gordon, however.
The high court declined to review the 5th
District Court of Appeal’s ruling In the case
which was that Gordon was not tried within
180 days of his arrest as required by law.
Gordon’s convoluted Journey through the
courts began with a Dec. 5. 1984 incident In
which Gordon was video-taped selling
cocaine to an informant. He was then
recruited to work undercover for the
sheriffs department and did so in exchange
for not being prosecuted on the charge. In
April. 1986, however, he was arrested by
deputies on the cocaine charge.
Gordon argued that the deputies had
broken their agreement and that more than
180 days had elapsed since his arrest.
Circuit Judge Kenneth M. Lclflcr ruled
Gordon had been arrested In April. 1986.

.14

TEMPERATURE
CONVERSION
f

A r e a F o re c a s t
S a t u r d a y . ..m o s tl y
sunny...breezy and cooPWr'HIgh
In the mid to upper 60s. Wind
northwest 15 to 20 mph.
Saturday n ight...clear and
quite cool. Low near 40 to the
mid 40s. Wind north 5 to 10
mph.
Sunday...mostly sunny with
th e h ig h n e a r 7 0 . W in d
northeast to cast 10 mph.

A re a Readings

snowstorm.
" I ’m looking forward to it,
definitely quite a lot." said
Mary Stevens. 23. a Journalist
in Mansfield. Mass., who grew
up in Maine.
"U p In Maine they have a
saying," Stevens said. *“ If you
can't stand the winter, you
don’ t deserve the summer.'"
Elsewhere In the country,
showers and thunderstorms
extended along a cold front
over southeast Georgia. Cloudy
skies were the rule Friday over
the western half of the nation,
but most areas had dry condi­
tions.

Degrees
Fahrenheit

Friday’s high temperature In
Sanford was 77 degrees and the
low was 53. Mostly sunny Sun­
day with high near 70. Partly
cloudy Saturday night with a
low near 45. No rainfall was
recorded Friday.

The temperature at 8 a.m.: 54
overnight low: 54: Friday’s high
78; barometric pressure: 30.07
relative humidity: 50 percent
winds: N.W. at 14 mph; rain
none; Today's sunset: 5:40 p.m.
Monday sunrise: 7:18 a.m.

Extended Forecast
The extended forecast. Mon­
day through Wednesday, for
Florida except northwest —
Mostly fair Wednesday. Lows
from around 50 north to upper
60s south Monday morning.
Highs around 70 north to 80
south Monday. Turning cooler
Tuesday with the lows In the
upper 30s and low 40s north to
around 60 south by Wednesday
morning. Highs from around 60
north to mid 70s south Wed­
nesday.

A r e a T id e s

Degrees
Celsius
rv
°

i

, Water
- 100* boils

M ONDAY: D aytona Beach:
highs. 11:04 a.m., — p.m., lows.
4:37 a.m.. 5:01 p.m.; N ew
Sm yrna Beach: highs, 11:09
a.m.. — p.m.; lows. 4:42 a.m..
5:06 p.m.: B ayport: highs. 3:22
a.m.. 3:37 p.m.: lows. 9:45 a.m..
10:18 p.m.

B o a tin g
i Water
freezes

NEA GRAPHIC

St. Augustine to Jupiter Inle
...small craft should cxerclst
caution...
Saturday...wind northwest I f
to 20 kts. Seas 4 to 6 ft. Bay anc
inland waters choppy.
S atu rday n ight and Sun
day...wind north to northeast I f
kts. Seas 3 to 5 ft. Bay anc
inland waters a moderate chop.
Synopsis...a cold front fron
the northern bahamas across tht
south central part of the Florid;
peninsula w ill move rapidlj
southward

�4

■-* - e '

COUNTY
IN BRIEF
Public Hearing Slated After
Rezoning Plea Gets Tentative O K
The county’s Land Planning Agency gave tentative
approval last week for rezoning of about 900 acres of rural
land In Oviedo, which would make way for homes, stores
and light Industry. Public hearings will be held Feb. 10 and
11 before the county commission, after which commis­
sioners may make final approval. Proposals for use of the
land came from Duda Land Inc. developers. ConOev Corp.,
James Moore. ZOM Company and Paul Vines.

County Approves Rexoning Pleas
A public hearing to rezone two lots on the east side of
Maitland Avenue, south of Flortdahaven Drive, from
residential single family to resldentlal/professlonal was
approved by the county commission. The applicant was
Donald Hollingsworth.
Another request for public hearing to rezone from
agricultural to single-family residential, by Patrick Kelley,
for nine lots on the north side of S.R. 46, Vs-mlle west of
S.R. 426. was approved by the county commission. Also a
request for a public hearing to amend density distribution
for Greenwood Lakes planned unit development was
approved.

Pistol Packer Approved
A concealed pistol permit was approved for Edward
Milan, Investigator for the sheriffs department, after a
background investigation.

Site Plan Gets G o Ahead
The county commission approved a site plan for an
Interior design office In a resldentlal/professlonal district
100 feet cast of the Intersection of Lake Harriet Drive and
Marcia Drive, approximately 50 feet north of S.R. 436. The
applicant was Frederick J, Lonsdale III.

Home Lots G et Green Light
Preliminary plans for Chula Woods Phase I were
approved by the county commission for applicant. Oviedo
Development Corp. This preliminary plan consists of nine
single family lots on 1.74 acres at the northeast section of
Chuluota, south of 5th Street and cast o f Avenue G.

Paving, Drainage Accepted
The county commission accepted paving and drainage
systems In Greenwood Lakes sections as well as paving
and drainage systems in Lakewood at the Crossings.

Study Session Planned

I m k r t m w W , Umtecd, F t

Retiring
Judge
Roasted

1, tm -S A

F o r m e r C ir c u it J u d g e
Dominick J. Salfl was placed
upon the verbal spit Thursday at
a luncheon roast in his honor in
Sanford.
Salfl, on the bench for 16
years, resigned Jan. 5 to return
to private practice and to teach.
Salfl, tabled prgresslve by
some and oppressive by others
who appeared In his court, sat
through an hour of pungent
humor and was welcomed back
Into the fold of lawyerdom from
the bench. The roast was at the
Sanford H oliday Inn at the
Marina.
Starting the honors was Chief
C ircu it Ju d ge for the 18th
J u d ic ia l D is tr ic t C la re n c e
Johnson. Sanford attorney Ken
McIntosh, assslstant state at­
torney Bob Fisher and Circuit
Judge O.H. Eaton Jr., also had
comments.
T h e y chided him for the
number of forms he had lawyers
use. his demeanor In court, and
for the publicity some of his
cases generated.

xsrm p w b t l—* W w *

Poised to cascade to the floor a long list of
appeal cases reportedly generated during 16
years on the bench by Circuit Judge Domtck
J. Salfl, Is Sanford Attorney Ken McIntosh.
McIntosh was one of four speakers during a
Seminole Bar roast of Salfl, right, Thursday.
B e s id e s h a rp c o m m e n ts ,
Johnson praised Salfl for at­
tempting to make changes In a
system which he said resists
change. Johnson said Sal 11 tried
to make lawyers think. “ He
stepped on a few toes, but lifted

up some lives." Johnson said.
Salfl, who said he was uncom­
fortable talking about himself
rather than Ideas and concepts,
had a short comment rebuttal.
Bar members gave him a stan­

Commissioners
Overturn Mobile
Home Denial
The Seminole County Com­
mission overturned a Board of
Adjustment denial of a special
exception to reinstate a mobile
home In an agricultural zone at
the northeast corner of Hurban
Street and Tatra Street, one-half
mile south of Red Bug Lake
Road.
C o m m is s io n e rs , h o w e v er,
upheld a Board o f Adjustment
denial o f a lot size variance from
8.400 square feet to 6.708
square feet on property located
on the west side of Second
Street, north o f S.R. 46 in
Geneva.

Salfl resigned as |udge In January to return!
to private practice and to teach. The;
luncheon roast was held In Sanford. Circuit;
fudges Clarence Johnson and O.H. Eaton J r .:
spoke as well as Assistant State Attorney!
Bob Fisher.
ding ovation at the end o f the*
luncheon
During the luncheon. Bob!
Fisher, president of the bar Ini!
1986. was given a plaque for his
work during the year.
—Deane Jordan

Good Service
rse

JCY
TRAVEL ASENCY

Pays O ff!
XL

▼ VJ

A . JL ♦

Universe Travel wishes to thank all of our clients
for their help in making 1986 another successful year.
We are happy to announce the opening of our newest office
at Heathrow International Business Center
with Audre C. Brooks as Office Manager.
Please come by and see how our
Business and Personal Travel Service pays off for youl
Marie Cuppy Bell, CTC

EhJOY

GRAPEFRUIT

(3 0 5 ) 3 2 1 -1 6 8 0
250 International Parkway • Suite 150 • Heathrow’, FL 32 746

F R O M FLORIDA

-.ru t

GRAND

O P E N IN G

o n s t r u c t io n s

, D

e v e l o p m e n t

J,

• • * —*•

S TU M P

S TEN S TR O M
C

Im t n , M

President

A work session with all constitutional officers was set for
Feb. 10 to discuss how to pursue a study of charter
government. Charter government could cause some of the
constitutional officers. Including the sheriff, to be ap­
pointed rather than elected.

.f i #

r l

* mfr**"*■*•» &lt;r*&gt;#*■*»•

C

o r p o r a t io n

“ THE HOME CENTER”
Our Plan or Yours — Your Land or Ours!
SINGLES! JUST MARRIED! FIRST
TIME HOME BUYERS!

OUR PLEDGE TO YOU
TH E HOMEBUYER
A QUALITY PRODUCT - A QUALITY EXPERIENCE
B U Y IN G A H O M E S H O U L D BE F U N C Y O U S H O U L D H A V E AN E N ­
J O Y A B L E E X P E R IE N C E FROM S T A R T T O F IN IS H !!

Two or Three Bedrooms, Two Bath Homes From
$350.00 Total Monthly Payment Including Loti

TR A D E - IN!

Trade-In Plan Available for our move up Buyersl
Prestlgous lots available In Loch Arbor and Mayfalrl

S T E N S T R O M -S T U M P IS A N EW U N IO N O F A C O U P L E O F O L D
H A N D S . T H E Y W A N T Y O U R B U ILD IN G E X P E R IE N C E S T O BE A
Q U A L IT Y O N E FROM T H E D A Y Y O U S E L E C T Y O U R L O T T I L L T H E
D A Y Y O U M O V E INI
B O B S A N D E R . O U R M A R K E TIN G D IR E C T O R , H A S E IG H T Y E A R S
E X P E R IE N C E H E LP IN G P E O P LE ! H E U N D E R S T A N D S F IN A N C IN G
A N D W ILL H E L P Y O U S T A Y R IG H T O N B U D G E T ! B O B W IL L W O R K
W IT H Y O U IN S E L E C T IN G A F L O O R PLAN F R O M O U R E X T E N S IV E
IN V E N T O R Y , O R A S S IS T Y O U IN D R A F TIN G Y O U R O W N . YOUR
S E L E C T IO N S A R E M A D E R IG H T H E R E A T O U R " H O M E C E N T E R ."
N O W A S T E D T IM E , N O R U N N IN G A L L O V E R T O W N , A N D N O R U N ­
N IN G U P Y O U R C O S T I W E S TIC K W ITH Y O U F O R T H E E N T IR E PRO­
C E S S , FR O M M O R T G A G E A P P R O V A L , D U R IN G C O N S T R U C T IO N .
A N D O N T H R O U G H C L O S IN G A N D M O V E -IN I
D A V ID S T U M P IS O U R LIC E N S E D R E S ID E N T IA L C O N T R A C T O R . H E
B RING S T W E N T Y Y EA R S EX P E R IE N C E IN H O M E B U IL D IN G T O YOGI
D A V E H A S B U IL T M O R E T H A N 8 0 0 H O M E S O V E R T H E Y E A R S .
A N D H E S T IL L G E T S E X C IT E D O V E R A J O B W E L L D O N E ! D A V E
W ILL IN S U R E T H A T Y O U G E T A Q U A L IT Y H O M E ! N O S H O R T C U TS !
O U R P L E D G E T O YO U IS T H A T W E W ILL D O E V E R Y T H IN G IN O UR
P O W ER T O M A K E Y O U R H O M E B U IL D IN G E X P E R IE N C E A H A P P Y
ONE!
_________

VISIT OCR “ HOME
SHOWROOM” AND INSPECT
THE MANY STANDARD AND
EXTRA FEATURES YOC’LL
FIND IN A HOME TO BE
CCSTOM-BUILT JUST FOR
YOU! BUILDING YOUR DREAM
HOME FOR YOU CAN BECOME
A REALITY, SO YOU DESERVE
TO HAVE IT “ YOUR WAY” !
VETERANS:

NO DOWNPAYMENT • UP TO $110,000.
ONLY $500 TOTAL MOVE-IN COSTS!

HOMES FOR D ISA BLED OUR SP EC IA LT Y .
LET US BUILD A HOME • A HOME TO
FIT JUST YOU!

QmMTI

2559 Park Drive, Sanford Phone (305) 321-0140

�g j v w w ? '1 '" ' i f * * * * * *

\
HtraM, tartar*, PI.

fywiay, Fab. i . 1W7

A m e ric a n s H e a v e W e s t B e iru t

WORLD

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) — Three Am eri­
cans left embattled Moslem west Beirut
under heavy guard today, as the fate of
hostage negotiator T e n y Waite remained
unclear for an 1 1th day.
Church of England officials said they
"continue to receive assurances" that Waite
Is safe, despite reports that he has himself
been kidnapped while meeting with the
captors o f other W estern hostages in
Lebanon.
Moslem Druze militiamen escorted the
three Americans, two men and a woman,
from their homes to the abandoned U.S.
Embassy annex In west Beirut and later
handed them over to Lebanese police at the
Green Line that separates Christian cast
Beirut from the Moslem westm half of the
city, witnesses and police sources said.
Witnesses originally said five Americans
were in the departing group, but police later
said two of them were relatives "w h o came
to say goodbye."
"Lebanese police were waiting for the
Americans on the Green Line. The operation
was completed smoothly and the three

IN BRIEF
PLO Deputy Says U.S. Firms
Bought Hostage's Freedom
TUNIS, Tunisia (UPI) — U.S. companies paid $2 million
to ball out American hostage David Jacobsen from
captivity in Lebanon three months ago. a senior Palestine
Liberation Organization official said.
Abu Ayad. deputy to PLO chairman Yasser Arafat, said
Friday unidentified U.S. companies created a special fund
to free hostages in Lebanon and paid out 82 million to free
Jacobsen, who was kidnapped by the pro-Iranian Islamic
Jihad on May 28.1985 and freed In Beirut on Nov. 2,1986.
He said the U.S. government did not collect the cash.
Ayad's allegation could not be independently confirmed
and he provided no evidence to support It. He made the
dislosurc at PLO headquarters In Tunis.

Am ericans are now safe at the U.S.
E m b a ssy in e a s t B e i r u t , " a p o lic e
spokesman said.
The U.S. Embassy had no comment on
the departure o f the three Americans, but
newspapers in Beirut today published a U.S.
government statement warning Americans
to leave Lebanon or face prosecution.
The same warning was broadcast by
state-owned Beirut radio Friday at the
request of U.S. officials.
Militiamen guarding the embassy annex,
adjacent to the hotel where Waite was
staying before his dlssapearance. kept
reporters away as a five-car convoy o f Druze
militiamen and police took the Americans to
the Green Line.
Waite, 47. arrived In Beirut Jan. 12 on his
latest hostage-freeing mission and was last
seen Jan. 20 as he took leave of hl3 Druze
militia escort, saying he was going to meet
with Shiite Moslem kidnappers.
No word has come from Waite since then,
despite efforts to contact him, by the
archbishop of Canterbury’s office, British
diplomats and Druze leader Walld Jumblatt.

the man who promised to protect him.
The Church of England had no Immediate
com m en t Friday on th e re p o rts . A
sDokeswoman in London said we continue
to receive assurances o f Terry Waite's
well-being but we have no information as to
his exact whereabouts."
In the latest report he was being held
against his will, the Ash Shiraa magazine
said Friday that Waite was kidnapped In an
Iranian-inspired bid to block U.S. military
intervention In the six-year Iran-Iraq war.
The Independent An Nahar newspaper
and Christian Voice of Lebanon radio said
Waite was seen being driven blindfolded
through eastern Lebanon's Bekaa Valley in
a convoy and might reappear In a few days.
The Bekaa is a center for pro-Iranian
Moslem fundamentalists.
Ash Shiraa predicted that Waite and other
Western hostages would remain captive
until the outcome of the battle between Iran
and Iraq for control of the southern Iraqi
port of Basra was clearly decided.

Soviet Says Cease-Fire Failing

U.S., Poland Begin Talks
W ARSAW . Poland (UPI) — Deputy Secretary of Slate
John Whitehead, trying to determine whether the United
States should normalize relations with Poland, held talks
with President Wojclcch Jaruzclskl Saturday.
Whitehead has met with Poland's leading dissidents as
well os senior government officials on a four-day visit that
Is expected to determine whether the United States will lift
economic and diplomatic sanctions against Warsaw.
The United States and Poland have not exchanged
ambassadors since the Polish government Imposed martial
five years ago to crush Solidarity.
On Friday. Whitehead spoke with Solidarity founder
Lech Walesa In the first meeting of a high-level U.S. official
with an opposition activist since Poland outlawed the trade
union In October 1982.

Talks Begin On Stand-Off
NEW DELHI. India (UPI) - India and Pakistan began
talks Saturday to resolve a tense week-long military
standoff along their border in the Punjab region, with each
side demanding the other withdraw Its troops first.
The Hindu newspaper reported both nations had
Imposed a news blackout on the discussions. Involving
diplomats and senior defehse officials from both nations.
Pakistani Foreign Secretary Abdul* Sattar and Indian
Foreign Secretary A.S. Gonsalves led their respective
delegations. The talks were.to contlnueSunday.

Troops Raid Marcos-Linked Farm
M ANILA, Philippines (UPI) — Government troops
tracking renegade soldiers Involved In this week's abortive
coup raided a farm linked to deposed ruler Ferdinand
Marcos today, but military officials said most of the rebels
fled.
An Armed Forces spokesman. Col. Honcsto Islcta. said
250 government troops surrounded a farm believed owned
by Marcos' son-in-law after a tip that 50 to 300 rebel troops
massed there following a failed attempt to seize state-run
television Tuesday night.

P re sid e n t Botha Calls
V vh ite s -O n ly Election
J O H A N N E S B U R G . S ou th
Africa (UPI) — President Pieter
Botha set May 6 as polling day
.for the nation's minority white
'voters In a general election an
■analyst dismissed as "ordering
•another round of drinks on the
ITltanic."
• Rejecting the notion of equal
'voting rights for the majority 24
'm illion blacks. Botha Friday
'urged the nation to "stand
iunlted against the spirit of revoHutton In c ite d a g a in s t the
^country from abroad" In the
’election called two years early.
■ The election and attendant
‘. "re tre a t from real re fo rm "
^sought only to cement Botha’s
•divided N ation al Party and
'pander to breakaway rightwing
lAfrikaners. charged Colin Eglln.
'opposition Progressive Federal
•Party leader.
&gt; " T h e forthcom ing election
^clearly qualifies as political
•farce.” said political commrntn
'to r and form er PFP leader
•Frederlk van Zyl Slabbed.
. "Public accountability is only
possible if political parties are
periodically granted the oppor­
tunity to put their policy and
Viewpoints to voters," Botha said
a t th e fo r m a l o p e n in g o f
■parliament in Cape Town.
5 He said he decided against
fa llin g elections for separate
^nixed-race and Asian houses of
.Parliament, which were elected
.■by fewer than 30 percent of
^eligible voters In 1984.

the hands of new obstetricians,
because during the first couple
o f years' of practice a physician's
malpractice Insurance rates are
Continued from page 1A
fairly low. They start to soar
after about three years.
asked to
get involved set­
She also said she believes that
ting medical malpractice Insur­ babies will be delivered at only a
ance rates, but he said he few large hospitals In the area.
doesn't have the legal authority
The deliveries will be done by
to do so. But he Is establishing a doctors on the hospital staff who
taskforce to review the situation.
are covered by the hospital's
Meanwhile, Dr. Newman will
insurance. Or they will be done
be thinking about dropping his by doctors who are linked to
obstetric service.
major health maintenance orga­
Newman said he thought very
nizations. covered by the organi­
hard about stopping deliveries a zations' Insurance.
couple of weeks ago when he
Newman said he Is hoping for
paid the $72,000. Newman has sweeping changes In the Insur­
never been sued, cither.
ance industry, which would
" I 'm a lit t le s t u b b o r n ,"
make "no fa"*t” ip p ’y to medi­
Newman said. "I feel like I've cal situations, just as In Florida
worked hard for the prlviledgc of automobile Insurance Is "n o
delivering babies. It makes me fault." thus reducing the pre­
mad to be pushed to give It up."
miums for the insured.
But Newman said he may be
He said he doesn't believe
forced to. depending on what his insurance companies' claims
malpractice insurance rates are that they are losing money.
next year.
" I t ’s all a gamble. We don’t
Newman said If the cost of believe the insurance compa­
m a lp ra c tic e In su rance was
nies. You can't get at the real
passed along to his patients,
truth. I can't believe they're
each would pay about $5,000 for losing money." Newman said.
a delivery, opposed to his rate of
Obstetrics has become safer
between $ 1,200 and $ 1.800.
over the years. Newman said,
Newman said overhead for an with doctors .taking uggresslvc
Independent d octor’s office,
action to intervene and deliver
excluding malpractice insur­ by Caesarean section If theiabor
ance, generally takes more than is prolonged. If the baby is In an
50 percent of the doctor’s gross improper position for birth, of If
Income. Newman said he doesn’t there would be need for radical
consider what percentage o f his use o f forceps.
gross earnings will go to medical
Doctors he said are not opting
malpractice. Insurance. Instead for Caesarean deliveries at In­
hfc- eonSttlers how many babies creased rates because of fear of
hC has to deliver' 16 cover'that
liability In a "norm al" delivery,
c6*|,V*.Av »
■ 1 but because it in some cases It is
Some doctors might work
safer and problems now can be
about two months with all of spotted earlier. Caesarean births
their earnings from deliveries
have their own set of potential
going toward their insurance
problems, related to the use of
cost, while others with fewer anesthesia and the performance
cases might work for 10 months of a surgical procedure, he said.
Just to pay their insurance rates.
According to a report of the
That is. he said, without cover­ National Institute of Child Health
ing any other expenses from and Human Development near
delivery funds and without the Washinton. D.C., these "fetal
doctor earning any profit for distress" Caesarean births have
those deliveries.
Increased from 14 percent to 21
Malpractice rates. Newman
percent of first-time Caesarean
said, are based on the doctor's
births between 1979 and 1984.
s p e c i a l t y a n d th e r i s k s
Today one in five deliveries Is
associated with that specialty In C a s e a r e a n . M a r t L e b o w
addition to the length of time he spokesman for The American
or she has been in practice. The C ollege of Obstetricians and
longer the time In practice the G y n eco lo g ists said this in ­
greater chance the doctor has of creased reliance on Casereans
being sued, he said.
can In many case be linked to
In the situation as it is. he said,
the fear of suit, if a difficult birth
It’s the patients who need free turns out badly.
service who suffer — because
"American life is plagued by
doctors can't afford to deliver frivolous litigation." said Dr.
charity cases at all because of Jahagirdar. a native of India.
the liability potential.
Lawsuits and huge awards to
That. Newman said, really
those who sue are affecting not
tugs at his heart, because he only the medical profession, but
began Ills Sanford practice at the Just about every aspect of life,
community clinic for the needy she said.
and he has always had a special
But physicians are especially
lntcreit In caring for the poor.
vulnerable, she said, because if a
Newman said doctors arc now mistake is made it is usually
paid about $230 by the govern­ v e r y v is ib le and g e n e ra lly
ment or the hospital for each
blamed on the doctor, even if he
delivery of a baby born to an or she Is not at fault. "There ts
Indigent mother and at that rate no way to salvage yourself and
he said, "how many babies do say this was not my fault," she
you have to deliver to gross said.
$72,000?" And many other pa­
Dr. Jahagirdar said she will go
tients also do not pay their full back to delivering babies if the
delivery fees, he added.
price of insurance drops. "I don't
"They're going to still have want to lose my touch." she
babies," he said. "W ho's going said.
Drs. Jahagirdar and Newman
to deliver the babies, 1 don't
know."
practice at Central Florida Re­
Dr. Jahagirdar said that she gional Hospital In Sanford. With
believes the deliveries will be In a dlflcn.ru perspective Is Judy

..Doctor

MOSCOW (UPI) — The Soviet-backed Afghan govern­
ment's unilateral cease-fire in the 6 -year-old civil war Is
failing because Moslem rebels continue to attack govern­
ment troops. Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
said.
Shevardnadze's remarks, at a banquet Friday for a
visiting Mongolian official, were the highest level con­
firmation yet that Afghan leader NaJIb's New Year's Day
cease-fire offer Is not succeeding.
In a veiled reference to the United States, which supports
Moslem guerrillas in the war. Shevardnadze blamed
"foreign patrons ... who are putting weapons Into (the
rebels’ ) hands guided by their neogloballst expectations."
Najlb has asked rebel groups to Join In a coalition
government but any such government must retain close
ties with Moscow.

coincided with the election
statement.
Denis Worralt. Botha's envoy
In London, announced his resig­
nation moments before Botha’s
parliamentary speech, fuelling
s p e c u la tio n t h a t o th e r
lawmakers will leave his party,
which has ruled under apartheid
since 1948.
"Ordering another round of
drinks on the Titanic — that's
what Botha’s whltes-only elec­
tion is about.” political analyst
Professor Peter Vale said in
comments published Friday in
the liberal Weekly Mall.
” 1 think (Botha) will Juxtapose
chaos and stability and present
himself as the pillar of one and
e v e r y o n e o p p o s in g him ...
epitomizing the other," Slabbert
wrote in the same publication.
"A s long as one docs not ask
for sense, the forthcoming elec­
tion makes absolute sense." he
sdd.

That center only accepts lowrisk cases and annually delivers
about 100 babies at a total cost
of $1,800 for each case. Ms.
Brown said. Difficult cases are
referred to an Orlando doctor
and his Insurance rates, she
said, so far have not impacted on
that service.
However. Ms. Brown said, the
center lost Its pediatrician, who
did g iv e c h e c k u p s o f the
newborns, because of the Impact
on his insurance rates.

ARNOLDS
STAINED GLASS
Driftwood Village
Suite ff 203
Lake Mary Blvd.
322-0197
Gift CcrllficatM For Claaaaa A Gifts

C a r Insurance?
&lt;)iu‘ name sa\s it best.

T
.....

TONY RUSSI INSURANCE
R
P h . 322*0285
JL 2575 S. French A ve., Sanford
i
. , , n,
t*. ' , ill- t
».' * » Ksfuto - O w n e rs in su ra n ce
1 ife. H iiiiu'. I ar. Minlncst. Dm name u n it all.

DO YOU KNOW
THIS MAN?

Big Jim says thanks for my
4th successful year operating

A LLE N 'S APPLIAN CE SALES A S E R V IC E .
My new store located at 116 Hwy. 17-92 DeBary
Next door to DeBary Auto Parts.
Featuring new washers, dryers, ranges, refrigerators.
Some Scratched and dented *20-*150 O F F . A ll
with new factory warranties. F R E E D E LIV E R Y
Re-Built Appliances Available.

ALLEN’S APPLIANCE
SALES &amp; SERVICE
(305) 668-5441

(305) 574-8433

19 Years Experience

EMERGENCY SERVICE NO EXTRA CHARGE

W hy n o t have y o u r
new

MONEY SOURCE

o ffic e s

d ir e c tly a c r o s s

th e

s tre e t fro m
C e n t r a l F lo r id a

Fast Professional
and Confidential Service.

1st and 2nd Mortgage
Loans

Purchase of Existing
Mortgages.

Residential and
Commercial

R e g io n a l H o s p ita l?

• Sale or Lease •
We Will Build

i Botha’s announcement closely
followed police orders tightening
Restrictions on publicity for the
putlawed African National Con­
gress and other unlawful groups.
3 'he new gags replaced censor­
in g curbs thrown out Thursday
jby th e S u p r e m e C ou rt In
Johannesburg.
.
* The apparent defection by a
prominent Pretoria ambassador

Brown, the office manager of the
F a m i l y B i r t h C e n t e r In
Longwood.
Ms. Brown said that that
center's malpractice rate for it’s
certified nurse- midwife went up
from $45 last year to $2.100 this
year. Although rates for nurse
midwives are much lower than
that of physicians, it should be
considered that $2,100 repre­
sents one-quarter of that center's
m idwife's annual salary. Ms.
Brown said.

LET US HELP SOLVE YOUR MONEY PROBLEMS.

SEMINOLE MONEYTREE, INC
323-8990

Licensed Mortgage Broker
549 W. Lake Mary Blvd., Driftwood Village Suite 202
Lake Mary, Florida 32746

To Suit
F or Additional Inform ation Call:

Sanford Medical Plaza
C/0 Haass Real Estate
(305) 896-9494

�« »' ■WW

SCHOOLS
IN BRIEF

lofce Mary High lnaugurat0S
‘Wellness In '87' Program
Lake Mary High School's faculty and staff have begun a
"W ellness In ’87” program which Is a four-stage program
Involving active participation In awareness, evaluation,
nutrition and behavior, according to Don Reynolds,
principal.
Marjory Large. Michael Sabine and Kathy Kruge.
students at Lake Mary High School, placed first, second
and third respectively in the Optimist International essay
contest, and Robert Ferris and Vano Chu, also Lake Mary
High students, recently won two of the four district PRIDE
awards in math and science, Reynolds said.
Lake Mary High School grad, Gordon Michael Moore, has
been named recipient of a George C. Wallace Academic
scholarship to Troy State University, according to
University Chancellor Dr. Ralph W. Adams. He is the son o f
Mr. and Mrs. George R. Moore.

SCC , Chamber Sponsor Show
Seminole Community College and The Greater Sanford
Chamber of Commerce have Joined together to bring the
Chinese Golden Dragon Acrobats and magicians of Taipei
to Seminole County. The performance will be at the SCC
gymnasium on Feb. I at 2:30 p.m.

Dean's List Honorees
Nancy Alice Hughes of Longwood has been named to the
dean’s list at Appalachian State University in Boone, N.C.,
according to the university's news bureau report.
David Michael Whelchel, son of Mrs. Chariote P. Gauss o f
Lake Mary has been named to T h e University of the
South's dean's list for the fall semester, according to the
university’s public relations office.
Vanderbilt University OITlcc of News and Public Affairs
announced the university's dean's list for its 1986 fall term
which included several students from Seminole County.
They are: Jett John Plhakls, Altamonte Springs, and David
Edward Tate. Allison Marie Gish and Paul Matthew Pirillo
from Longwood.

p#«

#•*— -

Students at the University of
Central Florida will have to deal
with an Increase in tuition this
summer. The Florida Board of
Regents, the governing body of
the state university system,
anounced the fee Increase last
week.
In past summers lower fees
were offered as an enticement to
students to attend the university
d u rin g the slow er sum m er
months, but this year students
will be hit with a significant fee
boost. Last summer a student
could attend UCF and take an
u n d e r -g r a d u a te cou rse for
818.50 a credit hour. That cost
will be hiked to $33.19 per credit
hour this May.
The BOR found the Increase
n e c e s s a ry for a o f co u p le
reasons. During the summer
semester instructors are paid the
same as in the fall or the spring.
Also, building maintenance is
the same, if not more, during the
summer.
...UCF has announced the
appointm ent of Dr. Edward
N e i g h b o r to th e n e w l y established position of associate
vice president for faculty affairs.
Neighbor is currently the dean of
A r t s a n d S c i e n c e s at
Northwestern University. He will
take over his new post at UCF in
March.
...Students at UCF are eligible
to compete in the fifth annual
N ation al C olle gia te D rivin g
Championship February 5th and
6 th. From 8 a.m! to 6 p.m. the

Friendship Month Proclaimed
February has been designated as "Friendship Month" at
Lawton Elementary School. The entire faculty and staiT
will present classroom activities centered around the idea
of being friendly and having friends, principal Michael
Mizwlckl said.

The Circus Is Coming
Wekiva Elementary School kindergarteners will become
animal trainers, acrobats and performers when they put on
their own circus for parents at 9 a.m., Feb. 6 in the school’s
media center. The circus will culminate a unit in which the
kindergarteners learn all about the circus, assistant
principal Peter Barnett said.

Touring Group Visits Lakeview
Tiie Art Reach Touring Theatre of Cincinnati, Ohio, will
present a performance at Lakeview Middle School on Feb.
17. The touring company is an award-winning, nationally
recognized organization that presents programs to stu­
dents from an educational standpoint, assistant principal
Fred Burnett said. He said the performance of "T h e Lion.
The W itch, and T h e W a rd rob e" Is sponsored by
Lakcvlew's Cultural Enrichment Program for 1986-87.

Intern Applications Available
State Representative Art Grindlc (R-Altamonte Springs)
announced recently that applications are available from his
office at 2603 Park Dr.. Sanford, for the College Graduate
Legislative Intern Program. He said applicants must be a
Florida resident or attending a Florida university, must not
be a first-year law student during the internship period and
must have their undergraduate degree by August 1987 and
be enrolled at a Florida university during the Internship
period.

Writers O f Week Recognized
Aspiring students at Lakeview Middle School achieve
recognition for outstanding writing in the "Writers of the
W eek" program under the direction of Linda Goddard,
seventh-grade English teacher, according to assistant
principal. Fred Burnett.

f*

F I.

Students Face
Tuition Hike

Around
UCF
K a th y

UCF SAE (Society o f Automotive
Engineers) is hosting the tryouts
sponsored by the Dodge division
of Chrysler Motors. Students will
compete for the fastest corrected
driving time in a Dodge Daytona.
The NCDC is on a nationwide
tour o f over 100 colleges and
universities across the nation.
First prize is a trip to Daytona
Beach to compete in the Grand
Finals for over $25,000 In schol­
arships and other prizes.
...Internships In Tallahassee
are now open to graduate stu­
dents who want to experience
the working process of policy
making in Florida's Legislature.
Rep. Michael Langton. Chairman
of the House Legislative Intern
Program, announced the Florida
House o f Representatives Intern
P ro g r a m is now a c c e p tin g
applications for the 1987-88
program. Twenty students will
be chosen to participate in what
will mark the 20th year o f this
program. More information can
be obtained by calling (904)
488-0710.
...The Lady Knight basketball
team is currently on an eight
game slide. UCF will be looking
to break the losing streak Satur­
day the 31st when they host
Stetson University. Like UCF.
the Hatters are also a member of
the New South Womens Athletic
Conference.

Herald HMM by Lmt&gt; eaimend^

A Token O f Appreciation
Special honors and treats. Eastbrook Elementary School'*
student council members, from left, Adriene Tynes, Candice]
Thompson, M ary New, Nadia Foil and Melissa Loreto arq
paying tribute to their school's staff Thursday before
attending a special party provided by Friendly's Ice Cream. !

WE BUY MORTGAGES
We also make 1st and 2nd mortgage
loans on Residential or Commercial
Real Estate up to $100,000.
Personal loans art avallabls including
Ravolvlng Credit Lina.
For Information Call:

831-3400
Fait H IfcSRp1st Ctr.
Sit 430
FL 32790

SCHOOL MENU
Fallowing are the menus to be
offered In Sem inole County
schools for the week of Feb. 2-6.
Monday
F eb ru ary 2
Pizza Wedge
Seasoned Green Beans
Chilled Peaces
IceCream Treat
Lowfut Milk
Tuesday
F ebruary 3
Charbrollcd Burger
Garden Vegetable Mix
Crispy TatcrTots
Applesauce Surprise
Lovvfat Milk
W ednesday
February 4
Chicken Fried Steak w/Gravy
Whipped Potatoes
Garden Peas
Favorite Fruit
Roll
Low fat Milk

S e m in o le Schedules
Parents' Counseling
Sem inole High School will
hold evening counseling services
for the parents of next year's
ninth-grade students from Feb. 4
to I 1 on the proper selection of
courses for the 1987-88 school
year. Interested parents should
call the school during school
hours for an appoin tm en t.
322-4352. ext. 208 or 209.
Sem inole High School stu­
dents. Alonzo Gainey and Tonja
Simpson, were the recipients of
the Dr. Martin Luther King. Jr.
Scholarships presented at the
King celebration banquet in
Sanlord on Jan. 17. They each
received a $350 scholarship to
attend the university of their
choice.

Thursday
February 5
C ircu s Corndog or Tender
Steak Nuggets/Roll
Piccadilly Cole Slaw
Oven-Baked Beans
Dessert Delight
Lowfat Milk
Friday
February 6
Crispy Flshwlch or Golden Sea
Nuggets
Macaroni 'n Cheese
Green Beans
Juice Bar
Bun or Roll
Lowfat Milk
•

St

C&amp;S Family Credit Services, Inc.

S f VALENTINE’S
SPECIAL

55 00 Off
CHAMPAGNE
HAMPER OF GIFT FRUIT
Help your SWEETHEART tU y In (hop*, i.n d
torn. Indian R ln r Fruit Instead ol candy or
floweia. A gill lor the howl Iron* the heart.

P A C N* S E N D
f lK

304 E. Commercial St.
Downtown Sanford 121-1117
Mon-Sat.

Little Stuff
Consignment Shop

SALE!
5 0 % O F F All Slue, Gray. Purple Tag*

INFANT TO SIZE 14
Now Accepting Spring Clothes
10 Mins. From Downtown
Sanford
WE BUY CRIBS
19 Hwy. 17-92 Across From Post Olflcs
DeBary 6 6 8 - 8 2 6 5 “ s a M O S

GRAND OPENING!

Q u it s m o k in g

e n, line.

fo r g o o d *
* B EAU TY C A R E
For The Whole Fam ily
• Perms
• Color
• Haircuts

• Blow Dry Styles • Manicures
• Roller Sets
• Condition Treatments
• Frostings
• Professional Consulting

W e’re so convinced m
that our Smoking I
Cessation program $
will help you quit, we’re
offering the first session
free. It’s your opportunity to
see that you am quit smoking.
N o ifs. N o ands. N o butts.
T h e H C A Personal Health
Program on Smoking Cessation
Is based on proven methods that
have helped thousands to break
their habit. In fact, it’s one o f the
most successful programs ever
developed. It has worked for p e o

ALSO

* AEROBICS
Exercise Classes
• Senior Citizens
• Beginners
• Advanced

MEMBERSHIPS
*20 PER MONTH

! •

Gives you full month exercising
•&lt; • Full Month use of tanning bed
10% Discount on Sebastian Products

HCA.
We care forAmerica.
We care for you.

LOCATED IN

OPEN
MON.-SAT.

ZA Y R E P LA ZA
SANFO RD

da

pie who have tried
to cjuit and failed;
people w ho thought
that, for them, quitting
was impossible. M any
even find it a satisfying and
enjoyable experience.
For more information on pro­
gram schedules or any other details,
please call us at m e number below.

Sk Central Florida
n V H R e g l o n a l Hospital

Phone 321-4500, 668-4441, Ext. 607
Free introductory session
February 9, 7:30 to 8:30 P.M. (Dining Room)
C O U R S E 0/ ‘ ES
. 4E
P LA C E

February 16, 17, 10, 19
7:30 to 9 P.M.
Hwy. 17-92 on Lake
Monioe. Sanford
321 4500, 668 4441, ext. 607

%

V

�*A—SeiHeNMerekl, Sm M , FI.

limOay, F« &gt; . }, IW7

Road Work This Week
Horo ar# tho projects In Sominolo County that may affect tha flow of traffic:

_______ Cypress Way
tween Concord Drive and
Melody Lane. Paving and j
drainage work scheduled to
start Monday.
Tw o -w a y
traffic on one-lane. Jurisdic­
tion: Casselberry.

State Road 434 and
Interstate 4 interchange.
Widening of 1-4 exit ramps.
Work affecting traffic flow 34
hours a day. Jurisdiction:
F l o r id a D e p a r t m e n t of
Transportation.

— ^
Sun D r i v e off
Rinehart Road. Installing
new paving and drainage.
Passage along Sun Drive will
be somewhat limited. Scheduled for completion by end of
February. Jurisdiction: Lake
Mary.

■ ■ ■
I n Sanford
Plaza/Pine Crest area, State
?*r ®et e * * l *
Highway 17*92 to dead end,
Southgate Road from Airport
Boulevard to State Street;
and East and West Coleman
Circle and East and West
Jenkins Circle. Resurfacing,
minimal disruption of traffic
flow. Expected start: Wed­
nesday or T h u r s d a y .
Jurisdiction: Sanford.

Editor's note: Last week It
had been expected that the
resurfacing contractor would
begin work on Sarita Street,
Santa B arb a ra Drive,
Florida Avenue and Georgia
Drive In the Fairway Plaza
a r e a ; H a y s D r i v e and
Country Club Circle in the
Country Club Manor area;
and subdivision streets In
Grovevlew Village. Instead,
plans were changed and
work began on Fulton Street
and will be ongoing on Holly
Avenue between Ninth Street
and Thirteenth Street and
Maple Avenue between Sixth
Street and Third Street. Start
date is as yet uncertain for
resurfacing of the above
mentioned streets.

Forest City Road
from State Road 436 to
M aitland B lvd . W idening
two-lane road to four lanes.
N o r m a l traffi c usually
m aintained. Ju ris d ic tio n :
F l o r i d a D e p a r t m e n t of
Transportation.

_______ Wymore Road and
Lake Destiny Drive. Turn
lanes, resurfacing and minor
drainage work. Expect minor
slowdowns, but one open lane
in each direction usually
maintained. Occasionally at
off-peak periods only a single
lane open wi th fl agmen
directing traffic. Completion
date Feb. 13, extended from
J a n . 30. J u r i s d i c t i o n :
Seminole County.

Tuskawilla Road
and W i n t e r S p r i n g s
Boulevard. Left turn lanes
being added. Normal traffic
flow not usually affected.
Scheduled for completion by
early February. Jurlsdlc
tlon: Seminole County.

In the downtown
Sanford area, Holly Avenue
between Ninth Street and
Thirteenth Street and Maple
Avenue between Sixth Street
and Third Street. Resurfac­
ing. Minimal traffic interrup­
tion. Jurisdiction: Sanford.

11

In the Ranchlands
area, Sailfish Road from
Shore Road to the dead end
and Sllvercreek Drive be­
tween Holiday Road and
Shore Road. Resurfacing.
U nlikely to affect traffic
flow. Jurisdiction: Winter
Springs.
1

12

A lderw ood Ave.
from South Edgemon Ave. to
Moss Road; Buttonwood Ave.
between 206 and 218 But­
tonwood; Second Street from
Edgemon Ave. to Bombay
A ve .; South Fairfax Ave.
fro m State Road 434 to
Lombardy Road; South De­
von Ave. from SR 434 to
Lombardy Road; and Bitterwood Street from But­
tonw ood A v e ., to South
Edgemon Ave. Resurfacing.
U nlikely to affect traffic
flow. Jurisdiction: Winter
Springs.

Quintuplet Drive
between N. W inter Park
Drive and Lake Drive. New
paving. Sometimes difficult
to get through. Jurisdiction:
Casselberry.

Evansdale Road.
New paving of 2-lane road.
Flagmen directing traffic but
little delay due to low usage.
Jurisdiction: Lake Mary.

COM ING EVENTS
SU ND AY. FEB. 1
Educational seminar for kidney palients and
families sponsored by Central Florida Chapter ol
the Nutiunal A s s o c ia tio n o f P a tien ts on
Hemodialysis and Transplantation. 9:15 a.m. to 4
p.m., Florida Hospital Medical Center in Orlando.
For Information call 894-1390.
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).
Rebos Club. 130 Normandy Lane, Casselberry.
Narcotics Anonymous. 8 p.m. The Grove
Counseling Center, 580 Old Sanford/Ovledo Road
(offSR419). Winter Springs.
Sanford Family Group Alanon meeting, 8 p.m.,
Christ United Methodist Church, County Road
427 and Tucker Rd.. Sanford.
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 ONDAY, FEB. 2
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
Centra] 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 Sanford, 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, B p.m., closed. 1201 W. First St.
Fellowship Group AA. senior citizens. 8 p.m..
closed. 200 N. Lake Triplet Drive. Casselberry.
Overeaters Anonymous. 7:30 p.m.. West Lake
Hospital. State Road 434. Longwood. Call Mary at
886-1905 or Dennis at 862-7411.
TU E SD AY. FEB. 3
Sanfoui Senior Citizen Club, uuou. Sanford
Civic Center. Bag lunch and bingo.
Countywide Forum on teen problems and what
the schools and commipiity are doing sponsored
by Seminole Chemical Awareness Network, 7-9
p.in.. Sanford Civic Center.
Free Income ,ax help for retlreees. 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. Tuesdays through
April 15.
STANDING MEETINGS
C a s s e lb e rr y 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.
Free blood pressure checks, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.,
American Red Cross Seminole Service Center.
705 W. State Road 434, Suite C.. Longwood.
Tuesdays and Thursdays.
South Seminole County Kiwanls Club, noon,
Quincy's Restaurant. Highway 17-92 and Live
Oaks Boulevard. Casselberry.
Rebos Club AA. noon and 5:30 p.m.. closed. 8
p.m.. step. 130 Normandy Road. Casselberry.
Clean Air Rebos Club, noon, closed.
TOPS Chapter 79. 6:15-8:15 p.m.. Howell
Place, 200 W. Airport Boulevard. Sanford.
Sanford AA. 5:30 p.m. open discussion. 8 p.m..
Living Sober closed. 1201 W. First St.. Sanford.
Toastmaster International Club In the Lake
Mary/Longwood area at 7:15 p.m. at the Seminole
Community College. For additional information
call Rosellaand Tom Bonham. 323-8284.
24-Hour AA group beginners open discussion, 8
p.m.. 317 S. Oak Ave., Sanford.
17-92 Group AA. 8 p.m., closed, Messiah
Lutheran Church. 17-92 and Dogtrack Road.
Overeaters Anonymous, open. 7:30 p.m.,
Florida Power &amp; Light, 301 S. Myrtle Ave.,
Sanford.
Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p.m. (closed). West
Lake Hospital. State Road 434, Longwood.
W EDNESD AY. FEB. 4
STANDING MEETINGS
Casselberry Rotary breakfast, 7:30 a.m.,
Casselberry Senior Center. 200 N. Lake Triplet
Drive.
Sanford Rotary-Breakfast Club, 7 a.m.. Sky port
Restaurant. Sanford Airport.
Sanford Optimist Club. 11:45 a.m.. Western
Slzzlln Restaurant. Sanford.
Sanford Kiwanls Club. noon. Sanford Civic
Center.
REBOS AA. noon and 5:30 and 8 p.m.(closed).
Rebos Club, 130 Normandy Lane, Casselberry.
Sanford S e ren a d ers D ance fo r seniors.
2:30-4:30 p.m.. Sanford Civic Center. Free live
band.
Central Florida Blood Bank Seminole County
Branch. 1302 E. Second St., Sanford. 9 a.m.-5
p.m.. and Florida Hospltal-Altamonte. State Road
436, 11 a.m.-7 p.m.; Longwood Branch. South
Seminole Community Hospital. Suite 103-A. 521
W. State Road 434.
TOPS Club (weight loss). 5:30-7 p.m.. Salvation
Army. 700 W. 24th St.. Sanford. Open to the
public.
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.
Altamonte Springs AA. 8 p.m.. (closed). Alta­
monte Community Chapel. 825 State Road 436.

14 Miles O f Sanford Roadwork
Nears End, N ew Projects Start
A $27,350 contract to extend
Road work has been delayed
F irs t S t r e e t ’ s S t r e e ls c a p e
on First Street in Sanford, but
landscaping will propably be
repaving and repair continues
on other routes throughout the awarded by commissioners in
regular session Feb. 9. A pro­
city.
posed agreement for the work
Rehabilitation of more than 14
hadn't been firmed up by staff
miles of city roadway Is almost
and the contractor in time for
finished and repair of another
award at commissioners' m eet­
100.000 square yards is set to
ing Monday.
start next month.
First Street, the main route
Also recently completed was a
through Sanford’s downtown
$115,000 project to rebuild
business district, will receive
McCracken Road, from Airport
about $70,000 worth of repaving
B o u le v a r d to P e r s im m o n
and relandscaping under plans
Avenue.
mapped out by staff and agreed
Commissioners are funding
the comprehensive road pro­ to by commissioners.
As presently discussed, a
gram with local option gas tax
private contractor will receive
accruals city budget funds. The
the $27,350 award to replace
road project contracts were
- curbings and gradings for the
proposed by staff last fall.
Streelscape extension, running
The 14 miles of repaving was
from Park to Oak avenues.
contracted by commissioners for
About $15,000 will then be used
$525,000 In November and a
fo r c it y c r e w s to I n s t a ll
$183 ,0 0 0 c o n tra c t for the
Streelscape brick work and
100.000 square yards of road
plantings.
was awarded earlier tilts month.

The Streelscape work should
begin in early March and take
about two weeks to complete.
E n g in e e r in g and P la n n in g
Director Bill Simmons said.
The city will then move on a
roughly $30,000 effort to repave
First Street from Park to French
avenues, with the work expected
to take about a week, he said.
That stretch of roadway will be
levelled and receive a one Inch
thick overlay. The covering
should last at least five to 10
years. Simmons said.
T w o way traffic will be main­
tained on First Street during all
work. The city will prohibit
parking in the affected areas and
close one side of Ithe roadwy.
then the other. Simmons said.
While the Streelscape project
will take about two weeks, the
lane restrictions during this part
of the project will be In effect for
only a few days, Simmons said.
— K aren T a lle y

REALTY TRANSFERS
Gulseppl Belcuore and Wt Thelm a to
Donald P. Htllyer and Wf Diana L.. Lot 61
Hollow brook West. M l.000
General Homesto Michael A. Nugent and
Wt Rae Ann. Lot 79 Blk A. Lakewood at the
Crossings. Un 3. $103,900
Terrell Johnson. Etc., Trustees to Daniel
Faby and Wt Melanie P., Lot 36 W tkiva Hills.
Sec 3. $133,000
Ja y m trk Bldrs and Dev. to Joseph E
Zagameand Wt Jane C.. W *5' ot E 81 50' ol N
31.33' ol S 130 83’ ot Lot a. Sandalwood
Village. $63,500
Jaym ark Bldrs and E v. to Joseph E.
Zagame and Jane. W 45' ot E $1.50'i ol N.
34.83’ ot S 95.49’ ot Lot 4, Sandallwood VIII..
$53,500
Strathclyde Homes to Scott L. Barnes. Lot
X N orthrldge. $148,000
T .G . Jones Co to A. Majid Basy and Wt
Patricia. Lot II The Estates At Springs
Landing, $80,000
T.G . Jones Co. to Joseph L. Savlno and Wt
Debra C., Lot 6 Deer Run Un 30, $96,400
Spicewood Ltd to John L. Reppller and Wt
ColleenC „ Lot It Spicewood. $84,900
Andrew E. Brodle to Steven R Schefstad
and Wt Jan H.. Lot 114 Devonshire. $95,500
Catalina Homes to Susan E. O ’ Brien and J
Phillip Kumelman and Wt Tana M , Lot 95
Deer Run Un MB. $69,500
JSI Duv. to Robert J. Payne and W l Nellie.
Lot 190 Wedgewood Tennis Villas. $75,400
Catalina Homes to Lois T . Armstrong. Lot
115Deer R unU n 140. $64,900
J.W . Boulicault and Robert E McKee to
William M. Gentry and Wf Jane G „ Lot 19
and E 66’ of 30 Sanlord Commerce Park.
$63,300
Trendmaker Homes to Donald Mowery. Lot
I Howell Harbor Ests.. $140,000
Repr Ests Howard Mlciche to Thomas L.
Sabatino and Salvatore P.. Lots 18 and 19

Sanlando Sub. B eaut. $71,000
South Country Corp. to M /l Schottenstein
Homes. Lots 1 13 and It 99. Alalaya Woods.
Ph V I, $530,700
Arturo P Velasquei 8. W F Mariana to S
Keith Turner. Lt 133 Lago Visa. $60,000
Adam A Kamus 8. WF Linda to Lynda M
Showers. S 300’ ot Lt 6 Blk D Triplett L K
Shores. 183.500
D erek J G a lla g h e r &amp; W F D iana to
Lawrence P Coughlin 8 W F Charlotte J . Lt
183 Oakland Village Sec 4. Ph I. $63,700
Clmmarron Dev to Andrew W Donahue A
W F Teresa R. W 41.15’ ol Lt 17 Clm m arron
Groves. $54,000
Del Prop IV Ltd to Robert J Gibson &amp; W F
Joan D. Un 306 Bldg 8B Hidden Village Cond,
$65,900
Steven A Marsh 8 W F Jana to Arthur C
Burkholder 8 W F Constance. Lt 41 Tiberon
Hills Ph I A, $880,000
Kuhl 8 Brinkman lo Ronald J Lynch 8 W F
Thelma F, Lt 63 Tuscawlila Un 11 A, $140,000
Cox Corp to Lee R Smith 8 W F DoJros, Lt
4$ Amended Plat Longwood Green, $115,000
Dei Prop lo John R Ortlr 8 W F Esther, Un
194 Bldg 13 Hidden Springs Cond, $66,500
Del Prop to Thomas M O ’ Boyle, Un 303
Bldg IJA. Hidden Springs Cond. $63,900
Paul R Bertram J r 8 W F Marsha lo John R
Galop 8 W F Kathryn T . Lt 11 Blk G.
Summerset No Sec 5. $50,000
Kam bli D Arsanl to Sanyarak Manatad 8
W F Sumalee. W8 56 ol Lt 14 8all of 15 Blk 55
Sanlando Sub Beaut Palm Spgs Sec $41,600
Keny N Meadows 8 W F Patricia to M ary
Jane Corbin, LI 20 Blk F Seminole Sites.
$58,000
Robert A Moseiy 8 WF Sharon lo Jerald L
Chernak 8 WF Gall. LI 78 Wekiva Cove Ph I,
$128,000
Harris Amer Homes lo Fred L Dorter 8 W F
Loretta C. Lt 140 Hyde Park. $98,400

Suda Inc to Kenneth L Gaines 8 W F Karen.
Lt 8 Caribbean Heights. MI.OOO
■ Jam es L Bradley 8 W F Jacqueline lo
Frederick C Jarrett 8 W F Eleanor J. Lt 6
Robin Hilt. $74,000
Ja y Morgan Ind lo Ray Westerman, part ot
Secs30821 21 X , $80,000
Centex Homes to Gladys A Zuniga. Lt 79
FoxchasePh I. $96,500
Cal ton Homes to Ronald R Keen 8 WF
Irm a. Lt 45 The Trails At Country Creek,
$82,300
George F Barngrover 8 W F Sally to Carlos
A Cardona 8 W F Shirley, Lt 3 Indian Hills Un
7. M3.000
Thom as F Brennan 8 W F Marguerite to
Robert A McNaughton. Lt I I I Stockbridge Un
2. $62,300
Orlando Sun Prop to Greenstreel Corp, Lis
2 18 23 844 56 Wllla Lake. $3X.000
P R N Iny to BM L Investments, land In Sec
9 21 29,8310.000
General Homes lo Jerald M Yarls 8 WF
Linda, Lt 64 Blk A . Lakewood At The
Crossings, U n 3,$97,000
General Homes to Leslye E Dlener. Lt 17
Blk A Lakewood Al The Crossings Un 2.
$97,400
General Homes lo Hugh A Farnsworth 8
W F Kelly D, Lt 87 Alataya Woods. Ph It.
$97. WO
General Homes to Stephen G Knowles 8
W F Yvonne. Lt 131 Alataya Woods. Ph II.
$90,000
General Homes to Robert Wilkinson 8 WF
Maxine L. Lt 133 Blk C. Lakewood At The
Crossings Un I, $99,000
General Homes to Brian L Stoll 8 WF
Kim berly T . Lt 46 Blk B. Lakewood At The
Crossings. Un 2, $89,000
General Homes to Donald L Moon 8 WF
M argaret. Lt 35 Blk A Lakewood Al The
Crossings Un 3. $98,000

�NATION
IN B R IEF
Reagan Votos Clean Wafer Bill,
Expects Congress To Override
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan, vetoing for the
second time a S20 billion clean water bill he called “ larded
with pork,“ Is resigned to losing his first battle with the
new Demoe ratio-controlled Congress.
* i know this veto Is going to be overridden," he said
Friday when he vetoed the measure. Last year, he allowed
an identical bill to die after It was passed unanimously by
both the House and Senate.
Reagan quickly found that key Republicans were
standing fast In support of the bill that this time passed the
Senate 93-6 and the House 406-8 — much larger margins
than the two-thirds majority required to override a veto.
The bill to extend and amend the Clean Water Act of
1972 would authorize 818 billion In grants to state and
local governments to build sewage treatment plants
through 1994 and $2 billion for other pollution control
programs, Including the Chesapeake Bay, the Great lakes
and other bodies of water.

Super Collider Gets G o Ahead
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United States will build the
largest scientific device ever, an atomic accelerator 20
times more powerful than now exists, but Is looking for
partners to help meet the price tag. the admlnstratlon says.
The superconducting super collider may cost up to 86
billion by the time It Is completed In 1996. President
Reagan's decision Friday to build the collider ensured a
battle among states to be Its home.
“ This will be the crown jewel of high energy physics,"
said Energy Secretary John Herrington, describing It as the
physicists' equivalent of putting a man on the moon.
At least 20 states are Interested In housing the collider,
which could be a high-tech bonanza. The collider would
employ about 3,000 scientists and technicians, as well as
be a lure for related Industries, schools and laboratories.
The collider would be a ring, 19 miles In diameter, of
10.000 supermagnets assembled In a tunnel that would
push atomic particles — protons — to nearly the speed of
light. The collisions of the protons are expected to reveal
even smaller particles and provide Information about the
fundamental nature of matter.

G irl Dies In Rescue Attempt •
CHICAGO (UPI) — A 5-year-old girl rescued one of two
older brothers from the frozen Chicago River, but fell
through the ice herself and died trying to save the second
boy, who was presumed dead after an eight-hour search.
Victoria Yacoub and her two brothers, Jonathon, 8 and
Mohammad, 10. were playing together Friday by a 6-foot
dam near the Intersection of the river's North Branch and
Little Branch when the two boys plunged through the Ice,
authorities said.
Victoria pulled Jonathon from the water and he ran
through the neighborhood shouting for help while his
sister went back onto the Ice to try to save Mohammad and
fell In herself at about 4:30 p.m.. Jonathon told police.
The girl’s limp body was pulled from the river nearly two
hours later and she died as doctors worked to revive her.

, {i,Arms.Sales: 'The Lord's Work'
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A lawyer for retired MaJ. Gen.
Richard Secord says Sccord and his business partner, key
figures in the Iran arms sales, thought they were
performing "the Lord's work" In urging profits go to the
Contras, a Senate report shows.
Sccord and associate Albert Hakim, both private citizens,
were so Instrumental in the deals they knew far more than
Secretary o f State George Shultz and Congress, said the
intelligence committee report released Thursday.
The report disclosed that Secord and Hakim arranged for
aircrafts to ferry U.S. arms to the Middle East, helped
manage a Swiss bank account where the sales proceeds
were deposited and proposed spinning off some of the
money to aid the Nicaraguan rebels.
A lawyer representing Secord. retired from the Air Force,
reportedly said that Hakim later routed money from two o f
the arms sales through his financial network Into the
accounts of unidentified "foreigners." the panel said.

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
State House Speaker Proposes
O ne-C ent Sales Tax Hike
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) - House Speaker Jon Mills has
proposed a one-ccnt sales tax Increase to pay the bills for
Florida’s staggering growth rate, but the Idea ran Into
Immediate trouble with Gov. Bob Martinez.
Mills offered the proposal Friday to delegates of the
Florida League of Cities, who were meeting In Tallahassee
to shape their agenda for the spring session o f the
Legislature.
He said the extra penny could be split evenly between
the state and local governments, sparing cities and
counties the pain of proposing their own local taxes. Local
governments already have the authority to assess a
half-penny sales tax.
Mills said the increase must be accompanied by tax
reform, to shift the tax burden from goods to the service
sector, the fastest growing sector of the state economy.
Services account for most of the estimated $2 billion In
sales tax exemptions due to "sunset" or be automatically
repealed this year.

Guardsmen Leave For Training
PANAMA CITY (UPI) — Four C-130 transports were
scheduled to leave Saturday morning from two bases In
Florida to fly an estimated 600 National Guardsmen to
Central America for two weeks of training.
Major Ken Forrester, a spokesman for the Florida
National Guard In St. Augustine, said three transports from
Tyndall Air Force Base and one from Mayport would leave
at one-hour intervals beginning at 6 a.m. CST.
The infantrymen, primarily from the Panhandle, will be
In the western Panamanian province of Chiriqui. The
exercise is part of the six-week Kindle Liberty exercise
Involving U.S. and Panamanian troops.
T h e g u a rd s m e n are m em bers o f th e T a m p a headquartered 53rd Infantry Brigade. But most of those
participating arc from the 3rd Battalion, 124th Infantry,
whose members are from Tallahassee. Panama City,
DeFuniak Springs. Bonifay and Chlpley.
Late next week more than a dozen dozen legislative and
Industrial leaders from Florida will fly to Panama and
Honduras for a three-day fact-finding mission to determine
the role o f the Florida Guard In Central America.

...Long wood
Continued from pogo 1A
site plans to DRMP since June 1986." Longwood
has an assistant city engineer In addition to
Haasler.
H e also mid consultant's services are no longer
needed for the Columbus Harbour Force Main
project because It is 99 percent complete and the
city has been pumping sewage It from Columbus
Harbour to the Skylark Sewage Treatment Plant
since Jan. 3. As to the proposed Grant Street
plant. Waller said the project was designed by
DRMP and bids opened on Oct. 22, 1986.
The apparent low bidder promised to hold his
bid until Feb. 19. Waller said If Sun Bank allows
the d ty to connect the county's sewage system,
the city will not build its own plant. Even If the
city decides to build the plant, he said It would
hire Us own full-time construction Inspector and
there would be no need to retain DRMP.
In other business, the commission will consider
authorization for payment to Architects Design
Group for supervision of construction o f the new
police station. The construction was scheduled
for completion on Dec. 15. 1986, but the general
contractor was granted a 30 day extension by the
commission because of a delay caused by the
city's Inability to reimburse the contractor for

...Mayor
Continued from page 1A
The Mitchells have lived In the
Orlando area for three and a half
years and moved to W inter
Springs two years ago.
Gobel said with the dollar
down against the German mark,
this Is an Ideal time for German
tourists to visit the United
States, but not so good for U.S.
tou rists, who find It m ore
expensive than usual to visit
there because of the exchange
rate.
Gobel said the direct Interna­
tional flights Into Orlando make
It much easier and cheaper for
tourists of the two countries to
travel back and forth. Beginning
this summer, he added West
German visitors here will not
have to have visas.
"W hen we go back home I talk
about how nice and friendly
people are here and there are
plenty of hotel rooms In every
category." Gobel said. "1 tell
them they should plan to stay at
least a week to see all of the
attractions."
While he Is here. Gobel hopes
to pick up some tourism tips, as

...Tour
Continued from page 1A
The trip through Sanford will
be "a circuitous and slow," with
plenty of time for commentary
and questions. Faison said.
The routes will Include State
Road 46. Airport Boulevard and
some streets the city has Just
repaved under its $1 million
road repair effort, he said.
A stop will be made at the
Poplar Avenue sewage treatment
plant, off SR 46. location of part
o f the c ity 's 836.5 m illion
wastewater management pro­
gram,
The city's westward growth
through annexation will be cov­
ered while the bus heads along
SR 46. Faison said. A 4.6 acre
parcel tagged for development as

...Juan
Continued from page 1A
Brown said orthopedic sur­
g e o n D r. C h a r le s P r ic e
performed the operation early
Saturday. Price was the first
surgeon in the United States to
perform the operation which was
developed by Italian surgeon L.
Renzl Brlvio, who assisted Price
with Juan's left leg.
The procedure, known as the
Verona technique because Brlvio
performed the first operation In
Verona. Italy, calls for the upper
leg bone, the femur, and the
lower leg bone, the tibia, to be
severed at mid-shaft.
P re v io u s m eth od s o f le g
lengthening performed in the
United States have always re­
quired a bone graft. Brown said.
An external frame, each with
four screws, are placed on the
outside of the leg. The screws
are attached to the cut leg bones.
One cut Is made above the knee,
one below the knee.
The patient actually lengthens
his own legs by turning a
wrench which permits the frame

HOSPITAL
NOTES
Central Florida Regional Hospital
Friday
ADMISSIONS

Samlord:
Howard E. Kingston
M a ry G Kosky
Rebecca L. Smith
Margaret E Stewart
DISCHARG ES
Sanford
Sandra Z Hopson
M ary A M urray
Rebecca L Smith
Beniamin W Crebs, Howey In The Hills
Benerly A Gieseking. Osteen
Pamela L Black and baby girl
Tonya Peck and baby boy. Fern Park

I, FI.
project expenses. The architectural fee has an
allocation o f 814.981 for the construction phase.
Prorated this would equate to 82.430 a month
and Architects Design Is asking for that amount
per month 1o be continued during this period o f
extended services.
Other items on the agenda Monday night
Include:
• A public hearing on amending d t y code by
deleting section 2-16 to eliminate the necessity
for preparation and enactment o f two ordinances
when compensation o f city com mission Is
changed.
• A request by Ken Allen, owner o f Longwood
Promenade at 821 S. Highway 17-92 to reconsid­
er decision on permit on one master water meter
instead of one per tenant.
• An authorization for amendment regarding
requirements for water meters.
• A site plan for Aero Products. Inc. Building 2.
Longdale Industrial Park.
• Preliminary action on on revising com ­
prehensive zoning to clarify the permitted and
conditional uses o f land undr General Commer­
cial (C-3) and create additional zoning definitions.
• A resolution authorizing a corporate credit
card for the city.
• A report on Columbus Harbour drainage ditch.
• City trash pickup on March 16.17 and 18.
—Jane Casselberry

that Is the main Industry in his
A lot o f service personnel who
1.004 year old city on the were stationed in the area come
picturesque Mosel River. The back later Just to visit, Mrs.
tow n o f 10 .0 0 0 Is host to Mitchell said.
1,200,000 visitors each year
The other local industry In
ranking It the third biggest Cochcm Is w inem aking and
overnight tourist destination in Gobel turns out 50,000 bottles
W est G erm any. The tourist each season at his winery, which
season runs from early spring has been the family business
through Christmas.
since 1725. His winery produces
A favorite attraction for visi­ 16 varieties of wine. Including
tors there Is the 950-year-old champagne.
castle on the heights above the
"W e come here to rest and
river.
enjoy ourselves." Gobel said.
Mrs. Mitchell, who met her "W e work hard the rest of the
husband while he was serving year and this Is our ofT-scason In
with the U.S. Army In Germany, the winery as well as for tourists.
said the people of her hometown We have 35,000 grape vines In
have a special relationship to our vineyards which arc spread
Americans because there are around the valley."
Gobel, who went to Daytona
several major air bases In the
Beach
Thursday, said In addi­
area and they come to Cochem
tion to visiting area attractions,
for the wine festivals.
he enjoys sunbathing.
"T h e y are aware the Ameri­
One thing the Gobels find very
cans are over there for peace and different than back home Is
th eir p ro te c tio n ," she said.
stores staying open at night and
"T h e y depend on them for the
on weekends. In Germany the
economy because they spend a stores all close at 6:30 p.m. and
lot o f money In German towns.
on weekends, except restaurants
" T h e Am ericans help pick and cafes.
grapes In the vineyards and buy
"W e don’ t want It any olher
wine. There arc always people w a y , " he s a id , a lt h o u g h
demonstrating, it's like that ev­ acknowledging It Is better here
erywhere, like the peace de­ for families with two working
monstration at Cape Canaveral people because they can go
shopping together after work.
last week."

Sanford's third fire station lies In
this area. Commissioners paid
8100.000 for the site In October.
In southern Sanford, the de­
veloping Lee P. Moore Park in
the Hidden Lake subdivision will
also be visited. The 12-acre
parcel's transormatlon Into a
park is being undertaken with
$150,00 In grants and $34,000
in city monies and manpower.
An e a s te rn s to p o v e r w ill
bcWoodmere Park, being devel­
oped in the Woodmere sub­
division off Sanford Avenue.
The residential and commer­
cial developments cropping up
all over Sanford will also be
discu ssed du rin g the tour,
Faison said.
"T h e re ’s a lot of activity going
on out in the field," Faison said.
"T h is will give us all a feel for
it."

to expand the distance between
the bones. As the bones are
expanded, the broken ends form
new bones. Brown said.
Juan must turn the screws
lour times a day, and he gains a
quarter inch a week In each
bone, meaning that his legs grow
approximately a half inch a
week. Brown said.
After Ills first operation, his
fellow 1.279 students at Teague
Middle School in Altamonte
Springs sent him a huge get-well
card they signed during lunch
breaks.,
Doctors hope the technique
will add an extra six to eight
Inches to Juan's height.

Prairie Dog
Bites W om an
A Sanford woman was bitten
on the hand and leg Friday after
she spooked a prairie dog In her
yard.
Jackie Carruthers. 59. of Club
Road, said she had put down a
bag o f trash when she felt a nip
on her hand and saw the prairie
dog. She tried to get away from
It. she said, but "th e darn thing
was hanging on my pants leg."
Then it bit her on her leg, she
said.
She began to scream, and her
b lin d h u s b a n d . H arv, 73,
grabbed a shovel from their shed
and though he can only see blurs
killed the animal.
M rs. C arru th ers said the
animal belonged to her neighbor
who reportedly caught it in the
woods, she said. She said they
told her it gnawed Us way out of
Us cage. She was treated and
released from Central Florida
Regional Hospital in Sanford,
she said.

M a y , Fab. 1 ,1W7-7A

...Homes
1A
the home "3 0 years, ever since
m y mother died, but It just can't
be fix e d up an ym ore. T h e
termites have eaten It."
S h e and m a n y o t h e r
Georgetown property owners
were notified about the city's
program last fall.
"T h e y mailed me a letter,
saying they had plans to build
and fix up homes for low income
people," Mrs. Smith said. " I
went to a meeting .(city repre­
sentatives held at a local church
In October), listened to what
they said and signed up. I've Just
turned It all over to Mr. Woods,
he's taking care of m e."
Richard Woods is the city's
community development block
grant officer, hired when the
8650.000 was awarded a year
ago. Grant terms required a
lengthy administrative process
to any proceed construction.
City commissioners voted in
October, 1985. to seek the grant
from the Florida Department of
Community Affairs. Word of tinfunds' reclept came last Febru­
ary.
Commissioners serve as ul­
timate overseers of the funds'
administration. Woods nnd a
secretary work at city hall as
grant facilitators, under the
Engineering and Planning De­
partment. A citizens advisory
board named by commissioner^
also provides input for lh»J,
grant's administration.
Nine structures were tagged
for demolition and 81 others foij
rehabilitation during survey^
that were part of the city's grant;
application process. Woods said I
T h e nine structures wor«{
Judged safety hazards, and re-J
hab work at the 81 others wil(
run a gamut from substantial t&lt;(
mlnlmual, Woods said.
All work is heing contracted!
through com petitive bidding.*
and will Include structural rein-!
forcemenls. Interior and exterior*
reflntshlngs. floor levellings.!
w in d o w r e p la c e m e n ts and.
plumbing and electrical up*
grades, he said.
The city anticipates complex
Non o f the work before tlu&gt;
March 31. 1988 deadline set Ingrant terms. Woods said.
— K aren T a lle y

A i r F a r e W a r Es c a la te s
U nited Press In tern ation al
American Airlines, Pun Amer­
ican World Airways and USAir
slashed ticket prices up to 83
percent in an escalating fare war
touched o ff by Eastern and
Continental discounts.
D elta's president said his
airline will match Eastern on
selected routes but did not give
details. Delta also said Friday It
was picked to replace Eastern as
the official carrier for Florida's
Wall Disney World.
Investors worried that cheaper
tickets will cut Into the airlines'
profit m argins forced stock
prices down Friday. AMR Corp.,
American’s parent, fell $1.50 a
share to $56.50 in Friday's
trading on the New York Slock
E xchange. Delta fell $1 (o
$55,625 and USAir was oli 87 xh
cents lo $23.125.
But Pan Am gained 62 'A cents
to $5.75 a share, on takeover
speculation and Texas Air Corp.,
parent of Eastern and Continen­
tal, was up 50 cents to $45.25 on
the American Slock Exchange.
Am ong other curriers. T W A
gained 25 cents to $24,625 and

United W a s up 't2 ir*4' WWts itA
$53.50.
A m e ric a n 's p ro gra m , a n ­
nounced Friday, drops fares be­
tween 80 percent ancl 83 percent
off regular full coach prices, sail I
S te v e M cG regor. A m e ric a n ,
spokesman In Fori Worth, T e x ­
as. USAir is offering 79 percent
off.
Pan Ain's program, which has
few er restriction s than Mo­
uthers. would allow travelers to
fly from New Y ork to Los
Angeles for 889. A New York i&lt;&gt;
Boston lllght would cost $29.
American travelers could ll\
from New York to Chicago for
$49 Monday-Thursday and on
Saturday, hut on Friday and
Sunday the cost would be $59
From New York lo Los Angeles
it would cost $89 Monday
Thursday and Saturday and 899
Friday and Sunday.
U S A ir t r a v e le r s ca n fly
r o u n d trip fro m B o s to n to
Washington for $90. A trip from
Pittsburgh to Los Angeles ami
back would cost $198.

AREA DEATHS
BEULAH AN N TRUED
Mrs. Beulah Ann Trued, 80.
122 Oaks Court. Sanford, died
Friday at her residence. Born
March 12, 1906, in Georgia, she
moved to Sanford from Orlando
In 1955. She was a homemaker
and a member of the Lutheran
Church of the Redeemer. She
was an Army Air Corps veteran
of World War II. a member of the
Order of the Eastern Star. DAV
C h a p te r 30. and a form er
member of the Sanford Garden
Club.
S u r v i v o r s i n c l u d e her
husband. Laverne; daughter.
Bobby G. Wilson. Lakeland: sis­
ters, Lois A. Bailey. Jackson,
Ga., Ruth Forsythe. Chula Vista.
Calif: one grandson.
Oaklawn Funeral Home. Lake
Mary-Sanford. Is in charge of
arrangements.
JUNE SM ITH
Mrs. June Lockwood Smith,
64, 102 Cypress Avc., DcBary,
died Wednesday at her resi­
dence. Born June 24. 1922, in
Huntington. Ind., she moved to
DcBary from Orlando in 1979.

She a homemaker and a Baptist
Survivors Include her son.
Gary. Sanford; daughter. Judy
Byron. Houston, Texas; brother.
Max Lockwood, H untington;
sisters, Juanita Favory, Belly
Turner. Rosie Humbert, all ot
H untington; and If) g ra n d ­
children.
Gratnkow F u n eral H om e.
Sanford, is In charge of ar­
rangements.

HUNT MONUMENT CO.
DISPLAY YARD

I CREMATION SPECIALISTS I

Hwy. 17-92 — Fern Park
Ph. 339-6988
Gene Hunt, Owner

FUNERAL HOME &amp;
PRE ARRANGEMENT CENTER

Brwtze, Marble &amp; Granite

F u n e ra l N o tic e s
SM ITH. J U N E LO C K W O O D
— Funeral services lor Mrs June Lockwood
Smith, 64. ol DeBary. who died Wednesday,
will be held II a m . Monday, at Gramkow
Funeral Home, wllh Ihe Rev Paul Kellh
officiating Burial will be at Glen Haven
M e m o ria l Park
Frie nds m a y call at
Gramkow Funeral Home Sunday, from 1 to i
and 6 lo 8 p m Arrangements by Gramkow
Funeral Home. Sanlord
TR U E D . B E U LA H ANN
— Funeral services lor Beulah Ann Trued. 00.
122 Oaks Court. Sanlord. who died Friday
will held Monday, at 3 p m , at the Oaklawn
Funeral Home Chapel, with Paster E A
Reuscher officiating. B urial will be a'
Oaklawn Memorial Park Visitation lor
family and Iriends will be held Sunday tram
6 to 9 p m ., and Monday, Irom t p m until
Service lime Oaklawn Funeral Home Lake
Mary Sanlord. Is In chargeot arrangements

O A K L A W N

3 2 2 -4 2 0 3

th§amtf FuA. il Hum* Cw

E s t. 1 9 5 4

Jv.-a.-nar*

�SH O P-N -W IN N GIVEAW AY
W IN A G R O C ER Y CERTIFICATE

FROM PEPSI-COLA
AND WINN-DIXIE | H G i ^
or, a W rin k le s D o g !

D O UBLE

‘GRANDPRIZE•$125GROCERYGIFTCERTIFICATE 6 8 ® » | r n @ h
‘2ndPRIZE-$75GROCERYGIFTCERTIFICATE
B g lH B B .rUyg 2
‘3rdPRIZE■WRINKLESSTUFFEDDOG
M" ‘—
.......' ‘"

M AN U FAC TU R ER ’S
C O U P O N S EVERYDAY

PRICES GOOD
FEBRUARY 1 * 4, 1987

Mi wW4mMt Mm law mIn •! wwudeclxnn tMpwu m te
Nwlwdhii SO*.CaiifnufmwHi apte &gt;1.00wMkt nmmmi m |l

lUM M inW 1
oijuia. smou. onus, osaou 51 IKK
sgn a n u iw M u n u iu u
m m otmearn rua «

SMALL MEATY
(3WLBS. A DOWN)

Turkey Breast « $149

Spareribs
W-0 BRAND USDA CHOICE
BEEF BONELESS

IOP ROUND
OVEN ROASTS
U. S. CHOICE

ULTRA BLEND

|

CHOCKFULLO'NUTS
COFFEE
$ 1 8 9

London Broil. ■$267
ASSORTED

Ice C r e o n ^ w &gt;
includes

Limit 1 with S5.00 or
more purchase excl. clgs.

SPECIAL

8 ROLLS
B. POTATO
tM
B. SALADc.
COLE SLAW

SUPERBRAND LOW-FAT
(24-oz. SIZE S i-49)

AVAILABLE ONLY IN
STORES W ITH DELIS
Hsimmmiu
w

abu ts

IGMlNS (ACM

p&lt;» up plan, Supai Bonut
ai out cnacaoui counta&gt;»

LARGE
EGGS

SURGEON GENERAL’S WARNING: Smoking
Causes Lung C a n c e r, H e a rt D is e a s e ,
Emphysema. And May Complicate Pregnancy.

»0u 9« j Sup*. Bonut Sump Iw M |
» ' »ou tpaml P « » J6 Sup«&gt; Bonu»
Sump, on IK H cattif«ata

PLUS
DEPOSIT

TH R IFTY MAID
UNSWEETNED. REGULAR.
UNSW EETNED PINK or
SUGAR ADDED

ALL BRANDS &amp; SIZES
EXCEPT DORALS &amp; PRICE
BREAKER BRANDS

GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE

CARTON OF
CIGARETTES

K

ARROW
DETERGENT

SUPERBRAND
SPREAD

turkey

SMOKED
\ MEATS'

SEAFOOD KITCHEN

% FISH
* * STICKS

$ 9 3 9

�*

•

r

- r ~ r ~ * ~ r ~ *-

^ f 't

f

S P O R TS
Seminole's Late Surge Melts Patriots, 63-55
H erald Sports Editor
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S Remember the cartoon where
the Patriot fires volley after
volley from his musket until the
barrel melts? Lake Brantley's
barrel melted with four minutes
to play Friday night against
Seminole.
Seminole, which trailed by two
points with 3:40 to play, applied
a full-court pressure defense to
blank the Patriots the final three
minutes en route to a 63-55
Seminole Athletic Conference

*

y

victory before 811 fans at Lake
Brantley High School.
"W e hung In there pretty
tough most of the game." Lake
Brantley coach Steve Jucker
said. "W e just ran out of gas at
the end.”
Seminole remained unbeaten
In the SAC with a 4-0 mark and
Improved to 17-5 overall. Lake
Brantley dropped to 1*3 and 5-9.
S em in ole hosts Lake M ary
Tuesday while Lake Brantley
entertains Oviedo.
Coach Bill Klein, aware of
Brantley's depth problem, used

Basketball
nine players to run the Pats
ragged. "Y ou try to go full speed
the whole game but It gets to
you." Brantley's Brett Bell said.
"S e m in o le m ust have used
everybody. Every time I looked
up I saw a new face."
While the new faces applied
the pressure, three old faces —
Andre Whitney. Jerry "Stick"
Parker and Roderick Henderson
— supplied the clutch plays to

turn around the game In the last
four minutes.
Parker led all scorers with 20
points and grabbed six boards.
Whitney tossed In 17 points,
handed out nine assists and
came away with seven steals.
Henderson finished with 14
points. 11 rebounds, five assists
and three steals. The 6-4 senior
controlled the boards In the final
period with five caroms.
"Henderson Is at his best In
the last two minutes," Seminole
assistant John McNamara said.
Bell, a 6-1 swlngman, used an

array o f lean moves to finish
with 19 points. Leva chipped In
16.
Whitney, usetng two superb
head fakes, pushed the Tribe In
front with 4:33 to play with a
short baseline Jumper. Bell,
though, dropped In two free
throws and followed a Leva
Jumper with a rebound bucket to
push the Patriots on top, 54-52,
with 3:40 to play.
Then the musket drooped.
Parker tipped In a missed shot to
tie the game before Michael
"S p u d " Edwards and Parker

! Conner

forced a bad pass which Whitney
controlled. The S-l 1Vi guard
was prom ptly fouled by Bo
Pamplln who Joined 6-4 Barri
Shirley on the bench with his
fifth foul, further compounding
Brantley's size problem.
W hitney dropped both free
throws for a 56-54 lead with 3:17
left.
The 'Notes slapped on the
pressure again and Edwards
came away with the steal. He fed
Parker who dropped In the
S «e MELTS, Page 4B

Campbell
Soups Up
200th Win
For Phillips

Is 1 Up
For Cup
FREMANTLE. Australia (UPl)
— Dennis Conner's Stars &amp;
Stripes dominated Kookaburra
III In light and tricky breezes
today to win by a commanding 1
m inute. 41 seconds In the
o p e n in g ra c e o f th e 2 6 th
America’s Cup finals.
O vercom in g alleged
Kookaburra III superiority In
waning winds and flat seas.
Conner played the wind shifts to
surge straight ahead on the first
windward leg. and never trailed
to take the lead In the best-ofseven series.
"W e got the favored end of the
starting line, put the accelerator
down and had the boat going
nicely." Conner said. "T h e puffs
came to us first."
Conner is only three victories
away from avenging the 1983
loss that took the c o veted
yachting trophy away from the
United States after a 132-year
reign. He consistently held the
favored left side o f the 24.1-mile
course despite the shifty 8- to
10-knot winds Kookaburra III
had previously claimed as a
;* '
7
M*r»ld PH*to by Tommy VIikooI
stronghold.
The race Conner has spent
Lym an’s V in c e F lo re n ce is th e c e n te r of attention as he jerks d o w n a re b o u n d a ga inst Lake M a ry Frid a y.
three years and $15. million
preparing for was delayed 20
minutes by organizers because
of the swinging winds.
T w en ty-th ou san d ch eerin g
s p e c t a t o r s r e m a i n e d on
shoreline rocks for the parade of
ond shot was the one that scared with 7:01 left. Lyman's Vince
By I f ark B lythe
boats out to the Indian Ocean
m e."
Herald Sports W rite r
Florence, who finished the night
course, and the proximity o f the
Lym an, down 24-18, out- with 18 points, then hit a layup
Robert Thomas hit a pair of
massive spectator fleet stirred up
scored Lake Mary 15-2 In the off the Greyhound press-break
the seas rounding the buoys, free throws with three seconds
third quarter to take a 33-26 offense to up the lead back to
Lyman
Improved
to
10-5
and
l
e
f
t
t
o
l
i
f
t
t
h
e
L
y
m
a
n
hindering the speed o f both
lead. The two teams then picked seven with 6:45 to play. Florence
Greyhounds to their 16th con­ 3-1 In the SAC. Lake Mary fell to
yachts.
7-10and 2-2 In the conference.
up the level of play and went to then rebounded his own shot
"It was gross," Conner said, secutive homecourt victory,
"1
thought
we
would
tie
the
54-53.
over
the
Lake
Mary
Rams
battle In the final period.
and put It back In pushing the
"particularly bad for the boat
game when Thomas (Robert)
Lake M ary's T e rr y M iller lead to eight, 37-29. with 5:55 to
F rid a y n ig h t In S e m in o le
behind by In h ib itin g them
started things off with a short play.
Athletic Conference action be­ went to the line." Lyman coach
more."
See THOM AS. Page 4B
Tom Lawrence said. "T h e sec­ Jumper to cut the lead to 33-28
.
Lashing out at the Royal Perth fore 251 fans.
Yacht Club. Conner criticized
the starting line as "too short."
While Conner maintained 400
yards was the customary length
In N ew port. R.I. where the
competition was previously held,
race official Noel Robins said no
length was stipulated In the
regatta rules.
NEW YO RK (U P I) Ray
"W hat you see Is what you
Leonard has spent the past nine
get.” Robins said. "T h e line
months deciding how to fight
today Is the line we will be
Marvin Hagler — and explaining
setting."
said. " I ’m 30. I'm healthy. If I
why.
Even freshening gusts of 16 to
had never fought Hagler, it is
The
"h
o
w
"
Is
the
most
In­
18 knots on the fifth leg failed to
triguing question of Leonard's something that would always be
s p e e d u p K o o k a b u r r a III.
life’ the " w h y " Is the most on my mind even when I'm 60.
Australia’s only hope of keeping
Irritating. Neither has a simple And I believe It's the same for
the emblem of yachting suprem­
Marvin. It's ego. money and
answer.,
acy In Perth.
If both questions are un­ Sugar Ray Leonard.
Skipper Iain Murray and his
"Marvin is fighting me for the
answered after Leonard’s sched­
youthful crew were no match for
recognition.
I'm fighting him for
uled
1
2
-round
bout
against
the 44-year-old Conner. Conner
the
thrill
of
victory.
Hagler
April
6
at
Caesars
Palace
relied on the strategy that had
Money, ego and the will to be a
In Las Vegas. Nev.. then Leonard
powered him to a sweep over
three-time
champion are the
will
have
failed
In
his
quest
to
San Francisco’s U.S.A. In the
m
o
s
t
o
b
v
io
u s r e a s o n s for
defeat
the
middleweight
champ.
challenger semifinals and a 4-1
Then he. too. may be asking Leonard's one-fight comeback.
rom p o v e r N ew Z e a la n d ’ s
Whenever a fighter announces a
why Instead of how.
fiberglass 12-Meter In the finals.
comeback,
money is the first
If
he
Is
successful.
Leonard
"W e didn’ t even come close."
r
e
a
s
o
n
p
e
o p l e t h i n k of .
will
score
one
of
the
biggest
and
Murray said. "(There Is) a feeling
most gratifying victories In box­ Especially when the warrior Is
of disappointment among the
ing history. The why would be guaranteed $11 million, as Is
crewmen. What Dennis left us
Leonard.
answered
once and for all.
with was pretty much zilch. He
Leonard has not wasted his
For
now.
the
why
of
Leonard's
left us no options."
challenge is a mystery to all but ring earnings, which climbed
The San Diego Yacht Club
the former welterweight and above $44 million. According to
helmsman took the controlling
Junior
middleweight champion. his la w y e r. M ike T r a in e r .
position In the pre-start maneu­
Why would a man who has Leonard's money earns more In
vers to hit the line at full speed
earned millions of dollars, who interest than he spends in a
and su rge four boatlen gths
retired twice after having sur­ year. He lives In a $1-million.
ahead on the first shift.
gery. to repair retina damage, English Tudor home set on two
K o o k a b u r r a I II s t a r t in g
who last fought three years ago acres of land in Potomac. Md..
helmsman Peter Gllmour. 26.
and
once in five years, want to with his wife Juanita and sons
avoided his characteristic ag­
move
up in weight to fight one of Ray Jr.. 13. and Jarrel. 2. He
gressive start, and Murray. 28.
spends grudgingly.
boxing's great champions?
failed to Initiate the tacking
Sugar
Ray
Leonard
has
mapped
his
strategy
for
fight
with
The middleweight title is not
"Marvin
Hagler
Is
the
moun­
strategy that had outpaced five
much
movitatlon for Leonard
middleweight
champion
Marvelous
Marvin
Hagler
April
6.
tain
I
want
to
clim
b."
Leonard
other defender hopefuls. In­
cluding 1983 Cup victor Alan
B o n d 's A u s t r a l i a I I I an d
Australia IV.
SUPER BOWLING
PINS TO WIN
HIGH MARKS
Conner, who had concentrated
on maximizing his boat’s effi­
Seminole and Lake Mary
The Super Bowl may be
Seminole C o m m u n i t y
ciency In light air during the
both collected numerous
College coach J a c k
over but Super Bowling
1 1 -day break, collaborated with
pins Friday night which
P
a
n
t
e
l
i
a
s
g
i
v
e
s
his
c o n t i n u e s at B o w l
longtime tactician Tom Whldden
paid off In easy wrestling
baseball Raiders high
A m e ric a as the 600In executing a flawless race.
victories.
marks for 1987.
series march rolls on.
"I'm not a great believer In
.............................. S e e 2B
..............................S e e SB
.............................. S e e 3 B
See CONNER. Page 6B

Thomas' FTs Nip Rams, 54-53
B a s k e t b a ll

By Chris Plster
Herald Sports W riter
CASSELBERRY For the
most part. Dale Phillips was
satisfied with Oviedo's 10-5 start
this season but the one area
where he felt the Lions were
lacking was senior leadership.
F rid ay night, the 13-year
Oviedo basketball mentor had
good reason to be doubly de­
lighted. Not only did the Lions
get some senior leadership, but
th e y snapped a three-gam e
Sem inole Athletic Conference
losin g streak and presented
Phillips with his 200th career
victory.
Senior guard Terry Campbell’s
prime-time performance In the
second half paved the way for
the Lions' 55-38 victory over
Lake Howell's Sliver Hawks be­
fore 751 fans at the humid Lake
Howell High gym.
Oviedo now stands at 11-5
overall and 1-3 In the SAC while
Lake Howell dropped to 4-10
overall and 1-3 in the league.
"Campbell came In and gave
us the leadership we’ve been
looking for all season," Phillips
said. ’*1 hope to see a lot more of
that out o f him now that he
realizes what he's capable of."
Campbell scored seven points
In a row In a span that covered
the late third and early fourth
quarters as Oviedo opened up a
big lead and held o ff Lake
H o w ell's fourth-quarter run.
C a m p b e ll finished w ith 12
points and three assists to lead a
balanced Oviedo attack. Senior
forward Chris Griffith turned In
one of his best performances of
the year with 10 points, senior
forward Robb Hughes added
nine and Junior guards Garth
See P H IL L IP S . Page 4B

Why? Sugar Ray Maintains Thrill
O f Victory Too Sweet To Ignore
B o x in g

IN S ID E
SP O R TS

either. When he announced May
1 that he wanted to challenge
H agler, Leonard proposed a
non-title bout. He never speaks
o f winning the middleweight
title, only of beating Hagler.
That leaves ego. Many who
know Leonard believe this Is Ills
true motivation, and one that
will help him win the fight.
"R a y 's got too much ego
going." said Emmanuel Stew­
ard. whose Kronk Boxing Club
stable Includes Thomas Hearns,
who lost to both Leonard and
Hagler. "H e hasn't been there in
a while. He’s got enough ego and
enough talent to go out and fight
12 rounds and win." .
Steward remembers a party
for one of his fighters. Milton
McCrory. after a 1985 victory
over Carlos Trujillo In Monte
Carlo. Leonard was at the party,
and seemed out of place, ac­
cording to Steward.
"Milton was the big man."
Steward said. "Ray was Just
sitting there and It was eating
him up. Another time he was at
a party for Tommy, who Ray
beat. Ray was Just standing in
the comer, he wasn’t a star."
"You have to know the indi­
vidual.” said trainer Lou Duva,
whose stable includes five 1984
See T H R IL L , Page 6B

CAUTION DRIVE
Caution — not speed — is
th e b y w o r d as t he
Daytona 24 gears up
Speedweeks racing at
the Daytona Speedway.
.............................. S e e 6B

�r
i

lt- S M t o r * H w «M , UnHr4. PI.

U tn U f, Fe&gt;, 1,HOT

Rams Wallop Lyman
B yCfcrisM Pter
■•raid Sports W rite r
Lake Mary Rams won the first six
matches Friday night and never looked
back en route to a 57*21 victory over
Lym an's Greyhounds In prep wrestl­
ing action at Lake Mary High.
The Rams ran their dual meet record
to 8*3 while Lyman slipped to 1-9.
Lake Mary has a big dual match
Wednesday at home against thirdranked (Class 4A) Orlando Colonial.
“ W e match up with them (Colonial)
real w ell." Lake Mary coach Doug
Peters said. “ I think we can beat them
down low. It will be If we can stay ofT
our back at the upper weights.”
In Friday's meet. Robert Donlero
started the Lake Mary streak In the
low er weights with a 3:28 pin o f Mesa
Y a m a m o tto at 101 pounds. J e ff
Johnson followed with a pin In 2:50 of
Robin Bernardo at 108, Scott Flores

stuck Kevin Garrett In 2:57 at 115 and
Wayne Clayton pinned John Cobb In
3:12 at 122. Brad Winder made It five
In a row with a 6-4 decision over Dan
Chlodo and Rob Richards kept his
unbeaten record Intact with a pin of
Tom Beckman at 135.
“ (Jeff) Johnson wrestled the same
kid at the conference meet and only
won by a point," Peters said. "H e
pinned him in the second period this
time with a bar-arm to tilt. That's his
trademark."
Lyman got Its first win of the night
when Henry G om ez edged Shane
Stanley. 7*6. at 141 pounds. Carl
Cannaday gave the ‘ Hounds another
win he came up with a pin at 148.
Lake Mary's Bill Richards then ran
his season record to 164), 11 by pin, as
he stuck Clay Coopertnder In just
under two minutes at 158. Tad Roman
fo llo w e d w ith a p in o f J a s o n

—

'Notes Maul Gateway

Wrestling
McEIhlnny at 170 and Brad Goeb
stuck David Callgiuii at 188.
Lyman’s heavyweight duo of Mike
Whitaker and Jlmbo Smith continued
to roll as Whitaker pinned Scott Keller
In 21 seconds at 224 pounds and
Smith stuck Todd Wright In 3:48 at
heavyweight.
LAKE MARY 57, LYMAN 31
101 — Donlero (L M ) p. Yamamofto, 3:71; 1M —
Johnson (L M ) p. Bernardo, 3:30; IIS — Floras (L M )
p. Garrett. 3:17; 11] - Clayton (L M ) p. Cobb. 3:13;
I N - Winder (L M ) d. Chlodo. 4-4; 13S - R. Richards
p. Beckman, 2:3V; 141 — Henry Gomel ( L ) d.
Stanley, 74; 14S — Cannady ( L ) p. Louvom. 3:44; IM
- B. Richards (L M ) p. Cooperlnder, 1:3V; ITS Roman (L M ) p. McEIhlnny. 4 :]4 ; I M - Goeb (L M )
p. Cellglurl, 3:1*; HO - Whitaker p. Keller, :21;
HWT - Smith ( L ) p Wright. 3:40; UNL - Jackson
won by forfeit. J V scare — Lake M a ry 43, Lym an 30.
Records — Lake M a ry I ). Lym an 1-9.

M AIOLINI TURNS LOOSE JV
Seminole won all but two matches
Friday night and ran its dual meet
record to 8-3 with a 75-8 rout of
Kissimmee Gateway at Seminole High.
The only matches Seminole did not
win Included a forfeit at 136 pounds
and a tie at unlimited.
"W e didn't wrestle Sheralton (Mays).
Randy (Bryant) or the Turners (Troy
and Tracy}." Seminole coach Glenn
Malollnl said. "It was our young kids
against their young kids. And we
looked a little stronger than they did."
Seminole started the match with
three consecutive pins as Titus Man­
ning stuck Pete Lawson In 2:20 at 102
pounds. Brad Dyess followed with a
3:35 pin of Brian Brooks at 108 and
Thomas Brindle stuck Hans Wagner In
l:1 9 a t 116.
Also coming up with pins for the
Tribe Included Scott Gipe (159). Les

Thomas (171). Richard Mobley (189)
and Keith Denton (224). The 'Noles got
technical pins from Larry Nathan at:
130. Don Sellers at 136 and Troy
Rollins at 149. •
SEM IN OLE 7 I.O A TE W A Y 4

IM -

Manning (SI p. Laweon, 3:30; IM - Dyes*
(SI p. Brook*, 3:33; 11* - Brlndlt (S ) p. Wignar,
1:1*; 113 — Sudsur 1 0 ) won t»V N r W t ; 131 — L.
Nathan (S ) tp. Drako, » 5 ; 114 - Sailor* (SJ tp.
Wood*. M 5: 141 - K. Nathan (SI p. Moyar. 1:14; 14*
— Rolllnt (S ) tp. W la sn w e , 17-*; II* — Glp* (S ) p.
Bord, 1:44; 171 - Thoma* (S ) p. Foddli. ;34; IS* Mobloy (S ) p. Wood*, 1:31; 3 3 4 - 0*nton IS ) p. Colo,
1: 44; H W T — Bennett (5 ) won by tortolt; U N L Dorrlek Butlor (S ) tlod Dumar*. 3-3. Racardt Seminole I J . Gataway 1-1.

WTMORE-OV1EDO CANCELLED
Friday's scheduled match between
Wymore Career Education Center and
Oviedo was cancelled. Oviedo coach
John Horn said Wymore called off the
match because It had too few wrestlers
to make the match worth wrestling.

Tribe
Frosh
Go 12-0

Lyman's Off Night
Still Blanks Tribe;
Brantley Wins SAC
B y Chris Fitter
■ •r a id Sports W riter
Even a team that has lost only
twice In the past three years Is
bound to have an ofT night. The early In the second half when
difference between an ofT night Kerry Musante scored on an
for Lyman's Lady Greyhounds assist from Karen Abemethy.
and most other teams, though. Is Randl Huddleston closed out the
a whole different story.
scoring for Lyman with her 10th
Despite sluggish play for a goal of the season an an assist
good part of the game Friday from Jennifer McAvoy.
night, the talented Lyman squad
Despite Its inability to score.
still came away with a 4-0 Reno said Seminole received
Sem inole Athletic Conference outstanding efTorts from defend­
victory over Seminole at Lyman ers Cindy Benge, Vicky Pakovlc.
High.
Carol Lykens and Shannon
Lyman, ranked second In the Sundvall and offensive players
state, now stands at 15-1-5 Tracey Fam ily, Sherri Rumler.
overall and finished second In J e n n if e r L ln d a m o o d a n d
the SAC to Lake Brantley at Rachelle Denmark. Goalkeeper
5-0-5. Seminole dropped to 9-9-2 Kim Walsh had 18 saves for the
overall and 1-7-2 In the confer­ game.
ence.
LAKE MART TIPS H O W ELL
"U p until tonight we've really
Lake Mary built up a 3-1 lead
been p layin g w e ll." Lym an early In the second half, then
coach Laura Dry den said. "W e
retied on Its "Ditch Diggers"
Just had an off night."
defense the rest of the way In a
Seminole outshot the Lady 3-1 SAC v ic to ry o v e r Lake
Greyhounds, 18-11. but could Howell's Lady Silver Hawks at
n o t fin is h a n y o f Its o p ­ Lake Mary High.
portunities. Lyman goalkeeper
Lake Mary, ranked ninth In
Sarah Cobb came up with seven the state, now stands at 15-4-3
suves in recording her 1 1 th overall and finished at 6-2-3 In
shutout o f the season. *
the conference. Lake Howell
"W e had outstanding play concluded the regular season at
from everyon e but we Just 7-9-3 overall and 3-5*1 In the
couldn't put the ball In the SAC.
g o a l." Sem inole coach Suzy
Lake Mary took a 1-0 lead on
Reno said.
Kelley Broen's 24th goal of the
Lyman took a 1-0 lead 12:45 season with Donna Rohr getting
Into the game when Maye Belle the assist. Broen then got the
Bryant scored on a breakaway assist on a goal by Rohr for a 2-0
for her 2 1 st goal of the season. lead. Lake Howell pulled wlthlng
Dana Boyesen's goal on an assist 2-1 with four minutes left In the
from Kim Mitchell gave Lyman a half when Dawn Towle scored on
2-0 halftime lead.
Nicole Compton's assist.
Lyman upped Its lead to 3-0
The Lady Rams got an Insur­

Sem inole H igh 's freshman
basketball wrapped up a perfect
'season Friday night by pulling
away from Lake Brantley in the
final two minutes for a 75-68
victory at Lake Brantley High
School. The 'Notes finished 12-0.
Bernard Eady tossed In a
career-high 19 points to pace
coach Bill Zeiss' Seminoles.
Robert Moore also totaled 19
points. "C ool Bobby" Cofleld
added 11 points while Brandon
Cash and Jessie Nightengale had
10 points each.

Soccer

Joe Kushner led the Pats with
17 points while Tony Cun­
ningham tossed In 16 and Clint
J o h n s o n had 11. J e r r e y
Thurston chipped In eight before
fouling out.

HaraM m a la by Tom m y Vlncant

Seminole's Heather Brown, left, uses her
head to deflect ball away from Lyman's
ance goal early In the second
half when Brooke Taylor scored
on an assist by Lesll liobek.
The Lady Rams then turned to
the “ Ditch Diggers." the name
coach Bill Elssele has given his
defense, to shut Lake Howell
down the rest of the way. The
"Ditch Diggers" Include Amy
Alexander, Vicky Warner. Jolie
Hoffman. Michelle Padilla, Lisa
Fraher and goalkeeper Tammy
Scott.
P A T S POUND 54 SHOTS
Lake Brantley pounded 54
shots on goal Friday night and
m an aged to squ eeze three

Kerry Musante. Lyman won despite a
sluggish performance, 4-0, Friday.

through the alr-tlght Oviedo de­
fense as the Lady P a ttlo ls
cllnced the SAC title with a 3-1
victory over the Lady Lions at
Oviedo High.
Lake Brantley, ranked third In
the state, concluded the regular
season with a sparkling 22-1-2
overall record and 7-0-2 In the
SAC. Oviedo finished the regular
season at 4-11-4 overall and
0-7-3 In the conference.
"Oviedo played as many as 11
p e o p le on d e fe n s e ,” L ak e
Brantley coach Wolfgang Halblg
said. "W e had a real hard time

scoring but kept after them and
finally broke through."
Brantley took a 1-0 lead In the
first half when Michelle Schroth
scored on an assist from Julie
DclKusso but Oviedo tied It 12
m inutes before halftim e on
Cathy Bergman's 14th goal of
the season.
The Lady Patriots broke the tic
on DelRusso's 28th goal of the
season off an assist by Cara
Marlen. Marten later added an
Insurance goal, her 19th of the
year, on an assist from Reenle
Dcaver.

TOP 100 COLLEGE FOOTBALL PROSPECTS
Defensive ends (7)
John Johnson, LaGrange, G a „ 54, 315, 4 4 (Alabama. Georgia,
Auburn, Clemson).
Frank Jacobs, New Castle, K y „ 4-5, 234. 4.7 (Kentucky, U C LA ,
Boston College, Notre Dame).
Allred Williams, Houston, 4 4, 230, 4.4 (Oklahoma, Oklahoma Slata,
Georgia, Colorado, Illinois).
Carlas Merino, Detroll. 4-4, 23J. 4.7 (Michigan, Georgia, USC, Ohio
State).
Kandrlck Elly, Roxboro, N .C., 4-3,340.4.7 (Undetermined).
Kraig Hackbarth. Fond du Lac, W ise.,4-4,125.4.7 (Wisconsin).
Stave Webb. Holt. Ala.. 4 4. 235. 4 1 (U C L A . Notra D am t.
Alabam a).

Cal lag# Football Racruttlng
Unltad P m * Intarnational
Th a Top 100 college football prospect* In Ihe United Slat**,
arranged by poiltlon, a* salaried tor United Pr*»* International by
Ihe National High School Football Racrulllng Sarvlca In Houston.
(L iftin g hometown, height, weight, 40-yard dash timing and collaga
poulbllltle*)
Quarterback* 0 1 }
M lckoy Joseph, M arrero, La., 3-10, 17S, 4.S (Oklahoma. Nolra
Dam *, LS U ).
Darnell Dickerson, Detroit, 4-4, IfO, 4.4 (Georgia, Nebraska,
Pittsburgh, M ichigan).
Craig Erickson, W ait Palm Baach, Fla., 4-2, IfO, 4.f (Miami,
Florida, Florida Slate, Pittsburgh).
E rie Bu*h,Quincy, III.,4-3, i l l , 4.4(Illinois. Michigan, lowal.
Deem* M ay. Laxington. N.C., 4-5. 2IS. 4.1 (Georgia, Michigan.
U C L A , North Carolina).
Jason Palumbl*. Laka Oswego. Ora., 4-3. 200. 4.f (oral commit­
m ent to Stanford).
Kenny Ford, Port Arthur, Texas, 40, 171. 4.S (Notre Damt,
Olahom a, Nebraska, Oklahoma Slata, Taxes A 4 M ).
M att Vogler, Tallahassee, Fla., 4-4, 1ft, 4.1 (oral commitment lo
A uburn)
M att Blundln. Folsom. Pa.. 4 4. I l l , 4.1 (Pittsburgh. Pann State,
Notre Dam e).
Kant Graham , Wheaton, III., 4S. 230, 4.7 (Illinois. Michigan, Iowa,
Boston Collage).
An dy Kelly. Chattanooga, Tann., 4-3, IfJ, 4.7 (oral commitment to
Tennessee I.
R icky Vestal. Houston, 4 4, 20J, 4.7 (Baylor, Mississippi Stale,
Stanford, Iowa).
Halfbacks ( I D
T o m m y Bookar, Vista. Calif., 4-1, tf l. 4 5 (U SC , N ebm ka .
Oklahom a, Auburn).
Le roy Thompson, Knoxville, Tann., 5-11, 200, 4.4 (Tennessee,
Georgia. Arkansas, U C L A ).
Darren Lewis, Dallas, 5-10, If5 .4.5 (Texas A A M , Baylor).
Carlos Snow, Cincinnati, Ohio, 51. IfO, 4.4 (Ohio Stala. Michigan,
Nebraska, Alabama, Georgia).
Laotls Flowers, Omaha, Nab., 44), IfO, 4.5 (Oklahoma. Texas AAM,
Arkansas State, Nabratka).
M ika Gaddis, M cAlister, Okie., 4-3, IfS, 4.5 (Oklahoma. Oklahoma
State, Arkansas).
Chris Parkar, Jacksonville, Fla.. 5 1 ,1ft, 4.5 (Florida Stala).
B a rry Foster, Duncanville. Texas. 511, 205, 4.5 (Arkansas.
Oklahom a, Arliona Slat*. USC I.
Leroy Smith, Atco, N .J ., 51. 200, 4.4 (Arliona Slot*. Maryland,
Penn State, Iowa).
Scott Lockwo»1, Boulder, Colo., 40, lfJ, 4.4 (USC. Georgia, Notre
Dom e, Arliona State, Colorado).
Ricky Watters, Harrisburg. Pa.. 4 2, 1?5, 4.5 (Notre Dam*. Pann
Stala).
Fullbacks (7)
Randy Simmons. McKinney, Texas, 52,315.4.5 (Oklahoma, Texas.
Baylor. Arkansas, Texas A A M ).
Anthony Ray, Wharton, Texas, 52,215,4.4 (Baylor, U C L A , Arliona
Stata, USC. Texas A A M . Iowa).
Georga Hemingway, Colton, Calif.. 52. 231. 4.4 (Nebraska.
Colorado. Georgia).
Paul Moore, M iam i, 52.230, 4.5 (M iam i. Florida Slate).
To n y Brooks. Tulsa. Okla., 51, 315. 4.5 (Notre Dame, Oklahoma.
U C L A . Georgia).
Samuel Gath, Hendersonville, N.C ., 50, 220. 4.4 (Penn State,
Georgia. North Carolina).
E m m lft Smith, Pensacola, F la .,5 f , If* .4.4 (Auburn. F lo rid .).
W ide receiver* ( f )
Antnony Morgan, Cleveland. 4 1, IM . 4.4 (Tennessee. Nebraska.
M ichigan. Ohio State I.
Johnny Walker. San Antonio. 4 0. 175. 4 5 (Taxes Texas AAM , LSU.
A rlio n a Stata).
T rip p Walborne, Greensboro. N.C., 51, 144, 4.5 (U C L A , Alabama,
Georgia, Georgia Tech, North Carolina Stata).
Keith Cash. San Antonio, 55. 200. 4.4 (Texas. Texas A A M . Arliona
State, Purdue).
Patrick Row*. San Diego, Calif., 4 1, 140, 4.4 (USC. Arliona Stele,
Io w a ).

Nat* Tu rne r. Chicago. 4 2.205.4.5 (M iam i. Illinois).
Rob Tu rne r. IndlanapolK. 4 0.115, 4.5 ( Undetermined).
Stefan Weir, Melbourne Fla., 53,175,4.5 (Auburn.M lam l).
Daxtar Austin, Sarasota, Fla., 5-10, It ], 4.4 (oral commitment t»
Florida).

Tight ends (3)
Jeff Ellis, Loulsvlle, K y „ 4 4, 224, 4 4 (U C LA . Alabama, Kentucky,
Notre Dam e).
Coray Bookar. Old Tappan, N .J., 4 4. 120. 4.4 (Stanford. UCLA,
Notre Dam e).
Von Reeves. Knoxville. Tann., 4 4, 230. 4.7 (oral commitment lo
Tennessee).
Canters(1)
Brad Collins. Washington, D C.. 4 4. 244. 4 * (Virginia, Alabama,
Pann Slat*. Stanford).
Dewayn* Spann. LaMarqua, Taxes. 4-4. 270, 5.1 (Arkansas. Iowa.
Oklahoma. Texas. Taxes A A M ).

Otlenslve guards (4)
Cla«da Janas, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., 54. 210, 5.1 (Miami,
Michigan State, Florida Stata).
Brad Culpepper, Tallahassee. Fla ., 53.150, 4.4 (Alabama, Florida,
Auburn).
Dean Dlngmen, East Troy, Wise., 51. 270. 4.1 (Wisconsin, Iowa,
Nebraska).
Greg Lckln, Houston. 44. 240, 5.1 (oral commitment lo Taxes
A A M ).
Mike M orris, M iam i Baach, Fla., 53.174,5.1 (M iam i, Michigan).
Lamonta Tallis. Atlanta, 4 3, 275. 5.1 (Georgia. Alabama, UCLA,
Notre Dam e).

Henslve tackles (14)
Greg Skrepenak. Wilkes Barra. Pa.. 4 f . 331. 5.2 (Penn State.
Michigan, Nolra D a m t).
Scott Ball, Brandon, Fla ., 54, 240, 5.1 (Florida, Florida Stata.
M iam i).
Norman Bellntlne. Hailawood. M o . 4 4.242,5 0 (Undetermined).
James Rae, Anaheim. C a lif. 4 5. 255. 5.1 (USC. UCLA. Arliona
Stata. Colorado).
Paul Slavar, Downlngton. Pa . 4 4. 240, 4.f (Penn Slate, Maryland.
Ohio State).
Kelvin Hankins, Camden. N .J.,4 4.270.5 0 (Pittsburgh. Clemson).
Scott Adoll. Ashvlll*. N .C .. 4 4. 240. 5.1 (Georgia, North Caroline
Stata. South Carolina, North Carolina).
Joey Allen, Chicago. 55, 270. 5.3 (Nolra O am t, Michigan, Duka,
Illinois, Iowa).
Brian Boerboom. Colorado Springs. Colo.. 57. 245. 3.0 (Nebraska.
Notre Dame. Arliona State. Colorado)
Brian Kelly, Torrence. C a ll!, 5 5, 240. 5.1 (U SC UCLA. Arliona
Stale, Stanford. Colorado, Washington).
John Ray. Charleston, W .Va., 4 f , 315- 5 1 (Alabama, West
Virginia, Pittsburgh).
Scott Spaulding. E l Toro, Calif., 5 5 . 240. S.t (U SC, UCLA. Stanford.
Arliona State, Nebraska).
Brian Brauninger, Arlington. Texas. 4 4. 215. 5 0 (or4l commitment
to Oklahoma).
Matt M cCall, Lutkln. Taxes. 4 4 .303.5.3 (Texas. Georgia. Baylor).

Oafansiva tackles ( f )
M ark Spindlar, ■Scranton, Pa.. 53, 370. 4.f (Penn State. Notre
Dame, U C L A ).
Stacy Dillard. Clarksville, Texas, 57, 245. 4.4 (Oklahoma, Taxes.
Baylor. T C U ).
David Rockar, Atlanta, 54. 255, 4.4 (Auburn. Notra Dame,
Tennessee, Alabam a).
Rob Fhenlx, Rosemount, M inn, 4 4. 270, 4.4 (T C U . Notre Dame,
Michigan, Iowa).
Mike Brendan, P erry, Fla., 53, } u , 4 f (Florida, Florida Stala).
Virgil Cola, Conyers. Ge., 4-7, 252. 5-0 (oral commitment to
Georgia).
Pater Rausch, Capo Coral, Fla., 51m 245, 4.f (Nolra Oam t,
Georgia, U C LA , Alabam a).
Ryan Shea, Sacramento, Calif., 4-5. 235, 4.1 (Stanford, U C LA ,
California. Noire D am a).
Jaff Hull. Deer Park, Texas, 4 5. 271, 4.f (oral commitment lo
Texas A A M ).
Nose tackles 0 )
Georg* Williams. Wltlsboro. N .J., 53. 240. 50 (Notra Dame.
Tennessee. Penn State).
Toren Robinson. McComb. Miss.. 52. 250. 4.f (Alabama. LSU.
Mississippi Stata. U C L A ).
Slave Scoggins, Apopka, F la .,4-2,355,5.4 (Florida).
Outside linebackers (5)
Chris Drossos. Carm el, Ind ,5 2.214.4 4 (Undeterm ined).
Andre Jones. Hyattsvllle, M d „ 5 4 , 233. 4.7 (Penn Stale, Notre
Dam*. M aryland).
Slav* Ramer, Monro* County, Ala., 4-3, 220. 4.4 (oral commitment
to Ala bam a).
Junior Saau, Oceanside, Calif., 5 4 ,3 )0 .4 4 (U S C , Arliona Slate).
Sean Howard. Crespl. Calif., 5 5. 225. 4.7 (U C L A . Oklahoma,
Washington. U S C ).
Middle linebackers (3)
John Derby. Oeonomowoc. Wise., 4-4,220. 4 4 (Wisconsin. Michigan
Slate, Nebraska).
M ark D'Onofrlo. North Bergen, N .J., 4-2 , 240. 4 4 (Penn State,
Notre Dam e).
Chris Zorich, Chicago, 4-t, 230, &lt;4.7 (Illinois. Notre Dam*. Michigan,
M ia m i).
Dave Dlebolt, M ay (laid. Ohio. 4-4,235.4.4 (Ohio Stale. U C L A ).
Keith Traylor. M alvern. Ark., 4-4.220,4.7 (Oklahoma. Arkansas).
Cornerbacks (3)
Jerem y Lincoln. Toledo. Ohio. 4 0. 144. 4.4 (M iam i. Michigan Slate,
Ohio State).
Randal H ill,M ia m i,5-11,170,4.4 (Florida Slate, M iam i).
Todd Lyght. Flint. M ich., 4 2. 177, 4 5 (Michigan. Michigan State.
Notre Dame, Arliona Statal.
Satatias (4)
Matt Oarby, Virginia B«ach. Va . 4-2. IfO, 4.5 (Georgia, Tennessee,
U C L A , North Carolina).
Louis Riddick, Perkasle, Pa.. 4-3, 210, 4.5 (Penn Stale, Pittsburgh,
Notre Dame, U C L A ).
Kelvin Fisher Am bridge. Pa., 5 1 , 145. 4 5 (Pittsburgh. Arliona
Stata, Ohio Slate, Clemson, Tennessee).
Eugene Burkhalter, Long Beach. Calif., 4 1. 140, 4 4 (U n ­
determined).

S E M IN O L E (71) - Cash 10. Frltton 3.
Moor* If, Nightengale 10, Cotleld 11, Eedy If.
W right 4, Bobb0, Total*: 13 1437 71.
L A K E B R A N T L E Y (**) Simmon* 3,
Kushnor 17, Johnson 11, Gabrovic 2, Harper
4. Cunningham 1*. Byerts 4, Thurifon I,
Total*: 2*122741.
Halftlma — Samlnol* 2*. Lake Brantlay 3*.
Foul* — Samlnol* 33. taka Brantlay 23.
Fouled oul Cotlald. ByarH, Thur*ton.
Technical — none.

In Junior varsity action Friday.
L a k e B r a n tle y o u tg u n n e d
Seminole. 60-54.
Danny Hartley had 14 points
and eight rebounds for the 3-12
Tribe. Brantley improved to
2-10.
S E M IN O L E J V (14) - Hardy f. Hendrick*
4. Allen 5, Burk* 4. Brinson ID, Hagan 1,
Robert*4. Hartley 14. Total*: 31 13-17 54.
L A K E B R A N T L E Y JV ( U ) - Whit* II,
Hlnshaw 3, William* II, Bucchui 12, Clark 14,
B a rn a rd0. DantilerO. Total*: 2020-3440.
Halftlma — Laka Brantlay 24, Samlnola 23.
Foul* — Seminole 21, Lake Brantley If.
Fouled oul — Roberts, Hendrick*, Bucchui.
Technical — Lake Brantley (kicking ball).

G i r l f r i e n d W a its
F o r G o o d e n P la n e
W ith L o a d e d G u n
NEW YORK (UPI) New York Mels
pitcher Dwight Gooden docs not know why
his former fiancee waited for his plane at
LaGuardla Airport with a loaded gun In her
purse, a team spokesman said.
Carlene Pearson. 21, was arrested by Port
Authority police Friday morning at the Delta
Air Lines terminal when a routine X-ray at a
security checkpoint revealed the pistol In
her handbag, said agency spokesman
Armando Arrastia.
Pearson was waiting for Gooden, who was
flying In from his home In Tampa, said Mcts
spokesman Jay Horwllz. The cuuple. who
broke up after the Meta’ 1986 World Series
victory, recently reconciled by telephone, he
said.
"Dwight told me he had no Idea why she
had the gun. where she had gotten It or
what she was doing with' it," Horwltz said.
"He was as suprlscd as anyone."
Gooden landed at LaGuardia shortly after
she was arrested, he said.
Pearson was taken to a police building at
the airport after being arrested, he said. A
check on the gun. a ,38-calIber derringer,
showed it was reported stolen In Tampa In
1982, he said.
Pearson was arraigned Friday night In
Queens Criminal Court on charges of
possession of stolen property and criminal
possession of a gun, said a spokesman for
the district attorney’s office.
She was released on ball and ordered to
appear In court Feb. 20. the spokesman
said.
Gooden. 22. the 1985 National League Cy
Young Award winner, and Pearson canceled
their wedding plans last November after he
admitted he had an 8-month-old son by
another woman.
Pearson, who said she lived with Gooden
for three years, said she walked out on him
while he was celebrating the Mels' 1986
World Series victory.
But Horwltz said the couple "reconciled
over the last few days and she was going to
help him buy furniture for an apartment."
Last week, a Tampa Judge placed Gooden
on three years' probation and ordered him
to perform 160 hours of community service
on his no contest plea to charges stemming
from a brawl with policemen.

�ft

Rudy
Seiler

Baseball Greats
To Play Mayfair
For Fund-Raiser

J

I

W ith the a d v e n t o f n ice
weather, the old course Is really
getting busy these days. A tee
time reservation Is definitely
r e c o m m e n d e d , e v e n on
weekdays. Call 322-2531.
The next order of business at
the club Is on Feb. 20, when
Mayfair will host the Baseball
Homecoming GolfToumament.
T h e Baseball Hom ecom ing
G olf Tournament will be held on
Friday, Feb. 20. C onfirm ed
participants at this time include
Hail of Famers Robin Roberts,
W a rre n S p a h n . H arm on
Killebrew, Brooks Robinson as
w e ll as Clem L a b ln e, C arl
Ersklne, Danny Ozark. Bob
Allison. John McNamara and
Dale Long.
Each golf flvesome will Include
a baseball old-timer. In addition
to golf, a light breakfast, lunch,
cocktails, buffet dinner and en­
tertainment will be supplied.
There will also be a memorabilia
auction.
You will have all day to "hob
nob" with the old-time greats.
You can enjoy this day’s events
for $ 185 per person.
Corporate sponsorships are
also available In these areas:
• Tee and green markers at
$100 each
• The corporate naming o f the
t o u r n a m e n t :
T h e
{ ----------------------- 1 B a s e b a ll
Homecoming Golf Tournament
- $ 1,000
• Advertising In the program:
for $500, you will receive two
places In the gold tournament
and an ad In the program.
• Cart sponsorship — $600
• Contributions to a player’s
expenses — minimum of $50
All proceeds from this event
will be donated to the Major
League Baseball Players Alumni
Association. Baseball Legends
For Kids and the Lake Mary
High School Athletic Booster
Club which is raising money for
lights for its baseball stadium.
A n n e S t r a u s s . B a s e b a ll
Homecoming Golf Tournament
spokesperson, said to make this
project work properly, we need
help from volunteers and cor­
porations willing to invest in this
county-wide promotion.
For more information, contact
Strauss at 260-2510.

' v

Hurls High Marks At '87
If preseason potential Is any
Indication o f what is follow In
the season, the Seminole Com­
munity College baseball team is
in for a banner season.
Last year, the Raiders were
one run away from winning the
Mid-Florida Conference. As it
turned out Seminole finished
second In the conference and
sang the familiar refrain, "W alt
until next year."
Well next year Is here and
coach Jack Pantelias' club is
anxious to go one step further
than last season. "T h e kids have
really been working their tails
ofT," Pantelias said Thursday.
‘ T m excited about this team.
They have a lot o f potential, but
they have to turn that potential
into something.”
SCC. 30-19 a year ago. opened
the seas- n Friday night In Miami
against Miami Dade New World
Center. The two clubs will play
again Saturday afternoon. The
Raiders home opener will be
Tuesday against Florida College
at 3 p.m.
“ W e ’ ve p la y e d a c o u p le
practice games and have looked
pretty good ," Pantelias said.
’ T m anxious to see how the kids
will react In a real game."

Pantelias. who Is beginning his
14ih year o f coaching at SCC.
said th at th is team has a
tremendous attitude. "T h e s e
kids have realty got their heads
on stra igh t." Pantelias said.
" T h e y a r e e x t r e m e ly e n ­
thusiastic and all like each other.
Their work ethics are all very
good."
starters, leaving many shoes to
fill. "This will be a fairly young
team, but I wouldn't say that
they are inexperienced.'* Pan­
telias said. "These guys have all
played the game and it is their
turn to play."
The only returning starters are
Joe Sims and Kevin Hill. Sims
had a great year last season as
the sophomore hit .391. Leftfie ld e r D a n n y M oo re, w h o
missed half of least season with
Injuries, Is healthy and will be
coun ted on fo r lea d ersh ip .
Longwood's Hill, who hit .341
least season, will also be counted
on for his bat. Hill played his
prep ball at Lake Mary High.
"W e lost quite a few good
baseball players." Pantelias said.
"But I am confident that these
guys can do the Job. In fact, they
are more balanced that last
year’s team.”
The Raiders' biggest loss was
Jeff Morgan, who established

NFL Wait? Just 224
Days After Pro Bowl

Baaeball
several SCC hitting records last
year. Pantelias said he did not
make grades and dropped out of
school.
The Raiders will open with
sophomore Chris Gage (Norwich,
Ct.) at first base, sophomore Ted
Papousek (Naperville. 111.) at sec­
ond. Hill at third and sophomore
Charles Brookes (Mount Dora) at
shortstop.
The outfield will consist of
sophomore Ed Zahn (Lisle, 111.),
Moore and Sims. Freshman JefT
Fortune (Sunrise) is the starting
catcher.
SCC’s starting pitching rota­
tion is made up of sophomore
Steve Carter (Newcomb. N.Y.).
s o p h o m o re . T o n y F e r r e b e e
(Clinton, Oh.) freshman Brian
McGinnis (Appleton, Wise.) and
JefT Rood (DeLand). McGinnis
w ill pitch T u e s d a y ’ s hom e
opener.
"T h e y all throw s trik e s ."
Pantelias said of his starting
staff. "That's all 1 really ask for.
They also can throw it pretty
hard."
N ew com ers Include Frank
Torres, a second-team all-state
outfielder last year for Oviedo.

B ER T B E LL
TROPHY:
BOOXIE o r T HE

R U E B E N

along with Eustla’ Jeff Watson
a n d M o u n t D o r a 's D a v e
W e s tg a te w h o p itc h e d for
Central Florida's Big League
All-Stars.
Pantelias. whose career record
at SCC Is 392-245. said that his
team has been pounding the ball
in practice. "W e were a very
good hitting team last season.”
P a n te lia s said. " S o far In
practice, we have been tearing
the cover off of the ball."
Pantelias said that his club
does have the mental edge. "W e
didn't have a kid last semester
with a grade point average that
was less than 2.5," Pantelias
said. " I figure that if a kid can’t
handle It in the classroom, he
sure as heck can’t handle it on
the field."
Practice for the Raiders has
not been easy and Pantelias said
he takes the credit for that. " I f
they don’t want to work, I don’t
want them on my team ," Pan­
telias said. "A n y ball player can
still Improve. We are a team that
will have to hustle In order to
w in ."
One disadvantage that SCC
has Is its lack of scholarships.
SCC receives only 18 tuition
scholarships. Pantelias said that
proper attitudes can overcome
the lack o f scholarships. "W e

V IT A L STATISTICS:

5*ir, 201 POUNDS
23 VEABS OLD
3RD ROUND DRAFTEE
1.353 YARDS R u S H i n O
4.7-YARD AVERAGE
1.449 TOTAL YAQDS

CHICAGO (UPI) - After Sun­
day, It will be only 224 days
until the NFL returns to the"
airwaves.
But one o f the major questions
is whether Sunday's telecast by
ABC of the annual NFC-AFC Pro
Bowl game will be the last pro
football telecast by the network
for some time.
ABC Sports President Dennis
S w a n s o n has In s is te d the
network "Is going to listen and
evaluate" whether It will be a until April, but some lucrative
part of the NFL’s new television possibilities exist for ABC.
package. The networks and the
There Is the matchup between
NFL begin negotiations soon on the Super Bowl champion New
new contracts. In the expiring York Giants and last year’s
agreements. ABC. CBS and NBC cham pion C hicago Bears at
paid the NFL a total of $2.1 Soldier Field. The Giants also
billion over five years for rights play the New York Jets and
to televise its games.
division rivals Washington and
ABC’s coverage of the Pro Dallas.
Chicago, which racked up two
Bowl could wind up being the
end of a 17-year marriage be­ of the top-three highest rated
tween the network and the NFL. Monday Night telecasts In the
Alpine Ski Champ/onshlps from Swltierland
ABC already has ordered up 10 past (wo years, also has a road of the line for ABC and the NFL.
and same day coverage ol Am ercla’s Cup
made-for-televlslon movie scripts date against Buddy Ryan and
yachting finals.
The wffkmd far* (all llm tt E S T )
to replace Monday Night Foot­ the Philadelphia Eagles and u
Am e rica 's Cup (11-11:30 p.m . E S P N ).
Saturday
U p da te on A m e ric a 's C u p , live from
ball should the network consider matchup against Denver and the
Colltga baikttball
Australia.
Raiders as possible Monday
the NFL's asking price too high.
Saturday game ol the week on CBS (1 5
34 Hours ol Daytona (3:15 4:30 p.m .
p .m .). Doubleheader. First game: Iowa at
Al Michaels and Frank Gifford, Night fodder.
W T B S ).
M ic h ig a n f o llo w e d by S y ra c u s e a l
Sunday
Other potential sweeteners
the Monday Night announcers,
Georgetown
College basketball
a a tt
will be Joined by Lynn Swann for could Include a rematch of the
N BC Saturday game ol the week ( I -5 p m .)
N B C Sunday game (1-3 . p m .). North
Now that the course activities
Doubleheader: Oklahoma al North Carolina
the Pro Bowl broadcast, which AFC cham pionship overtim e
Carolina State al Noire Dame.
Stale followed by Kansas at Louisville.
A B C gam * o l the week (2-4 p .m .).
are getting back to normal,
begins at 4 p.m. EST live from thriller between Cleveland and
Virginia at Clemson (J 6p.m. E S P N ).
Nevada Las Vegas at Auburn.
here’s a reminder about the
Denver at Cleveland Stadium: a
Honolulu.
DePaul at LaSalle (8 p m W G N ).
N B A basketball
w e e k ly s c r a m b le s . E v e r y
Pro basketball
AB C 's Pro Bowl spot was J e ts -C o w b o y s g a m e at the
Houston at Atlanta (l-3:30p.m . CB S).
C
B
A
all
star
game
&lt;8:30
It
p.m.
E
S
P
N
).
Golf
Thursday at 3 p.m. there Is a arranged In the latest contract Mcadowlands or the traditional
Live from LaCrosse. WIs.
P G A goll (3:30 4 p.m. C B S ). Final round
9 -h ole scram b le and e v e r y
package that rotated the all-star rivalries between the Rams and
N H L hockey
coverage of the A T &amp; T Pebble Beach National
Sunday the course has an 18- game and the lucrative Super 49ers. Patriots and Dolphins:
New York Rangers al Philadelphia Flyers
Pro A m . live from California.
(noon, W O R).
hole scramble that tees up at 2 « Bowl among the networks over Bears and Packers; Cowboys and
L P G A golt (1-3 p.m. E S P N ). Final round
Colt
coverage ot M a id a Classic Irom Boca Raton,
p.m.
the five-year period. The Pro Redskins: and a Raiders-Broncos
P G A goll (5 4 p.m. CBS) Th ird round
Fla.
Everyone is invited and it’s a B o w l, h o w e v e r , has m uch game.
action of the A T &amp; T Pebble Beach National
M IS L soccer
Pro Am
W lchliaat St. Louis &lt;3 5 p m . E S P N ).
lot of fun. Get to the club a little smaller ratings than the Super
The NFL regular season begins
P G A lour 113 p m. ESPN) Live coverage
N H L hockey
early and sign up In the Pro Bowl as a football-weary au­ Sept. 13. The first Monday night ot Lthird
round ol Maida Classic from Boca
Gam e to be announced (7:30 10:30 p.m.
Shop. Partners are decided by dience usually finds the game game Is slated for Sept. 14. If Raton, Fla.
E S P N ).
Bowling
General
blind draw so everyone gels Into antl-cllmatlc.
ABC doesn’ t plan to participate.
P B A tour (3 4:30 p m A B C ). Live coverage
Am erica's Cup III p m .-3 a n r E S P N ).
the act.
What has to lure ABC back HBO. Turner Broadcasting. Fox ot llnals ot 5115.000 Greater Los Angeles Live coverage Irom Australia.
Into the booth for another year Is Broadcasting and others are Open
A B C Wide World ot Sports (4 7 p m .).
aaa
General
A F C N F C Pro Bowl, live Irom Honolulu;
som e p oten tial blockbu ster waiting in the wings.
A B C Wide World ot Sports (4:30 4 p m )
World Alpine Skiing Championships and
Here’s an Interesting Incident Monday Night telecasts. The
Only time will tell if Sunday's World Cup gymnastics championships from Am erlca’sCup yachting report.
from the LPGA: Jame Geddes. a NFL's schedule won't be out game from Honolulu is the end
Bejlng, China; same day coverage ot World
74 Hours ol Daytona (3:05 4 p m W TB S ).
touring pro, received a pocketful
o f help from a member of the
gallery when she won the Boston
Five Classic last year.
In the final round. Geddes’ tee
shot on the par-3 sixth hole
sailed off target and flew into the
pocket of a male spectator. He
PEBBLE BEACH. Calif. (UPI) - Lanny
was unhurt because the landing Wadkins used his set of Irons and a surge of
was cushioned by a pack of momentum to move into the second-round
BOCA RATON (UPI) — An unusually
cigarettes. Geddes also emerged lead of the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am
strong putting game carried Cathy Morse to
unscathed. She scored a bogey golf tournament.
a three-hole birdie streak and the lead
birdie putts of lour ieet. six feet and 10 feet,
on the hole. Since her savior was
Wadkins blrdled his last two holes Friday,
midway through the first stop on the LPGA
and two from eight feet.
standing near a water hazard so firing a round of three-under 69 to take a
Tour.
"T h ey go in and it’s a different game," he
he might have rescued her from one-shot lead over playing partner Payne
A 35-foot putt on the 16th hole hlghlghtcd
said.
a worse fate. Geddes won by the Stewart after the second day of the annual
Morse’s 6-under-par 66 Friday In the second
For much of the afternoon. Lanny’s
tournament by one stroke.
event played on three Monterey Peninsula
round of the $200,000 Mazda Classic. Her
brother. Bobby, was also on the leader
The final results and money golf courses.
only victory In nine years on the tour was In
board In the many years both have been on
won of the Mayfair Open, which
1982, and she blames her lack of success on
"I was playing with Payne and we both
the Tour. Lanny Wadkins said, it was the
turned out to be a one day m a d e s o m e b ir d ie s an d g o t som e
putting.
first time both had been among the leaders
tournament last Friday, are as momentum going." said Wadkins. whose
"Usually from 35 feet. I'm ecstatic if I get
in a major tournament.
follows:
two-day total stood at seven-under-par 137.
near the hole and. this time. I knocked it
"It helps when the people you play with are
In." she said.
65 — Pate $1800; 67 — Perry. playing well."
The two leaders will play their final two
The putt sparked a streak of three straight
Thompson $1200 each: 63 —
rounds on the Pebble Beach course, where
The leaders also may have benefited from
birdies to finish the round and give her a
B e s a n c e n e y $ 9 5 0 : 6 9 — a late tee-off time Friday that helped them
Lanny Wadkins had won the 1977 PGA
two-shot lead.
Sullivan. Turner $800 each.
championship
in a sudden-death playoff
miss heavy, early-morning rains. Britain’s
On the par-5 17th, she knocked an 8-tron
against Gene Littler and was a stroke away
to three feet and. on the final hole, she used
70 — Govern. Hall, Kalinka, Sandy Lyle and Japan's Isao Aokl, who
from the lead o f the 1982 U.S. Open on the
were tied with Danny Edwards two strokes
the same club to lay the ball six feet from
Kruczek, Moses, Roush. Smith.
final day.
behind
Wadkins
at
139.
played
their
first
the pin. making both putts. Her 66 tied the
W ood $456 each: 7 1 —
nine holes in the driving rainstorm. Lyle
course
record set last year by Patty
DeForest. Grygicl. Horn. Krapfel.
“ I like Pebble," Lanny Wadkins said. ’ ’I've
fired a round of 71 and Aokl carded a
Sheehan.
Lee. Mogg. Panaslk. Rabold.
won on the golf course. The best thing about
two-under-par 70.
"M y driving didn't get me In any trouble
S ch len e. T e rry . T h om p son .
playing there the last two days is it’s the
Wadkins
said
the
weather
had
very
little
add
I hit my irons probably close to the best
Weaver $216 each.
driest of the three courses."
effect on his round Friday.
I’ve ever hit them ." Morse said. "M y putting
Stewart, who said his favorite course Is
72 — Bettes. Cichra. Gaugert,
"It (the rain) had Just about quit when we
fell really good, although I missed some
Graham. Horstman. Mattlace.
Spyglass Hill, nevertheless found playing
putts."
teed off." he said. "The weather wasn’t a
Meade, Mize, Murfltt. O’ Neil.
the IInal two rounds on Pebble Beach
factor as far as we were concerned except
Morse. 3 1. believes if she could putt
Smith $143 each.
the course was awfully wet. The course
agreeable.
better, she would have won more tourna­
played like a swamp."
ments.
" I f you get off to a good start at Pebble,
73 — Chadwick, Chancey.
Wadkins credited his performance in both
you can really pul up some low scores." said
C o o k so n , C oston . G ra tto n .
"There is no question thai putting held
rounds to steady play and good control of
Stewart, who turned 30 Friday. "But if you
Jackson . Johnson. Kestner,
me back. My basics were not very good
his irons.
hit a few bad shots at the wrong time, you
M cK elver. M euthing. M iller,
when I came out on the tour.” she said.
"Both days. I’ve played very solid golf."
can also pul up some big numbers. Unless
O’Connor. Porte*. Roberts $81
"You think you're having a good round, and
he said. ’’I’ve hit some good iroil shots, but I
we are rained out, seven under par won’t
each.
then you three-putt ihret* greens and it’s not
really haven't sunk any long putts. I made
win this tournament."
very good."
two birdies yesterday that came after iron
aaa
Bobby Wadkins was three strokes back at
Jan Stephenson, with a 71 Friday, and
shots put the ball within six Inches of the
No T u esday Dogfight nor
140.
along
with
Bobby
Cole
and
Fred
Sally
Little, with a 72. were in a group tied
hole."
Thursday Scramble was held
at
143.
Couples.
During
Friday’s
round.
Wadkins
missed
this week.

Wadkins' Iron Work Sporks Surge
G o lf

Morse Putts Into Lead

P u t e llu

Hill

don’t get as many (scholarships)
as some of the other schools."
Pantelias said. “ But If we can
prepare ourselves mentally, we
can still win. In order to win you
don't always haVe to be good,
you also need to be lucky."
Even though he Is in his 14th
season at' the helm. Pantelias
said that he still Is enjoying
coaching. "It is still a thrill to
coach.” Pantelias said. "T h ere Is
nothing more satisfying than
watching a kid develop and
succeed on the field.
"Coaching Is a lot of work and
it can be a burden at times, but
it’s all worth It."
Pantelias said that ff his team
gets a few breaks, it could go all
the way. "1 think that we can
make nationals," Pantelias said.
"W e Just need to have a few
bounces go our way."

LB Ta ylo r
Is Tired
O f Football
HONOLULU (UPI) — After
playing In 23 games from preseason through postseason, New
Y o r k G ia n ts lin e b a c k e r
Lawrence Taylor treats the Pro
Bowl as a chance to have some
fun.
" T o me, It’ s a va c a tio n ."
Taylor said during a workout In
the sun at Aloha Stadium. "T h e
game's pretty much secondary
to me. It's the best o f the NFC
and the AFC meeting In one
place for one week to have some
good times.
"Y o u ’re out to show what
you've got against the best
players In the game. But me? I’d
like to come out here and have a
good time and not have to play
the game. I'm tired o f football.
W e’ ve been p layin g for 27
weeks. That’s enough."
Los A n g e le s Raiders defensive

end Howie Long and Giants
linebacker Harry Carson differ
with Taylor on one point.
” 1 think everybody wanls to
play In this gam e." Long said of
ihe classic, scheduled for Sun­
day. "W hy? Some guys don’t get
Into the playoffs and this Is like
their playoffs. That's the way It
is forme this year."
* 'I had no r e s e r v a t i o n s
whatsoever about coming here,"
Carson said. ’ T v e got a whole
offseason to rest. T h is has
always been an honor to come to
this game. Heck. I even thought
about this game at the Super
Bowl— after we were up by two
touchdowns."
The 84 players participating In
the game were chosen by NFL
coaches and other players in
balloting before the regular
season ended. Eight members of
th e S u p er B o w l- c h a m p io n
Giants were selected and six
from the . runner-up D enver
Broncos, but among the the
missing will be Super Bowl MVP
Phil Simms.
Instead of Simms. Tom m y
Kramer of Minnesota and Jay
Sehrocder of Washington will
share the quarterbacking chores,
with Eric Dickerson o f Lus
Angeles and Chicago’s Walter
Payton the starting backfield.
New York's players in the
game include four sturters: tight
end Mark Bavaro. Taylor. Carson
and punter Scan Landeta. Play­
ing back-up roles will be of­
fensive tackle Brad Benson,
running back Joe Morris and
d efen sive lin em en L e o n a rd
Marshall and Jim Burt.
REVENGE FOR BRONCOS?
HONOLULU (UPI) - T h e Den­
ver Broncos who were selected
to play In the Pro Bowl want
Sunday's game to act as a salve
to their Super Bowl wounds.
D enver d efen sive linem an
Kulon Jones hopes the Pro Bowl
will wash away part of the
Broncos’ 39-20 loss to the New
York Giants in Super Bowl XXL
" I t ’s still fresh in m y mind."
Jones said of Sunday's 39-20
loss to the Giants. "But maybe
this gam e Is a b lessin g In
disguise. You always remember
your last game of the season ami
If you play well in It you finish
up wllh a positive feeling."
Jones added that although the
Pro Bowl lacks the Intensity of
the playoffs, "it's pretty compet­
itive."
The 84 players participating In
tile Pro Bowl were chosen by
i heir peers in balloting before
the regular NFL season ended.
"Everybody wants to play In
this game." Howie Long of the
Los Angeles Raiders said earlier
this week.

�4ft—Santerft HaraM, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Fob. 1, m ?

Coghlan Wins Redord 7th Wanamaker Mile
NEW YO RK (U P I) Eam onn
Coghlan. who suffered through his
worst season ever last year, re­
discovered the thrill o f victory Friday
night when he won a record seventh
Wanamaker Mile at the Mtllrose
Games.
Coghlan. winless during the Indoor
circuit In 1986. ran a perfect race In
defeating fellow Irishman Marcus
O'Sullivan at Madison Square Garden
before a sellout crowd of 18.122.
After O'Sullivan took the lead from
Spain's Jose Abascal with a lap to go.
Coghlan bolted past O'Sullivan with
•half a lap remaining and cruised to
victory.
"It reminded me o f the world
championship and what It means,"
C ogh lan said, r e fe r rin g to his
thoughts as he raced toward the
finish line. "I raised m y clenched fist
In sheer delight." t
Coghlan held fourth or fifth place
for much of the race until he saw

...Thomas
Continued from I B
Bernard Mitchell then put
down a short Jumper off the
glass with 5:13 remaining to
bring the Rams within six. Craig
Radzak. who finished with a
gam e-h igh 20 poin ts, then
scored the Greyhounds next six
points as they upped their lead
to 45-35 with 4:27 left.
Florence then gave Lyman Its
biggest lead of the night. 47-35.
with a baseline Jumper with 4:12
remaining.
Cory Prom, though, put down
a bucket on a nice Inside move,
sparking a Lake Mary run. After
Radzak dropped a pair of free
throws Oscar Merthie. who led
the Rams with 16 points, then
scored six consecutive points to
cut the lead to 49-43 with 2:46
left.
Florence then nailed a Jumper
before fouling out to send Eric
"C Z " CzemleJewskl to the line.
Czernicjcwskl hit both charity
attempts, cutting the lead to
51-45 with 2:23 left.
Mike Mandcvllle then took
control of the game, hitting two
Jumpers from long range. Man’ devlllc then picked up a loose
ball and hit Mitchell with a nice
pass off the break to tie the game
at 51 apiece.
CzemleJewskl then came up
with a rebound and was fouled
and connected on both to put the
Rams up. 53-50 with just 35
seconds to play.
Lyman, however, rushed the
ball down the court and found
Radzak who put down a shot
from the base line to cut the
deficit to 53-52.
Lake Mary then turned the ball
over with 17 seconds left, giving
Lyman the chance for the win.
J.J. Miller followed with his
only shot attempt of the night
from the free throw line which
fell short. CzemleJewskl and
Lyman's David Kendrick then
battled for the ball and Kendrick,
a hefty 220-pounder, managed

O’Sullivan make his move. Once
O'Sullivan took the lead. Coghlan
went to the outside and used a burst
o f speed to pass him.
"Tactically. It was a perfect race."
Coghlan said. "Marcus and Abascal
got a little over-anxloifs. Once I made
my move on Marcus, he wasn't going
to come back on m e."
The victory enabled Coghlan to
pass Glenn Cunningham for most
Wanmakcr Mile triumphs. Coghlan
remembered a talk he had in 1984
with Cunningham. He said Cun-'
nlngham. who won six Wanamaker
Miles In the 1930s. told him the value
o f experience In a race.
"Th at’s what I focused on tonight.
Experience Is exactly what won the
race." said Coghlan, 34.
The triumph also showed Coghlan
Is ready to regain his place as the
world's premier indoor milcr. The
Irishman had experienced a disas­
trous 1986. Coghlan. who holds the
world Indoor record for the mile at

to wrestle the ball away but he
fell down and watched angulshly
as the ball rolled out of bounds
with Just six seconds to play.
Lake Mary then called a time
out and came out with the
Intention of getting the ball In
play and running out the clock.
Mandcvllle then attempted to hit
CzemleJewskl with a full court
pass that came up short.
M iller, who was coverin g
CzemleJewskl. tipped the ball to
Thom as who was fouled by
Merthie. sending him to the line.
"1 didn't think I'd make them
because I'd Just missed a couple
right before that." Thomas said.
“ After I hit the first one I knew If
I followed through. I'd make the
second."
After the second fell through,
the Greyhounds began to cele­
brate as Mandcvllle rushed to
half-court and pul up a despera­
tion shot which missed.
"A ll we had to do was put the
ball in play," Lake Mary coach
W illie Richardson said. "W e
didn't play well, but should have
capitalized when we had the
opportunity to win It."
Thomas finished the night
with 10 points, eight coming
from the line, and three assists
while dictating the tempo at the
point.
"Radzak and Florence scored
more because they (Lake Mary)
were concentrating on Thomas."
Lawrence said "It's nice to have
a p layer. willing to give up the
ball and complement the people
who are scoring."
Lyman will now get ready for
Lake Howell this Tuesday at
Lake Howell.
The Rams will have to gear up
for conference leader Seminole
at Lake Mary.
L Y M A N (#4) Florence II. Starke* 2.
Thome* 10, Hester .1. Radrak 10, Moulton 0,
LambO, Kendrick 0. Ml Her 0.21 12 2054.
L A K E M A R Y (51) - Prom 4, Napoli t.
Merthie 14, M iller 4. Ciernle|*wskl 9. Man
devllle4, M itchell4 Total*: 21 It 27 53.
Halttime — Lyman It, Lake M ary 24. Foul*
— Lym an 22. Lake M ary 20. Fouled out —
Florence, Hester, M iller. Technical* — Lake
M ary coach Richardson 2 (verbal). Record*
— Lym an 105 (111. Lake Mary H O , (2 2).

Tra c k /F ie ld
3:49.78, tried dieting last year and It
left him weak.
" I went on the 'Eat T o Win Diet’
and wound up losing." Coghlan said,
"tt was the first season since I began
20 years ago that I ran so poorly."
His problems continued through
the outdoor season. On the advice of
an Irish doctor. Coghlan rested for
almost two months before he re­
sumed training for the Indoor season.
W hile train in g in Dublin last
month, Coghlan was attacked by a
dog. He sustained a broken left hand
and underwent surgery on his right
calf, making him doubtful for the
Indoor season.
"T h e first 12 hours, when I was
being pushed around In a wheel
chair, I felt my Indoor season was in
jeopardy," Coghlan said. "W hen I got
out of the hospital. I could hardly

LAD T RAMS CRUISE
L ak e M a r y 's L a d y R am s
cruised to their 19th win In a
row ham m ering the Lym an
Lady Greyhounds, 68*21. Friday
night at Lyman.
Lake Mary now stands at 21-1
and 5-0 In the SAC. Lyman fell
to 1-14 and 1-4 in the confer­
ence.
"I was fairly pleased with the
performance," Lake Mary coach
BUI Moore said. "E v e ry o n e
played and that's valuable expe­
rience."
Lake Mary was led by forward
Cynthia Patterson who finished
with a game high 14 points. 6-5
center Terl Whyte finished with
12 points and Ashley Thomas
chipped in nine.
L A K E M A R Y (40) - Patterson 14. Lawson
4, Thomas 9, Whyta 12, Roldan 3. Olden 4,
Davis 2. Bonavenlure 4, Fray 4. Dawson 4.
M ullhollandt. Totals: 314 1741.
L Y M A N (31) — Brooks 3. Robarts 0. Bouay
2. LaDuka 0. Boyla I I . Hardan S, Jarratt I.
Totals: 15-1521.
Halltlma — Laka M a ry 32. Lym an 14. Fools
— Lake M ary it, Lym an 31. Foulad out —
none. Technical — none. Records — Laka
M a r y 2 H (5 0), Lym an 1-14(1 4).

...Phillips
Continued from I B
Bolton and Brian Wilson con­
tributed seven points each.
Alonzo Robinson led Lake
Howell with a game-high 15
points and 10 rebounds. C.
Gibson tossed In eight points.
Steve Johnson canned seven
and Phil Clark added six points
and eight rebounds.
"W e played good enough on
defense but the kids tend to
think that defense ends with the
shot and not the rebound." Lake
Howell coach Greg Robinson
said. "Once we start rebounding
better on the defensive end and
taking a better shot selection on
offense, we'll be all right."
Defense was the name of the
game In the first half as Oviedo
launched a number o f bricks
against Lake Howell's tough 2-3
zone while the Hawks had trou-

walk, but 1 rode a stationary bicycle
and. within three days* running. I
knew I'd be all right."
Coghlan opened the Indoor season
with a victory In the mile two weeks
ago In Tennessee. The triumph at the
Millrose Games could give Coghlan
the confldncc he needs to reclaim the
position he lost to O'Sullivan last
year.
"M y goal Is to get to where I was."
said Coghlan. who plans to compete
in at least two more races this season.
Steve Ovett, the 1980 Olympic
champion In the 800 meters, finished
last In the Wanamaker Mile. He was
making his first indoor appearance
since 1975.
In other events, Greg Foster de­
feated Renaldo Nehemiah In the
60-yard hurdles. Lee McRae edged
Carl Lewis in the 60-yard dash. Gwen
Torrence captured the w om en's
60-yard dash. Lavonna Martin took
the women’s 60-yard hurdles. Earl

Bell was victorious In the pole vault.
Lynn Williams of Canada won the
women's mile. Doug Nordquist edged
American record holder Jimmy How­
ard In the high Jump and Jose
Luls-Gonzalcz of Spain upset Doug
Padilla in the 3.000 meters.
Foster, who has spent his career
trying to escape the shadow o f
Nehemiah. defeated his rival for the
second time this season. Foster, the
world's top-ranked hurdler last year,
edged Nehemiah 6.98 seconds to
7.02. After breezing through his trial
heat. Foster won the final with a
burst of speed after clearing the final
hurdle.
"It's a good sign." said Foster, who
has been chasing Nehemiah since
1978. "There was a time when I
would worry about the competition,
but when I worry about beating the
challengers. I Just beat myself. I’ve
got no reaction to beating Renaldo. I
only have a reaction to winning."

Whltney stole that rebound."
Juckersald.
" T h a t ’ s m y s p e c ia lty ."
Whitney said o f the theft. " I ’ve
been working on It in practice.
Those big men like (o get the
rebound and come down. You
Just meet them when they bring
thfe ball down and It pops loose."
Whitney was fouled with 54
seconds left and the Junior guard
notched both free throws to put
Seminole safely ahead. 61-55.
Parker added a bucket with two
seconds left for the eight-point
margin.

...M elts
Continued from IB
bucket for a 58-54 lead with 3:11
to play.
"W e've worked hard on that
p r e s s . " P a rk e r said . " W e
thought It would work against
them because they don’t like to
run."
Point guard Joe Nolff picked
up the Patriots last point with a
free throw with 3:08 to play.
Seminole then went to a spread
o ffe n s e w it h H en d erso n .
Whitney and Edwards handling
the ball. The Tribe ran off two
minutes before Henderson drew
a foul.
Henderson dropped the first
charity toss for a 59*55 lead. He
missed the second, but Whitney,
streaking down the baseline,
tipped the ball away from a
Brantley re bounder and recov­
ered Uln the corner.
"That was the ballgame when

Freddie G odson's rehound
bucket gave Seminole a 10-6
lead but Leva hit of soft Jumpers
and Nolff dropped In another
with four seconds left for a 12-12

ble scoring on Oviedo's tight
man to man. With Oviedo hold­
ing a 13-12 lead, the Lions reeled
off the last six points o f the half
fora 19-12 halftime lead.
Since It had no luck against
the zone in the first half, Oviedo
got its transition game going In
the third quarter and went on to
take a 31-20 lead into the fourth
period. Campbell scored the last
four points o f the third on
fast-break layups,
Campbell opened the fourth
quarter by Tilttlng one of two free
throws, then hit another driving
layup to put the Lions up by 14.
34-20. Tw o free throws by Grif­
fith and a nice scoop shot by
Campbell put Oviedo up by 16.
38-22, with 6:35 left to play.
With 4:30 remaining. Lake
H o w e ll m ad e a c o m e b a c k
sparked by a three-point play by
R obinson. C lark fired In a
baseline Jumper to pull the
Hawks within eight, 39-31. with
3:59 remaining. Hughes an-

swered with a pair of free throws
but H ow ell's Steve Johnson
came back with a strong move to
the hoop, got the deuce and the
foul and convcretcd the three
point play as the Hawks drew
within seven. 41-34.
The play that scaled the win
for the Lions then came as Lake
Howell's Johnson was driving to
the basket and put up a shot but
Hughes rose up and slapped It
off the backboard and the Lions
turned the block Into a fastbreak layup and a 46-36 lead
with Just, over two minutes
remaining. Lake Howell could
get no closer the rest of the way
as Phillips got number 200.
"T h e cheerleaders gave me a
flower before the game and there
was a cake made for me so 1
figured If 1 didn't get number
200 tonight it could get pretty
expensive." Phillips Joked. “ Ac­
tually, It’s kind of nice that we
got two things over with tonight.
I got my 200th win and we won

The well-played second half
was in contrast to the first
quarter In which the teams
combined for five turnovers to
open the game before Parker hit
two free throws at the 6:29
mark. All told, there were 13
turnovers.

Super Bowling Continues In Sanford
Adam s (681), Anderson (679), Hathaway (612), Benevenuto (279) Bust 'Em
The pins keep falling at Bowl America
Sanford.
There have been a Ion of pins knocked
down In the past few weeks. Six hundred
series are becoming rather common
place.
This week's high series went lo John
Adams with a 681 on the T.G.l.F.
League. Adams had games of 213. 214,
and 254. He was followed closely by
Buster Anderson of the Sanford City
League. Anderson put together games of
212, 236 and 231 for a 679 series. There
were several more series over 650.
j,
High game honors went to Don
B cn e ve n to w ith a fa n ta s tic 279.
Bcncvcnto strung nine In a row before
| failing lo strike with his first ball In the
10th frame. That Is one bull he would
like to have back. The Super Bowl may
be over but the Super Bowling continues
at Bowl America.
it tt tt

Bowl America Sanford’s youth bowlers
are getting their share of the wood also.
; Steve Hathaway has had a 600 scries
; two weeks In a row. Last Saturday, he
rolled a 240 game and 612 series.
Hathaway Is also a member of Seminole
High's state-ranked basketball team.
Tha«e of you who donated to thct
; Budwclscr Hall of Fame ure now eligible
to bowl In a short one-week tournament
In house starting Monday. Check at the
desk for details.
tt tt tt

Here Is a look at the high rollers:
YOUTH LEAGUES - (5-8 year olds):
Josllyn Grover 120, Kelly Ogden 81, Jill
Shoemaker 113. Kathy Murphy 113.
Shane Cacciatore 113, Casle Rash 110;
(9-11 year olds): Jason Royal 136. David
Beaty 120. Charles Isom 142. John
Martin 135, Steve Templeton 125. Chris
Allman 133, Damon Kmid 145. Seun
Bumgarner 129, Michelle Jlmincz 113,
Jennifer Stlncr 111, Mike Lull 125,
Tommy West 123, Chris Eckwall 116.
Bryan Rotthinghaus 123; (12-14 year

Roger
Quick
BOWL
AM ERICA
SANFORD:
322-7542

’ r

^

olds): Derek Drake 133, Chris Rottlughaus 163. Jason Everly 161, Brandi
130. Ronnie Allman 189/518, Andre
Collins 154. Denise 139, David Adams
163, M ic h e lle K ru ld 152, P au la
Hagermen 134; (15-18 year olds): Brett
Hansen 143, Chris Bumgarner 191.
David Sulllns 187/515. Denny Clayton
166. Rhonda Gorman 170, Todd Morgan
202/546, Jimmy Roche 199/527. Steve
E tland 209/539. S te v e H ath aw ay
240/612. Stephen Bcvis 191, i’ at Fish
174. Mike Isom 171. Annette Boness
179.
BALL AND CHAIN - Jim Fleet 207.
Bob Baker 211. Brad Foley 217. Mike
M cN ab b 202 201/602. C E N T R A L
FLORIDA REGIONAL HOSPITAL - BIU
Griffith 209. Steve Page 208 207,
Kathryn Otto 211. Maggie Peebles 203.
W IL L E T T OLDSMOBILE C AD ILLAC
CLASSIC — Ralph Montgomery 206.
Bruce Neubauer 226, Bud Beatty 208.
Bill Martin 212. Ron Stafford 207. Randy
Judkins 223. Don Gorman Jr. 208
202/609. Harold Robertson 219. Buddy
Keller 235. BUI Gilbert 202. Zach Hunter
201. Bob Stevens 212 208. Joe McGuire
202. Mike West 219. Tony Dunklnson
202. Aaron Kaufman 234. Ron Allman
200 213 220/633. Roy Templeton 216.
J.C. Carver 202. Steve Myers 202. Jim
Howell 201. Robert Barnes 214, William
Stiles 205. Kenny Snyder 207, Curtis
Page 206. Fred Brown 203. Kit Johnson
204. Roy Jacobs 200. Don Canlglia 212

201 200/613.
TU E SD A Y NITE MIXED - John
Pinder 219. Roy Templeton 209, Don
Burkhardt 200. Mike Herring 210, Mike
Carroll 203. Pal Esclavon 212. AKU TIKI
— Mike Cameron 243. Pete Shoff 202.
Claudia Bcnevento 228, Bob Sullnksl
209, Tank Grover 203. Murk Quick 222.
Gil Benton 202. WASHDAY DROPOUTS
— Gene Rogero 204. Harpld Herbst 211.
DRIFT INN MIXED - Ronnie Heaps 217.
Dan T illts 232 202/633. Les Buddenhagen 212. Don TodrliT 201, Jim
Johnson 200, Curt Dunaway 200.
Barbara Atkcns 212. Inez Fisher 218.
Vince Cara 210 233/616. Timmy Zim ­
mers 216 219. Bill Slnnott 210.
EDUCATORS - Robert Kooy 200. B.J.
Crane 215. Cosmo 209. HURRICANES Art Minnegerode 221. Al Doyle 207.
MATCHPOINT - Cheryl Rash 209. HI
NOONERS - Phyllis Mott 206. FOR­
ESTERS — Joe Fowler 208. Cap Byland
200. Wm. McCarthy 213. FLEA WORLD
— Joe 200. BOB DANCE DODGE —
Bryan Hackett 204. Richard Heaps 215
245/640. Charles Mell 222 208/609. Bob
Adams 201, Lennlngs Grover 200, Don
Sapp 216. Jerry Farella 217. SEMINOLE
COUNTY SCHOOL FOOD SERVICES —
Essie Henry 203. Judy CloanInger 201.
SANFORD C ITY LEAGUE Bob
Barbour 214 and 214. Tony Dunklnson
203. Bill Gilbert 223/606. Dan Spangler
201, Ron Allman 202. Roy Templeton
201. Jim Carver 214 223 200/637. Don
Gorman Sr. 257 224/663, John Ballew
201, Dave Scherpt 203. Roland Crevler

208. Joe Bruggu 213. Jim Morace 214,
Buster Anderson 2'12 236 231/679, John
Pinder 200. Ed Sartorlus 241. James
Tanner 203, John Plovlsan 202. Bob
Hosford 204. Johnny Taylor 200. Farris
Cato 223 247/620. Jack Kaiser 205 200.
GATORS — Lee Taylor 214, Charlie
Lukins 202 231. REBELS — John Hall
202. Harold Brain well 234.
BLAIR — Melvin Adkins 202. Harold
Sundvall 213 201. Ed Smith 215. Adrian
Hodges 208. AMERICAN WEIGHT LOSS
— Louis Joens 214 205. Dave Rlchardc
220. Joe Ervin 241/612. PIN BUSTERS —
Myron Gates 238/604, Andy Erny 201
227. Elmer Slufflel 202. T.G.l.F. - Kay
Taylor 215. Cheryl Rash 211. Ron 202
215/605. Chuck Todd 232/603. Howie
Harrison 201. Pee Wee West 204 209.
John Adams 213 214 254/681, John
Waugh 201. Ed Sautter 207. Bruce
Woodhams 201, Jim Middleton 203.
Harold Herbst 222, Fred Brown 213.
SUN BANK — Scott Kern 213. John
Adams 204, Pepe Luyanda 252/604,
Charles Shaw 233, Sharon Kramer 200.
Don Gorman Jr 213, Dottle Bryant 201.
Roy Tem pleton 223 213/617. Roy
Allman 219 224/636, Don Bcnevento
279. Tony Dunklnson 234 211/637.
Tracy Gooding 206. Ed Smith 222. Steve
Keller 202. Ronnie Robinson 202. Willie
Stevens 201. Richard Jett 200. Don
Canlglia 246 242/665. Gary Larson 222.
Donnie Anderson 205 212/613. Robert
Barnes 233. Mark Quick 214 209/611.
Wendy Gorman 233. Bob Bradshaw 224.

first-quarter deadlock.
In the second period. Seminole
turned around a three-point def­
icit with a four-point move.
Parker hit a Jumper and 6-B
Craig Walker was fouled un­
derneath. Walker, who contrib­
uted nine rebounds, converted
both tosses for a 21-20 edge. It
grew to 31-25 when Whitney
closed the half with two jum ­
pers.
The third quarter was a freethrow battle. Although Brantley
did not have a field goal after
Doug Lawson's Jumper at 4:11,
the Pats hung tight by making 8
of 11 free throws. The Pats
trailed by three going Into the
final eight minutes.
S E M IN O L E (43) - Whitney 17. Parker 20.
Henderson u . W alkers, Edwards o. Lucas 0.
Hopson 2, Bellamy 1, Baird 0, Cadson 5,
Totals: 23 17 2441
L A K E B R A N T L E Y (51) - Ball 19. Lava 14.
Shlrlay 3, Nolff 4. Lawson I. Pamplln I,
HinshawO, Totals: I I 19 21 55.
Halltlma — Seminole 31. Laka Brantlay 21
Fouls — Seminole 20, Laka Branllay II.
Foulad out — Shlrlay, Pamplln. Technical —
none. A — #11.

our first conference game of the
year. Now we can go on from
here and hope to have one of our
best seasons In a while.”
OVIEDO J V PR E V AILS
The last five minutes was
perhaps one of the longest of
Junior varsity basketball history,
but Oviedo's JV Lions stayed
awake long enough to claim a
70-58 victory over the Lake
Howell.
Charles Warner and Robbie
Crager pumped In 15 points
each to lead Oviedo while Tim
T occo added I I . Paul Rein
poured In a game-high 24 points
to lead Lake Howell.
O V IE D O (35) - Campbell 12. Wilson 7,
Bolton 7. Everett 2. Hughes 9, Hill 0, D ia l 0.
Griffith 10, Kandall 4, Bowen 2, Greene 0
Totals: 20 IS 29 55.
L A K E H O W E L L ( I I ) - Banks 0. Gibson I.
Clark 4. Weeden 2. Peterson 0. Robinson 15,
SI. Johnson 7, Yapo 0, Gammon* 0. Keller 0.
Totals: 112 73#
Haltllme — Oviedo 19, Lake Howell 12.
Fouls — Oviedo 9, Lake Howell 22. Fouled out
— none. Technical — none

SP O R TS FANS!

I

BET
YOU
DIDN’T
KNOW
Brought to you
By Kan Rummel
Incredibly, a basketball team once
scared only one point In an entire
game — and yel won the game!...Jt
happened in the lowest-scoring
basketball game ot all-time, played
March 7,1-0 ..The only scoring in the
game was one foul shot by
G e o rg e to w n !...Th a t's hard to
believe, but it’s true.
•••

One ol the most unusual record#
in batebell history we#
by outlislder John Paciorek...He we# cellad up to Houston lor the last gam#
ol the 1963 season end played In on­
ly one major league game in his Ilia
— but In that one game he came to
bat 5 times and they couldn't get
him out...Ha made 3 hits and walkad twice In 5 at bats...Pac(orek then
au tiered a back Injury and never
played again — but he alanda In Ihe
record book as 'Inlahlng his major
league career with a perfect onethousand batting averaga!
•••

Amazingly, NO team In the Na­
tional Basketball Association has
been able to win the championship
01 the NBA 2 seasons In a row
ANYTIME in the last 10 YEARS ...The
last time a team won me NBA title
2 straight years was when Boston
did it back In 1968 and 1969.

••*
I bat you didn’t know...that Ken
Rummel Chevrolet has a fine selec­
tion ol new cars and trucks and OK
ussd cars &amp; trucks. Our sarvlco
department Is fully stalled with fac­
tory trained technicians and raady
to serve you.

No appointment necessary!

M c C o r d ic

H o ld s

3 8 -P in

LOS ANGELES. Calif. (UPI) - Pete
McCordic held a 38-pin lead over Ricky
Corona Friday after the fifth round of
the $125,000 Greater Los Angeles
Open.
McCordic. who has never won a PBA
event, averaged 228.2 pins through 34

L e a d

O v e r

C o ro n a

games and had a pintail total of 8. 120.
Corona, also seeking his first PBA title,
had a total of 8.082 going into the final
eight-game session Friday night.
Left-hander Jess Stayrook dropped
from second to third with 8.005. while
another lefty. John Gant, was fourth.

HWY. 17-92 SANFORD
3 2 1 -7 8 0 0

�t

&gt; I

* r r .r 9z r—r» r- *-r -

•

0

•

•

# ' » '9 **/ f *.* |

. .

■

- *-

r.

0 r 1^ 1

■

ip a

^..

n l f l l i i N M V iv lf r l ,
•Vi' r •; U

SCO REBO ARD
scoriroard . u

I Cfdfcmmww

n / n iiiit in ia i

TV/RADIO

MBREF

TV/MOW:
TIKVIttOH

Atlitodflf

United Pres* International
BufTalo goaltender Tom Barrasso turned boos Into cheers
Friday night.
The former Calder and Vczlna Trophy winner stopped
the Quebec Nordlqurs 3-1 to win Just his sixth game In 21
outings this season. Barrasso stopped 35 shots, including
24 of 25 in the second period.
“ I’ve been getting booed out of this building (Memorial
Auditorium) for most of the season," Barrasso said. ‘-'It
feels great to finally have some cheers behind me.
"W hen they weren't cheering. I still had my confidence. I
kept saying to myself. 'I can do the Job' and you have to
think that way because sometimes things aren't golng’ to
go your way and you're going to get booed."
Adam Creighton gave Buffalo a 1-0 lead at 4:31 of the
first period with a power-play goal, picking up a loose puck
In front o f Quebec goalie Clint Malarchuk and lifting a
backhander Into the net.
Michele Goulet tied the score 1-1 with a power-play goal
at 3:53 of the second period. Christian Ruuttu deflected a
Doug Smith shot past Malarchuk on the power play at
12:26 of the second period to give the Sabres a 2-1 lead.

lOUiStilN (U
1 pm - WCPX*. Colltg4. Syrtcus# it

Rotary Breakfast Golf Feb. 9
The Rotary Club of Sanford Breakfast will hold Its Rotary
Charities Golf Tournament Monday. Feb. 9 at the Mayfair
Country Club In Sanford. Rotarlan Brett Carll announced.
The entry fee Is $75 for the 9 a.m. shotgun start. Carll
said the money raised will be used to fund scholarships
and local charities. "W e're hoping for a field of 128.” Carll
said.
Golfers with an established handicap will be place In A,
B. C or D classifications. For those without handicap, the
Calloway system will be used. There will be prize for first
low gross and prizes for first, second and third In all flights.
Closest to the pin prizes, complimentary gifts from local
businesses and a buffet will also be Included.
As an added feature, Sanford's Courtesy Pontiac give
away a new car to any golfer who records a hole-ln-one on
Mayfair's 189-yard par-3 10th holes.
To register, call Carll (321-0827). Kim Townsend
(323-5415) or Lcs Owen (322-8861).

N e w World Tops SCC In Opener
"Gator” Rcbhan scattered six hits and Miami Dade New
World Center used three unearned runs to trim Seminole.
6-1. in Junior college baseball Friday at Miami.
It was the season-opener for Seminole which returned to
action Saturday at 1 p.m. against New World. Coach Jack
Pantcllas' Raiders host Florida College In their home
opener Tuesday at 3 p.m.
New World Jumped on loser Steve Carter for two runs In
the first inning before DcLand's Jeff Rood relieved. Rood
was touched for four runs over the middle Innings but Just
... one was earned.
Seminole pushed across u run in the sixth when
DcLand’s Troy Blevins dropped a bunt single down the
third base line and one out later. Chad Sims followed with
a run-scoring double to left center.
Danny Moore had two singles to pace SCC. Chris Gage
and Charles Brooks also singled.

] 43pm - WTIS. 34Hours WOrrtitoitorl
III

&gt; pm - WCSMl Cut* Una 4
CwraUawIU

1 pm - WM004L CM**. U u u ppi
StotottKtntocly
&lt;p m. - ESPN. Can*p. Virfiai* 4 Orman
(L)
M m - WON Ctfkft. OrPtuI 4 ItStllo

(U

M m. - FNN. CWtogt. 111*41Oifcip4
Cimtton*Sum III
I Xp m - ESPN. CBAAII StorCt-no (l)
1p m - WFTV 4, PSA. OwNr Lm hnprtrs
Jptnlll
lip m -SIN. Bang FromMtiKr
044
5 pm - WCPX*. PCX. PGtto Botch
National Pr» Am. TNrd round III
St m - ESPN. WorldCup. Mon 1SUIom

Mraitinim

i a p m. - WFTV I. Wl* World 4 Sport
I Downhill tiling. World Cop gymnottici
AmorKt’i Cop. Rtct I)

CHICAGO (UP!) - The Chicago Cubs Friday traded
veteran third baseman Ron Cey to the Oakland A's for
Inflelder Luis Quinones.
Cey. 38. had been with the Cubs since 1983. Last year,
he appeared In 97 games, batting .273 with 13 home runs
and 36 RBI.
Ccy’s lifetime batting average Is .261 with 312 home
runs and 1.128 RBI.
Quinones. 24. who Is from Ponce. Puerto Rico, was In the
San Francisco Giants organization last season but was
traded to the A's after the season. With the Giants last
season, he appeared In 71 games and batted . 179.

Johnson's 33 Not Enough Life
Jimmy Johnson scored a game-high 33 points In a losing
effort as Dixie Village Chrlstlon downed New Life Christian.
59-51. Friday night.
LaMont Bridges led the way for Dixie Village with 19
points.
New Life now stands at 3-4 overall and will take on
Osceola Christian Academy Tuesday.

Celtics
Still Win

BASKKTIALk
M I N : 7:30 p.m. — SV. JohmRIvNrCCNtSwtslnoSNCC
W O M IN i S p.m. - AAanatpp CC at SamliwlN CC

«- n i:a a
i t« i m
I ACRoctMUrl

i4 ta
114 14

us

o iM ia a i P is n m a : T O M it.ia a
N a -v t iA ia a
t Thump*
44 IM 18
1 winngtan
ta ta
• MMMlU N MtpU
18
d i m ) mat p u iia o i r m t i v w
iia -s / ic .a n
« MrrttNutmog
14 14 14
t Trod Lott
t a 14
1 (1I9J98B
4JI
0 IM) mat P (Ml tl.Mf T 144X1 aiMf
Pk its t»M&gt;H4l. I 4 I p4d 1 o W m
ta m Ctrrpootr: B14UI
IIW-1/UC.J14
t PortrMitt
14 IM 14
I RElJ4mtf
14 14
S RnmrCrtt,
14
0 i n i iim i p itn mat r ittsi Wat
04o CM litlll m m Scntdad: 7 TM’i

MmmjO

i M -v iA t m a
4 Somot
14 14 14
5 FotlBorort
IM 14
S ToughCootit
la
0 (H I IlMi P (til H 4 i T ( t i ll in.Ni
S P im n a ia
A— Ullt N-MMtlS

• p.m. — Finals of Srmlnolp AttiSpfle Conterpnc* Wrpttllng
Toumampnt

BASKETBALL: FrtdPrlPnpl
ConcordtLWNWNg M lOT)
ToyW U 7B Kinfuctf SI N
OrtPNlEt— n .O lt d lB f o N
Lonptmd lymtn Si Loot Mwy S3
•O n N 7LOrwndi Mao 77
I Oth Rd p 71Orltndi Edpnptr 43
Ctrdm Wni Ortnpt si. 01* *
Lott OrtntVy U
OHondl Htniopi Prop a OHonNi I
ChrtNonSl
Orlonjt loop Highiond Pnp 13. EoSMtilN
40ym* t TtchS?
Ortondl Trinity Pnp 41. MtNtun* FNrIdo
Arr Acodmy S3
Dtylono Botch Chrlillon 7f. Orlondt
EoMondOrMlonll
Orlondt BopHN Ttmp* SO Orltndi Chrt
Kona
Tottnt 7i Cnmond M
77.
CNrawnl a MNwl Oro U
01 SI Aupmhnt

ArtRtcmg
] N p m. - WTBS. 14 Mouri 4 Dtjtont
IMth.UI
7 pm - NVL AmorKm Sport Corokodt
(olio mitowgMI
BtshtfhtR
noon - WESHI. Colloft Gttor BtstrttM
with NormSiotn
41 m. - ESPN. Ctiltft. Vrg.n*4 Oman
I pm. -WESH1 CMItft. Nor*Corolmo4
NofroOomtlll
1pm - WCPXt NBA. Houtlon Rockrt4
Atltn*iHt«kk ll)
1 pm - WFTV4. Colloft. Nntdtlos
Vtgtitt Auburn III
FMMf
B u t - NVL ltd, Bou Ctossic 14m 1
pm I
l:Npm -WFTV 4. HtntPvk* Fishing
«P n. — WFTV t. NFL AFC NFC Pro I
III
GtN
1Rill - ESPN. IPCA MuGCtoUK. FiMl
RoutoIII Ii Ho ) N»m |
3 N p 71) - WCPX i PGbto BmcII NMIontl
Pr»Affl.FiMl Round (L)
Hk 3*t
7 N pm. - ESPN. NHL Bnton Brunt «l
NtwTtrt Rtnftrtlll
StlMf
fpm - ESPN. World Cup FrotsTyto
Sorctr
Spm -ESPN. Indoor. WNNtoWings4$1.
loutt SWtniir III
}:Npm - SIN. F4M InWmoclonM
VocMWf
Spm - ESPN. AmtrKo’t Cup Flnol. Rtct
Ono Highlights
II p m. - ESPN. Amtrlto i Cup Find. Rtct
Two ID

BASKETBALL:
ROTS
Tm *
Srmmoto

ML
4 I

l»mpn
LtuMinv

&gt; AM
IF 4
WS

||
i 1

41
II

LMtBrtntlor
I S
Lott Hoooll
I )
Ovodo
I S
FndtT'trtoBt
StmmoltULoUBrtmitrSS
LrmonULottMaf S3
OtMtSLLottHtMlIN
Th*sdt,'s rratos
Lott Mtry 71. NowSmyrnt Botch44
DtLond It Lott Moooi1SI

IN

IIS

0111$
Tm *
LGlMjry
Wmoo*
LGtHoMlI
IGfBriMtor
Irt* )
0*«*
Fndtr'irttoll
Lott Mtry 41.1,mtn 11
Thondtr'l m dh
LG*lr4nrtoy47, Son)Mt43
Ltt4 Hontll 4, Ori4d0SI

a l
S1
3 3
3 1
3 3
14
1 1

0B
—
3
3
3
4
1

AR
111
M
1S3
♦3
114
SI)

SthrdJT
ISS pm - WUCFFM 14»). Colltft
aomon. SWton 4 Ctntril Florida
I N pm — WPRK FM 111SI. Colltft. Stint
ltool Rolling
no pm - WUEEAM (1400). Contft.
Tt ut SonAntonio4 S'rton
Tilt
4 p m - WXIS AM ITtOI. SportTiit with
Chrulophtr Rutto
Soodif
FtitklH
4pm - WKIS AM (741. WW8F AM (IIMI.
NFL Pro Rati
Tilt
,
1 pm - WKIS AM 174). SportT it mth
Chr n'ophor Ru&gt;10

DOGS
Fridty NifhTt Rttoltt
I I I - 3/14, B: $1.44
I NtttRtOt
7to IN IN
4 HoodRirtrSty
400 410
3 Emit Scot
3M
0(14)NN; PIt41MN: T (111)litN
M - 1/4.0: Jill
I BuildADrttm
ItN 100 IN
I PoloB'Ottn
ItN IN
t SptcMty
4N
0 IIIIII Nr P 111) IIS Ni T Itl II NlMi
OOlltlIXSIO
3rd-1/14. M: 1143
1 HutttrBttty
IN IN 3M
I BullyPrtdr
SH SOP
I MtiSpttdy
IN
Oll lin N : PIMII7N. TIMIIS4M
mi — S/l*. 0: II IP
1 Stm t Sufftr
*
11to IN IN
I MLBuIltlonf
IN IN
3 Wonnlorlilting
SN
0 (13) II Mi P (111 3134, T 111IS 147Nj
Ouit 04 11713) 43 34
stk-t/itCilus
I TrotFirt
I3N IN Sto
4 MuchThtBolt
13N 7N
7 Full!Knot
IN
Q (441 44Ui P (44) II1N. T 1447) INN.
ScrHchtd IShtulint
4411— 1/1. C: 34PI
4 LuctyEma
IIN IM S »
7 hoodRnmrTtrrl
IN SN
3 NtnDtChuct
.&lt;N
0 134137N. P147)SS44, T111 3)444 N
7th- S/14. A: 11.14
7 SJlttl
UN IN 3H

BOYS
Turn
Lilt Horn)1*
Lott Miry
Ovtdo
Lymtn
Lott Brmtity

7 L T OB

I lo ­
ss I 31
333 4
3 3 11
3 S IS'1

BASKETBALL

W l Pd. 0B
11 II .IS 34 11 J4I 1
11 II S I II
ti a m in*
II 11 2S4 llto

01 1 1

AM
1S11
11)3
W43
0)4
4104

101

-SACOumpatt
Thtndiy'irtum
lymtn 3. Stmmono
UtiHotrillLlttM inrl
Ovttdol Lott Brtnnry I
Tattdjyt rtwltt
Lott Brmtity S. StminoW7
Lott Moryl Orwdll
Loot M*«trillymon4
GIRLS
Tttm
W L T
Llti Brmllty*
701
lymtn
S0S
ItttMory
S33
L l t t lW I
3SI
StminoW
I 77
Ovitdo
073
•SACOumpatai
Fndty't rtwltt
lymtn 1 StminoW0
Lott Mtry L Lott Montll I
Lott Bronttry 1 Outdo I
Wtdnmdty’i rtwtti
LottMory LO.tdol
lymonS, loti Monti) 0
Twidiy'i rtwlli
loot Brtnllty 1 Stmmow0
Win)*Ports Ovtdo)

GIRLS
WVhtr Pirt 71. ApnAo 34
Loot Mtry Ml Longnwd Lynun 31
Orlondt Jtntl 0L Ltmhurg O
Oriondo Ed a m * SL OrNndi OG RIda N
Orlondt Coloniol M. Wonr Cordon Wool
Orma3S
Orlondt ChrUHon SI. Orlondt Boprt) Tim
pNIl
Orlondt BoomU. Orlondt Enm SI SOT
Orltndi EotKond Chrthon 31 Dtylono
Botch Chrittion77
Orltndi lulhtr 7L AMntwrdi Acodany 34
Oriondo Horltoa Pnp S3. Orlondt Ottmty
Chrtflona
CNrmonlSL Mount OtriN
TlluttilN Aotrtnoul USoWmttM
Em 7*N. UmthltoN
Ttvortl &gt;4. Crtwltnd 13

i P il ir i C t ilir t ic i

SOCCER: Stmttlt AINofk CtMtrotct

RADIO

OcMoVonguad Ml CsRaotRaEsoDM
la
MtNtumt Control CoANic 71 Fort PNro
JthnCorrtn S3
TnnNn M. Ocolt SI. JN* IMhwai U. OT
EMin SI OmthlloM
Pori Ormpt Struct Cnth S7. PtdlUN

BASXITBAU: NBA STANDINGS

StmmoW47. DtySou SttOrttit 4
Lttp Mory N. DtLondS3letortimtl
Lott Htnoil St OriondoLoto Hifhlond4
Tattdtr't rttoll
OrlondtCtlonl447.Lymonl

Spm — WESH ISporttWorld
4p m. - WFTV *, Wldt World4 Sport

DOO RACING Al SooltrtOrUtdo

Cubs Swap Cey For Quinones

— .S A T U R D A Y ’S SC H ED ULE —

W R IS T L IN O

Barrasso Turns Boos To Choors
A s Sabros Stop Nordlquos, 3-1

In other games. Washington and the New York Islanders
tied 3-3. Edmonton and Minnesota tied 2-2 and New Jersey
beat Vancouver 4-3.

3B la

I MMl,m. tutor,
SM
o o n n m p im ib * t is m im u i
■1-3/14.0:31*1
I nn'MCwwi
i « sa im
i n ito n
la la
i m int*
ta
0 IHI I4.X: P 1*11 MB: T ItH I INJk

Bolton
P4ilMMpM«
WoMnftan
Nr. York
N r. Jtnr,
Cmtrtl Onnwi
Alton!*
31 IS *31 —
Ottrrl
33 IS *41 to
MihMukM
74 14 J44 3
CNCKfO
II 11 S I 4to
70 31 4*3 1
IndtoM
Orvttond
17 17 IM tlto
Wtstori Cotltrtnct
Mrtml Ofyrutt
a I Pci. 01
Dollot
a IS 0SI Utoh
a 17 SIS 1'1
Houston
a II Jtl t

Otnvtr

11 is 40 Pn
is 1* 141 ll’&gt;

Son Anion*
Socrtmtnto

u 71

ip m it J07 1

LA Lottrs
Portlond
Stott*
Cold*) Stott
GB

I
3
4’1
I &gt;
7

All
T il l
ISIS
144)
703
003
4114

VOlllYBALL: SotNrd Rtcruhtt looftti
Mtndty tCo EdBltoiut
Tttm
W l GR
DvtyWort
40 Bon Motor lint
S3 3
Dolphmt
43 7
Pmtcrnl Kidd* Korn*
S3 3
Goion
41 4
Sp.tryt Tht Cong
03 1*1
BuDwhngri
30 7
Pit ) Art Pirn
04 I
GoodShtphtfd lulh*tn Church
31 I
Churchol Cod01Prophtcy
01 I
Tmdiy's Co E4 A Itoptt
Turn
W l GB
Pitrlon
01 Oulripfm
01 —
Dti*onoSodS*yKt
73 I
Blot’* i
73 I—
IronPtop*
30 S
Loom Scrtnt
17 I
HghJumptn
I) 7
Dolph.m
04 I

IS ll'y

a sis ion

a in 11
m tsn

h

LA CMpptn
V IN IT’S
Fndty’i Orwlh
Ahonlt IPO. NowYork N
PhilodHphlo 111. Chktgo HI
Bolton IM India* 44
DtHtt 131Milttuhtt III
LA Lottrs IILPhotnic IP3
Coidm Staid 137. Sttltto 114
Portlond ITlNtwJtrsryW
Son Anton* 114. LA Clipp*t IN I0T)
Soltrdly't Gtmts
0*iroilolNr*Y*k,7 Spm
Plutodtopnto*1Wishing)*). 7 S p m
Indtong*1Ctovttond: |p m
Stcrtmtnto tl D*)«*. t X p m.
LA Clipptn *1Utoh. 4 X p m
Phonii tl $Mni«. X X pm
VMdtr'l Gtmts
HoustonttAttonli
Hr* J*trr tl Goto*) Stott
ChictgotlDttrwf. night
0*ltottlPorttond.night
Utohtl Stcrwnonto. high)
Milwtutto tl Stn Anton*, night

•ASXETIAIL: Fndty 1CHkft KtstITt
(4d
AITrtd I0S. Rtnswlt* Potytoch 74
Cotoy Q. MtddltPury 73
John Joy TlRtmopoi;
Juniolo U Drt* SO
Mt&lt;nt Mtritimt S4. LyndonSI 74
Ttorvlch 71 Boxdom33
Nytch 47, Simpson tt
Plthshurgh SI a Ontontt SI 34
Pfmelton 41 Brown 77
Rochtstor Iruhtuto 71. ClorkionU
SI Jot* Fish* 74. Robtrt Wtstoyon 71
Souhiompton11. Coneor0* 43
SI iMrtnct 17. HoMrt to
Ytltlt.PtnnN
Vill*)Ovi 34. BostonCol 33
lA iM rttP m

*

(

T t/ k B

C m ad r

.,

arid IS

McKonWit 71 JudMn 14
W*.S3w&lt; 71W4. WNttaoltr 73
Wit UCnmtTlWN. ItGwNrOI
WIiOmhoGttWn. RHmrFilNII
trn la .O o »ta wh. PionmiNN
Air F n 41 BrtBl* V**g 41
INUII. Aim o Pk HIc M
CNOtrtCHumhMNSIH
Col SI EOwtfd a Col SI MRvda u
CNPdySLOllCNPLA S7
Comm PNG P. Wtrtrn W*h 74(OT)
CoUIIInGtLW. NpoMNikiTt
OdiwGIIocOHilNSI a
Dmmngi Hl!NIt CMW y Pomtnt so
NML maun* 71Sd CtNrMi IS
Norlhtrn CoN 41. S Dtholo St 74
On|G Toco8 lo*H AndOort a
SI Morhnt 71NWChrtKtn 73
Stuthm OtpG 71 Pocir* 10
SNkMm S&gt; GOOciSI 47
WtrtmSiaFtr1L»y*s74

BASEBALL
BASIIAU: FrWpyiAtCtGMHl
Mloot INn WtrSdCoGor 1 SldlwN I
-| —
Ml as IB — I 0 I
■ l * ai rl dl OO 111 O i l - 0 I I
Cortr. Rood IT). ItntG IT). Tlmmm II)
Gd Ftrlvm. PHN4TM If). RGhM pndFoviN
Tryort

HOCKEY
M0CXIV:NN1 STANDINGS
W i l l i Cooloriico

Ptl

a1
PhllodHaU
NY Itlondtn
WothlngNn
NV
Plttibwrgpt

II 30
14 31
If 11

M It
31 &gt;1
a a
it a
is a

Honan
Montrt#l
QuG pc
•uttoto

OF GA
311 143
S4 IM 173
SO IM 143
43 IM 317
M IM IM
40 114 174

n

34 13
3411
II 14

«
1
|
1
t

a
13
u
41
33

NwitoOhWG
a L T P4l
33 II 1 II
a il i a
It 23 1 41
It V 3 43
11 N 1 O
3*tu n Dh ium
Eton*)1*1
14 14 4 73
Wlnnlp*
31 II 3 II
27 21 1 1*
C*(f*y
Lot M pt* nn t a
V«ncou)*r
IS 11 1 3*
FrMiT'l trum

Mlnntioto
0«to*4
SI. Lflult
T*wto
cmc*m

tot IM
IS Itt
M3 IS
1*7 IN
IM 3M
GF GA
it3 in
13* III
171 IM
173 IM
IM 364
144 in
lit 171
» 700
313 3M
171 111

NY Itltndrs 1 Woshmgton3(TNI
Mmnsoio 1 EdnoMon! ITNI
N n Jtnoy A Vtncouv* 3
Stttrday'i Gtmts
NY Rtngtrs it PhilodHpMo. I 43p m
WWtptf il Boston. I IJpm
HortlordttNY Itlondws. 7 PSpm
Lot AngtNSll Montrttl. I H p m
Htwl*sty tlCtlgtry l lip m
Ottrcltl Toronto. I OSpm
Clxcjgo il SI. Loud I N pm
Staday'i Goats
Wnnptf |l WtsMnfton

SOCCER
SOCCER: MISL STANDINGS
Enltrt Ontsitt
W L Pel.
It 1 447
tt 1 447
11 9 III
11 10 S43
II 13 431
1 11 ia

Hawka 109. Knicks 98
At Atlanta. Dominique Wilkins
s c o red 31 p o in ts and J on
Koncak grabbed 17 rebounds to
lead the Hawks. New York re­
ceived 23 points from Gerald
Wilkins. •
Sixers 121, B alia 112
A t P h ila d e lp h ia . C h a rle s
Barkley collected 40 points and
21 rebounds to pace the 76ers.
Michael Jordan scored 49 points
for Chicago. Barkley scored 17
points In the fourth quarter,
helping Philadelphia post Its
11th victory In Its taat 15 games.
M avericks 133, Backs 117
At Dallas, Derek Harper and
Mark Aguirre scored 28 points
apiece for Dallas. Harper hit 5 of
the Mavericks' 9 3-point goals to
a c c o u n t f o r 15 p o i n t s .
Milwaukee hit 7 times from
3-point range, as the teams
combined to convert an NBArccord 16 3-polnt shots. John
Lucas led the Bucks with 21
points.
L a k e rs 1 14, Suns 102
At Phoenix. A.C. Green scored
25 points to lead the Lakers to
their 12th victory in their last 14
meetings with the Suns. Karcem
Abdul-Jabbar added 23 points
for th e Lakers. The Suns, whose

OtmthtrPurftMfMpny

Btttot 17NY Mtnptrs. wphf
HorHtrdll PIHsPurgl). n&gt;ght
Los Angtttsil OutCwc. night
Ednontontl Chicogo. night
Mmntsdt (I Vtncouv*. nigM

Clnttohd
Otltot
Btilinwrt
Mmnttoli
Chictgo
Nr. Ywk

*
Uiiitad Prasa la ttm a tlo a a l •
The Boston Celtics, playinrf
"u g ly ” and trailing by 14 points
in the third period, rallied and
extended to 37 their regular*
season w in n in g streak over]
Central Division opponents.
"W e had a very sluggish start
In the first half. W e couldn't play
defense cuid our offense inatcheq
our defense, which was pretty
ugly." Boston Coach K.C. Joneq
said F rid ay night a fter thq
C eltics defeated the Indian^
Pacers 100-94. " I could see right
away we were out o f sync and
couldn't get anything going."
The Celtics received crucial
plays from Dennis Johnson and
Danny Alnge In the final 1:29
and 31 p o in ts from K evlri
M cH ale to post th eir sixth
straight victory. It was Boston's
eighth straight triumph over the
Pacers In the past two seasons.
The last time the Celtics lost In
the regular season to a Central
Division opponent was Jan. 7.
1986. 113-107 at Detroit.

01
_

i
i
3
11

W*st»r» Dntt*.
Ttcomt
17 S m —
1] 9 141 4
Stn 0&lt;tgo
11 n so 1
WKh.lt
4 M XI •to
Ktntts Dtp
1 is 341 •to
51 Louis
lot Angrtot
t 14 n N
Fndiyi RtwHs
Bolhmon HL Mmnmolt 4
St louisl. CltvtUndl
Wichilt 7, Chictgo7
Son D*go L Firsts City 3
U7*d&lt;y's Gtmts
KtnstiCi7yillosAnaln.il Upm
Dallas tl Ttcomo. IP 13 p m
Sttdoy'sGtmn
SonDtgotlBolhmwt
Wich.Utl SI Louis
M.nmso)atlNn&gt;Y*h
Ch.ctfo tl los Angtitt. »'ftl

DEALS
Itwhtil
Ch-ctfO (Nl) - Trtdtd third Ustmtn Ron
Cry toOu l*&gt;dlor nl*id* lu. t Ou.nonn

three-game winning streak was
broken, w ere led by L arry
Nance’s 18 points.
W a rrio rs 1 2 7,S on lcs 119
At Oakland. Calif.. Joe Harry
Carroll scored 32 points and Eric
"S leep y" Floyd and Purvis Short
each added 31 to lead the
Warriors. Floyd, who had 13
assists, sank a pair of baskets
and a free throw In the final 29
seconds for the Warriors. Seat­
tle’ s Torn Chambers led all
players with 36 points.
B la zers 125, N ets 107
At Portland. Ore.. Klkl Vandeweghe scored 28 points and
Caldwell Jones grabbed 14 re­
bounds to power Portland. The
Nets' road record fell to 2-20.
Dwayne "P e a rl" Washington led
New Jersey with 18 points.
Spurs 124, C lippers 120
At Los Angeles, Alvin Rob­
ertson scored 15 of his 25 points
In the final 7:37 of the game —
including 6 In overtime — to lift
San Antonio to its fourth straight
victory. The decision spoiled Los
Angeles' bid to win two straight
games for the first time this
season.

La d y's S e cre t Stuns
Lucas W ith L o n g e v ity
NEW YORK (UPI) If he
hadn't seen the birth certificate,
trainer D. Wayne Lukas never
would have believed three years
ago Lady's Secret was a daugh­
ter of Triple Crown champion
and two-time Horse of the Year
Secretariat.
"Y ou know I raised her on my
ranch In O klahom a." Lukas
said, "and. at 2 . I thought she
was so small, she'd be nothing
but a six-furlong or seveneighths (of a mile) horse —
maybe a mile at best. She was so
small and delicate. Of course, we
now know nothing could be
further from the truth."
Lady’s Secret, now 5 and the
1986 older filly champion, has
long since proven she received
the best traits Secretariat's
expensive genes had to offer.
And Friday, the thoroughbred
industry honored her and her
father by naming her the 1986
Eclipse Horse of the Year.
The unanimous selection ol
th e T h o r o u g h b r e d R a c in g
Associations of North America,
th e N a tio n a l T u r i W r ite r s
Association and the Dally Raring
Form. Lady's Secret is the first
of Secretariat’s offspring to be so
honored.
T h e 5-year-old gray mare.

R a c in g

DOG
RACING
NOW!

owned by Joyce and Eugene
Klein of San Diego, also became
only the second female to be
voted Horse of the Year since the
Eclipse Awards were established
In 1971. Joining 1983 winner All
Along. Prior to the Eclipse
Awards, only two fillies —
Hustler in 1944 and Twilight
T ear in 1945 — had been
honored as Horse of the Year.

N IG H T LY 7:30 p.m .

{except Sun.)
Matinees Mon., Wed.

&amp; Sat. 1:00 p.m.

The announcement was made
at Aqueduct by TRA president
James Bassett, and transmitted
by satellite to racetrack and
simulcast sites across the United
States.
Lady's Secret received 172 of
the 229 Eclipse votes cast, to 4 1
for Manila. 8 for older horse
cham pion Turkom an. 4 for
3-year-old colt champion Snow
Chief, and 3 for steeplechase
champion Flatterer. One voter
abstained.
Lady's Secret's election was
unanimous because she carried
die majority In the separate vote
counts of the TRA. NTW A and
the Form.

PLAY T H E
E X C ITIN G &amp; HIGH
P A Y IN G ...
“ PIC 6” &amp; “ BIG Q ”
THURS - FREE g7and
stand admission lor ladies
Visit our two climate conttolled
Clubhouses lor your hne aming
and entertainment pleasure!

Rotary Tees Up Feb. 9
It was not the sticker price which caused
Brent Carli to pull out his driver. Much to
the contrary. Sanford's Courtesy Pontiac
will be offering a new car to any player who
scores a hole-in-one during the Rotary

il*-*

CLUBHOUSE RESV.: 831-1600

Charities Golf Tournament on the 10th hole
at the Mayfair Country Club Monday, Feb.
9. Carli and his Rotary Club of Sanford
Breakfast members are hoping for 128
entries. See Briefs for further information.

SANFORD-ORLANDO
KENNELCLUB
North ol Orlando. Just otl Hwy. 17-92
301 Dog Track Road, lonowood
Sorry No One Under 18

�—1^-V * -V

w . - ' - Y -7* w,

11 j V * ’ Y " /

J ' / ••■ ■

'

r r r

l

(AR—SaMord HtraM, laiHard. FI.

Daytona Drivers
To Take Cautious
Road In 24 Hours

Sanity, Fafc. 1.1W7

I think Hay (Uonord) Is on on afo trip. With mo. I
.think I |wst wont to show that I'm o truo champion.

— Marvin Haglar

Hagler Seeks His
Due Vs. Leonard
LO S A N G E L E S (U P !) Som ew h ere beneath Marvin
Haglcr's menacing scowl Is a
•man seeking acceptance, one of
the few things a $30 million
purse can't buy.
*- "1 believe I was cheated out of
my glory when I won the title."
?ald the undisputed middle*
w eigh t cham pion before he
opened training in Palm Springs
for the S100 million showdown
with Sugar Ray Leonard April 6
at Las Vegas. Nev.
"W hen I won It In Europe,
they threw bottles at me. I
.believe by the status which
• Sugar Ray Leonard carries ...
let's put It this way: I'm happy,
but I'm not satisfied yet. This Is
.what I need.”
It wasn't enough that Hagler
!had become rich In the ring or
ihat he had stopped all comers
since winning the crown from
Alan Mlnter more than six years
ago. Victories over Roberto
Duran. Thomas Hearns and a
superbly condition John Mugabl
Improved his reputation, yet did
pot elevate him to the stature of
iMuhnmmad All. Joe Louis or
■Leonard himself.
, "W hen the challenge came
from Ray. It was good." Hagler
said, try in g to exp lain his
reasons for ending an unofficial
retirement. "It moved me. I was
sitting outside on a swing late
that night and I decided to make
up my mind, to talk to my wife
about It. She knew In the back of
my mind and In my heart that I
really wanted to fight this guy.
"She said. ‘Don't think about
It anymore. Just do It.’ "
It has since been done.
"Leon ard saved the d a y ."
promoter Bob Arum said be­
tw e e n d a s h e s a ro u n d the
country to hype the bout that
■ seems to need little buildup.
"W ere it not for him. Hagler
would've almost definitely re­
tired. There was no one out there
for him. Marvin has handled his
money better than anyone who
**has ever fought In the game. He
^didn't need this fight."
f a i iy w

j P ^ w

^ t iW

ly '

B M P

• tlonal.
"I believe this Is the ultimate.
The fight In the champ's ca­
r e e r , " said Pat P e tro n e lll.
; Hagler’s manager. "T h ere Is
[ nothing higher than this. He’s
done everything, accepted every
^ c h a lle n g e . W e h a ve n e v e r
•ducked anybody.
"Marvin always had doubts if
it would ever happen. Deep
. Inside, he wanted the match
very badly. When the match
■came about and it was a reality.
• he was overjoyed." .
•: Goody Petronelll, H agler's
Strainer and Pat's brother, could
pint envision Hagler concluding
Mils career with a match against
tLeonard.
t "This fight. I never thought
(.Would develop." he said. "But
jit's happened and It’s here. It
^reminds me of the barroom talk.
$Could (Jack) Johnson beat Jack
SDempscy? On one hand, you’ve

B o x in g
got a bunch of people saying.
'Yeah, he'd knock him out.’ On
the other hand, you've got the
people saying. ’ Dempsey would
knock him out?'
"Could Joe Louis beat All?
You could go on In history.
You’d never know the answer. 1
thought the same would happen
with Marvin and Ray. Well,
we're going to find out. It's not
going to be barroom talk. This Is
for real."
Hagler. who will be six weeks
short of his 33rd birthday when
the fight takes place. Is 62-2-2
with 52 knockouts. He has not
lost since 1976 when Willie
Monroe stopped him in 10 round
In Philadelphia.
The roots arc Newark. N.J..
w h e r e H a g l e r s p e n t h is
c h ild h o o d In p o v e r ty . R e ­
portedly. the family slept under
their beds during the 1968 race
riots so that bullets coming
through windows would not
Injured them. Soon after. Hagler
Joined relatives In Brockton.
Mass., a town made famous by
bruising heavyweight champion
Rockcy Marciano.
Haglcr's first 14 fights were In
the New England area, his only
tw o d e fe a t s c o n t e s t e d in
Philadelphia.
"This (the Leonard challenge)
reminds me of the Philadelphia
wars." said Hagler, who fell to
Bobby Watts two months before
the Monroe bout. "M e as a young
kid. always having something to
lose, trying to prove m yself to
the public. This Is Wars II."
T h e H earn s bout, w h ich
Hagler ended In the third round
fo llo w in g seven m inutes o f
b r e a t h t a k in g a c t io n , w as
another time the champion con­
sidered the ring a bat Replace.
"T h a t’s what boxing Is —
war." Hagler said as he prepared
for Hearns. "Boxing Is a con­
frontation. and the man who Is
physically stronger, who has
prepared himself better and who

•k

M arvin
H a g le r

MO

—

i

rA q s ............ 30
H e ig h t .... 5 '9 Li
W eight.......160
R e a c h ....... .75"

Hagler, his mind reacting as a
warrior's would, ignored a deep
gash on his forehead when he
stopped Hearns on that April
night in 1985.
"After you fight for so many
years, you lose the fear." Hagler
said. "A fter you haven't been In
the ring for long, you back away.
T h e y ' l l be s o m e f e a r on
Leonard's part.
"I expect him to try and bring
out the best of my abilities. I feel
when an opponent Is good or
threatening to take something
away from me. I think I prepare
myself mentally and physically
to be In the best shape I've even
been In. I thought I couldn't dc
any better than what I did when
I fought John Mugabl.
"I think the reason I’ve been
here so long is that I earned it
the hard way.”
Those around Haglcr's train­
ing sessions m arvel at Ills

commitment. He does his road
work and sparring religiously.
The latest camp opened slightly
ahead o f schedule, three days
before Super Bowl XXI.
" I ’ll train the same way for
this figh t as a lw a y s ," said
H a g le r . w h o o fte n le a v e s
Brockton early to avoid distrac­
tions and work in w arm er
weather. " I 'l l run the hills.
Maybe I'll do a little more
running to get some of that
quickness. We bring five or six
sparring partners in. They don't
hast long. I need fresh meat."
H agler laughed, then dis­
cussed those fighters who he
says have been counting the
days until he retires.
"Ray was waiting for me to get
older." he said. "Like Tommy
Hearns, like Roberto Duran. I
said. 'Don't let this (shaved)
head fool you.’ I'm not an old
man. believe me. I still feel very
young. Age Is Just a number. I
feel very good at age 32. I feel
l iu-a, lot monger und-1 think I
have die tools to put him away."
L e o n a rd , H a g le r said. Is
approaching the fight as the way
to get back In the limelight.
"I think Ray Is on an ego trip,”
he said. "W ith me. I think I Just
want to show that I'm a true
champion.”
Pat Petronelll said Leonard
must be considered more of a
threat Ilian anyone else In (he
division.
"Forget the Currys and the
Thomas Hearnscs. he's better
than all of them.” Petronelll
said. "Marvin has already beat
everybody out there. There’s no
one left. If tills Is his last fight,
and It very well could be. what
better way is there to go out than
with a show like this.
"T h e time for this event Is
now. The people are hungry for
It. They weren't as hungry then
(a few years ago) as they are
now. It was nowhere near the
fight that it will be today. From

then to today, the champion
(Hagler) is much more popular.
His record Is growing and grow­
ing.
"R ay Isn’t the fighter he was
then. He's a better fighter today.
I believe that. He's bigger, he’s
stronger and he's 100 percent
fit. I don't think you’ ll ever see a
fight again where you'll get
fighters like Sugar Ray Leonard
and Marvin, two great champi­
ons."
Hagler said the sport was
Invented for events such as the
one which will take place In a
desert parking lot.
"Everything about It Is what
boxing stands for.” he said. " I
hope that this fight docs some­
thing for the boxing world. I
hope that It brin gs people
together. That's what's good
about boxing.
"Nationalities come together,
everybod y becom es friends.
Whites, blacks. Chinese, all un­
der one roof. This is what boxing
should be about."
The promotional tour before
the holidays abruptly ended
when a weary Hagler, shuttled
from city to city to answer
similar questions, halted It a few
stops before Its scheduled con­
clusion.
"I'm not going to fight with
my mouth." he said. "I'm going
to fight with my fists."
The champion said Leonard's
left eye. which was surgically
repaired In 1982. might he
hunted by those fists.
"I'm not thinking about the
eye." he said. "I'll be hitting him
all over his body. But If I'm
losing. I might go after the eye.
"I'm the one who has more to
lose. I plan on not lettin g
Leonard take anything away
from inc. It's a scary feeling,
because If 1 lose, tills man can
control everything I’ ve built.
Nobody takes nothing away
from me. I've always been that
way."

Until today's defeat. Murray's
all-round boat had held an
advantage In light sea breezes,
while Stars &amp; Stripes was re­
garded as a hcavy-alr boat
reaching optimum performance
in winds exceeding 20 knots.
Now In his fourth campaign,

Conner had started In 1974 as
the tactician on the winning
Courageous. In 1980. he suc­
cessfully defended the Cup sail­
ing Freedom, only to become the
first American to lose It three
years later.
Murray's lone previous Cup

v e n t u r e w a s in 1 9 8 3 on
Advance, eliminated first In the
challenger trials.
The two ocean racers crossed
the starting line simultaneously.
Conner was in an ideal position
to take advantage of a huge shift
and quickly sliced ahead.

"It was an emotional thing,”
Leonard said. " I didn't want to
hear It any more: I didn't want to
hear It from you guys (media). I
didn't want to hear It from the
fans. I called it quits.
“ The next two years I said ‘ I
did the wrong thing.* I watched
that film and 1 said 'Hey man.
I'm better than this.’
"I know I can fight. And most
Importantly. I know I can w in."
After Hagler's unimpressive
15-round decision over Roberto
Duran Nov. 10, 1983. Leonard
told friends at ringside he was
sure he could beat Hagler. That
feeling grew with each Hagler
fight, most of which Leonard
attended In his role its HBO's
boxing analyst. After Hagler's
11 th-round knockout over Junior
middleweight John Mugabl last
March. Leonard felt It was now
or never.
"This fight. I've always felt
was Inevitable." he said. " I t ’s
like being an amateur boxer and
win every amateur tournament
there is and never get to the
Olympics.
"I was never retired. I was
unemployed.
Leonard's challenge of Hagler
received a negative public reac­
tion. Leonard's Injured left eye
and inactivity were the main
reasons against such a bout.
Leonard repeatedly emphasized

he had medical clearance, out It
took a passing grade from a
battery of seven doctors to final­
ly calm the furor when the bout
was announced Nov. 3.
Still, skeptics remained.
"I Just hope his comeback
doesn't hurt boxing." Hagler
said.
Another reason people said
Leonard should not light was the
wishes o f his wife. Juanita
L eon ard n ever w an ted her
husband to box. even when he
was champion.
However. It Is hard to deter a
man from a career that makes
him rich and famous. Before
Leonard decided to fight Hagler.
he talked with his wife and she
reluctantly accepted his de­
cision.
"I accept It. 1 have to get used
to It." Juanita Leonard said. " I f I
told Ray I was wholeheartedly
against it. he would respect my
wishes. But people have to
accept that Ray's the kind of guy
who can make his own de­
cisions. He's made some good
decisions before.
"I don't want to say I'm all for
It. because I'm not. I don't like
boxing to begin with. 1 think It's
brutal."
Hagler needed time to consider
Leonard's decision, and did not
accept the c h a lle n g e until
August. Eventually, public opl-

nlon began turning and the light
has gained acceptance. The
odds, which opened at 4-1 In
Halger's favor, dropped to 2 M i-1
and ticket sales arc brisk.
"First It was, 'Oh no. this kid
don't have a chance.’ " Leonard
said. "Now It's *Wc see some­
thing different, we see a different
Ray. This kid might have a
chance.'
"There was initial paranoia.
'He hasn't fought In a long time,
how can he win?* Now they’ve
had time to re-evaluate the
situation. Hey. I didn't Just start
fighting. I've been lighting a long
time." •
Leonard has put his sur­
gically-repaired eyes (a minor
procedure was performed on his
right eye) to work, watching
countless hours o f tapes o f
Hagler's last five fights. Before
he left for his Hilton Head. S.C..
training camp Jan. 20. Leonard
trained at the gym named for
him at Palmer Park. Md.
Before and after each session,
he watched tapes of HalgerDuran In an office one flight
above the gym. Leonard re­
members the two fights he split
with Duran In 1980. The first, a
15-round d e c is io n , was
Leonard's only loss In 34 fights.
He avenged it with an eighthround TKO In the "N o mas”
bout.

- *K W !

l

j... Conner
^

Continued from IB

.luck on sailboats." Murray said.
"Dentils took the most of the
lopportunlty."

... Thrill
Continued from IB
^Olympic medal winners. "I'm
betting on his ego."
y Added Angelo Dundee, who
will help train Leonard for the
]Aprll 6 fight: "H e's high because
he got this fight. If he didn't get
It. he would be In pain."
: Leonard's May 1 announce'Client surprised many people.
;^ut did not shock those closest
to him. He had wanted a Hagler
(Ig h t for y ea rs . G reat
welterweights have challenged
great mlddlewelghts throughout
‘ boxing history, and a battle
between Leonard and Hagler
was considered natural when
Ihey were the only undisputed
champions from September of
1981 until Leonard's first rcylilrement the follow in g N ov­
ember.
Leonard's eye surgery pushed
^back the dream matchup once,
and his lackluster showing In a
.1982 fight against Kevin Howard
prompted him to retire again.
Leonard was floored In the
fourth round before stoppplng
Howard In nine, and retired
again Im m ediately after the
bout.

DAYTONA BEACH (UPI) When drivers discuss their pre-race plans, talk usually centers
on when and where to pass and
how quickly they would like to
take the lead.
Friday at Daytona Interna­
tional Speedway, drivers pre­
paring for the 21st 24 Hours at
Daytona instead talked about
how cautiously they were going
to drive.
"For sure, we're going to run
conservative." said veteran Bob
Wollek of France, who will start
In the second position with
teammates Darin Brassfleld and
Jim Busby In a Porsche 962.
"Th at's a difficult decision. If
someone goes for it and pulls
away, and has no problems,
you’re done."
The history of the race shows
the team that has the fewest
problems, not necessarily the
fastest car. goes to Victory Lane.
West Germans Jochen Mass
and Klaus Ludwig, along with
car owner Bruce Leven. will start
on the pole In a Porsche 962.
Sarel van der Merwc and Doc
Bundy, in a Corvette GTP. quali­
fied third, followed by the teams
of Rob Dyson. Price Cobb and
Vem Schuppan In a Porsche
962; and Jim Adams. John
Hotchkiss and John Hotchkiss
Jr., also in a Porsche 962.
"W e led the first three hours
last year and. after a brake
problem dropped us to seventh,
we got up to third before we
went out with a broken cylinder
w all." Dyson said.
"Last year, we led four hours
before we had problems towards
the end and finished third,"
Brassfleld said.
Don Bell, Jeff Kline and Bob
Earl had the best qualifying time
in the Camel Lights division and
will start In the 14th position
overall in a Flero GTP. NASCAR

Auto Racing
stars Terry Labonte and Darrell
Waltrip. along with Greg Pickett,
had the best qualifying time in
the GTO division and will start
In the 15th position overall in a
Camaro.
The highest-qualifying GTU
c a r w a s th e M a z d a R X -7
belonging to the team o f Bart
and Tom Kendall and Max
Jones. Tom Kendall qualified the
car 44th overall. Sixty-nine
vehicles were entered as o f late
Friday.
The endurance factor makes
the starting positions relatively
unimportant. Wollek said.
"You can start dead-last. 20
minutes after all the other cars,
and still win the race." said
Wollek. a two-time winner In the
24 Hours. "You have to keep
running and running and runn­
ing. It doesn't help to go very
fast and spend 20 minutes In the
pits, then come out and run very
fast for a while, then break down
and spend another 30 minutes
in the pits. You want to go
conservative and keep going all
the time."
The team of defending cham­
pion A1 Holbert. who will drive In
the race only In an emergency,
made a conservative move late
Friday. Holbert decided to install
a 2.8-liter engine In his Porsche
962, compared to the 3.0-llter
model In most Porschcs.
Holbert — the defending IMSA
champion who has trimmed his
schedule to help Porsche develop
an Indy car — said the smaller
engine will improve fuel mileage,
as well as reduce wear on brakes
and tires. Derek Bell. A1 Unser
Jr., and Chip Robinson are
scheduled to drive the Porsche.

Payne, Raiders Ready
To Rebound From Loss
By Mark Blythe
Herald Sports W riter
Seminole Community College
basketball coach Bill Payne Is
hoping his team will be able to
rebound from Its one-point loss
in Jacksonville Wednesday and
come out and play Lake City
Community College In the same
fashion they have been playing
lately.
T h e R aid ers have played
excellent for the past few weeks
with big wins over Daytona
Beach Community College and
St. Johns Community College
before dropping a narrow de­
cision to Florida Community
College.
"I hope we don't come out
flat." Payne said. "I also hope
the kids don't play with feelings
about the loss Wednesday."
Seminole, now 23-3 and 7-2 In
the Mid-Florida conference, will
need to play well In hopes of
either catching back up to FCC
who leads the conference with
an 8-1 record or holding on to
second place which would give
have the conference tournament
held at SCC.

B a s k e t b a ll
The Raiders own a 83-74
decision over Lake City earlier
this season at Lake City. It Is a
Just a question o f whether or not
they can bounce back and play
with the same Intensity.
"E v e ry o n e seem s up and
ready to play," Payne said. " I ’m
not sure If they are or not
though."
Seminole had two brilliant
p erform an ces turned In at
Jacksonville. Claude Jackson, a
6-7 strong forward scored a
career-high 24 points and pulled
down a career-high 13 rebounds.
F resh m a n c e n te r R o b e rt
Williams poured In a career-high
17 points and pulled down nine
more rebounds for the Raiders.
Seminole will look to shut
down Lake City's high scoring
Tony Anderson who scored 27
points In the teams first meeting.

"W e Just have to go out and do
our best." Payne said. "W e
haven't done much this week In
practice and won't change our
style of play any."

Seminole will also hope to get
guard Malcolm Houston un­
tracked. Houston, who has seen
limited times In the past two
games due to foul trouble, has
not been able to get Into the flow
of either game, therefore, being
held In check.

Whenever Leonard noticed a
move by Duran that gave Hagler
trouble, his eyes lit up. "I can do
that better.” he says.
Leonard also likes what he
hears from Hagler. He consid­
ered It a victory that Hagler quit
the 12-city publicity tour sched­
uled by promoter Bob Arum
halfway through. Hagler stopped
talking to Leonard when the
Nov. 3 press conference In New
York began. Leonard continued
to make small talk but Hagler
refused to answ er. Flnallv,
Hagler failed to show for the Dec.
16 Chicago press conference and
called olT the tour.
By then. Arum claimed to
have $28 million in the till and
let Hagler walk, despite his $12
million guaranteed purse.
"M a rv in ’ s rather Intense."
Leonard said. "H is mentality
won't allow him to be friends
with his opponent. That's his
persona, he's mean. But I don't
have to hate my opponent to go
into the ring.
"A t the New York press con­
ference. we talked about every­
thing. We shook hands, then
when the curtain went up. It was
war. In private. I talk to him. He
don't talk to me.
"I like his way of thinking.
He's not thinking about winn­
ing. he's thinking about what
happens If he loses. He even said

'I can fight again if I lose.' that's
all I wanted to hear."
Leonard Insists he will never
fight again, win or lose, after
meeting Hagler. Once this fight
ends, he says he will happily
continue to work for HBO and
spend time with his family.
Leonard Is enjoying watching
the athletic career Ray Jr.
"H e was the MVP o f his
football team as a defensive
end." Leonard said. "N ow he's
playing basketball, he's like
Mlchfcl Jordan."
Leonard sa.d he can ‘.ever
muster the same drive again for
any other opponent.
"A man Is only allowed so
much drive for something like
this." he said. "There's a limit
on how many things you can do.
I'm putting all my energy, every­
thing Into this fight."
" I ’ve never seen Ray like this
for a fight." Juanita Leonard
said. "H e takes this fight home."
Leonard has had his share of
super fights. His two Duran
bouts and the Hearns fight were
among the biggest and most
famous In the history of boxing.
‘Each fight had Its feeling of
being the ultimate.” Leonard
said. "T o beat Duran or Hearns
would be the ultimate."
So how Is Hagler different?
"T h is." Leonard said. "Is the
conclusion of the m ovie."

�r

Itgol Motif

legal Notice

R E P O R TO F CONINTION
COMSOLI B A T IN # DOMESTIC AN D FO R E IG N S U B S IO IA R IIIO F
T N I L IB R H TY N A TIO N AL BANK O F LCNRWOOO IN T N I
S TA TC OP FLOR ID A, A T T N I C l O t l OP BUSINESS ON
D EC EM B E R t l, I f H P U B LIS H ! 0 IN B I I P O N I I T O C A L L M A D !
B Y CO M PTR OLLER OP T N I CU R R EN CY , UNDER T I T L E 11.
U N IT E D S T A T U COOB SEC TIO N H I,
C H A R TER N UM BER tH M , CO M PTR OLLER OP T H E C U R R EN C Y
SIXTH D ISTR IC T
Statement of Resources and LlaMlltlo*
ASSETS
Themaateef Delian
Cash and balance* dot from depository ln»t Buttons
Noninterest tearing batancos and currency and coin................. 7,tot
Mareas-tearing balancaa.________
Nona
Sacurltlaa................................
1,144
Patera! fund* told and tacurlllaa
purchaaad undar agraamanta to retail
In domestic offIcaa of the bank
and of lla Edga and Agreement aubaldlarlaa,
and In IBFa.................................................................................. 1,400
Loana and laaaa financing receivables:
Loans and leases, not of unaarnad Incoma.......................10.437
LESS: Allowance lor loan and laaaa loaaaa......................
M
LESS: Allocatad tranafar rlak reaarva............................. Nona
Loana and laaaaa, no! of unaarnad Incoma,
allowance, and reaarva................................................................ io.S3l
Aaaafa hold In trading accounts.......................................................Nona
Pram lies and fixed aaaata
(Including capitalized laaaaa)..................................................... 0 4
Otter real aatata owned............................. .
Investments In unconsolidated aubaldlarlaa
and aaaoclatad companies..........................
Customers' liability to this bank on
acceptances outstanding............................
Intangible aaaata............................................
Otter aaaata.................................................................................... 302
Total aaaata...................................................................................... 17.743
L IA B ILITIES
Oepoalta:
In domaatlc offices....................................................................... 15,979
Noninterest tearing...................................................... s.aog
Interest bearing.............................................................10.171
In foreign of(leas, Edga and Agreement
aubaldlarlaa. and IBFa........................
Non Interest, tearing............................ .
Interest-bearing...................................
Federal funds purchased and sacurltlaa
sold undar agreements to repurchase In
domestic offices of the bank and of Its
Edga and Agreement aubaldlarlaa, and
In IBFa.....................................................
Demand notes Issued to the
U.S. Treasury..........................................
Otter borrowed money.................................................................. Nona
Mortgage Indebtedness and obligations under
capitalized laaaaa.......................................................................... Nona
Bank's liability on acceptances executed
and outstanding.......................................................................... None
Notes and debentures subordinated
to deposits......................
None
Otter liabilities.................................................
44
Total liabilities.................................................
14.035
Limited-life preferred stock.......................................................... None
E Q U ITY CA PITA L
Perpetual preferred stock...........................
None
Common stock.................................
175
Surplus............................................................................................
175
Undivided profits and capital
reserves....................................................................................... (13)
Cumulative foreign currency translation
adjustments................................................................................ None
Total equity capital......................................................................... 1,717
Total liabilities, limited life preferred
stock, and equity capital.............................................................. 17,743
I, Joyce H. Franklin. Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition la true and correct to the best ot
my knowledge and ballet.
/Joyce H. Franklin
January 37,1947
We, the undersigned directors, attest to the correctness of this
statement ol resources and liabilities. We declare that It has been
examined by us. and to the test of our knowledge and belief has teen
prepared In conformance with the Instructions and Is true and
correct.
S/Wllllam B. Gossett
S/Deno P. Dlkaou
S/John A. Baldwin
Publish February 1,19*7
DEL-10

N O T IC E O F A
P U B L IC H E A R IN G O F
P R O P O S E D C H A N G E S AN D
A M E N D M E N T S IN
C E R T A IN D IS T R IC T S
A N D B O U N D A R IE S O F
T H E Z O N IN O O R D IN A N C E
O F T H E C IT Y O F
S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A
Notice Is hereby given that a
Public Hearing will be held In
the Commission Room at the
City Hall In the City of Sanford,
Florida, at 7:00 o'clock P.M . on
February 9. ' i t 7. to consider
changes and amendments to the
Zoning Ordinance of the City of
Sanford. Florida, as follows:
A portion of that certain
property lying East of Seaboard
Coastline Railroad Right of-Way
and between Airport Boulevard
and ISth Street (C R 44A) Is
proposed to be reioned trom
M R-3 (M u ltip le -Fa m ily Resi­
dential Dwelling) District to
P U D (Planned Unit Develop­
ment) District. Said property
being m ore particularly de
scribed as follows:
From the Northerly corner ol
Avondale, according to the plat
thereof a : recorded In Plat Book
3. Page 94 of the Public Records
ol Seminole County, Florida, run
North S3*04'39" East 319.73 ft.
along Ihe R ig h t o f-W a y of
Seaboard Coastline Railroad to
the P O B ; thence run South
36*S5'31" East 434.43 ft.; thence
North 53*04'39" East 331.90 ft.;
thence South J7*J3'40" East
79.73 ft.; thence North ll*33'3l"
West 4100 ft.; Ihenco North
19*1S'50" West 344.13 feel to Ihe
point ol curvature ol a curve
concave S outh easterly and
having a radius ol 435.00 ft.;
thence run Northeasterly along
said curve a distance ol 579.41 ft.
through a central angle of
74*lO 'O O '' lo Ihe p o in t ol
tangency of said curve; thence
run South 49*15 52" East 140 00
ft.; Ihence run North 00*44 04"
East 1114 00 ft., Ihence run
North 49*14't r West 775.35 ft. lo

the Rlghtof-W ay ot Seaboard
Coastline Railroad Rlght-olW ay; Ihence run South 34*3I'09"
373.51 ft. to the p o in t ot
curvature of a curve concave
Northwesterly and having a
radius ot 1930.04 It.; Ihenca run
Southwesterly along said curve
a distance ol 430.71 feet through
a central angle of I4*43’30" to
the point of tangency ol said
c u r v e ; th e n c e r u n S ou th
53*04'39" West continuing along
said Rlght of Way 171.34 tt. to
Ihe POB.
All parties In Interest and
citizens shall have an opportuni­
ty to be heard at said hearing.
By order ot the C ity Com ­
mission ol the City of Sanford.
Florida.
A D V IC E T O T H E P U B L IC : It
a person decides to appeal a
decision m ate with respect to
any matter considered at the
above meeting or hearing, ha
may need a verbatim record ol
the proceedings, including the
testimony and avldence, which
record Is not provided by the
City of Sanford IFS 344 01051
H.N. Tam m . Jr.
City Clark
Publish: January 31 A February
1 ,1947

QiKM

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 114
Hays D r , Sanford, Samlnola
County, Florida 33771 undar the
Fictitious Name ot F L O R ID A
A S SO C IA TIO N O F Q U A L IF IE D
T R A D E S M A N , and that we In­
tend to register said name with
the Clerk ol the Circuit Court,
Seminole County. Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
ol the Fictitious Name Stetutes,
To Wit Section 445 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/s/ John A. Parker
I t l Noble A. Parker
Publish January 25 &amp; February
1,1, 15, 1947.
D E K 140

F O R H O M E D E L IV E R Y
T O THE

Sanford Herald
CA LL

322-2611

* T~

legal Notice-

Legal Notice

IH TH E CIRCUIT COURT
FOR SEMINOLI COUNTY,
FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
FIN Number 47-34-CP
INBBi ESTATE OF

CITY OP
LOM8WOOO, FLORIDA
NOTICIOF
PUBLIC NIARINO
TO CONSIDER ADOPTION
OP PROPOSEO ORDINANCES

ALOYSIUSOSCAR RAUSCH
A/k/a ALOYSIUS O. RAUSCH,

N O TIC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by lb* C ity of Longwood,
Florida, that the City Com­
mission will told 0 public hear­
ing to consider enactment of tto
following ordinances:
O R D IN A N C E NO. I N . en­
titled:
AN O RD IN AN CE OF T H E
C IT Y OF LO N G W O O D ,
FLORIOA, AM EN D IN G O R D I­
NANCE NO. 54. BEIN G T H E
F U T U R E LAN D USE PLAN
E L E M E N T O F T H E COM
PR EH EN SIVE PLAN O F T H E
C IT Y OF LO N G W O O D .
F L O R ID A , S A ID A M E N D ­
M E N T C H A N G IN G T H E
F U T U R E LA N D USE OF
C E R TA IN TE R R ITO R Y FROM
LOW D E N S ITY R E S ID EN TIA L
T O O F F IC E -C O M M E R C IA L ;
PROVIOING FOR CONFLICTS,
S E V E R A B IL IT Y . A N O E F ­
F E C TIV E D A TE.
A part ot tto Southwest 1* of
tto Southwest V* of Section 30,
Township 30 South, Range X
E a s t, C it y of L o n g w o o d .
Samlnola County, Florida, de­
scribed as follows:
Commence at tto Southwest
corner of said Section 30; thence
N. 00*lt'04" W.. along tto West
line ol said Section 30,344 54 feel
to the PO IN T OF B EG IN N IN G ;
thence continue N. 00*M'04" W.,
along said West line, 200.00 feet;
thence N. 49*51’37" E.. leaving
tto West line ot said Section 30.
249.91 tool; thence S. 00*04'33"
E., 140.00 toet lo a point of
curvature ot a curve, concave
Northeasterly, having a radius
ol 25.00 feet and a central angla
ol 90*00'00"f thence ru n
Southeasterly 39.77 feet along
tto arc thereof to the end of said
curve (tangent tearing leaving
said curve N. 49*sr37" E .);
Ihence S. 00*04'33" E., 15.00 toet
to the North Right ol Way line ol
Longwood Hills Road a 50 loot
wide Right of Way as now laid
out and used; thence S 4e*51'37"
W„ along said North Right of
Way line, 394.79 foot to the
PO IN T OF BEGINNING. Sub­
ject to Easements and Rights ol
Way ot Record. Containing 1.351
acres more or less.
Being more generally de­
scribed as 1.351 acres lying on N
side ol Longwood Hills Road,
Immediately west ol the Day
Care Center.
O R D IN A N CE NO. 409, en­
titled:

NOTICE OF
ADMINISTRATION
The administration ol !ha
estate of A LO Y SIU S OSCAR
RAUSCH a/k/a ALO YSIUS O.
R A U S C H , d a c e a te d , F ile
Number 47 29-CP, Is pending In
the Circuit Court for Seminole
C o u n ty , F lo r id a . P roba te
Division, the address of which Is
Seminole County Courthouse,
Sanford, Florida 33771. The
names end addresses of the
personal representative and the
personal representative's at­
torney are set forth below.
All Interested persons ere
required to rile with this court.
W ITH IN T H R E E M ONTHS OF
T H E FlrfST P U B LIC A TIO N OF
TH IS N O TIC E : ( I ) elf claims
against the estate and (3) any
objection by on interested
person on whom this notice was
served that challenges the valid­
ity of the will, the qualifications
of the personal representative,
venue, or jurisdiction of the
court.
ALL CLAIM S A N D O B JE C ­
TIONS N O T SO F IL E D W ILL
BE FO R E V E R BAR RED
Publication of this Noflca has
tegun on January 35.1947.
Personal Representative
/$/ Karol R. Anderson *
3191W. Lake Brantley Drive
Longwood. Florida33779
Attorney for
Personal Representative:

FRIEDMAN A FRIEDMAN,
P.A.
By: J. DON FR IED M A N
Fla. Bar 1155473
145 W. Jessup Avenue
P.O. Drawer 1149
Longwood, F L 33750
Telephone: (305) 134 9494
Publish: January 25 4 February
1,1947
D E K -137
N O TICE FOR H E A R IN G
ON D E C LA R E D PUBLIC
NUISANCE
IN R E :

Lot 43. Block Cot A.B. Stevens
addition to Midway as recorded
In Plat Book 7, Page 34 In the
Public Records ol Seminole
County, F lo rid a , presently
shown as being owned by Annie
Jenkins hairs and all parties
having or claiming to have any
right, title or Interest In the
property described above.
W H E R E A S , the Board of
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e r s of
Samlnola County, Florida, did
on the 13th day ot January, 1917,
find and declare a structure In a
demolished state located In
Samlnola County, Florida, to be
unsafe, unsanitary and a public
nulsanca: that the owner ot the
property according to the pro­
perty records In the Seminole
County Property Appraiser's
Office on which the structure Is
located is Annie Jenkins heirs
c/o Ira L. Jenkins ol Route 2
Box 337. Sanford. Florida 12771;
that the public nuisance Is a
residential structure severely
destroyed by lire and In a
demolished stale located at 3530
S.R. 44 East, Sanford, Florida,
and further described as sat
forth above, and lhat corrective
action Is required to abate the
public nulsence; end
W H E R E A S , Ihe Board ol
County Commissioners found
that the following conditions
constituted a public nulsanca:
(1) Structure damaged by lire
and completely demolished, (31
Excessive trash and debris on
pro p e rty, and (3 ) P ro perty
abandoned; and
W H E R E A S , the tallowing cor
rectlve action necessary lo
abate the public nuisance Is: to
demolish and remove Ihe build
Ing, trash and debris from the
property.
NOW T H E R E F O R E , notice Is
hereby given lo the said Annie
Jenkins heirs and all parties
having or claiming to have any
right, title, or Interest in Ihe
property described above, to
appear before the Board ol
C o u n ty C o m m is s io n e rs of
Seminole County, Florida, at
):3 0 p .m „ at Its regular meeting
on the 24th day of February,
1947, at the Seminole County
Services Building, Room W-130,
1101 East First Street, Sanford,
Florida, to show cause, If any,
why such structure should not
be declared a public nuisance
and Ihe corrective action of
abatem ent specified In the
N otice o l P u b lic N uisance
should not be taken; or cause. It
any why the cost of the correc
li v e a c tio n o l a b a te m e n t
specified in Ihe Notice of Public
Nuisance should not be paid for
by Annie Je n kin s heirs or
assigns; or cause. It any, why
said cost should not be assessed
against the property.
W ITN E S S my hand and seal
this 72nd day of Jan
(S E A L )
D A V ID N B E R R IE N
Clerk lo Ihe Board ol
County Commissioners
By: Sandy Wall
Deputy Clerk
Publish: January 35 A February
1.1, 14, 1947
D E K 144
N O T IC E OF
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice Is hereby given that we
are engaged In business at 1219
Park Avenue, Sanford, Seminole
C o u n ty , F lo rid a under the
F ic titio u s N am e ol P A R K
A V E N U E S E R V IC E , and that
we intend to register said name
with the Clerk ol Ihe Circuit
Court, Seminole County, Florida
In accordance with the Pro
visions ol the Fictitious Name
Statutes. Tn WIt 'action 445 09
Florida Statutes 1957
/s/ Emmanuel A . Tw um
/*/ Helen L. Twum
Publish February 1, 4, 15, 33,
1987
OEL 9

A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E
C IT Y OF LO N G W O O D ,
F L O R IO A . A M E N D IN G O R D I­
N A N C E NO. 544, B E IN G T H E
F U T U R E L A N D USE P L A N
E L E M E N T OF T H E COM
P R E H E N S IV E P LA N O F T H E
C IT Y OF LO N G W O O D ,
F L O R I D A , S A ID A M E N D M E N T C H A N G IN G T H E
F U TU R E LA N D USE OF
C E R T A IN T E R R IT O R Y FR O M
LOW D E N S IT Y R E S ID E N T IA L
T O O F F I C E C O M M E R C IA L ;
P R O V ID IN G FOR C O N F L IC TS ,
S E V E R A B IL IT Y , AN D E F ­
F E C T IV E D A T E
A part ol the Southwest M ol
the Southwest '4 ol Section 30,
Township 30 South, Range 30
E a s t , C i t y of L o n g w o o d ,
Seminole County, Florida, de­
scribed as follows:
Commence at the Southwest
corner of said Section X ; Ihence
N 00*11"04" W, along the West
line ol said Section X . 344 54 reel
to the North right of way line of
Longwood Hills Road, a X loot
right ol way as now laid out and
used; Ihence N 49 S1'37" E,
along said North right ol way
line 400 00 feet for the Point of
Beginning; thence N 00 ll'04"
W. leaving the North right ofwa-» line ol Longwood Hills
Road, 300 00 feet, thence N 49
Sl'37" E , parallel with said
North right ol way line. 299,99
leel; Ihence S 00 10’38" E, 300.00
leet lo Ihe aforesaid North
right of way line ol Longwood
Hills Road; thence S49 5t'37"W.
along said North right-of-way
line, 399 47 tett lo Ihe Point of
Beginning. Subject to Ease
ments and Rights of Way of
Record. Containing 1.377 acres
more or less.
Being m ore generally de
scribed as 1.377 acres lying on N
side ol Longwood Hills Road.
Immediately east ot Ihe Day
Care Center.
Said ordinances were placed
on llrst reading on January 19,
1947. and the City Commission
will consider same lor final
passage and adoption alter the
public hearing, which will be
held In the City Hall, 175 W.
W arren Avenue, Longwood,
Florida, on Monday, the lath
day ol February, 1917. A O
Parties may appear to be heard
with respect to Ihe proposed
ordinances This hearing may
be continued from time to time
until llnal action Is taken by the
City Commission.
Copies of the proposed ordi­
nances are posted at the City
Hall. Longwood. Florida, and
roples are nn tile with the Clerk
ot the City and same may be
Inspected by Ihe public.
All persons are advised lhat It
they decide to appeal any de
clslon made at thesa hearings,
they will need a verbatim record
ol the proceedings and lor such
purposes, they w ill need to
Insure that a verbatim record Is
made, which record to include
the testimony and evidence upon
which the appeal Is made. The
C ity of Longwood does not
provide It.ls record.
D a te d th is 20th d a y of
January. A D 1987
City of Longwood
D.L. Terry,
City Clerk
Publish: February I, II, 1947
DEL 3

joan colons just
pu m p her husbanpof
NINE MONTHS, SO WHY
AREN7 YOU S ' \

sckeamm

i- " t V

ME AWAKE V • T WTTH THE NEWS f
•«-'

AfTER FIVEYEARSOf YOUR
WM6 bulletins, now i
CANTSLEEP WTWQVTMY
'ENTWRmiWENT*'\
TONtfflT'
{
- - *0
fix / m
6CM BACK
10 06V.

by Berke Breathed
PAP'

i£E IACOCCAALSO YES..
JJSf PUMPEP HIS THANKS.
SPOUSEOf NINE SON. SAY.
MONTHS' FEEL US ANOJOAN
BETTER? ,
HOURMAKE
\
SOMEHOT
\
COUPLE.
MM-PNT
. V*
THEY''
\ r-\,
u i
' ..cV‘Jy

r~rr~

r

v Nfc. 1, r a r - T i

m.

a

7 1 -H e lp Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
S e m in o le

EXTRA TO FULL Income from
your homo operated business.

O rla n d o • W in te r P ark

322-2611
C LA S S IF IE D D EP T .
t
H O U RS
3
fc S t P J L

SATURDAY • •

INSURANCE CLAIMS Adjutte
In vestigetor Seminar. Semi­
nar propores you for Stefa

R A TES

License examination. Class Is
three day*. I weekend. Salary
potential 435.000 + . Daytona
Baach Feb. X . It , 4 33, 1*47.
(Employment opportunities
possible upon tatlifectory
completion of Seminar.) State
approved dess registration 4
deposit ol 435 required. For
details call Mr. React, A 4 R
I n s u r a n c e
Services................. &gt;04 733 9791

7IC b Rrb
M C i I rb
M C r Im
M C i Am

7
ID
3 Uom

DEADLINES
Noon Th e Day Before Publication
Sunday - Noon Friday
M onday • 9:00 A .M . Saturday

13— Card of Thanks

21— Ptrsonais

OUR H E A R T F E L T Thanks tor
your acts ot kindness A tor tto
many floral contributions re­
ceived during our rocont
bereavement, with special
thanks to Rev. King A mem­
bers ot tto KI wools.

tor oil your BUSINESS needs.
(Please lift with ut), personal,
household 4 family needs
also. For Information please
call, 305-340-4455

21— Personals

25—Special Notices

A L L A L O N E T Coll Bringing
People Together. Sanford's
most respected doting service
slnco 1977. Aten over 50 (45%
discount)............1-400923-4477

For Details: 1400-432 4254
Florida Notary Association

ATTN: EDUCATORS
There Is on all new itors just tor
you In Delond. "Ttacher's
Aides". Ws have everything
tor tto teachers. Give us e try.
Teacher's Alte*
247 Voerhls A vs.
Poland, 734-41*3,734-4343
COME ON CRAO
L E T 'S DO T H E T R Y S T

HAPPYBIRTHDAY

L O V E ...........................CAROLE

CRISIS PREGNANCYCENTtlt
ABO R TIO N C O UN SELIN G
F R E E Pregnancy Tests. Con­
f id e n tia l, In d iv id u a l
assistance. Call tor appt. Eve.
Hr* Available.......... .331-7495.

legal Notice
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO UR T
O F T H E E IG H T E E N T H
JU D IC IA L C IR C U IT
IN AND FOR SEM IN O LE
CO U N TY, FLOR IO A
CASE N UM BER :
444151- CA-09-G
P IN E T R E E V IL L A G E A T
D E E R RUN HOMEOWNERS
ASSOCIATION, INC.,
Plaintiff,
vs.

A T H A J O SANDERSAND
m e r is t e l l

McLa u

g h l in ,
Defendant.

N O TIC E O F ACTIO N
T O : M E R IS T E L L
M cLAUG H D N
c/o Shackelford
1403 Ft. Farnsworth Road
Alexandria, Virginia 33303
YO U AR E H E R E B Y
N O T IF IE D lhat an action to
foreclose a mortgage on the
following described property In
Seminole County, Florida:
L O T I, C L U S T E R " B " .
S T E R L IN G P A R K . U N IT 24,
according to the Plat thereof as
recorded In Piet Book 20, Page
43, of the Public Records of
Seminole County, Florida,
has been tiled against you and
A T H A JO 5 A N D ER S . and you
are required to serve ■ copy ol
your written defenses, it any, to
It on TH O M A S R. P E P P L E R .
P la in tif f 's a tto rn e y , whose

18-2123
BEAUTICIAN,
visit healthcare cantor 1 day a
week. Cdntoct Mlllheven
Heeltheere Center, 450
Mollonvlllo A v . ,
__________ E.O.E.
ACCOUNTING TR AIN EE- 45
hour. Will train sharp figure
or tented portent Loam com­
puter, tool Casual office puts
you at easel A A A Empleyment,700W.3SthSt.....32&gt;-St74

TURNREVRUSINESS
Handling Nablico. Keebler,
Frltolay and similar food
products. No telling Involved.
Service commercial accounts
tot up by parent company.
National census figures stow
average grots earnings ol
SU1I.97 per month Requires
approximately I hours per
week You will need 115.000
ca sh to r e q u ip m e n t.
E x p a n s io n fin a n c in g It
automatic tor ttosa qualified.
C a ll National T o ll F r e t
1400-472 4747 ask tor operator
IX . Phone staffed 34 hrs.

N O T E : In the event of the publishing ot error* In advertisements, the San
ford Herald ite ll publish the advertisement, after It has teen corrected at
no cost to the advertiser but such Insertions shall number no more than one
I III.

^osojBowen^Fomll]^^^^

NEEDED. ACN mporl
protorred. Call:.....PAR I

tretnlng provided. 3314HU

831-9993

EMPIRE DtAL-A-SERVICE

Sunday calls scented.

*1— Money to Lend
Confidential 4 Personal Service
Stow Credit OK....3nd Mortgages
BOB M. BALL JR ., Licensed
Mertgago Broker, 349 Country
Club Rd., Lake Mery...333-4II4

BECOME ANOTARY

A3—Mortgages
Bought ft Sold

27—Nursery ft
Child Care

W E B U Y t ( t a n d 3nd
M O RTGAG ES Nation wide.
Cell: Ray Legg Lie. Mtg
Broker, 940 Douglas Ave.,
Altamonte.................. 774-7753

I W IL L BA BYSIT, my home, 7
toddlers. Rais. Hot meali.
331 1347or 333 4047 after 4pm
I W IL L DO C H ILD CARE IN
M Y H O M E . Experienced,
C lo s e to 1-4 4 R t . 44.
Call :332A454 Bonnie Aldridge

71— Help Wanted
CARPENTER HELPER
TRAINEE

LO V IN O M O TH E R , will baby*!'
In m y homo. Day or night,
port/tull time, oil ogos33) 0974
M O T H IR of 3 y r old will care
tor your child with T L C In my
homowookday*......... .3313943

legal Notice
address I* Pott Office Box 1490,
Winter Park, Florida 33490, on
or before Feb. 19, 1907, and tile
the original with tto Clerk of
this Court either before service
on Plaintiff's attorney or Imme
dlately thereafter, otherwise a
default will be entered against
you for the relief demanded In
tto complaint or petition.
D A T E D Jan. 15, 1947.
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 : Jean Brlllant
As Deputy Clerk
P u b lish : Ja n u a ry I I , 35, 4
February 1,1,1947
D E K 94
N O T IC E O F
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice It hereby given that I
a m engaged In business al
444-204 V e r s a i lle s P la c e .
Longwood, Seminole County,
F l o r i d a 32779 u n d e r Ih e
Fictitious Name ol G L O B A L
P R O D U C TS , and that I Intend to
register said name with the
C le rk ol the C irc u it Court.
Seminole County, Florida In
accordance with the Provisions
ol the Fictitious Nemo Stalutes.
T o W it: Section 145 09 Florida
Statutes 1957.
/*/ Jack B. Hoiid
Publish January 35 &amp; February
1,4, 15,1947.
DEK-143

Entry level, permanent posi­
tion. Experience with power
tools tolplul, Sanlord/Deland
arte. Hover e loot

A D M IN IS TR A TIV E

ASSISTANT
M W PM
+ typing. Export
enced, professional Imago.
Permanent postlion. No Feal

TEMP PERM______ 2SQ-5100
ADVERTISING SALES
S A N F O R D A R E A : Q ua lity
magaxlno. Excellent earnings
tor limited lima.
Cal) Mr. Page U0P-3B3 7454
A LA R M IN S T A L L E R
T R A IN E E S4.X hr Greet tor
beg Inner I No way you can
losal Elite co. Likes your
clean appearance. Loam to
Install sacurlty systems! AAA
Em ploym ent, 700 W . 15th
St......................... Call: 333-5174
ASSEMBLY WORK at homo,
plus many others. Earn good
wages In spare time. For
Information 504-4414091 ext.
1449.7 day*..........C A L L NOW I
F U L L CHAROE B O O K K E EP ­
E R , ItK En|oy you rte lfl
Great working conditional
Take charge I Very secure
f ir m ! N eeds n o w l A A A
Em ployment, 700 W. 35th
St..........................Cell:333-5t74
F U L L T IM E A L T E R A T IO N S
PERSON for Boys Sportswear
Shop. Must be experience on
Industrie! sowing machine.
Apply In person only: San-Del
Manufacturing, 2340 Old Lake
Mary Rd-. Sanford......331X10
ACCOUNTS R E C E IV A B L E
B O O K K E EP ER
T H E SANFORD H E R A L D Is
currently accepting resume's
tor an experienced A/R Book­
keeper. Duties Include pric­
ing. posting 4 billing on. a
manual system.
Requirement*'— 'v te :
•Typing Skills
• Calculator by Touch
a Pleasant Personality
oComputer Exp. a Plus
We Otter:
a Insurance Plan
a Paid Vacation
a Friendly Atmosphere
a Job Sacurlty

TEMP PERM______260-5100
CASHIER: Convenience Store,
lop salary, hospital 11at Ion, 1
week vacation each 4 months,
other benefits. Apply 303 N.
Laurel Ave. l:Xam-4:30pm
Monday through Friday.
C E R T IF IE D NURSES A ID E tor
3-11 shift tor senior retirement
community. Please apply to
300 W . Airport Blvd.__________
CNA: Immediate lull time posi
tions. 7-3 or 3-11 shifts. Good
benefits 4 atmosphere. Apply
Debary Manor. 40 N. Hwy.
17-93, DeBary 444 4434..... EOE

It you meet the above require­
ments end would like to be a
part of the Sanford Herald,
sandresume' lo:
SANFORD H E R L A D
P.O. BOX 1457
SANFORD, F L . 33773-1457
Attn: Office Manager

CONTRACT LABORERS
Earn S9 to 513 per hr. Must
enjoy working outdoors. No
exp. nec. For lull or part time
poaltions in Samlnola Co. call
I
M w N f p w ............ 4I3-444-7UI
F U R N IT U R E S TO R E
517,040 to 574,000 per year
Great opportunity lor personali­
ty plus. Touch ol class, at­
tractive, single, able to re­
locate In Orlando, sales or­
iented perion to learn de­
corating design and manage­
ment trainee. Good public
relations needed. Decorator
Furniture. 1011 Suite B. W.
La ncaster Rd. at O range
Blossom T r . Appointm ent
only. D r. Keith 455 9410
G E N E R A L O F F IC E C L E R K
Apply In person: Lowe’s Truss
Plant, 3901 Aileron Clr. San
ford Airport Industrial Park

Train To Be A
Trawl Agent •Tour Guido
Airline Resorvationist
Start locally, full llme/pert
time. Trein on live airline com­
puters. Home study and reeldent training. Financial eld
available. Jo b placem ent
assistance. National head­
quarters. LH .P ..FL.

A.C.T. Travel School
1-800432*3004
Accredited member N.H.S.C.

CONSULT OUR

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

Accounting &amp;
Tax Service

General Services

Landclearing

Painting

DIALASERVICE

H U B ER TP EA R C E
Exp. Income Ta x Service
12)4009 tor appt.

For AM Your Needs. Business,
personal, household, &amp; family.
For Into please call: 240 4455
F R E D 'S E R R A N D S
24 hr. service. Reasonable
C a ll;...................................221 0795

BACK HO E, Dump truck. Bush
hog. Box blading, and Discing.
Call 372 180*
o r......332 9313
BUSH HOG. Box Blading, Dfs
elng 4 Tractor Roto Tilling
Call.................................122-2597

A L A N 'S P A IN T IN O 4 Paper
Hanging. Interior 4 exterior
No job too small. Lie. 331 3032
P R O F E S S IO N A L , Q U A L I T Y
Painting by Dave
Interior. Exterior, Resldenlial.
C o m m e r c ia l. Pressure
Washing. O ryw all Repair &amp;
Popcorn Ceilings.
Lie.....Bonded ...In s...... 171 4074

Additions &amp;
Remodeling
B.E. LIN K CONST.
Remodeling...............305 322 7039
Financing........... Llc.*CRC00067i

Blinds &amp; Drapes
C U S T O M D R A P E R Y , balloon
c u r ta ln i, m ln l-b lln d i &amp;
verticals. Free eat. In home
service. M ad-tine
233-4X1
D 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
SHAM S B Y D IA N E ..... 333-4244
ONE CALL G ETS BEST R E ­
P AIR S O F A L L . Any kitchen
&amp; laundry appl. 90 day guar­
antee on repairs..........714 0295

Building Contractors

BLOOM COUNTY

r r n

r r

N E W HO M ES F R O M 529,900.
LIc.rCBCO 19840 Commerical
remodeling specialist, m ain­
tenance, additions....... 323 4433

House Plans
C U S TO M B L U E P R IN T S
Fast Service) Good quality!
KK D E S IG N S ...................747-1914

Carpentry
A L L T Y P E S O t C a rp e n try
Remodeling &amp; home repairs
Call Richard Gross 331 5973
R IC H A R D S C A R P E N T R Y ~~
14 y rsin Central Florida
T a ll...................................323 5/87

T H O R N E L A N O C L E A R IN G
Loader and truck work/septlc
tank sand Freeest. 172 1413

Handy Man

Landscaping

H O U S E W IV E S , Tired ol waiting
lor your hu*band to do those
small repairs? I specialize In
sm all bothersome repairs.
Free estimate. Satisfaction
guaranteed No job to small or
large. Call..................... 321 4943

B A H IA R 51. A U G U S T IN E SOO,
W ax M y rtle s a ll sizes.
Call................................. 349-9225
B O G U E 5 I Exp! Professional!
Lawn &amp; Garden Main! 4, chain
saw work I Lake M a ry Resi
dent F R E E E S TI 323 4347
S E M IN O L E LA N D S C A P IN G

Health &amp; Beauty

3228133

Secretarial Service

A B S O L U T E L Y M ASSAGE
Massage al home or workplace.
Gift certificates. 345 4549

Lawn Service

Custom Typing- Bookkeeping
Notary Public. Call: D .J. Entorprlsof. (M S ) 131-7493.

Home Improvement
C A R P E N T R Y B Y E O DAVIS
R E M O D E L IN G / R E N O V A TIO N
Large And Small Jobs Welcome
Sanford Res. U yrs. 33) 0443
C O M P L E T E H O M E R E P A IR
D o o r ...... w in d o w ......cabinets
Call Russell at 774 4586_________
S U N S H IN E IN S U L A TIO N
G iv e y o u rs e ll a tre a t, let
fiberglass save heat 4, air. Let
Sunshine do It cheap 333 4372

Home Repairs
A L L PHA SES ol household
repair &amp; improvement
• F R E E E S T IM A T E S a 323 1631
R E M O O E L I N G . C a rp e n try ,
P a in tin g , S m all electrical
repairs &amp; Installation, plumb
Ing &amp; Installation, Hauling &amp;
lawn service. Call:
E d o r Allan,...................... 331-4210

A L L SEASONS lawn service 4.
landscaping Commercial or
residence Freeest......442 2079
B A R R IE R 'S Landscaping!
Irrlg , Lawn Care, Res &amp;
Comm, 321 7444, F R E E ES TI
G E O R G E 'S LAW N C AR E
Reasonable prices
Call now to reserve service
Freeest
323 7582
"S U N N Y S ". Mow, edge. trim.
planting, mulching SPRING

^gec;_Fre«esT333782^_^_

Masonry
Concrete Walks, slabs, palios,
drives 25 yr exp lifelong
resident Lic/lns 149 9754a ll5

Nursing Care
H IIL H A V E N H E A L T H CARE
C E N T E R , 950 Mellonvllle Ay..
333-4544
EOE
O UR R A T E S A R E LO W ER
Lakeview Nursing Center
919 E. Second St., Sanlord
113 4707

Roofing
R E -R O O F your home now in
time lor spring rains. 24%
discount on all types of roots
during month of Feb Stale
Lie. #C0CC 0137I0CC.. 331 1555

Sewer/Septic Tank
H O W AR D 'S S E P T IC S E R V IC E
Repair Lines &amp; Clean Tanks
Free Estimates ..........123 0359

Sewing Machines/
Vacuum Cleaners
A U T H O R IZ E D E L E C T R O L U X
Sales &amp; Services. Vacuums 4
sham pooers. S ervicing all
makes Ken Echols.....322 X73

Tree Service
ALL

TREE

SERVICE

+

Firewood Woodsplltter lor
hire Call Alter 4 P M 373 9044
EC H O LS T R E E S E R V IC E
Free Estimates! Cow Prices!
Lie...Ins...Stump Grinding,Tool
111 7139 day or nile
“ Let the Professionals do it".

�t

- i 't — t ' '

------v 'r™1 •»'*',*"v v'r-\ ~ r,-rT~»— n

- » i » »

*■'

V ' n r i ' V i ~ i~ i v i i

T T T V T T T

'»-e-r\

'J '.— ~* t— — x

• * r T ,« ^ n n r v T - r - *

v rr

R N S H IFT S U F IR V IS M t Full
tlfna, 11 »o 7. Position ter
beginning tuptrvltor, food
benefit*. Apply at:
LangwoodttealfhcaroContor
Ing Boys Sportiw— r Shop.

ISMS. Oram St.
Lmii wood.......... .305-339-9100

Monday through Friday.

Mutt bt txperlence In all
phatat of garmont com true
lion and p ric in g . S alary

S A L IS F t M O N Wantod. aam
high comm ltalon on salts. alto
bonus commlniont paid for
Mg producers. Training pro­
vided. Apply In p*r*on to A A
B Water treatment at 2597 S.
Sanford Avo. Palm Plata, or
call............................. « i a n
S A L IS PIRSONS
....art made not bom I Havo fun
white training- Advancement

Noods today I AAA Employm e n t . 700 W . I S t h
S t -.......................Call:223-S17&gt;

Manufacturing. 2340 Old Lake
Mary Rd.. Sanford......321 MlO

L I N K L I A D I R
lor
electro/mechanical manufac­
turer. Background muat In­
clude soldering, asternbley,
and manufacturing processes
relating to military standards
and spec Ifleet Ions. Full lime.
permanent position. Benefits.
Send resume* and salary his­
tory to: BOX 240, c/o Sanford
Herald. P.O. Box 1057. San­
ford. F L 32772 1057
M A IL IN S E R TE R O P ER A TO R
T R A IN E E . JCPenney Credit
Processing Canter currently
has part time and full lime
positions In our Mall Services
D epartm ent for M a ll In­
serters. Positions will entail
operating a Pitney Bowes
CDM System A an Insertamax
Inserter. Previous experience
helpful. A lifting required.
The qualified candidate
should bo production oriented
and willing to work a Monday
thru Saturday work schoAile
with flexible hours according
to mall volume.
We otter a good training
p ro g ra m , opportunity for
advancement and an excellent
benefits package which In­
cludes a discount plan In
JCPenney stores.
Please apply In person be­
tween • am 3:30 pm, Mon. Frl.

SUN LAKE

APARTMENTS
-Join the FUN!-*
• U p to $1,000 F R E E R E N T
• FR EE W A S H E R &amp; D R Y E R
(o n ly 3 left)
• FR E E F IR E P L A C E

Manufacturing. 2240 Old Lake
Mery Rd-Sanford......33I-3T0

...start now! Call:..... MBjgS
P A R T-TIM E Auditors helper for
In ve n to ry crew . 10 h rs.
m inimum. Above average
wage. Apply at 301 E. 2Jth St..
Sanford. Call 33*4307 tor Into.

NURSES, AIMS,
&gt; COMPANIONS
H A P P Y N EW Y EA R . We need
you now. New benefits In­
cluding group Insurance and
vacation. Free CEU'S. Dally
pay. Staff A private duty.
M E D IC A L PERSO N N EL POOL
Call:74M3M

PRESSMAN PRINTER to $12
h r. R ig h t arm w a n ts d l
Flourishing business I Exp. on
4 color press helpful I AAA
Employment. 700 W. 25th
PART T IM E EXP. O F F IC E
PERSON for fast paced office.
Must have typing A calculator
experience. Non smoker only.
Apply In person: San-Del
Manufacturing. 2140 Old Lake
Mary Rd.. Sanford......331-3110

train completely! Great start
Into the clerical fleldl In
Sanford I A A A Employment,
700 W. 25th St.......Call:223-S174

R E C O R D S C O M M U N IC A ­
TIO N S S P EC IA LIS T for part
time shift work. Must demon­
strate proficiency In office
Ms. Liberators, Lake Mary
Police Dept............... .323-1153
R E SER V A TIO N 1ST T R A IN E E
Fun Spot I Nice phone voice
wlnsl Set reservations for
tours. No typing I Exciting I
Fa scina ting fu tu ra l A A A
Em ploym ant, 700 W. 25th
St.......................... Call.322-5174
R E S P IR A TO R Y TH E R A P IS TFull lime. C R T T . Fla. lie. II
pm -7 am. Apply: W. Volusia
Memorial Hospital. 701 W.
Plymouth Avo., Poland, FI.
RN OR LPN needed. Full time.
3 to 11 shift. Experience as
Charge Nurse and geriatrics
helpful. Apply DeBary Manor,
SON.Hwy 17 02. *404434 EOE

S A L IS P IR S O N : EttaMIthed
used car dealership with fl-

A L E S S E C R E T A R Y - Boat
manufacturer has opening for
Sales Secretary. Computer
exp. helpful. See Sharon Atchley. Cobla Boat Co.. 500
Sliver Lake Rd.
S E C R E T A R Y T R A IN E E To
14.50 hr Grand boss needs
right arm person to keep him
organised! Super life typing I
Pleasant sense of humor lands
Itl Loam simple bookkaeplng I
Will hire now I Terrific futural
A A A Employment, 700 W. 15th
St......................... Call:323-5I74
SHIPPINO/RECEIVINO
No experience necessary. Permanent position. Never a feel

TtMPPERM______ 210-5100

JCPenney
Credit Processing Center
H I Wektva Springs Rd.

• FR E E B R E A K F A S T C R U IS E
(on Rivership Romance)
-------------- P L U S --------------T h e Passport to H o m e O w n e r­
ship. A $2,000 investment in
y o u r future.

If you want to work full, part or
spare time. All ages. For Info
please call :2 * »$455__________

DONT MISS IT
call 321-7700

"Country Living With City C onvenience"

- F O R D E T A IL S -

Report roedy for work at 4 AM
407 W. 1st. St................ Sanford

D e s ire d
Com e home to a vacation... Sailpointe, the
newest adult community in old historic
Sanford, offers a lifestyle you’ve been dreaming
a b o u t... It’s designed for people who love
sailing, skiing and swimming. Who prefer to
dock. If you're this person, Sailpointe 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
401 West Seminole Boulevard
Sanford, Florida 32771 4 322-1051

2 ,3 &amp; 4 Bedroom Home with 2 Baths
G.E. Kitchens, Cathedral Ceilings,
Fireplaces, Double Car Garages.

PRICED FROM
LOW $70*s to $90,s

D O C T O R 'S A S S I S T A N T
T R A IN E E - $4.50 hour. Wowl
No oxporlenco needed I Wenlt
today I Friendly smile to greet
patients and assist with
exams! Dynamite opportuni­
ty! A A A Employment, 700 W.
15th St.................. Call:333 5l74
DRIVERS W A N TED . Domino's
Pina . Inc. Wages, lips. A
commission. $5 hr. guaran­
teed. Must have own car with
liability Insuranca.
Apply: 1*10 French Ave. or
call 3H-5000after Item
E L E C T R O N IC T E C H N IC IA N
IJK + Terrific&gt; Basle knowledga of computers puts you In
this prestigious staff I Large
company I Da Unite career I
A A A Rmpioymenf, 700 W. 2Jth
sr............... ......... Call :n &gt; sirs

OPEN 1 P.M. TIL 5 P.M. DAILY
For Information Call

Ji

3 2 2 -3 1 0 3

hoem aker

m «eiw. »v»»

fc r f

llli
*H

X„M
“

i
J

* &gt;•&gt;*«

ll

SINCE 1936
C O M M ER C IA L • R E S ID E N T IA L
2 7 0 1 W. 23th S T .
SAN FO

D IS H W A S H E R wanted, lull
lima. Ra«pontlbla par ion only.
Gallarla Restaurant. ..321 7717
EXP. B U ILD ER /LA M IN A TO R
lor itoro display A flxturas.
M usi hava knowladga of
commarclal tools. E . Sanford
location, banaflts. 333 4444

Apply In parson, Daltona Inn
Tuas.-Saf. 2pm to 5pm________
E X P E R IE N C E D Past Control
Tachnlclan naadad. Call 333
1441 (or Inlarvlaw lam 4pm
Monday through Friday.
E X P E R IE N C E CO NVEYOR
Assamblars A Installars
Call:............................. 333 7970
M E C H A N IC naadad. experlanced with dlasl A gas with
own tools. Call:331 3331
NOW H IR IN O I Imm. naad lor
contract P T . RN, CN A'S,
L IV E -IN S A Homamakars.
naw pay seal# - Medl care/
prlvata.. 774 1153. Mon./Frl. 10
till.C A R E A T HOM E. E.O E.

H

Equal
Professional
Service

UEALtOIJ
SEM IN OLE C O U N TY
BOARD OF
R EALTOR S

^
" T h e y say
&gt;
L a k e M a ry lS a n fo rd is
\ t l i e c o m in g a re a .” j

Reflection Pointe
Townhom es
from the $50's
w ith 8i*‘ fixed rate
interest!

Professionally Managed By U.S. Shelter Corp

T w o b e d r o o m , t w o bath s in g le s to ry
t o w n h o m e s lo c a t e d o n L a k e R e f l e c t i o n - j u s t
a c r o s s f r o m M a y f a i r C o u n tr y C l u b - in th e
L a k e M a r y / S a n fo r d area. A n d e v e r y h o m e
h as 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 te n y e a r w a r r a n ty o n
m a jo r stru ctu ral d e fe c ts . S o y o u k n o w y o u ’re
g e t t in g th e b e s t v a lu e f o r y o u r m o n e y !
FRANK WICKERS
Realtor-Associate

LISA WICKERS
Realtor-Associate

TOM PITTMAN
Broker-Salesman

A n othe r

S T E N S T R O H [Q
R E A LT Y , INC. R

BROKER CO-OP INVITED
All Sales Offices Hours:
Mon. thru SaL
10-6
Sundays
1-6

Babcock
Q uality
Certain
Home

*9.02% APR rued me interest.
Available on mo*t units and locations.

R E A LTO R S
2563 Park Drive
Sanford. Florida 32771
&gt;

C A L L A N Y T IM E

Lake Mary, Florida 32746

321-2720

The Babcock Company
A Weyerhaeuser Company

�* &lt; * * • * • •

r $ + * f , ,

71—Help Wanted

107—Mebiie
H om ts/Rtnt

SUPERVISOR o r F IN A N C IA L
A ID E , responsible lor managlog Mm college's Financial
AM* Servlet*. Minimum qual­
ification* Include a Bachelor's
Degree. M a tte r's Oograo
preferred. In counwllng or
rolalod aroot knowledge ol
Federal and Hale Financial
A ld a P r o g r a m a ; a n d
Interested partona should
apply In me poraonnel office
at Seminole Community Col­
lege. Applicants should pro­
vide a resume' and other
a w p p o r tln g m a t e r i a l s .
Application deadline is Feb­
ruary 11th, IH7
Equal Access. Equal Opportune
ty Community Col lege._______
T A X PRBPABSR Needed until
4/15^7. Call PhllJHtlH

RIAL ESTATE ASSOCIATES
W E A R E L O O K IN O FOR
T H R E E V E R Y S P E C IA L
ASSOCIATES T O JO IN O UR
LA K E M ARY T E A M O F
PROFESSIONALS
W E O FFE R !
• Continuous Training
a Non-Competing Managers
a Competitive Commissions
• Free Listing A Sales Tools
• Free Signs A Postage
• Toll Free LD Calls
a Newspaper/TV Advertising
a Relocation Service
a New Home Sales
a Professional Facilities
a Sanford, Lk. Mary Offices
CA LL: B ETH H A TH A W A Y
Lake Mary Branch Mane per
Far A Can(Mentla I
Interview Today I

ERASTENSTROM REALTY INC
REALTORS
321*2720
322*9551, Em.
TR A V E L CO N SU LTA N T.
Bright personality, experi­
enced In Leisure A Corporate
travel tor Heathrow office.
Apollo training preferred, only
exp. agents need apply. Universe Travel................ 331-01)4

TRUCK DRIVERS
For over the road oper., with
exp. In hauling produce, good
verifiable driving record. For
Info— MOO-321-7041 ask for Leo
W A N TED : Manager Trainee lor
* nktlons1'fsrgeit * amusement
chain. Must b« dependable a
bondable. Electronic back•ground preferred. 15 per hr.
A p p ly at B a lly 's G re a t
E s ca p e , S a n lo rd P la t a ,
Mon.-Thurs IQam-lpm________
WOOD PRODUCTS M F O . CO.
Has openings tor people who
desire o p p o rtu n itie s for
advancement. Saw mill axp.
helpful. Company otters com­
petitive wages A benefits,
apply Monday thru Frl day a
to 4 at Trusso Mfg. Inc.,
Sanford Airport______________
WORKERS N E E D E D I It you
need steady work-paid dally.
Call Sam alter 3 pm.....323-7354

73— Employment
Wanted

113—Storage Rentals

103— Houses *
' Unfurnished/Root

97—Apartments
Furnished / Rtnt
SANFORD, Large 1 bdrm.. with
screened porch. Complete
privacy. tfO wk. + 1250 sac.
dtp. Call........ .............. vcvm *

wk. 4- security.
COZY* 1 bdrm. apt. furnished,
fireplace. 1370 mo. plus sec.
Call:............................J31-3190
COZY* I bdrm. apt. furnished,
fireplace. S370 mo. plus sec.
Call:.............................33MII0
Ferns Apt*, far Senior Cttliens
311 Palmetto Ave.
J. Cowen. No Phone Calls
N IA R TOW N , 1 L 2 bdrm*.. US
to US wkly. S150 sec. ALSO
Efficiency. 33313*4, even Inos
O N E B D R M . A F T.* Living
room, kitchen A bath, no pets.
Elderly lady. Pay elec. S323
mo. 333-7414......or.......333-3340
O S TE E N : 1 bdrm. apt. fully
furnished, adults only, no
children or pets. 1350 mo +
1200 sec. Call................ 333-4343

B E A U T IF U L 1 bdrm.. 3 bam
pool home. 1530 me. plus etc.
Call:.......................... .333-3141
a a a IN D ELTO N A a a a
a a N O M E ! PON B I N T a a
♦ a 174-1414 a a
L A K E M ARY A R E A - 3 bdrm., 1
bath, garage. 1500 month/
discount. Call:.............«3P0*97
M E LL O N V 1 L L I AREA. 3 bdrm
I bath. 1430 mo. -t- tec. Avail.
3/1/B7......... -333-430 after!: 30
P IN B C R E IT * 3 bedroom, l
b a t h , fe n c e d , c a r p o r t .
C a ll:-,* ................... 33f-3031
R E N T O PTIO N : 1113 S. Elliott
St., 2 bdrm., I bath. 14 000
down, 1400 mo.......... 1-413-3343
SANFORD. 3 bdrm.. 1V1 bath,
central H/A. Borage, No Pott.
1445 4- deposit. Call.....491-1000
SANFORO- 3 bedroom, 1 bath.
1475 month plus daposlt.
Call:........... '•...............031-9443
SANFORD- 3 BR.. 1W BTH..
Garage, C/H/A. 1410 mo. 1045
Gall PI. Call:...............3317353
SANFORD: 2 bdrm, newly dec­
orated, c/h/a, appllancaa
tumlihad............ Call:4*M93l
SANFORD- Rant, lease with
option to buy. 1/3. H/A, appl..
dbl. garage, fence. S471 mo,
1st, last, 1100 toe. Call:32H444
SPACIOUS- 1/2. family room,
fenced, c/h/a, no pots. 1475 lit
Blast................313-3791 after!

LAROE f TORAO I ROOM
$40 month
CaM^— — - - - - - - jJJM *47

117—Commercial
RentalsO FFIC E S - TOO B 1000 aq.fl. In
growing 4-Tewne/Dobary area
on Hwy. 17 93.40-4*15 ave*.

121—Condominium
Rentals

pets. Call

1110 S. Myrtle. $475 Mo. available 1/1. Call 333-3443 axf. 333

SANFORD: 3 bdrm., &gt;
luxury condos. Pool, tennis,
washer/dryer, sec. $415 Mo.
^ a n d a r a m a £ la ;J n e ;iJ33J734&lt;

105— DuplexTripltx / Rtnt

127—Office Rentals

******aaaaaaaaaa
Dafex* Depies Centra. Screen
parch, laundry B tier a— rm .,
lewnteev. provided— 111-tHI
D U P L E X : 3 bdrm., carport,
clean, extras. $115 mo. plus
security. Call............... 323 3442
LA K E M A R Y : 2 bdrm., 1 bath
duplex. $340 mo. -t- 1300 sec.
Call...........................1-3*1M N F O R O i 1 bdrm.. heat A air.
large rooms, suitable for
couple. 12*0 mo. -f $100 sec.
Call.............,322 9402 after 4pm
SANFORO: ] bdrr i., t bath.
newly decorated. Kids, pats
OK. $315 + dep..... ......$49 0044

141—Homes For Sale
BY O W NER, 1 bdrm., t both. In
Ideal Sanford location. Newly
remodeled kitchen A bath,
fenced back yard, screened
front porch with swing. Re­
duced 12000 • OW NER MUST
R E -L O C A T E . $43,900. doys
3210772 or eves J22 0007

in n

Q m lu i^

hi

\i n

H I M l OH

EHEMY REALTY

JUNE PORZte REALTY. INC
COUNTRY, LIRE NBWI Mobile
S acres.
CHARLOTTECROSLYN
*

M M fTl

LOO MOMI* with fenced
ecreege. Ottered at.... .179,90*.
C H A R LO TTE CROSLYN
ttM OTl
M OVE T O B E A U TIF U L Tree
Shore Lakat Development
w/lake privileges. Call for
details
C H A R LO TTEC R O S LYN
m -g*7i
IN V E S T O R S R E A D T H I S :
Sanford back on market, 4/3,1
story on 31s city lots. Beet buy
enywhere at $19,500. Price Is
firm. Drive by lilt Palmetto
Ave. Than call:
BRA WILLIAM SON....323-474]
SEE TH IS 1/t new carpet and
vinyl. New paint Inalda and
out, largo trots. Move In
quick. Owner will finance with
reasonable down......... $42,500
BEA Wl LLI AM SON....333-4741

3224*71

T R E E S surround this lovely ]
bdrm. m bath home In great
neighborhood! F H A buyers
LOOK I $145$ down B under
I d * per mo. Includes taxes B
Ine. plus m inim al cleilng
coats. BVi%. 30 yre. tixad ratal
Privacy fenced yard B moral
O nly............................. .$47JO*
FH A BUY1RS B INVESTORS
C H IC K TH IS H O M E I $1)50
down B only $345 par mo.
P .l.T .I. plus minimal dating
coital l bdrm ., iv* bslh!
Foncsd Yardl Corner loti
Manytrootl................. $42,300

323-5774
________NOS HWY. 17-93
ID V L L W IL D II Enchanting, 2
story, 4 bdrm., ) bath brick
h o m o In s o u g h t a l t e r
neighborhood, boasts 2.307 sq.
tt. of luxurious living area.
Reduced now to $105.0001 Call
Marti Seraakovlc, 333 3300,
or......................... 333 3307 eves

nomoA me m a tro n s
K I T E S It IN T H E SOUTH

RELOCATING
Short term leaies. 3 bdrm.
unturnlihad, single story,
private, near conveniences.
SANFORD CO UR T A P T.
313-3301 ax.eet

99— Apartments
Unfurnished / Rent
a E F F IC .1 A 3 IO R M .A P T S .
• FURN. A UNFURN.
a PAY W E E K L Y
Why Consider Living Anywhere
Else When You Can Live In

e. li r U ilU m r
323-4507
HISTO RIC D IS TR IC T, Sanford:
I A 3 b d rm . u nits w ith
charming sun porches. Re­
cently redecorated, conve­
nient location.............1350-1315
444-4500.... Attwood-Phi)lips Inc.
N ICE, newly remodeled, new
carpet, t bdrm. apt. 1245 mo.
f dep.Call:322-IQ93_________
O N E Y R . OLD. 1 bdrm.. 3 bath,
washar/dryer. screen porch,
air. 1395 4- dep.............444 3491
SANDLEW OOD V ILLA S- 1 br. I
ba, washer/dryer, downstairs.
1325 4- sec. Alt. 7,433 3734
SANFORD: 3 bdrm.. 3 bath,
can. heat A air, Ig living room,
eal-ln kit. with dishwasher,
washer/dryer. Adults or small
child. 64SM14.....or..... ItS IM I
SANFORD: 3 bdrm., 1 bath,
carpal, cantral a ir, appli­
ances. 1350 mo. Discounted
British American
Raalty...............................4W-U71
SANFORD D U P L E X : 2 bdrm .
private yard, laundry room.
1375 4-dep. 323 5711 or 134 5333
SANFORO: 2 bdrm . 2 bath,
water paid, 1400 mo. 4- 1300
sac. Adults, no pets. Call
Kathy torappt.............331 0795
SHENANDOAH V IL LA G E

★ ★ $199 * ★

O W N YOUR P IE C E O F
v w n
FLO RID A!
D E L T O N A ...
i

*

YO U R OWN HOME FO R L E S S
THAN YO U ’RE PAYING REN T NOW.

k r C Z iX .

“THE JULIE”

“ THE OAKW OOD”

2 BDRM , 1 B A T H , 1 C A R G A R A G E

3 BDRM , 2 B A TH , 2 C A R G A R A G E

Ask about move In special I
Call.................................. .333-2920

R I DG E W O O D ARMS A
BAMBOO COVE SPECIALI
Rent any slit apartment by
Feb. 1st and recelva March
rent F R E E I
2510 Ridgewood Ave....... 323-4420

_J&gt;os£ltaL^elerencesjar372 ^_

300 E. Airport Bl.............333-4411

ROOM M ATE: Home to share,
1300 mo. -t- utilities. Call
333-9579 attar 4pm____________
SANFORD (24th St. A 17 93
area) house to share. Prefer
non smoker. 1250 mo...333-1)50
3 BDRM., 2 bath in very nice
neighborhood, kitche n A
laundry privileges. Prefer
female. 32HU1I.. or...574 9419

141-1

141—Hemet F a r Sale

^ C a lh j-j-j^ ^

S K ILLED Reg. Nurse avail, tor
private duty In your home or

91— Apartments/
House to Share

s e -:

S I N I V A - 1 bdrm., IVk bath,
u n f u r n is h e d . IVk a c r a .

323*2123
TE L E P H O N E SALES* $5 per
hr. + bonus. Full or part time.
ALSO LIO H T D E L IV E R Y ! «
am to 3 pm or 5 pm to I pm.
No exp. necessary.......01-4594
TELEP H O N E SEC R E TA R Y Work in casual Sanford office.
Advance sales for benefit
concert. No weekends or night
work. Full or part time. We
pay commlulon! Write your
own paycheck I Call
331-4447
T E X A S R E F IN E R Y C O R F ,
needs mature person now In
Sanford area. Regardless of
training, write H .T. Hopkins.
Bos 711, Ft. W orth,T». 74101

141—Hemet Far Sale

1bdrm., 1bath............... 1335 mo
2 bdrm., IWbath............ 53*0 mo
a Central Heat A Air
a Pool A Laundry
FR A N K LIN ARMS
1120 Florida A vt.
___________ 223 4450___________
2 BDRM, 2 F U L L BATH, large
(1.000 sq.ft.) apt. Furn. kitch­
en, w/w carpet, c/h/a. clothes
washer/dryer. 1340 mo. One
year lease, no pets. Large
pool. 323 9040.....or.....323 9543

3 3 9

3 8 6

P6I

IN C L U D E S L O T , * 4 3 ,9 0 0

IN C L U D E S L O T , * 4 9 ,9 0 0

HATE THE :LAUNDERMAT?
Bring In Thl* Ad And We’ll Include a

•No D ow n P a ym e nt Fo r Vets
*1/4 A cre W ooded L o t Included

FREE

Wiifher £ Dryer With Your Home!!!
HURftYl OFFER VALID ON HOME CONTRACTS
DATED JAN. 21 1957 THROUGH FEB. 15. 1987

WE BLOW FLAT ROOFS!
Insulate safely for
year-round com fort C
lifetim e econom yl

0

FOR FREE ES TIM A TE
C A LL

rw

ENERGY SAVINGS SYSTEMS
(3051 830-4035

FHA/VA

30 YEARS

WHY RENT
When You Can Own
Your New Home!

NO DOWN PAYMENT
Through The Farmers Home
Administration, You Can Move Into A
New Home At Amazingly Low Terms.
Payments Are Based On Your Family Size
And Adjusted Family Income.
See Us Today!
Let Us Explain This Sensational Plan.

C&amp; S

HOM ES,

• N O C L O S IN G C O S T S
Hours
Mon.-Sat. 10:00-6:00
Sun. 11:00*6:00

• C U S T O M B U I L T H O M E S ...
YOCJR P L A N S O R O U R S .

• B R O K E R C O -O P 3 %
e x it
S3

4 2 2 -6 9 0 2
(T o ll Free from O rla n d o )

_

■10 04TT0M J
_
*

L

louts \ i
ar v i

af *{T05*

Hour*l«|*t* » *ITMrt|

Rates subject to change

In c .

CALL
COU.1CT
(£ 7 (904) 738*0153 CftCOIBJOB
B R .fW I

710 WEST NEW YORK AVE.

DELANO

'I
v. ,

�r

' - i -*
* * 1 ^ 1

i i
• » » ‘^ , t ~ r r ^ r * i

t

.1 . 1

•

. » .

IIB—SaMgrG HtraM, tauter*, FI.

‘

1 1 •
.

1 1 • • •

. . .

T

.

KTT *M*CARLYL* ®fcy Larry Wright

*m r Gb y , P «G . 1 . 1 « r

141—Home* For Salt

141—Home* For Sale

141—Homes For Sate

W O U L D Y O U U K I (0 ***
YO U R M O M ! K tw rllM d hart
at n* cad la Yau? Aak abeut
our 4% today listing at............
F IR S T R I A L T Y IR C ... J3M*«1

• Y OW NER, Lab* Mary: 4
bdrm.. IV* bath, groat room,
tcraanad porch, 3»'XM* pool
approx. SPOT m* ft. living araa.
traod lot. W 3JM 333 3317 aftar
4pm wtday*/anytime wkandt

U N B E L IE V A B L E III
Pra construction prices avail
•Me an two A throe bdrm.
tingle family home*. In. now
davalopmant. Nicely tread
le t* . O a ra g e * V a u lte d
callings. FHA/VA Financing,
sta rting a t S4*,*00. C a ll
Joanne Prince.RE/MAX IS* n.
realty Inc. 43AM30 or 331-7145

l

-\ t t H O O ll

k

t )

(H 1 &gt; ll| 1 ,

767-0606

OW NER SAYS B I L L STS Nka
family horn* taatura* 3 bdrm.
3 bath, can. H/A, doubla
garaga. all appllancat. This It
a "M att Sat” at SMAM
Ala* B. JaMsaw. Ra/Mai
UaRmHad. 333-41*3 Of 340-3Wt
SANFORD: Now 3 bdrm.. 3 bath
homat. Block. FHA. low down

*54.Wt...... At*-3100or 6*3-1473
SANFORD- In-lawt7 4 br. oftic*.

‘

i : l| y l

"

,M

»'&gt; »*IW

O 7 ..........
ISTENSTROM
REALTY, INC.

or FHA. SIStOt..........36*7113
SPACIOUS HOME. 3/3. living
room, dining room, kltchan,
porch A carport on largo
shady lot. Call 333-1031,3-7.

REALTORS
W 1 L IS T AMO ( I L L
M ORE P R O P ER TY TH A N
A N Y O N I IN NORTH
S IM IN O L I CO U N TY
• LOW M O R T O A O I R A T IS I 1
&gt;* b d r m . , I b a t h c o n d o ,
;• w#*h#r/dryar, walk In cloMt,
&gt;| all appliances, pool, dubhou**
;• A m ora l......................... S3J.500
.-A D U L T CO M M U N ITY! 3 br., 3
ba. home. naads a IIHIa TLC,
’• canfral H/A. pool, prlcad at
•I appeal tad valua I.......... 144.000
j,
S I C IT T O D A Y I 3 bdrm., IV*
ba th h om o, a p p lla n c a t,
, aaaumabla mtg., aat-ln hitch*
&gt; an, boat A air, and Much
t■ Moral.............................*44.»00
&gt;
•J
;&lt;
-'

Hatp-USall Brobar......333-3333
SANFORD- 3 bdrm., 3 bath,
scraan porch, fancad yard.
S4I.000. F H A attu m a bla .
*3,000 down, total paymants
undar *475. 333 4C3* ava*.
SANFORD: 3 bdrm., t bath.
1317 Dowglat. ownar financing

Y IA R S N IW I 4 bdrm., 3 bath
energy efficient horn*, tolar ‘
watar haatar A panalt on roof,
canfral H/A. naar tchoolt A
shopping I...................... S4*.000

l!C O M FO R T A S T A IIL IT Y I 3
bdrm., I bath horn* on fancad.
comar lot, ramodtltd Intlda
and out, now appllancat A
braakfast bar, front porch A
much mora....................*59,900
RAVEN N A PARKI 4 bdrm., 3
bath horn* In Idyllwllda school
district, fancad yard, cantral
H/A. split br plan, groat lor
kids................................*59,900
CURB A P P EA LI 3 bdrm.. 3
bath homo, sunk an llvalng
' room, fpl.. dining araa, paddla
fans, p a tio , graanhousa
window, washar/dryar..*65.900
S U B M IT A L L O F F E R S I 3
bdrm. 3 bath homa. potslbla
' laasa option or assumption. I
■ y r. homa warranty, lovaly
homa I........................... *44.500
M IN T CO N D ITIO N ! 4 bdrm. 3
bath homa. family room, fpl.,
paddla fans, sertanad porch, 3
utility bldgs.. 3 graanhousasl
....................................... S/5,000

O W N IR D E S P E R A T E ! Will
pay all closing costs and sail
undar appraisal. Extra nlca 3
bdrm.. Ilk* now condition.
Paym antt lass than rant.
M t.ftl Call:............... BECKY
COURSON. RE/MAX 3*t n.

raatty Inc. ITSUM sr.tllH M

ST e m p e r
POO LI Draamwold araa; Largo
3 bdrm.. 3 bath horn* on largo
lot. Many axtras........... *45.000
LOCATION. LOCATION I Prlc*
rtducad *3500. Largo 3 bdrm..
3 bath horn* on cornar lot.
......................
153.500
E X E C U T I V E H O M E I Loch
Arbor; Extra largo 3 bdrm., 3
bath, naar M a y fa ir G olf
Courts. 30x31 graat room
O n ly................................. ***.900
L A K E F R O N T I Largo homo
tontd M R -3. Adult car*, child
car*, duplax. or Mothar-ln
law. 3 bdrm.. 1V*bath.. .*45.000
PAOLA/LAKE MARKHAM I 3
bdrm., 3 bath homa. Ownar
will pay most of dosing costs.

......................... tst.too

C A L L A N Y TIM E
R E A L TO R ...................... 333-4ttl
V ETER A N S. No down paymant.
no doting costs. 3 bdrm.. 3
bath In country, flraplaca.
garaga, traps. *74,t00..34t-57l7

LETS TRADE!
YOUR HOME
FOR ONE OF OURS
YOUR PLAN OR OURS
OUR LAND OR YOURS
CALL BOB SANDER NOW
T O S E E IF YOU Q U A L IF Y

CALLMV TIME

322-2420
321-2720

Cw i—tnaata w w w Cixwm
2559 Paris Drtvt
(305)321-0140

Call toll f r n 1-800-323-3720
1545 PARK AVE....
sat Lh. Mary Blvd..

...Santord
■Lb. Mary

3 BEDROOM. 3 car garaga. 1700
ft. house on 3 lots, anormout
possibilities, In superior con­
dition. upper MO'S....... 344 5545

231-Car*

O t.4 . K N IF E A M IL IT A R Y
■NOW. January 31-February
1. Orlando. Fairgrounds (Hwy
50). Cantral Florida's largest.
Came to buy, tall, trade or
lust browse. Samathlng tor
everyone. Shaw provtaw F ri­
day *-♦, *3.00 Satvrdoy *5. A
Sunday *4. *3.00. Children 12

SAT. O Stl*. Fumttura. 1*7*
Baft. Sate Fin. and let* of
mlae. 11731. Origan Ava. Call

H O N D A C IV IC - m
7C1MA.
•17*5, H m hiali Fard. 37*4
NWV.1T-M...................J a -I W I
M E R C U R Y M O N A R C H - ‘77.
7TW*R, m s . SamlaaN Fard.

WASHINGTON OAKS: 4 bdrm..
IV* bath. Owner w ill help
finance. *43.500........... 44073*7

REA LTOR,. ...... .........333*4111

195—Machinery/Tool*

CASSELBERRY: 1 acre m a d
PR-1. *45.000. W. Malktewskl
Realtor
■333 7*03
CORNER L O T I I acre + . toned
C-l. Hwy 50 E.. 3 blka from
East Watt Expwy., varied
uses. J . Strong. 100 % Real
Estate Inc. 443-13*0or 3»MIOO
OLO PARK A SHOP BLD O .
15.000 *q.ft., alto adlecant bldg.
Needs to sail to settle estate.
300 tt. on Park Ava. 170 tt. on
Hwy. 44. High traffic araa.
Plenty of parking. Owner fi­
nancing......................*4*5.000.

153— AcreageLots/Sale
IV* ACRES, I4S tt. paved road
frontage by 440 ft. deep (3
orange grove*). *3.000 down.
*135 mo. 333-*040...or.,.333-*S43

CALL BART
i ; i&lt; \

T

HRill |Mll|

/

•333-11**
KOKOMO..
JUNK O W R IC KED CARSRunning ar nat, tap prices
paid. Fret pick up. 331-3354

223— Miscellaneous
RIPOSESSIO
Must sail 3. quonaet stylo stool
buildings. One I* 40 1 40 brand
now never erected Will aotl
for balance owed. Coll Tom,

APPRAISALS AND SALES
BOB M. B A L L , JR. P .A ..C L M .

In (Oil If ID
to i vow

37*4Hwy. 17-W,..........JP-1451
M IR C U R V COUGAR- ‘ I I .
7CIS4A. *77*5, le am m Per*.

219—Wanted te Buy

TTW
mWilli pmUnTp.

191—Building
Materials

7.7% ATR
CONSTRUCTIONFINANCING
FOR UP TO2 TEARS

R E A L ESTA TE
REALTOR
333-74**

UI t ■ H&gt;

217-Garagn Sates

MI W T

pool. SII4JM........... J31-313*

SAVE ON HIO H LABOR COSTS
and build II yoursall. No down
paymant. Quality pre-cut ma­
terial*. Slap by *t*p Instruc­
tion*. Call for details or attend
a seminar..............1*5-4*1-1941

STENSTROM

157— Mobil#
Homes / Sole

REALTY, INC.

A B E A U T Y - Skyline. 34X53. 3
bdrm., 3 bath, Fla. rm PLUS
screened araa, aat-ln kltchan.
Priced to sell!.............333 010*
CAR R IAGE COVE: Adult Sec..
3 bdrm., I bath. 3 car carport,
screened porch A utility rm.
Exc.cond. *14.500...... 333 3*74
CARR IAOE COVE: Adult tac­
tion. 14X70. IN I Fleetwood. 3
bdrm.. He bath, split plan,
cantral a/c. raised scraan
room, carport. Beautiful loca­
tion. Prlcad to tall at *14.500
F A M IL Y SECTIO N : 34X54. I**t
Paachtro* 3 bdrm , 3 bath,
cantral a/c. many extra*.
Bargain at t35.500 Call.333 *140
CASSELB ER RY) wllh nice lot.
3/1, Remodeled, nlca tract.
Bargain. Ownar.......... S**-II13
FA M IL Y SPACES A V A ILA B LE
Carriage Cove Mobil* Horn*
Park. Com* tea u til I
Gregory Mobiles Hom*t.333-I30»
OWNER W IL L FIN AN CE with
substantial down. 3* tt. wide,
4 room, manufacture horn* In
adult park. Longwood Sanlord
araa. Evas4 wkandt...4**-4*97

REALTORS

Sanford’s Salts Laadar
C O M M E R C IA L / M U L T I P L E
USE, Prime proparty fronts
on heavily traveled street, lot
site 111 x 13*. toned GC 3.
*17,000.. Call Bath Hathaway.
Raaltor/Atsodat*
O E N E R A L C O M M E R C IA L
ZONINOI 3.154 sq. It. build
Ing, land tit# 144 x 117.
(comer loti, on high traffic
steal, 5104,000 Call John
Butnar, Brokar/Salasman
O R E A T IN V E S T M E N T O P ­
P O R TU N ITY ! 4.4 acres toned
for 15 untie par acre, over 500
ft. road front, Idaal location
tor multl-rasldantlal. 43*5.000.
Call Ta rry Llvle, Realtor/
Associate
a O EN EV A O SC EO LA R D .e
ZONED FO R M O B ILE SI
5 Acre Country tracts.
Wall tread on paved Rd.
3*% Dawn. It Yrs. at 13%l
From 511.5001

163— Waterfront
Property / Sale

201—Horst*
EXECUTIVE HOME
MOVINO O U TI Contents of ex­
ecutive homa from fabulous
Bay Hill Estate: Beautiful
Quean Anna (solid Cherry) tlx
place bedroom sulfa with 4‘
tall 4 poster bad. triple dress­
er, mirror, chest on chest,
night stand, etc. Originally
15500 flrtf *1445 cash taka*.
Magnificent Traditional (solid
Oak) 7 place bedroom suite
with quean site Orthopedic
mattress sat. originally 14300
asking *1145 firm. Gorgeous 3
place sectional living room
sultawlth quean site sleeper,
originally *4304. sacrifice
« tins. Elegant formal Quean
Anna (solid Cherry) * place
dining room suite 43" by 44"
table, two 12" leave* A 4
hlghback chairs, originally
*7100 sacrifice S1«45. Matching
52" lighted china cabinet,
originally *1400 asking *13*5.
Massive solid Oak dinette on 4
pedestal 43" X40" table with
three 13" leaves and hlghback
chairs originally *3400 asking
tits. Matching Hutch A buffet
40" originally *1400 asking
*115. (A ll 1 month* old)
N EP H EW W ILL H E LP DE
L IV E R I
E X C E P T IO N A L
H IG H Q U A L IT Y A N D IN
IM PECCABLE CONDITION.
Exclusive showing by app o l n l m a n t o n l y to
appreciative, deserving party
only!...............................155-*410

KENMORE WASHER A
D RYER . Exc*ll*nt condition.
SI15each. Call:.......... 333 4104
K IN O SIZE BED - Mattress,
boxspring, frame. Good cond.
SI 15. 333 145* leave massage
LARRY'S M A R T. 315 Sanford
Ava. Naw/Usad turn. A appl.
Buy/Sall/Trada. 333 4)33.
MOVINO, M UST SELLI * pc.
oak dining room suite. *7*5.
Call attar 4 pm............331 0941
O F F IC E DESK- Good condition
Must salt. Price:................. *45
C a ll:.....................

CAU. M T TIME

SANFORD) Lakafront lot In tho
city lim its.. Sowar A watar.
ready to build on. Fish, ski,
swim. Call Now!......... 33113*7

322-2420
321-2720

181— Appliances
/ Furniture

Call toll f r n 1-800-323-3720
A L T E R N A T IV E T .V . A APPL.
3*54 Hwy. 17*1
331-5400

3545 PARK A V E ......... ...Sanford
Ml Lk. Mary Blvd....... Lb. Mary

H O R IZO N TAL Penal Sow. I0hp.
100" cutting capacity X 3V&gt;
depth w/scorlng unit. 333-53*3
P O R TA B L E W E L D E R For
tale, ac/dc. Weldon Power, 14
hp. got driven, alec, start, too
tt loads A canvas cover. K A O
Trailer. 333*45* or 333-**a*

111—Appliances
/ Furniture

34Q-5W4

SOLID a O C X M A f LI HUTCH
Prlca:.'....:................. :......S350
Call:.............................3334704
W ASHER/DRYER, Kanmoras
bast, 4 months old. *435 Or
bast otter.............Call .331 45*1
7 PC. PVC PATIO turn. sat.
*450. Patio table A 4 chair*.
*300. Solid white oak gun
cabinet, *100. Acoustic guitar
w/case. *75. All Lika New!
Call:.............................1310*74

Q U A R TE R HORSE M A R E ,
Sorrel, good pleasure horse,
M UST SELLI *350....... 331*043

211—Antiques/
Coltecliblt*
L IQ U ID A TIN G Stock of uphoT
stery A decorator furniture.
Peddlers Cart, 331 H. AdofN
Ava., Poland............... 734-13**

213—Auctions
■OB'S U S ED FU R N ITU R E
W E T A K E CONSIGNM ENTS.
B U Y OR S IL L ...............333-113*

BRIDGES ANDSON
Auction every Thursday 7 PM.

WE BUY ESTATES!
Hwy 44........................ 333-3*01

215—Boats and
Accessorits
B A Y LIN ER - 33 ft., flybrldge.
sleeps 4. galley, 335 Volvo 1.0.
Coast Guard equipped. Make
otter. Call:.................. 333 S43*
SAILBO AT: Used lass than 1
year. Perfect condition *300
Call..............................3310*74
14 Ft. OLASTRON Bowridar. 45
Johnson, with ga lvan lied
trailer. Many extra*, must
sail I *3,1*5......... 441*733 att. *
'47 COBIA-1* tt. fiberglass boat.
Rapo. Motivated buyer na*ds
to salt. Make bast otter. Call:
45044*3 ask tor Jarry

. 217—Goragt Salts

*************
SPECIAL PURCHASE
Used solas, lounga chairs,
cocktail tables, side chairs,
metal office dasks. Items are
for limited time only. Located
at Sanlord Airport. Bldg 4*.
hra. 4em-5pm. Frl., Sat. A
Man. through Frl. next weak.

*^ y *w *v r **

YAR D SALE- 3550 S. French
Ava. (Hw y. 17*3). Jan. 31.
Next to Insurance World.
4 PC. LIV IN O ROOM S ET with
matching lamps *373. queen
eotebed 5300. King watarbad
with haatar *150. Ml»c. Item*.
Shown at 135 Garrison Dr. Sat.
A Sun. 1:30 toS. 33! 4360

River Rock Potto Stones
Grease Trap* Send Dry Wells
Reedy Mix Concrete
Mtrocts Centre** Ce.
333*5751................ .3** Ik R Ava.
B U Y -----------S I L I ------------ TR A D E
HAsgt AnyUjlnf

Heay's Crown Pawn.— JM-B744
DIAMONDS are forever but love
Isn't. Set. A 7ct. flawless
diamonds. Ha ha Jonathon. I
told you I'd toll thorn. 3453140
FOR S A L I) Rowing exerciser,
good cond. 130. Stereo system,
needs some repair, *30JP-4503
FOR S A L I) 4x7 storage shad
575. Upright refrigerator, *50.
Call otter 4pm............. 333-147*
H A LF P R IC II Flashing arrow
signs *30*1 Lighted, non-arrow
*37*1 Unllghtad *13*1 F r n
latter*I Sea locally. Call to­
day I Factory: 1MO43T0163
IP A , ax cal lent condition. In­
cludes all except heater A
skirt. M*0.....................323-M71

231—Cars
VW R A B B IT D IE S E L L- '*3.
Baby blue w/b*lg* cloth Int.
A/C, 5 *p„ 51.000 ml., 40 mpg
city, 55 mpg hwy., 1 mo.
Mlchelln lira*. Lika new cond.
Mutt Sell I *3.300 nag. 574 37*0
Bad Credit?
No Credit?
W E FIN A N C E
W ALK IN ................DRIVE O U T
N A TIO N A L A U T O SALES
Sanford Ava. A 13th SI....331 4075
CA D ILLA C O E V IL L E - 7*. fully
loaded, graat cond., ana
owner. *4,500. 333 7*53. t 6pm
C H E V R O LE T C H E V E T T E 'll'.
T4544B. 113*5, SamlMl* Ferd,
37*4 Hwy. 17 *3............ 333-INI
C H E V R O L E T N O V A *74‘ ,
4C473C. 45*5. Seminal# Ferd.
1714 Hwy. 17*3............ 333-14*1
C H E V R O L E T CAMARO- '75.
4C473C. *17*5. Seminal# Ford.
1714 Hwy. 17 *3............. 333-1411
C H E V R O L E T M A L IB U - '7*.
4C443A, *15*5. Sam Inat* Feed.
17*4 Hwy. 17 *3............. 333-INI
C H R Y S L E R LeBARO N ‘I I ’.
C45I0, *19*5, Samlnel* Ford.
17*4 Hwy. 17 *3.............333-IN I
DODOE ASPEN- '77, 3 door.
Graat condition. *100.
Call:........... 360-59*4 after 5 pm
D O DO E C O L T- '74, 7C1I3B,
*4*5, Seminal* Ford, 3714
Hwy. 17*3.................. .173-UI1
FOR SALE) 1*7* Chrysler New
Yorker, nice shape, #*,000
mites, naw radial liras. SI,*SO
or bail offer. Call........331-119*
FORD FA IR M O N T 4 dr., 'IM0.
C4574A. *17*5, Seminal* Ford,
17*4 Hwy. 17*3............J 3 3 IN I

FORD ORANADA- 7*. 6T«*SB.
*e*J. SamlMl* Fard. 37M
Hwy. 17*3....................333-14*1
FORD L TD - 7*. 7C090B. *1495.
Samlnel* Ford, 3714 Hwy.
17 *3............................. 333-t4*t
FORD M USTANG ’41, T-Top.
4C640A, *3995. Saminola Fard,
17M Hwy. 17 93............ 133-1411
FORD M USTAN O 71. C4577A.
Samlnel* Ferd, 3714 Hwy.
17*3............................. 133 14#I

37B*Hwy. 17-W,...-..... -33*14*1
M IR C U R V HMRGUIB- 74,4 dr.
7CI4BA, *4*5. SamkNli Fard.
37B4Hwy. 17-W,........... -333-14*1
OLDS D E L T A M - *74. Run*
good. UOO/bast otter. Call
aW*rS:3»gm.............. 4*5-4153
P O N TIA C GRAN D V IL L E i 71.4
dr., I owner, no longer need
extra car. Lets of extras, runs
goiG. body naads work. BSAB0
ml.MMcaah.................365-367*
PONTIAC- 73, 3 dr. 7T1SSY,
55*5, Seminal* Fard. 1714
Hwy. )7-*3..................-333-14*1
R E N A U L T A L L IA N C E '51.
7T3J7A. *34*5, lemhwte Ferd,
3714 Hwy. 1791.............333 1441
R E N A U L T- ’*3, 7C077A. ***5.
Seminal* Ferd, 17*4 Hwy.
17*3,............................J33-IG1
T N U N D IR B IR D - 13, 13,000
mile*, auto., air. Vary clean,
must sail I Taka over pay
mante.................. 32**455 att. *
VW BUG- 73. 4TI031B, *795.
Samlnal* Fard. 17*4 Hwy.
17 *3,........................... 333-INI

233—Aute Parts
/ Accessories
OOOO USED MOTORS
and transmissions
Call:................................ 331-3354
X C A L I B U R T O P P E R (o r
longbad Ford, axe. cond. 5500
ALSO Matal utility trallar.
*300. Call......................333 7611
1977 OLDS 5TRONO 154 with
quad A transmission. Approx.
10.000 miles. Doesn't smok*.
sa* It run. 234 W. 19th St.
_M jM 7 7 ta s k to rG # 2 £ _^^^_^

235—Trucks /
Buses/Vans
OM C S TE P V AN : 71, good
cond., naw paint. tlMO/offar
Call:33l 1555 or 331 7149

238— Vehicles
Wanted
W E PAY TO P 54 lor wracked
cars/trucks. W* Salt guaran
lead used parts. AA AUTO
SALVAOE el Dsbary..*44-4*61

239— Motorcycles
and Bikes
HONDA Automatic 4S«: 'll, naw
cond. 2500 org. m l. *1700
Call. 33) 1555 or 111 714*
YAM AHA SECA 450: '13. *xc.
c o n d . 5,000 m l. B I L L Y
CASTER golt club*. 331 3744

241— Recreational
Vehicles / Campers
H I-LO Travel Trallar. '53. 31 tl.
57,7M Exc. cond. Bab Owan
Travel Traitor* 313 N. Adall*
Ava., Daland...............71»S0«
M A Y F L O W E R ) '10, P a rk
Modal. 15'X T Tlpout*. Neat A
clean 57AM Bab Owen Travel
Trallar* 111 N. Adall* Ava.,

Oaland............ ..........73t»4d*
Q UIN 5TAR ) Camping. Cargo.
U t i li t y , T illi n g T r a lla r
Unique.
Bob Owan Traval
Trailers 111 N. Adall* Ava.,
Oaland........................71*-5*54
SEE T H E NEW HI-LO TR A V ­
E L TR A ILER S at Bob Owan
Travel Trailers i l l N. Adall*
Ava., Oaland.............. 711 5050

AUTO
SERVICE
AND

ALL CARS
ALL DRIVERS

SA LES

P A R TS

IN S U R A N C E
(305) 323-7283

friendly service

-

quality parts

A AUTO

#

INSURANCE
WORLD
PIP

AUTO PARTS

SR-22
DWI
NO PROBLEM

2546 S. French Ave.

Sanford, FL 32771

Seminole
Paint &amp; Body

1344 E. SEMORAN BOULEVARD
(ONE MILE EAST OF HWY. 441)
APOPKA, FLORIDA 32703
PHONE 886-8700

L A K E M ARY
P a *1

2 5 4 0 S. M yrtle Avenue
SANFORD. FL 32771
Ph. Sanford - 323-5163
Winter Park - 834-0077

P A R TS
OPEN SIX DAYS

ANFORD AUTO
ALVAGE

EARLY &amp; LATE MODEL PARTS

SANFORD 321-3371
1-800-334-2841

101 ALBRIGHT RD.
SANFORD, FL 32771

120-101 E. LAKE MARY BLVD.
(THE SHOPPES AT LAKE MARY)
LAKE MARY, FLORIDA 32748
PHONE 322-5831

OVER SO CLASSICS 8c L A T E MODELS
TO CHOOSE FROM
A L L PRICED TO SE LL
508 S. FRENCH AVE.
321-2388

SANFORO 305 3710970
DCLANO 904 736 8006
ORANGE CITY 904 775 7971
OAYTONA BEACH 904 257 1500

TOM R. TAYLOR SR.
PRiSlOENT

T R A N S M IS S IO N

KEYSTONE CARS
‘80 PONTIAC SUNBIRD........ *1495
72 DODGE CORNET MAKE OFFER
79 FORD L T D .......................... *595
7 9 CH R YSLER .............. * 4 5 0 DOWN

LO N G W O O D

1501 French Ave., Sanford

073 WEST S.R. 434
(434 CENTER)
LONQWOOD, FLORIDA 32750
PHONE 830-0105

3 2 2 -0 4 2 0

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
CARS • VANS • TRUCKS • MOTOR HOMES • 4X4’s
•ONE DAf SERVICE
ON MOST CARS
• FREE TOWINO
WITH OVERHAUL

• OVER M YRS.
EXPERIENCE
• FOREIGN •
DOMESTIC

• FRONT WHEEL
I 4 WHEEL ORIVE
• ALSO STANDARD
TRANSMISSIONS

"ASK ABOUT OUR 6 MONTH OR 6000 MILE GUARANTEE

SEAL BIDS ACCEPTED
MAKE US AN OFFER

FREE ESTIMATES

6 9 9 -0 7 7 3

”

1055 NURSERY RD.
WINTER SPRINGS 32708

SERVICE

S A LE S

EAST 46
AUTO SALES

Tire &amp; Muffler

4 Chrysler Sth At*. -4 Dr.
« Toyota Pickup
82 Olds Fiienza- 4 Ur.
81 T-Bird

APOPKA

P A IN T &amp; B O D Y W O R K

s

SHERRY &amp; LES ARMS
Owners

E R N IE J A C K S O N
A U T O S A L E S . IN C B IG J A N U A R Y S A L E
COMPLETE DETAILING
CLEAN INTERIOR, ENGINE
BUFFING &amp;
WAXING

3710 E . Highway 46

24 HOUR TOWINO

Sanford, FI. 3 2 771

«

EM ER B EN C V ROAD S ER V IC E
04ius &lt;rut rone otM0# ricjuui route* camushcuw

322-3100

LOCAL A LONO DISTANCE TOWINO

COM*lETI REXAMSERVICE
AUTOAM•IAAXI SERVICE■9AOHT(NO• TUM-UM•
•i moms MaiNiOMa•

USED CAR SALES &amp; SERVICE
COM PLETE AUTO REPAIR
DIGITAL OSCILLOSCOPE

OVER44TEARSEARERJEMCf

For quick repair o f your cars
engine problem s

322-7397
imCfLlRY AV.

i

m

^

117—Starting Good*

S E T O F W ILSON Golf Clubs,
original carton, used once.
S1S0...................... C o H :» 1 5 W

149—Commtrcial
Proporty/Sala

w

r r r r r r r i r V

BUTCH’S
CHEVRON

FO R HOM E DELIVERY

CALL
322-2611
S a n fo rd H e ra ld

v

�•

r

What Does It Mean To Be An American Indian?

Professor: Indians Are A Lot Of
Herald Staff W riter
Some Seminole Countlans.
through a one-time opportu­
nity at Seminole Community
College, are gaining Insight
this term Into American Indi­
an culture, although guest
Professor Ron Llbertus. who
Is almost half Chippewa and
who grew up on a northern
Minnesota Indian reserva­
tion. said Its hard to pin
down exactly what It means
to be an American Indian.
He a ls o d o e s n 't kn ow
exactly what It means to be
an "Am ericanized" Indian.
" P r o b a b l y a lo t o f m y
thought processes, a lot of
my feelings, a lot of my way I
view life, my cosmology, the
way I perceive the world has
to be based on my Indl-

anness. That's m y Influence.
It's the way I was bom and
raised." Llbertus said.
"N o one can say what an
Indian is. because Indians are
a lot of things." he said. But
some Indians are making a
strong statement — 'I am not
white.’ " I think there's a
great strength In that state­
ment as long as It's not
angry.
"I think, as Indians, we
lean heavily on. 'Look at
what you white people did to
us. You killed the buffalo.
You stole m y land.' That's
fine. But I’ve heard the last
three choruses o f ‘Now the
Buffalo are Gone.' and I’m
tired of it. I want to get on
with whatever we're getting
on w ith." Llbertus said.
He doesn't wear Indian

Ron Llbertus, who Is proud of his Indian heritage, shows
his grandfather's medicine bag, part of exhibit at SCC.

C FR H Administrator James D. Tesar, left,
congratulates Fred and Mildred Haen for

trappings and his brown eyes
In a face framed with white
hair and beard might be the
only visual clue to his Indian
heritage. But brown eyes are
certainly not exclusive to
American Indians, so without
knowing Llbertus, you would
never guess he Is Indian.
"People tell me I don’t look
Indian. T h at’s more o f a
reflection o f what’s going on
In their mind than what goes
on In m ine," he said.
And although he doesn't
like to generalize. Llbertus
said, In the minds of Am eri­
can Indians you won't find
the idea o f accumulating
wealth. You'll find a sense o f
sharing, w h ich . Llbertu s
said. In his case during his
2 6 - y e a r m a r r ia g e to a
N orw eglan -lrlsh w ife has
created a bit of confusion,
because he gave things away.
"I still do. I don't have a real
strong sense of ownership.
" I f one spiritually looks at
the world around us, 1 think
we view It differently. At least
I do. I think Indians saw and
still do to a certain extent the
earth as som ethin g that
doesn't belong to us. It's not
ours to destroy. Indians don't
mine and never have mined.
Indians don't strip forests.
But ra th er they see
themselves as a functionary
within the realm of what the
creator provided. They said.
‘I am a simple creature. I am
a human being. My spirit is
no greater that that of the
b e a r , w h ic h h a s g r e a t
strength, a fox. which has
great cunning, the bird,
which can fly into the spirit
world, the river which flows
clean. We're all of the same
spirit and we must have
great respect for that.
" i am a caretaker of the
earth I must care for It.
because it's not mine.’ So
with Indians thinking that.
pcan who wants to colonize.
"Indians didn't have any
problem with that at first.
They said. ‘Well, they're go­
ing to come In and use Jhe
land like we use lt.‘ All of a
sudden their (Europeans) use
said the Indians couldn't use
It (the land). That's what
stunned the Indians. And
that whole conflict Is still. I
think, the basis for all pro­
blems we have in the United
States. Indians still don't
know anything about owning
land.

serving more than
auxiliary during 1986.

1,000 hours In the

HtraM PIm I m fey Swun LaStn

These sand paintings w are made lo r Llbertus by a Navaho healer.
"W e have 56 million acres
of reservation land and no
one owns it. No Indian owns
it. Everybody exists on It.
which Is what the creator had
In mind. So. I don't have
resentment based on those
land dealings, although there
are times when I become
very angry when it is still
going on.
"M ine Is not a resentment.
Mine is more o f sadness,
probably m ore than an y­
thing. But I have sadness
about a lot o f things. About
the way we pollute. And
Indians pollute also. I have a
sadness, a very stong feeling,
when one views the world
around us."
"tlW frtu s: who Win be at
SCC through April, has with
him a collection of curative
Navaho sandpalntlngs, which
in their sacred form are never
seen outside an Indian set­
t i n g , as w e l l as o t h e r
examples of Southwest tribal
art. His Pueblo Kachlna dolls,
along with baskets, blankets,
bead work, including a medi­
cine bag that was his great­
grandfather's. will be on dis­
play in S C C 's Fine Arts
Gallery from Feb. 16 through
March 13. Admission Is free
and during his 4-month visit.

Llbertus is available as a
s p e a k e r to c o m m u n it y
groups.
Like his grandfather, an
educated full-blooded Chip­
pewa. who returned to the
reservation, because "h e had
a hard time dealing with
W e s te rn th o u g h t and
Western m en ta lity ."
Llbertus. too. Is a story teller.
He passes on Indian lore
and facts, as well as provides
a look at Indian art in the
form of useful Items. This Is a
sid etrack for 48-year-old
Llbertus. who began his ca­
r e e r w i t h a d e g r e e in
linguistics as a translator of
Russian. For five years he
w o r k e d fo r B r it is h I n ­
telligence In Europe as a
translator.
At 18. when Llbertus left
the reservation for college he
said It was like moving from
a small rural community to a
more urban setting. "There
were more distractions —
pretty girls." he said.
In such an alien society.
Indians, Llbertus said, like
farm kids who go to Harvard,
experience cultural shock.
But Indians in those days
didn't have a support system
In such a world, he said.
Today support systems are

C F R H Auxiliary officers installed by James
D. Tesar, hospital administrator, are, from
left, Mikdred Haen, president; June Moore,
president-elect; Gail Stewart, first vice

developing for Indiana with
many pursuing higher edu­
cation and with law becom­
ing the fasted growing field
am ong Indians. "In d ia n s
have found It's okay to go out
and beat the drum. You'll get
attention from the press and
from liberals. But to get
things done you really have
to figure out how the system
works and then get yourself
In th e r e w ith o u t lo s in g
whatever It was that brought
you In there," he said.
But Just w hen Indians
think they have the system
figured out and the rules
seem to be working in their
favor, the rules arc changed.
Llbertus said. He cited land
rulings In his home state,
which Instead of giving Indi­
ans llke-land for land they
owned, which had been built
on by whites, the Indians
have been offered a cash
settlement. Indians, he said,
don't want m oney. They
want land.
He also said
that as Indians have begun
getting a hand In high-stakes
b in g o , w h ich b e g a n on
S em in ole reservation s In
Florida and has spread across
the country, states have tried
to change the rules that work

president; Fred Haen, treasurer; Mildred
Askew, corresponding se cre ta ry; and
Dorothy Gatchel, recording secretary.

CFRH Auxiliary Honored

Volunteers G ive 30,000
Hours Service In 1986

"Honored Members." serving the auxiliary
since Its inception In 1956 are, from left,
Georgia Chorpenlng, Margaret Wright, Ina

Galloway, Olive Hunt, Sara Epstein and
Betty Toll.

Central Florida Regional Hospital Auxiliary
members, who amassed nearly 30.000 volunteer
hours during 1986. were honored Tuesday at the
annual awards luncheon hosted by the hospital at
the Skyport Restaurant In Sanford.
Thomas McDonald, chairman of the Board of
Trustees. In thanking the group for their
dedication gave hls prescription for happiness.
"Learn to share and to carry some other person’s
burden." He ended hls salute by alluding to the
story he Just told about people who were happy
because they were helping each other und saying.
"You are happy people.”

Auxiliary President Mildred Haen and her
husband. Fred, treasurer, with Grace Smith were
recognized for the over 1.000 hours they have
devoted to the hospital during the past year.
Over 700 hours were volunteered by Miriam
Askew. Edith Avenel and Marion Cox: Vivian
Farmer put In 600 hours plus: while Margaret
Burke. Katherine Cull, Phyllis Freund. Esther
Lansing. Elsie Querry and Audrey Roush worked
over 500 hours In 1986.
The following members gave from 300 to 499
See A U X IL IA R Y . 3C

�r
K

fzw lb c i H m M , Sm M

, F I.

Sunday, Fa b . I , I f t J

Engagements
GuernseyTerwilleger
Mr. and Mrs Robert F.
Guernsey or Lake Mary, an­
nounce the engagement of
t h e ir d a u g h t e r . R o b y n
E lizab eth , to W illia m A.
Terwilleger, son o f Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Terwilleger of
Sanford.
Bom in Lexington. Ky.. the
bride-elect is the maternal
granddaughter o f Mrs. Gerry
Whalen, Louisville, Ky., and
the paternal granddaughter
of E.L. Guernsey, also of
Louisville.
Miss Guernsey is a 1983
graduate of Seminole High
School and attended the Uni­
versity o f Florida where she
was a member o f Zeta Tau
Alpha sorority. She Is cur­
rently attending University of
Central Florida, Orlando.
Her fiance, bom in Sanford,
is the maternal grandson of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Al
(N a n c y ) B ro c k and th e
ttemal grandson of the late
r. a n d Mrs. J a m e s E.
Terwilleger Sr., all of San­
ford.
Mr. Terwilleger graduated
from Seminole High School
In 1981 and re c e iv e d a
b a c h e l o r ' s d e g r e e In

B

In And Around Lake Mary-Longwood

Schools Mark 'Challenger' Day
The School Board of Seminole County
declared Jan. 28 as Challenger Com ­
memoration Day. Students and faculty
members o f schools In Longwood and Lake
Mary focused not on the tragedy, but on the
dedication and enthusiasm o f teacher.
Christa McAulifTe, and other members o f the
Challenger crew.
Rock Lake Middle School sixth-graders
had, as a guest speaker. Susan Forte, a
semlflnallst in the teacher in space program.
Students at Greenwood Lakes Middle School
presented a plaque In memory o f the seven
Challenger astronauts to Principal Ted
Barker.
Longwood and Lake Mary Elementary
Schools encouraged children to look at the
challenge o f space while remembering those
who have contributed to the program.
Jill White, a 1986 graduate of Lake Mary
High School, has been named to the Dean’s
List at the University of Alabama with a 4.0
grade point average. Jill Is the daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. James White of Longwood.

Robyn C. Guernsey
engineering from the Univer­
sity of Florida In 1985. He Is
a member of the American
Society of Civil Engineers
and is employed as a civil
e n g i n e e r by G r e i n e r
Engineering of Orlando.
A s p r i n g w e d d i n g is
tanned at Church of the
P
1
Niatlvlty. Lake Mary.

A 5-day program to help smokers elim i­
nate and prevent the urge for cigarettes is
scheduled to begin at South Seminole
Community Hospital, Longwood. in Febru­
ary. "W e're so convinced that our program
works that we are offering the first session
free." said Lisa Smith, director o f Education
at South Seminole.
This free introductory session is sched­
uled for Thursday. Feb. 19 from 7:00 to 8:30
p.m. In the education classroom of the
Medical Oftlces building at South Seminole
Medical Center. Four other medical treat­
ment sessions are scheduled for Feb. 23. 24,
25. and 26 from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. The total
cost of this program is $50.
Two optional "m aintenance" meetings
will follow completion of the course and are
scheduled for March 5 and 12 from 7:00 to

...Indian
Continued From 1C

Hollace Ann W illiam s, William H. M cPhillips

Williams -McPhillips
M r. an d M rs, T e d N.
Williams. 4700 Paola Road,
S a n fo r d , a n n o u n c e th e
engagement of their daugh­
ter. Hollace Ann Williams of
Tampa, to William Henry
McPhillips of Tampa, son of
Mrs. Ginger McPhillips, 509
Hershcl Drive, Temple Ter­
ra c e, Fla., and Enrl
M c P h illip s, 527 G arrard
Drive, Temple Terrace.
Bom in Gainesville, the
bride-elect Is the maternal
granddaughter o f Mr. and
Mrs. G e o rg e W. C aisse.
Henderson. N.C.. and the
paternal granddaughter of
M r . a n d M r s . T e d M.
Williams. Hilo, Hawaii.
Miss Williams is a 1979
graduate of Lake Brantley
High School, Forest City,
where she was a member of
the Girls Track Team. She
attended Stetson University.
D eLan d , w h ere she was
Lam bda Chi Alpha Little

Sister. £he is employed as
s a le s re p r e s e n ta tiv e for
Tampa City Directory.
Her fiance*, born in Tampa,
is the grandson of Mrs. Clyde
McLeod and the late Mr.
McLeod. Tem ple Terrace,
and the paternal grandson of
Mrs. Grace McPhillips and
th e l a t e Mr. F r a n c i s
McPhillips of Tampa.
Mr. McPhillips is a 1973
g r a d u a t e o f K i n g H igh
School, T em p le T errace,
where he was a member of
the fo o tb a ll, sw im m in g,
wrestling, basketball and
track teams. He graduated
from Florida State University
under a 4-year football schol­
arship In May. 1977. He Is
em ployed In the fam ilyowned business, Hillsboro
Bottled Gas Cp.. Tampa.
The wedding ill be an event
of March 21. at 11 a.m.. at
Maison Et Jardln Restaurant.
Altamonte Springs.

to the advantage o f Indians.
Indians, on reservations not gov­
erned by the white man's civil
laws, can operate bingo games
virtually without restrictions of
pot size, of play times, or of
profit use.
The profits from bingo are
enabling some tribes for the first
time to elevate their standard of
living In a country where it is
fashionable to feel sorry for
Indians, to romanticize them
and to see them as part of the
past. Libertus said.
"Soon bingo is going to be
disallowed and Indians will be
back to where they were. It’s
frustrating. That's not right.
There's a lot of conflict, mostly
because now Indians are seeing
that Indians are more equal in
some cases. I don't know how
they can say that with the state
o f a ffa ir s . So In d ia n s are
becoming attorneys and saying
okay we'll take the advantages."
The visual gap between Amer­
ican Indians and other segments
of our society are narrowing,
alth ou gh som e In d ian s are
bucking the recent trend to
Americanize and are readoptlng
some old traditions including
dress and healing traditions.

School, Sanford, where she
was a member of FBLA and
FFA. She is employed in the
family business,. Formitex
Inc. $ Swaggerty Surveying.
H e r f i a n c e , b o r n at
Pertham boy, N.J.. is the
maternal grandson of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hyers of
New Jersey and the paternal
grandson of the late Mr. and
Mrs. W illard Province of
Missouri. He attended De­
ltona Christian School where
he was a member of the
b asketball, baseball and
soccer teams. He is employed
by Sw aggerty Surveying.
Sanford.
The wedding will be an
event of March 27. at 7.30
p.m., at Lake Mary Pre­
s b y te ria n C hurch. Lake
Mary.

8:00 p.m. These sessions are at no addi­
tional charge and are designed to reinforce
the new nonsmoker's behavior and teach
additional skills to minimize the likelihood
of returning to cigarettes in the future.
For more information or to register for this
program, call the hospital educational
department at 767-5892. Space is limited
and the deadline to register is Monday. Feb.
16.
Greek Day was celebrated by sixthgraders at Greenwood Lakes Middle School.
Students dressed In togas, participated in
Olympic sports events, and feasted on Greek
food. The play "Skills of Pericles” was
presented by Marge Holt's English class to
students and parents. Others teachers'
classes that participated were Cinda Benz,
Peg Voke. Betty Gorman, Susan White.
Donna Bradley, Judy Troxell and Carol
Dudley.
"D o you love your heart or put stress on
It?" will be the program al this month's
Lake Mary Chamber of Commerce Meeting.
Guest speaker. Dr. Luts Perez, Is a
cardiologist from Central Florida Regional
Hospital, and Immediate past president o f
the Florida Medical Association.
This meeting will be held on February 4.
at 8:00 a.m. in the CIA Building. Lake Mary.
A continental breakfast will be provided by
the hospital and door prizes will be
awarded.

Alfred Hamman of Longwood has been
named to the St. Bonaventure University
Honors List for achieving an academic index
of 3.25 or better during the 1986 fall
semester. He Is a sophomore majoring in
Philosophy.
Lake Mary High School will hold a
curriculum Fair at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Feb.
5 for Btudents who will be attending the
school next year. AH departments and
extra-curricular programs will have dis­
plays.
Eighth grade students who plan to attend
Lake Mary High School received a copy of
the curriculum guide during orientation on
Friday. January 30 at their middle school.
Faculty and staff will be available to answer
questions. There will also be a program to
discuss graduation requirements held In the
auditorium at 7:00 p.m. for parents of next
year's prospective ninth-graders, new stu­
dents. or any others who have questions.
The following Lake Mary High School
students had art work selected for exhibit at
the Florida State Fair Youth Art Symposium
presently being held in Tampa: Chad
Driscoll. Chanin Conway, Kathy Maragh.
Michelle Harmon, and Cindy Fraustro.

started teaching humanities at
the University o f Minnesota
where he earned his degree. He
started to take note of his own
culture. Since there are no
written accounts of Indian histo­
ry that meant Libertus had to
touch on his family history,
especially though his grandfa­
ther. who had reared him.
As the oldest grandchild In his
fam ily. Lib ertu s, as a boy
followed Chippewa tradition and
lived with his grandparents, to
be educated by them In Indian
ways
and language. It was his
"People ask, 'What do you
duty then to help In the rearing
want for Indians?’ 1 don’t want
of the other children in his
anything for Indians. If some­
family, which had six children.
body really cared what I want, I
Libertus. who was a schoolboy
would like a society that would
in the 1940s and '50s, was
be so open that people could be
what they want to be," Libertus caught between a cultural gap of
said. And different Indians want being educated In Chippewa
different things, he said, citing ways while the U.S. government
the cases of his yuppy brother was trying to take the Indiand his radical, reservation anness out of Indians. Their
lawyer sister. "They Just have languages had been outlawed
different pursuits and the ability and reservation schools closed.
to go out and pursue what you Libertus was among the first
consider happiness, that's all 1 g r o u p o f s i x C h i p p e w a
youngsters to be bused 36 miles
care about. I want my three
ch ild ren to have the sam e from the reservation, where to­
day he owns a resort, to a public
freedom and latitude.
school.
"M y children Identify
In 1969, when he was asked
themselves as Indian, yet they by the Minneapolis Institute of
are more Norwegian than Indi­ Arts, as a minority educator, to
an. But they're not involved in head arts education for that
politics," he said.
institute. Libertus agreed on the
In the early 1960s Libertus condition that he could put
"W hen people look at Indian
culture they think that the
culture has died off and some­
thing new is In its p lace,"
Libertus said. "That’s not true.
Cultures don’t do that. Cultures
are dynamic. When people look
at Indian culture I think they arc
hard pressed to believe the
people living today are really
descendants of those people that
they knew about some years
ago. So I think that’s the first
problem Westerners have.with
Indians.

together the first-ever showing of
American Indian crafts as art.
"1 wanted to show it as art. It
Is an expression of a people,” he
said, o f the collection of works he
has gathered In his visits to
Indian nations. "Saying some­
thing with color, depth tone,
style. That's certainly Indian art,
what we look at." he said."And
Indian art has another attribute.
It has a utilitarian function. The
designs mean something
spriritually. On my own I created
my own art history."
The sand paintings were made
especially for him by a Navaho
h e a l e r w h o s t u d i e d and
practiced his craft 32 years. The
figures In the paintings, which
arc made of sand on sand,
usually are never seen by out­
siders. but are used in a private
healing ceremony as part of the
bedside manner of the healer
who may also use drugs. Ameri­
can Indians knew of the currative powers of many herbs and
substances before the white man
arrived in America. Libertus
said.
That first show by Libertus
was the first to put American
Indian art into a prestigious
museum, the Walker Art Center
in the Minneapolis Institute of
Art.
For information on his activi­
ties at SCC call 323-1450.

Howell Place is for someone you know who now wants to
be rid of the chores of home maintenance and the daily
struggle with the generation gap. But yet, and this is extremely important, someone who
still demands a full and active share of the decisions and freedom which come with
m aturity. Howell Place has social events, educational and recreational programs, a full
calendar of activities and all the support services one might ever need. So, if you have a
family friend or loved one who needs more information about the opportunities available
in Adult Congregate Living, call or write today!

Visit Howell Place Today And See For Yourself...lt's Great
N O E N D O W M E N T O R E N T R Y F E E S ! • N O A S S IG N M E N T S O F A S S E T S
P .S . A s k about our special Valentine gift to new residents.
F o r dinner reservations, please call 3 2 3 -7 3 0 6 .

Entries Wanted For A rt Exhibit
The Miss Jr. America Show Is coming to Florida April 26 at
the Orlando Marriott in Orlando.
Miss Jr. America Is m search of the girl (age 13-18) who will
represent Florida in the National televised "Jr. America Show"
hosted by television personality John Davidson.
Miss Jr. America is also In search of Miss Jr. Florida —
preteen (8-12). and Miss Jr. Florida-petite (4-7).
Call today (513) 7/1-8094 for more information on your state
show.

323-8308

HONOR THY
FATHER AND
THY MOTHER

Compton-Province
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Swagg erty . 435 O range A ve..
S a n fo r d , a n n o u n c e the
engagement of their daugh­
ter. Joy Viola Compton, to
Paul Thomas Province, son of
C h e s t e r P r o v i n c e . 20 1
Oakland Ave.. Sanford, and
the late Mrs. Grace Province.
B orn in S a n fo r d , th e
bride-elect is the maternal
granddaughter o f Dave Eber,
T i t u s v ille , and J oyce
Appleby, Sanford, and the
late Mr. Buddy Appleby. Her
paternal grandparents are
the late Mr. and Mrs. W. B
Swaggerty of Lake Monroe.
Her great grandparents are
Mrs. Dora Mae Harrell. San­
fo r d . a n d th e la te Mr.
Nepoleon Harrell.
The bride-elect is a 1984
graduate of Seminole High

Carol
Gantry

Longwood Elementary School Is holding a
"Western D ay" on Feb. 3. There will be
rodeo demonstrations, clogging, square
dancing, a horse parade and a presentation
on blacksmith techniques.
Interested students In grades 2 through 5
will bring their horses and present a
program o f rodeo skills, tricks and stunts for
parents and classmates. After a parade of
horses, ribbons w ill be awarded. The
program will start at 9:50 a.m. with
blacksmith demonstrations at 1:00 and 1:40
p.m.

iH

HOWELL PLACE
U M O H AUCJUCAM COMMUNITIES

SANFO RD

I

200 W. AIRPORT BLVD.
Sanford FL 32771

I

305-323-7306
TA V A R ES
1111 CAROLINE ST
Tavares. FL 32778

904-343-6464

I
SEND FOR FREE BROCHURE
or CALL TO LL FREE 1-800-551-7368 I

I NAME
I
| AD DR ESS

I
■ C ITY
PHONE

ZIP

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

J

�11'-»- r -r r ^ T r f •

FILMETER
What's new In
movies and video
bert D M attoo

Action Flick
Far From Good
IN M O V n THEATERS
W ANTED: DEAD OR A LIV E
(R ) A good, lowdown action flick
is nothing to snlfT at. but this
lowdown action flick is far from
good. Rutger Hauer. Mr. Plati­
num Blond, stars as Nick Ran­
dall. great-grandson o f Josh
Randall, the bounty hunttfr
played by Steve McQueen in the
late-‘50s TV series o f the same
name. Nick Is a former CIA agent
turned bounty ^hunter himself,
and in this routine adventure he
stalks international terrorist
Malak A1 Rahim (Gene Sim­
mons, of the rock group Kiss).
"W a n te d " has surprisingly
little In common with its TV
namesake — beyond its bounty-hurttcr p r o ta g o n is t and
plethora of gunfire. It's more like
one of those high-tech, coldhearted thrillers that have been
rampant In recent years, or like
a bad Charles Bronson or Chuck
Norris picture.
Give the film one thing: It has
Rutger Hauer, and Hauer is an
original. Among action heros,
m ayb e on ly R o g e r M oo re's
James Bond looks better In
clothes. And Hauer made such a
chilling "replicant” in the movie
"Blade Runner" for a very good
reason: There's something not
quite human about him. Even as
Nick Randall, one keeps expect­
ing to learn he Is really an alien
posing as Nick. Instead, he Just
flashes his blue eyes, glares at
the camera and convincingly
wields a veritable arsenal of
weapons. When his girlfriend is
killed by terrorists, he barely
registers the occurrence. It's on
to mutilate Malak AI Rahim. In a
pedestrian, bloody finale we’ve
seen coming from the first scene.
Gene Simmons plays the terror­
ist with single-minded mien: He
virtually hisses his way through
the role. GRADE: 1 star.
THE BEDROOM W IN D O W
(R) This tricky little romantic
thriller is sometimes madden­
ingly Improbable, but It's Just
suggestive enough to keep one
watching. A B altim ore man
(Steve Guttenberg) reports wit­
nessing a violent attack, on a
young woman (Elizabeth
McGovern). But It is his lover
(Isabelle Huppert) — who is his
boss’s wife — who has actually
seen the attack. Before you can
whisper "Him nolr." the man Is
caught In a web of deceit and
murder.
Two of the three leads might
have been better cast. Gutten­
berg Is OK as a schlemiel who
gets In over his head, but he's
almost too lightweight in the
role. (His acting has degenerated
to popping his eyes a lot.) As the
femme fatale, Isabelle Huppert is
stiff and faintly ludicrous. This
c o m p e llin g F ren ch a c tre ss
shouldn’t try to act in English.
Elizabeth McGovern Is enjoya­
ble. though. In the flashiest part.
(She gets to pose as a floozy
toward the end.) And the movie
is redolent of those ’40s and ‘50s
pictures in which an illicit affair
was sufficient catalyst for de­
struction. GRADE: 2V4 stars.

NEW HOME VIDEO
RAN (R) CBS/Fox. $79.98. A
late work by the Japanese ge­
nius Akira Kurosawa, consid­
ered by some to be the filmm aker's m asterpiece. It’ s a
160-mlnute epic transcription of
"K ing Lear." in which a war lord
(Tatsuya Nakadal) relinquishes
his power and then goes mad as
his two oldest sons vie for
control while his domain col­
lapses. There are memorable
Images and a stunning climactic
b a t t l e s e q u e n c e . As the
power-hungry wife of the eldest
son. a real Lady Macbeth figure.
Mleko Harada gives the film a
charge: Her lust has a comic
edge (she interrupts a fake dis­
play of tears to squash a bug).
But "R an " is also very stiff and
austere — a despairing view of
human nature that has static
stretches and an overriding Im­
personality. GRADE: 3W stars.

HOWARD THE DUCK (PG)
MCA Home Video. $79.95. One
of the top box-office flops of
recent years. See for yourself
how bad this comic-book parody
can be. GRADE: 1 star
(Film grading: 4 stars —
excellen t, 3 stars — good. 2
stars — fair, 1 star — poor).

Unibed W ay

■V ■■■«" !

The'MacLeods Honored
On Golden Anniversary

“Let The Professionals Do It'L t t

§

By Jane C asM lbarry
Harald A ta ff W riter
Donald and Emily MacLeod of
604 Oakhurst St., Altamonte
Springs, were honored on the
occasion o f their 50th wedding
anniversary by their children at
an afternoon reception held
S u n d a y . J a n . 2 5 . In th e
fellowship hall o f Community
United M ethodist Church o f

Casselberry. Guests Included
many of the honorees' friends
and relatives.
The couple were married Jan.
30, 1837 in the Hope Lutheran
Church of Reading. Pa. They
m oved to Altamonte Springs
from there 31 years ago. Mr.
MacLeod, who was in the tile
setting business before beginn­
ing a second career as a teacher,

Herald P M * by Jan* Caualbarry

M r. and Mrs. Donald MacLaod

ECHOLS TREE SERVICE
LICENSED - FUUV INtUREO - MTMFACTMN OUAMNTKD

r e t ir e d fro m th e S e m in o le
County school system In 1962
after 10 years o f teaching con­
stru ction at S em in ole High
School, Lake Brantley High
School and Seminole Communi­
ty College. He Is on the board o f
th e Good Sam aritan Hom e,
Sanford.
Mr. and Mrs. MacLeod are
active members of Community
church. He h&amp;s contributed his
construction skills to mission
facilities In Haiti as well as
community projects locally.
Mrs. MacLeod's sister, Betty
Reed, and brother, George Ravel,
both of Reading, who attended
the wedding, came down for the
anniversary celebration, as did
Mrs. Reed’s husband. Elmer.
Hosting the affair were the
four MacLeod children and their
spouses, including. Donald Jr.,
his wife. Anita o f St. Petersburg;
Bob and his wife. Patsy o f
O v ie d o : J e f f and h is w ife ,
Barbara o f Altamonte Springs;
and daughter, Linda Hatfield
and her husband, Dell, of Green
Acre City. There were also nine
grandchildren and two great­
grandchildren present.
A wedding photo of the couple
was on display surrounded by
five heart-shaped cakes which
re p re s e n te d th eir w e d d in g ,
births o f the children and grand­
children and the Golden Anni­
versary. Guests were served
cake and punch.
Following the reception. Mr.
and Mrs. MacLeod were guests o f
honor at an anniversary dinner
given by their family at Holiday
House restaurant in Orlando and
were presented with a golden
money tree.

Woman's Anger Flares At
Assault On Friend's Child
and have a girlfriend I’ve known
since high school. I’ ll make up a
name — Millie. W e are both 30
years old. Tw o years ago Millie’s
boyfriend raped her 11-year-old
daughter, and Millie Is still
dating this guy. and she’s plan­
ning to move in with him!
My problem la that I can’t
seem to set aside my anger
loward Millie. When she calls me
on the phone I make excuses
why we can’t get together. As far
as I know, neither Millie nor her
daughter has ever received any
!klnd of counseling or therapy
following the rape. Am I wrong
to hold this against her? She
never talks about It — It’s us
though it never happened. What
would you do about it?

COLD IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR COLD: I would get
together with Millie immediately
and ask her if either she or her
daughter has ever had counsel­
ing following the rape. If she
says no. you should Impress
upon her the Importance of
therapy — especially for her
daughter. The friendship be­
tween you and Millie is not
Important, but getting the child
Into counseling now (If she has
never had therapy) Is very im­
portant. The rape crisis treat­
ment center in your area can
help Millie and her daughter.
Please don’t let this slide.
Write again and let me know
what’s going on. I care.

DEAR ABBY: We have a
middle-age woman in our office
who doesn’t seem to have a
birthday. She’s heen In this
office for going on three years,
and even though the rest of us
have a little lunchtime celebra­
tion on our birthdays — and we
all pitch In for cake — this lady

Continued From 1C
hours to the hospital carrying
out dut i e s In 1 1 di f f er ent
services the auxiliary provides.
They are: Georgia Anderson.
Carol Boston, Muriel Brum ­
baugh. Dossie dcGanahl, June
Moore. Eleanor Tangye and Ruth
Young.
One o f the highlights o f the
event came when nine members
h ad “ H o n o r e d M e m b e r "
bestowed upon them as they
have served since the Inception
of the auxiliary in 1956.
They are Georgia Chorpenlng.
Sara Epstein. Ina Galloway.
Olive Hunt. Eunice Jenkinson.
Barbara R uprech t. Rebecca
Stevens. Betty Toll and Margaret
Wright.
Underlining the value o f the
a u x i l i a r y ’ s c o n tin u in g contrlbutlns, CFRH Administrator.
James D. Tcsar. Jokingly said.
" If we had to pay you. we would
have to file bankruptcy and then
on a serioues note he concluded.

2406 Orandriaw Avonus
Sanford, FL 32771
ou
Contact Pste or Terry Echols r nO flO

Dear
Abby
.*&gt;t .u uik.*/ '■ in ...tu­
nas never let us celebrate hers.
When she applied for the Job
here, she left the space blank
where It indicated date and year
of birth — informing the head of
personnel that it was "against
the law" to ask a person’s agel
And she got by with It. because
she got the Job anyway.
She’s very nice, quiet and
competent and a lady In every
way. but we find it rather
strange that she refuses to dis­
close her birthday. (It’s also
slightly irritating.)
Nobody really cares how old
she is, so what’s ail the secrecy?
Any Ideas?

THE BIRTHDAY GIRLS IN
EAU CLAIRE. W1S.

323-2229

FEUX A. NAVARRO, JR. M.D.
SPECIALIST M DIGESTIVE DISEASES
Diplomats cactitied In (ho spaelalty of internal M id k ln i
and tha subspoclolty of OoRfroontafotogy by tha
American Board ol Intamal Madlclna.
(Diagnosis and traafmoftt of Eaophagaat, Stomach, Pan­
creatic, Ltvar, Gallbladder, Small Inks tins, Colon and
Nutritional Disorders.)
Office and Hospital Fiberoptic Endoscopic Procedures.

HOURS BY APPOINTMENT
1403 Msdlcsl Plaza Drive
Centre! Florida Msdlcsl Arts Bldg.
Sulla 206 Sanford. FL 32771
(306)322-0630

70 Fox Ridge Court
OoBary, Florida 12713
(3

FREE S P I N A L E V A L U A T I O N
\-s i i \i r u lv |s ) n i )

Frequent Headaches
Low Back or Hip Pain
Dizziness or Loss of Sleep
Numbness of Hands or Feet
Nervousness
Neck Pain or Stiffness
Arm and Shoulder Pain
Ivaiiutiea IrcM rk Poitar* taalpM. tuition Tnt, Sbarl
l*| Tnt, Start Aim Tail M Tad With Dactar.

ACCEPTED*

’Ltajrct T* Palkr IMta* Atk about our "Making CMrooractle Affordable'' Prof ram
- tuc p a t ie n t a n d a n t o t h e r p e r s o n r e s p o n s ib l e ron p a y m e n t m a s a might t o r e f u s e t o
PAT CANCEL PAYMENT OR aE REIMBURSED FOR PAYMENT FOR ANY OTHER SERVICE E1AMINA
TION OR TREATMENT WHICH IS PERFORMED AS A RESULT OF AND WITHIN t l HOURS OF RESPON
PINO TO t h e ADVERTISEMENT rOR T h e f r e e SERVICE EXAMINATION OR TREATMENT

LAKE

M A R Y

TO I I

Ink,

AA .i, ,

III . ,1

BLVD.

CLINIC,

INC

322-9300 ..

*&gt; . t . 10'

II ,, , H , i, d C • t i l.

THOM AS

F

YANOELl

JR

O C

front door — and locked away
from the main area of the home.
He said this was law In Bavaria.
Homeowners cannot deny any­
one who wants to use the
bathroom entrance Into that
areal I speak German, so I know
that I did not misunderstand. I
admit that I was shocked. Have
you ever heard this before?
J.F. IN VAN C O U V E R , W A SH .
DEAR J.F.: Never.

DEAR READERS: In m y
m orning m ail. I found this
charming poem, written by a
16-year-old girl:
"A Kiss Goodnight"
I climbed the door and shut off
the stairs
1 said my shoes and took off
m y prayers
I brushed my makeup and
took off my teeth
I pulled down my alarm and
set my sheets
I shut off the bed and climbed
into the light
And all because he kissed me
goodnight!

Froo gold tone bracelet with $5.01) Valentine
purchase. Only at Hallmark.

&amp; V ili 4, “ | f
" T i r e area's o n ly Qold Crow n Halm ark Sh op "

SEMINOLE CENTRE

On* par cuitomat

tA M C n o n

Whlla iupply laiU.

SANFUKU

3 Z I -0 8 2 7
„ 19fl6

card*. )nc

TI-LEE TYACKE
DEAR GIRLS: If the woman
doesn’t care to disclose the date
and/or year of her birth. It’s her
right. So what Is the big deal?
You know she was born: now
Just let her live.

DEAR ABBY: Recently while
wc were In Munich. Germany,
we came upon a display of eight
new modern homes, so we
decided to tour them since they
were open to the public.
We noticed that every home
was built with a bathroom about
six feet from the front door! It
was actually In the entrance
hall, and not part of the family
living area. There was a partition
that one could lock.
I asked the salesman why a
bathroom was situated near the

SALE

STA R TS

SUN D AY

We could thank you all day. but
the thanks you get Is helping
your fellow man."
Tesar Installed the 1987 of­
ficers during a candlelight cere­
mony in which colored flowers
symbolized each office. Conti­
nuing to serve for a second term
will be Mildred Haen. president.
June Moore, president elect; Gail
Stewart, first vice president:
Fred Haen. treasurer: Dorothy
Gate he), recording secretary:
Miriam Askew, corresponding
secretary; and Audrey Roush,
past president.
Pins for serving their first 100
hours were presented to Marietta
Bragg, ike Butler, Arthurcnc
Cook. Mlkki Hickson. Becky
P eep les. Jane W yson g and
Lucille Young.
T ra d ition a lly an engraved
silver bowl is awarded to mem­
bers when they attain their first
500 hour benchmark. Phyllis
Freund, a form er CFRH
employee, seemed to catch the
spirit of volunteerism when she
responded to this honor by
saying. "This Is the best paying
Job I have ever had. it pays in
self satisfaction."

o pen

M ftV S /

SUNDAY

12 T O

6

AFTER INVENTORY
cnn/
SALE SAVE UP TO 30°/o,40%,50o/o,DUu/O
AND MORES
OF EVcm ,

otla01ics

YC u 9D 0 u J j S^ earance
P r i c 'd

..A u x ilia r y

• COMPUTE TREESERVICE
• FREEESTIMATES • STUMP ORINDHM
• 24 HR. ANSWERING SERVICE

C H IR O PR A C TIC

DEAR ABBT: I am a female

h

w.

tot

tm m s d ia w

*1

• Fleece Prints • Solids • Corduroy

* Cotton Stripes • Broadcloth
• Sportsw ear
• Terry Cloth • Lycra • C otton Knits
• Plaids &amp; Shirtings

HURRY
FOB BEST
SELECTIONS!

ALL AT
m ONE LOW
J PRICE
/,

•. V■ .-

6 9 9

BETTER DRESS FABRICS
ALL FINEST QUALITY!
Select From Hundreds of Yards
Gathered Form Our Fall Fabrics

SAVE UP TO 70% OFF
• Sweater Knits • Suede • Velvets • Velours
• Printed Corduroy • 60" Plaids • Tweeds

99 e

ALL AT ONE LOW, LOW PRICE
ORLANDO

ORLANDO

949 N. Semoran
Westgate Square
Blvd.
2657 Hiawassee Rd.

SANFORD

FERN PARK

APOPKA

3832-34 Orlando Dr.
Hwy. 17-92 Lake Mary Blvd.

131 S.R. 436
Fern Park

2303 E. Samoran
(Piedmont Plaza At Wekh'j)

»

V,

�-u '*

4C— Soitford HtraM, laniard, FI.

Sunday, Fab. 1,1M7

Adventist

...THE HOPE
OF OUR COMMUNITY,
OURNATION!

THE SETtH TM AY
Caranr H I k I D u
Rtf Writ

I M

The
Church...

u

740 p j *

Assembly O f God
mw un assimlv or oaa
I M Keane)

m .
m
■av.DavtP Bthtama
Suagey Miming
10:00 L B .
M a y l u ilig
0:30 pJB.
T w ti* ) [ i n k |
7:00 pJB.
IMali tag TaaUk Senkatl
kitw&gt;, ptwOW h t pR Irn ttM
h m

u m

Baptist

or oaa
im w. s» st

freedom a s s im r l y

liramb L lahasea
Sunder Scheel
Warship Servke I I I 1
E,rnin| kfrihlp
WePaesPay Family Right

Episcopal
NOIY CROSS

W1 STVHW BAPTIST CHURCH
4100 Paata Haag I44AI

Pester
M ! a.m.

Or. Reger W. MetHa

11:00 p b l
0:00 p.m.
T :00 p.m.

Patter
OOO p m
10:00 a m
0:00 p m
7:00 p m
7.-00 p m

Wed. Prayer Service

Baptist

Sunday
Colosslans

1:1*14
Monday
1 ThesMlonians

5:12-20
M W M own CALVARY
MISSIOHARY BAPTIST CHURCH
IM S Watt 12th SL
nlfi wlVf|V Wr fflfilw
Sandey Scheel
P M pat.
*45 a.m. Meraiag Service
11:00 4m,
11:00U h Iveaiag Service
5:30pm.
BOOp.m.
7:00pm.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
700 p m

CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH
1311 0th Art.. SenltrP

123-2114
TraPAe Smith
SaaPay SchMl
H rm h i W oth p
Chech Trchh|
tvanbg Warship
Wag. Prayer Srnlci

COURTRTSI0C 0APTIST CHURCH
Chantry Ctnh Rm 4, Lahh Wary
A,cry M. Lang
h ttrr
M u Schthl
M l pm
Preaching A Werthipiag 10:45 A m
libit S M )
1:10M L
Shhftng A Prhtlfnniiig
7:30 p m
Wag. Ptiycr Mart
7:30p m
Narstry PrariPeP

Tuesday
Hebrews
13:1*16
Wednesday
James
12-18
Thursday
James
5:7-20

Like Mary, fleride
Dr. Rahert |Beh| Parker
Patter
Teat 0. McHimey,Miniiter at Mask
OMe Stady
PAS 4 m
Werthip
1P 4S4 m
Teeth Chair
400 p m
Werthip
7:00p m
Wedaetdey Servkrt
Prayer A Bihle Stady
7:00 p m
Adatt Chair
POOp m

Saturday
Jude
1:17-25

Catholic

I0R0 AH BAPTIST CHURCH
0U0 LAOT OF T M LARIS
120 Uptele R4.
CATHOLIC CHURCH
tlgie Hernthy
Fetter
1110 NjilariNaa SI.. Dvtteae
Sandey SchMl
10:00».m Father WMheai KiMea
Patter
Meraiag Service
11:00 m l Saadey Mattel 4 10 p m 12 Hi m
(veaing Service
7:30p m Setardey Vigil Nattetd par. IlngRth)
WePaesPiy Service
7:30pm.
7:M p m . (Spaaithl
0M Tratht ler a Rea Oey
Weekday Matt P 00 4 m Hea.Frt
CenlettiMt
Italy Deyt

LAKtVItW BAPTIST CaURCH

Men121-0210

lackle Hit
Fetter
Sundry SchMl
PAS 4 m
Werthip Service
11:00 am.
Evtniag Werthip
7:00 pm.
WePatsPay Bihle Stady
0:10 par.
Hartery Pretided
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OF LOHOWOOO
111 I . SR 414
lengaeed, FI 127S0
Rev. lines W. Haaaaack. 0. MM Palter
Rev. Rick Chaffin Mkdtter el 1dacelien.
Tenth
Rev. PrrtlM Greene Mlnitter el
Matk and Activities
Sender SchMl
P 30 4 ai.
Mermng Werthip
PAS 4 m
SMdey SchMl
11:00 4 at.
turning Werthip
7: 1Sp m
Charch Training
P 104: 1S pm.
Mivtienert Meeting end
Child Champs'
' 4-.T0-T .0Q pm.
Wed. Prayer Service
7-7:30 pm.
PALMETTO AVIHUl
■APT 1ST CHURCH
3020 Pelarette Ate.
Her. Reynead Cracker
Patter
Seadey SchMl
P 4S 4 m
Meraiag Werthip
11:00 4 m
Iteagriitlk Strvket
1:00 p m
Wtd. Prayer A Iikte Stady 7:M p m
Independent Mittiaury

PIMCIKST BAPTIST CHURCH
IIS W. Alrperl Stvd., SeeTerd

122-1737
Rav. Tam 1atthe, D. Mia.
Orkla Stagy
Meraiag Warship
titling Warship
WaPaaiPay
FtReulblp Sapper
Prayer Matting
binary PravIPaP
AH Sarvkat

Pattar

9:4S * bl
11:00 * m
7:00 p.m.

4:00 p.m.
7:00 pm.
Far

• Batter
M
u l
LltlSpJR.
*20 *m.

ST. PETERS EPISCOPAL CHURCH
lr ia Man Cemmanrt]■W *
Lria Mmy. Fb.
Vtear
Dp i . Rahart AaPanta
Saapiy Schate B Matteag
*00 41*
Warship SptvIcp

NonDenominational

Haw Meeting idythilide (kmantary

IVAM IUCAL CONOOEGATWHAL
21* Wade Street
Patter
Rtv. Rahart Han*
1*00 4 M.
SaaPay Sth ill
1*0 0 Am.
Warship

2444 I t . taatarP Ava.
*45 a.at
SsmAif SdkMl
Srm Marten Warship
Sm. Iraaiag Warship
WaP. Prayer Stnka

Let Children Be Children

Christian Science
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST
SCHHT1ST, LOMWOOO
S7S Martha* Weedt Rd.
Career Ot 1.1. WHRm i i m Rd.
Saadey: Charch Service
ead San. Scheel
I POO 4 m
Wednetdey
POO p m
Hartery Aratiehie At AR Servicer
Reeding Ream Mm . •Wed. - FrL
Set
10 4 m •I p m

too-not

Congregational

Scriplurn Sneered by
The Am.,cun M w Sooery

She was four, that wiggly and giggly age, and attended a
child care day school. One day she came home with a note
from her teacher. “Your daughter is a little immature," the
teacher wrote.
The mother read and re-read the note, getting hotter with
each reading. Finally she dashed off a note to the teacher: "If
my daughter cannot be immature at four, when can she?"
Indeed!
Parents and teachers need to hear the words of Apostle
Paul anew: "When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought
like a child, I reasoned like a child.. . . " (I Cor. 13:11)
We need to let children be children: to let them act, and
re-act as children. Demanding adult behavior from children
denies them their childhood, a phase of life everyone must
, go through— sooner or later.
The greatness of the Apostle is perhaps in no small
measure traceable to a satisfying childhood in which he was
allowed, no doubt encouraged, to be a child.
He gave it up to be a man. he said. But at one time he
WAS UNASHAMEDLY A CHILD.
Copyright 1937, Kciiar-Williams Newspaper S«rvtc«s P O Boa8005 CharK)tiesv&lt;n« VA22908

Christian

11:00 a.at.
7:10 p.m
7JO p.m.

SARF0R0 HOUSI OF PRAISI
113 Mipb Ate.
Senlerd. 331 2307
Pattar
M a t « . MtOaabl V.
lately Marteig tanka 1*30 Am.
7:00 p.a.
SaaPty (roateg Sank*
TaatPty Marakg Prayer
10:30 i a
Nattk|
WtPattPay Iraaiag Prana
1:10 p.m.
lap Warship
7:10 p.RL
Bibb StaPy
FriPay Iraaiag * h b StaPy 7:10 p.M.

LUTHERAH CHURCH OF
T M M D fIM R
“The Utheria Mur” and
TV “Tbit It The Ufa"
2S2S Oak Ave.
Rev. Elmer A. Rtntcktr
Patter
Sunday Sckeni
MS 4m
Wnrthip Servke
10:10 am.
Kindergarten and Hartery
GOOD SMPMR0
LUTMRAN CHURCH
2117 Ortaage Dr. 17-12
Ititberta Charch In America)
i 322-7312
Patter
Rae. Dan Cay
M S Am.
Saaday SchMl
Wftnliia
10:00 a m .
7:30 pm.
lik k Study Wednetday
I 1:M am.
Cibk Stady Thartday
M S am
Chair Practke
Hartery Prtvided
ST. UMt'S LUTMRAN CHURCH
SR 420 0 Red Rag Rd.
Oviadp (Slavial
(dam I. Rattan
Pattar
Sunday SchMl
1:15 am.
Wnrthip Servkat &lt;:00 0 10:30 am.
We maintain a Chrittiaa SchMl
Kindergarten thfMgh Eighth Grade
HOLT CROSS IUTMRAR CHURCH
OF LAKE MART
Drittnaed Village On
Lake Mary Hid.
Paul Hnyer
Pattar
Sun. Wnrthip Strvka I 0 10:30 am.
Sunday SchMl 4
Adult libk Clan
M S am.
Far Intermatien Call 322- 2SSI
Or 321-77S7

Methodist

Church Of God

SANFORD CHRISTIAN CHURCH
117 W. Air par I Rlvd.
Phene 122 OSAO
Id Geant
Miniiter
S. Iduerd iehrten
Fitter
Drug Rke
Atteciate Minitler
Sundry Church SchMl
PAS am.
Sunday SchMl
1:M am
Mereieg Werthip
11:00 4m. Werthip Service
10:30 4 m.
Prayer 0 Ribie Study
400 pm.
tveaing Servke
0:00 p.m.
Nunery Available
Prayer Meeting Wtd.
7:30 p.m.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
IDiKlpiei 01 Chritl)
1407 S. Stele,d Ave.

CHURCH OF GOO

101 W. 22nd Street
Rev. Welter Pettitt
Sunday SchMl
Minting Wnrthip
Ivangehttk Servke
Family enrichment
Servke Wednetday

Patter
M i am.
KkSO am.
4:00 pm.

7;M pm.

M S p jg
TRHHTT UM TIB METHODIST CHURCH
520 Seuth Smtferd Avenue
Dr. I. 0th Ir a k
Pattar
Church Scbpal
0^30 4 m
Wnrthip Seevka
11:00 4 m.
GRACI UNHID

Lutheran

Setardey aad I m at
1:00- 1:4S pm.

COMMOATMRAL
CHRIST1AH CHURCH
2401 4 Pert Am .
13A 4 SA4
Rev. WtMt C. PattM
Miaitler
Neat Phene
324 I 3S2
Saadey Scheel
p M am.
Mpreiag Werthip
11:00 4 m
1i l Saadey. S-7 pm . FHgrha FtReathip
meet! in FtRnathip Had.
2nd Saadey, Reard el Tratleet. Hi m ,
fa FeReathip Had.
2nd Wedaetdey, Catered Ofth Dinner.
4:M pm.
3rd Saadey, Beard el Chriitiea [dacalien, dean, in FeHnathip Hell.
Ird Thartdey, 7:00 p m , Pntlar’t Setililttm Clan, meett ia Church
Senchiery.
4th Sandey, Heen. the Diecnnate mrrti
hi FiHeathip Hell
4th WednttAey, 1P M 4 m , Ethel Rm I
Circle email In FeHnathip Had.
11:00 4 m , grkie Stady, ia Charch
Sanctuary
Lett Setardey el menth, Mea't Chib
Peektett 0 pm.. Felteeihip Neil.
Sth Saadey, Heen, Charch Cenncil
meett ia FeHnathip Hell.
Hartery Ateiiehie At AH Servket

Dp*. FrtParteh I . Mean
Maty (adurtet
Charri Lachartet
ChrkUaa (PhcpUpp

GRACE RMU CHURCH

Friday
1 Peter
1:13-25

riRST 0APTIST CHURCH
SI* PMh AtM M . SenfnrP
Hti. F m I I . Murphy, tr.
Pieter
Regnay OrMht
Wart Iff i f Mink
ALL SOULS CATHOLIC CHURCH
S w lry ScIi m I
*45 A m
002 Oth Ave., Senlerd, Fla.
Meriting Warship
11:00Am. Father Lyle Oaaea
Aderlelitriter
Charch TreMng SaaPay
4:00 p m
Set WgH Matt
POO p m
(reaiag Werthip
7:00p m
Sm . Matt
POO, 10:10, 12:00
Wf4. Freyer Service
4:30 p m
Cm ftiika. Set. 4 p m te P M p m

120 Uheviea, Lake

401 Part Ait

PAOLA WESUTAN CHURCH
SOSO Waytida Dr.
CHURCH OF COO OF PR0PMCT
Saalard, FI. 32771
2309 S. I fan Ave.
L. Dun Fatter
Patter
Phene 30S-323-0346
Sandey SchMl
M S am.
Rev. Stevea L Cthner
Patter
I M S am.
Sunday Scheel
M S 4 m Warning Wnrthip
0:30p.m.
Meraiag Wnrthip
! ! : M 4 m. Children Sank*
(veaing Servkn
7:00p.m.
IvangtHtlk Servke
7:M pm.
(verytM Weknme
Wednetday TMth Servke 7:M pm.
7:30 p.m. Wednetday Prayer 0
Praite Servke

Petlar
M S 4m
I M S 4m
Ynath FiHewthlp
5:30 pm.
IM A 4
Hartery pririded ler aH teryket.

Ml,,,||.
-■-IvO
flWf m
lOrlKf

Nazarene
FIRST CHURCH
OF T M RA2A H M
2101 Saaferd Are.
Patter
M S 4m
Wnrthip
1* 4S am.
4.-00 pm.
leaMgaOit Servke
4:00 pm.
Servke (Wed.)
7:00 pm.
Hartery Prevtded far pH Servket
LA M MART N U A M M CHURCH
1T 1 I . Cryttel lake Drive
lake Mary, Tlerida

323-0003
Rev. Oaa Hayat
Senday Scheel
Werthip
Ironing
Wednetday

Patter
N S 4m
IM S 4 m
0:00 4m
7:M pm.

Presbyterian
FIRST PRISHTTlIltAN CHURCH
Oah Ave 0 3rd Street
Ce-Pattert
Rtv. Of. Virgil L. Bryant
Rav. C. Richard Daaieteh
Phene 322 2002
Meroing Werthip
1:30 4m
Church Scheel
1:45 4m
Mprnhig Werthip
U :M 4 m
Nunery
Wed. Prayer Meeting 0 Bihle
Study Felleutkip HaN
0:30 pm.
FIRST m S O m R I A N CHURCH
OF LAKE MART

WiMur Ave., lake Mary
Rne. A.F. Steven
Miniiter
Church Prayer Stealing
M S am.
Church Scheel
N S am.
Naming Wnrthip
11:00 am.
TMthCmap
0:00 pm.
Wtd. Chair Practke
7:30 p m
UPSALA PHESITTERIAH
W. 25th 0 Upula Rd, Saalard
Ret. Daruin Shea
Palter
Sunday SchMl
0 4 m.
Charch Servkt
10 am.
Ribie Stady Tun. 1 4 m. 0 7:30 4 m
MARKHAM WOODS
PMSRTTERIAH CHURCH
5210 Markham Weedt Reed
Lake Mary
Phene 323-41*0
Or. Dm T. De Reverie
Patter
Sunday Schell All Aget
S:IS 4 m
Churth
10:30 4 m.
Hartery Prtvided
Teeth Creep Senday
7:00 pm.
Fatter’i Ribie Study
Sunday
7:00 pm.
WOC - M S am. Flrtl Tettdty at the
menth and IiM ln g 7:30 2nd Tutdty
at the menth.
MMthty Family High! Sapper

JOIN THESE SPONSORS
AND HELP KEEP
THIS DIRECTORY
AVAILABLE
S4.50 P ER W E E K
C A LL 322-2611

The Following Sponsors Make This Church i Notice And Directory Page Possible
FIRST UNION
SaFiford, Fla.

SUN BANK and Staff

KNIGHT’S SHOE STORE

THE McKIBBIN AGENCY

PUBLIX MARKETS

200 W. First St.
3000 S. Orlando Dr.

Downtown Sanford
Don Knight and Staff

Insurance

and Employees

Howard H. Hodges and Staff

COLONIAL ROOM
RESTAURANT
Downtown Sanford
115 East First Sl.
Bill &amp; Dot Painter

WILSON-EICHELBERQER
MORTUARY
Eunice Wilson and Staff

MEL’s
GULF SERVICE

QREQORYLUMBER
TRUE VALUE HARDWARE

PUBLIX MARKETS

500 Maple Ave., Sanford

and Employees

Mel Dekle and Employees

HARRELL A BEVERLY
TRANSMISSION

L.D. PLANTE. INC.

David Beverly and Staff

Oviedo, Florida

OSBORN’S BOOK
AND BIBLE STORE
2599 Sanford Ave.

STENSTROM REALTY
Herb Stenstrom and Staff

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE CO.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wilson

SM ITTY’S MOWERS
Behind Shell Station 25th &amp; Park
Family Owned Business

WINN-DIXIE STORES
and Employees

■SEMINOLE COUNTY AREA CHURCH DIRECTORY'
ASSI MOLT OF GOO
FreePem iiu a M y at Cal, ISIS W. Sth IL , Saafarp.
h i Ufa Aiumhty, 100 Kinu l b k
BAPTIST
Aaftech lapttil Churth, OvMa
Calvary laptM Churth, Cryitai Laha 0 Irg, laka Mary
Caai atbarry lapttil Chart* T 70 Satahwk IM .
Caatral laptM Chunk. 1211 Oah An.
Ci n u ll Fuat BapUat
. at Haalar At*.
rtnl la p 'll Chart*. I l l Path An .
Flrtl laptM Charch at
Flrtl Aapthl Chart* aI Faraat GKy
Tint Aaauit Chart! at
That laptkl
Lakaviau BapUat
flrtl BapUat Churth at Uka
Fbil BapUat Chart* at L i a n g, M l (art SR 134
I M laptM Churth at 0vk4a
flrtl BapUat Churth at leakage Iprtegs
Flrtl BapUat Chart* at Winter Ipthga, 2*0 0ahnma I t
Flrtl SkUth Mkakaary BapUat Chart*, t i l l W. 13lh SL
Faratl BapUat Chan t at Oataaa
Fmmtak Hang BmUat Chart*. (Triage
i *20

ut. Mark* PrhniUv* laptkl 1111 Lacutl At*. taatarP
HI. M r, Mkakaary laptM Chart*. tanlanPa Spriapt 0,
Mt Skat Mkakaary laptM Chmth. 1A00 tarry An.

ML Zka Mkuanary PapUtl. SipMIn
hr* 4r*hte Mkakaary Chnrth. 0tha BMchnry Am

bPepenPtatr BapUit H i t CMc laagaa N g . LeagueeP
Hapa laptM Chare* Faraat CHy Cvaaaaky Caatar, Faraat CHy
Hat, ML Catvary Mkakaary BapttaL 1I N W. 12th SL
Hau Sakm Primttiva laptM Charch. ISM W. 12th SL
Haw Mt. Urn BapUat Chart*, 1720 Pam A n
Man Lite FaPaathlp. ***1 I. Laka Oriva. Cinihirry. a 12710
Waatviau laptkl Chat*, AIM Paab Haag |*BA|
Paapk'a Baptial Chapai. 1201 W. Flrtl Strut, Saafarp
Pkacratl Baptkl Chart*, li t , W. Alrpart DM.

ryatriaLahalapUaL M|a U . Fan Park

Pragrata Mkakaary laptkl Chat*, MIPaay
SataaP Shihk Nteakairy laptht Chart* Wut taatarP
Smyrna laptM Chart*. 2S0 Ovathraah Dr., Canal*arry
SvmlaaP 4 *l)tl Chart*. 2*21 Pahutta

SI. iamat MhUauary laatkt Chat*. SL 14 411 onnr.

gaalara OrteaPai Chart*. SL Mm Chryimtam Chapai. U S. Huy. 17-02. fan Par*

SL UP. Mkakaary lapUat Chart* at Caamna City, h
SL Pant laptkl Chart*, 111 Ptea Art.
SL Harihm Daptkt Chart*. Caaaw Hgte.
SprtegllaM Mkakamy DapUaL I 21h B CaPar
IL taka'! Mkakaary Butkt Chart*. 120 Cyprau SL
i Chapai Mkakaary BapUat Chan*. Mar* B 1
i Chart*. T 12 Oraaga Art.

COUCHS6ADOHAI
Caagragatiaaal Chrittiaa Chart*. 2441 1- Par* Am, Saafarp
I IL AHiamatt Ipriagi

CAlaOUC
Chat* at tea hathtty. U*a Man
U Saak Calhalc Chart*, 71* Ori An., SaaFarP
Dm LaPy Qaau at Paata CalhaAa Chapai 321 S.
An, SularP
SL Im 'i Cat* i At Char*. Pagan A Trail DaBary
SL Aarnathm CathaSa Chart*, Smut Dr, u
SL Hvy MagaPakat CatfcaAc Charch, Naitleag I n .
Om UPy tl the Lahti Cathahc Chart*, t i l l MatemMe* Dattau

EPISCOPAL
Ipkaapal Chart* at tea Hau Caraaaat. ITS TaaJuwtHa RaaP. WMar
The Chart* al tea BaaP ShepherA U iltkaP. I l l laha Am
Al Sakte tab tip it Chart*. L Paltry Am, Eatarpriaa
Chrial lytinyit thati*. LaaguaaP
Haty C m t Ipbtapal. Par* Am, at 4tb SL. t aatarP
SL Rkharp*! Chart*. 1111 laha HautR RP, WMar F a t
SL Patan Epbn pil amaUag it Laka Mary I kmantary Sternal laka
KWISH
■ate Am lyaagagaa mntkg at klartlata teal, Amanita tprmgl
LUTRERAH

CMRtSTIAA
FVtl

Chut*. 1117 *. SaafarP Ava.
112 W. Alrpart KvP.

Ukaatau) ChrtaUu Chart*, gaar Laha A4 . at
CHHHT1AH SCMRC1
FVtt Chan* tl Chrial SckatkL STS Markham WaaPa R4 . LugwaaP.
I Of CHRIST
Chart* at ChriaL IS 12 1 Park Am
CkmtA at Chrial at laka (Ran, U S. 17-12, IL Cata.Mirvy
State t l iPmill Chart* a4 Chrial S410 Uka UauaO IP.
Chart* al Chrial. I M Paha Ipriagi Dr, AKa-uta Ipg4
Chan* •( Chritl Saaava
Oran* at Chrial. LaaguuP
Chan* at Chrial W. ITtt SL
■erttaiPe Chart* tl Chrial Fla. Harm Dr, Manual
Chart* if GaP. SRI Hkkary
Chan* at Gap. M l W. 22U St
Chart* at SaP. OviaPa
Chart* at taP HaAaan. Ul
CharJ. al GaP Mklka. lalarpriu
Chart* at Gap. 1402 W. Ut* St.
Chmt* at Gap ia Chritl thnPa
Chart* al Bap at Praphuy, 2SM S ika Am
Ctmth at SaP at Praphuy, 17M S. Panlmmia Ava.
Baacaa Chart* at CaP. IT M W. lit* Sl. taatarP
Tnm Chan* at Gap, 27M IMgauaaP Am. Saafarp
LASTTM ORTHODOX
Imttra OrthaPn Chart*. St- Caargt, ASA SharaaaP CL. AtUmaat* Ipriagi
laatara OrthaPn Chart*. St. Stavaa'i at 0.CJL, 111 State SL, Fan Par*

BaaP ShapharpUaHeP Latharaa, 2*17 1 Oil I Or.
IUFIMTBB
“
m
t-__*. - a n_ i l , - , , m m. .
uMHCH Dl wFHfMMCI, V M M
Latharaa Chan* at tea RaPatamr, 1*1 W. ISte Plata
Mania* UUwna Chnrth. Baku Dayt hr. A Huy 17-02, CavnUvrry
St. Lriee latharaa Charter. Rt 42*. Sbvia
S l Stephan LaUmraa Chart*, 434 |aat Wut at M , LaagaaaP
Italy Craaa Latharaa Chart* al laha Mary

HITHOmST
laraatt IMtaP Uimarill Chart*. I- Pa l ary Am, taterprba

FVtt Chart* al |h*Hauraaa, 2M1 SeaterP Am
BpaataChattel at teaHauraaa, II. 44 Gaaava
lake Han Chan* at teaHturma, 171L Cryttte Uka Am, Uka Han
Alvar
Mmhkam WaaPa Chan* at tea Hauraaa, SIMB, 3Vk MUn W. at L4 at tea WtAJvt
&lt;
LaaguaaP Chan* te tea Haunaa, Waymaa B tetaap A n , UaguaaP
PRISOYTtRIAH
I Mv4 B Aaitte Ava, halt ana
FVtt Pratbytartea Chart* Oak Am A I N IL
FVtt Pmkytartaa Chart* at Balmy. I MghkaaP
SL AaPrau! Pmhytarba Chart* M i l Baer trite 14
I L Merit Praahytariaa Clan* 1*11 PaU Ipriagi IP
____
TawauMa Pmhytarba Chan* MOB Waal Stria 14 42* OvbPa Fb.
--------“1 Prathytartaa Chan* Uptria 14
u y u m t oat a o tm tis t
Faraat UAa Savaatt Bay APvmtkt Chmt* Huy. 43* Faraat City
Savaath Day Spvaaltal Clan* HaUbaP Am. *“ — n li San
Seetirg Savaath Bay APvaatbt Chart* 7th 4 (ha
WMar Sprtegi Savaatt lay APvaatbt Chmt* SO * Matt Bp
M m Mi Savaatt Day APvaatbt Chin* &gt;01 t. 2aP St, Saafarp
OTHfl CHURCHES
Protea taP Paamr Chan* 111 W. ,
A n , Uka Man
A in 't 4 MB. Chart* OOva 4 tug
1 Frith Chapa* Camp I imhn b . Writer Par* 14
■ 1 Aream HaAaan Chm l. HaarPaP 4m
Chan* at h im Chrbt at Lrilar Day Sakte. 2115 Park Am

Bbtlirl A JLL Qwrck, C e n t Mctt.
Cmi aharry CaamamUy UaUaP HateaPbt Cknth, May. 17-12, Fkmy UPga RP, Can aharty
Chrial UaUaP HtteaPM Chart*, Tatear Or, SaalaaP litatn
OtBary Cimmimlty MathaPkt Chart*. W. MgkAaaH 14. balmy
tint UaNaP HateaPbt Chart*. 410 Par* Am
lin t HateaPbt Chart* at OvbPa
fraa HateaPbt Chart*. MO W. 4lh Sl
Flrtl IhUaP MathaPkt Charch al Gantt*. Caataa
Gaaava HateaPbt Chart*. Statu
Grata UaUaP MathaPkt Chart*. Alrpart Ikp
Grant Chapai 4 MB. Chart* Drink
OaAgravt HateaPbt Chart* OriaPa
Oataaa HateaPbt Charter
Paab Wttbyaa MathaPbl SAW WvytrPa Ortu. Saafarp. fk.
SL iamat 4 MB. Sth at Cyprau
SL Laha M.l. Charter at Cmrrta City, tec, AaarCafl aft U L 44 (.
SL Han't 4 MB. Chan* SL IL 41S, Octaaa
SL PaaTl MathaPkt Chan* bitam RP . Eatarpriaa
Stattarp Maamrtat Chart*, 4 balmy
leakage IkitaP MathaPirl Chart* SI 414 tag M . LaaguaaP
Octaaa UaUaP MathaPkt Chart* Car. al Carpenter 4 Murray Sl , Diteea

MagPam Hal at lahtvri'a Wltean. Lria Mmuaa IMt, 1S42 W. TUrP SUaat
Ftnl Oar* Chmt* at tea Lteteg SaP, H ia ..,
FVit Chmt* at Chrivl Sckutkl Chma PteP mP I m St. PaUaaa
Paatauatri Opaa IMte Tahamte* RMganap Am, Oft 2Stt appetite
r-T-y
FVte Pnlataalri Chan* at LaaguaaP
Tint Faatateetri Chan* at SntwP
Frit Gatpal Chan* at gap b Chritl 1424 terry Ava, taatarP
Frit Gatpal Taharaada. 2724 Center Ctek
M l Mva Hteteata Chart* Ori MR R4 . Ottaaa
taatarP AHaaca Chart* 1401 S. Par* Ava
Saafarp Bttle Chart* 24*0 SaalwP Art.
NairnP Caagragribari at bharri't WHaattat 11M Hr. It* |t
Tha Sateatba Army, 700 W. 24te SL
PaRkp M b HaratUa Chart* M 434 1-----------UtettP Cant* at ChrrtL IHwaata f immnUy Chapai
i~ti Sptlagr
Maty Trtarty Chart* at Cap b Cbrkl 1514 Mugauttka Ava.

ThaFm
MGatpal Chart* at Or* larp tetnt Chritl, Wathtegtaa St &lt;■.... ci|,

Water Spring! Cvmmnfty [raagikul Caagrairibari. Wklar W m ,t. I I----------- -

gr— r- L Cl h. 2444 S Saafarp. A,a.

'

�- r , ,

r * r •- * 4 &lt;r + *■ r f r- f r r

r

4 * ■» «—r 'y i

9 r

■r ” *

&lt;•

~*-r

RHJGK*I
B rie f ly
Proposed Boycott Would
Protest TV Sex A n d Violence
The National Board of Christian Leaders for Responsible
Television (CLeaR-TV) has voted to recommend an economic
boycott of leading sponsors of sex. violence and profanity on
television. Meeting In Chicago Jan. 20. the board voted
unanimously for the boycott.
Should the members of the 1600-member group approve the
recommendation, the boycott could begin as early as April 1.
according to Dr. Billy Melvin, chairman of CLeaR-TV.
Companies Identified as possible targets are among the worst
offenders on TV over the past five years, officials said. The
action comes after a year-long effort to persuade the networks
and advertisers to reduce incidents of sex. violence and
profanity by 35 percent and end anti-Christian sterotyplng
Tailed.

Evangelist To Speak
First Baptist Church of Altamonte Springs. 887 E. Altamonte
Drive, will host a revival led by Evangelist Gene Smith of the
Vineyard Conference Center of Dothan, Ala., beginning
Sunday, Feb. 8 and concluding Wednesday, Feb. 11. The
meetings will be held at 8:30 and 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. on
Sunday and at 7 p.m. on weeknlghts.
For youth there will be the following activities held during
revival week: a "60 Minutes Ice Cream Social, at 8 p.m.
Sunday: Bulld-Your-Own-Taco Night, 6 p.m., Monday: and "6 0
Minute Special." Wednesday at 8 p.m.
Services are open to the public and a nursery will be
provided for Infants through three years or age at all services.

Mission Challenge
Seminole County Jail Chaplain Chuck PitrofT of Good News
Jail and Prison Ministries and Thelma Mike, director of the
Good Samaritan Home in Sanford will share the pulpit Sunday
at the 8:30 and 11 a.m. services at Community United
Methodist Church of Casselberry as part of a two-day
second-mile mission challenge.
Pat and Mclenda Edmiston. members o f the church on
furlough from Papua New Guinea, where they serve as WycliiTe
Bible Translators with the Alamblak people, will present the
program at the 7 p.m. service. The Edmlstons will leave in May
to return to Papua New Guinea for their second term.

School O f Ministry
New Life Assembly of God School of Ministry. 100 Kennel
Road, Sanford, will offer eight classes beginning Tuesday at 7
p.m. The sessions will run for eight weeks. Courses include
Marriage Relationships, Lifestyle Evangelism, Altar Worker
and Counseling. Solid Foundations I &amp; II. How to Heal the Sick.
Successful Parenting. Money Management, and Spiritual Gifts.

Catholic Schools Week
Catholic Schools Week is being observed Feb. 2-6 by two
Seminole County parochial schools with special events. At St.
Mary, Magdalen In Altamonte Spring a children's musical will
be presented at 7:30 p.m. Monday, a talent show at 1 p.m.,
Tuesday: career day. 12:45 p.m.. Wednesday: faculty play at 1
schools on Tuesday: hold a teacher-student volleyball game on
Wednesday: faculty breakfast at 9 a.m.. Friday. An essay
contest on Catholic Education will also be held during the
week.

Prayer For Helpline
Mayor Hope Strong of Winter Park proclaimed Jan. 11 to
March 15 as a time for special prayer for Central Florida
Helpline, a new outreach program for helping those in need in
the community.
Helpline is conducting a 50-hour seminar during that time
for persons interested in being a lay Christian counselor. The
proclamation was accepted by Pat Rltz, founder, and Sandra
Davis, publicity chairman. For information on Helpline call
671-2545.

Gaither Concert Slated
The Bill Gaither Trio and Gaither Vocal Band Gospel Concert
will be held at The Carpenter's Home Church In Lakeland. Feb.
27. at 7:30 p.m. Tickets arc available at Christian book and
record stores.

Evangelistic Meetings Set
The Sanford Free Methodist Church will hold a series of
evangelistic meetings Feb. 15-20 and Feb. 22. Sunday services
arc at 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. and weekday services are at 7 p.m.
There will be a fellowship time after the concluding service.
The church is located at 500 W. Fourth St.. Sanford.
A men’s breakfast will be held on Feb. 14 at 8 a.m. at the
church.

A g lo w Fellowship Meets
Karen Jackson, internationally known speaker and singer
will be featured at a meeting of Aglow Central Orlando
Fellowship on Saturday. Feb. 14 at Morrison's Cafeteria on
Highway 17-92 at Winter Park Mall. Fellowship and coffee
begin at 9:30 a.m. and the meeting at 10 a.m.

Reagan Sent Bible
To Iranian Leader
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
White House confirmed Thurs­
day that President Reagan in­
scribed a leather-bound Bible
with a message of good will that
was delivered to an Iranian
Intermediary in Frankfurt. West
Germany, as part of U.S. efforts
to open contacts with Tehran.
Deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes told reporters that the
president signed the Bible at
9:30 a.m. on Oct. 3. 1986. in the
Oval Office at the request of Vice
Adm. John Poindexter, the na­
tional security adviser at that
time.
Speakes said that the idea for
the gift to an Iranian "high
official" was initiated by one of
Poindexter’s aides. Marine Lt.
Col. O liver North, "because
there had been a discussion of
common religions" in earlier
contacts with Iranian repre­
sentatives.
The Bible was delivered a few
days after It was signed by the
president. Speakes described

Reagan as "a man of God."
"W e were trying to deal with
those in Iran who had clout ...
and to pick up on common
religious roots," he said.
Speakes acknowledged that
the White House only admitted
that Reagan had sent the Bible
after H ajoleslam A ll Akbar
Hashetnl Rafsanjanl. the speaker
of the Iranian Parliament, dis­
played the Bible this week to
W estern c o rre s p o n d e n ts in
Tehran.
The Reagan Inscription read:
"And the scripture, foreseeing
that God would Justify the Gen­
tiles by faith, preached the
gospel beforehand to Abraham,
saying. ’All the nations shall be
blessed in you.’
Galatians 3:8
"T h e Bible was sent to show
seriousness," Rafsanjanl said.
On Wednesday. Speakes said
he had no Information on the
Bible and that he had no Inlcn
lions of asking the president
about it.

I

Construction Begins
Construction has begun the first phase of Grace United
Methodist Church's new facilities at .499 N. Country Club
Road. Located on a 5-acre site, it will contain approximately
9,800 sq.ft, and will include a 250-seat sanctuary, fellowship
hall, which can be used for expanded seating, nursery,
kindergarten and education space as well as choir room,

kitchen and offices. Projected cost is 1850,000. Witt
Construction of DeLand is general contractor. The con­
gregation Is meeting Sundays at 10:45 a.m . in Idyllwllde
Elementary School on Vlhten Road, Sanford until the Sept. 1
completion date. Children's Choir Is at 9:30 a.m. and Church
School isat9:45a.m.

A d v ic e To Y o u n g Lovers W e ll T o k e n
After listening to my advice,
did they get married? Through
the years I had been wondering.
Last month, a Christmas card
from Boston put an end to the
suspense.
Lisa and Mark were young
lovers In 1980, when Lisa wrote
to me. Both were 18. Theirs was
a star-crossed relationship. The
parents of bath had objections.
Lisa’s mother and father were
not as strongly opposed as
Mark’s parents. But they were
cool to the affair. They felt the
two young people were getting
serious too soon. In down-toearth language, they were afraid
Lisa woutd get pregnant.
Mark and Lisa were ready to
get married, bul Lisa’s parents
lelt they were too young.
With Mark’s parents, the ob­
jections went deeper and were
more emotional. They not only
w e re dead set again st the
romance, they were In earnest
about breaking it up.
’ ’ T h e w h o le m onth of
August,’ ’ Lisa wrote to me,
"M ark wasn't allowed to go
away from his house. He went to
football practice — but under
parental supervision. He Is not
p e r m i t t e d to m e n t i o n my

Saints And
Sinners
George Plageiu

name."
One night Mark was hiding
under the covers in bed with a
flashlight, writing Lisa a letter.
His parents caught him and took
the letter away. They conducted
nightly bed checks. They even
threatened to move to separate
the pair.
The big problem was religion.
Mark was Catholic, Lisa was
Protestant.
At least Lisa thought the
difference in religion was the
reason for their opposition to the
match. " I ’ve met Mark’s mother
only once and have never met
his father. So It can’t be me they
object to. It must be that I’m not
Catholic.”
tn my reply to Ltsa 1 had more
qu estion s than straigh t-ou t
advice:
"Would It be better for both of

you to 'date around' more before poorly — sneaking In on him
you seriously consider m ar­ while he is writing a letter to
you. the bed checks, etc. But
riage?
"Is it possible that the dif­ right or wrong, the hostility is
ference in your religions, which there and your marriage could
does not bother either of you suffer because of It. It is nicer to
now. will drive a wedge In your have your parents and ln-laws In
marriage later on? If Mark’s your corner when you get mar­
parents disown him (Mark had ried. They can provide a lot of
expressed this fear to Lisa), will emotional support, especially in
he blame you for this if the time the early years.
"Hard as it may be for you to
should come when he begins to
miss his parents* love and sup­ see It now. there is not ‘only one
person* in this life for any of us.
port?
‘ ‘ There are enough happy If It should not work out for you
mixed marriages these days so and Mark, do not think that
that I think Mark's parents may happiness in life has passed you
be wrong in Insisting he marry a b y."
That was six years ago. I
Catholic girl. But your parents
are right that teenage marriages waited for the sequel, but none
are risky. The divorce statistics came. Then this year there was a
prove this. There is a lot of Christmas card in the mall.
Lisa, who would now be 24. Is
appeal in the line from ‘South
Pacific’ that goes. ‘Once you getting married in May. Not to
have found him, never let him Mark. She doesn't mention him
go.' That is probably how you except to say, "Mark is married
and living in Denver." Lls^t Is
feel now.
"But it is also true that young still in Boston.
"It has all worked out." she
people often marry before they
know what they want. I would says. "Thanks."
Thanks for what, I wonder?
feel much Bafer In telling you to
go ahead and get married 1fyou What did .I say .that was of any
help? A n yth in g ? Or was it
were 2 1 Instead of 18.
"Personally. I think Mark's thanks for listening?
What do you think?
parent? are handling the matter

Commentary:
In-School Sex Clinics Don't Solve Teen Pregnancy Problem
By Donald E. W lldm on

(Mr. Wlldmon. a United Meth­
odist m inister. Is executive
director of the National Federa­
tion for Decency)
T h e in -s c h o o l sex c l i ni c
movement is picking up steam.
The stated goal of the sex clinics
Is to reduce teenage pregnan­
c ie s . T h e s e c lin ic s , whi ch
operate In the public schools,
have as one of their primary
missions the dispensing of con­
traceptives and abortion referral
information. This Is done, of
course, without the consent or
knowledge of the teenager's
parents. Without questioning
the sincerity of those promoting
in-school sex clinics or dlsagrce'ng with the desired result.
I must say that those promoting
the new service are on the wrong
track to arrive at their desired
destination. Why?
One reason is that these pro­
grams have proven that they do
not work. They do not do what
their supporters say they will do.
reduce teenage pregnancy. If the
greater availability of contracep­
tives and sex education were
effective in reducing teenage
pregnancy, one would expect to
see a correlation between In­
creased contraceptive use and
decreased pregnancies. But a
study o f unmarried sexually
active females aged 15-19, re­
ported in Fami l y P lan n in g
P ersp ectives, (published by
Planned Parenthood, a moving
force behind the public school
sex clinic drive and the largest
provider of contraceptives and
abortion services In America.I
found that as sexual activity
increases, the probability of
pregnancy also increases — even
when contraceptives are used
consistently.
The increase in teen pre­
g n a n c y has occu rred even
though more teens are using
contraceptives, using more ef­
fective forms of contraceptives,
and are exposed to more in­
struction on sexual behavior and
birth control methods.
Not only do these programs
not work, they in fact can
Increase the problem. The House
Select Committee on Children.
Youth A Families reported in
December, 1985. that despite

sex education and contraceptive
distribution programs there has
been no change In the percent­
age of sexually active teens who
become pregnant, but there has
been a huge increase in the
percentage of teens who arc
sexually active. And this In­
crease In sexual activity has led
to a proportionate Increase in
pregnancies to unmarried teens.
What public school sex-clinics
often do is increase the number
of teenage abortions. A report of
the Washington. D.C. based
Family Research Council ad­
dressing the effectiveness of sex
clinics. Indicated a link between
those clinics and the number of
teenagers who obtain abortions.
We must keep the Issue clear.
The Issue Is not whether some
teenagers will be sexually active,
the issue Is whether current
pregnancy rates can be reduced
by dispendlng contraceptives
and abortion referrals in public
schools. The answer Is. they
cannot.
Another reason we don't need
the public school sex clinics is
finan cial. A c c o rd in g to the
Support Center for School-Based
Clinics, the cost of sex clinics
ranges from about $25,000 to
$400,000 per clinic annually. A
study of a proposed clinic pro­
gram in Mecklenbcrg County.
North Carolina found that an
average o f $79,800 would be
spent annually for a single clinic
to serve an average of six teens
per day. That breaks down to
$73.88 per student served each
school day. It would be cheaper
for the state to pay the fees for
students who use these services
to visit a private physician.
Another reason we don't need
the public school sex clinics is
the loss o f confldene in public
schools. At a time when con­
fidence In public school already
sufffers, are we prepared to give
even more parents justification
to send their children to private
schools?
T h e r e ar e so m e r e ­
sponsibilities which many, if not
most, parents sim ply aren’ t
ready to turn over to the state.
But once the state, in the person
of the public school, attempts to
usurp those responsibilities, re­
action and loss of confidence

follows.
I t h i n k we a r e k i d d i n g
ourselves if we think that public
school sex clinics will stop at
simply passing out contracep­
tives. Abortion referrals will
follow Just as night follows day.
Some see school-based sex
clinics as the latest step in a
growing movement to transform
public schools into social welfare
agencies which provide a wide
range of peripheral services that
interfere with academ ic re­
sponsibilities.
William Raspberry, the black
syndicated columnist for the
liberal Washington Post, had
this to say about the sex clinics:
"T r y this: a high school prin­
cipal tells his assembled stu­
dents that shoplifting is risky,
both for Its moral implication
and because of the prospect of
Jail, and he wishes they wouldn't
do it. 'But if you think you might
shoplift anyhow, we have a
visiting team of experts In Room
301 who will tell you how to
avoid gettin g caught.' That
analogy will outrage proponents
of school-based birth control
clinics ... there is another point
to the analogy: what would be
the pred ictab le result o f a
how-not-to-get-caught-shopllftIng seminar? How serious would
students take the principal’s
admonition not to shoplift. When
it comes to sex. the only accept­
able instruction the adult can
offer to adolescents is: Don’t."
The final reason we don't need
public school sex clinics is that
they address the results of the
problem, and not the reasons for
the problem.
During the past three decades,
our society has seen a growing
decaden ce o f Im m orality —
especially (n the entertainment
media. We have, often under the
guise of "pluralism." accepted
messages from the entertain­
ment media to which we long
ago should have said "stop.” We
have abdicated our responsibili­
ty. As tong as our entertainment
media bombard teenagers with
them message to "d o it." and we
remain silent, what can we
expect? If we are genuinely
sincere in stopping the rise of
teenage pregnancy, we must
begin at the most pervasive

source. We must let those who
exploit our youth for personal
e c o n o m i c g a i n k n o w t hat
pluralism and "anything goes"
are not one and the same.
A survey o f teenagers reported
in the Journal of Adolescent
Health Care showed that 90% of
teens feel the greatest pressure
on them to engage in premarital
s e x c ame f r o m t e l e v i s i o n .
Ranking second as a source of
pressure was pop music, with
81 % reporting they had recently
heard songs emphasizing sex.
Of course, treating the reasons
rather than the results is longer
and harder and more difficult.
But. in the final analysis, it is the
only thing that will work.

The Rev. C. Odell Jones, an
A s s e m b l i e s of G o d
missionary to Benin, will be
guest speaker at New Life
Assembly, 100 Kennel Road,
Sanford, this Sunday at 10
a.m . Jones and his wife,
M artha, have worked in
Benin since 1973. He is
director of the International
Correspondence Institute for
Benin with more than 18,000
students. Prior to their work
in B e n i n , t h e y w e r e
m issio n a rie s to L ib e ria ,
where he was principal of a
mission school in Monrovia.

�k

"jC kC

f '/

♦C-fcmUri HenM, laMgrd, FI.

■ LO N D II

r* r r

* 3 H B P jr

SewSay, F«&gt;. i, ifty

• }'W ^3 # * 'i *

by CMc Young

ACR0S8

HOROSCOPE
What The Day
Will Bring.,.

by Mort Walker

BEETLE BAILEY

TH E BORN LOSER

by Art Sanaom
m

HE

e V E P O W lM fo

ABOUT

«•»

ARCHIE

by Bob Montana

rP l6 H T \ / 0 t / l W|N TH E
A G A IN , ) T R IV IA L S A F A R I

&amp;AMB'

POP* V O U K N O W M O R E
S E N S E L E S S , S T U P iP ,
W O R T H L E S S , T R I V IA L
IN F O R M A T IO N T H A N
ANVONE!

EEK A MEEK

by Howl# Schnaidar

I HAD R^RTOJt
LAST UJE£K
7

M C/SL

mad£rxw
D/AJAJCR

by Hargraavaa A Sallart

MR. MEN AND LITTLE MISS

by Wamar Brothars

BUGS BUNNY

X PlPNT KNOW THE CRITTER
WAS ONE OF BIGFOOTS FRI6NP5

O i W » f rnm -m

»— —

TOUR BIRTH DAY
FEBRUAR Y 1 . 1987
Opportunities will develop In
the year ahead that will help you
further your financial ambitions.
The trend will be put Into play
by something you create.
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
If your hopes are unreasonably
based upon what others can do
for you today, you might be
disappointed. Be self-reliant and
depend solely on yourself. Major
changes are ahead for Aquarius
In the coming year. Send for
your Astro-Graph predictions
today. Mall 81 to Astro-Graph,
c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. OH 441013428. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If
you have an important objective
you’re anxious to achieve today,
don’t leave things up to chance.
You’re not apt to be successful If
you lack method.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Don't make Impulsive decisions
regarding im portant matters
today. Be logical and methodi­
cal. and take time to think
things through.
TAUR US (April 20-May 20)
It’s best not to involve friends In
your commercial affairs today.
Although they'll want to help
you. they might end up doing
the opposite.
GEM INI (May 21 -June 20)
Partnership arrangements could
have their drawbacks today. If
both parties are not In total
accord, objectives aren't apt tc
be accomplished.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
S en sib le sa fety precautions
should be follow ed today If
you’re working with equipment
or materials with which you are
unfamiliar. Don't take chances.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Strive
to minimize your expenditures
today. If you try to gratify your
extravagant whims In some fool­
ish or expensive manner, you’ll
regret it later.
V IR G O (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
Usually you’re a self-starter, but

Y Primary Mil
7 Sauaaga
12 Imprlaan
13 Group of wordt
14 Seouting group
18 Tattarad
18 Hava a maal
17 laland (Fr.)
18 Status-----21 From haad

Anew* to Previous Puzzle

8 Schubarfa
______ Quintal

□□□

• Flahtrap
7 Ahab and
I Impulse
• Taata (si.)
10 Compass point
I I Theodora, for
short
13 Monastery
18 Stellar object
18 Actress-----Andreas
20 Bird
22 Alarm
23 Doubting----24 Coiffure
25 Whirlpools

23 Artiela
26 Cataatial boar
28 Unit of
praaaura
29 Poaaaaaad
30 Snakas
31 Bladdartiks
37 Traa
(archaic)
33 Tranacand
32 Bushy clump
36 Biblical king
37 Baarfika drink 34 Oxygenated
38 Director Kazan
40 Florida county
41 Light beam
42 Medieval dance
refrain
44 Emargancy
•ignal
46 Caldron
48 Cup
48 Highatt point
81 Styla of typo
55 Slura
56 Fish

n n cin n

onn

nnn n n o n n nnn
□no o n n n n n nn
n nnnn
nnnG n
□no nnn
□non n n n n 5 E E
nnnn nnn
n nn
□nn
non gone
nnon o ne n n n n
nnn nnn
_
□□ e g g
G G cnn
nnn o e e g b nnn
nnn o n n o n non
nnn nncinn g d d
48 Last letter

38 Slow-moving an­

49 Timber tree
80 Pen point
82 Medieval poem
83 Not wed
84 Runner
Sebostien

imals

39 Have high
regard for
4 3 _____________ •
limb

48 Refer to (Lat)
47 Chatters

67 Sat firmly
68 Storo foddar

DOWN
1 Whiz
2 Entartainar
Sumac
3 Universal time
(abbr.)
4 Belonging to ua otor

(c) 1087 by Nf A. Inc

today you may be too dependent
upon others and waste valuable
time waiting on one who lacks
Initiative.
L IB R A (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) A
poor attitude will cause you to be
unproductive, especially if your
philosophy Is. "Don’ t do today
what you can put off until
tomorrow.”
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Because you’ve worked hard all
week and feel you deserve a bit
of pampering, there's a possibili­
ty you may unwisely waste some

of the financial surplus you've
acquired.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Companions will find you a
rather charming person to be
around today, provided every­
th ing goes yo u r w ay. If It
doesn’t, they'd better run for
cover.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Your outlook and attitude
could run to extremes today.
You might be unrealistically
optimistic or unduly negative.
Seek the middle ground.

F eb ru ary 2 ,1 9 8 7
Friends and contacts have
always been important to you
and they will be even more so In
the y e a r ah ead. B e n e fic ia l
circumstances could develop
through those with whom you

stlnctively feel about things.
Your Intuition is your ace In the
hole.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Valuable lessons can be gained
through personal experiences
today. That which you learn

pal around..........

nmthntid. -yens'll wisely use to

People you help now will want to
do more for you In return.
L IB R A (S ep t. 23-Oct. 23)
Self-Interests can be effectively
advanced today by dealing- on a
one-to-one basis with people
pertinent to your plans. Avoid
committee Involvement. •
SCORPIO (O ct. 24-Nov. 22)
You’re a strong finisher today
because you’ll gain momentum
as you go along. Zero In on
projects that have loose threads.
S A G IT T A R IU S (N o v . 2 3 Dec. 21) You're likely to fare
better In important discussions If
you conduct them later in the
day. You need a little time to
assemble your Ideas properly.
C APRIC O RN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Som ething advantageous
which could afTcct your material
security Is stirring today. A
person who likes you will have a
hand In Jarring It loose.

i -. ..

-•

A Q U A R IU S (Jan . 2 0-Feb.
19) In competitive situations
today the race will go to the
smart, not the swift. Out-think
your competitors Instead of try­
ing to outrun them . Major
changes are ahead for Aquarius
in the coming year. Send for
your Astro-Graph, c/o this news­
paper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleve­
land. OH 44101-3428. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Instead of trying to force Issues
today, let events run their natu­
ral course. You could be quite
fortunate In situations that arc
dictated by chance.
A R IE S (M arch 2 1 -A p rll 19)
Don't let doubts Impede your
progress today. If there Is a new
undertaking you've been anx­
ious to initiate, proceed in a
fearless fashion.
T A U R U S (A p r il 20-May 20)
Judge career situations realis­
tically today, hut also give
credence to the way you In-

your advantage later.
' CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The possib ilities for fitting
yourself Into sound ventures
that others have successfully
underway arc better than usual
today. Hunt for a piece of the
action.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your
ability to gel along harmoniously
with others Is your greatest asset
today. Put your charm to work
for you where It ran do you the
most good.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Being kind of service to others
encourages reciprocity today.

C E LE B R ITY CIPHER

Catobnty C.pf*r cryptograms
created Irom quotations by famout paopla pa«l and present
Each 'attar m th« cipher gland* for anothar Todjy %c/be H equj/s Q

S T GWNT V
WPK

BRWD

R S H T MT D . ”

CO

PGJT

PR S W
—

WK

AT W O

SKV

SKV

MGLT

GS

KQV
MKD

KVZ RBN.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Superstition is foolish ... and Irrational —
how much does it cost you to knock on w ood?"' — Judith Viorst

but

WIN A T BRIDGE

I

by Bob Thavas

J'vE £fifN SeLScTBP A S A SPOKESMAN 1&amp; ASK YOU TO &lt;55r FlP OF
4 ^

„

T H e H e0 L T A F S -

//

Y P

#

-2 iiiw v^ - 7 - i r

by Jim Davia

GARFIELD

sto p

iffiM

r-31

m um e

/ SOMETIMES THAT'€&gt;\
(
ALL A C A T
V uN PER tTAN Ffi

—

B y Jam es Jacoby
d u m m y ’ s a c e a n d "ruffed
A fter East had supported dummy's last heart. Next came
hearts. West should prefer bid­ the ace of clubs. The Interesting
ding five hearts to defending thing about this deal Is that
against four spades, for many declarer will make the hand now
reasons. First, five hearts might whether he leads a diamond or a
make. (Suppose East had the second club. If he leads a club.
diamond ace instead o f the West can take the 10 and the
K-Q-J.) Second, the opponents Jack and then play the club
might bid on to five spades. queen. Declarer will simply play
Finally, even If five hearts Is set. a diamond from dummy on that
it may well be that South could last club. That Is the third trick
make four spades. And so he for the defense, but West will
could, although he needed a now have to give declarer a
little luck.
diamond sluff In dummy and a
When West led the diamond ruff.
deuce. South suspected it was a
If declarer gets off lead with a
singleton, so he took the ace
right away. Although he didn’t diamond. East can take two
expect to find a distribution that diamond tricks but will then
would allow four spades to have to give declarer a sluff and
make, declarer took his best a ruff. Either way declarer takes
shot. He ruffed a heart, played a 10 tricks for his contract. Now
spade to dummy’s Jack, ruffed a wouldn't West have been better
second heart, played a spade to off bidding five hearts?

ANNIE

NORTH
♦ A J 43
Y 732
♦ A 83
♦ 975
WEST
♦8
Y K q J 10 6 4
♦2
♦ Q J 10 3 2

-11-17

EAST
♦ 95
Y A 985
♦KQJ975
♦ K

SOUTH
♦ K q 10 7 6 2
Y- - ♦ 10 6 4
♦ A 864
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Weal

North

2Y

2♦

East
1♦
3Y

Pass

Pass

Pass

South
1♦
4♦

Opening lead: 9 2

by Leonard Starr

�w r m r-

0

*

•

# •*

•

•

r

•

r

' I

*

r ? r f ‘’

0

f - * r r r t 0' i— r ~ »

r

■r - * r ~ •

i

»*- s ' f

ST|

r-^t

= M e a = J= 3 = *= -

1t
!•
H H Iill H W

bi

» I — IP 1 »

i.
—

mmmm
W % .

TONIGHT'S TV
E G Z 3
AFTERNOON
to o
u m i houm

on t h i

0(11)MOVffi "TheGeiMoeiUkah r |1W7| Jan* Pon« i. C « t Robertaon. A pung woman haa a difficult
ikna deciding wffieft of three potanUN huabanda la ffia righf ona for
har.Q

.
1■ i
Br ^ ; - - "%*• i? y f t i *.; "ij
■•«■
t

lofparaMaWbto
MMtbftoar
up later to d*M their cffiM. In
alarFi*tw-

^ J | " f 5S t * « 3 5 »
S m B h OFORLAW O

f f l l i M O W "Tha Raem upstair*" (Prandara) Stock
v d Charm­
kard
Charming. Sam Wataraton. A woman afro
ha* «Nlt*r*d ***** from ffia out0 0 ww 0 nnm ■npiomp r a ■
n*w outlook on If* with the naweat
tanant of h*r boarffingfwu**. A
"Hifritsni Hal of FanWr praMnt»&gt;

S S o S fm S m

300

bong
(D 0 OHARA Ohara mu*f prefeet
the If* of a tuMrina who wttneaaad
a murder, g
0 MO) UNOCMSA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
0 ( 8 ) FATHER MURPHY

• ffl COU1QE BASKETBALL
Kanaaa at LoulavMa (Uva)

9:30

• ( W) AHCMCAN GOVERNMENT

too

0 ( 0 AMERICAN GOVERNMENT

ffl

m

coueoe

b a sketb all

Svracuaa at Georgetown (live)
GD • M A BOWING $125,000
Greater Loa Angalea Open, from
GaMa Houaa Bow* In Torrance.
CaM.(Lhe)

1

(10) FACE! OF JAPAN
m COUEGC BASKETBALL
Mliiiaalppl State at Kentucky (Live)

3:15

Q AUTO RACMQ IMSA 14 Hour*
Of Daytona (Mart of race), from
Daytona, Fla. (Uve)

3:30

*

0 (10) TONY BROWN'S JOURNAL
An examination of ilw movement to
light radat remark* on the airwave*
and the role ol black radio.

4:00
• (11) MOVIE "Run A Crooked
MHa" (1969) Lout* Jourdan. Mary
Tyler Moor*. A teacher become* In­
volved wtth murder and Intrigue al­
tar discovering an underground
ta bdigi plot.

• ( W) WTAE COOKING NOW

4:20
©SALTWATER ANGLER

4:30
d ) O WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled: World Alpine Ski Cham­
pionship* (tame-day tape), men *
downhill, from Crant-Montana,
Switzerland; World Cup Gymnatlic*
(taped), women'* all-around com­
petition, from Bailing. China; a re­
port on the America'* Cup Yachting
Race (tame-day tape). Itrtt day ol
the final*, from Perth, Auatralia.
■
(10) MOOERN MATURITY
Scheduled: a aaluta lo the volunteer
•pint; worker* and mduatry (Part 3
of 3) examine* creative employee
training program*; ILGWU Vic*
Preaident Evelyn DuBrow and John
Howard of the Chamber of Com­
merce debate U.S. trade policy, g

4:55
® FISHING WITH ROLAND MAR­
TIN

5:00
■ ( I ) LOVE BOAT
(X) O PGA GOLF ATAT Pebble
Beach Ciaaaic. third round. Irom the
Monterey Penimula in California.
(Live)
8 (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW g
O ) (6) MAMA'S FAMILY Vint'e cartain he wax adopted when he ditcover* tome disturbing Information
on hi* birth certificate.

5:30
0 (16) WALL STREET WEEK "Fly­
ing Merger*'' Gue«t: Fir*! Bonon
Corp. Vice President Michael Derchin.
(D FtSHIN* WITH ORLANOO WIL• m rrs A u v tN G

0 ® EASY STREET LK. and
company have a hard ttma deciding
how to fir* a menacing gardener. In

100
0 ® TOOAY AT SB A calabralion
of "Today**'' 33th annlvaraary
raunfta* former anchor* Hugh
Down*. Barbara Walter*. John
Chaneater, Tom Brofcaw and Edwin
ulan John Palmar, Gan* Shan and
W lfrd Scotl. Hoctc Jan* Faulty
and Bryant Gumbai. in atarao.
ffl 0
I F M E R : FOR HIRE
Spenser invaattgatea tha myatertoua death of a vataran ataman. (R)
0 ( 1 1 ) INN NEWS
0 (10) DOCTOR WHO "Fu8 O r­
el#" GaHfray la miaalng and th*
myatartou* marauding Outian ara
suspected
0 ( 8 ) BONANZA

10:10
® MOTORWEEK ILLUSTRATED
Moloraporia competition, ranging
from airplane* and auto* to snowmobtfea. will be examined In thi*
weakly series, plus a "Racer Of Th*
Week" aegment and profti** of rac­
ing personalitwt. Host: Dave Deepain. (Taped)

0 ( 9 ( D O ( C O NEWS
0 (1 1 ) SMALL WONOER Ted and
Joan'* high-school friend, once a
wimp and now a professional wres­
tler, arrive* for a visit.
0 (10) FRUGAL GOURMET Sparenbs with lentils, and pork in wine
and vinegar sauce.
O (8) CHARLES IN CHARGE
Charles tries lo obtain a college
loan. &gt;

6:05
® WRESTLING

6:30
0 ® NBC NEWS
f f lO C B S NEWS
fflQ A B C N E W S g
0 ( 11) NEW GIDGET Gidgel otters
to run a friend's beachslde snack
bar
0 (10) HOMETIME How to prepare
walls lor painting and wallpapering

7:30

8:00
0 ® FACTS OF LIFE A young
singer (Stacay 0), afraid ol her po­
tential lor stardom, gets support
from Tootie and the girls In slsrao
§ ) O OUTLAWS The Outlaw*
travel to N*w York to track down a
psychotic killer
ffl Q SIDEKICKS Rizzo gets pro­
moted to a boring desk |ob g
0 (1 1 ) MOVIE "Th# Friends Ol Ed­
die Coyle ' (t973) Robert Milchum.
Peter Boyle A federal agent uses a
smalltime crook to expose a crime
nng.
0 ( 10) PROFILES OF NATURE
0 ( 8 ) STREET HAWK

8:05
© MOVIE "Heaven With A Gun''
11969) Glenn Ford. Carolyn Jones.
A peace-loving preacher attempts
lo bring some solidarity lo a West­
ern town by setting up a church
only lo lind himseit embroiled in lo­
cal leuds

8:30
0 ® STORYTELLER Hans My
Hadgehog" John Hurt portrays a
medieval storyteller who earns his
dinner by telling the tal* ol a haltman, hall-hedgehog creature In
stereo
ffl Q SLEDGE HAMMERI Don
helps eipose a con artist posing as
Sledge's brother. In stereo, g
0 (10) ARTHUR C. CLARKE S
WORLD OF STRANQE POWERS
Topic: receiving massages from the
dead

9:00
0 ® GOLDEN GIRLS Th# women

i
0

10:50
0 NIGHT TRACKS: CHARTBUSTERS

11:00

i

(9 ( D O ( D O new s
(11) MAUDE
(•^BARGAINS TONIGHT

11:30

0 ® SATURDAY NtGHT UVE In
stereo.
® Q STAR TREK
CD 0 LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH
AND FAMOUS Scheduled: Brooke
Shield*; Conway Twftty; American
heiress Carolina Hunt Schoallkopf:
fashion designer Roberto CavaiS.
0 (11) MOVIE "Serplco" (1973) Al
Pacino. Tony Roberta.

11:55
® NIGHT TRACKS Included: Lu­
ther Vandroa* (“Slop To Love"):
Bob Geldof ("Thi* la The World
Calling''); Bruca Springsteen
("War"). In stereo.

12:00
( D O UNTOUCH \BLE3
ffl o MOVIE "Fraulein" (1958)
Dana Wynler, Mai Ferrer.

1:00

wtMP* —
1:30

0
ffl MTV TOP
COUNTDOWN
( D O NEWS

20 VIDEO

2:00
0 (It) MOVIE "White Heat " |I949|
James Cagney. Virginia Mayo.

2:05
® NIGHT TRACKS

2:20
ffl 0 MOVIE "The Raging Moon"
(1971) Nanette Newman, Malcolm
McDowell

3:00

100

fSUBMCBS

I * ™FOR
* YOUR
” M A L TH "Mam___________

8

fTOW M TTM

£

1035

M O M "Ftracsaeb" (1988)
Btaaart Hanry Fdnd*. A
erne* town protected by ■ timid

■MWmit mTOrm wj 11
and Ida man.

® NIGHT TRACKS

4:00
0 (ft) THREE 3TOOOES

4:15
® NIGHT TRACKS

4:30
ffl Q GUNS OF WILL SONNETT

MORNING

5:00
ffl O BRANDED
0 ( 1 1 ) CNN NEWS

5:20
® NIGHT TRACKS

5:30
0 AGRICULTURE U.S.A.
(It)CN N NEWS

6:00
( D O LAW AND YOU
ffl O VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION
0 ( 1 1 ) IMPACT

® CNN NEWS
0 (8) SUNRISE SHOPPING AT A
SAVINGS

6:30
0- &lt;
®
FLORIDA'S WATCHING
2 1F
OUR TIMES A look at
( D O FOR
i
effort* by New York and New Jer­
sey synagogues and churches to
accommodate th* handicapped g
ffl O ESSENCE
0 (1 t)W .V . GRANT
® WORLD TOMORROW

7:00
0 ffl 2‘S COMPANY
(D O ROBERT SCHULLER g
ffl 0 COVER STORY
0 (11) FROSTY’S WINTER WOND­
ERLAND Animated Just *i Frosty'*
about to marry, the mean Jack
Frost puts him into a deep freeze.
Voices ol Andy Griffith, Shelley
Winters. Dennis Day
® fTIS WRITTEN

7:30
) HARMONY ANO GRACE
____ I JIMMY SWAGQART

0 (11) JACK FROST Animated
Jack Frost strikes a deal with Fa­
ther Winter that it he defeats a vil­
lainous giant he wi&gt;1 become visible
to the beautiful, and human. Elisa.
Voices Buddy Hackatt, Robert
Morse. Paul Frees

7:35
® TOM 6 JERRY AND FRIEN0S

8:00
0 ffl VOICE OF VICTORY
15 ) 0 WORLD TOMORROW
0 (10) SESAME STREET (R) g

8:30
0 ffl SUNDAY MASS
S i O DAY OF DISCOVERY
f fl O ORAL ROBERTS
0 ( 1 1 ) JEM

9:00
Q ffl REAL TO REEL
Q ) O SUNDAY MORNING Sched­
uled a look at the new wing of 20thceniury arl at New York's Metropol­
itan Museum ol Art, profile ol
pianist Steven DeGroote. who has
returned to music after being in-

0 J[1 1 &gt; WHAT* HAPPENING

0 ® OUR HOME Qua eftadangn
mamban of th* family to gN* up M
of M r jom-cantury luxurtaa for
onowoaaond. in Marao. q
06QMMUTCS
■ 0 MOM "You Ruined My
Ut*" (PramMra) SoMa Moon Fry*.
Paul RaHar. Tha casino managing
uncH of a young girt who can't
vo foiortto i

ITNMTYIMNUTCS

n

(M ) NM TON -B APPLE

ii

11:30

WRESTLING
FAC* TH* NATION
TMB W OK WITH OAVtO

aRMOCVO
)(t0) GOURMET

0 MORE REAL PEOPLE
(11) M OW "Bad '

8

(1961) Suaan Hayward. John Oavtn.
A married man kaapa a mtatraa*
who mual remain forever In the
background.

0

(10) WONDERWORKS "Tha
nli&gt;iWi«‘ w
¥¥W3 rony rwfiCTiny nev rnoinfi
■

&gt; x « i-a &gt;iA A u #l » -■ — m — — ,h a_. y

marrtaga to tha man tsho tea* parity
reeponaibie for hi* tathar'a daaffi.
Chrtatophar Faitowi withdraw* from
paopia unto a wdd pony haip* form
a bridge bahaaan th# boy and hi*
naw parent Star* Marfyn Ughts.una. Ad Hindi*, Joah Byrne, g
0 (8) MIO-DAY BAROAMB

12:30
MEET THE PRCSB
TAXI
_____BIBKEL 4 EBERT S THE

m

M O M S Scheduled review* "Ra­
dio Day*" (Woody Aden); "Outragaoua Fortune" (Shelley Long,
Bette Midler); "On* Woman or
Two" (Gerard Depardieu. Sigour­
ney Weaver).

130

ffl COLLEGE BASKETBALL
North Carolina al Noire Dam* (Uva)
CDO NBA BASKETBALL Houston
Rockets at Atlanta Hawks (Uva)
ffl O HEROES: MADE IN THE
UAA.
_______
i . W &lt;M| MMOTBMBOI TM ATRB
"Lott Empirae" Baaed on th* 1983
novel by J.B. Prleetley. A young
man (Colin Firth) leave* fua fob m a
Yorkshire mi* town to Join hi* un­
ci*’* WutlonUt act Alao atari Sir
Laurence Olivier, John Caatte.
Beall* Edney and Gillian Bavan.
(Part to t7 )g

1:05
Q MOVIE "Dakota" (19431 John
Wayne. Vera Ralston. A land war
result* when crook* try to burn out
wheel farmer*.

1:30
ffl 0 HANK PARKER OUTDOOR
MAGAZINE

2:00
ffl 0 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Nevada-Laa Vega* at Auburn (Live)
0 (1 1 ) MOVIE "Madam* X" (1981)
Tuesday Wald, Eleanor Parker. A
young woman, married to a wealthy
man. must abandon her husband
and daughter because of one tragic
mistake.

3:00
0 ffl SPORT8WORLO Scheduled
Michael CHayde vs. Don La* (kva) in
a middleweight bout ichaduled for
10 round*, from Atlantic City. N.J.;
Millroe* Game* Track and Field
Meal (taped) from Madison Square
Garden M Naw York
0 (10) TAXBREAK '67 IRS expert*
explain tax credits tor senior citi­
zen* and how to complete various
tax form*. Including the revised W4 withholding lorm. Host: Edwin
Newman.
0 (I) MID-DAY BARGAINS

3:05
® AUTO RACING IMSA 24 Hour*
Ol Daytona (and of race), from Day­
tona. Fla. (Uve)

(D

GMfflvy Sunday Movto" proton*
■ UOFALLGUV

0 (10) LIT THE OOOO TWCS
ROLL WITH E ll UNO Grammy
A V w IrilIIm

3:30

0 PGA GOLF AT&amp;T Pebble
Beach Ciaaaic. Anal round, from the
Monterey Peninsula In California
(Uve)

4:00
ffl o WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Scheduled. Annual NFL Pro Bowl,
(live) from Honolulu, same-day re­
ports on the World Alpine Ski
Championships (woman's downhill)
from Crant-Montana. Switzerland
and tha America’* Cup Yachting
Race, from Perth. Australia
0 (It) MOVIE "Sparkling Cya­
nide" (19831 Anthony Andrews. De­
borah Ratlin. Bated on a novel by
Agatha Christie Guest* at an anni­
versary party become murder sus­
pects when a unfaithful wife suc­
cumbs to poisoned champagne
® MOVIE "The Man From Th*
Alamo" (1953) Glenn Ford. Julie
Adam*. Th* sol* survivor ol the
Alamo discovert that American re­
negades. not Mexicans, were re­
sponsible lor th* Ox-Bow massa­
cre.
0 (8) AMERICA'S BIGGEST BAR­
GAINS

4:30
0 ffl MOVIE "Death At Love
House" (1976) Robert Wagner.
Kale Jackson A young writer's ob­
session with a long-dead movie
queen is encouraged by tha star's
•putt

5:00
0 (10) FIRING LINE
0 (I) WILD KINOOOM A study ot
the Komodo dragon, a deadly lizard
that lives only on lour small Indone­
sian island* (R)

nohart Taylor, Ian Hutlor. A runa­
way grow* up to be th* laatast and

6:00
Q ff l(D O N E W S
0 (1 1 ) SILVER SPOONS

»-■ -

L H t u l _ »*-

(1176) Rab Brawn. Haathar ManzHa. An 'ax-Marina turns ertmoAgMar and pumaa an arch-villain
out to destroy Phoenix with a neu­
tron bomb.

•30
0 ® MOM "LBJ: Th* Evfy
Year* (Pramisrc) Randy Quaid,
Pam LuPone Twenty-nine years
(1834-83) In th* life, and often con­
troversial political career, of tormar
President Lyndor Bain** Johnson,
who ro** from■test In Congraa* to
tha nation'* highsat office. In star® &amp; MUROCR. SHE WROTE Jes­
sica aavaadropi on a phone con­
versation that could Sped doom for
a Cabot Cova resident. g
0 (11) MOM "The Andromeda
Strain" (1171) Arthur HM. David
Wayne. Three scientists work to
identify a dearly strain of bactarta
in Uma to asms everyone r
0 (10) NATURE A study of tfw
frtgde eeoeyntem of Cameroon s
Kor j ramforest, in siarao. (R) g

930

8

0 DESIGNBfQ W084EN
O MOM "TIM Man With Tha
Golden Gun' (1974) Roger Moors.
Christopher La*. British secret
■gent James Bond 007 tracks down
an Internet'onel hit man who uses
golden buflttt and has constructed
a powerful tolar death ray. (R)g
0 (90) MYSTERY! "Th* Sacral Ad­
versary" Tommy and Tuppence ara
not alone n their pursuit of th* Nu­
tty* woman who may hold Ihe key
to th* missing treaty. (Part 2 of 2)
_ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC EX­
PLORER An underwater haiicoptar;

Gurkhas, the Queen's Army for th*
British crown; Patrick Edllngar
tesla* cliffs overlooking the Vardon
River in France: th* repair ot Stradivartua violin*; Alaska's Otnail

) (8) GLOW: GORGEOUS LADIES
O f WRESTLING

10:00
ffl 0 HARO COPY Dai Valle (Dean
Devlin) learns a lesson in urban pol­
itic* whan hit paper refuse* to print
a story about gang murders and
territorial takeover.
0 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"Lost Empires" Richard lails In lov*
with Nancy Ellis, Unde Nick mvotves Richard In his plan to haip a
suffragette eved* the law. Start
Colin Firth. John Catll*. Beetle Edney end Carmen Du Sautoy. (Part 2
o l7 )g
0 (I) TALES FROM THE DARKSIOE A struggling horror novelist
works on hi* next book with th*
haip of a homeless vampire.

10:30

I
8

(It ) INN NEWS
(I) NtGHT GALLERY

11:00

O ffl ffl O NEWS
(11) MAUDE
(10) ADAM SMITH'S MONEY
WORLD
® SPORTS PAGE
0 (8) BARGAINS TONIGHT

11:30

0
ffl ENTERTAINMENT THIS
WEEK A tribute to Hollywood*
tOOth anniversary,
ffl 0 WKRP IN CINCINNATI
0 (1 1 ) HAWAII FIVE-0
® JERRY FALWEU

11:35
ffl o NEWS

12:00
ffl 0 CHECK IT OUTI Cobb's lat­
est directive prompts Marten* lo
cad a sink* among the supermarket
fflPtojTsouo Q0LD Schadultd
performances Georgia Satailitas.
Anita Baker. Belinda Carlisle and
Freda Payne ("Band of Goid 'X
Dwight Yoakam. Bon Jovt, the
Gras* Roots ("Midnight Conlessrons") Quest. "Night Court" co­
ttar Richard Moil In siarao.
0 (f) NIGHT OWL FUN

12:30
B ffl AT THE MOVIES
ffl 0 UNTOUCHABLES
0 &lt; t1 ) DREAM OIRLU.S.A.
® J0HNANKER8ERQ

1:00
0 ffl EBONY / JET SHOWCASE
Intarviewt: recording artist Luther
Vandrots. actress Alain* Read
|"227").
“ O VCu WRITE THE SONGS
JIMMY SWAOGART

1:30
o MUSIC CITY U S A.
Q MOVIE "Miles To Go Before
l Sleep" (1974) Martin Balsam.
MacKaruie Phillips

2:00
ffl O NEWS
® WORLD TOMORROW

2:30
0 NIQHTWATCH
LARRY JONES

3:00

8

CHRISTIAN CHILDREN S FUND
(8) NIGHT OWL FUN

3:15

ffl Q MOVIE I Heard The Owl
Call My Name" (1973) Tom Cour­
tenay. Dean J agger

MONDAY,
MORNING

5:00
Q ffl THIS WEEK IN COUNTRY
MUSIC (MONI
® 2*S COUNTRY (TUE-FRI)
(111 CNN NEWS
® BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

8

ISAAC OF THBOCNTURV

(IIJOOOOOAYl

AT A

® 0 U

0

( 11)1

f

fflTOOAY

® MOVE

BLOCKBUSTERS
SUPOBOR COURT
MW) WHO AAERKA (MON. Fft)
(10) PROFIUS OP MATURI

S

_ ( 0 PHENOMENAL WORLD
(WED)
0 ( 0 NEWTON'S APPLE (THU)

730

0fflWHEEL OP FORTUNE

1130

ffl0 P R K S E fW M T
ffl 0 FAME FORTUNE S RO&gt;

(It)a LJO E
110) SQUARE
ONE TELEVISION
7:50

0 ( l f ) ALICE
0 ( 0 TERRY FOX: I HAD A
OREMMMON)
I f0 AMERICAN CAESAR(TU*)
( 0 THE SRAM (WED)

0 SESAME STREET (R)g

8 :05

0 1 DREAM OP JEANNE

S _i

11:30
WEBSTER
(R)

(ll)MAUOC
0
(
n
;

( 0 METER ROGERS (ft)

AFTERNOON

8 :35

® BEWITCHED

120

930

IfflTHC JUDGE
) 0 DONAHUE
) 0 OPRAH WWFREY
bill)GREEN ACRES
1 (0 SESAME STREET(R)g
I (8) SHOP-AT-HOME ANO SAVE
9:05

OOOWN TO EARTH

f f lf flf
(ii» r “

1

(10) BERGERAC (MON)

(10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
QJTUE)
0 (10) MY8TIRYI (WED)
9 (10) HENSON’S PLACE (THU)
0 (10) ANNA KAREMNA (FRI)

0 (8) MIO-DAY BAROAMB

( 0 SQUARE ONE T fL f V 0 O N

430

I im nwNCHCNvrruB)

( 0 MCROWAVE* ARE FOR
COOWNO(WB|
laiAAauMNkSjaiR W iiju
0 (10) w O O O ^ W O H il IM O r

V

Si

(11) IK.VCRHAWKSg

130

J A E THE WORLDTURNS
MtljF-TROOP
( 0 NEW SOUTHERN COOK-

Q FLBfTlTONEE

530

IfflOIVOICE COUNT

( r m
Si

( 0 FLORKM HOSE GROWN

(11) FACTE OF LIFE
(0 O C E A N U I(M O N )

20

0 ® ANOTHER WORU)
ffl 0 ONE UPI TO LIVE
0 (11) ANOY BREFITH
0 ( 0 WONOCRFUL WORLD OF
acrvuceohon )

■ k V IO R O U E )

0(0BU8UNES1
IBUEBEBS F
m Ua|R)(WED)
i m
l(0 M O N E V n S
8 (W M P T 0 P 9
s

r a

«

SRI

0 ( 0 PAINTING CERAMICS (FRO

OQEJJQAirB ELAND

( 0 NOVA (THU)
( 0 MAOiC OF 00. PAINTING
&lt; 0 EYES ON THC PRIZE;
AMERICA'S CML MONTS 8YEARS,
M 0 PAPflTNO SOUTHERN
1664-1866 (FRI)
LANOBCAPEEfTHU)

0 (It) DOBBS THE MENACE
• 0

4:0

(0 JO Y O F PAPmNOfTUE)

930

« (11)FllNmONCS

436

00

1030

0 OOOO MORfMNQ AMERICA

1a

IDAVSOPOURUVn

1035

0:45

0 (0 A .M .W IA TH M

'A
TAW
JEOPARDY
IftTN U N O W CA TSg
E) A M W C A t BWEBET

130

0:30
) 0 CM MORNMQ NEWS
(It)CCNTLNBONE
(M) FARM DAY
TOMS JERRY ANO FRKNOB

.

430

0 ffl WORDPLAY
® J I YOUND AND THC RBBT-

)(tt)FALLOUY
1(10) CAPTA** KANGAROO (R)

IfflMEWB

&gt;41 -

IwW V IP M W p 11 ini W M ,
0 0 M O M "Captain Amortca"

5:30

(

1030

50SAUVJCSSY RAPHAEL
j 0 IYIWTTNSS4 DAYBREAK

® M OM "BRy Th* K «“ (1941)

® WRESTLING
0 (8) WHAT A COUNTRY! Taylor
makes plan* for a Moroccan sing­
er’s performance at a local club
EVENING

0,0
B). iru-jg
n- ■a■»■m m
0
r\iny pWTiyfmi

aemaol hN moat popUar aonga In •
1013 conoart on mo Tuft* Univani-

-■

1130

930

0ILO V ILU C Y

0 ADYW6TVIREB
B O T M tT W g

____ 1530

t® M C M W a

730
100

0 ® L O V lCON N iC l M l
0 (1 1 1 P rm O O R T JUNCTION

•too

wto «

0 ( 8 ) NIGHT OWL FUN

3:10

•30

FIRST SAPPST CHURCH

I

0

12:30

LOOK A T M l NOW (IMDt
CAN YOU M TI MBE R 7

ANOY BWPFITH

O NEW LEAVE FT TO BEAVER
Otsar and Baasar antar a construeben contact sponsored by OtHw1*
Junior Tm biiaaraTroop.

® DURATIONS
I (11)
MOWS "Tha Qratf Waldo
I
' (1873) Robert Radford, Bo
A fru**r*l*d American
team** a barnasarmIng Hunt man In N* ffifrat lor aoHon
during)
gW vO YO FFAW nN O

0 ( 1 ) NtGHT OWL FUN

T O M rtM M M M

(11) CNN!

II

1230

® DAYTONA UPDATE

0 0 STAR MARCH

A 3 mli'T -H O M AND SAVE

0 ffl UNfVfMfTY ATHLETIC AS­
SOCIATION; FLORKM BASKET-

10:40

7:00

0 ® FLORIDA'S WATCHING
(7) a WHEEL OF FORTUNE
0 (It ) 9 TO 5 Marsha spearheads
a campaign to save a (allow em­
ployee s |ob

• 0

0 (1 1 ) BOB NEWHART

0 (!) ONE BIO FAMILY Uncle Jake
renews his friendship with his for­
mer vaudeville partner (Bill Macy)
who's about to undergo surgery
0 ® THROB Sandy starts a ro­
mance with a doctor
® O HEE HAW Co-host Mane
Osmond Guests Eddie Rabbitt.
Ralph Stanley. Bill Monroe. Paul
Davis
ffl O LIFESTYLES OF THE RICH
AND FAMOUS
ffi (11) TED KNIGHT SHOW Mon­
roe hopes his stand-up comedy act
will lead to stardom
ffi (10) PONAPE: ISLAND OF MYS­
TERY
0 (6) DEMPSEY A MAKEPEACE
Drug dealing and gang violence are
ingredients In Dempsey and
Makepeace's investigation into the
murder of a pimp and a police de­
tector*

mowi now • ptptton
■ark*: a Mur ol ffia Hoof C M efu*-

10:30

EVENING

6:00

M ar Kay McMwar hakat

630

0 (18| T M WHO DM
-------------’’ TNnfclnf h# had
i way to th* law.
I hit
"Tha M Ha"

20

I0RAMBO

50

50

si mm
| ® PEOPLE’S COUNT

8 0 CAPITOL

(11) MV LITTLE PONY I f
FREMM
0 ( 0 SECRET CITY

30
IfflB AN TAEAM M A
■ OUKXNOUQNT
) 0 GENERAL HOSPITAL

i

• f f lO N c w t

m

0(0OCCANUS(MON)
0 l(( t0t) JgFBRBONB
UNDERSTANDING
| HUMAN
BEHAVIOR (TUE)
j|0BUBfNOSFU(*MWED|

S |( 0

MONEY PUZZLE (THU)
( 0 ANT OP BEING HU

(11)SCOOEV000

SR

1(10) MISTER ROGCM(R)

0 1 DREAM OP JEANNE

){$) MIO-DAY BARGAINS

6 0

30

ROCKY ROAD (MON-THU)
SAFE AT HOME (FRft

® TOM S JERRY ANO FRENOS

Eddie Murphy Holds Court
By Vernon Scott
UPI Hollywood Reporter
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Come­
dian Eddie Murphy held court
the other day In a curious
movieland tribal rite initiated by
Paramount Studios to promote
h is new m o v le -ln -p ro g re s s.
"Beverly Hills Cop II."
Murphy seldom gives Individ­
ual Interviews now that he is a
superstar. His feelings have been
hurt in the past by reporters he
says misquote him or misun­
derstand his responses. That
makes him melancholy.
So Paramount's publicity folk
arranged a mass media confer­
ence with "photo opportunity"
to present Eddie to reporters and
photographers In comfortable
surroundings on the studio's
S U S P 14.

„

Murphy would now be able to
discharge ail his publicity ob­
ligations in u single appearance.
Even so. he didn’t HAVE to show
up. "Beverly Hills Cop" was the
single most successful comedy
ever made, earning an astound­
ing $350 million worldwide.
Protection was provided the
com edian by a phalanx o f
publicists, his co-stars, ills
director, his personal braintrust,
the film's producers and a gaggle
of hangers-on that Murphy re­
ferred to as "m y boys."
A makeshift stage was the
settin g wi th four d irecto r's
chairs em blazoned with the
"Beverly Hills Cop II" logo. Four
or five hand microphones were
in place at a series Df three
tables.
Some 30 or 40 members of the
media, mostly electronic, faced
the empty chairs until at last
producers Don Simpson and
Jerry Bruckheimer appeared
and answered questions. The
gist of their thoughts was that
Eddie Murphy is the funniest
man In the world and that
"Beverly Hills Cop 11" would be a
winner.
They were joined by executive
producers Robert Wachs and
Richard Tl enken, who also
happen to be Murphy’s manag­
ers for movies, TV. concerts and
records. They, loo. think Eddie
Is the greatest thing since sliced
bread.
After a mercifully brief ques­
tion and answer session the cast
was Introduced in order of as­
cending importance. First the
vi llains. Brigitte Nielsen
(Sylvester Stallone's real life
wife). Jurgen Prochnow and
Dean Stockwell.
The trio admitted Eddie was a
great fellow.
Then in came the picture's
version of a Greek chorus, the
supporting players who ap ­
peared with Murphy in the first
"Beverly Hills Cop" — Judge
Reinhold (Billy Rosewood). John
Ashton (Officer Taggart) and
Ronny Cox (Lt. Andrew
Bogomil).
A reporter asked an inane
question and Rclnhold. Ashton
and Cox answered in singsong
unison, "Eddie Murphy is a
really great guy and it's a
privilege to have worked with
him." The journalists were not
p articu larly amused, but it
cracked up the Greek chorus.
As the three actors fielded
questions, producer Simpson
announced (hat they might be
interrupted at any minute by the
arrival of (hold your breath here,
f o l k s ) E D D I E M U R P H Y in
person.
Clearly, there would be no

ruffles and flourishes or sound*
ing of trumpets. Eddie, being the
humble, un pretentious
multimillionaire star that he Is.
would sort of Just drop in. And
sure enough, as Cox was an­
swering a question. Murphy
ambled onto the stage wearing a
Detroit Lions jacket and a wide
grin.
"Sorry I’m late." Murphy said.
"Eddie Murphy Is a really
great guy and It's a privilege to
have worked with him," the trio
chorused and like a nightclub
warm-up act, the comedy team
of Relnhold, Ashton and Cox
quieted down as Murphy took an
empty director's chair and faced
the media.
Asked if he felt any pressure
about following “ Beverly Hills
Cop" with a sequel. .Murphy.
said. "I don't think there arc any
pressures at all because I'm not
trying to out-do what we did
before. It's much easier now
because we all know each
other."
In response to a question
about coping with pressures that
arise from enormous success, he
said, "T h e older you get the
easier It is to cope.”
A woman reporter asked how
Murphy had changed since
1984. He laughed and pointed at
his clothes and said. "Look, the
sam e bleep. It's the sam e
wardrobe and the same stuff.
The same guy."
Murphy attempted to explain
why he doesn’ t talk to the
media:
"T h ey change It or they screw
up a lot of things I say lots of
times. I have nothing against
you people. It's Just that they'll
bleep up a lot of things I say ...
get taken out of context.
"I feci real personal to this
picture. It's a real important
movie to me. That's why I’m
here."
Somebody asked. "W hy?”
' ' Because it made the most
m on ey," Murphy said, then
laughed. "It's the easiest thing
for me to do because I have the
most freedom comcdlcally ...
that's why it's really personal.”
Murphy grew more serious
when asked about the bad re­
views he received on his most
recent picture. "T h e Golden
Child."
"A lot of things they said were
warranted. I had the same reac­
tion any artist would have when
you do something and someone
goes, 'That sucked real bad.'
You know what they say about
actors, they build you up and
want to shoot you down. I don't
try to out-do myself.
"I'm going to do some things
that are bad and do some things
— no one has a completely
perfect track record. So when I
get bad reviews, it's like when
you get a good review. You
know? 1guess."
The subject was changed to
contemporary comedians and
Murphy was asked which of his
peers he respected the most.
"I have a great deal of respect
for Richard (Pryor)." he replied.
"And I think Bill Cosby Is a
brilliant comedian, a brilliant
comic actor and I don't know
why he's not doing more movies
.... He's an underrated actor.
"I like Steve Martin a lot and 1
like Bill Murray a lot. See. once
you get really successful, you get
afraid to do something else.
T h a t's what happened with
'Gulden Child.' If I had never
done 'Beverly Hills Cop' I don’t

think the critics would have
been as hard on 'Gotden Child'
as they were.
As the news conference con*
tinue^ Murphy made It Increas­
ingly difficult for radio and TV
reporters to record his words.
His language grew In vulgarity,
and profanity, eliciting nervous
laughter from the reporters,
cameramen and photographers.
Murphy said he was working
on a new record album for which
he has written live songs. He
added that he didn't know what
happened to the plan for a
sequel to the hit movie "48
Hours" In which he co-starred
with Nick Nolle.
" I don't know." he said. "I'd
love to work with Nick again and
I'd love to work with th o s e ;
N t f E l n ^ U 's li k e a I s t M l

Bungs, you get great Ideas for
things and it Just never happens.
"Stallone was supposed to do.
'Godfather III' and I wanted to be
In 'Godfather Iff’ bad so I called
Stallone ... and Pacino ... and
Mario Puzo and the director. And
everybody said It was great. And
It just never happens."
Will there be a "Beverly Hills
Cop III?"
"This is the type of character. '
this Is the type vehicle that you
can keep doing. It’s like those .
‘ Bond’ movies, you know, it’s
not like the end of the story. It
would be funny two or three
pictures from now when you all
(looking at his Greek chorus)
start dying. You know who said
’ I don't want lo do it anymore'
and they're like shot or some­
thing like that. It's the type of
thing you can keep doing over
and over again."
Returning to the subject of his
p r o b l e m s wi t h the me di a.
Murphy said. "Once I get com­
fortable (with the press) I get
comfortable with the way I talk,
too. And 1 don’ t talk ... I talk
different with my boys than I
talk with you all.
"S o when I get comfortable I
start talking like that and what
happens is they start writing
things like Eddie Murphy says
'dis and dat and yo man' and,
hey. they start putting their own
words In like 'bleep-bleep' and
things I didn't say ... It's Just
weird for me.”
A black reporter asked if
Murphy is pressured by the
black community to be a role
model.
"T h e biggest statement I ean
make is through my work." he
said.

|O Floyd Theatres I
FLAM TWIN I

i7? m /

EDDIE MURPHY IS BACK

QQe

^

T U
E
tE*n3 1 1 1 L

1R k H
u m «

GOLDEN CHILD
PIA7A (WIN II

i?7 ; m ?

1 ST€V€ MARTIN
Q 9 t:f U D E t
CHEW
a ■ 0
CHASE
era

,

*vs__ i
___ ED 4 f c M M
MOVIELANDD I

O f/
U l 1716

SOMEWHERE OH EARTH.
s A iv m e K .
NO X 7 \ , nrer
PASSES E L ™ 1=1
_TH €

VOVAG€ BO M €

S TA R TW E K JI

iTHE SEARCHFOR SPOCKl

�These fine Sanford businesses give you what you deserve — the very best in quality, price and service
Keep your shopping dollars local and shop in Sanford.

The Best Shoe Is
Made In America
FO OT THRILLS" by CLINIC"
tettVe worn thecSwa Now wear dw shoe th* tm I *

® ESSBnroS

ON SELECTED FALL
^
MERCHANDISE

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, FEB. 1
9 a.m. - 6 p.m.
★ CHAMPAGNE PARTIES
★ FREE REFRESHM ENTS

SHOE STO RE
2M L FIRST i m r , HtSTOtK M

322-0204

HOURS

★

DOOR PRIZES

★ STR ESS M ANAGEMENT
SEMINARS
★ FASHION SHOWS
★ COM PLETE MAKE OVERS
Grand Opening Continuea
Thro Sat,, Feb . 7
Call For More Detaila

FIN E
JEW ELRY
W H EN YOCJR
FEELIN G S
FO R R E A L
Special care goes into the
selection of fine jewelry. Your own
very persona) feelings. And your
jeweler’s expert knowledge.
That's why there's no finer way
to express your true sentiments
than with a gift of fine jewelry.

INCLUDES
A Men'* Exerdse Floor

SHERI KRAM ERS EYES HAVE
NEVER SEEN A BETTER SELECTION

★ Certified b u tm ctoralfl

A Separate Ladles Exercise Floor

* Tanning Beds ★ NunoyM

★ Nautilus, Paramount,
CamStarand Universal

A SteamRoam 4 Sauna
★ Personalized Training with

1987'a HOTTEST HEALTH CLUB
Ai lluric, mv i n n ’ hnwiliM n
^
Aiklm vhiW |(tMv,li«iL.
/
&amp;i, .liter it ivtupti'lviMiv c&gt;v
/
k i'\,im liy ilk' iikk'ivikUni I W i * \ i J
1
Opium-try rn&gt;lutv\t ikxit. p&gt;ull
J^.
|fi tinhorn' fntm hunjrwj, of
V /
fniiMi .it IVnrli'
Our iyvuvar cotkHilunt will
W rruL.- m k your nl.iw, fit comfcirtahly
P*M|V»b A (hi nilijhl 'tlfi.V't ^xvtil
B
h'.itutiH liU' I'Li'ih k'twv ultr.iimk't k vr.itilt-n-^.im mimic.

Rooms
A Diet A NutritionCounseling
★ Open 6 Days

^—

Fi v the fx-rhi'i pur I i frame, jum

m.iL-ilh- nullI hivin.i Until'

(PEARLER
co ncer J

William Howard

V

ih i

Seminole Centra
San lord

CALL TODAY 321-4722

321-3140

v iw o o

bMUKbYbb MUtCI

OF SANFO RD
unnsr m i
IMMCM6 •

aihl ill'll m u.

2453 AIRPORT BLVD. &amp; 25th ST., SA N F O R D

SEMINOLE CENTRE
SANFORD
323-5000
C 1986 fcarlc Health Services, Inc,

Am erica Grew Up
Under a Stetson Hat

When you climb aboard our rider, you're
riding on years of SNAPPER quality,
engineering and Innovations. SNAPPER
rldsrs have earned their reputation In the
Sunbelt where grass grows most ol the year.
Time-tested performance makes the SNAPPER easy to operate and tough. For added
safety and a smoother ride, SNAPPER riders
now have automatic blade stop and smooth
start clutch. These features are available for
the SNAPPER you now own. Ask your dealer
for details.
Some other exciting and Innovative
features Include on-the-go shitting,
SNAPPER'S famous disc drive and
easy nelght adjustments. See our
&gt;
riding mower at your SNAPPER dealer
today. You'll see why It's a reputation
worth riding on.
* ALL SALES FINAL
* NO REFUNDS
NO EXCHANQES

TW O YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY
A division of Fuqua Industries

‘T H E OLDEST C FINES r ‘
FOR 34 YEARS
318 E. It t ST.

f

HISTORIC
DOWNTOWN SANFORD
MON.-SAT. 9:30-3:30

A c t io n Mower Mart
H H

■K

2599 Elm Ave., Sanford ( j S j

321*5208

H

STOREWIDE SALE

�i '*

(

r * f

*

r * * w r f r -

r - f —» '

f .

*

r ~r ■

«

.

r r r 'r V

- gr—* r —r~

T' r ^r ' • &lt;

r

r r *

i / i r jrrrs r ^ - T ;

T V T *" f7 r f

VEWPOMT
Swtfay, ftfc. I, IM 7-1D

Sanford Vat Retires

Pets Enrich, Lengthen Human Life
By Kathy Tyrlty
Herald S ta ff W riter
Veterinarian Dr. Raymond L. Bass,
who is retiring after 42 years In
business In Sanford, believes that
children who are raised with pets
make better adult citizens and get
Into less trouble because or the
special responsibility that having a
pet teaches them.
He also believes, as do many
soclotogtc researchers, that pets help
prolong life for adults as they get
into their elderly years, many times
In nursing homes.
•T il tell you w hat,” said the
66-year-old doctor who can tell as
many stories as you have minutes to
listen, "having a pet Is an Ideal thing
when a child is growing up.
*Tve raised two boys and two girts
and they always had pets. The dog
would give them a signal when he
needed fresh water, and the kids
would leave their T V automatically
and go and (111 up his water. When
he was hungry, he had another
signal, and the kids learned their
responsibility that way.
"W hen they got older, they real­
ized their responsibility in other
ways. And they grew up straight and
loving." Dr. Bass said.
As far as prolonging life for older
people, he said animals are the
answer there, too.
“ That Is excellent therapy," he
said. "W e know that an old couple
who has a dog or cat can live a lot
longer than others because they
have something to look forward to.
When you greet the animal, no
matter how long you've been away,
or If you've Just taken a nap. the glee
Is the same. You will not know how
much Joy Is contained when you go
to stick the key Iri the door and
s o m e o n e 's on th e o th e r s id e
hollerin'."
To Illustrate his theory best about
pets teaching something to children,
he told the story of his boyhood and
how a pet — even In its dying — set
the course for his lifetime career.
Bom In Kissimmee, Dr. Bass grew
up with many animals and a happy
home life in a town that at tha't time

Retiring Sanford Vet, Dr. Raymond Bass and feline friend.
had no veterinarian. When young
Dr. Bass learned to drive, he ac­
cidentally ran over his favorite dog.
striking him with grief for many
years.
" I had no where to take my dying
dog; there was no one around who
could help him. So I took him home
and cared for him as he withered
away and died.
" A t that time. I had Just finished
high school with no plans of going to
college. But as the months passed, I
began to know what I would be. I
was going to learn how to keep
animals from dying. I was going to
be a veterinarian." Buss said.
Now that he has raised his own
family — along with countless dogs

and cats and other things ("Just
don’t ask me how m an y"— he Is
proud that his oldest son has become
a veterinarian, too. And the other
son. a lawyer. One daughter Is a
CPA. and the other a computer
operator who Is also raising a family.
The love of animals is something
Dr. Bass said was "Just born In m e."
Along with his wife, who helps out In
the office, they have an adoration for
nature's creatures that Is obvious
when one looks around the office.
A large cat named FluiT straddles
the reception counter where one
would normally lean to write a check
or make an appointment. Other cats
and dogs that the Basses own roam
around the office and sometimes

outside.
Dr. Bass is particularly fond of a
black mixed breed large dog he calls
Lady, who Is at least 15 years old.
She lies under the typewriter desk
and minds her own business.
Actually. Dr. Bass owns about 150
dogs and cats, and he has come to
know m uch about the anim al
kingdom.
The cats, he noticed, seem to get
along better together over the long
haul than do the dogs. "But we
require them all to get along.” And
he knows that cats are “ the only
amlnals that can charm a snake.”
Many people, he said, keep cats Just
so they will kill all the snakes,
rodents and large bugs.
Does he have a preference for dogs
or cats? "No, Just so they're animals.
I Just love all animals."
He said most of the meanness In
animals Is the result of their han­
dling by owners. But some animals,
he said, "are Just bom m ean" —
nothing to do with their heritage or
breed. He has even raised pit bulls
and found them to be loving and
gentle In his hands, he said. He
admits he has one boxer that Just
loves to fight, though.
Cats, he said, "feel more of an
obligation" to protect the yard and
home from pesky varmints, and they
are Just as quick as a snake.
“ A cat has the patience of Job and
can sit nonchalantly for hours wait­
ing for a little creature to move —
■you won't even see her breathe."
And If the cat sees a snake. Bass
said, the cat often know Instinctively
If It is poisonous or not. He had a cat
that would play with non-polsonous
ones for a while before killing them.
And that cat could kill a snake with
one swat of the needled paw.
Over the years In the business, he
has seen a trend to people having
bigger dogs and using them for
protection because o f an Increase In
burglaries.
He was hdppy to say that most
people keep those big dogs indoors
and "treat them like part of the
fam ily."
See VET. Page 4D

Science Updates
center.
Doctors from Pittsburgh to Paris
say it is the donor heart shortage
that makes the artificial heart neces­
sary to keep patients alive until a
natural donor heart can be found.
The surgeons anticipate more im­
plants this year.
There were eight cases In 1985 In
which mechanical hearts replaced
diseased natural hearts. There were
only single uses o f artificial hearts In
four previous years.
But in 1986, 43 artificial hearts
were implanted in 41 patients.
Including two who received a second
follow ing an unsuccessful heart
transplant, according to statistics
gathered by Dr. Don Olsen of the
University of Utah and indepen­
dently confirmed by a UPI survey.
Three of the Implants In 1985 were
designed to replace a dying heart
permanently and all three o f those
patients have since died. But the
other five 1985 patients subse­
quently had the mechanical devices
rem oved from their chests and
r e p l a c e d by a n a t u r a l heart
transplant. Two arc still alive, at
home and doing well.
All of the artificial hearts im­
planted in people last year were
planned to be temporary measures
only to keep an otherwise terminally
ill person alive until a suitable donor
he ar t c o ul d be l oc at e d for a

Quirks

transplant.
Ten patients died before they
could receive a transplant but 30
were kept alive long enough — for a
week on average — to have the
machines replaced bya natural
heart.
Of those 30. 19 are alive with
somebody else's heart beating In
their chests. One person, a 49-ycarold West German woman, suffered
rejection of the transplant and was
given a second artificial heart. She
awai ts a second transplant In
Stockholm’s Karolinska Hospital.
Another person to
receive an
artificial heart last year also remains
on the device, a Penn State Heart. He
was given the plastic heart after his
body rejected a natural transplanted
heart and doctors have since been
searching for a donor heart that his
immune system will accept.
None of the deaths of artificial
heait patients has been blamed on
the mechanical blood pump.
"T h a t’s a tremendous achieve­
ment." said Olsen, director of the
Artificial Heart Research Laboratory
at the university.
Thirty-seven of ihe artificial hearts
implanted in 1986 were $18,600
Jarvik-7s. either the original model
or a smaller version that is Increas­
ingly being used because it fits into
the chests of more people, including
women, and may pose less of a risk

BLOOM COUNTY

Research: Th in k right,
Live Sickness Free Life
NEW YO RK (UPI) Doctors studying links be­
tween emotion and health
are finding new evidence
that p o s itiv e thi nki ng
helps ward o ff sickness
and that aggressive people
tend to be especially resistent to disease.
Recent studies at the
N a tio n a l I nst i t ut es o f
Health Indicate positive
thoughts help the brain
produce higher levels of
chemicals called
n e u r o p e p t i d e s , wh i c h
bolster disease-fighting
cells called macraphages.
D iscover m agazin e re­
ported.
The N1H scientists told
the magazine their find­
ings help explain why
people with a positive

Our government, smarting from restrictions by
members o f the European Economic Community
against the Import of U.S. grain. Is about to slap
equally harsh restrictions against canned ham.
carrots, gin. and a host of other goods we Import
from them.
The Europeans are preparing to retaliate In
kind, perhaps by slapping additional tarlfTs on
our electronic goods. Should they do this, we may
step up our restraints on their pasta. And so It
goes.
Each side seems determined to come out on top
in the war to Inflict punishment on Its own
consumers.
I have often wondered who carries on these
little exercises In spiteful tlt-for-tattlng and have
finally found the answer. Trade talks are carried
on by two six-year-old boys, one representing
Europe and one representing the U.S.
The U.S. representative la trained at a posh
private school In Beverly Hills. Miss Peabody's
School for Gifted Brats. I had a chance last week
to visit the school and to see a training session for
the U.S. representative as he prepares for another
round of talks In Geneva.
I first asked Miss Peabody about her school.
"W elt, our philosophy Is that there's a real need
In the world for really bratty kids. Especially If
they're rich. Our graduates go on to become
lawyers. Investment bankers, bill collectors —
you name it. The wonderful thing about these
trade negotiations, though. Is that they give our
little brats a chance to get Into a career track right
away.
“ As we see It, these negotiations are a perfect
opportunity for our brats. They call for pointless
exchanges of threats, each of which can only hurt
the aide making the threat. It's a wonderful
exercise in purely bratty, self-destructive
behavior."
The U.S. representative, a young man with a
permanent sneer, came In the room, put his feet
on the table, and started blowing a large bubble.
Then another young man. with an even surlier
sneer, came In. The two glared at each other
fiercely.
"That second boy Is one of ours, too." Miss
Peabody whispered. "H e's pretending to repre­
sent Europe. Just to get our main boy primed.
Both boys' parents have asked us not to release
their names, so we’ll Just call them 'U.S.' and'
'Europe.' Let’s watch."
Europe ptuck his tongue out at U.S.

IJ S ^ U fk his tpttgue 9ut$tyhac|K

Artificial Heart Implants Increased Fivefold In '86
B y A1 R o s s lte r Jr.
U PI Science Editor
W ASHINGTON (UPI) - T h ere
were five times more artificial heart
implants around the world last year
than in 1985. all intended for the
first time to keep people alive until
they could receive natural heart
transplants.
The marketing director for the
company that made most of the
mechanical hearts calls the boom
"Incredible” and says his company
is now focusing on temporary im­
plantation Instead of the permanent
hear t r e p l a c e m e n t o r i g i n a l l y
envisioned.
There is now little enthusiasm for
use of the current machines as the
final heart. Critics of permanent use
cite the threat of strokes from blood
clots and restrictions on patient
mobility because of exterior tubes
and support equipment.
However, a medical ethlcist says
he is "v e ry worried about this
proliferation" of artificial hearts as
stopgap "bridges" to subsequent
transplants.
"There Is a limited number of
hearts to transplant and the device is
so dangerous Ifor long-term use) that
it tends to hijack human hearts to
those who get the artificial heart as a
b r id g e ." said A r t hu r Ca p l a n.
associate director of the Hastings
Institute, a medical ethics research

Tariff Restrictions
Punish Consumers

outlook tend to get better
sooner.
"T h e more I look, the
more I'm convinced that
emotions are running the
show," NIH neuroscientist
Candace Pert said.
A sep a rate siu d y at
George Washington Uni­
v e r s i t y fo u n d t hat
thymosins. hormones that
stren g th e n the b o d y 's
immune system, also ap­
pear to cause agression.
GW researcher Allan
Goldstein, who conducted
thymosin experiments on
mice, said his findings
support observations that
more aggressive Individu­
als cope better with dis­
ease.

of producing blood clots that could
lodge in a blood vessel in the brain
and cause a stroke.
One of the 1986 implants was the
Penn State Heart and the other five
artificial hearts were developed In
Europe. One, the "Berlin Heart."
was designed by Dr. Emil Buecherl
in West Berlin and used once last
March in a patient who died of
kidney failure after receiving a
transplant.
The other four hearts were devel­
oped by Austrian heart surgeon
Felix Unger and were implanted in
patients in Vienna and Salzburg. All
four died, three after receiving
transplants, but In all four cases
doctors said the "U nger Heart"
worked as planned.
"I am not disappointed by the
results," Unger told UPI In Vienna.
"W e ’ve learned so much from these
experiences, Including that the heart
itself is a very good short-term
strategy."
The Jarvlk-7s arc manufactured
by Symblon Inc., of Salt Lake City,
and were initially designed as per­
manent heart replacements. Barney
Clark received the first Jarvlk-7 Dec.
2. 1982 and lived 112 days before
suffering multiple organ failure.
See H E AR T, Page 4D

Y o u tc ugly and your mother dresses yflu
funny." hooted Europe.

"Oh yeah asteroid lips? Your mother is so ugly
she'd have to Me a steak around her neck to get n
dog to look at her." U.S. shot back.
"W ell, your mother wears combat boots."
countered Europe.
"Your mother shines combat boots."
Miss Peabody patted U.S. on the back.
"That's our warmup phase." she explained. "It
sets the tone for the rest of the talks."
U.S.opened.
"Speaking o f combat boots, we’re going to start
keeping your shoes out of the U.S. That'll make
our shoes really expensive."
"O h yeah? Well, we can hurt our consumers
Just as bad as you can hurt yours any day. W e’ re
going to keep your grain out of Europe."
U.S. was livid.
"Oh yeah? Well, we can make our consumers
way worse off than that. Just for that, we're
gonna keep out your canned ham. And your
carrots. And your endives. And a whole lot of
other yucky stuff that a lot of our consumers
like."
Europe gulped.
"Oh yeah? Well, we're.gonna keep out your;
electronic goods — whaddya think TH AT will do
to our consumers? And that's not all! W e’re not
gonna let our tourists go to your country. Top
that!"
U.S. swallowed hard.
"You know that pasta we’ve been keeping out?
W e’re going to keep out more. THINK how that's
going to make our consumers suffer."
"You'd keep your people from buying our
pasta?" Europe asked. He looked defeated.
"W e're talking way of life here." crowed U.S.
’ ’ We'll Impose all the harm It takes to show you
wimps who's tough around here," U.S. said
triumphantly.

by Berke Breathed
ovr r
STZPOVT'f
w m rs-m i
s fz ro v r'T

sup

m ock- o m m

StVCX.. LAST
TRANSMISSION

APPARSNTLY
•** G M O U P .

�*++"*9 '~**S i£V^N»“
'" 'T V

Sanford Herald
(UIFS 491-2M)
300 N. FRENCH AVE.. SANFORD. FLA. 32771
Area Code 305-322-2611 or 831-9993

Sunday, Fab. 1,19*7 — 20
Wayne D. Dryla, PvMltlwr
Tbanw Iw dana, M a w lm idHar

JdLftlwIin
AdM
A ^M
iv tv iv m M
Hbrlafea
in ii m
v vai M
i iaw n f u ii i i w

Home Delivery: Month. *4.75; 3 Months. *14.25:6 Month*.
•27.00; Year. *51.00. By Mall: Month. *6.75: 3 Months.
•20.25: 6 Months. *37.00; Year. *69.00.

Drug Testing Step
To Transport Safety
Nothing makes a better case Tor random
drug testing of transportation operators than
the recent disclosure that marijuana was
found in the bloodstreams of the Conrall
crewmen Involved In last month's fatal
Baltimore train wreck. Unfortunately, an
order for such testing Issued by Department
of Transportation Secretary Elizabeth Dole is
being resisted by airline pilots.
Her edict comes not a moment too soon.
Inasmuch as air, train and highway transpor­
tation directly and indirectly affects the daily
lives on millions of Americans. The Federal
Aviation Administration, for example, re­
quires that pilots and crew members should
not report for work if they have consumed
alcohol during the eight hours prior to a flight
or if they are under the influence of drugs that
inhibit Job performance. These are com*
mon-senslcal rules. But they are not a total
deterrent: It appears the Conrail crew
brazenly violated similar substance-use rules
before the tragic crash.
Secretary Dole's order lends much-needed
enforcement to these regulations.. Under her
plan, air and rail crewmen would be subject
to random drug testing along with approxi­
mately 26,500 DOT employees — ranging
from highway inspectors to firefighters —
involved with transportation safety.
T h e railroad un ions are opposed to random
testing, e v e n though d rin k in g or drug abuse
has b een a factor in m ore than 9 percent o f all
serious railroad acciden ts du rin g the last
decade. In addition, the airline pilots’ union
reports than less than 4 0 m em bers w ere
treated fo r d ru g use ou t o f nearly 39.000
pilots, an d asserts there is no d ru g problem in
the air-carrier Industry.
But it takes o n ly one pilot o r train engineer
to e n d a n ger the lives o f hundreds o f passen­
gers. In fact, b y refusing to take drug test,
transportation operators erode public con­
fiden ce in a ir travel.
S ig n ific a n tly, S ecretary D ole's efforts are
bein g d u p licated In both houses o f Congress.
Sen. J o h n D anforth. R-Mo., and Rep. C lay
Shaw , R .-Fla.. are plann ing to Introduce
d ru g-testin g legislation for airline and rail
em p loyees. A llu d in g to the C onrall disaster,
Rep. S h a w asserts. "U n fortu n a tely, w h en a
traged y occurs, people ask. ‘W h at are w e
g o in g to d o to keep this from happening
a g a in ? ’ W e ll, this (random d ru g testing) is
som eth in g w e can d o ."
P re c is e ly so. T ra n s p o rta tio n em p lo yees
should w e lc o m e the op p ortu n ity to assure
travelers th at their lives are not endangered
by dru g-im paired operators.

Wage Boost's Harm
O rgan ized labor believes the tim e Is ripe to
raise th e federal m in im u m w age law. T h e
m in im u m w a g e has been frozen at $3.35 an
hour for s ix years, and w ith the Dem ocrats in
control on the Sen ate and House, labor union
o ffic ia ls a re h o p efu l th ey can Jack the
m in im u m w a g e up to a w h op p in g $4.85.
C ertain ly a $1.50 an hour Increase would
benefit certa in m em b ers o f the labor force.
But it w o u ld carry a hefty price on tw o
counts; It w ou ld force m any em ployers to
sim p ly d o w ith ou t you n g. Inexperienced, or
m argin al e m p lo yees w hose output now has a
m arket v a lu e o f at least $3.35 an hour: and It
w ou ld raise the threat o f ren ew ed high
inflation.
B ig lab or ap p aren tly feels the increased pay
for som e w ork ers offsets sacrificin g Jobs for
others. But one w onders how the latter feel
about that. B oostin g m in im u m w age would
hit hardest on teenagers, especially blacks.
T h e o v e ra ll u n em p loym en t rate currently Is
6.7 p ercen t, but the Jobless ratp am on g
teenagers Is 18 percent, and a m on g teenage
blacks ft is nearly 40 percent.
Sen. E d w ard K en n ed y, D-Mass., the new
chairm an o f the Sen ate Lab or C om m ittee,
and o th e r k ey con gressional leaders m igh t
a s k t h e m s e lv e s w h e t h e r a n In c r e a s e d
m in im u m w a ge Is w orth the price o f putting
addition al restless, footloose teenagers on the
streets; not to m ention the increased Jobless
b en efits ta x p a ye rs w ou ld be required to
provide.
C on gress also should consider the risk o f
re-ign itin g high in flation through the ripple
elfcct caused by an artificially high m inim um
w age. W o rk e r w h o are paid m ore than the
m in im u m w a g e could be exp ected to point to
an increase in the floor w age and say " m e
too.”

BERRY'S WORLD

PROFOUND QUESTION

"What's the difference between the Saturday
morning cartoons and the advertisements? "

kX&lt;C ^ # f iw

george

s j^

C jC /*r*1

M cG o v e r n

'Bankrupt The Russians' An Absurd Idea
George Wilson, the highly regarded militaryaffairs expert o f The Washington Poet, reports
that the Defense Department Is now pursuing a
strategy "to force the Soviets to spend billions
on new defense efforts."
The strategy is outlined by Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger In his recently released
annual military report.
The plan calls for a costly new high-tech effort
conducted behind a curtain of secrecy that
would develop American bombers, fighters and
cruise missiles with a "Stealth" capability to
confound existing Soviet air defenses.
The assumption driving the new weapons
strategy Is that we can force the Russians into
an even more costly arms race that will place
additional burdens on their economy and their
defense budget.
I do not know o f a more accurate word to
describe this strategy than "stupidity."
Why would any person of common sense
assum e the R ussians w ill beh ave m ore
agreeably or safely after we tighten economic
pressures on their country? I think Just the
reverse Is true: Accelerating the cost o f the arms

race can only add to the tensions, suspicions
and paranoia that already complicate SovietAmerican relations.
There are many signs that the Soviet economy
Is already under pressure, aggravated by the
cost of the country's defense outlays. This is
believed to be a major reason for Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev’s eagerness for an armscontrol agreement.
Why Is It not also In our interest to seek such
an agreement rather than challenging the
Soviets to engage us In an expanded arms race?
Granted the United States la more prosperous
than the Soviet Union and better able to finance
an arms race than the Soviets. W e are
nonetheless under some economic pressures
ourselves.
The huge *300 billion annual military budget
has been responsible for a sizable portion of the
deficits In the federal budget In recent years.
Our concentration on developing more new
weapons has diverted scientific, technical and
financial resources to military purposes . The '
Reagan adm inistration has acted on the
assumption that It was In our national Interest

to engage‘ In harsh and confrontational tactics
toward the Russians. Part of this strategy has
Included trying to make life more difficult
economically for the Russian people. It Is a bad
strategy politically, economically and morally. It
Is not worthy of a great nation such as the
United States.
Lest I appear overly partisan, let me suggest
that a far better strategy toward the Russians Is
the policy o f "peaceful coexistence" pursued by
Republican President Dwight Elsenhower or the
policy o f "detente" followed by Republican
President Richard Nixon.
Neither o f these Republican presidents loved
the Russians, but they were realistic enough to
understand that both Russians and Americans
are better o ff searching out areas of mutual
Interest In arms control and economic matters
rather than trying to cause each other max­
imum trouble.
Secretary Weinberger Is said to have labeled
the arms-to-Iran deal "absurd." For that he Is to
be congratulated. Alas, he does not seem to
realize that his "bankrupt the Russians"
defense strategy Is equally absurd.

DON GRAFF

SCIENCE WORLD

Allies
Against
AIDS

Sizing Up
Care Of
Babies

SAN AN TO N IO (N E A ) Dr.
Gordon Dreesman spends a lot of
his time in the company o f chim­
panzees.
Dreesman is chairman of virology
and immunology at the Southwest
Foundation for B iom edical R e­
search. one of the institutions con­
tributing to this city's growing
stature as a center for medical and
scientific research.
The focus of his research Is
acquired immune d ef ic ie nc y
syndrome — AIDS. He Is seeking a
vaccine, in that cause, man's closest
primate relative has been enlisted
as an ally.
The alliance goes back to 1983
when, even before the AIDS virus
had been Identified for certain, a
test animal was successfully In­
fected at Southwest, establishing
the chimpanzee as an acceptable
stand-in for hum ans In AID S
experimentation.
That first patient, as It happens,
recovered after 60-some days and Is
now In good health. Why, Dreesman
and his colleagues cannot say for
sure. But meanwhile, other chimps
have been similarly Infected, and
the search for an effective. safe
procedure to produce AIDS an­
tibodies progresses.
This Involves a computerdesigned synthetic protein that
mimics a portion of the surface of
the AIDS virus. The idea Is to trigger
enough antibody production to
prevent subsequent Infection.
But the testing can't be rushed.
An experiment runs a minimum or
12 to 15 months, and the supply of
c h i mp a n z e e s , an e n d a n g e r e d
species, Is limited. Only 25 of
Southwest's colony of 160 huve
been drafted for the AIDS campaign.
Once infected, an animal can’ t be
used for other experiments.
Southwest is one of several facili­
ties utilizing chimps in the AIDS
quest.
Basic researchers, he notes, are
inclined to be competitive to the
point at times of behaving like
prlma donnas. But he personally
believes that, faced with the AIDS
challenge, the research community
feels a tremendous urgency and so
is exchanging information more
freely than at any time he can
recall.
The urgency, he stresses, is all too
well-founded. There is no indication
that the number of AIDS cases Is
going to do anything but increase in
the foreseeable future.
"W e have to get rid of the idea
that this is a gay disease." he says.
"It’s a venereal disease — a fatal one
— that threatens everyone. But
right now public education is not
getting that across."

By Rob Stela

U P ] Science W riter

RUSTY BROWN

Don't Stop Learning
A c o lle g e s tu d e n t,, reb ellin g
against a poetry-writing assign­
ment, complained to his professor,
"I'm no poet." But the professor
shot back: "Young man. I want you
to understand you're not finished
yet. You're still In the process of
being created."
I think of that Incident as a
reminder that we all should recast
ourselves from time to time and not
consider ourselves "finished." For
our own Inner growth. It’s good to
Jump-start our minds Into new
directions and different goals. A
career counselor once said. " I f you
want to be alive as long as you live,
you’ve got to Invest In yourself. You
have to be Involved in the task of
self remaking and re-creation."
One of the best ways to do this, of
course. Is through continuing educ a t i o n . T e c h n i q u e s and
te c h n o lo g ie s are c hang i ng so
quickly these days, few of us can
afford not to re-school and re-tool to
upgrade our marketable skills. It Is
reported that more than 20 million
adult Americans — or one of every
eight — is taking courses part time.
And women make up the highest
percentage of those on campus.
That's because women are more apt
to forsake education for marriage or
move in and out of the work force
with the ebb and flow of family
re s p o n s ib ilitie s . What e v e r the
reason, women, at some point, often
realize that their lives are changing
and more schooling Is necessary for
the transition.
When I returned to campus to
prepare for a new career some years
ago. I found it exhilarating but not
easy. For one thing, while l was
fascinated with the rhetoric of
Quintilian, my huafmnd was less
than charmed when I wanted to
leave Friday-night parties at 9
b eca u se o f Sa t ur da y - mo r ni n g

classes.
Pam Mendelsohn o f Areata. Calif.,
returned to college In the '70s for a
master's in psychology. Out of her
own needs, she was inspired to
write "Happier by Degrees" (Ten
Speed Press) — a com bination
guidebook and pep talk for col­
lege-bound women. She writes
about the hurdles of re-entry (ad­
mission's tests and registration
run-arounds) and offers advice on
how to cope with fear o f failure, how
to study for exams and what adult
students may have to give up:
friends, leisure, being a perfect
homemaker.
She also discusses how a mother's
return to school affects the family.
C hildren m ay com p la in about
thrown-together meals ( “ You call
this dinner?"), and husbands get
irked when student-wives spend all
weekend writing papers.
But the women Mendelsohn In­
terviewed also articulated upbeat
advantages; " I feel that I'm a really
good role model for m y children":
"M y entire life changed — 1 re­
gained self-confidence” ; "1 didn't
expect to meet peers, make friends
and to be in an e x c i t i n g a t ­
mosphere": "I'm proud of going
back and undertaking something
very difficult and very remote from
what I ever had before."
Returning to school sharpens our
skills or teaches us new ones; it can
get us a promotion and higher pay;
it can ready us for new careers.
Beyond all that, delving Into new
areas of knowledge makes us feel
better about ourselves.
I knew a 48-year-old freshman
w h o w a s so e x c i t e d a b o u t
a p p r o a c h i n g her i n t e l l e c t u a l
expansion that she said, " I feel like
a child who's been locked in the
attic and suddenly let out into the
sunshine."

BOSTON (UPI) - In 1983. a nurse
was charged with fatally injecting a
15-month-old girl at a clinic where
she worked in Kerrville, Texas.
Prosecutors also alleged that
many Infants were Injured while
being cared for by the nurse.
Genene Jones, while she worked at
the clinic and at a San Antonio
hospital's pediatric intensive care
unit between 1978 and 1982.
The case, according to Dr. Murray
M. Pollack of the Children's Hospital
N a t i o n a l M e d i c a l C e n t e r in
Washington, illustrates the need for
a better system for monitoring and
evaluating care in pediatric in­
tensive care units.
"T h e routine way to evaluate
quality of care is to do a subjective
case review," said Pollack In a
telephone interview. "That kind of
analysis can miss systematic pro­
blems that are present In an ICU."
Pollack has developed a new —
and what he considers to be a more
effective — way of gauging the care
administered In wards for critically
ill babies.
‘.'It w ould have alerted them (San

Antonio hospital officials) that the
(cases) were suspicious and that
they needed to be more critical of
their own care practices." Pollack
said.
Currently, hospitals evaluate the
care given in pediatric intensive
care units by taking a sampling of
cases and evaluating them individ­
ually.
In the San Antonio case, ad­
ministrators initially dismissed the
cases after developing possible ex­
planations for the individual deaths.
But under Pollack's system, the
entire unit Is evaluated by assigning
numerical values to a variety of
variables to describe each Infant
and his or her condition. The
numbers are then used to project
expected death rates.
In San Antonio, the system
clearly would have revealed an
unusually high death rate, alerting
officials that something was wrong,
said Pollack.
"Using a system that we propose,
we would have picked up the fact
there were too many deaths In
patients in low-risk groups," said
Pollack, who published details of his
new system In a recent edition of
The New England Journal of Medi­
cine.
Jones was eventually sentenced
to 99 years In prison for the death of
the 15-month-old Infant girl, and
given another 60 years in prison for
Injuring a 4-week-old child with an
injection at the medical center.

JACK ANDERSON

The Bloodshed Goes On In Uganda
By Jack Anderson
And
Joseph S p ear
WASHINGTON - Idl Amin Dada
was run out of Uganda eight years
ugo. but his bloody legacy lives on.
What used to be a tourist haven
with modem skyscrapers and the
amenities of civilization virtually
returned to the Jungle under Amin's
bestial misrule.
On a visit a few years ago. the best
room In Kampala's least ramshackle
hotel boasted one wall made of
gunnysacks to keep out the fetid
night air. Uganda's infrastructure
was all but destroyed under Am in’s
dictatorship.
But the worst that Amin be­
queathed to his long-suffering peo­
ple was a ruined economy and
political instability marked by a
succession of wars, coups, re­
bellions and indiscriminate slaugh­
ter. Amin lives like a king In Saudi
Arabia, heedless of the horrors that
continue to beset his former sub­
jects.

I n c r e d i b l y , the Re a g a n a d ­
ministration's largess to various
groups of "freedom fighters" Is seen
as an opportunity by some of the
losers in Uganda's ceaseless power
struggles. These would-be dictators
— no better than Amin — have
memorized the proper buzzwords,
like "dem ocracy" and "freedom ."
In hopes of clambering aboard the
CIA's gravy train.
The principal target of these
mendicant military men is the
American Embassy in Khartoum,
the sand-blown capital of neighbor­
ing Sudan. "T h ey come here seek­
ing money for guns." u diplomat
said. "T h ey keep telling us. 'If only
the Ugandan people knew of us and
what we stand for."*
Fortunately, the Americans know
exactly what these desperadoes
stand for — themselves — and the
pleas for money have fallen on deaf
ears. "W e wouldn’t even consider
it," the embassy man said.
Reporters Scott and Jon Lee

Anderson were In Khartoum re­
cently and paid a visit to one of the
exiled Ugandans. Gen. Basillo Olara
Okello, strong man of the short-lived
military Junta that was overthrown
just a year ago.
The meeting began on a sur­
realistic note. "Thank you so much
for co m in g ." said the general,
beaming. "You are from the em­
bassy?” It took several minutes to
convince Okello that his visitors
weren't dropping by with a bag of
CIA greenbacks. Despite his obvious
disappointment, the general agreed
to an interview anyway.
Okello is a friendly, bearlike man
whose disarming demeanor belles
his reputation as one of the most
brutal leaders in recent Ugandan
history. He was responsible for the
massacre of uncounted thousands,
both as the strong man of the
six-month Junta rule and before that
as an officer under President Milton
Obote. who had the distinction of
being both predecessor and suc­

cessor to Amin.
Okello and Obote are rumored to
have Joined forces for the bloody
civil war now raging In northern
Uganda against the leftist regime of
Yoweri Museveni's National Re­
sistance Army. Okello did not reply
when asked point-blank if he was
leading the Ugandan rebels from his
exile In Sudan; he merely smiled In
tacit admission.
Surprisingly, he acknowledged
the massacre of civilians by his
men. In fact he defended it, saying:
"Museveni put children in his army,
mothers, young girls. These people.
If you met them In a troubled area,
what would you do with them? How
are you going to go into a guerrilla
area and say. 'This is a guerrilla’
and 'This is not a guerrilla.'?"
Okello confirmed his hopes for
American or other Western support,
explaining with a straight face that
Uganda "needs a democracy." He
said In the long run "It depends on
the people o f Uganda.”

�f ^ &gt;"V

»

^

r s 'c r r '

/v v

t ' t r t

O P T IO N
Santari NaraM, Sanfartf, FI,

r j i

The most Important question
raltod by tho Mozcrt cos*
It thl»: Should parents bo
oxpoctod to Ignoro whet
thotr chtldron aro botng
taught? And tho Irrefutable
am war It no.
the same — like different brands of ice
cream or aspirin. That view involves
more than toleration, and Indeed pre­
cludes the possibility o f toleration.
Christians. Moslems, Jews, and those
o f other religious groups are not so
casual about theotoglcal matters. Their
teachings, values, and beliefs differ
from one another In Important re­
spects. It Is not difficult to understand
why parents would be unhappy when
public schools act to distort that fact, or
misrepresent the true meaning of
toleration.
Other critics alleged the fundamen­
talist parents did not want their
children reading textbooks that con­
tained material about equal rights for
women. This allegation Is Incorrect.
The parents object to the inadequate
—. and In their view disparaging —
treatment given to traditional women's
roles such as maintaining a home and
raising children.
Some women may condemn the
service of housewives, but many do
not. A new poll of women conducted by
Glamour magazine disclosed that 90
percent of the working females ques­
tioned Indicated they would prefer to

/ ;W''^jfc‘ -V-:

»■

1
i

*

y, Fafe. 1* 1M7-SD

Striking A Blow For American Parents
Last October, the landmark ruling of
a federal Judge In Tennessee prohibited
public schools from forcing students to
attend Classes that violate their re­
ligious beliefs.
T h e lawsuit at Issue. Mozcrt v.
Hawkins County Public Schools, was
filed by a group of Christian fun­
damentalist parents who objected to
textbooks their children were required
to use.
Although these parents have been
accused of attempting to impose their
religious tenets on local schools. In
truth, their protest resulted when the
religious (or Irreligious) views of others
were Imposed on their children.
In his opinion. U.S. District Judge
Thomas Hull stated: "...while the State
of Tennessee has a compelling and
overriding Interest In the education of
Its children and the literacy o f its
citizens, this Interest can be ac­
complished by less restrictive means.
The uniform, compulsory use of (the
disputed textbooks) Is by no means
essential to furthering the state's
goals."
Critics o f the verdict were quick to
attack the Judge's decision. In the
process, they have produced some very
unfair distortions of concerns
expressed by the parents.
One commentator declared. "T h ey
didn't want their youngsters reading
The Diary o f Anne Frank because It
talks about tolerating all religions."
This assertion is untrue.
What aroused the parent’s Ire was
the notion that all relfglons are about

fi

*' |f&gt;*■y,♦If

. - V ' - *'

stay home with their children If they
could afford it. As Glamour does not
seem to be a religious publication,
these poll results raise the question of
what elite group Is In fact Imposing Its
views on the majority in our public
schools.
The most Important question raised
by the Mozcrt case Is this: should
parents be expected to Ignore what
their children arc being taught? And
the Irrefutable answer Is no. In fact,
school reform advocates, across the
board, Insist that parental Involvement
is a crucial Ingredient In the education
o f children.
Asking parents to accept apathet­
ically whatever the centralized educa­
tional bureaucracy dished out — even
when they find the material Inaccurate,
unfair, or offensive — Is an astonishing
request. The Tennessee court decision
merely confirmed that when parents
face such a circumstance, they are not
without recourse In our democracy.
Ironically, it was a Tennessee gover­
nor who recently said. "O nly land
condemnation proceedings and the
military draft are more coercive than
the present system that dictates what
public school a child must attend and
gives him an assigned scat."
The legal dispute In Hawkins County.
Tennessee resulted from the monopoly
and centralized adm inistration of
public education In America today. If
parents there and elsewhere could have
a real choice about where to spend their
children, and could deliberate upon
and oversee administration of public
schools on a local level, legal conflicts

like this would be avoided.
This case Is Just one of several
controversies generated by our present
government-controlled school system.
And that should surprise no one: such a
bureaucratized institution can neither
respect, nor govern within, a pluralistic
democracy anymore than It can ade­
quately address the needs of individual
students.
We have not really begun to grapple
with this problem. But the necessary
solution Is already evident: we must
make steps to give all parents, not Just
a fortunate few. a real Influence over
the education o f their children. We
must de-monopollze public education
by making tax credits or vouchers
available so that all families have the
choice between public and private
schools; and simultaneously, we must
d ecen tra lize public education by
allowing local P.T.A.s. within very
general limitations, to administer their
own schools.
President Reagan, Secretary of Edu­
cation Bennett, the National Governor's
Association, and a growing number of
state legislators and educators all have
called for Increased parental choice and
authority in schooling.
Until that happens, we will not
control the conflict which increasingly
embroils our schools or focus those
Institutions on producing quality edu­
cation. The decision In Tennessee Is a
small step In the right direction.

Taking
Cara

Learning To
Breathe Easier

Chronic lung disease Is the fifth
leading cause of death and the sixth
major cause of disability In the United
States.
Respiratory diseases, such as em ­
p h ysem a, chronic b ronchitis and
asthma, permanently damage the lung
tissue and Impair lung function. The
result Is shortness of breath, coughing
and p rogressive d isa b ility for Its
victims.
"People have no idea how debilitating
It can b e." said one respiratory thera­
pist. "W hereas It takes you and me
maybe 20 minutes to get showered and
do our hair, these people have to spend
the better part of the morning getting
dressed to go out. Lifting their arms to
shave Is a major project and they're
pooped. It really does something to
their selfesteem ."
Yet people with chronic lung disease
are learning to care for themselves
better, avoid hospitalization and regain
their confidence.
In groups known as Better Breathing
or Easy Breather clubs, they learn
Roger Magyar is Director o f education
about exercise and respiratory muscle
studies for the Sequoia Institute, a
training and also receive the support o f
Sacramento-based public policy re­ others with similar conditions.
search organization.
I saw the change these programs
brought about In a neighbor and was
very Impressed. He had been shuffling
around, using a cane to walk and
looking pretty frail. A few months later
he was walking without a cane and
looking much stronger.
" I was In the hospital so many times I
Way presented the Freedom to Learn
board. The low point of that campaign
lost all my muscle tone and now It's
award to a parents' group In Hillsboro.
was a poster printed and distributed by
coming back as much as It can," he
a local representative of Pat Rob­
Missouri — Patrons Against Censor
said. "M y legs and arms, being as
Tactics. The group gained national
ertson's Freedom Council that said:
skinny as they arc, have tightened up. I
prominence
for
Its
battle
against
a
"Wanted — Qualified Christian Can­
can stand and talk to people now and
group of censors seeking to ban mock
didates for West Palm Beach School
elections, state-mandated sex educa­ don't get nervous, and I've stopped
Board." Citizens for Quality Education
walking the halls like a mummy. It's
tion classes, personal Journals, and the
rose to the challenge. Interviewing
even put a stronger tone to my voice."
films Romeo and Juliet and Walt
candidates, educating the public, print­
Exercise reconditioning gives people
Disney's Never Cry Wolf, on the
ing candidate guides. The takeover
with chronic lung disease the con­
grounds that they promoted "secular
attempt was beaten back.
fidence to do more. Because they
h u m an ism ." T h e previous y e a r's
“ Citizens for Quality Education is u
become short of breath after only
winner was a parents' group active in
prime example of the Importance of
defense of the Hawkins County. Ten­ minimal exertion, they stop trying.
community Involvement to the schools.
When they see they can do more
nessee public schools, now under
Their efforts to protect the schools from
through exercise, they feel a little more
attack in the Tennessee Textbook Case.
intolerance has been a public service to
...
People For The American Way Is a confident.
the entire community.'' said Buchanan.
Respiratory m uscle training and
250.000-member nonpartisan con ­
The group has pledged to continue to
breathing techniques, such as pursed
fight cfTorts to gut public education in
stitutional liberties organization. The
lip breathing, help people breathe more
group has been active In protecting the
West Palm Beach.
efficiently and control the panic that
freedom to learn around the country.
Last year, People For The American
can set In when they get short of
breath.
"W hen a person comes to a support
group or goes through a pulmonary
rehabilitation program and learns...
how to control that panic and not get
into the cycle of *1 can’t get my breath
and I'm going to die,' they will gain
Once again Longwood's "Petty Poli­
more confidence,'.' said Dec Kohl,
tics" are accented.
director of lung health programs for the
This time Police Chief Greg Mann­
American Lung Association of Con­
ing seems to be under fire with an
necticut.
investigation of his so-called un­
professional behavior.
People come to the sessions, she
It also seems to have occurred
says, to ask questions and for practical
during a break In a city commission
advice. For example, they learn how to
work session. If It were a break and
conserve energy, which movements
not a regular session I see nothing
take up the most oxygen and how to
wrong with anyone expressing their
organize their day.
* feelings and with all the garbage that
But the support they get from their
has gone on before perhaps it would
peers is very important. Kohl said, as is
do some good to clear the air. put it
the encouragement they get from
behind and go on from there.
"encountering people who arc where
they are: encountering people who
What we see in others is usually a
have been where they are and have
reflection of ourselves.
Improved, and then encountering peo­
To the commissioners, arc you not
ple
who are not quite where they arc
all working towards the same goal — a
yet."
better community?
My neighbor said. "I'd like to get on
Please work together in love and
the roof tops and tell people with
light and harmony. It will make your
emphysema and any breathing dif­
Job so much easier.
ficulty about these programs. 1 swear,
Greg has done a fine job. Know this.
this is one of the greatest things that's
Meta Burgess
happened to m e."
Longwood
To locate pulmonary rehabilitation
programs and Better Breathing pro­
grams In your area, contact your local
office of the American Lung Associa­
tion; or your area hospital.
The Purple Martins return to San­ midges a day.
Robert E. Daehn
ford Friday. February 13. It is time to
And don't let anyone tell you nothing
Blind Mosquito Task Force
clean out their houses.
can be done. These programs can help
Sanford
you manage your disease and feel
Remember, each bird eats 150
better about yourself.

Group Stands Up For Public Education
By Matthew Freeman
People For The America W ay
Citizens for Quality Education of
West Palm Beach has received People
F or T h e A m e r i c a n W a y 's 1986
Freedom to Learn Award. The third
annual award was presented at the
organization's board meeting In Los
Angeles on last week, said John
Buchanan, chairman.
Buchanan praised the group for its
efforts to protect public education.
"Citizens for Quality Education has
repeatedly stood up to attacks on public
education In West Palm Beach. Their
story is a case study In the danger
WftidWHfp' groups pose for public
education — and a testament to the
responsibility we all have to stand up
for our schools."
Citizens for Quality Education was

‘Tholr offort%to protoct
tho Bchoola from Intoloraneo
havo boon a public service
to tho onttro community
founded in 1984 in the face of an effort
to censor a health textbook used in the
public schools. Led by Rev. Pam
Cahoon. director of the Cross Urban
Ministries, Rev. Allen Hollis of the
Union Congregational Church of West
Palm Beach, and Rabbi Alan Sherman,
director of the Jewish Federation of
Palm Beach County, CQE was suc­
cessful tn Its defense-of the text. Let's
Talk About Health. But the pressure
tactics continued.
Subsequently the censors launched
an attempt to take over the local school

OUR READERS WRITE
Magnolia Mall: Parking Was Better Use
The conflict between common sense
and stupidity is an unending one.
Frequently stupidity seems to win
out. However, the victory is usually
shortlived, and common sense ul­
timately proves Itself right.
In 1980 the Downtown Develop­
ment of Sanford called for the deliber­
ate elim ination o f many, muchneeded parking spaces on First Street
and on Magnolia Avenue. Until my
health forced my withdrawal, I was
party to the effort to stop this kind of
"progress."
On one Friday morning, in less than
one hour's time. I counted nearly one
hundred m otor vehicles passing
through the Intersection of First Street
on Magnolia Avenue. That testimony
is in the court file. There arc also

photos showing, as I recall, lliut at
that time every parking space on each
side of Magnolia was occupied. This
area is now a mall!
Your page 3A article of January 14
cited a study that "Sanford presently
experiences ‘minor* parking and traf­
fic flow problems" on First Street. The
same type of thinking — or lack of It
— which spent over $150,000 of
ta x p a yers' m oney to con vert a
workable street into a problem area
now proposes to construct a four-story
parking deck to relieve the situation.
While I am no longer burdened by
taxes to finance such nonsense. 1 do
find It Interesting to watch as the dog
runs In circles chasing Its tall.
A. Edwin Shlnholser
Seven Springs. Fla.

Protesters Deserved Harsher Punishment
Open letter to Governor Martinez:
This past Saturday I met with a
group of people who demonstrated,
within the framework of the law. in
support of the Trident missile. I
watched Dr. Spock and other follow­
ers defy the law. climb the fence, and
trespass on government property.
The pacifists that marched captured
the press, received millions of dollars
o f free publicity and cost the taxpay­

ers approximately a quarter ol a
million dollars to keep law and order
and they received for this disobedi­
ence a $100 fine! What the State of
Florida has done Is telegraph to every
crook, terrorist, and revolutionary
that it is not a very high price that one
has to pay for taking the law into their
own hands.
John B. Book
Maitland

Strive For Harmony

Time To Clean Purple Martin Houses

What Newspapers Across The Nation A re Saying

'Supply Side' Hostage Policy Invites More Kidnappings
By U n ited Press International
le N ew Y o rk Tim es
U n derstandably, Am erican responses to
tstage-taking in Lebanon are hardening. Civil
ithority in that shattered country has long since
nished. Every Westerner still in Beirut surely
tows the risks. The Stale Department keeps
glng Americans to clear out ... By staying on.
ey and others put themselves and their country
hazard.
... President Reagan ... can make plain
ashlngton's concern for the safety of any
nerican seized as hostage in a foreign conflict,
it what needs to be equally clear is that there
111 be no secret missions, no oilers of ransom, no
eas for release of terrorists Jailed in Kuwait ...
id please, above all. no more ... weapons lor
an.
The White House ... seems finally to grasp the
fects of its diplomatic blunders. ... The first need
to restore consistency and credibility to

something that had become a supply-side hostage
policy, all but Inviting fresh kidnappings. ...
A tla n ta C onstitution
Poor Ed Meese. For 20 years, it seems, he has
been in a swivel over the Supreme Court's
Miranda decision, which Insists that police Inform
suspects of their constitutional rights ... In 1985.
the attorney general put It this way: "T h e
Miranda decision Is wrong. W e managed very
well In this country for 175 years without i t ..."
A recent Justice Department report on the
subject calls Miranda "a derelict on the waters of
law." And it notes. "Overturning Miranda would
be ....among the most important achievements of
this administration...”
First, the nation did not manage well before
Miranda. Police squads often made cases the lazy
way, extracting “ confessions" with rubber hoses
and fists. One study found that before the
decision, authorities obtained confessions from

90 percent of the persons they arrested: In the
months after the ruling, the figure plummeted to
49 per cent. If the old way was convenient for the
boys at the station house, it failed to deliver
Justice.
The E n terprise. Brockton, Mass.
William J. Casey, the beleaguered head of the
Central Intelligence Agency, must pine for those
halcyon pre-war days when secret services really
were secret.
Bill Casey, you see, is a protege of another
tough Irishman named William "W ild Bill"
Donovan, who. as head of the Office of Strategic
Services, was fighting in President Roosevelt's
clandestine war against the Nazis long before the
bombing of Pearl Harbor. ... The covert war
fought by the OSS in 1940 and 1941 makes the
latter-day exploits of the CIA look like pretty tame
stuff....
As for Bill Casey, he's gone from OSS "hero” to

CIA "villain ," even though he's done nothing
other than serve his commander in chief and his
country. Times have indeed changed.
Chicago Sun-Tim es
President Reagan Is absolutely right in telling
Americans still in Lebanon that there is a limit to
what the government can do for citizens who
persist in living amid the anarchic conditions that
characterize that country.
... Our compassion for any American taken
hostage cannot outweigh national policy consid­
erations. Terrorist kidnapping, whether of a
single hostage or dozens ol them, must not be
allowed to skew American foreign policy.
if it does, our government forever will be
subservient to international blackmailers. And
that would be tantamount to surrender to those
despicable farces that have declared war on
civilized peoples everywhere.

�4D—Stwlwi H w M , h M w i FI.

fcw«$r, Nfc. 1,H8I

What's N e w In Health

One Sick Child Had Too Many Chances
By B.D. C olts
NBA W rite r'
Meghann LaRocco was bom
with biliary atresia, a congenital,
progressive liver disease. A l­
though th ere is a su rgical
treatment for the condition,
most children bom with the
disease die In a few years —
unless they undergo a successful
liver transplant.
Were liver transplants always
successful (they aren't; at best
two-thirds of liver recipients live
at least five years), and were
there an endless supply of donor
organs (there aren’t). Meghann's
illness would be m erely an
expensive Inconvenience.
But Meghann was one of about
20.000 children born In 1986

...Heart
Continued From ID
William Schroeder was the last
survivor of the permanent recip­
ients. He died when his lungs
g a v e out A u g. 6. 1986 In
Louisville. Ky.. after living a
record 620 days with a plastic
heart In his chest.
Although Schroeder's surgeon.
Dr. William DeVries, said he Is
looking for another permanent
Implant candidate. Symbion no
longer expects its Jarvik-7s to be
used on a permanent basis,
more
"Our market assessment Is
that the Jarvlk-7 is strictly
limited to brldge-to-transplant."
said Symbion marketing director
Phillip Carter. "That's a clearly
defined group of patients who
are on transplant lists and im­
m ed iately risk death when
donors arc not available."
"O u r total focus with our
current device Is certainly on
brldge-to-transplant operations."
he said in a telephone interview.

suffering from biliary atresia,
and. theoretically, all 20,000 are
candidates for the fewer than
600 l i v e r s a v a i l a b l e for
transplantation.
On Nov. 29. Meghann received
a transplant. Joining the short
list o f liver-failure victims given
a second chance. R ejection
began that day.
On Dec. 18. from a com ­
puterized list of about 300 other
people urgently needing
transplants. Meghann was again
chosen to receive a liver.
On Dec. 20. she received a
third liv e r, and when that
transplant failed, she received a
fourth.
Now. before some of you take
out the stationery to write me

about how I'm a Nazi — which
you do each time I raise these
questions — consider, instead,
some questions of health-care
economics and simple equity.
F irst, th e m on ey. So far
Meghann LaRocco's hospitaliza­
tion has cost well over 8300.000
— by the time all the charges are
added for aspirins and little
bedside boxes of tissue, to say
nothing of physicians' bills, the
tab will be close to 8500.000.
The money spent to maintain
the life of this one child with
congenital liver disease could
provide corrective heart surgery
for between 30 and 50 other
children.
I know; We shouldn't have to

"W e are still working towards a that will depend on continuing
long-term goal of developing a Improvements In device design
permanent artificial heart, but and medical management."
that will depend on continuing . Carter said his company anti­
Improvements in device design cipates "m uch wider" use of the
mechanical heart as a temporary
and medical management."
Carter said his company anti­ llfesaver in coming months. He
cipates "much wider” use of the said Symbion could easily dou­
ble Its heart production this year
mechanical heart as a temporary
llfesaver in coming months. He if the demand is there.
That is what bothers Caplan.
said Symbion could easily dou­
who
monitors the trend from his
ble its heart production this year
office In Hastings-on-Hudson.
If the demand is there.
N.Y. •
That is what bothers Caplan,
He said he favors limited use of
who monitors the trend from his
artificial hearts on a temporary
office in Hastings-on-Hudson,
basis as a research step. "But I
N.Y.
"O u r market assessment Is wouldn't think that we're ready
that the Jarvlk-7 Is strictly yet. given what we know about
limited to bridge-to-transplant." the device, to sort of Install them
said Symbion marketing director in every emergency room."
He said he also is worried
Phillip Carter. "That's a clearly
defined group of patients who "that there arc enormous pre­
are on transplant lists and Im­ ssures" to expand the use of the
me di at e l y risk death when Jarvik-7 to many medical cen­
ters across the nation "and to
donors are not available.”
"O u r total focus with our pretend as If It Is therapeutic."
The Jarvlk 7 is still an exper­
current device Is certainly on
brtdgc-to-transplant operations." imental device, but the federal
he said In a telephone interview. Food and Drug Administration
"W e are still working towards a has given 15 American medical
long-term goal of developing a centers permission to use the
permanent artificial heart, but artificial heart on a temporary

make such choices. You will
argue that if we decided to trim a
few toilet seats from the Pen­
tagon budget, or not build a few
B-l bombers. We could care for
all these children. You are abso­
lutely right.
The problem is that unless you
are willing to pay higher federal
taxes or health-insurance costs,
or can convince your elected
representatives to trim the m ili­
tary budget and increase health
spending, we. will have approxi­
mately the amount of money
that we do now. Until we
reallocate resources, we must
continue to make choices within
categories of resources. Thus the
money used for Meghann’s care
cannot be used to care for

basis with support from Sym ­
bion.
.
It was used at nine hospitals In
1986 — five In the United States,
and at hospitals in London*
Paris. Ottawa and Stockholm.
The American centers to use the
Jarvlk-7, and the smaller Jarvlk
7 -7 0 , l ast y e a r w e r e Presbyterlan-Unlversity Hospital In
Pittsburgh. University of Arizona
Medical Center in Tucson. Ab­
bott-Northwestern Hospital in
Minneapolis, the Texas Heart
Institute in Houston, and St.
Luke's Hospital in Milwaukee.
Dr. Christian Cabrol, chief of
cardiovascular surgery at Pltlr
Salpetlere Hospital In Paris, has
Implanted more Jarvlk-7s than
any other surgeon. He Installed
15 of the devices In patients last
year and Implanted his 16th
Jan. 13.
Seven of Cabrol's patients last
year died of complications from
their heart disease before they
could receive transplants. But of
th e ei ght who did r e c e i v e
transplants, seven are still alive
and he credits the Jarvlk-7 for
saving their lives.

Who hath a book, has Mends at hand,
and gold and gear at his command; And
rich estates, If he but looks, are held by
him who hath a book.
—Wilbur Dick Ncsblt. {1871 1927)

Two Women Novels, Good Wintertime Reading
By Elisabeth Mitchell
American Library Assn.
OIRLS IN HIGH PLACES, by Sugar
Rautbord und Elizabeth Nlcklcs. NAL.
$16.50.437 pages.
Two of America's high-profile women
have gotten together to write a wicked,
glitzy novel that's great fun for wintertime
reading.
"Girls in High Places" is about Just
what the title promises. It marks the
collaborative fiction debut of socialite and
"In terview " contributing editor Sugar
R a u t b o r d and a d v e r t i s i n g m a v e n
Elizabeth Nlckles.
Their girls are in high places literally
and figuratively. On private jets. The
Concorde. In Chicago penthouses and
cx-cutlvc suites. When they're not in the
sky. they live the high life: power
lunching from the Secretary o f the
Interior's Georgetown garden to the
Greenhouse spa In Dallas. Dining at the
White House. Appearing on the cover of
" T o w n and C o u n t r y . " Ri di ng and
gardening and Jogging on estates from
Lake Forest to Windsor.
The two women are in love with one
man: Graham Donaldson, the powerful,
dynamic, attractive CEO of Intcrcon Inc.
One is his wife Eve. a stunning, well-bred

Barbara
Michaels
Lake Forest society matron. The other is
Catherine McBride, an ambitious, driven
Harvard MBA who starts out plump and
a ll business, but soon b ecom es a
glamorous, confident take-charger.

Best Sellers

By United Press International
Fiction
1. Night o f the Fox — Jack Higgins (No. 7
last week — 3.499 copies ordered)
2. The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life
in the Universe — Jane Wagner
(4 —
3.163)
3. Windmills o f the Gods — Sidney
Sheldon (3.028)
4. The Eyes of the Dragon — Stephen
King (2.760)
5. Red Storm Rising — Tom Clancy ( 1 —
1.875)
6. Flight of the Intruder — Stephen
Coonts(9— 1.425)
7. Bandits — Elmore Leonard (6 — 1,364)
8. It - Stephen King (2 - 1 ,1 6 5 )
9. The Polar Express — Chris Van
A lls b u r g (5 - 1.103)
10. The Golden Cup — Belva Plain (860)

Non-Fiction
1. Season on the Brink — John Felnsteln
(2 - 8 .9 1 6 )
2. Fatherhood - Bill Cosby (3 - 3.232)
3. A Day in the Life of America — Rick
Smolan and David Cohen (1 — 3.043)
4. Marilyn — Gloria Stelnhem (2.805)
5. The Frugal Gourmet Cooks with Wine
- J e f f Smith (4 - 2 .0 1 6 )
6. McMahon — Jim McMahon (7 — 1.869)

7. The Scented Room — Barbara Milo
0 h r b a c h (1 0 - 1,784)
8. Dancing on My Grave — Gelscy
Kirkland (1.716)
9. The Secret House — David Bodanls (5
- 1.620)
10. The Morning After — George Wills (6
- 2.728)
Up And Coming
1. Echoes In the Dark, by Joseph
Wambaugh — Wambaugh retells the
killing of Pennsylvania teacher Susan
Relnert and the subsequent conviction of
William Bradfleld and Jay Smith.
2. The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys, by
Doris Kearns — A history of the two
families.
3. Brothers, by William Goldman — The
sequel to Goldman's "Marathon Man."
4. Poison, by Ed McBaln — This new 87th
Precinct novel focuses on Det. Hal Willis
who falls in love with a woman who may
or may not be killing off some of her
lovers.
5. Evil Angels, by John Bryson — The
story of the trial of Australian Llndy
C ham berlain, who was accused o f
murdering her own child.

Rankings based on orders to Ingram
Book Company from more than 7.000
bookstores nationwide.

Eve's story is the tale of every corporate
wife who finds herself In an era In which
she is no longer appreciated. Catherine is
the modern striver. a woman who knows
from childhood that she has to take care of
herself. Yet the lifelong forces that make
her self-sufficient, capable and shrewd In
the business world also draw her self­
destructively to a married man in mid-life
crisis.
Each woman fights hard for her man.
And along the way they get caught up In
everything from corporate conspiracies to
international intrigue. But Is this a serious
saga of strong women who win In the
end? Or is a spoof of the genre?
It's a little bit of both.
Though the novel is an attention-holder.
It Is disappointing, lacking the depth of
either a fine satire or a corny soaper.
While both Catherine and Eve change and
grow, their development is shallowly
rendered.
Rautbord and Nl ckl es g i v e t hei r
Catherine the luxury of several white
knights (one a baron, no less) who are on
hand to assure her that her story has a
happlly-ever-altcr conclusion.
S H A T T E R E D SILK, by Barbar a
Michaels. Antheneum. $15.95. 369 pages.
Barbara Michaels' "Shatt.-cd Silk" Is a
mystery and a romance.
When heroine Karen Nevitt returns to
h er a u n t ' s h i s t o r i c h o m e in the
Georgetown area of Washington, her
marriage has Just ended, her confidence is
down and her dress size is up. As this
novel develops. Nevitt rediscovers an old
beau and finds a new one. throws herself
Into the vintage-clothing business, and
melts to a size suitable for modeling.
She awakens one night to see what
appears to be a ghost in the garden.
Someone breaks Into her aunt's house
and rifles Karen’s Inventory of antique
clothes. Then one of her co-workers is
murdered. The plot takes many twists and
turns until Karen and her friends —
handily Including a policeman — solve the
mystery.
Anyone who is fascinated by antique
clothing will be absorbed by the descrip­
tions of everything from old lace petticoats
to rare Worth and Fortuny gowns. As
Karen tells her partner-to-be. "Clothes are
historical artifacts, like pottery and
tools.... I suppose they have an additional
mystique because they actually touched
and were shaped by the people who wore
them. A historian can learn a great deal
about a culture from costume — not only
the bare facts of fashion, but the social
and political attitudes of the period."
With "Shattered Silk.” Michaels has
woven a delightful escape that will leave
readers wondering not only about skele­
tons In the attic, out uboul the value of the
old clothes up there, too.

another child, or another group
o f children.
Now. Ignoring the financial
questions for a moment, let's
consider simple equity. Is It fair
for one child to receive four of
the fewer than 600 livers avail­
able last year for transplanta­
tion?
I have heard it argued — by a
su rgeon , o f course — that
M eghann d eserves mul ti pl e
chances because society made a
commitment to her by giving
her one transplant. Other poten­
tial recipients, this argument
holds, must wait their turns
until Meghann finally gets a
transplant that takes.
I don't buy that argument. I

believe Meghann has had her
chance — and .the chances of
three other children. If society Is
g o i n g to p r o v i d e l i v e r
transplantation in the first place,
then the few livers that are
available must be allocated on a
fair basis. Giving four to one
child is simply not fair.
Ob v io us ly the death of
Meghann LaRocco would be a
tragedy of Incalculable propor­
tions to her parents and rela­
tives. But the deaths of the other
Infants and children who need
livers are also tragedies, and. in
a way. they are made all the
more tragic by the fact that one
child Is getting all the chances,
while others get none.

Travelin ' About

'M u rd e r' W eekends
Becoming Popular
By STEVE GEIMANN
BOLTON LANDING. N.Y. (UPI)
— A swanky resort hotel was
plunged Into chaos one recent
w eek en d wi th th ree brutal
"m urders." a public Inquisition
and the cold-blooded "d eath " of
the murderer before 200 guests
eating Sunday brunch.
Gunshots first pierced the
c o n v e r s a t i o n at S a t u r d a y
breakfast and again at afternoon
teu. felling a hotel waiter and a
form er U.S. am bassador to
Turkey. At dinner, the envoy's
ex-wife crumpled to the floor
after drinking poisoned wine.
Hour after hour, hotel guests
turned private eyes, hunting for
clues, comparing notes and re­
lentlessly chasing suspects —
and each other — In a race to
crack the case. .
When the smoke had cleared,
the victims and the murderer
reappeared to take their bows
before the 200 amateur sleuths
who had paid $168 a person to
play the game for 27 hours.
Such murder, mayhem and
mischief takes place on a regular
basis — In hotels, on trains, on
cruise ships and even in hot-air
balloons — as students of Agatha
Christie and Sherlock Holmes
gather for some real-life fun.
Murder a La Carte of New York
City, a major producer of such
mystery plays, conducts up to
three events in a single weekend
at distant points around the
country, while Its counterparts
maintain sim ilarly ambitious
schedules.
Resort and tourism operators
use the mystery theme to boost
b u s i n e s s d u r i n g the s l ow
months. Hotels usually schedule
the events in the winter and
spring, while cruise lines stage
mystery productions In the spr­
ing and summer.
Tour organizers believe the
whodunit getaway has caught
on big because it provides a total
sense of escape — and caps It off
with a happy ending.
" I t ’s the only place that the
public can turn to for assurance
that good will triumph over
evil.” said David Landau, presi­
dent of Murder To Go of New
York, a major mystery weekend
packager.
Karen Palmer, who coow ns
B o g ie 's Mur der ous Myst er y
Tours In New York City, agrees
people flock to such planned
e v en ts — c o m p le t e with
gunshots, stabbings and theatri­
c a l b l o o d — to f l e e t hei r
day-to-day troubles.
"W hen people need to see
Justice, and they don't see it In
the real world, they turn to
fantasy." Palmer said. "It's good

...VET
Continued From ID
" I used to use a 30-pound
scale for the dogs, but I had to go
out and gel a 250-pound scale."
he said, attesting to the trend
toward bigger dogs.
He agreed that havi ng a
watchdog is a very good Idea.
His office was burglarized
once, and he was out of business
for a week waiting for resupplies.
A while later, when he put a
few trained watchdogs in the
office to live, burglars tried with
less success to make a haul.
"W hen we got in the office, all
we had to do was wipe up the
blood." Dr. Bass said.
At home, his animals won't let
anyone In the empty house
except for Mr. and Mrs. Bass.
Once. Mrs. Bass left the stove on
and called a neighbor to ask if
she would shut It off. "T h e
woman got bit several times, but
she managed to cut the stove
off." Dr. Bass recalled.
The trick to training a good
watchdog, he said, is to keep
him Inside awav from most

clean fun.”
But not everyone who signs on
Joins the ranks o f Mike Hammer
or Miss Marple. especially when
the production falls short of the
mark.
Landau and Palmer both fear
that mystery weekends arc be­
ing threatened by success, as
more and more operators cut
corners to make a buck. In some
cases, the solution to the crime
contains elem ents never In­
troduced dur i ng the gam e.
Landau said.
As a result, hotel, cruise and
resort operators arc becoming
reluctant to take an expensive
gamble after hearing tales of
deadly receipts from some col­
leagues. he said.
Still, quality packages abound
and business Is brisk. Industry
experts estimate more than 50
companies arc In the murder
business, killing off dozens of
victims during weekend and
one-night performances, com ­
pared with fewer than a dozen
firms three years ago.
Most mystery packages come
as theatrical productions in
which actors mingle witli guests
and "perform " the story, mixing
scri pt ed mat eri al wi t h i m ­
provisation to keep the audience
guessing. In another form, some­
times known as analytical, de­
tails of the crime are laid out for
guests who must come up with
the solution.
Some events ure wrapped up
in one night, other stretch over a
weekend and the most am ­
bitious versions can last one
week. Prices can run as high as
$300 per person for the weekend
packages at hotels to nearly
$1,000 for seafaring plays, de­
pending upon cruise ship ac­
commodations.
All mystery weekends feature
Intense audience participation.
Strangers thrown together for a
one-night show or the weekend
share clues, test out their
theories and even chase after
suspects In search c f the solu­
tion.
•
Theatrical productions, such
as "A Deadly Habit" staged by
Murder a La Carte at The
Sagamore in Bolton Landing
north o f Albany, encourage
guests to fire
questions at
suspects and even challenge the
qualifications of the detective.
Thomas Chiodo. the writer
and director, admitted his small
ensemble — which has Included
soap opera stars and a former
football player — often wing It.
people except the family. "Don't
let it associate with anyone
except the family — and worst of
all. don't tie it up outside." The
dog will learn that no one is
allowed In the home when no
one is there. His watchdogs
won’t even let people they know
inside unless Mr. or Mrs. Bass Is
'home and lets them In.
The oldest dog he ever had
was a 22-year-old "Old Yellow
Curr.” That dog. also called
Lady, had good eyesight and
good teeth but developed a bad
case of arthritis. Dr. Bass finally
had to put her to sleep six
months ago. but only after she
had raised two "fine pups who
turned out to be excel l ent
watchdogs."
Listening to Dr. Bass talk
about the animals he loves, one
wonders w h it makes, some peo­
ple cruel to creatures and others
adoring. " I ’m half Indian and
half Jew,” said Dr. Bass. "I
guess the Indian part took to
nature and the animals."
He said he has no special plans
for retirement other than spen­
ding time with his "fa m ily" —
"that’s our animals: they're the
only family we have now."

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="80">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="140925">
                  <text>Sanford Herald, 1987</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222081">
                <text>The Sanford Herald, February 01, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222082">
                <text>Sanford (Fla.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222083">
                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on February 01, 1987.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222084">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222085">
                <text>Original -page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, February 01, 1987; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222086">
                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222087">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222088">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="222089">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>Sanford; The Sanford Herald</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
